Support the show and get a premium episode every week at http://patreon.com/mininodeathcult This week: Karen demands to speak to the manager of slurs, and Nascar driver Kyle Larsen gets fired after he starts twitch streaming and immediately says the N word
Okay, I wasn't going to say this, but when you go into the article about him saying the N-word, you know how there's related articles at the bottom containing similar keywords to whatever article you just read?
It was a pretty good juxtaposition at the bottom of I think it was like a Sports Illustrated article.
So the top one is Kyle Larson suspended for using racial slur.
The next article underneath that was Kyle Larson keeping it clean.
Which was an article about him, like, refusing to engage in, like, bumper-to-bumper contact in a race or whatever.
And, like, he lost the race because he wasn't, like, being aggressive enough.
So maybe he learned his lesson from that, and he got a little more aggressive, and now we're punishing him for it.
Well, I mean, if Rubbin' is racing, if you can't, like, go bumper-to-bumper digitally, So you gotta like, you gotta bring it somehow.
Yeah, this makes sense.
Eric Burton says, NASCAR continues to alienate their ever-dying fan base to placate the cultural Marxist.
Incredible.
We don't need to spend a lot of time on this.
Nope.
But yeah, just cultural Marxism is when you don't say the n-word.
And I learned that from Jordan B. Peterson.
Rest in peace.
Hope, recover soon.
Get well soon, buddy.
Beverly Collins says, I love this comment so much.
Beverly Collins says, Don't know what you said and to who, but thank you for apologizing.
You're having the lowest bar ever.
Listen, I don't care what you say.
It's none of my business.
All I care about is that you apologized.
It's not that she doesn't care what he said, it's just that she doesn't know what it was, but thank you for apologizing.
I do care about what you said, whatever it was, thank you for apologizing.
And that's like the radical centrist comment of, you know, listen, I don't know what you said, I don't know who you said it to, but I'm glad you apologized for it.
Yeah, thank you for that part.
Thank you for doing the right thing.
There was a couple popular memes going around about the hip-hop thing.
What if you were black and you said it?
Then it wouldn't be a problem.
Isn't that funny?
That's kind of the whole point.
One of the memes was Nicki Minaj.
It was like, says the N-word all the time.
Morning, noon, and night.
And wins Grammys.
Kyle Larson says the N-word.
And he gets fired.
And, you know, whatever.
My favorite version of that criticism was Andy Ayala, who says, if you were a rapper, so Kyle, if Kyle Larson, if you were a rapper, you would have made millions off of that.
Yeah, it's that easy.
That's all it takes.
Yeah.
You know, and Andy, to that point, everyone can start a SoundCloud.
Like, I think you might have been beyond something.
Maybe you should just record yourself saying that and put it on SoundCloud.
If you, like, with your mindset were just, like, in a black body, Andy, I think you could make more money as, like, Being who you are right now saying the n-word than if you were a black person saying the n-word.
I think you're right.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
Now's the time.
If you were a rapper, you would have made millions off of that, because that shit was fire, dude.
When you said the n-word, that shit was fire.
Yeah, it sucks because of the prejudice that the media has, and the prejudice that the recording industry has.
They can't see it, or they refuse to see it.
But you would have made millions off of that n-word you said.
When you said that n-word, I felt it.
Yeah, yeah, it was good.
It slapped.
Isn't there like a CB4 song that's just like the N-word over and over?
Yeah, yeah, totally.
In Cellblock Fort?
Like, that's what Andy thinks rap is.
No, he thought that was a documentary.
He's like, no, no, I've seen Straight Outta Compton.