Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I listen to the Black Guy You Tips podcast because
Rod and Caring are hot.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Hey, welcome to another episode of the Black Autels podcast.
I'm your host Rod, joined as always by my co
host Karen, and we're live on a Monday night, ready
to get you some quick, down and dirty podcast and
find us everywhere that you get podcasts. The official weapon
of the show is folding chair and the unofficial sport
(00:38):
a bullet ball Extreme Extreme Extreme. You will see the
link later on in the show notes. If you're listening
on audio wherever you get your podcasts, it should be
in the show notes. I have to figure out. I
still gotta do the HTTP thing on YouTube. But and
if you're live in the chat right now, you can
(00:59):
see it in the chat. But our live show tickets
are officially on sale.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
Hey, our own sale.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
You can buy them now. There's two different price tiers.
There's the VIP package, which you'll get a chance to
get a photo opportunity with me and Karen, and we'll
we'll also have signed posters to give the people. Yeah,
like a quick little meet and greet. It'll be I
think it like I think the shows at seven that
(01:28):
starts at like five thirty, probably wrap it up by
six thirty. But yeah, we have fifty of those tickets available,
so there's limited number. If somehow that number starts selling
out or start then we'll we can talk to the
venue about up in the number, you know, like up
(01:49):
in the number of VIP tickets.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
But that's totally up to how many we sell. And
if it's worth that I liked I like the spot intimate.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
It is a is a. We're in a smaller theater
than last time, last two times. Last time they had
us in the theater, Kevin on stage, So I was like,
I don't even know why y'all did that to y'allselves.
I guess it was just calls opportunity costs. But the second,
the second, the most important thing too is if you're
people that want virtual tickets, we're working on the option
(02:18):
for virtual tickets. They almost never have them. When we start,
they'll have We'll fight to get you guys some kind
of way to watch it on zoom or you know,
watch it live, as we've done in the past. So
if you can't make it that, hopefully that option will
be available. I'm talking to the same people we talked
to last time. It's always been available before, and I'm
(02:39):
hopeful that we can do the same thing this time,
but yeah, different being different room in the same thing.
But we're looking forward to it very excited. That's February
twenty eighth. Jail Covan will be there. I didn't ask
him about doing any meet and greet stuff, so I
don't even know if that's a thing. I'll text them
(03:00):
like yeah to see to see it. I mean, it's
it's it's it's fine either way. Yeah, but uh yeah, man, Jail,
I can't wait. Man, Jayl's gonna be there. You know,
he's gonna be funny. He's probably gonna do fifteen to
twenty minutes before we come out. Then you know we're
gonna be doing that. Uh and and uh no Mary,
no hotel info, all that stuff. Everybody gotta do. They
(03:21):
gotta do their own thing.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
This time.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
We didn't get like a event planner and go through
like you know, all that stuff. We're just we're just
gonna be at the venue. We're gonna do the meet
and greet, we're gonna do the live show, then we're
gonna be out. But yeah, I'm still I'm looking very
much forward to it. And uh, people have been asking
about it, so uh and most importantly, guys, most importantly, Okay,
(03:44):
we paid for all this out of pocket, all right,
yes we did, so like our like, this isn't a
sponsored event as of yet, they could become one if
sponsors step up and want to. Uh, but we put
the money down for the venue all out of our
own pocket. This is why stuff like the Black Fridays
sale is important. This is why stuff like y'all's premium
(04:06):
membership and shit like that is important, because we really
could not make these moves without having some money in
our bank account for our business. And essentially, we're hoping
to sell enough tickets to recoup what we put in,
and that's how we determine if we make a profit.
And it's also how venues like this determine if they're
(04:27):
gonna work with us. Again, it's also like how we
can afford to pay Jail Covid and once again, like
we're like, we're paying him hoping that people sell we
sell enough tickets that this is a work for our venture.
And I know Jail would say, why would you do
something like that that's never worked out for me? Well, Jail,
I have more faith in you than you having yourself.
(04:48):
And I feel like we're gonna the blackout tips. People
gonna come through. We're gonna have a great time.
Speaker 3 (04:52):
I think they're gonna come through. People are gonna come
and show up and show out, particularly people that are
in Challing in the surrounding area. We always have people
to fly down if they can make it. And also
we know for those of you that can't, they're gonna
do virtual tickets. So we're definitely looking forward to that.
We'll let y'all know, like we're saying, when the virtual
tickets gonna sale. But I am really really big because
(05:13):
this is something we've planned, we've been planning working on
for a good little while. So I am really really excited.
It is in February, February to twenty eighth. I am
ready and I'm excited to see everybody.
Speaker 2 (05:23):
Yeah, that February twenty eighth is a Friday. It's Friday,
seven pm, Bloomahal Center for Performing Arts. Like I said, man,
it should be a really fun time. We always have
a great time at these events. You know, I haven't
talked to Justin yet, but he'll probably be there. Oh yeah,
I'm thinking about trying to find a way to also
get Jail to be on the podcast with us as well,
(05:45):
because I think, you know, even if we have to
rotate to see it out for a second, I think,
you know, last couple of times we had comedians there,
and I realized the last time, I was like, why
don't we just have them come on stage and do
part of the podcast. They're always friends and guests on
the sholve, So figure all that out, guys. But at
any rate, man, thank you everybody, and I can't wait
to see you Stage Door Theater, February twenty eighth, seven pm.
Speaker 3 (06:10):
Be there.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
All right, Karen, you know what I gotta ask. Do
you have any banter?
Speaker 3 (06:16):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (06:16):
I know you do. All Do you have any.
Speaker 4 (06:21):
Talk to me?
Speaker 2 (06:23):
Do you have any talk to me? Do you have
any banter? Banter? Banter?
Speaker 3 (06:32):
Banter?
Speaker 2 (06:32):
Banter?
Speaker 3 (06:34):
Do you have any banter? Talk to me?
Speaker 2 (06:46):
Do you have any banter? Banter? All right, Karen, give
me some banter real quick.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
The banter is basically the race did we did Saturday.
That's gonna be my banter. I actually had a great
time doing the five k because we really didn't get
to talk about it last show because it was basically
a feedback show. So now we have we are in
this spot, but we can actually talk about uh, the
five K. And it was a fun experience. This was
(07:13):
our first one. Your mama did it with us, She's
done it before, so you know, but this is like
brand new, uh for me. Like I said, at first,
I was looking at y'all like child, No, I see
a K and numbers. I was like, that's far, Like,
what is we talking about here? No, that's far. Initially
I thought I would look at like but I once
(07:33):
am I ready explained, I was like, Okay, that's not
It's not as far as I thought, and I don't
think it's gonna be as as bad as I thought
it was gonna be. And so that kind of calmed
my nerves down where I was like, you know what,
I'm gonna go ahead and do it, and I'm glad
I did. I was nervous and stuff like that because
(07:55):
I didn't know what to expect and you know, what
was really gonna happen or anything like that. And we
you know, we got up that your mom came and
got us. We got up that morning parked and you know,
they had all the people there. They was giving out
breakfast like but you know Banana's Gonoda bars and things
like that. Uh, they had like a speaker that was
like hyping people up, so they was playing I think
(08:17):
that was the DJ oh the dj Okay. They was
hyping people up playing music and things like that, you know,
and it was really cold. This was They was like,
this was the coldest day ever. We've been doing this
twelve years, so it was really cold that morning.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
It was like twenty degrees when we started, twenty two degrees.
Some wasn't really up yet, just started coming up. And uh,
they told me today like something like eleven hundred people
signed up for it. And when I got there, what
I was We got there like an hour forty five
(08:50):
minutes to an hour before it started. And in my mind,
I was like, I don't know if we need to
be there at early, but I think Karen to my mom,
wanted to get there at early. And it did. The
parking lot got pretty full. It wasn't it never got
all the way full because a lot of people seem
like they cross cracked across the street we walked over
or something. But yeah, it was cool, you know. We
(09:11):
didn't race it like it like it starts promptly at eight,
and there's some people that are there at the like
when the gun goes off, and they just like take off,
like they had people that finished in like fifteen seventeen minutes.
Speaker 3 (09:22):
Yes, I was. I was like, y'all going five five
minutes a mile? I said, y'all was moving it.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
Yeah, So it kind of depends on, like, you know.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
The deliverable of the person. I was like, yeah, y'all.
I was like, y'all doing this, y'all, this is warm
up for y'all.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
Yeah, but man, it was. It was so fun, such
a good time. I we all walked it, so it
wasn't like we was out there, you know, trying to
change the world or nothing. And I was determined I
was going to walk it. I had been walking. I've
been walking for a few months now, well for like
(10:03):
two months, three months now where I walk three miles.
You know. It's funny because I started this year just
when I well actually a couple of years ago. But
when I started walking at the beginning, when I got
a trainer this year, she would be like, you know,
just go out and walk, you know, twenty minutes, go
out and walk, you know, half a mile. This just
don't matter whatever. And now you know, I walked pretty
(10:28):
much three miles a couple of times a week, and
you know, I know people that do more than that.
But I'm just looking at my progress that you know,
I went from doing like under a mile or a
bottle mile to three miles in the in the process
of this year, and who knows where I'll be next
year stuff, So you know, I was just looking at
(10:49):
it like that. I didn't look at anybody else's time.
I wasn't really trying to compare myself out of when
you get done with the race, they see you your
time and your age group and what place did you finish,
because to some people that means something to.
Speaker 3 (11:01):
Them, Yeah it is. And my thing was, I'm just
really glad that I finished the race. And I'm tell
you right now, I'm very thankful for your mom because
me and your mom kind of walked together, and that
was kind of my motivation because I was like, I know,
I'm not gonna be that fast and I'm not gonna
be that quick, but it's something I want to start
and finish. And we did about twenty minutes a mile
(11:23):
by nineteen twenty minutes a while my watch was on
it my watch, we would just be walking. Off of sudden,
my Apple Watch started talking out loud. I was like,
what is it saying. It's like, oh, it's tracking me.
It was like, you've done about nineteen point something, you know,
minutes a mile. I was like, oh okay, and all
of the rings was ringing around and stuff. I actually
had a good time. And the one thing I did
(11:45):
like about it is that we got to cut through
neighborhoods where I'm just driving and I don't really get
to see the neighborhood. So it was really beautiful cutting
through these neighborhoods where people had like their houses all
decorated with like Christmas decorations. And I think one family
got out there with their kids and stuff and they
was cheering everybody on, and like every so many probably
(12:06):
certain mile markers they had like volunteers they would kind
of root you on, and people that would kind of
point you in the right direction, and some spots they
had police officers and stuff. So you know, I felt
safe the whole time. And we had a really really.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
Uh we had families that some people set up chairs
to watch everybody that were people that, and then the
other thing it was the rein there like wrong or whatever,
and so people they have a costume contest too, where
you can dress up in Christmas costumes and they give
you a hoodie as part of just signing up. But
(12:42):
you know, people was out there wearing like rain their
outfits and running around with costumes and and all kinds
of stuff. They had a bunch of Christmas displays. It
took a couple of pictures and stuff. I had a
sweater that a hoodie that I wore that's a it's
a Gremlins hoodie that looked like I have I have
a Magua gizmo on my like I'm carrying a gizmo.
(13:04):
It was a big hit. Everybody just kept complimenting my
hoodie even when I was walking past the volunteers and stuff.
They but like, I like that hoodie. And people was like,
you know, I've never seen the Grimlins holiday hoodie before,
and I was like, yeah, I'm definitely what it's a
few more times for the holiday season over, But yeah,
I you know, I enjoyed that part of it. It
(13:26):
was an awkward moment where like the person that did
my introductory like sign up to the YMCA for my
physical trainer and stuff. Her name is like Aisha, and
I had forgotten her name because like, I see her
all the time, but we don't always talk, and obviously
if I'm not in her office, it's not like I
met her one time that we talked and I could
really remember her name, but other than that, it's just like, hey, by,
(13:49):
you know, how you doing type of thing. And so
she came over and was like, you know, you know,
speaking and stuff, and then she was like I was like, oh,
my wife is here, my mom is here. She's like yes,
the podcast and all that stuff. And then I'm like
do I ask her what her name is? Or do
I just pretend like it's not a big deal. And
I just bit the bullet and was like, this is
(14:10):
my wife, Karen, is my mom Judy? And also what
was your name again? And I did feel like it
was a little judgment. I felt like she looked at
me like a little bit like you don't remember my name?
And I'm like, ah, we don't talk that, we don't
talk about our names. We just be talking, talking regularly talking.
I got a lot of people like that, but I just,
you know, I was like whatever, it's better. I'll remember
(14:33):
it now because it's this awkward moment. I'm not sure
she listens to the podcast, but I remember you know
her name forever for now since I didn't know it
that one time. So yeah, it was very that was cool.
At the end, they give you a medal and uh,
you know, uh the medal is like like it looked
(14:53):
like an Olympic medal. We took pictures with it, biting
the medal like they did at the Olympics. Karen wanted
to take that picture. I did.
Speaker 3 (15:00):
I did. And also, you know, the thing is because
we wentn't like doing like a marathon marathon. We were
doing a five k. I didn't know what we were
going to get medals or not. So when we gotten
it end they gave you a medal, I kind of
got emotional. I was like, oh, because it was like
(15:20):
an accomplishment. It was like here you go for actually
doing the task. And I was like, oh, that's why
they give people this, because it was like all of
a sudden, the accomplishment. I was like, I actually particularly
with it. Be in my first one, I was like,
I actually did this and I started it and I
finished it and I made it all the way through
(15:42):
and I didn't take no breaks and I didn't take
no stops, and I was like yay. And so for me,
I felt like a kid when you crossed that line
and they gave you that metal, I was like yay.
You know, in my brain, I was so happy. That's
why I was like, hey, I'm a bike this like
this might as well be my Olympic gold Metal. I
(16:02):
accomplished this.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
Yeah, And they're doing another one in like March, and
my mom was like, we should kind of make it
our thing. Maybe sign up for that one too, So
we'll probably sign up for that. And I'm glad my
mom came to because you know, I walk a lot
now and I'm not fast, but you know, part of
me was like I wonder how fast I can do it.
(16:25):
And it was also cold as shit, it was, and
so my mom kind of kept caring company and walked
in the back and was like just they talked a
lot we did. When I walk, I don't. I can't
do the walking and talking. I never could, so like,
I put my headphones on and just walk. I don't
even know if my time would look like if I
stopped to talk or you know, walked and tried to
(16:45):
chat at the same time.
Speaker 3 (16:46):
I'm used to doing that at work.
Speaker 2 (16:48):
When women can do it, women have an extra long
it's not it's just a it's a DNA thing, you know.
Look it up, Sean. I'm sure can write in about it.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
Yeah, but we were walking and talking about the trees
and shit, were talking about everything. It just the walking.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
Yeah. I just turned on like some podcasts and some
music and just walked. And I've made my best time
ever for that distance is now. It's not a great
time compared to to other people, but it was a
good time for me. And I think part of the
reason I made a good time was because it was cold,
Like I just was like, I just need to keep
(17:23):
walking to this is over. Like my hands started warming
up the longer I was walking.
Speaker 3 (17:27):
Yes, and the sun came up, which made it easier.
And by the time Roger met us, we ended up
having like a reindeer things upside out here And I said,
where y'all get that from? It was a lady randomly
walking and she was just handing out the little things
to go upside your head. We passed her, she was like,
y'all want what I say? Sure, and so we had
(17:48):
a good time. I could tell y'all my stuff I was.
I played seven hundred and seventy ninth out of one thousand,
one hundred, one hundred and eighteen. I finished in one hour,
in one minute, in twelve seconds. I did it about
nineteen zero point forty two minutes a mile. And my
(18:10):
gender I placed four hundred thirty six out of six
hundred and forty eight in my age group which is
forty five to forty nine, and age group place I
was eightieth out of one hundred and ten and age
group gender place I was fifty first of seventy four.
So I did good. It wouldn't matter if I came
(18:32):
in last. Bitch. I started and I finished it, So
I think I did pretty good for my first time.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
Yeah, nah, I mean we all did good. And I
think also afterwards we went out to get some breakfast
because you know, I didn't eat much before and the
night before and stuff. I just didn't and that morning
we were getting up so early that I really had
time for breakfast, and I you know, they had like
ranola bards and stuff there for you. But anyway, we
(18:58):
went out and got some breakfast, and I still had
on my Christmas ship and Karen had on her thing
and so, uh, people was the waiters and stuff was
just like asking and talking about the five K and
the we was reading our comic books and the guy
starts talking us about nerd stuff and video games and
comic books. So you know, it's like and I've had
(19:19):
a lot of energy out there doing the five K.
So so I think it was like you know, I was.
It was fine that we had like more conversational moments
with the with the people in there, but yeah, man,
it was a good time. I highly recommend it for people.
Most of y'all are probably fit enough to do it
without you know, probably do it faster than both of
(19:41):
us listening to this. And if you're not, you know,
it's a cool goal to have. And uh, it's a
fun experience. Everybody was positive out there. Everything was nice. Uh,
it was nice. Uh the uh even in the cold temperature,
it was cool. And so I would recommend it to
(20:04):
anybody to try. And I'll definitely be doing another one
at some point.
Speaker 3 (20:07):
Yeah. And also because the people that was like, oh,
your march gets sent go, like the people in front,
by the time they started giving out the wall. They
was like this person going and that. I was like, yeah,
they finished, like a fifteen minutes. They have time with
my I want some change, I asked. It was like
we got shit to do.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
Yeah, And I don't know who won the best dress
contests and stuff. I feel like most people did it.
And then you know, you hung around a little bit
like they think they had coffee, maybe like a biscuit
truck or something like if you wanted to. But I
was ready to go home by that time. I wasn't
really like socializing. One thing that was funny that I noticed, though,
(20:48):
is before the race started, they actually played the YMCA song.
And I was surprised because I did not think they
were gonna play the gay anthem at the YMCA. I
really don't hear people play to often us at the YMCA.
I be in the YMC every day, and I don't
you know, it's very rarely that you look up in
this bunch and somebody jamming to it. And after all
(21:09):
the controversy with Trump and all this stuff, I was like, oh,
maybe people are gonna stop playing it because they feel
like it's a political song. But now they played it,
and this YMCA is not what like it might be
conservative at the time, I don't know, but in general,
it's not really like a political why I'm saying, it's
not like a concert. It doesn't feel like a conservative
(21:31):
organization in there. Matter of fact, on the walk, all
the signs, a lot of the signage on the walk
was actually about Latino people and immigrants and how many
people the YMCA is supporting and donating to the causes
and their families and stuff. So it's actually a very
interesting situation with that.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Yeah, me and your mama's reading them signs. I think
they were saying. They were saying, like how many Latinos
were in the county in La team Like you said,
it was assistant how many that teams was like a
South boulevard, Like they was like giving us like some
real stacks about like the local area. I didn't even
know they do English as a second language there, you know.
I was like wow. So we were just walking, like
(22:15):
I said, me and mom was just having a ball,
just walking and reading the signs and talking about how
old the trees was and shit, I had a ball.
And for those of you that are listening and you
like me, the time don't matter, like you said you
basically go at your own pace. You know I was
not the quickest.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
Yeah. I think calling it a race is what makes
it seem more something. Yes, but it's not really like
a race. Race Like, honestly, you can go at your
own pace. Some people are going to race and treat
it that way, but most people out there, that at
least the people are within my group. That because I
was just worried in my head, of course. Uh, I
(22:54):
was just worried somehow I was going to get out
there be the only person really walking and then you know,
it's just me and back like with everybody running around me.
That's what I was thinking too, and that that wasn't
it at all, man. A lot of people was just chilling,
a lot of people was just doing it there on page.
Babies out there, strollers.
Speaker 3 (23:13):
See people walking with their dogs.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
Yeah, and it all and it's just money that goes
to a good cause, kid program, kids programs at the
y m C. A uh So, yeah, that's it man.
I appreciate that. Anything else for your banter.
Speaker 5 (23:27):
Mm hmmm.
Speaker 3 (23:28):
Did that then went to the Honey's game and just chilled.
Speaker 2 (23:32):
The things I'll say for my banter is a couple
of things.
Speaker 5 (23:37):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
Who went out to dinner with Liz and Keith, and
it came up at the dinner table, uh, where we
were talking about Spotify. I think we were talking about
how porn hub has these rankings and at the end
of the year they always tell us all the information
who was jacking off during the debate and all this
type of ship And I realized, like, why doesn't worn
(24:00):
hub send us an end of the year wrap up
like Spotify rap Sense. Why don't we have a porn
hub Jack? We should have porn Hub Jack, Like whatever
account xham wherever you're at, it' should send you an
end of the year Let you know, is it because
we have so much shame attached to sex and porn
because we really shouldn't be ashamed. Everyone's obviously watching it.
(24:23):
If porn Hub's gonna send us some at the end
of the year, like x percentage of people was jacking
off during the debate, then they might as well send
you a d That means they know they know when
you're sleeping and knowing your way, So maybe they could
send you something at the end of the.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
Year and be like they tell you jacking off doing
debate day.
Speaker 2 (24:41):
Your top five category was milf porn.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
You need to know these things.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
You know, your favorite actress was Jennet Jackbie. You you're
a throwback. You know how they had that They had
that description at least this year on Spotify that they
had that ai description that was like you a West Coach,
grandma thug rapper or whatever. That's what that's kind of
music you like? They could do that with They could
do that with what spot With porn hub Jack, they
(25:10):
could describe you, you know, you an old school crown
royal black and mild ass.
Speaker 3 (25:17):
Jack off nigga, Like, I don't know, you like ebonish,
you like it's spicy, whatever you like?
Speaker 2 (25:22):
Yo, you watched this, you mustn't really liked uh cherokee
to ass. You watched her scene from all that ass
twenty seventeen times and you watch it to the end, right, Like,
I want.
Speaker 3 (25:33):
To see that.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Your fastest time was this, Your longest was this. I'm like, oh,
I didn't have a lot to eat that day. I
was I was starving. You know, that was my second
one other day. I was just trying to get it through.
Why don't we have porn hub Jack? Is it because
of Shane. Is that the only reason y'all can't watch
porn hub Jack? Y'all afraid it is gonna get hacked?
(25:54):
Would y'all share the results? I feel like I feel
like those are the results. No one's gonna share, right,
and they'll be like, no, this is my personal share
Spotify rap. But is everybody sharing their porn hub Jack?
Y'all trying to let us know? MS be Nasty? Is
in your top five?
Speaker 3 (26:08):
Yes, y'all? Y'all, y'all a shame of pinky.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
Yeah, what's going on? Like maybe some of these people
could come back in the game.
Speaker 3 (26:16):
I don't know. Yeah if they if they knew.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
Right, your number one search was as Carmel made any
new scenes, yeah.
Speaker 3 (26:23):
They would do like they do on Spotify. You you
would see like the videos that I'm saying, thank you,
thank you everybody for watching videos and making me number one.
Speaker 2 (26:31):
End like that, Yes, like, hey this is Queen Road.
Thank you for watching my video.
Speaker 3 (26:38):
Yes, thank you for making me number one.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
Giving them something negotiate when they talk to them people,
I got a concert in your no area. I'm just saying,
porn hub Jack should be a thing, and it's a
shame that it's not. It's because of shame.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
Yes, it is.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
Literally it's shame that it's not. And the last thing
for my banter, it's kind of getting too the shell
show stuff. But why can't Andrew Schultz be the industry
plant that everyone always talking about? Like y'all ever noticed
that the industry plant is always somebody that kind of
don't seem like they might be the industry plant, Like
(27:14):
we always level that accusation that people that put in work,
like Kevin Hart has been working. I remember when Kevin
Hart was just a short dude that I was like,
is this guy the hardest working comedian in the history?
I see it everywhere? Yes, But I saw his rise
like it wasn't. He didn't just pop up one day
(27:35):
and he was a starring movie. I saw many bad
movies that he had bit parts in and stuff like that.
Whenever there's like an artist that puts in work, especially
a black artist, we go through this a lot. It's like, oh,
just because you ain't been paying attention though, she gotta
be brand new. No, she's had mixtapes out for years,
(27:57):
this is just her first album. This is your first
time attention. You didn't know, But like Andrew Shows, Why
can't he be an industry plant? I mean, when you
look at what people say about these industry plants, it's
always like they're in a position that their talent doesn't
really justify within the industry.
Speaker 3 (28:19):
You know that.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
I think that fits the bill, you know, it's not
you never really see people saying hilarious jokes from his
set or his stand up, or even hilarious moments from
his podcast. Like it's mostly just kind of like that
one note humor of like, you know, I say bad
things about everybody, and that's what makes it funny, is
that I'm saying bad things about everybody. But it's not
(28:42):
necessarily anything new. It's the same, you know, Black people
like chicken and watermelon type bullshit.
Speaker 3 (28:48):
You know.
Speaker 2 (28:49):
And then the other thing they always say is like
they never come from within the culture. They're put there
from outside the culture, and we just don't level it
at these certain eyes. So if they're coming from outside
the culture, that sounds like Andrew Shows, he doesn't. He's
not from within Black culture. Black people don't necessarily vouch
(29:10):
for him. They will say, oh, I watch his show
or something. The Black people who do vouch for him
are gatekeepers who will benefit from being there, such as
you're Charlotte Mans. So it's like, how I just don't
understand why industry plant is something that black people who
have worked their entire lives to get on have leveled
(29:30):
against them and then it immediately like erodse their credibility,
you know, it's it's Lizzo's an industry plant. Like so
you hadn't heard of her before.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
She's clearly talented, right, and a lot oftimes we've been
around forever.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
She's clearly making good music. What are we talking about?
I thought industry plant was this person? How did they
get here? We don't know this person, you know, like
if like and it's just like an Eggy Azalea. Why
aren't we saying industry plant? Right?
Speaker 3 (29:57):
You know?
Speaker 2 (29:58):
I know people say it about ice spice, you know,
that's one that I'm pretty sure people say that about.
But people were saying this shit about like Megan A. Stallion,
people people that have talent that I'm like, no, that
motherfucker can spit right, Like, no one's telling us that
that person's good. I can look at them with my
eyes and see that they're good. Yes, But I don't
(30:19):
know why somebody like Andrew Schultz wouldn't be considered the
industry plan. It's the calls coming from inside the house
with shit like that, And I don't think it helps that,
you know, when you look up Charlemagne is defending him people,
you know, people that typically uh you know, Van Lathan
(30:41):
is down playing it on this podcast like oh, everybody mad, wow,
because that's your friend, that's your you know, that's that
he's He's situated in the industry in a way that
if someone else would have done it, you'd be on
your show foaming at the mouth talking about we're not
going to accept this slander from a out black people,
(31:01):
but when it comes from someone that somehow hasn't Because
I guess the question came up with me and my
friends in the chat in the in our exchange on text,
it was like, why did so many people sound like
they're afraid of him, Like they're afraid to just be like,
oh no, that was some whack shit. You don't have
to defend it. You could literally just be like I'm
(31:22):
gonna stay out of it. But the idea of like
we don't criticize comedians, yes you do all the time.
We'll get to that in a second. So like, does
he got something on you? Is it bigger people behind him?
Because you acting like he a plant? Because y'all still matter,
Sarah Silverman, it's been decades, y'all pull up the Louis
c k shit every five minutes to let us know
(31:43):
we shouldn't be funck with him. Anybody that, Uh, what's
Amy Schumer like she made a joke about Mexican to
this day that she can she can say black lives
matter and that clip's gonna come up.
Speaker 3 (31:54):
Yes it is.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
This motherfucker says worse ship and yet somehow gets a
more vigorous defense or complete ignored ignoring from a lot
of people. I've seen a handful of people that in
his latest time called him out. DL Hughley called him
out today, I believe, But yeah, it's just I don't know.
Industry playing is such an interesting loaded term because it
(32:16):
seems that it's only there to undermine but not but
it doesn't have to line up. It's like when it
doesn't line up. That's when we talked about your chance.
The rapper. It seemed like a guy I remember his
ten Day mixtape, shit was banging. It made sense to
me that he was able to create a couple of
dope ass albums for a while. I still remember people
with industry plant. You know, he an industry plant. I've
(32:36):
seen this Nigga freestylbum for He's talented. Like this is
this is just some insular edge edgeword comedy.
Speaker 3 (32:44):
Shit, this is what I haven't heard of you your
industry plant.
Speaker 2 (32:47):
Yeah, this moe fucking somebody. But anyway, it's an interesting allegation.
All right, let's get into some some news, a little
bit of news, and then we'll uh. Like I said,
this won't be a long a long episode. Okay, it
will help if I had pulled up the beats already.
Speaker 3 (33:03):
Here we go.
Speaker 2 (33:05):
How about this one?
Speaker 5 (33:06):
You know we're here.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
It's like, I'm not understanding everybody yelling. Peace finds somebody,
please find a j much body, pusbody line with much body?
Speaker 3 (33:26):
Now please wine joke with much body, much body.
Speaker 2 (33:33):
I'm not understanding everybody yell. All right, let's keep it
going on the Andrew shouts topic. Like I said, very
conversational episode today. But Charlemagne to God of course defends
Andrew Schautz comments Kendrick Lamar basically saying and like I
(33:54):
told like, the reason I'm bringing this up is because
we got asked on our feedback show yesterday like why
I when with Charlemagne gonna say something or that. Someone
was like, I'm interested to see what he will say,
and I told them he's not gonna really say shit.
That's his friend, that's his man's.
Speaker 3 (34:10):
Getting they podcast together.
Speaker 2 (34:12):
They still have a podcast together that I don't expect.
Why would you even expect Charlemagne to say something about
that man? And you know he's not gonna be able
to say anything where he's really calling out somebody close
to him for disrespecting black women or making fun of
sexual assault, because he's done both of those things. So,
(34:33):
and this is part of the ecosystem issue, which is
a lot of times people say they want people to
speak up for stuff, but they won't let those people
let go of or move on from the mistakes that
they've made. Right, So, while these moments could show growth
and for somebody to be like, hey, I made these mistakes.
(34:54):
This person's making this mistake. Let me tell this person
they are wrong for this, they should not do it.
Most of us are just gonna pull out a this
year dunk on that person. And so I think you
kind of make people be quiet that you claim you
want to hear speak up. But ultimately the smarter move
from the vast majority of these guys is to shut
(35:15):
the fuck up, because they don't need y'all going through there.
They're all their old history and being like, yeah, you
saying that today, but there was a time when blank. So,
of course Andrew Schulz made his rape reference to Kendrick Lamar.
I would make love to him, and there's nothing he
could do about it. I'll make love to him, and
(35:36):
the only thing he could do is the side of
his consensual or not. I would go so far as
say he couldn't stop most people on the planet from
having sex with him. He's talking a lot of shit,
but if it came down to it, I could put
him on my lap, I could feed him a bottle.
And this is because Kendrick Lamar told the black men
around Andrew Schultz stop letting him talk bad about black women.
(35:58):
And Andrew, of course you took it personal, even though
he claims it's just jokes and comedy. I mean, I've
you know, listened to and watched the segments and the
voice that he's delivering this in don't really seem like comedy. No,
I don't think he's you know, like it wasn't like
ha ha. This is more of my hilarious segment on it.
(36:22):
And of course, just off slightly off screen slightly to
the right, is the black man that Kendrick Lamar is
talking about sitting up there being used. I believe it
was in the lyrics where Kendrick says the niggas that
be in rooms with him and the coons were sliding
(36:46):
on them, so it wasn't even about Andrew Schultz really.
But the next after he says this, where he threatens
the sexually assault Kendrick Lamar as ha ha with a
hilarious joke, We're gonna rap I'm a white man gonna
rape the black man because that's uh, you know that
somehow is okay. He ends up going on his Brilliant
(37:10):
Idiots with Charlet Maine and I'm just not familiar with this, sister,
because I don't watch their show like that. But of
course then he's now claiming to be getting death threats.
Speaker 6 (37:24):
All right, don't be surprised if he goes creat Listen
some of some of the Kendrick stands I've been posting
shit like telling me they're gonna take out my family.
Speaker 2 (37:35):
On like pictures of my child.
Speaker 6 (37:37):
You surprised, but this is the nature of the game
social media. It's like like, but he says that line.
He says that line, his parents, his friend, his some
of his fans, and the majority of his fans don't
do anything. The majority's fans are just like, they like
hip hop, they think he's a great musician. But the
most extreme ones on a picture of my eight month
baby are going, you better take security everywhere because I'm
coming for your whole family.
Speaker 2 (37:58):
And this is like multiple So to me, that person,
I don't blame Kendrick.
Speaker 6 (38:04):
We can't control with our fans to but that person,
I go, you talked about my kid, man, like I
have to screenshot.
Speaker 3 (38:11):
You know who you are, and if I ever see
you that you can't you can't play with it.
Speaker 5 (38:16):
Yeah, I want you.
Speaker 3 (38:18):
I want you.
Speaker 2 (38:19):
That's why I'm not I don't feel feel about someone
giving it to Drake.
Speaker 3 (38:27):
But my thing is this, So you say what you say,
kendreing ain't post take that personally.
Speaker 2 (38:34):
You can say I'm going to sexually assault you, and
then you're like Wow, these fans are overreacting with these threats.
Well maybe they're up and coming comedians. Maybe they're joking.
You can't play with that, can If I can play
with you, you can play with saying you're gonna sexually
assault me. You can play like that because because you
put the you put the name tag comedian on and
(38:56):
the rest of the world. We can't have a reaction
to that. If you talking specifically about me, I can't
say shit to that. I'm being too sensitive. But anonymous
people death threatening you, which we know ain't gonna happen
all of a sudden, Now we need to have a
serious contest. You motherfucking flip flopping ass bitch. You're playing
(39:17):
or you're playing the sympathy game when you have none yourself.
That's crazy and so it's just kind of whacked me,
and I believe, uh just so for accuracy, he says,
we recorded this podcast before I responded to Kendrick. So
(39:42):
you're talking about death threats and being a victim right here,
right because hey, I'll said some bad stuff about black women.
It was just a joke. Why are people death threatening me?
Then you want on your show and say I'm gonna
rape this guy, that's just making it worse. That'll make it.
Speaker 3 (40:00):
It make sense.
Speaker 2 (40:01):
Your response was worse. So it's like, oh, let me
go escalate this thing. But also I'm the victim. It's
such a drake suing white man ass response. How is
this not the industry plan? He don't come from our culture.
This is not part of our culture. If you talk shit,
then just talk that shit.
Speaker 3 (40:19):
No one got like.
Speaker 2 (40:21):
No one has to like that. You talk that shit,
no one. That's the game. No one has to people
listening to show all the time they don't like what
we got to say. Sometimes it's fine.
Speaker 3 (40:30):
It's fine.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
No one can make them like it. It's cool, you know,
And I can see if it's one of those things
where it's like bruh, All I did was say blank
and then everybody went crazy. Your your whole point is
I say the crazy shit to people?
Speaker 3 (40:44):
Get us your whole point.
Speaker 2 (40:46):
You don't come from our culture, and yet you comment
on it like a person looking in the window. That's
why you talk about black women like that, like they're violent,
because that's what people that watch like Instagram reels of
like the help, old comedy hack bullshit that you see
on social media where it's like black women are mad
and angry and jealous all the time, and you gotta
(41:08):
be scared of your black woman. Boy, you don't know
what she's gonna do. That's what you say when you
from outside the community, and that's what you think of
black women. True within the community, we know not like man,
I come home, my wife physically assaults me every day.
Speaker 3 (41:20):
What the fuck are you talking about.
Speaker 2 (41:23):
Them?
Speaker 5 (41:23):
Man?
Speaker 2 (41:23):
Shits and giggles. But once again, this was never really
about him. It was supposed to be about shits and giggle.
Now what's funny is that Charlemagne defending him by being like,
Andrew is just making jokes. I agree that you're a comedian.
You have I don't want to say a license because
it's not the right word, but you had a license
to make jokes about any and everybody. Since when do
(41:44):
we police comedians? If Andrew was a person that was
only constantly making jokes about one group of people, it
would be different. Don't get me wrong that have people
call themselves comedians at the time used as smoke screen.
Just say some real fucked up, dumb shitty jokes that
are probably racist a hateful in that and that's just
bad comedy. But if you're being honest, like we're all
sitting there being honest, and everybody, anybody even online, Uh
(42:07):
that of course, it's just gonna pop up in the
middle of my fucking thing. Anybody that's even online. Uh
what do you say to that, Oh, yeah, knows anything
about me? Is being honest? You don't believe that. Here's
the thing, though, there's two parts of this. One. This
is your homie. He is making shitty simple jokes. These
(42:27):
are not These are not These are not like some
George Carlin bit or something. No one's jokes Like, God damn,
that was so smart. He's your homie, so that's why
you're gonna let him do it. If it was another
comedian that wasn't your homie, you'd be saying, he's one
of these races facts. That's just what I believe. But
then the second part of that that I find very interesting.
(42:51):
Charlemagne gave Kat Williams donk the other day over jokes.
So clearly we police some comedians when we feel like it,
but when when when we don't, it's okay, like like
he got mad or he said Kat Williams, was you know,
doing too much? On Shannon Sharp's podcast and gave him
(43:13):
and he was lying and blah blah blah. So you
clearly don't just give comedic license to everybody where It's like, well,
they was making jokes and the rule is you can
make stuff all the time, make jokes all the time,
and if your comedian, and that's just what we have
to do. So you know these, like I said, how
does not the industry plant? I just want to know,
(43:37):
how is that not the industry plant? Chatz and Charlemagne
went on brilliant Idiots and called out Kat Williams.
Speaker 3 (43:47):
How did so?
Speaker 2 (43:48):
Comedians don't have this license unless you give it to him.
Stay consistent, stay on message, that's all, and mostly stop
bitching about games then death strengthening me. You're threatening the
right people, and you're not online fan anonymous person. When
you can't control what your fans do, you can control
(44:09):
what you do. And you chose to use your voice
to say you're gonna sexually assault a black man that
had the to marity, the fucking the audacity to just
be like, hey, maybe to say something when this dude
is talking bad about black women in masks, and you went,
what about the rap? What about black on black crime.
(44:32):
What's that have to do with anything? That's not where
you got your license from. You're not from part of
our community, so you're not getting it because you're so
in doubt. Listen, I'm so involved in the hip hop
saying I just got confused. No, you just thought that
shit was a quick, easy joke, and you knew that
those cowards would come in there and they would not
defend black women to your face, and you dare them.
(44:54):
And a lot of these motherfuckers fit the goddamn bill
because now, even after what Kendrick said, even awake of
what you're saying right now, these niggas sit there in
that room, yuck, yucking and waiting for you to awkwardly
move on, watching you play victim. You know, sister sitting
in there.
Speaker 3 (45:11):
Oh my god, what.
Speaker 2 (45:14):
You know what was the Oh my god?
Speaker 3 (45:16):
When the ship?
Speaker 2 (45:16):
He said that ship in front of ships and giggles.
But but you know, every time I see a nigga
in the room with him and they own a payroll,
like you would see what the industry plant mm hmm.
Speaker 3 (45:28):
And then the thing is yr rigid, Bob A good point.
They was like, they apologize and he joked them.
Speaker 2 (45:33):
He clowned them for apologizing. They not they not stand
up comedians.
Speaker 5 (45:38):
M m.
Speaker 2 (45:39):
He clowned them for apologizing because it was real. Yes,
so yeah, but now I'm supposed to believe death threats
to you are real. But but the other ship is fake? Man,
fuck you. Let's see what else is happening in the news, guys,
there's other things talk about. Oh uh, jay z he
(46:06):
is now being accused in a lawsuit. Uh well, he
says it's a lawsuit. I have no idea exactly what's
happening because Tony Busby, who is a guy who.
Speaker 5 (46:19):
Uh is.
Speaker 2 (46:21):
Getting together a lot of people that are swing Diddy.
A lot of Diddy's accused. He's a guy who got
together a lot of people that accused Sean Watson in
both of those cases. I believe them. Excuse me. I
believe those victims. And I know what he does is
some people don't respect it to call an ambulance chase
(46:42):
or whatever. But also I know that it's a hard
job and someone gotta do it. Like people said the
same thing about Gloria already too, And people always try
to discredit these the people that do this work because
a we like these rich, powerful, famous men normally who
accused of shit. So a lot of times we don't
want to act like these people have credibility. But then two,
(47:06):
when you're gathering sometimes dozens, if not hundreds of people
together to sue somebody, sometimes you might get it wrong.
Excuse me. Sometimes you might have a person that says
something that can't be cooperated or says something that's not
strong enough to win a suit. What you're hoping is
that if you bring fifty people together to sue somebody,
(47:28):
the person will just be like, fuck it. It's no
reason to get to be like, yes, I sexually assaulted
forty seven people, but three of them is lining. It's
like you just pay everybody out and try not to
go to trial at that point, right, So he's doing
this with Diddy and allegedly, I mean a rape allegation
(47:50):
was made against jay Z as part of this. A
woman who previously sued Sean Diddy Combs is a legend
she was raped at an award show at the party
in two thousand when she was thirteen. She amended the
lawsuits Sunday to include a new allegation that jay Z
was also at the party and participated in the assault.
The twenty four time Grammy Award win a producer and
music mogul called the allegations idiotic and hanus and nature
(48:13):
and the statement released by rock Nation, one of his companies,
and I read the statement, the statement seemed like some
shit he wrote like, it didn't seem like a statement,
where like some lawyers wrote it for the record. As
I will always say, I don't know what an innocent
or guilty response to being accused looks like because people
(48:33):
who have been guilty have tried everything like. It's one
of the reason I don't feel any need to have
commentary or parse it out on social media like all
these other like you know, experts suddenly are like, you know,
he should have said it should have been three sentences.
I've seen people make three sentences and they still did it.
I've seen people make long ass like I definitely didn't
(48:55):
do it, We're gonna take this shit to trial, and
they still did it, and vice versa. I've seen people
that put out short statements and turns out they didn't
do it. I've seen people put our long statements very
like we're gonna go to trial, don't give a fuck.
In turn, sometimes they.
Speaker 3 (49:09):
Didn't do it.
Speaker 2 (49:10):
I don't. We won't know until they go to court.
I don't find any value in being first on this
or saying I was right later, and we'll see what
the evidence of allegations showed that it's provable or believable.
We'll see if other people come forward, which is another
thing that could happen.
Speaker 3 (49:31):
Yeah, that's the biggest thing.
Speaker 2 (49:32):
Yes, Like a lot of times these things start with
one person and then you know, twenty people later you're like,
oh shit, So I don't know. I think, as I've
said the whole time with the Diddy stuff, a lot
of this has been salacious. A lot of this has
been speaking into like trying to get ooh, the tea
is brewing, Ooh, some gossip. And I just think one
(49:53):
of the most disrespectful things we do in these situations
to not just the court of law, justice, whatever you
wanna call it, but to the actual people who've been assaulted,
is we turn it into gossip. It's not juicy enough
for me, So I'm gonna make up some shit, make
up some shit.
Speaker 3 (50:10):
It's horrific enough. Why are you making up ship? Yeah,
Like basically, like what your allegations were are boring to me, right,
entertaining me.
Speaker 2 (50:19):
But what if Kanye West was there, you know, like
that kind of shit. So this this one mentions him
by name as a as an allegation. I think he's
trying to his people are trying to be like, she
shouldn't be able to be anonymous if she's gonna make this,
you know, which is another tactic that people do in court,
(50:40):
like how you're gonna accuse me and stay anonymous, you
need to put your name on it. Tony Busby is
on Twitter putting out tweets as a lawyer, as the
lawyer of representative of the person, being like, this is
only in bolding her, and it's gonna we you know, uh,
we reached out to you privately to try to set
(51:00):
this and they didn't even want money, They just wanted
a mediation you you didn't respond, so uh, all you've
done is make this worse for yourself. And Jay Z's
calling it blackmail, and it just depends on who's telling
the truth.
Speaker 3 (51:14):
Because it depends on who the truth.
Speaker 2 (51:15):
Obviously, if you really didn't do this, what else would
you call somebody being like, hey, you sexually a sort
of a thirteen year old girl and she's a grown
woman now she wants to have a mediation with you.
If you didn't do it, you're gonna be like, this
is blackmail? What the fuck kind of bullshit is this?
If you did do it in public, you won't say
(51:37):
this is blackmail. This is what kind of fucking bullshit
is So I we haven't learned anything from this. I
remember Diddy's first statement with the pity Well his is
more of a pity party situation, but still it was
a nothing against me is true? All these people lying. Now,
by the time you put that statement out, it was
way more people than Cassie. So you know it to
(51:58):
me context wise, when you say all twelve people is lying,
I mean nothing twelve people said it's true. I immediately
antenna goes up like this niggas line right, and.
Speaker 3 (52:11):
Like everything else, the only time will tell and you know,
just let the facts roll out.
Speaker 2 (52:15):
Yeah, so we'll see what happens.
Speaker 5 (52:20):
To this.
Speaker 2 (52:21):
Jay Z is you know in this statement talking shit.
I will not give you one red penny. I'm gonna
expose you for the fraud that you are. He brought
up being from the projects of Brooklyn, Like it's like
it was a long vociferous ass statement. The unnamed woman
said she was hanging around Radio City Music Hall during
two thousand MTV Video Music Awards managed to talk a
(52:44):
limousine driver into bringing her to a celebrity started party
at a private residence. After the event, she said while
she was in the limousine, she was asked to sign
a non disclosure document. Once at the party of the
law thirteen year old wow. Once at the party of
the lawsuit, said she took a drink that made her
feel woozy and lighthead. It went into a bedroom to
lay down. She said that comes in. Jay Z, whose
real legal name is Sean Carter, then barged into the
(53:07):
room along with another unnamed celebrity and sexually asside of her.
Now why the last one is unnamed, I don't know.
The woman said. She eventually escaped the room, fled the house,
and called for a ride from a nearby gas station.
Busby is, a personal injury lawyer in Houston, said the
notion that he was trying to blackmail jay Z as
stupid and laughable, that his letter simply sought confidential mediation
(53:28):
in the litigation. What he fails to say in his
recent statements by firm sent his lawyer a basic demand
letter on behalf of an alleged victim, and that victim
never demanded a penny from him. Yeah, but at the
same time, we're gonna be fair about that. That's the
letter you send before you say give us some money.
It's not like nobody fucking just meets with the person
(53:48):
and then goes all right, well it's all good now
what anyway, But like these are this is what happened
when you read lawyer's statements. These are two different sides
of the same. Like, I'm making a public argument and
it's not really an argument for the public as a
public It's honestly a thing that will be adjudicated in
a court of law if it gets that far. Yes, sir,
(54:09):
since I sent the letter on her behind, mister Carter
has not only sued me, but he has tried to
bully harass me in this plane of his conduct has
had the opposite impact. She isn'tvoting. I'm very proud of
her resolve. Jay Z's attorning file the court paperwork Monday
asking a judge require his accuser was identified only as
Jy Doe toal identity if she wants to continue the lawsuit.
(54:29):
Spiral said the woman hasn't provided any evidence to justify
her anonymity, that her vague assertions of potential harm for
far short of the stringent requirements under the law. Yeah,
I also think that's the other part about this environment
of our conspiratorial gossiping. The accusation is enough for the
vast majority of people that want a gossip to be.
Speaker 3 (54:51):
Like he did it.
Speaker 2 (54:52):
I agreed, like, you have to unprove that you sexually
assaulted somebody, and very rarely is that something you can
completely unproved because people are so conspiratorial, it's I mean,
the same people that were sharing Jaguar Wright clips are
gonna be like he did it. I don't give a
fuck what. I don't give a fuck what is proven
or not proven. I don't care if she can't back
(55:12):
it up. I don't care if she did. And also,
once again, in fairness, if it did happen and it
was in two thousand and you were thirteen, there literally
might not be enough evidence to you might not have
enough like if you didn't if if it is true
and you don't have like you didn't go to you
didn't call the police. You didn't go to some type
(55:32):
of doctor and have a kit done, you don't have
any paperwork or really it's still gonna be almost impossible
to prove anyway. So people are gonna go in public
opinion with whatever they're prone to lean towards. Anyway, jay
Z has made a lot of public miscues with people
(55:54):
in the first place with his politics. With this, you know,
he's very like capitalistic, very like it's very anti what
Twitter is about. So already it's people that want to
kind of hate him anyway. There's people that just don't
like that he's rich. So uh yeah, it's very interesting
to see what happens with this. And I'm just gonna
sit back and wait the same way I did for everything.
(56:15):
I don't have to have an opinion. Stuff.
Speaker 3 (56:16):
We will come out, y'all, We will come out.
Speaker 2 (56:18):
Yeah. So I can't tell if he did it or not,
just that little bit, but hey, stuff has happened that.
I mean, I remember when the Cassie video came out.
You know, it was like a lot of people that
was on the fence had to stop, you know, So
who knows. I think it's also interesting that the government
is not going after any of these people. Yet like
(56:41):
the government is going up after more people than Puff Daddy.
So for people to be like, well, that's because they
just want to take him down. Nah, the government is
actually going after the people within Puff Daddy's network that
they feel like they have tangible evidence that coracy.
Speaker 3 (56:56):
You ate it in the bed. That's that's their words.
Speaker 2 (56:59):
So is not so if he I think if he is,
if there's evidence jay Z was involved in this shit,
I do think it's quite possible we see some criminal action.
I don't think it stays in as a civil matter,
which might also explain why he's so vigilant and being like,
I ain't part of this Shit'll like, y'all might take
(57:20):
down Puff that. But I'm not trying to fed looking
at me for some shit like this because it's very serious,
right anyway. The suspect in the killing of the United
health Care CEO apparently shook when police confronted him. Officers say, well,
that's what they wanted to say, right, They'll have it
on tape if they got it. But yeah, they arrested
(57:41):
the suspect Monday and the brazen Manhattan killing of United
Healthcare ceo After quick thinking McDonald's customer in Pennsylvania spot
of the man who officers foul with a gun a
mask at writings linking him to the ambush. Now what
he was doing in McDonald's, I don't know, Yeah breakfast,
there's ten thirty. Maybe he was there like falling down
(58:02):
trying to wreck the file, right, you know, he's like,
so you tell me I can't have that McMuffin, and
it's ten thirty one clack. The chance signing at the
restaurant in Altuna led to a dramatic break in, challenging
but moving fast from an investigation that captivated the public.
In the five days since shooting that shook the business world.
The suspect, identified as twenty six year old Luigi Nicholas
(58:23):
and Manngioni or Maggione, had a gun believed to be
the one using the Wednesday shooting Lebrian Thompson, as well
as writing suggesting anger with corporate America. Yeah, and the
gun had like the silencer thing. I believe, So I
don't know how many people just rolling with guns that
(58:44):
with the silences. That also happened to look like the
motherfucker that shot the dude five days ago. Eric Adams
led it slip that they had the guy's name, but
they weren't releasing it to the public, and a lot
of people thought, yeah, of course, yeah, right, y'all don't
know who he is. Y'all just acting like y'all know
who he is, so that whoever y'all framed for this
(59:05):
shit that didn't do it, y'all could be like it
was him the whole time. We just didn't tell y'all.
Here's a problem with that, thinking, to me, this is
the way I think. If they knew the name of
the person and they didn't want it to get out,
they probably also didn't want it to get out that
they knew the name of the person and they didn't
want it to get out. Right, that's the kind of
(59:26):
thing if you looking for somebody, you think that gives
you the upper hand. You don't even want them to know.
We know who the fuck you are and we know
where to look for you.
Speaker 5 (59:35):
Right.
Speaker 2 (59:37):
If they telling the truth, they probably have to tell
that to certain people in power, Right, Yes, they have to. Yes,
of the people you tell. One of those people is
probably the mayor of New York of course. Okay, Now
they would get the instructions don't tell nobody. We fucking
(01:00:00):
know who the guy.
Speaker 3 (01:00:01):
I guarantee you. That was one of the phrases that
was said in this conversation somewhere.
Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
Now, if there's one motherfucker on this planet that I
completely expect to go, mister, I want to be am
going to tell that we know when we coming to
get him, it's Eric Adams, who had nothing to do
with catching this man.
Speaker 3 (01:00:25):
Me a fuck up a case. I know.
Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
That was like God damn, sir, definitely put this case
in jeopardy. Yes, he did, definitely letting the killer.
Speaker 3 (01:00:33):
No, like we out here, we know.
Speaker 2 (01:00:38):
I guarantee you, they didn't tell Eric Adams his name.
I guarantee they told him know who I think they said,
we think we know who he is. We think we
know his name, but we're not releasing it to the public.
And they didn't tell him because if they would have
told him, he would have been out there like it's
Luigi were coming for your ass.
Speaker 3 (01:00:59):
You know he would have.
Speaker 2 (01:01:01):
It's gonna be a real Hounted mansion when we roll
up on you.
Speaker 3 (01:01:08):
You may tell your brother Mario, You're gonna be sleeping fishes.
Speaker 2 (01:01:11):
When we catch you. It's gonna be do do do
because we gonna kill you. That's what you would have said.
So I do believe that they had his name and
they knew who he was, you know. Plus I'm sure
family friends and ship man like that's that's someone you recognize.
And the people have been doing, of course all this
(01:01:33):
like online research. And so they pulled up his Twitter
and they saw not his tweets necessarily, but his family's
tweets to him, and it seemed like he been missing
for months and crashed out, and people been asking about him,
like where you at come home? One person was like,
(01:01:55):
you're supposed to be in my wedding. We haven't talked
to you in months. If you're not gonna be in
a way, can you let us know so I can
make plans accordingly. So it sounds like he's just fell
off the map. Yeah. And as much as fun as
people were having with the idea of like the conspiracy
of it mean too, I don't, you know, I don't
(01:02:15):
think like I never really understand the people that get
so up up tight about the jokes. Guys. We don't
have superpowers. I don't have a time machine. I didn't
make this man kill anybody. I might joke about it.
I also wasn't really out here like championing him as
a hero, but mostly because it's America, right, and in
(01:02:38):
America when it comes to these type of events, there's
two commonalities that I found resonate through every single last
one of these events, regardless of where you fall on
the political spectrum. These are the two things I identify
and I've never been wrong yet. The availability of guns
(01:02:59):
and craziness in America. It's like this on every lap,
whether it's a mass shooting, whether it's a fucking one off,
whether someone shot up a fucking party. We have way
too many fucking guns in this country, and they're way
too fucking easy to get. Yes, the Republicans make sure
they're easily available to everybody, and honestly, in a moment
(01:03:24):
like this, I think a lot of us are like,
could have been worse, That's how fucked up America is.
Could have been a school of children, could have been
a grocery store. Black people who knows what they're crazy
is gonna be. I'm surprised it's taking this long for
someone's crazy to be one of these. Like I'm against
the billionaires in the one percent, and I'm gonna catch
(01:03:44):
one of them slipping. I'm surprised it's taking this long
because people talk that kind of shit on social media
all the time, and those people can go get guns too.
No one's stopping anyone in this country from getting guns
really there. So I'm not really shocked at any of
that stuff. And when you look at it like that,
it's not funny, it's not as sexy, it's not as whatever.
(01:04:07):
But that's how I see the truth, which is like, yeah,
it's another long line of examples of wide mastly available
weapons that can just take someone's life and us casually
letting them just be out here, just out in the streets.
They caught on me, had like mad fake IDs on him.
He was sitting in the rear the McDonald's wearing a
(01:04:29):
blue medical mask and looking at a laptop computer. A
customer saw him. An employee called now one one. The
other thing that's been going around on social media is
and a lot of it seems to be jokes. I
can't tell. This feels a little tad Bundyish to me.
No offense to y'all that's into this guy, but where
people are like over exaggerating how hot he is because
(01:04:52):
it's like he's a bad boy. And it's like, maybe
we're twenty years from documentaries on this man to where
people gonna have that moment like they had with Ted
Kazinski about five years ago, where everybody went, this nigga
not that attractive, y'all, was letting him just kill y'all.
And I was like, I mean, it's what are we
saying about the victims when we say that? But yeah,
(01:05:13):
it's anyway, I think maybe that's what maybe we're living
through what happens with the Ted Bundye type person. Maybe
we're living through it where people are like the euphoria
of acting like, you know, this dude is the hottest
man we've ever seen is more powerful than is he
actually the hottest man we've ever seen? Right, Like the
(01:05:36):
jokes and the fun is more fun than the truth,
you know, which fun. I'm not trying to yuck people's jump,
but I'm just wondering because if he really is the
hottest man on earth, I have to say, it's a
horrible choice to try to murder somebody, right because everybody
pays attention to hot people. You don't, you know, you
(01:05:57):
can't get away.
Speaker 3 (01:05:58):
You come in and chat. You barkling this shit. You
make everybody look up. A spotlight shines on you because
everybody was like, you would look act normally beautiful if
he's super hot.
Speaker 2 (01:06:07):
I'm surprised he didn't get caught on the greyhound. Hot
people don't ride the greyhound act people who shower don't
know him to get to ride the greyhound.
Speaker 3 (01:06:15):
Not too often.
Speaker 2 (01:06:16):
If you get on the Greyhound smelling like soap, you
stand out.
Speaker 3 (01:06:19):
I can see that. A lot of times.
Speaker 2 (01:06:21):
They call the police on those people right away. They're
like they running from something. We don't know what. Well
know what they running for. They did a crime because
they nothing. Why would they be able to afford soap
and greyhound bus fare.
Speaker 3 (01:06:31):
It's either one or the other.
Speaker 2 (01:06:33):
What are they jail driving to a ride into an event? Right, No,
normal people don't do this. You gotta be down, tried,
and you have to have the stink of failure and
desperation on you.
Speaker 3 (01:06:45):
Before you make them life trust decisions.
Speaker 2 (01:06:47):
Yeah, dude was so hot. The the one of the
women he got, we know what he looked like at
the bottom of his face because he went to order
a coffee and somebody was like, goddamn, take your mask off.
You see what I'm saying. Somebody was flirting with him then,
so he was too hot to do this crime. This
is not the crime of a hot person. A schlubby
(01:07:09):
forty four year old balding man would still be on
the loose, nobody trying to fuck people know where he was,
no one making eye contact. Put your mask back on,
put it here's an extra mask, beat it bomb, get
out of here, pops.
Speaker 4 (01:07:25):
Unk.
Speaker 2 (01:07:26):
You know, uncle would have got away with it. The
reason Jeremy Meeks was the hot feling, but he wasn't
a hot murderer feling. We wouldn't. It would have never
worked out for him. Can't be on the run and
hot come only people going to run, normal people going
to run. Man need to put on like seventy five pounds.
(01:07:48):
Are he gonna go on the run in America and
be not be not noticed?
Speaker 4 (01:07:51):
Ten?
Speaker 2 (01:07:53):
They probably been. What really happened is for the last
four days people probably been recognizing on but they just
been in his slide because they thought, oh, he like
our v for Vendetta. He out here getting the billionaires
here he are.
Speaker 3 (01:08:07):
Activists recognized him particularly, and you know, a large shit
in like New York. Too many, it's too many people
congested for something. Nobody to recognize him.
Speaker 2 (01:08:16):
They thought he was cool. Okay, they thought he was cool.
They they was they was given the come gut as
a past. It was like, listen, he's got a thirteen
pack abs. But and and it's clearly the man that
killed that CEO. But he's hot. But then my guess
is at some point he talked, you know, he ordered
(01:08:37):
this McDonald's, he did something, and then all of a
sudden people realize, oh, wait a minute, this is not
v for vendetta. This is not Jason Bourne. Okay, this
is this is not a dude that is giving us
uh you know that that's that that's gonna free the people.
(01:08:58):
He didn't have a list like the dude at the
end of Billy Madison that he's checking off to get
all the CEOs. He's not trying to free us from
the health insurance struggle. I think when he went to order,
you know, McNuggets at eight thirty, the McDonald's people were like,
oh shit, oh.
Speaker 1 (01:09:20):
Oh oh, oh, you crazy, I have yeah, you know
when he's when he came to McDonald's and was like,
let me get the sea bass and they was like, oh,
we thought you was gonna stop the rip, start the revolution.
Speaker 2 (01:09:42):
You want us, you said, just give you a cup
and you're gonna fill it up in the toilet. All right,
he's crazy. Go ahead, let's get to ten thousand dollars award.
Let's just get it. Fuck it. In his backpack, police
found a black three D printed pistol and the three
D printed black salacer. The complaints said the pistol had
a metal slide and plastic handle with a metal thread
at barrel. He was taking in the custry at nine
(01:10:04):
to fifteen am. Still in there waiting on Big Max.
Speaker 3 (01:10:09):
You know you cant three D print a gun.
Speaker 2 (01:10:11):
First of all, Yeah, you can three D print of
a gun. First of all. Ordering McDonald's after the Lasteria
outbreak is wild behavior. They should have known. He's like,
I hate corporations, but I love a deal. Okay, I
can't past the deal. When he came in there and
sat down and he said, uh, I'm just gonna wait
(01:10:32):
for y'all CEO to come in, and they was like,
why are you waiting on the CEO of McDonald's, sir.
That's I just want to talk to him.
Speaker 3 (01:10:38):
For a second, apparently that this deal is better than death.
Speaker 2 (01:10:42):
I would like to talk to him for a sac
Let me know what are Ronald's office hours. He's done
a lot to the community. He need to pay for it.
This listeria outbreak gonna stop today. The last nasty onions
have been sold in this country. And I'm the CEO.
Speaker 3 (01:11:02):
Shooter, Right, I've had onions and none of them taste
like this.
Speaker 2 (01:11:05):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:11:06):
Is it true?
Speaker 2 (01:11:07):
His nickname was Hot Shooting. I heard people was calling
that on Hot Shooting. Yeah, that's a joke for those
that watched Hot Frosty.
Speaker 3 (01:11:17):
But yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
He had clothing and a mass swimming to those worn
by the shooter, and a fraudulent New York, New Jersey
I D matching one the suspect used to check in
to a New York City hostel before the shooting. NYPD
Chief of Detectives Joseph kenney And said Maggione was born
and raised in Maryland, has ties of San Francisco. His
last no address in Honolulu. A message left Monday with
(01:11:40):
Philadelphia area phone number connected to him was not immediately returned. Yeah,
they say his family is rich, so there was like,
you know, his family got money and more money than
the ceo he killed. And I was like, well, it
sounded like rich people business to me. Yes, that is rich.
This rich on rich. Crime is out of control in
(01:12:01):
the city. And I'm tired of the one percent and
all this violence.
Speaker 4 (01:12:06):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:12:07):
Where are the sires, well the lords? Right, I'm tired
of y'all not having fathers in the manner?
Speaker 3 (01:12:17):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:12:19):
Where what's happening to the to the man, the structure
of the mansion, in the nuclear family with these rich people.
I did think at first he was like the riddler
because he've had monopoly money in a bag that they
found in the park. But what if he just what
(01:12:39):
if he was planning to put that monopoly money all
over that guy and he fucked it up and just
hopped on the city bank, got out back and got
out of here. A lot was having a gun jam.
Speaker 3 (01:12:49):
It was a lot happen.
Speaker 2 (01:12:51):
Yeah, he was like, let me just I was gonna
throw monopoly money on the man. Already wrote shit on
my bullets. That's gonna be good enough. I got to
get out of here, just left the backpack in Central Park.
I thought you at first, I thought he was a riddler,
But I was like he didn't leave no riddles with
the backpack.
Speaker 3 (01:13:09):
And just said the riddle Meadia is NYPD. Yeah, what's moves.
Speaker 2 (01:13:14):
Even when it stands still? Batman, see you in your
next destination.
Speaker 3 (01:13:21):
Commissioner Gordon, all right, I'm like.
Speaker 2 (01:13:27):
The hands of time can only be moved by the
feet of clay. Good luck, commission up, should be no
goddamn sense.
Speaker 3 (01:13:39):
I was like, he didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
He just left the monopoly money. Now you gotta go
directly to jail. Did not pass go? What if you
gotta you think if you roll like a eleven or
two that let him out? He's like, give me two dice.
I'll rolled a seven, y'all gotta that didn't need a freedom? Okay, Well,
(01:14:02):
do I at least get the money? Uh? Down with
down at the park at the free parking? Can I
just get the money?
Speaker 5 (01:14:09):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:14:10):
All right?
Speaker 2 (01:14:12):
Well can you let me out for the silver car? Nopem? Okay,
all right, Well, I don't want to bribe the judge,
but you in the property because park place I got.
Speaker 3 (01:14:22):
Properly saying bullwalk for you.
Speaker 2 (01:14:24):
I'm just saying, okay the rent, I let your company
in the railroads. We can make a deal.
Speaker 3 (01:14:32):
Let's make a deal.
Speaker 2 (01:14:34):
Yeah, buddy. Yeah, They said they found a three page
document with writing suggesting that he had ill will towards
corporate America. They asked, if you need a corporate defender,
he said he would a public defender, he said he
would have He would ask it at a future date.
So sound like he's gonna try to defend himself.
Speaker 3 (01:14:54):
Chill. I hope the family get a hold of him
and be like, the hell you will. Yeah, somebody gonna
step in at some period of time that I know
if we're paying for it, you know.
Speaker 2 (01:15:06):
Yeah, it seems uh, it's it seems that maybe he's.
Speaker 3 (01:15:12):
Not all right. Seemed that something is off.
Speaker 5 (01:15:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:15:18):
They said. He quoted the unibamer manifesto on good Reads
and gave it four stars.
Speaker 3 (01:15:24):
Oh why lose a star?
Speaker 2 (01:15:27):
Probably because it's too long, Okay, his manifesto is three pages,
so I'm pretty sure he was like, ted, you ain't
need to write all this shit.
Speaker 3 (01:15:34):
That was too much, Like wrap it up, speed this
shit up.
Speaker 2 (01:15:39):
You could have got filestars. You shaved like.
Speaker 3 (01:15:43):
At all.
Speaker 2 (01:15:46):
Yeah, they were very detailed. He had the writings, they said,
they were very detailed. Everything we have is going to
be turned over to YPD. He had a ghost gun,
a type of weapon that could be as similed at home,
and parts of our serial number make them difficult to trace.
He also had a passport in ten one thousand dollars
in cash, two thousand of it in foreign currency.
Speaker 3 (01:16:04):
He said, uh, I'm going somewhere yep.
Speaker 2 (01:16:11):
So yeah. He attended an elite Baltimore prep school, graduated
as valedictorian in twenty sixteen, according to the school's website.
He went on to earn undergraduate and graduate degrees in
computer size in twenty twenty from the University of Pennsylvania.
One of his cousins of Maryland State Legislature. Slater and
(01:16:31):
his family bought a country club North and Baltimore of
North of Baltimore in nineteen eighties. So oh, money, money,
it comes from money.
Speaker 4 (01:16:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:16:46):
So I don't know, but he sounded like he just
crashed out for some reason. Maybe he just read Maybe
the woke d I got him. He read enough shit
about billionaires and I was like, I'm gonna get me one.
Everybody will set it out, they'll start the revolution. I'll
be a hero. Based on everything we've seen, he is
very careful with trying to stay low profile avoid cameras.
(01:17:08):
Not all that successfully in some cases, but that's what
certainly the effort he was making, said the police. In
the day since the shooting, police turned to the public
for help, blah blah blah. So, uh yeah, they didn't.
What's funny is they were guessing at first they thought
he was a disgruntled employee or client of being sure,
(01:17:31):
but they didn't. They didn't know. Clearly, sounds like he
just was a guy that decided he was gonna catch
him one. So yeah, I guess that's maybe. I mean,
I'm sure there'll be more to this story. He's alive,
and of course sound like he's gonna try to defend
himself in court.
Speaker 5 (01:17:51):
Uh so.
Speaker 2 (01:17:54):
You know, we probably will be hearing more and more
from this man. Yes, yeah, but yeah, I'm looking at
the pictures of him now for those that you know,
I'm not saying he's not attractive or whatever. I just
I just think people are hyping up his attractiveness because
of you know, it's a bad boy, salacious story. But
(01:18:15):
that's him posing with a picture of McDonald a happy
mal for McDonald's. This is him with with the with
the abs out, no shirt on in the jungle.
Speaker 3 (01:18:26):
Oh yeah, you hit them adventurous type.
Speaker 2 (01:18:30):
Yeah, it's bugs out there.
Speaker 3 (01:18:32):
Deep spray himself with some first I hope he did up.
Speaker 2 (01:18:39):
Yep. So, uh, that's what's going on, guys. Uh, it's
it's a jungle out there. Be careful, all right. People
getting accused of sexual assault, people getting caught at shooting,
eating mcgrittel's and shooting CEO's.
Speaker 5 (01:18:56):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:18:57):
Andrew Schultz being an industry plant. That was a show
for they. I'll do a little bit of soy ratchingess
so we can wrap this up nice and clean. Tomorrow's
show will be a bit early. Four PM will be
the time we're going live. We'll have a friend of
the podcast and successful movie writer, Russell Hayline, who is
(01:19:23):
responsible for one of the biggest movies out right now,
the phenomenon known as Hot Frosty on Netflix. And he
has more movies in the pipe and more than he's written.
This just came out come on through, So make sure
y'all come in tomorrow if you're interested into that. We're
gonna talk to him probably for like an hour or so,
(01:19:44):
about you know, his journey from being a podcaster to
like in a film critic to like a movie to
writing movies.
Speaker 3 (01:19:54):
Right, that's a transition.
Speaker 2 (01:19:55):
Yeah, he's been on the show a few times. I've
had him on, we've done movie reviews. He's one of
my favorite would review disaster movies with. So uh yeah,
tune in for that tomorrow because it's gonna be a
good time. All right. Sword ratching this time?
Speaker 5 (01:20:11):
Ye?
Speaker 4 (01:20:17):
All right?
Speaker 2 (01:20:31):
Sword wilding man charged with aggravated assault. You hate to
see it? Oh wait? Can I read this out? Okay?
There we go. Oh wait, this is one of those
you gotta like ill getting to read it? All right, Well,
fuck it, we'll go to a different one. They clearly
don't care about how their jersy swords are. They gotta
make us pay. Thirty five year old man stab with
(01:20:55):
samurai saw it after asking a man for a cigarette tail. Right,
that's that's all. Just say no, I'll take a note.
You could just say I don't have any cigarettes left.
Stabbing seems love the top. I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 5 (01:21:17):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:21:17):
Neighbors said man was stabbed it. Oh cool? I think
I could play this article. Let's see if we can
listen to it together. Everybody, I mean, change my share
my screen with everyone. And let me also make sure
the sound is right. Okay, cool, All right, let's see
we can listen as a family. Everybody make it a bigger,
don't embarrass me article.
Speaker 6 (01:21:38):
A man is dead after getting stabbed with what neighbors
called a sword or a machete.
Speaker 2 (01:21:43):
This attack was at an apartment complex in Greenville. Let
me tell you right now, that is a difference with
no distinction. A sword and a machete the same thing. No,
they're the same thing. That's what I'm saying. It's a
difference with no distinction. A machete is a fucking sword
when it's kneedy, be your guts. I promise you it'll
be a sword.
Speaker 3 (01:22:03):
Well.
Speaker 2 (01:22:03):
Saturday night, Mike Campbell talked with.
Speaker 6 (01:22:05):
Neighbors, and Mike, they tell you this all started when
the victim only asked to borrow a cigarette.
Speaker 7 (01:22:10):
Oh exactly right, Cheryl. Now we are near downtown Greenville
in front of a business that you see is a
laundry mab.
Speaker 2 (01:22:18):
But in this building, if you walk with me up this.
Speaker 7 (01:22:21):
Slight driveway, you'll see that the rest of this building
is actually a large apartment, a number of apartments back here,
and this is where police and neighbors say the senseless
crime happened an attack without warning. Police arrested the man
that lived in this apartment building after he went after
a guest of another tenant, and the neighbors described to
us a nightmare that was all sparked by the victim
(01:22:44):
asking for a cigarette.
Speaker 2 (01:22:47):
You think you said a cool one liner after he
said no, can I have a cigarette? No, but you're
gonna get smoked. Oh no, sorry, but it's not your luck.
This a lucky strike. I don't know. I don't smug
a lot of cigaretus guys.
Speaker 4 (01:23:04):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:23:04):
I didn't have any.
Speaker 5 (01:23:06):
So he went next door and that guy just took
some kind of a sword, samurai sword and stabbed him.
Speaker 7 (01:23:13):
Sheila Horn told me she's still in shock. She identified
the victim as Kyle Brown, a thirty five year old
homeless man.
Speaker 5 (01:23:20):
I let him sit with me in the daytime so
he didn't have to walk the streets all day, you know,
because he's lived at the bridge nine one one man.
Speaker 2 (01:23:28):
White people said they old government name to the news.
Black people will be on the news at the crime
happen up the street. First of all, I faced ont
be on camera.
Speaker 3 (01:23:38):
Youling a hell out of me.
Speaker 2 (01:23:39):
Yes, a lot of chest a lot, a lot of hands,
and be like a neighbor who didn't want to be identified.
Speaker 3 (01:23:45):
Shots.
Speaker 2 (01:23:47):
You know, it's like everyone on the street knows you,
but you don't need everybody in your business. White people
be out there, like Cheryl Jones said.
Speaker 7 (01:23:54):
Some callers brought Greenville police and rescue crews here Saturday night.
They called in an air ambulance to fly him to Dayton,
but Brown did not survive his injuries.
Speaker 5 (01:24:04):
I know that the two do know each other.
Speaker 7 (01:24:07):
I'm not going to comment yet on past disagreements or
what may have led up to it. Greenville Chief Ryan
Benji told me his officers handling the crime scene discovered
the forty eight year old suspect, Matthew McKnight, still on
the scene and took him into custody. Benji didn't want
to say much else, but neighbors claim McKnight appeared to
(01:24:27):
have mental challenges.
Speaker 5 (01:24:29):
He pulled a knife on me before because I went
over the nasty four cigarette one day and I had
to run. But he was very menleal, and he'd set
up all through the night and yell and scream.
Speaker 7 (01:24:39):
Horn and other neighbors want McKnight to stay locked up
for his and the community's safety.
Speaker 2 (01:24:44):
I've seen so.
Speaker 3 (01:24:44):
Much violence and stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:24:45):
It's way this world is amore.
Speaker 5 (01:24:48):
I hope that he don't ever get out, because if
he does, I don't know what I'll do.
Speaker 3 (01:24:54):
Damn.
Speaker 2 (01:24:55):
Yeah, I guess I've used the chill with him every day,
you know, Yeah, I can. I can see how she would.
Speaker 3 (01:25:04):
She will feel like, nope, keep them, keep them locked up.
And like I said, everybody cleaning, they care about mental
health until it's time to pay for mental health.
Speaker 2 (01:25:13):
Yep, yep. But I mean you can't really blame her.
Speaker 7 (01:25:20):
Back live and you are looking at the door where
neighbors told us McKnight lived in that apartment. Now Greenville
detectives are checking records to see how long he may
have lived here and whether there are any other complaints
about his behavior. He is booked into the Dark County
Jail on suspicion of murder. Tonight reporting live in Greenville.
Mike Campbell, damn.
Speaker 3 (01:25:38):
She basically said, the better keep his asking jail because
he comes back out here, it's gonna be a horror
movie nightmare for his ass. He don't want to come
back around here playing with me.
Speaker 2 (01:25:48):
All right, that's it, Thanks for listening. Everybody will be
back tomorrow talking some hot frosty. Until next time, don't
forget our live show tickets, our own sale. The link
will be in the show notes and and uh, you know,
first come, first serve when it comes to the meet
and greet tickets. And if it gets like sold out
or something, we can have a discussion then about opening
(01:26:11):
up more tickets. But let's let's let's get to that
good problem first before we start making any plans.
Speaker 3 (01:26:18):
That that is actually a good problem to have.
Speaker 2 (01:26:21):
All Right, y'all, till next time. I love you, I
love you.
Speaker 5 (01:26:24):
Wh