A Tribe Called Best
Welcome to the best podcast on the internet and the outernet! Hosted by the incomparable “It’s me Knowlo,” **A Tribe Called Best** is your go-to lifestyle podcast designed for the regular, everyday person seeking inspiration and connection.
Join “The Besties" as we dive into stories of victory, failure, and lessons learned along the way. Through laughter, tears, and honest conversations, we explore the highs and lows of life while coming to terms with current events.
Whether you’re venturing through the rollercoaster of life or simply in need of a friendly voice, “It’s me Knowlo" is here to guide, entertain, and inspire. Become a part of “The Tribe,” where everyone’s journey is valued and every story is celebrated.
Tap in every other Monday and let’s grow together. Subscribe now and join the dialogue as we uncover what it truly means to strive for the best!
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A Tribe Called Best
Benny the Butcher 💪🏽vs. The Nerds📱: The Dumbest War Since Ever
On this episode of A Tribe Called Best, ItsMeKnowlo’s bitchin’ about Benny the Butcher and his one-man war against… nerds. Yeah, apparently it’s “gangster” now to beef with people who go to work and pay taxes on time instead recreational jail and bullets & gun smoke.
ItsMeKnowlo’s had it with rappers who swear by street codes like they’re commandments carved in crack rock—and then get mad when civilians don’t play by the same rules. Spoiler alert: regular people don’t care about the “honor” of the streets. We care about Wi-Fi signals and gas prices.
Tune in for a hilarious, cynical breakdown of why gangsters/rapper need to stop promoting crime like it’s a lifestyle brand and start praising the people (the consumer)that got you were you are.
🎧 Keywords:
Benny the Butcher podcast, gangster rap debate, hip hop culture, street code hypocrisy, funny podcast, cynical commentary, rap beef analysis, A Tribe Called Best, ItsMeKnowlo, hip hop podcast, nerds vs gangsters, rap culture discussion
A Tribe Called Best is written, produced, and hosted by “It’s me Knowlo.” A heartfelt thanks to all “The Besties” for tapping in to the best podcast on the internet and the outernet. Remember, without you, there is no me. Let's make “The Tribe” thrive—tell a friend about the pod!
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Hey yo, y'all see what state the game is in when the streets when the streets don't hold the culture of the game. Now
0:07
that the weird Twitter nerds and and the nerds and all of these weird [ __ ] got, you know, mean they
0:13
got their hands on the culture. The street the voice of the streets don't mean as much as it did when we was coming up. It was a lot of cons to that
0:19
as well. You know what I'm saying? I got to say that. But you see what happen when the streets, you know I mean, don't
0:25
control the game no more. It's a lot of [ __ ] [ __ ] [ __ ] going on, man. And a lot of people's okay with it because they're
0:30
[ __ ] [ __ ] man. Holy [ __ ] It's a tribe called Best. Hey, what's up? ItsMeKnowlo, and this
0:36
is a tribe called Best
0:41
on this episode of bitching about I want to [ __ ] about Yes.
0:48
Benny the Butcher. I don't understand
0:53
the angry, vitriolic,
1:00
bitter, old headness that everybody is showing right now.
1:08
I say old headness because he is
1:13
40. I am also 40. I can't call a person old that's the
1:19
same age as myself. Old head is not a
1:25
age thing. A old head is a way of living. Old head is
1:32
your style. Nicki Minaj is an old head. She goes
1:39
around and complains and rants and raves about things that only she understands.
1:46
Nobody in the world knows why Nikki is mad except Nikki.
1:53
Jim Jones. Uh Jim Jones periodically uh pops up. Well, let me not say
1:59
periodically. He's always kind of around. He's always kind of relevant. I actually like Jim Jones. I don't dislike
2:07
him. I like his style. I like his music. It's really cool how in shape he is,
2:13
right? But when they gave him that uh that title, like when they designated him to be the world's oldest YN,
2:23
oldest is not his age. Oldest is his mentality.
2:28
He goes around and does stuff that's very impressive to 19 year olds.
2:34
He has a old head mentality. It has nothing to do with his age.
2:40
Dame dash very very old head mentality.
2:48
Just you're not aware of the fact that you're not it. And when
2:56
people tell you you're not it, you don't understand or accept the fact that
3:02
you're not it. If everyone in the world is wrong, you're the problem.
3:09
Holy [ __ ] It's a tribe called best. So when I'm saying Benny the butcher has
3:19
this old head mentality, he has this old head mentality because
3:25
he keeps conflating two topics. He's mixing up what the
3:33
street is with what the culture is, right?
3:38
And conflating the issues is one of the quickest ways for you to look like an idiot.
3:47
I said in another video and it's becoming a very popular thing to say. I
3:53
agree with it wholeheartedly. I think that it is true. The streets are dead cuz the internet is the new streets. The
4:00
streets moved on to the internet. All the the the the backbiting and
4:05
troublemaking and instigating and crime and hurting people, it's all on the
4:11
internet now. And
4:18
an example of that is the culture. people people keep talking about music
4:24
and hip-hop and the quote unquote culture, but what we keep overlooking is the culture is not necessarily the
4:32
streets. Hip-hop culture is
4:38
by by definition, the way that some people would define it would be the dancing, the graffiti, the the the
4:45
MCing, you know, the DJing, all the elements that make up hip hop.
4:53
Hip hop is a music and a culture with a
4:58
really rich and beautiful heritage. It came out of necessity and it came out of
5:04
struggle and it's this beautiful art form that's
5:10
ever evolving. Right. people started
5:17
uh excuse the arm the uh the the the whole hip-hop thing and uh it gained in
5:25
popularity really fast because it's tight and hip-hop was rooted in this story,
5:33
this narrative, you know, it's the way that we walk, the way that we talk, the way that we dress
5:39
and this is the way that we live. hip-hop culture and and at its onset
5:49
at the advent of hip-hop and and and black people making hip-hop. I think that we may have been one of the only
5:58
uh maybe not the only but at least the first people to make poverty
6:05
cool. People had money. People had things, not
6:10
us. But we lived a certain way in the hood and we popularized the way that we
6:16
lived and it was packaged up and it was sold to the world. It was mainstream.
6:25
People started to discover that hip hop was a way to escape the hood, escape
6:30
poverty. It gained
6:36
popularity. And just like anything else, it gets really popular, it gets stolen, it gets
6:44
commandeered, it gets taken over. So, a lot of people that are rappers and hip-hop artists and dancers and such
6:52
don't own their intellectual property. They sign these devil uh slave record
6:59
deals and they say stuff like you're mine in perpetuity and in all of the
7:06
universes and everything that you do. I'm going to wet my beak. I'm going to have a piece of everything that you do
7:12
forever to the rest of your life. You're mine, boy. That's kind of how it works.
7:18
You're this uh artist that creative and you get fractions of pennies on the
7:24
dollar for your blood, sweat, and tears.
7:29
Hip hop is a burgeoning uh uh thing. It's this cash
7:36
cow. It's big. It's huge. The world loves it. People start talking about what's going
7:43
on, current events, right?
7:48
That's when the plot thickens. That's when it gets really, really good.
7:55
Cuz we getting people cussing. We getting people We getting rappers is
8:00
being watched and investigated by the FBI because of what they saying. People is proud of being black.
8:06
People is fighting the system. People are are are are dressing a way
8:13
that is it represents their demographic. It was
8:19
a point where you could look at a person and be like, "Oh, he from LA. Oh, he he's from he's from uh Philly.
8:26
Oh, he dresses like he's from New York." It was a point where
8:31
it was regional and you you could see that person struggle. You
8:36
could see this particular rapper's struggle in his
8:41
delivery, in his subject matter, in his slang, and the way that that he talked. It was very specific and it was very
8:49
regional. As rap got bolder and bolder and
8:57
people started, you know, it started getting more aggressive, that's when people fell in love with it. That's when
9:03
it got more and more traction when it became its most rebellious.
9:13
So I remember too short told a story and he was saying that when he was coming up it
9:19
was a lot of dudes that were gangsters or or drug dealers and things like that and they were smart. They didn't uh you
9:27
know really want to be rappers. They didn't want to be in the limelight and they didn't want to be like, "Hey, look at
9:33
me. I'm Johnny Drug dealer." They didn't want that. But Too Short will write raps
9:39
and he would talk about the drug dealers or the pimps or whatever. And the drug dealers would say, "Hey,
9:45
I like that. Make a song or make a tape about me." And they would pay too short
9:52
to make these tapes to rap about them. And that was cool.
9:58
So the more that we start rapping about the street life and glorifying the street life, the more popular it
10:05
becomes. If you build it, they will come.
10:11
Rap turned into this commodified thing that was owned by uh
10:19
the these certain people, but it's just this commodified thing that the commodified thing that's now a product.
10:25
You know what I'm saying? It's kind of like not really this beautiful art form that it once was, but it's this uh
10:32
product that is to be packaged and sold in and just bled and just squeezed. You
10:40
know, they want everything out of the art and everything out of the artist that they can get. Okay.
10:48
So they noticed the popularity of the street talk, the killing, the pimping,
10:56
the drug dealing, and they were like, "Hey, get out of here with that hip hop [ __ ] that hood
11:04
[ __ ] that that poverty struggle rap. Get out of here with that. We want you
11:10
to rap about the drugs. Rap about the killing.
11:16
Rap about the degradation of your your your women and your children. Rap about how you poison your
11:23
community. That's all we want you to rap about. That's all we going to pay you to rap about. We not going to pay you that
11:29
handsomely. We'll give you scraps, but that's what we going to pay you to rap about. That's all we want you to rap
11:35
about. So that's all that you're going to rap about. At least if you want to make money.
11:42
So you get people that are the
11:47
Benny the butcher, right? I remember when
11:55
I first discovered Griselda. I remember when I first heard Westside Gun and I
12:00
was like, damn. I was like, this like this goes, this slaps. I like it. This
12:05
is me. I grew up in the golden era of hip-hop.
12:10
So without capping, without without being hyperbolous, without putting no extras
12:17
on it, the golden era of hip hop was full of artists. It was full of
12:22
individualities. It was it was plentiful. the music that I grew up on. And I'm not
12:29
saying, like I said, no hyperbole, stuff that I actually listened to, stuff that
12:35
I consumed. No Limit, Cash Money,
12:42
Defro. Never like Bad Boy, but Biggie. Biggie
12:47
is my favorite rapper. Not Bad Boy. Uh, Biggie. You had Bust Rhymes. You had Flip Mold Squad. You had Wu Tang. You
12:55
had a ball and MJG. You had UGK. You had Outcast.
13:03
You're coming up in a time where every region
13:08
is planting their flag and making music. uh David Banner,
13:16
you're coming up in a re in a time where every region has this representation.
13:26
Everybody is doing something and it's all different. It's all unique, right?
13:33
But it feels like the industry
13:39
reprogrammed the consumer to say, "Stop all this individuality.
13:46
Stop all this diversity. Stop respecting these artists. These
13:51
artists are a product." And they started force-feeding us the
13:57
same rap and the same kind of rappers.
14:03
So, we have the dudes
14:09
that are real street dudes that are real criminals. We We heard the
14:15
story about Benny the Butch. I'm I'm not here to um do all that, but dudes that are really street dudes that really did
14:22
the stuff that they were rapping about and then they're really good rappers.
14:28
But the problem is them conflating the issue.
14:35
I'm a street dude and I rap about being a street dude. So, everybody else has to
14:41
care and love the care for me as a street person and love the fact that I'm a
14:47
street person and they have to respect the street cuz I'm from the street.
14:54
And that couldn't be further from the truth. Nobody gives a [ __ ] about none of that [ __ ]
15:00
The culture and the street are two different things.
15:08
They run closely together. They sometimes overlap.
15:16
But the culture is supposed to be people tapping in enjoying music and the
15:23
streets is the streets. like when they when it was that kind of that that kind of narrative of like if you're not doing
15:29
what you're rapping about, you're fake. You're not keeping it real. If you are doing what you're rapping about, you
15:35
stupid. So the pendulum swung so far from one side to the other where
15:42
people that weren't street dudes and weren't criminals that was just rapping about it
15:49
kind of for the most part phased out if they weren't really good. All of our
15:54
legendary rappers from the golden era are still around. They still persist.
16:01
They're old dudes that still have elite god tier rap skills.
16:08
But there are a lot of dudes that were real and keeping it real and they blew
16:13
it and they went to prison or they got killed because they was real and they
16:19
was keeping it real. You get what I'm trying to say? And
16:26
a guy like Benny the Butcher, who is the picture of authenticity,
16:32
has the audacity to turn around and diss the so-called rap nerds and in
16:40
the so-called weirdos and the so-called [ __ ] [ __ ] and have
16:45
all this hatred and disdain and disgust for these so-called nerds.
16:54
You can't hate these people that much. These people are the people that put you into position.
17:00
There will be no you without the consumer. And the reason I say they put you into
17:07
position because like I said earlier, only people was listening to Griselda
17:12
was me and white people. When I heard Griselda,
17:18
I screamed it to the mountaintop. I told my brothers. I told some friends, you know, um, a lot of people don't really
17:26
care for the the the the the boom bap authentic,
17:31
you know, gutter lowfi, gritty rap. A lot of people just
17:37
don't care. But you know who does? White
17:42
rap nerds. the people that's doing these YouTube videos
17:48
reviewing Griselda albums, breaking it down bar for bar, comparing
17:54
what what body of work was better, this and that and your producers and they hanging on every word that you say
18:02
and they buying the tickets to every show and they buying your merch and they buying the vinyls and they and and they
18:09
buying the Lethos and and whatever you are are are putting down, they
18:16
picking up and you have the audacity to say that I'm a criminal ex crack dealer that's a
18:25
successful rapper. So now I have disdain and hate
18:31
for the people that put me here cuz it was the nerd. You can't hate the nerd. You really can't. You don't have the
18:37
right to. There's this argument
18:44
And I've heard it on the internet. I'm not going to say the guy who said it because I don't care. He's so
18:49
polarizing. He's already too famous. I don't need to say anything that he said. But is this argument something along the
18:56
lines of hey like celebrity um if you don't like
19:02
being a celebrity and it's so difficult and you have all this disdain, go get a nine toive job and stop being a
19:07
celebrity. Go be a regular person. And it's also like, hey, a celebrity
19:12
doesn't owe you gratitude or they don't owe you kindness. And D
19:20
couldn't be further from the truth. A person is famous or a person that's a celebrity.
19:28
They don't owe you their ass to kiss. A lot of times it's like
19:34
a privilege being in this position that you're in because it's people that
19:42
might work as hard as you are harder. I mean it it it's people that don't, but
19:49
it's people that would literally kill to be in your position
19:54
and you blow it. like the uh the thing how everybody talks about Lauren Hill,
20:00
right? How she's showing up an hour late for shows in in little antics, little uh
20:06
you know things that she pulls. And I saw a Toré video about her where he said, "Oh, she's late to these shows
20:13
because she figured it out. She has the cheat code and it's work life balance."
20:18
I think that that couldn't be further from the truth. That's cap.
20:24
Don't show up. no hour late for no show. You're disrespecting the people that put you in position.
20:30
If you're an hour late to the show cuz you didn't want to be there, don't come.
20:37
It's like fool me once.
20:43
You know, you know what I'm saying? But you're you're an hour late for a show. Okay, that's a mistake. It happened one
20:50
time, two, three, four times you late. You don't show up.
20:55
Now you're just playing. These people consume your art and these people pay for your art. These people
21:02
buy tickets and they drive to a venue and they pay for parking and they buy overpriced nasty food and and $16 beers
21:11
and they come and sit down and you're next to people that's musty and and your shoes is stepped on and people's in
21:16
there uh smoking blunts and people breath stank and people is too close to
21:23
you and it's sweaty in there. Then you come late.
21:28
As a celebrity, you don't owe me anything outside of you
21:36
being celebrity. Shut up and dribble. If you're a singer,
21:41
come on time and sing. If you're a rapper, come on time and rap. I paid to be here.
21:50
You don't owe me nothing more than that. Not a picture, not an autograph, not nothing. I shouldn't get to harass you
21:57
in the street. You don't want to be bothered. No means no. But you do owe me a perform. You owe me nothing less than
22:05
shut up and dribble. And that's the thing with people like Butch.
22:13
The street dude has this narrative of everybody is beneath him. The street
22:19
dude looks at everybody as a sucker and a punk and a lame and a square.
22:26
The street dude is analytical. He looks around and he sees the mark. This guy is weaker
22:32
than me. I could victimize him. I could I could [ __ ] him over. I could take from him. Oh, that guy over there is a
22:38
threat. I might have to hurt him before he hurts me. I always got to be on my pivot. What Jay-Z say? I survive reading
22:45
guys like you. It's this street narrative
22:54
that they push that they want everybody to believe. The street dude wants
23:00
everybody to drink the Kool-Aid. Everyone is not from the street.
23:06
Think about say for example you sell millions of records, right? Do you think
23:11
that it's millions of street people buying your records? No. No.
23:17
More than likely, no street people are buying your records. Every show that I went to,
23:24
every concert, every venue, every festival, it's a ocean of white. It's a ocean of
23:31
Caucasians. It's black people there. It be some black people there.
23:37
But your consumer is the the the quote unquote nerd or weird
23:43
black person. It's not a nerd or weird, but it's just a fan that likes you.
23:48
That's willing to spend time and money with you that's willing to spend their
23:54
hard-earned money and put it in your pocket to make you rich
24:01
and you look at them as a nerd. outside of the hip-hop is hip-hop and
24:08
rap is such a black culture and such a black thing and it's so little
24:14
black people that I see at tours and shows and festivals
24:23
and the crowds are oceans of Caucasian people that are lining your
24:29
coffers and you got the audacity
24:36
to say the nerds are in control of the game and have some kind of hate or
24:41
disdain for the nerds in in and they're [ __ ] [ __ ] allegedly
24:47
in your opinion. And I just think that
24:53
your opinion is your opinion. We can't argue opinions. Like I said before, facts are things that are rooted in
25:00
science. Facts are things that could be proven. 5 + 5 is 10. That's a fact. We can't argue a fact. Also, two,
25:09
we can't really argue opinions because if you and I are having an argument,
25:15
the only thing that's going to happen is we going to argue and then we going to part ways and we going to go our
25:20
separate ways hating each other and resenting each other more. When you argue, you're not going to convince
25:25
anybody of your opinion. Everybody on the internet has an opinion. Benny, as we see in the video
25:35
at the top of this pod, has an opinion, but I just think your opinion is wrong
25:41
and stupid. I would This is
25:49
Holy [ __ ] It's a tribe called Best. A tribe called Best.
25:56
If you support a tribe called Best, you are my bestie. I would never ever show this much
26:06
condescension to one of my besties. I would never
26:11
show disrespect or hate or disdain for somebody that clicks the heart or clicks
26:17
the thumbs up or follows or subscribes or puts money in my pocket. And I'm
26:22
trying to do this to get to the point where I could have a tangible product. And when I have a tangible product to
26:29
sell, it's going to be tight as [ __ ] It's going to be lit. I'mma get y'all something real dope. When y'all ask for
26:36
it, when I get enough besties to sell something, I will sell something. But I
26:41
would never have any disrespect or disdain for a person or people that put
26:47
me into position. And you people nowadays, it's so easy to to to to get
26:53
to where you going and get famous that you get there and you disrespect the
26:58
people that put you in position. It's disgusting.
27:04
So, back to like I was saying, the street dude narrative. The street dude narrative is this is the
27:12
code of ethics. This is how we live in the street. This is what we do in the
27:17
street. This is how street people conduct themselves. Hey, I'm going to go outside your house
27:23
and I'mma kick it. Me and the homies. And um we going to drink and we going to
27:28
smoke and we going to talk loud and we going to play music and maybe somebody will get in the street and start doing
27:34
donuts. Maybe some ops will slide. You know, maybe it'll be a little bit of gunplay. Maybe uh like you're a
27:40
taxpaying lawabiding citizen and maybe the ops will slide on us and shoot up
27:45
the block and you'll have to lay on the floor in your house. You'll have to get in the bathtub in your house because the
27:53
place that you pay rent or pay a mortgage might be bullet riddled because we're street dudes and we're going to
27:59
kick it in front of your house and we're going to kick it on the block. We might sell some drugs in front of your house,
28:06
but you better not tell on me. God forbid. You better not tell on me. I'm a street dude. You better not tell on me.
28:15
It's this street narrative that everybody has to abide by the street rules. If you're a civilian and you're
28:22
not a street person, you don't have to abide by the street rules. People is punching a clock and going to work and
28:30
paying taxes so they could telling your [ __ ] ass.
28:36
The street dude pushes this street narrative on to civilians.
28:42
And street dudes do not follow the street code. They generally don't. Like
28:51
I don't know where you're from. Where you from? What they call you? Where you from? Where your mama stay? Let me see your tattoos. where you from.
29:00
Go to where you're from and look around and ask some people. Talk to your uncle.
29:06
It won't be too long before you find a snitch or a rat. Everybody's a snitch because they push the street narrative
29:12
in the street code, but everybody just wants to go home. People want to do the
29:18
crime, but can't do the time. And they sign up to do all this tough guy [ __ ] But when it's time to go to prison,
29:24
people are singing like Beyonce. We seen the first 48, right? Go to
29:32
commercial. You come back. You see them smoking a Newport drinking a Coca-Cola. Whoever snitches first goes home. You
29:42
get arrested. Whoever makes a deal first goes home first. You're scot-free. Throw
29:48
the homies under the bus. You ratt it. That's about as far as a street code goes.
29:55
Turn on a movie. Italian gangster movie.
30:01
Um, real life. Sammy the bull. Tattletail. Um, Mexican mafia. Um, what's his name?
30:10
Uh, boxer Renee Boxer Enriquez killed like 37 people. He was a Tattletail.
30:16
Um, Frank Lucas. Alpo. Tattletales. Everybody's a rat. But the street dude,
30:24
the hard, tough, grizzly, grizzled street gangster enforces his street code
30:30
on to civilians. That's all y'all care about is pushing the rules on to civilians.
30:39
And that's just what it reminds me of. Again, I just think that Benny is another guy that's conflating two issues
30:45
because you were a gangster that sold drugs and went to prison and did this uh
30:53
real crime criminal stuff. Everybody is beneath you and everybody is a square and everybody is a sucker. And now that
30:59
your raps aren't um booming like they were,
31:07
now that you're not who you once were, now you're ranting and raving and
31:13
venting a little bit more. Now the nerds have control of hip hop a little bit more. It's the nerds fault,
31:24
man. Y'all y'all make me sick. Like I swear on everything I love, y'all make me sick because I would never
31:32
treat my besties the way that you see these people treat they following.
31:37
Like, okay,
31:43
you have different schools of people. You got some people that grow up and
31:49
evolve and and mature, right? Not everybody does. is this thing called
31:55
the mirror, right? And a lot of people don't know how to use the mirror. You use the mirror for self uh reflection,
32:02
right? You use the mirror for introspection. You get in the mirror and you go like this.
32:09
You look yourself dead in the eyes. Dead in the eyes. And you find your soul. You look in the
32:16
mirror and see who you are. And you see your morals and you see if you have integrity. That's how the mirror works.
32:22
You ask yourself questions in the mirror. Hey, what's the outcome to this?
32:29
What are the consequences of this crime? If I got caught for doing this crime,
32:36
would I squeal? Would I rat?
32:44
Jay-Z, one of my favorite rappers, sold drugs for 15 years.
32:51
I saw an interview where Warren Buffett said, "Jay-Z is on track to be one of the greatest businessmen of our
32:58
generation." Dame Dash went in the room and screamed at people. Jay-Z Warren Buffett said,
33:06
"Jay-Z is on track to be one of the greatest businessmen of our generation."
33:11
Hey, uh, Benny the Butcher, you and Jay-Z had the same line of work.
33:19
same line of work. But you want to say that the problem
33:26
with the game and the problem with music is that the nerds have control of it.
33:33
There are switches. They're their paradigm shifts. Things change. Maybe people don't want to hear
33:41
the gritty, dirty crack rap at the moment. Or maybe they don't want to hear
33:46
it from you. I can't really like rightfully say, but
33:53
it's just we have people that have grown and have evolved and moved past the
34:02
street image to turn into business mogul. And it's just like apparently you're not
34:08
one of them. I think that if you wanted to say to nerds, you wanted to say the
34:14
crazies have control of the asylum. I think that you should put a bullet on a name, a name on the bullet because
34:22
there are people that are literally responsible for the degradation of this culture. It is people that are
34:30
responsible for collapsing the quote unquote culture.
34:35
If you wanted to talk about the nerds that got control of the game, the crazy people that took control of the asylum,
34:42
let's say academics, let's say let's say Aiden Ross,
34:48
let's say Trap Laura Ross, let's say um what's the what's the dude with the the
34:55
big giant lips? The African fool that's uh he's like a fake academics. He stutters really hard. He's like morbidly
35:02
obese and he stutters.
35:12
Chango um Machanga um
35:18
used to work for Dr. Umar, he's like diet academics.
35:24
Well, anyway, that guy um um Adam22,
35:29
if you wanted to talk about the nerds that are ruining culture and ruining hip hop, there are a bunch of people that
35:37
are actively ruining things. It it's it's a bunch of really bad awful people that makes us
35:45
and makes the culture look bad. Say them. But I'm just really curious as to
35:53
who he was talking about that has the the quote unquote game all
35:59
messed up, you know. Um,
36:04
just just stop pushing I know I'm longwinded. Just stop pushing that street stuff on to people like the Oh,
36:12
excuse me. the issues that he keeps running into with Freddy Gibbs.
36:20
Freddy Gibbs is another person that I don't like because Freddy Gibbs confuses me. I don't like Freddy Gibbs. I don't
36:25
like the way he raps. I don't like his music. I don't like the way he looks. I don't like Freddy Gibbs. I can't I do not like the way that that man raps.
36:33
He keeps getting into um issues with Benny the Butcher. Freddy Gibbs trolls
36:40
people. Freddy Gibbs, I guess he's supposed to be funny, like he's like a wise ass or a prankster,
36:47
but Freddy Gibbs keeps doing these like antics and and and hy jinks and shenanigans and he keeps catching ales.
36:54
Things seem to blow up on him. Everybody that I know likes Freddy. I
36:59
don't. Everybody that I know likes Freddy Gibbs except me. I don't get it. I can't stand I hate the way that he
37:05
raps. Everybody that I know likes him, but it's like, is he a really good rapper
37:15
trying to be a street dude and his street antics keep blowing up in his face, or is he a street dude that's
37:21
really bad at being a street dude, but really good at being a rapper cuz he
37:26
keeps trolling and stuff keeps happening to him. But he's a street dude though.
37:32
He's better than you because you're a dumb stupid nerd square because he's a street dude.
37:40
I just don't get it. There are a lot of things that I don't get. What I don't
37:47
understand can fill a room. I don't get it. But somebody get in the
37:52
comments, fill me in, and let me know who these nerds and squares and weirdos
37:59
and [ __ ] [ __ ] are that are controlling the game. And also let me know
38:08
why the street dudes are just so street
38:13
oriented and it's just so important for them to continue to push this awful
38:19
narrative of like, hey yo, let's celebrate uh poisoning our community and
38:25
degrading our women. Like I was just looking at the video at the top of this podcast like where he was he was pissed
38:32
and he was degrading the nerds and he just had the the the big stupid ugly
38:37
nasty goddy chain on his neck. And that's another thing another aspect
38:44
that I thought would die. I that's another aspect of the street and hiphop and and and the d
38:52
boy that I thought would just like be not a thing anymore. Just like the giant
38:59
20 lb chains, the necklaces. I got a house on my neck. I got my face on my I
39:05
got me on me. Like I just really thought that like that would have been another thing that would have fell by the
39:11
wayside now cuz it's really stupid. But
39:17
the big ugly gigantic goddy overpriced chain that's on your neck, the nerds
39:22
that you hate and disdain got you that chain with their with their concert tickets and buying your merch.
39:32
Y'all stress me out. I'm fired up. Um, I'm blessed. I'm beautiful. Nothing but good things
39:40
come to me. Thanks for letting me bitching about
39:45
Benny the Butch. Holy [ __ ] It's a tribe called Best.