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Trump’s SOTU, BAFTA Fallout & Reddit’s Dumbest Dating Stories image

Trump’s SOTU, BAFTA Fallout & Reddit’s Dumbest Dating Stories

E298 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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Political lies and racial slurs—yeah, we did that in one episode. Bruce and Jay kick off Sibling Happy Hour talking Episode 300 and how you can help shape it. Then we break down the State of the Union claims: “most secure border,” “DEI abolished,” “balanced the budget,” and more—separating rhetoric from reality.

Next, we unpack the BAFTA controversy involving Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo, the delayed BBC broadcast, Tourette’s context, and why the real issue is how the response was handled.

We close with Reddit’s wildest “When did you realize you were dating an idiot?” stories—speedboats to Hawaii, microwaved soup cans, and logic so bad it deserves its own segment. #StateOfTheUnion #PoliticalCommentary #BAFTA #BBC #MichaelBJordan #DelroyLindo #tourettessyndrome #StateOfTheUnion #PoliticalCommentary #BAFTA #BBC #MichaelBJordan #DelroyLindo #tourettessyndrome #unsolicitedperspectives 

Chapters

00:00:00 Trump’s SOTU Claims, BAFTA Slur Fallout & Wild Logic Debates 🔥🏛️🎭

00:00:44 Sibling Happy Hour: Sips Strong, Opinions Stronger & No HR Present 🍸🎙️😅

00:02:04 Help Produce Episode 300 Send Topics Now Shape The Next Show 🎙️📝🤝

00:08:37 Commander In Cheeto SOTU Marathon Longest Speech Yet 🟠⏱️🏛️

00:10:08 Most Secure Border Ever Claim Debunked By Data Again 🧱🚫📉

00:12:19 Abolished DEI And Government Reality Check Powers Work 🏛️🧠📚

00:15:00 Lifted 2.4M Off Food Stamps Claim False Benefits Lost 🥫📉😤

00:18:15 Balanced The Budget Overnight Claim Deficit Ballooning 💰🧮🚩

00:24:55 BAFTA N Word Aired On BBC Delay Why Was It Left In 📺😳🧨

00:27:44 Palestine Sudan Congo Cut But Not That Slur Why 🎬✂️🌍

00:34:34 Tourette Basics And Why Vocal Tics Happen Under Stress 🧠🗣️📚

00:42:30 You Can Say It Deal With Consequences Period ⚠️🗣️🥊

00:51:00 After Hours Tease We Are Continuing This Debate 🔥🎧💳

00:51:58 Reddit Dating An Idiot Stories Get Wild Fast 🤦🏾‍♀️💬🤣

00:52:50 Speedboat From LA To Hawaii Pack Sandwiches 🛥️🥪🌊

00:59:10 Microwaving Soup Cans And Breaking Two Microwaves 💥🥫🤯

01:01:45 Divorce Will Turn The Kid Gay Logic Breakdown 🧠🚫🌈

01:07:04 Stuff I Cut Going To After Hours Uncensored ✂️😈🎙️


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Transcript

Introduction and Podcast Overview

00:00:00
Speaker
political lies, and racial slurs. We gonna get into it. Let's get it.
00:00:16
Speaker
Welcome. First of all, welcome. This is Us Listen Perspectives. I am 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, YouTube exclusive content, and our YouTube membership.
00:00:34
Speaker
Rate, review, like, comment, share. Share your friends, share with your family, hell, even share with your enemies. On today's episode, it's the Sibling Happy Hour. I'm here with my sis, J. Andrea. We're going to be diddly-dadding a little bit, and going to be talking about the State of the Union, and then we're going talking about BAFTA.
00:00:53
Speaker
That's enough of the intro. Let's get to the show.

Approaching 300 Episodes - Reflection and Listener Engagement

00:01:03
Speaker
What up, sis? What up, brother? I can't call it. I can't call it. Yo, this is episode 298. Next week, we will be filming episode 300. Crazy.
00:01:14
Speaker
I know, right? 300 episodes. We've been doing this for three years and some, well, no, hold on. Three full years and some change. Yeah, so that seems about right. Yeah. And if y'all are expecting something special,
00:01:30
Speaker
Don't. We're not doing nothing. Listen, we're not going celebrate every hundredth. but That's... Doing the most. We're not doing this. We're not doing this.
00:01:42
Speaker
So we're not going to celebrate. But I am going to put it out there... for y'all to help us produce the show. So maybe there's something going on in the world that y'all are like, I wish y'all would talk about this because I do have people who talk to me about the podcast say, are y'all going talk about this? And i was like, no, it wasn't, it wasn't on the, it wasn't on the schedule. I don't, I don't know how much air I can breathe into it. Some things are good topics for part of a segment, but not a full segment.
00:02:15
Speaker
And that's saying a lot considering the fact that Me and you can talk talk our asses off, but if it can't do whole second. About literally anything.
00:02:26
Speaker
About anything. About nothing. Yeah. We are on the podcast about something like and nothing. Yeah. Yeah. We like Seinfeld. Podcast is Yeah, just nothing. yeah So maybe, you know, y'all want to put out some suggestions. Cool. But like this it is a milestone. Don't get me wrong. It's something that we're proud of. proud of it. Yeah, we're proud.
00:02:50
Speaker
We ain't going to celebrate it. But it's like, you know, okay. we That's enough. Like, I got the 100 episode tiara. I'm not buying no more tiaras. Like, that's, we here. Y'all listeners.
00:03:07
Speaker
You've been listening. Keep on listening. And watching. Keep on doing both. Please. Please. And that's, that's that. that Uh-oh. But we are thankful for those people that have been rocking with us for 100 episodes, right? Like, even that's a hell of a commitment. ah yeah Never mind the people that have been rocking with us since the very first. And there's a few y'all out there. But just to be rocking with us for the last 20. You know, somebody brought it up to me recently.
00:03:38
Speaker
And they were just like, hey, I'm behind on the podcast because, because you know, y'all put out a lot of content. And i was like, do we? And then I thought about it. We put out two shows a week, plus yeah After Hours and YouTube exclusives.

YouTube Viewership and Ad Dynamics

00:03:53
Speaker
If you are subscribed to everything, you're thoroughly in entertained. Yeah.
00:03:59
Speaker
It's a lot. It is a lot. It is. It's a lot. yeah And so I've been noticing, especially in our YouTube numbers, like sometimes it takes... The podcast, full podcast, it takes about a week for those numbers to bump up.
00:04:13
Speaker
Part of that is YouTube like kind of holds the views back before they're public. like I can see on the back end how many views that we're getting. And it won't show it publicly for a while. like There's a little bit of a lag. So sometimes if you guys are watching the YouTube...
00:04:31
Speaker
you'll see like 100 likes, but only 30 views. Because somebody sent that to me one time, and they're like, what is that? I was like, well, YouTube tries to make sure that every view is a legitimate view. but For some strange reason, not every like is a legitimate like.
00:04:46
Speaker
Because, I mean, if if they liked it, you you you let that go immediately, but not the views, whatever. Well, because a like, I have to, like, I click the button, right?
00:04:59
Speaker
With the view... I mean, they don't know if it's a legitimate view. Yeah, that's true. You know, so it takes a little while for it to pop up.
00:05:10
Speaker
But I've been noticing that it's like a week because there's always kind of like a stopgap. what nas got Not stopgap. Like a not a complete stop, but like a it pours and then it dribbles after that. Right? Like when you first release a video, like, oh, okay, it shows up on the for watch page for people and it's like, click it I'm watch it.
00:05:32
Speaker
So the first week, yeah, yeah, I'll see those numbers trend up. After that first week, it starts to trickle. It might be that particular video gets one or two views a week. Like, it'll still kind of grow, but very slowly. It grows rapidly, early, and it kind of slows down. so got But y'all still watch them. And please, as I can't stress enough, please watch those ads. I know.
00:05:58
Speaker
I know. yeah And I know we be having a lot of them. well Yeah. I don't know, because i have a YouTube premium. Right. if you did The YouTube premium, that automatically counts. you know No ads anything. Automatically counts if you use it. We get revenue from that as well. But yeah I can tell you, because every now and then I'll have it on when I'm playing video games. I'm like, this ad been going on for about two minutes.
00:06:24
Speaker
Goodness. And i do have some control over the ads, ladies and gentlemen. But y'all know damn well that i we're not going to have no Republican political candidate advertising on our show. That is YouTube. That is not us. Yeah, no. That's absolutely not us.
00:06:46
Speaker
And that's kind of strange that they... I don't know. I feel like the algorithm should let them know what kind of content this is and that they should have more targeted ads, but I don't.
00:06:59
Speaker
I believe that they are targeted. I believe a lot of people hate Watch Us. Oh. no I know for a fact because of the comments. And some of the comments are so vile, I won't let them be made public.
00:07:12
Speaker
We've been getting, anytime we talk about anything race-related, like today, race-related or political, yeah, no it is... And they are watching the full episodes. I'm like... Which which is... Hey. Hey, out there.
00:07:25
Speaker
Just want you to know, we do not care. But thank you for watching. They probably petty. They're probably being petty and skipping the appetizers because there's somebody that I hate watch. Like, I hate his content because of his political leanings. He doesn't... His content isn't political in any way, but I know of his personal political leanings. And I think he's...
00:07:51
Speaker
a 100% asshole. However, he tells old mob stories because he was in the mafia and he was a high-ranking figure in the mafia. So that automatically is going to draw me in. And he has this wealth of knowledge and he's like, these stories are so cool. yeah So what I do, my silent protest is anytime I see one of them ads, I skip it. You ain't getting no revenue from me.
00:08:15
Speaker
Not one cent. ah But I'm still to watch your content. So I would imagine that's kind of what's happening with people. But whatever. well Yeah, I mean, I don't know. Like, we still don't care.
00:08:28
Speaker
yeah i don't care. No. Speaking of politics. Yeah.

State of the Union Address Critique

00:08:34
Speaker
The commander in Cheeto had a State of the Union address last night. First of all. Oh, no. He set the record for the longest State of the Union address How long was it?
00:08:46
Speaker
It was almost two hours. It like an hour and 49 minutes. show He broke the record. Guess whose record he broke?
00:08:56
Speaker
i'm I'm assuming former President Barack Obama. No, his own record. Oh, boy. His own record. My man be up there just talking. Rambling.
00:09:08
Speaker
Well, I talked to somebody earlier and I've seen excerpts of it. I didn't watch it. I talked to somebody earlier and they said he started strong and he finished strong.
00:09:19
Speaker
Somewhere in that middle. he It was like they gave him a directive. Yeah. It's like when you, in the NFL, sometimes an ah off offensive coordinator would script like the first the first five to seven plays on the opening and drive to just to get everybody going, right? Yeah. So they scripted what he was going to talk about for the first 10 minutes, and he stayed on point.
00:09:40
Speaker
Yeah. Then after that, he did full Trump. he tro He drifted. Yeah. Because, ah like, the teleprompters just for show, what are we doing here?
00:09:52
Speaker
ah There was a state of union of lies. You want to go through just a few of these lies? Go ahead, because I know there' is i know that i know they're there. That's why I didn't bother watching.
00:10:03
Speaker
He said that we now had the most secure border in American history. The lie detector determined that was a lie. yeah Border encounters and unlawful crossings have continued. No data supports zero crossing claims.
00:10:23
Speaker
So there's people still crossing. It's not right. he said it was nobody crossing. No, that is that's not true. true It's just untrue. But OK. He said no undocumented individuals entered in the past nine months.
00:10:40
Speaker
Law detection determined that was a lie. There's been no verified nine month period with zero unlawful entries. Yeah, because what are you even? ha What are you even talking about?
00:10:53
Speaker
and Listen, how are you tracking that?
00:11:01
Speaker
I mean, they got drones, I guess. 24-hour drones and cameras all along the wall and all along the border. No. No. This is complete another BS. Yeah.
00:11:12
Speaker
yeah yeah He attacked the Democrats a lot because, you know, that's what he does. That's what he does. Pointed at them, said they were ruining the country. He was really upset when he was trying to make points and the whole Republican side was standing up cheering like, oh, my God, they was. They was acting like they was at a Mike Tyson fight the way they was cheering. They were standing up, screaming, hollering, Mike Johnson behind him, just cheesing.
00:11:35
Speaker
ah And he got mad because none of the Democrats, those that came, because it was only four justices that popped up. ah None of them were standing. he He legit got upset. Like, they're not standing. You should stand. Stand. Like, he he yeah wants universal applause. And yeah he didn't get that. But we attacked the Democrats saying that they cut off all funding for DHS.
00:12:01
Speaker
Wow. That is a lie. There is a funding fight right now. Yeah. But operations have continued.
00:12:11
Speaker
So they haven't cut off all funding. No. He said that he has abolished DEI in America. Categorically false. Yep. The lie detector determined that was a lie. Federal changes occurred, but DEI still exists in states, companies, and universities, even though they're trying to get rid of all of it.
00:12:31
Speaker
I just don't think he understands how America works. Like, there's the federal government. Mm-hmm. And then there's state and local governments. Right, right, right. Okay? So, federal government can make changes to things the federal government touches, right? Mm-hmm. Yes, it is. Has authority over. Mm-hmm.
00:12:57
Speaker
But the states... make their decisions because they are the government of that state. And I don't think he understands. I think he thinks, I say there's no more DEI.
00:13:13
Speaker
And so now there isn't any because I'm the president slash, in his mind, king. And that's not how America works. There's levels.
00:13:24
Speaker
yeah yeah and And not only that, ah he doesn't really understand the federal government, because he keeps saying that he's just gonna do what he wants to do with or without Congress. and Yo, you just, I mean, i you can't. you Congress is the one who makes the laws.
00:13:44
Speaker
Yeah. The executive branch signs them into law. Yeah. judicial branch makes sure that they are lawful. That's, yes yeah I mean, that's the simplest form. It's the simplest way I can put it.
00:13:56
Speaker
Yeah. ah That's just, and it has, it when you make a law, has to go through the House and the Senate. It's got to be approved by both chambers. Mm-hmm. That's the reason why he keeps signing these executive orders and they're temporary.
00:14:11
Speaker
Yes. Right. They're not forever because it hasn't been passed by a law. Like when they passed a law to release all the Epstein files, which, by the way, there are reports.
00:14:23
Speaker
they They didn't release all the Epstein files that they kept out. of They kept out some files that specifically were related to Trump. Hmm. That's not surprising whatsoever. And if they did that, because it's been reported, and if they did that, they broke the law. The DOJ broke the law. But, yeah, he doesn't understand. surprising?
00:14:45
Speaker
no not no um no no No, not surprising at all. ah What did he also say? This one, this one just blew me away. He said he lifted 2.4 million Americans off of food stamps.
00:14:59
Speaker
You...
00:15:03
Speaker
you kick them off the benefit. that's he li He lift nobody. Yeah. He pushed people down. That's what he did. Not lift them up. pushing Actually, not push them down. He stomped them down.
00:15:18
Speaker
Yeah, you curb stomped 2.4 million Americans who need food assistance benefits, like food stamps, SNAP, et cetera, et cetera. Like you, you use them as a bargaining chip.
00:15:37
Speaker
Let's not forget that. Because at the end of the day, i don't think there's anybody Trump hates more than poor people. He really, really, really hates poor people, and he is willing to sacrifice them for his own aim. And the crazy thing is, a lot of them vote for him and continue to support him, which is mind-boggling. It's not really.
00:16:05
Speaker
Identity, remember, ah was it last week or a week before that I said my entity my identity is first Black, man, and then American? Yeah. In that order. Black person, man, American. In that order.
00:16:19
Speaker
And so my first identity is being Black. Yeah. For these people, their first identity, you would think it would be American, but the overwhelming thing, more important to them than I think for these specific people that voted for their harm.
00:16:35
Speaker
is to be white. Yeah. That's, it's like, yo, I'm white. I'm great. And we are better than everybody. I think black people are the shit.
00:16:46
Speaker
Like we are it, but I don't think we're better than anybody. No, that that's, that's not, that's not our bag. We just think that we in and of ourselves, we never ever said that.
00:16:59
Speaker
Never, not once. We don't have ever claim to be better than anybody. We just love ourselves because we'd be like, hey, man, just think about all things we bring to the table. Why don't you get off get your foot off our neck just a little bit? yeah And they'd be like, nah.
00:17:14
Speaker
But these people... That vote for him and vote against their interests, they were always told that you're special. You're supposed to have more, be more. And so they, in their mind, think is if we could take away from them, it'll come to us. And that's not what happens. No. When they take away from others, they just line their pockets with what they just took away from others. You don't get no leftovers or no crumbs.
00:17:38
Speaker
Ain't nothing trickling down to to ah Bumble Town, USA, Arkansas. Ain't nothing bubbling down. Y'all still going to have Dairy Queen? Shout out to Bumble Town.
00:17:50
Speaker
But it's not a real town. that's because west say of but Arkansas is a real state. Yeah. It ain't a real town, but i did say Arkansas, and I don't know why I'm killing Arkansas right now. I just know people from Arkansas. All right, let's go to one last lie, okay? I had more, but just one more. yeah He said that he balanced the budget overnight by eliminating fraud. Yeah.
00:18:13
Speaker
No, we have an insurmountable deficit. Like, no, you didn't.
00:18:24
Speaker
yeah The fraud, estimated fraud wouldn't even come close to the federal deficit. No. Not even close. Like, that it it's ballooned under your presidency.
00:18:41
Speaker
Mm-hmm. You just didn't balance the... but You ain't never balanced nothing... in your life. Certainly not a budget.
00:18:53
Speaker
Maybe a balanced being. He might've had a balanced breakfast, but other than that, but but what McDonald's and Burger King. cares with all right So,
00:19:10
Speaker
all right, this is, this, this is what I'll say. This is what I'll say.
00:19:19
Speaker
No, he has not balanced the budget. No. Because every Republican president in the modern era has inflated the deficit. The deficit grows under Republican presidents, even though they say Democrats are the wasteful fraud ones. They just consider giving anybody, giving a less fortunate, a helping hand is fraud.
00:19:43
Speaker
That's what they consider fraud. They are included in that. well Yeah, I guess so. They believe in socialism when it benefits them.
00:19:53
Speaker
they're Right. You know, they they get money taken from Bernie Madoff. Bail us out. Mm-hmm. You know, ah Goldman Sachs, not Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers go under.
00:20:06
Speaker
Yeah. Hold on. That's my money, too. That's my 401k. That's my investment. Bail them out. Yeah. Yeah. So they believe in socialism when it benefits them, just not when it benefits people that are not like them. And Trump... don't want big government until they do want big government to tell women what to do with their bodies. But just don't say anything about our guns because that is the priority hierarchy in this country. And I'm going be real. I'm going to be real honest. I believe in tooling up. I believe in tooling up. But how many damn guns are problem with it. Yeah, no problem with How many damn guns do you need? Also, why do you need military assault rifles? I mean, they waiting for the day that the revolution comes in they mind.
00:20:54
Speaker
And they gonna lose. you got Look, you got you had them assault rifles, but you gotta be willing to use them. And push yeah come to shove. Y'all scary fingers might not pull.
00:21:06
Speaker
I'll tell you what's not going to be scary if I'm in that situation. My finger is going to pull. You're going be hiding in a bunker with me and the rest of our family. We're going to ride it out. If the revolution, no, if the revolution come, I'm out there fighting.
00:21:24
Speaker
Uh... It depends. Is this... Is this, like, precursor to, like, a post-apocalyptic America? Oh, no,
00:21:36
Speaker
Hold on. Because, again, if there's no internet, no electricity, i am going to let the zombies just go ahead. Well, those are two different things.
00:21:48
Speaker
it You can be post-apocalyptic and not be a zombie apocalypse. I'm just saying, I don't want to work... so hard every that's why i didn't understand shows like The Walking Dead you telling me I gotta to work hard every minute of the day to stay alive for to live in hell Yes, yes. You've told us. yeah I get what you're saying. Yeah. And let's say it was a dystopia like the Mad Max movies or a Book of Eli. Like, I don't want to live anywhere where I can't bathe as much as I want.
00:22:28
Speaker
Yeah. Is there working indoor plumbing? you ain't Look, let me tell you something. If I can't bathe, if I can't use indoor plumbing, and if I can't grab some water when I want some water, don't want to live there. So you're right. I'm talking about, you know,
00:22:46
Speaker
what they call a revolution. where we we just fight. That ain't happening. No, it's not to happen. That ain't happening. I hope it don't happen. I hope it don't happen. I doubt it. That's enough of this diddly-daddling. Let's get to... I mean, even though we didn't want to get to the... My sister did not want to talk about the State of the Union, but I was like, we got to kind of... We got to kind of talk about it. we? Because literally, this is your show, and you can decide what you want to talk about. But people are expecting to hear...
00:23:17
Speaker
what we have to say about it. People are expecting to just hear what we have to say. They just tune in for us. No, yes and no. they They also want to hear us talk about stuff that's happening in the world. And I know this because people say, are y'all going to talk about this? i I just said that at the top. like So they wanted to hear what we had to say. And this is what we have to say. Long story short, we watch He Lying next.
00:23:43
Speaker
Ha ha ha! yeah Say it again. What to say? Long story short, we ain't watch. He lying. Next. For real. Next.

BAFTA Film Awards Incident and Reactions

00:24:02
Speaker
Jay, something real strange happened last weekend. oh Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo. Lindo.
00:24:14
Speaker
Lindo. not I don't know why i always put an L at the end of that. i don't know. Because that's who we are. Yeah. We're going to add an S, an L. Michael and... Nah, they messed up his first name.
00:24:30
Speaker
ah Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo. This is not hard. I was just going to say Delroy. I said Michael and Delroy. And then I just was like, I'm looking dead at the word. And I'm like, Del and Roy? Yes. That's his damn name. Anyway, what happened to them wasn't funny. They were presenting an award at BAFTA. And...
00:24:49
Speaker
at Something really bad happened to him. So at the 2026 BAFTA Film Awards in London, a guest in the audience shouted the N-word when Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting on stage. The slur was attributed to an involuntary tick from a man with Tourette's syndrome, but it was clearly heard in the room and aired during the BBC's delayed broadcast.
00:25:14
Speaker
BAFTA later apologized and took full responsibility, and BBC called it an error and oversight. The controversy intensified because the broadcast also cut a Free Palestine remark from another speech, raising questions about the editorial judgment and priorities.
00:25:33
Speaker
Not just Free Palestine, they also had spoken about the Sudan Congo as well, yeah which also gets lost in that conversation, but... yeah ah BAFTA did issue an apology. The the show was Sunday.
00:25:49
Speaker
The apology was issued Monday night after the social media backlash. And it said it took full responsibility for putting its guest in a very difficult situation. And we apologize to all.
00:26:02
Speaker
It also said it wanted to apologize unreservedly. I don't know what that really means. Without reservation. Yeah. Huh? Without reservation. Yeah, I know. But just know why I've never heard that word before, but these are the Brits. So they're actually using real English. To Jordan and Lindo.
00:26:19
Speaker
And we would like to thank Michael and Delroy for their incredible dignity and professionalism. Now, Jay, I've got some key facts that I want to get to, but you were salivating when you saw this on the rundown. So I'm going to just say...
00:26:35
Speaker
Yeah, so i know i don't know if you're going to... Actually, I should probably reserve it because I see you're going to you know give some context. So I don't want to...
00:26:48
Speaker
preemptively give my opinion without making sure that the audience has context. Okay. Specifically around like what happened, like the timeline of at what Tourette's syndrome is and and things like that. So you want me to go through all the notes and then you're going make it. Then you're going make your contributions. Okay. I can do that. yes I'm not cotton mouth at all. So let's see how this goes. we' I'm already having trouble saying Delroy. Yeah.
00:27:14
Speaker
okay All right. So the slur was heard live in the room and in the edited BBC broadcast. b Okay. So then I will cut in on that. Okay. All right.
00:27:24
Speaker
So see see this is the reason why I say, hey, take look at the rundown before we get started. ah No, because I forgot that I do want to make a point about this before I make my overarching point.
00:27:36
Speaker
Okay. Okay. So, and you said this, this is, there was a two hour delay on this broadcast. Okay. They took the time to censor any mention of Palestine, Sudan, and Congo, and but not the N word that was shouted three times.
00:28:00
Speaker
Three times. ah Was it shouted three times? I only heard it once. i believe it was shouted three times. I never, and I think you might be mistaken in all the reporting that I've done and all the research I've done. It was not, I have, I have, I'll go back and watch the video again. Okay. But as far as I, the reporting that I read, that it was shouted three sure you weren't just the loop? Okay. All right. Well, maybe it did. It was shouted. How about that? was shouted. So just calling that an error or an oversight, right?
00:28:37
Speaker
That is important context, right? In terms of what is important
00:28:47
Speaker
to, let's just say, the BBC. Well, bbc describe the BBC described the airing as an error and an oversight and internal emails. So they BBC didn't even come out publicly publicly.
00:29:03
Speaker
and said that these were internal emails that got to people. And they said was it was an er error. I said, I was about to say, err. It was an error and an oversight in these internal um emails. And also, there was other other strong language was not edited out.
00:29:27
Speaker
No, was edited out, but the slur wasn't. So you had piss, which to me isn't a strong word, right? It's really not. That was edited out. But the N-word by BBC and BAFTA was not edited out. That means it's not an error.
00:29:46
Speaker
It's not an oversight. You just didn't give a damn that that word was said and you didn't think it was a big deal. But piss was That's a big deal. And it's not like y'all didn't know it was said. First of all, it can clearly be heard on the broadcast. But then you had Alan Cumming come out and make like this very soft apology or explanation. So as you knew it happened.
00:30:13
Speaker
Yeah. You know it happened. And it's a two-hour delay. You definitely, definitely could have cut it out and you made a distinct choice not to. And that cannot be ignored.
00:30:31
Speaker
By Black folks. Mm-mm. No. yeah And we have a right to feel some type of way about that. and And let us be clear, because I'm going to get into Tourette's later.
00:30:42
Speaker
I'm not even blaming a dude. Now, there are some conspiracy theories out there that that was a word used... when it was Black people up there.
00:30:53
Speaker
And, you know, like that... I mean, there is a South Park episode where Cartman faked to have Tourette's. I'm not saying that this person didn't have fake Tourette's. this person definitely Tourette's syndrome. But Black conspiracy... He was there because there was a documentary made about him. But Black conspiracy says... He knew what he was doing.
00:31:17
Speaker
Okay, yes. But he didn't. So take it of the... It is interesting that this tick did not occur at any other point.
00:31:30
Speaker
Nope, not true. In the broadcast. No, it's not true. It did occur. Yes. Not that word, but other that's what i'm saying offensive other offensive language occurred throughout the broadcast. But that word, but that unless he said it three times, like you say, but I...
00:31:47
Speaker
I'm just saying from my research, I didn't hear or see that it was reported that it was said three times. I'm not saying that you're wrong. I'm just saying that I didn't see that. But he did. He was causing a ruckus.
00:32:02
Speaker
Almost throughout. Right. Again, not his fault. Not his fault. Not his fault. And in no way are we saying that people who have Tourette's syndrome, y'all gotta hide in your house. Like, no. Like, people understand.
00:32:22
Speaker
Even if it's just at a high level, what Tourette's is, that it involves involuntary tics that could be vocal, they could be physical. Like, people understand that at a high level. So no one is saying that.
00:32:37
Speaker
It was the choices made afterwards that we have a problem with. That we have a big problem with. Delroy was like, hey, look. which somebody from BAFTA had spoken to them afterwards because once again, they knew because a host came out and did a soft apology, not to Michael B. Jordan or Delroy Lindo, no but to the audience.
00:33:04
Speaker
And the apology pretty much was, hey, we told you something like this might happen. So, you know, sorry for the inconvenience, but we told you. it It wasn't a great apology. But the backlash to this,
00:33:18
Speaker
And the reason why they apologized, because they were dragging their feet with any type of apology. The backlash to this was pretty incredible because a BAFTA judge resigned over the handling of the entire incident. He might have been the one who leaked the email the internal emails. High-profile actors publicly could...
00:33:36
Speaker
Yeah, high-profile actors publicly condemned the airing of of the slur. And like I said, you know, they cut out the Free Palestine and all the Sudan and all the other stuff from the BBC broadcast, but left the N-word in. And BBC's explanation for certain cuts to certain things was speech shortened for time constraints. And critics are arguing that that looks like selective political censorship. So you don't care about...
00:34:09
Speaker
offending a certain group of people. Right. But you do greatly a care care about offending another group of people.
00:34:19
Speaker
Right. And that is political censorship. Yes. So, yeah. But let's get into what Tourette's syndrome is. Tourette's syndrome is a neurological condition that causes involuntary movements and vocalizations ah called tics. In rare clay cases, it can include involuntary swearing. Not everyone with Tourette's.
00:34:41
Speaker
Tourette's swears. Yes. It occurs in roughly 10 to 15 percent of the cases. Ticks can worsen under stress, anxiety and excitement. So he has this movie that's been done for him.
00:34:55
Speaker
Mm hmm. And he's there as a guest. Yes. It's pretty exciting time. Yes. We're not blaming him. Oh. Black conspiracy says that's a real interesting word to use at that particular time.
00:35:07
Speaker
but yeah I mean, I don't know the the science behind how the tics present, right? Like, I don't know...
00:35:20
Speaker
the science behind that. So I'm not going to make, I'm not going to make a comment on, yeah you have an involuntary, you know, vocal tick, but why you pick that word? Well, did we don't know that that word was picked? Like we, I don't know the science behind us So I can't make a statement about that.
00:35:42
Speaker
And, and honestly, if you don't know anything about Tourette's syndrome, I wouldn't, There's no point in going... There's enough with with the response to be angry about. that and There's no point in in, like, digging into this man who... Well, the man has publicly apologized, and then I've made some... I saw some comments on online saying, well, he ain't apologized to Michael and Delroy, and, it like, he has reached out to the producers, the centers, and everything to try and get in contact with them. And I'm sure...
00:36:19
Speaker
Michael B and Delroy is going to be like, man, look, week it it it was offensive. It hurt. But we kind of understand that it was involuntary.
00:36:31
Speaker
yeah yeah Yeah. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, but we all have something, right? Yeah. That's got some stigma. but But it's unfortunate that he has this, and he should still be able to live his life the way he lives it.
00:36:43
Speaker
And I've been in environments where I've seen people with Tourette's, and it looks like it freaking sucks. So I am extremely sympathetic. h But I'm also Black, and I'm extremely offended because two professionals...
00:37:00
Speaker
were up there handing themselves professionally. And that's, man, not been my response in that situation. yeah I might have gone full DC, but I'm not real professional.
00:37:14
Speaker
and and And again, my focus is really on the reaction, yeah specifically from BAFTAs and the BBC. Yeah.
00:37:26
Speaker
But speaking for like from Michael and Delroy's perspective, they're up there. They don't know why this is happening. They don't know who's yelling this out. Well, I think. Hold on time out.
00:37:42
Speaker
I believe before the ceremony started, They did tell everybody, this person is here. You may hear some outbursts. They did pre-warn them because that's when he came out and apologized. When I said, he said, basically, ah we told y'all this was going to happen. yeah ah So they they, I'm sure they had some idea.
00:38:03
Speaker
And that's the reason why they responded that way. But you can still see they were just like, yeah that for real? Like, call me, call me the B word. You know what I'm saying? Yeah.
00:38:17
Speaker
Me as a male, not a woman, but but as a male. it's It's a tough space to be in because, again, these are involuntary. Right. Ticks. like But it doesn't mean it's not preventable.
00:38:31
Speaker
I don't. i Voluntary to me definitely gives a signal that it's difficult to prevent. but Well, not and I'm just saying he didn't necessarily have to be there.
00:38:44
Speaker
But I don't think that that's fair to him because he's there because a documentary about him was... You know what i'm saying? Like, he had just as much right to be there... I'm not talking about rights. I'm i'm not talking about that. As everybody else. Like, look so don't know...
00:39:01
Speaker
i don't know
00:39:04
Speaker
If I know... if My issue is... Go ahead. My issue... I did say go ahead. And then I started talking again. Okay, go ahead. Go ahead.
00:39:15
Speaker
All I'm saying is, if I was that person, and you say all the time that I'm overly considerate, huh I wouldn't put myself in that situation for fear that I would say or do something that would be offensive to other people.
00:39:32
Speaker
I...
00:39:36
Speaker
Honestly, i don't I don't know the answer to that. But I do know that... though rus the The backlash against Black folks being upset by this is wholly unwarranted. Listen, we can both understand that this is a result of Tourette's syndrome, right?
00:39:59
Speaker
Like, we can both understand that and also understand that regardless of intent, impact is important, right? You can go into something with the best of intentions and have an atrocious impact. Like that is possible. And we're allowed to say, i understand that this is not something you can control, but I also feel harm.
00:40:36
Speaker
Because it was set. Like that's. Both of those things. Can exist. Stop telling. Us. Oh you can't get offended. He has Tourette's.
00:40:48
Speaker
No. No. i I can. Feel. Harm. From a word. That is steeped. In so much history.
00:41:00
Speaker
Of violence. Against black folks. I can feel.
00:41:06
Speaker
the The pain of that, of hearing that and having to stand up in front of people and still maintain my dignity and my grace and get through this.
00:41:19
Speaker
And then for y'all to send Alan coming out there. And I don't know if they gave him talking points or he just winged it. But the...
00:41:30
Speaker
What he said was, quote, Tourette's syndrome is a disability and the tics you've heard tonight are involuntary, which means the person who has Tourette's syndrome has no control over their language. We apologize if you were offended tonight.
00:41:46
Speaker
That is very dismissive of the impact of the words that were spoken. yeah Oh, this a person has Tourette's.
00:41:59
Speaker
if you If you were offended, we were. We apologize if you were offended tonight. But this person doesn't have control over that. I understand that, but I was also offended.
00:42:16
Speaker
Yeah, so
00:42:20
Speaker
it's about Black pain, right? For some right some reason, black pain is always minimized. And it wasn't even that. It wasn't even. That bothered me.
00:42:30
Speaker
Like, he had Tourette's, so you should let it go. No, don't have to let it go. That word that word means something. Counter-argument that a lot of stupid people have been making.
00:42:41
Speaker
You guys say to each other all the time. Why can't we all just say it? Go ahead. And that great Delroy Lindo ah scene from, oh, I forget what the name of the show is, but you have seen it yeah on social media, right? yeah Say it.
00:42:56
Speaker
i Say it. Say it. I dare you. Say it. Go ahead. Go ahead. let let's be Let's put one thing out there. Let's put one thing out there. Nobody's saying that you can't say the word. Oh, you can say it.
00:43:08
Speaker
Yeah. You just got to deal with the consequences. Us telling you not to say it as a warning. Yes, that's a warning. You could come right up to me and say it. Good luck with the rest of your life.
00:43:19
Speaker
Right. Good luck with it. Oh, you'll go to jail for assault. And so I'll go to jail for assault. There are some things that even though I don't want to ever go to jail that I'm willing to go to jail for. Will I go to jail ah to save my sister's life? Maybe.
00:43:33
Speaker
Maybe not. But will I go to jail? Will I go to tell? Good to know. And somebody says an N-word to my face? Yeah, and going to take your eye with me. So this idea where you guys say it, yo, in every single tribe.
00:43:48
Speaker
and and And I don't say group. I say tribe, right? In every single tribe, there's an offensive word or words in that they can say amongst each other.
00:44:01
Speaker
You can't say it. Yeah. You can't say it. In the words of Ryan Davis, quote, when we say it, it's cultural. When you say it, it's racist.
00:44:14
Speaker
Dead stop. So, yes, we can. And it's such an offensive word. I hate it I hate what it stands for. don't think you should be able to say it. You can't tell me what to do and what to say. Just like I can't tell you what to do what to say.
00:44:27
Speaker
But I can give you a warning. Yeah. But, ah again, like, it So the campaign group, Tourette's Action, released a statement following the BAFTAs, and they said that they, quote, wanted to address the negative comments that have surfaced following John's involuntary vocal tics during the ceremony.
00:44:51
Speaker
Adding, we deeply understand that these words can cause hurt, but at the same time, it is vital that the public understands a fundamental truth about Tourette's syndrome. These tics are involuntary.
00:45:03
Speaker
They're not a reflection of a person's beliefs, intentions, or character. these are symptom These symptoms are neurological, not intentional. And they are something John, like many others with Tourette's, live with every single day.
00:45:15
Speaker
Nobody is saying that.
00:45:18
Speaker
Nobody is saying that we don't understand this fundamental truth about Tourette's. Do not dismiss the hurt and harm that was caused.
00:45:33
Speaker
and see ah That is all we're asking. because you Hold on, time out. Me and you were looking at that apology completely different. i was a As you were reading that, I was like, that's what BAFTA should have used as an apology because the first the first thing that they did when you apologize to somebody, when they say the five stages of apology, you recognize the hurt that you caused somebody by your actions.
00:45:54
Speaker
I don't like the but. We deeply understand that these words can cause hurt. First of all, they didn't... It's not they can cause. They did.
00:46:05
Speaker
Like, first of all, let's be... like That incident... Hold on. That incident for us caused hurt. yeah Yes. But when they say... Come on, you're the English major. Now, i don't make me... don't Why you getting me to defend? I don't want defend. When they say can, if if he was out there saying the B word and all the other types of stuff...
00:46:25
Speaker
that could offend me, it wouldn't offend me. So certain people are going to be offended by certain words, and certain people are not going to be offended by other words. When he said the N-word out there for Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo, there was a bunch of people that was just like, well, eh. And a lot of them worked for BBC and BAFTA.
00:46:47
Speaker
Case of point, the reason why they didn't edit it out. yeah But... They acknowledge, yo, we understand. We get it. But you have to understand that there is a pushback.
00:47:01
Speaker
of and And I'm in that Black conspiracy social algorithm where it's just like, and I did it as a joke, as a tongue-in-cheek joke. But he was like, people have been like, that's the word you use at that time? Well, that's kind of how...
00:47:17
Speaker
that version of Tourette's kind of works. You you take the words that are not supposed, that is not supposed to be said at a particular time and you say them. It's involuntary. Like I kind of get it. I don't blame the guy with Tourette's, even though I was kind of bringing up the argument that, you know, maybe he shouldn't have been there in the first place, but I don't know if that's the right response or not.
00:47:37
Speaker
But at what point do we give space for people with Tourette's to apologize, but then also explain to the people who don't understand Tourette's, yo, this is this is kind of what it is. Like, I'm i'm not doing this on purpose because a lot of people don't know what Tourette's syndrome really is. It really, really, really is.
00:48:00
Speaker
They have a kind of a cursory idea, but not really. So they're an organization that was trying to... I think it's a... First of all, there was no apology in there.
00:48:11
Speaker
There wasn't an apology in there. They did not apologize. What they did was they said, these are involuntary and it's not a reflection of his beliefs, intention, or character.
00:48:24
Speaker
So we know these words can cause hurt, but he has Tourette's. That was the response. There was no apology. There was no I'm sorry at all in that statement. No. And no, we're sorry for the harm that it caused.
00:48:38
Speaker
No, they understand that the words can cause hurt. Oh, OK. Yeah, never mind. I take back my yeah I take back. I thought I thought it was. a i'm out We are sorry for the hurt that these words have caused. That would have been the proper way to apologize. OK, first of all, y'all. I just read the full statement. Y'all cut out.
00:49:00
Speaker
And this is now I'm pissed at the Guardian because what the statement actually says is we deeply understand that these words can cause hurt and we are deeply sorry to the black community for the harm caused. But don't be stay mad at the Guardian for that. No, because I'm mad. don' Time much time come out. Time out.
00:49:18
Speaker
Where'd you find that quote? This is on their Instagram, their Tourette's action statement, BAFTA, following the BAFTA Awards. Okay. we talk about it a lot. We talk about a lot on this show.

Humorous Reddit Stories

00:49:31
Speaker
And we talk about do your research. Yeah. so yes, the Guardian cut that off. But also, you were supposed to do your research. but So that's kind your fault, too.
00:49:41
Speaker
oh Yes. And I will say that. But again, like, why was that part intentionally left out of the reporting? that That's a good point. Why was point the N-word intentionally not removed from the broadcast? This is the thing that we're talking about.
00:49:59
Speaker
yeah You're reporting this out and you intentionally left out the part where they say we are deeply sorry to the black community for the harm caused.
00:50:11
Speaker
Now, again, they still say but at the same time. But that's what I was talking That's the apology that needed, that everybody needed to have. and yes And yes, to make the apology better, they should have said to the Black community, but to human beings...
00:50:30
Speaker
all, to all human beings. Because yes, Black community is affected first. There are some people that was also affected, not like Black people. I'm not doing not doing that but yeah but that. But I just know how to apologize. But this segment is running long, and this is what to ladies and gentlemen.
00:50:46
Speaker
We are going to talk more about this on the After Hours. So, if you want to hear more of our uncensored takes and how me and my sister going to go back and forth go ahead and join our Patreon or our YouTube membership and check out that After Hours Uncensored that will be airing on ah What's What's Monday? March the Yes, March the 2nd, 2026, and we'll continue this conversation. And if you don't want to pay for the membership, you could buy the single episode for just $3 on our Patreon page. But on that note, we're going to end this segment and get to some laughter because I'm getting agitated continuing to think about this because if I was Michael B. Jordan or Del Rey Lindo, I'd whooped somebody's ass.
00:51:35
Speaker
I would not have. But I would have expected a much better response from BAFTA and BBC. Facts.
00:51:54
Speaker
Jay, o I went on my fur, my, not my fur. My speech has been getting worse and worse. My favorite social media. Reddit, and I found a new subreddit. Okay.
00:52:10
Speaker
When did you realize you were dating an idiot? Immediately. Almost immediately. Yeah. So I picked a couple of comments that I thought were funny god that I just wanted to get your response to because I love the Reddit, this the subreddit, and the and just the topic of when did you realize you were dating an idiot?
00:52:34
Speaker
Yeah. So this first one. She wanted to celebrate getting her boating license by taking her father's speedboat to Hawaii from Los Angeles.
00:52:46
Speaker
When questioned about the distance involved in such a journey, she said we could pack some sandwiches. I like to think she's still floating out there in the middle of the Pacific.
00:52:58
Speaker
Y'all...
00:53:01
Speaker
I know that it might be hard to judge distance, right? When you're looking at like a globe or a map in a book.
00:53:12
Speaker
But I assure you, based on that five-hour flight from Los Angeles to Hawaii, that a speedboat ain't gonna have not nearly enough gas, girlfriend. That's the reason why he was like, think she's still floating out there. You gonna make it. Yeah.
00:53:35
Speaker
You aren't going to make it. Pack some sandwiches. Pack some sandwiches. Like it's a day trip. it It will. It is a day. It'll take you a day to get there on speedboat. It'll you a day to run out of gas.
00:53:50
Speaker
and the Nowhere near Hawaii. I don't think people get it. You're literally flying over the Pacific. yeah You look down, there is no land for hours. We've taken cruises all over the place. We've not seen land for a few hours. yeah You know i'm saying? But there was no land anywhere.
00:54:12
Speaker
for hours. yeah Hawaii is not close. It's not close. I knew somebody who thought arcis ah Alaska and Hawaii was right next to each other. No. only benefit I gave to her was that in most maps, they are, like when you get those little maps in school, they are kind of close to each other. And I was like, no, I don't realize, I didn't realize as a college graduate, you didn't realize that those maps weren't written, drawn to scale. Like, that's not, no, that's not, why would it be so cold and so hot?
00:54:42
Speaker
Yeah. That that don't, that's dumb. It don't make no sense, yeah. I didn't date her. It also takes a really long time to get to Alaska. It really does. Yeah. Alaska, close as hell to Russia.
00:54:55
Speaker
All right, another one. My ex said maybe we should have a kid to motivate him more, that a baby would drive him. He wanted to become a rapper.
00:55:09
Speaker
First of all, we never even got to that conversation because once you told me I'm trying to be a rapper, I told you good luck and God bless.
00:55:27
Speaker
And then I went home. Now, you know, there's been... Jay-Z, the most successful rapper that there is because he's a billionaire. I don't know if any other rapper is a billionaire. what One. There's one.
00:55:39
Speaker
Like, there's one dude. Like, one dude. how many musicians How many musicians were ah were a billionaire? How many rappers have like longevity to their career? Not many.
00:55:55
Speaker
You get one, maybe two albums, a tour and never hear from them again. That's how it is. They come out with a single or something, but I mean, they might do a collab, but you'd never hear from them again. Okay. We're just now getting a resurgence of the juvenile got a song out. T.I. Clips met had an album out. Like we just now getting that resurgence, but it was decades.
00:56:20
Speaker
And it was only because of verse. It was only because of verses that everybody was like, I forgot they had some good songs. And their names started bubbling up. The streams started going. And they was like, I should come out with a new project. yeah That's the only reason. That's the only reason. But he said a baby would motivate him more not to be a rapper. But again, we never even got to that dumbass take.
00:56:44
Speaker
Come on, you can't. Come on, we're we're creators, right? you go We'd be upset if somebody shot down our dreams to create. He just wanted to be a rapper. Maybe he tried at UPS or at FedEx on the day-to-day, and then he spit mad rhymes in the nighttime. Maybe he got a gift.
00:57:02
Speaker
But maybe he ain't really got a gift when he needed a baby to motivate him to become rapper. Because the fact of matter is, you don't even have the motivation to do the thing you want to do. Don't even have the motivation. hoping for an external motivator in the form of a baby, which I don't know if you've met babies, but they make you very tired because they require a lot. So if you're looking for motivation,
00:57:31
Speaker
That's not the route. That's not the route. No, it ain't. All right, let me go to the next one. When she saw some dinosaur-related status I had on my WhatsApp, and she literally said, do you really believe in dinosaurs?
00:57:50
Speaker
Now, know museums aren't always the most ethical places of all time, right? They'd be stealing a lot of stuff and then charging you to see it. yeah But they got some bones in there.
00:58:03
Speaker
Right. They have reconstructed two colossal creatures. And there are many, many different identified dinosaurs.
00:58:19
Speaker
From Cretaceous, Jurassic, Jurassic period. day Dinosaurs definitely, definitely existed. Now, the made up ones that they just created in Jurassic Park movies, obviously those don't exist. But what were you doing in school? Because that's elementary school where you learn about dinosaurs. That ain't nothing but a flat earther.
00:58:44
Speaker
That ain't nothing but a flat earther. All right, here's another one. He told me he only buys the Campbell's sipping soups that are packaged in plastic because the metal cans of soup, quote unquote, always broke his microwave.
00:59:02
Speaker
not Not that he broke the microwave with a can of soup one time. He said they always break his microwaves.
00:59:15
Speaker
Now, you let me just deconstruct that. Because I am damn sure that on the can of every Campbell's soup, there are directions on how to prepare that soup.
00:59:32
Speaker
That's number one. And it don't say microwave in the can. That's number one. Number two, who don't know?
00:59:43
Speaker
You can't microwave some, not the can, but the contents. That's what I'm saying. yeah yes Yes, you can microwave the contents, but you can't microwave it in the can. Number two, who doesn't know that you can't put metal in a microwave?
00:59:59
Speaker
And then... The fact that you did, after the first microwave blew up, you did no follow-up research to figure out what went wrong.
01:00:13
Speaker
You then tried it again and broke yet another microwave. Yeah. It's time for me, in order to protect myself from you,
01:00:28
Speaker
to get on out of here. yeah I gotta go. here's another one. She asked if they spoke English where I was planning on visiting.
01:00:41
Speaker
I was going to England. To me, now,
01:00:51
Speaker
now, yeah
01:00:55
Speaker
These are people that are allowed to vote.

Implications of Uninformed Voting

01:00:59
Speaker
Yes. That's exactly what I was thinking. That was exactly what I was thinking. These are our people that are allowed to vote. yeah not Maybe a a literacy test wouldn't be the worst thing for the voting rights.
01:01:16
Speaker
yeah Maybe a comprehension test wouldn't be the worst thing. Yeah, these are people that are allowed to vote. You know who else is allowed to vote? This person. Mm-hmm. He was upset that his brother was getting a divorce because he was convinced it would turn his nephew gay.
01:01:37
Speaker
I don't even follow that logic. hip I don't understand it either. So your nephew is going to become gay because, you know, his parents got a divorce. First of all, sir, you don't become gay.
01:01:51
Speaker
You don't. There's there's many things wrong with that statement. Yes. Wow. Yeah. People out here dumb as hell. And people out here dating these dumb as hell people. and Yeah. And then they get into these scenarios. Luckily, I have never dated anybody this dumb.
01:02:11
Speaker
I've never. No. I know people this dumb. but I don't even know anybody this dumb. No, I know i know people i know some dumb as hell people. I know some people that are so confidently dumb.
01:02:24
Speaker
that i just You forget that I deal with people all day long every day. Yeah, but goodness. Yeah. That's dumb. Yeah, no. And these are people out here, you know, dating. And I found that new subreddit. So ladies and gentlemen, I'm y'all right now, that's going to continuously be a segment on and off for these episodes because that is just pure hum humorous content.
01:02:49
Speaker
Yeah, because that, I can't even track that logic.
01:02:55
Speaker
He was upset that his brother is getting a divorce because he's a convinced it would turn his nephew gay. Where I can't follow the, like, usually, like, even with the do they speak English where I was planning to visit, I was going to England.
01:03:12
Speaker
I can even see an instance where somebody hears you're going overseas. And it doesn't, like, it don't click right away. Right. And they ask a dumb question.
01:03:25
Speaker
there's There's multiple countries overseas. Yeah. That their primary language is English. Yes, I understand that. But I think when we hear that, like as Americans, somebody's going overseas. Like...
01:03:43
Speaker
Maybe you think that, right? And sometimes you not quit. Sometimes you a little so slow on the uptake. I get that. That happens. I've asked dumb questions and been like, hold up, my bad. You're going to England. That was a dumb question. I don't know why i asked that.
01:03:59
Speaker
Like, I can even get that. I can't get it. Not when they said they're going to England. But I don't, I can't follow the logic.
01:04:11
Speaker
in that last one. Like how a divorce is going to turn their kid gay? Right. Maybe he thought... There's no statistics on that anywhere, I'm no i'm sure.
01:04:23
Speaker
Maybe the only way he got to this conclusion is that he thought that his brother was going to leave the child's life and wasn't going to be there to raise no man. And so because he's being raised by a woman, that's to turn him gay. That's the... that's the oh it's As stupid as that sounds, that's the only...
01:04:41
Speaker
form of thinking i think this person was thinking i is that's that's it for me i i can't figure it out any other way i don't have it i don't got maybe that's a is that a that's gotta to be a cultural thing because like you know we we have there's a lot of single mothers in our community right we don't i it don't occur to me that just because you were just raised by your mom or your aunt or your grandma or whatever, that you're going to be gay. Like that, because one, being gay is not choice. Two, that don't make no damn sense.
01:05:20
Speaker
Did any of these make sense? That's the reason why when they, the the title the Reddit is, when they discovered they was dating an idiot. And it is clear that they was dating idiots. Campbell Soup.
01:05:32
Speaker
Idiot. Going to take my speedboat from Los Angeles to Hawaii? Idiot. All these peoples is idiot. And yes, ladies and gentlemen, I said peoples.
01:05:43
Speaker
Yeah. Just let it slide. All these peoples. All these peoples. And Dale Roy's Lindos. Hot damn. What do you want to tell these people before we get out of here?
01:05:56
Speaker
don't know, man. We talked about a lot for a real long time. really don't know that we are. We are petering. We are petering to 300 blood. Yes.
01:06:10
Speaker
I'm tired because I just did an interview yesterday. I got more interviews this week. I got editing and stuff I got to do on top of my real job. So I'm tired. And on that note, ladies and gentlemen, don't forget. We are going to continue that conversation about BAFTA after I was uncensored. I'm going to just let you all know because I'm going to into the editing bag.
01:06:31
Speaker
There's some stuff that I cut out in this conversation. that I'm not going to let air on the main podcast. But I will let air on at the After Hours Uncensored.
01:06:42
Speaker
So go ahead and check that out. It's going to be released March 2nd, 2026. that's ah That's a Monday. That's a next that's next this upcoming Monday. right This is upcoming Monday because it's released on Friday. But on that note, ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for listening.
01:06:58
Speaker
I want to thank you for watching. And until next time, as always, I rala.
01:07:07
Speaker
That 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, and 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.
01:07:30
Speaker
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01:07:42
Speaker
But the real party is on our Patreon page. After Hours Uncensored and Talking Straight-ish. After Hours Uncensored is another show with my sister. And once again, the key word there is uncensored. Those who exclusively on our Patreon page, jump onto our website at unsolicitedperspective.com.
01:07:58
Speaker
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01:08:24
Speaker
Thank you. Thank you for listening and watching and supporting us. And I'll catch you next time. Audi 5000. Peace.