Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: You feel me?
[00:00:02] Speaker B: All right, y'all. We back with episode 40 of Wiretap. God damn. 40 episodes, bro. 40 episodes.
[00:00:10] Speaker A: Shit. Big. Don't seem like to a lot of people. Yeah, yeah, but it's big. Not so is Keon. Yeah, me too.
[00:00:15] Speaker B: Wow. Pause. Let's pause that.
We back with episode 40 of the Wiretap. Ladies and gentlemen, we took a two week break. A much needed break. We was rolling, we was working, and we decided that we refreshed. Yeah, we refreshed. We needed, you know, you need a break from time to time. You know what I'm saying? Like, consistency is a real thing, but from time to time, you gotta take you a little break before we crash out. Yes.
[00:00:40] Speaker A: You know what I mean?
[00:00:41] Speaker B: Cause we sacrificed a lot of time to be here and to give y'all this content. So we wanted to reward ourselves with a two week break.
[00:00:48] Speaker A: If y'all miss us, thank y'all. We back.
[00:00:51] Speaker B: Yeah. Some people was DMing me. Some people was like, yo, what's up with the show? I'm like, we on a break. You know what I'm saying?
[00:00:57] Speaker A: That could have been hate, too. Like, what's up with the show?
[00:00:59] Speaker B: Overland, you right. I mean, yeah, yeah.
[00:01:01] Speaker A: This over with.
[00:01:02] Speaker B: You absolutely right.
[00:01:03] Speaker A: Knew that nigga was gonna fall.
[00:01:04] Speaker B: That's a real thing. But we didn't. Yeah, we did. That's a real thing.
As always, like, follow and subscribe. And if you feeling what, frisky, Go ahead and comment. Y, let's go ahead and spin that intro. As always, the doom. The do.
All right. All right, y'all. We back as always. Thank y'all for tapping in with us. We about to go ahead and get started with these topics. We were very eager to get back. Keon called me the other day, said, what are we doing? We should never do this two week again. What we doing? But we are back, and as always, we're going to start with our mental health check in and with our beautiful ladies here who were running the camera and the mixing board. So, Leah, go ahead and tell us how your week was.
[00:02:04] Speaker C: Hey, guys.
[00:02:05] Speaker B: Hey.
[00:02:05] Speaker C: We missed y'all.
My week was good. Very long. Very long. Worked some overtime and my little part time gig.
So it's been a long week, but overall it was okay.
[00:02:16] Speaker B: All right, how about you guys? You gotta get rid of, I don't.
[00:02:21] Speaker A: Know, probably been all over the place a little bit.
[00:02:25] Speaker B: Okay, okay. Nothing wrong with that. But you mentally good, though. You not about to crash out, do anything crazy, trip out.
[00:02:36] Speaker C: I don't know. I'm Just trying to get myself in a rhythm, and it just don't seem like it's working. Cause I want to do other things.
[00:02:42] Speaker A: Outside of work, but work is so exhausting, so I just go home.
[00:02:45] Speaker B: Yeah, that's adulting. That's what we call adulting today.
[00:02:48] Speaker C: Shit is ghetto.
[00:02:50] Speaker A: Ghetto as fuck.
[00:02:51] Speaker C: Extremely ghetto.
[00:02:52] Speaker B: Keon, how was your week, brother?
[00:02:54] Speaker A: My week was good, bro. Work was cool.
Yeah, it was good, bro. I actually had a. Had a really good week overall. You know what I'm saying?
[00:03:05] Speaker B: No.
[00:03:06] Speaker A: No complaints on my end. Well, actually, I do got one complaint. I gotta get the alternator changed on my. On my car. Other than that, you know what I mean?
[00:03:12] Speaker B: It's always the alternate.
[00:03:13] Speaker A: Yeah, it's always the alternator.
[00:03:14] Speaker B: Always the alternate.
[00:03:15] Speaker A: I had a good week, bro. Solid week. You know what I mean? No hiccups.
Yeah, it was solid week. Yeah, it was solid. What about you?
[00:03:25] Speaker B: I was off all this week, so I took advantage.
[00:03:28] Speaker A: Well, fuck you.
[00:03:30] Speaker B: I took advantage of being off, Just, you know, laid around, did some research.
Just really taking my time to, like, you know, get. Gather my thoughts together. I think, you know, from time to time, you gotta take some time off from work, especially in what I do, because that shit can be mentally draining.
Overall. I ain't really do nothing crazy. Today was my son's birthday. Yeah.
[00:03:52] Speaker C: Shout out to Tony two times, right?
[00:03:54] Speaker B: Yo, I realized how fitting that name was, because, you know, his birthday is February 22, 2022.
[00:04:02] Speaker A: Wow. 22 times.
That's his barbershop name. Renamed him. That's 22 times.
[00:04:07] Speaker B: Well, I'm like, damn, that's gonna stick. That's it. I'm like, yeah, that's you.
[00:04:12] Speaker C: Especially with the bottom leg, saying, 2.
[00:04:14] Speaker B: 2, 2, 2, two.
[00:04:15] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:04:16] Speaker B: I was like, you more Baltimore than you know, bro.
[00:04:18] Speaker A: All right, you can get it.
[00:04:19] Speaker B: He already saying, all right. Like, all right.
[00:04:24] Speaker A: Yo, it's the one. He come in the barbershop, he go, pound everybody up. He do this. Come to you Pound. He like.
He gets it already. This guy gets it.
[00:04:33] Speaker B: That's his thing.
[00:04:34] Speaker A: He's going.
[00:04:34] Speaker B: So shout out to Happy birthday, son, and daddy loves you. Yes.
But, yeah, that's. That's been my week. My week was pretty good. So that's.
[00:04:44] Speaker A: That's what it is.
[00:04:44] Speaker B: We're gonna go ahead and get into these topics. Leah, what we got first?
[00:04:48] Speaker C: All right? I mean, we got a little. A mix. We got some tragedy, a little bit of comedy and. Okay, let's start with some goodies.
[00:04:57] Speaker B: So.
[00:04:57] Speaker C: So they dropped Jay Z's lawsuit. I'LL stop there, guys. Round of applause.
[00:05:04] Speaker A: Yeah, but did y'all also hear that he lost, like, 20 million in.
[00:05:09] Speaker C: In deals.
[00:05:09] Speaker A: In deals.
[00:05:10] Speaker B: That's crazy.
[00:05:11] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying?
[00:05:11] Speaker B: No, I didn't hear that part.
[00:05:12] Speaker A: Yeah, he lost 20 million in deals. Like, granted, like, it's a drop in the bucket for him. Yeah, it's a drop in the bucket for him. But I'm with 20. But you know what I'm saying? 20 M's is real.
[00:05:21] Speaker B: But the crazy part is, to him, that's probably still. Cause, you know, he's fortunate to be in a situation where he can make 20m. So. Yeah, I'm taking that personally. Right?
[00:05:32] Speaker A: Yeah, absolutely.
[00:05:34] Speaker B: I'm happy, though, for him. You know, again, I think we are in this weird stage where we starting to see things happen to our, you know, quote, unquote, heroes, you know, the people, our great blacks. There we go. What we grew up on. And, you know, I. I'm kind of.
I'm not going to say, like, if you've done something, by all means, you should be held accountable for it.
[00:05:58] Speaker A: Right, right.
[00:05:59] Speaker B: At the same time, though, it's just kind of disheartening to see those things happen to these people that we kind of hold in a certain light.
[00:06:07] Speaker A: I mean, it's. It is.
It's like, damn. But when it's true, you be like, nigga, yeah.
[00:06:14] Speaker B: You should know better.
[00:06:15] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying?
[00:06:16] Speaker B: Like, I mean, because, I mean, like, you know, I think the biggest.
I'm not gonna say the biggest, but, like, one of the disappointing things was probably Kels Bill Cosby.
[00:06:27] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:06:27] Speaker B: You know those things. Cause Bill. Bill. I wanted to mirror my family. Like Bill Cosby. You know what I'm saying?
[00:06:34] Speaker A: Huxtables.
[00:06:34] Speaker B: Yeah. Like, that was.
[00:06:36] Speaker A: Yeah, that was one of the great black families. Two working parents in the household and.
[00:06:40] Speaker B: So on and so. Yeah. And it's like, damn. Like, damn. Like, you a creep, right?
You had Claire Huxtable, bro. Like, what? Like, come on. How could you do that? But getting back to Jay, I want.
[00:06:52] Speaker C: To ask y'all a question. How do you feel about Jay Z filing a defamation lawsuit? He should.
[00:06:56] Speaker B: Yeah, absolutely. He should. Especially.
[00:06:58] Speaker C: So do you think that you should always come back and attack, I guess, your accuser?
[00:07:03] Speaker A: Hell, yeah.
[00:07:05] Speaker C: Not be the bigger person, especially with.
[00:07:08] Speaker B: Something as serious as that.
[00:07:10] Speaker A: I need my gift back.
[00:07:11] Speaker B: Yeah. Nah, nah, nah. I definitely need my gift. You accuse me of one of the most heinous crimes.
Side note, watch Law and Order, man. Side note, what would be the Top five heinous crimes.
[00:07:23] Speaker A: I definitely would. I would say, you know, acts towards minors, pedophilia. Okay.
I would say any form of.
What's the word I'm looking for? Because I don't know if I could say it, but like. Like, sexual assault. Sexual assault. There we go. Thank you. Sexual assault.
I honestly like murder. Murder. Yeah. See, it depends on what the murder thing, like, it's like one of those things, like there's justified murders, you know what I'm saying? Some people need to get out of here, you know what I'm saying?
[00:08:07] Speaker C: And likeness.
[00:08:11] Speaker A: Behind the right circumstances. Like hypothetically, like somebody trying to rob me and they got the drop on me, but I'm able to get to my firearm. Yeah, I'm gonna blow you away from here. Cause you try to take my life and. Or take my. Take my private, you know what I'm saying? Home and my family, I think. And there's a line between that too. And it took for me to watch an interview for me to say that, you know what I'm saying? Like, you know, if I do murder the person that did something to my loved one, I. I'm still no good to the loved one that I lost, you know what I'm saying? So, yeah, like, it gotta be one of those cases where it's me and you, you know what I'm saying? Like, and I know you about to kill me. Yeah, I'm gonna get you outta here.
[00:08:57] Speaker B: So for me, it's two things. It's either that or you do something to my kids. One of the two things. Those are the two for me.
[00:09:03] Speaker A: Yeah, but. So now let me pose another question.
[00:09:05] Speaker B: Okay?
[00:09:06] Speaker A: Same. Same reason why I say what I said. Like, all right, somebody do something to your kids. You know, as a parent, your normal instinct is to say, yeah, kill. I die behind my kids. That's. That's. That's noble. But if somebody does something to your child and then you kill them and you get caught, you're still no good to your child. Okay?
[00:09:29] Speaker B: Hey, hey. I'm not gonna go.
[00:09:31] Speaker C: All right, so that's the topic of revenge. And that's what I was thinking about, because technically this is like revenge.
[00:09:36] Speaker B: I mean, in that scenario, though, I think it's. It's. It's very, very reasonable because.
[00:09:42] Speaker C: So that's reasonable. Revenge?
[00:09:44] Speaker B: Yeah, absolutely.
[00:09:46] Speaker A: Like, you, number one, you cost me bread. That's my slander in my name. And for me to just say, you know, water underneath the bridge, No, I need to get my 20M's back that you that you took for me. And then some. Because you should have did your homework before you went out there and pressed these charges and accused me.
[00:10:07] Speaker B: And then on top of that, you accused me again of one of the most heinous things anybody accused of.
[00:10:13] Speaker A: That's wild.
[00:10:13] Speaker C: So it's not good enough that your name is just acquitted?
[00:10:16] Speaker B: No, absolutely. Because I need to teach you a lesson at this point. Yeah.
[00:10:20] Speaker A: Watch who you go after and make sure you do your homework and make.
[00:10:22] Speaker B: Sure you know what you're talking about.
[00:10:24] Speaker A: I gotta get you back.
[00:10:25] Speaker C: Because now this revenge can now trickle over into his family. Do you think they deserve that? I mean, to be punished for the sins of their loved ones?
[00:10:32] Speaker B: You mean as far as lawyer Buzby.
[00:10:36] Speaker A: Oh, well.
[00:10:36] Speaker B: Well, he should have thought of that. He should have thought about that shit.
[00:10:39] Speaker A: Yeah, your bad.
[00:10:40] Speaker B: Yeah, he should have thought about that shit. Yeah, absolutely.
[00:10:43] Speaker A: 100%.
[00:10:44] Speaker B: Oh, well, listen, I don't think Jay is wrong for, you know, getting his get back because again, you accused me of something that the world. We all can agree in the world that this is the most heinous thing a person could do. Also, you. You lost me 20 M's. This could also potentially lead to me losing other things. And me really not. I mean, money wise, he would have been straight regardless because he has investments and things we probably don't know about. Ownership and things we don't know about the whole nine. So money wise, he would have been good. But to be able to just to pop out or take my kids somewhere, you don't know where that could have led. And then like the shit that might. Could have affect Blue, you know, I mean, I don't know if she goes to school. Of course you don't go to public school.
[00:11:32] Speaker C: But she does go to school, right?
[00:11:34] Speaker B: So it's like that those situations as far as being in school and now the kids are looking at me different. We all know crazy.
[00:11:45] Speaker A: It just think like in your neighborhood, if you knew Joe Blow up the street was on that list, guess what? You gonna stop doing like.
[00:11:53] Speaker C: All right, so tell me, how does going after Busby change that?
[00:11:57] Speaker A: It doesn't change it. It's justification.
[00:12:00] Speaker B: It's justification, but it also teaches a lesson even for future, future lawyers who may want to take cases that are coming after certain people involved. It was a money grab. Yeah, it really was.
[00:12:13] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying? Like, and you didn't get the money, right?
[00:12:16] Speaker B: He thought, you know, Jay didn't want to have that stain on his name. So I'm gonna just Pay this money to get you to go away.
[00:12:22] Speaker A: He said no. He said no, especially. And I. And I. I respect him for not being black.
[00:12:27] Speaker B: Fell. Yeah.
[00:12:28] Speaker A: Not being black. Man, you stood up for. With J. Hey, well, I ain't do this. Let's. Let's go to court.
[00:12:32] Speaker B: Yeah, he called his bluff. But as far as it affecting Busby's family like.
[00:12:40] Speaker A: Two kids in the butt. Okay, yeah, take it to the states.
[00:12:42] Speaker B: I changed my last name. If I'm his kid. Yeah. Shit, I'm Smith. Yeah. That's my last name. That's my last name.
[00:12:48] Speaker C: All right, well, while we talking about lawyers, I want to talk about how Diddy's lawyer dropped him as a client.
[00:12:54] Speaker B: That is scary.
[00:12:55] Speaker A: Listen, it's two sides to that shit, right? In my personal opinion, very possible. One, you dropped it because, you know, ain't a snowball chance in hell that this is gonna beat this. Beat this case. One or two, for me, it's your moral compass. Compass kicked in and you like, yeah, I ain't trying to. I just. That's just.
[00:13:19] Speaker B: No, no, those points are valid. But I also think there's a third one. You're saying as well, we forget that Diddy has an ego.
Right? And we've seen how Diddy operates as far as when it comes to his staff. Staff and. Or like, on reality shows. We've seen, like, the. The he pulls.
[00:13:40] Speaker A: Did you watch the. The docs that they had on?
[00:13:43] Speaker B: The only one. I watched the hbo. I didn't finish it, but I. I watched three. Was it five?
[00:13:48] Speaker A: Yeah, it was like, five. Five episodes.
[00:13:50] Speaker B: Yeah. So I've watched three of the five.
[00:13:52] Speaker A: Okay.
[00:13:52] Speaker B: I never finished it.
[00:13:54] Speaker A: You got to finish it, because the last one was. Was like, wow, this is weird. And it was an interview with his assistant.
[00:14:02] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:14:02] Speaker A: The last episode.
[00:14:03] Speaker B: So I'm gonna finish that. I'm gonna finish that. But I think that. That my last point being that, you know, is there a bumping of heads within that situation? Because maybe the lawyer, you know, sometimes. And I've seen this play out before. I've seen lawyers attempt to tell their clients to, you know, go with this plea deal. If you don't go with this plea deal, you're potentially looking at bop, bop, bop, bop, bop. And I've seen defendants fight back and say, hey, listen, I know such and such that locked down with me. And they did the same thing I did, but they not looking at the same time. I got. But then the lawyer has to say, well, you did, like, yes. You guys kind of sort of committed the Same crime, but the steps that you took to commit that crime are very different.
[00:14:50] Speaker A: So the steps are different light.
[00:14:52] Speaker B: So in the sense, if me and.
[00:14:53] Speaker A: You do the same crime, I get locked up, I get five years, and now you going to court, you getting 10 years for the charge. What do you mean, as far as the.
[00:15:00] Speaker B: So the steps could be different as far as, like, okay, we might have went into a 711 to rob the joint. Right?
[00:15:06] Speaker A: Right.
[00:15:07] Speaker B: So when we point the joints at the. The cashier, that's assault right there. Right?
[00:15:11] Speaker A: Right.
[00:15:12] Speaker B: Boom. I might have went and hit yo on the head with the gun. You know what I'm saying? So now that's another charge. Okay.
You might have just went and grabbed the money out and, you know, put it in your pocket and ran.
[00:15:26] Speaker A: Different circumstances.
[00:15:26] Speaker B: So then I might have popped the shot. Boom. We not playing with you type. So it's like we committed the same crime, but the steps as to how we committed the crime were very different.
Right. Your side was more lenient. You just went in there and did an armed robbery. Yes. You might get the assault for pointing the gun and, you know, you taking the money, you know, I'm saying. And having a firearm. Reckless with the firearm. But me, boom, that assault goes from assault two to assault one.
[00:15:52] Speaker A: Okay.
[00:15:53] Speaker B: Because I didn't hit you with the butt of the gun. You know what I'm saying? So it's like, yeah, I can be in there like, well, me and Keon did the same. And it's like, y'all didn't do the same shit.
[00:16:01] Speaker A: Okay.
[00:16:01] Speaker B: Keon went in there. He just grabbed the money.
[00:16:04] Speaker A: Just on paper, it reads the same charge. But, yeah, you did this.
[00:16:08] Speaker B: Something completely different. So that's why, like, when lawyers be fussing with their defense clients, they'd be trying to explain them because they. What they call them jailhouse lawyers. Yeah.
[00:16:18] Speaker A: I met quite a few of those.
[00:16:19] Speaker B: Right. And so don't get me wrong, some of them have a valid point.
[00:16:24] Speaker C: Explain to the people what a jailhouse lawyer.
[00:16:26] Speaker B: So a jailhouse lawyer is someone who goes to jail and they start reading.
[00:16:32] Speaker A: They go to the law library.
But this the thing, though, my. That starts with them reading up on their own case, right? And now they think they fucking Pappy Mason.
[00:16:43] Speaker B: Yeah, but see, they don't. Sometimes what they don't understand is how, like, certain words and definitions kind of intertwined with each other, you know, I'm saying. So it's like this. This word attached with this word could mean something completely different from what you thought it meant. And that could Be the thing that fucked them up or could help them essentially. Like, I know one of the greatest cases that come to mind for me is Rick Ross. The real Rick Ross, when he went and he did the same thing, went to the law library to say, oh, this and that. Nah, that don't. I didn't do that. This is. I didn't do this. So that's why essentially, the first time he came home, he got off on a technicality, because with the law read, he didn't do.
[00:17:27] Speaker A: Right.
[00:17:28] Speaker B: But some people don't understand it. A lot of people try to put common sense in the law, but it. That don't work. So it's like, for instance, litigation is litigation.
[00:17:37] Speaker A: Like.
[00:17:37] Speaker B: And I don't know if it's a good analogy, but this is the analogy that I come to kind of think about. If you tell your kids not to go in the kitchen, right. That's the law of the house. Don't go in the kitchen.
[00:17:49] Speaker C: Okay.
[00:17:50] Speaker B: Right. Let's say you left the faucet running, though. And now the faucet is overflowing, so they gotta go. So they go into the kitchen to turn the faucet off. Technically, did they break the law?
[00:18:00] Speaker C: Yes.
[00:18:00] Speaker B: But they had a reasonable circumstances as to why they broke the law. You get what I'm saying? So it's like that technicality could possibly get them off. Like. Well, the only reason I went in the kitchen is because you left the faucet on and the sink was overflowing, so I had to stop the sink and clean up the mess in the kitchen. I didn't go in the kitchen just to go in the kitchen. You get what I'm saying? Yeah, but technicalities, right? So you have certain situations like that that can happen within the law for most people. They just use their common sense. A big example would be like when most people. All right, so you have possession and then you have Shit. What's the.
I can't think of the term right now.
You have possession. Because I remember me and Jeremy got into an argument about this on the phone. You have possession, and then you have.
[00:18:50] Speaker A: I know the other one that you talk about. No, no, no, no, no.
[00:18:53] Speaker B: It's like indirect possession. Yeah. So possession is. I go to Keon's pocket, his phone. That's possession. He has the phone. Right. I go in his pocket, phone. Indirect possession is. We all know this is Keon's phone, but he's upstairs.
So let's say, you know, just for shits and giggles, phones are illegal. We come and bust the House. We like, who phone is this? We look around, it's just Keon, and we assume it's got to be Keon phone. Right? But lot of people don't understand that. You get them saying, Keon has control of his phone, but he upstairs. So indirect. Indirect. The best way I think they describe it in court is like, literally, like, if a person. If you look outside and you see this raining, it's raining. And then if a person comes in dripping wet with a raincoat on the umbrella, you have the presumption that is raining. Like, your common sense, like, oh, it must be raining outside. Doesn't mean it technically is raining.
[00:19:52] Speaker A: But why the would he have that get up on there?
[00:19:55] Speaker B: No, it's not that he had to get up. Yeah, yeah.
A lot of people get confused with that because most people understand direct possession, which is the phone is on Keon. Hey, bro, don't do that.
[00:20:08] Speaker C: How did it get to the point again?
[00:20:09] Speaker B: We was talking about Diddy, but you. I mean, Diddy.
[00:20:13] Speaker A: Sorry, Diddy. Like, I think the nigga, like, ultimately, like, I think we was also talking.
[00:20:20] Speaker B: About how they might have been button heads.
[00:20:22] Speaker A: So that's him and the lawyer. Yeah, that's what we talk about.
[00:20:24] Speaker B: But in my opinion, that's probably really what it is.
[00:20:27] Speaker A: Yeah, like that and his ego probably might still be through the fucking roof. But I think at this point, like, with all of the allegations, may they be true or not? I don't know. I'm not a lawyer. I'm, not, you know, privy to that information. But I think the nigga is in the. The position that the. Is just fighting to get the least amount of time that he possibly can get versus he think he could beat this case. I think down deep down inside, like, bro, it's. I ain't never seen a. With that many accusers as far as famous, why do you think the lawyer.
[00:21:05] Speaker C: Removed himself from the case?
[00:21:07] Speaker A: Because one, I. You know, it's gotta be one of the three. Yeah, like one of the three. Like, and then that tarnishes his. His reputation or his record. Like, you. You want more wins than you got losses. You know what I'm saying?
[00:21:20] Speaker B: So.
[00:21:21] Speaker A: Yeah. So you recuse yourself from the. From the cases. Like, yeah, this is not a stain on my. On my rap sheet, on my record, because I didn't follow through with the case. So it's like.
[00:21:30] Speaker C: Yeah, how deep are they in? Pause. How deep are they into the case?
[00:21:33] Speaker A: Because.
[00:21:33] Speaker C: Can you recuse yourself this late in.
[00:21:35] Speaker A: Yeah, should that be legal? It is what it is.
[00:21:40] Speaker B: I Mean, I mean. But so the problem is then you have.
So if they don't recuse their self and then it goes to trial and Diddy loses, then he has the opportunity to bring the back because he's going to say, I didn't have effective counsel.
So nine times out of 10, that's why they're gonna, you know, say, okay, like, all right, you want to, you know, move yourself. You can remove yourself. And he's just going to find another lawyer. Did he gonna find another lawyer? And then they probably get a postponement because I think he was supposed to go to trial, what, next month?
[00:22:10] Speaker A: Yeah, March. He's supposed to go to trial.
[00:22:12] Speaker B: So they're probably. He's probably going to get a postponement, and the trial probably won't start till later this year.
[00:22:17] Speaker A: Yeah. On Diddy's side, he's allotted three postponements, and then the state is allotted three postponements in terms. So, like, he really can. If they both keep postponing, then they could postpone this shit in 2028.
[00:22:34] Speaker C: That's not necessarily something you want to be.
[00:22:35] Speaker B: Right. He's sitting in prison.
The. So the thing is, they. They. I don't know if this is the same with the Fed. So you have what they call a Hicks date. So Hicks date is. Is like, meaning, like, you have a right to a speedy trial. So they have a certain date that they can't go past because you have to go to trial before this particular date. Now, if they keep postponing it and a Diddy agrees to the postponement, then they can surpass the Hicks date. But he's gonna have to postpone because your lord, whoever, he's gonna pick up as his lawyer.
[00:23:10] Speaker A: Not necessarily because they're not gonna know.
[00:23:12] Speaker B: Enough about the case.
[00:23:13] Speaker A: No, not necessarily because that lawyer that recused himself from the case, that could not have been like, the. The main lawyer.
[00:23:22] Speaker B: Like, he has a team. He has a team of lawyers.
[00:23:26] Speaker A: So you don't. We don't know what his part is in his legal battle. You know what I'm saying?
[00:23:33] Speaker B: Matter of fact, that's actually a valid point. We really don't know, and I don't know if we can find that out.
[00:23:38] Speaker A: Yeah, like, what's this role?
[00:23:39] Speaker B: Yeah, we don't know his role within that, but, you know, moving on. What we got next, please?
[00:23:45] Speaker C: Well, continuation with the trial.
[00:23:47] Speaker A: God damn.
[00:23:48] Speaker C: The last one, y'all. Promise in court, asap. Rakim has got off.
[00:23:54] Speaker B: Asap. Rakim.
[00:23:55] Speaker C: Ain't that his name?
[00:23:56] Speaker A: Asap.
[00:23:57] Speaker C: Rakin Ain't that his name? Rakim.
[00:24:00] Speaker B: Asap. Rakim K.
Yeah. I'm about to say I don't know who that is. That's a new ASAP member. ASAP Rocket. Yes. ASAP Rocket.
[00:24:09] Speaker C: His head look big as while he was in.
[00:24:13] Speaker A: Infinity.
[00:24:13] Speaker C: Braz.
[00:24:14] Speaker A: That is fat as them braids is.
[00:24:16] Speaker C: Fat as he had a alien front of his head.
[00:24:19] Speaker B: Let's salute out to asap.
[00:24:22] Speaker A: Yo, you know how cool you got to be to be in caught with shades on.
[00:24:29] Speaker B: I'm surprised the judge. That's not because I know with me, they don't let that shit. Yeah.
[00:24:34] Speaker A: Did you see. Did you see when the. When the lawyers was. Was like, getting into a heated battle? Like, they. Like, them niggas wanted to scrap.
[00:24:40] Speaker B: I ain't following the case.
[00:24:42] Speaker A: I did. Yo, that shit was on social media. Like, his lawyer and the prosecutor. Yeah, prosecutor was, like, really, like, going at it, like, not like, litigating, like, having an argument, like, nigga, fuck you.
[00:24:54] Speaker C: What do you think of his response to how he jumped across the stains?
[00:24:57] Speaker B: I mean, I think any man that. That was facing. What is he facing, 25.
[00:25:01] Speaker A: Yeah. Like, yo, I thought he was the dumbest nigga in America when he ain't take that plea. And I thought he was, too. I said, this nigga.
[00:25:08] Speaker B: I think we talked about it.
[00:25:09] Speaker A: Yeah. I said, this nigga is fucked.
[00:25:11] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:25:11] Speaker A: I so in turn, beat the case. Like, I guess he knew better than he was. He knew what we did.
[00:25:16] Speaker B: I mean, let's be real. Money talks, bro. Bitch, sure enough, he got a billionaire wife, bro. Yeah, I knew he wasn't going.
[00:25:23] Speaker C: That shit ain't look theatrical to y'all, though. Action Dramat.
[00:25:27] Speaker B: I mean, I think he was genuinely happy. I mean, that could be the case. You know, he know the cameras is there. He want to make a moment. I mean, don't get me wrong.
I would have been just as excited. I don't. I mean, like, when you think.
[00:25:40] Speaker C: I cannot see you jumping on those things, though. As excited as you would be.
[00:25:44] Speaker B: You never know.
[00:25:45] Speaker A: Yeah. You never know. And that in that type. Type of predicament to. To know that everything about to go away, and then you.
Then it goes away, man.
[00:25:57] Speaker B: I don't think nobody trying to look like Diddy right now being that bad. Could you imagine going from imagine to herself to wearing. From wearing Pride orange jumpsuits?
[00:26:07] Speaker A: That the sheer aspect of being free to not being free. Yeah, that is a. It's a. It's a humbling and hurtful experience feeling.
[00:26:17] Speaker B: Yo, rich or poor, I was watching Shout out to Gillian Wallow. I watched the Wallow interview.
[00:26:23] Speaker A: Right.
[00:26:24] Speaker B: I think I brought this point up to you the other day. I was like, yo, that the Wallow.
[00:26:28] Speaker C: Or the gilly one?
[00:26:29] Speaker B: I watched Wallow. I didn't get a chance.
[00:26:31] Speaker A: I watched them both because I. Yeah, me and Tone was talking.
[00:26:34] Speaker B: The funny part was because I remember my uncle telling me a story once when Wallow was talking about how he.
That he came back from the joint.
[00:26:45] Speaker A: His laundry was folded, and he had some snacks. Honey buns.
[00:26:49] Speaker B: This is. This is cool. Whole time the old head was trying to line him up. Yeah. But I remember my uncle telling me a story once how he. When he did his first bit, and he was like, yo, the kept trying to give me shit. At one point, I just had to beat his ass.
[00:27:05] Speaker A: Like, you gotta get it out the way. Especially with a nigga pressing you down like that. And you don't even gotta be built like that. But you gotta. You gotta take that stand when a nigga keep. Yeah. Keep wanting to do shit and so on. And so you blow.
[00:27:20] Speaker C: So you just got smacked and they could give you honey buns. You just got. Smack the shit out.
[00:27:24] Speaker A: I'm talking about continuously, like, praying on me.
[00:27:28] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:27:28] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying? Like, he's like, praying on.
[00:27:30] Speaker B: Because that could have led to anything. Because it could have led to one, you know, him taking honey buns that blazing your buns. It could have led to, you know. All right, look, I gave you this. Now you on the hole for me, and I need. You owe me this.
[00:27:43] Speaker A: Oh, you owe me this.
[00:27:44] Speaker B: If you don't do that for me, I'mma poke you up in here. So it could have led to all that, but.
[00:27:49] Speaker C: Double entendre.
[00:27:50] Speaker B: Yeah, right. J Prison. Double. Yeah, triple. Yeah, I was on my J. Cole right there.
But we going to take a quick break and we going to come right back.
Five. Five dollars for long. All right. All right, y'all. We back from the break. We're gonna keep it going. Keep it going live. What we got next?
[00:28:23] Speaker C: All right, so Lil Wayne was looking funky fresh to death on that. Okay, Lil Wayne, what y'all think about that?
[00:28:30] Speaker A: That was fly.
[00:28:31] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:28:31] Speaker C: Did y'all think it was super bowl halftime? So worthy.
[00:28:34] Speaker A: No, no, not at all.
[00:28:35] Speaker C: That was the comparison.
[00:28:37] Speaker A: No, I don't. I don't really want to go back to the super bowl, but we could touch it just a little bit. Like, just. Just a little bit like. No, you know what? Never mind that. No, no, I don't think that he should have did the. The halftime. He got slaps, but I don't think he should. Yeah, I think.
[00:28:54] Speaker B: I think people are conflicting the intimate setting with a setting. That's. How many people was at the Super Bowl? Like, I don't even know.
[00:29:03] Speaker C: Well, first of all, let's not on it. He had excellent breath control. I mean, he had control of the stage rapper. Well, but not all rappers have good breath control.
[00:29:12] Speaker A: You said Wayne.
[00:29:13] Speaker C: Yes.
[00:29:13] Speaker A: I mean, he bet he'd be doing it for 100 years.
[00:29:15] Speaker C: Acapello on beat knew all the lyrics.
[00:29:18] Speaker B: As he should.
[00:29:19] Speaker C: As he should.
[00:29:19] Speaker A: They're his songs.
[00:29:20] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I mean, listen.
[00:29:22] Speaker A: I mean, rappers have forgotten their songs.
I mean, I'm not disrespecting yet, but it's like that's.
[00:29:28] Speaker B: That's what come with the game type shit. Like you should. You should know what come with the game type shit. I mean, but to have. All right, so we comparing again, an intimate setting where you are performing maybe in front of what, 500 people versus a whole, what, 13 minute halftime show where you perform in front of thousands of people.
[00:29:49] Speaker A: I'm not saying that he couldn't have did it.
[00:29:51] Speaker B: Hey, I'm not saying that either. But I'm just saying, like, the comparison is not really the same.
[00:29:57] Speaker A: I mean, respectfully, I wouldn't have mind seeing Wayne at the halftime.
[00:30:03] Speaker B: I'm not saying that either. I'm just saying you just can't compare the two.
That's what I'm saying. Okay. See, it's a difference from comparing it, like from the shits and giggles. If Wayne had did the super bowl and then Kendrick super bowl, yes, you can compare that. But to compare.
[00:30:19] Speaker C: Yeah, let's completely take the comparison out of it. Could Lil Wayne have done the Super Bowl?
[00:30:23] Speaker B: Absolutely. Yeah, I think he can do it.
[00:30:27] Speaker A: And more people. More people would have known. Lil Wayne songs versus Kendrick songs. That's just. That's just like kind of like an unspoken.
[00:30:34] Speaker B: I don't. I don't know.
[00:30:35] Speaker A: Come on.
[00:30:36] Speaker B: Nah.
[00:30:40] Speaker C: Three months ago, y'all said he couldn't do it.
[00:30:42] Speaker A: I'm saying, like, catalog. It was not super bowl appropriate.
[00:30:51] Speaker B: Exactly. That's what we were saying.
[00:30:52] Speaker C: That wasn't the only take we was making. Y'all was saying that he didn't have all these attributes. I just listed like he couldn't have. He didn't have stage presence. He didn't have the breath control.
[00:31:02] Speaker B: I don't think we said that.
[00:31:03] Speaker A: I don't. I know. I ain't saying.
[00:31:04] Speaker C: I know. I know for a fact.
[00:31:06] Speaker A: I know for A fact that my ignorant ass ain't saying shit about no breath control.
[00:31:09] Speaker B: Yeah, I was like, I don't think you said that.
[00:31:11] Speaker A: I think nothing about me saying I said that.
[00:31:14] Speaker B: Layman said, no.
[00:31:16] Speaker A: Y'all said the big brother. Show up, my nigga. No, I ain't say shit about no breath control.
[00:31:22] Speaker B: We said that. What songs can you do? We was like lollipop.
[00:31:26] Speaker A: We were saying super bowl appropriate.
[00:31:28] Speaker B: Yeah, what songs would he really have?
[00:31:30] Speaker A: I ain't say shit about his breath.
[00:31:33] Speaker C: I just said, okay. He got more songs than people would have known that Kendrick performed. Yeah, he does.
[00:31:37] Speaker B: I mean, again, I don't know about that.
[00:31:40] Speaker A: Come on, nigga. Like, look, so you mean you gonna sit here and tell me that Wayne is not more iconic than Kendrick?
[00:31:51] Speaker B: Being iconic has nothing to do with.
[00:31:52] Speaker A: Who being iconic and people knowing his music.
[00:31:55] Speaker B: I don't know. Cause I've met people. Hold on, hold on. I've met people who literally don't know Wayne's music.
[00:32:00] Speaker A: What the fuck? They live underneath a rock.
[00:32:02] Speaker B: Who are these people?
[00:32:03] Speaker C: What was they born in?
[00:32:04] Speaker B: Older white people.
[00:32:05] Speaker A: But older white people, okay, fame.
[00:32:07] Speaker B: But that's what was at the Super Bowl.
[00:32:08] Speaker A: Older white people probably still call us colored, but they don't count.
[00:32:12] Speaker B: When I say older, I don't mean older in the sense of like that old. But I mean, like you're 50, 60 year old white people. Some of them didn't. Don't know who, like, who do you.
[00:32:21] Speaker C: Know that's an old white. What Old white people, you know, I.
[00:32:24] Speaker B: Mean, I work with some, so I know.
[00:32:25] Speaker A: Yeah, but I know some people who.
[00:32:27] Speaker B: Just listen to like fucking country and.
[00:32:31] Speaker A: Yeah, I get that. But okay, so let me say this. Let me lower the age demographic. I ain't talking about the people that's in their 50s and 60s. I'm talking about, okay, then now I'm talking about 40 and down.
[00:32:42] Speaker B: Yeah, okay, now we have a different argument. Yes.
[00:32:43] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying?
[00:32:44] Speaker B: Like, yes.
[00:32:44] Speaker A: I don't expect no 50 year old to know 50 year old white to know Fireman.
[00:32:49] Speaker B: But people know Kendrick's music. It's just people may not know who he is.
Like, I had a conversation with somebody at work, they was like, oh, I don't know who Kendrick Lamar is. So I'm like, you don't know the song? Oh, I love that song. That's Kendrick Lamar.
[00:33:03] Speaker A: Okay. Yeah, they like that. Like, there's a lot of artists that I like and I don't know who the hell they are. I like this song was this. I Don't know.
[00:33:10] Speaker B: Like, I might be jumping ahead, but did you see the video of the guy who listened to Good Caveman City for the first time?
[00:33:17] Speaker A: Yeah. And he was like that. It was like he was so elated. Like, that shit brought him so much joy and so on and so forth. Yeah, I watched it. And that shit is.
I mean, I don't know. People need to kind of broaden their ear.
[00:33:32] Speaker B: A lot of people don't, though.
[00:33:34] Speaker A: Yeah, they stick to their genre. What they. And what the.
[00:33:36] Speaker B: They know, I'm pretty sure. Like, me. Like, when I was on my way here. Brie, you probably never heard the I was listening to on my way here.
[00:33:42] Speaker C: I didn't, but it was groovy.
[00:33:44] Speaker A: I kind of liked it.
[00:33:45] Speaker B: Right. So it's Paris, Texas. They're the duo rap group.
[00:33:49] Speaker C: It's given, like, cocaine music, but it's.
[00:33:52] Speaker A: It's.
[00:33:53] Speaker B: To me, they remind me of an early 2000s nerd.
[00:33:58] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:33:59] Speaker B: Type of.
[00:33:59] Speaker A: Okay. Yeah.
[00:34:00] Speaker B: Like, meaning Pharrell. Right, right.
[00:34:01] Speaker A: I know what you mean.
[00:34:02] Speaker C: Eclectic or rockish or what?
[00:34:04] Speaker B: It's like a rat. Rockish. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:34:06] Speaker A: Like, I don't.
[00:34:07] Speaker B: I don't.
[00:34:07] Speaker A: Like. I don't know who they are. Like, no, they.
[00:34:10] Speaker B: They still pretty much underground for the most.
[00:34:12] Speaker A: I stumbled upon somebody today. Tell me you heard of this person. I was on Apple Music. Get out of here. Back. My phone. The group is called Veg.
[00:34:23] Speaker B: I know them.
[00:34:24] Speaker A: You know them? Okay. I. I stumbled across it today.
[00:34:27] Speaker C: I saw this joint group.
[00:34:28] Speaker B: I posted one of their. So Joe Biden be talking about that.
[00:34:32] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:34:33] Speaker A: I ain't know nothing about. I see this joint kind of groovy.
[00:34:37] Speaker C: Past that blocker post about the blogger that listened to the Kendrick Lamar song for the first time.
[00:34:43] Speaker B: Yes. I think a lot of.
[00:34:44] Speaker C: What song was that? That he listened to?
[00:34:46] Speaker B: It was the one that got him. Was.
Was it Sing about me? I think it was singing about.
[00:34:52] Speaker C: Oh, my gosh. I love that song. That song will make you cry.
[00:34:56] Speaker B: Yes. And he started crying.
[00:34:57] Speaker C: Yes.
It tells us that. The tale of, like, you know, homeboy getting shot. Yeah.
[00:35:05] Speaker B: Yeah. So singing about me, I could see. To me, that wasn't the one that got me. For me, it was peer pressure. Peer pressure got me a good, good kid.
[00:35:15] Speaker A: Yeah, that. That was such a solid body.
[00:35:17] Speaker B: Yeah. That shit was in my rotation for, like, five years, bro.
[00:35:19] Speaker C: I was thinking something made me cry. The only song I ever cried off was Mother. Man. I. I cried off that.
[00:35:24] Speaker B: Nah. For me, it was the art of peer pressure, because I felt like that was like. I literally felt like he was talking about me as far as like the shit I experienced growing up not being able to kind of just be yourself and being in an environment where you had to kind of adapt and be who you had to be.
[00:35:42] Speaker C: But that's the most. That's the most beautiful thing about Kendrick. Like he really has some thought evoking.
[00:35:46] Speaker B: I'm pretty sure people cry to the other guy's music. I'm pretty sure you don't think nobody cries at the other guy's music.
[00:35:55] Speaker C: Crying over some bitches and crying over some shit that's really internal emotional.
[00:36:03] Speaker B: I can tell you one that probably all right. So for me Marvin's room.
[00:36:07] Speaker A: Yo.
[00:36:08] Speaker B: I was just about to say that Not Marvin's room. It was.
[00:36:11] Speaker C: I had a call me and say what you done?
Look what you done.
[00:36:15] Speaker B: Look what you done. That was around the time my great grandmother died.
[00:36:19] Speaker A: Yeah, look what you done was the one. Was a solid song.
[00:36:22] Speaker C: Like yo, that's song.
[00:36:23] Speaker A: That's probably one of my. That I'm gonna say that's my favorite song from off that album. I don't know why. Like he. That was.
[00:36:29] Speaker B: I would agree with you.
[00:36:30] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:36:32] Speaker C: Was a fire album.
[00:36:33] Speaker A: Huh.
[00:36:33] Speaker C: Take care.
[00:36:34] Speaker B: That's the one.
[00:36:35] Speaker A: Yeah.
It was a solid project. But as far as my favorite song off that album, that was probably the one. Look what you've done.
[00:36:42] Speaker B: Yeah, look what you've done.
[00:36:43] Speaker A: That knows one of the most profound.
[00:36:45] Speaker C: Songs that he be that he got introspective on. He don't really get introspective on a lot of his songs. And I feel like that's once he.
[00:36:51] Speaker B: Got hooked up with. You know what's crazy?
I don't know if you know Leo. He used to come to. He. He not. He don't live in Baltimore.
[00:36:59] Speaker A: Yeah, of course I remember. I know all your friends.
[00:37:02] Speaker B: That's crazy. That's. That's weird.
[00:37:04] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:37:04] Speaker B: But anyway.
But he had a point.
[00:37:10] Speaker A: Is his real name. I'm sorry. That was a random ass thought. I know it. But I know it is. I ain't gonna say it. I know I remembered it now.
[00:37:16] Speaker B: Go ahead.
[00:37:17] Speaker A: My fault.
[00:37:17] Speaker C: But name is not Leo. He goes by Leo.
[00:37:20] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:37:20] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:37:24] Speaker A: It's for very good reason.
[00:37:26] Speaker C: No, it's like the man that goes by his middle name because they don't like this.
[00:37:28] Speaker B: But if the letters are within his real name. I guess. Yeah.
[00:37:31] Speaker A: Like off camera. I tell you his real name. And I would never tell nobody that was my name either.
[00:37:36] Speaker B: But I remember.
I remember when.
What's the one with the. Are you reading this. If you're reading this, it's too late. I remember. You know, I literally remember this day. We was. We was driving somewhere and we was bumping to that and he was like, yo, somebody writing for this nigga?
[00:37:57] Speaker C: Why do you say that? I.
[00:37:59] Speaker B: For the life of me, I don't know. But he was a hundred and twenty percent right. Because literally like maybe like what, a year later, that's when the queen.
[00:38:10] Speaker C: That's not like. All right, first of all, that was blown completely out of proportion. Like if. If I write a song and you write me the hook, that's not writing for me.
It's not writing for me.
[00:38:21] Speaker B: Why ain't it?
[00:38:21] Speaker C: Come on.
[00:38:22] Speaker A: It's the hook. My.
[00:38:23] Speaker C: Come on.
[00:38:24] Speaker B: But he didn't write the. It wasn't just the.
[00:38:25] Speaker C: I'm just doing it. It was the hook percentage of the song and how. And maybe. Okay, so he told one song.
[00:38:32] Speaker A: So he told him how.
[00:38:35] Speaker B: Remember Meek leaked the reference tracks? Yeah, Reference tracks was the whole flow and everything. But my point being is when Leo said that shit, I'm like, I ain't nobody right for this. But then when it came out that he was writing, I'm like, damn, that made so much sense. Because when you listen to. You said it earlier, when it comes to his earlier music, that shit resonates different. Everything after. If you read this in Too Late kind of falls off. Yeah. Because now I wouldn't say completely falls off because I didn't say completely neither.
[00:39:05] Speaker C: I just say if you Reading it.
[00:39:06] Speaker B: Too Late was a good album.
[00:39:07] Speaker A: Let me, let me, let me, let me, let me.
[00:39:09] Speaker B: I think Slept on albums.
[00:39:11] Speaker A: What?
[00:39:12] Speaker C: Yeah.
[00:39:12] Speaker B: Views is one of his most.
I think.
I think that's the Slept on album.
[00:39:18] Speaker C: That's when he explored all his var.
[00:39:19] Speaker B: Yeah. And then what do you have after Views? Is that Scorpion?
[00:39:23] Speaker A: Yes. Yeah. Scorpion is after that.
[00:39:25] Speaker B: And sc. That's when it starts kind of drifting. Yeah. It's just like, ah, this sounds. I'm not feeling like the party lane. Yeah. Like. But everything prior to that.
I mean, like I said earlier, I think he has songs people has probably potentially cried to. But to go back to the blogger who was speaking on to that. That particular song, I'm finding that because it let me down because I actually wanted to watch the whole video and it led me down a rabbit hole of people who actually has never heard of Kendrick music. And I kind of appreciate how the generation is kind of going back because I even seen one earlier today where somebody was listening to Big L.
Like. Like that.
[00:40:04] Speaker A: That is really really odd, right?
[00:40:06] Speaker B: But Dave was fucking with it.
[00:40:08] Speaker A: I'm not saying that. Like, for me, I. Of course I know who Big L is, because that's. That's my era and so on and so forth. But, yo, but that shit, yo music is, like, fucking fashion. All that shit come full circle.
[00:40:20] Speaker B: And I think. I think to be 100 with you, the bag that conductor and alchemist are in, I think they're about to lead a new wave of music. How people are rapping. Yeah.
[00:40:34] Speaker A: And I hope. And I hope it sell like. Like, I think that, like, the Dave east, he's in that pocket.
You know what I'm saying? Like, he's one of my. One of my favorite rappers. Like, but a lot of, like. Yeah, I don't really listen to East. He got that one song that I like. I'm like, Broken Rap. It's the beats that y'all can't get past because y'all. I ain't gonna call them Not Hip Hop head that. Yes, I am. Like, y'all don't even.
Yeah, yeah.
[00:41:04] Speaker B: For me, I. I never really. I mean, he's cool.
I've listened to some of his music.
I've never really. It just didn't catch with me. I don't know. I'm not saying you're wrong for your opinion, because you actually. He couldn't spit. It's just something about it just never really caught on with me.
[00:41:21] Speaker A: Yeah. So why. And this is just. This is me asking why? Like, like, you know, I guess for.
[00:41:27] Speaker B: Me, when it comes to my ear, what sound good to me just sound good to me. Well, don't, don't. And it could be because I can send you some shit that you completely not fuck with.
[00:41:39] Speaker A: Do me a solid, right?
[00:41:40] Speaker B: I've listened to Issa's albums.
[00:41:42] Speaker A: Paranoid, the most recent one. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. This ain't the most recent one.
[00:41:48] Speaker C: Why don't y'all both drop playlists on the POD page?
[00:41:51] Speaker B: That's actually a smart idea because I definitely have people who ask me about my drop playlist.
[00:41:56] Speaker C: Actually, people comment and go from there.
[00:41:58] Speaker B: I. With that.
[00:41:59] Speaker A: Yeah, that's cool.
[00:42:00] Speaker B: Yeah, do that.
[00:42:03] Speaker A: Go listen to that album.
[00:42:05] Speaker B: All right, I'll try it out.
[00:42:06] Speaker A: Listen to that album and.
And then tell me what you.
[00:42:11] Speaker B: I mean, I love a good 13, 12, 13. I'm. Listen, I'm tired of you putting out albums that be 25.
[00:42:18] Speaker C: Ridiculous. Like, it's overwhelming. Just opening and saying that means this.
[00:42:22] Speaker B: Is my personal belief. Real. Anybody that put out an album past 12 songs you not confident about your album.
[00:42:29] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah.
[00:42:30] Speaker B: You do feel like you're not confident about it.
[00:42:32] Speaker A: You give it. You putting in fillers. It's like just in case this don't.
[00:42:36] Speaker C: Hit everybody except Chris Brown. Okay, I was waiting for you to comment on that.
Okay. 30 is pushing it. 22, 23 is my.
[00:42:48] Speaker B: But hold on, let me reiterate that because that's a different lane. He's an R B artist.
[00:42:52] Speaker A: We talking about rappers.
[00:42:52] Speaker B: Rappers, Anything.
Anything.
Anything past 12, bro. I feel like you just not come. Like I can understand if you put out a 12 track album and then re release it and have extra songs, bonus joints.
[00:43:07] Speaker A: Yeah, cool. Or the deluxe package.
[00:43:10] Speaker C: I mean, 2009.
[00:43:13] Speaker B: No, anything past anything past 12 new.
[00:43:16] Speaker A: Albums now be having.
[00:43:17] Speaker B: I should not. I should not have the. I should not have to break your album down into two listens. I want to be able to listen to your album in my space and decide right then and there if this about to be in my rotation. Other than that, if I gotta break that down, I'm probably not. I'm probably gonna like a few songs off the shit, but I'm not gonna. Bro, I'm not bumping the entire album.
[00:43:39] Speaker A: Some shit I won't even listen to. I'll go to the new album. That should say 22. I'd be like, yeah, I'm good.
[00:43:44] Speaker B: Yeah, I'm not.
[00:43:44] Speaker A: Yeah, I'm gonna listen to the song that I know off this album.
[00:43:47] Speaker B: I'm gonna just wait to see what's popping online, maybe go somebody else, you.
[00:43:53] Speaker A: Know, I mean, like, we are definitely a part of that.
[00:43:56] Speaker B: You might not call me a true listener of music, but I'm not. I just feel like if this past 12, 15 is pushing it, I. I listen if it's 15, but anything past that, I'm not with that.
[00:44:07] Speaker A: Yeah, what you doing?
[00:44:08] Speaker C: Let me bring us back to the topic because we didn't fully answer this one question.
So some fans believe that Lil Wayne SNL performance was actually better than the super bowl halftime show.
[00:44:19] Speaker B: I don't understand why.
[00:44:20] Speaker A: Because on that keyword, Little Wayne fans. Okay, yeah, that sums that up. You're a Little Wayne.
[00:44:27] Speaker B: But again, of course you're gonna say that again. To go back to that point, you're comparing two different. Like, yo, no, I got into Shout out to my man Sean. I got into it about him about Kendrick and Drake at work, right? And he was like, yo, I seen you when somebody comments, talking about how.
[00:44:46] Speaker C: I see you with somebody comments.
[00:44:48] Speaker B: You know, like, look at that.
[00:44:52] Speaker C: Right?
[00:44:53] Speaker B: You can't compare. Imagine he a New York too. So it's like he be talking this. He was like, I see you see you in the comments saying this and that about, you know, Drake and Kendrick. He was like, you know, he showed Kendrick and he showed Drake. Shit. I'm like, yo, you can't compare this to. I'm like you comparing a halftime show where someone is limited in how they really perform versus a concert.
[00:45:13] Speaker C: Right. When you have full freedom, full liberties.
[00:45:16] Speaker B: So, yeah, full freedom, I said. Then you talking about a Super bowl that has a demographic from what, the ages of six, maybe up to 70.
[00:45:23] Speaker C: Right.
[00:45:24] Speaker B: Versus a concert where you probably the demographic probably from 18 to 30, like.
[00:45:30] Speaker A: Maybe a little bit higher.
[00:45:31] Speaker B: Yeah, maybe, maybe.
I mean, just in hindsight, if you was to break down the percentages, that's probably your biggest demographic. Then you got snow bunnies. There's nothing but snow bunnies at that moment. At the other one, you got, you got two, you know, so many different people. And I'm like, yo, you, you can't compare. Nah, yo, nah, nah. Drake, music is better than Kendrick. I'm like, I do feel like that, bro. You know? You feel like that. I mean, personally, to me, when it comes to the artistry of music. And we could go down that lane real quick.
You know, Kendrick is outdoor Drake. Yeah. I mean, Drake may have quote, unquote, more hits, but when we talking about the artistry of music, he's not better. Yeah, he's not better than Kendrick because he.
[00:46:13] Speaker A: Because he comes from that. Like, he's a. He's a poet first, he's a writer. He's a lot of different things. Not saying that Drake is not. But. Well, yeah, actually I'm kind of Nobel Peace Prize.
[00:46:25] Speaker B: Hold on, hold on. Let me ask you this, Let me ask you this. Since we. On the topic of music, right, with that, let me ask you this. Do you think as time has gone on, right, because you are a little older than me, so you kind of saw the tail. And I'm saying you older than me.
You saw the tail end of the 90s differently than what I saw. You know, I didn't start really comprehending music until probably around like, get Richard die trying. Okay, right. By that time, you what, in high school?
[00:46:53] Speaker A: Yeah, I was in high school.
[00:46:54] Speaker B: Yeah. So you see 10th grade, right? So you see music completely different. You saw things differently than how I saw, right.
Do you think that we as a people. Because I made this statement on a post I made about when people was going back and forth, I said, music Is still an art.
And at the end of the day, art is subjective. I said somebody may see the perfection in graffiti, but don't see no. No value in the Mona Lisa. Like, me personally, I know the Mona Lisa is art. I know. Not even just that this is like, that's art. That was still done. Somebody put the time in, ugly as it is, but again, it's still art. Somebody put it.
[00:47:45] Speaker C: Somebody told you it was.
[00:47:47] Speaker A: Hold on, let me finish my part.
[00:47:49] Speaker B: It's still art. I can't do the Mona Lisa. I can't paint the Mona Lisa. Right. I. I can't do that.
[00:47:55] Speaker A: Right.
[00:47:55] Speaker B: But I see no real value in it versus somebody who climbs dollar amount value. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I'm just saying. Yeah. There's no appreciation to where, though. If I was on a train, I'm passing over like some bridges and shit, and I see somebody tag a wall like that kind of fire.
[00:48:15] Speaker A: Yeah. I think, like, if we compare it like that. Like, I think Graffiti Alley, that's here.
[00:48:21] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah.
[00:48:22] Speaker A: It's fire.
[00:48:23] Speaker B: Shout out to Graffiti. Yeah.
[00:48:24] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying? Versus you taking me to the museum and showing me.
[00:48:28] Speaker C: No, the Walters Art Gallery. Shout out to y'all has some magnificent pieces.
[00:48:33] Speaker A: I'm talking about. We. But we talking about the Mona Lisa.
[00:48:35] Speaker B: Yes. I'm just saying, the comparison.
[00:48:37] Speaker A: I like. I like Graffiti Alley more than I like Mona Lisa.
[00:48:41] Speaker B: And that's just how music is, in a sense. But I do think that music has lost the appeal of the artistic value. So.
[00:48:50] Speaker A: Was that a question to me?
[00:48:52] Speaker B: No, no, that's it. That's it. I'm saying, do you think music or do you think the. The public doesn't really care anymore for the artistic value of music?
[00:49:01] Speaker A: Of course they don't, bro. Like, you know, they like. I feel as though that they like that. That. That microwave music. You know what I'm saying? Like, anything past two minutes, they don't want to hear it.
[00:49:10] Speaker C: Like, that's the TikTok generation.
[00:49:12] Speaker A: I mean, yeah, yeah. But. But he asked me. I'm just.
[00:49:15] Speaker B: But I'm saying as far as the artistic.
[00:49:17] Speaker A: Yeah. I. I appreciate a lot more things that other people like. And they. They always say, that's cause you old. I be like, no, like, did you, like, really? Do you listen to music or do you just skim through it?
[00:49:30] Speaker C: That's why I just said, that's the Tik Tok generation. That's not our generation. I still feel appreciates the artistic value.
[00:49:36] Speaker B: I wonder how many people like, well.
[00:49:38] Speaker C: Me and you are in the same.
[00:49:40] Speaker A: Same age group.
[00:49:41] Speaker B: I wonder how many people like. All right, listen kids, it's. We used to do this, right? We used to wait till. When did music drop? Tuesdays and Friday, I think it was Tuesdays music used to drop.
[00:49:51] Speaker C: Yeah, it did.
[00:49:52] Speaker B: Music dropped on Tuesdays and movies dropped.
[00:49:55] Speaker C: On Thursdays, I believe.
[00:49:56] Speaker B: And we had to go to a place called Sam Goody.
[00:49:59] Speaker C: Best Buy.
[00:50:00] Speaker B: Best Buy.
[00:50:01] Speaker C: Circus City.
[00:50:02] Speaker B: Circus City. Damn, that's gone.
[00:50:04] Speaker A: I mean, fye, fye. For me it was.
[00:50:07] Speaker C: And hope they ain't ban you coconut CDs from Walmart.
[00:50:13] Speaker A: That was the up top. That was the up top thing.
[00:50:15] Speaker B: But that was before even that. Or your local Tower Records. Yeah. Your local music shop. Right. We physically had to get up, go there. And depending on what artist it was, you either had to wait in line or you didn't depend it because it depended on your taste. You get what I'm saying? Everybody not into what you went to, but if it was like a J. A dmx, you was in line. You had to wait in line. You had to give him money, right? Cash money.
[00:50:44] Speaker A: Physical cash.
[00:50:45] Speaker B: Physical cash. Give them money.
[00:50:47] Speaker A: Like 13.99, 15 max. If it was like a double destination.
[00:50:51] Speaker B: Right, like that, then you got a physical cd. You couldn't listen to it right now unless you had a CD player. And by the way, that non skip shit never worked. Yeah, that shit was definitely skippy when you walked.
[00:51:03] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:51:05] Speaker B: And you got. What was it called? The.
The. The cd. When you did the. The.
[00:51:10] Speaker A: The. The. The sleeve. The. The booklet.
[00:51:13] Speaker B: The booklet. And you had to pull the booklet out and literally go through the booklet to see who.
[00:51:18] Speaker A: The producer who wrote this song who was on.
[00:51:23] Speaker B: Was a whole experience.
[00:51:25] Speaker C: It was definitely an experience. Features.
[00:51:26] Speaker A: Yeah, features.
[00:51:28] Speaker B: Like it was a.
[00:51:28] Speaker A: It was a. It was a whole thing. Like yo, my. My earliest memory of going to buy an album on my own. My pops gave me the bread to go get that. I told him I was.
[00:51:38] Speaker B: My first one was a bootleg, by the way.
[00:51:42] Speaker A: And then we shout out to the bootleg. We used to bootleg like Clue, Clue, Mixtapes and DJ sns like you from Patterson. You know what I'm talking about? But I think one of my first albums that I went and bought on my own was It's Dark and Hell is Hot.
[00:51:58] Speaker C: Dmx. That's one of my first albums.
[00:52:00] Speaker B: Mine was the original Die.
[00:52:03] Speaker A: That was one of my.
That was one of my first. That I can vividly remember getting it. I bought the. My dad gave me enough money to buy the CD and the Tape, you know what I'm saying? Cause kids.
[00:52:16] Speaker B: So you had CDs and you had cassette tapes.
[00:52:19] Speaker A: Like in my hood. In my hood, like n used to be on they bike and have a radio with them playing music. Like either a Panasonic radio or a Sony. Not no big dumb shit like this, but, you know, little whatever size joint. And I went and bought It's Dark and Hell Is Hot, the CD and the tape. And I was the. You couldn't tell me shit when I went and did that.
[00:52:42] Speaker B: And if you wasn't fortunate to have a CD player, you had to wait till you got home and listen to that bad boy.
[00:52:47] Speaker A: I popped that tape in, got on my bike, me and my cousin rode back to my neighborhood. Cause we had to go downtown to go get it rolled back to my hood. Listen to that shit. He riding side by side to me like that.
[00:52:57] Speaker C: What age was you? Do you remember what age you at?
[00:52:59] Speaker B: That was what, 98.
[00:53:00] Speaker A: It's dark and hella hot.
[00:53:02] Speaker B: Came out and went 98.
[00:53:03] Speaker C: I would say it was like 98, 98, 10, 11. So that's what I'm talking about with like this tick tock.
[00:53:10] Speaker A: Yeah, I was like, 10, 11, right?
[00:53:11] Speaker C: Somewhere in that your kids now, if they're 10 and 11, do you feel comfortable with them listening to that type of music?
[00:53:18] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:53:19] Speaker B: Yeah. Because the album I played earlier, I played with Adrian, and he loved it too.
[00:53:23] Speaker A: Yo, and it's like. It's like one of those things, like, where I feel as though like I.
[00:53:28] Speaker C: Fought myself on that. Because When I was 10 or not, I was. I was listening to DMX. My first, very first CD was Capone Noriega, the reunion CD. That was my very first CD.
[00:53:38] Speaker B: Mine was what was Jay.
[00:53:40] Speaker C: But it's like, I don't want my son listening to that.
[00:53:42] Speaker A: So my mother married.
[00:53:45] Speaker C: Her husband was listening to Jay Z. The Blueprint.
[00:53:48] Speaker B: No, mine was the Hard Not Life, Volume 2. Because that's the one where he in the. He got the jean jacket on and.
[00:53:57] Speaker A: He'S standing in the.
[00:53:58] Speaker B: Yeah, that was. That was the first. That was like the first real. Real.
Listen.
[00:54:04] Speaker A: That's volume three, though.
[00:54:06] Speaker B: Is it three? So it's three.
[00:54:07] Speaker A: Yeah, that's three. And that came out at 92 is.
[00:54:09] Speaker B: When he owned a car.
[00:54:10] Speaker A: Yeah, that.
[00:54:10] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, it was.
[00:54:13] Speaker A: It was, bro. Like. But I remember in 96 listening to reasonable Doubt. Now, did I know what the. They was talking about? What? I was 11. Was that 11? Yeah, yeah. I was 11 when reasonable doubt came out. But I was rapping that shit word for word. Like, yeah, I knew that. I knew that. I knew that shit word for word, bro, like, because my parents played it so much. And my. My. My grandfather's girlfriend's son, Jakir, is the one that put me on the Jay Z. Like, yeah, he was a lot older than me, so I was impression when he, like, like this, who you should be listening to. And ever since then, Jay was my favorite rapper, played that Reasonable Doubt.
[00:55:00] Speaker C: So that's my question opposing that. If should your kids listen to that is like, how do you extend our artistic appreciation from our generation onto this younger generation who had that TikTok mindset?
[00:55:12] Speaker A: But kids kind of mimic what they parents like, I think, in a sense. In a sense, like. Like, okay, my dad Dr. Dresses like this, or my mom dresses like this. For a little girl, My mom dressed like this. This is acceptable. My mom listens to this. This is acceptable. Vice versa. For. For. For a boy. Okay, my dad dresses like this. This is cool. My dad likes this. So this might be kind of cool or some. They just gonna be like, yeah, I don't like it, but I'm not gonna not let you hear it, because you're gonna hear it eventually.
[00:55:42] Speaker B: So for, like, for me, I'd rather.
[00:55:44] Speaker A: You do it with me than with somebody else.
[00:55:45] Speaker B: Like, Adrian has no problem telling me if he on, like, something because there's been plenty of things I try to put him on to, like, as far as cartoons, movies, and he'll tell me, like, that I'm not this.
But there are also a lot of things that he do, like. Like, again, like the album I listened to earlier, the album, to me, reminded me of a earlier NRD album.
Very hip hop, rockish. He was into it. He was like. He kept asking me to play certain songs, so I'm like, it just. It just depends on your kid. Yeah, it just really depends on your kid. Like, the thing about art is it's either gonna catch you or it's not.
[00:56:19] Speaker A: Yeah, nigga. I got home today for work. I asked my daughter. I'm like, what you doing watching the Simpsons?
[00:56:23] Speaker C: I was like, what?
[00:56:24] Speaker B: Right?
[00:56:25] Speaker A: You're nine. But all right.
[00:56:26] Speaker B: I like that.
[00:56:27] Speaker A: I love that, though. Yeah, I like that for you.
[00:56:30] Speaker B: We gonna take a quick break, and we gonna.
All right, y'all. We back for our last and final segment here. We really got deep on the music segment, which I enjoyed. I enjoyed it. Yeah.
[00:56:52] Speaker A: You know, music. Music conversations is always my.
[00:56:55] Speaker B: We actually gotta give the people a whole music part eventually.
[00:56:59] Speaker C: I think we need to do a deeper Dive into that topic.
[00:57:01] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[00:57:02] Speaker A: Especially. Especially when they get into that R B bag. That's my. That's, that's, that's. That's my bag, right? Same here.
[00:57:08] Speaker B: What I'm telling you.
[00:57:09] Speaker A: Yo, R and B wise, bro.
[00:57:11] Speaker B: All right, all right. I know I didn't play this game before.
[00:57:14] Speaker A: I'm. I'm a bird. When it come down to R and.
[00:57:16] Speaker B: B music, I. I played this game.
[00:57:18] Speaker A: I'm a bird.
[00:57:19] Speaker B: Yo, I used to love that Joe Button drop. Remember that? What, the bird drop.
[00:57:23] Speaker A: Yeah, that's why I got that word. I'm a bird.
I was like, me too.
I'm a good R and B song.
[00:57:30] Speaker B: But what we got next? What we got next? Next? And plus, I got my leather pants on.
[00:57:35] Speaker C: Oh, okay.
[00:57:36] Speaker A: Going. Love it today for y'all. Smell good. Got the leather on.
[00:57:41] Speaker B: Let's go.
[00:57:42] Speaker C: We was talking off camera about the, the plane crashes. Like, do you guys think that it's actually more plane crashes or it's just.
[00:57:49] Speaker B: I said a matter of fact. I'm a double check. I'm a double check.
Statistics, bro.
[00:57:55] Speaker C: Let's lie a little bit.
[00:57:57] Speaker A: You hear me?
[00:57:57] Speaker B: Hold on, hold on.
[00:57:58] Speaker A: It's a podcast. We can lie a bit.
[00:58:00] Speaker B: Playing plane and crashes. Gave me the lie from 2020.
[00:58:04] Speaker A: You know, I used to be a pilot.
[00:58:06] Speaker B: No, you didn't.
[00:58:07] Speaker A: Yes, I did.
[00:58:08] Speaker B: No, they didn't. You can't even look over the steering wheel.
[00:58:11] Speaker A: Yeah, I don't gotta look over.
They sit in my chair, a little booster joint, shit flying.
[00:58:17] Speaker B: They was like, nah, you can't look over. So it was my fault. I think I quoted 144. It was 123 last year. Oh, nah. And between January 1st to February, February 19th, there were 123 aviation accidents of various severity. According to data from the NTSB, there were 18 fatal incidents, but the number of fatalities were. Was fewer than in 2025, with 42 reported. So there were 18 fatalities versus.
[00:58:46] Speaker C: Did you get out of the chat GPT?
[00:58:48] Speaker B: No, I'm looking on Google.
[00:58:50] Speaker A: All right, and then on top of that, like the one that, that, that crash.
[00:58:55] Speaker B: And right now we have 94. You said earlier it was what I said 87. So.
[00:59:00] Speaker A: And that report was like last week.
[00:59:01] Speaker B: Yeah. So as of now, it's 94.
[00:59:03] Speaker A: Okay, well, it keeps coming. Look at that.
[00:59:05] Speaker B: It was 54 in 2024.
[00:59:09] Speaker A: Yeah, the one in Toronto, like the one that crashed in Toronto. They offered. They're offering like Severin severance packages to the people. That's 30,000 for 30,000 a piece.
[00:59:22] Speaker B: Peace.
[00:59:23] Speaker A: If you could shell out 30,000 a piece, I know I could get more.
[00:59:26] Speaker B: Oh, I don't want the 30. Yeah, I need more than that.
[00:59:29] Speaker A: I'll wait.
[00:59:30] Speaker C: The comments said they should be giving people like 500,000 to a million.
[00:59:36] Speaker B: They ain't gonna do that.
[00:59:37] Speaker A: Yeah, but, but, but that's the biggest.
[00:59:40] Speaker C: But they take it to court.
[00:59:42] Speaker A: Yeah, but the, that play the long game.
[00:59:45] Speaker C: I don't play the long game.
[00:59:46] Speaker B: Yeah, I mean, it depends because, I mean, so the issue is with that is baby gift.
I don't know if this is necessarily true, but I've seen a civil suit play out and the jury determines on how much you get.
[01:00:02] Speaker C: I'm not doing a civil suit. I'm not compiling with 100 other.
[01:00:06] Speaker B: No, but when you sue somebody, when you sue somebody, that is a civil suit.
[01:00:09] Speaker C: I'm thinking of class action suits.
[01:00:12] Speaker B: Yeah, it's okay.
[01:00:13] Speaker C: I, I don't know. Something as, as this caught on fire and rolled over.
[01:00:18] Speaker B: I mean, you, I think they have a, A, a valid argument. But I think you also take, take the risk of potentially the jury limiting you on how, depending on the lawsuit. I don't know how that work. I'm not a lawyer. I'm not going to speak on that. I'm just saying as far as what I've personally seen is that the jury decide on how much a person should.
[01:00:37] Speaker C: I think it has to go. It still has parameters to it, like.
[01:00:40] Speaker B: Yeah, I'm pretty sure. Yeah, I'm pretty sure. I'm pretty sure. But I think it's, I think it's just being reported more. I think Trump is under a lot of. He's going to be under a microscope, especially with people who identify as liberals. He's definitely going to be under a microscope, and I think that certain media platforms are definitely going to pick through every little thing he does, essentially like how Fox did with Biden. Any other president, you know, before Trump, they just want to pick through every little thing. But it's not to say that there weren't incidents under Biden. They were definitely fewer deaths, but there were incidences under, under Biden. But again, the plane shit, that could just be me bumping planes next to somebody else. That's the, that's an incident.
[01:01:32] Speaker A: Yeah, like, I mean, it's like one of those things.
[01:01:35] Speaker B: That shit sounded crazy. Yeah.
[01:01:37] Speaker A: Either you gonna get on that plane or you're not gonna get on that plane. You know what I'm saying? Like, like, you know, thank God there weren't a lot of fatalities. With it.
[01:01:46] Speaker B: But, you know, and also, too, there might be a valid argument to how he fired all of those employees that, you know, work within that industry. So that could also potentially be playing a role in how these incidences are playing out.
[01:02:00] Speaker A: Right.
Lack of judgment on whomever's part. Air traffic control. Whatever. Whatever. You know what I'm saying? Like, I mean, you roll a dice anytime you step outside the house. In any other case, say it again. You know what I'm saying?
When you step outside, as soon as.
[01:02:16] Speaker B: You step out the bed. If you ever watch. What's that with the. I don't. I've never watched the movies. What? Final Destination.
[01:02:24] Speaker A: Oh, yeah, yeah.
[01:02:27] Speaker C: Scariest movies in the world or true. Like, that can really happen.
[01:02:31] Speaker B: Only reason I never watch that is because, like, you can't fight the shit back.
[01:02:36] Speaker A: Yeah, I know. You can't fight.
[01:02:37] Speaker B: You don't know when the shit gonna happen. Like, I think the blended is with that. And the.
The reason why I don't drive behind 18 wheelers. Yeah. Yeah.
[01:02:50] Speaker A: Trucks were like those. Those, like, barrel anything that can potentially.
[01:02:54] Speaker B: Fall, you know, the worst ones I don't like driving behind is the.
The tow trucks with the little joint on the. You know how they break with the cars, right? No, I'm saying, like, if you hit the back of that motherfucker, good, you gone. Yeah.
[01:03:08] Speaker C: I don't like driving behind the. The tractor trailer that's transporting the cars.
[01:03:13] Speaker A: That'S going to the car dealership.
[01:03:14] Speaker C: Oh, yeah, yeah.
[01:03:15] Speaker A: That just look like it can fall. Even though it's strapped down in my head, I'm like that, about to fall. You know, I'm not fly past.
[01:03:21] Speaker B: Side note, I'm not normally superstitious. No, not superstitious, but normally I don't have an issue with driving across bridges. But that bridge. I don't know what bridge that was or tunnel that was to go to Virginia Beach. That.
[01:03:37] Speaker A: That. It sways. It's a. It's a suspended bridge. So it moves. That's. I forget the name of the bridge, but yeah, but it moved.
Crazy story, right?
I don't know if y'all ever noticed.
[01:03:52] Speaker B: That when you drive over it, it kind of bumps.
[01:03:55] Speaker C: It bounces up and down. I don't know if y'all ever really noticed.
[01:03:57] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[01:03:58] Speaker C: Because it bounces up and down.
[01:03:59] Speaker A: But the. Is still scary. That's what a suspension bridge is.
[01:04:03] Speaker B: Yeah.
[01:04:03] Speaker A: It's like, essentially, like, there isn't no. Like, it's meant to have give in it. Like, I remember one time going. Going to Virginia Beach. Matter of fact, I'm lying. I was going to Cambridge this particular time, and it was raining, and. But the wind was blowing hard. I'm going across that bridge and it's not. I thought. I felt. I could feel the bitch going like this. Mind you, it's raining hard as a bitch, but the brain is doing. The bridge is literally doing this. This. I'm riding across that. But I couldn't speed up because the rain was coming down so hard that I couldn't see windshield wipers like this. But I still couldn't see because it was coming down too hard. So I had to coast across the bridge that's doing this in the rain. You talking about paranoid. Today is the day I die.
Today is gonna be the day.
[01:04:57] Speaker B: Oh. Just to let y'all know, if anything ever happened, happens to Lee and Keon, they will want us to continue and use the space that we're in.
[01:05:07] Speaker C: We're gonna put that in the will.
Please let Tony and the crew.
[01:05:13] Speaker B: So whoever moves in here afterwards.
[01:05:15] Speaker A: Hey, hey, it's up.
[01:05:17] Speaker C: We got at least been notarized. Definite.
[01:05:22] Speaker B: It's court order, right? It's court order. It's court order. This.
[01:05:27] Speaker C: What do y'all think of squatters? Yo, on some random shit, Squatters? How wild is that? That shit is crazy. It's real crazy. But it's like, at the end of.
[01:05:34] Speaker A: The day, how the fuck do y'all get in here?
[01:05:35] Speaker C: Are the windows unlocked?
[01:05:37] Speaker B: Well, I saw a case once where.
[01:05:38] Speaker C: Why can't I just punch you until you get the fuck out my house?
[01:05:41] Speaker B: I saw a case once.
[01:05:42] Speaker A: Why did you have fucking rights? It's crazy.
[01:05:44] Speaker C: Why did you have rights?
[01:05:45] Speaker B: How do you have rights in the world?
[01:05:47] Speaker A: You're homeless.
[01:05:48] Speaker B: I saw once. You ever see the shit that in New York where the woman, I think she was military, and she left for like a year and some change. When she came back, it was a squatter house and she assaulted the squatter and she got locked up.
[01:06:00] Speaker A: She got locked up?
[01:06:01] Speaker C: Yes, because they had how.
That's that America shit. Yo.
[01:06:08] Speaker A: Yo. I swear to God, I'm gonna find the nicest I can find, and I'm just gonna be in that.
[01:06:12] Speaker B: And listen.
[01:06:13] Speaker A: Hey, hey, listen.
[01:06:15] Speaker B: I don't ever completely agree with this administration, but they could. That's one thing they could. Could change.
[01:06:22] Speaker C: They plan to change the squad.
[01:06:23] Speaker B: That's right. No, I'm saying no.
[01:06:25] Speaker C: He said, that's one thing.
[01:06:27] Speaker A: I come in my house after being gone for however long out here, I'mma bust a cap in your.
[01:06:32] Speaker B: You Ever seen. I seen another one where the. The girl was doing the Airbnb and there was time for sure to leave. She like, I'm not leaving.
[01:06:40] Speaker C: I seen one in Baltimore.
[01:06:42] Speaker A: It was movers.
[01:06:44] Speaker C: They was trying to move somebody. There was squatters in the apartment. Literally, if they were sublette in the house, wasn't nobody really there, so on and so forth. The squatters was literally arguing back and forth like, well, you ain't never tell.
[01:06:56] Speaker A: Me to leave, so I ain't leave.
[01:06:58] Speaker B: Well, see, that is crazy. I've also seen.
I remember they was running a scam in Atlanta where you would reach out to something like a private landlord. So I would, like, if Leah said, hey, I'm a private landlord, I could get you. You in this spot.
And what they were doing was it was homes that were up for sale that nobody was in and they would give you. They were literally give you a real like, lease or what looked like a real lease. And they would.
[01:07:29] Speaker C: Oh, they were scammed. Yes. My grandma got scammed like that in California.
[01:07:33] Speaker B: See, that is crazy to me. Like, I mean, listen, at the end of the day, if I worked hard for something in this mind and you come in my. I. I don't know. I don't know how this. Could you imagine coming home a.
[01:07:44] Speaker A: In your room?
[01:07:47] Speaker C: Listen, it's been a vacant house in our neighborhood for like five years.
[01:07:51] Speaker A: Oh, yeah, how to squat that? The one, the one round there.
[01:07:54] Speaker C: Yeah, I remember, I remember.
[01:07:57] Speaker B: I remember a case where the dude had one house off of auction for a dollar. It was a nice house.
And the, the neighbors, you know how. What's that they be having in the neighborhood? Do y'all got that?
[01:08:15] Speaker C: It's like real low key.
[01:08:17] Speaker B: All right, so, like the day they were upset that he got the house and they were trying to get him to move out, but it's like, bro, he got. I don't know, bro.
[01:08:29] Speaker A: Yeah, that. And people are very prejudiced when they live in a neighborhood and like that. Like, it just. It is what it is like. And I find myself sometimes complaining about shit like an old ass man. I do. Like, it's. I gotta.
[01:08:43] Speaker B: I mean, if you, if you worked yourself up to live in a decent neighborhood, I mean, you will have certain.
[01:08:48] Speaker A: Like, yeah, like, it's a. It's a. It's a fucking lady that live down the block. This chick be driving through here like it's fucking nascar.
[01:08:58] Speaker B: I'm like, yeah, you can't be doing.
[01:09:00] Speaker A: Shit like shorty the speed limit, say 25. Like one day I'm backing out of the driveway. Had I not been paying attention. I'm talking about she's flying.
[01:09:08] Speaker C: I'm like, did you get a tag number?
[01:09:10] Speaker A: Babe, this ain't the autobahn. Like if you.
[01:09:14] Speaker C: Wait, that's that glowrilla in her ears.
[01:09:16] Speaker A: Speed when you get to the top of the neighborhood. You know what I'm saying? You I'm talking about. And I don't know how fast she was going. I don't have no gun to clock it, but she had to be going at least 50.
[01:09:26] Speaker B: Damn. Yeah. In a residential.
[01:09:28] Speaker C: Let's talk about inflation. Is inflation impeding on our res. Recreational life?
[01:09:33] Speaker A: Yes, exactly.
[01:09:34] Speaker C: Somebody was just talking about.
[01:09:36] Speaker A: Absolutely.
[01:09:36] Speaker C: Getting a bar tab of 73 for two drinks. What do you got to think about that?
[01:09:42] Speaker A: That's nuts.
[01:09:43] Speaker B: That is.
[01:09:44] Speaker C: It's real. It's also a location too. Because when I clicked on the link.
[01:09:47] Speaker B: No, I mean, but still, it's still. It's still.
[01:09:51] Speaker A: It's still D.C. spank you really, man.
[01:09:53] Speaker C: That's like you going to the bygone with them art, what they call artisanal drinks.
[01:09:59] Speaker B: But still, like, like.
[01:10:00] Speaker A: Oh yeah. I went there and I was confused.
[01:10:03] Speaker C: You could go to your local watering hole.
[01:10:07] Speaker B: You gotta think like the price that they paid for what they paid for. They could have bought the bottle of Don Julio and drunk, bro. But. But that's for like $30 less.
[01:10:16] Speaker A: Yo. That's the.
[01:10:17] Speaker C: That's the hell anything.
[01:10:18] Speaker A: That's the beauty in it. Like if I'm a. I'm a bar, a club owner. A bottle of Don Julio cost me this price. I'm charging said number per shot.
Quadruple whatever. The quintupled my money off of that bottle. Like it is price gouging in a sense. But also it's like you know where. You know where you're at, know where you're at.
[01:10:43] Speaker B: Number one.
[01:10:44] Speaker A: Like dc. DC or if you downtown in a harbor, like just know that it's going to be more expensive than the win.
[01:10:52] Speaker B: Let's be 100. Yeah, but it got out of anything with a dress walled and got out of control.
[01:10:58] Speaker A: Yeah, absolutely.
[01:10:59] Speaker B: I mean like, like, like real though. Real though.
[01:11:05] Speaker C: And hanging chairs.
[01:11:06] Speaker B: Real though. I just hang a chair.
Real though. Like the average date back in the day.
And when I say back in the day, I mean like around 23, 24 bucket some change. Not even that.
[01:11:24] Speaker A: Not even that.
[01:11:25] Speaker B: My average date at that time probably was like 70. Yes, like 70.
This is around the time I started stepping out of like.
[01:11:35] Speaker C: And then you also gotta realize that everything Back in the day wasn't so aesthetically pleasing.
[01:11:40] Speaker B: Right? Well, I mean that, too, but. But, like, I remember, all right. I think I told this story before going to PF Chang's, right? And I took a young lady, right? And I had a hunt. Cause I'm like, yo, PF Chang.
Shorty went and ordered, like, three glasses of wine and then, like, another drink.
And I'm still not thinking nothing of it.
I think that was the first time I ever peed over 100 for a date.
[01:12:13] Speaker A: But, but, but did you get the drawers? No, but respectfully, though, I'm sorry, but respectfully, though, you shouldn't have went outside with a hundred dollars.
[01:12:25] Speaker B: I mean, but at the time, I'm basing it off of prior.
[01:12:28] Speaker C: No, hold on, hold on.
[01:12:29] Speaker B: No, at the time, I'm basing it off of prior.
[01:12:32] Speaker C: You go on dates. Hold on, hold on. Let me get back that up.
[01:12:36] Speaker B: Hold on, hold on. Let me get my thought up. At the time, I'm basing it off of prior situations where, like, the bill is roughly between 65 to $80, right? So I'm not thinking.
But plus, I didn't. At that time, I didn't know anybody who had that much to drink at the time. Like, at most somebody might get one drink. But I've never had anybody get three drinks, especially wine on top of a martini.
[01:13:04] Speaker C: That was classless. Ordering three lessons. Three drinks. I mean.
[01:13:08] Speaker A: No, no.
[01:13:09] Speaker C: Including the martini.
[01:13:10] Speaker A: I mean. But, but, but how many people did.
[01:13:12] Speaker B: You know drink like that? At 23, bro.
[01:13:14] Speaker A: At 23.
[01:13:15] Speaker B: At 23. How many people drunk like that?
[01:13:17] Speaker A: I mean, it varies. You know what I'm saying?
[01:13:20] Speaker B: Like.
[01:13:20] Speaker A: But I'm just talking about me. This is just a me thing. And I'm not going outside on no date with a buck to spare.
You feel what I'm saying?
[01:13:32] Speaker B: I mean, I wholeheartedly understand that, but you also gotta think of the mindset for me, at the time.
[01:13:37] Speaker A: I mean, but my mindset.
[01:13:39] Speaker B: I mean, also, you also.
[01:13:42] Speaker C: He's talking about. You just said 23, right? Yeah, I was 23 years old. 23.
[01:13:46] Speaker A: No, I had never paid over a hundred dollars for a day.
But at 20. But at 23, I still wasn't going outside on no date.
[01:13:58] Speaker C: All right, that's you.
[01:13:59] Speaker A: Yeah, that's why I said. I tapped my chest and I said.
[01:14:03] Speaker B: And you gotta also remember the lifestyle you was living. Money is different for you.
[01:14:07] Speaker A: That. Yes. And I think that, you know, it applies to what I was.
What's the word I'm looking for? What I was Shown, you know, saying. By older people.
[01:14:23] Speaker B: Yeah.
[01:14:24] Speaker A: So I set my bar to that.
[01:14:26] Speaker B: See, I didn't. I didn't. That wasn't my experience. So, for me, like, we went to a lot of chain restaurants, okay? So, of course, naturally, as I'm getting older and I'm starting to date, I started off with chain restaurants. Once they kind of start getting played out, I started kind of adventuring out to more restaurants. But again, at 23, I never knew anybody that had more than one drink.
That's just my experience like that.
[01:14:52] Speaker C: At 23.
[01:14:52] Speaker A: No, I wasn't really drinking, like, Right.
[01:14:54] Speaker B: So it's like I said, the lifestyle you was living. Money is different for you. I work, so it's like, for me, it's like, yeah, that's half day.
[01:15:02] Speaker C: Wait.
[01:15:02] Speaker B: Yeah, for me. I work, so money is different for me. All right. So it's like, for me, at the time, I'm thinking I'm gonna go outside, pay like, 6, 65, 70 for this date. Still had $30 left. Because the plan was money. The plan. I didn't drive at the time. I was catching the bus. Oh, so the plan was to just go out to eat? Yeah, go out to eat. Because she lived downtown. It was to go out to eat after that, go back to the crib, watch a movie. You feel what I'm saying, right, Spank? Right. Stay the night or not stay the night and carry on.
[01:15:35] Speaker A: You ain't have a car at 23?
[01:15:37] Speaker B: No, I, I.
[01:15:38] Speaker A: So you was in between cars?
[01:15:40] Speaker B: Yeah, so I. I've had. So my first car was at 20. My Lincoln.
[01:15:45] Speaker C: Don't feel judged.
[01:15:46] Speaker A: No, I'm not. I'm asking a question.
[01:15:48] Speaker C: I was definitely feeling judged.
[01:15:52] Speaker A: It's just 28.
[01:15:55] Speaker C: I definitely, like, got my car at, like, 29.
[01:15:59] Speaker A: So let me let. So if you felt judged, let me explain my. Myself.
[01:16:03] Speaker B: I didn't feel, but I didn't feel.
[01:16:05] Speaker C: First of all, I didn't even get my license till I was, like, 20. Where you about the text?
[01:16:13] Speaker A: Let me explain myself.
My parents. I had my first car at, like, 16.
[01:16:21] Speaker C: Oh, no. See, my mama didn't get her license.
[01:16:22] Speaker A: Until she was, like, 35. But I had. So I had. I always say this. I had two parents in the household. So my mother, when she didn't want a car no more, she would give it to me. Do you want this? And then she would tell me, like, because I had a little job at the time, you got to pay the insurance on the car. You know what I'm saying? Or so on and so forth. Like, so I've always had a car. I didn't buy my own first car until, you know, my mid-20s. Up until then, all my cars was given to me by my parents. Like, and I. You know what I'm saying?
[01:16:56] Speaker B: You want that? This?
[01:16:57] Speaker A: Yeah, I want this. You want this card? Yeah.
[01:17:00] Speaker B: It wasn't like that for me.
[01:17:01] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying?
[01:17:01] Speaker B: So I had to buy my first car.
[01:17:04] Speaker C: Was a link.
[01:17:05] Speaker B: Yeah. My first goal was a. Me, too.
[01:17:08] Speaker A: But I've never. But I've never sat on this pod and made it seem like I had a hard night. No, no, I didn't. I mean, I feel attacked now.
[01:17:16] Speaker B: Hold on.
[01:17:19] Speaker A: Sorry.
[01:17:20] Speaker C: Now you're playing the victim, Keon.
[01:17:22] Speaker B: I didn't feel offended by what you asked. It's just like. Like, I didn't. I bought my first car straight cash. You feel what I'm saying? My second car was given to me. That went up. Then I got another car.
And now we took a hell of a tangent.
[01:17:36] Speaker C: We talking about inflation, the price of.
[01:17:40] Speaker A: We just talking, but we ain't trying to stay on topic. And all that other conductor.
This is just us talking. But, like, yeah, like, bro, like. Like, I. I guess, like, at the end of the day, like, yeah, a hundred dollars should suffice. Yeah. She was. Three glasses of wine is like, that's od.
[01:18:01] Speaker B: Like, I remember somebody was saying, like. And the martini, that was very.
Yeah. And the person was like, that was very unladylike. She was like, this was your first date? I'm like, yeah. I mean, like, we knew each other because we went to high school with each other, but this was our first actual.
[01:18:19] Speaker C: Yeah.
[01:18:19] Speaker A: Like, you got to show some type of, like, cool restraint. Like, all right, I know. Let me just get this. I ain't saying you got to go in there, eat cute, but don't do too much. Like, don't. Like, I feel as though after a certain point, like, you just trying to see how much money you can get out of me on a date and that shit. But that's like bird shit to me. Like, for you to be like, yeah, I remember. Like, this nigga spent all his motherfucking money.
[01:18:43] Speaker B: We got into an argument about it, right? We got into an argument a few. A few days later. She was like, you couldn't even tip the waiter. I'm like, shorty, you ordered three glasses of wine.
[01:18:53] Speaker A: What did she work at at the time? Now, she ain't tip the waiter.
[01:18:58] Speaker B: She did. She did tip the waiter.
[01:19:01] Speaker A: Did she consider herself better? Like, Like, I don't know. Did she? No. This is a real question, like, did.
[01:19:06] Speaker B: She consider herself like, like fancy, like, looking back at it now and even like, like currently, like. Because I, I follow her on Facebook.
Yeah, I would say she probably considered. But she worked, if you remember the gallery, right. It used to be a cologne store on the first floor.
[01:19:25] Speaker C: Man, why did you order three drinks on the first date?
[01:19:27] Speaker B: She probably only remember that, to be fair with you. But yeah, I think inflation is getting out of hand.
I think we haven't seen the worst of it yet, which I think we about to see the worst of it.
[01:19:39] Speaker C: But inflation is also happening because of all the money that we have received on Covid.
[01:19:44] Speaker B: I mean, not only just that, but it's also the spending, it's also the tariff situation that we about to go into. It's a lot of things that's about to cause inflation to go up. I mean, we have a president that's in office that pretty much is going to be cutting a lot of shit taxes for the rich. And they always think this trickle down shit works, and it never has worked. If anybody's familiar with the trickle down effect is giving tax breaks to these companies who make billions of dollars in hopes of them giving out more money to the people below, which it never works. Matter of fact, and Trump's last presidency, he did that.
A prime example of it would be, I think it was.
Is he a Teemo or AT&T, I can't remember.
[01:20:33] Speaker A: Said Timo.
[01:20:34] Speaker B: Timo.
[01:20:35] Speaker A: Oh, I think he said team.
[01:20:36] Speaker B: They gave tax breaks to them in hopes that they would give the money to the, the employees. But essentially they, they ended up.
Yeah, they laid off themselves. Yeah, they ended up laying off 1500 employees.
[01:20:51] Speaker A: Yeah. Like bro.
[01:20:52] Speaker B: And keeping the money for themselves, fortunately.
[01:20:54] Speaker A: You know what we're capable of doing? Adapting.
[01:20:59] Speaker C: Should that be date etiquette rules with inflation, that should be a hot topic. That's nothing.
Etiquette rules.
[01:21:07] Speaker B: I mean, that should be date etiquette rules in general.
[01:21:09] Speaker A: So my question is, is there even a such thing? What you mean with the day and.
[01:21:16] Speaker C: Age of women in the day and age of certain men, is there a certain etiquette?
[01:21:22] Speaker A: Like, honestly.
[01:21:23] Speaker B: All right, let me.
[01:21:23] Speaker C: Some women think like here. Some women, some men think like.
[01:21:26] Speaker B: Let me, let me, let me say it like this real. And just to just be 100. 100.
[01:21:33] Speaker A: He's upset.
[01:21:34] Speaker B: If somebody with you, they. With you, it don't matter what your pocket's looking like. I like think, I think one of my best dates was real, literally us going to the getting readers and literally sat in the park for five, kicking.
[01:21:50] Speaker A: In and talking like, like, So I agree with you.
[01:21:52] Speaker B: So it really just depends on. On how a person with you essentially when you meet certain people. And this is why I used to have an issue with a certain podcast. I'm not going to mention their name, but they, they only used to interact with women who, and I said this before, they strictly were gold diggers. They wanted to change the mind of gold diggers, which I, I didn't understand because you can never know who they are and knows what they want. There's no sense in talking any type of sense into them. But again, if shorty fuck with you, she fuck with you. And that's just what it is. It ain't got nothing to do with how much money in your pocket or nothing like that. She fuck with you. She fuck with you. If she fuck with you because you have a certain.
[01:22:42] Speaker C: On the first date, should y'all go Dutch?
[01:22:45] Speaker A: No, I don't, I don't believe it.
[01:22:46] Speaker B: I know.
[01:22:47] Speaker A: I believe as a man, me that, you know, on a first date, I'm. I'm supposed to pay and I don't mind. But again, woman, I feel like you.
[01:22:56] Speaker C: Should do something casual.
[01:22:57] Speaker B: Hold on, hold on, hold on.
[01:22:58] Speaker C: Like he said, the reader's whole situation. It's like a meet and greet sort of situation.
[01:23:02] Speaker B: Yeah, but hold on. But again, to me, it goes back to if a person really fuck with you. Because I didn't been on dates where she know my situation fucked up, but she wants to spend time with me, she pays.
[01:23:13] Speaker C: So should you be dating, though, if you that fucked up?
[01:23:16] Speaker B: No, I mean, you shouldn't. But let's be real here. We are human beings and we love it.
[01:23:22] Speaker A: Companionship.
[01:23:23] Speaker B: Yeah, we want companionship.
[01:23:25] Speaker A: I've been in a situation of the opposite sex.
[01:23:27] Speaker B: No, bullshit. I've literally. Same sex, literally. This has literally happened to me. I've been in situations where I've told somebody like, no shit ain't right. Right now, I'm not really looking to date. I'm trying to get my together, blah, blah, blah. I literally had somebody literally beating my DMs down and she like, listen, I don't give a about none of that shit. I want to meet you. I want to talk to you. I think you look good. I want to get to know you. The shit you be talking about on Facebook, I like, I want to know who you are.
[01:23:57] Speaker A: That's. That's a real good down to earth, right?
[01:24:00] Speaker B: So like I said, it's just it. I mean, you. I think to answer your question, you should not be dating if you want a fucked up situation.
[01:24:07] Speaker A: But if somebody put that to you like that you like.
But then when you gotta think like.
[01:24:12] Speaker C: Is it a facade?
[01:24:13] Speaker B: I mean, we, we talked for a while. We. We around. I mean, it wasn't what we got.
[01:24:17] Speaker C: Because my whole point is like, how can you give yourself, give all of yourself to that if you're focused?
[01:24:22] Speaker B: I mean, I couldn't. And she understood that. I mean she, she understood that. It's just. She just wanted to experience. That was all she wanted to. Pretty much.
[01:24:30] Speaker C: Right. Women. Women will, will understand to an extent.
[01:24:34] Speaker B: Yeah. But we gonna end it here.
Thank y'all for tapping in.
[01:24:39] Speaker A: Absolutely. I miss y'all.
[01:24:41] Speaker B: We'll be back next week. Hopefully Jeff will be here. He has some prior engagements. He had to. He's being light skinned or that.
[01:24:51] Speaker A: I'm joking y'all.
[01:24:53] Speaker B: But as always, like follow and subscribe. Thank y'all for tapping in. And if you feeling what frisky, Go ahead and comment.
[01:25:00] Speaker A: Yurt.
[01:25:01] Speaker B: We'll see y'all next week.
[01:25:08] Speaker C: Give me.