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Deadpool, Drake, and Defining Moments: Unquestionable Takes!
Episode 426th August 2024 • Unquestionable the Podcast • No Question Entertainment
00:00:00 00:56:40

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In this lively episode of Unquestionable the Podcast, the crew dives into everything from the latest Deadpool movie to the iconic moments in pop culture and sports. We kick off with a heated discussion about Deadpool’s box office success, break down Ryan Reynolds’ influence, and debate whether Drake would make a great mob boss in Hollywood. The conversation flows seamlessly into nostalgic nods to Allen Iverson, Nike’s rise with Michael Jordan, and that unforgettable Malice at the Palace. Plus, we explore the transitions athletes and celebrities make from their main career into new ventures. Tune in for unfiltered thoughts, laughs, and a trip down memory lane as we riff on culture, hustle, and staying true to yourself.

Transcripts

Let's talk about that new Deadpool movie. Oh yeah. I ain't trying to get too nerdy on them.

You're missing out bro. Yeah, because you ignored the text. You ignored the group chat.

All right, and we're back. Welcome to the Unquestionable Podcast. We are here today on this fine Wednesday with my boys.

Back in the hood, in the uh selection, you know the crib, unknown location. Yeah, different scenery for the boys today. And obviously we're missing somebody.

He called out, but you know, we'll get into that a little later. Things happen. But what's up with gang? How you guys doing? Chilling man, chilling man.

I'm out here living. Worked a good eight hours today. I'm sorry.

I know it's been a long, long, long day, man. And it's been a long week. It's launch week.

So yeah, a lot of moving pieces, a lot of moving parts. Thank you for everybody out there supporting us, man. It means a lot to us.

We fuck with you guys. We appreciate everything, bro. If you haven't already, you know the deal.

Like, comment, follow, subscribe, tell a friend to tell a friend. You know you're here with your boy Chris, your boy Bucci, and your boy Kev. We're gonna have a good old time.

Yep. Shit. What we getting into today, boys? What we getting into? Shit, baby.

Let's talk about that new Deadpool movie. Oh, yeah. Oh, I ain't trying to get too nerdy on them.

Hey, I know you haven't. You're missing out, bro. Because you ignored the text.

Yeah. Ignored the group chat. Let's talk about it, though, bro.

As a big fan of Marvel, bro, I am like a comic book nerd. So I fuck with all that shit. The superheroes is what it is, dog.

Fight me about it. But Deadpool, bro, is let's talk about the behind the scenes, bro. They charted at number six on the opening fucking box office profits, gross profits.

They hit five hundred and not even the first week, bro. So right now when you guys see this, it'll probably be longer. Probably won't even be in theaters anymore.

But we're on like the first week right now. But Monday they hit five hundred million. And I think all the all the people covering it, like the the bloggers and everything, the news reporters, they're like all saying, oh, it's not even going to hit like 200 million.

I think that's a farfetched dream. He's supposed to hit five hundred fucking million, half a ticket on by Monday, which is crazy because when you think about it, that's Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday. And usually they show the little early previews on Thursdays.

But five hundred million dog is is is pretty, pretty gnarly for what they're doing, in my opinion. I think it's on track to hit a billion eventually, bro. Not a lot of people think that, but I got faith in him.

I saw the movie twice. I saw it with the boy Chris and boy B. Yeah, it was good, bro. I'm not going to lie.

Have you missed out? Yeah, it was funny. I guess I'm missing out over here. No, you really were because I thought it was super funny.

The cameos were fire, like the show itself was pretty far. I thought it would have been a little bit better, but I'm still here for it. I'm popular opinion.

I've told this to many people before. I just find Ryan Reynolds in certain movies funny, but I thought for the longest time I didn't like Ryan Reynolds like his like. He's trying to be too funny in a serious movie, but then I was like, OK, like, you know, this is the way he is, like this is the way he's doing it and stuff like that.

So I kind of like I seen the first one, I seen the first Deadpool and stuff like that. I was like, why is he like is there like like jokes in it? Like I was like, I personally didn't like it, but then I did rewatch it again with like my dad and stuff. So I definitely got to go check out Deadpool.

But that was the only thing I was holding me back. Ryan Reynolds, he's a good actor and stuff. But based on what you guys are saying, I definitely got to check it out.

Now, yeah, a lot of people who don't like the actor in himself, bro, say the same thing. And I get it like he can be too too much at times. But the purpose of Deadpool, like reading the comics, bro, like this is like on 10 of what he even does.

And the whole point that he'd be talking to the audience and like breaking the fourth wall is because in the comic books he literally does that shit, bro. He literally fucking acknowledges the fact that he's in a comic book. And then like in one comic specifically, he pulls up on the writers of the comic book.

It's like it's like a whole thing. It's like cinematic as fuck. But that's the whole point of his character that he's he's just hella out there, bro.

Yeah. Yeah. And I think I think he sells like the essence of Deadpool really well, especially like he says when he like taps the the fourth wall and makes a joke about the Marvel universe or about the movie itself or about the actor in the movie or something like that.

It's hilarious. Like, well, since Mario is such a big fan, was there any Easter eggs or did you catch him or figure it out? Tons of Easter eggs, bro. Too many to even discuss.

And are we going to do we really want to spoil it for the people? You know, I mean, by the time they see this, it's already going to be well out there, but I still won't spoil it. But, bro, go watch it. Go support.

I fucked with the movie tough. I like the story behind it. And I hope I hope it hits a billion in the box office, bro.

With that being said, R.P. Stanley, dog. With that being said, do you guys know what the the highest gross movie of all time was? No, no. Avatar.

Fact check me, but it's either Avatar or Avengers Endgame. Both those movies hit like two point eight, two point seven to two point nine billion. I know Avatar hit like over two billion.

I just didn't know, like if there was some like old school movie that, you know, now you're talking first weeks, right? Now I'm talking all you're talking all time, like just all time gross, all time gross. I honestly wonder like what the top 10 is. To be honest, we should probably go over that all time.

There's a lot like Avatars up there. Avengers Endgame is up there. Avengers Infinity War is up there.

Spider-Man No Way Home is up there. All Marvel movies. Joker.

Joker's like Dark Knight probably up there. The Dark Knight with Heath Ledger. Shout out my boy Heath Ledger.

Rest in peace, bro. Greatest Joker of all time. I'm not up there.

I'm not going to lie. Like that movie in itself, even like just this opening scene of like the bank robbery and everything. Just so iconic.

Right. That's one of my all time favorite movies. Very cinematic.

Oh, yeah. I'm a Marvel fucking stand, baby. But that Dark Knight is by far one of my favorite comic book adaptations of a superhero in like real life, real life movie shit.

That movie was just fucking insane, dude. Like cinematically, like I can't even describe it, bro. I don't even fuck with the dude who played Batman.

What's his fucking name? Which one? Christian Bale. Christian Bale. Yeah.

I'm like an iffy fan about Christian Bale. He's cool. He was cool in that movie, but Heath Ledger like out fucking acted that dog in the movie.

No, I honestly fucked with Christian Bale in that one. But I do think Heath Ledger did his thing, bro. But that shows to like R.I.P. Heath, like in the state he was in in that moment and where that movie took him.

Unfortunately, it shows like how dedicated he was to getting that across. Yeah, a lot of people say that he passed because he was a method actor and he just got so into the role. Yeah.

But in my opinion, it's probably a little bit deeper than that. That's what the is always going to say. But yeah, it probably is.

It probably is a conspiracy. But yeah, I heard it was a certain certain stuff like that attributed to it or something like that. And that's just it's crazy.

And somebody will go to portray a story to the masses. It's a literal art, like for sure. Not that that's what actors do out there, bro.

It's crazy. Like everybody always be like, I could be an actor. Even I say that shit.

But it's like, bro, I don't even know. Motherfuckers like that will make you second guess that shit. Him and Shia LaBeouf are straight method actors like they'll really change their lifestyle for a whole fucking eight months just to go to this fucking movie.

Christian Bale's like that, too. He has you can see Christian Bale's in movies where he's fat. He has movies where he's anorexically skinny and stuff like that.

So there's a lot of actors that do that and do it well, like even 50 Cent. I know the movie didn't do well. That cancer movie was lit.

But what it is, though, I mean, it's like what we all got jobs where you pull up, you do your job, right? I mean, imagine if you do it to the best of your ability. Yeah. You know, your job was to go be this fucking far left, far right.

Hundred hundred percent different person that you you could never even expect yourself to be. What are you going to do? You're going to go fucking do everything you can in your power to go to go get those fucking 20 mil right there just to do that. Like, I didn't try to.

Yeah, you're trying to. Some people do it for the love of the movie, some people do for the love of acting, some do it for the awards. Everybody does it for a different reason.

But like you said, they they dive their head head on into their passion and a lot of respect for them. And it's lowkey cool to see. But today I was watching it just dropped today.

Andrew Schultz interviewed Lil Yachty and they were talking about Drake and stuff. And they're talking about why doesn't Drake get into acting? And they got into the SNL thing and everything. And they're saying it's lowkey, just a matter of time in a sense.

Not necessarily. It's a matter of time. But if he wants to, he could go and do it well there for the boy.

Could you guys see Drake come into movies, headline a movie and literally sell to the masses? Because you've seen him get into production with Top Boy. You've seen him get into executive producing shows and stuff. What if he comes out with his first? I don't know about headlining a movie.

I don't know about how serious he can act. I know that he would be a really good like supporting actor, if not antagonist in a movie that was like had a little comedic sense to it because he's kind of funny, like in the SNL skits. I thought they were pretty funny.

No, like his delivery for the more I say it, the less I like it. Shout out to Martin Rose and the Kings, doggy. Come on.

For sure. I could see that. Yeah, I think that he has some type of like value to it.

Like it's Drake, bro. Like if Drake is in a movie, people are going to be like, are you going to go see that Drake movie with Drake? No, for sure. I mean, there's a there's lesser artists.

We've probably watched movies just to see their parts. You know what I'm saying? So at the same time, I would love to see Drake do like like they said. I think Yachty said it.

He said, I'd like to see him do a mob boss. It's a role. And I was like, bro, that would be lit.

See Drake do a mob boss. The Toronto accent, you know what I'm saying? That shit would be hilarious, you know, and especially after that'd be tough, you know, after the recent tragedy. I feel like that's a good pivot.

Toronto accent is insane, bro. I'm trying to get on top of nothing, but that's that's why that's why he signed Smiley is to to start like basically entering it into popular culture slowly. So when he started doing it, it wasn't it wasn't hell.

I get it. I'm calling it. That's my conspiracy right now.

I'll give you that, you know, because he came like a year or two later. He started talking like that a little more. It is like they already charted.

So I want to talk about it. That song is hilarious, bro. It's funny.

She's I'm so cheesy. She's cheese. That's hilarious.

Chris, you thirsty over there, boy? Yeah, I look at him. I'm sorry. Hey, speaking of Toronto, Ryan Reynolds is from Toronto.

I don't know. I don't know. I don't know about Toronto, but he's from Canada, right? Canada for sure.

Yeah, he's from Canada. That was that was funny. He's they they reference.

No, with the nice one came with the nice one. What do you say? Well, I had a thick ass accent. He says, sorry, sorry, sorry, everybody.

Sorry. It was so funny, bro. So funny.

Hey, look, I didn't know that. You told me that Ryan Reynolds because I remembered the role that he played in X-Men. Like I remember him slicing the bullets, all that shit.

But I didn't know that you told me his character was named Wade Wilson. Yeah. And that Deadpool's comic book name.

Well, I know. But you said that he he's the one who like petitioned for the series. Right.

He's the one who like kind of went to Fox and said, hey, let's make this a movie. And then. Yeah, fake way.

So what happened was he he started in X-Men Origins as Wade Wilson, who, for those of you don't know, that's Deadpool's Deadpool's comic book name, like the dude, not his superhero persona, but his name in real life is Wade Wilson. He played Wade Wilson in X-Men Origins. The movie kind of flopped.

A lot of people didn't like it. A lot of people also didn't like the fact that their depiction of Wade Wilson, aka Deadpool, was like just kind of whack, like not necessarily what those comic book lovers out there or superhero lovers out there was looking for. So they it was like a flop, almost almost like his fucking Green Lantern movie.

But people were just not fucking with it. Hit his ego hella hard. He just wasn't having it.

He he was trying to petition for it. Let's do a different movie like fuck that shit. Scratch it.

Let's get out of here. Let's do actual Deadpool comic book accurate. They gave him a budget to do like a what's the word like a fucking pilot, a pilot scene opening scene.

And then at that point, when they were finished with that pilot scene, spend all that money on it. They're like, no, I don't think a R-rated movie is a superhero R-rated superhero movie is going to do good in these times, whatever, whatever. Boom.

Someone fucking leaked the video. And it's infamous that Ryan Reynolds and all the other I think there's like two other writers and directors and people who really were pushing that movie forward. None of them will say, but they all said the same thing.

They're like someone only three people had that fucking footage, but it wasn't me who leaked it. Like, you know what I'm saying? But someone leaked it and it benefited them because once they posted it, everybody out there was just like the feedback was insane. Everybody was like, OK, I can't wait for this shit.

Like this shit looks dope. Like and essentially Fox was like, fuck you. Like if everybody wants it, like they were forced.

Yeah, they're forced to fund that shit. So which is a pretty dope story in itself. Yeah, he manifested that shit.

And then I'll look where he is now. He's in a whole franchise. He fucking migrated over three movies deep, migrated over to fucking the Disney side of Marvel.

For those of you who don't know Fox recently, like what, eight years ago or so, some shit like that. Don't quote me. They had rights over all X-Men characters, which are Marvel.

But certain companies have certain rights to make movies about what superheroes or whatever characters are allowed to use. Like Sony's got Spider-Man, Fox for the longest time had the X-Men, Disney for the longest time had like the Avengers and all that crazy shit. But recently they acquired Fox as well.

Sorry, X-Men as well from Fox. And that's where Deadpool made his first fucking debut in the Disney side of Marvel. And it was Disney's first R-rated movies, which is kind of fucking crazy to me.

Yeah, that's dope. That's dope. And it tells a lot about Ryan Reynolds, too, because even like you said, it sounds like he's, you know, driven.

And it tells, when you see him with the aviator gen, you see him with Mint Mobile, you see him what, he signed up. Welcome to Rex, him had his own TV show about the soccer team that him and Homeboy from It's Always Sunny, I think, purchased on the fucking whole soccer team, man. Yeah.

Bro's got endeavors on endeavors, dog, like cyclists. And he's successful at them, bro. That shows like, that shows when he's, when he's set on it, he's going to make it happen and he's going to do well because, shit, those Deadpool movies, like I said, they're written well, they're written witty, like intelligently funny, like type thing.

A lot of the jokes will go over your head if you're not really paying attention. He had to whisper a couple of my ears because I was just like zoned out thinking it was like, so what's going on? I missed a couple. But it's nice.

It's for the adult movie. I really fucked with it. Yeah.

Shout out to Ryan Reynolds, bro. Not to not to get too crazy on him, but yeah, he's hustling, he's doing his thing. But speaking of Ryan Reynolds and all of his like endeavors outside of acting, it would have me thinking the other day I saw him on Vice.

We've talked about it before, but like that Odd Future article, well that Odd Future tweet that went viral about where they're all at now. Odd Future. Yeah, it went viral and Vice published an article the other day of like kind of where they're all at, you know, with Lionel being in the bear, Jasper's doing a bunch of commercials and all that stuff.

Taco was in Dave and he's acting now. Tyler's fucking around with fucking LV now. Yeah, doing all that.

Sid and the internet and just like where they're all at, you know what I'm saying? And you could even see the Frank Ocean, Steve Lacey, like all the people that were involved and like where they're at now. Successful as fuck, bro. They got in their bag and do what they had to.

And it just had me like kind of thinking about. It's like career development. Yeah, that in like a wide sense, even with athletes, you see Kevin Durant and LeBron getting very involved in production, whether it's media, movies, different things.

They're getting involved heavily because they know they're in the tail end of their career. You see Jeremy Grant was on some news channel talking about investing. I guess he's.

Jeremy Grant. Yeah, I guess he's heavily involved in like stock hedge funds and stock investments and things. Shout out Jeremy Grant.

And just seeing these different athletes and these different. Artists, you know, kind of not letting break off shit waste, like not letting the spotlight go to waste, brother. They're they're taking action and they're making the most of it.

They're gaining their bag, their hustle, and they're spreading their endeavors elsewhere other than what they're in the spotlight for. And I can only respect that, dog. Shout out to everyone on Odd Future, brother.

ough. Back in, what was that,:

Remember that Odd Future woke in skateboards and shit? Golf wing and all that shit. Golf wing. Hey, go look me up on Twitter at golf wing, baby.

Come on. That shit was funny, bro. Nah, but yeah, it just had me kind of thinking about all of that.

And I was wondering to you guys, who do you guys kind of think made that best transition in a sense? Off top of your head, we can point out the obvious is Jordan and these guys who made billion dollar empires outside of sports or outside of their original profession. But who do you guys think is doing the best right now at kind of making that transition from like even you could see Drewski making that transition from kind of online skits to trying to get into that reality space? You could tell he's pitching in a sense. And he's trying to get into these Netflixes and things of that nature.

We talked about Shane Gillis going from online and stand up into writing and creating these shorts. Who do you guys think right now is doing well? Kevin Hart. Kevin Hart.

Oh, he did. Kevin Hart. Cause I don't know if y'all remember, this fool was like some side character in the scary movies and like, like some comedical ass, like who is this cat? The epic movie.

Wasn't he the albino dude? Nah, epic movie. Or which one was that? Epic movie I think was the one with Drake Bell where he was like the Spider-Man fucking parody or whatever. But Kevin Hart is like his best friend or whatever.

But the one you're talking about is like scary movie two or some shit where he's the albino or scary movie three. One of them. But yeah, crazy as fuck to see this guy come from being like some random ass character that they probably just added in last minute to just straight headlining comedic tours and like starring in his own fucking movies.

He even tried to get serious for a minute. It's like, hey, none but respect for that fool. He's doing his thing right now.

And his production company is huge right now too. He's going to be, he's on track to being like a billionaire too. I think for sure.

I think for sure. Especially him getting into the podcast space and what he's doing now, even in that media space. He's fucking around with AMP and all them motherfuckers.

It's only going to create longevity. And speaking of that bro, that was hilarious. The cypher, he did the chocolate dropper shit again.

Bro, he's for sure tapping back into the youth. He's realizing where things are changing and he continues to evolve through it all. So I agree.

Kevin Hart is killer at that for sure. Yeah, he's doing his thing. Honestly, I probably had to say one thing that I've kind of been watching as recently, just a past time and a person who was actually in the WNBA, the NBA.

It was Jeff Teague in his podcast, how he like talks about his transition from the NBA and like what it actually really is and stuff. Like it's not like as, you know, linear as people think it is. Yeah.

And his style is different. Honorable mention. His style is different.

It's not like a media style. It's more of like a storyteller style. It's funny because he even talked about it, bro.

He said his wife said, you tell all these NBA stories to your friends and you guys go on this podcast and bullshit about other stuff. Why don't you tell them about what they care about the NBA? Like he said that on cold. Yeah.

And he did that in the next video went viral and he's been doing it ever since. It's just being like kind of like the funny storyteller. I show Mario shit that I was watching with this.

I mean, yeah, because if you think about it, like you don't get to hear about the locker room talk. You don't get to hear about like all this other shit. I mean, one thing that I will say about like Draymond Green, his podcast is really big, but like he talks about like he assesses postgame.

His podcast like postgame like he's more of like a media journalist perspective in a sense. And it's like there's a raw, true perspective of like, yeah, I fucked up that game. Yeah, I got ejected this game.

Yeah, I fucking punched somebody and stomped on someone's chest like that. But I think he has been your guy. He is off to a lot of people, but I think that just like the space from going well, like Jeff Teague is out of the league like this.

Jeff Teague and himself just kind of like being like he he has a ring. He got a ring. Let's not forget.

He was a he's a baller, bro. He's a baller. He was raw with the Hawks.

Yeah, he's a baller. Like he has a ring. He's, you know, respected.

If you have a ring, you know, respected. But I think that who we are, I mean, who he is as a character and like in himself, like just the kind of the way he talks, you don't really think that he would kind of be like talking like that. I thought Jeff Teague was going to be like more like more hard body or something like that.

Like just like the image that you have of him playing in the NBA. You think that, oh, yeah, he's about his business. But when he's like talking on his podcast, he's like, yeah, man, just relax, relax.

Like it's hella cool to see the transition in him, like talking about pretty much like, you know, see what's going on. Yeah, the real him going on and going out of the NBA into a podcast space. And I mean, sports make you aggressive, dog.

Yeah, it's worse bringing out of your character name, like obviously to the outside looking in, you're going to look like like he said, like some fucking standing on business motherfucker. But really, it's just like not just the adrenaline, the aggressiveness of just wanting to win. But it shows in a lot of stances.

Exactly. They're just doing their job that day. And it's like to you, it's they're performing.

But to them, it's just they're showing up for their job. And they're trying to win. Exactly.

They're about the business and really trying to do it. But I do think with Jeff Teague, a lot of it, too, is I think he did a great job with his casting by bringing his right people. Yeah.

By bringing his friends like he has the right dynamic where it's just comfortable. They're forever firing on each other and joking. And those are funny.

Yeah. Behan is hilarious, bro. Like his his co-hosts.

They're they're fucking hilarious, bro. And even even like Draymond was like, why didn't they come or something like that? You know what I'm saying? It's like, but I really think, you know, Jeff Teague has almost done the Matt Barnes where it's like he goes into media and he's going to surpass anything like he's looked at for an NBA, in a sense, not like in a negative way. Obviously, they both have great careers.

Not like it's going to be a huge fan of both of them. But I'm just saying, like, they're getting more fame and and notoriety, in a sense, after their career, because which is good, good for them. But you don't always get that longevity, bro.

And I mean, he even had his run for like a great amount of time, but it's like not everybody going to be a LeBron or Steph Curry or fuck Clay Thompson. But yeah, Clay Thompson, not everybody going to go down as one of those people that all the little kids are going to be like. Like you ask a fucking little seven year old right now, you know, Jeff Teague, what? Like, you know, I'm saying, like, come on.

But it's like he has a respectable career. Yeah, it's the same thing with the Matt Barnes thing, because if you would have asked some of those kids, like when we were growing up, if they knew him, like they probably wouldn't not at all have known him as much because he was a lot older. But in a sense, he had a great, respectable career.

When you look at what he did in Orlando, Golden State, you look at just how he helped even in the morale standpoint with the Kings when he was there. Yeah, he wasn't no joke. He had a great career, bro.

Very respectable, very, in my opinion, a legendary dog. And it's like, it's cool to see him shine after he's still going hard. And it's not even to do with any I mean, like playing wise, but like, yeah, he's going hard in the media type shit.

Yeah, he's involved in Showtime Basketball, made that shit huge. He is a iconic man for the Derrick Fisher incident. I will never not fucking mention that, because that is insane.

The guy's messing around with your baby mama and you drive fucking five hundred miles or three hundred miles or whatever to go pull up on him and press him and straight up whoop him, bro. And that's the one rare occasion. I mean, it's not rare, but I mean, that's the one occasion that like you see that up on the court and he's standing all business.

Now off the court, that motherfucker's standing all business too, like. Hey, no, that's an insane story. And it's crazy because that's his baby mama's husband now.

So Derrick like coaches his kids and shit. Bro, I guess they're cool now and shit, but like still it just. Fuck Derrick Fisher.

That's crazy. Fuck Derrick Fisher. Nah, I fuck with Matt Bartz tough, bro.

That's that's the guy I would say, because I do think like we talked about, I think he just found a way to continue to shine after his career, even though he was one of those like those grinding gear guys where you might not have seen him in the outside of the machine, but he was he was a big part of the machine in a sense, you know, and just he's just like that. So I love that. Yeah, I'd say they in their bag trying to run it up.

Yeah. On that note, Kev, I think you got something for us. Yeah, I do.

I do actually do. What you got? What you got? Well, my first thing is that, you know, obviously we started this podcast and stuff and I actually kind of want to ask individually, like, how do you how do you guys feel? Just like, you know, the pressure, the pressure, the pressure, you know, the like, you know, the releasing of it. How do you guys feel about it, given that, you know, there's a lot of like outside noise, possibly, you know, I wanted to see if there's anything going on in your guys' heads, like just releasing the podcast, those jitters and stuff.

And now that we're actually doing it and we're living authentically, staying true to ourselves, like, how do you guys feel about it? You know. Go ahead. Yeah, I was I was honestly sorry we were both going to talk at the same time, but I was honestly going to say I personally feel like I was super anxious leading up.

I'll be honest. Rightfully so. I'm one of those people who like I overly obsess over certain stuff and I want to make it right and I want to do it correct.

And shit, if it was my choice, we probably would keep going for two, three more years doing pilots until we had everything figured out. Not really. But but I just like I want to like perfect everything before I show people because I always want people to kind of want to like what I had to do or what I had to create or whatever it is, you know.

And I know I've struggled with that in the past. So with this, I for sure just wanted to once it was go time, once we talked about it and it was go time, you know, there's been points where I've I've been a little jittery and little like, what are people going to say? But at the same time, I'm like, man, you can't hate somebody for just trying. Right.

You know what I'm saying? So I just got to be myself. You know, I have my aspirations and my hopes on things I want to do and achieve in life. And it's like, like you said, I got to live authentically to what I want.

And because nobody else is going to do it for me. You know what I'm saying? So at this point, I can't can't worry about everything else. I got to just do what I want to do and see where that takes me.

So that's kind of like my thought, I guess. It takes a gang. It takes a whole entire group of people to put this stuff together.

And now that we're finally here, it's just that we've had a lot of thought. We've had a lot of questions, a lot of questioning ourselves, given, you know, unquestionable the podcast. It's you know, it's a lot.

It's a lot, man. And I think that that's why you got to stay true to yourself. And, you know, there's a lot of outside noise.

There's a lot of outside perceptions. And, you know, there's always going to be people. Yeah, there's going to be haters.

You know, people be, you know, like Chris said, hey, our podcast ain't going to be everybody's cup of tea. And I don't hate you for that. Yeah, it's a good thing, though, because it encompasses just like who we are as people, who we are as a podcast, what we stand for, what we embody.

And, you know, just at the end of the day, our mission and what we're trying to achieve in life. And, you know, we're trying to take this seriously. And, you know, hopefully one day we're going to look back on this and like, damn, look, look how far we came.

So that's one thing that I wanted to bring up was just staying true to ourselves. And I know we're not here with Boi-B, but Boi-B does add some, you know, you know, some steez to the podcast and definitely missing Boi-B on the podcast right now. You know, just his presence and stuff.

No homo or anything. But at the same time, you know, we're staying true. We're staying true to ourselves.

You know, unquestionable the podcast, baby. You know, we we are here trying to make it do, you know, where ends meet. Making ends meet, baby.

But, hey, like Chris said, bro, I mean, it's obviously a lot of hard work. Like you said, it's obviously a lot of hard work that goes behind the scenes. A lot of a lot of risk being taken.

I mean, in our opinion. Yeah. I mean, we we're going to make this move.

We're going to make that move. We think it's going to be the best. But at the end of the day, when when the move finally comes out, it's like, hey, is other people going to fuck with it? And they don't feel the same way that we felt about it.

But it's scary, bro. But if you don't jump off that fucking ledge, but you won't forever be looking down, you know what I'm saying? So in my opinion, dog, I ain't I ain't feel no type of way about who thinks what or what thinks what. And I appreciate you guys if you're tuning in and you're fucking with us and you're supporting the movement, bro, like that means so much from the bottom of all our hearts, dog.

But at the end of the day, everybody can hate it. We still going to make fucking episodes. We're going to put out authentic videos.

We're going to put out, you know, some crazy shit that we got on the works. We're going. Yeah, we're going to stay true.

We're going to play it through. We're going to be consistent. And the thing is, is I mean, shit.

Worst case scenario, we stay consistent. This is something we we have fun doing. We love doing.

And we have something to show for it, like you said, with to our kids, to anybody. And it's not like we're you know, we're not trying to have facet or nothing. We're taking our time.

We're trying to understand things and figure it out. Obviously, it's a learning curve for us and everything like that. So that's part of the nerves.

But at the same time, somewhere getting into the social media aspect and all that type of thing and moving into stuff that maybe we were a little more hands off with and never really got into earlier on in life. It's like it's a lot, bro. It's a lot.

It's a different change of pace. It's a it's an abrupt change of the way that you're living. I mean, and by that, I mean, it's just like your everyday life.

Like Chris was saying earlier in the episode, dog, it's like you're always on go since we started this shit. Hey, but time is money, baby. And money is time.

So, you know, I'm saying like, why wait around? You got to be on it. You got to stay on it. And if that's what you want to do, dog, go ahead out there.

Go do it. Whatever it is that you want to do. Go out there.

Do it. Jump off. You can do it.

Y'all can do it, too, because it took us a minute. But at the same time, we are here doing it, baby. We are here, dog.

Big things to come. Y'all want to hop on the podcast. Hit us up, bro.

We're taking guests. You know, I'm saying we're going to have a few coming through pretty soon. Stay tuned for that.

Stay tuned for a special guest. Big things coming, dog. But if y'all out there supporting with us, rocking with us, fucking with us, you've been a one since day one.

You've been down. Hit us up, bro. We'll bring you on.

Come on. Yeah. Fuck with us.

No, definitely. And it's like even talking about that, I feel like there's so much still to come. So it's like that's another part is like we have this whole vision because we've already seen it.

We have these things, but it's going to get slowly exposed to people. So that's hard, too, because for us, it's like, oh, but you'll understand sooner. You know what I'm saying? What I'm saying, too, is it's like but, you know, having to roll it out the correct way and trying to learn that, too, is like it's been it's been tough.

You know what I'm saying? It's a learning curve. It's a learning curve. So it's one of those things that I think the consistency alone is going to at least help us grow.

And that's all we're worried about. We're not worried about nothing other than just creating something from scratch and turning it into the next thing and the next thing and the next thing. You know what I'm saying? And speaking of that, what are some kind of avenues you guys are looking forward to getting into, like when it comes to giving things a first chance? You know what I'm saying? Shit.

Hey, I ain't opposed to nothing, baby. Tell me to do it and I'm there as long as the check is, you know what I'm saying? Come on. I'm honestly looking forward to getting into other creative spaces like, I don't know, like diving into some type of like Only Dance? No, I don't know, like some subset of like Like subsets of like music, how like, not trying to like bite or anything like that.

But you know, like the, what's it called? The rap, where they like dissect all the lyrics and stuff like that. Rap Genius. I was drawing a blank.

That's for sure, but I'll still do it. I know. But like at the same time, just like some type of subset of just being able to figure out how we can embody ourselves into something else.

And I think that there's always going to be different avenues that we're going to be able to figure out and go down. Obviously, all of us are very passionate about music. So I think that like, you know, some type of subset of what we do involving music, you know, getting interviewing people, talking about their backgrounds, their how they got there.

It's just something that I know that we can do. And I think that we probably will put it into place pretty soon. It's just something that we got to put into fruition.

But any type of subset involving music. And I think that we can definitely tap into different avenues. And that's why we got, you know, No Question Entertainment, baby.

Straight up. Hey, to our first musical guests that come on here, we're going to narwhal the fuck out of you, dawg. So be ready.

You're a second grade teacher. No, but I mean, even for me, it's like, I'm just trying to get better. I mean, I spoke about it in one of our early, early pilot episodes when we were first getting into all this stuff.

But I'm trying to get better at documenting. You know what I'm saying? Like taking pictures, taking videos. I want to get better at telling a story with that documentation.

You know, our generation don't take pictures, bro. Exactly. And I'm super interested in getting into I've talked to you guys about it, the docuseries space or the documentary space and stuff and finding ways to tell these interesting stories.

You know what I'm saying? Because there's so much out there, the more you look. And that was obviously part of why we have a podcast is because there's so much in the world to talk about, to, you know, just dissect or think about. And it's like it's never ending.

And I'd like to experiment with all all those interesting stories, I guess, in my like. Nah, yeah, sure. Shout out to digital property, bro.

That shit gonna be there forever until someone deletes it. Letting everybody's voices be heard, man. That's the that's the thing about it is just letting people letting people find their outlet to like letting people like speak about what they want to speak about.

And it's kind of being a listener to like I think that's one thing that's taught me a lot about this podcast is just like being able to listen and like actually provide like some good feedback and stuff. And I don't know. I feel like interviewing is always kind of been within us to like we always ask a lot of questions.

We're always curious. We always want to figure out this is out of it. For those of you know, Chris, this motherfucker don't stop asking questions.

Are we certified yappers or what? No, I'm a certified learner. I never stop. I'm obsessed with learning.

No glazing on Chris, but man does love to. He's very curious and amen. If Chris is a fact checker, he's the fucking number one fucking encyclopedia.

He's very questionable to the point where you might say is he? No, but yeah, I just like to dive into like like you said, the curiosity behind certain things. I know there's a lot of stuff, even locally stories to be told and things like that. And I'd love to to for us to get a hand on telling the story, you know what I'm saying? And especially as we continue to grow and learn how to get our productions bigger and bigger, we're going to get to those those points, you know, and do time.

Y'all stick with us. Stay down till we come up. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, we're not perfect, but we try and we try and speak for yourself, doggy.

Oh, you perfect? Secret location right now. We got nobody to leak it like Kyson. Do you guys see that? No, because he's streaming in like a U-Haul van right now.

And then I guess like he told somebody to pull up, help him out or something like that. And he leaked his location. And then somebody fucking like started driving the fucking U-Haul van while he's midstream.

It could be scripted or whatever, but that's actually kind of crazy. It's a video I was showing you earlier with his little homie, he's like, I'm deporting you. Fuck that, he's not deporting you.

That's what I'm saying. He wasn't even mad like that. And you got to think, how mad would you have been? They didn't even seem like, I don't know, I saw the clips.

I didn't feel like it was the reaction I would have had if it was for real. I would have been more scared, you know what I'm saying? And I think even with the little Mr. Beast thing, how they burnt down the little set, you know what I'm saying? They're good at like, they're getting away with these drugs. And on that note, no question podcast ain't never going to have nothing scripted.

So let's just get that shit straight. No, we're riffers. Anything you say is either off the dome or it's real shit.

We riffing for real. No, I be rizzing for real. I think we should, I mean, the stuff that we talk about, like we know what we're talking about, and I know we were confident to talk about, I think we should start involving more like a fact check, like a fact check break and then boom.

Fact check us, bro. Yeah, and that's the thing. And if you're watching right now.

No question is hiring, bro. If you want to be our fact checker, dawg, come fuck with us. Because we're all about, you know, displaying and portraying, you know, the correct information and no fake news, no fake media around here, right here.

points in fucking:

Or we can, we could get an assistant producer, like you said, and get somebody who's back there running the works. Yeah, bro, we're hiring. You want to fuck with us, tab in, bro.

Always for the crazy questions. When we start getting questions and asking y'all questions or allowing questions to be, you know, put in the chat or whatever, whatever you guys want to do. And we're going to fucking fact check them.

And if you're interested and you want to apply, send your application at no question dot admin. What is it? It's admin, A-A-D-M-I-N at no question dot co. Well, speaking of questions, if you guys have questions about us, about the podcast, about the creation of the podcast or anything around, shit, even topics, the world, anything, leave the questions below in the comment section, leave them in our comments on Instagram.

We, we're going to go through all those. Definitely want to put together some, some of your guys' thoughts and what you guys want to hear from us and, you know, kind of do it that way. Yeah, let us know what you want to hear, bro.

We'll get after. Yes, sir. Whatever it is, man.

And with that being said, I mean, yeah. And with that being said, I mean, we could just go into the second segment of the day. Iconic moments.

Let's get it. Iconic moments is a segment where we're going to basically point out an iconic moment in time, whether it's across sports, entertainment, media, anything, and kind of elaborate why it was so iconic to us. And with that being said, which one of you guys wants to start it off? I'll jump it off, baby.

My iconic moment is A.I. in his prime, dog. Allen Iverson. Shout out to the boy.

Artificial intelligence or? Shit, that too. Nah, Allen Iverson, baby. In his prime in the NBA, dog was a, bro was the truth, dog.

When I was playing fucking 2K way back in the day on my little fucking PS2, like I would own. First of all, I don't know how many, how familiar you guys are with 2K, but you can go and adjust like the player's stats and attributes and shit. I would slide his three point slider even crazier than it already was.

And I'd be like, I'm Allen. I'm the Sixers, dog. Come on, let's go.

Fucking just draining it. Draining it, dog. Like, and people are like, how you hitting those? Like some crazy ass shots, helicontesting shit.

I'm like, I'm A.I., dog. What you want from me? But he hit a iconic moments for sure because he impacted my life toughly, dog. And I wasn't the best basketball player growing up, dog.

I was a little chunky motherfucker growing up. And like football was my main sport. Baseball too.

But basketball is just kind of like that side gig that I did to lose a little bit of my fat when I was younger. But your boy had the breakaway sweats, dog. I pull up in him with the basketball shorts under.

I look like Michael Jackson hopping off the bench and just ripping them off. Michael Jackson? Michael Jackson had breakaway sweats? Nah. In my world, he did, dog.

Pause. Whatever. Whatever the case may be, I had the breakaway sweats.

Michael Jordan. I was jumping off the fucking bench. Bop.

Yanking them off. I had the headband. Fucking.

Calvin Cambridge, dog. Calvin Cambridge up, dog. I saw that movie and I thought I could really dunk, bro.

Like Mike, honestly, speaking like not to like cut you off or anything, but like that movie like Mike was probably an iconic ass fucking movie. I'm not straight up. He had me thinking I could dunk.

No, for sure. He was in the NBA. He had you thinking he was in the NBA because he was like crossing up fucking Chris Webber and shit.

Everybody fucking thought that they could fucking just dunk after that movie, bro. He was crossing up Maurice Chestnut, bro. Come on.

Come on. No, but it was crazy. That shit for sure was an iconic moment.

But even A.I., like he was saying, when you talk to A.I. I mean, talking about A.I.'s influence on the game with just his flashiness and even that the armband and, you know, the headband and the braids and just his whole influence, even on popular culture as a whole and how he was the first one, you know, really out there pregame pulling up and what the rappers were wearing. You know, he had the chains. He was rapping like that shit was so sick back then.

A.I. was really a trash rapper. Back in the day, the NBA had a pregame like attire, like specific attire that you could wear. They said, like, no chains, no do rags, no this, no baggy clothes.

It was damn near tuxedo type shit, like business casual. Yeah, business casual. That's why you used to see LeBron in a fucking blazer and some baggy ass jeans, though.

Then you see Russell Westbrook walking in with the skirt. Yeah, with the skirt. Saying that Kyle Kuzma nowadays walking in with like some like crazy ass triple XL shirt and shit.

It's like, come on. But yeah, shout out A.I., bro. Iconic moment for sure.

Had a lot of influence on me growing up. He had me thinking I was like Mike. Had me thinking I was Calvin Cambridge.

Shout out SLB for the Calvin Cambridge song, you know what I'm saying? And I'd like to say A.I. was probably one of those pioneers, like you said, of even kind of bringing in more fashion, like current fashion into, you know, that pregame and into the NBA. Risk taker, rule breaker. You had like, you know, Rodman was Rodman dressed a little weird too type shit.

Breaking the barriers and breaking the norms, you know? Yeah, it wasn't it wasn't just your normal guy. So I agree with that. What about you, Kev? What you got? What should I say? What about you, bro? You're going with like Mike is really your iconic moment.

No, it's not my iconic moment, but I want to see what you have to hear. See what you have to say first. Well, I see you can't just speak back of him.

No, that's crazy. No, my iconic moment, it was going to be around sports, but more of a business side. I mean, I've talked about it in previous podcasts, but the book, it's usually in our set, Shoe Dog by Phil Knight, the owner of Nike.

I think my iconic moment was when he made that jump from running into NBA in a big way by signing Michael Jordan and turning Nike from, like I said, just a running shoe for runners that revolutionized running into a popular culture shoe into something that we still wear every day now. You know what I'm saying? You're never going to see those. At the time, I don't think he knew any of that shit.

He just took the risk, bro. Nobody was fucking with what he was talking about. They called him stupid, crazy.

He didn't even like the shoes. He said he didn't even like the shoes. Yeah, he didn't like the design that was finally made, came out.

And I mean, whoever has those fucking OG shoes to this day is like making a bag off them. Those 85s are crazy. And the crazy thing is, too, they used to pay his fines and shit so he'd wear the black shoes.

That's another iconic moment that Nike was a part of. You know what I'm saying? They literally changed the strict dress code of in-game. Now you see these guys wearing lime green shoes all the fucking time.

And it's because Nike did that, you know, as a marketing expense, in a sense. But still, it's fine. Me, baby, I don't get, you know, just seeing how they did it, you know, and they came for running.

They tried to revolutionize running shoes and stuff like that and how they were able to seep into clothing and seep into everything after Adidas. What you have to realize is Adidas was so big before them. You know what I'm saying? So it's like people don't realize how big that is.

That's like, you know, somebody dethroning Apple. Like we couldn't even, you know, fathom that in a sense. And Android couldn't do it.

Yeah. And I know it's not the same thing. But at the same time, it's just, you know.

Put it in perspective. Put it in perspective. It's just something like a lifestyle brand being dethroned and you don't see it often, you know what I'm saying? And I think that was an iconic moment to me.

Longevity for sure. Like you said, to this day, the Jordan 1 hype came a few years ago. Now it was the Dunk hype.

And the 4 hype, the 3 hype. They all come circling back, bro. The 11s, the Space Jams, all that shit, bro.

I know. Iconic as fuck, to say the least. Because freshman year, everybody was fucking with the 11s.

Now people aren't fucking with 11s all that much. Now it's like everything. Like I said, a few years ago, it was the 1s.

Then it was the Dunks. Now Dunks, motherfuckers. Shout out Nike, though.

I mean, I don't know how you feel about that. Shout out Nike, though. They're making it more accessible to people to fucking block out resellers.

Yeah. And they're even starting to try to do that by just making the shoes retail in stores. Like just bigger quantities.

So they're not, you know. Which is cool, bro. I mean, shit.

It kills the resale market when you have that many shoes being produced. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, I mean, shoes is cool. Going after motherfuckers like the big scalpers and stuff like lawsuits against them, motherfuckers.

Bro, crazy. Some of those motherfuckers literally make like 20 bands just off of fucking one day. Yeah.

Taxing motherfuckers for shoes. Just taxing people one day just because it was a recent drop and they just had access to the shoes. Because everybody's going to buy it the day it dropped, even if they didn't get it.

And that's not mentioning hoarding and fucking like, yeah. Yeah. Just on some thirsty shit.

Everybody don't want to wait. They just get it the day drop, even if they can't get it. They buy a resale for something crazy.

And just. Shout out to them. I'm not going to hustle, baby.

It's hustle. Hustle is hustle, right? But fuck. What about you, Kev? What you got? What you got for us? You got some good iconic moment, right? I do got a good iconic moment.

I think one of the iconic moments that I remember as a young kid was when Ron Artest and Jackson started brawling in the crowd. And I think that was at the Palace. That was one thing my dad, he was like, Oh shit.

He was like, literally was like on SportsCenter. Like all that stuff. Jermaine O'Neal, Ben Wallace.

They were going crazy. They were fighting people in the stands, throwing punches, throwing jabs. For those people who don't know, one of the fans, one of the fans threw a beer at Ron Artest when Ron Artest was laying on the, laying on the side of the table.

And bro just gets up. It just runs into the stand. And Steven Jackson, being a good teammate, goes after him.

And then just started going crazy. Just starts yanking all my fighting the fans. And then they separate.

They separate. And then Jackson goes back into the crowd and just start molly whopping somebody, bro. And it's such an iconic moment in the NBA because if you think about it, bro, you have so many people talking shit on you, calling you like all these, you know, words and names and stuff.

And then, bro, you have one bad game. Like all it takes is that one, that one trigger, that one thing. And they said, fuck you, bro.

They said, you know what? I ain't got nothing to lose. And they were suspended for hella long because of that too. Like the NBA.

Well, it affected their careers long term. It affected the contracts they got later on. It affected like just everything.

You know what I'm saying? Nah, it was the same. One of the reasons why I said that was iconic moment too is just because if you think about it, there really has not been like a brawl like that in the NBA where the guys, where people are just straight fighting fans. Because they soft now, bro.

I was about to tell you that. There's no one fighting fans like that no more. That's an iconic moment.

I remember that when I was a little kid, like these dudes were straight up fighting. Like it's all over ESPN, all over the news and shit. But one thing is too is because it's like you're a fucking millionaire, dog.

You're hella famous. And this little nobody is going to like probably sue the fuck out of you. Even if you fucking like regardless of the matter, but you throw blows with him, you fucking slap him at the very least, dog.

He's going to sue you and probably fucking win and like grab hella M's just because he's the guy who got slapped by so-and-so. You know what I'm saying? No, and I was going to say that too. I think that you notice across the league that there's just less fighting nowadays.

And I think it's partially just because there's more to lose. You know what I'm saying? People don't want to be the antagonizer as much as they used to back in the day because shit, you loved having that in the locker room and you weren't paying them as much. But now they're $200 million contracts that you're paying these guys.

So they can tax the fuck out of you. You can get a public reputation just off how you play on the court. Look at what happened to DeMarcus Cousins out here.

You know what I'm saying? He was the truth. You know what I'm saying? And he was getting fined just because of his reputation in some of the calls. You know what I'm saying? In some of the teams.

Draymond Green too. Draymond. There's other people just like that.

But nowadays, you don't see him at least taking it to that level where Isaiah Thomas used to take it. Where all these guys used to take it. Larry Bird, Michael Jordan, like Doug Christie even.

Doug Christie uppercutted Rick Fox. That's an iconic moment right there. They also wasn't getting paid that much back then either.

So now they have so much to lose. They have a legacy to lose. They have all, like we talked about earlier, how they all have these side ventures and endorsements and things.

They have so much things going on that their image alone in the NBA is so valuable. So I feel like that's part of it now. And the media is going to spit, like the way the media is now, they're going to spin it as like they're the attacking it.

They're the ones who's like, you know. I'm sure some people begin doing it. I'm sure some people could be getting down after the games or something.

I'm sure. They wasn't getting down like Artest and fucking Homeboy. Real shit.

Respect to Metta World Peace, a.k.a. Ron Artest. When I was in elementary school, dog, I had the Fat Farm jeans, the Black Forces, and that Ron Artest jersey. And couldn't nobody tell me shit, dog.

I walked out of school. I was like, who wants some? Indiana Pacers, dog. Right.

That was probably the only one you saw out here, huh? I ain't never seen an Indiana Pacers jersey out here, really. That shit was lucky to grow back then. Yeah, that shit just grew.

That jersey in itself is a girl for sure. Nah, fuck with that. Bring it back, dog.

Lucky I'm about to get one now. Now that you said that, you just inspired me for the next bit. Artest in the club? I'm just kidding.

Nah. But do you guys have any other iconic moments that aren't sports related? We kind of went crazy on the sports iconic moments. I'll bring one up.

One off the dome. Bell-bottom jeans. Bell-bottom jeans was popular when we was little kids and shit.

And the girls wore them back then. Nowadays, it don't matter if you're a girl or a guy, like the flared out jeans is popping. Yeah, it made a comeback for sure.

It went from, you know, used to be some little that 70s show type. Yeah, like some hippie shit. They're doing it like with a distressed carpenter pant or something like that.

And some of them be swaggy, bro. They be swaggy. I can't lie, I be rocking flared jeans all the time.

Yeah, they hard. They tough. But everything it just shows fashion, music, genres, whatever the fuck you want to talk about, bro.

Everything comes back in a full circle. If it was cool back then, it's going to be cool in 10, 15, 20 years. Everything recycles, dog.

No, definitely. Definitely. Gain original.

I'm sorry to tell you. I think another iconic moment that I'm thinking of is just the whole 90s hip hop movement in itself. You know what I'm saying? Well, not obviously 90s is what catapulted it.

But people don't realize like DJ Kool Herc and like started hip hop in a sense, they say. Back, you know, not even what, 50 years ago, it was just the 50th anniversary. And then you just see how that era of like the biggie, the Pac, and then you see it transcend into the big L's.

You got fucking what was his name? Why am I blanking? A big pun. You got hella, hella different, you know, 90s artists that just kept making it bigger. And then you even got Death Row, Snoop, Dre, Ice Cube.

Like, I don't even know how I forgot them. You know what I'm saying? You had the East versus West movement. It like is kind of reminiscent to even right now what you're seeing going down where they're kind of playing the geographical mind games with the Toronto versus Compton shit with the Kendrick and Drake thing.

It's not the same, obviously, but you just see how, I mean, that. And the recipe is there. They're going to find it.

Yeah, how that kind of catapulted, you know, hip hop into that next level, into that top genre. And then we see people talking about how hip hop is falling down. Country's number one.

You haven't had a hip hop number one in a hell of a long. And then what happens right after? They're not like us. Drake and Kendrick beef.

It's like things like that, I feel like are iconic moments because maybe they're not still fully like, I don't know. Well, you don't see it now, but like I do hear where you're coming from, like in about 10 years, 15 years, they're going to be like, damn, y'all remember when motherfuckers was making country rap songs and then country was on the rise? And then Kendrick and Drake started beefing and motherfuckers dropping. They not like us.

And Kendrick had a whole fucking concert with hella motherfuckers. Everybody from LA. Yeah, I don't necessarily think it'll stop the trajectory of country because right now with their country going hard with their stars, yeah, they got a bunch of stars right now that they're just going to keep going crazy.

But I think it it did like like they were talking about it on the podcast I was watching, it did create a huge conversation around it, like kind of catapulted them close. And that's why I said the 90s was an iconic moment, because it reminded me of kind of how that Drake and Kendrick beef catapulted hip hop to be that forefront of the conversation. With that being said, though, motherfuckers would have smoked each other.

Yeah, there was not CCTV, you know, especially with Drake. Drake's bodyguard already getting popped. And then she was, you know, she was not the same in that aspect.

But it wasn't it was I'm not saying it was it wasn't Kendrick's people that popped him. I'm just saying it's getting spooky in the streets for people. They was getting naughty, naughty.

Naughty, naughty. And go bun for bun. We can go M for M. No, but with that being said, thank you guys for tuning in to this week's episode.

We know that this isn't the normal space, but we love that you guys sat through this long. If you haven't already, like, comment, subscribe, share some love, comment, you know, share the post on your social media, too, if you're really fucking with it. Come on.

We appreciate you guys and hope you have a good night. See you guys next week.

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