Chapter 1: What is discussed at the start of this section?
This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human.
Spell gynecologist, Rory.
I think Rory would be a good gynecologist.
No, spell it. Spell gynecologist. I think if you can't spell it, you shouldn't be allowed to talk about it. Go ahead, do it. G-U-Y. You're doing this on purpose.
Yeah, you are doing this on purpose.
Not guy.
Yeah. No. That's true.
It is a guy. no a c-a-l-l you gotta call college yeah college g-i-s-t that was close it was sounded out he's right do you want to try mall g-y-n-e-c-o-l-o-g-i-s-t-s ding ding ding ding ding ding ding go mall let's go mall mall wow i love pussy i gotta tell you
again shit just like dudes dressing up like that fucking you know other shit like same sex people adopting kids like we should look into that that's gonna affect the kids at some point it is I don't know in which what way but it is gonna affect the kids like this first of all first of all anybody that's adopted should have therapy anyway Okay.
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Chapter 2: How do generational differences affect perceptions of bullying?
a responsible one, one that was vetted through the adoption system, couldn't wait to be parents, takes it very seriously, or the kid whose mother has an OnlyFans and in the lunchroom someone can pull up his mother's nudes. Wait, you lost me. What's going to be more of a traumatic thing?
The kid with the straight parents, but the mom is on OnlyFans and I could pull up her nudes in the cafeteria or the guy that has two amazing supportive dads.
Well, obviously, if your peers can see your mom naked, that's going to be something way more... Or dad. Or dad. If you see your mom or dad naked, that's going to be traumatic for you. You know what I'm saying? So, I mean, that goes without saying, but I do think that both of those are the same in where kids in school will find a way to poke fun at either one of those.
Yeah, I think that's going to happen no matter what. I think you're right. And you probably will get in trouble by the principal and dean and shit like that for making fun of a kid having gay parents more than poking fun at making a kid, laughing at a kid for his mom having an OnlyFans. I believe that.
I believe you probably get expelled for having, you know what I'm saying, making fun of a kid having gay parents. Yeah, I'm agreeing with you on that. But it's going to be traumatic for you either way if kids in your school find your mom's OnlyFans or... Kids are going to find... Kids are mean. They'll find anything. That's what I'm trying to say.
If it's two supportive gay parents, I mean, that kid's, I think, on top.
Supportive parents is supportive parents. I don't give a fuck what they are, heterosexual or gay. I don't care. I'm just saying that I think that they should definitely be provided with some type of counseling or therapy because... especially coming up in school, kids are fucking, they just have no filter sometimes.
But why do they have to get therapy? Because kids get picked down for all sorts of reasons in school. Kids get picked down for being poor. Kids get being picked down for not being conventionally attractive. That's part of building character is getting picked down.
Nah, nah, nah, don't say that. Don't say that. That's not a part. It should be a part of building character, but you pick on kids now, you get expelled, you get kicked out of that school. When I was getting picked on, you had to take that shit. You had to deal with it. It was part of growing up. It was like, okay, they talking about me. They bullying me.
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Chapter 3: What impact does social media have on today's youth?
See how you tried to do that? Don't do that.
What you just tried, don't try it. When I was in elementary school, we had indoor recess. Remember when it would rain or whatever and you couldn't go outside? Do you just have recess in the classroom?
Yeah.
This kid, Jem, moved from Turkey, and he barely spoke English, so naturally everyone picked on him. Of course, real reputable reason to make fun of a kid. Jem from Turkey? Because he can't speak English yet. Yeah, he's definitely getting picked on. And I was being a follower. I was involved in the making fun of him during indoor recess.
He cocked back and gave me the bloodiest nose I have ever had in my life. I went to the teacher like a bitch. She said, get a napkin. Yeah. That was it. You deserved it. And you never fucked with him again? No. Actually, we went to junior high together, too, and some of high school, and we became cool. Yeah. No, it was a night.
Once he learned how to speak English, I could at least have a conversation with him.
I think a lot of bullying is just... You heard that bloody nose, though. You understand that. Oh, hell yeah. I think a lot of that, though, I think a lot of bullying is genuinely... Because kids sometimes don't know how to break that ice of talking to another kid that they think is different. So if you see a kid that's an immigrant that's not from this country,
As a kid, naturally, you'll just start poking fun at him because he doesn't speak English. He dresses different. He's not from here. Things like that. But in a weird way, it's because you're like, yo, who is this kid? Like, what's his story?
What are you about? That actually stopped me from being a follower to some degree in a weird therapeutic way because I didn't want to pick on him. I was doing it because everyone else was doing it. Right. And then I got punched in the nose and I was like, I just got punched in the nose for something I didn't even want to do. Like, I didn't want to bully that kid.
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Chapter 4: How do childhood experiences shape adult behavior?
Now this person is giving speeches at colleges. I'm like, yeah, I did 20 years for selling heroin or selling cocaine. Then I was hired by this company. Now I run this company. But that's real.
You know that that's a Cinderella story, though.
No, no, no. It's not a Cinderella. People to me that don't really need rehabilitation. They're extremely intelligent people that were placed in a circumstance where that was probably the only option. They had the mindset of a CEO, but not the opportunity to become one legally. So when they go to jail and they come out, it's like, I mean, I'm smart.
I did that because I was in a really shitty situation. And I got myself out of it. The only way I knew how it just happened to be illegal. And yes, people harmed this and that. It's the people that are like have violent outrages and shit that harm innocent people that need to be rehabilitated before they come back out.
Well, we're not someone that like. No, but if you're we know if you're running a drug empire, we know what was going on. There's a lot of violence that comes. Sure. You need rehab for that. You caused a lot of destruction on the streets.
I agree. No, you need to serve time for that. I don't know if they necessarily, if they have an option when they get out of jail to not have to do anything illegal, they would need rehabilitation to make that choice. Like, I think, what's a drug kingpin?
Do we think Freeway, Ricky Ross needed like rehabilitation or that was just a gentleman that was put in a situation and his brain took him to the top in the situation he was in? I don't think he got out of jail and was like, damn, I just need to sell heroin. No, I have other opportunities now.
well yes and because of who he is maybe yes but there are other people that don't have those again they come home and there's still no other option yeah so it's like that's why they need rehabilitation because you you need to learn how to channel your whatever gift you have of being able to sell a product channel that into a different direction but what's what's so fucked up about that
is the prison system is designed to do otherwise. The opposite, yes. Because if you have someone like, let's say Supreme from the Supreme team, him getting out of jail as a felon, it's very tough to maneuver. The only way he actually could was fucking with Irv and hip hop because hip hop takes care of people that can't get actual jobs because of felonies and shit like that.
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Chapter 5: What are the challenges of being a male gynecologist?
And I think we got to, we got to, it was something that we could address that, you know, when somebody isn't being real with you, even if you could get past that initial first line, you'll wonder if they're always lying to you.
I mean, he knew that girl for a week. I feel like that was kind of forgivable.
Yeah. But also, if you see the character had lost a mom and a dad at the same time. Oh, yeah. Never mind. And some people that have mothers and fathers, some people that have mothers and fathers at the same time, they believe in love at first sight. They believe in longevity in marriage. They believe that that person, I could have, this is my one. You know what I'm saying?
You, my friend, with your body count, maybe you... Wow.
Switching gears.
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Chapter 6: How do societal perceptions affect male gynecologists?
Was your arm actually broken? All being a Bronx representative. He said this, I didn't say this. He said, it's crazy that you let someone call you Brooklyn, but you from the Bronx mall said that I didn't.
Well, well, well, first of all, well, first of all, you said mall being a Bronx representative. I need you to put the, every time you say, of course, right. So it's, it's the Bronx cause it's not the Manhattan or the Queens, but, um, I think, no, his, oh, I got a little pod moment. My name wasn't Brooklyn. My name was Patches. Where did Patches come from?
Yeah, I was like, what the, what is that, right? And for some reason, they thought that was cool. And he was like a poet. He's like, his patch is in Apache.
Chapter 7: What are the implications of gender in medical professions?
And I was like, nah, like Brooklyn can be, if you're in any place in the world and go where Brooklyn at, somebody there will say, whoo. You know what I'm saying? That's true. So when you go to another city, no one's going to say, yo, that's my man Bronx. They'll be like, yo, that's my man Brooklyn, from Brooklyn. But I thought the idea was dope.
And then the name tag, if you watch at the end of it, the name tag, I put my last name being Bridges. Oh, when you get the new job, yeah. Yeah, so my name is officially Brooklyn Bridges.
That's crazy.
I couldn't do that. I couldn't do that with the Bronx. It would be like the... the Bronx Jacoby hospital or something like that. I don't know.
Chapter 8: How does personal experience influence medical understanding?
It'd be the Bronx. Yeah.
Whenever somebody from the Bronx move out of town, they just call us New York. And I mean, what's so funny is how ahead of the time it was with that character. Cause we see now how many New York transplants are in Atlanta. Like that's a whole thing now. Yeah. So it was crazy that, that, that, that character kind of represented exactly what was about to happen in in the next decade in Atlanta.
Yeah, you're welcome.
Everyone I know from New York, move down to Atlanta.
Yeah, you're welcome. I feel like... The real estate agents can thank you. I've done that with the Graduation album. I've done that with this last Donda album. I've done that. I'm a part of these classic and great moments because I step aside and go, it's not about the Bronx. It's about what can resonate when someone calls it out the window.
So we name our children based off of the window of Tupac and Juice where he goes, yo, Q! And like, could you call your mom? Now he has a good call name outside the window. So Brooklyn! That made way more sense than the Bronx or BX or anything like that.
I'd be terrified if someone was just randomly screaming the Bronx.
that would be terrifying but yeah we appreciate you for real we look forward to ATL too also you know you and I have talked off mic a bunch of times definitely need you to come up here one day and like really kick it do a proper episode you know you and I have talked about a lot of shit that I think the world needs to hear so I appreciate you and we'll talk next time you're in New York yeah yeah please everybody you know
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