RAWTALK - How Sneako Got Unbanned from Youtube
Episode Date: October 21, 2025Sponsored by: Prize PicksUse code “BRADLEY” & Make your first $5 line up & get $50 whether you WIN OR LOSE! https://prizepicks.onelink.me/ivHR/BRADOn this episode of RawTalk, Bradley Marty...n sits down with Sneako and talks about getting unbanned, censorship in the age of AI, the current state of free speech, the role of Islam in America, the viral dog shock clip, His collab w/ Nick Fuentes, Andrew Tate's upcoming fight, His comeback plan and much more!Hope you enjoy, see you next Tuesday!SUBSCRIBE HERE: https://www.youtube.com/c/REALRAWTALK?sub_confirmation=1 LISTEN ON APPLE PODCASTS: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/rawtalk/id1294154339 FOLLOW RAWTALK PODCAST: INSTAGRAM | https://instagram.com/getrawtalk TIKTOK | https://tiktok.com/@askrawtalk FOLLOW BRADLEY: INSTAGRAM | https://instagram.com/bradleymartyn SUBSCRIBE TO RAWTALK PODCAST CLIPS: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvzSBNBOK599FqzrTZS8ScQ/?sub_confirmation=1 SUBSCRIBE TO LIFE OF BRADLEY MARTYN: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWTQG2aMDYKGDqYEGqJb1FA/?sub_confirmation=1 SUBSCRIBE TO FITNESS CHANNEL: https://www.youtube.com/bradleymartynonline?sub_confirmation=1 RAWGEAR: https://www.rawgear.com (CODE:RAW)
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All right, guys, before we get into this podcast with Sneco,
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Bradley. Let's get in this podcast with Sneco.
Look who's back.
Back again.
Wow.
Sneak goes back.
Tell a friend.
Listen, bro,
this feels good.
It's like a different.
I feel like YouTube's different.
You feel like it's different?
It feels the same.
You know, I haven't logged in in three years looking at the, I still have the same
recommended that I had three years ago.
The vibe is very similar.
I now have a partner manager and they're nice to me.
They talk to me for the first.
time, but it still feels the same in a way.
Like, I feel like I'm walking on eggshells.
I'm so used to having free speech.
And I don't, I can't trust Google again.
Like, obviously I'm happy, but anybody not stupid, there's no chance you could trust
them after what they did.
I see what you're saying.
So do you think, do you think that now as you make content on YouTube, you're going
to be more hesitant with what you do?
Yeah, I'm going to be more strategic.
I just want to show them.
I'm a good content creator, you know, just put out the videos that, that I like the
most and but I'm definitely going to be a lot more strategic and less less cerebral I think for a while
when I was streaming on YouTube when I got all my strikes I was very you know go every full blast
time to like pace it and think things out but you say full blast you just mean like whatever the
fuck I'm thinking I'm going to say it that's what I was doing then yeah and it was without
caring about the repercussions or without thinking strategically even though I didn't say anything
They admitted that what I said was correct.
You know, they apologize.
If you read the email that I posted on my Twitter, Google said,
thank you for your patience, three years of patience.
Yeah.
But sorry, we were wrong.
So, but I think the reason, there's many reasons that I, that I was banned everywhere.
Obviously, like the actual reasons were misinformation.
But if I had played it, you know, more strategic and thought more long term instead of full,
full speed ahead, I would have lasted longer before getting banned.
You know what I find really interesting?
But thank you.
Let me interrupt you before your question.
I want to say thank you to you.
You know, I think that podcast, obviously the campaign that I did,
I did three years of campaigning to prove Google wrong and I ended up winning.
That's a major feat.
I've never seen that happen on YouTube.
I've never seen a YouTuber get their channels reinstated like this ever.
You know, somebody get blanket permanently suspended.
Three years I was going around on podcasts.
I was making my videos on X.
I was talking about it on stream.
And our last podcast that we did went up here.
We were there on my balcony right over here with my YouTube plaque.
And I was talking about, I immediately started off by saying I was wrongfully banned for COVID and election misinformation, things that you can now talk about on YouTube.
And I think that that was effective.
And you gave me a platform to tell the truth when I didn't have one, when most of what's on YouTube is from, you know, boring commentary channels that just do drama slop that want to say something negative.
You know, that's what's dominating YouTube right now because of the algorithm.
but you were there giving me an opportunity to to say what was right and you ended up being vindicated too
so thanks i really do appreciate it yeah it's it's interesting i think and i thank you for that by the way
before i continue but the thing that i'm starting to really notice and i don't know if it's i don't know
if it's exactly true with what i'm going to say next but it feels like there is a lot more power
that people have
now more than ever
that it felt like we were
at least now
I think the future I'm a little more concerned about
but because of AI and stuff like this
but it seems like right now in this current time
at least over the last three years
and the last few years
people have had a lot more power than I think
they've been willing to give themselves like credit for
meaning like
I don't think these changes would have become changes
if they didn't feel a need right
because as a business you have to decide
you know, are we losing users to TikTok?
Are we losing users to Snapchat?
Whatever the other platforms are?
And I think these platforms, albeit the biggest platform in the world, Google, with unlimited
money essentially owning YouTube, I think they still start to recognize it like, yo, this is wrong.
Even though despite at one time, you know, there was a presidency that was saying, yo, clamp
down on this, don't allow this to be said, don't allow this to go out, which is why you ended up the way you ended up.
Which obviously was wrong and they admitted it.
But I think, like, do you think it would have changed?
changed if enough people weren't like, yo, what the fuck?
Probably not.
And they see the long-term play.
AI is going to replace a lot of people on the algorithm.
And they know that.
A lot of the thumbnail replicate, you know, since I left YouTube, there's been so many,
I'll just be out, a lot of Mr. Beast clone type videos.
Those people are going to be gone.
A lot of fitness influencers, AI is going to replace them.
A lot of people who don't have a person.
and authentic voice, AI does what they do better.
So they know, and they're panicking.
They're seeing what SOAR is doing.
And why would I listen to you when AI is speaking in a better way?
And also she has bigger tips and she's more attractive.
This AI girl, I'm just going to go listen.
And she does what I say.
And she talks to me back.
And that's replacing so many of them.
So they know that authentic voices are valuable.
And I mean, weirdly enough, over the past three years,
not only did the banned voice, because I got it, I exploded in popularity since I was banned.
It's not supposed to happen.
Since I was gone, I mean, I had two million subscribers, but far more people know who I am now.
My name has more recognition.
And also, more people are just interested in listening to the wrongfully banned voices.
People want to hear those banned voices because those are the ones that are having the
interesting conversations.
Yeah.
But everyone else, if you look at, you know, the, what's readily available, most other
places, it's just, it's nothing. So YouTube wants to, they want to fight back against the AI.
They need creators. So you said something that was interesting, though, you, the AI taking over
and the authentic voices. And also, you got more popular outside being canceled and people
wanted to hear those voices that were canceled. Do you think that maybe it's somewhat of a play
of maybe we can lessen the power of these voices by allowing them back on almost? Because now you
have, you now you have the ability to control that sort of algorithm in a, in a, in a,
better way than you were if they were about then again right there is not as many people using rumble
there's not as many people like you know i mean a ton of people search on twitter but um what i'm
trying to say is your voice got sort of louder or more people were interested in it because it was
banned i'm it makes me think like maybe they think if we if we allow these people then maybe
they'll have less of an influence ironically right that's a pretty decent that's a good
insight. YouTube different than is different than Twitch. So Twitch, they do something called off
platform behavior. That's why I was banned. I've been banned on Twitch so many times for,
you know, I've been permanently banned on Twitch. And one of them was off platform behavior.
So they just say like, oh, we don't like what you did on that website. So we're going to ban you on
our website. YouTube doesn't have that policy. Although they do evaluate it, absolutely,
that's not part of their community guidelines, which I have become an expert in. So if you follow that,
then we should be fine.
And if you want to have conversations about difficult subjects,
then just do it on other platforms.
But who knows?
What I've learned is that they'll,
if they want you, Ben, they will.
So that's, you know,
definitely that falls into the walking on eggshells theory that I'm finding myself in.
I've been so used to having free speech.
Now that I haven't even uploaded my first video back,
and I'm already like, okay, can I see this?
Can I say that?
Can I, I'm already remembering what it's like to not be able to say the word kill or, you know,
not be able to title it properly,
censor the first 30 seconds,
make a joke about whatever.
That's,
I don't miss that.
Yeah.
There's a little cumbersome for sure
I'm being on YouTube with that,
but so what do you think?
So what's your,
those are decent insights,
but what do you think the reason is,
obviously Steve will do it is,
I don't know if you announced it,
but I think he's able to make a new channel.
A lot of people who were banned
are able to make new channels,
but Google said specifically,
case, I can get reinstated fully, which means getting all my channels back because I was
wrongfully banned. So do you think, why do you think that they unbanned all of us?
That's, that's, maybe my view is a little pessimistic, but I think a little bit is, I think it's
twofold. I think it's what I said first, is that they realize that content creators,
uh, to, to a certain degree, like you said, the authentic voice ones are, I think, few and far in
between. And I think they realize that those are the most powerful ones. Like, they look at people
like, for example, Tucker Carlson, right, who went off of all these news channels and now
has probably one of the biggest platforms like that is like alternative sort of news for the
right, obviously, in this case. I think they're recognizing that like news entirely is like pretty
much dying, the CNN, all this stuff. I mean, they've known that. But I think that they're starting
to realize that, you know, people, at least in this spectrum, where you kind of line, like you're,
you know, you're a blend of a lot of things. I think you're, you got comedy. I think you have artistic
nature. I think you also talk about politics. So I think you cover a lot of stuff. But I think
they recognize at least in the political sphere that they won't have content creators if they
continue doing that like, okay, we don't like what you said, get off of our platform in regards
to political stuff. And so, but then the other side of it is like, well, maybe they want them
back on the platform. So you just said minutes ago where you're like, well, I don't know if I could
say this. I don't know if I could say that now this way. Then you kind of start to self-police yourself
Like, truthfully, I have for years.
Like, I'm not even going to front and be like, there aren't conversations that like, like we did, you and I did a podcast with Myron here for like four hours one night.
And I think we cut out two hours of it or like an hour and a half because it was like we knew, I knew you guys had already kind of gone through the, you know, the being banned.
And you guys were like post the shit.
I was like, bro, I will get banned for this.
We were also kind of telling you on the podcast, this should probably not go away.
Yeah, you weren't like fucking ruin.
You guys were very straightforward.
like this is not good for for you know it was good for the conversation and it was a great
conversation but for youtube it wasn't good so that's why i'm saying like for years i've sort of
like self-police myself with the with the i remember the two like i remember october 8th i
went on uh your podcast with sarah and immediately i was like free palestine i was talking about
this and you guys are like can we do this can we it was like it was it was uncomfortable and
that that is uh that is maybe they're thinking that they're actually bigger
if they're off YouTube because they get free speech
and everybody's flock on other platforms.
If we allow them back on,
then we can control them and therefore hinder their growth.
That's what I was saying.
Yeah, so I think I'm thinking that.
Or it's just a straight up, not even political.
I think it's or it's just a straight up like understanding
of where this is going like we talked about.
I think it's a twofold.
I think it's both those things combined where they do understand
the power and like actual authentic voices
and wanting them to stay on their platforms
versus just like, you know, we're known as a platform that, you know, for example,
Rumble came to be because it was like, you know, we're the opposite of these other platforms
that will literally tell you you can't talk about this, you can't say that.
And I think they started to get like the idea that we're, if we continue to go down this road
of censorship, then we're going to actually hurt ourselves in the long run.
I think that was, I think that's a, that might be the bigger reason, to be honest.
Like, I don't think it's just an algorithm play.
Because at the end of the day, like, you're still going to get attention for whatever.
you're talking about in regards to whatever, depending on, you know, the sensationalism of the
conversation, the currentness of the conversation, you're still going to get views,
you're still going to get attention regardless. So I think it was just a long term. They did also admit,
they did also admit, and this comes right after Trump sued Google and I think won $35 million.
The congressman or representative Jim Jordan, you know, he applied legal pressure on YouTube
and YouTube posted a letter saying that the Biden administration applied pressure on.
on them to ban misinformation, which is COVID election misinformation.
The same thing that-
And that falls in line with what Zuckerberg said on Joe Rogan.
He said that the Biden administration.
So although there's some good points there, this is also factual.
They've now admitted it and said, this is un-American, this is wrong.
It goes against free speech.
And it's also kind of borderline tampering with elections.
If they're saying that one political party was able to silence the other by, you know,
getting involved in big tech, which controls information, that does.
change the course of our country. So I'm happy that they were able to re-evaluate,
but it's always like, you know, in hindsight, 2020, they say this now and they apologize
now, but when it was important to say you got banned. Like if you talk about the vaccine now,
it's useless. Everybody, you know, most people got it. Did you get it? Yeah, I think I had it like
once or twice. I never, oh, no, no, no, no, oh, the vaccine. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. I've
gotten COVID once or twice. I've never, no, no, no, no, no, no, I've gotten COVID once or
twice. I've never had that. I was, I was vehemently against it. I mean, I kept my gym open. I was
like, I'm not doing this shit. You can't even make this make sense to me. I remember you,
you'd have the gym open, uh, that whole controversy. Yeah, bro, I went to fucking court fucking eight
times. I'm like, I'm not closing. Right, right, right. Okay, okay. You're based.
I'm that guy, bro. From the beginning, bro. You're based. From the start. Congrats. In LA,
that's, no, that's, that's rare that deserves props. But it's like, now you could talk about
or now you could do what you did back then, but it doesn't really have the impact. Like, you
talk about election misinformation now but the election already passed like it already
Biden and Trump already went out it that it doesn't hold the same way yeah so they admitted
they did it at a crucial time because almost everyone and you know what's interesting about that
though dude we were talking about this the other day on the phone um that's my concern with
the way this is going for the future and AI and like the control of the narrative like being able
to like really control the narrative and we'll talk about some of those narratives now but
My concern is that like, because if you could make something like not feel controversial,
which in most cases it shouldn't be because it's just conversations.
But I think like right now we're talking about COVID.
And COVID at one point was this thing that you're like, you can't, you can't say that.
You can't say this.
It's, oh, you know, you're killing old people, whatever, whatever the reasons were to virtue
signal to make you not talk about it, even though there was like all these other alternative
things that were good fixes or good, you know, things to slow down COVID.
that you can't don't talk about ivermectin don't talk about this stuff um i i wonder if like
the future of this is no one really being able to talk about anything outside of a narrative
because it's so controlled like it almost seems like it's like this it feels like it's this last
moment i hopefully again i really hope we're not going like you know right now you're here
we're able to say yo you're here you're back you could talk you could share stuff you got to
kind of self-police yourself a little bit.
But my fear isn't like fucking, when this AI stuff gets so crazy and they really are
able to control the narrative to such a degree that the narrative will just be what they
want it to be no matter what is said.
Because let's say if I said something, but they didn't want it to be out there that
you could censor it in a way that is like, for example, right now we have certain things
people say on Twitter or whatever platform and you could tell it gets boosted.
Like you could tell it gets a lot more love.
You could tell it gets a lot more attention.
and there's bots and they're pushing traffic to these things.
So my fear is that like the opposite of that happening when the AI gets better
and the control gets better and the ability to like track what people are saying even
better and even more, that's my fear with the whole, the furtherment of AI that we're going
to get to a point where there's no other narratives because you don't even hear them.
If it's getting impossible to tell if people are real in videos, then imagine how fake engagement
is when you see propaganda against a certain group and this is what I want to talk about.
Nanyahu saying publicly that he's paying $7,000 per post for pro-Israeli propaganda,
saying that he wants to invest and get influencers to support Israel more.
You see the people that own Open AI, chat GPT, that own the majority of AI companies
and who they support.
It's like all roads always lead to the same spot.
So who does AI benefit?
Is it going to benefit the people like me, or is it going to benefit the opposite narrative?
So I think it's, I'm seeing the algorithm shift, especially recently, since the ceasefire.
And now Trump is saying that he wants to deploy troops and destroy Hamas after they just
announced a ceasefire.
And it's very clear that a lot of this is, that not only there's a lot of this engagement fake,
but it's going to continue like the narrative is super important to them they realize that for over the past two years
they've been bombing kids so much and they become Israel's become super unpopular among the youth
Charlie Kirk was admitting that before he was assassinated that look the youth is turning and it's hard for me to
keep promoted Judeo-Christian values nobody wants to keep giving tax dollars to kids dying yeah the fact that they
lost that and that the support especially the American support is crucial to them because if Israel does
not have American support they cease to exist. They're like a parasite. They rely upon our media.
They rely upon our money, our military aid. Trump just went in Israel and bragged in front of
Netanyahu about all the military, completely complicated and how specific the bombs and the
missiles that Netanyahu demanded were. We give them everything. So if that relationship is crucial to
them, and you've seen Nanyahu go on this media tour everywhere, talking about Judeo-Christian values,
making sure to put the Israeli flag next to the American flag,
making sure you get on the Nelk Boys podcast where they have the American youth
and be like, we're the set.
I eat McDonald's.
I eat Burger King.
I'm just like you guys.
I'm regulated.
If that is so clearly their goal and their mission to make sure that relationship
is instilled and make people think that Israel is a 51st state,
then of course they're going to continue to pay for propaganda.
Of course they're going to use AI to boost engagement.
Yeah, well, I mean, I mean, even that Netanyahu thing where he was talking about, like,
we got to talk to Elon Musk about Twitter, even that same conversation.
I saw him sit down and talk.
I don't know if he was talking specifically too, but he was being recorded.
I think he was talking to like that group of maybe like social media people in the same
conversation where he's talking about, you know, influencers and check out some of our influencers.
He was saying how like, oh, we got to talk to Elon Musk and also how, oh, there's the sale of
TikTok and now TikTok is going to be, you know, hopefully that goes through.
just it's it's too uh this i'm leading to a question here that i want to ask you it's too
blatant right it's it feels like because at this point everyone sees all those things they see
all those clips they see trump like you said he gets on he talks about miran adelson being like
this like huge proponent of israel and then you can look very clearly miran adison is one of
his biggest donors i think it was like 200 million dollars for the for the
super billionaire and he says a dual citizen at an american israeli
citizen and she clearly prefers is and well he literally says he literally says on the platform he
says uh you know and i like who who does what country does she like more israel or america and i you
know i think it's Israel and it's like it's just a very what i'm saying is it's so in our face at
this point do you think it's on purpose i feel like it's on purpose i don't think it's on purpose
i so i understand that theory the theory is that they are bombing kids publicly on purpose and they
brag about how much control they have to make
themselves, to make Israel hated. And if they're hated, then
they can band together more and they can become stronger. And then
a byproduct is maybe they inside a war. And obviously Israel wants to go to
war with Iran. Obviously, Israel wants to expand and become the greater state
and take over the Middle East and eventually the world. That's clear. I don't
think so. I just think that they know that they can get away with it. They know
that they control the United States. It's been leaked that Nanyahu brags
about controlling Trump, I think that they just, they saw, if they can get away with bombing kids
for two years, breaking all these war crimes, doing whatever they want, being wanted all over
the world, and still be able to do it without pushback and still hold allegiance with most of
the United States politicians, then why wouldn't they do it more?
If this is, it's, it's clearly working.
Nothing is like they control, like look at that.
Trump just said that he's bragging about being able.
able to, I save TikTok, I saved TikTok. No, you didn't. It's just instead of Chinese control,
it's under Israeli control now. It's one of the richest Zionists in America. He's funding APEC.
It's like, it's not TikTok is saved. Like, immediately one of the first things they did was ban
the juice box emoji. Was that because the juice box emoji was violent or were people using it
to talk about Israel? Yeah. It's clear who's in control now. I don't believe that that theory
because if they wanted to be hated so much,
then they wouldn't also invest so much money
and the propaganda.
Then Nanyahu wouldn't be sitting next to Kyle and Sine
talking about Burger King and McDonald's.
He would just continue bombing
and then not have to do a media tour.
But you don't think if you could incite enough hate
for yourself, for example,
where then you would be in a position
that would actually become violent, right?
Like, for example, the Charlie Kirk thing
where there's,
There's this whole narrative around Charlie Kirk
where he said all these such terrible things
that he got this person from
who aligns with this group over here
that is willing to assassinate him, right?
So what I'm saying is I'm giving you
like a different representation
where someone goes,
if people can hate me enough,
then they'll want to hurt me. And if someone hurts me,
then I can make, pass some law,
pass some bill, pass something to control
more of that.
Meaning like if I can get people to hate me,
enough. Could I say that, okay, now
we've gone too far in this
hating direction because it's so prevalent.
Like right now it's so prevalent.
Now that we can go.
They're already passing anti-Semitism laws.
Trump passed a bill where
foreign students who are on student visas
if they say free Palestine, then they can get
deported and lose their visa.
Right.
There's already anti-Semitism laws being.
So my theory of
this, the idea of
they're, they're will, because they're not,
I don't think any of these people are dumb, bro.
I don't think they're done.
Do you think they're dumb?
No, absolutely not.
So if they're not dumb, then they're probably thinking, right?
If you can get enough people to hate you, then you could justify means to protect the hate.
Right?
So then you could justify, like you just said, okay, well, we could start with these people who aren't citizens.
We could kick them out.
Where does that go?
Does that go?
Oh, the hate gets even worse.
Oh, now if you're a citizen and you say this, then we could do this to you or we could say that to you.
I mean, they've already tried to pass stuff like that as far as like you couldn't boycott.
But I don't think they need to because.
They also have staged false flag attacks.
And one of the publicly known ones, which is no longer conspiracy theory, is the USS Liberty.
If they wanted hate, like, they can just do it themselves.
They can just attack people.
Some people, they assume that October 7th was known about for six hours and they allowed
October 7th to happen so that they could justify the war and that they could go and, well,
not the war, they can just bomb Palestine, that they knew they had knowledge that October 7th
happening and they knew that Hamas was going to attack and they said, okay, we'll do this and now
we can do what we want to do. That's the theory. The other theory is that 9-11 was used to justify
the war in Iraq and Iran. Israel is a country that's surrounded by all these enemies in the Middle East
and they need U.S. military support. So they staged an attack, 9-11, and then now every American
is like, oh, brown people, Muslims, and they go in. And then remember, you know who's the one saying
that there were weapons of mass destruction.
There's weapons of mass destruction.
I know exactly.
That was Benjamin Nanyahu.
20 years ago.
And then we go there.
30 years ago, same thing.
The same guy.
And we go there, there's no weapons of mass destruction.
I can understand why people have that theory.
Look at what happened the day after Charlie Kirk was assassinated.
People don't talk about this enough.
Benjamin Nanyahu goes on Fox News and immediately says that Charlie Kirk was killed by radical
Islamist and working with the Marxists.
He's trying to.
frame radical Islamists with Antifa Marxists and group them together. Nobody talked about. Everyone just
forgot about that immediately. And then he made a video saying, I didn't kill Charlie Kirk. It was the
radical Islamists. They know that by blaming brown people, blaming Muslims, that they can get America
to do whatever they want. That's why you see the Muslim hate always ramped up right before another
war starts. If they wanted to justify what they do, if they wanted, like, if they needed hate,
then you wouldn't see so many of these false flag attacks.
I see what you're saying.
We'll talk about the Islamic stuff in a second,
but excuse me, I want to continue on this first.
I understand what you're saying,
but there's also a really important thing here.
I think it's gotten to the point with Israel
and these false flag attacks
that if a false flag attack happened again,
everyone would just,
it wouldn't even feel like a false flag.
They would just immediately point and be like,
yeah, it was probably them.
It's definitely them.
So my point is,
I think they know that they don't really,
have that necessarily the same options as they did before in the past that they had.
And I think the biggest thing by Benjamin Netanyahu's own words that they're trying to fight
against is the information, is what are people saying?
What are people getting other people to believe?
And I think that's the thing that in the long run, they want to be able to like fully squeeze
and fully choke.
And I think if you can get enough people to hate you, then you could start to rationalize,
okay, we can make this a law that you can't hate this much.
You can't hate this far.
And I think that's like maybe not as overtly, you know,
they're going to pass a law and do it.
But I think that's what's going to happen with the AI advancement.
Because did you see recently there was this,
I think, Senator of Massachusetts that said,
I'm going to give back the money that APEC has given me
and I'm not going to take any more money from them.
My point is that's happening right now.
That happened two days ago.
and right now right if you go five years in the future how many more people are going to like forego this sort of we're going to not take this money because so many people know and so many people are aware and so many people are bringing up and so many people are talking about it that because the talk is happening that war as as he would describe it his own like that's this other front of war this information war is so much more powerful in this case that they could justify oh if you if you if
they hate us enough, then we could, we could cover some ends here.
And then we could start to really clamp down.
That's what I think.
That's my perspective of it because it's just like, like I said, the false flag,
if we did it, if they did it, excuse me, that it'd be like, oh, it's clearly it's you.
And it would just make it worse.
And I think they want to get to the point where their narrative, you don't even hear
it about it anymore.
Because, dude, if these politicians are already like foregoing money now, like imagine
where this goes in 10 years or 15 years or 20 years when everyone right now who believe
these things and who knows them to be true,
they come into power.
They come, you know, they're the new senators.
They're the new Congress people.
They already know I'm not fucking with them.
If I got there, I wouldn't fuck with them because people now are doing it.
Think how scary that is.
So I think it's an information thing more than it is like a, you know,
a bombing or a false flag thing that they can really even like utilize at this point.
Yeah, but I understand that theory, but that I, why would Miriam Middelson spend so much
money to try to slander Thomas Massey?
who's one of the few who's not taking money from APEC, then why do the 7K posts
everywhere, then why go on this whole media tour saying he didn't kill Charlie Kirk?
And if you're saying that a false flag would be really obvious, but it hasn't been obvious.
The people who theorize about October 7th and about USS Liberty and what happened in 2001,
like that was, look how we went to Iraq, we went to Iran.
You know, the clue, I mean, people who are able to connect the dots and assume that it was,
that it was a false flag attack, that that wasn't the common theory.
Charlie Kirk, for example, I think there's a very, I said this the first day it happened.
There's a clear case or there's a lot of questions to be asked.
Like, was it really some, you know, deranged person who's dating a transgender or, you know,
who's been very public about killing journalists, killing foreign leaders, bombing U.S. allies.
Israel bombed Qatar three weeks ago and we moved on.
That's an ally of ours.
who's capable of killing people in foreign lands for their own personal gain.
And we saw that Charlie Kirk was starting to turn against Israel.
He had Candice Owens just released text where he says,
I don't think I could keep doing this with Israel.
They're saying he refused money.
They wanted to give him $150 million to Turning Point USA to give positive propaganda.
And when he said, I'm not going to do it, you saw what happened in.
But was that actually confirmed, the 150, I think it was 150 million.
Was that actually confirmed?
I don't think that was actually confirmed.
I think that was just here.
That one still theorized.
But the text message is that one is confirmed, where he did specifically say.
I did.
That was confirmed by his own people.
Close before he died.
He went on with Megan Kelly and he was starting to say, hey, they're calling me anti-Semitic for just even questioning what's going on with Israel.
Yeah.
Like if I don't have undying support, even I'm getting called anti-Semitic, this is going too far.
He went on the Patrick Bet David podcast and said he thought that October 7th was allowed to happen.
Yeah, to stand out.
A lot of this, yeah, the standout order was six hours late.
A lot of this does not follow the Trump narrative, the Judeo-Christian narrative, the narrative
of the most valuable asset to promote Judeo-Christian values.
That was Charlie Kirk to keep the American youth.
And if he started to turn, then he can't go full red pill.
He can't go fully down because then a lot of other people are going to turn to.
The American sport is extremely valuable to them.
And that's why this, like if you talk to so many boomers, I know if you're on Twitter,
you think a lot of people are starting to become aware in this stuff, but many people have undying
allegiance and still believe in Judeo-Christian values. The vast majority of white Christians in
America believe in Judeo-Christian values. A lot of them are evangelical Christians. They say
what Ted Cruz says, where in the Bible it says, God must bless those who blesses the state of Israel,
who think that Israel is our greatest ally. That propaganda has seeped into the minds of so many
people, and it's really hard to deprogram that. Yeah.
I just think where it's going.
I don't, I mean, just knowing the, knowing the past, right,
if the future is more technology, more advancement, more AI, more control,
like I feel like it's going to go in that direction where I don't know,
in what year, at what year can you be like,
you literally can't even get the information out there that's opposing that relationship
because it needs it so much and it's so ingrained, like you said.
I just don't know, like, do we go, does he, do you think it goes to a place where
you won't even be able to talk about it
because AI has gotten so advanced
and because the controls of it
or because of things that they passed in regards to it
like that what that Peter Thiel guy
doesn't want people to like
be able to even criticize
what AI is doing or not doing.
Like that's a very weird thing
and he's like one of the leaders in it.
Talenteer needs to be
talked about a lot more by a lot of people.
The thing is though a lot of this is probably inevitable.
Like where we're at now
where Open AI is starting to introduce
romantic relationships on chat,
That was a dystopian movie called her in 2013. Now that's the norm. Now that there's ads,
we just left the train station on West 4th Street and ads everywhere for this device called
Friend, where it's a little device that you wear around your neck that listens and spies
to everything you say and it texts and talks to you. It becomes your AI friend. This is just
inevitable. So if they want to use that as a tool to censor and to shut people up and to prevent
us from having these conversations, of course they're going to use it. But all we can do is
is do our best until then.
Yeah, that's fair.
Okay, so let's switch a little bit to the Islam stuff.
I saw you have a debate with Myron about,
I guess the sort of Christian nationalism and Islamic,
you know, beliefs or practices within America and it being like,
you guys are, I found it pretty interesting.
His perspective was pretty interesting.
Who do you agree with?
You? Yeah.
Yeah, because the, I guess I got to, well,
you could preface it like talk to me about like what the whole conversation was really about
and why there's this narrative yeah why it came about because i've seen the shit on twitter where it's
like so you know you know why i think i came about i think myron fell for i love myron he's
one of my best friends extremely low extremely smart i think that he fell for some of the 7k
rage bait that started to pop up and the seven thousand dollars if they want to you know
redirect the anger they're going to start blaming muslims that's always been the playbook
radical Islamists, radical Islamists, al-Qaeda, Taliban, be scared, Iran, Iraq.
And now people are like, okay, this is, I can't believe that people are still following for this.
Or maybe it's just, maybe it's all fake engagement.
But after the past 20 years, Genzi, we grew up with this, you know, TSA paranoia being scared
of Muslims.
We thought Allah, al-Aqbar was, you know, a call for a bomb, but it's really just saying God is great.
When you learn about what this is, you're like, wait, I thought, you learn what Muslim is,
you know, oh, that means submitting to God.
this stuff this was years of programming it was a kid in fifth grade he dressed up like a he dressed
up in a thobe and we all made terrorist jokes out of the whole day that's what everyone's idea was
so i think myron saw the recent brigade we've all seen it everyone started you see this word
islamist that they keep using what does that mean islamis i i don't know i'm assuming it's
someone that practices islam so it's instead of saying muslim the people that are getting paid
by israel the shills they start saying islamas because it sounds like terror
terrorist. It's just like this word that they made it. Yeah, that Islamist. It's like, what is that
even like, I like peaceful Muslims. I have a problem with Islamists. If you Google what it means,
it just means somebody who wants to spread Islam, which is almost every religious person wants
to spread the religion. Like they're just making it sound like the scary word. It sounds like
Zionists, Islamist, you know, terrorists. So I think you saw some of that and people are now,
some of that outrage has been redirected towards people of the citizens of Dearborn. It's 100,000
people. You know, it's like it's 90% Muslim. And the town,
have agreed they play the call to prayer. All right. It's loud, but also I don't see any outrage
from the citizens there. I don't see any of that, but people are like, this is, they're invading
America. Okay. If Muslims are invading America, why they're 1% of the population? And why do,
why does APEC control 98% of our politicians? Where is the Muslim invasion? And then they're like,
they're blocking off Times Square to pray. And I'm like, Myron, I was there. Sonny was there.
We went. I was praying in the first line. I made a vlog there. There's a walking area.
not even the sidewalk, but there's just like this open area, and we set it up and we prayed.
And the police didn't stop us.
Nobody complained.
It took like 10, 20 minutes.
It was peaceful.
Didn't bother anybody.
But online, you could be like, look at them.
They're taking over New York City.
And it's like, no, this is just like a prayer for a bit.
People do, you remember those dances in 2011 where everybody would freeze and stop?
What do you call those?
I forgot the name of that.
That used to take up all time square.
Manic challenge.
Manic.
I don't think it was called something else.
before. But I mean, there's, you know, Dominican Day parades, there's gay pride parades that
take up the entire Fifth Avenue that block traffic. When we prayed during Ramadan, during
this most important month in Times Square, like, that's just like a holiday celebration for one
day. And we didn't need the cops. We weren't blocking anybody else. What else are you blocking
in Times Square? Advertisements, Elmo, like what's happening in Times Square? And also it's like,
you know what else is disrupting in Times Square? All the street performers, they jump around
into crowd forms, right? People doing the flips, showtime, showtime. That's how much space we took.
So, like, this is not people taking over America. And Myron's like, oh, you're, I know what you guys are
doing. You're asserting dominance. Praying is asserting dominance. Isn't that the most submissive
thing you can do putting your head to the floor and saying, God is great? This is like, it's humbling,
you know, and then people get to see what you're all about. You know, what was great about that public
display is not only one, could we not fit in a mosque because there was too many. And it was
like an all-American New Yorkers coming to pray.
But people get to see like, oh, wait, Muslims are, you know,
this is peaceful praying, but what are you guys doing?
And then they ask, and then they learn something that they didn't know,
especially after all the years of propaganda,
it's an opportunity for them to see what we're really about.
And so for them, for people to start saying that this is disrupting
and destroying New York City is just completely disingenuous.
Yeah. I get it.
I think it's more in related.
I feel like New York specifically, this whole conversation
is sort of surrounding the Zohani guy.
The Mundani guy, Zohan Mondani?
He's not a good representation of Muslims.
Right, right.
But I think that's why this conversation is sort of like ramping up.
I mean, not overall, but specifically we're talking about New York.
That's part of it.
He just announced Hassan Piker.
He just said that Hassan was reprehensible for saying America to serve 9-11.
It's like completely separated from him.
And also in that debate yesterday, Mamdani says he wants to decriminalize prostitution.
and you know some of the stuff he says is absolutely uh ridiculous and he's also really starting
to dial back his anti-zionist position yeah and i i try to understand myron's point because his
idea the thing that i can't get behind is you know i was watching the debate and every time he
would reference um you know if we went to another country we couldn't do this over there like
you couldn't practice you know christianity well not only i don't think it's not only i don't know
to be honest how it's not true there's more
Christians in Saudi Arabia than Muslims in America.
Like there's the ratio.
I get it.
That's not even the point.
The point I wanted to make was not even that.
It's, that's not the, like, the point is like, but that's not America.
Like that was, that's not what, they were not found, they did not found America there.
That's, that's, that is literally a Muslim country.
Like they, they, they announced they are a Muslim country, right?
So I don't understand how we're making references to a Muslim country when we're talking about
America.
And America, the, the first amendment is about.
the freedom of speech the right to religion and freedom of religion yeah and like you said
some of the founding fathers even talk about it specifically and the number one thing that i thought
when i was watching that that that debate was like wait so if i who've been i grew up a catholic
i pretty much i would i would align myself with a christian at least now in my life as far as like
beliefs go um i'm white i look this way if i all of a sudden converted to to to be a muslim and then
I started practicing, am I now, now I'm a guest here?
Like, it didn't make sense.
Now you're a guest, now you're a guest in your own country.
So the same thing.
I was born Catholic.
I was baptized, you know, I was an atheist for a while and then became Muslim.
So now by that logic, I'm a guest in my own country.
And then I kept breaking out his argument.
I'm like, what about minorities?
He's like, yeah, just white people.
I'm like, so, okay, so I'm a guest in my own country because I'm not white,
not only because I'm Muslim, because I'm a non-white person.
Then you break it down.
And he said that I'm like, okay, so if you break it down,
So the only people that are not guests in America that are entitled to this country
are white Christians with several generations of American-born family members.
That must be like 5% of the country.
Yeah.
He's like, yeah, that's true.
So 95% are guests by that logic, which is all made up.
You know, I understand why he's saying that he's, you know, kind of, yeah, that's a lot of
his audience are all about that.
But just like this statement alone that America's a Christian country is literally factually
untrue.
There's just, that's not true at all.
It's not in any American doctrine.
It's not in the Constitution.
It goes against, it's literally un-American to say that
because we have freedom of religion.
That's the whole point.
That's the whole reason they left.
They wanted to get away from the monarchy.
A lot of the founding fathers were deists.
Thomas Jefferson owned a copy of the Quran.
They wrote that it's a country for all religions.
And they specified even Muslims at the time.
So.
Well, because I mean, at the time when they found it,
weren't they trying to evade like sort of persecution
based on their own religious beliefs back in fucking,
Britain. Exactly. Exactly. And also where it falls apart is they're like, okay, Christians,
okay, so Protestants, Catholics, they're close enough. Well, actually, no, they went to war for
like thousands of years in Ireland, like tooth and nail, swords. Like these people are not like,
it's just like the same thing because they think Christ is king. Nope, they, a lot of them excommunicate
each other. They think one is not another Christian and they battle each other. So you can come to
America and then unite based off Christianity. That's never happen. It's disingenuous. I mean,
people could say America is a majority Christian country, but it is not a Christian.
That is true.
It's a majority.
Yeah, but Christian nationalism, like it doesn't, that's actually on as un-American, as they say,
Zormandani, these communists are.
It goes against the fundamentals of what this country is all about.
Yeah.
I mean, you know what I find really interesting.
And maybe this is just like a greater piece of this whole conversation.
I just find interesting how much people believe.
And this could be said about the whole Israel-Palestine conflict or any conflict over the course
of history is how.
much people have tied theology to what they believe they deserve or they should have.
It's interesting because, like, we're all, all of us, every single one of us is technically
a guest here on earth.
Like, we're not, we don't own shit.
Like, it's just a very interesting conversation to have in general to say, this is ours,
we own this, this is mine.
It's like, you can go back how many centuries, Romans own most of fucking Europe.
And you can go back and before them, it was just whatever indigenous.
people are cultures that were around in those places we're living in those places
America same thing here like we took this from them and at one point they thought that they
were right and everything was right there and now we're here right so it's weird it's weird in
general in on like just a world level to be like this is mine because my god told me it is
or because my god told someone fucking 2,000 years ago that it was his and then it passed
down so now it's mine it's just I don't know I just have a weird disconnect with this like
religious, this religious belief to like, this is my land and it's not yours.
And I, like, the thing is, when I look at it like that, where do you, where does it start and
where does it end?
You know, we could talk about the Israel-Palestine thing forever.
You could talk about whose land it was based on at what time did they have it and it was
stolen from them or stolen from them.
And it's just like, where, like how, who is deciding, okay, 11 AD, this is, now that from
that inception forward, that's, that's whose it is.
It's like, it's a weird conversation overall, generally.
And nationalism, I understand the importance of nationalism,
but throughout history, it's always ended up in warfare.
Nationalism is the number one tool used to divide people.
The entitlement to think that, this is mine and I own this and it's my lineage.
No, it's like, this is God's land and we're all guests here.
We're all here temporarily.
And while we're here, because we're visitors, really think about it, we're visiting here.
We have a short amount of time.
we all know that we die, this one certainty, and then we leave.
But it's, it's God's land.
And nationalism has historically always caused war division.
And it's funny because I'm seeing there's a white identity.
So has religion.
Religion as, yeah, of course.
I think those are the two biggest driving factors of like all wars ever.
Like those two things.
Nationalism and religion.
Yeah, man.
Faith and nationalism.
Nationalism.
But you see, you know, like there's a big white identity.
uprising and they're saying and now because if you ask a white person well first I'll ask you what is a
white person someone with less melanin than someone else so me I mean your your skin's fairly white
but yeah I guess I wouldn't consider you white why not exactly yes I don't have a based off your
definition there you got to say no one has an answer I guess maybe a long time you'd be like a
like a someone from Britain someone from I don't even know yeah I'm Italian so it's like Italians are
some are darker than others that's but that's how it goes to the point that i'm saying up until like
the 60s and 50s italians weren't white in america you know that right right yeah they were treated
like you know like another group minority that were enslaved yeah yeah it in so that's but that's
kind of my whole point is like this whole conversation it just it just becomes so interesting
and i try to look at it from like way out and i'm like we're all like what the fuck everyone just
constantly fighting about fucking everything all the time and they go my god said this or god said that
so you're wrong and I'm right, let's fucking fight.
That's what always divides people.
I mean, look, like, so the whiteness one is so funny to me
because you ask people like, what is a white person?
There's no clear definition.
For a while, it was people from Sweden, Norway, Finland, the UK, maybe,
and the Netherlands, and then they added Germany, and then they had it.
And then now I think the widely accepted one that I see on Twitter,
which is, you know, my field research is, they say European.
I mean, Europeans or whatever.
You could do this about any place.
You can say, what's a Brazilian?
You go, oh, are they brown, but there's black, Brazilians?
You can say, what's a Panamanian?
Oh, they're brown, but they're fuck.
There's black.
There's Chinese Panamanians.
Like, you can do this about any continent.
Imagine taking Myron's logic and telling a Native American, you guys are guests here.
You're not Christian.
You're not white.
Imagine talking a Native American with roots centuries back.
This is my home.
You're a guess.
Like, how ridiculous that statement is.
Arriving here and saying, you're a visitor.
Well, that's what I'm saying.
Like, that's my whole point.
The conversation is like,
It just seems like all the fucking farce.
Like at what point, who is determining that this is mine and it's not yours now based on what timeline?
Like what we're all just a bunch of humans trying to fucking figure it out and be happy and like make money and fuck and have kids.
Like that's what that's what people are doing.
And it just seems like we're we just constantly find ourselves in these battles of race, religion and all this shit.
And it's in my opinion, it's just fucking sad, man.
I don't even know what else to say about it.
It's just like I see it.
It's inevitable.
this is this is what was predestined and it was always going to happen and it's going to continue to happen
and it's that's the the major test in our life is like do we fall into these traps do we yeah like let
ourselves be consumed and commit evil because of the because this is what it does it drives you
away from your real purpose like getting too deep into any of these ideologies by saying like I'm an
American and I'm a that's all a lot of these tools if you go too deep into that then you just divide
and you have this us versus them mentality.
And naturally, you start to see people as your enemies.
And if you have a, if you justify it in your head,
that's when war starts.
Yeah.
I mean, don't get me wrong.
I understand the need for nationalism as far as like, you know,
countries and borders and control on some of these things.
But to some, to some degree, it's just kind of like,
we're all just sort of making our point as to why we think it's ours
and not someone else's.
This is just what it feels like.
It just feels like that every time I,
I watch these people conversate or debate or, you know,
say this.
versus that. So I just, I always find myself being like,
am I just like a nihilist or I'm just like, we're just fucked?
I don't know. I don't think you're a nihilist. I think you're a realist because
I mean, just, this is, this is prophecy. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. This is prophecy.
Okay. Well, let's move on to the, uh, I want to, you, you talked about the mandani guy,
or I did, and, uh, you brought up him denouncing Hassan, but did you see the, uh, did you see
shocking the dog? Did you see it when he became a Sith lord?
and his hands turned into these evil tools
to shock a dog, a living animal as a prop
to become empathic on stream.
I saw a bunch of me.
I saw a bunch of me.
That's your boy.
That's your boy.
That's your boy.
That's your boy.
Dude,
your boy's shocking dogs.
Yeah, that was, that didn't sit well with me.
I'll tell you that much.
Your boy's a dog shocker.
I didn't sit well with me.
I have three dogs.
I love my dogs more than I love people, to be honest.
It was, it was weird.
I think the initial clip,
the thing that,
that I thought was the most weird was the time lapse, the fact that the dog is in the same
spot, obviously in camera on shot. That's the thing where when I look at the whole thing,
I go, oh, that's peculiar. Like, that's interesting. Clearly, he wants a dog to be in the shot.
Fine. Um, but it does feel weird when he reaches his hand over. That was the weird. That was like,
I mean, I don't know what's going on here. That's where I was like, this is, uh, this is hard to
going on man it's hard to see otherwise so your friends a dog shocker do i have i don't have any i don't have any
friends that shock dogs i don't know i don't know what this is crazy i know you don't like the guy
but i don't have any dog shocking friends so you you're convinced he shocked the dog i mean you could
see it in camera i don't know why this is like a debate point i don't know why i'm not debating i'm asking
you no i know but like it's so funny because everyone knows he did it and to see like the la
circle, like his orbiters and everything. I saw Pokemon cancel the podcast that she had lined up
with him because of the backlight and seeing them try to just, no, it was a vibration collar
and he taped over the prongs. What type of millionaire buys a shot collar just to take off the
prongs and tape it over? You got to be an actual idiot to do that. He's shocking a dog and they're all
coping. But to see his friends kind of like have to cope and justify and like buy and figure out
how to navigate the cancel culture because it's like people would cancel for saying,
the N-word or for having the wrong political opinion.
Animal abuse, that's a new one.
You've been in content for a long time.
I've never seen animal abuse.
Because people have been trying to get him banned for a while for like advocating violence
and saying to kill senators.
The one that gets him is shocking a dog.
It's just, it's poetic.
Well, I think everyone has a real affinity for dogs.
I like, again, I like dogs more than I like humans most of the time.
So I kind of can understand that for sure.
you were probably pretty happy about that probably just no i wasn't happy about it free kaya everyone
in the comment section not the dog being shot everyone in the comment section free kaya free kaya we need
to set that dog that beautiful dog free dog free dog if we don't then brad's going to shock him with
what the fuck is this nonsense everybody please free kaya well i would never i would never do it bro
i remember i reprimand my dogs properly my dog you're you're good well you love your dogs for
sure um yo you recently did a you recently did a you recently did a vlog
with Mr. Nick Fuentes, I've seen.
Yeah, your podcast was, in the vlog,
I asked him, like, what was your favorite
of the generational run?
Like, he's been doing so many collabs.
And he said, yours.
And I, and I, I'm grateful for that,
and I appreciate that.
I really enjoy the conversation.
And it's funny because...
Wait, who group chatted you guys?
Yeah, so I was going to mention this.
I mean, I'm going to mention,
I was going to lead out.
Let me lead into this.
That was fine.
I'm fine.
No, so I wanted to talk to Nick for a long time,
for a very long time
and I avoided talking to Nick
because of the whole narrative around him
and everything that people would
oh don't do that don't and I
fell into that category for a while
and I was like ah
this is kind of sketchy
and I was afraid of
and then you waited until it was popular
and then no no no no it wasn't it wasn't as popular
no and he wasn't on podcast like that yet
what other podcast was he on like mine
before mine
I think it was on Sam Hyde
no that was after me
He was starting to go on Info Wars more, which you can, but it was more normalized at that point.
It was more normalized, especially after the Nelk Boys had then Yahoo on, they brought me,
Nick Myron on and the dog shocker, the Us Four, to talk about, you know, a Palestine.
So it was more normal.
I'm just, I'm giving you, you know, I'm like just teasing a little bit because, you know, I know, I was the, you know, he credits that for saying, he said himself.
He said, I put him on.
But I don't think so.
I would he, he would have grown up on this.
I'll tell you.
I talked about the podcast you and I did with Myron some time I don't know how many how long ago was that
do you remember when we both sat down a year and a half a year a year and a half ago so a year a year and a half ago
was the first time you said to me myron was there as well but it was you who said it to me
you know you should have Nick Fuentes on and that's when you gave me his phone and you know
who told myron what's that you know who told myron about Nick who who me I really like you
Yeah, I saw that he was wrongfully banned and I could relate to a lot of that stuff.
So I wanted to make sure that his voice was heard, you know.
Yeah.
So a year and a half ago, yeah, you told me.
I remember we went to Denny's.
Do you remember that?
We were in Denny's after the podcast.
And you're like, yeah, let's go eat.
And then you're like, yo.
And I was like, I want to have some other people on that are like more controversial because I really enjoy doing that kind of shit.
And you're like, you should have Nick on.
And then I looked at some of the stuff.
And yeah, I'm not going to lie.
At first I was like, oh, fuck.
This is like the final boss of canceled guys.
It is.
Not anymore.
Not anymore.
Yeah, not anymore. Now it's interesting, though, now. Now it's very like, you know, all these people who would talk sort of like candidly about him, but never mention his name. Now kind of all say his name. He's sort of undeniable in the space.
Yeah. They pretended like he didn't exist for so long. Yeah. Like they would. Like they could avoid more.
Yeah. And now it's unavoidable. It's, do you think he's changed up his, his messaging a bit? Nick. I think he made it more palatable for the mainstream. Yeah. I think he. Yeah. I think he. I, I, I, I,
I read his New York Times article and he said he kind of, like some of the stuff he said in the
past was to provoke, you know, there's, I'm not going to repeat all this stuff, but it was
definitely like it was more humorous and like when you're banned, you're speaking to an echo
chamber.
I know what that's like to be on Rumble first and you just have like the really rabid people who
only want to hear about one subject and you kind of ramp it up and, you know, got to be edgy
for them.
And now that he's, it's growing, it's like you got to make the mess.
but he's done a good job of staying true to what he believes in
while also becoming palatable for the mainstream.
I don't think people,
there's no political commentator that's done that before.
Yeah, I mean, he's what he's been,
he's been talking about similar stuff for the probably 10 years now, right?
Since about 2000 and, yeah, 10 years since 2016, almost.
Yeah, that guy's consistent, man.
Yo, do you still have that, that Asian, the Asian girl picture of you on the wall back there?
yeah it's right uh right here
there's me
my bad
dude i'm happy you're back on youtube man for real
i'm happy to be back
what what can i plug my thing can i never i never plug any can i plug my channels
yeah do whatever you want bro
youtube dot com slash at sneco i have to add my second channels at schneko
so you can go there that's my main and my second channel
i got them back man it's like it that's i'm happy to plug that because it means everything
to me and you got all your you have all your historic videos on there too right
Because you were like a kid when you first started.
I got everything back, man.
It's like you could see my whole life on there.
Yeah, that's beautiful, bro.
So what's the direction?
What's the direction moving forward on YouTube?
So the first thing I'm going to do, I'm going to immediately.
By the way, chat, I know, or people listening right now.
Before this conversation, Sneaker was like, yo, I got a publicist now.
Maybe you are a fair, bro.
Well, first video back.
I'm going to leak it now.
So me and Brad were going to put on Yamakas.
and we're going to, we're going to, we're going to go to a synagogue and light.
And I'm, it's, it's just going to be good.
It's going to be good.
Not too controversial, you know, I just want to, I want to make, I want to make some dope
stuff.
Is everyone going to say, I want, when you start posting content on YouTube, are they going
to say I want the old sneak go back?
They've been saying that for like 10 years.
So I've been hearing that, I've been hearing that nonstop for, yeah, of course, I,
I like when people say that.
That's actually true, because you're growing, you're evolving.
it's good how old are you now bro how old are i look early 20s 25 27 20 oh shit 27 yeah
damn all now just like i got the brad head you got the brad cut now wait can you can you take
your head let's see do we look alike yeah i got to say i got to i got to cut it up you know we do
look at like let me flick it off let me flick it virtually can you take it all no no no no no no
that's what we said that's that's on a different channel but i i'll take it off
when I see you next time. If you show up to LA
with the baldhead, I'll have the baldhead. Brad's
funny because, like, you stream for hours
on end with the bald out, and it's like
taking up half the frame. And you do the pod
and you're like, fuck, like, it's glue. If you're in the gym,
it's like, it's not, it's not coming
off. Yeah, I don't know. I think that, because
when I stream, it's like more private. I feel like,
you know, those are the homies for real.
Yeah, that was like, everyone else, they,
you know, they get on all these other clips, they judge.
They're so mean, you know?
Right, right. It's like having raw sex with the main
and then condoms with the sides. You're there.
Arnold Schwarzenegger in me right now. What's going on here?
No, that's basically, it's like you have a layer of protection with people.
The intimacy is not there yet.
Yeah, that's exactly right, actually.
That's pretty fucking accurate.
I thought you're trying to make an Arnold Schwarzenegger joke.
That's a boomer joke.
I don't know what he, do what he fuck is made with something?
Yeah, yeah, he has a kid.
Yeah, a kid by his maid.
A friend of mine, actually, his name's Joe, the son.
Oh, really?
Yeah, like that's why I thought you were directly talking about that.
He got his maid pregnant.
He got one of his houseworkers pregnant, and he has a kid name.
But he's a great kid.
Amazing.
One of my favorite people.
So, yeah.
Anyways.
So listen.
It's a human now.
What?
That's just weird that that, like, that story is now like a person.
You know, he's known for anybody.
Yeah, no, because it was like a scandal.
It was like a scandal way back in the day.
And then, you know.
Yeah, to be like a human scandal.
Good luck to him.
It's kind of like you.
You're kind of like a human scandal.
Not anymore.
Not anymore.
I slapped it off.
Slapped it away.
I'm all good.
Truthfully, truthfully,
did you ever think this day was coming?
I did.
I prayed a lot for it.
I prayed a lot for it.
So it is weird.
Every day, it feels really surreal.
What else you pray for?
Now, what do you actually want out of your life, bro?
I want to go to heaven.
That's the most important thing.
I just want to want to make sure.
What do you think that allows someone to go to heaven?
Doing, I mean, only God knows,
but hopefully doing more good than bad.
That's the way I see it.
I think it like evens out.
It's like a,
if you do more good than bad,
it's likely you're going to be able to go upstairs.
But what do you think that's like?
What do you think it is?
What do you think heaven is?
I mean, it's a subscribe.
I think it's paradise.
I think it's eternal paradise.
Do you think it's, it's not physical, though?
You don't think it's like this.
Something that we can't copy, greater than we can comprehend.
Yeah.
I'm excited for it.
Do you ever talk about this stuff much?
I do.
I do.
I talk about it a lot.
You've never, have you ever, I don't know if I've really asked you this.
Have you ever had points of like complete disbelief?
Yeah, there was, I even uploaded a video about it.
That's on my second channel.
It's called I don't care about anything anymore.
I remember I was living in Brooklyn at the time and I had no belief system.
and I didn't know what to follow.
And I had no guidebook and I didn't know what to do or what my purpose was.
And that was like a complete nothingness.
I didn't believe in God.
I didn't have faith.
And that was a really low point.
And since I found it now, it's like I know exactly what I'm supposed to do.
It's like it was like being an ant and you don't know how to like build an ant farm or work with the colony.
You're just like moving around.
And now you know what you're supposed to do, your mission.
You got to get the grain of sand and build the house.
I now have the programming I need to do what I'm supposed.
supposed to do you just think but you think you think supposed to do is is is is all around good yes yeah
serving god and everything stems from that so like what is what does god wants you to do
obviously he wants you to to make the world a better place and to to pass the test he gives you
i think that was one of the tests i think at the time when i was speaking about i think that was
the major tests like do i choose to speak about this when i can you know my life can change
or do I, you know, do I do what's right or do I do, do I take the easier path?
And I took the difficult path.
And that's why I think I always knew I would get unbanned because it was righteous.
And it would, it would sort itself out eventually.
And so it was difficult.
It was really hard three years.
It was, you know, getting slandered everywhere, getting lied about, censored, blackball, all this stuff.
It's like, it was a very huge challenge.
But I was happy for the challenge because I knew I'd come out a better person.
And I'm thankful for that.
And that's why I'm happy when, I think I learned, like, I'm happy to have struggle because you come out a better person.
It's like the gym.
Like you have to train the muscles.
You have to, they have to go through pain in order to become bigger and stronger.
And I think I, I think I passed that test and I'm on to the next one.
Yeah.
What do you think that test is now, though?
The new test, whatever it is.
I think it's going to be greater.
I think right now, long term, I have yet to fully figure that out.
Short term, it's do I do this properly now that I have a second chance?
You know, am I going to self-sabotage?
Am I going to do it the right way and think longer, think long term, see the bigger picture,
plan out for the rest of my life instead of short-sighted views, fast, viral.
Yeah.
what is what is what is the what is the what is the long term good look like for you like where
does this and i said this before but i want to say it again what does it all look like
like in relationship to the content that you make the the sort of followers or following that
you have or the relationship like what does it pertain to that you like see okay i want to do
good in this aspect and for this aspect like how do you envision yourself and i know it's
one of those corny questions but in five years like what are you doing and how are you
affecting people.
And what do you like to, what are you trying to get them to believe or think or feel, you
know?
No, that's a good question.
So it's, it's not even just with my platform, but it's also just like things you do in
everyday life.
I think your, your judge of character is, it's most accurate when nobody's looking.
Like when the cameras aren't following and the people aren't there, are you really doing
the right thing?
Are you putting it, you know, is it all for show?
Is it, and they even, they even, that's written in the Quran.
Like, that's when you're really.
Are you doing it for other people's validation?
Are you doing it for God?
I read a comment.
I don't know who it was.
I wish I could give him credit.
But someone said,
now that God has given you what you wanted so much,
you should give up something love that's forbidden.
Something that you love that's forbidden.
In a sense,
like this is what I wanted more than anything.
You know that.
Yeah.
Like you two fighting for this so much was everything.
Was everything.
My life's work was my vindication,
my sanity,
like just having everything I poured
into that it was everything. And now that I prayed so much and I told God, this is what I want
so bad. And now to have it, I should give up something that I love that's forbidden because I'm used
to that threshold. And that's why it's good to have pain and that struggle because I'm used to that
level and being able to go through life at that pain. So now that I'm going to be happier,
you don't want to get too cocky or too arrogant. You want to be able to stay sane. And also to
to sacrifice is good.
So I think in five years, the next step is giving up, you know, the fast life.
Like the influencer life allows you, you know, have money and free time and access to
social experiences that are really easy and it can get addicting and can be a trap and
can be, you understand what I'm saying.
Like, this life does not encourage the humble family household.
hold and that's what we're supposed to do.
And so I think giving up what I love would be a lot of those cheap thrills in order for
what's long term.
So that's the next test.
Like can I give up the short term satisfaction for what's real?
So I think in five years, I obviously want to get married and start a family and be more
disciplined and be more and think about the future, not just for myself, but for my children.
Yeah, but that's beautiful, man, for real.
I think that's the thing like we've gotten away,
I think because of a lot of,
obviously a lot of circumstances that like make it more difficult nowadays
to even have that or think that that can be something that is attainable for a lot of us,
which is why I think a lot of young men are having families a lot later
because it's harder earlier to like build something of value
that you could sort of live from or live off.
do you think that gets better or worse for people?
It gets better for worse with age?
No, meaning, meaning like, do you think that it's going to become easier for the younger generation
to get towards that sort of part in their life?
Because like, you know, like, obviously it was a different time, but 50s, 60, 70, you think it's
going to get harder.
It's because they're putting everything in front of us to, to, to, to,
extract us from it. You know, we dating went from getting an ice cream at the at the cafe or whatever
now to swiping right endlessly and, you know, doing one-night stands and the abundance of options.
And not only that, AI is coming in and replacing a lot of those. And the amount of porn that's
everywhere, the amount of all that is, you know, is replacing and giving us all the dopamine that
you would get from a committed relationship. So it's going to get more difficult and they're
making it more difficult on purpose. So people are more easily controlled.
So that that's the challenge.
But I think for people that have already become successful, the challenge is
letting go of those, is being able to sacrifice the cheapness of it.
Because I think why it's difficult for so many successful people to settle down
is because you get used to the access you have.
And it's difficult to sacrifice what comes so easy compared to most people.
So for the average person, it's going to get almost some,
it's going to get nearly impossible.
Like, look at the way, not only does the average guy, like every, these women think,
I mean, look, not to be misogynistic or whatever, most women think that their guy should be
a millionaire, should have at least 500K, 300k a year.
The average guy's making like 45K a year.
They all want a guy who's six feet.
They all want, and just the average, to be able to even like talk and get to know a girl,
she's already on Instagram.
She's already having way more access and options than he is, like a celebrity can DM her.
and she probably has been DM by celebrities
if she has an active Instagram account
and she's slightly attractive.
So she has a different perception.
Girls are talking to chat GPT more.
Instead of getting answers that are truthful
and where she has to think critically,
she can get AI to validate every delusion she has.
It's more difficult to date.
And also it's more difficult to make money.
So when you have time to talk to these women,
it's a complicated sexual marketplace.
Yeah.
It's challenging, man.
This shit's so much more challenging than it ever has been, I think.
I think for young men, it's, like, becoming way, it's interesting because at one point,
the internet, I'd say, like, five to ten years ago was just like, damn, you could, it's so
kind of not easy, but you could figure it out.
There's so many more options, like, where you can make money.
But I think you're right, because now there's so many, there's so much more access to
all these other things that have also come along with it, that it, the distractions there are much
greater.
So I think it's for, it's for younger men to, to, to, like you said,
said you're sort of five year goal now, I think for all men to think of, like, what are the things
that you can get rid of or let go of that you know are not really serving you that are not
making you a better man or a better person or a better partner or a better business person
that are just distractions because there's so much more of it now than ever.
It's just that challenge of like being honest with yourself and being like, all right,
this is not serving me.
This isn't making me better.
I need to let it go.
And I think that's becoming harder than ever.
Yeah, because it's more addicting than ever.
But imagine if you told me two weeks ago when I was still banned on YouTube, if you said you can get your YouTube channel back, all you have to do is sacrifice cheap dopamine, you got to go to the gym every day, you can't watch porn, you can't date without trying to marry, you can't waste time going out and partying.
Would you take it?
I'd say absolutely.
I would take it in a second.
I don't even have to think about that.
I would take the YouTube channel and be able to have that back and be vindicated, be able to create on that platform again.
to take that a second. Now I have the channel, but I still have the other things, right?
So it's, it's up to me to sacrifice that. And imagine, like, now that I'm back, imagine no distractions
at all, fully focused on what I'm supposed to do. And also imagine me jacked. Imagine,
imagine like jacks, like 185. You know, I'm one, six, imagine 185. The 260's a little much.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah.
$1.85, you know, a different. For most men, it's too much. But for some men, they could,
they could take care of it and handle it, you know? It's too much for you.
you some men are a little more like they're just smaller but they're just more petite in nature
right right some guys need to some people need to overcompensate but if you if you don't need
to overcompensate yeah then 180 like maybe one 175 one 185 one 185 like a new a new person
like the the fully disciplined sneako I want to see that guy yeah 60 secco that guy that guy probably
has like insecurities or something you think that guy would have insecurity he's just too
great, the 261C.
You can't shoot that far. It's like, you're shooting for the
fucking moon. Not really the stars, huh?
Yeah, it's just like, that's just like, why do you need to do that?
It's just so unnecessary, you know, unless you're like a
super or a football player, like,
why do that to yourself? Too much dedication, too much
passion, too much drive. It's not for
everyone. It's just, yeah, I know, just
to be, you know, doing curls, it's like,
it's just like that's unnecessary. That's just like,
like, you know.
Yeah, yeah, I get it. It's not for everyone.
2.20. Right. You know, have you
ever thought I get on steroids?
I was going to ask you that.
You're going to ask me that?
As the steroid expert,
okay, go ahead.
If I did a cycle,
can I just stop it and then just go back to,
or do I need it to keep taking it forever?
So you absolutely, obviously, you can just stop it, right?
I think people who take it for a longer period of time
have a harder time coming back to normal
and like stopping it in general.
And that's twofold.
I think it's because once you do it,
it's kind of like
oh man
I used to say this
I'm trying to grow up a little bit
but
I'm trying to give you a good
I want to hear you could
I'll just tell you
I'm just trying to give you a good analogy
but I was trying to like
also be like I'm a grown man
I shouldn't say this but I'm just going to say it
it's like good pussy
okay
once you get it
and once you know it
you don't unknow it
and then you relate
all the other ones to the one that's good
right because you know oh that one was good
like alpha widow you ever know the term alpha widow where a girl is with an alpha man
and then he leaves her and then for the rest of her life she's like always comparing the guy
she's with to sure yeah the same thing so like with the whole the whole conversation around
sarah is that once you know what it feels like because if you already train if you're already
consistent it's going to increase it to a level that you're like damn this is like better
I mean just point blank period it's just going to feel better you're going to feel stronger
you're going to feel better but it's not going to like take if I do one cycle is it going to take away
the rest of my hair and just shrink your balls
and get the zits. I mean, it will
because the production of testosterone is in the
testicle, so it will make your balls a little bit smaller
because you don't use them essentially, but
it's not just going to, like, take away your hairline.
And there's also other things you could do as far
as your testicles are concerned, like, HG, that you can
kind of keep volume there as well. That's not
that big, but the hairline is like... Well, the
hairline is a genetic thing. The hairline, like,
for example, before I ever took steroids, I was
already losing my hair. So,
it was like... There's a dog. I know
a certain guy who takes finasteride at
He shocks dogs.
Like, do you think that that messes up with your hormone balance?
I don't want to take, you know.
Yeah, taking it in pill form is not good.
But rubbing it on is not as detrimental to, like, the rest of your endocrine system.
So it met, Phanaseride fucks up your head.
It can a little bit.
Yeah, you can't fuck you up a little bit.
It might make you so evil you, like, shock a dog.
I don't know about that specifically.
But, yeah, I mean, it just, it, it fucks other things up in the body.
So, like, topically, like, midoxinone and finisarid are good to stop that.
But again, it really is determined on your,
like genetic predisposition to actually losing your hair.
And does this stop testosterone production?
Because I'm 27.
If I did TRT like Joe Rogan, would that like, would I have to keep on taking testosterone
because I can't produce testosterone naturally?
Yeah.
So that's what I was saying earlier is like if you just took it, let's say if you took it for,
you did one cycle and it was like six months and you came back to normal.
Everyone has a different amount of period like that it takes their body to sort of come
back to normal.
I have a 670 testosterone.
You just did a 6.7 thing right there?
Was that a 6.
I'm not a, no, no, it wasn't.
It felt like it.
That felt like it.
The fact that you're saying that meme is like, I think you just killed it.
I'm glad it's dead.
It needs to die.
It needed to die right now.
But the point is, 670 is good for most people.
Some people maybe don't feel as good there.
But if you feel good there, stay there.
But there, there are also other benefits to like testosterone.
You said, like, you can see for the rest of your life.
Like, your body will make more androgen receptors.
within the body because of the excess testosterone
and then those androgen receptors
will essentially stay there
and now your body's ability to like
have a stronger connection to the testosterone itself
like binding and like being useful
does stay prolonged like that is a real thing
like in science base that is truthful.
Are you trying to sell me drugs right now?
Not at all, not at all but you ask you a really good job
like now I want to buy steroids for you.
I know I'm not even trying to but you ask me the question
I'm just telling you the truth.
Now, with that being said, there's also, obviously, there's a lot of side effects that can come along with it where, like, you have to also be mindful.
You want to be able to get your blood work done.
Like, anytime I talk about this kind of stuff, I always try to reference that, it's very important.
If you're ever going to do it, you want to get your blood work done before, you want to get your blood work done during and you want to get your blood work done after.
So you can know what else is happening in your body.
So if you do it the right way and there is a right way to do it and there is a wrong way to do it, you can be fine and you can come back to normal and you could, you know, do a six month cycle, come back and be normal.
The problem, like I said, is the mental aspect of it where it's hard to forget how it feels and you kind of want that feeling.
That's the sort of like, I wouldn't call it addictive, but that's the damn, I want that again because I don't have that.
That's exactly what addictive is.
It's like once you, somebody does heroin, Perkinset doesn't hit the same.
Yeah, it's just not as acute.
It's not like a cute addiction.
Like heroin is acute where you're like, I need that shit now.
It doesn't feel that way.
But your overall life, you'll notice if your testosterone is increased, you will.
just feel like more of you.
You'll feel like more go get it.
You'll feel more like, you know.
So short story, long so short, if I do one cycle,
it's not going to ruin my testosterone and fuck my life up.
I don't believe so, unless you're like predisposed
and some fucked up shit, I don't think so.
If you do it the right way, you don't, you don't overdo it.
You don't like go too hard.
Yeah.
I kind of want to do it the natural, but it's like I have a tough time eating.
That's always been the problem is, uh, yeah, me too.
But who's on, who's on steroids that doesn't admit it?
I know Zambl's hearing is very public about it.
He's a friend of mine, and he's like, he lists this whole thing is, who do you think is on it that lies about not being on it?
I mean, bro, I mean, Michael Hearns lied about it forever, I think.
But you know, I don't even know if you know Michael Hurry.
He's a older.
A bodybuilder, I remember, yeah.
Been around forever.
I've been trying to get him on the pod for a minute.
I would confront him about it.
But, I mean, he's just, he's that guy, man.
He's, he can't, I don't think he could be like, and maybe he'll react to this, but you can't be like 50-something years old and being like jacked as,
fuck like he's in tip top shape all the time yeah most miami guys that age like you know the
miami do with the sleeve and the big delts and the tan and that guy's usually you know the muscle
t-shirt but what about influencers who's on who's on t-r-t or steroids that you know that isn't say it
i don't i mean bro i feel like a lot of these guys who don't talk about it they they i think if
you're in the fitness space most of them are on steroids bro like i would be honest with you
is there anyone in mind you're talking you're asking about specifically
No, there's a couple people that I suspect, but I want to see what you think.
I'm going to text you on right now.
Don't be weird.
Okay.
Let's see.
This is funny.
I got a pretty good judge of this.
Interesting.
I know Zerka's done it.
Zerka talks about it a lot.
Interesting.
Do you want me to say that?
What do you think?
Why don't we don't say that?
I don't, I don't, I like how this is like a look.
a little inside inside thing i don't i don't really believe so i don't know um because obviously i've
met him i don't believe so it doesn't seem that way it seems like he's had a whole active life
majority of his life what about trump i think people get to i think i think i think people at
that sort of like age it's just the best thing for them i think like their doctors might
suggest it truthfully because cortisol management there's so many things that like as you age
your body gets really inefficient at.
And in taking testosterone and steroids, in this case,
it's not like they're trying to take steroids
to be this like jacked bodybuilder.
They're just trying to live a more quality life.
So I think someone like that, like Trump, for example,
you know, why would he not if he had, you know,
all the medical stuff at his disposal
that he could do it in a really safe and positive way
just for his general well-being?
Would you recommend somebody like me to take?
I have 670 testosterone.
I don't know there's different metrics,
but that's what I got to that did my blood work.
670, 27 years.
old. I want to get super jacked. But actually, like, I have good, uh, peck insertions. You know,
I don't have gyno or anything. Yeah. You know, I, I know this stuff. I watched your videos when I,
I know all this stuff. I know about rear delts and though, you know, I have good Latin certions.
It's like, do I really need it? What do you think? I mean, but that, that question so, it's so hard
to say yes or no, because there's so many other things that I don't know if you do well enough.
Like, do you go to the gym every day? Do you actually train consistently? Do you do, do you do, do you drink
water. Do you do all these things? I'm on enough. I drink, I drink water. There's water.
I drink all these juices and have all this water. It's funny that we go from like juice to fitness and the
but yeah, I'm very healthy, but I'm not consistent with the gym. I'll do like two months off,
two months off, two months on. Like I'll go really hard and then like I have to travel, I have to work and
that I can't be consistent and then the routine stops. So the real question you got to ask yourself is
if you're willing to like take that step, which is like take the testosterone, take the TRT,
whatever it is, are you going to allow yourself to not be inconsistent?
Because then that's like the worst case scenario where it's like you do something that
in some sense it could be detrimental to your body where you're not getting the most of it.
You're not making the most of it because your consistency still remains the same.
Like now, I think the comparison, when I was, I was prescribed to Adderall when I was 11
and then through my teenage years, when I would take it, I would get the shit done.
Like I wouldn't just take Adderall and vibe out.
I would do it in and lock in.
maybe give it a shot if you think if you think personally that you would actually take it serious and do the do the things you need to do around it like the blood work so you're taking care of yourself overall then it's you know it's not like you're fucking 18 like i would never tell this shit to an 18 year old but you're i just got bradley martin to sell me drugs the meme is not a meme anymore i didn't tell you anything i'm advising you just sold me drugs you asked me questions to figure out what you should do for yourself but i'm just telling you the truth wow i didn't sell anything man but you can vam on me later you
later.
It's expensive, right?
No, I mean, you could, you could, there's so many places now for men's health stuff,
you can go and get it pretty cheap.
Isn't it cheaper in Mexico?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, everything's cheaper Mexico.
Yeah.
What else are you talking about?
Everything, like water bottle.
Like, oh, water, fucking tacos, anything cheaper Mexico.
What do you mean?
Tacos, hookers, all that's so cheaper Mexico.
You know that.
I know you know about that.
I've seen you in Miami.
I mean, never been to Mexico before.
No, but I know in Miami is in the imports, you know.
I've seen you in Miami, bro.
What have you seen me?
Yeah, I see you at the gym.
I've seen you also not at the gym.
Where else you see me?
Dude, that was a bad one.
I've seen you at 11.
I've seen you at 11.
Okay, I want to tell this because it's funny.
It was after Sugar Sean's fight and all the influencers went to 11, which is a club.
But it's also, there's strippers there.
It's like a big Miami club.
And I go there and Brad's like, oh, my God, you're here.
And everyone's there.
It's like everybody, I know all my friends.
And then like, this is right when I was going really hard for Palestine.
I'm in the back of the Nuff Boys video.
Like there's this.
Some Zionist screenshots is like during Ramadan, sneakos in the strip club.
It wasn't even Ramadan.
I'm like there for like, it is like, you weren't doing anything.
You were just sitting and people were around you.
That's all.
But it was funny.
I just thought it was funny.
Yeah.
But I just like to troll you because it's because you're, because you troll me.
So I was like, fuck it.
yeah that's love that's real that's that's that's brotherhood right there i never posted the
videos that i got so i got your back i know he i'll tell that to brad's audience he did take
sneaky but he's like look i got he was like threatening blackmail on me i would never post it
it it's just funny but yeah yo but yo so what what happened with what happened with tape though
with you it was like he he tweeted something about uh yo the real one stayed banned like right when
you got unband yeah that was i thought was weird he said
You could tell what the true freedom fighters are.
They don't take the shekels.
They stay banned.
I'm like, what the fuck, bro?
Like, come on.
It's just, all right, bro.
And then I said something on Myron's pod.
And next day, he said,
congrats on getting on Ben.
So.
Yeah.
Yeah, I appreciate him saying that.
Yeah, for sure.
But no contention there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm supposed to go,
I was supposed to go interview him in Dubai this month.
Yeah, he's got a fight coming up, right?
He's fighting, who do you think he got Tater,
chase he's fun to chase tomorrow i'm not chase is a good guy chase is a good guy chase is tall
tase is big um skinny but obviously he's big he's tall they're about the same size i
yeah i whenever i see tate's far it's always a guy like significantly smaller so this is like a
match match up it's hard to count tate out though because he's he's has so much actual ring
experience like he's done that for a long time it's not like new to him and also people are saying
he's retired he's 37 38 this is like alice carrera's older than him and that guy's yeah you know
one of the best in the so i think we're learning this year especially old fighters you can't count
him out yeah yeah i'd like this i mean the funny thing about tate is like whoever he fought i'm
definitely watching it i think most people would watch that how much you think he made for that fight
it's got to be a big bag it has to be a huge bag because that's one of those dudes if he loses his
brand takes a big like chase can lose and it's not a it's not he's going to get more fights in fact
his stock goes up just by getting this fight tate loses can you still call yourself top g
I mean, there's a lot, there's, yeah, there's a lot of other things he would, he'd be able to
himself for, yeah.
But that's a, that's a, that's a big.
It's got to be big.
How much you think it is?
More than 10.
It's got to be more than 10.
I would say, I was going to say 10, 10 to 15.
Yeah, that's what I think so, too.
I wonder if he'd say it.
I wonder if he hasn't talked about it much.
I think Tate was, excuse me, Tristan was talking about it a little bit, but I don't think
Tate even confirmed the fight yet.
probably still trying to
I just thought around
I haven't spoken to him in a while
you still are you're close at them
yeah yeah
I was supposed to go interview them like I said
in Dubai just the flights
I was like fuck these flights are crazy
16 hours man
Oh bro yeah I didn't not want to do that
I'm not gonna lie but I'll probably make something happen soon
That's crazy so you were gonna fly 16 hours to Dubai
to interview tape but you couldn't fly like five hours
to New York to do this flight but I didn't fly
You see what I'm saying I didn't even fly
I know, but you could have, like, you could have did this.
This flight is like nothing, back and forth on day.
Yeah, but I've flown out to you to do a podcast already.
What is this, bro?
No, no, no, you were, you happen to be here and he took a shit in my bathroom.
It wasn't like planned out.
Wait, no, I thought we did plan it.
We did plan it.
No, no, no, no, you're lying right now.
Why was I here?
Why was I in New York then?
Sugar Sean lost against morale.
Oh, that's fair.
That was in Jersey.
I was in Jersey.
You're right.
You're absolutely right.
Vindicated.
Look at you.
Always.
I was like, why not pull up?
and say what's up to Sneco, man.
Shit in his bathroom.
Do a little pod.
Get it.
Farms some pod.
Yeah.
For me for content.
Say what up to the cancel guy that, you know, can't get anywhere else.
But, you know, right here on this channel.
Not anymore, man.
I know.
I'm proud of you.
Not anymore.
I really wanted to, I wanted to do the podcast because I want to say I'm happy for you
because I think you deserve it.
So.
Thank you, man.
Yeah.
Thank you.
And I'm excited to see what you do with it.
I'm also excited to see how you, how you move through like still talk.
talking about the same things you talk about, whether it's on or off platform.
Do you think I went too hard this podcast?
No, not at all.
No.
I didn't go.
Okay.
I did talk about it a lot more than I thought I would.
Also, you saw a sneak peek of my first video back.
So I've been uploading some of my older Twitter vlogs.
I posted two of my main channel and a lot of my second channel.
What do you think of the video I'm working on?
Brad saw a sneak peek before the pod.
I think it's, I think it's poetic for sure.
And I also really like the coat.
I really like the coat.
But you've always, I mean, you've always had that spin on your content.
It's more artistic.
And I guess I just found out recently before this podcast,
it's you edit all your own shit.
I didn't even know that.
It's a lot of work.
It's a lot of work.
Yeah, that's, uh, that's probably why they come out the way that they do, right?
Because you, you, you obviously care about that in a creative way.
Yeah, which is the intro's sick for sure.
I think they're going to like it a lot.
I'm so sorry.
I'm going to, I'm going to go on a run.
I'm about, I'm about to go on a little run.
This podcast is going to be the marker of a generational,
YouTube comeback. See, everybody loves the come up. The comeback is better. No, people love the
comeback. I think the comeback even more than the come up. Because at the point you get to a point
on the come up and then when everyone really just starts to fucking hate you and then they love
to see you crash. That's what the internet does. The internet loves to hate. Somebody who's doing
really well, like you see happens to Kai Sinat. He starts succeeding and everybody starts hating
on it for like little dumb reasons just to tear him down for fun. So everyone needs to fall.
I had such a big crash. It's like where you can't tear me down again. Like now,
I have all the cards stacked in my favor to really not,
I want to say redeem myself, but to take over again, bigger.
Well, I'm happy for you, man.
I look forward to see it.
And I think, yeah, you'll probably be out in L.A.,
probably do some content.
I may be for your vlogs or some stuff with Steve,
but is there anything else you want to tell your audience?
No, man.
I'm just excited for this comeback.
So I don't know when this podcast will be out,
but probably right around when I dropped my first video,
back and I'm really nervous about it, but I'm excited to, I'm about to go finish it right now.
Cool. Well, is, uh, if that's all there is, I appreciate your time today. Thank you for taking
it. Thanks so much, Brad, for having it's always fun. I don't know, we've done a lot of pods and
it's always interesting. All right, we're out of here. Thank you, Sniko. Every Tuesday, I love you
guys, subscribe to the channel. I'll see you guys next week.
