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TikTok Violence Trends, Reckless Parents & Parking Lot Karma image

TikTok Violence Trends, Reckless Parents & Parking Lot Karma

E316 · Unsolicited Perspectives
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A comedy roast sparks backlash, a mother gets charged after her teenage son allegedly kills a Vietnam veteran riding an illegal e-motorcycle, and a disturbing TikTok violence trend targeting unhoused people has Bruce and Jay seriously questioning where society is headed. Then things take a lighter turn with a Reddit parking spot story that turns into a full debate about boundaries, entitlement, and whether towing your neighbor’s car makes you the villain.

On Episode 316 of the Unsolicited Perspectives Podcast, Bruce Anthony and Jay Aundrea break down the Kevin Hart roast controversy involving Katt Williams, Shane Gillis, and Tony Hinchcliffe’s George Floyd joke, while discussing whether comedy roasts have gone too far in today’s culture. They also dive deep into parental accountability, reckless teenagers, TikTok violence trends, internet desensitization, social media addiction, and the morality crisis happening online.

Then the Sibling Happy Hour closes with one of the funniest “Am I The Jerk?” Reddit stories yet: a neighbor repeatedly steals someone’s assigned parking spot and gets her car towed after months of warnings. Bruce and Jay debate kindness, boundaries, entitlement, and why being “too nice” can backfire.

#KevinHart #KattWilliams #ShaneGillis #TikTok #SocialMedia #ComedyRoast #RedditStories #NeighborDrama #Podcast #CurrentEvents #InternetCulture #TikTokViolence #podcast #unsolicitedperspectives 

Chapters:

00:00:00 Roast Controversies, Reckless Parenting & Parking Lot Karma 😳🎤🚗

00:02:12 Katt Williams & Kevin Hart FINALLY End Their Legendary Beef 🤝🔥😂

00:05:18 The George Floyd Joke That Completely Changed The Roast 😳🎤💀

00:08:28 Shane Gillis, Racist Humor & Comedy Crossing The Line 🤔🎭💥

00:13:28 Could Any Young Celebrity Actually Survive A Roast Today? 😳🔥👀

00:18:12 Mother Charged After Teen Kills Veteran Riding E-Motorcycle 😳⚖️🏍️

00:25:48 Should Parents Be Criminally Responsible For Reckless Kids? ⚖️👨‍👩‍👦🔥

00:28:18 Parents KNOW Their Kids Are Out Here Causing Problems 😩🚨💯

00:29:20 TikTok Violence Trend Targeting Homeless People Is HORRIFYING 😨📱💔

00:31:45 Social Media Is Destroying Some People’s Sense Of Humanity 😳🧠📉

00:35:18 Violence Became Entertainment And Society Got Desensitized 🎬🩸😬

00:43:15 Neighbor’s Car Gets Towed After Repeatedly Stealing Parking Spot 🚗😳💸

00:47:45 Being “Too Nice” Is Exactly How People Take Advantage 😩🚪💯

00:51:08 Bruce DEFENDS Towing The Car With Absolutely ZERO Shame 😭💀👏

00:56:08 “Occasionally” Means Completely Different Things To Everybody 🤯🧠😂

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Transcript

Introduction to 'Unsolicited Perspectives' Podcast

00:00:00
Speaker
A comedy roast that may have gone too far, a news roundup, and accountability of your neighbor? We're going to get into it. Let's get it!
00:00:20
Speaker
Welcome. First of all, welcome. This is Unsolicited Perspectives. I am your host, Bruce Anthony, here to lead the conversation in important events and topics that are shaping today's society. stay 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.
00:00:38
Speaker
Rate, review, like, comment, share. Share with your friends, share with your family, hell, even share it with

News Stories and Reddit Discussion: 'Am I the Jerk?'

00:00:45
Speaker
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 dilly-dadding a little bit. Then we're going to be talking about two news stories that caught my attention. And then the Am I the Jerk?
00:00:58
Speaker
Reddit about neighbors. But that's enough of the intro. Let's get to the show.

Kevin Hart Roast: Humor and Controversy

00:01:10
Speaker
What up, sis? What up, brother? I can't call it. I can't call it. Now, I did this rundown thinking that you were on social media and at least caught some of the clips from the Kevin Hart roast. You didn't catch none? No.
00:01:24
Speaker
I have not been on social media. Okay. Well, here's the kicker. It was a roast of Kevin Hart. Like, you know how roasts do, right? Yes. A bunch of different people from all walks of life, not just comedians, roasting Kevin Hart.
00:01:38
Speaker
Yeah. The final person was a surprise guest. Oh, no. It was Cat Williams.
00:01:46
Speaker
Now, they have a thing, don't they? Yes, they have had a beef beef. Yeah, why? A real beef for decades. Yeah, so why? I think a lot of it is Cat's jealousy, but sure.
00:02:04
Speaker
it was funny. Even though one of my friends is like, it wasn't all that funny. I was like, oh, it was funny. And it was historic because at the end, Kevin Hart was like, look, everybody knows and we didn't have beef.
00:02:18
Speaker
Let's just go ahead and squash it. Because I'm a fan of yours first and foremost. And they hugged it out. Okay, that's nice. But there's been a little bit of backlash, as most things in comedy is done, because Chelsea Handler was there, Tony Kittclough, the dude that did the...
00:02:40
Speaker
the Trump rally at Madison Square Garden that said some racist jokes. Why was he there? They had a lot of comedians. Shane Gillis hosted it, and everybody calls Shane Gillis MAGA, and I don't necessarily... He does a great Donald Trump impersonation. I don't know that he's necessarily MAGA. As he would say... I do find him controversial in a very, like, sometimes harmful way.
00:03:05
Speaker
Uh... Yeah. He's also really funny. Yeah, I mean, He's also really funny. Sometimes. And then sometimes I'm like, ugh. But I mean, first of all, a roast is going to go too far. Like, that's kind of the point. The point is that the roast is going to go too far. And then when you pick people like Sharon Gillis and Chelsea Handler, it's going to go too damn far.
00:03:33
Speaker
There were some racist jokes. Yeah. And it was a joke George Floyd. then when invite that racist MAGA guy, like, I don't even know why he was even there. invited Oh, Chelsea Handler handed him. But there were some racist jokes and even a joke about George Floyd that has gotten Black people up in a... Because Ken Hart laughed about a joke that was joking about the death of George Floyd. Look. Do you know what the joke was?
00:03:59
Speaker
I don't remember what it was. it but It was in bad taste. Yeah. But here's... it i I always like going to Ryan Davis, the comedian Ryan Davis. I feel like he's really sensible and gives a good outlook on how we should view comedy.
00:04:18
Speaker
Yeah. And he was like, hey, look...
00:04:22
Speaker
A roast used to just be a thing between comedians in a back room that wasn't for public consumption. and Right. And the way comedians joke around each other is no different than the way individual people... heat I'm paraphrasing. I'm adding my own little twist to what he said.
00:04:41
Speaker
When he described the roast, the way he described it is no different than me and my boys and our group chat. I do not want our group chat Absolutely not. Absolutely not. Yeah. was Who made them public like public of things like Dean Martin?
00:04:58
Speaker
ah But here's the thing. I don't think they were. um I think they had an audience, but I think those videotapes of those came later, like after everybody's death. i don't think that that I don't think that they were selling those videotapes.
00:05:12
Speaker
during that time. And if they were, they were probably... First of all they weren't videotapes because they were filmed in, like, the 60s and 70s. Right. what they were probably done is like, those record recordings. Like, Richard Pryor used to have those... the concerts on record that you would listen to.
00:05:27
Speaker
but it But it probably wasn't... It wasn't for mass consumption. You had to probably go into the little back room and go buy it. Now, this was on Netflix. Now, I found the joke...
00:05:40
Speaker
not not y'all y'all can find it i'm not gonna repeat it the george floyd joke unless you want me to i will but it was it was tony henchcliffe who i think is the yes he is yeah yeah yeah it was his joke
00:05:57
Speaker
and do i want to say this Just say it now. Yeah, yeah, okay. Hinchcliffe faced backlash for a George Floyd joke, telling Hart, quote, the Black community is so proud of you.
00:06:12
Speaker
Right now, George Floyd is looking up at us all, laughing so hard he can't breathe. Yeah. Nope. Yeah, because it's not really a roast of Kevin Hart. That's a shot, an unnecessary shot. shot the Black community. Yeah, it, well...
00:06:31
Speaker
It's a shot at George Floyd. Yeah. But, but once again, i have to go back to Ryan Davis. These things aren't for, aren't supposed to be for public consumption. And so Kevin Hart is getting some backlash because he laughed at that joke.
00:06:46
Speaker
Yeah. Number one, he laughed at that joke. And two, not everything has to be monetized. Right.
00:06:57
Speaker
And, and, they should know that they were going to get some backlash because in today's culture, people ain't standing for it. I don't think people are more sensitive. I think people have a voice now to say, hey, that's not cool.
00:07:13
Speaker
Yeah. I don't like that. But also, some of that stuff was funny. Some of it is funny. Some of it's funny. And like I said, you know, you expect for it to go too far. But the

American Fascination with WWII and Military History

00:07:26
Speaker
roast should be a roast.
00:07:27
Speaker
Yes. Of the person. that First of all, that person should have never been invited. Because why are you even in a black space? Well, it's but that wasn't a black space.
00:07:40
Speaker
It's the roast of Kevin Hart. That's not a black space. Kevin Hart just doesn't operate in black spaces. Not anymore. No. You know, I saw a funny meme and it was Chelsea Handler sitting next to, oh, what i Regina King. Mm-hmm.
00:07:56
Speaker
And it was when you invite your two different friend groups to the same gathering. and Right. Because he and Kevin Hart, Kevin Hart and Chester Handler just did something on Netflix where they gave a comedian like a contract. It was like a contest. So she, they have, they are friends.
00:08:12
Speaker
Yeah. So is he and Regina King. Right. And they're just, they're different demographics, not only because of black woman, white woman, but just as far as the humor is concerned is different.
00:08:24
Speaker
Now, what do you think about this? Okay, so for his part, Gillis, Shane Gillis, joked about Jeffrey Epstein, okay, lynching and slavery. Okay.
00:08:38
Speaker
at one point saying that Hart's ancestors, quote, came to America in a slave ship in a bottle. Yeah. No, I saw that. Okay. When you read the joke, not that funny.
00:08:50
Speaker
When you see him tell the joke, hilarious. And and because it doesn't, it's not racist what what he said what he's saying is, because Kevin Hart is short. Right. yeah So you had to see, for me, Shane Gillis, I've watched his stand-ups.
00:09:08
Speaker
And he talked about going to see George Washington's home. Yeah. And then he said everybody's, like, doing the reenactments. They're acting in that in that time period. And he was like, oh, these are slave quarters? Oh,
00:09:26
Speaker
Oh, this is the same person that talks about how he has delayed onset Republican because he watches World War II documentaries. He's got early onset Republican. No, he's just a middle-aged white guy. That's all that means. Or just a middle-aged man because I love World War II documentaries. I don't know what y'all's obsession is with World War II.
00:09:48
Speaker
I get you. You're historian. But, like, what is the middle-aged man's... like obsession with World War II? oh I believed.
00:10:01
Speaker
The man's obsession with World War II is the call to action that men did after we were attacked. Only after we were attacked, ladies and gentlemen. Only after we were attacked. Like, let's be very clear about when, yeah what we knew when, and then when we actually got involved and why.
00:10:19
Speaker
it took It took a long little while. And just that just that, oh, I would have done the same thing. Like, I would go fight for for freedoms in our country and like everybody else did. No. I'm going to tell you right now. Y'all lock y'all doors in ah in a bad neighborhood. Like, you're not... Lock their car doors as they're moving. They're driving. Lock, lock. I'm like, you're moving. it's Somebody going to jump in? They going to jack you as you're moving?
00:10:46
Speaker
Like, it come on now. A lot of y'all... A lot of y'all would not have been storming them beaches. No, but I mean, it's it's also about... That's the that's the only time in modern history where there is a world villain. There's multiple, but there is a world villain. Like, if you were

Parental Responsibility in Criminal Actions

00:11:10
Speaker
filming... If you were going to create a movie...
00:11:14
Speaker
Hitler's like the ultimate villain. Yeah. And to vanquish him like that, to and America being the deciding factor in that, like there there's a sense of pride that comes along with that.
00:11:27
Speaker
and Wasn't it the last war we won? No, because we did win the Iraq War. Did we? Well, one was a conflict, there's a storm, but we did win the war in Iraq when when W came down on that plane.
00:11:42
Speaker
Did we? He said you shouldn't accomplish, but... No, we got Saddam. We got Saddam. So we did win that one. But I mean, yeah, World War II, because then the Korean War was basically a stalemate. That was a draw.
00:11:55
Speaker
That means you didn't win. Vietnam War didn't win. So, yeah, you know, I mean... And it was honestly the last war or conflict where the...
00:12:12
Speaker
the reason for it was actually youre heroic and like a humanitarian reason. It wasn't like for oil or money or power or position. I mean, what we as the, we all know, like we know really like America iss not altruistic like that, but what you can, the way you can frame it is there's this big, bad villain and we are going to save the world. Like, it is a very, like...
00:12:49
Speaker
heroic, I guess, kind of thing where you can, even though, whatever. Yeah, it was the last time that we were actually a savior. Yeah. order Kind of. Or maybe the only time. As we've gone off topic.
00:13:01
Speaker
Sorry. That's okay. Yeah, Shane, you have to actually watch that joke. See, that's the reason why when people read stuff, I'm like, oh, you can't read a joke. eight You can't read a joke. You don't get the full feeling of it. You gotta... you gotta You got to watch it and hear it and understand. So that that joke with Shane Gillis, I saw it and I laughed. I thought it was funny. And, you know, I'm the first person to jump on racism. Like, no, that's racist. I ain't messing with that. Shane Gillis, I give a pass. But I guess the bigger question is, with our culture right now, do you think any of these younger celebrities would be able to survive a roast?
00:13:40
Speaker
No. No. I honestly don't know that we should keep doing it I think that we could do it behind closed doors. We roast behind closed doors. Not everything is for public consumption. Yeah, I don't think i don't think we should be televising these. if If comedians want to do this amongst themselves, I get it. It's like a tradition among comedians.
00:14:02
Speaker
Then, sure, that's fine. But keep it amongst yourselves. Like, we don't need to see it. I mean, it's just kind of like when you go back and watch shows from the 90s and you're just like, oh, this is very problematic stuff. You know, Zach Morris was trash, you know. Martin za was martin was misogynistic and not really a great friend. like it Yeah. So it's like, you know, you go back and you watch this, to not to mention, you know, homophobic, but like you go back and watch the stuff. you like, oh, I'm glad.
00:14:36
Speaker
You know, we take it as it is for what it was in that time. Like, we can take it, you know, in the context of the time period that it was in But I think a lot of stuff, as we start to, like, mature in our emotional intelligence and then how we relate to each other, a lot of stuff has got to go by the wayside. And the comedians crying and boohooing, oh, we can't be funny anymore. if Like, if you need to be harmful in order to be funny, then you're not very funny. Like... Oh, come on. Now, some of our favorite comedians used to use to joke on people in the crowd. That's how we grew up on Duff Comedy Jam. We played the dozens. that's how That's how we do.
00:15:18
Speaker
That's fine. you a woman walking in in a silver LeMay dress and you saying how she looks like a baked potato, like that's hilarious. like So I get that. Shout out to Robin Harris. But like that's not what's happening. Right. Right.
00:15:34
Speaker
That's not what's happening. And I hate to circle back to Chappelle and his transphobic jokes, but like, that's... That's what's happening now. it's And it's not... It used to be, when you point out these things, it's a commentary on, you know, the ridiculousness of something, right? But that's not really what it... Not really what it feels like it is now. It feels like it's just straight up you're being harmful. Like, what are you trying to say with this?
00:16:07
Speaker
I hear what you're saying. Yeah. Comedy is art and art is subjective. So... I don't know. But freedom of speech don't give you freedom to, you know, from getting your ass pulled. So... Yeah, that's true. Say what you want, but take the consequences like a man, honestly.
00:16:28
Speaker
True. not Not to be, you know... sexist, but... Just using that phrase. Yeah. yeah But speaking of people making terrible decisions, like Kevin Hart deciding to put this on Netflix and make money off of it, we're going talk about a couple of news stories that oh had me in my thoughts and need a lot of people in their prayers. And we're going get into that next.
00:17:03
Speaker
Jay, the world actually might just be burning. You know, I know that's hyperbolic, but... Not really. I tend to not...
00:17:15
Speaker
over-exaggerate or over-blow situations that happen. I tend to stay pretty measured. But these next two stories that I saw in the news, I was like, ain't no way in hell this is happening in today's society.
00:17:31
Speaker
So, yeah the first story... It's about a parent who's being charged for manslaughter because of their child. So an Orange County, California mother named Tammy Jo Mayer is facing involuntary manslaughter charges after prosecutors say her 14-year-old son struck and killed an 81-year-old man while riding a high-powered, basically, e-motorcycle.
00:17:59
Speaker
Illegally, by the way. This happened a ah April 16th. of this year happened in Lake Forest, California. Authorities say the teenager was allegedly doing willies before striking the 81-year-old Vietnam veteran and substitute teacher Ed Hashman. Hashman later died from his injuries.
00:18:21
Speaker
That caused prosecutors to upgrade the charges to involuntary manslaughter. Prosecutors also say the deputies had already warned the mother in 2025 about her son riding recklessly. Authorities say she continued allowing him to ride anyway. They also allege she later lied about ownership and access to the bike.
00:18:43
Speaker
and So she's been charged with involuntary manslaughter, felony child endangerment, accessory after the fact, contributing to delinquency of a minor, providing false information to the police, and in allowing an unloses an unlicensed minor to operate a motor vehicle. Yeah. Mm-hmm.
00:19:01
Speaker
Why does this case matter? This case opens up a huge conversation about parental accountability. And what point does negligence become criminal, especially after authorities already warn you directly? So, I didn't... Gave everybody this, but I'm just going to paint a picture.
00:19:20
Speaker
e it's not an e-bike. It's an e-motorcycle because it's been souped up and it can go... These things can go all the way up to 60 miles per hour. Yeah. It's a 14-year-old... An e-bike usually tops out about 30, 35 miles per hour. This is a... So this child...
00:19:38
Speaker
didn't have no business driving an e-motorcycle at the age of 14. Zero. And he's riding recklessly, popping willies, right? Right.
00:19:49
Speaker
And the cops are... do you think he Baltimore? Philly? You think you're 12 o'clock boy? You're not. You're in Orange County. What do you think? He's part of a McMill's group?
00:20:00
Speaker
Yeah, who you think you are? And he hit this man, once again, a Vietnam veteran substitute teacher, And the cops done told her he's not supposed to be riding this. So she is just like, the hell with what y'all say. This is America. This is a free country. And now she's paying the price. And and it and I was watching this. And at first, I was like, why should the parent be charged? Before hearing the story, just reading

Societal Desensitization to Violence

00:20:26
Speaker
the headline, why should the parent be charged for the kid's actions?
00:20:29
Speaker
Then I read the story. And I was like, oh, oh, no. She should ride underneath the jail because they done told her. And she decided not to be a parent. Even if they hadn't. He didn't buy this bike himself. You bought it.
00:20:42
Speaker
a You bought this machine for someone who is underage and is not legally allowed to ride it. And then whether she said free country, he can do whatever he wants or she can't control him.
00:21:01
Speaker
Regardless, this is a child. His frontal lobe is not fully formed. He does not get to make these decisions. He also doesn't get to be held accountable for them. But somebody does need to be held accountable, and that's going to be you.
00:21:14
Speaker
Now, it just so happened that this is a story where she was told before. She had lied to police and all these things. And so it's like, it's easy to be like, no, she should be held accountable for this. But even if none of that was true, and she had just bought the bike,
00:21:31
Speaker
and let this child unlawfully ride this bike, this is a child. They can't sign a contract. They can't be held legally responsible for things at the age of 14.
00:21:47
Speaker
yeah Okay, I agree with everything that you're saying. Let me just pose a scenario at you. Alan Rich, Jack Reacher, the actor that plays Jack Reacher, was just in an altercation last month while riding bikes with his two sons in the neighborhood that I want to imagine are just like this bike this young kid had.
00:22:09
Speaker
They were on e-bikes and they were on the street. They had proper helmets and pads on. the They were riding with a parent under parental supervision.
00:22:21
Speaker
I don't see a problem with that. Okay. It's not unlawful for them to have. Now, an e-motorcycle is completely different. He was on a motorcycle. Alan Richardson was on a motorcycle.
00:22:32
Speaker
Yeah, but I think the kids were either on, like, dirt bikes or e-bikes or something like that. But a dirt bike is a motorcycle. But I don't think that there is an age restriction on dirt bikes. ah I mean, it depends on the state, I think, but... I don't know if there's an age restriction on motorcycles.
00:22:54
Speaker
A motorcycle, you have to have a license to operate. I mean, you do with a dirt bike as well, you should. But I mean, basically, the second time I got my motorcycle's license, because ladies gentlemen, in case y'all didn't know, i had gotten a motorcycle license twice. The first time I was in my early 20s. When I moved states, they didn't transfer the the M all from my Maryland to Virginia that designates I'm a motorcycle rider. I had stopped riding. And at that time, my ex-wife was like, you're not going to get on a motorcycle again. And I was like, you know what? You're probably right. But it got around my 40th birthday.
00:23:32
Speaker
And I guess it was midlife crisis. I decided to go get my motorcycle license again. Got it again. And one of the bikes that we were learning on was kind of like a dirt bike. ah And that was the bike that the instructors told me to, to like, to use for.
00:23:47
Speaker
Because I was so big and not to use one of the smaller bikes. And that bad boy almost sent me into a barricade during my testing. I almost failed the testing. Wow. Because that because that that throttle, it's is' it's it's real it's real loose.
00:24:04
Speaker
That throttle. And ladies and gentlemen, do I ride now? No. I did. I got the license, immediately got into an accident, and decided never to get on a bike again. And that's it for me. I still got the M on my license.
00:24:17
Speaker
Yeah. Not to get another bike. So for dart right dirt bikes, because they are used off-road, but you can use them on public roads, if you are using them off-road, you do not need a driver's license. If you use them Stop saying... I'm going to need to stop saying driver's license.
00:24:38
Speaker
Motorcycle license. You don't need a license, whatever. You don't need a license. It's still ah an operator's license. Okay. You don't, when a person get their CDL, you don't say you got your driver's license. They got their CDL. Let's let's just. ah All right. Okay.
00:24:55
Speaker
Okay. So, but if you intend to ride on public roads, one, the dirt bike must be converted to street legal. So headlights, taillights, mirrors, all of that. And you do need a valid license with a class M motorcycle endorsement.
00:25:10
Speaker
Yeah. that's That's Georgia. I don't know about wherever. California. I'm i'm going to imagine if that's Georgia. California's stricter. California's going to be stricter. so But it also leads to another... This whole situation leads to another question. How responsible are parents for reckless teenager behavior?
00:25:33
Speaker
Not solely talking about this scenario because the parent is absolutely responsible, but like... we Like, if your young child is out there in the community slinging that rack... Mm-hmm.
00:25:46
Speaker
A lot of them are tried as adults. The children are, but should the parents be held responsible, right? Like, should the parents be held responsible for Dylann Roof? Should the parents be held responsible for... What's the what's the boy that that shot this MAGA mascot that shot the people that were protesting ah Kyle Rittenhouse. Should the parents be responsible for Kyle Rittenhouse? Should the parents be responsible for the kids that go and shoot up to schools when maybe they took the precautions of locking the guns away and and the kids just broke into the gun? Like, where where is it the responsibility of the parents?
00:26:26
Speaker
I think it's case by case and it's up to the DA and the judge. like ah some and Do we want to leave things like that up to the d Their job is to on the laws. I know, but we just know because of the criminal justice system. i yeah Yeah, I mean, the criminal justice system in America is broken. We all know that. But the job of a DA and a judge is to...
00:26:48
Speaker
you know, pass judgment. So, yes. and not getting You know, so so I think it's case by case. I think as some of the instances, like the school shootings, the parents were held liable for providing assault weapons to their underage children and then some instances parents weren't you know I think it just depends on the level of involvement I think this instance specifically because she was told before and then made false statements to police and all of these things that that's why no you you accountable somebody died somebody has to be held responsible for this
00:27:27
Speaker
that kid also needs to be held responsible for this. And if that means, like, you know, some sort of inpatient thing where he gets some sort of treatment or whether that means juvie something, like, you know.
00:27:44
Speaker
Then we ain't talking about juvenile 400 degrees either. No, absolutely not. Everybody deserves that. You're right. but Especially because he back out and better than ever.
00:27:59
Speaker
Okay, we're doing our ADHD thing again, but...
00:28:04
Speaker
yeah I agree with everything you're saying, and I want to leave the audience with this. As we talk about this, let's get to the uncomfortable truth that people don't want to talk about. and A lot of parents know their kids are reckless.
00:28:18
Speaker
really They just never think the consequences are going to reach this level. yeah And this should be a wake-up call for parents because... Yo, you are responsible for your kids' actions sometimes, especially when it affects other people's lives.
00:28:35
Speaker
Yeah. You know your kids are little shit. Why are you letting them just be outside causing the same havoc that they cause in your home to other people?
00:28:46
Speaker
get Get it together. And that's 100% your fault. Sorry. Yeah. But that wasn't the only story. Some people are chasing attention online harder than they're chasing humanity because there was this TikTok trend.
00:29:00
Speaker
And I'm not on TikTok like that. I mean, I'm on TikTok, but not like that. You love TikTok. I'm an Instagram person. I have not been on since the presidential election. Oh, okay.
00:29:10
Speaker
Well, there's a TikTok trend that's targeting targeting the unhoused community. in this country. Police and prosecutors in New York say multiple attacks against unhoused people may be connected to this disturbing social media trend. Authorities say young people are allegedly targeting vulnerable individuals for clout, attention, and online videos. One case in Binghamton, New York,
00:29:37
Speaker
ay Five teenagers ages between 13 and 15 allegedly attacked a 45-year-old unhoused man named Peter Bendham. He later died from his injuries. Charges escalated into murder as the case was developed because he died in another case in New York City and Times Square. As a matter of fact, a 17-year-old has been charged in fatally stabbing a 39-year-old man. Investigators say the suspect allegedly admitted the attack was inspired by the TikTok-related trend. Why does this story matter?
00:30:09
Speaker
Because it's bigger than just social media. It's about people becoming emotionally disconnected from violence and recording their crimes has become part of the crime itself. The internet has created a culture where some people think attention is worth anything and not attention.
00:30:25
Speaker
human life So, Jay, when I saw this story, I came across, I was on YouTube, and I came across, it was a local New York broadcast, and I said, what the hell?
00:30:36
Speaker
There's no way in hell this is happening. Look, when me and my boys were teenagers, we did dumb stuff like egg in people's homes, kicking down mailboxes, toilet paper in people's houses. Mm-hmm.
00:30:49
Speaker
Things that are stupid, things that cost people money to fix, right? Yes. Not good. But we weren't unaliving people, and we weren't picking on the unhoused people there for clout.
00:31:04
Speaker
And I don't understand how that's clout. Yeah. i oh We're in hell. The world's not burning. We're in hell. My thing is, why would you want the clout of a murderer?
00:31:20
Speaker
I don't want that kind of fame or infamy. Something is happening to the morality of young people.
00:31:31
Speaker
Something's going wrong. Hold on. And we need. Hold on. Uh-huh. It's not just young people. It's not just young people. We saw people that could barely walk up the stairs on January 6th that were calling to hang Mike Pence.
00:31:50
Speaker
It's not just young people. It is people. No, but something else something is going on in general where I feel like social media is making people lose their minds. Like...
00:32:06
Speaker
Why would you... so I saw on TikTok people attacking vulnerable people. So i was like, cool, I can get some likes. Let me stab someone? That don't even make sense. Like, the logic... And I get that this is a 17-year-old. Again, this is another situation. Frontal load, not formed.
00:32:26
Speaker
What the hell is going on where there is clearly a disconnect, a moral disconnect,
00:32:37
Speaker
Like, and and i'm I'm not saying that this particular thing is new. It's not new. The unhoused vulnerable communities have always been vulnerable to violence. That's the, cat that's the if you finish what the vulnerable is, a lot of times it's to violence, right? Yes, there's economic vulnerability, housing vulnerabilities. There's all just different kinds of vulnerabilities. But a lot of the times what we're saying is that communities like this are are are vulnerable to violence, right? Because people think that unhoused people don't matter.
00:33:15
Speaker
That they're less than. That they're less than. Yeah, yeah. It's truly disgusting because if we if we all took real stock, if we all looked at our bank accounts, we are we are half a step from being in the same situation. as So many of us live in checkto check to check.
00:33:37
Speaker
And don't say anything, well, they're lazy and living out on the street just begging for change. A lot of it is mental health issues that we do not do a good job at all in this country of addressing. We don't do a good job of addressing drug addiction, mental health, alcoholism. We do not do a good job of that. We do not do a good job of providing places for people to get back on their feet or ways for people to get back on their feet. We don't do a good job of taking care of vulnerable communities. And so that's why people think that it's okay to attack people because society has turned their back on them. But this is not okay. None of this is okay.
00:34:20
Speaker
This should not be any kind of trend. The only trend that this should be is like a trend of let's call out this insane, insane behavior. Mm-hmm.
00:34:32
Speaker
And a lot of people are going to say, a lot of people are going to push back to the segment. And they're going to say, well, look, TikTok already came out and said this isn't an official trend. Yo, social media trends don't have to be official to influence behavior.
00:34:47
Speaker
Okay, because Mark Zuckerberg ain't never launched no trend of nothing. Okay? like Like, get real. The trends are started by the people. Mm-hmm.
00:34:57
Speaker
As soon as somebody creates the hashtag and it takes off, the trends are started by the people. You know, I read something years ago, years ago, and i haven't done a whole lot of research. I'm freestyling right here, ladies and and ladies and gentlemen. freestyling.
00:35:16
Speaker
About when the movie Psycho came out. Mm-hmm. There was so much shock and awe because Psycho is the original slasher film. Yes. yeah That it was so much shock and awe that people actually threw up in the movie theater. They weren't used to seeing that type of violence like in person.
00:35:36
Speaker
But it led the way for filmmakers to start making more and more violent movies. Yeah. That were getting more and more attention.
00:35:47
Speaker
Yeah. And there is something in the human psyche. that we look at that car crash on the side of the road. Mm-hmm. We were so tuned in, not me and you, because we weren't born yet, but we were tuned in during the Vietnam War watching what was going on. During World War II, when they were showing those film reels about what was going on, they were showing them in movie theaters that people were packing in movie theaters. We are drawn to violence.
00:36:20
Speaker
Mm-hmm. As we see violence through entertainment, because violence has increasingly become entertainment online, Yeah, it used to be where they, in movies and TV shows, they never showed violence towards children. And now that's just gone out the damn window. Oh, I look at Law & Order SVU, and it used to always be something was about to happen. You knew what was about to happen, and would cut off.
00:36:47
Speaker
Yeah. You wouldn't actually see the act. And then they just started showing the act, and I was like, oh, no. Like, yeah I don't actually want to see that. I can't watch the show anymore. You got young people watching Game of Thrones.
00:36:58
Speaker
No, it's, and it's, and this is a tangent and I'm sorry, but it's lazy writing. It's so lazy. This is why I never got into Game of Thrones. And if y'all come for me, I really don't care. It's such lazy writing to go to essay as a as a, as a, just a trope of like, it's so lazy. This is a made up world.
00:37:23
Speaker
This is a world you made up. Why is every episode... Filmmakers have always been doing that, though. It's like so lazy. Like those movies, the movies from the 70s, The Last House on the Left. Y'all don't know what that movie is about?
00:37:37
Speaker
Google it. It was in the movie theater. It was in one of them groundhouse movie theaters. It was... yeah hey They get remade it. They remade it no longer than 10 or 15 years ago. There was always this... woman that was essayed in this most brutal way but then came back and killed their attackers. And you you're like, yes, she wanted to end, but why did this need to be the basis of the story anyway? why Not just that. Game of Thrones, I thought, had needless excessive violence.
00:38:04
Speaker
yeah And that's the reason why I never got into it. Our brother loved that show. He showed it to me one time. I was like, I don't want watch this. He's like, wow, that's great. I was like, i don't I don't get my entertainment out of seeing excessive violence kind of nonsensical violence, extreme violence. I was like, if I want to see that, i can go take a walk out in the street because that's real.
00:38:26
Speaker
Yeah. That's real. And like I don't want to see that in my entertainment, but people are watching that and becoming desensitized. You know, the kids that did the Columbine They said they were playing the video game Doom, and Doom at the time was this revolutionary game that showed blood and guts, even though you were shooting aliens and things like that. But they said they had become so desensitized that they thought that it was a video game as they were going around shooting people. yeah We've become desensitized because of entertainment.
00:38:57
Speaker
We just have. yeah And it leads to stuff like this. Also, kids are growing up online faster than adults understand the internet. Yes. Like, parents technology moves at such a rapid pace.
00:39:13
Speaker
Yeah. Unless you're in it, you won't understand it. Kevin on stage just did a rant yesterday. About this new thing on Instagram where you could send like an instant portrait or something like that on Instagram.
00:39:32
Speaker
And he was like, Instagram, why y'all adding more stuff? New yeah stuff. First it was Instagram. He's like, I remember when Instagram was just posted pictures. Then it became reels. Then it became stories. Then it became notes. And you got to do all of this. Why? Then it was just DMs. Then it could be vanishing messages and DMs. Like, why? Technology moves at such a fast pace.
00:39:55
Speaker
Kids are in it. It's not fast to them. But for adults, It's too fast. And the algorithms reward shocking content, yeah whether intentionally or unintentionally.
00:40:07
Speaker
These platforms are not doing a good enough job keeping violent content off of their platforms. I don't know if they can. I don't know if they could, even if they wanted to, because technology is too fast.
00:40:20
Speaker
You can't, you shouldn't be able, you got, there's a lag when you upload something. It has to be vetted. if that's so If that's the extent that we have to go to. You know how many people are uploading per second on TikTok and Instagram?
00:40:35
Speaker
It's not instant. There's going to be a lag while it gets vetted in a much more thorough way. You would have to do that on X, Threads, yeah Blue Sky, Instagram, TikTok.

Neighborly Disputes and Personal Boundaries

00:40:48
Speaker
do We know two songs might not do it, but everything. Yes. I mean, the Trump phones is about to be released, so you can't say nothing bad about them. No, they just said earlier today they're going on. The first shipment is going out. Samsung Galaxy 2s.
00:41:03
Speaker
Yeah. Yeah, and y'all not getting that phone. Sorry. No, they aren't. Some people are you finally getting... them thing You're getting something. You're not going to get the thing that you were promised.
00:41:14
Speaker
Certainly not. Well, look, all I can say is is that... I don't think... The cat's already out of the bag. It's like the it like the advent of the internet.
00:41:27
Speaker
Yeah. When that happened, you were going to have... a dark side of internet yes you just you were it used to be hidden you know like like you think about snuff films of the 70s or something like that it was just it was away somewhere and and and and common decent folk were like that's not okay yeah And the people that watch that are also not okay. And there was shame around it. But now with the internet, everybody's on it.
00:42:03
Speaker
And so everybody has access to things that they should not have access to, particularly young people, but definitely just anybody.
00:42:14
Speaker
Yeah. You ain't lying, but guess what? What? Here's the uncomfortable part people don't like talking about. Some people aren't chasing happiness online anymore.
00:42:29
Speaker
They're chasing attention, even if somebody has to suffer for it.
00:42:38
Speaker
All right, let's lighten this up a little bit because the world is exhausted. And I got a, am I the jerk?
00:42:50
Speaker
Now, don't typically bring the I am the jerk sort of Reddit post for the main show, but I wanted to to bring something down a little bit that I thought was funny, but also a semi-serious conversation.
00:43:04
Speaker
Okay. So, the title of this Reddit post, Am I the Jerk? Am I the Jerk for having my neighbor's car towed after she kept parking in my assigned spot?
00:43:16
Speaker
No. No. um Okay, you say that now. Okay. Let me read. got to be something monumental to convince me.
00:43:27
Speaker
Okay. I'm a 28-year-old male living in a small apartment complex with assigned parking. Each tenant gets one number spot, and a guest parking is very limited. I work night shifts at the hospital, usually getting home around 6.30 a.m., m completely exhausted. Because of that, having my assigned parking spot close to my building honestly matters a lot to me.
00:43:50
Speaker
About four months ago, a new tenant moved in across from me. She's a single mom with two young kids, probably around five and seven. At first, we got along just fine. A few weeks after moving in, she asked if she could occasionally use my parking space when she had groceries or the kids were asleep in the car because her assigned spot was further away.
00:44:11
Speaker
said... I said, sure, occasionally, because I'm trying to be nice. But it is slowly turned into an everyday thing. Jay, will you stop so I can finish reading this? Okay, go ahead.
00:44:24
Speaker
But you messed up already. I'd come home from a 12-hour shift, and her car would be in my spot probably three to four times a week. At first, I'd text her. We can only get seven times. Jay, if you don't quit interrupting me, at first... I'd text her and she'd apologize and move it.
00:44:43
Speaker
Then it became, can you just use guest parking tonight or the kids are already asleep? The problem is guest parking fills up fast, especially overnight. More than once, I had to park on the street outside the complex and walk back half asleep in scrubs. A few weeks ago, I told her politely that I really needed my spot consistently and couldn't keep giving it up.
00:45:08
Speaker
She seemed annoyed but said okay. Okay, you don't get to be annoyed over my things, but okay. Then last weekend, I came home after an especially rough shift and her car was there again.
00:45:21
Speaker
i texted her and got no response. I waited about 20 minutes before calling the tow company listed on the apartment side and her car got towed. About an hour later, she started pounding on my door crying and furious because apparently getting your car back costs over $200. She kept saying I could have just knocked and that i have no idea how hard it is with kids.
00:45:45
Speaker
I do feel bad about the money situation, especially because she's raising two kids alone. But at the same time, i already warned her multiple times and I was tired of consistently giving up something I literally pay for every month. Now a couple of neighbors are acting like I'm heartless for towing a single mother's car over a parking spot, while others say she took advantage of me for months.
00:46:08
Speaker
Am I the jerk? Yes and no. First of all, listen. Stop listening to other people. Oh, the neighbors think I'm heartless. to do but So, I don't care about of y'all.
00:46:24
Speaker
I don't care. Oh, the family is calling and they're upset with me. in order so Who cares? Who cares? Yes and no. No, you are not because it's your spot that you pay for and you have the right at any time to rescind her access to that spot.
00:46:45
Speaker
Right? You warned her multiple times. She kept doing it. So, no. it's it's it's It's late slash early. You just want to go home, go to sleep.
00:46:58
Speaker
You call. You text. You gave her 20 minutes. Nothing. Okay. Well, I'm not... I already told you not to park on my spot. Here's where you messed up.
00:47:10
Speaker
Where I say, also, you're you are... the jerk you shouldn't have never said yes you should have never ever ever said yes to be nice there are too many times that people do things to be nice and you end up resentful because people are going to take advantage of you OK, well, she said, hey, can I occasionally you if you want it to be nice, you needed to set up boundaries of what occasionally means because three to four times out the week and a week only got seven times.
00:47:57
Speaker
That's damn near all the times. OK, that's not occasionally to me.
00:48:04
Speaker
Occasionally means maybe once or twice a month. Right? Occasionally is not every damn day. You knew you had them kids when you moved in here and got that spot way too far away.
00:48:18
Speaker
Way too far away. Way too far away. Okay? Your single motherhood and but kids and all that stuff, God bless you, but baby, that's not my problem.
00:48:34
Speaker
That's not my problem. And it' it's people like this, a guy like this sense of entitlement. It's the same as some people that be like, hey, do you mind switching seats with me on a plane so I can sit next to my family? You should have bought seats together.
00:48:48
Speaker
No, I'm not. I'm not switching up what I'm doing to accommodate you. Why would I do that? Because we're neighbors, I don't care. That might sound heartless or whatever,
00:49:01
Speaker
So, but the moment you open up, but the moment you open up that door and you never set parameters of like, hey, you can use it maybe once or twice a month in an emergency if you need to, please text me beforehand and let me know so that I don't come home expecting my spot to be free. Also, this is what my schedule looks like. This is what time I... You need to make sure once you get the kids in that you move the car to your spot.
00:49:32
Speaker
Like that, like that should have been the conversation that, yeah, sure. That's fine to be nice. Cause I did that with old neighbors.
00:49:42
Speaker
And what did they do? They took a damn vantage. And it's sad to say that it's like, you know, you don't want to be cynical, but you also got to be real. Like when people make their problems your problem, that's not good.
00:49:59
Speaker
So no, you did warn her, you told her you have the right to your things, but also you open the door for this.
00:50:09
Speaker
Okay. I agree and disagree with you at the same time. How is that possible, Bruce? I'm about to explain. I am him. Mm-hmm. Yeah.
00:50:22
Speaker
I know. I would not hesitate to be like, occasionally, yeah, you know, if you needed to use a spot, that's no problem. I understand you got a tough situation. Yeah, I come home late. Occasionally, that's not a problem.
00:50:37
Speaker
When he came home from that 12-hour shift, her And he'd already talked about ah ah talked to her about, hey, you know, this is starting to become a little bit more frequent than occasional.
00:50:49
Speaker
yeah And then she said to him, can't you just use guest parking or the kids are already asleep? I can't move it. I would have said to her right then and there, you can't use my parking space anymore. Right.
00:51:04
Speaker
You've taken advantage of the situation. i am no longer going to allow you to use my parking space. Don't park in my parking space again. Had he said those exact things and then told her... We don't we don't know what...
00:51:20
Speaker
he said specifically, but he said a few weeks ago. Yeah. I need my spot consistently and cannot keep giving it up. But it's that keep, it's that keep, I can't keep giving it up. That meant that you got to be more defined and definite, right?
00:51:42
Speaker
He was just annoyed that he played the nice guy. he looked odds Look, I know what it was. I know what it is. it was him playing the nice guy. Don't make it a thing. You know, he probably... No, this is a single mom with two kids. He's just looking at the situation. Look, those be the best. and Hold on. I love a single mom.
00:52:04
Speaker
Hey, single mothers out there, I love you. Bruce care, even if nobody else cares. Oh, I love single moms. They ain't got a whole lot of time. That means that time that they can spend is for you.
00:52:19
Speaker
I love it. I love it. Anyway, that okay, let me be serious, ladies and gentlemen. But, no, I don't think he's a jerk at all in any scenario because he gave her the warning. He was like, look, can't do it.
00:52:35
Speaker
Can't do it no more. And she basically was like, well, F you. I'm going to do it anyway. Yeah. cause she got his number. She could have been like, hey, I'm sorry. i know. I had to grab the spot real fast. Why don't you text me before you get home? I can move. If she had done something like that or had sent me a text saying, i hey, I apologize. i had to jump in. because You gave me. Give me an excuse. Yeah. Give me something.
00:53:03
Speaker
Something. Don't let me come home caught off guard that your car is there. After I told you weeks ago not to do it anymore. She came, she she finally came banging on your door an hour later after the car had already been towed.
00:53:19
Speaker
She had to know that the car was towed because I've been towed before. They don't tell you. They don't come knocking on your door. They tow car. Yeah. that That means that she had to find out her car was towed.
00:53:31
Speaker
So she found out her car was towed before she texted you back. Before she contacted or called you back. Right. I would opened the door like, are you banging on my door worrying about the money that you spent? I texted you 20 minutes ago. I hadn't told you beforehand. An hour and 20 minutes An hour and 20 minutes ago. I hadn't told you beforehand, stop parking in my space. You're going to do it anyway. Pay the $200. Yeah, know it's rough. I guess this will be a lesson.
00:53:55
Speaker
Yeah. that You learned your lesson. I guess this will never happen again. It's a $200 lesson. I'm sorry. I tried to tell you. But it is what it is. yeah I'm not going to park in guest parking when I have a spot that I paid for. But the thing of it is, it would i don't think it's a problem to be the nice person if what you're giving up really doesn't cause an inconvenience for you. I let my neighbor park in my driveway. I have a very large driveway.
00:54:27
Speaker
It was not an inconvenience for them to park in the driveway. It just wasn't. And so I didn't have a problem saying yes to that. If it was an inconvenience, like the fact that, oh, I don't know, you work at a hospital, you work long shifts and crazy hours, and you just want to crash when you get home because of we only can imagine what you deal with during the day, right? And you just want to crash when you get home, then it is imperative that your spot be free.
00:54:59
Speaker
Then that means, no, you cannot crash. hey, I would love to, but I really, I need my spot. Yeah, especially considering the fact that it was a couple of times my man had to park outside the complex because all the guests park. Nah, nah.
00:55:15
Speaker
Look. Because where's her spot? Why couldn't he park at her spot? oh That's a good question. Why couldn't he park at her spot? Well, because it's probably even further than just parking outside the complex, and that's why she met. But girl, that's, that's why you I don't know.
00:55:30
Speaker
Yeah. i get waiting this to get I don't think he's a jerk at all. You said he's a jerk a little bit. I don't think he's a jerk at all. He's trying to be a nice guy. And you're like, he should have set boundaries in the beginning. And I'm like, it's really hard to set boundaries for something that you don't know.
00:55:46
Speaker
Like if that's going to happen, like you can't see it to the future. But once these things start happening, and he set boundaries and she didn't honor the boundaries. So she got to get towed. I think maybe it's because of my neurodivergent brain, but I can't live in the abstract. I was just talking to a coworker about this today. You can't just give me some kind of corporate platitude and think I'm going understand what you mean. No, I need to know what occasionally means.
00:56:17
Speaker
What do, how do you define occasionally? Okay. Is that neurodivergent or trauma? No, I need to know what that means. That's a very vague, a few, several, a couple I know is two. But when you start getting into vague things, what does that occasionally mean? Well, few is three.
00:56:39
Speaker
Occasionally, yeah, there is no number. yeah What does occasionally mean? Because every day, because that's what it ended up becoming. It wasn't every day. it was three to four times a week.
00:56:50
Speaker
He said, but it slowly turned into an everyday thing. She would be, her car would be in my spot probably three to four times a week. That's not every day. they anyway said just Let's just say that they don't work weekends.
00:57:06
Speaker
So now that you got five times and you in the spot four of them five times, that's every day.
00:57:15
Speaker
That's every day. That's not occasionally. Occasionally is occasional. Like it' it's infrequent. This is frequent. So I needed to know that occasionally to you meant frequent, where in my mind it means infrequent. This is where I'm like, he's not the jerk, but he's set He ah it made space for her to take advantage she did of the situation.
00:57:43
Speaker
He did. But ladies and gentlemen, what do y'all think? Y'all drop a line in the comment section let us know what you think. But before we get out of here, Jay in a very short, non-long-winded Jay way.
00:57:56
Speaker
What do you want to tell the people out there? Oh, man, log off. Right. Touch grass. Touch grass. Touch grass. Maybe even touch a little bit of ass. And on that note, ladies gentlemen, I want to thank you for listening.
00:58:14
Speaker
You know that's my sign off. and you just had to You just had to do a little ad lib. Sorry. On that note, ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for listening. I want to thank you for watching.

Engagement and Features of the Podcast

00:58:24
Speaker
And until next time, as always, I'll holler.
00:58:31
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.
00:58:54
Speaker
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. 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 are exclusively on our Patreon page. Jump onto to our website at unsolicitedperspective.com.
00:59:22
Speaker
dot com for all things us. That's where you can get all of our audio, video, our blogs, and even buy our merch. And if you really feel generous and want to help us out, you can donate on our donations page. Donations go strictly to improving our software and hardware so we can keep giving you guys good content that you can clearly listened to and that you can clearly see. So any donation would be appreciative. Most importantly, I want to say thank you.
00:59:48
Speaker
Thank you. Thank you for listening and watching and supporting us. And I'll catch you next time. Audi 5000. Peace.