Chapter 1: What is discussed at the start of this section?
The thoughts, views, and opinions expressed by this podcast, as well as its hosts, are for entertainment purposes only. I repeat, it is not serious. It is not real. No one is exposing, revealing, indicting, or telling you anything about themselves. Also, we do not encourage you to try this at home. We are trained professionals. Do not have your best interests at heart or our own. Enjoy the show.
Mic check one, two, mic check one, two, one, two. So glad that y'all could be here with us on this very special edition of the Joe Budden podcast. My brother, Freeze, will be with us shortly. Flip, our good brother, Dark Lamont Hill, Big Parks is in the building. And Ish is here with us. He has on his resting Ish face because he just sent some aggressive texts. Wild aggressive.
To some tenants who have not paid him his monies yet. And it's May 27th by the time y'all are hearing this. And he was tight about it. Now, what I don't understand is... He been in the landlord game for so many years that he should kind of know what time it is. You know, the weather getting nice. You know what happened? I can tell you what happened. What happened?
You know, holiday weekend just passed. Oh, yeah. And it was Memorial Day weekend. That shit slid across the ground. That shit slid across the ground, and he seen one of them tenants out there. He don't seem like he's too pleased with that response. Dog, niggas is outside. Niggas is on Dykeman. They going to be outside? Niggas is traveling. They in the airport. Nobody is paying you that rent, dog.
You're not getting that rent. Don't do that, because at first you thought he was asking about the rent for June. Yeah, that's what we thought. I thought he was being thirsty, texting on the 27th saying, yo, you know June is coming up. He said no. He said no, they missed May. But I'm like, April. April. I don't stop. Now you adding shit. I said April from the roof.
Okay, but then... It's April too? All right, that's only two months. You do math, right? So that's two times... What's your late fee? $150? Shit don't matter. We're going to get you $300 for your troubles. Yeah, we got you. We're going to pay the late fee, nigga. You're not getting that rent until like August, September, dog. Fourth of July coming up.
And they know that... And they know that... And they know... Shit, they know they got a sweet landlord on their hands. Why you think they ain't pay April? He ain't going to kick him out. Oh. It's a dude.
He says a couple niggas. Oh, it's a couple?
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Chapter 2: How does the landlord's situation reflect tenant behavior?
He need that money. Look at him. I used to take that shit personal. He got on his, I need that money sweats, too.
And his sneakers. And his sneakers.
Nah, he got his whole outfit right now is, I need that money, yo.
What's happening? You want me to spot them?
What's the rent?
I'll pay. Let me pay.
Let me pay for it since you look like you really need it.
We're going to hold you to it. Shut up.
Shut the fuck up.
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Chapter 3: What insights are shared about the Knicks' performance?
They not off at all. They way off.
They ain't even getting on the highway at all. Yo, y'all niggas have worked here for five years. It amazes me how y'all continue to get that lie off. My question to y'all is, how much longer do y'all expect that lie to run? Karen Sybil already spilled the beans on you.
What you talking about? Oh, I did hear that.
Karen Sybil said every job you got, boy. Oh, she did?
Yes, she did. She said a lot of them.
All the money. I was like, yo, I used to kill all of us. Karen Sybil exposed your Newark man.
So you think he down with you, and he not.
I'm down with you. He's an ambassador for 75 different companies.
Freeze. Huh? Why you ain't tell me? Tell you what? He's lying. I'm not. That's why you wearing that chain out. Before you was hiding that shit in the glove compartment. Remember that shit? We had to catch that nigga.
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Chapter 4: What are the implications of Kevin Hart's recent comments on comedy and race?
I ain't really been on the ground. That's so fucked up. I ain't been on the ground that much. You skipped the ground portion of the tussle. Hold on, nigga. Hold on. He walked right into that one. Come on, man. Oh, man, I'm here all day. I got DVDs for sale outside. Anyway, yeah, fights go to the ground, man. God damn it.
How much money would it take you to go out there and do that with one of our peers? I know you're going to say none because you're too rich. I'm never going to do that.
Chapter 5: How does the discussion shift towards the impact of corporate decisions in comedy?
Flip, if somebody said you and, what's my man that does what you do but like on a slightly bigger scale? Drewski. Drewski, yeah. Drewski ain't doing that shit. How much would it, for a million would you do it? No.
No.
Yeah, he only going to get $50,000. Drewski going to get the $950,000.
Oh, shit. You know what's so crazy? Yeah, wait. I just held you down. I just sent you a bitch ass. You was fighting the ground.
Chapter 6: What critiques are made about the standards for black entertainers in the industry?
Yes, you think Drewski is going to get the $50,000? You think he'll give him 50? All right, that's cool.
You tell him it's a good look. Look at these groupies. Look at these groupies. Call out to him. Call out to him. Listen, at the end of the day... How much would it cost? I'm not doing a fight, nigga. Ray J offered me to fight a fat boy. I told you, I'm not doing a fight. Yeah, but I thought it just wasn't enough. You said Ray J offered you to fight a fat boy? Yes.
How much did he offer you? But Ray J just took a fight.
$250,000.
So y'all friends, why y'all ain't just draw up a play like all other friends do? I mean, that's what Phat was doing, but, you know what I mean, I'm not, I don't. You wouldn't do that for me.
I'll tell you right now, if a podcast, if it made for a million dollars, I would do it tomorrow.
And you could beat the dog shit. A million is the longest? It was before I got here. That's my baseline. You're not going nothing less than a million?
It would've been who was it would've been who was negative because at some point somebody Oh boy, that's what I'm saying a million dollars Three options Somebody black over the doctor.
They'd be trying to put against him The other doctor do Boyce Watkins. Oh, is it Boyce? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, you always just text me five minutes ago my violence They got okay by the text right boys. I would do for boys Umar Roland. Umar the one. And Roland. Umar the one.
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Chapter 7: What did DJ Head announce about editing songs for radio?
DJ Head went and announced that he had edited Too Hard for the radio without the disses and said, for all my conflicted DJs out here, meaning out there on the West Coast that wants to play this song, I did a version and I took out the disses. The Head edit. Pause. Sounds like an ice move. Yeah, but you don't put it back out. You do that for yourself.
Chapter 8: How does the discussion shift to the impact of edits on music?
It's not Ice moves. I do my edits and keep them. You distributed some of them. You distributed some edits. I distributed one. I hate when you try to turn your back on black Twitter you, yo.
We knew you back then.
I did do an edit before. Nigga, that was three years ago. I think I still have beef over that. No, I'm talking about that one. He still have beef over that. Ice, you still a black Twitter dude and black threads. Wherever there's black, there's you. B.T. B.T., boy. Unless you're Cinco de Mayo. St. Patrick's Day. Wow. Or any appropriation day. You're supposed to be mine. Wow.
I put my head down. Silent jokes from the newer couch. That's cool.
Silent jokes. That was wild. Look who's talking now. What I peeped was head basically low key saying that shit is a slap. Uh-huh. But we just don't want to hear you dissing us. Right. So I'm going to reproduce the song so that all the other Cali DJs can play this slap. He walked it back though. I was just joking. Yeah, yeah, because they jumped on his ass. A slap is a slap.
They jumped on his ass about what? What did he walk back? He was just joking. But he did really put out the DJ hat. I know that, but he was like, I should have worded my jokes better. He basically was saying, oh, shit, the backlash. Let me address that by cleaning it up and saying it's a joke.
Even if he put it out, you still, the fact that you didn't stand behind it and ran and said, all right, it's a joke. You edit some shit, edit it, my nigga. Like I said, I've been doing it.
Yeah, it's not that serious. Plenty of radio DJ edits historically.
But that speaks to the record. Speaking only for me, if anybody I know, like, or love plays a Joe Budden diss record with the Joe Budden disses edited, nigga, you're still a Joe Budden diss record. Like, that didn't change nothing for me that you muted out Fuck Joe Budden. The essence of the song is rooted in Fuck Joe Budden.
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