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Chapter 1: What early experiences with drugs does Charleston White share?
Oh, I started, I tried weed the first time, like in the third grade. Yeah, but. Yeah. I mean, I was always in the hospital on some kind of medication, so I don't know what I was. I just know when I'm high, I seem normal. And when I'm normal, I seem normal.
Right. But when's the last time you took a nice break from the weed?
Oh. when I caught those aggravated assault charges and the animal cruelty. So I was on bond for two years. So they put you on bond probation, because anytime you get two or more felonies, they put you on bond probation. So I had to report to a bond officer every month, and them pissing me. So I was getting by the first time taking the Surtos, going in and taking the Surtos. What's that?
It's a gelatin gel. it'll beat the average drug test. So I done seen guys beat DPS drug tests to drive trucks with this. So, I came out to the marijuana convention out here in Vegas, and I was with Vlad, the young Asian chick that used to work with Vlad Shirley.
Me and her was in the marijuana convention hitting this Mike Tyson bong, flipping it back and forward, and that bitch went viral, and the courts got it. And them motherfuckers revoked my bong. And then they quadrupled my bong, so it went from 30,000 to 90,000. See, I made the bong, got out. I went and seen a Texas medical, I went and seen a psychiatrist.
Uh-huh.
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Chapter 2: How did Charleston White navigate his legal troubles and drug tests?
And they referred me to a doctor. And the doctor prescribed me medical marijuana. So I got my Texas medical marijuana card. I started back smoking weed. And when they pitched me again, I went to my lawyer's office and gave it. My lawyer's secretary, Michelle, said, Charleston, I don't think the judge is going to honor that. I said, well, why are you kidding me?
It would be no different if I was in a car wreck. I went to a real doctor. This is real legitimate. I'm in a database. I'm in the Texas Department of Public Safety's database for having this car. She said, well, I don't think. And yeah, the judge said, that car. It locked me up and gave me a no bomb.
Damn.
Yeah, so I had to go 11 months. I went 11 months without smoking. Yeah, and shit, I started trying shrooms then.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah, I started micro-dosing shrooms.
But you weren't drinking?
No. Well, I'm not a drinker. When I started doing comedy, you could be nervous before the show. So say, give me a double shot. And yeah, that calms your nerves.
Right.
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Chapter 3: What insights does Charleston White provide about drug use and its impact on health?
We just think we've been taking these d*** pills for a laugh.
The d*** pills to me feel so mild.
But no, they don't. When you take them d*** pills, you getting a bitch at the gas station. I started looking at that shit. That shit got 70,000 milligrams of what? So what they buying... They buying the Schlitterfall, the pad of the formula that's in Viagra and Cialis.
Right.
They're buying it like a key of it. Because I done bought a key of Schlitterfall before.
There's a lot of random shit in those pills. But all these guys are also doing things that we actually know for a fact are horrible for you. But hold on.
They waking up doing this every day. A pill every day? No, no, no. They waking up doing the drug till we know there's killing them every day. Listen to the effects of the pill. Man, when you take that shit, Your vision start getting blurry. The lights be dripping. You be driving home in them bright lights. You be blinding the mother.
I don't know about that.
When you get to fucking your dick as hard as it can be. When you get through fucking. Your heart be beating so goddamn fast. Your head go to hurt. Everything. Your head be hurting two days later. You be wanting to tell your baby, baby, I'm about to die.
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Chapter 4: What lessons can be learned from being a viral sensation?
Nigga, now it's time to get serious. It was trillions of dollars in that event last night. How you nigga laying back on the stage when they ask you about fighting, you bring up, yeah, my baby mama. At some point, black man, you got to get serious, nigga.
But he, I mean, he's streaming while he's there. They got 20,000 people and some shit watching them. The clips are going viral.
So this is what I'm saying. This is what I learned and this is why I beat all these niggas. I learned early from talking to Vlad TV, Charleston, who remembers his last viral sensation? When you become viral, you got, depending on who you are, you got a three to 12 month run of attention.
Some people have like three days. Just hear me out. But there's levels to viral.
But just hear me out, depending on who you are.
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Chapter 5: How does the conversation shift to the challenges of maintaining street credibility?
Yeah.
You got three months to a 12 month run, depending on what you do in that life. That light is going to get brighter or darker. I done seen many get darker. Aaron's got darker. Bosco got darker. I can go on and on and on. Boy, Drewski's got brighter.
Yeah. The biggest anybody's ever gotten.
Country Wayne got brighter. Desi Bank got brighter. Charleston White got brighter. Why? Vlad said, you just don't want to be a viral sensation.
Chapter 6: What are the implications of targeting individuals in social media?
So, nigga, I started a website, merchandise. I'm not just saying, get on here, nigga, and stream and live. I don't even stream. And I could be doing what they're doing. Why? You won't get a lot of sponsorships and deals. Why? You stuck over here with the kids crowd. With this kids audience. And kick already got a structure for who they gave the big money to.
So come work, boy, but we going to feed you good, though. But that's a job. Having to do this every day.
Right. Well, I mean, I think the real question and the test for Adrian Broner will be, will he be able to be a popular, sustained influencer, social media character, et cetera, once he kind of gets past the drunk crash out stage? You don't think he got it?
He don't have the gift. He's entertaining drunk. Being obnoxious, a male chauvinist, disrespectful.
Mm-hmm.
His gift is boxing. He's a legend. He's a genius. Your gift is what you fall back on.
Yeah.
This is feeding you to get back to your gift.
Right.
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Chapter 7: How has the perception of street credibility in rap changed over time?
Street niggas who became rappers who started ordering murders. Acting like street niggas. Right. Before then, it was rapping niggas rapping street niggas. All of them. It was rapping. It was rapping street.
Yeah. Except Shout It Out. Think about like throughout the 90s and the 2000s how the shit that would impress us. Like 50 Cent we thought was the craziest shit ever because he got shot a couple times. Nine times, yeah. Nobody gives a fuck. if you got shot nine times anymore. You have to kill nine people. Now we're talking.
You got to kill or you have to die.
Yeah.
If you ain't kill or die, we don't give a... Well, no, if you get shot like somebody... What's the... The NBA young nigga got shot in the head?
Ben 10? Or... No, no.
The other one. He ended up preaching of getting his life saved. It's supposed to be the nigga that got shot and came back to live and... Because they didn't die, there ain't nothing.
Yeah.
So I'm saying at this age, shouldn't this shit go back to being entertainment? Because at one point in time, rapping was pretty good when they had a bunch of studio gangsters. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. So yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
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Chapter 8: What insights does Charleston White share about the impact of violence on rap culture?
So I'm with you. Let's find us some R&B singles or go to a country.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, I want to start like a little like a acapella like boys group. Like get a bunch of gang members, but get them to wear suits and then they can all kind of snap their fingers and harmonize.
Why gang members, my nigga? Why gang members? Why we can't even get a bunch of nerds?
They don't have to be from gangs. They got to be a little street though. They got to have some edge. So another backstreet boys kind of group. Yeah, but we're going to find like the best ones in the whole. Actually, really, I shouldn't be saying this is a great idea. Yeah, damn sure we are. I'm just kind of freestyling, but this is a great idea. A gang member boy group.
Man, them niggas go, man, they go. You gotta go K-pop. Man, you drop. So their audience comes with a risk.
No, okay. None of them are from the same city. You don't got to worry about putting a crib in the blood together because we got a New York guy, a Cali guy, a Texas guy.
I'm going to tell you something.
It's going to get complicated.
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