Brown Bag Mornings - Ep. 336 Kick That Lowlife Out! | Brown Bag Mornings (11/7/24)
Episode Date: November 7, 2024See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Sparwinero 6, L.A's number one for hip-hop.
Buenos L.A., good morning to you.
Good morning.
It's Thursday, November 7.
Yeah.
And if you're feeling sick and, like, you don't want to go into work today.
You are not alone, my friend.
Angie and Greg are there with you.
They're both out today.
Yeah.
Just kidding.
Well, how far is Woody here from San Ana?
Not too crazy, huh?
Not too far.
Greg always makes that drive.
Hello.
What?
To his other gig.
Greg hit us up yesterday.
that he was not feeling too good.
His tummy was hurting.
My little tummy secret.
And then Angie just woke up.
I said, hey, I'm not going to.
Yeah.
Hey.
Hey, fools.
I'm not coming in.
Figure it out.
She woke up at the Hilton, tired.
Oh.
Don't be rude.
Don't be rude.
Don't be rude to my Angie.
She's about to call it when she wakes up.
I asked her.
At 11 a.m.
for checkout.
Oh, my gosh.
That's my best friend.
I'm not letting you do that.
I'm not letting you do that.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Because there's a reason you know that.
That's checkout time, fool.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And let her get her free continental breakfast, okay?
You let her be.
What else can you give her free?
No, you said free continental breakfast.
No.
Oh, okay, okay, okay.
Don't be a jerk.
You know that you could get free a toothpaste and toothbrush at a hotel?
Yes.
Oh, for you?
Yeah.
They don't tell you.
They don't tell you.
You have to ask for it at front desk, but they'll give it to you.
And a lot of times that's part of the stuff you buy when you do your traveling.
Yeah.
So a little hack in this economy.
And usually, since people forget a lot of phone chargers,
if you ask a friend desk, they collect all the ones people leave behind.
Shut.
What?
I didn't know that.
That's tight.
That's tight.
Because I've been to hotels where it's part of the mini fridge thing that you can buy their chargers.
But if they already have some, there's no need to buy it in there.
You always leave them behind anyone.
Yeah.
Always.
Look at us.
Look at us.
Traveling smart.
Traveling smart.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But they're out sick, but we're here, okay?
Yeah.
Okay.
Also, you have to know, we are doing your friends.
this weekend.
Yes.
I know it's November already.
We're in the holidays.
We're trying to get Thanksgiving back because so far we've just jumped straight to Christmas.
I know.
What's going on?
There's still time for food and friends and family.
And this weekend, Saturday, November 9th, we are going to have a brunch at Hollywood Park Casino
inside the Century Bar and Grill.
And we're giving away $500 in Amazon gift cards.
That's all up for grabs.
You could go to power 106.com slash HPC to RSVP.
I'll say that again.
Power 106.com slash
HPC and you can RSD
there. It's going down this
Saturday, okay? It's going to be really hard.
Pull up on us. It's going to be fine.
All right. Keep it here because
Maximo is an influencer.
And he was out influencing on these
Clipper streets. Oh, yes.
You were like, wait, what?
What are I doing?
Are the Clippers the new Lakers?
It may seem like they are
at least with how they treat
former players.
In one way, is it?
In one way. Are they turning
into the bullies that we say the Laker fans are.
Yeah.
What's going on, Maximo?
So I went into the clipper game yesterday.
Shout out the homie, Doe Boy, Tony.
He hooked me in with some tickets.
Showed out of Doe Boy, Tony.
Yeah, that's his name.
Mopteroy Tony.
No.
No, no.
He's a good guy.
Yeah, he's Italian.
He's a restaurant.
Pizza.
That's why it's doughboy.
No, no, it's not Italian.
I made that up.
Well, I went to the game.
And it was Paul George's first game back after leaving the Clippers.
And the reaction was interesting.
Because for me, I'm like, I was happy to see him.
What do you mean after leaving the Clippers?
So he's from Palmdale.
So when he came here, the idea was like the hometown team.
Yes, I remember real LA team, you would say.
Yeah.
Yeah, for sure.
How many championships were they going to win?
Oh, zero.
No, were they going to win?
Well, like so many.
A lot.
But then they lost.
Yeah, we didn't win.
They never won one.
I blame you guys for trading away Rosa Westbrook.
That had to be done.
Yeah.
I like Rosetta.
Again, that's what the Lakers said.
Taking the Rust, right?
So when Russ decided to stay in L.A., he took what's called like a hometown discount,
meaning you take so much less money in order to be home and push that, like, L.A. team narrative.
But Paul George ended up taking a bigger deal, which I get.
He's older.
He's on the decline.
So it's like, hey.
All of a sudden he's on the decline.
No, I mean, but that's like the truth.
Like either take this huge bag, potentially my last big contract ever or.
Stay here for the hometown discount, and he decided to leave to the Philadelphia Sixers.
So yesterday was his first day back.
The Sixers played with the Clippers.
So he came on as another team.
Yes.
And the fans were not having it.
The fans were going crazy.
They were booing him.
They were screaming.
Like, I've never had, I mean, I never really had seats that close, too.
To hear all the stuff.
To hear, like, the slander and, like, people are like, your podcast sucks.
Podcast got to do with anything.
They were just, like, going at him.
I'm like, we don't want you leave.
They booed him.
And then like the wall, there is a moment where they all pulled down newspapers where he was talking smack.
Which the wall, by the way, is like the fan area of Intuit Dome that they literally made it to look like and be very intimidating to their person team.
It's like a college atmosphere.
100%.
They all pulled out newspapers where he was talking smack about the clippers.
And they were just shaking it when he was shooting free throws.
Somebody went in like 100 newspapers?
Yes.
Br.
The wall has a.
group chat.
Yeah.
That's effort.
That's awesome.
Did the Sixters
lose?
The Sixers lost.
Wow.
Wow.
Y'all are up.
Y'all fans are tripping.
Yeah, we're going crazy.
So it was cool.
And after the game, they asked Paul George about the situation.
Because, I mean, I'm sure leaving somewhere where you dedicate five years to, regardless, your family is there.
Yeah.
It probably hurts.
How quickly they turn.
You fast.
And this is what he said.
Does it bother you, though, at all that they booed you for large stretches of that game?
like after five years here?
Yeah.
Playing your heart out for them.
Like, does that bother you at all?
I mean, you know, it's stupid.
Oh, he's hurt.
Yeah.
Okay.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Hold on.
As liquor fence, please chime in, Victor.
Look, it's just that what he has to understand,
something he's not taken into consideration.
When the Clippers traded for him, because mind you, they traded for him.
Yes.
They gave away their entire.
future. They traded away like four first round draft picks, pick swaps, everything, and a player
that would go on to be a superstar. That's a top 10 NBA player right now, Shy Gilgesa,
Alexander. So it's like when you do all that for a player that just leaves, just like that,
and for nothing, they didn't even get to trade. He didn't give, he, they got to one, uh, Western
Conference Championship and that's it. And they traded away a top 10 player who if he would
have stayed, the Clippers would have been in a much better scenario. For sure. And I bet you
you, SGA would not have left.
Yes, let this be a lesson to you, girls.
Never give up the career, the body,
all of that for a guy you think is forever.
Five years down the line,
he's going to cheat on you and leave you for that.
Hey, well, how does this turn to you?
This is basketball.
I don't know, it just felt like it.
I gave you everything.
I gave you my future.
I gave you my body.
I built you a home.
I gave you SG8.
You just leave?
You just leave.
You just leave.
You know what I booed you.
All right.
And your podcast doesn't suck.
I like it.
You like his podcast?
Yeah, it's cool.
Did you boo the podcast?
No, I wasn't the one.
But someone threw a shirt at him and I laughed and I felt guilty.
And I heard he shot a three and hit the backboard and someone said, oh yeah, he's back.
I don't get that.
That's a signature move of how he misses.
Like he misses bad when he misses.
Okay.
Yeah, are we happy with him?
Shout out of him, shout out of Pop-Nale.
I'm happy he lost.
We wish you the best.
We wish you the best, bro.
Yeah, yeah.
Happy you got your bag in Philadelphia.
We are five minutes away.
from hooking you up with tickets to go to Disneyland.
And when you win these tickets to Disneyland,
you have to celebrate the holidays.
You also get in the running for eight more tickets on top of that.
Sheesh!
Eight one day one park tickets is the grand prize on top of the four that you win when you're a collar 10.
Okay?
That's a lot of tickets.
That's a lot of tickets.
I would take you, Maximo.
Yeah?
Yeah.
For real?
Yeah.
If I had the four, you would be cut out.
But with the 12th.
What have you had seven?
No, I would take Emmy and Max.
Wow.
Your kids.
It's okay.
What's it called?
Who would you take if you had your 12 Victor?
Okay.
My girl, her daughter, a little big.
And then my siblings, all of them, and then their kids.
And then I think.
You have enough to invite Ali?
No.
No, no room.
No room.
More than likely.
More than likely.
That's just not enough.
That's a big smile.
But yeah, so.
All right, let's move on.
You guys got shoutouts?
I would invite her with My 12.
You just hear pop-up on My 12.
Oh, Lord.
Vick's drinking a big swig of a cup.
He's about to get a text right now.
What are you taking?
Irish coffee.
Delicious.
Okay.
I have a shout-out to my mom.
Happy birthday to my mom.
Wow.
Happy birthday.
She's a November 7 baby.
So if you're born today, just know I appreciate you.
Like, I appreciate my mom.
This day is really amazing to me because she was born.
And if she was not born, I wouldn't be here.
True.
That's true.
Yeah.
Yo, that's fact.
Shout to your mom.
I shout out my mom.
Just like if Ali wasn't born, Little Vic would not be here.
That's true.
She probably deserves a trip to this year.
Yeah, I think so, too.
Well, worth it.
Okay, Maximo, you have shoutouts?
Oh, wait, wait, wait.
Also, yesterday I was at the Sephora.
in Alhambra
and I was paying
and when I was leaving
a young lady that works there
she runs up to me
and she's like hi
and I don't know if she said
that her name is Jane
or Jade
or maybe I just made up
what I heard in my brain
but I don't know if this happens to guys
but this happens to me
so I had went home
I had taken a nap
I put on like my
like a really big shirt
and really big sweats
I look bummy
like to me I look really bummy
so because she recognized me
while I look bummy
I was really nervous and I just wanted to get out of there.
Like, you know you don't look fresh.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure.
Like I looked like a bum, bruh.
And then like my shirt was wrinkled, all of that.
And I don't know.
I was wearing mismatched socks.
I was wearing.
You're bummy.
Yeah. And but she came up to me.
She was really nice.
And I think in my brain, I'm like, oh no, she caught me looking crazy.
But she told me her name and it was really nice that she came by and she said what's up to me.
And shout up to all the girls in support.
You guys are always look top tier.
That was after their makeup then.
Nice.
Jade or Jane.
Jade or Jane.
Or maybe I just made that up in my brain because I wanted to get up out of there.
And I apologize.
It's not your fault.
It's my fault.
I get really nervous sometimes.
Like one time I was at the Starbucks drive-thru, right?
And I pull up to get my stuff and you pay and then you get your coffee.
Duh, right?
Yeah.
So the person at the window was like, hey, did you go to Silmar High?
And I was like, no, I did.
I did go.
I did go.
But I lied.
But I lied.
And I don't know why I lied.
I was just so like, oh my God.
Again, I look bummy.
Oh, my God, no, right?
So they asked me and then the person clearly knew me.
Right?
She liked him.
Yeah.
And so she was like, oh, okay.
She made her embarrassed.
Yeah, so I paid.
I paid her.
I paid her.
And she's like, oh, okay.
And I paid her.
And then I just leave without my coffee.
Wow.
I get like, I don't know how to add.
Social anxiety.
Yeah, I think it's that, bro.
Like, not gonna lie.
I don't know how to act.
And then I'm like, dang, she's gonna really know what was me from somewhere.
Like, Lettie is so weird.
Well, Laticia Paniche left there.
Yeah.
She's that weird one.
You're a card who said your name on there?
I knew it was her.
I don't know why.
She went home and looked at her yearbook.
Like, I knew it.
I don't know why.
I don't know why.
You guys don't get that?
Social anxiety a little bit.
I'm working on it.
But, yeah, I mean, I get you, though.
Like, it does get kind of.
awkward sometimes.
Yeah.
You don't want to get caught up out there.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Sorry to the lady at the drive-thru.
All right.
Shout out.
Yeah, I want to shout out.
Deuce, the homie Deuce and Joanne from Inuit Dome.
Come on.
Really amazing people.
Showed a lot of hospitality, so I just want to give them a shout out.
Yeah.
I can't wait to visit Into a dome.
I want to see that wall.
Yeah.
The fan wall.
It's amazing.
I've seen videos of people saying that's like a really intimidating factor to the games.
It works.
Me, it looks like, I think I have to be there to see it.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
I think it looks like any other game that I've seen where the people have like the...
It's a little different.
What are those things called?
Like the...
The Thunder sticks.
Yeah.
I feel like also like the way it's built because it's built like in a weird, like, angle.
Like it literally covers your whole vision in the back.
Wow.
I want to go in like Pose as a Clipper fan, see if they discover me or not.
You want Pose or you're really a Clipper fan?
No, I want a pose as a Clipper fan.
No?
No.
No.
Oh, like, well, where's Waldo type of deal?
Like, you know, I'll be like,
hmm, I wonder if they discover my fandom is true or not.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, see if I can play it off.
Yeah, see if I can play it off.
He just wants to rock his clipper gear that he has in his closet.
I don't have any clipper gear.
But y'all can send me some.
Okay.
Word on Rosecrans.
All right.
What's the word?
Word on Rosecrans.
Roze Krants.
Word on Rosecrans.
The word is, has someone ever stole something from you?
Then someone steals from them and they want to make a big deal about it?
What?
Well, that's how ACON must feel right now, okay?
So, all right?
So you guys remember Ply's, right?
Yes.
Girlfriend number two?
Yeah, he took a bunch of songs.
Yeah.
Okay.
So he's reportedly suing Soldier Boy for stealing a song,
then Glorilla and Meg the Stallion for stealing a stolen song, all right?
So apparently back in 2008, Plies had a song titled Me and My Goons.
I'm going to play a little bit of it for you.
Brown me when I'm young
Because don't riff
That's Plyce?
Yes
2008
That was
That sounds like soldier boy
Yeah so when you see me
Yeah so pretty
Pretty Boy
By Soldier Boy dropped in like 2012
Soldier
Oh way
Whoa
I thought it was trippinar and on the remix
All the pretty girl stand up
All the pretty boy stand up
Pretty boys in the mail then
This right here is my swag.
Okay, I'm sorry, bro.
Yeah.
I thought that was Soldier Boy song.
Me too, me too.
I thought he was the first person to make that song.
Yeah.
But apparently he's the second.
So then Glorilla and Meg, they liked Soldier Boy song, and then they sampled it.
Made pretty girl swag.
Right?
So that was like, it's confusing.
It's like, oh, wow, they sampled a sample that we didn't know the first one existed, right?
However, he's suing them, but I brought up Acon earlier because he once told a story about how Ply's straight up stole a song from him.
All right, listen to this.
It was originally supposed to be for Trick Dad.
Trick is on the road at this point.
The record went to the slip and slide email.
Plyes picked the record up.
The song that he's talking about is I want to love you that ended up being Acon and Snoop, but Plies made his own version first.
Listen to this.
This doesn't feel right.
Right?
Plah!
So he straight up stole that song.
It was meant for Trick Daddy.
He got access to the email.
Mind you, this is like 16 years ago.
Made the song.
And then A-Conn later just had the beat already because it came from him.
Because it came from him.
And he was like, hey, you know, what's going on?
Where did he get this song from?
So he ended up redoing it and put Snoop on it.
Plice.
So it's like, what?
You want to complain about somebody still in your song?
you literally
did the same thing.
He just got inspired by yourself.
This is so crazy.
I feel like I need a dateline episode on this.
Right.
Because he is,
Plies is suing soldier boy
and Gorilla and Megalya
for flipping that one song
which whoa,
I didn't know.
Right,
which is pretty obvious.
Yeah,
it's valid.
But karma, brother,
because you had done that to Acon.
And he sent it out
to all the radio stations everywhere.
So when the Snoop version came out,
people were confused like,
hey,
I already heard this song.
You know, like isn't this Ply's song?
And so people at first were like, you know, kind of confused about it.
And, you know, Acon ended up doing a good thing and gave them another song.
I think it was hypnotized.
You got me so hypnotized.
Yeah, exactly.
So that ended up being like they're kind of like, all right.
That's how they squashed it.
Exactly.
But it wasn't even Acon's fault.
No, it wasn't at all.
No.
It wasn't at all.
What?
Yes.
I was about to say Acon just got to wait for Ply's to win that lawsuit.
Yes.
And then you come after and take all that money.
And then what?
Trick Daddy, you don't have the password to your email or what?
I guess not.
Because Trick Daddy didn't get nothing.
Nothing.
He was on tour.
He missed the whole thing.
Oh, my God.
Imagine?
You needed that two-factor authentication, brother.
Yeah.
So go see your cell phone.
Pleist is up there like.
Yeah.
Literally.
That's wild, bro.
Let me hear the first song that supposedly Soge Boy and Gloria.
Plies me.
All right.
Plice.
Yeah.
Me and my goons.
Bro
I keep a cup of killers around me
When I'm not gonna lie
Soldier Boy did it better
Yeah
Yeah he did
You hear that
That piano
Is it
No the production is just better
All the pretty girl stand up
Yeah
And it's a little slow
It's also because we know
Pretty boys in the mailman
This right here
Is my swag
That's wild
This is drama
I wonder what's gonna happen
I know.
Yeah.
I'm excited.
Thanks for me.
All right.
Look, Dave Roberts explained his infamous dance move to Mookiee Betz, all right?
To Ice Cube.
Oh, the, Danny.
About when he was dancing next Ice Cube.
If you guys saw the Dodgers parade, everybody was questioning Dave Roberts a little dance move.
Kind of on Ice Cube, you know, people saying he got a little excited.
People saying, was that a twerk?
Did he just twerk on Ice Cube?
But he went ahead and explained it to Mookie Betz, listen to this.
You could go on tour with Ice Cube.
Cube as a backup dancer.
Did you see your moves?
Have you seen the video dancing?
I think I blacked out.
And when he said, that was my ass dropping
right there. Oh, that was the ass dropping right there. Oh, that was
a ass dropping right there. Get that load old doc.
So I know, no, because I got a bad knee. So I
still know my limits.
But, man, I would love to go on tour with Ice Cube.
I'm telling you, Mookie, this was like, it took me back to
1988. Man, I would
listen to NWA and Ice Cube all day long, and so that kind of took me back.
So he got a little too excited.
So he was doing that in 1988?
Yeah, he was dropping that thing.
God bless Jorge, and please don't judge him.
He didn't know who Dave Roberts was.
Like he was like, who's that guy, the manager?
Like, like, and I was like, it's Dave Roberts.
He looks like my dad.
And then he's like, yeah, he's like, was he twerking on Ice Cube?
So people that don't know who Dave Roberts is, just know him as the man.
Man that's worked on ice cute, y'all.
He's, like, literally so important in the story of baseball.
He's not important to the Dodgers right now.
He helped break the, like, Boston Red Sox Curds by a stolen base,
played for the Dodgers.
Wasn't he first the Asian person to do the, I guess, before Otani was him with the home runs?
Yeah, yeah, because he was born in Japan, I believe.
And he was, like, a first, like, Japanese-born player to hit a home run or something like that.
Wow.
So, yeah, so he's very important.
He does all these stuff, but now people will know him for making that thing drop on Ice Q.
And I try to defend it so hard.
I'm like, no, that's not what he did.
He just said that's what he did.
And then, yeah, yeah.
But then the lyric, I'm like, he was just doing the lyrics.
Yeah, yeah.
And he put the bottle there so that Ice Cube knew it was friendly.
So, like, for a barrier.
If you go out of Dave Roberts, he blacks out.
But you know, like, you act out the song, though.
Yeah, yeah.
No, he was literally just so excited.
And we all know that's part.
I can make that drop.
Yeah, I don't do it personally.
Yeah, me either.
What do you do during that park?
Just sing it.
Just west coast fingers.
Yeah, west coast.
You know what?
Like a lowrider?
Yeah, yeah.
Because what are y'all supposed to do?
Just look cool.
Just look like a cute.
Put some shades on.
Yeah, okay.
All right.
Well, that was your word on Rose Cranes.
Brought to by local Southern California to other dealers.
I'm Rose Crans, Vic for Brownback Mornings.
I'm Power 10.
What's up?
This is Be Real from Cypress Hill.
Where are you from, Eset?
Don't you know I'm local?
I told yesterday I had the honor of attending the funeral for Fernando Valenzuela.
I would like to send my deepest love in regards to his daughter, Maria, who invited me.
And it was also a public funeral if you would have liked to attend.
It was at the cathedral?
Crystal Cathedral?
Beautiful.
Beautiful.
Where is that?
On Temple in downtown L.A.
It's the one you see off the freeway.
And I always see it.
I never knew what that was like.
like inside in gorgeous gorgeous uh his family to his wife linda and the rest of his children
again our love to you and you know it was so beautiful to see just how love fernando was you
had people i've never seen people at a funeral wearing like the jerseys like that and everyone
was wearing like fernando valenzuela jerseys and just repping their dodger pride there um but it was
one moment that i wanted to talk about where an an old player of his because all his all his uh all his uh
teammates were there.
An old teammate of his Mike Sosha.
I'm going to say it wrong.
Former manager, long time former manager of the Angels.
And then he currently does stuff with the team USA, the baseball team.
Oh, probably.
He was up there and he was talking about his friendship with Fernando Valenzuela when he first
came and he was like, look, we were all older and he was the new guy.
He was 20 years old.
He was a star.
He's like, but he never, like he never acted like it.
Like this guy was so humble.
He was never bigger than his bridges, is the term that he used.
And he was talking about what a jokester Fernando Valenzuela was.
He said that Fern had a lasso and would, like, laso the players that they would know they'd be walking.
Oh, my God.
And then they'd be grabbed by the ankles.
He would catch everyone.
He's like, I don't think he ever missed.
That's so picea.
That's so funny.
I'm like, how you have a lasso, bro?
Does it have a lasso he brings with him to work?
Yes.
He's like, he lasso was like we were baby caps.
It was crazy.
He looked at his lasso, like, you know, it'd be funny?
Yeah.
Me, I'll get a lasso.
You're going to be these, like,
yeah, but then he also talks about this moment.
And what trips me out is like, he's like,
I learned Spanish and I, and I would talk to Fernando in Spanish,
and he would say, my Spanish sucks, and I said,
it's just as bad as you're English.
Like, but also, like, Tommy LaSora to spoke Spanish to talk to Fernando Valenzuela.
But he talks about this thing that happened recently.
I'm going to let him tell it. It's pretty crazy. Pretty funny. Check this out.
Now, this is a true story happened a couple nights ago. I was in Arizona with USA baseball, and my wife calls me, and she said, honey, I don't know what to do here.
All of our TVs are in Spanish now. I said, what do you mean they're in Spanish? They're in Spanish. I didn't touch anything. I turned them on, and they're in Spanish.
And I said, honey, that's Fernando. So I said a prayer. I said, Fernando, Porphi.
Please, please, no me molesta.
I have to get up there.
We'll joke around.
But I don't mess around with my house.
I like his Spanish, bro.
You have my little.
That would be a Fernando thing, though.
If they were jocksters with each other and they prank each other.
That's a hell of a prank.
That's a great prank.
I know.
Everything in Spanish.
Everything in Sabbath?
Yeah.
A sad button.
I'm like, I don't know how to turn it up.
It's just a bunch of Telemundo.
It's just Fernando.
Oh, Fernando.
Yeah, that chis me out, though.
That's a good one.
I love that.
I love to hear stories like that.
For sure.
The funeral was really nice.
They even did, like, it was mass mass.
I've been to other memorials, unfortunately, right?
And other funerals.
And you go there and there's a process.
And even I've been to Catholic ones.
But this one was very, very, like, set up, Neil.
Like, they even did the Eucharist, the.
the, is it ostia?
Yeah.
I'm saying you're right?
I don't know.
Maximum.
Yeah.
I'm no idea.
They don't give the bread at your churches?
Yeah, but hostia sounds like oysters.
I know it does, but it's not.
No.
I want to please check me.
Am I correct?
Is it hostia?
Yeah.
So it's the body and blood of Christ, right?
And then I was like, hey, where's the blood?
Because there was no.
I didn't get wine.
It's the blood.
I didn't get wine.
I only got the bread.
I felt like a kid.
But we were talking off air.
We were talking about your church.
Your church says.
that too, I didn't know.
I guess as a Catholic, I thought only we did this because there was such differences
between Catholic and Christian Church and stuff.
No, they still do it.
It's the same idea, same like philosophy of like just a reminder you pray and then it's like
But you guys honestly like, A Catholics, I want you to know what the Christians are doing.
They low-key made uncrustables.
They look he made an uncrustable.
Tell us what yours is like.
It's called communion and the church I go to, it's combined.
So it's like a little cup
And the top peel has the bread
And then you peel under that
And then it's the juice
Wow
Yeah
Bro
We're so behind
They packed it up
They made like a little lunchable
Of the communion
Yeah it's a little lunchable communion
Wow
That's a trip bro
Yeah it's really good
And then Jose
When do y'all meet?
Sundays
Sundays too?
No they do like the Saturday
I'm so I can go to both
You go Friday
You go Saturday
You go Sunday
They do like the Wednesday
Church at night.
Okay.
Yeah, you can join the basketball
than you want.
Jose, you like the Christian one better?
It tastes better.
Then the Catholic place?
Why have you tasted both, you religion hopper?
Ritz cracker.
It tastes like a ritz cracker?
No, I don't taste like that.
No, I just taste like...
Sam?
No, I taste like the body of Christ, Victor.
Yeah, it gets stuck on my tongue.
It does, it does, it does.
If you've ever had this Mexican,
this Mexican...
candy it's cajeta it's like caramel
and they usually put it on top
of like these wafers and it tastes like
that wafer to me so when we would
buy those on their own we would give it to ourselves
and pretend we're at church
but they're all different colors
they're like pink and blue
oh yeah it's our game
church god
it's not a game
you're playing the house of God
it's not a game
wow
you're rude
you're rude
you're sick
go to your
incredible
I don't know how we got here
All right.
That's what happened at Fernando.
That's amazing, man.
It was beautiful.
That's a really nice of the family to invite you.
And for you to be part of something so special for L.A., Los Angeles, especially, you know, the Dodgers even winning this year.
I feel like it made it, like, extra special.
And it almost felt like it was for him.
It was definitely for him.
The parade was on his birthday.
Yeah.
It actually happened.
Yeah.
And you could tell that everyone felt that.
And I think that you could tell the family is very thankful.
However, I also feel like the family.
deserve so much support still.
Like, don't think that, like, send them your love when you can.
Send them your prayers when you can.
Because you could tell they're, they're missing a Dodgers legend.
They're missing their dad.
You're right.
Husband.
Their grandfather.
Probably the patriarch of their family.
I saw the granddaughters and they would do some readings.
But when it was time to walk out, they're just bawling crying.
That's their tata, you know?
And they said the son, Jr.,
went up there and he's like he's a he's a he's a ta-ta to my daughters or he would say I'm not
your tata I'm your t'o because he's like wanted to be young and stuff like that but like knowing those
moments and saying you know what I wanted him to see my daughters grow old like grow older
and it's like that type of stuff puts things in perspective and that's why I just send all my love to the
valenzuela family I know you're hurting right now and it doesn't end and it never will and we're
coming up on holidays so to you and anybody that's lost this year this year has been intense
It's been intense, a lot of loss, a lot of grief, also a lot of love and support.
So I never want to forget that either.
But yeah, it was really beautiful to go to.
RIP Fernando Valenzuela.
Okay.
Simp or pimp.
Sip, sip, sip, sip, sip, sit, sit, sit, sit, sit, sit, sing, sing.
Get up your phone, me.
All right.
Oh, so there's a video going viral, and the video is these two, this gentleman who,
He's at a specific club.
Okay.
And he's, I think, falling in love.
Oh, no.
So his approach is that he's telling these girls that he wants to change their lifestyles.
Listen.
I can take you out this lifestyle.
I'll take you out this lifestyle.
You're better than this.
Oh, my God.
I can take you out this lifestyle.
No way.
That really happens.
You're better than this.
Take her out the lifestyle.
What are your thoughts, Vig?
Why are you laughing?
You have to say, you can't keep these inside jokes from our listeners.
It's just instrumental.
There's no words coming down.
I was waiting for the words.
But, yeah.
You guys are being very suspicious.
Umberto, what are your thoughts?
What are your thoughts?
What are your thoughts, right?
Can you back to you, Um, Angie, Angie and Greg are not here.
Hey, you've been waiting for this moment.
video guy can you please put on your microphone right now what do you think about
strippers turn it on talk say something more we have more to say more to say
yeah there's just you know umberto's been waiting for a call out stick from
gregg to talk on your mic it's upside down bro wait come on
umberto what what's what's what's what's umberto from wads umberto from wads all right
Have you ever tried to save one?
Save one. No, I haven't.
No?
I've never actually even been to a strip club.
Oh, wow.
Fonkentz.
Jose!
Oh, I definitely purchased a strip club.
Jose, talk into the mic.
Have you tried to save one ever?
I've tried to save them all.
I'm the type of person to go to the casino.
I think I'm going to leave a millionaire.
If I walk to the strip club, I'm going to propose.
I'm going to get on my knee.
I'm my dad.
That's for them.
Yes.
I'm going to put on a show for them.
Sim.
Sim.
All right, check this out, homie.
You need a homie or need some help.
We need your help.
We need a line.
I mean, phone line.
We got you for the homie help line.
Olga needs our help.
Olga.
All right, Olga sent us a DM and said,
Hi, Brown Bag.
I need y'all help.
So my mom and Liz.
little sister live with me and my hubby. My little sister is a low life. Oh, Jesus. What?
Straight to it. All right. Whoa. Whoa. Whoa. She said, uh, she dropped out of school. She's 17 years old.
My hubby and I are expecting our second baby. So I told my sister, since she's not going to school or
working, I'm going to need her to find somewhere else to live because I need that room for my son.
She refuses to get a job and my mom doesn't do anything to help.
I don't know what to do.
Help me out,
Brown Bag.
Dang.
That's wild.
That was like,
whoa.
I don't know if you could be a low life
at 17 years old.
Right.
You're just a teen.
You're just a kid.
Yeah.
I'm just a kid.
That's pretty extreme.
I'm like me.
So she doesn't go to school.
She's probably just kind of like on the wrong path.
She's clearly going through it.
I mean,
that age is a strange age.
Yeah.
If she's the older sister too,
you have some sort of expectation.
because you did so much probably.
Clearly she has a husband, she has kids.
She set herself up enough to be able to house both her mom and her sister.
And you're just, like I think it might affect you more even as I know a lot of older sisters say that they end up being the second mom.
Yep.
So if you see your mom kind of being okay with it, you might feel like, no, like this is not right.
Because you have that, I guess, that not punish her, but like,
You have that disciplinary in it.
For sure, yeah.
Also, what usually happens, and I'm a little brother.
Oh, my God, there's an alarm.
Sorry.
I'm a little brother.
So it's always like that thing where like, oh, it was easier for you.
Yes.
Like, for me, I had to do this, this, this is.
Like, now for you.
Like, I know it happens to my little cousin too
where my older cousin's always like, she had it easy.
Right.
And my mom didn't, you know, make her do anything.
I had to, you know, wash the dishes.
I had to wash.
So that second child usually does get that,
that like, I guess more care and less, like, grow up faster.
And that resentment builds up between one sibling to the other.
But it's like, my father.
It's not my father.
And I'm the youngest one and the cutest one.
And my smile is nicer.
I can't help it.
I can't help me.
No, but like, yeah, I mean, I think with this, it's like kicking her out is pretty extreme.
I guess she needs the room.
17 years old, what she didn't do if you kick her out?
She didn't even have a job.
Yeah, I know, like, she needs a room.
I get that part.
But it's like, okay, from now on, you're not going to have a room.
And it's like, and you can say if she hasn't necessarily earned a room, right?
So it's like, hey, baby comes.
You don't have to leave, but, you know, you got to sleep on the couch or you got to sleep with your mom or whatever.
That's what I was thinking.
I was like.
But she wants to, she's finding this as a complete excuse to, like, kick her out.
She might have had the baby just to kick her out.
Who knows?
Okay.
All right.
Get her out of here.
So here's the thing, because she's saying, and I'm just thinking mom and sister.
in the same room.
If you kick your sister out,
you have to kick your mom out
and you need that help for your kid.
Yep.
True.
Because she says,
I'm going to need her to find somewhere else
to live because I need that room for my son.
Unless she has,
why don't you just let her move into the room
with your mom?
With your mom.
Yeah, exactly.
Or assuming that the mom has a room.
If they have separate rooms,
let her move in the room with your mom.
If they don't and they're in one room,
then you're also probably kicking your mom out.
Unless the mom sleeps in the living room.
And also, yeah.
And also it's like,
okay, Tia low life,
not my words, hers, is going to come in handy when you need a babysitter.
Her job will be your baby.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
So like all these, like you want to like kind of throw her away in a way like, like, oh, get out.
But it's like she.
Oh, we're oldest friend.
I forgot.
We're oldest friend.
Yeah, we're oldest friend.
Yeah.
But still, it's like you're going to, you're going to need that help once the baby comes.
You know, especially you're going to have, this is going to be your second baby.
But also, you know, I mean, I don't know how her like husband feels.
But like he's also dealing with her mom, her sister that doesn't.
nothing he's dealing with the baby and he's dealing with her oh yeah so for him
complaining about the other people it's like yo like I'm sure on his side like if I'm
put myself in his perspective I'm like yo why do I got to deal with your whole family
yeah he's outnumbered yeah so it's like it's probably him being like hey the baby needs
to roam like it could be we got to get them out of here because it's already like okay
your mom I get it's like now I'm I'm paying for your little sister you know it's probably
like every time you go you know after a while it adds up right like every time you go
eat. You can't just get stuff for you and your media family. You and your wife and your kid.
She's on the, she's down to Colin. She says, LOL, trust. She is a low life and all she does is play
video games. She refuses to go to the school around the corner of our house. She wants to go far
so no one can give her a ride. I told her there's a good school by my job, but she still doesn't
want to. She was living in Seattle with my older sister and my sister kicked her back out.
Oh my God, everyone's kicking this baby girl up.
I don't know, but I feel so bad for the 17.
She's just 17.
She's just 17.
Just put the hammer to the system.
The play system, right?
Yeah.
So she's already been kicked out.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is her second time.
Yeah.
But I get it.
I guess it's that thing like where you're trying to get.
I got a color.
Where you're trying to get, what's it called?
Her to understand like, hey, this is real life.
You need to get a time.
together, this and that, you know?
So I, I feel like they're trying to, like, give her some hard love.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, tough love.
Tough love.
But, you know, it's...
Tough love doesn't always work with people.
Not always.
Clearly, like, this girl is just, like, they're making, she's making excuses to not go to school.
I don't know what's going to motivate her.
Let me be in August's position.
You have, you've settled down, you have brought her into your house with your mom.
You probably have talked to your older sister that your sister that your sister.
sister's lazy. You're the younger one.
She's lazy. She's not really doing anything.
But she's still your sister. Like, we got to take care of our own.
She's probably like 16, 17 at the time.
Now she's 17 and she's at your crib and she's doing the same thing.
And you're trying to suggest things to her and she won't do it.
Yeah.
And what I'm not hearing is like a dad involved.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
And so that's like...
And also it doesn't seem like the mom is pushing her to do anything.
Yeah, I mean, she's maybe trying to figure it out too.
So it's like there's like a missing component.
opponent here kind of where it's like she's probably
need some support and I can understand it gets frustrating because it's like
I'm gonna tell you when the dad's not involved the sisters act like the dad like
that's why she's very like on some disciplinary and stuff like I gotta play hard on you
because mom is clearly too too soft on you and all of that all right older siblings
chime in it's your time to go up on your siblings oh bro don't call in all right
time to go off on your youngest sibling the consenti
Consentino, they get everything, but they don't work as hard.
So Olga has a mom and a little sister living with her on her hubby.
They have a kid.
They have another kid on the way.
She claims that her little sister's a low life.
Damn.
That's so sad.
I know.
She's only 17.
So like, I feel like you can't.
Look, as the low life of my family, it hurts our feelings when you tell us who we are.
I just feel like you can't be a low life until you're like, I don't know, like 26.
Like 26, 27.
Yeah, like literally your life has passed and you're done with like you didn't get to where you are.
The toughest thing about the situation is that.
Just a lazy teen.
Yeah.
Literally just a teenager.
Yeah.
But the thing is that the age like 16, 17, it's like when they think they know everything.
Yeah.
So like anything you say is not going to register.
It's just going to be like, yeah, whatever.
I know better.
They're going to watch one TikTok video one day and it's going to change their life and they're going to credit that TikTok video and not all your talks.
It's like you've been telling something
Telling them something for like three years
And they're like one TikTok
Yeah I changed my life
Because I had the sad pianos in the background
It's like I've been telling you that girl
Just play the sad piano
TikTok please
It's just a lot being the little one
You guys
It's a lot
It's a lot being the run of the pack
She's about to be an adult
She is about to be an adult
Okay so my dad did something similar
So I have an older brother
He's 12 years older than I am
and he is like my half-brother,
so he's my dad's son from another previous marriage.
But he was also like that.
He wouldn't get a job, and he was the oldest one.
So he was the only child for my dad and that lady.
I guess you're a seigneur.
And then.
That's what your mom called her?
No, no, no, la saluden.
Oh, man.
I'm kidding, I'm kidding, I'm kidding.
I believe it.
No, he said it in Salvi.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Okay. So my dad and that lady had my brother, then he got out with my mom and then had me and my sister.
And so he would come over all the time. To me, he was so cool. He was 12 years older. He listened to hip-hop. Like, this is my guy.
But to my dad, no, this. At your age, I did this, la, la. Like, my dad's been working since he was eight years old. Like, that's what it is, right?
So he told my brother, because my brother had been living with us at the time, if by the time you're 18, you don't get a job, I'm kicking you out.
And my brother, like me, I would not believe this would happen.
Like, you're my dad.
Like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So my brother is still chilling, not doing nothing.
On his 18th birthday, my dad takes all of his stuff outside.
Wow.
And it's like, no.
On his birthday?
On his birthday, because he said you have until you're 18.
On his 18th birthday, all his stuff outside.
And then my brother would be like, but you don't make the girls do it.
The girls are six.
No.
The girls are little.
No, bad argument.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Terrible argument.
So I would give it to 18, based off my life experience.
Did my brother end up getting a trip?
No, but you know what?
He found it.
His wife is the one, and it just happens, the Rolls a Reverse.
He's a stay-at-home dad, and maybe she's meant for that.
Maybe she's meant for some remote work.
Maybe she's meant for, yeah, but he's a stay-at-home dad, and then his wife works.
He accomplished his dream, dream career.
My dad's super mad about it, but you know what I thought about that.
It is.
You get what you want.
Some will say
mission accomplished.
Yes.
You said I couldn't do it, Dad.
He said, I didn't.
Stay home forever.
Look at me now.
All right.
Well, there's that part.
How did you accomplish this?
I would like to.
I don't know.
They moved to Vegas.
They have two kids.
They're good.
They live in life.
Wow.
I need a book.
Yeah, he's good.
He's good.
I love my brother.
My brother Jerry's the best.
But I'm thinking 18 is a good age
to be like, hey, this is.
when you'll learn.
Right now you leave her in the streets at 17.
I don't think she could get a hotel room.
No.
She can't get a lot of stuff.
It's dangerous.
But even then, it's like, let's be real.
Like, 18 in California, like, you can't do any.
Like, you're literally going to be homeless.
Like, you know what I'm saying?
And that's super sad.
Unless she's trying to become a professional gamer and she's really that good and
no one gets to.
Yes, maybe it's that.
All right.
Unless she wants to play college dude in real life and sign them to the military.
Oh, I thought again.
Okay.
Oh, yeah.
So we have Olga on the line.
Olga.
Good morning, Braille.
Oh, God, you're so mean.
No, I'm not.
I'm actually the nicest sister.
What does she do to you?
What did she do to you?
How many of there are you?
It's four of us total.
Okay, and you are in where in the dynamic?
I am the baby of the oldest one.
Oh, wait.
I'm the second youngest.
No, you heard how she said that?
The baby of the oldest choice.
The root comes from.
She was the baby at one point.
Yeah.
this baby
decided how baby her.
No, this one's the other baby.
That's what I'm saying.
So this one's the fourth one.
She's the one that took your spot.
Yeah.
As a baby.
She made you.
No, there's another one.
No.
There's four of them.
Yes.
She said, yeah, no, I'm the third one.
That's what you.
That's the one.
Yes.
Hate her.
From another marriage.
From another marriage then.
Or another, like, she's your half sister.
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
You love her a little bit half less.
I was a baby until you came around.
No, mom, give us all different daddy so we don't fight.
Ah, I like it, I like it.
Okay, mom.
For dad's love.
She's thinking ahead.
So your sister's 17 years old.
Tell me what to you makes her a low life, Olga.
She doesn't do anything at all, like at all.
Literally, she goes out in the morning to, I don't know, where the hell she goes.
But then she comes back.
So whatever there is there, she doesn't even buy.
washing her dishes.
Yeah, munchies.
And then she just sits in the living room playing video games all day.
Smacked.
And then, so we tell her all the time, like, hey, there's a school around the corner.
She's like, no.
What do you mean there's a school around the corner?
Like, is it college?
Is it high school?
A high school.
It's down the street from our house.
But she's like, no, I don't want to go to that school.
It's ghetto.
I'm like, girl, we all went to that school.
Girl, you're getting on the couch.
You got nothing to do.
What to do you like?
Yeah.
And so she wants to go to some school in Orange County.
I'm like, girl, no one, realistically, no one can take you there.
Unless you're going to bust it, then that's something else.
Yeah.
But she's like, no, my mom could drive me every morning.
I'm like, no, my mom has other things to do.
My mom has doctor's appointments.
She can't be taking you every day to school.
And then I'm like, I work near Manhattan.
So I'm like, I can't.
It's like, it's opposite.
Wait, I'm like, I can't take you.
I'm like, there's good schools here in Manhattan.
I'm like, I can sign you up to a school here.
Like Manhattan?
Beach?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
That's a nice area.
That's nice.
What do you mean ghetto?
She's tripping.
We don't live in Manhattan.
No, we live in the ghetto.
Oh.
Okay, so why are you trans under there?
No, I'm kidding.
Why don't you put her into school in Manhattan Beach?
So then it's on your way to your job?
She doesn't want to.
She said that she wants to go to Orange County.
I'm like, no one could take you there.
Like, I'm like, I'm doing my part by like bringing you here.
Why did she drop out?
And why is it okay that she dropped out?
I forgot the drop out part.
Like, why is that?
Because, so, originally they were living here with me.
Uh-huh.
And then they moved to Corona with my older sister,
because my older sister had had a baby, so my mom went to go help her.
And so she went to school over there.
She liked the school over there.
Eventually, they had to come back.
So then when she came back, she didn't want to sign up.
So that's her side of her.
She don't want to sign up to the school down the street.
And then my mom put her in a, it was like a homeschool type of thing.
And she was doing that.
But then eventually she's like, oh, she wants to join the military.
So my sister, the one that I mentioned, that lives in Washington.
She's in the military as well.
So she's like, oh, come over here.
She's like, there's a program that would help you finish school early so you can join the military.
So she did that.
She went over there to Washington with my middle sister.
And, yeah, so she refused to, like, help my sister around the house.
She didn't do much.
And then she was just lazy.
And then she didn't pass the test.
So obviously they couldn't
They couldn't
Like it's like forfeiting her
Her high school diploma
If she were to have gone
Yeah yeah yeah but then she didn't
She would have passed like the test that they required
For the military so she didn't pass that
And that she had to come back
Because my sister's like I'm not going to be
Helping someone that doesn't want to be help
Yes
That's crazy
That's wild
Almost like
So my sister kicked her back over here
And then now I am here
We are dealing with her
Which I'm like
As your oldest sister I support you 100%
but it's little things like this.
I'm like, I can support you.
Like, you want to be a dropout?
That's something we don't support.
Like.
Right.
And it's weird.
Get a dropout.
Get a job.
Yes.
That she's like, like, beggars can be choosers almost, but like she's a dropout,
but she feels like she got options.
She's like, oh, that's too good for me.
No, that's not good enough.
Yeah.
Uh-huh.
She feels so entitled and that's what I, like, we talk with my other sisters.
I think we enabled that too because we pretty much,
we're like her second mom.
So we give her anything and everything that she wants and needs.
But that's what I got to the point where I'm like, no, I can't keep doing that because now I'm like, not only do I have a kid now, but I have another one coming.
And I'm like to look out after someone that's not my kid and like it's old enough to get their own money.
Like.
And I know it sounds like, oh, she's only 17.
She can't get a job.
But we all like, me for example, I started working at 14.
And we all have like, we all had goals.
Okay, you can't work at 14.
What are you doing crazy?
Well, no, I mean, obviously that's why I said.
I'm like, I wanted money.
I feel like, I was working at downtown L.A. in the Cajjones.
Wow.
That's right.
Real hustler.
Make a palette from you.
Olga.
Question.
What is your mom's approach with your sister?
Like, how come your mom doesn't say anything or does she say so?
It's because my mom's older, too.
So I know she doesn't have the energy to stress over her.
And so my mom's like, well, mandala my quarto.
I'm like, yeah, that's the plan.
like go to my mom's room then and leave that room for my son.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So she has her own room.
Yeah.
Must be nice.
Yeah.
Man, I have money, huh?
Okay.
How old was she when this all started?
Because she's 17 now.
But how old was she when like she tried to go to the military and she like dropped like she just stopped going to the other school?
Like how old was she there?
Was it like 15, 16?
No, just recently like so she just turned 17 in May.
So this all happened this year?
Her moving from Corona to your crib, then to the Seattle.
Corona, they were living there last year.
Okay.
And then they moved back when she turned 17 in May.
Yeah.
And then after that, in June, I think it was, she went with my sister.
So my sister had her from June up until, like, endings of August.
Yeah.
And then she's been back ever since, and she refuses to do anything.
Is she rebellious?
But even prior to that, it's like she's always with all my, because pretty much she lived with all my sisters at this point.
And with all of them, it was just, it was just bad.
I'm like, I don't know.
We were all raised different, I guess.
We have to stay mom, but we were raised with a different mentality, I guess.
So I know it's like we go to someone's house.
It's like, we're going to wash our plate and we're going to, you know, try to like do good because that's not our home.
And she's not like that.
Like, she's like, well, I used it.
Yeah, but I'll watch it later.
I'm like, no, dude.
I'm like, we're all eating.
we're all getting up to wash her plate.
Why can't you do that?
She sounds like a chill, like rebellious though.
She's like, yeah.
Like, man, I'll get to it.
Does she watch your kid for you?
Does she help with the baby?
No, and that's the thing she fights with my kid.
We're looking for a positive in her.
We can't fire her.
Wait, how old are you?
This girl, man.
Hold on, man.
Get her out of there.
Give her, you still got that boot.
Give it to her.
Well, we don't know.
Maybe she has a silver tooth.
kid.
How old
your kid?
My kid is such a great kid.
He's such a sweetheart.
You sound like your mom's talking
about your sister.
Okay,
where's her dad in this?
Where's her dad?
Her dad is also living with us.
He obviously with my mom in the room.
But her dad had a stroke.
So he can,
obviously he doesn't work or do anything.
So I'm taking on that responsibility.
Oh my God.
You got an extra room in that.
Olga.
So she sounds like, okay,
let's scale a.
back a little bit. It sounds like she's been through a lot.
You know what I'm saying? And like, yeah, she, not that she's a respondent to it well.
Maybe she's just like shelling up.
Like shell shocked almost. Like it's like all these moves going here, going there.
Dad had a stroke. Like, you know, I get it like that she could respond differently,
but it seems like she's kind of just stuck.
Well, not. I know you're trying to find the positive, but it's not.
Like, I mean, she does not care about her dad at all.
Like,
He does it
There goes that argument
Olga.
I'm like she's 17
There has to be some light
You make me want to kick her out so bad
What video game is she playing?
Right
Go interrupt it
Pass to the phone
Is she good? Is she like
ranked in the world
Red Dead Redemption?
What's your name?
I don't know.
Fortnite?
Who even got her
the video game console?
Who did that?
I did.
That was my fault.
Olga.
Olga.
Can you buy me one,
too?
You're right.
You're blessed him.
Well, we gave it to her for Christmas like two years ago before all this started.
Hey, better a video game than the game.
Yeah.
True.
You know?
It's not too late, though.
Yeah, I don't know.
She doesn't have a boyfriend?
Not that I know.
Why didn't she?
I mean, she's out all morning, so.
Yeah, what is that?
Wake and bake, wake, wake, wake.
Yeah, for sure.
Where did she get the bake to wake?
I don't know.
Is she smoking the reefer?
The devil's lettuce
I don't know what he's doing
Outside the house
Okay
Follow her
Yeah
Yeah spy on her
Okay
I have a job
I can't follow her
Put a ring camera on her
Yeah
I have a question though
Why did she get rejected
From the military
She had to do some test
I don't know what it was
A test that she couldn't pass
Yeah she spelled her name wrong
Oh man
Her own name
I feel like
Yeah that's like a way to like
Shape her up you know
but like if she goes to the recruiting
Honestly I don't think I want her in our military
I don't think she's gonna
She's gonna do the way
She might be a drone pilot
She might be good lady
You know?
I don't know
She could turn into our best and brightest
You know what's her last name?
Who?
Your sister.
Just her last name
I don't want her first name.
I don't want to put her name all there
Well it's free
I want to talk military
Brits give me a new name
Like private lieutenant or private
Lieutenant Hernandez
Her last name he met him
Okay, like, Jimenez, where are you?
Jimenez?
See, I just wanted to do that.
But now it took too long and I was not even funny.
Jimenez, you're late again.
Chopin'em 20.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
All done, I need to take a walk.
No, Olga, honestly, it sounds like a lot.
You sound like very positive and jolly.
Like, your energy is just like, I feel like you try.
Yeah.
And she probably thinks you don't understand, to be honest, Olga.
Because to her, you have everything.
You have a husband.
You have a kid.
You have a house.
And you have enough rooms to even give.
her her own room so that she's not in her there with her mom and her dad getting all freaky uh you're just
you have everything you gave her everything so it's like why are you tripping yeah no but she knows
like the struggle we all went through she knows like growing up she had it easy with both parents
we grew up with uh with just our mom at one point yeah and she knew like the struggle the struggle that
it was like i mean maybe putting her in your mom's room might be the reality check she needs
Yeah.
You know, to have three people in one room and just be like, hey, you know, you got to figure it out.
What does your husband say?
Is he chill with her?
He's over the situation.
He's annoyed of the situation, which I understand him.
I feel like.
He's the one that was telling me, like, because at first we thought she's going to join the military so that's fine.
She's going to be away.
After that, she's going to, like, you know, get a good position in the military where they're all you're going to
pay for her home and everything else.
So we're like, she's good.
And then now that we're having our second baby, we have a seven-year-old right now.
So I'm like, he needs his own room now.
He's sleeping with us.
So that's where it puts me, like, down.
Like, I'm doing so much for you, but I'm not doing it for my family.
And that's what he tells me too.
He's like, you're thinking about your sister, but you're not thinking about your kids.
Have your seven-year-old fight her for the room because you said they fight already.
Yeah, so that's the thing.
When she had left to Washington with my older sister, we had made that room his now.
I'm like, oh, well, she's going to be gone.
We thought, oh, she's going to join the military.
So we had gave him that room.
And, well, we had kind of decorated it for him and everything.
And he was excited.
I mean, he would still come and sleep with us.
That's his room.
Yeah, he's back.
He's like, oh, that's my room.
I'm like, no, I know, but we have to give it to her.
And I don't.
that's fair that I'm taking that for my son now
when...
No, you're right.
You want the support to do an evil deed
to your little sister, all right?
You want to kick her out to the street.
Because where is she going to go?
No, real question.
Real question, where will she go?
Not to the street, but I guess
just a reality check.
Like, she's going to know if she goes to the street,
there's no support there.
Like, there's going to be a wake-up call for her.
Like, it's going to make her open her eyes
and realize that it's not as easy as she thinks.
She wants to act grown.
Yeah.
Then, yeah.
Where will she go, though?
She has her little...
Friends?
Like I said, she says, that's not her boyfriend?
But I'm like, well, you'll have to figure it out.
Hi, Olga.
This is a tough situation.
I'm like 50-50 on the house.
And your other sisters are like, do it, girl.
I don't want her at my house.
Pretty much, yeah.
And I'm like, it's messed up because my mom,
I got pregnant at a young age,
so my mom kicked me out and I made it happen.
Maybe you're doing what was done to you.
Mrs. Make it happen.
And that's what made me be responsible and get my act together.
I got pregnant at 17 and I got, well, yeah, I got kicked on.
My mom's like, well, now you have to go live with your baby daddy.
Yeah.
Do you feel a little bit of resentment for that?
Because it seems like you're doing what your mom did to you that you're trying to do that to your little sister.
I don't because I know if I would have stayed with my mom.
And I'm not saying I'm the best mom.
because I don't think any of them are perfect.
But I feel like if I would have stayed with my mom,
my mom, she 100% supports me.
So I know that I would have probably been a lazy, a lazy mom.
Like, oh, okay, whatever.
My kids crying, let me give it to my mom.
Oh, my kid did.
Let me give the baby to my mom.
No, and that made me stay on my A game.
I'm like, okay, I have to continue school.
I have to graduate because now I have a responsibility.
I'm like, I had to go to college because now I have something.
Right.
I have someone looking up to me now.
Yeah.
All right, Olga.
We're going to take calls.
We're going to help Olga out.
Shout it to you for calling in and sharing your story.
There was no good, no pros of this.
I was trying to find one so hard.
Yeah, me too.
Hold on.
She's not even ranked.
Olga, can you say something nice about your 17-year-old sister?
She's beautiful.
Whoa.
All right.
All right.
We can find her a job.
Modeling.
You know, I don't know.
All right.
Something else nice for your 17-year-old sister?
You got to figure out what game she plays.
What skills?
Maybe she's good at games.
What skills does she have?
What skills does she have?
What game?
I don't know.
All right.
We tried.
Okay.
She don't even know.
What is she really good at gaming?
Yeah.
What if she doesn't?
Nobody takes interest into her.
And that's why she wears bells against everybody, doesn't watch her dish, and makes herself a burden.
Right.
She's like, you guys don't even know my name.
Like, you know?
You don't even know what I.
They don't even know her last name.
Yeah.
Okay.
Just kidding.
Let's go.
There's a lot of calls.
There's a lot of calls.
Should our friend Olga kick her 17-year-old sister out?
Her 17-year-old has dropped out of high school.
She doesn't do anything at the crib.
She's told her, hey, sign up to this school.
Hey, get a job.
And the sister doesn't.
She's just chilling at home and playing video games.
She wants to kick her out.
She has other sisters that have let her live with them.
And they, too, have kicked this girl out.
Does it matter that she's 17?
It's hurting me that she's 17.
But does it matter?
It's a crucial age.
It's a crucial age.
You're technically like still not an adult.
Yeah.
So, yeah, it's tough.
And I'm like Olga where I got pregnant very young.
I got pregnant at 17 and yeah, that was hard and I had to grow up fast.
And I only wish that I had those days where I could just chill and be a teenager.
For sure.
Right?
Like you could just, I never had that because I had to work.
Get your Ponte las Pulas.
You get your ex-co.
Like you got pregnant.
You have to make life it.
So I'm wondering if we know what we were like at that age.
both Olga, who was 17 in Haddicate and myself.
So when we see someone that same age,
just chilling, being a teen,
it can mess with us internally
because we didn't know a 17 like that.
Right.
We knew a 17 of hard work, you know?
So.
But they don't feel that same pressure.
Yeah, but it's almost a gift that you didn't.
Like you, the pressure that I thought
I wouldn't want that on you either.
Right.
Yeah.
I wouldn't want the pressure that I had on you.
You know?
Yeah, but they don't know what they don't know.
Like they don't appreciate it.
Yeah.
I think it says,
simple as like even if just going to school would make a difference yeah like go to school you're
gone from 8 to 3 p.m. you're you're busy you're doing something that is like working towards
productive yeah and I think that aspect of it is what really is messing it up because it's as simple as
like get her in school but it's like how do you actually get her in school and we're in November already so
she's like four months or three months yeah and happened in May no uh August is like when school
usually starts.
Nate, we got Nate from South Central.
What's up, Nate?
From Nate?
Yo, good morning, everybody.
Good morning, Brown, man.
I'm a little deputy right now because of Olga's story.
We're about to kick out a minor, but it's crazy.
But what do you think?
So I was kind of in a situation.
I had my first son when I was a senior in high school.
And I mean, I didn't get kicked out, but I kind of just left.
I got a job and all of that.
but my girl's little sister, she started living with us at 18.
I mean, she graduated high school, so maybe that's a little different.
Yeah.
But so she was staying with her aunt in like Riverside and she wouldn't clean.
She wouldn't do anything.
So then the aunt kicked her out.
And then her mom is, her mom is single and kind of dating scenes.
So she didn't really want to take care of her either.
So then we took her in and we went, I went through the same situation.
she didn't want to clean she didn't want to cook she didn't do no laundry she stayed home all day
no job um and she dropped out and so i kind of told her if you're going to stay with us
you got to do something if you don't want to work then you got to watch the baby and clean the house
like earn your keep somehow in the train yeah do something and so we kind of went through it where
it still wasn't working.
And I mean, I don't want to make you sound bad,
but I kind of told her like,
all right,
we're trying everything with you.
If you refuse to do anything,
then you got to ask your mom for money for groceries.
Because we're going to work every day.
When we go out to eat,
pay for you.
When I go get fast food,
I buy fast food for you.
Christmas comes around.
We buy gifts and all of that.
So if you don't want to do nothing,
then I'm just cooking for me,
your sister and the kids.
And you're going to have to just.
just figure it out.
You feel what happened?
And then I think.
Yeah, I mean, it took a couple of years.
I ain't going to lie.
A couple years?
Yeah, a couple years of her going unfed?
That's crazy.
Who is this?
The child called it?
Wow.
Wow.
That's crazy, poor thing.
I read that book.
That's how I feel right now.
My heart hurts now.
I feel like we're doing that to this little girl.
Put her in the garage.
I would always feel bad because my uncle would always tell me,
don't be, if you're mean with anything, don't be mean with food.
So I still ended up always feeding her.
I just didn't do the extras as far as, if we get fast food, it's, okay, well, there's food
at home for you to figure out to eat.
But, I mean, now she's 23.
So she's, like, on the dream act, so she doesn't have her papers and all that.
So, but now she's 23.
I mean, she still doesn't go to school, but we have a second baby now, and he has autism,
so he doesn't talk or anything.
Oh, man.
So it's hard for any of my family.
to watch him.
Sure.
So she's the one.
She stays home with him every day.
I come home to the house clean now.
I mean, she doesn't know how to cook, but that's not a big deal.
I come home to the house clean.
Wow.
Laundry done, laundry folded.
The baby's a bath.
Well, that's good.
So I think you kind of have to give that tough love.
You have to find what the role is in the house.
You know, sometimes you've got to understand.
The rules are different.
I'm sure it's a little harder with her not graduating high school at least.
This one.
Yeah, yeah.
The sister.
Yeah.
I mean, you got to kind of like, you can't, you can't really put your sister out on the street like that.
I mean, especially out here.
It's a lot going on in the street.
Yeah, fair.
Well, man, I'm, you got to, you got to figure out something as far as if you.
Like a barter.
Like a barter.
Yeah, she can't play the game.
Yeah.
Yeah, Nate.
Thank you.
Do something to try to make her get up and go do something.
Nate, I got to go back to work.
Nate.
Nate.
Thank you so much for coffee, man.
And love to you and low-key, like, I know it's a tough.
job and I know that that beautiful kid is something special in your life and I know that
the job that this young girl is putting in into the family that means a lot that's almost
priceless dog yeah yeah man exactly especially with daycare and everything yeah yeah yeah
yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah from ktown on the line
What's up, Patty?
Hi, guys.
Hi, Patty.
How are you?
How are you?
Good morning.
Good morning.
Patty, we're talking to the home girl Olga.
She has a younger sister.
17 years old, high school dropout doesn't do nothing at the house.
Olga has her house with her husband and her baby.
There's a new baby on the way.
Her mom lives there.
And her stepdad lives there.
And that's the parents of her youngest sister.
But she's seeing this girl not do nothing with her life.
so she wants to kick her out.
She's out to kick her out.
Dang.
She's 19 17.
I told my mom, I know this sounds so terrible, but I told my mom to kick out my sister,
and it put her straight.
How old was your sister at the time?
She was a little bit older.
She was already 18.
Okay.
So she graduated high school.
She was already going to college, but she started getting in with, like, you know,
the wrong kind of friends.
So she stopped going to college.
She's like she was working, but she stopped giving my mom money.
She used to give my mom like 500 bucks a month just to help with rent and groceries and everything.
And she stopped doing that.
And so she wasn't cooking.
She wasn't cleaning.
She wasn't helping her with our youngest sister that was living with my mom too.
And my mom was like struggling.
She's like she leaves all weekend long.
She doesn't call.
She doesn't say anything.
And I'm like, I'm over and I told her mom, kick her out.
That's all you got to do is kick her out.
My mom was like, no, no, like, what is she going to do?
Where is she going to go to her dad?
She could go to her grandma.
She could go to her aunt.
She could go to her friends.
The ones that she disappears to, like, you got to kick her out.
It took my mom about six months to finally decide, like, okay, I'm going to kick her out.
She kicked her out, and my sister disappeared on all of us for like a month.
Oh, I'm scared.
When we finally, yeah, we were like, oh, my God, what happened?
Where is she?
You know, but I told my mom, like, she's doing this.
After we did that thing to her.
You know?
And the whole time she got it, she was working.
She got a job.
She started renting a room.
You know, she, she like, it made her wake up.
It made her realize like, hey, nowhere charges $500 for rent.
Nowhere is, you know, nowhere is free groceries.
Nowhere is free lights and gas.
And, like, you know.
So it made her, it made her wake up.
It made her get her shit together.
Now she's 23.
She has her own place.
She's almost done with.
college. She has a really good job, like way better than what she was working.
Does she hate you guys or is she thankful for you guys? I'm sorry? Does she hate you or
does she thankful for you? Well, she does she hangs out with me all the time.
Oh, okay. So she doesn't hate, she was mad at first. She was like, oh my God, why did you
tell my mom to kick me out? But. Oh my God, Irmana, why would you do that? But it worked
out better for her. See, it can work out. It can work.
But it also depends on them.
That month being gone is scary.
Like, I don't know.
For sure.
Because she's, yeah, she's struggling.
You don't know where she's staying at.
A lot of things that could be up in the year.
I wonder if there's a solution besides kicking her out.
George.
George from Whittier.
George.
Hi, hi.
Morning.
What's up, Pops?
What would you tell our home girl Olga?
Is that what happened?
What happened?
What would you tell our home girl Olga that's trying to kick out a minor?
Oh, I was in.
I'll say no, don't kick her out, but why don't these guys change the locks and take away the Wi-Fi?
Change the locks.
Isn't that kicking her out?
No.
No, change the locks to the room.
Because isn't she staying in the room?
Yeah, she's staying in the room.
So kick her out of the room that are staying the house.
Yeah, kick her out of the room, but not the house.
She's going to be on the couch all day.
You're going to see it all in front of you versus, like, in the room.
But also take out the Wi-Fi so that she can't use the Wi-Fi.
What are I going to do?
I want to watch the stuff.
She would have to, you know, pay for the Wi-Fi.
So either, like, you know, get a job or go to school.
And that's how she would have to pay for the Wi-Fi.
I lookie like that solution better than most of the other ones.
I mean, change the locks is pretty much kicking her out.
Change the locks to the room, not to the house.
Yeah, but then she's going to go to your room.
All right.
Daniel.
Daniel, West Covina.
What's it, Daniel?
Daniel.
It's Danielle.
Oh, Daniel.
I'm so sorry, Daniel.
It's the way our guy, Umberto spells.
It's just, I don't know.
Yeah, he went, I don't know what.
All right, Danielle, talk to us.
What would you tell our friend Olga?
She has a 17-year-old sister that lives with her and her husband.
Also, she let the mom and the dad of this younger sibling live with them, too.
But her younger sibling is just not doing anything.
Super lazy.
Said she was going to go into the military, didn't drop out of high school, all of that.
And she's like, you know what, I have to kick her out.
Should she or what else do you think she should do?
So bad for this.
little girl. I feel so bad she has not had any consistency in like her prime like teenage years.
The 17 year old. The sister. Yeah. Yeah. I feel like she was in Washington and Corona. I think if we give
her responsibility and goals and like more strict rules, I think she can be successful.
Yeah. So give her a little grace.
Give her a little grace, give her a little sympathy.
No, no, give her more consistency.
Like, I feel like maybe the parents can give her a little bit more time out of the day,
like, know what she likes in life, what video games she likes.
I don't think they know much about her.
I think they need to give her a little bit more time, a little bit more, like, consistency and goals.
I think kids thrive off of goals and responsibilities.
So they think they need to give her that.
Yeah.
Danielle, I'm kind of with you right there.
But I'm also very sympathetic towards kids and 17-year-olds and all of that.
I know if I had a 17-year-old in my house now, I was not doing anything.
And I'm like, when I was your age, I was low-key, like, at three different schools and two different works and all of that.
No, but I agree with the not having consistency part.
Yeah.
Her life hasn't been.
There's been no real foundation.
Yeah, it takes a way bigger toll than people realize.
Yeah.
And sometimes that's coping.
Low-key.
I'm not trying to deal with life right now.
Yeah.
for sure.
I mean,
I got to go take a walk every morning because of all this stuff.
Shannon from Englewood or as Maximo would say it.
Say Ingloid.
Inglewood?
He says it funny.
Yeah, Inglewood.
Shannon from Inglewood or as Maxx's.
No, you said Inglewood.
You say Inglewood.
You say Inglewood?
Shannon.
Shannon.
What's up, Shannon?
Hello, good morning, Brown, Bad.
Good morning.
Shannon.
On my notes here, our guy, Umberto said, you're going to tell it.
how it is. So I'm just ready. Like you go, what would you tell? Oh, yeah, I'm definitely a truth
teller. So first, I was going to address the fact of the 17-year-old first. But as I said and I
listen to everyone, I think the monkey in the room is really on the parents. Yeah. Because when you
have two parents that are in a household and they're still letting a child run amok, they're the
problem there. And so with her mother and her stepdad being in the household at our,
at ourselves at that point as parents, as grandparents and, and realize that our rearing as,
you know, from the 70s up until the early 90s, kids got their heads knocked off.
Kids got their butts whooped. Kids had punishments. This gentle parenting is not working.
world. How do these kids and expect them to be able to go out in the world and function?
We can't, we can't look at these kids and say, oh, she's just 17. She's a year from being an adult
from making a decision whether she wants to stay or go on her own. It's at the time, these kids
aren't holding their own. And I'm saying that in the aspect of going to school, getting the
grades that they need to get to either sustain themselves after they graduate,
high school or you're going to get a job and be able to sustain yourself once you are of age
to make the decisions today or nay to whether you're going to follow rules of a household.
Now, with that being said, the responsibilities, because obviously her parents aren't doing
what they did as far as tough love is concerned for as far as her older siblings,
are concerned. I'm the third to the youngest when I was 12 years old. And let me tell you that my 17-year-old
sister stepped up and helped my dad raise had to carry our own. It made me a stronger person. I was pregnant
at 16. I had my baby at 17. But guess what? I graduated from high school with honors. I went to school
every day. My baby sat on the table with me when I studied and because we were required.
to be responsible for the decisions that we make.
These kids are not required to do anything at this point.
You can't tell your kids to go to school.
You can't put a camera up in the house dang near to make sure that they're doing what they're supposed to do.
It's unfair.
The government has set our children up for failure, and they have tied our hands, and it's not good.
It's not good.
This Trump election, not good.
It's all feeding into this fairy tale lifestyle that no one is going to have.
Shannon.
Period.
Shannon, should she kick her out or should she keep her in the house?
Okay.
So as far as kicking her out, I don't think she should kick her out.
She's 17 years old.
And if she's not willing to kick her parents out and tell them that either they're going to step up or step.
out, then she can't hold that 17-year-old accountable for those things.
But what she does be to address with her parents is that at 17, when I got pregnant,
you put me out.
And so guess what?
With my 17-year-old sister in my household running the muck and doing whatever she wants
to do, guess what?
That same ultimatum is on your head.
It's not the 17-year-old's issue at this point.
It's those parents' issue.
I'm a parent of a 34-year-old.
almost 35-year-old mother with seven grandchildren and none of my
my daughter couldn't come in my home and let my granddaughter run a muck in my
house I'm sorry and I wouldn't bring my child there to run a muck in my kids
house when they couldn't run a muck in mine.
I think Shannon had some valid like very valid points as far as it's got to be it's not just
the seven it's not just the face value.
you. It's literally deeper than that.
For sure. A lot on the do with the parents.
Olga, did you hear that? You heard all of that, huh?
So did we. We got scolded because of you, Olga.
Olga, I know you're on the line. You see?
I'm in trouble too.
What did I do? What did I do? Let me talk to your mom.
Gentle parenting, not working.
And I know like you guys feel like, at least sometimes with my dad who's one of 15,
the older ones end up taking care of younger ones and it kind of goes without thing.
And it's not the best thing, but also my grandma and my grandpa started having kids really young, too.
Again, that's the dynamic that was over there.
It's not okay.
It's definitely not okay.
There is onus on the parents.
But even the parents probably are not equipped to handle that.
So you guys, I guess they may feel, oh, good, that you guys are more equipped to handle the 17-year-old than they would be, you know?
Or do you blame your mom and your stepdad too?
Do you blame them too?
Do you think it's on them?
No.
No, I think it's on my little sister herself.
Your mom, no, she's just chilling in her room with her man.
No, I mean, for the extent, I mean, my mom does the most.
She helps you.
She tries her part.
She's the one that tries to sign her up and everything, but my little, she's the one that just refuses to that doesn't want to.
Because obviously my mom, like I said, she's an older lady too, which, I mean, that's not an excuse.
but you can't
you feel for her because
yeah yeah you feel for her but
there is that like
responsibility as a parent
and I think it
I mean
because she's putting it on you
yes she's putting it on you
I see why it's not on you
and why it's on your parents
but I also understand why you're taking
it for your parents because of
I guess the dynamic there and you're putting it on
your sister but I'm just
going to tell you right now I googled if kicking out
a 17 year old is illegal and it is
so don't do that okay
thanks
it says typically kicking out
an underage child usually a minor
younger than 18 years old is regarded
as child abandonment
which is a crime okay so you're not going to do
that right you promise
Olga
when's her birthday
when is her birthday Olga
January? January boom
wait three months
kick you're out later
it's a crime right now Olga
And I'm going to check on you.
I'm going to get your phone number.
I have it, actually.
I'm going to text you.
Olga, what you got to do, right?
Change your locks to electric locks.
And then drop, like, lock the whole house till 3 p.m.
So that she has to be out.
So she's forced to be out.
And have no Wi-Fi on until you guys get home.
Like when you're home, the Wi-Fi's on.
When you're not, it's off.
And then until, yeah.
Olga, don't kick her out.
I just told you it's a crime.
You can't say you didn't know.
Now you know.
Now you know.
Sounds like, ah, yeah, right.
Watch me.
Prometel, I'm going to text you and I'm going to ask her pictures as proof that she's there.
Olga, play a video game with her.
Talk to her.
Don't hello me.
Don't hello me.
The time has come for this.
Nom, nom, nom, nom, num, num, news.
I know Angie's not here right now, but the biggest pun is over in Santa Ana right now.
Hey, yo.
We're talking about masapan.
Okay.
A factory in Santa Ana actually made the world's largest, and it won a world record for this.
The world's largest massapan, yes, that candy.
Wow.
Isn't it a candy even?
The sweet, the sweet treat that we all like.
Okay, it was 23,015 pounds, you guys.
The previous record holder was in Guadalajara in 2018, but this one is that much bigger, and it looks so delicious.
Does this go in the Guinness World Records?
Guinness World Records for the world's largest masapan.
Oh, wow.
Coming in from Santa Ana, California.
That's wild.
Yeah, it's amazing.
It's delicious.
It looks.
I'm not,
mm,
I'm not a fan.
They had like a whole celebration for us, too, though.
That's your half salvi side.
No.
It's too dry.
What?
It is very dry.
Like, I feel like,
I feel like I'm going to choke.
Yeah, people have definitely choked on masapine.
Yeah.
100%.
I would not.
Your body gives the wetness.
Pause.
Yo.
You.
Body adds to the wetness of it.
I'm dry as hell.
Yeah, if you dry, dude.
I don't know what you about that.
Where's something wrong with you?
Put some lotion up.
I don't got that.
All right.
Okay, you know how like dirt and then you put water and it's mud?
Yeah.
That's a massapanda.
Like, even if it's dry with your saliva.
So what am I supposed to do?
Spit on it?
Yeah.
Spit on the thing.
Apparently you do, bro.
You love hearing this.
Where are you?
Oh, I can't play in it.
Thank God.
Just say what she was.
No, no.
Say it real quick.
No.
I have to.
I'm so creamy.
I hack to.
I have to.
I have to.
I have to.
I have to.
Give a sleep cream.
Give a sleep cream.
Oh my God.
Jesus, me.
Oh, my sister.
Okay.
Sorry.
She's my sister.
All right.
I love Massapan.
I know it gets a bad rep.
It gets a bad rep because it breaks.
It gets a bad rap because clearly you guys don't like.
Mike Driesies. It's a choking hazard.
True.
How are you eating a whole?
Don't eat whole?
No.
You break it off like a little pie.
Yeah.
Like a slice.
I mean, it's good.
And it has its own taste.
Yeah.
Peanut.
Yeah, it's peanut, but it's like crushed peanut.
It's crazy.
It's a trip.
I buy it, though, to take it to places.
I never made a masapan hater in my life.
I'm not a hater.
I would like if more things were massapan flavored, but I don't like the
massapon itself too much.
because of the consistency of it.
I hate that I did this story then
because I remember pitching this story
and you were like
I could talk about masabana all day
but you didn't tell me that
it was talk smack about it
I love the flavor
and I love like the
seeing it at parties
I'm just like it's so cool
how long it's been
and like everywhere you go you know that brand
I love that about it
Who the heck's gonna eat all the masapan in Santa Ana
right now?
Yeah but if everyone hates it
No, I took a asapang to a party and they finished it.
Yeah.
Yeah, people like it.
Just me personally.
I don't like.
So you're happy.
So you're happy.
Well, I just, I, I would have loved if there was like massapan ice cream,
Mazabon, all these different things.
It's like a whole world of Masapan flavor things.
I like Masapan itself.
Massapan itself.
Give me that right now.
That whole, look, that's a big masapan.
Massapan, actual peanut butter spread?
Massive.
Massapan.
Yes.
Smacking.
They're going to.
have to get rid of it somehow.
People are going to have to eat it.
I think they're throwing an event for everyone to eat it.
There was an event.
Yeah, there was an event just show it off.
Yeah.
Wow.
What are they going to do with it?
I don't know.
Well, let these here.
Y'all eat it.
I'll spin it.
Get wet.
Y'all saying it's dry.
You just use your saliva, weirdos.
I don't know.
Not familiar.
It's dry until it gets in your mouth, dogs.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, all right.
I don't even mean it like that, fool.
That was like a break.
You know like Eminem's melting your mouth, not in your hand, right?
Masapan, same thing.
I don't know.
I chew Eminem's.
So.
I'm not going to.
You chew nuts?
All right.
Well, put a masapan in my mouth.
There's nothing wrong with that.
There's literally, you guys are making it gross.
It's not gross.
It's mat.
It's dry.
You guys said it's dry.
It's dry.
It's dry.
It's dry.
It's dry.
It's dry.
It's dry.
will make it wet.
There's literally nothing wrong and I'm mad.
And I don't F with you guys right now.
I need you to call this up right now.
And decide who you think is the better cook.
Chef.
Is it Maximo or is it Vic?
We all know.
I'm so glad that I get to partake in these activities.
Angelica is sick.
Greg is not here.
And the guys made French toast, right?
thing because we have a brunch coming up on Saturday.
If you want to go, you can RSVP at PowerWitness6.com slash HPC.
We're going to have a brunch there, Friendsgiving vibes.
So come dressed up all cute, okay?
We have $500 gift cards that we're going to give away at the brunch.
So make sure you can sign up.
But because we are doing the brunch, this Saturday.
We're not cooking there, but I was like, I wonder if you guys can even do brunch
food because the guys were like, oh, they better have this and they better have that.
And I was like, can you guys even make a brunch activity?
And then you're like, yes, we can make French toast.
Oh, yeah, I frenched the hell out of some toast.
Yeah, me too.
You French the toast?
That's crazy.
Yeah, hell, yeah.
So what I did with the Masapana, but you all took a different.
A little French you got toasted.
He french the toast is crazy.
Yeah.
French the toast.
Anyway, so they both have made French toast.
Correct.
And you're going to decide who has the better one.
I will taste.
I'll be your taste, sister.
Oh, my God, you're going to make me do it.
And I'll tell you who has the better French toast.
Is it Maximil?
I've been bringing syrup, I think.
Of course I did.
Let me see what you got.
Don't play with me, bro.
I got the bigger jump than you.
I got 100%.
Our finest.
Pure maple syrup.
Straight from Canada.
Oh, yeah.
They're turning up.
We got to record this, brother.
Is this getting recorded?
Product of Canada, bro.
Mine too.
This probably came from Monrovia.
Only Vic is in here.
I don't know if Maximal bowed out of the competition.
He should not get equal credit.
He should already start at a disadvantage for being late.
For being late.
But didn't you just take the microwave before him?
No, there's two.
Oh, there's two.
Okay, I'm smelling a really good French toast.
So we have a brunch coming up on Saturday.
RSVP Power 106.com slash HPC so that you could go.
RSD, as you could join us at our Friendsgiving brunch.
The guys both made French toast last night or this morning?
When did you guys make this?
I made mine fresh this morning.
He said 3 a.m.
3 in the morning?
Yeah, I even sent proof to the chat.
Wow.
Yeah, I made it, yeah.
Yeah, 3 a.m. is crazy.
Yes.
So it's not that fresh.
Not anyone else
No, I live alone
Okay
I saw a nail
On the video he sent
Was it a girl that made it
No, I made it, I swear
Okay
So Saraii from Whittier
She's going for Vic
To be the better
French toast maker
Lorenzo from Anaheim is going
With Maximo
Whichever one of you
Has the better French toast
It looks kind of gross
What you mean
How's it look gross
That's how French toast looks
It kind of looks like a girl cheese
Not your life
It does not look gross
That's how French toes looks.
Okay.
Okay.
Trust me.
So depending on who's...
Well, you know the thing is that Maximo's girl has said that he's a really good cook.
Yeah.
So I'm going to put...
But she also loves him a lot.
You know what I'm saying?
He also gave him the butt of the bread.
No, I didn't.
He told me that.
He's like, they're giving the butt of the bread because...
You know, they're not...
Not that slice.
I'm not going to give him the best.
Who wants me to try their...
Me.
Me, me, me, me.
Since I wasn't late.
Let's keep in mind what time I got here.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
And when did you make yours?
Oh, 5 a.m.
Yeah, he didn't wake up early or nothing.
So, like, you know, I specifically woke up early.
Literally.
Okay.
Okay.
Let's see.
Lettis.
Take in her first bite.
You know what I'm having a...
Big, there's like a...
No, chill.
A hair?
There's no hair.
What is that?
I don't know what that is.
Ugh.
Nah, chill.
Oh.
What's what are you talking about?
I clean my grill right before.
There's nothing.
Wait, Vic.
Oh, come on.
No.
I'm serious.
What is that?
I think your maple syrup has like ants in it or something.
No, it does not.
Look, Vic.
How does it have ants?
It's 100% maple syrup.
Sometimes they get, why are you laughing?
I just had some.
Are you serious?
I'm not joking.
Bruh.
Look, look, pour it yourself, bro.
I'll pour it.
Pour it and eat it.
Look, look at this one.
Pour it, bro.
Hurry up.
Stop trying to buy time.
You're talking about the maple syrup.
That's not.
It's not the bread.
It's the maple syrup.
I swear to God.
And it's happened to me before.
It's crazy.
maple syrup.
There's no ants in here.
Okay, now look through it.
Wow, parasites.
There's nothing in here.
Yeah, I see him.
I see him.
What is that?
Hold on, what is it?
He has bugs in his...
There's my butt.
That's how you serve?
You all I mean the name?
Nick, you try to kill me, dog.
I'm not even joking.
I ate this.
There's a bug right there.
We don't know what that is.
That has legs.
Bro, look out.
There's three right there.
Oh, what is that?
What is that?
You don't even got to try it by it.
You sabotage me.
You sabotage me.
That's crazy.
I just bought this.
Lorenzo, you're going, well.
I just bought this.
Terrible customer service.
Hey, Lorenzo, you're going.
I'm going to tell you guys where I got this from.
No, you're not.
