Higher Learning with Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay - RIP ‘Love & Hip-Hop,’ Scott Jennings on CNN, and a Colorism Conversation
Episode Date: May 5, 2026Van and Rachel look back on the legacy of 'Love & Hip-Hop' before reacting to the pausing of Post Malone and Jelly Roll’s stadium tour. Plus, Scott Jennings gets flustered on CNN and Fernando Mendoz...a skips the White House visit, before a conversation about colorism and Blackness. (0:00) Intro (17:37) The end of ‘Love & Hip-Hop’ (32:37) Post Malone and Jelly Roll cancellations (44:51) Scott Jennings and CNN’s ‘Newsnight’ (1:06:27) Fernando Mendoza and the White House (1:23:19) Colorism and Blackness Hosts: Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay Producers: Donnie Beacham Jr. and Jade Whaley Social Producer: Bernard Moore Video Supervision: Chris Thomas and Jacob Cornett Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yo, yo, yo, thought warriors.
What is up?
Anonymous Raccoon.
Higher Learning is on is I. Van Lathen Jr.
And it's me, Rachel Lund.
Who is Anonymous Raccoon?
Where are you getting this from?
Somebody was just in the document.
We have to pay attention to the document when we're interviewing people.
Oh, because they'll be like wrap it up.
They'll wrap it up.
10 minutes left.
And after this question.
And me of a fan will be like, no, it's okay.
It's okay.
We're not running out of time.
Just keep going.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Tell us about your childhood.
But somebody said anonymous raccoon is in the document.
That's you?
No, I don't know who is.
Who is the anonymous raccoon?
Revelling yourself.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, guys.
Who has access?
Wait, you can easily tell.
This is anonymous raccoon.
So it's not Donnie.
It's not Jade.
There are too many people.
There's anonymous croakouca and there's anonymous.
Is that us?
Is that us?
Anonymous quacko.
I think it's one of them.
That's fucked up.
Sometimes, wait, sometimes it pops up like that.
even if it is someone who has access to the dog.
So that's us?
Who's just scum and who's the raccoon?
Somebody in here is a coon in the dock.
I'm going to do it.
I'm going to say that.
Type.
Rachel, you're the coon.
Rachel's the United.
Oh my God.
The coon has been revealed.
Do you?
Type, type, type, type, type, type, type, type.
Let me see.
Let me see.
You just scuck.
You just scuck.
I'm a skunk.
That's cool.
That's cool.
I'm not the coon.
It's a koca.
It's a koala.
It says anonymous raccoon.
Mine does not.
Say, does y'all say raccoon?
Are you doing something right now?
You're the raccoon.
You're the raccoon.
You're the anonymous coon.
Rachel, the anonymous cooenzy.
I don't want a podcast today. I don't feel comfortable being here.
By the way, I don't blame us for this.
This is the fault of Google Docs.
And I'm not standing for this.
Google Docs.
We got Coons in the house now.
We got Coon, Rachel Lindsay.
We'll do the intro again.
No.
Yo-I-Doth Warriors.
No.
Hyler is on.
It is I, Van Lathan, Jr.
This is the coon, Rachel Lindsay.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I can't wait to heckle you tonight.
I can't.
I'm going to heckle you tonight after this.
As soon as you get up to the mic.
Boo!
Boo!
I'm going to throw some shit up there.
Yeah.
It's funny.
I finally typed out some of the stand-up on like a Friday.
And as I was typing it, I was having like a panic attack as I was typing.
Honestly, I couldn't do it.
So I was.
I applaud you. So wait, you typed it out. So is this, are we doing a story or are we doing
multiple jokes? We're doing a setup to a story. Okay. Two stories. One about my nephew and
one about my father. Okay, I hope you hurry up and get there. That's the thing. Yeah.
That's my biggest fear for you. I know you'll be funny. You're funny. Yeah.
The fear is, will you get there? Yeah, that's, that's the thing. The thing is, like,
I had to pare it down and trim it down a lot.
Okay.
So that's the thing.
Taking it seriously.
And I'm glad you're not making fun of anybody that's going to be in the audience.
I don't think that I will.
It depends, though.
Who knows?
I'm going to have a lot of drinks before, so we'll see how off the fucking.
Because if it goes bad, I want it to go like super fucking bad.
And what you guys don't understand is Van's not a big drinker.
So him saying, like, I'm going to have a bunch of drinks.
That's actually like a big deal.
If I was like, oh, I'm going to have a few shots before.
It's like, ah, apart for the course.
But for you, I'm a little nervous if you're going to be taking a bunch of shots.
It starts at 6.30.
I'm going to take some shots.
At 6.30?
Yeah, I'm going to start drinking.
It starts at 7 for anybody who's coming.
But the door starts opening early.
I'm going to get there earlier.
Hopefully to not make you nervous.
But, you know, seeing familiar faces, maybe it'll calm you down.
Maybe it will.
But a fun experience, thank to Ida.
thanks to everyone who's giving me advice.
Who'd you go to?
Jimmy, Kimmel gave me some advice.
Nice, nice, nice.
Brandon T. Jackson gave me some advice.
Alex Edelman gave me some advice on this.
Shout out to all the people.
Brandtie Jackson, shout out to Brandon, man.
Brandon was like, I was like,
I asked him, I said, yo, so what's your one thing?
He's like, if they don't laugh, just keep going.
Just keep going, yeah.
And I was like, fuck, they might not laugh.
I just have a feeling if they don't laugh.
I could see you be like, why aren't you all laughing?
Y'all don't think that was funny?
I thought it was funny.
I've been preparing for the last two weeks.
No, that's not.
I could see you going completely off.
But you'll be funny.
I'm not worried about you being funny.
Just, just, you are, hey, I don't know why Google Docs did that.
Hey, what was the response to the Karen Bass interview?
Skunk?
Do you know all about it?
Oh, I wouldn't tell him my funky story last week.
Yeah.
That was you.
Yeah.
Well, that's probably why I see.
That makes sense.
See, but you're just deepening because maybe it called me a skunk.
Oh, I make sense as a coon?
No, I never said that.
What I'm saying is that if you're saying that it called me a skunk because it knows that
had some stank with me,
then by the law of deduction,
you would have to be saying that I never said that.
What's the law of deduction?
You said it.
Go ahead.
You said it.
It applied to you, not to me.
Well, I'm saying, okay, so that's the way it goes.
Damn.
You know how that goes.
By the way, we don't have any interviews.
I do want to know, I want to do a quick post more.
Oh, the Karen Bass interview.
What were people saying about the Karen Bass interview?
John Legend liked it.
I think people who are tapped in.
Shout out to John.
liked it.
Great guy.
Yeah, John's great.
Tap, I think people who,
I think people liked it.
I think people on the internet
have a lot to say.
Like, just, like, are already just choosing
to not listen to Karen regardless
and don't like her at all.
Right.
I likely vote to her left, but it,
I thought she did a really good interview.
And I got a lot of that feedback too.
People were like, wow,
I was really impressed at how she handled the questioning
and how she answered.
But look, the reality is this.
There are two things that I'll say.
Number one, you have to have the conversation
in the Terry Gay Power and see where people are going.
You want to make sure that when you're seeing
in front of someone that you're not talking to Gargamel
or somebody like that that doesn't really
care about people or want them to do well.
So that's the reason why you have the interviews.
You interview the people.
I will say that I actually think
some of the stuff,
the more that I thought about it,
that she's saying about Spencer Pratt is actually unfair.
Go ahead and make the case for
Spencer. I'm not making the case for Spencer. Let me tell you what I'm making the case for. I'm making the case for the idea of someone who sees something happening in their city that they don't like and goes, I'm going to run for office. There's nothing wrong with that. That's not what she's saying Spencer is doing. She's saying that Spencer is exploiting people's pain and their struggle in order to further his campaign, which I agree with. Well, this is what I would say. Perhaps, but I'll say this.
If he's motivated, and this goes for anyone, forget about Spencer Pratt, if he's motivated by a specific happening to run for office, then you have to make that a part of your story.
Now, I did see something that said the airstream that he went out and got and all of that stuff, that that was specifically for the optics.
That's what I'm saying.
But what I would say about that, I think that's a fair criticism.
But what I would say about that is that we have to levy that criticism
then across the board.
And that means anytime a politician goes,
you know what,
I'm the son of a single mother,
you know what,
I was homeless,
you know what I was this,
we should say,
stop right now,
we don't care about that.
We don't care about you leveraging that community
or that thing that you're tied to
in any way to make your point.
Just tell us what you're going to do for the people.
So the only thing I would say,
say to that is you're right because it's funny because we would talk about you know the texas senate
race you always would be like i don't want to hear about how you grew up with this mom and made in this
socioeconomic status and that the thing with spencer is there is a lie to it if you're the the person
running for mayor coming out and saying i was a single mother and i raised two kids that is true
if you are that is a part of your story if you are purchasing an air allegedly purchasing a
an airstream on the property that was burned down and saying this is how you live when the reality
is you come from a family with money and you're in a beach house. You know, like you're going,
I don't know if you fully live there, but you're at your parents' beach house. Or, you know,
you had millions and millions of dollars or that you were house poor and you didn't have insurance
on your property because you didn't make whatever changes. And I'm not here to defend the insurance
company. I don't think that that's fair. But whatever it may be, you didn't have that. And now you're
you're telling false truths or creating a false narrative that has half-truths in it in order to
further your campaign. It's misleading. That's not right. I don't think it's a problem to say I'm
running because I lost my home in the Palisades fires. I feel like the governing bodies
mishandled it and I want to be a part of the change. There's nothing wrong with that. Spencer's
doing more than that. Well said. Number one, they lost their house.
So that's the first thing.
If that had been a lie, I would say everything else that's built on that is unfair.
Number one, they actually did lose their house.
They did.
Okay.
So the house was lost.
Number two, it was reported last summer that they couldn't afford to rebuild.
Now, if they were house poor, then they were living in a financial situation that I guess wasn't.
And they didn't have insurance.
Right.
And they didn't have insurance.
They were living in a financial situation that I guess is some people who would, I guess, the criticism is that that's,
irresponsible?
Yeah, I mean, the house is worth more than they got from,
than they ended up getting in a settlement, right?
It's difficult for me to be hypercritical about that
because so many Americans are in that situation, right?
And so many Americans that don't have what Heidi Montag
and Spencer Pratt have are in that situation.
Now, when you move away from that,
if there are theatrics that are involved in his story
because he wants everybody to pay attention to the plight,
of someone who lost their home,
then I guess what I'm saying is I look at all of that stuff
as kind of par for the course politically, right?
It's, you know, you tell something that is a truth
and then you blow that truth up
to make it fundamental to your story.
When you were homeless, were you homeless for a year?
Were you homeless for two years?
Were you homeless for a month?
The question is, how formative is the experience?
I'm not talking specifically about the mayor, by the way.
How formative is the experience of being unhoused on you?
Do you understand the experience because you were unhoused,
even if for a day or for three days or whatever?
So all of this stuff to me, when I look at this stuff,
I go, what undergirds it, what's below it?
And if I'm looking at someone that said,
I lost my home, this city isn't run the way that I think it should be run,
I'm going to run from mayor.
I have no problem with that.
The only thing I would have a problem with, it's policy.
Policy is the thing that gets me.
Yeah, the only other thing, if I was going to give a criticism to that response from Mayor Bass,
it would be, it was kind of like a, like I'm not taking that seriously response.
And I think we live in a time where we currently have a president that people really thought he couldn't win back in 2016.
They didn't take it seriously.
And it wasn't just that so many people voted.
It's also that a lot of people didn't vote.
And the reality is there are people that are upset,
and the reality is that social media does have influence in power,
and there's a lot of misinformation out there.
And I do think that you have to take that seriously.
Even if you think it's a joke that this person's running,
even if you think that there's no possible chance,
even the way that the system is set up with the top two, you know,
move forward unless you get majority of the vote,
it's like I just, I think that that,
could be an error on her back.
Like, I didn't like that.
Like, I mean, I didn't need her to defend herself to defend her campaign against Spencer's,
but I do think that you have to take that seriously because he does have money behind him.
He does have popularity and a little bit of momentum, I guess.
I guess a little bit.
We're interested in having all of the candidates for mayor on the show.
Oh, I would love for him to come on.
Spencer as well?
Yeah, why not?
Why not?
You like him?
You like the hills?
What's your thoughts?
I liked the hills back in the day, yeah.
Who is the, who from a reality show do you think actually would make a good mayor or governor or whatever?
Pick somebody.
Pick somebody from a reality show that you think would make a good mayor, a good governor, good president.
I don't know.
Do you have no clue?
Self-included.
I would not be.
I would not be good.
You don't think that you would be mayor, Rache?
Mayor Big Rage?
I don't like politics.
Big Rage for mayor.
And I wouldn't want to marry somebody in politics.
Can I tell you something?
Do you know where you would shine as the mayor of the city?
Tell me.
When you come into the city and the mayor welcomes you, have you seen that?
That is where you would shine.
Welcome to Los Angeles.
I'm your mayor.
Big Rache, Rachel Lindsay.
Big Rage.
People will go crazy.
Rachel Lindsay.
They might go crazy for a different reason.
You would not date.
What you mean?
I mean, they might not like it.
You wouldn't date somebody in politics, you said though.
Yeah, I don't know if I could be like the first lady of all of that.
That's just not for me.
You wouldn't date.
I need to be a little bit.
I need to be able to be reckless.
Oh, my God.
I just like, I don't want to have to be looking over my shoulder or worried about what people
are saying or thinking.
I live that life kind of when I came off the show, The Bachelor.
It was like, oh, are people paying attention if we're talking.
if we're arguing, if we're not being affectionate enough.
I hate it that.
I don't like that.
It's even turned up.
So you don't think anyone from a reality show.
You can't think of anybody from a reality show.
Because there are people out there.
I'd like to see maybe Fadre Parks as a mayor.
That would work, right?
I'd be entertained by that.
I think that should be good.
I'm going to throw out a couple of names.
Got the charm, the smarts.
You tell me if they get your vote.
Okay.
Oh, so you said, Phasra Park, you say yes.
Jocelyn Hernandez.
What is she running for?
Just no.
Just no.
What do you mean?
You don't even know what she's running for?
Just no.
So Josh and her-in- She's out.
No.
Shawnee O'Neill.
Perhaps she's already doing a first lady role.
First lady role, first lady of the church running.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Perhaps that's political.
There's politics in that.
I think that she could do that.
Yeah, I think she could do.
Right.
What's the guy's name?
Matt what?
From the black guy.
Matt James?
Matt James.
No.
I think he would be a perfect politician type.
What level?
I mean, let's see.
Governor Matt James.
No.
Like mayor Matt James.
He's like perfect politician type.
I'd need to know more about him.
Are you just talking about looks?
No, I'm talking about like someone that has the aura of somebody that could be the type of politician that we're talking about.
I don't know.
He runs, I mean, like his whole thing is a food platform.
I don't know him to be tapped in in that way.
Like he's running around, literally running around because he runs marathons and, you know, biking and to the next restaurant.
So I don't know.
Okay, last one, puck.
Come on.
Where is he?
What happened to puck?
Do y'all know puck?
They definitely have the idea who puck is.
No.
I think more about this.
I'm going to come up with for Thursday.
I'm going to come up with the list.
I mean, there are some.
I mean, Sean Duffy.
He's in there, yeah, he's in there.
And Kitt.
Trump?
No.
Sean Duffy is married.
Kit is on something else.
Sean Duffy is married to the lady.
Oh, road rules.
Road rules, but he's married to a lady from.
Who was on real world?
Real world, yeah.
Was she, wasn't it Rachel?
There was a Rachel who was in politics.
Because she even had, on that episode of the, on that season of the real world, she took
them to like a Jack Kemp Republican meeting.
Rachel Campo stuffy.
But she was fucking with Puck.
And she was fucking with Puck.
A little bit.
She was fucking with Puck.
Her and Puck was kissing in the goddamn cave in the fuck by the seat.
Because she had a problem with like she was trying to, she took her.
Oh my gosh.
This is what happens.
See, she.
It's been so long.
If I was Sean, like she took the spin with Puck, got a bad boy phase out of her,
and then she went with this MAGA nigga.
She was all, I want to fucking fuck with that shit.
Okay, cool.
All right, speaking of reality TV, Donnie?
Yeah, Paramount announced that love and hip hop is coming to an end.
It also announced that it's going to be celebrated before that happens with a six-part special
that's going to be released later this fall titled Love and Hip-Hipop, the final chapter.
What are you guys' thoughts on this reality TV institution coming to an end?
man what an end of an era i mean i used to be an avid avid loving hip hop uh watcher do y'all y'all see y'all don't y'all don't
do you all this is the z corner over here do y'all watch yes but i didn't watch did you go back
and watch in the beginning yeah you did so you're very familiar but i'm not caught all the way up
but I've watched at least the first three or four seasons.
Love and hip hop.
It's insane.
You know, with love and hip hop ending
and with basketball wives ending,
I wonder something.
That as well.
Yep.
I wonder if those shows go far enough anymore.
Or is it that they're under Paramount
and Paramount is
cleaning house on maybe some of these types of shows?
In terms of what?
They're black shows.
But I think that, I mean, they're black shows,
but if they were still, like, rabidly popular and all of that,
I don't know that that would have,
they would have a problem with those shows being on there.
Well, I don't watch anymore,
but I feel like a lot of people particularly love in hip-hop Atlanta.
People watch that.
Yeah, look, if I suppose that if the thinking is that Paramount
wants to clean house of anything that is black,
that is fine.
I think that Issa Rae has a deal at Paramount.
So I don't know that that's...
Maybe a certain type of black show.
Maybe, but...
I'm not saying they're clearing everything black.
Well, what I would say to something like this is that, I mean, you know, if we're talking about white, racist, whatever, they like this type of shit.
And you guys, when I say this type of shit, grace and love to love and hip hop, but love and hip hop is...
a show that's existed over a lot of time and I've had a lot of fun watching it,
but it is not a show that is in any way challenging the status quo in terms.
It's not a political show.
It's not something.
You know what I mean?
I don't know that anyone that would be at the top over at Paramount would have a problem
with love and hip-hop.
That's like saying that they will want to make money off gangster rap.
They definitely would.
Maybe.
I mean, but maybe there is an image that Paramount, we don't know.
We don't know what's going to happen with Paramount as it continues.
used to, you know, develop under this new rain over there under the Ellisons, but maybe they want
a certain image.
I don't know.
But maybe it is ratings.
I actually don't know the ratings with love and hip-hop.
It's been on for 15 years.
I used to be an avid watcher.
I don't watch anymore.
But, I mean, you used to watch in the day, more than anything, it just launched the career or at least
put in certain names of into the pop culture Zygai.
of people that we would never know.
I would never know Eric Kameh.
I would never know Safari.
I would never know Jocelyn.
I didn't know who Stevie J was really before.
I know, obviously, he's a legendary, you know,
legendary music back in the 90s,
but I did not know him until I watched the show.
I didn't know.
Interesting.
I didn't.
Obviously, most famously, Cardi B.
You have Kay Michelle, who came from here.
Ray J. was on it.
Soldier Boy was on it.
Kishol.
Daniel Gibson were on it at one point.
I mean, so many people were on this show.
Olivia, Jim Jones.
Jim Jones, yeah.
Look, I think Love and Hip Hop always had a balance of people
that were made from love and hip hop
and people that love and hip hop,
people that love and hip hop made,
and also people that made love and hip hop.
Meaning, I actually think that Safari
because of Nikki Minaj, that a lot of people knew Safari.
Oh, yeah, I forgot about that.
Yeah, that a lot of people do Safari.
But not like that.
We don't know Safari because, you know, after Nikki Minaj and Safari goes on there,
I think even for Cardi B, love and hip hop was, how can I put this?
Cardi B was a very interesting love and hip hop case for me because it mattered for her,
but it almost was like minor league baseball for her a little bit.
It was like Cardi B gets on love and hip hop and it's a big thing,
but she was blowing up so much before loving hip hop.
On social.
Right.
But I did not follow her on social.
So you have to like understand, like you at the time you're working for TMZ.
You're very tapped into everything.
I don't know what year Cardi B got in, maybe 2014, 11, because I feel like the, the Bodak Yellow came out.
2016.
When did she come out?
2015.
2015 because Bodak Yellow came out.
So I learned she was a big internet personality from love and hip hop.
but it just depends like where you consumed your content.
I wasn't a big social person then.
But I was a big love and hip hop thing.
And so I, you know, like living in Texas, all of that.
Like I just wasn't tapped in to that type of entertainment, I guess media when it came to social media.
So I learned about her from here.
So I would push back against that because then I was like, wow, she's so funny.
Let me learn more.
Oh, she has a big social media presence.
Totally didn't know that before I watched the show.
What I'm trying to say, I'm not saying that love and hip hop wasn't, it didn't help Cardi B.
Of course it did.
What I'm trying to say is that that was kind of, like she didn't stay on there very long, right?
Yeah, maybe one year, two years.
One year, two years.
Because she blew up next year?
Exactly.
I think that love and hip hop for Cardi B was more of let me, when I said this, this is her first shot at the pros.
It was like her shot at minor league celebrity because she was going somewhere else.
And like minor league actual celebrity coming from social.
now she's big enough to be on this show
she's a presence on the show
now she moves on and does more stuff
it's not a shot to her it's not a shot to the show
I just looked at it when I saw her on there
I knew that it was a clear stepping stone
because of the way people were talking about
Cardi B and the way they talked about her after
what I think though is number one
the ratings and the kind of cultural share
that some of these shows had
have been declining but also
Zeus crowded loving hip hop
I thought about that.
That's what I was saying earlier.
Like, Zeus crowded love of hip hop out of, out of the pain a little bit because love and hip hop
actually doesn't go far enough for people now.
Yeah.
Like what we used to see, the love and hip hopification that we would call of black culture,
of culture, period, people fighting and stuff like that.
Well, when you're on love and hip hop and you fight, the production come break the fight up.
And then they talk about the fight.
They might want the fight.
They might act like they don't want the fight, but they want the fight.
They want the drama and stuff like that, but the production come break it up.
Zeus and all of that, it caters to the people that like, nah, let them fight.
And now I think that those shows actually feel kind of tepid and tame when they are compared to what you can get on social media and what you can get on a subscription service.
I will agree with that.
I thought about Zeus when it came to that because there's also just like a line.
Like remember when we talked about
Erica Mena
and she was making doing the monkey thing
with the rapper
I can't think of her name
she called her a monkey
and that was a line
that it was like this has to go
this and I'm not saying that happens on Zeus
but I just think that there is
it feels like there are no boundaries
when it comes to what's on Zeus
as opposed to on network television
there's going to be a line
like you're going to go too far
I will agree with that
but I also just think that like
what the magic
of what made love and hip hop just seems to have gone. Back when it came, when it dropped in 2011,
it was, first off, like, you, I really didn't see people argue or get into it like that. Like,
Chrissy, Jim Jones's girl was a star. Like the way that she was doubt. So it's like we already had,
we fly high, we knew diplomat. So you get Santana, you get Jim Jones. And we were getting like this
sneak peek behind the scenes.
they were like the driving force of it.
And then it created other stars, right?
We learned about Yandy, and then there was the Mendezis of it all.
And, you know, Olivia, we knew as a singer.
So it just was like this sneak peek into hip hop,
which we'd never really seen before, and there's significant others,
and how they, their lifestyle and how they hang out together.
And I just had never seen anything like that.
And then I feel like we so got away from that.
And it felt like love and hip hop was, became a caricature of what,
people think love and hip hop was.
We just got so far away from that.
And I think that's another reason that it just,
maybe it's just run its course.
And all the other shows are, I mean,
New York's not there anymore.
Hollywood's not there anymore.
You just got Atlanta and Miami, I think.
Yeah, so look, what I always looked at it is,
love and hip hop was kind of like a show
about the middle class of hip hop,
which no one had ever really cared about before then.
Right?
You were a rapper.
You popped for a long time.
Mm-hmm.
And then when you didn't pop and,
anymore, you are done and we can make fun of the fact that you weren't around, that your shit
didn't work out.
I don't know why.
It seems that like rap is one of the main things to where everybody kind of gets to the
end of their run, but then everybody is also penalized for getting to the end of their run.
Everybody gets to the end of their run in hip hop.
You might, besides, you know, you see a couple people still going now, still going, Jay's still going
to clip still going.
Like, you see a couple of legacy artists now that are extending those wrongs.
but to be like a big rapper
you get two three albums
but when it comes to that honest thing it's wash
whatever whatever or has been never made it
but loving hip hop you got to see inside of like
the middle class of hip hop the people that are still doing shows
the people like struggle yeah the people that are like stevie j
that did all of this incredible amazing work
but maybe you didn't know about it exactly right and so
their mating habits and who they've been with
and whatever you see some people that
like, oh my God, I didn't know they were with this person and all of that.
And it was funny and it was cool.
After that, though, after the legitimate examination of that,
they became like, they, how can I put this?
People started trying to become a love and hip hop celebrity because there was an economy around that.
It wasn't, and there's nothing wrong.
That's what happens to every show, right?
Every show that happens to every show.
Now getting on love and hip hop is the goal.
Yeah.
It's like what you want to do.
That's what it felt like is if you were watching it.
It is the goal.
You want to get there.
And now it's kind of less like whatever it is.
But that happens to everything.
I enjoy it when it was on.
I never, ever, ever and still don't.
I still don't like the criticism that there is some specific evil to shows like this.
I don't.
Well, you know how I feel about Zeus.
but this, I watched it.
I didn't think it.
And to your point, which, you know, I think was,
I love that you said, like, the middle class rapper,
but that's why I said, like, the struggle.
We saw it.
Like, we saw somebody who had such a hit that was everywhere
that Ballin became from We Fly High
just became a terminology that we used all the time,
even more so.
I mean, we used it before, but like even more so after that.
And then you see Jim Jones, you know,
not at the same place.
or Jewel's says Hannah, not at the same place.
And then you see them working out their personal struggle
with their girl and like kids and all.
Like it just, it, I don't,
why would there be a problem with, why was there?
I think the show became something else to your point
where I could feel like maybe is a little bit more problematic
because I felt like people were performing.
I don't feel like I have a problem with authenticity
and watching it in this way.
I have a problem when it feels performative.
and like you're exploiting it.
Yeah.
Well, rest and peace, love and hip hop.
I just want to say this to people know.
Both Jewel's and Jim Jones were cultural phenomenon
before they got to love and hip-hop.
I had the biggest crush on Jewel's.
The dipset.
Phenomenal.
Like, not even the dipset.
I said diplomats.
I just named the record.
No, the diplomat.
The dipset had, man, it's three things in Baton Rouge
that we used to say.
see and we knew that niggas
was on because in Baton Rouge we got our own
hip hop economy right
you can ask somebody in Baton Rouge
who their favorite rapper is and you could get
to like five, six, seven people before
you get somebody that you could go
and see their video. Some people who was
fucking with Nussi badass, some people fucking
with Bilo, M.C. Niro
got a lot of got a lot, got a lot, you know what I'm saying?
Webby, Boosie, Fox. We got a lot of people
that we like, right? And everybody
liked the nationwide guys, but we got a lot of people
we like.
But it was three things in Baton Rouge that you could see and you knew somebody was on
that different shit.
Number one, niggas was coming with the Nelly Eye thing.
Yep.
Yep.
And they was wearing it.
And I was like, yo, dog, you know.
But whatever.
Niggas also was coming with the 50 cent wife beater with the shorter strap at the top.
For sure.
It was coming with that joint crazy with the 50 cent wife beater, the joint at the top.
And also people was coming with.
with the pink.
Yep.
On Southern's campus, people who was coming with the pink, pink bandana, pink.
The dip set had people going crazy.
Everybody was trying to create their own little dip set.
And once again, we are a very, very culturally proud people.
So we have our rappers that we care about.
We have our lore and our rappers that we care about.
But those movements and of course the Jay-Z hat, jacket, jeans, fucking.
Tim's.
We always wore Tim's.
We wore Tim's.
Well, I don't know.
Tim's, I'm talking about the, remember the Jay-Z era when he wore the Yankee hat and the jacket?
Every nigga.
I saw a nigga like, dressed like that in D.C.
Recently.
Yeah, a couple weekends ago.
I don't know.
If Dipset went on tour, I would, I would want to go.
I bet.
I bet.
Dipset is a legitimately kind of like a legitimate run to where it was like, look at them.
Look at their crew.
Look at day crew.
Dipset, bro.
Whatever.
All right.
Fuck it.
Donnie, let's talk about some white people.
Yeah, staying in music.
Post Malone announced that he's hitting pause on his upcoming tour with Jelly Roll.
He said in a post on Instagram, I don't have the time to finish it before the tour starts.
We ain't ready for tour just yet.
So I'm making the decision to push the tour back about three weeks to get this music done.
Been making some badass shit for this music, for this album.
Can't wait to perform it for y'all again.
Okay.
I have many thoughts here.
Do you?
Yeah.
First of all, both of these guys are in weird situations to me.
You think so?
I think so.
Okay, go ahead.
So jelly roll is, I think jelly roll was a lot cooler to people when we didn't know as much about jelly roll as we know now.
Like jelly roll now seems like he's kind of maga.
and we're not accepting that from Jelly Row.
Who's we?
Jelly Roll exists
in a really interesting place for country music.
He's country music with tattoos all over his face
and this sort of hip-hop influence.
Because he was a rapper first.
He was a rapper first, right.
Now, if you are straight up cowboy hat,
I got an alligator in the motherfucking flatbed,
Dodge truck Ford F-150,
cowboy boots going team pinning with the family body like a back row shit there's a lot of shit
you can get away with because you have a specific fan base if you are jelly roll just from your
history and your aesthetic you're a little you're a little hip hop adjacent there's like black people
got to like you a little bit because of where you're coming from there's some hip hop infusion into
what you do you're never going to be a pure country artist so if you start fucking around and
around the edges of anti-blackness
even a little bit, you'll get decooled
on that side, and then you're actually
not pulling from the cool that
people first thought that you had into the white
languages. Post Malone is in the same
situation at this point. Post Malone
got crazy hits, is a big-time huge
artist, but
Post Malone been showing us his ass for a little while,
and nigger might be like, I'm cool on Post Malone.
Like, I don't want to go out and watch
White Iverson and the rest of this shit,
because I know that we put
post Malone on and then as soon as he got on he was like that nigger music don't move me and so
i think that there's a little bit of cooling on but neither one of these guys to me is a titan
within the country areas they like them but they still got to operate a little bit different
than what they do i think for jelly roll it was some political shit to where we're like hey we're not
really fucking with jelly roll and for post malone he's been a little bit of little bit
anti-hip-hop and to me
not very charitable to hip-hop culture at all in the last
four or five years and I think that's affecting his
ability to get people to come out and fuck with him.
So
I don't think
that black people are buying
tickets regardless to a
post-Millone jelly roll concert.
They might be like, oh yeah,
you know, there might be something that they
see with jelly roll and like
it's like, oh, okay, like he's a little
different and they might like him, but they're not going to, that is not the reason that, because
it's being reported, like Post is saying he wants to work on the album, it's not ready, he wants
to have new music, he wants it to be right, it's a double album that's coming out, so that's
why he's postponing or canceling these shows, but it's being reported that the ticket sales aren't
good, and this is a stadium tour. I don't think that there are that many black people that are
supporting either one of these artists, which is why there could be slow ticket sales.
What I really think is that this is part two of the tour.
They were on tour last year.
So, and it's stadium.
So I just think that it's harder to sell, especially maybe if you went to the first part
and you went to a different city, because they're still, they didn't cancel the whole second
part of it.
They're still going to other places.
So I do believe that there's slower sales and I just think that it's just hard to do
a stadium tour. I think that the reason that Jelly Roll changed from part of his change from the
hip hop to the country is because that worked. I think he became MAGA adjacent. We'll just say
it looks that way. I think he went to country because that is an easier sell than it was in hip hop.
I think it benefits him that, which is why we saw him get at the Grammys and say and preach and
talk about Jesus in the Bible. And then when he's in the end.
interview room, he's sitting there and he's going, oh, you know, I'm not really on social media.
I'm just a good old country boy. That image works for him in this country world. So I honestly
just think it's part two of the tour and they just couldn't sell out. I actually don't think that
for their audience in any way is this a reflection of whether or not people like them less. All of that
benefits this country audience. Well, apparently not because they... It's part two. Maybe they
Oversold it.
But what I'm saying is apparently not because there's a couple of things here.
Number one, I'm not necessarily talking about how many black people are going to go out and see this.
That's what I said we.
I know.
I'm saying, right, so let me make it clear.
And if I said that, I'm talking about a specific group of people that like the country, hip-hop, fusion shit that they do.
Those people are the most likely people to be turned off by just,
staleness on the side of post Malone and more so with jelly roll if i was looking at what you were
saying the only thing different between now and then when they were selling is that people are looking
at jelly roll now like no if you're going to be the guy who is like super awesome and like is going to go
and testify on how fentanyl is hurting families if you're going to be this uh uh
musical humanist, which is a part of your story in terms of like how you've had to take care of
yourself, your past story and all of that stuff, then we want you to say is Ron to Lock Kids and Cages.
And you would not have to do that if you were more solidified in mainstream country music,
because you wouldn't even be asked to. If you were more solidified in mainstream country music,
if you're even past Jason Aldeen and all of those people, if you're Morgan Wallen even, right?
if you were more solidified,
if regular country music fans,
they wouldn't even have
those interrogations for you.
But they're going to have them
for Jelly Roll
because of where he came from
and the story of how he got there.
The story of,
oh, I felt like this.
I was on drugs.
What the drugs did to my community,
the history of Jelly Roll
and all of that stuff.
I think there's a group of people
who would like Jelly Roll
or Post Malone
that aren't diehard,
hardcore country fans
that are more people
that like the sort of
fusion of all of that stuff.
They enjoy jelly roll with Eminem and all of that.
The question is like if Jellyroll wants to go out now and put Eminem on stage with him,
is M going to want to do that?
Because if M is up there on, he probably would.
But if M is up there on,
the people are going to be like, hey man, we got sneaking suspicions
that Jellyroll could be announced as the DHS head at any time.
And so we don't want you on stage.
So I really do think that the change that we've seen since the last time that they went out
is that people have these questions about jelly roll and these are kind of the questions that
they've been having about Post Malone too.
I don't.
I think that they're going to pull.
I think they're oversat.
Jelly Roll headline stage coach last year.
Post did stage coach this year.
Post also did stage coach in 2024.
Post hasn't had new music since 2024.
I just don't think that people are running to go spend a lot of money at a stadium
tour, which is hard to sell out when you're not really putting out anything new, which makes sense
of, well, let me just wait. Let me just give y'all some new music and something look forward to
and some new features and maybe it'll add something more to the stadium. That's honestly what I think
it is. You could have just gone to see post as stagecoach. You could have seen them last year
and it's going to be the same music. It's not anything different. So I just think that's what
it is. But we'll see. We'll see when he drops the new album. Let's see what happens.
Let's see if they, no, not jelly roll, post.
Let's see if they rebook these tours that they canceled.
Maybe they will.
I mean shows.
Like, like, posty got hits that he could do, right?
But, you know, it's like.
But are you going to spend all that money?
Also, like, it could be the economy.
Like, as people are figuring out what to spend money on,
maybe they don't want to spend all that money on a show they've already seen
in music they've already heard.
All of that is a part of it.
But one thing is
specifically with Jellyroll,
I think it's true about Post too,
but specifically with Jelly Roll right now to me
is that he's had some bad press
and people are,
there's a regular casual fan that's ambiguous,
I hear what you're saying.
Can I ask you this?
I was talking to somebody about this.
Do you think, obviously Jelly Roll
has been in the business for a long time.
Went from rapper.
I don't know when,
I don't know if he was in and out of jail
or went to jail for a long stand in between,
but came out.
now he's a country singer.
You had to really be tapped in,
I guess to be following Jelly Roll before,
but for the masses,
it feels like he blew up pretty quickly.
Do you think that there's something
when you blow up that quickly
that it's easy for you to fall off that quickly too?
No.
Okay.
Well, and it, well...
Because it does feel like,
again, if you weren't tapped in,
it's like, where did he come from?
He came out of nowhere and everybody loves him
and everybody wants to be featured with him.
All of a sudden, it was like,
Jelly Roll was,
everywhere. He was like the darling
of music and it happens
so fast and I just wonder when
stuff happens like that. Just curious
because I was having this conversation with someone is it quick
for you to also turn on them
quickly? They love you then they hate you and they love you again.
It's all dependent on
that's why I'm talking about the political stuff
like I'll give you an example that somebody we just talked about
Cardi B. seemingly Cardi B came out of nowhere
right? She built her stuff on
Cardi B. What happens? What
Cardi B is
Cardi B is not trying to be everything to everyone
Cardi B solidifies
her section of her fan base
Cardi B goes on
you ask Cardi B a political question
she gives you an answer she goes
on and she has like conversations
with politicians and she does
all of that stuff she goes look if you're not fucking
with me because I don't feel like
like this terrible thing should happen
or I'm not like anti-trans or I'm not like
if you don't fuck with me because of that cool
everybody that fucks with me
despite the fact that I have the politics
and I'm comfortable in my own skin
let's see if we can take those people
and fill up an arena or a stadium
she doesn't shy away from it it doesn't do the whole thing
which makes people go kind of like your fate
her authenticity shines when you ask her a question
because you know that you're getting a real answer
I think that when people blow up
and more so people start to learn things about them
that they don't like
that that stuff is cool
as long as people think that is real.
But if you start to look fake,
then people go,
I'm not fucking with it,
this person is wishy-washy or whatever.
So I think there's a number of people
that have blown up quick and falling off quick.
Yeah.
Some people didn't have the music.
Some people we found out were boring.
But there's also a number of people
that have blown up quick
and stayed around
because they are who they are.
You know, so, you know, but I think it's a bunch of, okay, cool.
All right, Donnie.
It's getting, it's popping on Abby's show.
Scott Jennings.
Yeah, let's talk about it.
Conservative commentator, Scott Jennings,
he kind of lost his cool on a panel with Adam Mockler
on a recent episode of Abby Phillips's CNN Newsnight.
Let's see what happened.
I mean, honestly, they have been at war with us for 47 years.
We all know that Scott Jennings is more than happy to defend a war with a country.
that starts with the letter is IRA that we are currently failing that is going to put us trillions and
trillions of dollars more in debt. I was only a few years old while you were in the administration
defending prior endless wars. Now this war is failing.
Eight weeks is endless to you? Okay, you said it was going to six weeks. Wait,
wait a minute. I debated you on TV four to six weeks ago and you said we were weeks away from it.
Now you're making condescending remarks because you can't defend the fact that this war is not going
your way. Wait, one more time. Not going, not going to your way. Name one political concession.
Get your fucking hand out of my face. Name one political concession.
Everybody, hang tight.
Honestly.
Wow.
Political violence.
That's what you're calling it?
That right there is a perfect example of why we have a political violence problem in America.
Oh, speak on it.
So you have, look, there's a group of people out there.
that are not going to, and shout out to Adam.
There are a group of people out there
that believe that the niceties and the decorum
that is needed to maintain American lies
from power and political hackery
that is not worth it.
There are people that say, no, no, this is the truth.
The truth is we can't talk about anything
that befalls the president or the right without talking about the framework of political
grotesquery that we live in and why we live in it.
That there's no need to both sides every single issue.
There's no need to pretend that one thing is the way that it is and it's not the other way.
That all it is that like being in a situation to where you maintain this weird and
synthetic decency is stupid.
Here's the truth.
Here's what happened.
And this is something else that Adam did to Scott
that people on those types of shows normally don't do.
Yeah, he gets your pain out of my face.
This is what people do.
He didn't say this messaging is wrong.
He didn't say this idea is wrong.
He didn't say this mode of thinking is wrong.
He said you are wrong.
He said you know better.
He said that you are here and you are doing the work for an administration.
You are puppeting, being a puppet, should I say, for an administration.
And there's something in it for you.
He directly, directly called out Scott and said, hey, not only are you doing this now, this
is what you do.
You've done it before.
And he broke Scott.
He broke Scott because what we never, ever want to interrogate,
or explore in these types of situations,
situations is that the person that is lying to you,
the person that is obviously lying to you,
because in the situation that Scott Jennings
and so many others are in right now,
you can't lie your way through this.
You can't say that inflation isn't up.
The numbers are there.
You can't say that the war isn't going poorly.
It is.
You can't, these are things that are evident to everyone.
The only question left is,
Why are you saying the opposite?
What is the goal that you are invested into?
Why are you being willfully ignorant about this?
And what does it say about your character?
He pushed Scott there and he broke him.
Just because he refused to relent to some weird sort of truce that exists
when you're having a conversation across political lines that some people get into
where they feel like you have to entertain somebody else's point
even though it's obviously bullshit.
Do you think that Scott Jennings should still be on the show?
Because that is the question in what's being litigated on social media.
Like I'm not here, we're not here.
I'm not going to be like, Abby, this, Abby, that as I'm seeing people doing.
I think it's just a question of should Scott Jennings be on that show?
Yeah.
Why?
Because you want one more chance?
to talk to him?
Nah, me and him and all,
that's not it.
He should be
because it's pussy not to have him there.
So this is why I will say,
I say no.
And it's something that you pointed out
when you said
it's an example of,
you called it political violence.
Is that what you said?
This is how we have political violence.
Well, it's,
you said this is how we have political violence.
So to me,
I mean, I think that you can have
that show and you can have a person
who is a Republican, who is conservative, who is MAGA, who supports the Trump administration.
You can have that varying side from the right and still have an entertaining show without Scott Jennings.
I think that what happened last week crossed the line. And I think that you were right.
It does contribute to or show like why we have political violence. And to move further with him
rewards that type of behavior and almost normalizes it or desensitizes it and makes it okay.
Scott Jennings is not the only talking head from the right that can be entertaining on that show.
You don't need him.
And I think that I get the concept of the show, which it's like a, I don't know, like a sports debate show,
but with politics and I understand the entertaining nature of it and why it goes viral
and why they revamped Abby's show to do this.
I like that.
But I don't think that you need a Scott Jennings.
to have a successful show.
And I think we're turning the corner
where it's the opposite.
And to me, this line was the corner.
Of course, did I enjoy seeing Scott Jennings
throw a temper tantrum on television
and lose his cool?
Absolutely.
Did I enjoy the fact that it was at the hands
of a well-informed, younger,
factually prepared, progressive guy?
Yeah.
Did I enjoy that the only line of defense
that Scott Jennings had was to curse somebody
and say, fuck you, and then turn to Abby and say,
make him stop, which is basically what he did.
Yeah, I enjoyed all of that.
But I think that it almost at a point,
I'm gonna use the word cheapen, and that might be the wrong word,
but it also, to me, it's cheapening the show
to allow a Scott Jennings character person on there.
I think that I like the back and forth,
but I don't think it's gonna be as effective.
Sneaking what makes headlines is more Scott Jennings cursing him out than it does the point that you made of how successful he was and pointing out you were the problem.
And Adam having the facts to back up and contradict the things that Scott was saying because Scott just talks, right?
Scott says things we talked about it last week.
Scott said the people say racism is over.
We cannot platform that kind of rhetoric anymore in my opinion.
You can maybe defend, try to defend what the Supreme Court did.
and fine, you're in your right to do that,
but to sit on, to look at a black woman
be on her show and say racism is over
is a problem.
The fact that Scott Jennings got to come back
to the show on Friday is a problem.
Scott Jennings is a spoiled brat,
and I think to keep him on the show
shows that it is designed to almost like encourage
this type of behavior.
The number of times that he's on the show
where he gets to sit on the show
the fact that he used to tell Abby make him stop.
You know, that's not the first time that he's done that.
That's not the first time he's turned to Abby and said, like, make this person stop.
The way that he talks to other panelists, the way that his demeanor is with other panelists,
he gets what feels like preferential treatment, and he acts like he is the entitled panel.
He acts like he's above everybody else there.
And he acts as if I can say or do everything, almost like Trump on the panel.
He is the Trump of the panel.
He acts like he can say and do anything and nothing will happen to him.
And the fact that he was right back on the show like it was nothing furthers that and fuels that type that perception.
He is above it all.
And if anybody else on the panel turn and said like if you go on the show the next time and you say the N word, because you don't say that because there's a level of professionalism that you have when you're on that show.
You don't say fuck like we do here.
If you did that, I wonder if you would be asked back the next day.
So this is a fundamental disagreement that we have.
Number one, there's just some things about the show that I know that a lot of other people might not know.
Sure, you're on it.
You're a part of it.
It's not easy to get guests from the right to come on the show.
It's not easy to get them at CNN.
It's not easy.
Scott is also a CNN contributor.
So he's not just on Abby's show.
He's employed by CNN.
Which is even more of a problem.
Number one, but see, it's not a problem.
No, no.
I'm saying what he did saying, fuck you.
and that he is a contributor and goes on other shows.
Like, you know better than that.
Like he, that's what I'm saying.
Not that he, I don't mind him being on other shows.
So this is my deal.
So one time I was on there and John was hosting the show and the president had said bullshit.
And then John said bullshit.
And then Scott said, hey, my 11 year old son is in the green room.
And to me, to me, that was interesting even in that situation because the president said
that you didn't have a problem with it.
John, the host, repeats the president.
he was filling in for Abby, he repeats to the president,
and now it's my 11-year-old son that you have an issue with it.
I fundamentally do not believe in we shouldn't platform people like this
because that has lost,
and there's no way around it.
We can talk about it, we can discuss it, that lost.
It lost.
It just doesn't work.
In certain cases, I can understand.
the need to want to do it.
I'm not talking about like hate speech,
terms of service on a social media place.
I'm not talking about that.
I'm not talking about whether or not
you should be subjected to the inward
when you go on Twitter.
I'm not talking about Chud the Builder
or any of that type of shit.
I'm talking about the fact that
we don't need to platform these people
or these people shouldn't be able
we don't talk to them or whatever, whatever.
It lost because what those people did,
those same people,
is they went to other places
where people would platform them
and they made their cases
without any pushback
and America bought it.
That happened.
I'm not making that up in my mind.
That's what happened.
So what has to happen now
is what just happened.
Adam made Scott look like a fucking fool.
That's what has to happen.
Americans have to see someone
so desperate to defend something
that is clearly not working
that they lose it.
And then they have to say,
why is he so mad?
And that is working.
That is working.
The actuality of, hey, you're a little bit more poorer than you were.
This war is costing you $6,000 a year.
Do you feel good about it?
Like the tariffs that are slowing down the economy that Trump said were going to be a
boon for America.
Do you feel it?
That conversation is working.
And it works even better when you question them on it.
There was another clip that was on CNBC not too long ago where Pete Buttigieg was talking to think somebody from the treasury or might have been somebody that was just on the show.
And he's telling him, he was like, well, inflation's up.
And the guy's like, no, no, no, no, no, no.
And he goes, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Inflation had already come down to around 28, 29 at the end of the Biden Harris administration.
It's up to 3.3 now.
And it has been climbing, even if you give it a little cushion and you say that inflation,
was around three in January.
It had crept up a little bit.
It's gone up over Trump.
And Sorkin had to jump in and be like, listen, you can say whatever you want to say.
The math is the math, inflation is up.
Watching that guy short circuit, if at all your vote can be garnered.
If you're curious enough to be like, hmm, what's working for me?
Then you see that and you go, they're losing.
There's nothing that they can say.
If we're having debates about how America should go,
what's humane, what's human people first,
then we have to be able to talk to people
and poke holes in their arguments.
And to me, Scott, like, there are times
that people have been kicked off that show,
but it's had to do with violence.
Didn't you just say that this contributes to political violence?
No, but I'm saying it contributes to political violence.
violence to me rhetorically.
The only other time that I remember somebody
not being invited back on the show
is when Ryan Gerderski said to Mady Hassan,
the beeper.
The beeper thing.
That's almost like a terroristic threat type of situation.
It was so, so I, first I want to say this.
I did not say that you shouldn't have platform voices
from the right.
I literally gave a spectrum of all the voices from the right.
I think that that is necessary.
I said, Scott crossed a line to me
where you can be,
You can replace him.
I'm sure it is.
I'm not going to argue you about it hard getting people on the right on the show.
I think if somebody had the position that Scott has on that show where he's basically like the second person,
then I think you could get somebody on that show that would defend what the right is doing right now
just as intensely as Scott would.
I think Scott did something.
I agree with you with his rhetoric is contributes to politics.
violence. He threatened him and whether we say, oh, he lost his cool and that was great to see and, oh, you know, it showed that he was rattled and that what he was saying really bothered him and he looked like a fool. It still is like that's how he's talking to him. And it's basically, I've yelled at Scott on the show. You've yelled at him. You haven't been like, you haven't threatened him. It was a threat. It was a threat. It was a threat. So, so to me, I get what you're saying. To me.
I need that.
Do you feel like, and I guess that, and this is maybe where it's coming to, I feel like, again,
I truly believe Scott has given preferential treatment and everything about him on that show
and the way he behaves shows it to me and I just gave a laundry list of those things.
I think you need right voices.
I would like if it was even a back and forth right left on this side, on one side, right on the other side.
I like that.
I enjoyed the setup of the entire show and I think that it is necessary.
And I think it's productive.
I think it forces us to have conversations within our friend groups on podcast and group chats, whatever, and see a different perspective.
That is healthy and it is necessary.
Scott's gone beyond that.
And if somebody can get kicked off the show for saying something that implies violence, right?
That is what Scott did too, because the question is, if you say you get your fucking hand out of my face or what?
If I was Adam, he handled it well, I would have been like, or what?
Because what follows after that?
What the fuck are you going to do?
Right.
Because it's a threat.
Right.
You should not be able to do that.
I'm sorry.
And I don't feel like you think you could say, you could act like that.
Who?
You.
Do you think you could act like that on television?
Yeah, I do.
I think that I could probably do that on that show.
As a matter of fact, I think I would be, if I went up there as much as I was asked to go up there,
I would be on there like all the time, right?
I think they actually, to be honest, for me,
the only reason
it wouldn't be CNN
and this is the real difference for me
it wouldn't be CNN had I done that
that would have admonished me
It would have been the public
It would have been the public
And the public would have said
Van is this
Because even when I yelled at Scott
Over the zip tying thing, right?
It was the public that said
Look at Van losing is cool
Van is a gigantic ape
monkey nigger
Who can't control himself
We've seen this in the past or whatever
So when I'm thinking about
the way I'm acting on a show like that.
I'm not thinking about, that's not going to happen to me.
Do you think networks respond to public perception?
Because see, right now, black folks are mad at what Scott Jennings did.
Like, at least that's what I'm seeing, maybe because I'm on black threats.
I don't know.
But I think if there's enough pressure, they would remove you.
Well, I mean, yeah, remove me as easy.
I'm not a contributor so they can just stop asking me to come up there.
But I think the reason why they like me,
is because when I'm up there in the times that I do respond,
I inject a little chaos into it,
and they want that type of thing to exist.
I agree.
I will say,
but James do not.
We're making almost two different points.
If someone feels like Scott Jennings crossed over and went past what should be accepted on the show,
that's fine.
I'm not,
different people,
I don't believe that.
Remember where I come from,
where I come from,
we used to be at each other like that all the time.
So I have no issue with that.
I have no issue with that whatsoever.
That's not what I'm saying.
Well, it is what you're saying.
Well, I don't mind combativeness.
I don't mind the chaos.
I don't mind the debate.
He's setting a precedent.
So, like, I come on the show.
I'll be like, hey, don't fucking talk to me like that.
Get the fuck out of my face.
Why can't I talk to each other like that on television?
I would never come back.
Be asked to come back.
But if you said, like, to me, the question is, if you said, like, hey, the fuck out of my face with that, I don't want.
that's a conversation for you and I to have.
Like you're a human being.
I'm a human being on TMZ.
Like the Kanye thing.
Like the Kanye thing.
That's me standing up.
That's me standing up and addressing him.
That's me taking the show into my own hands,
standing up, addressing him, calling him out.
People liked it.
It was respectful.
Because they felt that it was righteous.
But in a lot of other places,
I want people to remember this.
in a lot of other places
that would have been fireable
because that was an interview
even though Kanye was turning around
and addressing us
that was an interview
where the only people
whose mics were on at that time
were Harvey and Charles
was Harvey and Charles's mics
that were up
and if their mics were the only
when I started talking
Jayrock had to run over with a boom
and boom me
because the mics weren't picking up
what I was saying
so I like interrupted the show
I know that it's different
and I understand that it's different
But what I'm saying is those types of moments to me should never be what the terrorism thing I do think is different because that's making fun of a really bloody situation and saying that you hope somebody doesn't come kill Madi Hassan.
That to me is very direct.
And you kind of have to get that person out of there because that's a different deal.
This right here is past the point of what I would consider to be decency.
I would have given an indecent response
like in that situation
I'd be like okay what happens if I don't
and then I would have stopped Abby
I'd have been like no I want Scott to expound
or what happens if I don't get my finger out of his face
because we can have a conversation after the show
or during a break it can go however you want it to go
right but Adam did it better
Adam did it better because Adam went
he's losing his mind because I'm right
you got to see that to me like
just to let y'all know
he's going crazy
because I'm right
because I am what I'm saying
is 1,000%
true. He's done this
before. This is the same type
of person that in 2005 or
2006 sent your son
and your daughter to dive in and he'll
do it again if they tell him to.
When are you going to stop listening
to him? Completely
shredded any sense of
power or intellectual
honesty that Jennings had, he lost it, and then Adam sat back and caked up off his victory,
went viral two or three times over it, and made a name for himself.
I just think that that's important.
I think it's important too, and I think that he can be done.
And Adam will do it again.
I mean, it's not the first time somebody's put Scott Jennings in his place, or Scott Jennings
got frazzled, or he rolled his eyes, or he did an insult.
Like, that's what he does.
It's just the first time he said he threatened somebody.
And it should be the last.
Right.
Okay.
Fernando Mendoza, you like him?
Yeah.
How could you not?
You fucking with him like that?
I'm just saying.
Like, you hear his speech, his Heisman speech.
He just seems to have such a love for his community and his family.
He seems to be super focused.
What he did at Indiana.
He just seems like a likable kid.
You like him.
Hmm.
All right.
He talked about the fact that he is not going to the White House.
It's not going to go see Trump.
Donnie, play fucking shit.
I'm on the trip to the White House.
11th, May 11th later this month?
Are you able to make that trip?
Are you finding out no one there?
I believe May 11th is the first day of OTAs.
If I'm not mistaken, I have the calendar.
However, you know, I mean, I don't have the calendar.
Sorry.
Well, maybe I do.
I'm sorry.
I got to check teamwork.
If it is on the first day of OTAs, like I said,
I'm on the bottom of the totem pole here.
I got to prove myself, I can't, I can't mispractice.
I mean, I'm not, I mean, I don't know anything official.
I don't have a calendar.
But I just wouldn't, as a rookie, I don't think that's a good look.
And I want to, you know, try to best serve my teammates.
And I don't know if that'd be accomplishing that goal.
Because it's, you know, yeah.
How can you argue against that?
What's you mean?
How can you argue that?
It was a perfect answer.
Like, they tried, they asked a political question,
which maybe he anticipated.
or not, but the fact that he's like, listen, I'm at the bottom, I'm trying to win this starting
position. It's the first day. I don't care if it's OTAs. I'm not going to set a precedent of I'm
missing the first day of practice to go on a field trip. I'm here to work. You drafted me first.
This is what a number one pick does. This just shows how easy it is. We always had this
conversation shows how easy it is man it's like you know you would have asked me that question
if i'm fernando mendoza i'd have been like i'd probably gonna have covid i can't go i'm probably gonna get
it i tell you guys a lot of people around here it's like whatever like i don't know i might be hungry
like just just whatever it's you don't have to go yeah you know what i'm like you like you don't
have to go right he doesn't want to go it looks weird for him to go it looks weird for him not to go
So what he goes is he actually tricked everyone.
He tricked everyone.
He goes, I care about football and I care about football more than I care about this.
I got to do it.
You can't argue against it.
It's that easy.
And I don't want to let you guys know.
It's like, once again, this kind of goes back to what I'm talking about.
At this point, there are myriad reasons that one could decide they don't want to be in a photo with Donald Trump.
It's not just because you're MAGA
because I'm sure if we go back
through Fernando Mendoza's tweets
and people have,
then you're probably going to find some stuff.
He's Cuban.
Yeah.
Just like that.
Well, I'm just saying that is not shocking
that his parents immigrated from Cuba.
He grew up in Miami.
He talks about the story of his parents
and how they came over.
Like, it's not shocking to me
that there might be a,
there would be some kind of
Trump tweet. There you go. Yeah, right. Back in the day, okay. Cool. Because like, you know,
we're having a lot of conversations about the Cubans, you know, about Cuban people and stuff
like that. I just want to make sure that we allow individual Cubans to be themselves. I said it's not
shocking. I'm not going to assume, since you said it, I'm like, okay, well, that's not shocking.
Because you like the Miami Sound Machine, right? What do you mean? You like them, the Miami Sound Machine.
Why do you say that? You must like, y'all like the Miami Sound Machine?
Don't know what that is
What'd you say?
Don't know what that is
Bernard, do you know the Miami Sound Machine?
Do you know what that is?
I'm not setting you up for anything.
Get on the fucking mic.
He said no, he doesn't know.
No, no, no.
You know the Miami Sound Machine.
No.
Donnie?
Yes, I do.
Thank you, Donnie.
Tell everybody who the Miami Sound Machine is.
It's Gloria Estefan, man.
You do know, Rachel.
I feel like you know.
You know.
You don't.
Come on.
Like Gloria Estefan, the Miami Sound Machine.
Are you just naming people?
The fucking Miami Sound Machine.
Oh, one more second.
Are you just naming people from Miami?
No, Gloria Estefan, you know Gloria Estefan is.
Of course, and I like that you said her last name correctly.
Okay, whatever.
Shout out to Gloria.
But that's Gloria and the Miami Shaw Machine.
Y'all know this?
Y'all know her.
Is that the name of the group?
Of course I know who she is.
Okay, thank you.
But I didn't know she was a part of a group.
Yes.
Sorry.
It's like.
Of course I know.
who she is. Okay, I'm just making sure
because now y'all got me.
I didn't know she's a part of a group.
I know the music. Yeah, I know
that you know. Like, it's like
Emilio Estefan, Gloria Estefan.
That's her husband, by the way.
Thank you. Rage knows.
I honestly didn't know that they had a group.
Okay. You know, I'm older than you guys. I'm not trying to like
in any way, shape, or form.
It was established in 1975,
just FYI for you guys. You know,
you know, this is the same shit that Jomey tried to
pull. Where's Jome? Get Jomey the
fuck in here. This is the only, this is the same
shit that Jamie, Jomi tried to pull over
the Barry Gordy thing. I'm not saying
that you guys. It's a little different.
It is a little bit. Okay, so I'm not comparing them.
This is a little different. I'm just saying that like,
you know, it's not like
I just pulled out. It's not like it was crazy.
Like, I just pulled out. This is one of the
most famous popbacks in the 80s.
Of the 80s. Of the 80s,
of the 80s, key word. Jade was born
in the 2000s. Okay, but
But see that.
Yes, I do know of artists, bands, groups and stuff
from the 80s, from the 70s.
Yes, but not all of them.
But if she didn't know who Gloria was,
then that would have been a different thing.
You do know who she is, right?
Who?
Gloria Estefan.
And I honestly, Miami Sound Machine, it sounded familiar,
but I'm not going to say I really know if I don't.
I can't remember a song.
And that's okay.
So let me, it's actually not okay.
But let me.
Shake your buddy.
to do that.
Yeah, that's the Miami sound machine.
You know what I'm telling you guys.
So what I'm telling you guys is there's something that's happening and I got to be honest
with you.
This is the way I feel.
Is Jomi here?
There's something that's happening and I got to be real.
I know that I'm old.
I know that I'm old.
I also start to feel like because I have a lot of cultural conversations with people
that there is some cultural laziness that's starting to exist and we need to talk about
it.
This ain't the hill to die on with that one.
I'm sorry.
To me it kind of is.
You also know a lot about the most random things, and this isn't random, but you do.
But like you, and then you expect everybody to know those things.
And then you get mad.
Like, I am not interested in movies.
And then you get mad at me.
I'm sorry, I'm not.
I've explained the history of it.
That is not mean that I have to know everything about movies.
We do a pop culture podcast.
But look.
We don't, not about movies.
There are two other.
podcast that specialized on that, and that's why they won't let me anywhere near them.
Okay.
They know.
Can I say something about this?
Okay, so, like, I was born 1980.
Okay, I was born in 1990.
You know what, nigga?
I'm going to start, Jay.
What was the face?
Jay, I'm going to start putting a wheel in your back.
Okay?
Just to let you know.
Jade, I'm going to start putting the wheel in your back.
All right?
I'm going to start putting the wheel in your back, Jay.
I'm just letting you know.
I'm joking.
Okay.
Okay, okay.
All right.
I was born in 1980.
You had the best,
you were born during the best era,
just to be real.
You had the best childhood.
She's a fan of Reagan.
Like you,
you were a teen in the 90s.
Like,
what I'm saying is,
is that like,
what I feel like was happening then,
that's not happening now to a degree,
is when I was born in the 80s,
the movies and the culture
was still to the point
to where they were exploring the stuff
that came before then, even like small scenes in movies, like Back to the Future.
Well, it was like, hey, he calls Chuck Berry and the most racist scene that's ever existed
in any movie.
That's more racist than any scene that's ever said to anyone.
What was it?
The most racist scene in the movie ever is Marty McFly inventing rock and roll.
There's never been a more racist scene in any movie ever because Marty McFly is playing Johnny Be Good.
I've said this before.
And then it's, hey, look at this.
This is the sound you've been looking for.
And it's like Marty McFly invented rock and roll.
That's legitimately in that small scene
demonstrating how white people stole rock and roll.
But even that, he's playing Johnny Be Good.
All of that stuff.
The people that are making the culture then
are hearkening back to culture's past
and educating you on it
by watching the things that are in the present.
And the culture and the stuff that we're doing now
is not doing that.
Like they're not reaching farther enough.
This is the 80s we're talking about.
Like we're not going farther enough in the back
and making sure far enough in the back.
Oh my God.
We're not talking about stuff.
that came before we're acting like the only stuff that matters is stuff that happened in 2005 on it's weird i
agree with that sorry jade go ahead i agree of to a certain extent and the only reason my the reason why i
agree to a certain extent is because in our generation there is a mass amount of content of things of movies of
TV of celebrity that nowadays it is hard to keep up with everything.
I will say growing up, I think there was that.
I think we, I mean, I was watching, I mean, shoot, I got, my parents are all his.
Like, I was watching culturally prominent films, TV, this, that, and the third, celebrity.
There was, you know, there's a list of actors and actresses that were like, you know them.
hands down, music you were listening to.
But as we got older and the internet started to become what it is,
it became harder to really have the need to go deep dive like that,
like you used to.
I feel like the internet kind of kept us from wanting to do that more
and put us more in the now constantly.
Yeah, the presence changed so much.
I would a hundred percent agree with you.
I was going to say the same thing.
It's overwhelming right now.
It's like to keep up with pop culture is overwhelming in all sense.
And you didn't even have social media back then.
Guess what?
Guys,
I'll be honest with you.
There are pop culture things that you guys know about stuff that's happening now
that old man van isn't caught up on.
But when you catch me up on something, I go and I listen to it.
And then I decide that I enjoy it.
So this is what I watched the King of New York.
There you go, Jay.
I bet you was fucking with it.
But this was.
You're not fucking with the movie
It was cool
Okay
But this is what I'll say
The only thing I'll say about this is different
Is you guys are watching people
Like walk around the downtown to some street
For like 10 hours in a row
Right
Like you guys are in that time
In that time you could watch like school days
And I'm talking to people
I'm not talking to the regular people
Who have all this other stuff that's going on
I'm talking to like the people that's supposed to know
About movies and culture and shit like that
It's a fucking Miami sign machine.
All right, you know what I'm saying?
It's like, you know what's something else about them that's interesting?
We move on now.
Please.
What's interesting?
Please tell me.
There's a show called Igorda.
Leflaka.
Oh, God.
You said it wrong.
So who's fucked up now?
I mean, I don't know how to speak Spanish.
Well, if you're going to say it, say it's right.
What did you say?
Igorita.
Igorta.
Igorta.
Igoda.
Well, actually you said Leflaka.
Laflaca.
La Gorda.
La Gorda.
It's La Gorda.
It's Gorda.
El Gordo.
It's Gordo because it's a man.
El Gleloch.
You know this show.
Yeah.
Okay, so the lady on that show, Emilio Estefan's sister or niece.
I saw her in Miami one time.
Okay.
I'm just saying shout out to the Cubans.
And, you know, I don't want to put all the Cubans in the same.
And what does that show mean?
What is that?
It means the fat man and the skinny girl or something like that.
I was on all of this shit.
I was on Univision.
Clearly not.
We've talked about it.
El Flaca.
Calien.
Contrault.
I think you can say it like that.
Sabado, he aggante, rest of peace, Don Francisco.
I was on all of this stuff, man.
Good for you.
And so I'm saying we just gotta be more cultural.
No?
Again, we know some of the players.
Some of the players.
Anyway, so I'm just saying,
Mendoza, I don't want to say that all my Cubans.
I didn't say that.
I said it's not shocking if that was the case.
That's true.
That's true.
What's your favorite, who are some of your favorite Latinos?
I like them all.
It's like Trump.
Give me your
My favorite
I don't know
Can I give you my
You have your hall of faith
You have your top five
I give you a top five Latinos of all time
Of all time
All time
All time
All right go ahead
Number five
Richie Valens
Okay
I fuck with Richie
All right
The day the music died man
Number four
Be Real
Cypress Hill
Okay
I fuck with Be Real
Cypress Hill
All right
All right
Number three, Jennifer Lopez.
So we're only doing music.
No, we're doing overall.
Okay.
We're doing overall.
These are the people that I know.
Okay.
Well, we do entertainment.
Okay.
Number three, Jennifer Lopez.
Okay.
Number two, Antonio Banderas.
Oh, I'm saying.
Number one, easy work.
Number one, my favorite Latino ever.
Try to guess.
Just tell us
Number one
Selena
I knew you were going to say
Selena but you said Latino
and it threw me off
because I would have been like damn
I hope he put Selena
but then you said Latino
which would be a man
I don't know the jargon
so it's man
Latino Latino Latino
AKA
their language
I don't know it
I know that I listen to
Bidi Bumba
I know that I've supported
It's not Bumba
What is it?
Like God
Like you either gonna be down
with them or not
I am
A be-de-be-de-be-de-b-b-b-d-b-d-b-d-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-h-h-h-h.
She could sing, man.
Selina was that work, too.
You didn't know who Selena was until she passed away.
That's not true.
I'm asking.
I did know who she was.
Because everybody was talking about her.
Everybody was like just wait till Selena takes over.
Yeah, because the songs had not come.
The, her English album songs did not come out.
But remember, I was watching.
I remember a different version of Shakira.
When Shakira first came out and she would be featured on like Caliente or control or any of those places,
Shakira was like a, she was like alt.
Like her, when Shakira first came out, like she would be on there, she would be performing.
And she would like have like red hair and black.
She was different.
So like all of those shows even before were like playing.
I was watching, you know, my Univision situation.
and they were playing Selena
and they were playing all of these different
but I was cultural though
I used to watch Caribbean rhythms
remember that show
they had Rachel
she'd take you through
the the
This was on MTV
This was on BET
So Rachel would take you through
the different sounds of the Caribbean
You know
Back up the big truck
Big truck
Patra
That wasn't a Patrick song
But Patrick would be that
Deep and far back
You don't remember these records
These are records
I apologize
I'm calling
cultural, man. Don't get me into my Asians.
Shout out to them.
Let's move on. We'll do them next time.
Because you don't said jargon for, like, the Spanish language.
You don't say, I don't know what you said at first about the name of that show.
Which one?
You got Selena's name, a song wrong.
There was a song that used to come on there.
There was a song that used to come on the island.
Come, baby, come, baby, baby, baby, baby, come, come, come, come, come.
You got to give me a love in there.
You got to give me a song.
A song, like, these are the records.
So you know that.
What's that God's called K-7?
That I cannot give you.
What's your opinion of colorism?
Can you ask the question a different way?
What's my opinion of it?
It exists?
Well, let's hear Loreale and Mona of Don't Call Me White Girl and Loreale of the Morning Hustle talk about colorism.
You know, light skin bitches on the internet right now, you really...
We can't say shit.
Nah.
You don't know it unless you experience.
I feel like, because I feel like we, you know, we learn it.
I love being a black woman.
I really appreciate it.
I feel lucky.
And we've learned so much about like colorism and how it affects us and how we think and,
you know what I mean?
So it's like, I know that the darker you are in this country, the harder it is for you, right?
So I have a certain amount of like empathy for my sisters.
But what the bullying and the shit I experienced was a thing too.
Yeah.
And I feel like we just in this weird place right now where it's like you have colorism,
but then it's this thing that the light skin is going to do, but there's no name to it.
Because of the privilege that's connected to light skin.
That's right.
So it's just like even when they say pretty privilege, I grew up fighting.
I didn't grow up getting the boys and nobody like me.
It was like, you know, so I don't know.
That's how it was.
She thinks she cute because she light skin and you're like, I got to fight for no reason
because of my damn complex.
Because in our culture, light skin means soft with men and women.
I hate that though.
Like, I hate the fact there's an even at division.
I bet you do.
First of all, I got to say this off the top.
I fuck with Mona heavy.
Mona's one of the most talented people in the whole space to me.
I honestly, I know people are expecting a biracial rant here.
I honestly...
Are they both biracial?
I don't even know if either one of them is, honestly.
But I honestly don't know...
I mean, I'm sure that this is true, right?
So this is somebody's personal experience.
when biracial people reach out to me and they do,
they tell me their stories of horror and how difficult it is growing up in a black community.
It's not like I dismissed them.
I understand what they're saying.
But, I mean, you tell me, this has to do with like the beauty standard and how darker,
complexed women feel, how I think some of this stuff, I guess that men, a man would
never say this, but if we're being open and honest,
I guess probably some of our lighter skin brothers probably feel like, you know, why am I attacked for being light skin?
Like, why is that a thing?
So I'm sure that this goes, this is in both sides and both sexes.
I don't know.
I don't know, like, what do you say to somebody's experience?
I feel like a lot of people were like, y'all, shut the fuck up with that light skin shit.
Because here's the thing.
It's, I think that they are definitely in their right to talk about, you know,
maybe growing up, not maybe, they talk about being bullied growing up because of the way that they
looked. And they're absolutely within their right to do that. I think the problem became when the
term reverse colorism was mentioned. And Mona says, a quick Google, let her know that that is not a
thing and it let her know why. And so she moved on from that. And Laurel was kind of like, yeah,
reverse colorism. And I think the reason people are like shut up, which I would never tell them that
because I think that if you experience, you know, any kind of bullying, you should have,
you should feel like you can talk about it and you can express it.
I think it's the problem of the way they're talking about colorism because it's almost as if,
and especially if you believe the word reverse colorism, which Mona says she doesn't,
so I want to give her that.
It's almost as if you're acting like colorism is something that was invented within by us.
It wasn't invented by black people.
and colorism exists in other communities as well,
but it wasn't invented by us.
It was a tool of control.
It was a racial tool of control.
And it's historically rooted.
And so if you talk about it from that sense
and you talk about how it was injected into our society
and into our community in order to separate us
in order to make people feel black people,
that's what we're talking about,
feel that some are better than the others
because of the way that they look
or because of their closeness to whiteness
or being adjacent to whiteness
even physically by working in the house.
And then there were black people
who played into that,
who felt like they're being close
closer to whiteness or adjacent to it,
made them better.
And therefore, you know, it worked.
The racial tool of control worked.
And then they treated black people
who didn't look like them a different way.
Then I think that that's where it's like
if you come from that perspective,
then you would stop having this conversation.
Colorism is a thing.
It absolutely exists.
But when you get down to the why of it,
then I think that that would shut this down.
They should be able to be like,
hey, I was bullied when I grew up
because of the way that I looked
and it wasn't fair and my blackness was questioned
and that made me feel a certain way.
And I think that we should hold space for that.
I was bullied when I was a kid by black people,
not because of how I looked.
I looked black,
but because of my being adjacent
to whiteness because of the school that I went to or what my parents did or because of the way
I talked.
I was constantly bullied when, because I lived in a black neighborhood.
I went to a black church.
I ran summer track every summer growing up.
I was constantly teased.
But, and I think I should be allowed to talk about that.
Now, I'm not talking mine.
It's not a form of colorism, but it is like my adjacent to, I guess, whiteness or whatever, going
to white school and stuff like that.
But it's not colorism.
and that word should be the way they're talking about it
made it feel like it was something that black people created
and that is not the case.
And I think that they more so we should talk about it
and that's why we should talk about their experience
because we shouldn't tease.
They shouldn't have been teased when they were younger
because of the way that they were looked.
And you have to talk about where that teasing comes from
and what that's rooted in and that's the conversation
that we should be having.
So we shouldn't ignore their experience.
We should talk about why it exists
and then that's a problem, and we should get down to that.
I'm fascinated.
I'm going to ask you a question on the backside of this in the second,
but before I get to that question.
Them being teased as a consequence of the system.
That's true.
Black people didn't create colorism.
I mean, colorism, to your point,
exists in every society, exists in Asian communities,
it exists in the most racist conversation I've ever had before in my life.
I think I've talked about it before.
Sitting down, I was in El Paso, taking the train back to L.A.
I was having a conversation with a guy and the guy was Mexican.
And, I mean, this is just the reality of the conversation.
I'm sitting down, this is like 2010 or 11.
He goes, well, the Mexicans that are in L.A., they're not, they're the dirty Mexicans.
I was like, what the fuck?
He's a Mexican guy.
He's like, I am from Chihuahua or whatever.
The place that I am from, we are lighter skin.
This is where all the women that win Mexico come from.
He's like the Mexicans that are in LA are the ones that come from Baja.
And I was like, my guy.
It's like, it has been nice to meet you and talk to you, but what the fuck is happening right now?
And he was telling me, and like when I was having that conversation, you know,
understanding that like there is a European thrust to the beauty standard that exists all over the Western world.
And really parts of the Eastern world as well, all of that stuff because of who's,
you know, been able to make the rules about what is beautiful, even if you're talking about
the Asian, all that stuff.
Colorism is deal.
The question is whether or not any specific culture, the Genesis to me is huge and it's a part
of it, I think.
But there's also a question, I think, is a more contemporary question than that question
is about whether or not we've codified it.
And even though the genesis of it is what it is, I think sometimes the living and active
conversation is about our hand and perpetuating some of these ideas.
And I think that's the living and active conversation about myriad things,
myriad cultural discussions that we would have, right?
The question is not the dysfunction that we inherited, but the dysfunction that we continue in.
And can we have enough conversations that are robust to where we can reorient the way we look
at each other?
That's a conversation about patriarchy.
That's a conversation about the way.
we yeah yeah you got that from this specific toxic forbearer can you say hey pause let's have a
conversation about it and maybe set some new rules and chart a new course um i think that's fair
here i just think that one thing that we will never talk about is no one ever is going to listen to
pretty girl problems they're not they're just not no one's going to listen to pretty girl problems
They'll listen to pretty nigger problems
Like they'll listen to pretty boy problems
Before they listen to pretty girl problems
The pretty girl problems nobody's listening to those
Now I'm not necessarily saying
I'm saying that in this situation
A lot of times lighter skin is connected
To desirability
And there's a politics
And that's been reinforced
Right of course
And there's a politic there
Where people are just gonna go
Y'all shut the fuck up
Y'all didn't got the covers in the magazines
And stuff like that for too long
We're not trying to hear that
And then the question is, being that we know that, right?
Being that we know that, the question is, well, how do we discuss this?
Correct.
And amongst our things.
And that's what I say this.
The list of biracial actresses that I keep, the reason why I keep that list, and I know that's a joke to people, but we talked about this and I'm not in any way trying to call it anybody out in no way.
we've had two big screen
um
uh portrayals of storm
like these are two
nice people amazing actresses
all of that stuff
both of those portrayals are like
biracial ladies
like you know what I'm saying
who played the other one other than Holly um
Alexandra ship and she's a funny she's a great actor
she's a nice lady
she's her family is nice
like all of that stuff but like
you know what the fuck I'm talking about
It's like I read the X-Men all the way up through.
And so then there starts to become.
And to be honest with you, the second portrayal lover is because Hallie Berry portrayed her
and they're trying to get somebody to approximate what Hallie Berry was like on screen.
And that's no shot to them or no shot to anyone.
None of that stuff, right?
But when we have these conversations, sometimes the conversations are about stop.
Let's pause and reevaluate what our beauty standard is who we think,
looks good and like what the center of ourself is.
So when people hear that,
they think we're not really trying to listen to you talk about like your pain,
even if it is this.
And as much as I've talked about and on here
had a lot of fun with the biracial thing,
there still is a really legitimate,
important and vital discussion
about how we treat everyone,
all shades and colors inside.
of the family of black people that we have it.
Yeah.
No, I mean, I agree with you completely.
That's why it's like I,
I'm never going to be that person who dismisses
two light-skinned women having this conversation.
But I think, and this is where I would have loved
to have seen their conversation go and it didn't,
is we got to be able to sit with each other
and talk about how we got here,
why this exists, and how do we move forward.
Like, we can't be like,
all y'all y'all are you know y'all are favored in the media anyway and and and when it comes to
hiring practices and things like that so like y'all don't have any real problems that's not fair like
we also we need to if we're going to come together if we wanted to stop we need to be able to come
together and have the conversation but you know it's the way they were having it i mean look i thought
that it was a real honest way to had a conversation i just saw it and knew straight up that the
sisters was going to be like, er.
It was going to be like, get it.
Well, because they were like, well, what, we, we can't call it this, so what do we call it?
And my, and I kind of, that's the only pushback I'll say is like, well, why does it need a name?
I think if you name it something, then that almost makes it more of a problem.
The question should be, it's, the issue should be, it has to stop.
And how do we start having conversations to make it stop where we even stop playing into stereotypes?
because it still exists within our black community.
You have women that only want to date men who may look a certain way
or men who only want to date women that look a certain way.
And it's like, well, why do you want to do that?
And what is it that you're really trying to accomplish?
And what does it say about what you dignify as beautiful or successful or whatever it may be.
Like, we have to talk about this kind of stuff.
We have to get out of our own heads too.
It continues to exist because we perpetuated as well as a community.
I think that there's some.
And naming it as part of that.
I think that there are some type of,
well, you said you didn't want them to name it.
That's what I'm saying.
Naming is a part of that problem.
I think there are certain lighter skin brothers.
I had a conversation with a lighter skin black actor,
pretty successful that was saying that sometimes when he goes out for roles,
he has seen as less masculine.
Like he doesn't get tough shit, tough roles.
Because we were talking about Aaron Pierre and how
Air Pierre's
We gotta have him on
I don't want to say his name
until we have it more
We were talking about
Aaron Pierre
and how Aaron Pierre's role
And what was Aaron Pierre's
breakout movie?
I love that fucking movie
I can't remember
thinking of the name of it right now
Rebel Ridge
Rebel Ridge
He was like
Aaron Pierre's
Role
his niggas said
Aaron Pierre was like
Jackie Robinson
of like
I was like
what the fuck are you talking about
it's been like
light-skinned black guys
that have been in action movies
like Will Smith
Like there's people that but he was like now you don't understand
He was like for me as an actor
Seeing him out there being a lighter skin
Light-eyed guy and being tough
He's like they don't give us those roles
He was like there's something that makes them sometimes think that we're not masculine enough to like get those types of roles
I was like really interesting I never ever because they got me because they were treated
softer you know like if historically historically right
Right because they were in the house they like their life was hard obviously they
slaves but I'm just saying that it wasn't as in the sun in the field doing labor in the same way.
So I think that's where that perception comes from. But are we not being problematic when we're
like, so I was talking to this light scan person. I was talking to this like shouldn't we just
be like I was talking to this black person? See? But I'm just saying the more that there's a
separation when you do that. Now it's difference if you say, hey Rachel, I want to hook you up
with somebody and I say, what does he look like? And then you describe there's a little that that's a
difference because I need to have a visual. But are we not?
part of the problem if we're like, all right, I'm just saying.
I'll tell you why I don't.
I'm just saying.
I tell you why I don't think so is because number one, are you?
Uh-uh.
Uh-uh.
That's the first time I've seen that.
You have never seen it before?
I've never seen in an interview, not in a regular conversation where she's telling us to
wrap up.
We don't even have a guess.
We don't even have a guess.
I don't even know if we have another topic.
Y'all.
I don't even know if we have another topic.
I have one more thing I want to ask you.
No, one more thing I want to ask her, but like I think in this
this situation. Reason why I said that is because it was pertinent to the conversation
because he was light skin and he was talking about. Sure, sure, but it made me think of that.
True. Very true. Let me ask you this. Do you think it is appropriate for black people to litigate
and discuss levels and degrees of blackness? Yeah, because we do it anyway. No, no, no, no, no, no.
I know that we do it, but do you think it's appropriate.
for black people intraculturally to say this is blacker than this,
that is blacker than that.
Okay.
This is blacker to-
Only in the sense of gatekeeping, maybe.
Say more.
But I, and I'm thinking of this at the top of my head.
I do not think that we should litigate somebody's blackness.
I just told my story.
My blackness was litigated.
It still is because of my ex, right?
Constantly.
Oh, my God, constantly.
I'm sure, yeah.
So of course I'm going to say it's something that we should not do.
We should not be litigating.
There's no book that exists.
There's a checklist that says, this makes you black.
This is not.
I think that's what makes us beautiful is that we are all different.
So no, I don't think that we should litigate it.
But I do think that there should be some kind of boundary or lines.
Maybe that's not litigating it in the sense of keeping what's ours, ours.
If that makes sense.
What do you think I think?
You think we should?
Absolutely.
In what way, though?
In all ways.
But like, what does that mean?
So I tell you what happens to me.
Do you think that that's fair?
It's not really about fair or unfair.
Do you think, why do you think that because here's the thing.
All right, let me back it up.
If I didn't have this podcast, if I didn't have this podcast,
that I know you call it a pop culture podcast,
but it's more than that, right?
We talk about how things intersect with black people, the community.
So I didn't have this podcast that was like this.
And so you didn't know me.
The only space that you know me in is that I went on a white show.
I dated majority white men,
and I chose somebody who was, I mean, yeah, Latino,
but like white presenting.
So white.
I think that there's a there it is fair to ask the question of does she fuck with us?
Because you don't know me.
And if that's litigating it, then I guess I do believe that.
But if I have a podcast where you constantly hear my thoughts, my opinions, where I stand,
what I call out, what I'm not afraid to challenge when it comes to the benefit of black people,
people, not just women, men too,
then I don't think that it's fair that you litigate
because I think it's obvious where I stand
and I think that any litigation of that
is just simply just wanting to hate on me
for the purpose of hating
because you just don't like maybe something that I did,
a decision that I made or whatever.
Or an opinion or something, yeah.
I see what you mean.
I think that there's two reasons why I think
it's not just appropriate but it's vital.
Number one, I think it's something that all cultures do.
Well, they do.
I said that, but you said, don't say that.
I'm like, well, yeah, we should because we do.
Well, no, no, no, no, no.
I mean, all cultures do.
All cultures litigate.
Our blackness.
No, no, no, no.
All cultures.
All cultures.
Any culture.
You can't name a culture that doesn't litigate and discuss the authenticity of that culture
amongst the people that participate.
For sure.
If you talk about skateboarding, skateboarders are going to talk about who the real skateboarders
are and who the fake skateboarders are.
If you're talking about hip hop, it's going to be real hip hop, fake hip hop.
If you're talking about American culture, you're going to talk about who is a patriot, who is not a patriot.
If you're talking about Jewish culture, Asian culture, whatever, there are going to be ways that those cultures really police themselves by talking about how authentically cultural things that are inside of their purview are.
Yes.
The only reason why black culture, to me, is frowned upon when it doesn't.
does that is because black culture is for mass consumption.
And because black culture is for mass consumption, there is a tinge of it and a twinge of it
that says black people are not supposed to police it, that we are not supposed to make rules,
we're not supposed to have guidelines, and we're not supposed to have those rules or guidelines
even amongst each other because the worst thing to call a black person inside of black culture
is anti-black or fake black, right?
Sometimes when you do that, you're going to be...
Or not black enough.
Or not black enough.
All of that stuff together, right?
Sometimes when you do that, you're going to be wrong.
Sometimes you're going to introduce new concepts
that are going to force people to listen to you
or force people to, like, re-interrogate what it is, they believe.
Like, heard somebody?
It was in conversation that said a lot of the 90s gangster rap
is decidedly anti-black.
That's actually not black culture,
because it's anti-black women.
Some people could say that it's anti-black men
with some of the things that it reinforces.
Some people could say that like it got to a point
to where some of them were discussing things
and then it became a white corporatist means of not only control
but a way to propagate a actual genocide
that was happening inside of black communities,
that the music is inherently anti-black.
Even though it's made by black people,
the genesis is black like that there's actually not black music
because it's to the detriment of black people.
Had a fantastic conversation about that,
a back and forth.
Then you just talk about, like, your proximity to whiteness,
your proximity to what is white,
and how that colors your perception of black people.
What's the symptoms of that?
There has to be.
There has to be a symptom of you not either being a part of,
being siphoned,
sector away from,
there has to be their symptoms that go along
with that type of deal.
What are those symptoms?
And are those symptoms things
that are catching within the black community?
We do it.
We just don't do it amongst a cohort of people
that is supposed to be accepted.
Right away, nobody's going to be like,
hey, Larry Elder, Candice Owens,
Byrne Donald, you can't talk about,
no one's going to care if I say those people
are less black.
No one's going to care.
No one's going to care.
It doesn't matter what a black.
where they black parents come from
don't matter what they did, where they from,
don't matter where they came from, they went to
black church every single fucking day.
They are endeavoring
into what people believe to be
cultural and political anti-blackness,
therefore they are anti-black. The question
is, if you are not
into that, if that's not
your thing, if it's not that
overt, and
there are things that you don't know,
cultural customs that you are not
up on, and these things
vary from place to place, right? There's no
because my, like
my black in the south
is different from the black in Harlem. Absolutely.
You go up to places and you're sitting around
and Puerto Ricans are saying the N-word and you're like,
yo, what the fuck?
Like you put overalls on Fat Joe.
He looks like the overseer on the plantation.
Like he, that's a white guy.
He's not black. I understand that.
But like he, because of his proximity to blackness,
has like lived inside of blackness
and where he's from
he will go there and say the inward
and nobody will care. If he comes to Baton Rouge
and tries that, niggas are going to check his
motherfucking temperature. So I'm getting lost in what you're saying.
What I'm saying is that conversation
about an understanding of cultural rules
and mores and values is a fair conversation to have.
And it's fair to say that y'all doing something
up there that is less black or anti-black.
It's also fair to say that if you grew up in a private school, not necessarily you, but
other people, if you grew up outside of the cultural experience of blackness, are there some
things that are ingrained into you that disconnect you from what people would say is a
cultural experience of blackness?
It doesn't mean that the answer is yes, but that would exist.
That does exist in every single culture.
Every single culture goes, that's not quite Jewish, that's not quite Filipino, that's not quite this, that's not quite that.
There are rules to being a part of it.
The only place where we get on each other's asses for saying, hey, there are some things.
And the list is not that long.
The list is not that long, but there are some things that we should all be able to kind of coalesce around is this culture.
So the reason I said I was getting lost is because you start bringing up Fat Joe and I'm like, he's not even black.
he's not even in the conversation.
We're not talking about people who are black adjacent to a community.
No, we're talking about the way black people in where he's from, the way they respond to that.
Correct.
That's different.
But the conversation is like us in our community should be litigated.
And when I say-
You understand the point, I don't want to get up to the point is.
Yes, but I want to get back to what it was.
I know.
But what I'm saying is the point that I would make there is that-
is not black behavior because you're accepting.
Yes, I get you.
Right.
I get you.
I get you.
I get you.
I get you.
So yes, black cultural, where you're from makes a difference as to far as like,
what you accept within your black. I get it. I get it. The reason, the only thing I'll say is,
is there's anti-black. I don't really know how to define fake black, but there's anti-black,
and then there's what's deemed not black enough. I don't believe debating or litigating what is
deemed black enough. I do believe in anti-black. And so like, see, I have, I will call
Candace Owens black, because I want her to know what she is. And she would say she was black, but
she's also anti-black. And that's something to me that should always be litigated. And that's where I think
the boundaries are. But within, if you want to ask a question, if you want to understand, I wouldn't
consider that litigating. But to tell somebody, when I say litigating, I'm mainly thinking of terms of,
are you black enough? To me, that should not be litigated. If I'm black, and that is how I identify,
and I might have had a different upbringing, I might have been raised, adopted by white parents,
I might have gone to private school my entire life.
I might have grew up in an affluent neighborhood where I didn't see black people.
But I identify as black.
I believe in the black experience.
Historically, I know stuff.
I have a desire to be a part and understand the community.
Why should that be litigated because I grew up rich?
Why should that be litigated?
Why should I be deemed I'm not black enough because I didn't have, or what you said,
I went to public private school my whole life, but that's not the cultural black experience.
so now my blackness is litigated.
That is what I say should not happen.
Anti-black, for sure.
And that's to me where I say there's a line,
there's a bounty, there's a gatekeeping of that.
Because that rhetoric and that behavior seeps in,
and I think that's where things become problematic.
So this has nothing to do with money.
Like, I'll give you an example.
The Cosby Show.
So I'll give you an example.
The Cosby Show.
So you have Bill and you have Heathcliff and Claire.
Heathcliff and Claire are affluent.
They are affluent.
They got money.
A doctor and a lawyer.
They are black.
There is black art.
There is black music.
There are black cultural traditions in terms of even the multi-generations.
Like the schools, it is black.
You're going to watch that show and you're going to learn about blackness.
And it didn't seem like they were.
forcing it. What it seemed like
is that this was
a natural manifestation
of who these people and who these characters
are. Right?
In actuality, Bill
Cosby, you guys
hold space right now for the grotesque
figure that Bill Cosby is. In actuality,
he went to Temple. He went to
Temple. In the show, he went to
a black school. Right?
Wanted to show that
financial
achievement
does not have to divorce you away.
from blackness.
Sure.
Blackness is something
that you invest
into a part of who you are.
What I'm saying
is to the person
that you're talking about.
Like, the person
that you're talking about,
like identifying as any culture
is not enough.
It's not.
Identifying as a part of that culture
isn't enough.
Well, I explain more
than just saying I'm black.
I said way more than that.
Cool.
Like, I'm not going to look at somebody
that is,
um,
that is culturally invested, curious,
and engaging in a participatory in black culture
and say that they're not black because they were adopted.
Right. But if you are not those things
and you are adopted, I'm going to say
that's probably the reason why.
So like if you don't care about none of that shit
and you were adopted, I'd be like, oh, you didn't grow up
because you're black, but culturally, you're whatever your parents are
and they didn't think that it was important for you to have this type of
upbringing. So I'm going to say, oh, that's probably why. And at some point where I hear about
these people that go to college and they become black at some point, like, you'll want to come
to the parties too, and then you'll go there and you'll join the black student union and you'll do
all this stuff. And then boom, boom, you're niggerized over time, but overnight. But what I will say
is I don't just think that it's appropriate to have these conversations. It's vital.
it's vital because it makes those cultural traditions and those values, it makes them important.
Now, you don't have to have them with a pitchfork.
Which a lot of times people do.
When people are kids, right?
Like I deal with it in my adult life.
But to be honest with you, though, in that situation, that, we could have a conversation
about that, like, whatever.
Like in that situation, if you're talking about because of Brian or because of The Bachelor or any of that stuff like that.
Oh, I think it's because of Brian more than anybody.
Okay, if it's because of Brian, then the usefulness of that social taboo,
the usefulness of that social taboo, we could have a conversation on it.
Yeah, I don't get mad if you're a first, but again, like, and maybe I just,
what I love to about this podcast is we grew up different.
I love that we grew up different.
We're both from the South.
We have two different perspectives.
I love that even grow up, like, we grew up different, but then as we traveled in life,
it was different.
And I think that that adds depth.
to the conversations that we have
because we bring different experiences to it.
But I also am very understanding.
And so if you don't know me
and you, but what you know of me
is maybe what you read on a Wikipedia,
if you ask me or maybe assume something,
I don't get mad at first.
Now, if you keep going with it
or I can't get past that,
whatever it is that you assume,
then like that's a totally different story.
We'll get off this, but I'll say this for some of them.
You know what?
You'd be surprised.
like I'm a Star Wars guy
so like Mr. Gubauer would have
Blurred. Yeah but that wasn't a thing then
there was no so I'm a Star Wars guy so Mr.
Gabauer rest and peace would have like movie time at lunch
and I would go in there and watch Monty Python with them
and all of that stuff when I was at McKinley Middle
Nirvana started popping and I joined a rock band called guillotine
you'd be surprised I would have like all of the stuff that I was into
they just come to me we'd be in the neighborhood
and they would be like, Van was with the white boys.
And I'll be like, if y'all wanted to watch Star Wars,
I would be with y'all.
But these are the motherfuckers that I watched Star Wars with.
These are the people.
So I put my niggas on Star Wars.
So I put my niggas on signs.
But your public perception wasn't.
My public perception became that.
Well, I get it.
But what I'm saying is that to me,
or even the talk white thing
was a huge, huge deal.
The talking white thing.
I even understand it.
It was a huge huge.
It was actually funny.
You talk white,
why are you talking white?
Did you ever try to change the way you talked?
No.
I did.
It did not work.
How did you try to change it?
I don't even remember then.
I mean, now I just talked like me, but I just remember.
I just remember.
I just remember.
No, no, Big Rach on the scene.
I wasn't there yet.
I was quieter in how I would talk
because I didn't want people to say,
you're so proper, you're so this.
Yeah.
It took a,
took a like a guy telling me in high school.
It's like, I like the way you talk.
I was like, okay.
Wow, interesting.
A black man, to me, I never, that shit never affected me.
Yeah, it's, I don't, I don't, I, mine was brutal.
It was brutal.
It was tough.
Also, I think that was because of dad too.
Recipe's dad.
I was coming home, I was like, I'd be like, dad, you know, I don't know, the gift program,
shit, they say that like, I'm, I talk white because I'm in the gift of
program. My dad would be like, yeah, well, the good thing about them
niggas is that all of them are going to jail.
Okay, that's it.
My dad did not say that to me.
It's like, you're really not going to have to worry about what they think because all of them
are going to jail and mama would be like, Terry, not all of them boys are going to jail.
He'd be like, keep watching, the majority.
Like, you can, and if you want to go out and go to jail with them, which is, I,
anti-black sentiment.
It is.
That's an anti-black sentiment.
Why I didn't say that?
But yes, yes, yes.
He knew that they were wrong.
He just put them in jail.
He said, I go, don't worry, Rachel, I got something for them.
Hey, Rachel, don't worry about that.
They keep talking to you, baby.
I got something for you.
They're going to Danbury Minimum Security Prison.
Talk to my girl like that.
What a weird conversation.
And Donna, you have anything to say about this?
You haven't, yeah.
Are you black?
I feel like it's obvious.
I am black.
And I agree.
I feel like there's no culture that doesn't litigate people's placement in said culture.
So we're not exempt from that at all.
Thank you, Donnie.
Yep.
That's appreciated.
Yep.
Doesn't care.
All right, Z-Corner, before we got out here, anything from you guys,
you guys have anything to add to niggas with dreads?
Nah.
Well, technically we're not supposed to say dreads anymore.
What is it?
Locks.
Two niggas with locks?
Locks, yeah.
I got locks?
That's anti-blocks.
Well, okay, so what else is anti-bler?
There you go.
Like, catch me up.
You guys, black if I have locked?
No, the word dreads.
Bernard.
Okay, nigga.
Bernard, we're going to take you off the fucking mic, Mike, dog.
Like, but like, Bernard, stay up.
Stay involved in different type of shit.
now. Come on.
What the fuck got you got going on over there?
Is that anti-black to have locks?
There's a lot of anti-black shit that we do, that I do.
It's anti-black to make front of the light-skinned black people.
That's anti-black, because they black in a way.
All right, let's go.
Love you, God.
All shades and colors, different places that you're from.
But he is keeping a list on some of y'all.
Keeping a list because I need to see Coco Jones in the motherfucking movie.
I keep something to say, I'm not getting off that.
Marsai Martin.
Name other young Jamie Lawson.
Marseille.
Marseille.
Marseille Marceau.
Like, I need to see, I need to see them.
Anti-black.
Anti-black.
I need to see them in some of the goddamn movies.
Just some of them.
Okay.
No, fuck that.
I want to see them in all of them.
Okay.
I got movies and shows coming out
and I'm casting dark-skinned people.
Nobody respected.
All right, tell you things kept off,
but do not stop learning.
And don't stop fighting for your culture, man.
I'm Van Lakin, Jr.
I'm Rachel Lowe and Lindsay.
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