The 85 South Show with Karlous Miller, DC Young Fly and Chico Bean - Naked City ft. Uncle Ty | Ep. 73
Episode Date: March 17, 2017On this fire episode, D.C. Young Fly and Karlous Miller talk about the new show from VH1 - Hip Hop Hollywood Squares. Since D.C. was on the first episode, the crew gives a breakdown of the show (featu...ring T.I., Tiffany Haddish, Michael Blackson, ands more) Once that's out the way Uncle Tyrone gives a history of street life...he's taking it all the way back to Naked City. From the days before condoms to the history of lottery and how it started, to Muhammad Ali and Atlanta's first glory days, Uncly Tyrone is taking you on a journey. Let's hope D.C. dont make him leave!!! Share & subscribe! #ThisPodcastIsFor #85SouthShow Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an IHeart podcast.
Join IHart Radio and Sarah Spain
in celebrating the one-year anniversary of IHart Women's Sports.
With powerful interviews and insider analysis,
our shows have connected fans with the heart of women's sports.
In just one year, the network has launched 15 shows
and built a community united by passion.
Podcasts that amplify the voices of women in sports.
Thank you for supporting IHart Women's Sports
and our founding sponsors,
Elf Beauty, Capital One, and Novartis.
Just open the free IHeart app
and search IHeard Women's Sports to listen now.
I knew I wanted to obey and submit,
but I didn't fully grasp for the rest of my life what that meant.
For My Heart Podcasts and Rococo Punch,
this is The Turning, River Road.
In the woods of Minnesota,
a cult leader married himself to 10 girls
and forced them into a secret life of abuse.
But in 2014, the youngest escaped.
Listen to The Turning River Road on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Pretty Private with Ebeney, the podcast where silence is broken and stories are set free.
I'm Ebeney, and every Tuesday I'll be sharing all new anonymous stories that would challenge your perceptions and give you new insight on the people around you.
Every Tuesday, make sure you listen to Pretty Private from the Black Effect Podcast Network.
Tune in on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast,
or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Parano Advirus.
My stupid ad, peruna advisory is advised.
Parano advisory is advised.
This context and language is not suitable for children.
Shit might be said that might hit you up under the skin,
and it might be a low blow.
But guess what?
It's funny as fuck, though.
We got 10.
Today's in the building.
Say what, say what, say what, say what you got.
Today's in the building.
All the way from Cincinnati, Ohio.
Today's in the building.
With your stacking ass.
You're going to be in New Year's End church.
With your stacking ass.
You're going to go straight back to work.
With your stagnant ad.
While your kids still playing up in dirt.
With your stacking ass.
Hold up.
Your alternated on work.
With your stacking air.
Now you got to try to crank it first.
With your stanging ass
Oh shit
You gonna be
Layfoot work
With your stanging ass
You ain't gonna
Have no fucking dog
With your stanging ass
You're gonna be in the shit
Fucking these holes on the loo
Niggas talking about
Them n'niko fun to hang with that shit
But that's what
I'll fuck your bitch
And I'll pay that rent
And anytime she called me
She's gonna get off on these dick
Now hey
I'm telling where you might see me
I'm posted in the Aid
But I might jump on the plane
And Paule-A-Vou
A La-Francais
I got the jokes I'm everywhere
You see me with it
I'm up in Africa
I'm telling jokes in different cities
Nigger went to Germany
and felt some different tities
Hey
Nigger went to Germany
and felt some different titty
Hey hell
niggum went to Germany
And felt some different tities
I say they're small and they're round
But felt some different titty
I like smoking weed
I like it in high
I make bitches mad like B.C. Youngfly
Bitch is walking out
Bitches pulling up
I'll apologize
When I say I don't give up for a crazy man
I don't like a crazy man
I don't give him some of that pussy
He'll give some of his dick to you
Give him some of that pussy girl
I don't like asking
Give some of that pussy baby
I don't like asking
If the pussy is real good
Then please don't give me some
But if it will see is great than Carlos really want some of that pussy girl
I don't like that.
We'll be ready in just a second.
We'll be ready in just a second, right?
We'll be ready.
You know how that shit go.
The 85 South savages once they get on your ass.
It's over with it.
You just gonna bring one sentence?
Oh, that's pizza.
I thought the nigga had a sandwich.
You could eat pizza, but if a nigga have a sandwich,
that's just fucking disrespectful.
Type of a nigga have a sandwich.
Yo, who got some lotion?
Not to run to the car, man.
Fucking winter than snuck back.
What type of shit is this?
She must be going through menopause.
She's sweating.
she hot all goddamn day
how to fuck you hot all goddamn day
the craziest shit
I ever seen
it's the niggas who listen to
podcast listen to
come on then
Tireone we can get you right over here
get you set up
you got your cool lads hat you ain't gonna want
these headphones
we'll just make sure we can hear you
come on in
yeah that's why we
brought you on here to talk to the young G's
that's this is what they're listening to
What's this blue shit you're drinking?
That's the shit look like some life elixir or something.
That's a shit to keep you young.
Got that liquid viagra.
I know what it is.
That's why the shit blue.
You want a red bull?
You got some?
No, I need some.
Oh, I need some, too.
I need some Viagra because I want to do some revenge fucking.
DC Young Flag gets love from everywhere.
Man, go on and get on the album.
I'm tears.
What?
All right, we almost ready.
You got your blue juice?
Got the blue juice.
Have a play of mint.
Yeah, here you go.
go we got plenty of shit real professional right there and throw me the crown
raw bag yo yo ain't that going on uh-oh see good thing we did it ain't nothing
still nigh oh he don't have nothing I can hear you though you can yeah it might
be these in here oh your shit ain't plugged up
oh lord I'm skeed all right there we go coming down what we're looking like on
the frame Jojo Crick J-O-N
Tyrone, you know, I don't know if you heard about the 85 South Show.
No, I just heard about it the other day, man.
But see, I'm glad we got a few minutes so I can let you know what the 85 South Show is.
You ever been over a chick house and she got a whole bunch of clothes on the couch?
And she'd be like, they clean, though.
That's the type of chicks that listen to this podcast.
Yeah.
You ever, you ever been riding with your homeboy who owe you $20?
And he's getting real quiet when you get towards his house
because you know he's about to ask you for another 20.
His nephew listened to these podcasts.
So I'm just trying to bring you up to speed
on the type of audience that we have.
Hell yeah.
You know the strippers that steal money out of the lockers?
They listen to this shit, right?
This podcast right here is for people
who let their kids take a nap on the floor
in the middle of the living room.
That's our demographic right there.
Yeah.
Most of the people who listen to this show,
they call I ain't never passed inspection,
emission since they had it.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
They just know somebody who worked down there
and get them $20 to pass them through.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Catching you up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Mm, I beg.
Who from creative loafing?
Yeah.
Shut out to Creative Loafing.
They got a black person working over there.
Oh, that's your black.
What's your name, bro?
Oh, what's up, man?
Where I know you from?
Hell yeah, that dude was the asshole parking lot dude.
I remember you.
Yeah, I remember you.
I remember you.
I feel like, I know that name.
He had no dread being.
80.
It's amazing how motherfuckers change.
85, high, hey.
Welcome back to the 85 South show.
We in this bitch.
We are in this bitch one more time.
In it, bitch, one more time.
My man, D.C. Youngfly.
How the fuck you, Ben?
Yeah, slow motion.
Congratulations, you had another show premiere last night.
Hip hop, holly, holl, warts.
Wow.
They're fucking playing with these foods, man.
This shit crazy, man.
Did you, how fun was that shit?
That shit looked fun.
That shit was lit.
I'm not even gonna lie to you.
It was like, let me go ahead, grab one leg, ah.
Go ahead.
Like, that shit was lit.
You really just go out there and say what the fuck you want to say.
I can really see that taking over the hood.
You know, black people love game show,
and then they got some real ass black people on them.
No, real black people, like, they even got
Calice, my neck.
No, that's the other one.
Yeah, my goodness, my goodness,
bring out of all that shit.
It's the same shit.
Same, same genre.
It's basically head.
It's basically.
Bro, that shit was so funny.
When you was like, Habo.
Boobis.
Titties, no.
That shit.
I would think it was titties for real.
Habubis.
That's a boobie.
Root word.
Shit falling all over and shit.
That shit is lit.
You know, we niggerish in him.
Hey, man, how long have this been on me like a minute and some shit?
I just wanted everybody to see my jacket.
I'm about to take this bitch off.
I just wanted to.
That's a nice brand jacket.
Yeah, I had to make shit, motherfucker.
I saw that, though.
You're going to take them to church this episode?
No, we ain't going to church, man.
There's some street shit right here.
There's some street shit.
You thought we was on some church shit.
I ain't know.
Ain't wrong with praising the Lord.
Since you're going to bring it up, we might as well go ahead and give a proper introduction.
You know what I have to introduce his ass.
I don't know who he is.
Well, that's what I'm trying to.
That's why I brought him on here today so you can know who it is.
I want to know.
Man, see, people always be talking about this street shit and raping the city and shit like that.
He got the bricks.
So I went, and I had to find OG who been in the city.
Been in the game.
I'm talking about when 285 was just highway.
Because, you know, OGs ain't really out like that.
You know what I'm saying?
That's what I'm saying.
It ain't been like 13 of them left.
Real talk.
He number six of 13.
Real talk.
Y, show some love, my man, Tyrone.
O.G. Tyrone.
Yeah, any nigga named Tyrone is an OG.
You got to believe what he said.
He's a Nogne Taron is an OG.
OG talked to him.
That's a microphone, man.
That shit came out.
2000 and stuff.
Man, I'm going to say something right quick.
Anyway, first of all I'd like to say, thank you for having me on the show here.
You know we had to have you.
He ain't going to fall asleep, bitch.
I appreciate that.
Listen, I came to Atlanta from Detroit.
I'm from Detroit, right?
Detroit players.
You know you're a real gangster.
You're from Detroit.
Most of them.
So he got a pistol on him right now.
No, I was a player type.
I didn't have to care no.
There it is.
I could talk real good.
There's go.
Oh, okay.
That's why he here.
So he's a pimp.
Your head.
Just talk to him.
I didn't say that.
Oh, okay.
Plah, plah.
But I had a little training.
But anyway, there you go.
Yeah.
So I come here in 1970, right?
How old are you all then?
I think I might have been about 21, 22.
Okay.
I just got my first Cadillac I was coming out of.
Hey, that's how black men remember time.
I had just got my first Cadillac.
Paid cash money for it, didn't you?
Pay cash money for it.
No, I didn't pay for it.
Now you would have top the story off if you would have paid cash money for.
Any nigger with a Cadillac, I know what you're doing.
That's how black men Mark, I remember my father had an 87.
My son was born.
Cadillac back in the day, like Chevy nowadays.
I know what's going on.
Yeah, if you got a Cadillac back then, however you paid for him, my dad.
There you go.
But anyway, we pull up in Atlanta about a week before the fight.
Muhammad Ali was fighting back here, right?
So he's coming from the draft.
And they would let him.
We're letting him fight nowhere in the country, right?
So they made a deal so he could fight here in a lot.
I was there about a week before, right?
I was staying right there on 14th Street, right off of 75.
They had to row away in.
This is before all them big buildings and all that stuff.
They had one hotel down down, the region.
Muhammad Ali fight.
In the Muhammad Ali fight, 1970, right?
In one hotel, no other hotel.
The Marriott won here.
The holiday inn one here
There was just one named Regency
Niggas
Niggas weren't allowed
They was allowed on the eighth floor
Well let me tell you about that part
Interesting
That was the only hotel
We were there
We was all in that hotel
Well let me tell you what happened
So I'm standing the roadway in the motel
Right on 14th to 75
And so I had a lady with me
You know she's a lady of the evening
So we
So I met her
taking that one.
So I met this brother named
this bitch is the lady of the evening.
Cold blood,
he's from Atlanta.
So I meet him,
you know,
he pimped kids,
I meet him.
So we're talking
and this and that
and chopping it up.
So he said,
well,
he said,
hey man,
don't listen.
Don't let your girl
go down 14th down
towards Buckhead.
Now you can't go
nowhere there.
She black folks
at the night time
with loud in Buckhead then.
Okay.
Especially,
you know what I'm saying,
no ladies of the evening.
Real.
Not going towards Buckhead.
You can come down towards downtown, but not Buckhead.
So, anyway, we're there about three, four days for the fight, you know.
So now when the fight come around that Friday, folks start coming in from everywhere.
I'm talking about everywhere.
Because this, Muhammad Ali had been out for about three, four years, right?
I'm talking about you had true story now.
You had.
Come on, Dad.
You had the movie stars, Dona Ross, all of them.
Then you had the Underworld.
Now, at this time, the Underworld, I mean, this was the real underworld.
The real deal.
Yes, the real.
The one called the Underground, called the Underworld.
Yeah.
So we, you know, so everybody gets in town there, right?
You know, so before they get in town, we go over to this guy's house, cold blood,
take me over this guy's house, and do not.
chicken man
chicken man
got cold blood
and chicken man
God bless the dead
you know
me and him came out
to be good friends
so he had
he had
some young cat
I'm 20,
21 years old
so I get up
his lady of the evening
I get
I get up there
in the house
man we go over there
now they got a little
little crib here
like I guess
you can call
the place
where you go
get your head
right
right
yeah
so we go
oh the other
head right
oh okay
Might as well.
Before they called it a massage place.
Get your head right.
You're going to go up beyond them.
You can drag yourself, good spirits, you know what I mean, or whatever, right?
Good spirit.
Everything, right?
So, anyway, so we get in there.
So it's three cats in there, older cats, I think, about 30-something.
You know, now I can look at them, I can tell us.
I can look at him and say, now, they're a real cold-blooded player.
Yeah, you know, I could look at them and tell, right?
And they chopping up something about 21.
I really want to get over there in that set, you know,
but they're sitting over there, they got their little stuff,
and they're talking and stuff.
And so we couldn't get over in that set.
We young, said, but see, back then, you know,
you had to stay in your place, you know what I mean?
If they over there, unless they say,
hey, young black, come out of that, man, you know.
Say, don't say nothing.
So we get out of little stuff, and we go, right?
So anyway, man, everybody that ain't come in town, man.
Look here.
It looked like Gotham City.
They got these Cadillacs, they've got some bubbles on the top,
and big lights, they call them Al Caponellos.
I mean, look here, man, they all, I mean, they're in the town.
So Wednesday, they start coming.
Black folk.
Thursday, they start coming.
Friday.
So Friday, on Friday, everybody here, oh, my God.
So we're down there in the regency, man, you know.
So I walk up, I walk up in the regency, and I'm coming up.
And so on the news, the news that say, they told all the white folks from the sticks and everywhere out in the countries and things.
Because the place wouldn't build up, bear in mind, it wouldn't build up like it is nothing.
So these white folks from the stick, they said, you've got to come down here and see these.
niggas, you know what I'm saying?
I'm talking about they got
batmobiles and
this moment. I mean, boy, they
so look here.
I'm walking up in, so
two white folks,
two white dudes, and they're
white, they were coming up here and I.
In front of the region, see, it's like
a horseshoe.
Nothing but Cadillacs, and all
of them were they all cavaliers. They got
bubbles. I'm talking about looking like, like I said,
like Goffin City, man.
and they walked up, you know,
and another dude pull up in there, man,
a little fly dude,
he pulled up one of them,
El Cabellas, man,
convertible, you know what I'm saying,
with the donut on the back,
and he pulled up,
and he jumped out.
And one of the white dudes saying,
he said, by golly,
what you look of him?
You know what I'm saying?
So, I mean, it had blowed their mind, man.
They had never seen nothing like,
You know, they had never heard in the South and never seen black folks doing something.
This is the first time that they had seen it.
So, I mean, you could imagine, like, they was just messed up, man.
They was like, so the next day, man, that's Saturday.
Everybody here now, that's Saturday morning.
We stand up on Hunter Street in front of Pascal.
So he had this boy named, could be a good friend of mine, named Ali Khan, right?
He was out of Chicago.
Anybody in here from Chicago?
So Aliccar, he's in Chicago, right?
The Aliccar, he got to come out to Pascal's.
He got a meat coat.
This is like, it's October now.
He got a meet coat, cape on his shoulder, right?
He got one.
So he come out, and he's talking, he comes out,
so he got this meet coat up.
Caked on his shoulder.
And, uh, keep going.
So he, uh, he got this being caked on his shoulder, and he got a, uh, he got this flat top hat that, like, you know, comes up like that, around, come up like that, but he got it smash.
And he got it up on his, he got it up on his jacket like this here, right?
So he stepped up around, he got this thing, cooked up, cake on it, he stepped out there.
Now, they got TV cameras and everything.
They're rolling, you know.
And he stepped up there and he said, yeah.
And I'm a pimp kid out of Chicago living in New York, big time pimped care.
He reached down in there, everybody looking at him.
He reached down there and grabbed that hat.
He was smashed like a pancake, and he said, pop, that thing, popped down.
Cockton on the side.
You know what I'm saying?
So you mean to tell me.
They took a picture of this here.
The news took a picture of went around the whole world.
This picture went around the whole world in the New York Times, man.
The first viral.
So let me ask you this.
So you're saying, that's what I'm saying, yeah.
So you're saying that these black people came down here for the Muhammad.
Let me catch everybody up for people who might have got along.
All the black people came to the city for a Muhammad Ali fight.
And they were so fascinated.
All the players, the street thugs.
You know what I mean?
The underworld.
Like you said, the underworld.
They came to the city.
Flooded the city.
Yeah, the entertainers and shit
Came to the city
Fascinated the white people
Because they never seen black people
Have money like this
And they're so fascinated by niggas with money
They're putting pimps on the news
And all in the newspaper and shit
Around the world
Okay now think about it like this
So we're catching everybody up right
This was the first time ever
That white people seen a whole bunch of fly-ass niggas
With money
With money in the South
Together
And they were just like
I'd be down.
First time.
First time ever.
Literally in mind.
Can you got to think about what nobody really finding before.
Let me ask you this.
What was the underwear like in Atlanta in those days?
Like you were here in the 70s.
What was going on in the city?
Was they obedient?
Well, they obedient that then.
Now they're hard-haired like a motherfucker.
Well, you know, you always had
some fly
black folks out of the south.
You always had a matter.
Like I said.
Like I said.
It came up north.
So they, you know, you didn't have those many of them, but you have, you know,
and especially the ones that were trapped, you know, they were pretty down.
So you're telling me they originated in the south.
Yeah.
Because you came from up north and came down here.
It was like, I want to be one of them.
Yeah.
Well, I.
Did y'all come from the south first?
Well, the game was in the, you know, we were in the south first.
Yeah, well, we got to the north.
Yeah.
Well, actually.
I mean, the game come out of the South.
Y'all hear that?
Where your family come from?
Y'all get that swag from must, niggled.
Nanny?
From Georgia.
Okay.
From Lennel, George.
Oh, oh.
You know, from, no, my daddy was from Marietta.
Marietta.
You hear that, boy.
He moved to Detroit, came back down here and found his heritage in roots.
He went back down in Marietta.
You were going to knock your socks off.
Now, in 1927.
to get him on.
Man, hold up.
Hold up.
Hold up.
Before you say it, this is the 85 South Show
time traveling exclusive.
1927.
Wait a in.
Black person.
Let go.
19th.
Who did that?
My grandma was born 19.
He not even 27.
My dad was born in 1931.
He about to tell us about some shit that happened on some pimps shit in 1927.
I want to hear.
Somebody make sure you record this on something.
Get this on every medium.
1927.
When Slay and Jersersers.
got through.
No, I would.
My father had one sibling in the family, him and his brother.
Right.
So my grandfather came home from work in 1927.
It was actually in Kennesaw, Georgia, next to Marietta.
He came home from work.
Caught his wife into bed with another man.
Your brother?
My grandfather.
Oh, God.
Father's father
True story
Benhorn back in the day
Benhorn
Hey
27
Benhorn
Y'all hit in
The stock market crash
For real
Hose bin Hose
He went and got his shotgun
He went and got his shotgun
Like a real nigga
And killed
Both of them
The man and her
And my grandma
Your granddad
Went to jail
In Kinosaw, Georgia
and the next day
they told
because he was like
quote unquote
a good neighbor not a troublemaker
it was all right if you killed
another black person
you know it was all right
as long as you weren't no troublemaker
it was cool that's why the nigga was shun like that
an American guyst
and let him out a jail
and told him
he had two days
you get out of that
he grabbed my daddy
and my dad's little brother
and they got on the train
and went to Pennsylvania
needless to say
man back during that time
I mean black men had it pretty hard
back during that time now
you know so he kept
so he drank itself he just kept drinking
you know it needs to say he didn't trust
another woman
it needed to say that
you know trust another woman
And so they didn't have no programs, you know, back then where they could help a guy out.
None of that big brother shit.
No, none of that.
None of that.
No, none of that.
You know what I mean?
That's why you demand you here today.
He stayed great.
Right.
You know what I mean?
He stayed crazy.
Let me ask you, what turn you on to the street like?
His granddaddy told him those ain't shit.
His granddaddy told him.
His granddad ain't shit.
He told the dad and his daddy told him.
Hey, look, my daddy.
Told me to tell you, hoes and shit.
Your entire identity has been fabricated.
Your beloved brother goes missing without a trace.
You discover the depths of your mother's illness
the way it has echoed and reverberated throughout your life,
impacting your very legacy.
Hi, I'm Danny Shapiro.
And these are just a few of the profound and powerful stories
I'll be mining on our 12th season of Family Secrets.
With over 37 million downloads, we continue to be moved and inspired by our guests and their
courageously told stories.
I can't wait to share 10 powerful new episodes with you, stories of tangled up identities,
concealed truths, and the way in which family secrets almost always need to be told.
I hope you'll join me and my extraordinary guests for this new season of Family Secrets.
Listen to Family Secrets Season 12 on the IHeart Radio,
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Adventure should never come with a pause button.
Remember the Movie Pass era, where you could watch all the movies you wanted for just $9?
It made zero cents, and I could not stop thinking about it.
I'm Bridget Todd, host of the tech podcast, there are no girls on the internet.
On this new season, I'm talking to the innovators who are left out of the tech headlines,
like the visionary behind a movie pass, Black founder Stacey Spikes, who was pushed out of
Movie Pass, the company that he founded.
His story is wild that it's currently the subject of a juicy new HBO documentary.
We dive into how culture connects us.
When you go to France, or you go to England, or you go to Hong Kong, those kids are wearing
Jordans, they're wearing Kobe's shirt, they're watching Black Panther.
And the challenges of being a Black founder.
Close your eyes and tell me what a tech founder looks like.
They're not going to describe someone who looks like me and they're not going to describe
someone who looks like you.
I created There Are No Girls on the Internet because the future belongs to all of us.
So listen to There Are No Girls on the Internet on the IHurt Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Pretty Private with Ebeney, the podcast where silence is broken and stories are set free.
I'm Ebeney, and every Tuesday, I'll be sharing all new anonymous stories that would challenge
your perceptions and give you new insight on the people around you.
On Pretty Private, we'll explore the untold experiences of women of color who faced it all.
Childhood trauma, addiction, abuse, incarceration, grief, mental health struggles, and more.
And found the shrimp to make it to the other side.
My dad was shot and killed in his house.
Yes, he was a drug dealer.
Yes, he was a confidential informant, but he wasn't shot on a street corner.
He wasn't shot in the middle of a drug deal.
He was shot in his house, unarmed.
Pretty Private isn't just a podcast.
It's your personal guide for turning storylines into lifelines.
Every Tuesday, make sure you listen to Pretty Private from the Black Effect Podcast Network.
Tune in on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Well, you know what?
RIP to whoever that was.
Like, I come from, I'm going to take you back to, I'm going to take you back to, I'm going to take
Damn, how far are we going back?
We're going back.
This is 1970.
My grandmother was born.
My grandmother on my mother's side was born in 1903.
I was born in 92, y'all, so just remember how old this year is.
1917, she was on the arm, right?
Coming from Memphis.
She's coming from Memphis.
And she was on her own, man, and she was down.
She did what she had to do to take care of her two daughters,
which one was my mother and my mother's sister.
You know, they did what she had to do.
So, you know, when I growed up as a little boy, man,
I'm, you know, four or five years old,
and my grandmother in Detroit, you know,
so when the people of my grandfather would be downstairs
and they'd be gambling and he'd be cutting and she'd be upstairs,
and you know and had two three ladies from the neighborhood they were you know
you know yeah mm-hmm I know what going on for those who you got to watch the
video in order to see his eyes I understand we're going you got to watch this shit on
you know what he's saying because he's looking at you like that look at she has
with three other now you know you know you got three or four you know you know from the
neighborhood yeah okay yeah we got you it was ladies of the evening
Ladies of the evening
Take it that with me
Who is this flat lady of the evening?
This is the 85th show
You would be glad to know
That those ladies that you're talking about
They're great, great, great, great, grand elders
They bustling it open for us right now today
Right now.
They're watching the show
No, no, they're ladies of the evening
They ladies of the all goddamn day
They used to just do it in the evening
They do the shit all day now
Taveron, did you know that?
Yeah, I did.
They starting early, early in the morning.
You, the OG, you ever bought some of that back paid?
You know what that back page is.
You know what that back paid?
You know how they said, you know, back then,
they like, they're paying for it now?
Yeah, they pay.
Yeah.
They let you look at it before you back.
They really own that by their cell?
Yeah.
With no guidance.
Tell you everything about themselves.
That ain't the later of the evening right now.
They do it all in the evening, morning, all that.
You ain't know that?
They're out here.
They out here.
They're independent now, though.
They don't sell pussy with a team no more.
They figured out how to do it all by themselves.
They have no coaches out there.
Oh, they don't have no macaroni.
They ain't no.
Ain't no match.
Ain't no macaroni.
There ain't no macaroni.
They just out here being ronis.
He's a tender ronis.
That's what they are in.
You came up in a good time where you could actually
pimp and live and support yourself.
We're not calling them pimping.
He called you a kid.
He came up in a time where you could.
could do that but I would hate to tell you now that these niggins have ruined that
shit dick ain't worth but three cents out here in these streets if that you can't
even get a postage stamp with dick now you out here trying to fuck to live that's why
something in the niggins you can't even add like you trying to clean a bitch up
without her thing you're trying to be her boyfriend bitch I ain't trying to be your
boyfriend trying to clean you out one thing about the game now the game don't
change the people do so you still got a few people
And they're having a ball.
And they're having the ball.
Oh, you got a few people that's pimping.
They're having the ball.
Exactly.
Because everybody else is doing something else.
That's exactly right.
I just wanted to throw that in there.
You just got to understand who is who and who want to be guided.
That's all.
You know, sometimes you can't save everybody.
You just got to let them wonder.
But to get back to answer your question about what brought me in the streets.
Yeah, what brought you in the street, man.
You know, back during that time, man, when I was coming through,
you didn't have a whole lot of people, you know,
that you could look up to black folks
that were doing this.
You know, I mean, you might have one doctor
in the neighborhood, you know.
And that was really the doctor in the neighborhood.
When some go on and somebody ain't got insurance
to go to the hospital, old Tyrone running his ad down the street
to come deliver that baby for a little cup of change.
Yeah, the doctor would.
Yeah, the doctor would not Tyrone.
You over there saying, damn, who the fuck done
did that without a rubble?
Fuck the market up
This way before rubble's flat
But to get that straight now
Hold up before you get it to the street
When they brought rubbers out
When did that really become a thing
Well, I know back in the day
Y'all would have fun, nigga
They was fucking
It was skin on top of skin
It was like sex was sex.
We went on the Neck of City then
Woo
Nekin City
I could just imagine
Naked City
Back in the day man
Necky City
man I'm talking about every time
oh every time
now that a nigga can count
how many times he naked city
I can count it I don't fuck the latter
or I can count
I don't I think I can't
hashtag naked city
hashtag naked city
lady of the evening naked city
ladies of the evening
I'm gonna say that anytime I'm like hey baby
I'm trying to go to naked city
I'm like what bitch naked city
rubblers ain't come out to about 81
So why did rubbles really come out?
Man, because somebody...
You weren't there, niggas.
Somebody fucked the monkey.
Brough, I'm 30, I'll be 34.
He don't believe this shit.
This shit all, nigger, I remember.
I remember back when they first started putting rubbers out.
Lifestyle was the first ones, I ever said.
Rubbers is new.
So when did rubbers come out, huh?
Shit.
Okay, uh...
I'm talking about when y'all are really, were like,
what the fuck of this?
When y'all was looking at them like, what the fuck of these?
Well, they had rubbers, man, back, you know, in the 60s, they had rubbers, but folks were using the minute, rough.
Exactly.
You know, but every now and then a guy would get burnt, you know.
Every now and then.
See how cool it was.
You got burnt, hell, yeah.
What about two?
Oh, he ain't fucking in a man.
He ain't fucking.
Amen.
No, but when that thing come along, what you were talking about that,
You get somebody on the backside that's what they say
We know better we know better than that I know white people white people freak his hair
If they'll kiss a dog they'll fuck a monkey
Man they fucking every time
They'll kiss a dog they will fuck a monkey
They will fuck anything they'll fuck anything they even fuck to all the other animals
They fuck each other
I ain't saying all white people fuck animals I'm just saying all people they fuck animals
I know some white people some nice white bitches who will fuck this monkey and this
Give him the business.
Oh.
You hear me?
Oh.
Oh, lint that pussy.
Cesar.
King Kong.
All in that boy.
King con.
King.
Oh.
Get done.
Nothing on that whole face.
Huh.
Huh.
Not all on that whole face.
I forgot to tell you this niggas crazy.
Tyro.
But yeah, man, naked city.
Bring it back to the fun day night.
Bring it back, man.
That's right.
Take me about to fight.
I ain't going to get over naked city.
Muhammad Ali fighting in that North Georgia fight.
After the fight, he beat Jericho in the third round, T.K.O.
Knock the mind.
Jericho.
Yeah.
The white guy.
Technical knockout.
Okay.
After the party, after the fight, they had a big party.
True story now.
Oh, we believe everything you say.
They have video.
They have everything you say.
Everybody, everybody.
They had cameras, but they ain't have them.
Everybody came to this party over this guy, Chicken Man's house.
Chicken, man.
And there was a robbery that night at the party.
They robbed everybody's party, right?
Everybody.
You too?
No, I'm going to the party.
We get lost.
He gets lost.
We get lost.
We get lost.
Hey, let me make the left.
You sure?
Nigre, make the left.
Trust, me.
Let's go to the left.
But they robbed them.
whole part that's the movie type shit that's the he ice back in the day it was a
movie being made about it right now what's the name of it uh it's called uh 133 rome
rome street or something like that that's the street that the party was on right and uh
at that uh the party and at the same time frank matthews oh not frank lucas right Frank
Matthews had a summit here in Atlanta that he had all the blacks in the in the uh Hispanics
Harron Dillers I mean y'all y'all could if y'all on the video Frank Matthews original
yeah Frank Matthews yeah they don't know where to hell Frank went not Frank Lucas Frank
Matthews Frank Matthews was the only guy in America that never went to jail no no no no
He called a case and he disappeared.
They called a case, and he arrested, he got on bond, he disappeared.
The only guy ever disappeared.
He was bigger than Franklin Lucas.
Right.
Exactly.
How he, why they made no move about him?
He can't find him.
I'm telling you, they make him one right now, you know.
I'm going to have an authorization to the script.
They make them one.
Hey, they don't get the reward $20,000.
That was a lot of money back then.
Yeah, there you go right there.
Yeah.
I've seen that story.
He had a major paper.
Yeah.
Big heroin did.
Only guy ever got away.
They don't know what happened.
Right.
To this day.
He paid a nigga.
You got the fuck on.
Hmm.
I give him.
So he got the hell on.
Okay.
So what about Frank Matthew?
What happened?
Well...
That's a nigga named Casino.
That's not...
That's not Fray Matthews.
I can say, that nigger looked like casino.
Yeah.
You know Casino?
Yeah, I know.
That's my son's artist.
Oh, okay.
Said I'm on there.
You were in the streets for real.
That's people.
future brother huh I said that's future brother yeah yeah exactly and he said that
nigga look like to see no they ain't no air I told you this way to OG man no he real
OG so what about Fray Matthew I love shit like this no he got away you know he got on
bounty got away you know but he's in he's in the he's gonna be in the move right
because they had a summit that same day right yeah so what did you what was you
What would you ask me about?
He got lost.
He got lost.
Ladies and gentlemen, he got lost.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm just asking what got you out here in these streets, man.
My dad was 63 when he had me, so I know what's going on.
Hey, man, the opportunity wasn't that much.
I wouldn't go into school.
Right.
I wasn't going to go.
I mean, he had the many black folks who were going to school at that time.
Back then school was good, but they were dropping out like a motherfucker.
I come home in 1967.
I had been in prison.
I went to prison.
17.
Come on, I was turning 19 in Detroit.
In 1967, they had a riot in Troy.
You ever heard about the riot they had in Detroit
where the United States government
was in the streets of Detroit with tanks?
Yeah.
Robby.
You niggas, read, or what, man?
Yeah.
Anyway, man, you know what?
Hey, they was in the street with tanks,
they had a riot, right?
They had a riot, right?
They did crazy.
city down.
The Jewish people had all the businesses
in the city, so they burned all the businesses down.
That's 1967, big thing.
I never read about this.
Okay.
Anyway,
So I come,
but I come, I come home,
the ride was in July.
I come home in November,
19th,
1967. I never forget it.
I walked up there to the pool room.
you know, so to show you what a loser that I was.
I thought it was a hell of a thing because I came out of prison, right?
You know?
So I'm shooting pool, and I see these guys in the pool room.
I mean, they had to be in the house when the street lights come on before I left,
and now they got their head dead, and they got pocketful of the money,
and they're passing something.
They were talking, and they passing something.
I've never seen this.
This is the first time they had hand.
in the hand combat in the street
you know with drugs
but I don't know what they're doing
I've never seen this before they passed
and when drugs just hit the street
yeah
and what you're at his world
just Heron
this is the first time
the United States government
flooded the streets of Detroit
with Heron
headed by
Jay Edgar Hoover
you heard it from somebody
who was right there
not no made up shit
tell them
first of all
they got it from
when they was over there in war and shit
when they didn't they using that shit
when they was over there in war and they were like well no
no before then
the U.S. governor put
the drugs down via the
mafia it's before
Frank Lucas with all that kind of stuff this is in
67
okay
so I came on that day
and so I'm passing
something but you can't see anything
you know
do shop
and you know I'm saying these
23 months ago when I
before I went to prison these guys was on the porch
They had to be in the house with the street lights coming,
and they were doing all kinds of stuff.
I said, damn, what's going on?
And so one guy said, hey, Ty, say, come here a minute.
He called me.
And he said, hold your hand like that.
He took this little capsule, pull it apart,
some white part in it, put it right there.
He said, sniff that.
So I turned around and I gave it my back,
and I dropped it on them.
I did like this in.
And I act like I hit it, but I did.
Yeah.
And I said, thanks a lot, man.
I went back shooting poo.
I was shaking.
I was nervous.
I said, oh, that's what they're passing around here.
They're passing this hair on.
This is the first time that.
Now, drugs have been, narcotics have been in the street.
They call it narcotics.
They've been in the streets in the 50s, in the 40s, but it was for jazz musicians.
You know, you couldn't, you know.
You couldn't come off the street, you know, like anybody, and come up to say, hey, man, you know, who got the, you know, who got the smoke, who got, who got, oh, you couldn't do that.
You know, if you weren't somebody in the note, see, get on out of here, muck-ass, nigga, me, you don't.
I need some paper, paper, but you don't get your regular ass on.
You ain't no musician.
You play trumpet, food.
What your trumpet at?
This is another episode at the 85 South Show kicking it with the OG Tavern.
No, this shit is interesting.
He's talking about Drew.
My man, D.C. Young Flag.
I want to hear more.
Yeah, we got, we're talking about it.
All right.
This is a real history, man.
The Florida's in the 50s.
This is our uncle.
If you weren't a musician, you couldn't get no Coke.
We didn't adopt a gym.
No, Harron, you couldn't get no Coke.
So what hit the streets first?
Heron was in the street first before the Coke.
See, the Coke was something that the Harron dealers would just give.
They were just,
They were giving that shit away.
She was love in the street.
You buy some heroin with these.
You get a 20, that much.
You get a 20-9-a-nigger, that shit.
Well, you know, the cocaine was supposed to have been something, you know, like for the elite.
Right.
You know what I mean?
This is for the party with the girls.
Right some ecstasy.
Yeah, I mean.
But they, but the cocaine at that time, the psychology was, you know,
Harron it was
physically habit form of
but cocaine
was not addicted
that's what they said
So while I'm in prison in 67
I got had a brother die
with overdose adult
Okay
It's my only brother
He was real tight
I said you know
He used to take up of me
I said well if they killed
If they don't kill him
I know I ain't got no business
messing with it
He's really he's shown up tough
You know what I'm saying
I said I ain't got no business
messing with it
So, anyway, we round there and after I was joints and with all the slicksers hanging out and they, and they're saying, they sniffing coke and they say, hey, here, Ty, I said, I don't miss it, I'm missing narcotics, man.
No, this ain't narcotics.
Just cocaine.
Wow. Just for players.
You know what I mean?
That way I couldn't be born back in the day.
I debit it with him.
Hey!
Don't you know no good
I would have been on it
I'm like I'm down so
a player you damn so right
He's been saying this shit for the longest man
Nick I'd have been a sniffing coke-hand player
Hey bitch
Get over here
I go get it for you Ty
Wait point out
Point out which one
You want her right now
Come here, Ty won't you
Let me see what it hidden for before I go tell Ty
Hey, man, you fucking retort.
This bitch ain't listening, Ty.
So these, I mean, these were the kind of spots where they were doing this out.
These are the spots like with, you know, with Richard Pryor would hang out at and, you know, different things like that, you know.
I mean, you come to the Alba Joint, man.
I used to come after the Ivajun and see Richard Pryor.
What's up, Richard?
Hey, baby, what's out, man?
But I really, I really got to say this here
because I really liked it, Richard Pryd, man.
Because Richard Pryd did a snowball job on America.
I mean, he talked about every aspect of America.
In a way, you know, I mean, he talked about,
I mean, just show you what he did, man.
He talked about the mafia.
you know, it made the mafia, you know, friendly,
you know, where blacks could come around
the way he would talk, the way he would bring things out, man.
You know what I mean?
I mean, and Richard was, you know,
but my man, you know, my man was Dick Gregory.
That's my man.
But I like Richard too now.
Don't get me wrong now, you know.
I like riches too, but Dick taught me a lot, personally.
I personally had more experience, you know,
and she's trying to, you know, clean myself up.
You know, you know, because I had, you know,
I tell you about that, Coke said,
I thought Coke was heroin, so I didn't,
I thought it was all narcotics.
That's when my mama said,
never missed one with no narcotics.
You know, so, and then they said,
no, man, this Coke, this is, this for players, man.
So I was trying to be that, so.
Let me ask you, he said it in that voice.
Hey, man.
So he hit it.
So you end up hitting it, time.
Why the nigger with the drugs
always got the cool ass boy?
No, because he high.
This ain't, no, no.
He high.
That's for players, man.
That's for players, baby.
Your voice's going to change.
Soon as you hit it, I swear, man.
So you end up hitting it.
No, you know, I didn't hit a den.
You didn't hit it, isn't it?
I'm telling you, if you were raised in the 60,
late 70s, if you ain't,
Want to hit cocaine you least attempted it to know that this one for you how many times can you turn the nigger down who'd be like no man
This for players man you don't everybody around you like trust him
It ain't gonna fuck with you man
Todd's scared he's scared man he's look at me baby do I look like a junkie baby
That was a perfect line you right you right I told you
Then they give you a little bitch
Ebony
Go with Ty, baby
Make sure he's alright
Make him feel good
You're in there now
That's fucked up
Now you high ain't getting here
Yeah then they give you a little
Now you really take your player
Nick no he didn't give you enough
Man give me some more man
You can't get me enough
Mm-hmm
No
They get you a little bit where you can't feel it
You'd be like
It's all right
We hit it again baby
That's when he changed on you
No baby
It ain't no more free
No, baby
It don't work like that
You got you,
I love how you threw it in
I ain't hit it that time
This ain't a party pat
That's funny
Okay, so when you didn't hit it the first time
So what I did is this
I went to
Detroit Public Library
And I looked it up in the
library was cocaine habit farmer that's all I wanted to know and it said it wasn't
physically addicted that's what they got you what's the difference between
physically addictive and addictive it said it wasn't physically addicted it was
psychologically addicted meaning oh you think about it and you was hooked
That's even worse than the physical.
Most different.
Yeah.
I think we're physical.
So all I heard is that it wasn't physical.
Right.
I was cool with that.
Okay.
You know, because my man, to go back,
you just said it,
my man, they were giving him the cocaine in the first time.
No, baby, we ain't got the bag.
It's free, Tyrone.
No, after they hooked him on it,
and he come back,
said, you got internet thing,
and say, yeah, you got 20.
Ain't no more free.
Yeah.
like the size of this mic here.
Hey, $20 was a whole cup of cocaine.
You get a whole cup of cocaine for $20.
At that time.
At that time, boy, the cocaine was cocaine.
It was pure, too.
Yeah, see, in them 80s, in them late 70s, in them 80s.
That's when they start cutting it.
Not even just cutting it, they switched it.
They put a little cocaine base on it, you know, like about,
13, 20% cocaine, 80% synthetic.
They were fucking the game up.
Because it wasn't a cocaine that makes you do all that crazy stuff
like them people smoking crack now.
Yeah.
See, you know, deuce, he's smoking crack one after another.
You can't smoke cocaine like that.
You take cocaine, you hit it one time.
I like the way you see it.
Hold on.
Just say that shit again.
He got to say that shit one more time.
You can't smoke cocaine like that.
God damn it.
That was real.
That touched my soul
because I'm from the street.
That touched me.
Like, you came.
But the way you said,
you just letting you know some shit going on, man.
Listen to me.
It made so fucking much sense
because if you ever been to the trap out now,
they come back to back to.
Nicky, I will see.
And you'd be like,
bitch, why you ain't buy $500 worth of crack
at that one time?
You have spent $1,000 with me today.
You feel what I'm saying?
Like, back then you get...
$20 at a time, though.
Back in the day,
Back of the day, you spend you a 20.
I probably won't see you the next week.
That's pretty much right.
By the way, he said, he said, you can't smoke cocaine.
That's some shit.
I ain't heard, though.
He said there was just some cocaine base.
But that's just, hold on a little further, further of all.
Niggas thinking they've been re-rocking shit,
like they just started putting a little 50%.
Did you not hear this nigga?
Back then, money was money.
Them niggas, he said he put 20% of cocaine.
I think about it, about really.
real brick and I put 20% of real cocaine and they was giving out this much so
that's why they really weren't giving out no cocaine they was given out this
much of fucking nigga that's why it looked like they would have money can
they had so much cocaine this cut was coming from the CIA now let me tell you
what happened whoa y'all y'all fuck y'all want me to tell us that this is
brought to you by the nigger named tauty-9 85 South Shore exclusive put
shit out there. Hey man, listen.
1980, I'm living in Dallas, Texas.
So it's this dude, we're in this crap game, right?
Big table like this, bunch and proud of dude, we're around there.
We're shooting craps, right?
So it's a guy there's a cab driver.
He don't even gouten him.
He go to Dallas-Fort Worth Airport.
He's dropping a white boy off.
Time they get home from the airport to the white boy's house.
the white boy didn't proposition him
about giving him some cocaine.
The white boy is CIA.
So they give him
87%
Bolivian cocaine.
That's the best you can get.
You take one little pinch
and you take a one
and hit it, you might go and invent something.
You know what I'm saying? I'm talking about,
Hey, hey, man, they, uh, had famous philosophers and all that, uh, uh, um, you got to be, even be smart to think it's, you remember what that nigga, uh, Eddie Griffith said, got to be hired. I always, did, do want to talk to a nigga who ain't even here? You got to be high.
Hey, man, look here. So after they hooked them on the real stuff, then they switch it with the synthetic, but they got you hooked because you're looking to get the real stuff again. And you can't have a fight.
so you keep running so now here go 80s and 90s and 2000s and you know and folks they never had no cocaine if you gave them some cocaine this and no I don't want that give me that stuff over that make me keep running and getting it they wouldn't even take no real cocaine because they don't know nothing about it they never seen it they never had it you know and this and this was coming from the from the U.S. government that's fucking amazing this is the way that you uh
destroy a neighborhood this is the way you know what destroyed the streets what
destroyed the street drugs because for the drugs and what they do it though how
did they do it how did they do it well what they did in Detroit that's that's
example what they did in New York with three-way Willie I mean in California yeah
y'all you're ready about that man
Yeah, no, the main in our books at school.
I'm a freeway to drink.
You know by Abraham Lincoln and shit like that.
I know that I know that ain't right there.
I'm free the slave.
Yeah, so how they did it, man.
You know, they just destroyed, you know,
they destroyed the neighborhoods, man.
And got putting all the people that started with the Herons.
I put them all on Herons, right?
You know, then the women,
the guys started getting them women,
everybody got hooked on hair around before you know it was just that run was just for like only jazz
musicians and you know saying folks like that you know you couldn't you couldn't get no half
you couldn't even buy back in the day in the 40s a black person couldn't buy a Cadillac
why because there wasn't no black folks supposed to have one you weren't allowed to have a Cadillac
that was a white man's color what the fuck so who the first person that really just
took it and it was like shit they got the money to get them niggas that shit good
question a street nigger y'all know what is it oh gee respect another young
OG in the making baby yes sir yes sir hey let me tell you how it happened in the
hotel you had the bell house you know they were girls were work in the hotel you
Ladies of the evening.
And so the bail-hops would, you know,
get the lady for the white guy who would come in, right?
So the pimps in the neighborhood,
they start going to the bellhop, say,
Hey, home boy, look here.
Would you tell that old white dude?
You know what I'm going to buy a Cadillac.
The Cadillac costs $3,000 then, you know?
I'm going to buy a Cadillac for $3,000.
I give him $300 to do it for me.
white the white boy you know he's buying you know he's buying you know he's buying sex in the
hotel you know he want to be cool with the black but so he's going to get a cal like
so boom then that's how they start buying cal so they had so many of them then you know
the calleg deal says shit just let them niggins buy from caldlette so but the caled with
$3,000 back then it's uh 2,000 before that that cred list right now
a thousand dollars hey shout out to niggas for being smart enough to beat the
We've been being the system.
Every time.
I just let you know how this shit just went over.
Just, oh, my cars are 34,000.
This niggins said a car left with $2,000.
2,000, brand new.
And you got to think about the niggas
who was really getting money back then.
Like, $1,000 was a lot to somebody
who really wasn't getting money.
And niggas who was really getting money,
$1,000 was like,
it was changing.
That's why Pimpin was pimping.
It was changing lives, people.
You know, I would give a bitch $5,000 back then.
I owned your bitch for at least three, four years.
Man, if you had $5,000, you can go buy a chick straight from her family.
Yeah, well, I'm taking her to California.
Well, bitch, get you back.
This man showed up with all this money.
He love you.
He loves you and your family.
Get your stuff.
You ain't ever gave us shit.
He come here and just give us money.
We don't even know him, but we love him.
Your mama cuss you out.
Got this nice man out.
He's waiting on you.
That's crazy.
Now that you can't even tell you bitch out to eat.
Like, bitch, I just spent all that money.
You still ain't going to give me that push?
I'm always bringing them holes back.
Like, bitch, don't you know Cadillacs with $3,000 back in the day?
You owe me and my great-great-granddad is a pussy.
Your great-great-grandmother owe my great-granddad is a pussy.
And they just went on down and trickle on to you.
Yeah.
Now give it to me.
Yeah.
So how the streets, so how the streets got mad?
messed up man was hammering the drugs the drug yeah the drugs really it fucked up to
the day too and then and then the drugs messed street up and then you had you know so uh now
before before the drug dealers now see when I always drug dealer oh I know it one yeah I mean
where the drugs come gambler what the druggler the gambler I know me I know me I would
have been I would have been I would have tried being a pimp but I know I'm a hustler
I'm a gambler.
I'd have been a smooth talk.
Ooh, niggily want to fight me.
You can talk.
Oh yeah, more definitely.
There's no question.
Oh, yeah.
I'm going in.
Like, hold up, everybody hold your horse and now.
This shit for the big show.
You sure you got your money.
Get his money.
Watch everybody.
Look, check the door.
Listen here.
It's a fair game.
Don't nobody get mad, but somebody gonna cry.
Let's do it.
You hear me?
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
You got a bait of men.
You got a bait of men because he's going down.
It's going down.
Y'all funny.
Yes, sir.
Yeah.
So, yeah, the drugs mess the streets up, man, you know.
But I'm going to tell you the first person that helped the streets out in the black neighborhood.
Or was the number man.
You know.
That's before they had to.
lottery. He was the
lottery. You know, it started by a black
woman. That's why he's seen that
picture of
with Dutch Shouts and
you know, and Bumpy Johnson,
you know, Bumby Johnson was
he was the muscle
for the woman who had invented
the number. The woman who had did
in New York.
No love, no recognition. They just
take it, just call it the lottery and
now they just get all out of goddamn money.
We don't get no respiration.
You know what I'm saying?
What it is?
I know it's round.
Respirations.
We don't get no respiration.
It's the same shit.
I just put an answer and I got a lisp.
It's like it crazy, man.
Yeah.
Your entire identity has been fabricated.
Your beloved brother goes missing without a trace.
You discover the depths of your mother's illness
the way it has echoed and reverberated throughout your life,
impacting your very legacy.
Hi, I'm Danny Shapiro, and these are just a few of the profound and powerful stories
I'll be mining on our 12th season of Family Secrets.
With over 37 million downloads, we continue to be moved and inspired by our guests
and their courageously told stories.
I can't wait to share 10 powerful new episodes with you,
stories of tangled up identities, concealed truths,
and the way in which family secrets almost over.
Always need to be told.
I hope you'll join me and my extraordinary guests for this new season of Family Secrets.
Listen to Family Secrets Season 12 on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Adventure should never come with a pause button.
Remember the movie pass era?
Where you could watch all the movies you wanted for just $9?
It made zero cents, and I could not stop thinking about it.
I'm Bridget Todd, host of the tech podcast, so there are no girls on the internet.
On this new season, I'm talking to the innovators who are left out of the tech headlines.
Like the visionary behind a movie pass, black founder Stacey Spikes,
who was pushed out of Movie Pass, the company that he founded.
His story is wild, and it's currently the subject of a juicy new HBO documentary.
We dive into how culture connects us.
When you go to France, or you go to England, or you go to Hong Kong,
those kids are wearing Jordans, they're wearing Kobe's shirt,
they're watching Black Panther.
And the challenges of being a Black founder.
Close your eyes and tell me what a tech founder looks like.
They're not going to describe someone who looks like me
and they're not going to describe someone who looks like you.
I created There Are No Girls on the Internet
because the future belongs to all of us.
So listen to There Are No Girls on the Internet on the IHurt Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Pretty Private with Ebeney,
the podcast where silence is broken and stories are set free.
I'm Ebeney.
I'll be sharing all new anonymous stories that would challenge your perceptions and give
you new insight on the people around you.
On Pretty Private, we'll explore the untold experiences of women of color who faced it all.
Childhood trauma, addiction, abuse, incarceration, grief, mental health struggles, and more,
and found the shrimp to make it to the other side.
My dad was shot and killed in his house.
Yes, he was a drug dealer.
Yes, he was a confidential informant, but he wasn't shot on the street corner.
He wasn't shot in the middle of a drug deal.
He was shot in his house, unarmed.
Pretty Private isn't just a podcast.
It's your personal guide for turning storylines into lifelines.
Every Tuesday, make sure you listen to Pretty Private from the Black Effect Podcast Network.
Tune in on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
and the number man sent the first kids to college
in the black neighborhood
because did nobody have no money going to talk?
You know, the number man had the money
and he sent the first kids to college.
So how do you become a number?
It was it just, number men was like the first hustle
or was it just?
No, number man didn't necessarily have to,
it was the first hustle.
That wasn't the first hustle.
I mean, prostitution, the oldest game at work.
But the number man, he could be a church-going man.
Numbers was accepted, you know, as to just a way it wasn't like no criminal activity.
I was seven, eight years old.
And my mama borrowed up a quarter, you know, and she said, take this cross street to Ms. Nellie's house and give that to her.
I go over there, Ms. Nellie got a stack of quarters and dollars saying over here.
I'm talking about, just saying 55, you know what I mean?
Money is tight, you know.
I'm looking.
It's like, I walks back home, I say, Mama, I said, what are they doing over there?
She said, oh, they got the number.
I say, the numbers.
I said, isn't that illegal?
She's all, boy, that's just a way of life.
So I accepted that
So she came up with a plan and said
You know what
I'm gonna do a drawing
Of a certain numbers
And you can
It's a dollar to put in
It's a quarter to put in
But if you win you get this certain amount
And she the one came up with that
A woman came up with that
You know put a penny would get you $5
Uh
A quarter
You know
we'll get you
a dollar gets you 500
you know it was
500 to 1 500 to a dollar
and so she had it
was through the races through the horse races
the number would come out
and there was the numbers that they were used
now various different states
had various different ways
that they did they did that
you know but in each major
city they had the numbers
Chicago, St. Louis, you know, Atlanta, you know, wherever, you know.
And they did, but the numbers was the first hustle,
but it didn't have to be a hustler who had the numbers.
Like I said, church-going guys,
but they're the first people to send people to college.
And then the mob wanted to take it over, right?
A mob in each state, you know, wanted to take it over.
the Ohio mob, Detroit mob, New York mob, you know.
So then they got it back.
And then they started doing business with the mob
because the mob had, they had the laundry, the money,
and the mob had the way to laundry the money.
So that's how the mob got back in.
And then the state took it over and said,
hey, we might go get some of that money.
Let's have a lottery ourselves.
That's what the government do
They just take it
And they just say
That's why
Like moonshining
And all that
Fuck it
We'll make the bill
And we'll make the money
Off of it
Oh we see you gambling on the street
No
We'll lock your ass up
Because we got casinos
Where you can gamble
Where you pay us
And gamble
And lose a lot
And we just take your money
Like god damn
Can we just have
Some that child
Can't control
Oh you want a small weed
Guess what
We're gonna lock a lot
Of you motherfuckers up
And then later on down the line
We're gonna make it legal
and where you combined from us.
How about that?
Cocaine, well, we tried, but it didn't work.
Heron, we put it out there, so that worked.
And before the drug era,
you might, a guy might get cut,
you know, stab in a fight or something like that.
That was bad, it wasn't a gun.
But you didn't hear by nobody.
Doing wise guys are getting shot.
Every now and then,
you heard about somebody getting shot.
Then when the drugs come in,
Folks who went to getting shot, falling like five, man.
The drugs really destroyed the whole thing.
I mean, the brotherhood that was amongst, you know what I mean,
you had some brotherhood, too, you know, amongst certain people.
You have brotherhood, you know.
And that was destroyed by the drug.
So nowadays, you know, you got guys,
they don't know nothing about having a word or nothing like that.
You know what I mean?
that's just crazy shit
I mean, you know, a word, what do you mean?
Everybody lying and keep
and crossing one another, you know.
Ain't no bond.
No, nobody's a word to law.
Ain't no word, ain't no word,
it ain't none of that.
That's just dead.
That's dead.
What's dead, it ain't dead.
It's just not that plentful.
It's not dead.
Because still there's people who've got word.
People who live by their word.
You got to be a man of principles.
You got some people that are finesse.
they can and it's over with it you know what I'm like people could really like my
world is long depending on my fuck with you and I you know what I mean my fault with you
my word is law because nowadays I'm trying to do better business so it's like because what
you put into the atmosphere you're gonna get back you know what I'm saying so I try to
I try to be kind and so if a motherfucker across me I'm like oh yeah it meant for him to get
slapped then yeah that was meant for him yeah yeah you should know
Yeah. See, I felt like I could have grew, but I knew I would have been on cocaine, though.
I knew, like, back then when money was money, I'm talking about, like, like you said,
like, niggas who was on the porch when he was locked up, and then you came home, and you was like,
what the fuck? Like, they was getting money. You know what I'm saying? Like, it was so much money back
then. But it was, but it was, in the beginning. It was structured.
Niggas really had blocks, and it was like, it was structured. You know what I'm saying? Like,
You just can't just come out.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, you got to be introduced.
Like, hey, you want to hustle?
Let me go introduce you to the nigger who owned this shit so he can.
I'm like, nigga, you want to, you want to hustle?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, who is you?
Who you just can't give you no pack?
Oh, I know your mama them.
So if you fuck up, you know, I'm going to your mama, right?
That niggles are telling.
I'm going to tell your mama that I'm going to kill her son if you don't get my shit.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, bad, I would have been a crazy hustler on cocaine.
You remember the picture of Godfather, right?
You know, they were talking about
the reason they shot the Godfather
because the Godfather didn't want,
he didn't want drugs.
But everybody else
they wanted drugs.
They said, give it to the darkies.
We don't do drugs in this family.
Give it to the niggas.
They, you know what I'm saying?
They're only animals anyway.
You know what I mean?
And so they gave us that stuff
and we started acting like animals.
Exactly what they wanted us to do.
Yeah, you know what I mean?
And then it got over, you know, today's children.
And when they got to their children, it got, now it's the problem.
How they get it from the niggas?
What?
You gave it to us?
The player presence.
The player commandments, man.
Talking to the OG.
We see you in here with this fresh-ass suit on.
We know what's going on.
We know what's going on.
You got to talk to the young player.
It might be listening to this show.
A Tuesday.
There ain't no Bible started going on on a Tuesday.
You got to leave some game on the 85 times.
Unless you go to a cathedral.
Nobody's going to know cathedral.
Well, I'll leave it like this here because, you know, actually.
Say something to the young Jesus.
I'm not, you know, I'm a businessman now.
You say a car.
Who?
You say a car?
No, but I will.
Now, but let me say this here.
You know, this is what I can say to the young ye,
to the business person, to, you know,
because, you know, to the one percent,
you're all the same.
A niggas are a nigger.
Okay?
Ain't no difference, you know,
that you're a college nigger,
then you, you know, you're just a nigger to the one of the same.
Okay?
So, but I leave the brothers, brothers, sisters with this here.
You get out of life which you put into it.
It's like a bank account.
If you put $25 and 70 in there, you can't get $25 and $80.
sent out. You can only get $25,000 and $70. You can only get what you put in. So in life,
whatever you put in in life, that's what you can get back, you know. And, you know, when people say
this can't be done and that can't be done, I don't care what it is. You know, you can do
whatever that is
that you want to do
if you put that in your mind
that's what you want to do
and you make
and you say
by hell
or high water
you know I'm going to make
this happen
and you take it
one day
at a time
it's just like eating an elephant
how can you eat an elephant
one bite at a time
that's the only
the way you can eat it because it's too big so if you go to thinking about the big picture
you know that's that's too much think about where you at you know man when I started off
man the data told me did have told me that I'd wind up doing you know some some things that I did
man I'd have told I might have ran away that might have scared me myself man because I wasn't
thinking about none of that all I was thinking about is trying to
to learn the game or trying to learn the business you know I ain't well I wouldn't worry
about the money see if you worry about the money you put in a cart before the
horse you know what I'm saying that's a bad thing well that's a terrible thing
when you do that you know so those are you know some of the universal principles
and you can apply them to anything that you want what would you say to people who
caught up in the money caught up in the money yeah what would you say to know well I
say this here through experience I'm gonna speak from experience I ain't gonna speak
about nothing I read you know I'm gonna tell you when you get caught up in the
money it's like being caught up when you got
this pretty good.
I mean, she is fine as wine in the summertime, I'm talking about it.
And you caught up in it, but she ain't worth two cents.
Right.
And you know she ain't worth too simple, but you called up in it anyway, you know.
The only way, you know, you're going to have to let her go.
And when you call up in the money, you're going to have to let that go.
and get caught up in what
gets the money
not caught up in the money
the money dead money ain't
you know it's money
it's just you know
it doesn't look else
he thought I was gonna flash
he about
he's about the game up
got them old hinnets
don't give me that blue shit
I don't want that blue ass shit
yeah
give me the Harriet Tettman Twinnies
now we just get game
uh huh
What would you say about the women?
What's the O.G take on the women?
The one that don't listen.
Just in general.
Bitch, you got to shut up.
Well, now, I'm going to have to be fair.
I'm going to have to be fair to the women now.
Of course, be fair to the women now.
But we're going to get some game from the O.G.
Okay.
Now, it's been a parent.
shift.
Talk to them.
Meaning that
we all,
at this particular
point, this particular junction,
we all have to come together now.
Man, the woman,
the young,
the old,
the white,
the black,
you know, because
you got some shit that's happening
to the planet,
you know, that it's going to take
us. I mean,
I can't say, man, you know, they're talking about two sons
and something going to happen and this and that and that.
I mean, you hear all kinds of stuff.
All kinds of stuff.
You know what I'm saying?
You know, now, I don't take this here as just being something
that's being just said, you know?
So it takes all of us to come together
because if enough forces come together,
you can neutralize anything.
Let me say that again.
If enough forces come together, you know, you can neutralize anything.
That means if something getting ready to drop on this planet,
if enough forces come together, we can move it another way.
That's our powerful.
That's how powerful we are.
Particularly, you know what I'm saying, when we, you know,
when we offer them drugs and, you know, we got a,
You know, we're in tune with a woman, the woman in tune with the man, you know what I mean?
You know, so it ain't about, you know, it ain't about being against, about the women and all that.
I mean, you know, a woman, all she really want to know is a guy, is he really with her?
You know, is he really with me?
You know, I mean, when it gets real thick.
Can you lie and say, yeah, when you're not?
Can you lie?
Yeah.
But lies always catch up.
Yeah?
You know what I'm saying?
Lies always catch up with you.
I mean, why lie when the truth would do?
Mm-hmm.
Let me say it again.
I always say that too, though.
Why lie when the truth would do?
Truth is the truth, but you can't go around.
Like, I hate when motherfuckers act like that truth and the truth.
Like, if I'm telling you the truth, that's just what it is.
Then you're like, why?
I'm like, bitch, I ain't no back up for the truth.
It's the truth.
It's the truth.
It is.
Two plus two is fault.
Why?
Bitch, it is.
Ain't no way around.
Mathematic.
Five minus one.
Yeah.
Mathematic.
Mm-hmm.
You know.
So, uh, what else?
We get me.
I mean, this church.
Hey, I'm learning.
Hey, I'm learning myself.
You know, I'm just as happy sitting there talking to y'all.
Because you've been had this shit just bawled up in.
You just for the longer.
You just been wanting to tell somebody.
You've been around.
You don't want to tell somebody.
I'm looking for a platform, really.
We're out here.
You come through and hollet us whenever you want to.
Hey, I'm going to have y'all come on my show.
What's the name of your show?
What's the name of your show?
Let me see what it's going to do.
He's talking about what it's going to be.
Hell, I thought you already had it.
No, I said, no.
Not yet, but I'm going to get one.
We're coming on your show, too.
But I'm going to be here again.
I'm going to be here again.
Most definitely.
I'm fucking with it.
I love this here.
I got so many things to say.
Well, Sam, hell.
We hear the listen.
Let me tell you where rap started.
Well, tell them where rap started.
Let me get some little feedback on that.
Y'all, y'all kick it to me.
Where did it start a long time?
You're going to be mad if I tell you when rap started for me.
Come on.
Where is started for me with Eminem's.
You're going to be mad.
Well, that's just a pen.
I fuck with Eminem.
He's the reason why I fuck with rap.
I ain't going to lie to you.
You're talking about when it started, started, right?
Man, slavery, man.
They've been, no.
Slavery, man.
Rap been out since the 20s.
Slavery, man.
It's been out since the 20s.
It's been out.
They was talking about how when the fuck they were going to get the fuck out on this field.
That's why I say it's been out.
It's been so, it would be so unique.
They were like, look, we can't talk about it.
Let's put it in the quilts.
Rap been out since.
We're going to draw this shit up.
They were like, look, see how nice this shit is.
Yeah, nigg.
This is the master's house.
We're going to go through this shit right here.
And we're going to go through the backyard.
You see how green that is over here?
This is the backyard right here.
Now, look.
Right.
Mm-hmm.
I-da-da-we-riding.
Yeah, they've been rapping ever since niggas been speaking English.
They've been doing that shit.
For real, not.
When the white football were like, damn, that shit sounds good.
Yeah, this is an escape playing, bitch.
What you talk about?
That's that song you're singing.
Yeah.
Which one you mean?
It's called leaving tomorrow.
Fuck you mean.
Call out of this bitch this week.
this weekend. It's called Joe
gonna die because he's slower. Now let's see what he's say. Where's
thought? Oh, but y'all, I mean, y'all
y'all, y'all hitting the nail
hitting the nail on the head. I mean, you said
the 20s, that's, you know,
that's getting back there with it.
Well, that's when they started recording
music. I think that was around the time
they started letting black people record music.
Well, I mean, well, they started rapping. They were
rapping on the corners, you know.
It was real, real hustlers was talking about
you know, what other real hustlers was
doing right you know and they they uh particularly they they got uh they would have toces you know
they would tell toasts right you know about uh what dudes were doing you know like you might hear a guy
rap rap now but you know he ain't really rapping about nothing he really did you know what
you know what I'm saying but back then they rapped about what they did right so they had it uh
it's just like just one rap it's called uh monkey deep the shit that never hit the streets
and hit the streets
He was the first underground artist
Monkey D
Yeah monkey D
First mixed tape
He
He was out of Spokane Washington
Right
Spokane Washington
Did they change the name of Spokane Washington?
No
No
Oh okay
So
And uh
And uh
Called Monkey D
Monkey D
Nicknames was horrible back in the day
You said he looked just like a monkey
Yeah
Yeah, here's out of toast women.
It said, now, in every town there's one around,
so my story won't be something new.
I'll tell you this one's slow, so everyone will know.
If you check, you'll find this truth.
Out of the old spokane, a little man who was ugly as a human could be,
he had ears like a donkey, he had a face like a monkey.
He was a horrible sight to see.
Each morning when he went walking, the neighborhood would be talking,
and they would be laughing as he passes by.
But he brushes his felt, and he laughs to himself,
and he keeps his head held high.
He's never too proud to say hello with a bow and tip his hat with the smile.
He said, Good morning, Miss Kate.
Let me close your gate.
And how's your daughter, Bell?
He said, to another, how's your dear mother?
I hope she's getting along swell.
He said, pretty, Miss Lou, how nice to see you.
I'm glad your sickness is past.
Along with your wealth, you are a fine picture of health.
And your daughter really has class.
So he pepped up his face and he turned the corner.
He moved out of sight, right?
And the first one he's seen was Pretty Brenda Lee.
He said, baby, this money better be right.
She said, ugly one, there's 10 grand in this sack,
and there's a grand in that pack.
If not, there's not a one.
So he went out of town, right?
That's why he was out of town.
They chumped up some charges on it, right?
When come back, they say,
on the day of the tribe,
there was Cadillacs for miles
lying before the courtroom door.
Said, the town became afraid
because they thought it was a raid.
They had never seen so many horrors.
said the judge on the bench
he began to flinch because he knew
something had gone wrong instead of a fool
this cat was real cool
and he was humming and grinning a song
they say prosecutor please
stand and read the charge against this man
he said you honor
the prosecutor said you honor my case
is in order and my witness is your daughter
without her I haven't got a clue
so
so dad
some is telling me
that you is monkey d
That was him.
This is the 85 South show.
You never know what might happen.
You never know.
We got somebody for everybody in your family.
Fuck, yeah, man.
We're covering every age bracket.
Don't make me bring Uncle Tyrone to your family reunion.
He's coming with me.
And get all your Auntie retirement money.
He's coming.
What fuck you talk about?
Type of nigga that had a deed to some land.
No, I'm not really like that.
He ain't, but I am.
God damn it.
Fuck that.
I ain't shit.
I'm bringing Uncle Ty.
I don't want to be.
I'm bringing Uncle Ty.
I ain't shit and I don't want to be.
Fuck it.
Yeah, you.
You're out of option.
Yeah, you something.
Fuck that.
I ain't shit because I love the feeling of doing wrong.
That's right.
God damn it.
That's why we partners.
We're too, we're just like two bank robbers.
We ain't going to be shit together.
Flah, you ain't going to be shit.
I ain't going to be shit.
I ain't going to be shit.
Make a toast.
nigga, let's get together and not be shit.
We ought to do an ain't shit-ass show.
Girl told me, why are you like that?
We said, because it was fun.
We was close to naming this to the ain't shit show.
We were like, no, we want some sponsorship money.
Let's call it 85 South.
It was, I'd be damn.
Yeah, but if you say 85 South show, it's the ain't shit show.
It's the, is the changing.
Right.
Chinese love.
Yeah, yeah.
It's that new shit, man.
I mean, what if y'all would have had podcasts back in the day?
They would have been telling on this.
Yeah.
Explain it.
What is podcast?
You don't know what the podcast is?
It's like the radio station without the music.
You know the shit they be talking at the radio station.
You're not getting a cassette tape at the end of this.
I'm just letting you know.
We're going to sing you the shit.
The shit is going to be on something called the internet.
I already told them who is for this podcast right here?
You're going to get at the end.
So where can I find the tape?
This podcast right here is for women that's two months pregnant and already single.
That's who this podcast is for.
He ain't got a tape.
Like, nah, dad.
Well, him, take this tape.
This is a nigga named Monkey Dee.
People who break up at the pregnancy announcement.
That's who listened to this podcast.
Okay.
I got it.
Shit lit.
Hell yeah.
Now you know he's resting up there.
He's like, okay, okay.
I got it.
You don't be out here messing with them young girl, do you?
Don't be letting them trick you.
You know they're trying to find somebody to pay their rent and shit.
No, I stop that.
You stopped.
You shouldn't have started.
Yeah, well, it was fun while I last.
But you know, when you.
When you got the OG man, he's messing with a young girl.
Let me give you a game on that.
That's what I want.
See, if he ain't got something for her to do,
she's going to have something for him to do.
Right.
And then when she got something for you to do, boy, you're in truck.
I know what you?
You're in naturally hot water.
But if you got something for her to do, you know, now you might make it.
Now, other than that, she got something for you to do.
You're going to be following her coming up.
You gonna be coming up and knocking them.
Hey, man, is Sally over there?
They don't do that no, man.
You can't knock on the nigga dough asking as they want.
What you want here, man?
You know what I'm looking for, is she over here?
She in the bed back there.
She in the bed, right?
No, she ain't over here, man.
Why you keep knocking on my door for?
You don't have, you don't wait for him, man.
You know?
Now, she's back there now.
ain't nothing no worse than an old man chasing after a young girl if you're chasing
now that's sad that's a sad sight to see hey look here ain't nothing more worse than that
especially you ride up slow and you got your glasses on and you're looking
look at this bitch she think i don't know but now if you got now if you got bank you ever had one
leave you before a young yeah no i'm just a woman you ever have a woman leave you you'd be
fucked up. Tell the truth. Don't keep it
playing. Yeah, yeah. Everybody
gonna be messed up. Talk to the fellas
who might be watching this. How you deal with
that shit? Who going through it right now.
Who going through it right now.
Thinking about going back. They're watching this because
they fucked up.
And shooting her. Hoping we got some life for him.
Well, listen, let me tell you. You got to let it go, right? Don't get
caught. But if you
if you messed up like that, man, you know,
I mean, you got to understand that, hey, this
happens to everybody. And it ain't the end of the world.
To the best of them. You know. So, you know,
that you're doing that crazy or nothing like that, you know,
uh, just,
just for one day,
just for the day,
for the rest of the night, what time is this night?
Okay, so we're at one o'clock.
Right.
Just for the day, you know,
just get yourself together, just for the day.
Don't worry about it.
He's saying jack off, man.
Jack off, man.
Just don't worry about that bitch and jack off.
Just for the day now.
Now, tomorrow, you can say, hey, I'm feeling to run behind that woman.
I'm going to do whatever she wants me to do, you know, whatever.
But today, I ain't calling her.
I ain't doing this.
That she's going to feel a whole lot of better.
Just for the day.
One day at a time.
Then when tomorrow come, you say the same thing.
Look at it.
Just for the day.
I don't care what happened.
I'm talking about it's my butt fall off.
I ain't going to mess with this.
not going that way just for today right you know I mean because you know it
know it happens anybody that's just life you know yeah I just say I just say I just
say I say the same thing for the women on the flip side I don't want to you know
I don't want to say well he didn't say nothing about the women the same thing go
for that don't think about me just for the day at a time I did you wrong you say I'm
gonna mess with him tomorrow but today I ain't thinking about him today I ain't
gonna give no thought today it's one day at a time and that
That's what happened, you know.
That's how you take care of that.
That's crazy.
That's how you conclude.
One day at a time, you can do anything.
Day to Five South Shore.
That's just, we're going to take it one day at a time.
We're going to bring Uncle Ty right back.
That is, man.
We're going to bring, and we appreciate you for blessing us with your knowledge, my brother,
because I have now picked up lady of the evening.
No, that's, that's going to be my new shit.
I feel like that was a dope-ass intro for you.
For the rest of the show.
And from here on out, if I say lady of the evening,
the followers, I already know.
Most definitely.
The ladies of the evening.
This is the lady of the evening.
Yeah.
And they're going to have a ball, and I appreciate you guys.
No, that was just your intro.
We're going to put this shit out.
And once you see the feedback and you see how you got them questions right there,
we're going to make sure that we get all that shit.
You got an Instagram?
They're going to be like, man, when y'all going to bring Uncle Tyback, man?
Ask that nigga what kind of cat like he had.
They hang on the details on this show.
Now, after this show, you're going to have to get on social media.
They're going to ask.
You're going to have to get Instagram, Facebook.
Y'all going to walk with to it now.
Hey, yeah.
You're going to be surprised.
You're going to be like, she doesn't send me some pussy pictures in the deal.
That's what they're doing these days.
I be down.
Yeah, that's what they do.
I'm going to click like.
I like that one.
Yeah, man.
This is the 85 South show.
You come kick it with us whenever the hell you want to, man.
That's what we do.
Well, I'll definitely be back.
That nigga going to buy a computer
ain't going to never lead that big.
He's not going to have a walkwater
every way he goes.
Nigga, I got to keep this motherfucker with me.
Ain't going to tell her.
Where ain't I'm going to get a pussy?
He ain't going to be telling all the little.
Yeah, I'm on there with him.
Me in D.C., all of us.
We on there.
We're on there.
You're going to be called a little like we're in real father.
Pull it up.
Pull it up.
You know, fly and loose?
Yeah, they're my nephew.
And we're on there.
Pull it up.
So when did this be at?
When did they add it?
We're putting this shit out Friday.
Payday.
We come out on payday.
Yeah, we come back.
We come out on payday.
That's why we drop on Friday.
We drop every Friday.
Drop some bombs on this bitch.
Do we got some bombs?
We just got a hit.
85 South Show.
Payday comedy event every Friday.
Coming live.
Locally accepted.
Liquors, check cash in places.
Everywhere.
Camp Creek.
Camelton Road, East Side, Decatur, West Side of Atlanta, Marietta, Winnet County, Riverdale,
over there by the airport, all up and down, old national.
Nigger, not only are we in Atlanta, we are locally accepted in every neighborhood.
Anywhere that nays got some ass trays on the porch, full of black and mouths, new ports, roaches, blunts, everything.
We in here, we in this bitch like a fetus, 80-5 South show.
Nigger, this whole episode smelled like weed.
Like all the rest double.
An old coochie.
That's what you do when you own your own shit.
You could just drop a commercial whenever the fuck you want to.
Hey, this is the 85 South show.
Yeah.
Wear a condom.
Pick the can.
No, naked city.
We're doing naked city.
Naked city.
Naked city.
Meat to meet to meet.
Welcome to naked sex.
Pullout game.
You want to have that coochie on your dick.
Uncle Tyro.
Come into a theater near you.
Naked city.
You can catch Uncle Tyrone on Young Jesus' new album Naked City.
85 South Show, man, all we do is talk shit. We're out here.
85.
You.
85.
85.
85.
8.
8.
5.
Thank you so much for blessing us.
Hey, man, I appreciate it.
I mean, fun.
Yeah, we do.
Uncle Ty, your little lady, friend, left for you, man.
Yeah, yeah, she did.
That's her, uh, she, I think she, did she leave her?
She ought to.
She might still be out, though.
Yeah.
She left, left, left.
Uncle Tyrone ain't funny, man.
She don't leave without asking big dad.
Yeah, well.
That's, uh, that's a, uh, that's a friend's, um.
She ain't gone, is she?
Young lady, she's gone?
Join IHeart Radio and Sarah Spain
in celebrating the one-year anniversary
of I-Heart Women's Sports.
With powerful interviews and insider analysis,
our shows have connected fans
with the heart of women's sports.
In just one year,
the network has launched 15 shows
and built a community united by passion.
Podcasts that amplify the voices of women in sports.
Thank you for supporting IHeart women's sports
and our founding sponsors,
Elf Beauty, Capital One, and Novartis.
Just open the free IHeart app
and search IHeard women's sports to listen now.
I knew I wanted to obey and submit,
but I didn't fully grasp for the rest of my life what that meant.
For My Heart Podcasts in Rococo Punch,
this is The Turning, River Road.
In the woods of Minnesota,
a cult leader married himself to 10 girls
and forced them into a secret life of abuse.
But in 2014, the youngest escaped.
Listen to The Turning River Road
on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Pretty Private with Ebeney, the podcast where silence is broken and stories are set free.
I'm Ebeney, and every Tuesday I'll be sharing all new anonymous stories that would challenge your perceptions and give you new insight on the people around you.
Every Tuesday, make sure you listen to Pretty Private from the Black Effect Podcast Network.
tune in on the IHeartRadio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
This is an IHeart podcast.