Noadvisory Podcast

Navigating Life and Lyrics with Cerebral Palsy

Noadvisory Podcast Season 5

Ever wondered how the hilarious world of secret OnlyFans accounts and social media antics collide with serious discussions on national security? Join us as we laugh our way through birthday roasts and playful banter, giving shoutouts to our crew while examining the gender dynamics within our group. We take a moment to poke fun at our buddy Flea's age, and explore the importance of having a balanced gender presence. But it's not all fun and games—we dive into the complexities of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's legal proceedings at Guantanamo Bay and the potential risks of transferring high-profile detainees to other high-security prisons.

Switch gears with us as we discuss the alarming rise in cancer rates among Millennials and Gen Xers, attributing these trends to lifestyle factors and environmental changes. We also tackle the controversial performance by Megan Thee Stallion at Kamala Harris' campaign rally and debate the effectiveness of hip-hop artists versus traditional intellectuals in engaging young voters. Our special guest sheds light on the rich cultural influences of Charleston's hip-hop scene and shares personal stories about living with cerebral palsy while making music. Their upcoming album "Baptism Before Fire" promises to resonate deeply with listeners, blending adversity with artistic inspiration.

And if you think that's all, think again! We'll also share our top hip-hop artist picks and dive into some nostalgic reflections on the mixtape era. Plus, get ready for an exciting announcement: the launch of an online store for the new album, ensuring that profits go directly to the artists. This episode is a rollercoaster of emotions, humor, and heartfelt moments that you won't want to miss. Tune in for an unforgettable experience.

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Speaker 1:

Oh, make with me on the beat. Trap's hit on the beat, but y'all know I ain't no rapper though. Yeah, let's get it. Me and my gang, we up in the yeah.

Speaker 2:

Cheers y'all. I'm on the Daily Summary Podcast your boy Sam McClain.

Speaker 1:

It's your girl Trap's hit. It's there as I screwed it. See y''all about to choke. When you started, I tried to hold it.

Speaker 2:

He was like he wasn't supposed to let people know because, oh shit, take that, take that, god damn.

Speaker 1:

You need to edit that shit out. What is that you have in your?

Speaker 2:

hand ain't nothing I got in my hand. Put your hand Ain't nothing I got in my hand. Yeah, put that shit away, uh-huh. Okay, blow it out, blow it out, blow it out. Huh, cause man niggas got things with people drug testing and shit.

Speaker 1:

Okay, New job me, New job me.

Speaker 2:

Okay, yeah, yeah. Shout out to my man Polo in the background. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to my man.

Speaker 2:

Swish.

Speaker 1:

Polo Polo, yes, yes, you need what? Yeah, he need light.

Speaker 2:

I got, it, I got it, you ready?

Speaker 1:

He's balling Swish. All right, listen, this is what y'all need to do as always, shout out to our cameraman Swish, he's ballin'. Like and subscribe. We're on YouTube. We're on Spotify, apple Music, amazon Music. No, we're not on OnlyFans. Who's on OnlyFans? You on Swish? Huh, oh, you got OnlyFans. You got OnlyFans. You got one too, yeah, I got an only fan.

Speaker 2:

You got one too. Yeah, I'm showing my fingernails, they got like women. Oh no, no, no, no, no, I'm not standing over here.

Speaker 3:

Give me a free trial link because I know you got a free trial link.

Speaker 1:

Just send me the video.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they like that shit.

Speaker 1:

Nah, I want the free trial so he can get the pornballs. We are on black people meet. We're on yelp. We are on um xjeevescom.

Speaker 2:

We're on people.

Speaker 1:

we're not on that pornhubcom, we're not on that either we are on pornhub slash midget peoplecom do you hope it's not even allowed in north riley. So do you and swiss got like secret lives y'all got a secret no advisor page we are on xxx slash pornhub, slash midgetpeoplecom. First of all, all those sites trash. If y'all going to be on some Tasty Blacks, Okay.

Speaker 2:

See, see, we done found out some shit about her.

Speaker 1:

I'll show y'all afterwards.

Speaker 2:

Found out some shit about her man. Shout out to my man, flea, over there Fleazess. Shout out to Flea Happy, belated birthday.

Speaker 1:

Oh, happy belated birthday. Three one, please, when was your birthday? Flea, that's what, not cancer? That's yeah, he's cancer, oh you know what Flea?

Speaker 2:

My nigga turned 86 years old. You look good for 86, my nigga.

Speaker 1:

Flea. Tag me in, tag me in, tag me in. Flea, you need me, tag me in.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so you talking about age Tag me how old are you TO? I am 42 years old and I am proud of my motherfucking age?

Speaker 1:

Yes, 42 plus what.

Speaker 2:

Yes, 42. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 1:

42 plus 42 is what?

Speaker 2:

42 plus 42 is 42, nigga.

Speaker 1:

No, that's not how old you are. Shout out Flea.

Speaker 2:

Flea, you, the coolest kid I know. Shout out to TikTok man. Shout out to Instagram.

Speaker 1:

Did you press the button and what did you say? Nothing, you just said press the button.

Speaker 2:

So now we live on. So now we live. Shout out to Instagram, shout out to TikTok Live.

Speaker 1:

We on TikTok Live motherfucker, we always got to shout out because we don't never do that, so we don't have to start doing that in our show. Shout out to Kim, our social media. Ty was here last week, you wasn't here.

Speaker 2:

She's on social media, she's YouTube. She was at the concert.

Speaker 1:

She went to a concert, shut up.

Speaker 2:

I need some men in the group because I'm tired of all these fucking cheeks in the group. I'm the only man, that's why.

Speaker 1:

I add a sleeve. You tired of cheeks is wild. That's a wild statement. That sounds very diddy. No, I'm.

Speaker 2:

I'm an involved man, I can't be having that shit. Oh brother, you know what I'm saying. I need some uninvolved men in a chat with me, but Swish, you don't say nothing, never. That don't, that don't help.

Speaker 1:

I'd be like, okay, help me, right, help me nigga say something. Nah, swish smart he trying to shut up so he can keep seeing cheeks, you, the one fucking. I'd be like, okay, help me, help me, nigga, say something. Switch, smart he trying to shut up so he can keep seeing cheeks you, the one fucking it up. We gonna go to the separate chats in a second.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we finna go separate chats.

Speaker 1:

And we gonna name it Cheeks. Do that Create your own chat.

Speaker 2:

Switch, we'll give you a free trial link. Free 30-day trial link. Free 30-day trial link. Invite Polo while you at it too. Let Polo come in and do the chat.

Speaker 1:

Polo can't see my cheeks, he think I'm innocent. Yeah, me too, uh-uh.

Speaker 2:

Now we know he think I'm innocent.

Speaker 1:

He can't see my cheeks. Besides, I ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 2:

What you gonna have Speaking of sleeves. Look at sleeves walking the building Tight shit, tight, shit I need you to help me in the chat and say some shit in the chat that's why I added you that's why I put you in the chat. Uh huh, does the run down okay?

Speaker 1:

okay, I got you you ain't hear what this man said he said he tired of seeing ass cheeks in the chat.

Speaker 3:

I am.

Speaker 1:

I see this shit all day on Instagram. So he said you ain't gotta be. This man said. He said he tired of seeing ass cheeks in the chat. I am I see this shit all day on Instagram. See, he said you ain't gotta be tired of that, you know.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

I was drunk as hell.

Speaker 2:

I said that during the club CEO.

Speaker 1:

I was like damn, I'm finna bother the fuck out of CEO. No it was the fuck CEO that killed me. I was drunk.

Speaker 2:

I done saw what's her girl name, what's her name Ty Ty. I done saw her coochie line and shit.

Speaker 1:

I don't even know the girl, you ain't seen her coochie line. I know you didn't. Yes, I did how she had on shorts. She had on shorts In the video.

Speaker 2:

She had the long black. She had the black on and Maybe you start looking so hard I can't wait to switch the editors. I'm going to put all the videos in.

Speaker 1:

Please add these videos.

Speaker 2:

Her situation?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you don't know she got a man, you standing out loud. She got a man who know oh, you are not discreet, well shit.

Speaker 2:

All right, let's move on.

Speaker 1:

Let's move on. As he repeats it again, let's move on. Celebr Topics with Chubby. What the fuck? We're going to go ahead and keep this pushing. Okay, we're going to go ahead. First, though, we got celebrity birthdays Only four today, real quick. I hate my brother's CEO, lil Uzi Vert. He turned 30. Lil Uzi Vert.

Speaker 2:

He turned 30. He's a sassy 30-year-old.

Speaker 1:

That's not it. Y'all get to show the. It was the purse for me. It's only my third day here. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I don't know if y'all know him but AJ Green.

Speaker 1:

He played for the Bengals.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, he was nice when he played?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he turned 36. 36? He's young still. Yeah, he's still young, he still playing.

Speaker 2:

It's crazy Nah what team he played for. Was it the Texans? The last team, I think?

Speaker 1:

Oh, he retired.

Speaker 3:

Oh.

Speaker 2:

AJ Green was nasty. Shout out to AJ Green 36 Alright up next Mark Cuban.

Speaker 1:

He turned 66, 66.

Speaker 2:

Mark Cuban, shout out Mark Cuban.

Speaker 1:

Curbin on Curbin Smart.

Speaker 2:

He's my favorite NBA owner. Curbin on.

Speaker 1:

Curbin. Shout out to Mark Curbin.

Speaker 2:

And lastly Wesley.

Speaker 1:

Snipes. He turned 62 Shout out to Blade.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to Blade. Spoiler alert. Spoiler alert. Spoiler alert If you didn't watch Wolverine and Deadpool, Blade is in it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they trying to. Why would you say that, no, no, no, that's not a spoiler alert though, because Marvel been said that when they first talked about doing this movie and they said they're using it.

Speaker 2:

I ain't gonna lie though I didn't know that y'all, oh yeah, For real. No, I didn't seen the movie.

Speaker 1:

I'm a Marvel fanatic. Don't spoil it, I haven't seen the movie Spoiler alert.

Speaker 2:

Spoiler alert Deadpool and Wolverine fought in the movie let's talk off camera.

Speaker 1:

Okay, let's talk off camera, Because that way I'm going to just Damn Doom.

Speaker 1:

That shit. I can't wait for that to be that need to be one of your top. What up? Tiktok, huh, all y'all motherfuckers. Your the name. Yes, robert Downey Jr. The man formerly known as Anthony Stark will now be Dr Doom, which is for comic people comic people. I've read that storyline. That's a storyline of Fantastic Four, where in another, the multiverse Anthony Stark is, which is gonna be crazy. Yes, it's gonna be crazy. So what Marvel is now trying to do is they're also incorporating some DC comics as well.

Speaker 1:

So you're gonna see a lot of multiverse storylines and when I tell you fire. Marvel is getting my coins.

Speaker 2:

Do you know the TV shows?

Speaker 1:

we finna get after that shit, the TV shows we finna get after that shit, the TV shows we finna get. Okay, also, little rumor alert Beep, beep, beep. A little birdie told me I don't know if y'all guys ever watched a cartoon that used to be on WB called Static Shock. Yes, static Shock is supposed to get a live action movie. Yes, I heard that. I heard that I used to love Static. Static's shot was so fire. Who's that? The little black?

Speaker 2:

kid.

Speaker 1:

With the dreads. Oh okay, that shit was so fire, virgil, virgil.

Speaker 2:

Virgil. He's a fictional character, right Like he's not in no comic book, to none they just made him up.

Speaker 1:

He's in a comic book. He's a comic book to none. They just made him up. He's in a comic book. He's a comic book. Yeah, he's a comic book character. Yes, and they made the cartoon out of him. They made a cartoon out of him, yes that's right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he's a comic book character, which which which DC. He's DC. Yeah, he's DC. Oh, okay, Because in the cartoon he.

Speaker 1:

But people have been asking for a long time, especially when Black Lightning came out. People have been asking for a static shock, live action and shit. Honestly, that might be DC's best move. If they want, like, a Black Panther type phenomenon, that would be their best move to do. To be honest, that is a good character to compete against a Black Panther you think so? Yes, because the shock is such a monumental character for the culture, for millennials, for Gen Xers.

Speaker 1:

I ain't a classic that's a monumental character for the culture, for millennials for Gen Xers, because I ain't gonna lie, that's the one thing. That's the one thing I remember coming home at 3 o'clock in the afternoon turning on WB, and right after Pokemon, static Shock used to come on like that would be a big ass character to compete with.

Speaker 2:

I mean DC needed, because the only person they got is Batman Superman kind of. I mean they need a.

Speaker 1:

They need another great Superman movie because Batman just took took the cake yeah, I think honestly DC, when there are movies, I think the only one is I really like, other than Superman and Batman, was Aquaman. But even that last Aquaman movie I was kind of a little disappointed the first one was fire.

Speaker 1:

That's the only one, yeah. The second one it kind of just in the rest of the DC movies. They just have not been touching my soul. So, and I hate to say it, but honestly, let's not, you know, get too far, because Marvel been falling off lately too. So Hell, no, yes, they have them.

Speaker 2:

TV shows the last couple TV shows. We're talking about cinema movies.

Speaker 1:

TV shows are part of the cinematic universe. They are, and that's the thing like you have to watch the shows in order to keep up with it.

Speaker 3:

In order to catch at yeah, what you said.

Speaker 1:

Hmm, yeah, I don't know what All of it is an order. Oh, yeah, yeah, you can't watch all the movies. You can't watch all the movies. Like the live action? Yeah, as soon as you can.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Like.

Speaker 1:

Wonder Woman or not Wonder Woman?

Speaker 2:

Like the one with Vision.

Speaker 1:

And no, that was good, that was good, that shit was. But they tied to the movies. We gotta watch that.

Speaker 2:

Because it ties into the universe, the only one that I say that I really enjoy Was Moon Knight.

Speaker 1:

Moon Knight was fire, shit. Yeah, moon Knight was fire and I'm excited to see His character in the Next coming movies, cause I was talking about, you know, egyptian culture and all that shit and that shit is so good. That shit was good as fuck. I ain't gonna lie, I love low key.

Speaker 2:

I'm a low key fanatic. Before we get too far, yeah, let's go to the topics. Topics.

Speaker 1:

Okay, the first one is gonna blow y'all mind Y'all ready. Yes, the United States. You know how they have this infamous saying we don't make deals with terrorists. The United States has reached a plea deal. We get this alleged 9-11 mastermind, ksm, but I'm gonna say his full name, khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and his two other defendants. Now, mind you, these are people that they captured in 2003. Okay, I know Khalid.

Speaker 1:

They have been sitting in Guantanamo Bay, so I don't know him waiting trial and I'm gonna tell you what has taken so long. So, up until the point of them reaching a plea, let me say this they were still in the pre-trial phase of this case from 2003 from 2003 what the wait?

Speaker 2:

three, four, five, six, that's 21 years.

Speaker 1:

Damn, 9-11 happened 21 years ago yes, 9-11 happened 23 years damn so 2001 yeah yeah, so one thing that held up this entire case was mr muhammad and his two defendants. They not no dummies. They were tortured and they went and they sued the us government. More specifically, they sued the military for torture against them. So that held up an entire case we had, because they had to go through the military trial first before the government can take action now.

Speaker 1:

Let me say this the biggest question that has been proposed because of this deal is well, let me tell you, their deal was obviously you know they're gonna die regardless, they never getting out. Their deal was, in exchange for a death sentence, they will serve out the rest of their natural living life in prison. The issue is nobody knows where they are going to be housed, because, if you remember, a couple years ago with the um I think it started with the obama administration he started shutting down guantanamo bay. Biden has kept that promise and kept that going and is currently that's like, priority for biden's administration is shutting down guantanamo bay. So a lot of people don't know, because this is something that's kept under the rugs. Guantanamo bay has released a lot of inmates that they feel are no longer threats.

Speaker 1:

Mind you, these were some of the worst of the worst, yeah you said they were never going to be rehabilitated, and now you're letting them back out now what is it dead up right, because think of all the torture and everything they have endured for the years that they've been there.

Speaker 2:

And nobody knows about it, that's shit crazy.

Speaker 1:

So just keep that in mind. So before you go to the next part, I guess that I guess that other prison, the one that's in Colorado, I can't remember the name of it Is that the one? That's the one that got all?

Speaker 2:

the Ute Bomber and all that shit.

Speaker 1:

So Leavensworth is really a military prison. It's not really a federal prison. Is that the one I'm talking about in Colorado? Yeah, it is. Yeah, I think I'm pretty sure they house all of the Macs. I don't think it's Leavensworth.

Speaker 2:

No, that might be in Kentucky.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I don't think it's Le bomber.

Speaker 1:

Um, it has, oh my god, a lot of those really high profile serial killers his wife, though that's that prison is the one they can only get out for like an hour a day, not even if that 30 minutes, and they like locked down 23 and shit like um, I can't remember the name of it, but I'm wondering if they would, if they would put him and put them in that prison. So when I was reading like more into this because this is Y'all letting the worst of the worst go, y'all making plea deals with terrorists I'm just so confused, like right, so they have like legal experts that are experts on terrorism and their lawyers and they said, what is it?

Speaker 2:

Who committed suicide.

Speaker 1:

Oh that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about the actual prison. I need the prison um they were saying that, um, the experts were saying like, honestly, this is the best deal that america could ever make, because if they would have kept going to an actual case, it would have still been another 20 years before they even got to trial, because all the motions and objections and things like that, that they'reling and that's just more taxpayers money that's being spent, that we don't even know is being spent.

Speaker 2:

That's fucking crazy.

Speaker 1:

So they said this is the best case scenario. But it's interesting. They also said that what they might do is essentially ship them off to another country and put them in their prison to let them like do it.

Speaker 2:

They're going to live in a country where they resided. No, oh.

Speaker 1:

Like, send them to like a Russian prison. Yes, go to Florence. And let them be Russia's problem. That's crazy, because they gonna be living good Because Russia got one of the harshest prison systems in the world.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that is, russian prisons.

Speaker 1:

I heard horrible stories about their prisons Supermax, florence, supermax, it got all the high-profile serial killers the Boston bomber, he's in that prison. The Boston Marathon, he's in that prison. So I'm wondering if that's an option on the table, because that's a Supermax prison. I mean there's a lot of Supermaxes in America.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I don't trust them to their own country.

Speaker 1:

I don't trust them to their own country. I watch too much thriller and action movies on amazon prime. I just feel like some liam neeson type nigga don't break them out and shit. I don't trust that. I just feel like it wasn't right, like and granted, you know. But let's be honest, most people that go to guantanamo bay they usually serve in life they're not going there with with the release date, let's be honest, they have no parole right, they have no hope of ever seeing daylight.

Speaker 1:

So to let them out, think of all the thoughts that they have festering in their mind while they were sitting in there against you think of all the, the things that they probably learned from other people, because, let's be honest, in a prison system, people are going to find a way to communicate yes they're going to find a way to plan, plot, whatever they need to do, still communicate x. You know they tried to send me to Guantanamo Girl. Goodbye, cause I'm the biggest, don't forget the realest. My bad.

Speaker 2:

Now that's the second one. Hey, who on the Instagram?

Speaker 1:

Nobody Shut up. So this second one is also going to make y'all mouth drop a little bit.

Speaker 2:

More millennials and gen xers yeah, before you go, we millennials right? Oh yeah, because you like a what boomer, a baby boomer. He's a millennial baby boomer, millennial is 1980 to 1994 yeah you know, he was born in 1970s 1969 millennial.

Speaker 1:

The gen xer is 1994 to, I think, like 2000, and oh, wait, wait, I'm a Gen Xer. Then I don't even know.

Speaker 2:

You're a millennial.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, because I'm in the beginning part of 94. It might be 1995 then. Okay, because my brother is a Gen Xer.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Don't play with me. I don't want to be in Gen X Google is your friend. Okay, anyway, millennials and Gen Xers 17 different cancers compared to other generations.

Speaker 2:

Wait what.

Speaker 1:

Wait what? We are more likely to develop cancer of 17 different types compared to other generations.

Speaker 3:

That shit don't make no sense. Let me, let me read it.

Speaker 1:

I'm baby Okay. So let me read the 17 cancers, right, okay, so out of the, these are 17 cancers that they're saying, out of the 34 that are known, 17 of these we have a higher risk of developing in our lifetime compared to our parents.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 1:

These are gastric or your stomach cancer. Oh, small intestine cancer. Oh Estrogen receptive breast cancer. Oh shit. Breast cancer based off your hormones. Oh shit. Ovarian cancer. Oh Liver and bowel duct cancer. Your mouth and throat cancers. And this is only for women. For women, mouth and throat is only for women. Anus cancer. Anus cancer, colon and rectal Anus Uterine.

Speaker 2:

Anus Gallbladder Kidney.

Speaker 1:

Panccreas myeloma testes we don't got that leukemia and this one is only for men kaposi sarcoma, which is basically the lining of your blood vessels and your lip nodes. That's only in me. I didn't ask to be born here.

Speaker 2:

You know what I want to know. Out of those like what is the percentage?

Speaker 1:

so I have people, thank you for the culture, because I'm like what you mean, I'm about to die, okay, for the culture for the culture. That's all I said. Let me get happy nigga day. They did a study of 23 million patients. They be in the north american cancer society. 23 million, that's a lot, 23 million patients, they being the North American.

Speaker 2:

Cancer Society 23 million. That's a lot 23 million patients.

Speaker 1:

That's a huge pool of people born between 1920 and 1990. 1920, see you, they broke these groups up every 10 years. So 1920s, 1930s, 1940s, right, the 1990 age group was 167% higher, which means they are 167% more likely to develop one of those 17 cancers compared to other generations. And then out of the black people. You didn't no, I didn't do black people.

Speaker 3:

Oh hell, they didn't break it down like that.

Speaker 1:

See we are, we're just breaking down by age. See, yo ask Siri, Do your old nigga shit, ask Siri. Do it, hey Siri. What's the question? Will black people get cancer? How many black people get cancer after that research?

Speaker 2:

Damn, that's a lot to ask.

Speaker 1:

Please hold. So the reason they said that millennials and gen xers are basically 167 higher at a risk of developing.

Speaker 1:

This is due to changes in the environment and lifestyle stuff that I did not ask for, yeah, so what they mean is more pollution, global warming, um, you know, kids smoking cigarettes at younger ages, obesity, things like that. And they said out of the 17 cancers, 10 of those are increased in younger patients because of obesity. So out of those, it was 10 that even if you are a Gen Xer and a millennial. So basically saying like let's say you got a little cousin that's a Gen Yer, they probably gonna get cancer faster than you are because of the obesity, gen Xer and a millennial. So basically saying like let's say you got a little cousin that's a Gen Yer, they probably going to get cancer faster than you are because of the obesity. Damn, because it's so prevalent. Damn, that's wild.

Speaker 2:

That's wild.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy.

Speaker 2:

Listen.

Speaker 1:

We're going to die. We're going to die. It's crazy, we're going to die.

Speaker 2:

It just really tells you to just take care of yourself, man. Health is wealth. Like they always say health is wealth, man. Take care of yourself man Detox.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to go on another detox Workout.

Speaker 2:

You know, even if it's five, even if it's two to five minutes a day, that's still something you know to get your body going, get your blood flowing. You know, burn little is wealth, man. The system is not set up for people to live, the system is set up for people to die and death make a lot of money. So that's why they want niggas to die. Death makes a lot of money. Look at rappers when a nigga dies and rap.

Speaker 1:

Somebody who's never going to be out of business. A mortician Never.

Speaker 2:

Never, never, never. They can even dig niggas up.

Speaker 1:

That's sad, let's move on. That was sad. Dig niggas up dig who nevermind go, move on dig niggas up and kill them again go ahead, see, alright. So the last one, that fake ass true story, the last one, y'all know I gotta talk about it talk about it, megan Thee. Stallion yeah, talk about it. Megan Thee Stallion Performed at Kamala Harris' rally Campaign rally In Atlanta the other day. Yes, she did For freedom and there was a lot Of Chatter, chatter, backlash, backlash, yep, for lack of better words, because of, oh shit Two things.

Speaker 2:

You know how you fumble. I got you. You know I be clumsy.

Speaker 1:

Because of two things number one, her outfit and number two, the twerking. Why was she twerking at a rally?

Speaker 2:

why why?

Speaker 1:

so y'all know me, I like to do my research. Y'all on tiktok, be saying I don't do my research, but the paper proves I do my research.

Speaker 1:

Okay, see that shit right there so, first of all, everything was very intentional with this performance. Okay, the outfit that she wore was a cobalt blue suit with a crop white shirt and a tie that was styled by Abdul Saul. He said he did this because Kamala has been criticized a lot for being a very dull dresser wearing a lot of neutrals, and he knew that she was going to wear blue. So this was his take on like twinning right now with that. He also said that this outfit was meant to serve two purposes. The other was to highlight that here you have two women from very different corners of the world, both at the top of their respective careers, defining power on their own terms. Now, I can see that from the Kamala campaign yeah.

Speaker 1:

The booze was cute from the Kamala campaign. Their advisors have said the reason that they have made the stallion perform is because what they're really trying to do for this election is hone in on the 18 to 27 age group demographic for voters of that Megan Thee Stallion has like 32.3 million fans, of which like 98% of those is that exact same age group. So their thinking was we're gonna bring what we already know works for a general um Gen Xers and Millennials TikTok, everybody know TikTok, everybody know to do the body. Yada, yada, yada. Do the little dance. You know, you know the little tiktok dances. So they did that with the intention of shining the light and trying to relate to their younger audience because, let's be honest, young people is not gonna sit up and watch no campaign rally on tv but you say, meg the style, you hear they gonna tune in now. To that point they gonna tune in Now to that point?

Speaker 2:

right. The only thing I will say to that point, just to play devil's advocate here, is there are white, spanish, well, spanish, black we'll just say Caucasian entertainers. That has a wider range on TikTok and social media than fucking Megan Thee Stallion. So why would we choose Megan Thee Stallion?

Speaker 1:

Because she's black number one, and she has a demographic of two points that they're trying to hit. They know that the most powerful voters in America are the black votes. So now, not only are they shining light on or bringing awareness to their black voters, they're also tapping into the millennials. Because by doing that, now you're just crawling, you're, you're negating the black. Now you're crossing all demographics right because a's don't have no race to it right but I say that to say.

Speaker 2:

Is she just soliciting the black vote to win the election?

Speaker 1:

so, so, let me, let me, let me make I'm glad we brought this yeah, but that. But that goes to his point. So, but before we go to, let me break this down because I've been waiting on this topic. So let me ask. To your first question, you said um, white entertainers, stuff like down tiktok, which ones would you have seen? Wanted to see up there?

Speaker 2:

I mean I don't follow tiktok in that, but I'm saying case in point, right?

Speaker 1:

Well then, negate TikTok. What white entertainers would you want to see on that stage? Why they couldn't get a?

Speaker 2:

Taylor Swift, who has the most.

Speaker 1:

Instagram followers. How do you know? Taylor Swift is even a Democrat.

Speaker 2:

I don't know what fucking Democratic party she's a part of. How do you know?

Speaker 1:

they haven't reached out to her and she declined it. How do you know they haven't reached out to her and she declined? It's crazy because when Hillary did this with Beyonce, nobody had this backlash. Hillary did the same thing on her. She had a campaign rally in Ohio and Beyonce came out.

Speaker 2:

Nobody said anything about it.

Speaker 1:

It goes to respectability politics and that's pretty much what it is. At this point, meg is hated. People hate her for shit. That don't even got nothing to do with politics. Her music, the toy, shit, it go. People hate that child and it is what it is. You know people have their own opinions about that.

Speaker 1:

Whatever, as far as this moment, I'm only gonna speak to this moment that twerking that she did I'm thinking the way people was talking about it. I'm thinking like she had a thong, always showing ass cheeks and pussy cheeks. That twerking that she did was not even your kids do worse. Your kids literally sit up there and do worse twerking on tiktok, on instagram. Your kids do worse twerking. I've seen your children do twerking while they're not with you. You think your kids are innocent and angels. When they're not with you, they are not.

Speaker 1:

Second of all, like sis said, they're trying to reach a certain demographic. I just know and I've been on twitter all day laughing at niggas, talking with niggas. I just know the demographic that ain't said my president is black, my Lambo is blue, is not talking about Megan. Thee Stallion on there twerking y'all niggas is corny as fuck with that shit. That shit was even released before Obama became president, so I know we not talking. This is also a democratic party that had Bill Clinton on Arsenio Hall playing a fucking saxophone and y'all called him the black president. What the fuck are we talking about here? What Meg Thee Stallion did was very pale and compared to other shit that the Republicans and the Democrats have done before. You had fucking Hulk Hogan on Trump's thing, ripping his shirt off, talking about he didn't even give no policies. You had the queen of the whole marathon, the whole walk on trump's platform talking about her and her, not a reformed wholeness. So again, I asked my people, I I asked my people wait terrence.

Speaker 1:

to also add to your point, nobody is talking about the fact that, as everybody is in such an outrage over meg being at this, that Trump literally went to a black journalism convention.

Speaker 2:

Yes, yes, I was about to get to that point.

Speaker 1:

Every single. I was about to get to that point. I think what black people and this is and I'm saying this and this, this might be the clip that might get me black people we have such a love, love, hate relationship with respectability politics. We are all for freedom, freedom of choice, freedom of body, freedom of this, freedom of that, but when it comes to that, for real, black people are the ones that be like uh-uh, y'all should be ashamed of y'all selves. Y'all should be embarrassed and I said this today y'all not embarrassed with hip-hop. Come on, y'all don't be embarrassed watching all five seasons of baddies, baddies, caribbean, y'all don't be embarrassed when that shit happens y'all, don't, y'all don't be embarrassed with them.

Speaker 1:

housewives of atlanta, married to medicine huntsville. So I don't want to hear none of that shit about this woman getting on stage trying to reach a demographic. If the demographic does not apply to you, let it fly, bro. It's not for you, it's not for you, it's not for you. And I'm trying to be really honest. People was talking so much shit on Twitter today and I love the way the tide with the turns, because by the afternoon people was really realizing how stupid as fuck they were and what they were saying, because they was like who would y'all rather see up there? The Clark sisters. I'm not going to lie to y'all. If I got on that rally and I saw the Clark sisters on, I probably would have turned my damn TV off.

Speaker 1:

Okay, it's all about a politics game and, sad to say, I know people bring up the point of well, they are pandering for the black vote. They pander for Asian votes. When it's an Asian rally, they're going to bring Daniel Dae Kim up there. They're going to bring Jet Li up there. It is what it is. That's politics, that's propaganda, that's the point of the game. They have to do this if you don't want to vote for kamala because of this. That's fine, but let's not talk about how meg was up there twerking and no policies were being made, because she talked about a whole bunch of policies through that rally and none of y'all said shit about it.

Speaker 2:

Now, the only thing I will say to that point is um, when and charlamagne the god um said this and he expressed this, he was like you got other black entities like Cornel West or what's the guy named? What's the guy named with the semi dreads that be always on Instagram? What the fuck is his name? What's semi dreads? It's not dreads, it's like it's half a dreads. What's his name? I'm confused.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, thank you, umar.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, thank you, umar, like, why not bring those guys up to speak, as opposed to trying to bring people from the hip-hop community to come out?

Speaker 1:

Because nobody's going to turn on their TV to listen to the fucking speak.

Speaker 2:

We don't listen to them on Instagram, as is.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to ask you this. I got to pick up my fucking mic now. I'm going to ask you this. I got to pick up my fucking mic now. I'm going to ask you this If they said, if they announced it right now on Twitter, all right, y'all, big rally tomorrow with Cornel West. We have Don King. Turn it. Tune in now. Ask the CEO Be honest with yourself. Are you going to tune in?

Speaker 1:

No, Okay, that's why they didn't ask, but I and let me say you brought up Dr Umar. Kamala Harris would not align herself with Dr Umar. Dr Umar is for black people, but Dr Umar is also a misogynistic ass black man. That does not align with Kamala Harris policies for women. So, no, she's not going to align with that. What you have to be realistic for is, bruh, they not trying to target your demographic. We, old as fuck, let that shit go. We, old, they're not trying to target our demographic. We, old as fuck, let that shit go. We, oh, they're not trying to target our demographic. We know to get our ass up and go vote. These kids do not. So they're trying to target these kids. Let that shit go.

Speaker 2:

I have to pick up my fucking mic because y'all don't piss me off, right, if you look at it and you, I think she need an airbrush?

Speaker 1:

no, because let me tell y'all, this shit been pissing me off. I'm sorry, this shit been pissing me off all day, so I didn't get this shit out.

Speaker 2:

Because you look at like who she's targeting right? These guys, that are, these people that are 18 to say 21, right 27 27 right. These motherfuckers are really. They're not going out to vote, they're not. They're not going out. That's why they're doing it to get people to go vote, but they still not going out.

Speaker 1:

So I want to let you know so I want to let you know, with that last election round, when they brought out all these rappers and all this stuff, that age range had a growth of 43.7% better than our age range because they brought out all these rappers and artists and stuff. So it's working somewhere. She did it in a state where a lot of that demographic is in that state. Georgia is a blue state, it's a black state. They she brought out two entertainers that have been at like they've been advocating for gun change, like gun violence. Quavo is on two of her gun violence committees. Ever since Take Off Die, he's been on two of her committees. Meg has been advocating for gun change. So, yes, this was a political move, it was a smart move and it worked. This shit worked. As of what I just read for like a couple hours ago, the polls in Georgia have changed. Kamala Harris is leading the polls in Georgia so far, those pre-research polls. So it worked.

Speaker 1:

The twerking worked. Let it twerk, vote a twerk. You know what I'm saying. And then, too, to like, dumb it down. To like. I don't know what I'm trying to say, but to dumb it down to you have to like think how these young ass kids think okay, they don't have it all the way. So in their mind, if they see one of their favorite artists, oh they voting. Bro, it's cool to vote, I'm gonna go vote that's literally how I get all of that scary.

Speaker 2:

But I get all of that. I just think that there's always two sides to a coin. Right, there are billions of people in this world, billions. So to corner a little section of people and negate all the other people, that's why I think the whole, that's why I think the backlash is coming I don't think that they doing it, though I think, for this is why this was just one rally she has more rally, absolutely, and then she has the democratic national, and then she has a whole campaign.

Speaker 2:

But what I'm seeing the consensus of what that rally was about was why, megan Thee Stallion, why you got to choose hip-hop artists to do that. That's their fault. They made it about the wrong shoes.

Speaker 1:

That's what I'm saying the rally wasn't about pop. It wasn't about pop, right. So because that's what? The consensus, but the argument, the about right. So because that's what, that's what is the consensus, but the argument, the argument is the main argument. The consensus and argument is why do they have made a stallion on stage and why are they not talking about policies? They talked about policies. Motherfuckers ignored that you talk about make the stallion. So at some point you got to realize like damn, do I really care about the politics or do I care about respectability politics? Yeah, like motherfuckers, who was talking shit about? Meg was like oh, they got her up to work, but they're not really talking about no policies. No, after she got off the stage, they literally ran through all of her policies. She went through all of her policies. You're not paying attention to the policies. So at this point it's a you problem, not a Meg problem.

Speaker 2:

But to that point is that a distraction away from what the policy?

Speaker 1:

No, because you wasn't going to listen to it nowhere. If she didn't have nobody on there, she just talked about her policies. You don't listen to it nowhere.

Speaker 2:

Just imagine if they had a Cornel West up there right.

Speaker 1:

You not tuning in? You've already admitted that you're not going to watch it.

Speaker 2:

That's the first thing, I'm just saying.

Speaker 1:

You already admitted that you're not going to. She had Megan.

Speaker 2:

Thee Stallion on there. They're not worried about the policies, they're worried about Megan Thee Stallion. Right, so say they had Cornel West up there. I keep throwing that name up because that's the first thing that comes to my head. And he talked right. And they're like, okay, get this nigga off the stage.

Speaker 1:

I want to hear what Kamala got to say, because they focus on what Kamala has to niggas on the stage. But I'm just saying, I'm just playing the devil. I get it and see, this is because this is because you had. You didn't really watch the rally. So those people that you were talking about like they had um stacy abrams on stage, john ossoff, all those people um was warnock, um, reverend warnock was on stage. They talked about her policies. Meg did too.

Speaker 1:

After she was done, kamala really didn't hit on her policies because everybody did before. You didn't't watch the rally. A lot of people didn't watch the rally. They watched one clip of Mad Twerking and watched Shade Room and then decided to form an opinion. That's why I tell people all the time and that's what Sid always preaches when she does these topics I do my research, do your research before you get to talking. Don't be on the Shade Room, yeah, do your research before you get to talking. Talking about, like cornell west, get off stage. All those people she put on before her talked about her policies. Each one of them hit on a different policy, and then kamala came in and backed up what they said and went on. Meg did quavo did all of them people did. That's what I'm saying. Y'all got to watch the rally but what are we talking about?

Speaker 2:

what's everybody talking about?

Speaker 1:

megan twerking no, to be honest. That's why I said in the beginning of twitter this morning on twitter, the tides change when people actually watch the full clip. Oh, they like. Oh, okay, this is what happened. So when you get on Twitter now, everybody like oh yeah, these policies, da, da da, cause you again. People watching what room? What room is it? What room we in the shade room? That's all I gotta say about that vote. Kamala Harris.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that was it vote Sia McClain and shout out to the US, us, for you know, we got five gold medals US fool 13. Silver 12, bronze 36 others you know, somebody said throw them bronzes away somebody said every other day you be hating America. But then, as soon as the Olympics come on, yeah, you be like US fool. Like every other day, you be like damn fuck America. But then, when the Olympics come on, yeah, usa, usa, nigga, was that it? Yeah, us, us food. You got any candy? Yeah, let me get one. Hell no Jolly.

Speaker 2:

Rancher oh shit, shout out to Jolly Rancher yeah, yeah, see your medicine.

Speaker 1:

Like you know how old people like that butterscotch. I thought it was like butterscotch stuff. I don't fucking know what butterscotch is.

Speaker 2:

Oh, you be chewing the candy like this. You got a green one. They gave me two. No one for candy, one for candy. Shit, nigga, that's for me. No green ones, no green. You see what I'm talking about.

Speaker 1:

Well, while we take an intermission break for candy Cryptid Agency, for all your hosting and PR needs, Alright, shout out to everybody that's following. Thank you, trav. Yeah, shit, baby. Alright, cl, what would you do? What would you do? What would you do?

Speaker 2:

So what's up, TikTok, how you doing, oh, my skin look good.

Speaker 1:

No filter.

Speaker 2:

There's no filter.

Speaker 1:

What.

Speaker 2:

You ain't got that netter, oh shit. My skin is good, my bed look good too. You ain't got that, ms Netter. So, what would you do? Y'all know my. What would you do? Disclaimer, damn Fuck. Disclaimer, mike. What?

Speaker 1:

would you?

Speaker 2:

do? Are it counts by me or it counts from a third party?

Speaker 1:

Give us a hint. Is this you today, or somebody?

Speaker 2:

else, Nah somebody else. This happened today.

Speaker 1:

Today, oh this fresh.

Speaker 2:

Oh, this is going to be good, Because I was laughing. I was hysterical. I don't know why I was laughing so much, but this is Okay. I'm going to ask you a general consensus question For your birthday. What is a reasonable amount of money for a family member to send you? Not even reasonable. What is the least amount of money you should expect from a family member to send you?

Speaker 2:

a reasonable amount, not a reasonable. What is the least amount of money? Oh, least amount that a family member should send you on your birthday honestly, between 25 and 50.

Speaker 1:

Great, I was going to say 20, but yeah, yes, that a family member Should send you on your birthday, honestly Between 25 and 50. Great, 25 and 50. I was gonna say 20, but yeah, great, at least 20. I didn't know, I didn't know my people, they always extra, so I say 25, 50.

Speaker 2:

So what would you do, oh?

Speaker 1:

this is gonna piss me off.

Speaker 2:

It'll piss you off mightily, oh god. So what would you do? It's your birthday, you know, say you just it's your birthday regardless of what age you are but no because at a certain age they feel like they can't give you money. No more, okay, so say between I mean, I still get money at 42, I feel like the older I get, the more money I get, nah that's a lesson you get less money.

Speaker 1:

Less gifts, less money. You get real broke as you get older so say you between 17, 17 to 22.

Speaker 2:

Right, you can go higher, but say 17 to 22. Your birthday and the family member calls I can't get this shit out.

Speaker 1:

This really happened today, like a few minutes ago.

Speaker 2:

Family member calls they be like hey, somebody's birthday. You know, I'm going to send them some money for their birthday. Okay, good, they're going to send them some money for their birthday.

Speaker 2:

Okay, good, they're going to send you some money. They're going to send you some little dollars and shit, Right, so I'm going to cut. I'm going to say so. The cash app rings. They're like okay, they're going to send it to you to send to the person for their birthday. Okay, cool Cash at rings Shee. However, the shit goes. I love that sound and the amount it's $12.

Speaker 1:

How old did the person turn? How old did the person turn? You can at least say $17. So what?

Speaker 2:

would you do if you were at the other end of the reception of the cash app and it just says $12? What would you do in that particular instance? I'm going to be like this. It Damn.

Speaker 1:

What would you do? I'll take your shit.

Speaker 2:

You'll take that Damn. What would you do? I'd take your shit.

Speaker 1:

You don't take that. I want better for you. I would be pissed, I mean, and let me say like I, understand that Money is money.

Speaker 3:

At least give me 17. Fuck, I'm doing. What the fuck?

Speaker 1:

I don't give a fuck if that's not the only family member sending me money. I'm 17, you send me 12. I wasn I supposed to do with that. That's not even gas for my damn car that my dad, that janky ass car. My daddy just bought me the fuck $12.

Speaker 3:

That's why I'm like at least give me $17.

Speaker 1:

$17? Okay, a dollar for every year. I was thinking that To. I would have took 15, because 15, you can get you a good little tank of gas. 12, though, you would go on the gas station and tell them can you put 12 on 9? They're going to look, that's exactly what they're going to do. 12 don't even get you no good bag of Takis for real, because you got to get a couple bags that shit. You can't even get a bag of Takis and chips off 12 dollars. No, though, because you got to get taxed like that's and you oh my god, you can't even get no chicken. You can't even get no supreme combo for 12. No more, you can't get no supreme combo for 12. You can't get shit for 12. 12, that shit is so fucking disrespectful to me. Who is it? I'm gonna send this person six, six more dollars. So look, right.

Speaker 2:

So I asked the question. When they said they were going to send them money, I'm like okay, you know, they're not just like yeah, they usually don't send them much money.

Speaker 1:

So like how much money do they send?

Speaker 2:

That's a lot. So how much money do they usually send what that?

Speaker 1:

payment history look like Five to $10. Oh Lord dollars. I was like, wait, maybe they don't have it though. Five to ten dollars, then don't send me nothing. I would rather you not send me nothing. That's what I said. Like don't send me shit, just say happy birthday, just say happy birthday.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna take a happy birthday. Then you send me. Imagine the cash that's going on for five dollars, nigga, and you got a business cash app account. They take 40 cents.

Speaker 1:

So you're not even that's what I'm saying, so he got. He got $12. He didn't even get the full $12. He got like $11.60. He probably didn't get the full $12. That shit is that shit is wild.

Speaker 2:

So that's why I asked the question beforehand, like yo, which I think is the minimum. I think the minimum like that you should give somebody on their birthday $20. Give them a full note.

Speaker 1:

And we say $25 for certain people Like I know my aunts and them they least amount they would give me is like $40, $50. But, like you know, my godparents or friends and family shit $25. And even if you give me $25, I'm grateful for $25. That's a full $12. Is crazy, though. $12 is nasty work.

Speaker 2:

That is nasty work. You could have just sent $10. You could have kept that.

Speaker 1:

But maybe that's. What they sent them was $10 and the $2 was for the extra cash out. Then I would have really been pissed Because that sounds more plausible. So they could get $11, $50 something.

Speaker 2:

Maybe, so they could get $11.50.

Speaker 1:

Maybe they just didn't know Swish. Shut the hell up, I don't give a fuck about none of that.

Speaker 2:

Listen, fuck that shit, swish. I don't give a fuck about none of that. No, I mean, I get it, I get it, but I'd rather somebody tell me happy birthday. Honestly, I would rather Thank you.

Speaker 1:

I would rather the happy birthday. Honestly, I'm a person, thank you. I would rather the happy birthday. Honestly, I'm a person. I'm a person for real like birthday gives nowadays. I mean, I like them. But I appreciate cars more because that takes your time and you write a message. I love cars. I collect birthday cards. I have a box of birthday cards. I love birthday cards because I feel like you took your time and then you gotta write a message and if you're writing a message, I mean I know you were lazy as fuck.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, you're just doing it here for right when you got the car Right. But when you give me a car, I know you took your time and you actually thought about what the fuck you had to say Sending me money now. Don't get me wrong, I love money, but I just feel like that's a lazy way of getting, especially on Cash App. 30-year-old $12 ain't shit. $12, not shit. $12. Gonna go to the dog before it go to me Yo.

Speaker 2:

I was cracking the fuck up when I saw that cash. I'd have been laughing too.

Speaker 1:

And it's crazy, I would have been laughing in that nigga's face. I'd have been laughing in that nigga's face.

Speaker 2:

The fuck it would do with $12?. I would have been laughing in that nigga's face boy A 17-year $12?.

Speaker 1:

What was his reaction when he found out? He?

Speaker 2:

got sent $12? I didn't.

Speaker 1:

The money was sent to a person to send it to them. Okay. So maybe that's why they sent $12, because they're like, when you cash it out and then he cash it out, it'll be $10. I'm telling you, he sent him $10. He didn't send him $12. He sent him $10. Y'all, listen to y'all cameraman, listen, I say what you going to give for $12?. What you going to give for $12 at 17-year-olds, at 17,.

Speaker 3:

I'm getting some condoms and some guards Easy.

Speaker 1:

You can't get guards.

Speaker 2:

I ain't have no car.

Speaker 1:

You can't get guards at 17. It's 21, now it's 21. You can't get guards. I mean you feel me, I would've got them, I got them when I used to get them and fuck the condoms.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna let y'all know this now my students do not use condoms. I use condoms. That's why I had a baby at 30.

Speaker 1:

That's nasty work. I'm trying to tell y'all kids don't use condoms. I'm sorry for a 17 year old.

Speaker 2:

20 is 20, 20 dollars that I don't need five people to give me $12.

Speaker 1:

Okay, then we're gonna be good to be honest, if all my followers on Instagram give me a dollar, I'd have at least three million. I'll give a hundred to the podcast I would that's it out of the thousands now I'm giving you a hundred and Sin said she's not giving you shit. You gonna talk shit to me, yeah, so take my hundred, you gonna take that hundred, or what? All right, thank you. Or I can give you four dollars.

Speaker 2:

Two dollars go to our son at the pocket yo you know how to you know send some shit, they cash out and then, um, they got like you can reply return. Nigga I didn't hit the return button. Return.

Speaker 1:

You know what you would refund, that I ain't going to lie $12 next to work but I ain't refunding.

Speaker 2:

So the person said his reaction was grateful, as you should Be grateful, be grateful for that $12.

Speaker 1:

Hell no.

Speaker 2:

I'm ungrateful as fuck Because he only got $12. And there's a nigga that don't get $12. He get like $25.50.

Speaker 1:

So you know.

Speaker 2:

Thank you very much. Can't wait till you send the rest.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Paulo.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that was a partial payment. Okay, you're going to give me the rest on payday. That's fine. I can't wait till see it.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy $12 a while what?

Speaker 2:

would you do? That's my what you do on a day. Drop in the comments. Y'all Drop in the comments what you do.

Speaker 1:

The best answer is going to get $12.

Speaker 2:

I'm telling y'all he didn't send him $12.

Speaker 1:

He sent him $10, and I'm going to tell you why Because $1 was the cash dollar. So the best answer gonna get $10.

Speaker 2:

And we're gonna sign it.

Speaker 1:

So drop your cash after you drop your answer. For this one y'all, the best answer gonna get $10. Make sure we clip this for Instagram. Hell no, it don't work like that.

Speaker 2:

Happy birthday to you, young man.

Speaker 1:

Happy birthday to you Don't say that nigga name on here.

Speaker 2:

That's not a young man.

Speaker 1:

Well, shout out to Wind Down Wednesday. Hopefully y'all get more than $12 from your significant others Question that has been on my brain for the last couple days. First of all, shout out to Wind Down Wednesdays because y'all know Terrence has rebirthed herself. I am no longer Shots With T, I am Zen Terrence, and I'm tapping into your relationship minds. I'm Cupid with the arrow, you know what I'm saying. I'm out here with these single train coming back soon, before the summer's over. Get your little winter bag together and your pajamas matching pajamas. But the question is in a, a relationship, what's something that you haven't done or tried yet that you want to do? And I'm not necessarily talking about sex, I'm talking about like activities, actions, like um, you know, dreams that you have just significant other. What's something in a relationship that you have not tried yet that you want to do?

Speaker 1:

that's a good one, yeah I've been thinking about that because and you know, in your relationships, each relationship that you have is different, so you do different things in each one and so you think, like dang in my next relationship with something that I want to try that I haven't done yet, that maybe will connect if that makes sense. Okay, I got one. All right, I think mine is travel more with my partner, cause I would leave your ass Same. Now I want to learn to like Vacation. Vacations look so much fun. You just get drunk, drunk and fucking boy, I swear you just a girl on vacation. Listen, I could just you know. We went to Cancun and the swim outs. I could see myself with a nigga and late at night, the swim outs, and it's the water, the ocean. You ain't no sex.

Speaker 2:

Well, yeah, my bad, I mean man.

Speaker 1:

Go ahead, CEO. What's something that you haven't tried?

Speaker 2:

That's a good one. You gotta come back to me Our special guest.

Speaker 1:

Hey, oh, my bad, sorry. So you haven't been spontaneous before. I'm saying the question is what haven't you tried in a relationship before that you would want to try your next one? Because if you haven't been spontaneous, then that's probably why the relationships ain't working out. It's okay, then, sorry oh, I got one. I got one.

Speaker 2:

Mines and I'm doing it based off of personal experience.

Speaker 1:

Mines is crazy. There's no S in mine Mines. There's no S in mine oh oh, oh Mines.

Speaker 2:

I thought it was like.

Speaker 3:

S what the fuck is mine.

Speaker 2:

Mines, but mine would be communication.

Speaker 2:

Oh good one. And I say that because I think I think to me when and that is crazy, cause I saw an excerpt from um on Instagram and the guy was talking about, uh, marriage and uh, how some people are they get married, but they're not marrying for the spiritual, they're just marrying for the you know how who could provide or be, shit like that. Like it was really deep. And for me, I think communication is bigger than love.

Speaker 2:

And I say that because love and I say that because if you could love somebody, you know you got l-o-v-e, l-u-v, however you want to spin it um but you could love somebody, but that doesn't necessarily mean that you're in love with that person, or or that that doesn't necessarily mean that this person is for you. You may love somebody, but that doesn't mean that that person that you love is for you. Right, right, but if you're able to communicate with your significant other to a level where it's just like communication is flows, just fluent, you communicate about anything good, bad, sad, happy that's when you know that that shit is real. You know, I'm saying so. For me, communication is something, um, that to your question that you said, that I never had, as you said, like that you Something that you never done before.

Speaker 2:

Never done before. Yeah, communicate, because I was. You know, some people communicate better face to face. I mean, people communicate better on text. Yeah, I communicate better on text, harder face to face. So I've grown into doing both, you know, face-to-face and text, and that's something I never was able to do before, but I'm doing that.

Speaker 1:

I love that. That was a good one. Communication definitely is like you said. It's definitely a foundation, because I feel like when you, I always compare relationships like building a house, the foundation is communication, because if you can't communicate in a relationship, why are you together? Why?

Speaker 2:

are you?

Speaker 1:

together? Yeah, why are you together? So let me ask a piggyback question to you for that. So do you feel like if your past relationships had communication, would it have turned out differently? Absolutely yeah.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely, absolutely. Yeah, like my marriage would have turned out different if I had communicated.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I feel like communication definitely is one of those things that you must try. I think in mine though I think mine would be a little more of understanding, because I realize that I do understand, but sometimes, because of things that I've been through as far as my personal life, with a lot of grief and stuff I really can't see outside the grief. And when you can't see outside the grief, you don't see happiness. You don't see none of that. So, learning how to, you don't see happiness, you don't see none of that. So, learning how to now, in year 28 through 30, I've learned to see outside the grief. So you see that it's more things in relationship than you know what you're going through, right, so that's why I say understanding, and understanding goes hand in hand with communication. Like, you have to be understanding of your partner, understanding of the relationship you're in. So I think you know.

Speaker 1:

Next, relationships, I definitely want to try more understanding, more like you know, seeing it like how you said, seeing it from both sides of the coin. You know what I'm saying, but that's a question that's been on my head because I'm like dang, like yeah, like what's some things that you would and I hate the word like what's some things that you would do differently because, honestly, you did what you just worked out the way it is, but how could you better yourself for the next relationship? That was a great question. Thank you, you know. Shout out to Terrence, listen, listen, x. Terrence will be dropping very soon, very soon. All right, ask me questions, any questions you want to ask me, and I'm going to give you an answer. It's kind of like X Strawberry but I'm not Strawberry. It's going of like X Strawberry but I'm not Strawberry.

Speaker 2:

It's going to be X Peach, because I got cheeks. I got cheeks.

Speaker 1:

Insert cheeks, so X cheeks. Alright, I'm done. Now we into the best segment. We got a special guest in the building. Drop a beat, real quick Special guest Special guest Special guest. Special guest Special guest Go.

Speaker 2:

That's your trash. I like that.

Speaker 1:

He thought she was funny, was it?

Speaker 2:

But y'all, it's been a minute. The no Advisory Podcast Wait Alright, jaby. Cameras on you. Tiktok what up TikTok? We got a lot of fucking people that's watching right there. They tuned in they definitely the no advisory podcast wait alright, what up tiktok? We got a lot of people that's watching they definitely know you a millennial.

Speaker 1:

They definitely know you a millennial. The tiktokers, I don't give a fuck, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I'm a person that I don't give a fuck about nothing when they, when they start dropping their unk in the chat.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to do low power mode. I'm going to do low power mode hey Siri, put low power mode that's some unk shit. That's unk shit. So we got a very special guest in the building, so it's only right that we bring you in the no advisory way are you ready?

Speaker 2:

you ready for you ready? You ready for this shit. You done said it. Let us do the segments. You done seen the craziness.

Speaker 1:

We gonna fuck your ass up today, nigga. So here, at no advisory, we just had three simple questions for you. Okay, who you are, where you from and what the fuck you do five years, you know just making my rounds finished up.

Speaker 3:

I don't know I've been about finished up. I've been about two weeks called got to do my clients. You know it's the only fight that I make up with Donnie Terrence, you know. Make the first step. You know I got to do my clients, you know we, um, we've been following each 10 years.

Speaker 1:

Wow, I sure did. Let me tell y'all something about me. I will block you in real life and on the internet because you pissed me off, and then I unfollow you once I get pissed off.

Speaker 3:

It was like because I noticed it, it was like the darkness is the thing that the world doesn't take yeah and you follow her back.

Speaker 2:

That's disrespectful when somebody unfollows you.

Speaker 3:

It's disrespectful.

Speaker 2:

I didn't unfollows you.

Speaker 1:

It's disrespectful. No offense to you, but I'm just that girl.

Speaker 3:

I mean cause people from Charleston, we talk a whole lot.

Speaker 1:

I probably just said like some angry words at the wild tip. I stop arguing back, I just unfollow your ass. I've been trying to block you for a while now, but I just can't. Honestly, I don't give a fuck Block me. That's the way you're eating that candy and you're talking, alright. So you say you're from Charleston, south Carolina. That's the Geechee Walla, walla, bing Bang culture down there. Tell me how, alright, tell me how that culture influences your music. Oh shit, I know that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so you see a lot of people, that you see a lot of people from up north New York. You know They'll probably deny it. They go hell.

Speaker 2:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 3:

Mm-hmm your granny from down south, your granny from down south and all your cousins from down south. I got family in Jersey City, so we here. Man Born and raised in the truck man. I got family in Jersey City, so yeah, man born and raised in the truck, man. It's just the thing about Charleston man, it's just so unique, you know we have our own accent. My accent didn't come out the way I wanted to because my parents raised me properly and shit.

Speaker 1:

I feel that I mean you know, it comes out when I'm mad or when I'm excited or something like that.

Speaker 3:

You know, in Charleston it's just so relaxed. When you come down it's a whole lot of history. You know, nobody talk with us, Nobody cook like us. You know, I'm talking about fried chicken, red rice.

Speaker 2:

You know a lot of people, yeah, and they can make me hungry, didn't they? My popsicle is called Frog North.

Speaker 3:

Street and they can make me hungry.

Speaker 1:

my pops use this car frog north street they don't have frogs in it oh, okay, because I was looking the way we was looking the way we was looking. Now I don't win as far as alligator tail, but yeah we just country see.

Speaker 3:

I'll put you aside see, charleston is a little different because you have downtown the downtown area, then you have west Aspen. Different because you have downtown downtown area than you have left and then you have these people are. So he's quickly dividing the little areas, going a little from now. So the thing about each side, you know he's cooking. If you ask the average person in Charleston they'll say oh, he's an Eastside nigga, dang it. He got money, he's poor, they ain't paying him. They ain't paying him Like you don't pay that no more.

Speaker 2:

Okay, the thing I like about Charleston well, I guess, from a tourist standpoint, when I went out there, this shit reminded me of like Florida, some hell of a bunch of palm trees and shit like that. I'm like wait, this is the South nigga, I thought I was in Florida. Charleston is beautiful.

Speaker 1:

I like Charleston.

Speaker 2:

It opened my eyes to a different part of the South that I didn't know geographically. It had With the palm trees and making it look like I'm in Florida or some shit.

Speaker 1:

Have you been to? What's your other name? Have you been to Savannah Georgia?

Speaker 2:

Not Savannah no.

Speaker 1:

So Savannah and Charleston similar, similar, mm-hmm. It make you that's why I said, when you drive into Florida, it make you feel like damn, I'm in Florida always, but you still like in South Carolina and Georgia as well, but Charleston is definitely beautiful.

Speaker 2:

I like Charleston, so if you haven't been to Charleston, go take out Charleston, I mean it's like a cousin.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, man, I'm afraid of it, I'm afraid of it.

Speaker 1:

I don't know. Okay, so I want to know. I want to kind of like skip back and want to know, like, what got you music in the first place?

Speaker 3:

Well, my father would be the one that inadvertently introduced me to hip-hop. I mean, I come from a musical family. My mom she sang. My dad at least tried to play an instrument. My mom, he gonna hear that.

Speaker 1:

He gonna be like what you mean? I tried.

Speaker 3:

My mom and all my aunts and my uncles sang too. I used to be able to sing, but then I got a few of them and my wife got two of them. So yeah, and then in terms of hip-hop, my pops. Inadvertently, I used to ride around with my pops in the back of a pickup truck all the time, so we used to play all kinds of music. When I say he grew up on the, I'm talking about the 80s, the 90 truck all the time. So we used to play all kinds of music. You know what I'm saying. He grew up on the. I'm talking Frankie.

Speaker 1:

Beverly Real music.

Speaker 3:

You know I'm the family star.

Speaker 2:

Okay, all this shit.

Speaker 3:

My mom's the big Luther fan.

Speaker 1:

That's the real shit so you know, I just came up with that.

Speaker 3:

So the first hip hop song I ever heard was Biggie. You know Biggie and 112. You know my pops brought that to set.

Speaker 1:

I don't know why you said that. Rub his head rub his head, rub his head there you go yeah nigga, I just remember the first memory.

Speaker 3:

you know Jesus.

Speaker 2:

Oh yes, just please us Lyrical thesis, you know what.

Speaker 3:

I'm saying what the fuck yeah, man.

Speaker 1:

We got two of them chairs, two big fans. No way.

Speaker 2:

I don't know about that.

Speaker 3:

I don't know about that you can call me Unc. I don't give a fuck, right there with you what you mean. I ain't nobody gonna see it. Oh damn, you sure don't.

Speaker 2:

So I am slanting.

Speaker 3:

Dang, oh, mm-hmm all the time, me and my cousin she was always watching BET, so you know we go to my cousin's house and you know we young at the time, so we're all watching BET and this fucking Legends of the Hidden Temple by Nickelodeon right now. Ha ha, ha, ha ha.

Speaker 2:

Oh damn, you old as fuck.

Speaker 1:

You're like an aunt to the real me.

Speaker 3:

Oh boy, I I'm like no, we don't know a lot of this shit, but I just remember playing at my cousin's house and seeing the only new video with Biggie and Mase on it. I was just memorized. I don't know what them niggas are doing, but they look cool as hell doing it. I do that shit too, oh wow.

Speaker 3:

So yeah, that was my first kind of taste of hip-hop. I tried to just kind of emulate the rap as much as I could and the shame that I am to say this I got inspired to actually rap by a little Romeo Bell.

Speaker 2:

Oh, let me cut this nigga's mic off right now. Hold on.

Speaker 1:

God damn it, I'm screaming. Let him talk first. Let him talk. Let him talk. Bruh, you had me up to that point.

Speaker 3:

Hold on, god damn it, I'm screaming, let him talk first, let him talk.

Speaker 2:

Let him talk, because look, bruh you had me up to that point. Let me explain, let me explain.

Speaker 3:

Okay, explain that shit, please, jesus Christ before, before you know I'm young, you know what I'm saying. So I thought, in order to be a rapper, you had to be a woman wait, wait what you had to be a. What a woman you had to be a. What A Romeo. You had to be an adult. You know what I'm saying. So that's why I'm thinking Because everybody was a kid.

Speaker 1:

Wait, so you looked at Romeo and Bow Wow as adults at that time.

Speaker 2:

No, he saw them as kids, that's what he's saying.

Speaker 1:

They was kids. He's like oh they kids, they could do it, so I could do it too.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I say a little bad word, you just don't know the way you move so fast Across the floor.

Speaker 1:

I mean you run through my mind like all the time.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, man.

Speaker 1:

Yes, calvin, cambridge, I have a hilarious story about Romeo too. That's who I was.

Speaker 3:

When. I saw them doing it and other kids starting to come out and be artists. It's okay. I think it's good too. So that's how it's up.

Speaker 2:

So so you know what I want to know where do you get the name ghost from? Because I saw on your instagram you had, um, a picture of the screen mask right, and I was like I didn't understand that part because that nigga that plays the screen, nigga, serial killers. So I'm like why they got a serial killer reference on the street and his name is a ghost. I'm trying to put those two when you come on. I got to ask you this shit, nigga, because you ain't no serial killer, right.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, jesus. Well, I mean, it's too late to ask him that now, because we all dead now. I'm dead already, right.

Speaker 2:

Like what the fuck? Yeah, I just want to know that reference, where you get that from.

Speaker 3:

My full rap name is Let me explain. So I went to Winthrop University. I almost went to Clapton, but Winthrop came in At the last second.

Speaker 1:

So I have my own radio show at school.

Speaker 3:

So my name that I go by is Donagy, but couldn't nobody pronounce it right or spell it right. So I said just call me Don or whatever. So I had my own radio show at school and I'm trying to find a cool name. So at first I was going by Don G. I just kept it simple. But as I started going into my radio career I'm like yo, they ain't got no name to it. Don G, anybody can have that. So let me just think of some shit. So I don't know why, this popped in my head one day. I was just thinking I think I was writing a rap or something, you know John Gotti.

Speaker 2:

All of a sudden I said hey, gotti, uh-huh, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

I said, hey, that's kind of dope, so let me do Don Gotti.

Speaker 1:

So I went with my Don Gotti for a very good reason.

Speaker 3:

And then, in 2012, I played the greatest fraternity in the world. I made myself a fraternity.

Speaker 2:

Oh shit, Fucking Q's.

Speaker 1:

Oh God, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Y'all motherfucking Q's boy.

Speaker 1:

God damn Dirty dogs. We love y'all Me to me.

Speaker 3:

That's nice.

Speaker 1:

Woo shout out to them dogs. Dirty dogs.

Speaker 3:

My line name is Ghost Rider, my brothers, we're called the Avengers, so we're all named after superheroes, oh, okay.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Ghost Rider me, my kane the conqueror, that's his nickname alias oh yeah kane the conqueror.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, okay, um, so um and then you have my tail, which is the punisher so um, so I started on him.

Speaker 1:

So ghost, ghost rider, it's a whole nother reason behind it but of course okay, and I don't yeah, so anyway, so ghost rider.

Speaker 3:

I started going by that, and then I just thought, one day hey, man, god, he the ghost, he got a fucking, that's a fucking fine name. So it's like you know, because, coming up when I was little, I used to always like daydream about you know somebody saying yo, I got that brand new, got it? Or ghost.

Speaker 1:

Got it or ghost on the radio you heard that shit.

Speaker 3:

You know I came up, you know I'm old, so DJ Drum, dj Kool.

Speaker 1:

DJ Drum Dramatics, nigga DJ Drum, a X-Tate's legendary.

Speaker 3:

I swear to God yeah man, besides checking my high school. So that's where it got into X-Tate.

Speaker 1:

I feel that, though, because you know what my name back in the day used to be Cush and Jets I'm glad I changed that shit boy. That was in high school. Remember that shit? See, that's when I was a real, that was when I was a Taylor Gaye back in the day. I had the Chucks. I had like 10 pairs of Chucks I was. I'm going to give you one of my first rap names Wheels of Steel. Hold on, try it lightly.

Speaker 2:

It's not a no ditty name, is it Okay, okay, okay.

Speaker 1:

Wheels of.

Speaker 2:

Steel, what so? One of my first rap names was.

Speaker 1:

I named it for my dad, Andrew.

Speaker 3:

Rose JD, jd.

Speaker 1:

Dollars. Jd Dollars that sound janky. That sound like that nigga that's running for VP JD man, I got JD Dollars. I got JD.

Speaker 3:

Dollars.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because that was 9 or 10. Okay, that's acceptable. Okay, 9 or 10 is acceptable. Jd Dollars, it's your boy, jd Dollars. I'm glad you said it on God, I got a rapper called JT Money.

Speaker 2:

Oh, jt Money, who that? Who that? Who that? Who that? Who that? Who that? I don't know. That's some old nigga shit, old nigga shit. You never know JT Money. Yeah, I know, I never knew who the fuck that was. I knew the song.

Speaker 3:

I know my history, I remember.

Speaker 2:

That's it.

Speaker 3:

So basically, yeah, that's where I got into it.

Speaker 1:

All right.

Speaker 3:

Okay, you know you go by a couple of L's and shit, you saw the ghost face thing.

Speaker 1:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

I added you know, I call myself ghost face sometimes, oh shit, but you was like an actual ghost. Next time I'm, like this nigga, a killer.

Speaker 1:

Was you scared CO.

Speaker 2:

I was scared. I'm like we about to get a killer out here. Get the strap.

Speaker 1:

So let me ask, you know, I always I ask the hard hitting questions. So, yeah, I ask the hard hitting questions, so the camera can't really see. But you know you're, you got the wheels, you know you want to go right, you are. So does that, does that and I'm, I'm asking, I'm genuinely interested does that hinder your music or does that add a certain flair to your music?

Speaker 3:

I have this condition called cerebral palsy. So basically I'm a dumbed down person. Y'all got Wikipedia, look it up.

Speaker 1:

Yes, and CEO has Siri Right well, it's great.

Speaker 3:

I'll explain it in simple terms. It's a condition of which you know. It's a birth injury, brain injury. At birth I was born prematurely, so about a few months premature I was supposed to be born.

Speaker 2:

In June came my neighbor nigga, he was ready to get the fuck about that pussy huh shit let me out nigga so yeah so basically, you know growing up, you know being different.

Speaker 3:

Using crutches in the wheelchair I can't walk this I have my crutches in the car and y'all ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 1:

I ain't gonna lie, don't take this offense. I ain't never seen a motherfucking wheelchair with a fresh pair of shoes. Every time I see this man, y'all the nigga got shoes. The shoes he be buying, it be like $500, $600. I be like, damn, you got a new one. He be switching shoes like two, three pairs a day. Y'all yeah, you do. Don't let him lie to you. Them East Cooper niggas got money, money. Now I ain't going to God. His shoe game is fire. I was looking at his shoes today when he was putting them on. He's like, yeah, I better put my shoes on. I'm like, damn, I got on these little slides. See what you got on Skechers.

Speaker 2:

I got on Fila's.

Speaker 3:

You got Skechers.

Speaker 1:

I got on Fila's. They look like Saconis. Why don't you put them on with a yellow shirt? Oh, you look like somebody uncle. I see them blue in the muck. Yeah, and it's crazy because CL, you usually have coordination. What's up today? Oh yeah, people like somebody African uncle. Yeah, you definitely be at Safari. It's called style, you be at Safari. It's called style, you be at Safari and look nice, don't you?

Speaker 2:

Huh, you be at Safari. Yeah, shout out to Safari.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, man Like you know when things got hard and stuff like that, like I used hip-hop as an outfit. So you know, growing up I couldn't play. You know, when you grow up and you're a kid, you can't really understand, like why I'm not so different.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

I wanted to be a ball player, you know.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 3:

But I had to realize, hey, man, you might not be. You know that realization comes when you get a certain age. You might not be in the place for it, and then you find something else. So that's when hip-hop came in. You know it took my life and you know putting it around, you know hip-hop got me out of a lot of dark places. I look at hip-hop like because I think hip-hop was the closest thing to God himself. That's what got me closer to him. My mom used to get mad at me. You know my parents. They came up when they were. When they came up, you know, rap wasn't the way I was supposed to do it. They didn't understand me. So I mean, they always supported me in what I wanted to do, but it was just like they don't. They don't understand, like, why this rap has such a huge connection with you know why you always listen to the.

Speaker 1:

A huge connection with you know my mama used to buy me Christian raps.

Speaker 3:

It don't hit the same but you know I grew up listening to. I'm old again.

Speaker 1:

You know the J's, the 9's so, like you said, it brought you from a dark place. You kind of just connected differently with it, you know, because you might hear that song.

Speaker 3:

So like you said, it brought you from a dark place. You kind of just connected differently with it. Yeah, just like that Mm-hmm. So you know, because you might hear that song and you're like, oh, this person look good.

Speaker 2:

Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 3:

So you know stuff like DD. You know as I got older and I started to understand, like you know, because when you're a kid it's just fun to you. But like when you get like older and you start living life and you start paying attention to like what many things you're saying. I'm 13, I'm 12, 13 years old.

Speaker 3:

Like you know, jd said this, but he meant that you know what I'm saying, or Nod said this but he really meant that, and you know what I'm saying, or nah, I said this, but he really meant that I'm starting to like I'll hear a nice touchline and I'm like, oh, I get it because it's from you know.

Speaker 1:

So I was on like that website genius.

Speaker 3:

I was a genius breaking down a lot of reporters.

Speaker 1:

I'm screaming.

Speaker 3:

So yeah, man, so that's on Okay.

Speaker 2:

So I want to know right? So you know, dealing with cerebral palsy, there's, you know, probably millions, thousands, millions of people that have that, doesn't that? That's in the same seat that you're in, Right? So when you, as a hip hop artist, do you feel like you got to make music, cater to people that's in your same position, or do you feel like you just got to cater to just people that are into hip-hop? Do you feel like you got to voice that in order to be accepted in hip-hop?

Speaker 3:

It's a two-way street. My parents, you know they raised me. You know you have a disability, but ain't nobody gonna say good yeah right for the people who are listening to this podcast. Like you hear my voice and it don't sound like I got something wrong. You know, like I know people who like there's different types of cerebral palsy. I just happen to be one of the lucky ones.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I read it's a lot of different types, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you know it affects me from always there, and I know people who can't move at all. They're like this much. I knew this one dude who, like, needed help getting in the bed, turning around, using the bathroom, and he got some projects that I do. So I look at that and I'm like, okay, well, you know, god do everything for a reason. So do I feel like I have to make music for people who work for him? No, not necessarily because I don't make music, for I mean, I make music for everybody.

Speaker 3:

But I'm not trying to beat you to death with. I have to record it.

Speaker 1:

I have to record it.

Speaker 3:

I have to record it, I mean, because even if I did, they'd always be like, okay, you get the point Right. So I feel like I'm going to make music for everybody, but I also want to show my story, and then somebody who hears it and has to record it, hey, this guy made a success out of himself. So I feel too and I also want to educate the world.

Speaker 3:

Educate the world about silver pause and what kind of condition it is. Because I have people ask me all the time like and I'm trying to learn this right now because people just talk to me and they'll just ask me stupid questions, Not even stupid because I'm like people don't know, no better.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

They'll just ask me random stuff like well, can I get?

Speaker 1:

rid of the oil.

Speaker 3:

I had a shorty ask me one time. You know you're in a wheelchair. Can you have up here oh?

Speaker 2:

Ain't nothing wrong with my shit, the slongest slonging nigga, hey, hey.

Speaker 1:

Y'all are diddy.

Speaker 3:

Okay, no diddy.

Speaker 2:

No, diddy, you're a real diddy over here, nigga, I am comfortable in my masculinity. I don't give a fuck what y'all say. Nigga, I get a lot of pum-pum from you, of course, but you know, eat to me I'm going to get some.

Speaker 3:

tonight too I'm lonely, just like everybody else. You know, I live in a.

Speaker 1:

I mean you do have some places where, like you know, I live in an accessible apartment. I got to you know like I need. Let me ask a serious question. Let me ask a serious question. You get a discount on that apartment. Has anybody ever asked you that?

Speaker 3:

question. No, that's a good one. I appreciate it.

Speaker 1:

I'm being serious, friend. Yeah, I'm being serious. You'all being serious. Get a discount on that part. It's my sister's department. She probably get a discount. Let me ask. We'll talk to her after this.

Speaker 3:

Go ahead I was just talking with the homies the other day.

Speaker 1:

I do get discounts at the movies. Oh really, let me tell you, it's a movie I still ain't seen Inside Out 2 I still ain't seen Inside Out 2. I still ain't seen Inside Out 2. Now you know what I want to talk about.

Speaker 2:

I want to talk about the GoFundMe that you got going on, because I like the fact that you explained it in one of those videos in detail on what it's about, because when a lot of people see the fundraiser, they think you need a wheelchair, right, but you broke it down on what actually you need.

Speaker 3:

Um, so break that down to the people that don't know. Yeah, I had to go for me, for I need a wheelchair left in my car. Man, I'm out here breaking down the wheelchair, putting in myself, man. So, basically, um, just, just, uh, just want, because I drive a 2019 pso and somebody's going to say in the car you drive, yeah, I drive.

Speaker 2:

Oh shit.

Speaker 3:

So so yeah, it's just. It just makes things a little bit easier because, you know, sometimes when it's raining outside, I don't feel like getting outside, getting my coat on, breaking down and stuff, and then half the time the thing that I hate the most is people ask me for help. Like people ask me do you need help? Do you need help, do you?

Speaker 2:

need help. Do you need help? Hey, fuck you, I don't need no fucking help, help yourself.

Speaker 3:

Damn, I'm so used to just being like nah, I got to be good. And then when I actually do need help, that's when ain't nobody around, but I just grew up being so independent.

Speaker 1:

Self-sufficient.

Speaker 3:

If somebody asks me. If I need help, I automatically just say no, I got it Before I even realized. The code got me, or not Right.

Speaker 1:

So how much money have you raised on your GoFundMe so far? How much do you need total? Yeah, damn Well. Well, we definitely gonna link the GoFundMe on this episode. We definitely finna push that.

Speaker 2:

I got some paper for you, bro what is that? Paper. That's what money is made out of. Give him $12 give him $12 give him $12.

Speaker 1:

Give him $12 right now, you can use that. Send him $12 right now. If everybody send him $12 right now, you can use that shit Send him $12 right now, if everybody send him $12 right now. Listen, I'm going to sell you $12.50. It's about $14,000 on Instagram. So shit, we might get you right. Y'all send me $12, actually $13 for the text, $13 for the text.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, man. I just want to do text.

Speaker 1:

Talk about it, talk about it. No, no, no, nope, it don't work. I'm so triggered by this low-key because when my mom was sick, my mom had LS. When my mom was sick, the insurance paid for her to get, like those cats bus rides and the little handicap company Iterton Ilderton yeah, but it would not pay for her to get, like, would not pay for her to get a wheelchair accessible man. And it's crazy because I calculated how much money we spent in, um cats rides and how the insurance paid for it, until we could have just bought, uh, yeah, but he, right though they don't, the insurance does not cover it. Um, you can go through this foundation, this foundation, but they're either not giving out enough money or they're not giving out money to you at all, like, and it's, it's hard, it's really hard.

Speaker 3:

I'm like nine so um, yeah my wife, my friends up anyway, um yeah. So I mean I'm trying, I'm trying to raise money.

Speaker 1:

I'm trying to raise money for the car, I mean anything, anything else. Every time that y'all talk shit, donate a dollar. Every time that y'all don't call Sid Edges all fucked up, donate a dollar. Every time that y'all don't call me A fat bitch in the comments, donate a dollar. You're gonna tell y'all to call me old.

Speaker 2:

Nobody really call you that Don't make two dollars.

Speaker 1:

Nobody call you that they talk shit about us. They talk shit about us. They don't ever talk shit about you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, good, because I be low-key and shit. I don't want niggas to talk about me because I get emotional.

Speaker 1:

So let's chat about what we really here for this new album. Yes, baptism Before Fire. Talk about it, tell us about it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so that's how my niggas are going to go to hell.

Speaker 3:

Nah, bro, I mean I always had like I grew up in the church, so I mean I always I always wanted to put like biblical references in my, in my music.

Speaker 2:

Like I said, I'm not a Christian rapper, but the way I look at it is.

Speaker 3:

Jesus hung with the dirty people and Jesus walks.

Speaker 1:

I'm clean.

Speaker 2:

I took a shower today I ain't dirty.

Speaker 1:

We messing with you, well, not me, hallelujah, so anyway that's my part.

Speaker 3:

I'm kind of crazy like that because I thought about this hallelujah, so anyway. So that's my part. I was, I had this. I'm kind of crazy like that because.

Speaker 3:

I thought about this title a long time ago, probably when I was 20 something. Hey, I'm gonna be dope for next decade. I'm gonna keep that in the back of my head. So and that's just crazy how y'all cause when I was making the album on going through some shit at the time, you know, dealing with the um, dealing with the uh wheelchair, you know, uh new job stressing out on bills and whatnot.

Speaker 3:

So I just happened to uh think about it one day. Oh yeah, I feel that this is my father man. So it brings you to a bible verse, matthew uh 3, 111, and it says I can't quote it directly, but it just says like, basically, we all go through fire, we all go through hell at the end of the day. But you come out there hell is going to make you pure. It's going to make you stronger.

Speaker 3:

So that's where I came up with the title from. So yeah, baptism of our fire man. How many tracks on it? Seven tracks, seven tracks. That's where I came up with the title for it. We were back to about five.

Speaker 2:

How many tracks on it? Seven tracks. What's the titles? Give the titles.

Speaker 3:

Well, I was going to do a little background as to why I decided to do seven. My first album that I dropped back in 2001,. It was called the Awakening. Y'all check that out. I had about 13 extractions. I was asking people right before. I dropped the Death of Kobe hits. I couldn't do all the shit that I'm doing now. I couldn't do when I dropped my first album, so it was received pretty well, Like nothing to be back at home.

Speaker 1:

People said 13 was too much.

Speaker 3:

No, not that I had people say you know your album was cool, but you know, this girl took me on time. I think she would just tease me, but she was like your album was cool, but you ain't had nothing for me to like dance to Gotta have something for the ladies. The ladies buy records At the same time like this was my first time.

Speaker 2:

First rodeo, okay.

Speaker 3:

So I'm thinking I come from the Jadakiss, I'm thinking Bar. You to Death, basically on everything.

Speaker 2:

But all those guys got girl records.

Speaker 1:

Lady Tracks Okay.

Speaker 3:

It's not like I couldn't do a girl record, it's just the concept that I was doing it.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 3:

A girl record didn't fit. The closest thing to a girl record on the Awakening was a verse that I had dedicated to an old flame.

Speaker 1:

Not an old flame. You already know. This album right here only has seven tracks. Name the tracks you got.

Speaker 2:

Smoke Move Something.

Speaker 3:

For the ladies name the tracks.

Speaker 1:

Don't feel like that. Now we're trying to help you out buying your hey you hear that track.

Speaker 3:

And then you got the Furnace. You got the Furnace which is an inspirational track, Future and our girl Katie. She killed that hook on that song.

Speaker 2:

Your singer, yeah, okay.

Speaker 3:

She killed the hook on that song. It was originally supposed to be five tracks, but I made a track called Double Wine. I have tracks, but I made a track called Dump the Wine. Like I said, a lot of my female friends were like you don't have to be so hardcore and bar heavy all the time.

Speaker 1:

I ain't going to lie bar heavy music. I go to sleep. I do, though I'm being so honest. I like versatility in artists. Now, don't get me wrong. I'm not always looking for a female generator record, but I'm not also trying to hear you talking about whipping up the packs all 13 records and talking about how your mama made you sleep on the floor. I don't want to hear about that shit. My mama may never made me sleep on the floor, so definitely diverse.

Speaker 3:

Let me tell you t I had some. Definitely diverse.

Speaker 1:

Let me tell you, TI had some ladies track.

Speaker 2:

Alright, it's like a mix thing in terms of you know, just experiment you know, let me try this, If I All right. I can't even speak this shit.

Speaker 3:

I wanted to experiment, so I'm like, okay, I'm going to take the advice that these people are giving me. You know people like when I do bar hand stuff. You know wordplay you know, wordpress lines, syllabus, metaphors, things like lines, some of the scheme metaphor, things like that. I got my core. I got my core people that focus on that, like that. But if I do a female record, it's got to be something that it's got to be something for me.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 3:

I know who I am and I know who I'm not. I'm not Aubrey.

Speaker 1:

I'm not. I'm not Aubrey, I'm not Kendrick, but you're you. That's perfectly fine, sid. You know what I realized. When you're done, you know we always like to end it out that way Go ahead and hit them so we like to play a little game called Hit it and Quit it.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Advisory Podcast. And Hit it and Quit it is not your traditional game. Okay, hit it and Quit it. So we're just going to ask you three simple questions. Now you don't have to answer the questions, but if you don't, you pussy, we're going to make you take a shot at a punch over there.

Speaker 2:

You got a cup.

Speaker 1:

Okay, Swish give your hand a cup darling.

Speaker 2:

Wake up Swish.

Speaker 1:

God damn.

Speaker 2:

You're a sleeping ass.

Speaker 1:

Well, he did do a lot today. He did, he did, yes, he moved. Oh, he moved. Insert new crib here. New crib, swish, new crib. Who this? Y'all already know what that means. The next meeting at Swish's house Dills. The next meeting is at Swish's house. Next meeting, who cooking? At the next meeting at Switch House? Y'all cooking. Huh, why? You say me? I heard you talking about you. I always cook. I'm going to cook what you be cooking, because you don't be cooking shit. What you mean? No, it don't be him. It be boozy by this, it don't be. No, that was real federal too Sure was. I wanted to be honest. I'm tired of this nigga perpetrating. No, we not bleeping. No, we ain't. It's okay. Sleep, I'm gonna keep posting my shit too. No, he ain't no shit. I just realized I didn't even finish with all, seven.

Speaker 3:

So anyway, you got after the furnace, you got number six, which is Duff, no More.

Speaker 1:

So, ladies, y'all got three tracks on this motherfucker, don't make it to. No More, no, no more Duff, no More Hell. No, that's why I don't know why he went back, because after he said three, I ain't care, no more.

Speaker 2:

So nah but in the end you got my personal favorite number seven, which is outchia. Outchia. That's my Anthony Charles name. We outchia nigga.

Speaker 1:

Alright. No, he didn't say outside, he said outchia Alright, see, he didn't quit it because you know, Outchia nigga, we gotta end this out, Outchia nigga. We got to end this out you are not from the south. Shut up, that's not a south word, though.

Speaker 2:

It's definitely a south word.

Speaker 1:

All right, let's hit it. I don't want to hit it. First question I got for you what you got. What's the wildest DM somebody has ever sent you? That's a good one. You laugh. You're a Q-Dog, so I know you got some. How big is it? I ain't going to lie, I didn't want to say it.

Speaker 2:

I'm glad you said it.

Speaker 1:

Wait, how big is it? It was?

Speaker 2:

That shit was in my head like yo do it work.

Speaker 1:

That'd be so that you just I'm glad you said it and you know I ain't gonna go too crazy. You just be sitting on the chair, on the wheel, never mind you know what. Let me shut up, because I'm just Let me shut up. Go ahead, sid. Let me shut the hell up.

Speaker 2:

Yo, you know what's crazy. Hold on B.

Speaker 1:

Because you're going to be like me. See when you Yo, where you fucking.

Speaker 2:

Why is y'all laughing like this? Nigga, are you rolling with the bitches? What are you fucking up Rolling with the bitches Like yo? They love that shit. That's an adventure, nigga you on an adventure, Like yo, Bitch.

Speaker 3:

What the hell, bitch, guess what I did, bitch who knows.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you be in the movies tripping, I ain't see you. It is real federal. Because I was at the movies. I was at the movies with you. I was at the movies with you. I was at the movies with you. Yeah, never mind, I was at the movies with you Never mind.

Speaker 3:

I was with my older sister, I was with my older sister.

Speaker 1:

Oh really, I thought that was your girlfriend. I ain't going to lie. That's why I was like hi, I thought that was your girlfriend. My bad with you. I got a headache. I ain't fucking with y'all. All right, go ahead and see. We're going to get canceled, all right. Second question this is my favorite question. I love to ask this. I was going to wait, but I'm going to ask it now. First name only of the ugliest girl you've ever slept with Damn.

Speaker 3:

Damn.

Speaker 1:

Tell it, I got sandals on. Tell it every nigga done.

Speaker 2:

Fucked the ugly bitch.

Speaker 1:

Come on D don't fart, don't front, cause when y'all Q get a little off that y'all be seeing double and shit.

Speaker 2:

Come on the ugly shit got the best pussy son fuck yeah, nigga you scared you ain't got it you scared. You scared, you ain't fucking an ugly bitch.

Speaker 3:

Hey, my mama used to say a penis don't have eyes, look at what I do.

Speaker 2:

A pussy ain't got no face.

Speaker 1:

Uh-huh, oh my God, what the fuck? See, ask me that question. Never mind. See, ask me that question. Never mind. Don't ask me that question or I'll get in trouble. Go ahead.

Speaker 3:

If I don't tell you the truth.

Speaker 1:

I'm not going to tell you the truth. Next question Alright, last question what's the wildest thing somebody has ever said to you during sex?

Speaker 2:

Nigga roll up out of here. What's the?

Speaker 1:

wildest thing somebody has ever said to you during sex Nigga, roll up out of here. Nigga, what's the wildest thing somebody has ever said to you during sex.

Speaker 2:

Somebody told you to roll up the fuck up out of here, nigga. Fuck up out of here, nigga. Roll out.

Speaker 1:

Because somebody probably has said some wild shit like that. What he said my mama watched, said my mama watched this, what's?

Speaker 2:

the wildest shit, though he drunk to it he drunk to it, he drunk to it. Fuck that nigga. You better answer that question.

Speaker 1:

He don't kiss and tell we can answer off camera. It probably was. It probably was roll up out of it. I can answer the wildest. Well, technically, that's for him. We ain't supposed to answer, that's for him. But I'll answer this last one. What's the question again? What's the wildest thing somebody ever said to you during sex? The wildest thing, oh girl, I don't know if this is wild to me, but this shit blew my mind. I had to stop damn your glasses, sis. I had to stop because I was like.

Speaker 1:

I don't know what day it was. I forgot I had them bitches on. I forgot I had them bitches on. I forgot I had them bitches on. Falling in love is crazy. No, no, no, I take them off usually, but I forgot I had them bitches on. It was one of them times. You know, you just got to dive into it. Oh yeah, I don't know. Yeah, we got to get a review. So you know, you fucking with your glasses on. What kind of shit is that? Some niggas like that shit. See you, you want to see the dick. Some niggas like that shit. It. Some niggas like that shit. You want to see the dick. Some niggas like that shit. It gives the nerd effect. Just because you can't see yours don't mean nothing. You fucking with the glasses on and shit, just because you can't see yours don't mean nothing. All right, nigga. All right Because we getting off topic. It's the punch. We getting off topic. Tell the people where they can find you at Wait, wait, wait.

Speaker 2:

No, before you do that, before you do that.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you're going to ask your question.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, Because you know it's hip-hop, nigga, top three, hip-hop, I ain't going to say artists, hip-hop, artists of all time, top three.

Speaker 3:

Dead or alive. Dead or alive.

Speaker 1:

Favorite or just a joke?

Speaker 2:

Your top three don't say Bow Wow.

Speaker 1:

I said little Bow Wow Hope.

Speaker 2:

Hope okay. No particular order okay yes, beyonce.

Speaker 1:

Okay, yes, yes, beyonce is.

Speaker 2:

Wait, what the fuck was that I?

Speaker 1:

tried to do that laugh. What was that? I tried to do his laugh my bad. That was an epic laugh. I tried to do that. Laugh that kid that. I tried to do his laugh my bad, that was an epic laugh. I tried to do that laugh. That kid's laugh is crazy. Oh my gosh, we need that as a. There you go Polo.

Speaker 3:

I met Jada for the first time.

Speaker 1:

I met Jada in a lot for the first time at the Charlotte show.

Speaker 3:

That shit was like a childhood dream.

Speaker 1:

I cried on the way back there I met one of my hero boy, that Jada on that verses it's New York. I bet that was legendary. I know he felt like I was from New York, even though it's New York. Last one, what's the tie?

Speaker 3:

interesting choice.

Speaker 1:

What's the tie?

Speaker 3:

Interesting choice, lloyd. I was a die-hard Junior fan back in the day. I'm not going to say 50. Kim.

Speaker 1:

Lloyd, lloyd Banks yeah, okay, lloyd Banks. No, no, no, no. Listen to a lot of Lloyds. Lloyds' verses don't be bad, but I don't know if I would put him in my top three, but he's a good artist.

Speaker 3:

No, I mean because you have to like I'm looking at people who inspire me.

Speaker 1:

I'm rapping and rapping. Okay got you. Okay, now I get it. You know what I'm?

Speaker 3:

saying, and then growing up in the mixtape era, niggas used to say the wildest shit. I used to like making punchlines. The wildest punchline I could. I remember one time when Beck said something like I got rocks and niggas can't afford to buy it. That's why I got bigger than Kelly Price before the diet.

Speaker 1:

Damn. If I was Kelly Price, I'd be his ass.

Speaker 3:

And it's like what the fuck did he just say?

Speaker 1:

And even then he had a bar about Ashanti.

Speaker 3:

You know they were people who murdered Anglans. Yeah, Ashanti, you know they were people who murdered Anglans either I'm blind or Ashanti's side. I just love like wild shit like that and then you know, you know, just those artists.

Speaker 1:

Banks was on Versatile too, you know. Jay and all my favorite artists were Versatile.

Speaker 3:

They do really kind of record stuff Top 3 you know, go Jada and Tiana.

Speaker 1:

Tiana, alright, well, listen, tell the camera, tell the audience where they can find you at social media and what not. And yeah, man, follow me at.

Speaker 3:

GoddardGhostsOfNorris, the audience where they can find you at social media and whatnot. Yeah, man, follow me at GottiTheGhostOfNorris Pretty much anywhere, man. Twitter, I used to call it Twitter. Fuck that X-Men Instagram. I don't do Snapchat much anymore. My little cousin put me on TikTok but I don't know how to work it.

Speaker 1:

Baptism Before Fire. It drops what date August 9th, august 9th.

Speaker 3:

What I'm going to do is I'm not going to put it on streaming just yet, fuck that streaming shit. I want to make sure the money goes back to the artists the streaming it goes to them and the artists don't see no kind of paper offer. So I'm going to make the announcement in a few days. It's going to be available on my website. I made my online store holyghostflownet Okay.

Speaker 1:

Then I'll put it on streaming, like probably a month later, holyghostflownet, alright, boom, that's that, damn you know what it is.

Speaker 2:

Man, give a round of applause for our very special guest in the motherfucking building, my nigga Ghost. Nice to see you, man. Yes, big Ghost, the little one you heard, he drunk off that. He fucked up off that punch.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to get your review video afterwards.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, nigga, you gotta drive home, nigga, be careful, be careful, nigga, there's a lot of licking.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you think that.

Speaker 2:

Alright, well, so you know what it is. Man, it's your boy. Silver Clay, it's your girl.

Speaker 1:

Trap. See it, this tear is unscripted.

Speaker 2:

Ain't no reason to know about this podcast, motherfucker.

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