Digital Social Hour - Building Bridges: Comedy, Activism, and Change | Charleston White DSH #684

Episode Date: August 31, 2024

🎙️ Dive into "Building Bridges: Comedy, Activism, and Change" on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🚀 Join us in this captivating episode as we explore the intersection of comedy, activi...sm, and cultural change. Packed with valuable insights, our guest shares their journey from studying legendary comedians like Redd Foxx and Eddie Murphy to standing up against societal challenges. Discover how humor can be a powerful tool for change and why it's crucial to have the right people around you. 🎭   Don't miss out on this engaging conversation that touches on everything from the essence of hip-hop culture to the impact of societal norms. Tune in now and join the conversation about building better communities and fostering genuine change. Watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and right here on YouTube! 📺 Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🌟   #MindAgainst #Vladtv #StreetCodes #2Pac #DigitalSocialHour   #EntertainmentNews #Boosie #ExclusiveMusic #DjVlad #2Pac   CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:40 - Charleston's Comedy Club in Vegas 01:34 - Kevin Hart vs Cat Williams Comedy Feud 02:07 - Charleston's Dislike for Terrence Howard 03:21 - Understanding Hitler's Legacy 06:16 - Charleston on Boosie Badazz's Influence 06:57 - Authenticity of Boosie Badazz's Persona 07:42 - Surrounding Yourself with Positive People 13:33 - Michael Rubin’s Exclusive Party Insights 18:05 - Discussion on Racial Language and the N-Word 20:37 - The Psychology Behind Pretending to Be Dumb 24:05 - No Jumper Podcast Highlights 27:30 - Alternatives to Gang Involvement 34:30 - Charleston's on Donald Trump 36:31 - Communication with the Crips 44:17 - Insights from Vlad TV Interviews 44:45 - DJ Akademiks and Hip-Hop Commentary 47:44 - Discussion on Banning Hip-Hop Music 49:23 - The Cultural Impact of Hip-Hop 55:23 - Post-Crack Era: Values and Consequences 57:14 - Government's Role in the Crack Epidemic 59:16 - Where to Find Charleston   APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com   GUEST: Charleston White https://www.instagram.com/officialcharlestonwhite https://www.youtube.com/@TheFanBus   SPONSORS: Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly   LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 You're trying to get Boosie Badass arrested, I saw. Speaking of the police. Yeah, you know, I was just bullshitting. I actually like Boosie. I'm actually a big fan of Boosie. I don't like the persona, the image, and the gangster character that he upholds to the culture. Because he stands on street codes. Yep.
Starting point is 00:00:22 And at the same time, he tried to raise his children and do the right thing. He really lived by what he, by what he believed. All right, guys, he's back. Second most viewed episode on the channel out of a thousand episodes.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Thanks for coming on, my brother. Man, appreciate you, man. Appreciate you for having me. Awesome, man. And you got residency in Vegas now, right? Yeah, a Wise Guys Comedy Club, man. Let's go. So you'll be here weekly? Weekly weekly weekly every thursday okay so you want to go hard with this comedy stuff well i i grew up studying it and and so i'm kind of i'm a i'm a student of
Starting point is 00:00:53 comedy i would listen to it and go mimic it and then get get spankings you know get whoopings because kids aren't supposed to you know back in day, kids weren't supposed to even hear it or listen to it, let alone regurgitate it. So, yeah, man, I was, yeah, yeah, I've been watching it for a long time. Who were you studying? Redd Foxx, Ma Mabel, Eddie Murphy, Richard Pryor, Robin Harris. And even though Petey Green wasn't a comedian, he was a radio personality who had a lot of comical ways. So I grew up studying him. But my favorite is Redd Foxx.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Legends. What do you think about Kevin Hart? I love Kevin Hart. I've actually seen him perform in person. Nice. And he was good. Who's that guy that went after him on Shannon Sharp's podcast? Cat Williams.
Starting point is 00:01:44 Cat Williams, yeah. I love Cat too, though. Yeah, yeah, Cat. I love Cat, too, though. Those are two different comedians. Yeah. Cat is more urban hood, and he can cross over, but Kevin Hart, to me, is more cultural, diverse comedian than what Cat would be. I feel that.
Starting point is 00:02:06 Yeah. Did you see the Terrence Howard episode on Rogan? No, I didn't. You didn't see it? No, I didn't. Damn. Broke the internet, man. I heard about it.
Starting point is 00:02:14 Why didn't you see it? I'm not a big fan of Howard. I'm a big fan of Rogan, but not Howard. I didn't think that he had that level of intellectual conversation. Wow. So I wasn't intrigued by it. It made a lot of noise. It got my
Starting point is 00:02:34 attention. Why aren't you a fan of Howard? I've only liked one role that he played in. Yeah, I've only liked one role that he played in. Yeah, I've only liked one role that he played in. So just as an actor, you're saying? Yeah, just as an actor, man. Yeah, I've only liked one role that he played in. So not him as the man personally, but I've only liked one role that he played in as an actor.
Starting point is 00:02:55 So I've never been too fond of watching. I feel that. I don't even watch movies anymore, dude. You don't? I feel like they lost their touch. Me too. I'm more of a... I've been watching a lot of documentaries on Netflix.
Starting point is 00:03:07 Yeah, so, you know, between Hitler. There's one about a wrongfully convicted kid, Sean Elliott. So I've been watching a lot of documentaries. I haven't saw a good movie in a long time. Yeah, I like documentaries. Do you think Hitler was misunderstood? Very, very much so. I don't think that
Starting point is 00:03:31 I don't think his history has been told fairly. Because good people do bad things. Just like bad people do good things. They've made him 100% complete bad. And that's not true about no human so you think you can be like evil but not entirely evil uh you can be good and evil simultaneously but that's the
Starting point is 00:03:55 dual nature of a human good and bad we all have good and bad in us we all have good and evil in us as humans we all have the capacity uh to be a hitler we all have that in evil in us as humans. We all have the capacity to be a Hitler. We all have that in us to be that. So, yeah, yeah. I feel that. Yeah, the media will just show one side. Yeah. So they'll never show the other side.
Starting point is 00:04:16 It's just like people who, I'm pro-police. I back the blue. But I noticed that whenever someone kills a cop in America, that person is erased. You don't hear it. Once they give you the bad side of who that person is, there's nothing good that they will ever say about that person ever again. They won't share the family's pain. They won't share the mother's pain.
Starting point is 00:04:42 You won't hear anything from the father, the friends. They are completely erased. Wow. Yeah, when the four cops killed Floyd, they're pretty much toast, right? Yeah. They're gone. Yeah. Now they're getting raped in jail, I saw last time.
Starting point is 00:04:57 Wow. Crazy, right? Yeah. There's two sides to it. Yeah, there's two sides to everything. They like to showcase the police brutality on my Instagram. Oh, you think so? On mine, yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:07 They like to show it? Yeah. It happens. It happens more than most, the average Americans think happens. But overall, you're pro-police? 98% of my existence is pro-police. Wow. And that's rare for coming from your background, right?
Starting point is 00:05:25 Yeah, black man coming from where I come from. Yeah. Embracing the culture that, you know, that I grew up embracing. Yeah, I'm considered a sellout because I support police. So people call you that for that? Yeah. Uncle Tom, sellout. Uncle Ruckus, you know, snitch, rat.
Starting point is 00:05:44 Because I advocate calling the police. I've heard people say, man, I wouldn't wish jail on my worst enemy, but in the same breath, kill the enemy. I think they're needed because what would we do without them? Man, if my mother called the phone right now, I probably wouldn't answer. And she could be in an emergency. I would rather her call the police. Facts. Because they got equipment.
Starting point is 00:06:11 They got guns, dogs, whatever. Yeah. To help her out. And we pay them to take care of us. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I feel that, man.
Starting point is 00:06:17 You're trying to get Boozy Badass arrested, I saw. Yeah. Speaking of the police. Yeah. You know, I was just boozing. I actually like Boosie. I'm actually a big fan of Boosie. I don't like
Starting point is 00:06:30 the persona, the image, and the gangster character that he upholds to the culture. And at the same time, he has children that he goes out of his way to try to raise right. So he's an oxymoron to a certain degree because he stands on street codes.
Starting point is 00:06:52 Yeah. And at the same time, he tried to raise his children and do the right thing. Yeah, that's a tough balance. Do you think it's a persona he's playing? Now it is. I think at one point in time, he really lived by what he believed. Yeah. I think now he don't live by it,
Starting point is 00:07:15 but he's still trying to propagate it. Yeah. He's still trying to propagate it as if he's just, and he's not. Well, once you get the money and the fame, why would you want to keep living that? You know what I mean? We watched many of them get the money and the fame and go's not. Well, once you get the money and the fame, why would you want to keep living that? You know what I mean? We watch many of them get the money and the fame
Starting point is 00:07:28 and go to prison. We can name a host of rappers who as soon as they got the money and the fame, they committed a crime and went to prison. Fugiano. Pusheisty. So there's a list of them you can take the man out of the ghetto or the hood
Starting point is 00:07:50 but you can't take the hood or the ghetto out of the man the individual have to be willing to change from within and it's hard to do when you take a lot of people with you facts, because you become your environment
Starting point is 00:08:06 yeah so i tell young children all the time um i can look at your five closest friends and and predict your future so if you want to know where you're going in life just look at your five closest friends and that'll kind of give you the direction in which way you're headed yeah because a lot of these these rappers stay with the same people, right? Yeah. And they don't evolve. Yeah. Damn.
Starting point is 00:08:27 At all. They don't even realize that's what's bringing them down, too. Well, it's hard to step away to take a look, to make the right kind of assessment. Yeah. Because the most part, you're high, you're're drunk and you're around a bunch of people. So when do you give yourself or allow yourself to look in the mirror to assess you? Uh, when do you have a quiet moment or quiet time, you know, outside of probably going to sleep or sitting on the shitter to,
Starting point is 00:09:01 to really have a deep thought and say, okay, man, what am I doing wrong? What am I doing right? Uh, to really look at the people and say, okay, man, what am I doing wrong? What am I doing right? To really look at the people around you. So I make it my business to do that for me. I feel that. Yeah, you got good people around you. I didn't notice that about you. You're very selective.
Starting point is 00:09:17 Yeah, I make it my business to do, because I pay attention to everything that's around me. Yeah. I'm willing to take the fucking to learn. I'm willing to take it, you know, to see who's robbing me, who's's around me. Yeah. I'm willing to take the fucking to learn. I'm willing to take it, you know, to see who's robbing me, who's lying to me. So you have to assess. Yeah, so you'll put out a test to see loyalty?
Starting point is 00:09:34 Yeah. Yeah, I do that too. I'll tell two people different things and see what comes up. You know what I mean? You got to, man. You got to see if people are talking behind your back. Man, it's some good water.
Starting point is 00:09:44 Yeah, not bad. I'll put you in touch with them, too. What did you think of the Kendrick Lamar stuff with Drake? I thought it was staged at first. At first, I thought this was staged. They were running a flea flicker play on the people. Then once it went on for about a week or two, you start hearing reports that All these guys may be having
Starting point is 00:10:05 Animosity toward each other over a girl Then as it go on And the song start being released You start seeing these guys attack each other In ways that It was a cat fight It was a cat fight by way of rap lyrics And it's gotten ugly And so at first Yeah, it was a cat fight. Yeah, it was a cat fight by way of rap lyrics.
Starting point is 00:10:27 And it's gotten ugly. And so at first, I kind of looked down upon it. Because why do we always need beef to excite us? Why do we always have to go against one another to get the best out of each other? Yeah, I thought that they probably would have gotten more. I thought that they would have given more to the culture. I think the fans would have gotten more out of a song had they all collaborated rather than going against one another. So I think now we're divided again as a culture.
Starting point is 00:11:03 So I think every 10 years in hip-hop culture in the black community, we have something that divides us. It started out with Crips and Bloods. It started out with East Coast, West Coast, Tupac, Biggie, North versus the South music. So now fans are taking sides. And so now fans are not only taking sides, they acting out in violence and taking sides.
Starting point is 00:11:31 Rick Ross just got jumped on. Yeah, I saw that. So, yeah, it's just another element that keeps us divided. It's crazy, yeah. Certain artists can't even go to Canada now. There you go. That's nuts. And so here I am.
Starting point is 00:11:44 I'm on the sideline and I'm trying to make it comical. Yeah, I want to make this shit comical because what they mad for? Literally, what are they mad for? And then why are the fans mad? Well, they want to hurt somebody that ain't done nothing to them.
Starting point is 00:12:08 Right. They want to show their loyalty to the artist, right? That's what it is. The artists don't show their loyalty to us. So why is fans what we want to show out other than just supporting their music? Yeah, it's a weird situation. It seems like Kendrick won, though. Ain't no seem like it.
Starting point is 00:12:25 He did. Lyrical-wise. Lyrically and numbers. But I'm a fan of Drake's music. Man make good music. You cannot deny that. I'm a fan of Kendrick Lamar persona and what he's represented as a rapper.
Starting point is 00:12:53 Kendrick's won the battle, but Drake's winning the war. How so? You didn't see Kendrick at Michael Rubin's party. You saw Drake. Drake is a little taller, a little bit more handsomer, more of a sex symbol to the women, whether they're black, white.
Starting point is 00:13:17 The women, you know, Kendrick's a little short dude. So the tall, handsome, yellow guy with the long hair that got more hits that's embraced by the Jewish population and friends, yeah, he went all day long. He went in the war. I feel that. What do you think of Michael Rubin's parties? It's getting a lot of attention on social media.
Starting point is 00:13:38 Yeah, we just mad because we can't go. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Y'all better go on and admit. Y'all better go on and say it. We just mad because we can't put on us Some white linen and go man Yeah that's all You would go if you were invited You're goddamn right I would go
Starting point is 00:13:50 Because I want to go assess And make an observation Because I want to See I was the black guy During The Trayvon Martin And George Zimmerman verdict I remember dressing up And going to a executive meeting with the Tarrant County GOP Republican Party.
Starting point is 00:14:12 Because racism in America was starting to resurface in a way that it hadn't resurfaced for our generation outside of the Rodney King situation, right? So from the Rodney King situation to the Trayvon Martin verdict, we hadn't really saw any ugly, ugly racism in this country that caught our attention the way the George Zimmerman verdict did. So I was just starting to get into politics at the time. So I really wanted to see if Republican white people were as racist as it was being propagated and projected to us so i live in a i i live in a predominantly a republican county it's it's it's considered a red state a red county the largest voting republican base in the country so man i dressed up one day just like a hood nigga would look cock my hat to the side
Starting point is 00:15:06 with my hoodie on my gold chain and i went to a republican executive uh a meeting where they had a lot of elected officials greg abbott was there and so i was just looking and they was just looking like what this nigga doing here and i'm looking trying to see well i want to talk i want to get on the microphone and speak because i saw that they was allowing people to speak. And I remember a guy asking me, saying, well, what do you want to say? And I told him, I know the history of these two parties. And I know which parties stood with black people. And I know this is the party that used to embrace niggas.
Starting point is 00:15:40 And that white man didn't know what to say to me when I said embrace niggas but he was he was taken aback by my my knowledge of history about the party and so he gave me a card and he was from Greg Abbott's office which was Greg Abbott's our governor the next day I called the Republican party and told them what my experience was as a black person with gold teeth in their mouth and I was smelling like a pound of weed. So they invited me to come to the headquarters. So I went to see for myself, is it really like this? And I saw that it's really not like that.
Starting point is 00:16:16 Wow. So the South isn't racist? Very much so. But it's hidden. Just like racism is hidden in Americaica you can't blatantly identify racism because it's hidden it's elusive it's it's hidden in the fabrics of what america is built on it's generational there you go so what we think is racism is really is really a fucked up ideology supported by prejudice. Because the people we're calling racist are co-workers who don't have no power over us.
Starting point is 00:16:53 Racism is power. So when black people, from my standpoint, man, we don't knock this group of black people. We don't know no motherfucking racism. Really? It's hitting. Huh. Most cops aren't saying, get out the car, nigga. I mean, it's not blatant.
Starting point is 00:17:15 It used to be blatant. It's hitting now. It's covert. Right. Yeah, my grandparents were racist. They would say it, but now you don't say that word. No. Unless you're Ryan Garcia.
Starting point is 00:17:25 There you go. But even with Ryan Garcia, nobody's shaming the Mexicans in Houston for saying it. The peso peso for saying nigga. Yeah, Mexicans can get away with it, I feel like. Man, the Chinese, too. I got some more nigga Chinese. Really? They're saying it?
Starting point is 00:17:40 Man, I got into it with a whole group of Asian population out of California from New York that was saying nigga. That nigga Charleston. From China Mac to all the rappers. I can't think of the Asian rap people. Man, I had a whole war with the Asian community because they were saying nigga. And they were trying to make me seem hateful. And I'm saying, well, y'all saying nigga to me.
Starting point is 00:18:01 Yeah, I don't know if Asians got away with it. Man, I'm telling you california asians say nigga i had a whole fight with him online publicly so that was my whole fight man you can't go in the house and say nigga china man you can't go in there with your grandparents and use the word nigga as a chinese person you're not gonna do it so even china mac came out said i'm gonna stop using this word it's some white people that can say, man, what's up, my nigga? So I'm trying to figure out why everybody's so mad at Ryan Garcia when everybody he hang around is black.
Starting point is 00:18:34 His trainer, his homeboys, his bodyguards. So why he can't say my nigga? How is it that you can listen to rap music and we're going to get mad when you get to the part and say, hey, you can't say nigga and you're rapping alone? So I think this group of black people wants to use racism as a crutch. But if you sit them down, they cannot give you a 100% fact that they have experienced racism.
Starting point is 00:19:01 Wow. Yeah, you hear it a lot from black people. They experience classism right they're experiencing they're experiencing classism based on their socioeconomic status so just money yeah because because since the since we've been given uh our, civil rights, America has moved in a fast pace since then more toward capitalism. This is a capitalist country. This ain't a racist country.
Starting point is 00:19:36 It used to be. Not anymore. And hadn't been for a long time. Wow. Yeah. I mean, you're black, so you can say the stuff, you know? I can't. And not only that, I run around trying to play a nigga.
Starting point is 00:19:54 So I don't try to be smart. So I'm a very intelligent, highly educated black man in America that's very articulate, but I'm trying to play a dumb nigga. I'm running around playing ignorant with my people. And if I get in certain situations, I play dumb and ignorant. To realize most people aren't smart because I can be ignorant and walk you back from being ignorant to an intelligent conversation. And most people get lost in me going from ignorant to intelligent.
Starting point is 00:20:27 But if I show up intelligent, most people try to play on you. Because you show how smart you are. They won't listen. Yeah. Oh, I see why you do it now then. Yeah. Yeah, because you'll go on shows. Man, I done been on jobs and playing like I can't read.
Starting point is 00:20:44 I go to hotels during the pandemic and say I can't read. Take my eye out and say I'm legally blind. And watch them skip the process of me having to know what's in that paper to sign it. So I would do that during the pandemic because a lot of hotels, when you would travel, you would have to sign these forms to check in. Same when you got off the airport, I can can't read i will play dumb and stupid i learned that from reading reading and learning about slaves the slave would know how to read but he would have to play dumb as if he couldn't how come to get by or to get over i may be sneaking to another plantation to go see my wife who was sold, and I got a pass. I can read the pass.
Starting point is 00:21:28 I'm a runaway slave. I can read the sign, but I'm playing like I can't read. There's a term that's called jeffing. The slave would have to jeff. So here, think about the slave who done ran away from the plantation, and the slave catcher's done caught him, and he got a fake pass and the dog just barking at him and he's scared and it's just like when the police get you and you try and you got to try to get out this it's no different wow so i took on a a slave like mentality to to maneuver through america i play dumb and ignorant. And only certain people can realize, man, he's playing.
Starting point is 00:22:07 Damn. Only certain people realize, man, the guy's playing. He's not none of what he's projecting. Because nobody is what they're trying to openly project. So you think everyone's putting on a show? Everybody. Everybody have a public face, a private face, and then a secret face. Secret face.
Starting point is 00:22:26 What's that about? Those are secrets only you and God know you do. Yeah, yeah. You take us to the grave. Yeah, that's the guy that's sneaking around playing homosexual, and he only know he's a homosexual. You saw that sketch? Yeah, that's why I brought that up.
Starting point is 00:22:38 Secret face. I saw the photo. I was like, what the hell? Yeah, shit. Man, he got pinned up. Yeah. That's crazy. Yeah, very crazy.
Starting point is 00:22:45 I don't think he should be canceled for that. Why would you want to counsel a man for what he's doing in his sex life? That's what I mean. Unless you, unless, yeah. Why would we want to counsel him for that? He's getting a lot of heat. But he's also getting heat because he was pretending to be stupid, like you're saying. Who mad at him for that?
Starting point is 00:23:05 And why? I guess he pretends to be kind of like a Mentally challenged But I don't know I don't watch him So I'm not sure We all pretending to be something I think
Starting point is 00:23:20 Yeah And then when we go home That's who we are Yeah, it's like dating someone first dates don't really matter right but then once they move in you know who they are at least by two years I think it take about two years
Starting point is 00:23:34 and that's paying attention and that's paying attention to who they are you'll wait two years before you move someone in I think that's when you you kind of really get to know who a person is. Yeah. I've seen people put on for two years and then switch up.
Starting point is 00:23:51 Damn. People can put it on for that long? Yeah. That's like a full-time job at that point. Yeah. Two years, bro. But after so long, who you are, it comes out. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:04 Yeah. I saw you talk about Adam 22. are, it comes out. Yeah. Yeah. I saw you talk about Adam 22, called him a slave master. Yeah. You're not cool with him? Nah. I'm not cool with no white guy that's surrounded by gangbangers. And he's into this gangbanging culture.
Starting point is 00:24:26 And it's like he gets a hard-on off of it. And he's the only white guy in it. Yeah. And this culture is nothing but negative and detrimental. Everything on here ends up fighting and hurting and slapping and spitting. Everything. There's no substance over there. And it's all gangbangers.
Starting point is 00:24:48 Pimps and gangbangers. Gangsta rappers. Street guys. Everything's about gang and street politics. There's no... I've never seen anyone go on Adam Nojumper's 22 platform and advance or elevate to any other platform.
Starting point is 00:25:10 Wow. He just had on the guy that killed Pop Smoke. Did you see that? Yeah, I think that was a spit in the face of any victim. Wow. Yeah, he's getting a lot of heat for that one. Yeah, I think that was a spit in the face. Why, why?
Starting point is 00:25:24 Yeah, why's getting a lot of heat for that one. Yeah, I think that was a spit in the face. Why, why? Yeah, why, why? So, man, people get robbed up there. People get shot up there. People's cars get broken into up there. People get hurt up there. They fight up there. So I just see it as a cesspool that a white man runs and a bunch of black people is barely getting paid. They barely get any.
Starting point is 00:25:50 There's no rewards for going through a no jumpers platform. No one wants to book you after no jumper platform. Have you been on there yet? I would never go. You would never go on there? I would never go. Wow. I've been invited to go and I would never go. You would never go on there? I would never go. Wow. I've been invited to go, and I turned it down.
Starting point is 00:26:06 Damn. Yeah, and when I turned it down, one of his former hosts, who and I eventually had a talk about this, he made a statement before the world and said, if Charleston White comes on No Jumper, I will set him up. And this was a black man saying that. Yeah, AD said that on No Jumper Why would they set you up though?
Starting point is 00:26:26 Well Because I speak against The gang culture I'm the first black man In America To openly Stand up against rappers The Crips
Starting point is 00:26:35 The Bloods The BDs The GDs All the gangsters The street guys And tell them Fuck y'all I'll call the police on y'all
Starting point is 00:26:43 Yeah I snitch I'm the first black person to uphold those pro-social values in our culture and still walk around as if i'm cool those are some powerful enemies uh yeah they they've uh man they put my mother address online they put my they put my grandmother's address my sister uh my aunts uh they've had my address online uh but it ain't stopped it ain't changed my tune what's right is right and wrong is wrong and so in my mind i'm speaking against what's wrong in the black community and i got the right to say fuck what's wrong
Starting point is 00:27:18 don't y'all say fuck what's right meaning the. So I embraced pro-social values, and my life became in danger for that. Jeez. What would the alternative be to the gangs for people growing up then? So this is what I tell children. There's no alternative. You go become the change that you want to see. So what I did, I went and created a youth organization. It's called Hyped About Hype Youth Outreach.
Starting point is 00:27:45 So that became, that was the alternative. So with that, I started out in the church. Hey, moms, dads, y'all got any kids? I got a youth program. Then I went to the schools.
Starting point is 00:27:54 I went to the alternative schools. From the alternative schools, I went to the juvenile systems. From the juvenile systems, I went to the court systems. And here's the alternative. Hey, your honor, rather than sending this kid to the state juvenile system,
Starting point is 00:28:06 we have a youth program that you can send him over here. That's an alternative. Right now, we don't have any alternative to our kids going to jail. What's the alternative? Send his ass to jail. So that's why I recommend jail until we come up with an alternative. So the alternative is for you gangbanging niggas, if you love what you say you love, go make a difference. That's the alternative is for you gangbanging niggas, if you love what you say, you love go make a difference.
Starting point is 00:28:27 That's the alternative. If you love this hood, you love this set, why are we creating an atmosphere and a pathway for all of us to end up in jail or prison? Who's protecting mom and our sisters if we all out here in jail and prison? So if you love what you say you love, nigga, go make a difference. Stop peeing on the corners. Pick up trash. Have some after-school program. Feed the kids.
Starting point is 00:28:51 If you love this neighborhood, that's what you would do. Other than that, you just talking. You don't love this motherfucker. I come to realize they don't love the neighborhood. They love the egos that come with being associated with claiming the neighborhood Because they're so protective of the area
Starting point is 00:29:08 There you go It's an ego thing They don't give a damn about that neighborhood Nigga, they watch Kid Star They sell dope to children's mothers And don't try to feed the kids Who mama they selling dope to How you love this neighborhood?
Starting point is 00:29:22 So I challenge that shit I challenge black men Y'all just talking Y'all don't give a fuck about George Floyd how you love this neighborhood? So I challenged that shit. I challenged black men. Y'all just talking. Y'all don't give a fuck about George Floyd. Y'all didn't give a fuck when he died. Because if y'all would, if y'all gave a fuck about George Floyd when he died,
Starting point is 00:29:40 we would still be tearing up shit. Because ain't shit changed. Yeah, those riots were wild, though. Come on now, but they were breaking in the zoos stealing cars that was a self that was selfish that was entitlement issues they had nothing to do with injustice yeah they were breaking down stores come on man that had nothing to do with no motherfucking injure or black man dying because if it would we'll stop killing each other yeah so man black man i'll be saying man black people full of shit and so i'm the only one come tell black people this type of
Starting point is 00:30:11 motherfucking shit because everybody else is afraid when malcolm x started talking to black people like that he came up dead same with mlk come on now you're the modern day malcolm x right that's what they be trying to say. I just want to play the fool. I just want to be the one that's foolish enough to say these things. Damn. Yeah, I want to play the fool. You need full-time security, man.
Starting point is 00:30:34 Nah, you see I showed up with no security. Yeah. So I've traveled around this country for five years with no security. Damn. And I hadn't had one issue. Really? Not one issue. I saw on your stand-up someone attacked you or something.
Starting point is 00:30:45 Oh, well, that was a killer in the city. Oh, he was a killer? That was a homegrown issue. Jeez. Yeah, so the guy that attacked me in the barbershop. So there was this book that's out. And I want this officer. I hope he can get on this show.
Starting point is 00:30:57 Officer by the name of Tegan Broadwater. Local cop working in the neighborhood. They wanted to take down the four trade gangster Crips out of Fort Worth. So this one white officer went into this predominantly Crip neighborhood and brought down 53 hardcore notorious gang members. And these guys were notorious. Some of the most feared individuals in our city. And they all end up snitching and telling. All of them.
Starting point is 00:31:31 Damn. Working with the FBI, told on one another. They solved murders that was unsolved from the 90s when they got these guys. So I'm saying, man, what the fuck? And they be talking no snitching so this officer tegan broadwater or realized that out of 53 gang members there was over a hundred and maybe 12 some kids who didn't have fathers and mothers due to this arrest he went back to the police department and tried to create some alternatives and the police department said man why would you want to do this?
Starting point is 00:32:11 Make a long story short, he retired. He wrote a book that's called Life in a Fishbowl that talks about this historic drug arrest. And he went back and helped create a program that's called Hope Forum for these kids in that same neighborhood. So I know about the drug bust. I didn't know that this officer had done this until I started working with children. And I know about the drug bust. I didn't know that this officer had done this until I started working with children. And I met a mother whose son had been affected by this. And so she told me about this officer. So I read the book. And one of the main guys,
Starting point is 00:32:38 a guy by the name of Kelvin Spencer, he's the OG of the Gangster Crips. He's a notorious killer Not only that He's a pedophile He molested young girls in the neighborhood And everybody in our city is afraid of him And he snitched
Starting point is 00:32:54 And he told all the gangsters that Can't nobody whoop me And ain't nobody go kill me So rather than him going into a witness protection program He came back to the city And walked around untouched wow now i'm a community activist playing like i'm a community activist working with children who life is being threatened for saying i called the police on you and i hadn't called the police
Starting point is 00:33:15 on a nigga yet so when i start saying y'all scared to call him a snitch and i start publicly saying his name oh he started threatening to me, saying I better keep his name out of it because now he's shamed because nobody's bringing shame to him. So I start publicly calling Kevin Spencer a snitch. And that's when he attacked me. Damn. So he pulled up on you?
Starting point is 00:33:39 With guns. Jeez. Yeah, yeah, with guns. You call the cops after? Yeah. So he's in jail now? I'm out on two bombs. I'm out on two felony bombs. Wait, yeah, we're gone. You call the cops after? Uh, yeah. So he's in jail now? Uh, I'm out on two bombs. I'm out on two felony bombs. Wait, you got arrested?
Starting point is 00:33:50 Yeah, for he attacked me. How did you get arrested? Uh, well, they set it up. What did they do? They staged it for me to be attacked at a barbershop. And so when I got attacked, I went and got my gun. Oh, wow. And they said I wasn't supposed to go get my gun.
Starting point is 00:34:05 And he was a killer. Yeah, so I hadn't been indicted though. So I've been out on bond since December. So I hadn't been indicted, no court date, no nothing. Holy crap. This was in Texas? I thought you could have a gun there. Well, I'm a political person. So it's a little different for me. I can have a gun.
Starting point is 00:34:21 But they said I was wrong for going to go retrieve my gun. Isn't that self-defense though? Well, that's why I ain't been indicted. Crazy. Did you publicly back anyone yet for this upcoming election? Yeah, Donald Trump. Nice. Yeah, I would never back a Democratic candidate.
Starting point is 00:34:36 Really? Never, never. Wow, even Obama? I never backed Obama. Wow. I backed Hillary against Obama. Wow. Yeah, I wouldn't dare vote for a black man
Starting point is 00:34:46 over a white woman. Never. Hell, nah. I don't trust no white, no black man over no white woman. I had white school teachers. They were very loving and kind. I don't know if I trust Hillary, but... Man, I trust any white woman over a black man in political power. Because I know that black man in political
Starting point is 00:35:02 power got a hand up his ass as a puppet. That white woman can stand up and talk back. That's why they fought so hard for Hillary not to be president. It's hard for a white man to control a powerful white woman. Nobody told the queen what to do. We're an extension of Britain. So it's a woman ready to take that seat. And she going to be a mean ruling motherfucker.
Starting point is 00:35:24 But she going to be a little ruling motherfucker. But she gonna be a little bit more loving than what the man gonna be. So, no, I would never vote for a black man over a white woman. Man, hell no.
Starting point is 00:35:34 I wouldn't give a damn how mean that white woman is. I ain't trusting no nigga in politics. Now, I'm not trusting no black man at a high position in politics.
Starting point is 00:35:42 He would have to be on a local level for the game I trust. What about black woman, Kamala Harris? be on a local level for the game, I trust. What about black woman, Kamala Harris? I ain't trusting no black bitch with no white hood. Man, that bitch taking... Man, I ain't trusting no white,
Starting point is 00:35:52 no black bitch that taking fucking on a white boy like that. Man, no. Hell no. Michelle Obama. Oh, no. People say she's a man. Yeah, but she had two kids and it's been proven.
Starting point is 00:36:06 Yeah. That's a weird conspiracy to make. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, they just try to make mockery of the woman that got the black woman that got the physical physique of an athlete. She's an athletic built woman, just like Serena Williams now. I was thinking the same thing. Yeah, I mean, she kind of fine. Serena's fine.
Starting point is 00:36:22 Me and Michelle Obama fine. And she, man, yeah, that's an in-shape sister. And she grew up squabbling and fighting in Chicago. You and Trump need to sit down, man. They trying to get me to the mansion over there? Yeah. Yeah, you got to make that happen. You and him could get a lot done together.
Starting point is 00:36:39 I think so. Yeah, I think so. He would definitely value your input. And he need a bold black person. He does. He doesn't have one of those. He need an unapologetic. And he need him a nigga that can talk to the.
Starting point is 00:36:50 See, this is what I used to tell the Republican Party. Now, the young Republicans used to get it. The old ones used to get offended. Dan Patrick or Sheriff Bill Wabron. Sheriff Bill Wabron came to me one time and said, Charleston, man, we love you to death. Our children love you. My wife and them love you but your use of the n-word online and and we was at we was at a meeting with with lieutenant governor dan patrick and at the time i felt guilty because i didn't want to offend you know my white counterparts by using the word nigga
Starting point is 00:37:21 but man i got a whole group of young people that use this word and this word we so i had to war with myself and you know ironically i told sheriff near me and fuck y'all i'm gonna use the nigga word but what i was trying to show them homie is you can't send a black person to deliver a message to a bunch of niggas you can't send uh ben carson to go talk to sexy red crowd you can't send uh oprah winfrey to go talk to sukiyana crowd you gotta send black people to go talk to black people you can't send a highly educated black person down off in the ghetto to go talk to a bunch of uneducated black people they're gonna run his ass out of there and he's talking proper using proper english with a suit on you gotta send a nigga to go talk to nigga say you dumb motherfuckers listen up who you calling
Starting point is 00:38:27 dumb you dumb motherfucker your kids so and you show them where they done yeah and argue with them but so that's what i'm trying to show i'm the nigga that can talk to niggas and i'm the nigga that can talk to black folk and i can gather them together yeah and they go listen republicans need that because right now the democrats have all all the uh the black voters right oh now trump got him right now the worst thing they did was making trump a convicted felon because now all blacks and niggas resonate with him yo listen psychologically they don't even know they do. But now, psychologically, they gravitate because now they can connect. Now they can relate. When we watched that debate, my 20-year-old son watched the whole debate.
Starting point is 00:39:16 Man, you can't relate to Biden. Not only that, we've already been desensitized, or we've already been groomed to embrace trump through the rap lyrics bill gates donald trump let me in now that's a man trump's been in over 300 rap songs wow from nelly jeezy or two chain man you name it mac miller man you name it bun b so some of the most prolific rappers have rapped about using Trump's name. So we're already kind of groomed and embracing. And he a convict now?
Starting point is 00:39:51 Shit, that's my nigga. Been a massive shift, man, because you guys used to hate him. Well, not y'all. They did. The dumb, uneducated blacks used to hate him. Us smart, intelligent blacks have loved him up until the point that he ran for president. So I just want to remind America we never hated Trump. I was born in 1977, May 17th, 1977.
Starting point is 00:40:19 As far back as I can remember in the 80s, I've seen Trump with pictures with Rosa Parks, Michael Jackson, Russell Simmons, Tupac, Mike Tyson, 50 Cent, Snoop Dogg. I can go on a list. Now, how quickly have we forgotten that he once had a show that was called The Apprentice? One of the best shows we watched on television. Amazing show. He had Omarosa. He had Little John.
Starting point is 00:40:51 He had every nigga we love on there. He had them as project managers. He didn't fire all the blacks first. He had Claudia Jordan on there. So, and his Apprentice show ran for quite some time. Yeah, over 10 seasons. We never heard him be called a racist then. Ever.
Starting point is 00:41:09 Not once. It wasn't until he decided to run for president that all of a sudden he's a racist. And what did they bring up? He was a slumlord. Most landlords are slumlords. They brought up the Central Park Five case. So let's stop right there.
Starting point is 00:41:29 When Trump made those statements about those Central Park Five black kids, everybody in the world believed they had raped that woman. So why wouldn't you want them to? Everybody believed they had done it, especially white people. So why wouldn't white people be mad about five niggas savagely raping some white broad in the park? It's natural. Just like niggas be mad when a white boy kill a black person.
Starting point is 00:41:54 Whether he's justly or unjustly, we just mad for so what? Come on now. So when he made these statements, he's kind of justified as a white man. So we're going to use that against him 30 years down the road with no other evidence of him being racist other than the things that he say to the white people to get them to come out and vote for him. How that's racist. Yeah, I doubt he's racist. I know he's not. If you're successful in business, you can't.
Starting point is 00:42:20 Well, he's been with too many black people that's been successful. Evander Holyfield. Remember, Trump was in boxing too many black people that's been successful. Evander Holyfield. Remember, Trump was in boxing for a long time out here in Vegas. Yeah. We never heard it then. Never. Absolutely. This is the group of people that you can tell the truth to with no evidence.
Starting point is 00:42:39 This is the group of Americans that believe things without evidence. People that watch the news. Yeah. Yeah. But that number is news. Yeah. Yeah. But that number is dwindling. Very much so now since Joe Biden's come in office. Yeah. Because America hadn't been the same.
Starting point is 00:42:52 We're on the verge of World War III. We're watching our Democratic president give almost $100 billion to Ukraine. But we can't get our student loan dismissed. We can't get our credit reset. We can't get our student loan dismissed. We can't get our credit reset. We can't get no aid as Americans. Do you know what a hundred billion dollars will do for each American? The aid that he's given Ukraine, the aid that he's given to Israel for war, that ain't got nothing to do with us. And we got starving children in this country that need free lunch at school. they got to go to
Starting point is 00:43:25 the public library just to eat do you know how hard it is for poor people to get food stamps do you know what loops and rings of fire and the barriers that they got to try to overcome just to submit an application and we're giving all this money to ukraine man fuck ukraine in that war and we've got wars over here we still got a war on poverty yeah meanwhile the ukraine president's wife just bought a bugatti for five million come on man crazy just money laundering yeah that's all it is but but hunter biden you know he said that you know that was he went over there first he went to ukraine man he started doing business over a long time ago.
Starting point is 00:44:05 Really? Yeah. Wow. Well, he's getting in trouble right now for the laptop stuff, right? Yeah. Oh, they found crack in the White House. And he got a pistol he wasn't supposed to legally own. Jeez.
Starting point is 00:44:17 Times are changing, man. Yeah. Have you been on Vlad before? Yeah, I've been on Vlad two times. Yeah, some of the highest numbers Vlad had was with me and him. Nice. People think he's undercover. He ain't no undercover.
Starting point is 00:44:28 He just want to be an undercover punk. He want to be an undercover black man. Yeah. He got a black woman. I don't know what Vlad want to be. I didn't know he had a black woman. Yeah, he got a black girlfriend. Okay.
Starting point is 00:44:44 Respect. DJ Academics, you been on there? Yeah, I fuck i fuck with that yeah i've been on that you like what he's doing uh yeah i like it uh he he's good for the culture okay so what makes him different from adam 22 in your eyes uh he has more substance uh uh he created this culture of what we see Adam and I'm trying to do. He's a Chirac. He's been telling
Starting point is 00:45:11 the Chirac war since it started. So he kind of created this lane for what Adam and I was doing for us the culture wise. I feel that.
Starting point is 00:45:23 He does research. He very seldom Report inaccurate information What Adam does Is all gang banging conflict It's all beef It's all It's no substance It's no
Starting point is 00:45:42 It's no They're not Enlightening you on anything That's going on in the culture Other than It's no substance. They're not enlightening you on anything that's going on in the culture other than two guys about to fight or two guys had a fight. Who your buddies killed. Other than that, DJ Academics offer more of a news-like. I feel that. Adam also promotes the sex stuff too. Man, man, come on, man. They're very disrespectful to women over there. I feel that Adam also promotes the sex stuff too man man
Starting point is 00:46:05 come on man they're very disrespectful to women over there they're not gentlemen amongst women if they get a nice looking girl on there you can see the pervert
Starting point is 00:46:14 coming out in them the way they're looking at the woman salivating at the mouth so you know this this is the gang culture
Starting point is 00:46:22 rape culture murderous culture that that our culture exists. All those elements is on that podcast. So nobody would feel comfortable having their mother sit in the audience over there. Their daughter, their grandmother. Hey, mom, I want to be on No Jumper. And your family sitting with excitement and watching this. Or if they do research.
Starting point is 00:46:49 So that's why I won't sit down with certain networks like Zeus TV. I watch Zeus TV allow a homosexual man, a violent homosexual man Attacked a straight black woman With all the feminine traits and characteristics of a woman I watched And then they stopped it after she was hit and attacked Jeez So I watched this And so I know for a fact that
Starting point is 00:47:20 JB Main Car In the Say Cheese TV The Girl V When they went and done there, their car was broken in two. Damn. Niggas getting robbed up there, set up up there. So if you got a guy that would go on the platform and say, if Charleston come here,
Starting point is 00:47:35 I'm going to set him up to boldly say that to the world. Nah, man, that's why. Yeah, that is wild. Yeah, that's why violence is happening over there. Where do you want to see hip-hop headed to? Do you want it to go back to how it was? I want it to go back. I want to move forward like Russia.
Starting point is 00:47:54 Russia has banned hip-hop. They banned it? Yeah, the Russian president does not allow hip-hop. You can't even listen to it? No. Holy crap. No. So you want it banned?
Starting point is 00:48:06 Yeah. But you love hip-hop you can't even listen to it or no holy crap no so you want a band yeah but you love hip-hop oh i do uh i want all new music band and we just stick with what we got tupac all what we got now we we can listen to all the old music but no more new hip-hop it needs to be banned you think that's a good thing for society yeah how come uh because children mimic what they see and repeat what they hear. And that's what you see in the black culture. We're the only group that's mimicking the culture. Hip-hop culture, because we don't have any other culture to mimic. Wow.
Starting point is 00:48:36 Damn. Shout out to Russia, man. I didn't know that. Yeah. Your black people in America don't have any other culture. We don't embrace education. We don't we don't embrace in in uh we don't embrace education we don't highlight the smart kid we highlight the kid that'll smoke weed and cuss and suck my dick with the gun so so we don't we don't value education anymore black people we don't value
Starting point is 00:48:58 getting up going to work we don't value getting a job now man you got a white man's job we don't value that anymore we don't value family being together as a family uh we value what the culture give us so now the culture shapes the culture now shapes let me let me rephrase this our subculture hip-hop shapes our black culture because hip-hop is a subculture which now shapes our culture as black people what we eat what we drink how we have sex, a drug of choice. Because if hip-hop don't tell us about Molly's, Percocet, syrup,
Starting point is 00:49:51 we don't know that. We just know tobacco, weed, alcohol. If hip-hop don't tell us about Amari, Louis, Gucci, Fendi, Chanel, Birkin, we'll never know about it. Those terms would never register with us We would never know about a Birkin bag We would never know about a AP Damn
Starting point is 00:50:14 But the culture teaches us to ice it out I just devalued this motherfucker You did by a lot By a whole lot That's why I bought a U Smart Yeah But I just The culture don't teach me this motherfucker. You did, by a lot. By a whole lot. That's why I bought a U. Smart. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:27 But I just, the culture don't teach me, the culture say, ice it out, and it ain't shit if you don't, man, we, the culture teaches us this. The culture says,
Starting point is 00:50:36 blow money fast. Blow money fast. Ball till you fall. These are clear instructions. Yeah yeah that gets in your subconscious mind for sure these lyrics yeah when i used to listen to xxx dude i was depressed yeah xxx centacion yeah dude that shit gets in you i know i was depressed for like a month or two uh that's how i engage certain children by who their favorite rapper is and that's how you can tell the depressed kids
Starting point is 00:51:06 the gothic kids the gangster kids the perverted kids by their rapper wow that's crazy you walk into a kid's room and you see the posters
Starting point is 00:51:18 on the wall it kind of gives you an idea of who they are yeah they're saying the CIA even infiltrated the hip hop industry yeah
Starting point is 00:51:24 for the programming yeah I could believe that well it now now hip-hop is a mind-altering program yeah uh it's it's a mind-altering tool now and and and everybody profits everybody profits off the destruction it's just like the tobacco industry man the tobacco industry profits off the Destruction It's just like the tobacco industry Man the tobacco industry Profits off the The ills that tobacco Calls from you smoking They profit from that Your addiction
Starting point is 00:51:54 The pharmaceuticals Man they profit From your pain Hella So there's no There's no There's no incentive to Cure anything
Starting point is 00:52:03 When I'm profiting So So there's no incentive to cure anything when I'm profiting. So hip-hop doesn't profit if we go positive. We're headed for self-destruction. That was a song. What? I thought you were joking. Man, no, that was a song. Man, some of the biggest rappers out of New York City came together in maybe 87, 88.
Starting point is 00:52:26 Man, this was a national anthem that, man, the biggest rappers known in hip-hop came together and created a song that was called We're Headed for Self-Destruction. Wow. And people are repeating that out loud and manifesting it. Yeah. They don't even know. A few years later, all the West Coast rappers created an anthem and a song called We All in the Same Game. Because people are now starting to see, man, this shit is, the culture is negative.
Starting point is 00:52:55 And this shit is, not only does it destroy the community, it eats his own kids. Hip hop eats his own kids. Hands-hop eats his own kids. Hands them out there to be sacrificed. Don't snitch, man. You're going to tell a 7-year-old not to snitch? You're going to teach a 12-year-old not to snitch? What if I'm being bullied at school? My mama told me, go tell the teacher.
Starting point is 00:53:21 You tell somebody so you don't get in trouble. But if I go tell, now I'm in trouble with the culture and I'm a snitch. Think about the gangbangers, the gangbanger neighborhoods. There's a little girl and a little boy whose mother is gang affiliated. And she dates gangbers because just the only thing she got to date in this neighborhood. And her stepdad is a gang banger. The dynamics of that situation is
Starting point is 00:53:54 if mom and dad ever gets into a fight, the kids can't never call the police because in their neighborhood, in their community, in their habitat, in their village, in their neighborhood in their community in their habitat in their village in their area they're gonna be called a snitch and if he's a hell of a guy in the neighborhood and he go tell him yeah man little bitch called the police on me man when i was flat
Starting point is 00:54:18 they're gonna be shamed picked on and bullied, I never thought of it that way. Imagine a little girl who finally comes out and says, I'm being molested by her gang-banging uncle, a gang-banging, and he denies it. Man, she's snitching. She's lying. You snitched on me. Don't snitch on me. Keep a lot of people quiet. Right.
Starting point is 00:54:40 Don't snitch on me is a term that's used to shame the kid that's being molested. Jeez. So you learn not to snitch on me is a term that's used to shame the kid that's being molested. Jeez. So you learn not to snitch. Is that what you were taught growing up? Nah, I was taught to tell. I was taught, who done this? Okay, as mama going to go get the belt, when she come back, somebody better be telling.
Starting point is 00:55:02 If not, we all getting a whooping. Say, man, man, I ain't get no whooping for you, man. I ain mama i ain't do it mama kevin done it i told nigga i was talking you don't keep secrets so that got you beat up growing up no because everybody told when i grew up black people did not start developing negative values until post-crack era. Post-crack. So what years was that? I didn't start hearing the term crack babies until I was about maybe 13, 14 years old.
Starting point is 00:55:40 So I say 91, 92. Okay. So the kids that's born in 91 92 on up so most black people were raised with with pro-social values don't steal don't lie don't cheat uh the culture teaches you otherwise right so if if your mom is at home teaching you certain things like my mom were the culture is teaching you other things the neighborhood and the community is teaching you certain things if you got an uncle or a stepfather he's teaching you certain things so whatever male attribute negative or positive so between uh you're in action with your male
Starting point is 00:56:21 counterparts or your community, and the culture, it kind of contradicts what mom is saying. Because your mother is saying, son, you share. Man, you go outside and share. You might not get it back. You say thank you. You say please. Well, in the black culture, if you're a kid saying thank you, you're welcome, please, may I, they're going to thank you a weenie.
Starting point is 00:56:52 Hey, may I see that? kid saying thank you you're welcome please may i they're gonna thank you a weenie hey may i see that hey thank you hey can please i said please fuck you man because the other kids aren't being taught these things yeah so it wasn't until crack came when crack came the culture shifted just when gangster rap is starting to be introduced around the same time. So the values are changing. Not just the values in the black community, but America values are changing as well. There's theories that the government knew that the crack was coming. Did you see that? There's not theories. There's real documentation that's been proven.
Starting point is 00:57:20 Wow. So they planned it? Yeah. Wow. Well, it fund a lot of side wars with the cia the country wars norweg and all that shit so uh yeah uh man black people hadn't really had a fair shot yeah that's crazy because that destroyed man man we hadn't we we man um when they let us out of slavery,
Starting point is 00:57:47 black people worked hard right after slavery. And they almost leveled the playing field economically wise. And then you start having things like the Tulsa riots and things like that. So then you started having the Jim Crow laws. All those things start being put in place so we can advance so there are literally so redlining uh man you got man you got so much shit that was put in place for us not to advance so here we are today and and our government know that things have been intentionally done to us. But they would tell us we don't need a, we don't deserve a handout. And we don't.
Starting point is 00:58:33 We just need a fair shot. And we ain't had a fair shot yet. Wow. From the things that they teach us in our schools. From the school nutritional programs uh the lack of prenatal care compared to uh more access to Planned Parenthood think man come on we ain't had a fair shot so we don't need our government to give us a fair shot is what I say we don't need our government to give us a fair shot is what i say we don't need our government to give
Starting point is 00:59:05 us a fair shot we just got to hit a reset button and and identify with our children what's really right and what's really wrong and let's just start from there absolutely we'll cover that on the next episode man it was a blast having you on anything you want to promote or close off with oh man y'all come see me las vegas every thursday uh wise Comedy Club, man. I want to shout out to Green Room Radio. You can catch me on YouTube every other week with the fan bus. So I got this new school
Starting point is 00:59:33 I call the Mac School. So I'm trying to teach young guys how to be gentlemen while trying to date women and be comical at the same time. So I got that with the fan bus on YouTube. And then I also got another one called date my niece with up so i'm teaching young ladies as well okay so i'm trying to become the change that i want to see in the community i love it man we'll link it all below thanks for coming
Starting point is 00:59:53 on man appreciate it yes sir yes sir thanks for watching guys see you next time we out

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.