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Cyber Breach & Raw Anxiety: Generations in Conflict image

Cyber Breach & Raw Anxiety: Generations in Conflict

E219 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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🚨 CYBERSECURITY HACK EXPOSES 150K STUDENTS’ PRIVATE PHOTOS 🚨 Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z—who’s winning the anxiety war? Bruce Anthony dives into a chilling cybercrime case where a former football coach hacked college athletes’ nudes, debates why Gen Z’s mental health is tanking, and shares raw stories about creepy encounters and generational trauma. From viral privacy breaches to why Boomers just don’t get it, this episode unpacks the chaos of modern life. Don’t miss the uncensored Patreon sneak peek! 🔥 #podcast #mentalhealthawareness #digitalculture #privacybreach #GenZStruggles #unsolicitedperspectives 

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Thank you for tuning into Unsolicited Perspectives with Bruce Anthony. Let's continue the conversation in the comments and remember, stay engaged, stay informed, and always keep an open mind. See you in the next episode! 

#podcast #mentalhealth #relationships #currentevents #popculture #fyp #trending #SocialCommentary 

Chapters:

00:00 Welcome to Unsolicited Perspectives 🎙️🔥💥

01:15 Headline Story: Cyber Nightmare: When Private Photos Go Public 👾📸

04:57 Behind the Curtain: Privacy Reflections & Creepy Encounters 👀

17:33 Into the Abyss: Unraveling Generational Anxiety 🔍

38:15 Boomers vs Zoomers: Breaking the Cycle of Judgment 🔄❤️

39:08 Hey Gen Z & Alpha: This One’s For You (No Cap) 🚀🧠

40:22 After Hours Tease: Uncensored Sneak Peek 🎬🤫🔥

44:33 Backstage Pass: The Raw Reality of Our Show 🎙️💥🎥

45:58 Flying Solo: Why Talking to Myself Isn’t Crazy (Promise!) 🎤😅

49:40 Comment Section Wars: Surviving the Internet’s Darkest Jungle 🌐⚔️

54:52 Body Talk: Raw Confessions About Weight, Health & Self-Love 💪💔

01:01:22 Signing Off: Final Thoughts & Patreon Love 🙏🎯🔥

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Transcript

Episode Introduction

00:00:01
Speaker
We are going to get messy today. It's the battle of the generations. We're talking Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z. Let's get it.
00:00:21
Speaker
Welcome. First of all, welcome. This is Unsolicited Perspectives. I'm your host, Bruce Anthony, here to lead the conversation in important events and topics that are shaping today's society. Join the conversation and follow us wherever you get your audio podcasts. Subscribe to our YouTube channel for our video podcasts and YouTube-exclusive content.
00:00:39
Speaker
Rate, review, like, comment, share. Share with your friends, share with your family, hell, even share with your enemies.

Security Hack Overview

00:00:47
Speaker
On today's episode, I'm going to be talking about a security hack that exposed some nudes.
00:00:54
Speaker
I'm going to be talking about anxiety through the generations. And then I'm going to be giving you guys a sneak peek, just a little bit of a peek it inside our Patreon show, After Hours Uncensored. But that's enough of the intro.
00:01:07
Speaker
Let's get to the show.
00:01:15
Speaker
Ladies and gentlemen, this is ripped from the headlines. There was a news report that I saw today. I was going to talk about something else. Maybe I'll talk about it later. Maybe I will never talk about it because it was going to be personal and I was going open up, but I don't feel like it' doing it right now. What I'm going to do instead is talk about this story that I saw on the news no more than two hours ago that made me completely readjust this entire show.
00:01:40
Speaker
because this was not gonna be the first segment, but I feel like this is important. What am I talking about? There was a cybersecurity hack for a database in colleges by this one person.
00:01:54
Speaker
And this one person got a whole lot of students, news and sexually explicit videos Let me get into it. So Matthew Weiss, a former assistant football coach at the University of Michigan, has been indicted on 24 federal charges, including unauthorized computer access and agitated identity theft.
00:02:16
Speaker
Aggravated. Not agitated. I mean, people that he stole from are agitated, but agitated. Aggravated identity theft. Weiss allegedly orchestrated large-scale hacking operation targeting thousands of college students, primarily female, to access their private data, including intimate photos and videos.
00:02:37
Speaker
Here are the key details of the case. Weiss served as a co-offensive coordinator at the University of Michigan from 2021 until his termination of January 2023. Before that, he worked for the Baltimore Ravens and Stanford University.
00:02:52
Speaker
From 2015 to January 2023, eight years, Weiss reportedly accessed database maintained by Kiefer Development c assist Services, a third-party vendor used by over 100 colleges and universities.
00:03:07
Speaker
He downloaded it personal identifiable information and medical data of more than 150,000 athletes. Weiss specifically targeted female as athletes based on their school affiliation, athletic history, and physical characteristics.
00:03:25
Speaker
He used the stolen data to compromise passwords and gain access to their social media, email, and cloud storage accounts. Prosecutors allege he sought private photos and videos intended only for intimate partners.
00:03:41
Speaker
Here's his charges. He's got 14 counts of unauthorized computer access, 10 counts of aggravated identity theft. Each count carries significant penalties. Unauthorized computer access could result to up to five years of prison per count.
00:03:55
Speaker
Why agitated identity theft, did it again. Aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory minimum sentence of two years per count. The University of Michigan fired Weiss in January 2023 after he failed to cooperate with investigation into alleged computer crimes.
00:04:12
Speaker
The university has declined to comment further on allegations, but is named as a defendant in the lawsuit by the victims. Victims have expressed feelings of betrayal by both Weiss and the institutions of involved.
00:04:24
Speaker
At least three class action lawsuits have been filed against Weiss, the University of Michigan, its regents, and Kiefer Development systems Services for negligence in cybersecurity practices that allowed Weiss to exploit sensitive student data.
00:04:39
Speaker
One victim described the situation as terrifying, highlighting the breach of trust placed in the university. Federal court documents do not confirm whether Weiss has legal representation or if he is currently detained.
00:04:53
Speaker
It tends to reach him for a comment have been unsuccessful.

Reflections on Privacy and Consent

00:04:57
Speaker
So why do I want to talk about this? First of all, this is a crazy story. My initial reaction in stories like this is a chuckle.
00:05:06
Speaker
Chuckle because ah because, okay, like who's going to through all of this to see some nudes? Like, okay, i get it. All right. I guess I wasn't going to get I said I wasn't going to personal, but I guess I am.
00:05:19
Speaker
I like when I get nudes for women. I like it. Who wouldn't like it? I'm sure there are some people out there that love getting nudes for men like nudes is cool.
00:05:30
Speaker
It's a I don't know what to call it. It's a kind of adrenaline rush. I like to get the nudes from people that want to send them to me. One time I met an actress, just a regular actress. She'd been on several shows. I was really excited to meet her.
00:05:48
Speaker
And sent the picture of me and her to a couple of friends of mine. My friends were like, who is that? I was like, oh, she's been on a couple of shows. They immediately scoured the internet defi to try and find nudes for her and then put it in the group chat and be like, this her?
00:06:04
Speaker
And I'm like, you know I feel violated and this these are nudes of me. Like, why would you immediately go to that? Like, why are you such a such a creep? And I will say that, you know, the women, I have a lot of female friends and I will admit, you know, guys, we are, we're more than a little creepy, more than a little bit.
00:06:29
Speaker
So my initial reaction was to chuckle because like, bruh, porn is free on the internet. Only fans don't cost that much. So I suppose I see advertisements for $5 and $3 to join Only fans.
00:06:43
Speaker
You can get all the news you want. I also wanted to chuckle because there are parts of this story that I left out purposely because I wanna address them now.
00:06:55
Speaker
and And I'm sorry for laughing, but this is what my man did. In order to hack the system, He hacked the system.
00:07:07
Speaker
He, in order to get passwords to like iCloud, to be able to access the private data of these female athletes, he would Google them, get on their social medias and try and find their mother's maiden name and more important and details of their birthdays and dog names and things like that, to be able to get the passwords to access their iCloud.
00:07:33
Speaker
Now, said that over 150,000 people were hacked. I know he did this over a span of eight years, but do you know how much time that takes?
00:07:49
Speaker
That takes a lot of time just to see some nudes. like Think about that. Just to see some nudes. When you can see nudes on the internet for free all the time.
00:08:04
Speaker
all the time, he's sitting up there like Sherlock Holmes of the internet, going into social media profiles, Snapchats, Instagrams, TikToks, Facebooks, falling down rabbit holes to find other family members, plugging in any possibility of what could potentially be a password.
00:08:29
Speaker
To get passwords, for over 150,000. he didn't have to do this for all 150,000. I'm being hyperbolic here. But even if it was 10, okay, that's a lot of time and effort to see some nudes.
00:08:47
Speaker
And what is with men being so creepy?

Generational Differences in Relationships

00:08:50
Speaker
ah Look, I met a young lady recently just out and about And like we were sitting at the bar, you know, drinking, having some drinks or whatever, and we were hitting it off. You know, I'm a single man.
00:09:02
Speaker
You know, I'm just a bachelor looking for a partner, someone who knows how to ride. Stop. But, ah you know, I'm just chilling. We just communicate. just talking. And anybody who has met me in person.
00:09:15
Speaker
when I've been drinking knows that I get super friendly when I've been drinking. That's when my personality comes out or what y'all see. That's when I'm really talkative. I'm inquisitive.
00:09:27
Speaker
You know, I ask questions. I'm really messy. That's what I found out. I'm really, really messy. and But my messiness is not, hmm. to be harmful or hurtful in any way.
00:09:39
Speaker
It's just I'm genuinely interested in people's stories. It's part of the reason why i started this podcast, right? I'm genuinely interested in people. People fascinate me. And i want to know as much as I can about you because I love learning about people. So me and this young lady talking and we are vibing because because she's I'm cracking jokes, you know, i'm saying doing what I do just the way players play all day, every day. I don't know what else to say.
00:10:05
Speaker
Right. And we're vibing and I was like, yeah, you know, I don't know how old she is. don't know how old she is. And somehow that comes up.
00:10:15
Speaker
Ladies and gentlemen, y'all know I'm about to turn 45 in just a couple of months. I'm 44 years old currently.
00:10:24
Speaker
I don't know if I look 44. Some people say I don't. Some people say, nah, you look 44. I don't know. I don't know what 44 is supposed to look like. Okay. She obviously didn't know how old I was.
00:10:37
Speaker
She dropped the knowledge that she was 24. I said, ma'am, I was in college when you were born. was in college when you were born. I was immediately turned off because she's too young for me.
00:10:50
Speaker
Now, she didn't look like a kid, but she's too young for me. She looked like ah ah she was a professional woman, right? But she's too young for me. soon as I found that age, as soon as I found out what that age was, um' I'm good with that shorty.
00:11:03
Speaker
I'm cool. Because it's there's too much of a gulf in between us ah about where we are in our lives. and Like it won't work. you You're still young enough. You need to go find your way. You need to go have some mistakes. You need to go have some relationships and get your heart broken before you find that right person. Because I'm going to mess up your whole world because going to think I'm perfect and want to be with me.
00:11:23
Speaker
And then, you know, I might think that you okay. Or vice versa. You know, that happens from time to time. So this dude, Weiss, is specifically trying to look at college age women.
00:11:36
Speaker
And I'm sorry, but college age is anywhere from 17 to 23, maybe. If you start college young, right? 17, maybe you have one of those birthdays where you started kindergarten for you 17 when you're entering into college.
00:11:51
Speaker
Or maybe you one of those late birthdays and instead of graduating when you're 22, you graduate when you're 23, right? Like all those things are possible. So let's say the age range is 17 to 23. The young lady I met was 24, too young for me, right?
00:12:06
Speaker
She was dressed in professional attire because she had just come from work. So she looked and carried herself as older. These are college kids. If you go on college campuses, these kids look like kids.
00:12:18
Speaker
So he is hacking. all these computers of these college female athletes just to get their news and session of sexually explicit videos. I can't leave that out, right? Sexually explicit videos.
00:12:34
Speaker
And it's just like, what are we doing here?
00:12:38
Speaker
Like seriously, what are we doing here?
00:12:43
Speaker
150 people. And just the intricacies of trying to find out what these passwords were when porn once again is free.
00:12:58
Speaker
But then I take off my immature hat and then i look at the privacy of these people just being torn away from and how hurting that has to be to feel helpless.
00:13:20
Speaker
This was on their phones. Maybe they just wanted to keep it to themselves. You know, I take selfies in the bathroom when I'm monitoring my weight mass gain or if I'm leaning out, you know, women do the same thing.
00:13:34
Speaker
Maybe the nudes that were in their phone is just to get an idea of their body. Fitness is a very big thing in this country now. And especially for the younger generation, they're taking care of themselves.
00:13:49
Speaker
So maybe these pictures are on their phone because they're just gauging how their body is changing. Maybe they are sending nudes to different people or romantic partners, even not romantic partners, just friends.
00:14:05
Speaker
You know I've had female friends that were legitimately, well, I guess i guess this one particular friend, me and me and her had history, but we were friends at that point that because I'm a trainer,
00:14:19
Speaker
sent me what would be classified as nudes, but they weren't because they were of the purpose of where do I need to work on things? we're And asking for my suggestions is because I'd already seen her naked.
00:14:32
Speaker
It wasn't that big of a deal. But to feel like I have this private moment Maybe it's a sexually explicit video between two partners and they decided to be, you know, spruce up the relationship. i don't know why you got to spruce up the relationship if you're 17 to 23. But, you know, I don't know what it's like to be 17 to 23 in this day and age because those kids had porn readily available to them as soon as they had their own phone, as soon as they had their own computer.
00:15:02
Speaker
So maybe you do got to spice things up at a young age. I didn't. I don't even got a spicy name now, but that's neither here nor there. We talking about this particular situation.

Generational Anxiety Discussion

00:15:14
Speaker
and And this special moment has now been stolen from you because a dude wanted to be Sherlock Holmes on the internet.
00:15:26
Speaker
This guy should never get a football job again. And I was just talking about in college. Talking about the NFL. Now it looks like if convicted, he is facing some real time.
00:15:37
Speaker
It was 14 counts for the unauthorized computer access and then 10 counts for the aggravated identity theft.
00:15:50
Speaker
And each one, you know each count carries a minimum sentence of like two years. Some of them carry
00:15:59
Speaker
up to five years. So you got 24 counts in total. Like he could be in jail for a long time. They might run him concurrently, maybe.
00:16:10
Speaker
They might just pile him on top because he violated so many people.
00:16:22
Speaker
I saw the video and you know me, I find the humor. can find humor in just about anything. And it it is, there is the humor aspect of it, of the effort of which he decided to put forth just to be able to get once again, nudes that are free on the internet.
00:16:44
Speaker
150,000 people violat it yeah my man needs to go to jail that's for sure and and and for all you people out there
00:17:00
Speaker
and and i'm talking to my men out here fellas lean in lean in i gotta tell y'all something and i mean this from the bottom of my heart and with all sincerity and humility stop being creepy it's weird just stop being creepy
00:17:27
Speaker
I had a conversation. I'm not going to say it was interesting. felt that I was dragged into a dumb conversation and this this person listens to the show and yeah, I'm talking about you, but I told you that I thought it was a dumb conversation in the first place, but I thought it was dumb from the standpoint of where they were coming from it, but I thought it was an interesting concept to examine.
00:17:47
Speaker
Let me get to the point here. Okay. So was talking to somebody earlier today and they were telling me a story of another person that they know, who was going to an alternative therapy. They couldn't give me the name of it. I couldn't find it on the internet to find out what it was, but it was breathing techniques and eye techniques for situations when they get triggered that would help them calm.
00:18:13
Speaker
And the person that was telling me about this said that the person that is going to this therapy is young. And what do they have to feel anxious about or be nervous or anything about? And I was like, well, that person is a Gen Z person.
00:18:26
Speaker
First of all, we all have anxiety. i have been open on this podcast. about my anxiety. it is I've often said, and I even told my ex-wife, y y'all don't ill be proud of me, right?
00:18:41
Speaker
I reached out to my ex-wife to talk about some other stuff.
00:18:45
Speaker
And in that conversation, i told her that I mentioned her in one of the podcasts that I had done and to check it out. And I gave her credit for identifying to me my anxiety issues.
00:19:03
Speaker
I didn't know what it was, didn't put it pin on it, thought everybody experienced the things that I experienced. Come to find out there are a lot of people that experience things that I experienced, but it isn't wasn't as common as I thought it was. I thought just everybody experienced these things and these things that you just deal with. But panic attacks are completely different ball game.
00:19:24
Speaker
I had three panic attacks in one year 2021. and twenty twenty one No, 2022. ah had three panic attacks that year.
00:19:35
Speaker
Was going through some things and didn't even realize I was going through them. And that was my anxiety, right? Like anxiety is real. So it's not something I'm ashamed of. It's out of my control, right? Like i would choose not to have anxiety if I could make that choice.
00:19:53
Speaker
But I have generalized anxiety and it's bad, you know? But I take measures to try and minimize how their anxiety can affect me.
00:20:06
Speaker
And so when I was talking to this person, the person was just like, what did they have to worry about? What did they have anxiety for? That generation is just weak. And this person is a millennial and they were talking about a Gen Z person and every generation always says that the generation behind them is the weakest.
00:20:25
Speaker
and i' And I've gotten into into arguments with you know people that are boomers and Gen X. per I'm a Zillennial. I'm in between Gen X and Millennials. like i'm I'm neither one of them, but both of them at the same time.
00:20:42
Speaker
And I've said, i don't think Gen Z is weaker. Not at all. I think they are bombarded and had to deal with a lot more than what we had to deal with.
00:20:52
Speaker
And the person I was talking to was like, no, that's crazy. That's ridiculous. I was like, okay, well, well ah okay. i I laid out some examples for that person and they just didn't want didn't want to hear it.
00:21:06
Speaker
And so I was like, okay, well, I'm done with this conversation. It's like talking to a tree, like it's pointless. But I did a little bit of research as I would normally do.
00:21:17
Speaker
And I was like, the question that I found interesting is the anxiety levels per generation.
00:21:26
Speaker
Who had more anxiety? Gen X, millennials or Gen Z? I didn't even look into boomers because boomers weren't even recognizing anxiety when they had it.
00:21:39
Speaker
So I'm not i'm not even including boomers in it, even though they had it. They had it, you know what saying? So let's talk about it, all right? so let's start with Gen X. Gen X is often known as the forgotten middle child.
00:21:54
Speaker
they The anxiety levels for generation generation X is moderate compared to younger generations. In a clinical study, they scored around a five. on a clinical anxiety scale.
00:22:06
Speaker
Their anxiety is often tied to financial stress, job security, and concerns about retirement savings. Many Gen Xers grew up during economic instability, like the dot-com crash in the 2008 financial crisis, which shaped their pragmatic approach to life, but also contributed to lingering stress.
00:22:27
Speaker
So yeah, you know, I mean, those things are real. And those things will absolutely cause anxiety. You know, boomers would say, well, that that's not a real deal. We was dealing with a war. Well, guess what?
00:22:41
Speaker
Gen X was dealing with a war too. So were millennials, so was Gen Z. America has consistently been in a war. The only time that we weren't in official, well, technically we haven't been in an official war since World War II, right?
00:22:57
Speaker
The Korean War was not labeled a war. It's a conflict. I don't even think the Korean War got conflict. i think they got something else. But Congress has to pass it to be classified as a war.
00:23:10
Speaker
That's the reason why we call it. the You say it's Vietnam War and we weren't at war, but technically wasn't labeled a war. it's the Vietnam conflict. Kind of like English is the majority spoken language in the United States.
00:23:28
Speaker
But, and I'm sure this is going to be a shock to a lot of people out there, English is not the official language of the United States. What is the official language of the United States? The United States doesn't have an official language.
00:23:41
Speaker
So, Vietnam War, Korean War, Desert Storm, the war ah the war in Afghanistan, the Iraq War, none of those were actually labeled war because you have to label them war by through Congress.
00:23:55
Speaker
But, We've been in consistent fights. And even when we weren't in actual military conflict, we were in a Cold War, right?
00:24:08
Speaker
It's been happening since 1939. It's been consistent. So every generation has a claim of we've been at war. We've been in constant fight and we've been in constant terror.
00:24:20
Speaker
yeah Every generation has that claim. So boomers would just say nobody had it like us. Okay. But everybody wants to make their story the most dramatic story to be the biggest hero that they can be.
00:24:33
Speaker
But fact of the matter is each generation faces their own struggle. We need to recognize that. But that was Gen X. What about millennials? Millennials are known as the transitional generation.
00:24:46
Speaker
Millennials experience slightly higher anxiety levels than Gen X. their gin let Their anxiety score is about a 6.1, whereas Gen X's anxiety score was five.
00:24:59
Speaker
So done made a step up, right? We go on a 1.1 point. Now, what does that mean in the grand scheme of things? I don't know, but this is what I do know. If you got a pain, I got heel spurs in my heels right now.
00:25:13
Speaker
Right now, I would say the pain is about it. I actually don't even feel that bad right now. But as soon as I get up to walk, that pain is about a six. When I wake up in the morning, that pain is above a seven. But if I'm lucky, it's only a seven.
00:25:28
Speaker
And I know the difference between going from that six to that seven. I feel it. You feel the difference in that anxiety going from that five to that 6.1. But where do most of the anxiety pressures come from?
00:25:43
Speaker
Financial pressures such as student loan debt and delayed career advancement due to the Great Recession and other major contributors. Social media, which introduced comparison culture and FOMO.
00:25:57
Speaker
Y'all know what FOMO is, fear missing out. Accelerated their mental health struggles, or I should say our mental health struggles. So look, dig this here. Gen X is, I guess, MTV generation.
00:26:12
Speaker
like when MTV started, like my mom's youngest sisters who are technically technically my aunts, because they're my mom's sisters, but they're eight and nine years older than me.
00:26:27
Speaker
So I don't even call them aunt. They're like big sisters. And I have a ah cousin, who's same age as them. He's like my big brother, right? They're that generation generation X. They are fully entrenched in Gen X. They were MTV kids. Like when MTV became a thing, like they remember it.
00:26:47
Speaker
They were MTV kids. Before that, the only time that you had to compare yourself to anything was like celebrities and movies and television shows. so And they were celebrities. Like you...
00:26:59
Speaker
Unless you had some real cockiness about you, you didn't really compare yourself to celebrities. I'm sure it happened, you but you didn't really compare yourself to celebrities. You compared yourself to the people on the street, right? That's what you compared yourself to.
00:27:13
Speaker
Now, imagine that street becomes a city, becomes a state, becomes a country, becomes a continent, becomes the entire earth. That's what social media did.
00:27:25
Speaker
So now you're not just comparing yourself to the people down the street. or across town, or in the next town over, or in the next state over, now you're comparing yourself to everybody, your age range, hopefully.
00:27:40
Speaker
Hopefully you're not comparing yourself to other people that are not in the age range. But if you are comparing yourself, hopefully you're staying in your age range. But now you're comparing yourself to everybody in your age range.
00:27:53
Speaker
Everybody. And people only post Well, not all. The majority of time people, you know, post good stuff like they live in like that.
00:28:04
Speaker
Are they posting pictures of their bodies when their body is is super fit or they got to they take the right lighting? You know, women will take 17000 pictures in the same spot to get to that one right picture that they'll post, which is the best picture.
00:28:20
Speaker
So you see in most people at their absolute best and you compare yourself to it. On top of that, you got these financial struggles and you just like, man, how am I going to make my way through?
00:28:31
Speaker
Meanwhile, Tony over there is big baller. If y'all don't know what big balling is, and and you must be Gen Z. But Tony over there, big balling. Like, how's Tony getting it? Like, we both went to college together.
00:28:44
Speaker
My GPA was higher. My job when I first came out was better. Like, how's Tony over there getting it? Tony is lying to you, but you don't know that. Or even if you do know that, you're not recognizing that in the moment. So that comparison will make you not feel good about yourself.
00:29:01
Speaker
you start to lack self-esteem because of comparisons to other people, which leads to anxiety, which leads to depression, which are mental health issues. You see how this goes on? And this wasn't something that Gen X really had to experience because their world wasn't as big.
00:29:23
Speaker
Millennials are the first ones in that digital age that, really had to, the world really expanded for them, but not as much as Gen Z, which is the digital native generation.
00:29:40
Speaker
All right, Gen Z reports the highest levels of anxiety among all generations, scoring 6.6 on a clinical anxiety scale. Their struggles include cyber bullying, overexposure to global crisis,
00:29:57
Speaker
eco-anxiety, and social media-induced perfectionism. Unlike previous generations, Gen Z is less likely to seek professional help from mental health issues, relying instead on social media or family members for support.
00:30:13
Speaker
What that means is is they'll recognize it, but they ain't gonna really go, but that's because they're still young and they ain't got no money. So they gotta go to family members and and other people for support.
00:30:26
Speaker
But if millennials were the first ones of the world getting big, Gen Z entered in that world. Millennials came into that world.
00:30:38
Speaker
We went from analog to digital. There was a transition. It's still stark, the difference between the two. But we still had, you know, just talking about earlier, we still we still remember going to Blockbuster.
00:30:54
Speaker
You know i'm saying? Waiting for that Tuesday and that Friday night release to go get the new movies. Rushed to the movie theater, heading to the new release wall, seeing the 25 different DVD boxes on their DVDs.
00:31:07
Speaker
DVDs, not even Blu-ray, DVDs, DVD boxes, you know, deciding on what movie we was going watch. Meanwhile, looking at the little candy section saying, hey, look, I got to get me some Twizzlers. Why do we like Twizzlers? I don't know, but got to get me some Twizzlers with the popcorn and the Reese's Pieces and the Reese's Pieces cups. I'm have myself a good little time tonight with my two movies.
00:31:29
Speaker
I'm to get my little two-day new release rental and my little seven-day movie because I got to go old school. Then we got to the point where we got streaming, but it was a gradual process.
00:31:40
Speaker
Gen Z entered that world. Instantaneous, what they have now, what they want now, they get now. Anxiety from birth.
00:31:51
Speaker
Well, maybe not exactly from birth, but Gen Alpha will be from birth because the phone is already in their hands as toddlers, as toddlers.
00:32:05
Speaker
So when the person I was talking to talked to me and said that they don't they don't have anything to feel anxious about, and I made these points to them. was like, it's a telephone and everything associated with that cell phone to click a button and see people from all over the world and you're comparing yourself.
00:32:27
Speaker
And also millennials didn't have to deal with cyber bullying. These kids are growing up with their worst- moments being filmed and put on the internet.
00:32:42
Speaker
None of my, it okay, I'm about to tell this story. but i don't know if I told this story before. This is embarrassing story. I was at a party, a high school senior year. We were drinking beer and it was another school's party because one of my boys went to another high school. So it was that school party.
00:33:00
Speaker
And me, I'm macking. As I do, you know, like I said, this is the way players play. I'm Mac on this tenoroni and there's a strong vibe. We vibing with each other. I got to pee.
00:33:11
Speaker
I can't find a bathroom. It's cold outside. But I'm going to go outside and pee. Now, here's the problem. Pull my, you know, everything out.
00:33:23
Speaker
And I guess I had two streams and didn't notice it. For all my fellas out there, you understand I'm saying. had two streams and I didn't notice it. And one of the streams is going directly to the front of my pants.
00:33:34
Speaker
So it looked like I peed, pissed myself. That's what it looked like. So the way I entered and exit the house, there was a washer and dryer right there. So I take my pants, i cant I find some fabric softener and I grab the pants and I throw them in the dryer in hopes of In hopes, because when I say it looked like peed to myself, I mean, it was ah it was a large, if you watching the video, it was the size of my face.
00:34:02
Speaker
That's how big the stain was. I really had to go to the bathroom. peed like a racehorse. So I throw the pants in the dryer, try to dry them. They don't dry all the way, but it's the 90s and I got a big shirt.
00:34:15
Speaker
So what I say to myself is, it's dry enough. I'm just going cover with my shirt and eventually the color will go away. Hopefully. Right. I go in there and start macking on the girl.
00:34:29
Speaker
Somehow my shirt comes up. That stain is visible. She yells out, this dude done peed on himself. I didn't, so I'm trying to convince everybody. This what happened. was out there in the background. didn't pee on myself. The pee hit my pants.
00:34:43
Speaker
But it was so it was such a large stay that it really legitimately looked like peed on myself. I didn't, by the way. I would admit it because I think that would be funny, and it was almost 30 years ago, but I didn't.
00:34:56
Speaker
Imagine if that had been on videotape. Cause my boys are jerks. They would have recorded it. And my one boy would have put it on the internet. It'd still be out there following me around. That's what Gen Z deals with.
00:35:10
Speaker
We didn't have to experience that. Everything bad we did got forgotten unless there's a picture. Because video cameras didn't really come out until, i don't know, 2008, nine, maybe.
00:35:25
Speaker
It was a while, it was a long time before smartphones were out. My first smartphone, I think it was in 2006. It was a Microsoft, so it was a Microsoft, was a Microsoft smartphone.
00:35:37
Speaker
And it did have camera and I could capture a little bit of video. So, okay, let's go 2006, because that's, yeah, let's go 2006. I was 26 years old. Most millennials were, I think the youngest millennial would have been, i don't know, 16.
00:35:53
Speaker
but sixteen Right. yeah Like you're almost you're almost out of it. And it's not like the the quality of these videos were good at that time.
00:36:05
Speaker
It was just something that we missed out on. We didn't understand cyber bullying. We didn't understand going home. And school not following us home.
00:36:17
Speaker
We only talk to our main friends or neighborhood kids that went to school with us when we got home, not the whole school, but now these kids have access to each other 24 seven through their phones, FaceTiming, whatever, texting, Snapchatting, you know, nobody, nobody tweets each other anymore, but, but you know what I mean?
00:36:40
Speaker
You can't escape the world. It's always there. It's always present.
00:36:49
Speaker
This leads to major anxiety. And instead of each generation
00:36:57
Speaker
calling the next generation soft and they didn't have it like we had it. Because we you know that's something that our parents say to us, right? well you don't You didn't have it like I had it growing up. this And we hate it because he's like, well, you don't understand what it's like to to live in my world.
00:37:13
Speaker
I credit my father because my father will say to us, Y'all, even though you guys make more money than me and your mom did, y'all have more expenses, more expenses than we had. We didn't have a cell phone bill.
00:37:31
Speaker
you You might have had cable. You might not have cable. there Sometimes we didn't have cable. Right. You need Internet. You have to have Internet. And these bills are ridiculous. It's a hundred dollars a month for the internet.
00:37:43
Speaker
It's a hundred dollars a month for your cell phone. You know, rents and mortgages are more expensive. So yes, yes, we make more money than our parents, but things are so much more expensive.
00:37:57
Speaker
that's what sometimes boomers don't understand. And like, we we bought a house. Yeah, you bought a house for $5,000. I'm sorry. They're not selling four bedroom, four bath, 10,000 square foot houses for $5,000 anymore. That's just not happening.
00:38:12
Speaker
You know, i'm I'm exaggerating, but you know what i mean. We need to have empathy and understanding for when each generation tells you their struggle. It's not a trauma comparison.
00:38:22
Speaker
It's not a struggle cap comparison. Every generation's had their struggles. If Gen Z is out here telling you that they have severe anxiety issues, it's not for no reason.
00:38:34
Speaker
They have them for very valid reasons. Don't diminish it. Don't not acknowledge it because you think that those things wouldn't give you anxiety.
00:38:46
Speaker
Because you never went through it. You never experienced it. How can you speak on what you don't know? You can't. You can't have understanding. But you can have empathy.
00:38:58
Speaker
So this goes out to all my all my people out there. Because Gen Z, Gen Alpha is next. if If anxiety continues to trend up like it is for Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z, what do you think is going to be for Gen Alpha?
00:39:18
Speaker
It's going to be extremely high when they become, a not even adults, when they're in middle school, high school, going extremely high. They're going to have their own struggles that none of us could even imagine going through.
00:39:34
Speaker
So Gen Z, this is a message for you, for Gen Alpha. When they tell you what they're going through, just shut up and listen. Just like you wanted millennials to shut up and listen to you. And millennials do the same thing for Gen Z and Gen Alpha.
00:39:47
Speaker
because you just wanted Gen X to shut up and listen to you. And Gen X, thinking that you know it all? Remember how you feel about boomers talking to you? Yeah, that's what you sound like now. And is that really what you want to be?
00:40:01
Speaker
i don't know, just some food for thought, if you want to think.
00:40:13
Speaker
All guys, this is going to be a little sneak peek into the after hours uncensored before you listen or watch it. Parental discretion is advised. We are cussing.
00:40:25
Speaker
And not the S word and all that other stuff. We are cussing. So put the kids away. They don't need to hear or watch this. because we are cussing in this episode.
00:40:38
Speaker
Well, this is just a little sneak peek of one of the After Hours Uncensored. It's just a little segment that I'm going to give you. Just a little quick segment, little 14, 15 minute segment of something that you can get on our After Hours Uncensored that you can find on our Patreon pat and page at patreon.com backslash unsolicited perspectives.
00:40:57
Speaker
I want to let everybody know that you can get After Hours Uncensored for $5 a month. We do four shows a month. what What is that math? That's $1.25 per show for $5 a month, $1.25 per show.
00:41:15
Speaker
Or you can go on to the patreon.com backslash unsolicited perspectives page. and buy single episodes, but them single episodes, $3.
00:41:26
Speaker
But don't worry, you can check out the descriptions to decide if that's what you wanna download and if you wanna buy it. And if youd bother if you check out the audio, there's a quick two minute snippet that you get for free just to check it out.
00:41:40
Speaker
Listen to it. Hey, is that funny? You know, Bruce and Jay is funny. I'm gonna go ahead and buy that. So anyway, here's the clip. I hope you enjoy it. Once again, put the kids away.
00:41:52
Speaker
Actually, I'm not off. I work every single day. Yeah. There's even today is Sunday as, as we're filming this.
00:42:04
Speaker
This is not work, but it's work. It is. Yeah, it is. It's work. I had to do research and write notes. We're working. Yeah, we're working. I'm glad you came prepared, too, because I was I walked out to the living room with our brother today. And I was like, I'm about to do show in a couple hours. Don't know what the hell going to talk about.
00:42:27
Speaker
i thought I thought it was a great show. And I'm starting to think that I don't need to super over prepare and be so meticulous, as you would say. Yeah. ah In preparation for these shows.
00:42:39
Speaker
And just do you got to have a rundown. You got to have some notes, not as much. I'd be having pages of notes. It's more about us and our shit meeting in the middle. So like you need to do less.
00:42:52
Speaker
I need to do more. And when if we come up and find that balance, then the show is good. So like when you pull back a little bit on, on being so meticulous and I come with actual notes and things to talk about, then we have a good show.
00:43:13
Speaker
Well, now that you all into AI, the notes is a lot easier. and No, this i I still have handwritten yeah no on a legal pad notes.
00:43:23
Speaker
ah You know you can put them in the little notes section or a little word process and put them to the side. I know. So I was trying to do that, but then clicking back and forth between my notes and different things. So it was it's just easier to have them written down where can glance at it real quick.
00:43:44
Speaker
and ah Maybe if I brought the other screen over and I had both screens up, you which I can i you do. That's what I used to do. But I think it was pulling too much... like from the the computer was working too hard.
00:43:58
Speaker
I've just been putting them on my phone or on my iPad and just looking down in front of me and I'm just like, that's good enough. I don't know why I'm trying to be all particular. I don't even think you can see my ah my phone.
00:44:10
Speaker
Yep, you can't even see my phone. So I'm like, motherfucker, this is good. Besides my eyes are all weak. I'd rather, people know that I'm reading. Yeah. My eyes ain't, Right. camera. So, you know. What it is, what it is.
00:44:23
Speaker
And, you know

Podcasting Dynamics

00:44:24
Speaker
what? That's just part of just watching us is that you see that, yeah, we are looking at notes. we We are sometimes researching things live. Sometimes. Sometimes. You know, so.
00:44:39
Speaker
You just seeing a little bit of background. That's all that is. And you know we're notorious for letting y'all in behind the scenes, even though I don't like doing that. Because it's usually some shit I'm not doing or some shit going wrong because of my internet or something like this. also so It's also shit about me. so i never liked it. Do we have to let people in behind scenes? No, ladies and gentlemen, because my sister don't do shit. Shit.
00:45:07
Speaker
You always said I would snitch and I'm beginning to believe you now. Like, yeah, I'd be snitching. You have me tell the audience that. They don't need to know.
00:45:20
Speaker
Just wait for people to get to know me. They'll realize I ain't shit. No, no. It's not that you ain't shit. i wouldn't have i wouldn't have We wouldn't be doing the show together if you wasn't shit.
00:45:31
Speaker
right there's You're not as meticulous as me. However, I don't need to be as meticulous as I am in life. who Right. Because so sometimes I look at the rundown, I'm like, he gonna read all
00:45:47
Speaker
that? um What? Oh, the show that I did, the show that released on Friday, it was almost six pages. of rundown because I had to give the definition of fascism. I had to give the history of Hitler yeah and the rise a Hitler.
00:46:02
Speaker
And then I had to do the comparative of Trump and how they're similar. yeah So I had a complete, it was a complete rundown. When I when i think about when you do the show yourself,
00:46:14
Speaker
Then I'm like, okay, you want to have a meticulous rundown because you're not playing off anybody or nobody else is chiming in. It's just you with the audience. So to keep yourself focused, there's no way I could do a show by myself.
00:46:28
Speaker
It would be all over the place because I have ADHD. You say I got it too. so I definitely believe it. Hyperactive. That's for sure. I am hyperactive. I actually got from one of our really loyal listeners texted me yesterday and was like, that show that I did on Friday, shouldn they were like, that was a really great show. it was really good.
00:46:51
Speaker
and And there's so much insecurity when I do by myself. There is no feedback. It is yeah yeah And I kind of go...
00:47:02
Speaker
Like I'm there, but I kind of leave. but I don't know. It's kind of like an out-of-body experience. Okay. Because I'm going. I know what i'm I'm talking about, but I don't know what I say.
00:47:15
Speaker
Like I don't know what I'm saying. Yes. um I'm just going. Yeah. And so like I'm i'm there, but I'm not. there is' a heart It's a hard thing to explain for the people that's listening and watching this. is a hard thing to explain. I'm just going. Just know.
00:47:28
Speaker
that I did the preparation beforehand so that I can just let go. People understand the zone. You're in the zone. I don't even know if it's, I don't even know if it's, because I've been in the zone in like sports where you're hyper-focused. This is not hyper-focused. This is, i do not remember what I say. I go back and listen to it sometimes and I was like, yeah Because you know me, soon as the show is over, I'm like, I thought that was a shit show.
00:47:53
Speaker
I don't ever think the shit good. Actually, I think the day that we did the show today was really good. yeah um But i don't i I'm always like, this is a shit show. What I do about my myself is the worst. This the fucking worst. And then go back to listen to it and like, yo, that was actually a good point that I made. I don't remember what the fuck I'd be saying. I was like, yeah that's actually a good point. Oh, I like the way I connected that. This is actually good.
00:48:16
Speaker
So when I get that, like reaffirms like, okay. like No, I understand exactly what you're saying. i feel that way about singing and taking photos. And I always tell you how many times have you failed in those scenarios?
00:48:31
Speaker
Why do you still have any doubt? um I'm betting 5,000. I'm betting 500. Like, that, in my mind... 5,000 is fantastic. No. betting 500. Like, that's how I feel. Like, I hear every missed note. I see every, like...
00:48:46
Speaker
that's how i feel like i hear every missed note i see every like upturned collar on a photograph or shadow that I wish wasn't there. Like I see all of the mistakes.
00:49:04
Speaker
And then it's also that thing of like, you don't know how people will react to the stuff that you're putting out. Right. It's always an insecurity. Will they get where you're coming from and what you're trying to say?
00:49:17
Speaker
what you're trying to get across. Like, will the other party receive it the way you're intending to? And then also, will it meet or exceed their expectations or will it fall short? Yeah, that's... ah You know what I had to do?
00:49:31
Speaker
Because we're in this political season, so we've been talking a lot about election and Trump and in and and all of the shows. and On YouTube, I just turn off the comments. yeah like People can't comment on those on those videos yeah because what I get...
00:49:47
Speaker
is nothing but vile. was just like, yo, know this isn't good for my psyche. You have to sift through these comments. I was like, yo, i'm just going to turn them and fuck off. Like, I don't care. Like, yeah you don't get to leave a comment on on this episode. Whatever.
00:50:00
Speaker
um a friend of mine went viral on on ah Twitter.

The Impact of Social Media

00:50:05
Speaker
Okay. Just posting, he just wrote, as a Black man in Georgia, I cast my ballot for Kamala Harris.
00:50:13
Speaker
And it was just a picture of him with his iVote sticker and it went viral. and he And I looked under the comments and it was a lot of bots, but it was also a lot of... misguided people, but it was a lot of like vitriol under there. And he's like, yeah, a lot of the comments were really supportive, you know, because it's got like, don't know, few thousand comments.
00:50:37
Speaker
He's like, a lot of them were really supportive, but he was like, there was some ugly stuff under there. Yeah, i mean, the in internet for all of the great AI tools that help you study, it is also...
00:50:51
Speaker
a place that allows people to be their worst selves. Yeah. You know, there's no consequences. There are no consequences for what you say the internet.
00:51:01
Speaker
Yeah, there are. And a lot people have been losing their jobs and all kinds of stuff. If you're we if you're you're present, in other words, if they can see who it is, got a picture and a profile and name and all that stuff. Yes. yes But like things that people say on the internet, they wouldn't dare say to people.
00:51:20
Speaker
and from Like the things that people say to to me on the YouTube, I know if they were in my presence, they would not say to my fucking face. Yeah, absolutely not.
00:51:32
Speaker
that and i po her And I call him on that too. it was like, you wouldn't say this to my face. I will respond back up like, you would not say this to my face. Yeah. Yeah. it's That's dope that he went viral though.
00:51:45
Speaker
Yeah. Shout out to him. so sha get the money up bill yeah He didn't even expect. He was like, I just posted that I voted. Like, I didn't think that it end is 25,000.
00:51:56
Speaker
You just never know. You just never know. Never know. I we just had a comment go viral. i have like 30,000 likes on it. And it it was literally like the most innocuous comment.
00:52:08
Speaker
Like I really didn't, there was a guy and he was talking about, i don't know what, because he was very attractive. So I not paying his attention. And there was this like, he was in his car and on a sunny day. and there was like this little beam of sunlight and like his skin looked, but it was his brown skin.
00:52:26
Speaker
I think he was Indian man and his skin just looked amazing. And you like, it you could see how his eyes were light brown. And that all I wrote was, I'm gonna need you to s slide over into that sunset a little bit.
00:52:38
Speaker
Like, I'm gonna need you slide over into that sunlight. and And then I woke up and like my Twitter, of my ah TikTok have like blown up because it's got all these comments and stuff. I was oh, well, that was just innocuous, you know, you never know. You never know.
00:52:53
Speaker
You never know. i was definitely still drunk because now I'm starting to come down. and Now don't kind of feel so good. So which means that I need to drink more. No, it means you should probably just take a Tylenol sit down somewhere.
00:53:07
Speaker
I don't do Tylenol. I do ibuprofen because i I do it in the naproxysodium. With that AC or whatever that's in Tylenol, it makes doesn't I don't have a good reaction to it. to yeah I don't do well with acetaminophen either.
00:53:19
Speaker
Yeah, I'm an ibuprofen girlie. Look, give me that naproxysodium. I got a lot of naproxysodium running through my veins right now. Yeah, I mean, it's just good for, you know, muscle aches and pains and joint shit and all kinds shit.
00:53:34
Speaker
i don't know. not doctor. What are you asking me for? ahucly Definitely, this is coming down. And I don't feel good now. Yeah. I'm a little nauseous. I just need to get some greasy food. and Well, you know where you got to go. You got to go Sonic.
00:53:49
Speaker
and There is, the Sonic is in Fredericksburg. I don't even think I can order it. That's the reason why I'm always going to your Sonic. Yeah. ah Because I can actually order it. I don't even think I can get it for Uber Eats. I think it's too far away. There's there's two with within 15 minutes of me. Like he's got to go Sonic.
00:54:07
Speaker
Yeah, I can't. Sonic is too far away. Oh, wait minute. Yeah, let's pick it up. It's 13 miles away. That's not far. There's one in Capitol Heights. I didn't realize there was one in Capitol Heights.
00:54:19
Speaker
But that's in Maryland. Yeah. Yeah, I can only pick it up. Whatever. I'm ordering me something. i think I feel like pizza. Pizza be messing up. No, you said you were going to some Detroit-style pizza.
00:54:32
Speaker
We have a great Detroit-style pizza place down here. I've only been to once, but when I went, it was great. I supposed to be losing this weight. I need to lose another 12 pounds.
00:54:43
Speaker
And our cousin was like, no know you lost a lot because I can see your face is a lot thinner from ah when you was in Atlanta. And I was like, yeah, because in in Atlanta, I was eating Sonic and Tater Tons and Nuggets. I was fucking bloated to shit. And the pants I was wearing yesterday.
00:54:59
Speaker
Me and our brother started joking because my pants, I had to really i had to really tighten the belt up. And then all we could think about was time your drawers fell off because you lost so much weight. Oh, yeah.
00:55:12
Speaker
It fell out of my pants.
00:55:16
Speaker
We were done. Weight on dark. It's like I just walk it. My drawers fell down. um so i just I knew my clothes were different and everything, but you don't think about all of the things. None of my shoes fit.
00:55:37
Speaker
Because I had all the shoes I bought sizes bigger, like one, two sizes bigger, because I had fatter feet. And now don't have no shoes anymore.
00:55:49
Speaker
None of my sneakers fit, nothing. Draws just be falling down. I think I had sweatpants on. And my drawers just fell out of my sweatpants. I was like, what the fuck?
00:56:02
Speaker
Damn, I guess I need some new drawers. I will forever. I will forever and ever, ever, ever never forget when I was in that Target and that old black couple was looking at drawers and that woman said,
00:56:19
Speaker
$20 for a pair of trolls? What do they do? And I, branching my knees in the middle of the target. That shit was fucking hilarious.
00:56:31
Speaker
Let me tell you something about black people. We don't like paying $20 shit. for shit
00:56:39
Speaker
Let it be $19.99. We'll be like, that's a good deal. That's not bad. No, because we'll still be like $20. Right. we'd be like, $20. $20. and we if it was seventeen ninety five like out I don't want it that much. We we don't like paying $20 for shit.
00:56:55
Speaker
Why is it specifically $20? I don't know. It's something about $20. We'll pay $100 for something. We'll pay $50 for something. But it's something about shit getting close to $20. $20?
00:57:10
Speaker
I will push back. I'll push back against that because this morning I was talking to our brother about that that fucking burger that I got and the half fries and half onion rings. I got all that for $20. I wasn't that bad.
00:57:25
Speaker
I wasn't that bad for $20. No, when I hear that you paid $20 for some food, that's, and it was just for one person, that's, that's exorbitant.
00:57:38
Speaker
That's exorbitant. $20? She said, $20? Well, Padros, what do they do? i asked where i was just walking past the aisle. I just heard the conversation.
00:57:50
Speaker
And I could bust out laughing. Just what do they do? Oh, my God. What did they do they All right. That's enough of this show.
00:58:01
Speaker
Yeah. I'm going go drink and um do some more work and then decide where I'm going to eat. I go back to my diet or my nutrition tomorrow. Yeah. i need to do that too. that I gained three pounds.
00:58:13
Speaker
Now it could have been that I had sweat clothes on, but could it yeah, and you never, you're supposed wait to weigh yourself the same time. was weigh yourself the same time That you would weigh. So in the morning when you wake up is when

Body Image and Weight Fluctuations

00:58:28
Speaker
you should weigh yourself. That's your true weight.
00:58:30
Speaker
Your weight can fluctuate five to 10 pounds in a given day based on what you eat. Yeah. Because it's water weight. It's not actual weight. So when you wake up in the morning, that's the true weight. Also, you don't have clothes on. that's Clothes weigh things. so with yeah balance but So don't have clothes on when you weigh yourself.
00:58:47
Speaker
Well, it was just like this little, it was just like this sense of dread a little bit where i was like, oh Lord, it oh Lord, I'm gonna gain it all back. And so I can, it was like. there For women, I'm about to teach something. For women, there are multiple reasons why your weight will fluctuate.
00:59:03
Speaker
If it's that time of the month, you're retaining a lot of water. If you eat a lot of salty fruit, you're retaining a lot of water. Women naturally retain a lot of water. So yeah like, that's the reason why I'm like, It's something that I've had to beat into my female clients. Warren, don't weigh yourself every day.
00:59:20
Speaker
That's number one. yeah Number two, weigh yourself at the same time, every time. yeah In the morning, when you wake up, bucket niggas. And then pay attention to where you are in your cycle and what you've been eating.
00:59:37
Speaker
Because those all determine. Because a lot of times people be like, I gained three pounds yesterday. No, motherfucker. you have a lot of water in your system right now. You ate some french fries yesterday.
00:59:47
Speaker
yeah And on that all that salt. Yeah. And you blowed it. You had a half french fry, half onion ring. it but It wasn't though. It was a full fucking... The bag they was... the bag was Six inches, seven inches long and about four to five inches wide.
01:00:05
Speaker
Yeah. And those were the hot the half. I said, i think y'all gave me full french fries and full onion rays. I could have sworn I ordered the half and half, but maybe I wanted the full of full. You might have.
01:00:18
Speaker
You might have. You might have gone up there and they were like, oh, would you like to do half and half? No, give me two. Give me one of each. I might have done that. You know why? Because I was really drunk.
01:00:29
Speaker
I can see you saying that. I was a romantic mucker. And you were like, I'm hungry. Give me a full frass, full onion rings. Put them in the same bag. Shake them up.
01:00:41
Speaker
and That's a half and half. They don't offer a half and half. You asked for fries and onion rings. No, specifically, I saw a half and half. They do offer a half and half.
01:00:52
Speaker
I'm surprised I ain't getting no hot dog yesterday. They offer hot dogs? Yeah, I'm looking at the menu right now. Why are you looking at the menu right now? I don't know, because I'm about to order some food because I'm not going to cook breakfast.
01:01:05
Speaker
Well, let's go ahead end the show because I'm on... what I hope you guys enjoyed that clip. I hope you guys enjoyed the show. Once again, you can find our Patreon page on our website at unsolicitedperspectives.com or go straight to patreon.com backslash unsolicited is the name of the show of the podcast, Unsolicited Perspective. That's patreon.com backslash unsolicited.
01:01:28
Speaker
perspective. That's $5 a month for our After Hours Uncensored show. I'll be real honest with you guys. doing too I'm doing too many shows. I ain't really done the Talking Straight-ish episode in a long time.
01:01:39
Speaker
So we really focus in on the After Hours Uncensored. Do not buy. The $9 for both Talking Straight-ish and After Hours Uncensored. I ain't been doing the Talking Straight-ish. Just buy the After Hours Uncensored for $5 or get the single episodes for $3. But on that note, I want to thank you for listening. I want to thank you for watching.
01:01:59
Speaker
And until next time, as always, I'll holla.
01:02:07
Speaker
I was a hell of a show thank you for rocking with us here on unsolicited perspectives with Bruce Anthony now before you go don't forget to follow subscribe like comment share our podcast wherever you're listening or watching it to it pass it along to your friends if you enjoy it that means the people that you rock will will enjoy it also so share the wealth share the knowledge share the noise and for all those people that say well I don't have a YouTube if you have a gmail account you have a YouTube subscribe to our YouTube channel where you can actually watch our video podcast and YouTube exclusive content freedom but the real party is on our patreon page with half hours uncensored talk history is hours uncensored is another show with my sister and once again the key word there is uncensored those are exclusively on our patreon page jump on our website at unsolicited perspective dot com for all things us that's where you can get all of our audio video our blogs and even buy our merch
01:03:04
Speaker
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01:03:19
Speaker
So any donation would be appreciated. Most importantly, I want to say thank you. Thank you. Thank you for listening and watching and supporting us. And I'll catch you next time.
01:03:31
Speaker
Audi 5000. Peace.