Antonio Brown is a former NFL wide receiver who played for the Pittsburgh Steelers, New England Patriots, Oakland Raiders and Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Lately he is known for his social commentary and "Cracker of the Day" picks on X.
Antonio Brown joins Theo to talk about his active online presence these days, his favorite players and moments from his legendary NFL career, and why he thinks "Cracker of the Day" could help solve America’s racial problems for good.
Antonio Brown: https://x.com/AB84
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Today's guest is a former NFL wide receiver, Pro Bowler, maybe one of the greatest NFL receivers of all time.
He played for the Pittsburgh Steelers, the New England Patriots, briefly for the Buccaneers and possibly for the Raiders.
Since then, he found himself in multiple endeavors like his prestigious Cracker of the Day awards, where he gives out awards to whites and honkies and others.
I had a good time getting to know him.
He is very unique.
Today's guest is the CTE SP in bad boy, Mr. Antonio Brown.
Like, damn, get off my DZ.
Yeah, people on it.
Oh, I didn't see them, but I believe they got a lot of lurkers around here.
A lot of lurkies.
Yo, I like this haircut, though.
What is that, Mullet?
Let me think of how they call it.
I'm trying to think of the term for it.
It's a swaggy, though.
I ain't going to lie.
I think it's.
Yeah, some people call it that.
I never.
It was a rat.
I know your hat say rat tail.
What is it?
It's rat king, baby.
Rat king.
But I think it's just.
Oh, we on right now.
We live?
No, we can wait.
I'm live.
I'm ready.
Come on.
Shit, we in this.
We on.
We fucking here, though.
Some people call it a mullet.
I think it's just as is, man.
You want to go shades today?
We can do them.
What do we got?
Oh, we can wait to put them on, whatever.
Whenever you, we got to step into the shade time.
All right.
Let's put like a shade.
I need a pair, though.
Bring my guys some shades.
You go on.
Let's see what we got.
You got some of those?
Yeah, put those shit on.
7-Eleven Classics.
Are they?
Yeah, Gas Station Movie Theaters.
7-Eleven, 7-12, bitch.
Welcome.
Let's go.
We taking it to the next level in this.
We're going to the movie theaters.
We got to go 3D.
All right.
We're going 3D out the gate, boy.
Right to the movies.
I'm with TV, baby.
Good to see you today, man.
Good to see you, TV.
My movie theater.
Why they don't call you TV?
They always say Theovon.
They don't just say TV.
I'm trying to think of who if some people says TV or not.
Some people might say it, but I don't know.
It's a good question.
Come on, man.
Your nickname should be television.
Yeah, I'm trying to think of what a good nickname for me would be.
What's your nickname, AB?
Goldiva.
Good dick.
Oh.
Mr. Catch'em all.
You never heard of Ash Catchem?
Ash Catcher?
Ash Catchem.
He catch Pokemons.
He does?
But his slam was catch them all.
And it's an Asian guy?
Yeah, Asian guy, yeah.
Oh, they love to get out there and catch him drawings, you know, animations.
They should have an Asian Asian Pokemon championships.
Yeah, that'd be cool.
I done see a that's something I would love to witness more of.
AB, good to see you, man.
Thank you, man.
How you doing?
I'm alive, man.
You know, it's a lot of pressure out there.
Facts.
The trenches are getting fucking tight.
Real tight.
It's oh.
Shit getting sticky.
It's getting sticky.
Bro, somehow I have to leave my shoes and just walk off in my socks, bro.
Got to.
Leave your footprint and be out, bro.
Full of AB, bro.
Just be out, bro.
Fuck it.
That's it, huh?
Yeah, that's it, bro.
That must have been the best day whenever you quit your job.
Yeah, that was the best, bro.
Because I think there's a part of that, bro, where everybody could feel.
Because everybody wants to take their shirt off and walk out there.
Take that moment, right?
But some people can't.
Buy FedEx.
Buy fucking.
What's like another good company?
Buy UPS, Target, anything.
Yeah.
It's always good, man, when you can walk out on your own freedom and make the moves that you believe in.
And life is already written for everyone.
If you want to be a football player, you know, if you're in high school, you got to pass the clearing house.
You got to have the right grades for the SAT.
It's a certain requirements that they lay out for you got to, for what you got to be to be that.
In my life, you got to lay out what you want to be within yourself.
And most of the time, the most important thing is to be in tune with God.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, because I guess as a football player, the path is kind of there.
It's like, you got to do this.
You got to be.
Everything lined up for you.
Right.
In my life, you got to create your own life, man.
You got to have the freedom and the balls to, you know, choose what you want.
And football don't last forever.
You know, it's injuries.
There's a lot of things that go into it.
Oh, hell yeah.
Oh, damn.
Y'all got the hood.
You got the honey pack.
Y'all got the backwoods, huh?
Yeah, I brought some Zy.
Yo, I know you.
You can smoke it, man.
I'll watch you.
All right, bet.
I'll fucking watch you.
I'm gonna smoke that shit.
This is like therapy.
You know, as a black man, they always want to fuck me over.
Who does?
Backwoods?
How many's in there?
They put five in there, huh?
Yeah.
Why?
You didn't they shorten you?
They always short us.
You gotta have one on the bench?
That's how you get your weedoo in there.
Oh, damn.
And what's in there?
That reminds me of a poppy steak.
They're bringing that steak out to you.
You been there?
Of course.
That's what all the girls like to go.
Poppy steak, huh?
Yeah, they like that beef at poppies.
Dang.
That's when everybody comes running.
You shake that.
Like you shake that eight ball at a party.
Everybody, bro, you have them Coke ghosts.
They show up like, ooh, they've been dead, but they hear that eight balls shaking.
They're like, ooh.
They go crazy when they see that 80. Dude, oh, there's poppy steak right there.
That's where they pull up.
That's the movie steak.
They're grilling that meat right there.
Yeah, they're going crazy.
That meat came in a lunchable.
That's a fucking, bro.
That's a rich ass lunchable.
That's a fire, right?
Rich-ass lunchable right there.
It came in a hot pocket.
Dude, my mom, we used to put silverware.
She would fucking me.
She put silverware in a lunchbox.
Nothing in that bitch.
I try to open it up.
Bam, boy.
What the fuck is eating?
Nothing, bro.
Stay hungry, huh?
Stay hungry, motherfucker.
You're gone.
You're getting full, boy.
You're in the chitches.
My mom had a good sense of humor.
She'd be like, ha ha, I love you.
That's what she did.
She put in there.
So the note was nice, but it's still.
Yeah, I would have preferred some proteins or something in there.
But, yeah, what you smoke in Backwoods?
Yeah, I smoke backwards.
I got my nephew some good backwards clothing for.
Oh, yeah, they do come out with some clothes.
Christmas last year.
Sweats and hoodies, right?
Yes.
He's a backwood guy?
I think he's nine.
I don't know if he is or not.
You know, he's still pretty young.
He's a Roblox guy.
Okay.
But if they did a Roblox backwood collab, he'd be on it.
That's him right there, Max in the middle.
Oh, yeah, handsome kid.
Yeah, he's pretty good.
He got a good hairline on him.
I know.
Kid swaggy.
Yeah, I don't look at him too much.
Where you from, Dale?
You from New Orleans?
I'm from outside of Louisiana.
I'm outside of New Orleans.
Trying to think if we had any probe athletes that came out of our area.
Yeah, one of my baby moms said he came from the same spot you in.
Really?
Yeah, you know I got a baby mom collection.
How many?
Oh, damn.
How many?
Yeah.
I think I got enough in the backwood, maybe five.
Oh, wow.
That's you got a pack.
You got a starter pack.
Yeah.
I woke up at Sour Patch.
Where's my starter pack?
Somebody said you're not a real black father until you've had three kids.
Is that true or not?
Like in the black community, that's what I heard.
No, I think you ain't a black father until you get on child support.
Because then you know, like, what it take to be a black father.
I think my dad was on child support years and years.
I think it's just like in the black community, I feel like the government is taking our woman.
It's like, yo, if you grew up in the inner city community, you had a kid with a woman.
It's like, if you're going to go out away and try to make some of yourself, the government going to take your spouse because now they tell the spouse, yo, you're going to be in Section 8. You're going to get free food, food stamps.
The government just took my mom.
Now they took my mom.
Now my dad can't even come back to the house.
So it's like.
Why?
Because if he comes back, then she loses the benefit.
So it's like, exactly.
So it's like the government really just took your bitch.
So as a black father, it's like, man, to experience that, you really, you know what I mean?
To be a black dad and in all seriousness is like really bad because you have a kid and you're trying to go out and make some of yourself.
And these women, the government come in and take it right out because it's like, yo, it's hard to be a dad.
My dad had me when he was in college at Louisiana Tech.
Oh, he went to Louisiana Tech?
Yeah, like that.
Up in Rusting, huh?
Yeah, right around you.
Was he playing ball up there or no?
Of course.
My dad was touched down Eddie Brown, like a great time.
I want to see a picture of him, man.
Touchdown Eddie Brown.
Pull up the Louisiana Tech.
Now he goes right there.
Eddie, bro.
If you need him, he's in the end zone.
That's where you're going to have to pull him up.
They call him touchdown.
He got like 300 tutties.
Yeah, bro.
Yo, he's like the number one arena league football player all time.
Really?
Did he play in Boise?
Where did he play Arena at?
He played at Albany Fireburst, the team I just bought.
And I realized they don't want us to own shit either, bro.
I bought the team.
They was kicking me off the field.
I think I just got to move out of America.
What do you think, TV?
I'm trying to think where we would, you could, because you would be considered an export at that point.
Yes.
So that's a trade agreement we'd have to get with another continent, I would guess.
I'm trying to think of who we could get for you.
Who could we get on the international market?
That's a good question.
As I said, who could we do it?
How could we do it?
Who could trade an A-B for?
That's what I'm saying.
What the market value for this shit?
Yeah, what's the pussy rate on that?
Yeah, what's the exchange rate on the NASDAQ?
You know, what's the exchange rate on the A-B if we put you out there?
For real, I'd be feeling like a cow or a dog.
Like, these bitches, Theo, these bitches want to milk me like a cow.
Who you talking about when you say them?
People in general, people that's around you that know your position.
Like, Theo, you real successful now.
Like, do people just take photos of you everywhere?
Or do people expect more out of you?
Like, if you was going to a restaurant with your buddies, like, who covering the towel?
Yeah, I think I would like to cover it most of the time just because I know that I have the ability to cover it without having to worry about it as much.
Maybe, you know, the next day or week, you know, or but sometimes, yeah, sometimes.
You want to feel like a cow?
I feel like a cow, but I feel like I'm my own shepherd at the same time.
Okay, okay, I like that.
You got to be your own shepherd, but you don't want people to treat you like a cow.
You don't want people to treat you like a cow.
Yeah, no, I think, no, I don't, I think what makes me kind of uncomfortable.
Yeah, sometimes if people are recording you for no reason, that's weird.
Exactly.
But everybody, but that's the new world we live in.
Everyone wanted to get that film of you just that so they could show somebody later or just feel like they cool by association.
And it's like, yo, boy, I didn't want you to record me right now.
I'm relaxing.
Yeah, we don't need cameras right now.
Dude, I saw one one time.
It was me just walking somewhere, dude.
And I'm not the best walker or whatever, you know?
How you walk?
You got a nice scroll?
Are you walking?
What you emphasizing when you walking with a strut, TV?
I say chest up.
Yes.
Eyes up.
Yeah.
You on your toes or your heels?
I'm right in the middle, baby.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm that middle dog.
You won't catch me on the front or the back, dog.
Like that.
Just somewhere in the middle.
I'll see at the 50-yard line.
That's where I'm at, bro.
Right between the legs.
Right in the middle.
Yeah.
I'm that fulcrum, baby.
I'm just, because you don't know if the Lord's getting me or the devil's getting me.
I'm right there.
I'm on that tightrope.
That's how I walk.
I like that.
I'm on that fucking tightrope, boy.
You don't know if I'm fucking, you don't know what I'm doing.
I like that.
But yeah, I like to be, I walk, let me see.
Yeah, I kind of push my, like, forward.
I'm move, like, I'm moving forward.
Like a demon.
Wow.
Yeah, like a pretty nice demon, though.
Like that nice superhero vibes.
Like that nice ass demon.
Yeah, but sometimes, yeah, I saw a video one time and it was like, damn, this dude ugly, bro.
That was a fucking video.
That was a caption.
Like, they was hating on you?
Yo, when somebody call you ugly, that means you swaggy.
That's an excuse for it.
They didn't mean it like that.
I think they mean it like that.
I like your attitude.
When people call you ugly, that means you swaggy.
Like, look at this ugly motherfucker.
That means you look a fly, bro.
You know what I'm saying?
Oh, that's a good attitude.
You're right, bro.
We ugly as fuck, son.
Ugly, motherfucker.
If you need ugly ass.
Look at these pieces of shit.
Yeah, yeah.
That's a good attitude, man.
You're right.
I am ugly, motherfucker.
And watch my ugly ass get some shit done.
Yeah, watch this ugly motherfucker go to work.
yeah, right, yeah.
That's a good attitude.
Life is about attitude, you know why?
It really is.
People like to create narratives, create stories.
They don't really care how people feel.
They don't care how your family react.
They keep us at a certain level.
I don't think that's just the community because, bro, I grew up in Miami, Florida, Liberty City.
We had a big drug game, if you never heard about it, called John.
Michael Irvin, huh?
Yeah, but Michael Irving from like Michael Irvin just played football in Miami.
I don't know if he grew up in Liberty City.
I think he grew up in Broward, so I don't, I don't really know what his lifestyle was, but I know I grew up on 58th Terrorism 17th Avenue in the heart of Liberty City.
Wow.
You know what I'm saying?
In the culture of a black community, because I know I love to see you talk about black people, black community, because I feel like you're from New Orleans.
So you've been around a lot of black people your whole life.
But being in Liberty City is not like the country because I know New Orleans is like country, little country is not.
It's like a mix.
Louisiana is a mix of like country.
It's a mix of country, light cities.
Exactly.
But in Liberty City, yo, we, yo, we have, we have like the John Doe boys is like the police of the neighborhood.
Okay.
So like these guys, like you pull them up, yo, pull up John Doe.
We basing blow.
Pulling up shitty watch trying to watch later.
Yeah, I'm trying to show.
I'm trying to educate you guys about the black community, where we come from.
Look up the guy from John Doe.
His name is Travin Bubba.
Just look up Miami, John Doe.
Put it on.
These motherfuckers watching Mythbusters on this bitch.
Put something on, man.
Put it on, Jack.
John Doe, right there.
Death penalty case of John Doe gang leader and perilous judge just.
Liberty City.
You see that?
In the 1990s.
In the 1990s in a red.
Okay.
And Liberty City.
So when you do the homework, the black community is ran by a John Doe group gang.
They just make money in our neighborhoods.
You see what I'm saying?
So they don't even live there.
No, they live there.
Oh, they do.
Next block on 58th Street.
Yes.
Travel, his family had a whole crowd.
This guy had a whole.
It's like they was running a business in the inner city.
That wasn't the right business, but they showed the inner city people hope, like the good cars that came by.
When we had football games, they came and supported.
Are you guys playing against them?
Oh, yeah, we got here go to money jerseys.
They gave us hope.
Nice shoes.
Nice opportunities to make us look forward for the great things.
But these environments that was called, what, Section 8?
You ever heard of Section 8?
Oh, yeah.
So these type of environments was given to who?
Our moms.
Most of the people that's living in the inner city is single moms that's been provided the house from the government to put us in these places with low-income people.
So we had the 106 in Park to look at TV.
We had the John Doe guys to come over and give us hope about, you know what I'm saying?
It was like our neighborhood heroes because we didn't see people didn't come to Liberty City and have regular lives, kind of like?
Nah, they didn't.
It wasn't like a lot of dads that were like doctors and shit like that.
Nah, it wasn't a lot of dad presence, period, because it's Section 8. Your dad can't even come around these areas.
So these areas were outsourced by the government because now if your dad come in, play your mom, don't get the food stamp card to buy you food.
So these guys was like our heroes that gave us hope in those situations.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, now I see that.
I never really thought about that concept before that the dad couldn't come back because if your dad come, your mama don't get the section A. She don't get the free lunch, the free housing.
What women who have a lot of kids and a lot of stress and a lot of to-do's with a lot of, you know what I mean?
Yeah, I didn't thought about it like that.
You know what I mean?
Well, in our neighbor, in our area, a lot of the black girls got, they all got pregnant, you know, over the summertime after seventh grade.
Because white people, I love my white people, they put their kids on birth control at 16. They already got a chip in them that's blocking it.
That's probably causing other black moms.
They already had a kid probably early.
So whatever your family or your mom, whatever you grew up in that situation, to you, that would come the normalcy.
You know what I mean?
So the percentage of black women going to college is pretty low.
So if you're in a neighborhood where it's a fast neighborhood and people growing up fast and they're doing stuff fast, you probably, I mean, less likely chance of you definitely getting pregnant.
Oh, yeah.
Alpha male, you know, black dick is king.
Yeah.
I haven't seen it.
Yeah.
I don't see.
Yeah.
I mean, I've seen some of it online.
I don't need to see any right now.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm good.
I hope these shades block out black dick, bro.
You feel me?
Because I ain't trying to see any today, bro.
Yo, the rate of fucking.
Yo, in the Liberty City, they see a fine girl.
They're like, yo, TV, you didn't nut in that?
You should nut in that.
That's what the black culture preeminated in Liberty City.
So they're not to go over and try to get some sex with the lady?
I mean, no, they telling you, did you nutting that?
Like, if you was from Liberty City and you brought a hot girl, they would have been like, yo, TV, you ain't nutting that?
Wow.
They give you the wrong guidance.
Oh, I see.
At an early age.
Imagine you in the neighborhood.
They didn't say, hey, TV, you didn't take that lady on a nice date?
No, they'll tell you take her on the date.
They're just going to say, bust a nut in there.
Oh, wow.
What up?
Dude, the cracker of the year this year was Shane Gillis, man.
Congratulations, dude.
Shane Gillis is amazing, man.
The cracker of the year was Donald Trump.
Oh, he was cracker of the year.
Yeah, man.
He overcame so much and he kept his class.
He kept his coolness.
Imagine he almost got killed while running for president.
Almost got took down by people trying to take him to jail.
You never really see a cracker really go through this type of intensity of his life and the government trying to take you down.
It's only like a nigga thing, to be real.
But he handled it with such class.
Did that give him more respect?
Of course.
You see how many black people changed the tide and switched for him?
You see Stephen A. Smith apologize like a bitch now?
Yeah, he fell on his knees too.
Everybody.
Exactly.
Because, yeah, the circle.
He showed it.
Because Trump showed that he could be a nigga and handle it with class.
It's like black people go through that shit all the time.
Look at my boy Young Thug.
He's fucking with the jail for some shit he made up.
Some shit was made up.
Like he, you know what I mean?
Free thug.
Free Quavo, too.
Is he locked up?
No, these guys out.
Quavo, young thug's out.
Oh, good.
Free young dirk.
Free young dirk, what'd he do?
Or what didn't he do?
I mean, what they say he do.
It's a bunch of he say, she say.
I don't know the facts.
Don't ask me, Jack.
Don't ask me.
I got that to do with it.
I got nothing to do with it.
You did?
But no, that's a big thing that happened for Trump was they put him on all of those charges, right?
He was in court every week.
And then they try to shoot him.
They try to kill him.
And so that's, if anything, if anybody, if any group could probably relate to some of that type of energy, black community.
They're trying to kill us every day.
You know about Martin Luther King.
You see Nipsey Hunt.
It's a whole list of, yo, pull up the list of black guys.
There was an elite who just died out the blue.
Maybe it was, what do they call it when they kill you out the blue and they don't even know?
Oh, assassination or whatever?
No, that's when they just kill you.
Oh, they just.
What they call it when they just they kill you and they just be like, oh, it was a, you know what it's called.
Oh, accident?
Assassinate?
No, we just tried that one.
Conspiracy?
Exactly.
It was a kapussy.
Yep.
Kapussy, yeah.
It's like they think black people is like the new vagina, like the designer vagina.
We're going to keep using them.
Keep fucking them.
No, you're going to keep fucking them.
Like, what happened to Kobe Bryant?
Like, I ain't never seen no one other airplane going down.
Never one.
When other time has it happened where a chopper just went off like that?
Yeah, and it was for Kobe Bryant, though.
I think Donald Trump just did a big thing yesterday.
Release the conspiracy information for the King family.
Why is this hiding conspiracy amongst people of my kind of people that's being fucked over?
Well, why, first of all, if we live in a country where it's free, where the communication.
Yeah.
Why did his family even get the condolences to know what happened?
Well, why didn't we all just get the truth?
You know what I'm saying?
Why the files have to be, like, why is there secret files?
Because black guys are like designer vagina and just give fuck.
I mean, that go to list.
Yo, you got the list?
Black Lynce Aga, bro.
Yeah, it's like they're just fucking you over.
Well, did you see some of the stuff I've seen is that people are trying to accuse him of being homosexual?
Of course, that's what happened with every black man.
They just try to get it.
They try to throw him under that under the game.
Throw you under, just throw your fucking shit that you build up.
Like, it don't even matter.
Under the LGBUS.
Dude, dude, bro, Martin Luther King was in a hotel getting pussy before they shot him.
I believe he was.
Come on, man.
You see how he looks?
You think Dr. King is not getting pussy?
Oh, yeah, I would definitely, I could see him definitely getting pussy.
But that's what they do.
They change the narrative on guys.
Well, they want to bring, they wanted to, they want to.
Why do they do that, though?
It could be a character assassination.
Nah, it's always a character assassination when you're black because they're always going to make it seem like you just too aggressive or too flamboyant.
But when they say, when you say they are, does it mean like, are you talking the FBI, the CIA?
I don't know who is they.
Right.
They is a word that you just try to figure out who is they.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
So when I say they, I'm not talking about no particular people.
It may be, but it's definitely some people in power.
I don't know who they is.
They is a mystical word.
That's why it's called kapussy.
Conspiracy, kapussy.
Okay.
Because we don't know who the guy who's doing the fucking, but we know we getting fucked.
Right.
Right?
TV?
Oh, if I wake up with cum on my shoulder, bro, something must have happened.
Bro, I'm having wet dreams.
Just come all over my fucking self.
Something must have happened, bro.
Yeah, bro.
I'm trying to fill out what's going on.
What's going on?
What the fuck is going on?
Don't ask me, bro.
If you ask me, I don't do with it.
I got nothing to do with it.
My name's Bennett.
I'm not in it.
But I'm seeing what's going on.
I'm just seeing what's going on.
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Cracker of the Year.
Oh, go on.
So that's why I started the Cracker of the Year.
To just bridge the gap between people because we all want a human race.
And I was like, you know what?
Let me bridge the gap.
You know, because I love my crackers.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
That was made me rich.
Shout out to Art Rooney, Dan Rooney, some of my favorite crackers of the year.
You know, I just, you know, we want to bridge the gap of racism, but just.
Yeah, and some of the ways to do that is humor.
I agree.
Rumor, right?
You're a funny motherfucker.
Well, thanks, man.
You are too, dude.
Thank you, bro.
You definitely, you went about it some unique ways, too.
That's like your own thing.
I think you're really unique.
Thank you, brother.
Did you always have a desire to be like, I know this is kind of a strange question, but did you always have a desire to be unique or to be different?
I just like be myself, man.
I feel like in life, it's free to be who you are.
But were you always like that as much?
Or were you more of like, was there a point where you're like, you know what?
I'm just going to do things how I want to do them now.
Nah, you got to always respect authority.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, in life, you got to know your position and respect authority.
You can't really, in life, you need people.
You can't really do nothing by yourself.
Like, even playing football is like, yo, I'm going against my man, but I got 10 more men helping me out to make this easier.
So it's like, in life, you need a team.
You know what I'm saying?
You can never do nothing just by yourself.
And there's always a collective of people that's there, you know, in your corner that's pre-emanating your higher self.
So to me, I just always felt like, yo, I grew up in Liberty City.
My dad was a great football player, but my dad endured a lot of adversities through his family.
You know what I'm saying?
With just growing up in the 40s with my grandma, my grandma having to work a job and my dad having to take sports for like a job early.
You know what I'm saying?
Right.
So was it even something you think he wanted?
Because I feel like this one's like, what if there's a lot of young black men, right?
And young black women that do sports that don't even really want to be doing them, but it's a means to an end because at some point it was kind of the only choice.
I think there's more choices now.
Exactly.
And that's just my outsider judgment.
I'm not saying that I know that, but it seems like...
That's a valid opportunity because think about it.
You growing up in Liberty City, bro.
I'm growing up where it's like drug selling and dope dealers killings right in this neighborhood.
Yeah.
Guys that's going to prison for life right in this neighborhood.
So it's like you either become a part of that or you make a commitment right there and you're within yourself to be like, yo, I'm not going to be that.
I'm going to do this.
And that preeminates the attitude and that individualistic.
I see what you're saying.
You know what I'm saying?
So right there, you're creating some sense of individualism just by not going with the mainstream that is in those types of neighborhoods to have a little bit more drugs and violence going on.
Exactly, because you can either be a part of it because you're seeing it or you could commit to be the difference.
You know what I'm saying?
But do the people in the neighborhood that are committed to the more hectic lifestyle and the more trench behavior, do they look down upon guys who are trying to get out?
Yeah, they respect it, man.
Like those guys that come to me and be like, yo, don't do what we do, man.
Ain't no money, man.
Make sure I got your jerseys this week, man.
We had the game, two touchdowns.
So they giving me incentives.
Like, yo, keep doing this because I feel like guys in the city, when they get encustomed into like the gritty, it's just because they know it's like, man, ain't no other way for us.
Like, that's how my uncle grew up.
My uncle just always felt like, man, I ain't working for nobody.
I ain't because he felt like he was already in the system.
But I just felt like, man, I wasn't going to let the system deteriorate me from going after who I wanted to be.
You know what I'm saying?
I feel like a lot of women that's in the black communities and males, they get accustomed with the trauma and the almost get addicted to it.
The trauma and everything because your whole family here.
You see your mom, like, damn, this is what mom went through and turned into.
So sometimes I feel like you feel like, man, it's a part of my family now to just be here.
But to me, you know, I had the attitude like, man, I ain't going to let my situation now affect what I could be and what I could do because in this situation right here, I could make it better.
And then once there's enough better avenues, other people, the younger youths coming up start to see better opportunities.
Better opportunities.
Oh, I remember, yeah, when I was growing up, the black kids in my area, they didn't have, we had like the best job you could have, it felt like, was a school teacher, right?
We had a couple black female school teachers.
We had an assistant principal, Raleigh Coleman, shout out, R.I.P.
And he used to sleep in the trunk of his car at lunch a little bit.
He used to catch him a little break, catch him a little nap.
He said, look, I look one time I was over by that fence.
I saw him getting in that bitch.
I'm like, damn, what's Raleigh doing?
And he looked at me like, I don't kill nobody.
I'm killing nobody out here.
He was catching a little nap.
But they didn't have like a lot.
Like, I remember, dude, it wasn't until a few years ago.
I went to a doctor for the first time that was a black doctor.
That's why I've seen you.
I'd never seen, and I'd never thought that I'd never seen it before.
I've seen black doctors on television.
I'd seen, you know, and I'd probably met black doctors, but I'd never been into the room where you're like, okay, you're going to go meet with the doctor.
And you get in there and it's a black guy.
Like, damn, is he going to know what's wrong with me?
You know, I just, my brain didn't.
Comfortability with it.
Yeah, it was just different.
So then I started to think, well, I wonder what it was like for black people always going to white doctors and then be like, does this doctor care about like just even just the thought in your head?
Yeah.
So that was just, it's definitely interesting.
I think you never really see people.
I feel like you come accustomed to, you know what I'm saying?
Like it don't matter what color the person is in position.
You know what I'm saying?
I feel like black people grew up where it was so rough.
It's like you got to have a lot of love in your heart to not even get into that.
Yeah, to just turn demon.
It's like, yo, you got to have, you know what I'm saying?
So black people do got a lot of love in their heart because you go through the most.
It's like, yo, I can't even be a good football player without somebody saying something negative.
And it's like, I guess for a black person, we're used to that.
We're used to people assassinating our character or putting pressure on us to turn oil to get more diamonds out of us because that's how we was built.
Yeah, it's in the history, man.
Damn.
Well, yeah, and I think I always rely.
I always.
Like, you fucked some black before, right?
Well, let me think about some of this.
I. Yeah, I've definitely.
Okay.
Did you have an addiction for design of vagina?
I haven't been to the addiction yet.
Yeah.
This was an older.
Not an addiction.
Everybody get pussy.
You know about testosterone, yes, sir.
Okay, do you ever get like you got no pussy and you just feel like you're mood off?
Oh, yeah, boy.
Okay, then.
So, you a man, you get it.
I'm not saying you think that I'm saying you need sexy because it's a part of a human body, that's normal, exactly, normacy, you know what I mean?
Oh, yeah, buddy, I know what you mean.
That's normal, man.
That's normal behavior.
Let me think about this.
You know, there was, I definitely, I envied black culture sometimes.
I mean, a lot of people envy black culture because black culture is where, like, people take a product to make it cool, right?
So, a lot of times a company will come out with a product nowadays.
They attach a black artist to it or put it through the black community in some way, and then it makes it cool, right?
Does that make sense to you?
Of course, because you don't want to say I'm accusing of that or anything.
I'm just saying that that's what I've heard.
Does that make sense to you?
That's pretty much a fact of the world.
It's like there ain't some things that's black that you need in your life.
Coffee, I know every coffee, you got oil.
What else you like that's black?
Hold on, let me just ask you.
Black olives?
All right, so let me just ask you.
Fucking green olive, bro.
If you was to go get a haircut, if you was to go get a haircut, or if you were to call a handyman, what's some of the like Spanish woman clean the house for me?
Mexican people clean up real well.
You know what I mean?
Like, what's some stuff you use black people for?
Let me think.
Feel good, music, entertainment.
So black people set the culture for like artistic culture.
Artistic culture for how you feel, how you dancing, how you, I mean, the value of jury.
Like, you know what I mean?
A lot of culture is kind of set by the coming through the black culture.
Let me think.
Let me think of the word I'm looking for.
Give me one second here.
A lot of black people, I think, add jazz to things, right?
And that could be to music.
Black people been getting robbed for everything.
What's the artist who was a big artist who just copied everybody?
Bruno Mars or whatever?
Nah, I don't know.
Bruno copied.
Oh, copied?
I didn't hear that.
It was a rock star guy who just copied every black guy song.
Big famous guy, man.
You're talking about Elvis?
Elvis.
Chuck Berry.
All right, thank you.
Exactly.
Robbed the black culture of all their songs and people just let him go with him.
Did he?
Bring it up.
Did Elvis rob the blurs?
Elvis fucked us over.
Damn, really?
His manager was a dog, man.
I'm not saying he was.
Elvis was fucking girls that was 13. How do you think R. Kelly got the artistic to know what a rock star is?
You don't think so?
R. Kelly, I think, came up with a little bit of his own shit, man.
Yo, Elvis was only fucking girls that was teenage As it was.
Really?
Yo, Google it so we can educate each other here.
Yeah, let's see what's going on, man.
What did black and Ray Charles?
That boy stole Ray Charles' song bar for bar.
Everybody stole everything from Ray Charles, bro.
Come on.
You're right, but it's like Elvis was so big.
Elvis was so big.
Right, he couldn't say hey.
He couldn't say no against him.
You got to give the credit to the people you take.
You just can't rob people of their art.
Oh, I agree with that.
You know what I'm saying?
You got to at least get the credits.
In 1994, Ray Charles sat down for an interview with NBC's Bob Costas and gave scathing critique of Elvis Presley to say that Elvis was so great and so outstanding, like he's the king, the king of what?
I know too many artists that are far greater.
He was doing our kind of music.
So he's saying that he's like, he's saying like there was some culture vulture style going on.
But does it say that he stole?
I'm not saying that he did it.
I've heard this.
Pull up the songs that Ray Charles said that he stole that.
He can show you the bar for bar.
It probably on YouTube.
Hey, I'm just trying to get some trick here because I've heard this too.
I don't know if it's true.
It might be.
It's definitely true.
But think about it.
If black people ran the country, it'd be true too because they'll will their people in the way too.
So it's not like a knock.
It's just a fact.
If you came up in music culture and you heard about Evans Presley, because what was Elvis Presley time that he was around?
We was probably wasn't even around when you were.
50s or whatever.
Exactly.
So you got to think back.
If R. Kelly came up and these guys were looking up to a guy.
Yeah.
Oh, no, I can see that.
Yeah, play those songs right there.
Okay.
10 black rock and roll musicians Elvis Presley stole music from.
It was hard for black artists to get their music played on mainstream stations, but that did not stop record label executives and white artists from discovering music from black artists and covering their songs.
Elvis was arguably one of the biggest stars to cover songs by black artists while mimicking their mannerisms and vocal inflections.
I don't think of Elvis like that because I know too many artists that are far far greater than Elvis.
I think Elvis was person came along at the right time where here was a white kid that could do rock and roll or rhythmic blues or whatever they want to call it.
And the girls could swoon over him.
Nat Cole got in trouble in Alabama when the women swooned over him.
Got put out of town.
And black people have been going out shaking their head behind for centuries.
Everything else unusual about them shaking their hips and stuff.
And that's all Elvis was doing was copying that.
This is Otis Blackwell.
He has the voice and pen behind some of Elvis' biggest hits, such as Don't Be Cruel and All Shook Up.
After briefly pursuing a solo career, he decided to step behind the scenes and become a songwriter when he discovered how good of a living he can actually make doing that.
Yeah, I'm not saying I'm just curious.
I'm curious about it too, man, because you always hear this, but then I never really have any information about it.
Shit, right in front of us.
Because this kind of shit happens all the time in every type of community where in every type of business where people will see stuff, they copy it and they take it.
There's still lawsuits about this every day, it feels like.
Also, the laws at the time didn't, like, the laws protecting against this are stronger now than they were at the time.
I'm sure.
And if a black guy walked into a place that he stole my music, he'd probably be scared to even say that because of the repercussions.
It was so big for the executives.
Like, back in the day, there was a different time if you like, just dive into the history and see, like, it wasn't big for black blues, artists.
They was cutting you off.
That was what Ray Charles was saying.
Like, they were stopping your way for even making mems.
You know what I'm saying?
I could definitely see that.
But that's part of being creative.
I love Evans Press.
Yeah, I want to say it's no knock on Evers, but it just go back to the theme that was talking about black people in history being put down.
But if a black person ran the world, it'd probably be the same way.
They would just do it a different way.
They're going to do it for the black people.
But it's not like a bad thing.
It's just what it is.
That's what it is.
Exactly.
But I could imagine this.
Imagine this, man.
Imagine you created something really cool, right?
Especially music.
Music is so special to people, right?
And then somebody stole it, right?
And you can't even, because of how you're perceived.
That's black culture.
That's what I'm saying.
But how you're perceived at that time, especially, you couldn't even go in and say, hey, this person.
Somebody ain't even going to represent you.
Who are you going to represent you?
So you got to see your craft being.
But that's the part of being black, bro.
That's the anger that you know.
You being loved of your shit.
You being raped of your character.
You being character assassinated.
You being conspired.
And it's like, you still got to find the energy to put yourself up.
Fucking put your shoes on.
Exactly.
Just like being a football player.
Like, yo, boy, don't forget.
A football player is a number, right?
It's you a number.
Yeah.
They're picking many of you.
Number 84, number 72, number 2. Yeah.
It's all a number.
So it's like, it's going to come to an end.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, what are you going to want?
What do you want me to leave when I'm hurt?
Or you want me to leave when they don't want me no more?
Okay, so how am I going to go transition to another job?
Right.
Are they going to be, are they going to take, oh, all I could be is a coach?
Like, I can't even show up on time to be a player.
But, bro, if you worked for FedEx, you can get that bitch there quick, bro.
Nah, I can't work for FedEx.
But I'm just saying, bro.
That's what I'm saying.
But that's like an average job from a God.
You know how fast you can get that bitch there quick, bruh.
Less than overnight, bro.
You know how many hits I do.
You put a post-wide on that thing, bro.
Imagine how many times I hit the ground.
I played football since I was six years old to like 31. Like, yo, 27 years or somebody, you waking up, not even thinking in reality, my life is like, yo, how can I get open on Theo?
I'm living this.
This is my life.
Waking up.
How I'm going to get open?
How am I going to win the?
That's not even real life, Theo.
Well, is it?
I mean, it's a short part of life.
Right.
So it's, yeah, it's not real life, but it's definitely like.
No, it's real, but it's like, like, yo, it's just a part of your life to get to a position in life where you can live a better life.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
Because how many opportunities you got when you coming out of a black neighborhood?
Like, what you really could do?
You either could represent the neighborhood rapping or doing some stuff.
Okay, rapping.
Maybe civit, like, you know, politics.
You could be all.
Nah, I know a black guy coming from this city, man.
Oh, come on.
They got something.
What about that dude at the Trump thing the other day?
That was smokes and jokes.
That was smokes and jokes.
The guy at the Trump thing the other day.
Did you see him?
I didn't see him.
Pull him up.
Pull him up.
Let me see what he was repping.
Oh, bro.
He was repping?
He was Martin Luther X. He was trying to be everybody.
That's all I'm saying.
It's like, it just looked like a joke.
He was trying to be everybody.
Yeah, he was the nigga of the day.
Oh, he was?
Yeah, he definitely was.
He's the only black guy doing some shit like that at the top of the event.
You know what I'm talking about.
Exactly.
I've been watching.
Yeah, yeah, man.
That was, yeah, he was doing it.
That was hilarious.
He was doing a lot.
Oh, damn, that's us right there already.
Yeah, I'm putting us up.
And that's who is that guy right there?
That's a good cracker of the day.
Oh, he got it.
He got the ginger beer with the black fro.
Oh, he looked like that.
Nah, he's rocking out.
He'll sneak in your bank.
Yo, who is your top five flyish crackers?
Because you got to be up there.
Oh, no, I'm not up there, man.
Give me a top five.
Give me your top five flyish crackers in the world that you know.
Wow.
That I know or that I've seen or whatever.
That you'll give top five.
All right, straight up.
Out the gate, man.
My dog, Brian Purvis, bro, who I grew up with, bro.
Okay.
Want an OG Wigger kid.
Okay.
When they used to have him, bro.
I used to have a lot of more younger, kind of like Wigga type of kids, you know?
Okay.
Like, you know what I'm talking about?
Bring him up right there.
Covington man wanted accused of attempted murder and armed robbery.
That's my dog right there, Brian Purvis, bro.
He won it right now.
That was his long time ago.
Nah, they got him right now.
Oh, shit.
But he'll be back.
You can't hold him down, bro.
He was in Learning Disabled, bro.
Because they put him in there for wanting to be a black.
They'd never seen a white kid that wanted to be black, right?
They put him in Learning Disabled, bro.
They do that to him.
So you had people that had real learning disabilities in there.
Fucking Knock Knock Wilson was in that bitch.
And then you had Brian Purvis just in there wearing like a Scotty Pippen jersey and fucking shit.
He just got swired, right?
Yeah, they're like, nah, we never seen this shit.
He must be mentally animal.
That's what I'm saying.
When people don't see something they used to, they just throw you to the wolves and that shit could create trauma.
Imagine what trauma that created in that kid.
Yeah, man.
That made him a demon.
He trying to flex a Larry Johnson jersey and they put him in there, man.
He didn't understand them, man.
So he would be, he's definitely, he's in there, bro.
He's goaded.
He's locked in.
I respect that.
Other beautiful crackers that are out there that are still existing well in the world.
Hmm.
Let me try to find a good.
Travis Kelsey not up there?
Nah, he's good, man, but there's so much now.
Everywhere it's getting too much, Kelsey.
I'm over Kelsey at the moment.
So he's not in your cracker top five.
He's not in my cracker.
Beautiful crackers.
Yeah.
I'm going to keep thinking as we go along.
I'll name some more.
Okay.
Who your niggas of the day?
Your top five niggas.
Let's don't put it like that if we can, okay?
Because I can't, you know.
Well, let me think.
Some great.
Never ignorant, getting goals accomplished.
Come on.
Gang, gang, gang, baby.
Let me think.
Come on.
Well, let's go through some of the criteria.
First of all, what is a criteria?
Because you have Cracker of the Day.
I feel like.
What's a criteria to become a Cracker of the Day?
You just got to cook Cracker Energy.
You know what I mean?
You feeling like a boss or you doing something.
You did something that was.
Everybody loved their crackers.
What's your favorite crackers anyway?
Yeah.
What kind of crackers are you eating and watching?
What's your favorite crackers?
Just straight up that saltine that came at night.
I think it just said crackers on the box right now.
There's a cracker of the day right there, a young white.
He's holding a butt.
There you go.
Oh, and there you go.
So these are some good crackers right there.
Oh, that's Travis.
Yeah.
You know, Kravis acting like your guy.
He got the gun with the Florida swag.
He was looking at your boy.
Like, he look a little awkward right there.
But he's on him, baby.
He pulling up.
Trevor Lawrence.
Trevor Lawrence, yeah.
Yeah, that's the $20 million quarterback right there.
Really?
Yeah, for the Jaguars holding the scrap in Florida.
He looking like he know Yak.
But you got that.
He looking like he know the sniper game standing like that.
Right?
That's swag, though, right?
In Florida.
You got that Florida swag right there.
You got to have that.
That's a Florida birth certificate.
Being a cracker of the day is just being a cracker that is exemplify confidence, boss-like energy, and that give people that happiness.
Like, what do you see when you see Trevor Lawrence posted up with a Florida gator's top?
looking like a teenager holding the scrap, like he's in Florida, understanding the culture and the energy of what's going around him.
I say, you know what?
Let's give him one more year.
Give him one more year.
That's what I say.
You know what I'm saying?
Let's re-sign him for another year.
That's the fact.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what it gives me.
Look at this guy right here.
He under major pressure.
Zane Gonalez.
He got to win the game for these guys.
This is the cracker here type energy.
He fixed this hair.
Ain't nothing in your head.
It's none of your head, Zane.
But he got that cracker energy like he really under that pressure.
He understanding this moment.
It's a big moment.
And he's getting his fucking hair fixed.
That's crack of the deck.
He's cracking the prisoner, right?
That's it, right?
No ER, brother.
Yo, he got the game on the line, and he's going to get the shit done.
He's fucking scratching ass right now.
He fucking fanning out the fade.
Let me make sure my fade so I don't fade this ball, man.
The pressure on me, all these fucking black guys couldn't win the fucking game.
That's a good point, bro.
All these dickheads?
Every time the white, the kicker goes in, the truth should be all these black guys couldn't win the game.
Couldn't do it.
And they trying to act like now it's not.
It's not a pressure on me.
And he about to shit bricks.
Look at him.
Yo, best play.
Look at Zane Fist in his face.
One top.
Let's have him.
Back it up.
Let's see how many times he fixes shit.
He fixes shit like 20 times.
Fix your hair.
Yo, can we get the cup?
He fucking, and he's two for two.
He's two for two, right?
And he's still fucking rubbing his head.
He red.
But he's understanding the moment.
He's overtime.
He's getting his shit.
He went overtime right there.
He did overtime at the end.
But you got to look good for your moment, too.
No, but he look like his ass is tight right now.
Look at Lil Trump Jr. right now.
What about him?
Now, how does he, how does the community feel about him?
That kids look like he's the next fucking.
That kid look like he's the next fucking president and fucking assassin.
He the young dumb.
Nah, he's just like a young Trump.
His body language is his facial movement.
It's like he got a subtle confidence.
Like he knows something we don't know.
He looks like one of them alfalfa kids, like just a kid.
Hey.
Yeah, like he got it figured out.
Like, yeah.
Yeah, that's.
I respect him.
He doesn't put himself out there.
He doesn't try to do too much.
No, he's a bar.
He got the mannerism of, like, he already got it figured out.
It's like, he's one of those special, beautiful crackers.
Like, you go to him when you got a problem.
He just make the problem solution.
Yeah, he changed it.
Like, right there, he looked like he ready to change the tie.
He looked like he's just Trump's son.
He's like, he's a younger Trump.
Like, the amazing thing Trump have to do.
You know, I got on the shirt today, man.
I didn't see that, man.
Shout out to Trump.
And thank you for telling me.
Give me the shout outs, too.
I didn't realize that they did, that they, yeah, at that point, after all of the things, man, a lot of people got on Trump.
There's a lot of convicts, inmates, people that had ever been accused of crimes a million times.
They didn't trust the justice system.
They all got on his side.
Because they knew Trump understand what it felt like.
Now he knows what it feels like.
The bill like a nigga.
Trump showed the world what it was.
And he freed some of my guys.
Did he?
Sniper Games.
Shout out to Kodak Black.
You know, Kodak Black.
Yeah, free Kodak?
KB, KB, Kodak Black.
I wish them pills would free him to him.
He's seeming like he's been going through it.
No, listen, hold on.
Let's get this clear, right?
Anytime a black guy is being judged or misunderstood or...
Hold up.
Oh, I agree with that.
Why do when a black guy is representing culture and representing something that you may not understand?
They just be like, oh, he on drugs.
It seemed like every black rapper who become really well, he's associated with drugs.
You think so?
Future.
What did everybody know of Future?
Perkus said.
Molly Perkis said.
But that's what everybody, that's what people were singing.
Yeah.
Now, all of a sudden, Kodak Black get his life together, doing billion-dollar businesses, opening up stuff right here locally in Florida, signing artists, getting other people opportunity to live.
He's a million-dollar rapper.
He's not just some drug addict guy who just, he fucking got big businesses.
He got a team and how.
Oh, he's a real business.
A real business.
No doubt.
A real.
But you're right.
You know, I'm definitely judging just off of video clips that I see and stuff like that.
Yeah, nappy hair, a guy with goals, you little.
That's not the part of the judgment.
Some of it is some of his behaviors and mannerisms.
Okay, what's the behavior?
Just some of the things where he's kind of fading in out of consciousness.
That's a part of being an artist.
It could be.
He's selling his artistry.
You're right.
That's what big people draw to him.
He's an artist.
But you just can't throw him to the side.
Like, not every time he's doing something cool or if he's doing the lazy movie.
Oh, he do the crazy.
He got the, definitely.
He got like.
He got a different disc.
He's got the, he got the bop.
He's got the swag.
He got it.
Oh, he has like, it's almost like a like a redesign of Bobby Schmurt, like the, you know what I'm saying?
A totally different.
Yo, he's like, he's like the African.
He's like the Haiti king, man.
He's like, oh, I don't even think of Haitian.
Is he Haitian?
Of course.
You know what it's like to be in Haiti.
Yo, Haiti don't got water all night like America.
Really?
Bro, and Haiti, you got to hang your clothes where you wash them on the line.
TV, if you go around the front of the house, your brother wearing your drawers.
You see in the whole neighborhood wear your clothes.
Your clothes gone.
You don't fucking wait with this clothes?
You fucking stand right by there.
You better stand while he gets his drop because your clothes, your boxes is wearing by your brother.
It's Haiti.
They're not getting close.
You're right, man.
Bro, it's a different life.
So before you quick to write off people.
I didn't write him off.
I'm just saying jump to conclusions.
Jump to conclusions.
I feel like jumping to conclusions.
But I'm part of that.
You're right.
Jump into conclusions, right?
Because sometimes we all do it.
I see a clip and jump to conclusions.
We all guilty of it.
I'm not saying it's you.
It's us as humans.
Human culture.
As humans.
Just as humans, yeah.
As humans.
Because we all get the same hours.
We all feel the same emotions.
We all go through the same things.
We just got to know how to be better people because they preeminate a better world.
If we work together better and we get to know each other better, we can do better things.
We are here together.
We all need each other.
No matter what you got or what we got, we all got to go to work together to make something work.
That's what we call the ecosystem.
Economic.
Economy.
Yeah, no, I knew this shit.
I knew you knew it.
I knew you knew it, man.
Yeah, but yeah, man.
That's what we're trying to do.
We're trying to bridge together the racism to bring more people together so it's not a default of having your guy in prison because someone threw.
Because, bro, being placed in a position could make you feel away.
Imagine your guy who you love, you put in your tough firecrackers, not because what he got, not because what he's doing, because what his heart is like and what position he was put in.
And that position that was put in preeminent his behavior because he felt like shit, everybody gave up on me.
And that is not a color thing or that's a human thing.
Anybody who put under this circumstance of everybody saying, fuck you, eventually you're going to say, fuck you.
You know what I mean?
What's so funny?
I think that's one of the what I think when I was young, I did like, I could sometimes, and I don't even know if this is racist to say, man, but I'm a second.
Say that shit.
Well, get it off your chest, bro.
Hold on.
We all from different ways of the world.
I would look at black, sometimes I would see black people or black, other black kids and stuff, and I would be like, that's, I don't know what their life was like, but it'd be like, I feel the same way they do.
There's a little part of me that has the same feeling.
Like, I just felt like the world hated me so like.
Because you different, bro.
You come from Louisiana, your country.
Look at your haircut, the way you talk.
Yeah, I don't know what it was.
Just in my, just whatever it was, there was something inside of me that fucking was like.
You feel like you're a different guy, bro.
You got a creativity to give to the world, bro.
You got a connection.
But sometimes I could, there was this little part of me that felt like I could mildly relate, bro.
You couldn't.
Relate.
Mildly.
I'm not saying I don't know what it's like to be like somebody's life.
And I'm not trying to keep interrupting.
I just want to be clear.
I'm not trying to.
God's respect.
I'm here with you.
I know you.
Thank God, man.
It's gang time.
So if those, so the cracker today, so those are, it's just, it's a.
This is the brig in, bridge the gap between people loving each other.
Yeah.
Because, bro, say some of the words that crack is made up.
Like, we all got different lingo and we all like it.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
But you got to watch people's intention, though, too.
That's a huge thing.
No, but that's what I'm saying.
The ex-Elon Musk gave us an opportunity on X House to speak freely and positively bring people together.
So imagine I started Cracker of the Day to bring positivity to people.
Oh, it's fun.
It's fun.
People send them all the time.
They're looking at the cracker today.
Everywhere I go, they're like, yo, AB, can you make me the cracker today?
Because this energy is, bro, the world is making people feel better.
No matter who you are, people just want to feel good and live a good life.
We all know one thing in the world, right?
We're going to pay taxes and die.
In the meantime.
In the meantime, let's just live a good life, man, because we don't know when the day is going to happen.
Let's just build each other up.
I got black baby moms, white babe moms.
I love all people.
Everyone should love each other and we should.
Well, yeah, no, it's just to be in a better world.
We're just having a tough time doing it.
That's it.
Nah, because that's why we need more people like you, bridging the gap, talking about the stuff that's uncomfortable, making awareness.
You should bring a black guy up here who's going through some shit and speak to a guy or bring awareness.
Raise awareness so people know you know what's going on.
We can't change the rules that's in aware of the world, but we can allow people to know we're aware of what's going on and we could be a part of the thing that make people feel good.
Yeah, let us at least do our due diligence.
Also, but just to show each other that we are aware.
And that's, I ain't saying you owe me, but act like you know me.
Don't act like you don't know what we facing.
Because that's what people were, if people knew other people was aware and they was encouraging, more people are high.
Now your friend who in that situation, he'll make a better decision because he'll understand when he feeling this trauma.
Like, yo, it's okay to be how you, it's okay to feel how you feel.
That's the freedom of the world.
Right.
You don't have to hide your feelings.
You don't have to hide who you want to be or who you are.
And if people misjudge you, then that's what you're doing.
And that's why we raise awareness to bring people of that misjudgment to make those people feel good while they're going through their trauma.
But humor does it in trauma.
Because we're all facing trauma.
Yeah, no, no.
And humor does it the most because it's that one you're like, okay.
I could get through that.
I know it is.
It's okay to connect these two.
It's okay.
And it's funny.
Exactly.
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Now, someone said that the prize for the Cracker of the Year was Shane Gillis, right?
Shane Gillis was what?
Cracker of the Year?
He was the funniest cracker of the year.
Funniest cracker of the year.
And I agree.
Very funny man and the funniest cracker of the year.
I agree.
He got my vote.
Now, my question is, there was said that there was a prize where whoever won it got to say the N-word one time.
Is that true or not?
I heard that.
Yes.
Okay.
I feel like everybody in their life have said the nigga, the word.
You said it, rapping the song.
It's a part of it, bro.
Everyone said it.
And kids, even Tom Brady one time told me, man, my son was asking me about it.
Because it's the curious thing.
It's like you put power on the word.
Like, don't say that.
But words could mean whatever you want them to mean.
It's all about how you take it, interpreting within yourself.
Oh, yeah.
If you say I'm your favorite nigga, it's like, yeah, I'm your favorite black guy.
You know what I'm saying?
If I say you my nigga, that mean like you're my guy.
Like you my black.
Oh, if somebody says it to, if a black fellow says that to me, I feel pretty good for that.
Yeah, like you my nigga.
Like I fuck with you.
Like we genuinely have a bond that I care about you.
I feel like, okay.
You know what I'm saying?
Let's do it, huh?
I'm going to buy some fucking J's.
You know, I'm afraid to do this.
But now, is there, why don't black people lease the n-word out to be said like at a certain event or something?
Because there could be a lot of money in that.
Is that crazy to say that?
I feel like just how you use it.
You know, sometimes.
Oh, I agree.
I don't mean use it in a derogatory way, but say like tonight they had like Angelina Jolie was paying 50 bands to say it, right?
On you on a live stream.
That'd be cool.
And you sold it.
And you don't want to see how she said it.
So that's the thing.
And you don't say she has slaves or she said it.
Because I might be fucking a white girl and be like, yo, call me a nigga.
Oh, damn.
Who are these people?
You don't like that?
Huh?
I have no idea if I like it or not.
But I just think like it's like.
It's prerogative.
Okay.
You know what I mean?
It's like exciting.
It's just like, it's fucking.
And will they do it sometimes?
Yeah.
No way.
Why wouldn't they?
I'll smack them on the ass.
Oh, no, I don't know.
Oh, I didn't know they're doing all that.
So I guess if somebody's fucking you, you can say it.
That's crazy.
How many times you said the word nigga that just like rapping the song or oh, probably just a couple hundred times.
That's what I'm saying.
It's a part of the words, and we don't have to hide our feelings as people of saying stuff to be a normalcy.
Right, right.
To feel, yeah, when it goes against kind of what's normalcy, but I think it's, yeah, obviously you want it out of like people that are using it in like a derogatory way.
But do you I feel like when people get mad anyway, they're gonna use it in a derogatory way because that's what they was taught to give off negative energy.
You know what I'm saying?
I used it one time.
There was a black cat or whatever was crossing my path or something.
I was furious.
What you said?
Look at this nigga.
Say that shit.
Let me how you said it.
Say that shit, Theo.
Right now, say that shit.
It was around Halloween.
All right, let me hear how you say that shit.
Let me hear it.
I cannot, right.
Why you can't say it?
Bro, because it's not going to end well, I don't think.
Why would it not end well?
It's the N-word, bro.
Vocabulary.
We'll have to bleep it out, don't we?
No, don't bleep it out, bro.
Right, just start as like, just like, no, no, no, I can't.
Just be like, AB, you're my favorite nigga.
All right, AB.
All right, perfect.
Wow.
Why did we say it, man?
I can't be saying that kind of stuff.
I don't want to say it anymore.
Never, nigga, mean never ignorant.
Never ignorant getting goals accomplished.
It's all about what the acronyms stand for, bro.
Words can mean whatever you want to.
But you can't be running.
I can't be out at the mall or something and saying it and something and I'm trying to stop somebody like, hey, here the acronym, you know, like that's the thing.
I don't want to say that.
Listen, when people know you from, you grew up with black people all your life.
Yeah, but I just don't want to say it anymore, man.
How about this?
Let me think about this.
No, because think about it.
We got to change, reverse racism.
Yeah.
And that's what the cracker of the day is about, to make the comfortability, because you don't have to hide some.
But you could say, you my G, you my champ.
No, no, calling me your favorite nigga.
It's not a bad thing because think about it.
In fact, people will look back and think that this is an important conversation.
Of course, this is an important conversation because we're educating each other and we're bridging the gap of racism.
We should not be doing that, dude.
You and me, dude.
This is where we at.
This is where we are in life, bro.
That's true.
This is where we are.
You're right.
This is where we are, bro.
Right now.
This is where we are, bro.
That's why Trump, the president.
That's why Trump went through all that stuff.
Being assassinated.
That's a black person.
Going through fucking the court system.
Every day.
And he's showing that it's bullshit because he's showing that.
Yeah, he was at court, left court only to try to be assassinated and had to go back to court.
That's fucking being like Martin Luther King, fucking Malcolm X, all these fucking black guys in history that we just went over.
Back around a year, bro.
To show all black people that he understand what it take to be a nigga.
Gang, gang, bro.
Assassinated court.
It's like, come on.
He's free.
He free cars.
Third wife.
Third wife, tall son.
That's black stuff.
Of course, he got baby moms.
I don't hear about his child support.
It's heavy, dude.
But I'm saying this, though.
You don't think, say, if Angelina Jolie was going to rattle off an N-word at 7.30 tonight, right?
You don't, and you got, and the black community sold it on a live stream, right?
People could love that.
They're going to love that because no, they're going to like, they're going to know Angelina love black culture.
She could say, nigga.
Right.
But she, but also, then that.
Why not hide it?
When you could be a realist and be truthful of who you are and not hide who you is, because that's when you're being fake.
What's being fake, TV?
Hiding who you is.
So if you're already saying it to yourself at Halloween, why you don't say it with your brother?
I'm your nigga.
I'm one of your niggas.
I just don't want to say it anymore.
You got to feel like a man when you say this shit, boy.
You already saying it.
Don't be fake.
Because that's the culture.
You're going to fake it now.
I just.
That's faking it when you send it in secret and you're not able to say it around your people's.
That's why I'm making Cracker of the Year denominator.
You're my favorite cracker.
These are my favorite crackers because, yo, these are my guys.
These are my brothers.
These are the gang gang.
These are the people I count on and look up to.
These are people who run in the world, like putting me in position.
Well, it's funny because you really kind of came into this position.
Like, I got a text from Rogan yesterday, last night.
Middle of the night.
I don't know.
He's the human owl.
Bro, he's the fucking smart genius.
He's one of my, one of the fucking crackers of the year.
He's beautiful.
I didn't know he was cracking.
Man, Rogan won some shit.
He's a nomination.
He won.
What do you mean?
I didn't know he won.
I thought you only gave one award.
We had a lot of awards.
You missed.
We had like 12 awards.
Yeah.
Bro, I love what you're doing, though, because it's so.
We reversing racism, man.
I love it.
Love our new human.
It's new.
Anytime, this is like the Kodak Black thing.
I go back to one of my friends, Kodak Black, Tonio Brown, KBAB.
The guy moved artistry.
Now they think he on drugs.
Why he got on drugs?
This guy just got a nice bop to himself that sell his music.
The guy write his own rhymes.
I seen him in the closet.
He fucking write the rhymes, come back and put them.
It's like fucking genius.
Genius level.
Kid been through so much adversity, never gave up.
Sniper game.
It's not to kill people.
It's to see the goal and hit it.
Gang, dude.
How did you get in that?
Is there a sniper game, Kodak Black?
I'm going to tell him you want to go.
Oh, that's his club?
This is his game.
This is his game.
That's my brother.
I got one of the chains.
No, I love Kodak, man.
I don't think there's anybody like him.
But you're right, I jumped against Cruz's Oh, I think he reminds me of Lil Wayne in a way, bro.
Like Wayne.
I like that.
Because think about it.
We grew up with this kid.
He's came up with a decade in rapping, hits, records, and while going through adversity.
Lil Wayne went through adversity.
He was with the Hot Boys, went by himself, was the only guy with cash money and fucking turned genius while going through adversity.
Went to prison, came back.
Kodak Black went through the same fucking shit and still on top of the game in music and creative screen and R-screen.
And unique, but to come through all of that.
The perseverant fucking shout out to Donald Trump, man, for freeing him, man.
I love Kodak Black, man.
Not everybody.
From Haiti.
If your clothes not off of the line, your clothes gone, man.
That's it, baby.
If your clothes ain't off of the line, your clothes gone, bro.
So imagine what it's like.
It's not water all night.
It's not America, man.
You ain't got water all night.
Water all night, motherfucker.
Imagine that.
Rich ass.
You coming back over here with little clothes, man.
You ain't got no clothes.
That shit shrunk.
You got nothing.
What if a big dude borrowed your shit and the next day you got to wear it again?
Nothing, man.
Ain't no clothes out there.
It's bad.
So it's like, yo, man, we got to continue to bridge the gap with people who don't understand and make the uncomfortable comfortable.
Respect.
You know what I mean?
And I feel like we got the power to do that.
We got the voice and people, you know, and we already doing it.
If you already send a word, nigga, that should be comfortable when you see one of your favorite niggas.
They'll be like, yo.
What's up, my buddy?
I'm your favorite nigga.
I think, well, I think there could be.
I feel like you got to get the comfortability to grow in it.
You got to.
I can't practice that out in the wild, man.
You got to practice it with me.
I'm your black friend.
You're going to even practice it with your black friend.
Okay.
Yeah, I could, yeah.
You got to practice it with your friends.
Yeah.
Just call me.
We have niggerisms.
I'll call you for crackerisms.
We'll just break bread.
Like, yo, if, if, you feel me?
What do you say if you didn't have no breakfast waking up as a black guy?
Yeah.
Fuck.
We just eat a bag of chips.
Yeah.
If you didn't have no barbecue breakfast, bro.
You like, yo, mom, we don't have breakfast?
Mom.
You know?
You know, but we breaking bread with just culture things.
Because that's what I'm saying.
Culture create the economy.
You know what I mean?
So we create a diverse culture where we could talk about the uncomfortability.
Seen Kanye West, one of my close friends, talk about the uncomfortability and give people on his ass.
But the only thing he was doing was speaking the truth of the uncomfortability.
He wasn't trying to bring nobody down.
I just said something that made people uncomfortable.
But as humans, let's practice more with.
Saying stuff that makes people uncomfortable.
No, no.
Let's make the uncomfortable comfortable.
Let's not make people uncomfortable.
Let's work towards bridging racism to make everyone, man.
It's okay if a white person act like he's black.
Kodak Black wanted to be Kodak white sometimes.
Sometimes he wanted to be a white boy.
He wanted to act like a white boy.
Let him act like a white boy sometime because guess what?
Michael Jackson wanted to be Michael Jackson wanted to be a white boy.
He turned white.
And an Asian woman.
He wanted to be everything.
Michael Jackson bleached his skin to turn into a white guy.
Imagine what was going on inside of him, man.
Of course, because he figured it out.
Man, maybe it'll look better if I look like them, right?
Maybe somebody will care about me if I look like this.
No, they'll make me the biggest artist ever because now it'll look more better.
You think?
I mean, if a black guy ran the world, who do you think he'll put in position?
You know what?
That's a good point.
If Michael Jackson didn't look like he looked, do you think he would have been the same successive artist?
You might be right.
He might not have.
You know, who knows?
He might not have.
Not in a bad way or anything, but just no judgment, which is a fact, he might not have.
He was a black kid seen in groups.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
He turned white and was like, shake the baby.
Exactly.
He wouldn't have talked to white guy as a white guy.
I was like, that's different.
That's interesting, man.
Yeah, man.
They had, what was I thinking about?
What were you just talking about?
And Michael Jackson was alive.
He'll ask me to smoke one for it.
Did he smoke a lot of pot or not, Michael Jackson?
Bring it up.
You know, Michael Jackson was really like how they portrayed him to the world was different how he really was.
Well, I heard he really liked women.
That's what I've heard.
He used to call women fish.
Yeah, good fish.
Springer.
Yeah.
He give a woman a hug.
Yeah, you could do more than hug me.
And they never showed that side of him.
They never ever will because they don't need to.
We need to show him in a real submissive.
You don't need to be a black guy.
Right.
Dominant with his dick on the table.
So you think they was.
That's the thing, how media can change so much the perception, but they can't do that as much anymore.
We got the X-App.
Think for Elon Musk.
I will say that, man.
That is one thing I felt like he was up.
It was something where, yeah, wow, you could say anything you want over here.
Because maybe me and you could get on the X-App and be like, all right, TV and AB are talking crackerism and niggerism.
Yo, TV, if you go to a black party, how I should act at a black party?
You should probably show up 40. You probably show up an hour late.
Hour late?
Yeah.
And bring some food.
A couple babes with me, too.
Of course.
Bring in the hotties.
We need decoration.
You know a decoration?
Shit that look good.
Bottles in the clap.
Yeah.
You feel me?
Maybe because I'm a thug.
Right when I walk in, put on Trick Daddy, bro.
Or I'll fucking stand on the porch, dog.
You know what I'm saying?
You know what I'm saying?
If you don't put on Trick Daddy, I ain't fucking coming in.
It's a thug holiday, bro.
It's a thug holiday.
I'm a thug.
R.I.P.
Trick, man.
R.I.P.
Chick.
Trick's still alive, man.
You're crazy.
You got to come to Miami, man.
I didn't know he's.
That's why we got, of course, Chick at his soul food restaurant.
He cooked.
Of course.
He go crazy with his pots.
See, man, you would just talk niggerism and crackerism.
Because I feel like how many times we can say that on here, man.
What is wrong with that?
They'll stop us, bro.
They don't want us communicating like this.
You think they do?
Who is they?
Good question.
We don't even know who is they.
But they out there.
But we got to do what God called us to do.
It's communicate.
That's all we're doing, having a conversation.
We're not saying that a conversation could help change anything.
We just opening the minds of people who getting uncomfortable so they could get comfortable to know two guys from across from the world, from two different, could bridge the gap of being comfortable to talk about how to see it from both sides.
Yeah, thanks, man.
You know what?
Because I think there's not a lot of times where it's like, you feel with like, if you're talking to a black person or a black guy, where I feel like, can we try to just be completely real about what we're thinking or what our thoughts have been or what our real questions are?
Exactly.
All of that.
Put that shit on the table.
So it's like, dude, I remember first time.
First time I ever, I was doing high school sports or something.
I was lifting weights and a black friend of mine spotted me, right?
He was spotting me.
And that was the first time I remember a black guy ever touched, I'd ever even touched a hand.
A black guy hand?
Touched my hand.
Yeah, we'd ever, we were spotting each other.
But it was like, but I would just remember it.
You know what I'm saying?
Thinking about it consciously, like, damn, I never just.
Right.
I'd never say it was the same time when I went into the black doctor.
It's like, oh, I never, I just never had like with it.
Like, okay, you know, let's do it.
That's why we should talk about niggerism and crackerism because now it's like, damn, for a person who never had that experience, they could tune in to hear me and you talk from both sides of a culture.
And people could dive in and be like, damn, that's pretty cool.
It's like that.
Like, oh, I understand that now.
So now if a person be able to go to a black party, they might have the Q ⁇ As that they had a black friend.
So like, oh, shit, I was listening to TV and A.B. in the space.
And AB was telling the TV, like, you go to a black party, how to, you know what I'm saying?
Right.
What the culture is.
Right.
It is like, okay, and TV was telling AB about like how crackerism, if I was to go to a white party.
Different things.
Yeah.
Different conversations.
Yeah, I think we just have to change the name and take the word out of the name.
That's going to be heavy for people.
Yeah.
Because you can't have somebody talking to their friend and like, what are you doing tonight?
And they're like, I'm going to this, you know, and there's.
No, I'm listening in.
Niggerism.
Right.
But you can't, if somebody hears that, it's just not going to end well for people, I think.
It's going to be.
No, I think we just got to promote it.
Abridging the culture.
No, I love the bridging the culture.
Everybody's saying it.
Like you said, you said it a hundred times under your breath.
So it's like.
No, I've sang it.
I mean, in music.
Of course.
That's what I get.
It's a part of us and music as a culture of people.
So it's like, if you already said it, there's been people who've said it, I know.
Some people in our era used to write it in, like, put it in like a piece of paper and then they would put it in a bottle, like, you know, message in a bottle.
Yeah.
And they throw it out in the river or somewhere, you know?
Because I feel like the word has been given so much power through like generations of people.
But it hurts a lot of people so much.
No, I feel like it only hurts you if you allow it.
Like things in life only give, if you give it power to it, you know, like if you giving it power, like, oh man, I don't want to say it, but I'm saying it's like you giving it.
It's like the boogeyman.
It's like, all right, you can go see if he come.
But it's like, it's not real.
But if you acting like, damn, the boogeyman might come.
It's like you getting that emotion in yourself.
But it's like, yeah.
As people, we already, you know, the biracial, interracials, it's all.
It's picking up speed.
Oh, it's going to be beige.
I say all the time, in three generations, everybody's going to be beige.
It's going to be a mix.
It's going to be a complete mix, man.
Especially at the rate that a lot of people.
There's a lot of people.
Every white family got some black dick in their family.
How many black people do you got in your family?
One dick?
Two dicks?
How many people?
Let me think.
I mean, I definitely.
There's always some black in a white family.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, my cousins.
That's what I mean.
So you got black in you.
So you can't act like you're not dealing with black people on a day-to-day, yearly basis that you have.
Like, you play with sports with black people.
So you heard, you've seen the mannerisms.
Yeah, I think it was a lot more like growing up for sure.
Of course.
And if I was at home, probably would still be kind of the same way.
Exactly.
So it's like you grew up with that culture already.
But if we get out there, I just don't know if we can be out there.
I mean, what do you guys think, Nick?
Is that a realistic program to start?
Or that sounds crazy.
I mean, realistic.
I think it could work.
Why not?
Well, I disagree with you guys.
But I think Elon Musk bought the X app from Twitter, not by saying the N-word.
To give people the amendment back to freedom of speech.
Now, that's a good point.
If we don't talk about the uncomfortable, how when you have an interracial baby and my interracial baby go to his white side of his family house?
Yeah.
Because he got to learn that.
He got to understand that because that's some thought he gonna have in his head, just like your friend.
And now they're gonna be like, damn, you mixed baby, but I want you to act white.
And then it's like, what if he like wearing a jersey like your friend?
Now they're like, oh, he fucking won't even want to be like us.
We're gonna put him in a fucking LD culture.
Now he doing something to ruin his life because somebody made him feel like no one loved him.
So he did something wrong out of spite because no one loved him.
That's what he felt.
You know what I'm saying?
So we could say that.
But he was cold on the court, though.
I know that.
Because we could have saved him to make him feel like, yo, you're not weird.
You're not a dickhead or you're not an awall, man.
You're special.
You got energy because you got passion towards something that a lot of people don't.
So let's use this energy to the right way so you don't put yourself in a position where you want it and you can't be around your close friend Theo now and see, you know what I mean?
You can enjoy their life.
You know what I mean?
So it's like, let's not be quick to shut down on the things that people doing that we already come to.
Because think about this, AB.
If you had, when people who said something that was crazy, right?
At first people said, that guy is crazy, right?
Exactly.
People said, that motherfucker is crazy, right?
Write him off, right?
Even if you look at like Robert Kennedy Jr., right?
I don't care if you like Bobby Kennedy or not.
He was a friend of mine before I knew that he was going to run for politics.
We were friends, right?
I saw him as a reliable, honest friend.
And then he started running for politics and he was talking about the vaccine and shit.
And people said, he's fucking crazy, right?
I mean, people, people that knew him, people that mutual friends, like he's crazy.
And then he made it all, he made it past, I'm crazy, to getting half of the people to believe him, you know?
Well, that's a part of the.
But that's how everybody's done that.
Like, everybody who ever said anything that was important started off by saying it was unimportant.
It was not considered of value.
It was uncomfortable.
It was uncomfortable.
That's what I'm saying.
Kanye West, you seen what his financial statements say?
How's he doing?
2.7 billion.
Pull up, Kanye.
Pull up, Ye.
Pull him up, man.
Have you seen him recently?
Yeah, he's in China right now.
He live all in China.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Pull up, Ye.
Look, what it say the network is?
With the network on him.
In 2025, Ye's net worth stand at $2.77 billion.
Yes.
That's confirmed by Eton Venture Services based on his music portfolio and his sole ownership.
Kyle West, the only black guy ever give me $2 million.
He gave you $2 million?
$2 million.
For what?
What were y'all doing?
Oh, you had Donda, right?
Yeah.
Just like, yo, how much money?
He was like, yo, how much money you want from me?
To pull up and support?
No, just like to run the brand.
Just like, yo.
Is that Donda, what you're wearing right now?
Just Kodak Black right now.
Kodak got my Donda piece, but this Kodak, this is my new SG chain I just got from Kodak.
But yeah.
Wow, that's the Donda piece.
I got that and the new chain.
Did he make it himself?
Yeah, he had Icebox make it.
Wow.
Yeah.
So like, you can think about a guy like that.
He said something that was uncomfortable.
Right.
Remember?
And what they called him.
They called him.
They wrote him off.
They didn't do that.
He's your friend.
The media cooked him.
But guess what?
I feel like black people were so used to being cooked.
And during the cook that you just, you know what I'm saying?
It's kind of like a part of the history of being cooked.
Put us on the grill, bitch.
Let's see.
Let's cook.
Let's see what happens when things eat up.
Yeah.
Let's see what happens when things heat up.
So you just overcome the pressure a little bit more.
You know what I'm saying?
A little bit more with diamonds.
You overcome the pressure because you're used to the pressure.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
People said Kanye was crazy.
He take Alexapro.
He take this.
He owned drugs.
He had problems with his.
He's going crazy about his kids.
It's like, no, we're raising emphasis on how our families are important.
It is.
Kanye believe in marriage.
He believe in, you feel me, businesses or poverty.
It's interesting, man.
When I see it, like, I have black friends now that have like children and their households are way different than the households of my friends that were black when I was a kid, you know?
It's a different.
Not in poverty.
They're not in poverty.
It's like, oh, wow.
It's like more of like, yeah, it's crazy.
But you've seen Trump just go through it a little bit.
Assassination.
Oh, they would.
Court system.
Everything.
Public news.
Shame.
And that bronzer.
I'm surprised he didn't go full dark on that bronzer one day and just pull up.
Right.
And just go crazy.
He's a president.
He could hit a button and wipe everyone out.
He handle it with class, just like all of the black guys.
Like Kunya.
He showed up.
He didn't run from it.
He didn't take himself out.
He didn't crash out.
He didn't give out.
He didn't give in.
Well, he went to China, but maybe he just didn't.
He liked being there better.
He got a new wife, man.
He's happy.
He doesn't want to deal with it.
Yeah.
Yeah, we don't want to deal with it.
Especially at a certain point, the media.
The media, every time you turn around, it's almost like they're trying to make you crazy.
They're trying to bring you down.
Why you never, we just seen the guys worth 2.7 billion.
We should be throwing pet rallies.
We should be throwing freaking niggerism parties for Kanye West.
A guy that broke his jar in the fucking crash.
The guy that gave so many people opportunities, making beats, producing to turn rapper to signing people and giving and giving and giving to just be constant broke down.
Well, I think it's, I do find it interesting and entertainment that I feel like all the black artists should be represented by black agents and managers.
That's one thing I feel like I don't see a lot.
But then also, what do I know about anything?
If you got a black guy.
Is that crazy to say that, you think?
No, I feel like you should have the guy that's going to get you the best opportunity that's going to rep the brand and make you feel comfortable.
Because think about it.
It doesn't have to be a black guy, huh?
Who matter who it is?
It could be a purple guy, pink guy, as long as he get your well-being for what he go and get the deal.
Gang, gang.
And most of the times, they're going to talk to a white guy.
Right.
Who working for the company that's going to give you the money?
So it'd rather be a guy who look like him, the broker the deal, it'd be probably easier for him to talk to.
Yeah.
Right or wrong?
Yeah, you're right.
Because who's the guy in the NFL who own the teams?
White guy.
Exactly.
Every team, huh?
Every team.
Wow.
Exactly.
So who also own the networks that you speaking on?
We representing?
Different something.
Selected people.
You know what I'm saying?
Selected people, but.
Select people.
Certain people.
Certain people, but the majority.
You know what I'm saying?
In life, you did this do what is right to benefit you.
It's not.
Right.
You got to get something that.
Life, man, just do with the people that's going to be genuine and got your back no matter what color it is.
Oh, yeah, man.
I talked to my friend Stan the other day.
He's probably my closest black friend, man.
And we have some real important conversations sometimes where you just feel like unconditional support from my friend no matter what.
Exactly.
What happened?
I know you call your channel CTE SPN.
Yes.
Who came up with that?
Was it you?
Yeah, it was me because I feel like people wrote me off when I walked off the field.
Like, yo, he crazy.
Yeah, a lot of people thought he was crazy.
Then a lot of other people took their shirts off and left their job.
Do you ever see all those videos?
I didn't see how somebody video?
They had like 30 videos.
Hey, listen, I'm not a quitter now.
Just don't give up your fucking day job.
I built up a lot of wealth to fucking sit on when I left out.
Yeah, when I left, I was getting into a Lamborghini, so that's a little different.
That's a little different, Levi.
Did you feel, but did you have an actual like mental, did you have CT, you think?
Like, did you not feel like I feel like CT is a trauma when the NFL just, you know, being a football player, you got to go through trauma, but it's like, you know, you prepare your body to endure the trauma.
Like I lift weights, you know, physical therapy, mental therapy.
I manifest the goals.
You know what I'm saying?
So you do all the mental clarity things that you got to do to be well off.
You know what I mean?
Take therapy, do all the well-being things you need to do to be a functional human, right?
Family, a golly man, spiritual.
So I feel like when people don't understand you or just like, why would make them lead the field for millions of dollars?
That's what they try to say with football players.
But CTE is a real thing that they determine when people pass away.
There's been a lot of players, football players, that died over the course of years that they just, you know, just write them off like they had CTE.
But we all have trauma and CTE is a trauma that we all endure.
Like you said, how you grew up dealing with trauma.
We be like, life is a trauma.
Life is not perfect for nobody.
Only person had it.
Jesus walked the earth and then have a, he was the only one living life perfect, but his life was evolved for traumas.
They killed him in his earth as an example.
So like our life.
That's a good point, man.
Life is a lot of trauma.
Life is all trauma, bro.
Sometimes your fucking back hurt, your knee hurt, you sore.
But that's what life's about.
Our bodies is not going to last forever.
Your mind is not going to last forever.
We all got a due date to die.
So when you think about life in that aspect of the reality, it's like, yo, I'm not crazy.
I just walked off to put myself in a better opportunity.
You just may not understand it and just thought it was crazy because you putting yourself in my shoes.
Oh, fuck.
I've left work early many times.
You know what I'm saying?
I just, my job was on TV and now they make it on the news.
It just happened to be one of them days, but as a normal human, we all had these days.
He was doing more shit.
You left me a job, you feel me?
We leaving early.
Hey, boy.
So it's just like, man.
That's it, dude.
But so you never got actually diagnosed, though, in CTE?
Nah, man.
People can't even.
I know CTE.
That's why I started CTSPN to talk to people about their traumas and how they deal with their traumas and cope with their traumas, overcoming adversity.
Because I feel like being a great football player, being a great person in any form of life, you had to endure a lot of adversity.
Like, tell me some of the things that you went through as a kid, how you was raised.
You told me one of your traumas.
You said, man, I always felt like a connection with a black person.
You know what I'm saying?
That was probably a trauma because that's something as a kid, you may have had to feel like I'm not.
I felt unseen.
That's what I felt like.
I felt like nobody saw me.
And so I think that that was something sometimes I could, when I would see how maybe black people were looked at or treated sometimes or some of just how they even treated themselves sometimes.
You know, I would like notice just little things sometimes or as I got, as I became an adult, I could relate to little things.
I'm not saying I could relate to any of their history like that, but I'm just saying there were little things I could relate to.
Like, man, man, now I could see why I gravitated towards some of these kids because I didn't feel seen.
I didn't feel like anybody saw me.
I didn't feel, and if they did see me, I felt like they thought I was fucking nothing.
And so there were little things like that sometimes that I, I don't make you maybe could think about.
I don't know.
I'm not trying to black culture about me though.
No, but listen, but that's why I started CTSBN so people could talk through their traumas, cope with their traumas, understand how to deal with it because I had to learn how to deal with my traumas to put myself together and be able to be in the position I'm in.
Because that's a part of life.
Life's about how you overcome adversity, how you deal with adversity, and how you overcome your situations.
I'm sure you've been through a lot of your life.
And that's why I started CTSPN to show like high-level athletes and high-level people.
What are the things that made them great?
What are the things they had to go through?
Because we all went through some.
You could have been raised with one parent.
Maybe you just never seen your dad.
Maybe you were just artistic.
You liked the computer.
You never played outside.
So you just, you know, it could be raised with a six sibling.
Anything.
But everybody got some type of trauma they're facing.
Maybe you're not tall enough and you can't pursue that dream.
It could be any little thing as a human that we're facing.
And we all facing some trauma.
So that's why I started CTSPN.
So I could talk to people from their traumas.
What's your adversity?
How you overcome it?
What was the bridge point?
Okay, how do you get through that?
And people could see when they're watching the video of, okay, I'm talking to Theo Vaughn.
Okay, how the fuck Theo Vaughn overcame that situation?
Like, how did he get in that position?
I feel like I need to do more weekly.
I feel like I just be usually randomly talking to people about their traumas when I see.
You know what I mean?
Because sometimes it's a lot to talk to people about their traumas because a lot of people hide their traumas.
Oh, yeah.
You know what I mean?
a lot of people not like that you become ashamed of I did the mental health facility, the therapist, yeah, because that's a part of recovering and getting a little your better self.
So how long when you had to go to a mental health facility, how long you had to go for it?
Just six weeks?
Two weeks.
Oh, that ain't too bad.
Yeah.
Was it nice in there or not?
Yeah, it's in Colorado.
Colorado Springs right there.
Psychological, you get to thinking.
Man, life's about looking at your life.
It's called the Lodge.
It's called the Lodge.
The Lodge.
That's where we went.
Exactly.
Yeah, it's nice there.
It's beautiful, bro.
It's a whole facility, spa, gym, everything.
Just find yourself because it's like in life, if we could just save ourselves from the moment, like your friend, before we just get to that point where it's like, damn, you know what I mean?
Free Brian, bro.
Free purvis, bro.
You know what I'm saying?
Bring him back out.
It's like most of the time, it's like, yo, in life, you know what I learned, Theo?
In life, it's better to be happy than to be right.
You know what I mean?
Sometimes people get so much trauma in their life.
They get so much trauma.
Like your friend has so much trauma for people treating them wrong, treating the wrong.
Like he felt that was the right thing to do, probably is just do the wrong thing.
Yeah.
Oh, I'm sure.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, like the only thing, somehow I'm going to show you the fucking see me.
And if it's going to have to be a crime, it's going to have to be whatever it needs to be.
You're going to be seeing me to get that.
You're going to see me somehow, right?
Exactly.
I'm just saying.
But that's the attitude they take as a human.
You know what I mean?
You take that on your own.
And it's like, yo, bro, ask your friend out.
Was that really happening?
Right.
Is that really happening?
Sometimes, though, the pain somebody I believe is feeling ain't even their pain.
It's from another generation, man.
So you have somebody out here expressing a pain that's just been stuck in their DNA because the DNA has to be even at the end of the line.
God made it all even.
And so I believe it has to find a way to even out because nature's a pretty even lady.
And that's what about the lodge and therapy and CTSPN.
It's about understanding your trauma.
So realizing it.
What is CT?
Bring it up.
I just want to have a clear idea because I always say it all the time and I have no idea what it is.
It's the new crazy.
It's like the new what you don't understand.
But it's really like a head trauma that the NFL diagnosed that players die by that they can't find out till you die.
Yeah, but it's like, yo, you already got that shit if you hit in so much, right?
You a football player, we banging every day.
So it's like it's a brain disease that works, worsens over time and can lead to dementia.
It's caused by repeated blows to the head, such as concussions that damage brain tissue.
CTE can affect anyone who has experienced repetitive head trauma, including athletes, military veterans, and first responders.
So do you have to get a like a diagnosis?
Oh, you can't, did you get a brain scan done?
I mean, I got a lot of brain.
Damn.
I feel like, yo, this is just like something to like that just think about it.
If you ever felt anything crucial, okay, sorry.
I'm sorry for interrupting you.
Playing football, you got to understand, Vaughn, you're signing up to fucking bang out.
Right.
Like before you even, you play in the NFL, you're lifting weights.
When they're hitting you, they're hitting you to hurt you.
Like, if they hit you, it hit a guy like you, Theo, Vaughn, if they knock you out on the field, they're going viral.
They're going on TV, they change it.
They might get a job pay raise.
So it's preeminent for alpha males to just lift weights and hit hard to bang out.
So you know, before you sign up.
Right.
If you sign me to the zoo, you normal, but you don't know you got to be an editor.
Of course.
So it's like, okay, after you've done being the animal and you realize being the animal just was for a short time, that is not realistic.
It's just a part of your life.
It's a kick game that you made your life and you feel like you realize you get 30-something, you're like, yo, I don't got that much fucking college in my knees.
It's only a thin line of college that you got.
That just, you ain't going to be able to run forever.
You know what I'm saying?
So you realize the real things of being an athlete.
You just remember.
Was there an athlete that you saw?
Was there a receiver or an athlete that you saw one time that really like brought it to your attention?
Wow, the physical, the long-term effects of the physicalness of this?
No, I feel like you always understand as a player, is it going to be physical?
But I feel like it's up to you to play the game smart and put yourself in position.
Right.
It's like your craft.
I'm a football player.
I'm a receiver.
I know how to run the routes on you with the timing and the precision to make sure I don't get hit.
Was there a season that you could have showed up for better like in yourself?
Like you just had too much going on in your own life?
I always showed up.
You did?
Yeah, that was my life.
My life is my football.
Like, yo, if I don't play good, I don't get treated good.
Who do you miss catching passes from the most?
Probably Big Vin.
Really?
Yeah, Big Vin.
Probably Tom Brady, too.
I mean, I caught some passes.
I mean, I'm really grateful to be at play with some of the best quarterbacks.
You did get to.
That was a blessing.
You know what I mean?
That's a super blessing, man.
Being a good receiver depend on the quarterback.
You're only as good as your quarterback.
And, man, I was blessed to play with none but championship quarterbacks.
You know, Big Ben and Tom Brady.
It's kind of wild when you see guys that leave a team to go to a team that doesn't have a great quarterback just for the money.
But I guess that's part of it, huh?
No, it's a bad decision.
You better ask Tyree Hill.
Yeah, huh?
He tried to be a cheater, man.
He should have stayed.
If I get Patrick Mahomes going to the Super Bowl, you in fucking Miami?
No, you are in Miami.
It's nice.
It's not nice in Miami.
It's not.
You come to Miami after your career when you're ready for vacation.
Miami is a vacation.
You don't want to be down there with all this party scene and BBLs everywhere.
It's a distraction, man.
You need to play in Kansas City.
It's cold and you focus on football.
Damn.
You know you're going to win.
What's BBLs mean?
You know what a BBL is?
I know.
I hear the term all the time.
What is it?
Bring it up.
You never had no BBL?
I don't know if I have or not.
I want to see what it is.
Brazilian butt lift.
Oh, okay.
And they go to Brazil to get it?
Oh, Theo ain't got no ass.
You ain't got no chicks with no ass on, Theo.
I don't know.
How much is it?
You got to buy new ass.
This probably costs like 15 bands, depending on what size you want.
Zoom in on that one on the right.
Zoom in on that.
You like that ass on.
Hey, bro.
That's the ass of the day.
Hey, let's go, boy.
That's the crack of the day.
That's the crack.
She put the crack in that booty crack.
That's Brazilian, huh?
That's wild.
That's a new ass.
You got to get your bitch a new ass when it been hit.
Oh, God.
That's crazy.
Fuck.
I'll get her an SUV maybe if we're married or whatever.
But what about this?
Whoa, whoa, what's this thing going on?
That's a funnel cake.
That's that funnel cake.
That's that.
Right there.
Dead ass.
Literally, bro.
God, that's a Birmingham butt lift.
She got that bitch back in fucking Central Alabama.
That thing fucking lobside, bro.
Dang.
No cheeky, yeah.
No cheeky.
You get that skinny BBL.
It depends on like what, you know, like what you, you know, what's your range of how you want to open your hips.
I don't know.
I don't want anything.
I don't want to.
Some women, it's like, if it's too much, it kind of, like, I don't want to fuck something that's fucking back, you know?
You don't want the jello?
I mean, I don't know if I can handle it, man.
I mean, I might swerve, hit that corner.
You know what I'm saying, bro?
Oh, shit.
Whoa.
What do you think about that new Jell-O song?
You know what, man?
At first, I was like, the bar, like the main bar is good, but then I was like, I don't know.
But then I was listening to it yesterday a couple extra times, and I did.
Yeah.
It's just like, I think it's, yeah.
I liked it.
I liked it.
It sounded like an old 90s song, right?
It does a little bit.
And it makes you feel like anybody could like it.
Almost all, like somebody from 15 to 50. Yeah.
Yeah, you could take that in.
Shout out to Jello athletes being rappers, man.
That's pretty cool.
It is cool, man.
And I really like his brother played for the Pelicans for a while.
Yeah, his brother's ballers, man.
It's good to see all the brothers.
It is cool to see three brothers get to do something together.
That's exciting, you know?
And then, and they had Zion Williamson down there.
He fucking.
Yeah, that kid got bungees.
Yeah, that guy, that's so exciting to play.
But now that Zion's in, how are they in their last 10 games, Pelicans?
Look at their last 10 games, man.
Zion carried these guys.
They're going to be as good as he wants to be.
He just misses a lot.
They got to take care of him a little better.
Oh, yeah.
He got to take care of himself, too.
I think so.
But then also, you know what?
I'm just judging.
I don't really know.
Nah, I feel like they got to take care of him, too.
And it's on him, too.
It's like, yo, it's a collaboration.
You know what I'm saying?
It's a combination.
Because it's like, if the Pelicans are going to be great, they got to go with Zeon.
Zeon go down, they go down.
That's a good point.
So it's like, how do you figure it out?
How do you make a ton of people?
Like, y'all gotta.
How do you make it?
You gotta bring your king to the puzzle, man.
You can't have your guy.
You're right.
I think I'm just a little angry at him.
No, no, he's a professional.
I feel like I expect more out of him, too, because he got so much ability.
It's like, it's so much more in there.
Yes.
And Tom is fast.
Tom ticks, man.
You think it's not going to tick?
I feel like we just got to get him.
I got to build him up.
What about when Le'Veon left?
Was that weird when he left Pittsburgh?
Man, I took the heart out of the soul of the team.
Le'Veon Bell, one of my close friends, is like, man.
Why was his energy?
He was like the team.
People loved him, huh?
Man, Espinzbury Studs is known for the running backs.
Oh, yeah.
Jerome Bettis, they love him.
L'IVion Bell is one of those guys.
Willie Wheels Parker.
Willie Parker, breaking long runs.
Some of these smoking guy.
Bro, he didn't get enough acclaim.
He was a great player, man.
Were they more?
We had always good running backs.
He was Tulane, wasn't he?
No, where's Moran?
Yeah, Tulane, right from New Orleans.
You know your history.
We had a lot of running backs.
Isaac Redman, we had a lot of good guys, man.
Franco Harris.
Franco Harris.
We had a legendary.
I had a history over there.
Jerry Olschansky.
He was an offensive lineman.
It was just so sad because it's like, yo, Levian one of the guys be drafted.
One of the guys, you just, you know, he was his heart still a guy.
He was so special.
And it was like, damn, it was like money stopped us from our goals.
It's like, damn, y'all can't come there.
You know, that's what I mean by both sides of people of culture, even the team.
I feel like once the old lineman and the teams went to like joking them online, because they was fairly in freaking trauma.
It's like, yo, we need him.
But it's like, how he feel like he don't need us.
So now they're like, yo, it's like, fuck you, fuck you.
It's like, man, as people, we got to make the uncomfortable comfortable.
And looking back, it's like, yo, that could have maybe won the Still's championship.
A couple championships.
You know what I mean?
Just if we had the courage to fucking go get Levion, bro.
But what about, do you think agents sometimes ruin the possibility for there to be a lot of different people in your corner, you know, telling you, you know what I mean, building you up on what they think you deserve and what's best for you.
And not seeing the bigger picture.
And it feel like, you know, that's a part of life.
You know, sometimes in life, if you don't act on the opportunity, you could miss it thinking it was positive for you and maybe it wasn't.
And it's like, you know, life goes on no matter who you is.
So it's like, yeah, I don't take my life for granted, man.
I just, in that moment with Living, I just wish we could have did that.
Because it would have been awesome if it did happen.
It's like, yo, it was like, what could have?
It's like, what could have?
And it's like, we don't want to never be living in that rim of what we could have done when we had every opportunity to do it.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
It's like, that was some special moments, man.
We was.
Who you got in the Super Bowl, man?
Who you got in the Super Bowl?
Got to go Kansas City.
It's like, how you go against Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelsey for a 3P.
Yeah, I think also.
I want to see it now because now we're seeing another level of greatness and another level of like specialness.
Shout out to Andy Reed for fucking just knowing how to do it.
It's true, huh?
Hell yeah.
You guys saw, bro.
You had the tweet the other day was so good.
He looked like Darlene from fucking Roseanne, bro.
That shit was.
That shit was hysterical.
That's just funny.
It was hysterical, yeah.
Bro, we got the best X app, bro.
I only like my X app.
Because you can say Xbox.
X Act and Xbox.
Yeah.
And X girlfriend.
Sometimes.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, sometimes.
But this is so true.
Remember when my homes played Darlene on Rose?
That's his twin right there.
That's not his face or no.
You're too cold, man.
Jacob and Assassin.
Do you just, does somebody, do you also have somebody else writing stuff for you or is it just you?
Yeah, it's a combination.
Me and my guy, Jacob.
Jacob is at.
Oh, that I met here?
Yeah, Jacob.
It's me and him coming out.
Wow, he's fucking, that's savvy.
He's fucking the savage.
He's a savage.
He's a savvy, dude.
Are there some players that you're still tight with?
And is there a player?
Of course.
Yeah?
Yeah, man.
I got a lot of great players.
Laveon Bell, one of my closest friends still.
He came with me on the Trump campaign.
Mike Wallace, one of my close friends under the radar.
He played with me for still a long time.
Plesico Burris, one of my long time OGs, played with me in 2013.
You know what I mean?
Helped me like, yo, man, move your split.
Little tip busy showed me was just working the outside receiver, how to play with the split.
So people not understanding the routes and knowing what I was doing.
So I could just run different routes from different angles so they wouldn't see it.
Just little things.
Little things that helped me be great.
You know what I mean?
Deion Sanders was always a pioneer in my corner.
Even when I came back to play with Tom Brady, just the whole process and that.
Tom Brady was always a prime factor, even though I joked him and shit.
Being in the tournament, he always was one of my friends.
Because you're a pretty stand-up guy.
Always stand-up.
You know what I mean?
You always remember those people in the darkest time who was there for you.
You know what I'm saying?
Who wrote for you.
You know what I mean?
I knew when I went to the Raiders, went to the Patriots with him, had a star Stint, I think he got to know, like, damn, he be really a smart, working hard guy with, you know what I mean, a lot of energy and the goat, you know, we're a man of God because you could, you know, come in the football teams, you're going to learn a lot by God.
One, is he in shape?
Could he understand?
Could he know what to do?
You know what I mean?
I feel like I built that camaraderie with just showing him for that week of work.
Just like, damn.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
He brought me back after a year off.
We won the Super Bowl.
That's heavy.
You know what I mean?
That's big.
You know what I mean?
It was just amazing to know that we could go plan something that we set out to do.
And do it.
And do it.
Do you think Belichick is as good without Brady?
In the end, it's all just a matter of pieces.
No one is in the NFL as good without a quarterback.
Right.
And Tom Brady's don't come around.
You know what I'm saying?
You never find a guy who just got overlooked.
Right.
And then he just fucking turned Superman and just fucking wipe your ass out for 20 plus years.
You know what I'm saying?
Because a lot of people get that trauma.
You know what I'm saying?
Like Tom Brady had trauma.
Right.
Something inside of him or inside of him.
Yeah, something inside of him.
In his DNA.
Something in his heart that was like, some in his balls.
Wanted to cook.
That was fucking ready to go and not fucking off the like.
Some shit you never see again.
Even him as an analyst.
I'm loving him as an analyst because he's a good person.
he gives you different insights that you never would have heard.
He said the other day in one of the games, he said that, oh, I usually looked at how far I had to get, and I average it usually about a second per yard, he said, when he was like, when the clock was really low or something, whatever.
I'm fucking that fucking living dream football.
Yeah, you could tell.
It's like Drew Breeze is the same way.
That fucking Tom Brady's a one-on-one.
Trust me.
Drew Brees.
I stayed at his fucking house.
That kid is 42 years old.
Fucking breathalyzer on the fucking treadmill the day after the game and the fucking treadmill on incline.
He got on a fucking knee sock.
His fucking fucking hat.
We won the Super Bowl and fucking got on got a fucking MCL the whole game.
He can't even wear, yo, he wearing jeans to practice.
He practicing them fucking denim jeans with a knee brace.
And he like, yo, one more route.
Fucking, he's always a one more guy.
He's never wore this one more.
Yo, this is right here for the Super Bowl.
Wow.
Now he's always just the most prepared, bro.
I never seen a guy live and sleep fucking winning football games.
Like, fucking, he lose a game.
That fucking guy look like he lost a relative.
Like someone died.
Like he lost one of his.
Yeah, like even if you've seen him, it's like, you don't want to see Tom after that loss.
Yeah.
It's like, yo, he's fucking dropping even more.
Fucking hit the gas even more.
It's like some shit you want to be.
It's like some Navy SEAL shit.
Right.
That much energy.
That much infection.
It's like, yo, let's go out and fucking do it.
Towards it.
Describe, I wanted you to some of these words for teams.
I'm going to give you a name of a team.
You just give me a word or two to describe them.
Ravens.
Aggressive.
Browns.
Toilet bowl.
Shit, you know how to take the Cleveland.
How many times do you take the Cleveland Browns to the Super Bowl?
How many times?
You understand that bar?
Y'all better dig Jim Brown up.
I'm talking about taking the shit.
Oh, damn.
The Cleveland Browns to the Super Bowl, that's the toilet.
Because that's the only Super Bowl they're going to.
The toilet.
You go to the Browns?
Yeah, you know who you're going.
Yeah, so people know when they go in there, it's done, huh?
Same shit, different toilet.
You know what I'm saying?
It's just a foul of shit.
Oh, come on, friends.
What about the Bengals?
When you see the Bangles?
The Bengals?
Yeah.
Ah.
The Bengals, I think of Patman Jones.
Raw player, great player.
But some way they're going to fuck it up.
Just a fuck up.
Just a knucklehead.
You feel me?
Like, some away to Cincinnati, always fuck it up.
It's like Joe Burrows just look like Ellen.
But I like Chase Daniels.
Yeah, you like Chase Daniels?
Yeah, he's like.
He's a backup quarterback, right?
He's the running back.
Oh, he is?
Chase Daniels?
David, what's his name?
Chase?
He's the number one receiver.
I don't know how to know his name, but his name's Chase.
He's a fucking elite.
I think he was the triple crown of the league.
Talking about Jamar Chase.
Jamar Chase.
Yeah.
He was the fucking.
They are.
Yeah.
Jamar being chased.
That's for sure.
I love Bro.
He had a great season.
No, he did.
He played like a champion, though.
did good.
I just feel like Nah, Joe.
He played his asshole, but what about the Jets now?
The Jets is the Jets.
It's like he's just a side chick in New York, you know?
Oh, damn.
You know?
No, I feel like all New York teams right now is just...
Yeah, it's Milwaukee right now.
It's hectic over there.
What's a little bit of news that's going on, man?
Got any news stories?
Yeah, Trump said he's going to release the MLK file.
Yeah, that's what I told you.
He's going to release it.
Yeah, we talked about that.
But see, I believe that that's the C. Here's what I believe in that.
I believe the CIA or the FBI or whatever has gone through, probably marked stuff in there to make MLK look bad, right?
Of course.
Because they changed the narrative.
They want to bring him down.
Because here's what happens is they start to, first they give you leaders, then they start to release information that brings those leaders down.
And when they do that, they kill a culture.
They're killing a culture, right?
Of course.
So now all the people that had him as like a, as a role model and he may have had a high-level guy and a high-level guy.
He may have had a unique life that was filled with different things, but it didn't make him maybe a bad guy.
It just took away, that's what I'm saying.
Like, you want to take away your culture?
That's what America has been based on for black culture.
And white culture too, man.
It happens now for white culture, too.
I think it happened for all humans.
That's what we got to preeminate it.
Just mostly for the blacks, the black superheroes.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, it's definitely happening more to blacks.
But now you're seeing where they're going and taking down, like, they're really, the media can go and take black leaders down, right?
I mean, that's all it is, is a media takedown.
It always is.
That's all it's been.
What else we got?
The only person in the world after with a functioning pig organ is thriving after a record two months.
Oh, damn.
Let's pull that up, man.
Have you got any?
They got a pig organ they put in somebody.
The only person in the world with a functioning pig.
Oh, damn, is it?
An Alabama woman passed a major milestone Saturday to become the longest living recipient of a pig organ transplant, healthy and full of energy with her new kidney.
61 days and counting, man.
That's kind of messed up, man.
I feel like hiding a piece of hiding pork inside of a black person seems fucked up, right?
That's crazy.
That's bad, bro.
In fucking Alabama?
Come on.
Come on, man.
That's insider trading, bro.
That's fucking.
They just turned into a pig.
I mean, it's just like.
Bro, that shit's bad, Walking Business, bro.
But a lot of people love bacon.
You can't put a piece of fucking bacon inside of somebody's body.
Why the fuck would she get that?
That's all they had?
That's a good point, man.
See, that's the kind of shit that black people been going through.
Like, hey, we ain't got a regular heart.
Yeah, we'll put this fucking side heart in you.
Yeah, they can't do them like that.
They got to stop doing them like that.
God damn, bro.
At least we could get a regular one.
They got no regular ones out there?
Yeah, at least definitely.
Yeah, you can't.
That's a wow.
Yeah, even if it.
What's the source of you living like in a pig organ?
Even give her one with the beats off a little bit.
That's fine.
You know, put that remix in her, but don't give her a pig heart.
Scientists are genetically altering pigs so their organs are more human-like to address a severe shortage of transplantable human organs.
Wow.
That's interesting.
What else, man?
What else have we covered?
I'm trying to think of things that I wanted to cover today, man.
Tiger King star Joe Exotic claims eight prison guards beat him up after one tried to force him to give oral sex an interview with Mac 8. That's Tiger King.
Y'all mess with him, this guy, man.
Oh shit, they trying to take Tiger King out.
They trying to get him in jail, but he in there slurping for show, bro.
been in there um but yeah that's one thing I think is if they hmm My brain's tired.
Yours get tired sometimes?
Nah, I try to keep it going for more.
How much pot do you smoke today, you think?
That's my first two joints.
Damn.
Yeah, I can't.
Black people are so much better at getting high, I think, man.
Because you got a lot of trauma to help you relax.
Fuck, dude, I got high.
I couldn't fucking walk four or five feet without making sure everybody's okay.
But obviously, black guys will play a whole basketball game on being high.
Yeah, you got a high testosterone ready to go.
I don't know.
It was always a beyond.
It blew my mind.
You just got to slam your, if you want to be black, just slam your dick in the door.
It's going to swallow up.
And then you're black.
Then your energy is going to go up.
You feel me?
I don't know, bro.
Bro, I can't take any more medical eye.
I can't take any more suggestions from you today, bro.
You're going to have me with a sore dick yelling the N-word out on the interstate.
We're going to be going viral.
It's a black party, bro.
Oh, man.
I appreciate you coming, AB, man.
Thanks for having me, man.
It was an honor, man, to just, you know, sit down, talk about some huge stuff, even if it was uncomfortable, just make the normacy of just breaking bread, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm intrigued.
What do you kind of see, like, what's things you want to do in the coming future?
Because it's like, I feel like at first people thought you was kind of crazy.
And then now people are like thinking, well, well, you know what?
That's all judgment.
What do you want to do?
What's some things you like, like, do you feel like you want to achieve, you know?
I just want to, you know, serve my purpose in living, you know, giving out light, encouraging people and, you know, bridging the gap.
You know, some of the stuff we've been doing on X, bringing comedy between like bridging the gap of people and just opening people's minds of, you know, experiencing, being making people aware of what the traumas they face, you know, just being a normal person, not even being a celebrity or any type of color, just people as humans.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Going through traumas and overcoming and just bridging the gap or just raising awareness for leaders.
What's one of your biggest regrets you've had over the years, if you have one?
Shit, my biggest regret probably was just like not throwing a wedding for myself.
You know, I feel like so many people fuck me over and threw so much bad parties.
I might as well just go to the altar with myself and celebrate myself.
That much, huh?
Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
Because I feel like life is about living.
And I feel like you got to love yourself.
And being a black person, you experience so much trauma with someone with people writing you down, changing the narrative, character bringing you down.
So it's like you got to keep enough sanity and not enough, you know what I mean, enthusiasm to just be encouraging and have the confidence.
Because not everybody could overcome with people writing them off, killing their character, bringing them down, making them feel a certain way.
It take a strong individual to be able to, you know, overcome that.
So I feel like just continue to raise an awareness, talking to people like yourself, high-level people that, you know, bridging the gap, but just raising conversation that inspire the youth and the world, you know, just spreading the light.
You know, I think I accomplished a lot of things in my life in a short time.
And I feel like now it's just being that inspiration as a human.
The highest thing you could do is inspire.
So just inspiring people, raising conversation, inspiring people, bringing smiles, bringing people together.
You do that.
I mean, you definitely, yeah, I think you really seem like an interesting guy.
I'm glad that I got to get to chat with you.
And I do think, too, they should auction off that N-word once in a while, man.
Maybe we have that little auction, man.
Think about it.
Maybe we have the nigga awards and then just maybe change the name word.
I know you hate the word, but it's like, it's a part of history.
The word only get, yo, we need to create a.
We'll sit in the back this time if y'all do have it.
How about that?
No, you got to be in the front line.
That's going to cause a lot of controversy, dude.
We're going to build it up.
We're going to throw out the teachers, get the commercials.
We're going to make sure.
We're going to free Brian Purvis, let him give one out.
Yeah, we're going to talk to Brian Purvis on the CTSPN and talk about some of his traumas.
What did he learn and where he had some black culture to feel comfortable, too?
Because I think that's an interesting thing.
I feel like that was embracing it.
How he grew up made him feel like he was one of the gods.
Because imagine when people feel not your own people, when your own people treat you like shit, you feel like black people.
Because all our people know is they'd be like treated like shit.
So it's like, yo, we're going to treat you like shit.
So it's like, until you break the culture of shit and making people understand it's okay to be of the not normal, but still have that love to still build them in the right way.
So you don't turn the right wrong way or do the wrong thing.
You know, we got to save people.
And if they had like a thing, say, if like, you know, tonight, bro, right?
9.30 p.m., Macaulay Culkin is doing the N-word, bro.
That's comedy, isn't it?
From home alone.
You telling me how many people would pay to stream that?
Man, they're going to love that.
And then you give the money to...
Exactly.
We make it beneficial, man.
Everything we do with positive intent to bring people together.
We're going to get a lot of hate for even thinking about that, I think.
But I could think about it.
I feel like we can't worry about the hate.
I feel like in life.
Okay, you're right.
Because sometimes the hate come, and after the hate come rewards.
Yay.
Yeah.
After the hate, 2.7 billion.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
After the hate come the love.
I feel like if you're not getting hate, then you're not raising the conversation.
You got to be uncomfortable.
Right.
You're right.
You have to uncomfortable.
To get comfortable.
Right.
This is how you feel uncomfortable about it.
It's like, we got to find the resource to make you comfortable.
And we found the resource.
Okay, let's do it like this.
We're going to give back to the black communities.
So now we're not just saying this in the detergent way to be funny.
We got a real resource behind this.
And we bringing people together.
Oh, yeah.
Because it's a natural thing.
It's not like people haven't said this or little kids.
I told you, Tom Brady's son's been like, yo, you think about the word?
I had to, Tom Zay had to explain them the word.
I was like, yo, man, I think it's not in the 50s what people use this.
It's not slaves no more.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, it's the normacy of black families being rich and living upon the same culture of generational wealth.
Yeah.
And building that up and seeing what the future of that's like in the universe.
Exactly.
I mean, I'm just a bystander in all of that.
But yeah, I think that would be really interesting to see if that was a way to raise some money.
But that also might be really crazy.
I think we're talking at the exact right now.
We was thinking maybe like the Cracker Olympics, but there was like, we maybe could maybe call it the ABC Olympics.
ABC in the seats for Cracker?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
That way it's not like a, that's why everybody could feel comfortable because now we're not trying to promote comfortability.
And you dude, a lot of good crackers ain't getting it.
You want to be.
Everybody likes a little bit of shine, you know?
Everybody deserves sign.
We all humans.
We deserve shine.
No matter who you are in the freezer, if you deserve sign.
Yeah.
All plants.
Everybody's working hard towards something.
All plants, bro.
We look at the sun, man.
What we got?
Yeah, we got another, anything else you want to talk about?
The Elon Trump fart.
The Elon Trump fart coin.
The ETF 500.
Elon Trump fart coin.
I wish I could pump out a fart right now, but I'm all half a belly.
But yeah, this is the coin.
It's a Bitcoin.
What's your thoughts on crypto?
I know you got a lot of money and shit.
I do just mutual, but I'm a safe, bro.
I get scared about my money.
Oh, wait, I did get like 160th of a Bitcoin or something.
How much is it?
140th of a Bitcoin.
How much is that?
I think maybe $3,500.
I got it.
You got a little scunyun.
I got a little put away.
Nothing crazy.
G's up.
Might be $4,000.
So check out the Elon Musk fart coin, man.
So it's Elon Musk fart coin?
Elon Trump fart coin, which one is it?
Elon Trump fart coin.
So check out the Elon Trump fart coin.
And what is that?
It's a coin that's out on.
It's one of the best coins that out on crypto.
Oh, really?
Yeah, it's going up.
It's heating up right now.
Let's see that.
Elon Trump fart 500.
Pull that up.
Elon Trump fart 500.
Yeah.
That shit looking down like a fuck.
We're doing a long day.
That's just 24 hours.
Give me it in a month.
Yeah, long day should be in Greenski.
There you go.
That goes to Greens.
Elon Trump coin 500.
Elon Trump fart.
Oh, yeah, I was going to fart with it.
I thought he was going to bust some ass.
No, that's all right, man.
I don't think we need it.
Let's don't bridge the gap that much, bro.
ETF.
ETF 500.
Okay.
Elon Trump fart 500 coin.
Crypto is going up.
Gang, gang, man.
You trade a lot?
I trade a lot, man.
I'll try to get into it.
It's a lot of money in the digital aspect.
Yeah, oh, no, I agree.
It's a huge part of the culture now, too.
It's all different things that happen in financial cultures.
I'm curious to see what the whole future of crypto and that whole world looks like, meme coins and everything.
It's interesting.
AB, thank you, man.
I really appreciate your time.
Honor, man.
Thanks for having the conversation, chatting with me.
And for just all the tweeting and stuff.
It's a lot of entertainment.
So thank you for that.
It takes a lot of time to do that.
People don't think about that.
It's a lot of time.
So thank you for the commitment.
And best of luck to you, man.
Thank you, brother.
Yeah.
Now I'm just floating on the breeze.
And I feel I'm falling like these leaves.
I must be cornerstone.
Oh, but when I reach that ground, I'll share this piece of my life found.