Podcasts about Hate Me Now

1999 song by Nas ft. Puff Daddy

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  • Jun 19, 2024LATEST
Hate Me Now

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Best podcasts about Hate Me Now

Latest podcast episodes about Hate Me Now

The Prism Of Perspective
Ep. 36 - Brad Henderson: Healing and Growth Through Athletic Pursuits

The Prism Of Perspective

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2024 38:39


I had the pleasure of speaking with Brad Henderson, a pioneer in Adventure-Based Education and Barefoot Water Skiing. This episode dives deep into the layers of Brad's life, exploring themes of family, athleticism, personal growth, and more. Here's a glimpse of what you can expect:   - Brad's experience growing up with an alcoholic father and how it shaped his drive to excel in athletics at the boys club. - The impact of seeking validation through athletic competition and how it influenced Brad's relationships and personal development. - Brad's transition from basketball to barefoot water skiing. - The concept of flow and how Brad uses meditation, breathing techniques, and visualization to enhance his performance in sports. - The importance of staying present and optimizing life circumstances through activities you love. - The significance of maintaining physical well-being and everyday practices that contribute to a longer, healthier life.   Tune in for an inspiring discussion that not only highlights Brad's journey but also offers valuable insights on achieving balance and growth in various aspects of life.    Brad's Book:    Hate Me Now, Thank Me Later: Barefoot Brad's Guide to Healthy Aging and Weight Loss

OverSaturated: The Podcast
Episode 217 - Aye Chief

OverSaturated: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 65:04


Episode 217 - Aye Chief First lookout for #OFFTHEDOME. What is your favorite white people anthem? Rank these 1999 singles. Next Episode, Hate Me Now, & Bling Bling.Topics Discussed -Grammy RecapKiller Mike SZA SnubbedJay-Z Acceptance Speech-Taylor Swift vs Beyonce-2024 Rock n Roll HOF Nominations-Mo'Nique vs Everybody-Random Movie Conversation and MoreOS Song of the WeekJohnnie's Pick - Fabo Loso - UlumanitiRalph's Pick - Blxst - Heart Ain't EmptyPlease Enjoy on All Major Platforms and OverSatThePod.Com. Please Comment, Rate , and Subscribe.

Mogul Squared Media Network
Episode 217 - Aye Chief

Mogul Squared Media Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 65:04


Episode 217 - Aye Chief First lookout for #OFFTHEDOME. What is your favorite white people anthem? Rank these 1999 singles. Next Episode, Hate Me Now, & Bling Bling.Topics Discussed -Grammy RecapKiller Mike SZA SnubbedJay-Z Acceptance Speech-Taylor Swift vs Beyonce-2024 Rock n Roll HOF Nominations-Mo'Nique vs Everybody-Random Movie Conversation and MoreOS Song of the WeekJohnnie's Pick - Fabo Loso - UlumanitiRalph's Pick - Blxst - Heart Ain't EmptyPlease Enjoy on All Major Platforms and OverSatThePod.Com. Please Comment, Rate , and Subscribe.

ill Mannered Media
Opinions While Black: Episode 220 - "Animal Magic"

ill Mannered Media

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2023 142:39


This week, Oz, Fluent and Euphonic talk about Jalen Hurts and the Black women who got him the bag, why "pause" needs to die, developments/predictions in the Jonathan Majors situation, Frank Ocean's Coachella disaster and the disconnect between (some) teachers and students. Plus, Nas slander, your listener letters and the Top 3 STFUs. Pour Up! Song of the Week: Arin Ray, Mereba and Omen- "Hate Me Now"

The Sean Salisbury Show
Coach JB On The NFL This Year & The Transfer Portal Being Trash

The Sean Salisbury Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2022 16:29


Coach JB On The NFL This Year & The Transfer Portal Being TrashCoach Jason Brown joins the show to talk all things football. He covers the state of the NFL and QB play. As well as how the transfer portal is ruining College and even highschool football. You may know Coach JB From: Netflix's LastChanceU | 2017 NJCAA Jayhawk Coach of the Year | Author of Hate Me Now, Love Me Later | Host of The Coach JB Show.

The Sample Axis Podcast
70. Ludwig van Beethoven for the Kids

The Sample Axis Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2022 55:11


This episode features the piano piece by Beethoven called Fur Elise and how the music was sampled on Nas' hit record, I Can. Also, part 2 is Meek Mill sampling Hate Me Now, also by Nas. Enjoy.

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
The Coach JB Show - With Sara Blake

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2022 93:26


Join me today on this great Monday here on August 15, 2022! It is a complete rebrand as we leave the "Hate Me Now, Love Me Later" podcast in the past and birth " The Coach JB Show" hosted by the coldest hustler out there Coach JB and the lovely Sara Blake! Coach Zach Smith will join us for the Menace Monday segment and we will talk all things college football and life! I will also discuss which rookie I think will have the best first year in the NFL, Kirk Cousins getting COVID, Last Chance U inside info, and the Anne Heche news! All brought to you by Betonline.ag & Cannadipscbd.com

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Thirsty Thursday - Recruiting with Tom Herman - Airplane Orgies and Asian Massage Parlors

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2022 62:08


Join this Hate Me Now, Love Me Later Podcast "Menace Takeover" - Former Ohio State Football Coach Zach Smith host the show while Coach Jason Brown is on vacation living it up with LIV Golfer Pat Perez. Coach Zach Smith will talk what it was like recruiting with Tom Herman, airplane orgies, asian massage parlors, Ohio State Football, college coaching, and so much more on this action packed Thursday!! To purchase Merch, Whiskey, Vodka head on over to https://coachjbstore.com/ Business Inquiries: Christian@AppalachianMarketing.us VIP Members: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuRr... - $1.99 Monthly - Trivia Giveaways - Chance to WIN Whiskey, Vodka, Cigars, Merch - Live Call In's Follow our show on social media: . Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@therealcoachjb Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheRealCoach_JB Podcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/hatemenowpod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/realcoachjb/ Podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hatemenowpod/

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Work Boot Wednesday - College Football Future According To Nick Saban

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 61:42


Join this Hate Me Now, Love Me Later Podcast "Menace Takeover" - Former Ohio State Football Coach Zach Smith host the show while Coach Jason Brown is on vacation living it up with LIV Golfer Pat Perez. Coach Zach Smith will talk Nick Sabans thoughts on the future of CFB | Mike Leach Comments on Sirius XM | Coach JB will join the show after he is done on the golf course, and so much more on this action packed Work Boot Wednesday! To purchase Merch, Whiskey, Vodka head on over to https://coachjbstore.com/ Business Inquiries: Christian@AppalachianMarketing.us https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast... VIP Members: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuRr... - $1.99 Monthly - Trivia Giveaways - Chance to WIN Whiskey, Vodka, Cigars, Merch - Live Call In's Follow our show on social media: . Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@therealcoachjb Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheRealCoach_JB Podcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/hatemenowpod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/realcoachjb/ Podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hatemenowpod/

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Talk That Talk Tuesday - Menace Takeover With Coach Zach Smith

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 61:33


Join this Hate Me Now, Love Me Later Podcast "Menace Takeover" - Former Ohio State Football Coach Zach Smith host the show while Coach Jason Brown is on vacation living it up with LIV Golfer Pat Perez. Coach Zach Smith will talk his top 10 NFL WR's, Ryan Tannehill or...? segment, and discuss the terrible recruiting video put out by South Carolinas football team. To purchase Merch, Whiskey, Vodka head on over to https://coachjbstore.com/ Business Inquiries: Christian@AppalachianMarketing.us https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast... VIP Members: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuRr... $1.99 Monthly Trivia Giveaways Chance to WIN Whiskey, Vodka, Cigars, Merch Live Call In's Follow our show on social media: . Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@therealcoachjb Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheRealCoach_JB Podcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/hatemenowpod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/realcoachjb/ Podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hatemenowpod/

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Talk that Talk Tuesday

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2022 158:48


Talk, & I'll Talk Back here on this Talk that Talk Tuesday on the Hate Me Now, Love Me Later Pod, as I have special Guest, and former player & Last Chance U star Emmit Gooden on the show to talk all things real, and his journey thus far, along with his future plans! I also discuss all things raw & uncut brought to you by Betonline.ag & Bluechew.com

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Fearless Friday

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2022 189:02


Take NO FEAR on this Fearless Friday edition of the Hate Me Now, Love Me Later podcast, as I discuss the landscape of College Football with none other than Zach Smith, former Ohio State WR Coach. I also will dive into the Lakers getting KD and Kyrie, plus Betting Guru Hector joins me on my "Scared money don't make money" segment to discuss all things MMA & MLB betting! All brought to you by Betonline.ag & Bluechew.com

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Talk that Talk Tuesday

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 134:57


Talk that Talk here on the Hate Me Now, Love Me Later Podcast, as I discuss Epstein's girlfriend sentenced to 20 years, plus the Deshaun Watson hearing, along with Westbrook back with Lakers, and two of my former players join this special show as Delrick Abrams former Atlanta Falcon and Joshua Avery former Seahawk both join me to discuss everything! All brought to you by Betonline.ag & Bluechew.com

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Hate Me Now, Love Me Later - Fearless Friday

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2022 164:01


Join me on this action-packed Fearless Friday edition of the Hate Me Now, Love Me Later podcast as I have two special guests on. Kash Daniel, former University of Kentucky football standout and wrestler, and my former SEC & University of Arkansas standout, Former Netflix Last Chance U star Rakeem Boyd. I also discuss all real talk banter as usual! All brought to you by Betonline.ag & Bluechew.com

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Hate Me Now Love Me Later - Merciless Monday

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 143:55


Join me on the latest episode of the Hate Me Now, Love Me Later pod, as I discuss everything from Richard Jefferson's comments on the NBA shortening the season talk, to JJ Reddick & CJ Mac soft comments, along with everything in between, and the Warriors winning in 6 games now! I also discuss all real talk banter brought to you by Betonline.ag

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Hate Me Now Love Me Later - Merciless Monday

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 92:54


Take NO MERCY here on this episode of the Hate Me Now, Love Me Later Podcast - Merciless Monday brought to you by Betonline.ag as I discuss Trade talks between America & Russia for Brittany Griner, along with how the Warriors will sweep Dallas, plus how bad Tiger looks, and how nobody wants the Laker Job! Plus my take on Deshaun Watson's Lawyer's comments, and how nobody wants to work anymore, including Professional Athletes! Tune in!

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Hate Me Now Love Me Later - Work Boot Wednesday

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2022 95:39


Join me on this edition of the Hate Me Now, Love Me Later podcast as I discuss everything from the NBA MVP voting process, to the death of Bob Lanier and how did I not know that the Cleveland Indians no longer exists? Plus the RICO charges against Young Thug the rapper and Naomi Osaka leaving IMG to start own agency. Plus so much more all brought to you by Betonline.ag

Film Study: An All American Podcast
Season 4 Episode 17 Hate Me Now Review & Recap |The Real Spencer Wrote It!

Film Study: An All American Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 54:47


Welcome to Film Study: An All American Podcast. My guest co-host Monda Kindle joins me to review and recap 4x17 Hate Me Now. Here's the first part of our conversation! Hope you enjoy it! If you are interested in supporting the podcast, my cash app is $LexiRedmond Subscribe to our Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/filmstudyanallamericanpodcast To recommend guests follow the linktree: https://linktr.ee/Filmstudyanallamericanpodcast Follow us @FilmStudyAA on Twitter and Instagram Tik Tok: FilmStudyAllAmerican Podcast: https://anchor.fm/filmstudyallamerican #AllAmerican #CW #Spelivia #Podcast #Spotify --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/filmstudyallamerican/support

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast
Hate Me Now Love Me Later - Merciless Monday

Bleav in the Slapdick Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 92:41


Join me on this new Hate Me Now, Love Me Later Podcast, for Merciless Monday, as I discuss everything that has been happening, plus the NBA playoffs, My NFL Draft weekend in Vegas, my kids being drafted, plus how soft the NBA is, and how 7on7 has ruined Football! Brought to you by Betonline.ag

Film Study: An All American Podcast
Season 4 Episode 17 Hate Me Now Predictions & Preview

Film Study: An All American Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2022 13:33


Welcome to Film Study: An All American Podcast. My guest Kat Pettibone (US Weekly) joins me to talk predictions for 4x17 Hate Me Now. Here's the second part of our conversation! Hope you enjoy it! If you are interested in supporting the podcast, my cash app is $LexiRedmond Subscribe to our Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/filmstudyanallamericanpodcast To recommend guests follow the linktree: https://linktr.ee/Filmstudyanallamericanpodcast Follow us @FilmStudyAA on Twitter and Instagram Tik Tok: FilmStudyAllAmerican Podcast: https://anchor.fm/filmstudyallamerican #AllAmerican #CW #Spelivia #Podcast #Spotify --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/filmstudyallamerican/support

The Frequency Podcast
Vol 123. Arab Money (Big Magpie)

The Frequency Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2021 151:57


**DISCLAIMER - THE AUDIO QUALITY ON NATE'S MIC WAS POOR UP UNTIL AROUND THE 20 MINUTE MARK DUE TO TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES- APOLOGIES IN ADVANCE** To begin this week's episode the Washed Boyz discuss Kev's recent birthday/trip to Barcelona (00:02:43) followed by a rant by Kev who was in his “Hate Me Now” bag because of the Newcastle takeover (00:12:43). This week's ‘What's Your Five?' list covers 5 ‘realistic' transfers the boys want Newcastle to make in January (00:42:15) before a discussion on albums the boys want to see before the end of the year (00:56:00), a rant on Jesy Nelson (01:08:52), the Drake Card (01:16:55), Dwayne ‘The Rock' Johnson rapping (01:26:36) & Fury Vs Wilder 3(01:28:52). In the reviews section the boys rate Young Thug's ‘P*nk'(01:34:20), Don Toliver's ‘Life of A Don'(01:40:08) & Pink Pantheress' ‘To Hell With It' (01:46:29). Plus catch recaps of Ted Lasso (01:49:16, BMF (01:53:16),The Dragonball Superheroes Trailer (01:59:12), & The Arsene Wenger Documentary trailer (02:03:30) as well as the weekly ‘Put Ons'(02:18:15). FT DUB BT DUB WEGETTINARABMONEY

Below The Hardwood
Hate Me Now

Below The Hardwood

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2021 55:08


In episode 47, the compadres breakdown the hostility caused by a wild first week of NBA Free agency. Goran Dragic’s interview that ignited Raptors fans vitriol and the apology shortly… The post Hate Me Now appeared first on PRESS.

Low End Marauders
#30: Game, (Dip)set, Match

Low End Marauders

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2021 101:37


For our 30th episode of the show, we open things up about talking about Nas' new album, King's Disease 2 and talk about what is his best song in his entire catalog due to ESPN's Stephen A. Smith ranking "Hate Me Now" as his favorite song of all time by the Queens MC plus our favorite song off of the new album by him. Then, the marauders watch and enjoyed the Dipset vs. The LOX Verzuz battle (August 3rd) from The Hulu Theatre from Madison Square Garden and discuss what went wrong went the Dipset army after fans online declaring The LOX as the winner of the battle backed by Jadakiss' MVP rap performance throughout the show and ask who we would like to see step into the Verzuz arena with Eminem after Charlamagne tha God's comments on Future, Young Thug and even 6ix9ine saying that they can beat Em. Next, Tyler, the Creator still hasn't forgotten about DJ Khaled's comments on his album IGOR from 2019. While in New York, he stopped by the Hot 97 Studios and talked to the Ebro In The Morning and let his feelings known about those comments from Khaled. We ask if it's time for DJ Khaled to start humbling himself after being mad about Tyler's Grammy awarding winning project. Plus Rank'd: Nas Edition, shoutouts, album recommendations and a lot more! Follow the show on Instagram & Twitter: @lowendmarauders Follow the marauders on Instagram: @real_89, @therealjknox and @nycholasfury Shop Low End Marauders apparel: https://my-store-10281732.creator-spring.com/ SOURCES: Stephen A Smith's Nas' song list: https://www.instagram.com/p/CSaa4l5po88/ The LOX vs Dipset: https://hiphopdx.com/news/id.63666/title.jadakiss-gets-all-the-love-following-dipset-vs-the-lox-verzuz Charlamagne's comments: https://hiphopdx.com/news/id.63863/title.charlamagne-tha-god-lists-off-rappers-who-would-shred-eminem-in-verzuz-including-6ix9ine Tyler the Creator on DJ Khaled: https://genius.com/a/tyler-the-creator-says-dj-khaled-s-ego-was-deflated-after-igor-went-no-1-over-father-of-asahd Tyler's Interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1OxkwRx2qs --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/low-end-marauders/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/low-end-marauders/support

CalPsychiatry Presents: Mindstories
Hate Me Now, Love Me Later | Robin Berman, MD

CalPsychiatry Presents: Mindstories

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2021 32:34


Robin Berman, MD, is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. She is the author of Permission to Parent: How to Raise Your Child with Love & Limits, which was also published in Europe under the title Hate Me Now, Thank Me Later. Dr. Berman has appeared on The Today Show and Good Morning America, and her book has been featured in the Washington Post, the London Times, and Time Magazine online. Dr. Berman is a founding board member of the Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital at UCLA and an Advisory Board member of Matthew McConaughey's Just Keep Livin Foundation. Dr. Berman is also on the Parents Magazine Advisory Board, is a regular contributor to goop.com, and had a podcast recently featured on the Hello Sunshine website. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and three children.   Permission to Parent ------ Instagram

Greater Than Code
230: Using Tech + Policy For Good with Corey Ponder

Greater Than Code

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2021 70:04


01:55 - Corey’s Superpower: Empathy * Finding Voice: You Are Not a Statistic * What does it mean to support Black lives? * Authentic Self * Having Conversations Around Allyship * Owning Vulnerability 09:06 - Having People Hear Your Stories * “How are you doing?” * “Me Too” Movement (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Me_Too_movement) – learned something about self and blind spots in the process and the feedback was helpful 13:01 - Allyship Best Practices * Growth Mindset * Trusted Sidekicks; Augmenting Journies * Invisible Knapsack: How to recognize your white privilege — and use it to fight inequality (https://www.ted.com/talks/peggy_mcintosh_how_to_recognize_your_white_privilege_and_use_it_to_fight_inequality/transcript?language=en) (Peggy McIntosh) 19:04 - Developing Empathy * Watch Hamilton! When it comes to leadership, Aaron Burr was right — “Talk less, smile more” (https://medium.com/@mkvolm/when-it-comes-to-leadership-aaron-burr-was-right-talk-less-smile-more-bf1e18dbac7a) (Being Able to Hear vs Being Able to Listen) * Deep Canvassing – How to talk someone out of bigotry: These scientists keep proving that reducing prejudice is possible. It’s just not easy. (https://www.vox.com/2020/1/29/21065620/broockman-kalla-deep-canvassing) * Google Assistant Research; Inclusive Design * Empathy Mapping (From UX Design) – Building For Everyone: Expand Your Market With Design Practices From Google's Product Inclusion Team (https://www.amazon.com/Building-Everyone-Practices-Googles-Inclusion/dp/1119646227) * Empathy Can Combat Mis/Disinformation * Fearing What We Don’t Understand: Nas - Hate Me Now ft. Puff Daddy (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dKSJN3WWR3E) (song) | Lyrics (https://www.google.com/search?q=nas+you+can+hate+me+now&oq=nas+you+can+hate+me+now&aqs=chrome..69i57j46j0l3j0i22i30.4277j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8#wptab=s:H4sIAAAAAAAAAONgVuLRT9c3LDYwLalINit6xOjJLfDyxz1hKYdJa05eY7Ti4grOyC93zSvJLKkU0uFig7KUuASkUDRqMEjxcaGI8Oxi0ktJTUsszSmJL0lMsspOttLPLS3OTNYvSk3OL0rJzEuPT84pLS5JLbLKqSzKTC5exCqUkViSqpCbqpCXX64AEQQAMkDXN6IAAAA) * Active Processing (psychology) (https://study.com/academy/answer/what-is-active-processing-in-cognitive-psychology.html) 36:03 - Using Tech + Policy For Good * Educating & Empowering People Online * Company and Community Values * Pipeline Investment and Early Exposure * Diversifying the Tech Policy Space / Manifestos? * Algorithmic Justice League (https://www.ajl.org/) * Virility * Clubhouse Is Worth $1 Billion Off the Backs of Black Folks. Now What? (https://verysmartbrothas.theroot.com/clubhouse-is-worth-1-billion-off-the-backs-of-black-fo-1846190868) Reflections: Arty: Centering around empowerment + asking, “How ARE you?” with the intention of listening. Chanté: We can’t outsource empathy. Corey: How the model of technology has shifted away from interest-based to follower-based and influencing. This episode was brought to you by @therubyrep (https://twitter.com/therubyrep) of DevReps, LLC (http://www.devreps.com/). To pledge your support and to join our awesome Slack community, visit patreon.com/greaterthancode (https://www.patreon.com/greaterthancode) To make a one-time donation so that we can continue to bring you more content and transcripts like this, please do so at paypal.me/devreps (https://www.paypal.me/devreps). You will also get an invitation to our Slack community this way as well. Transcript: ARTY: Hi, everyone. Welcome to Episode 230 of Greater Than Code. I am Artemis Starr and I'm here with my fabulous co-host, Chanté Thurmond. CHANTÉ: Hey, everyone and I had the great pleasure of introducing our guest of honor today, Corey Ponder. Welcome, Corey. COREY: Thank you. Thank you. Glad to be here. CHANTÉ: We're so glad to have you. If you don't mind, I'd love to read your bio so everyone knows who you are. COREY: Sounds great. CHANTÉ: Corey has over 10 years of work experience, he has had several roles across two industries and has also served in community organizations and nonprofits. At the core of each of these experiences is a passionate commitment to building community and developing people and programs. Corey most recently worked at Google serving as a senior policy advisor focused on privacy, advising product teams on best practices and approaches to inspire user trust. He also owns and manages his own business, em|PACT Strategies, a consulting firm that helps organizations build inclusive communities by prioritizing empathy as a skillset. Corey serves on boards of InnovatorsBox, a firm focused on creativity, and Youth Speaks, a nonprofit focused on youth arts and education. Great background. Corey, did we forget anything else? COREY: Well, I have to just because I am a lifetime SEC, Southeastern Conference, person, that I have to shout out Vanderbilt University, where I went for undergrad and then also, because I'm in California, I have to shout out University of California, Berkeley, where I went for my Master's in public policy. So those two things I would add. CHANTÉ: Those are great institutions for education. So good. Let's start off with the first question that we give everyone and that is: what is your superpower and how did you acquire it? COREY: Yes. I love this question. It gives me a chance to really nerd out. So I would say the first thing that comes up for me is empathy. When I think about empathy, I think about how superheroes, oftentimes exhibit qualities around being empathetic that we might look at as healing abilities, or the ability to regenerate themselves, or regenerate others, the stamina, or the fortitude, last, or survive in a space where there's a lot of things attacking them mentally and emotionally and able to persevere in spite of all of that. So I would say empathy is definitely the superpower that I have. I think when I step into spaces, I'm always thinking about what can I do to make other people feel more welcome, or feel more authentically themselves, which I feel like is the healing part. I feel like the regeneration piece is often me putting myself into positions where I don't like conflict, or seek it out, but I definitely feel like I put myself into spaces where I'm like, I want to support you and it might come at some risk to me, but I think I can bounce back from this. And then the stamina piece. I mean, none of this work, showing up for others even is not just a one-time thing and so, the consistency piece, I think, is something that I've really over time become more comfortable with just knowing that things might be protracted. People might need you for long periods of time and I'm here for it. CHANTÉ: So you said a few things here that really, I think, demonstrate the skillset for somebody who is in the diversity, equity, and inclusion space and I will bet that you probably didn't see that 10 years ago, or whenever you started down this journey. So if you wouldn't mind, I'd love to know how you got to this space now and I'll also add in, before you answer that question, that a lot of folks, BIPOC folks like us, we know what it's like to be othered. We know what it's like to be excluded. So I know for myself, I'm in the DEI space, but I'm just really curious. I did peek at your background, but just for folks who haven't or who don't have those quick fingers right now, they just want to hear your background, walk us through how you got here. COREY: Yeah, absolutely. So there are two inflection points. The first is I am a Black man so there are moments that I think about as a part of my growth as a Black boy and feeling like I had to grow up very fast to be taken seriously in whatever space that I was interested in to see the world from a perspective of hey, you really have to make sure that you're showing up and representing the person that you want to be because people will quickly ascribe something to you. This was a conversation that was permeating all around me so that when I got to college, there was an inflection point. The first one where I remember I was like, “I want to be a biologist and I might also go to medical school.” When I took lab for the first time, it was a moment where I realized like, oh man, despite all of the things that I have done, all of the things that are within my control, I studied hard. I was getting great grades. I was just woefully unprepared for that space of even just being in a lab and doing a titration. I was like, “What the heck is a titration? What is an Erlenmeyer flask?” I realized that in a lot of ways it was because I didn't have access to the resources, or the conversations, or nobody had even told me that I could do those things. I wasn't seen as somebody that could do those things and so it's like, I didn't know what I didn't know and I think that I really started doubting in many ways from that moment who I could be, what I felt like I needed to thrive in the spaces, what I felt like I was capable of in these spaces. It took me throughout college—great relationships and friendships, but also investment and resources around me to really find that voice that said, “Hey, actually, here's your story,” You're not this other narrative, this person that can't do it and you're not a statistic in a sense of a Black man that is x as opposed to a successful Black man. That was the first inflection point for me. Then I think the second was just having been at this point, maybe like 6, or 7 years working. I was at a moment at Facebook actually, where there was an increased conversation around what does it mean to support Black lives? Why are people talking about Black Lives Matter? In particular, during 2015, 2016, I forget specifically when, but Philando Castile and Alton Sterling were two Black men who were killed by police officers in different instances, in different cities, in different places, but within the same week. It was one of the first times that from a technology perspective, we were discussing this in an international way because it had been captured on Facebook Live. So there was this conversation around who are we as a part of this broader conversation? It was the second inflection point because it reminded me that was man, I am a Black man so even as I've done all of these things, I've been in careers, I've had these jobs and these opportunities where I've done things that I can be proud of, I'm still walking into this space the next day, after hearing about these instances and really feeling like I'm carrying something that I don't know how to speak to. I don't know how – I've never really talked to anybody about how it impacts the way that I am showing up in this space. So from there, I just made the commitment where I said, “I'm going to start trying to be more authentically myself. I'm going to start talking about all the parts of me that make me who I am.” I didn't have a plan for it; I just knew that I wanted to have those conversations. The interesting thing was I started having those conversations and people naturally, after I would talk to people, would say, “Well, what's next? What can I do to support you?” It really just made me think about the broader conversation around allyship. There's a broader conversation around what does it actually mean to show up for somebody and then I realized retroactively that there have been many examples, not only in my life, that people who have shown up for me that now I can pinpoint and look at as case studies, as data points, but also that I have naturally gravitated to doing that because of what I said earlier about the superpower of empathy. It has been something that I had always valued, even if I didn't know what it was, or what I was doing, or what it meant, but it was really important for me to see other people's stories because I knew how important it was for people to see mine. So those two inflection points really shaped how I viewed diversity, equity, and inclusion in my role, in the broader conversation. One, my own vulnerability with myself, but also two, how valuable it is to have people hear your story and validate who you are and your experience and how it's a part of a whole and how they see you. CHANTÉ: Yeah. ARTY: With stories like you mentioned being able to have this experience where you really understood what it meant to show up for someone. COREY: Yeah, absolutely. I'll give two stories. One was actually when someone showed up for me and I remember it was my boss actually shortly after the conversations, or at least what I mentioned earlier about Philando Castile and Alton Sterling. I just was having a really rough, it was a rough day. I mean, I was trying to show up business as usual was very much like, well, I have a job, I have meetings I have to go, and my boss asked me, “How are you doing?” That's a question you hear maybe a hundred times a day and it's also a question that feels like a rhetorical. I mean, you're supposed to say, “Good,” and keep it moving. I said that, but she really stopped me, told me like, “Hey, I'm asking because I really want to know and I have time. How are you doing?” I think just in that simple moment of making the space, creating an avenue for me to actually express a real truth, it just made me feel like wow, you didn't have to listen to my story. You didn't have to consider that I was something more than this a meeting I had to go to, or that I was more than this deliverable, or this project that I was working on. And you did. That meeting was, I, even years later, still to think about it because it was just like, wow, that meeting didn't have to happen that way. But I felt like this wasn't just my burden to bear after that question, or that conversation. The question that she asked and the conversation that followed. I think for me, showing up for others actually has been in this work—working through impact strategies and thinking through how do you actually show up as an ally. I've had a number of experiences. But in particular, there was one right around the decree, I would say the resurfacing of the Me Too movement and that conversation around sexual harassment in the workplace. There was an event, or a town hall, or an opportunity where I had a chance to really show up. I initially—and this is also a part of the failures piece—showed up to that very equally with the best of intentions and said, “Hey, what can I do to move this conversation forward?” Along the way, I remember realizing that oh man, in all of my eagerness to show up to this, I actually have silenced, or not included the voices that were probably most important to actually have this conversation. Women in particular, but also just thinking about in general, people who are survivors, or have been a victim of assault. So it was one of those moments where I took on feedback from people, some of my coworkers, colleagues, friends, I figured out a way to revamp the event, postponed the event so that I could do it the right way. And then I remember in the aftermath of that, seeing I learned something through that process about myself and also, the feedback that I received about the event afterwards was like, all right, this was a conversation where it really prompted people to think about a story that they haven’t thought about before—people who showed up to the event. Because I was helping organize it, showed up, and got something else out of it because I wasn't the only voice in the room. It was another moment where it was like, wow, this isn't necessarily my story, but I leaned in a little bit, or leaned in a lot in the beginning, learned a lot in the process about myself and even where my blind spots were within that entire process of learning in some ways helped tell a story that other people realized like, oh, wow, thanks for helping me see this narrative. CHANTÉ: That is so helpful. I feel like the times where I've had to show up as an ally and lean in to something that I didn't necessarily understand, really helped me to better articulate the needs I had as a Black identified woman, or as a Latino woman to say, “Hey, friend or colleague, you want to show up and help me. This is how you can help me,” Because I've learned from my own ouch moments like, oops, I shouldn't have done that and thankfully, somebody was gracious enough to share feedback in that moment, but many times, they're not. Do you have any best practices in terms of folks who want to show up, especially right now in this year, as an ally, they're very well-intentioned, well-meaning people, but they don't necessarily have somebody like an insider to give them the lay of the land, or to tell them where the real pain points are? COREY: Yeah, absolutely. Two things. The first thing is that to your point about the feedback, I think feedback is so critical and also, we have to recognize that for many communities, like you said, we're in the intersect. We are at the intersection of a lot of identities. I recognize that even though I am underrepresented as a Black person in many spaces, I also am in a privileged position because I'm a man. So I'm having to constantly examine those different nuances and intersections of my identity. Yet that also helps me understand that there's a lot of emotional labor in just showing up to be Black every day so, then sometimes, I might not have the energy, or might not have the capacity to give that feedback to somebody who was looking to be on their journey as an ally. The first thing that I would say is showing up for others is really, there's got to be a hunger, or a desire to actually grow and change. This idea of a growth mindset and it has to be separate from passively taking on the information, or the stories of others. I think once you have that, really having said, “I want to do this and I am motivated to do it.” Then I think the second thing is to go back to the superpower question from earlier, is I like to think about showing up for others as a trusted sidekick. So this model of thinking about you're not showing up to save the day, because that's also a lot of labor. Expecting to be the person to in the movie on a high note and be the person that walks down the aisle to get an award, or reward is not really the goal. But what it really is about is really understanding the stories of the people that you're playing in the same universe with and then figuring out what ways you can augment their journey. I think about three things that are a part of that, which is really those everyday moments. When I've had conversations through my work, oftentimes people are like, “Black lives matter. We need to March,” or “Gender equity. We need to dismantle capitalism.” It’s like, that is probably true and there are scholars out there that are speaking more deeply than I can ever speak to on that, but what about those moments that are outside of that? So you might say that Black lives matter,” and you might have the t-shirt, or you might step up in a forum and say, “Hey, I'm declaring that I believe in this cause,” but are you then actually including your coworker who was Black in the team lunches that happen every day that y'all just get together organically, but somehow that person is never on the organic chain? Or if you're thinking about gender equity and pay discrimination, that is a big thing, but also, are you actually making space and not taking up the room when you're in a meeting everyday being the person that has to get the last word, or are you making sure that everybody's opinions are on the table, including your women colleagues, or female colleagues are heard in the room? I think these are the everyday moments where we can show up as an ally. I think the second piece is thinking about these things that we have to confront about ourselves. It might be ugly or scary, but are necessary. We all have biases. We all are a product of certain privileges because we have identities that confer some amount of power to us and some type of favoritism to us. So if we're thinking about that, we have to really examine that how those show up and affect us. Peggy McIntosh wrote Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack, where she did a lot of research in this space, where the idea is that we carry this around and even if we don't acknowledge it, it's still there. This idea of it might be invisible to us, but you can imagine walking into a room with a big knapsack on not realizing that every time you turn left or right, you're hitting somebody with your privilege. So I think it's important to acknowledge that we have that backpack on whether we realize it, or not and it's affecting people whether we accept it, or not. And then the third thing is taking that next step of we have the positionality. So if you're talking about supporting from your identity, or from your perspective, you have some ability to influence change. Again, even if it's at a micro level. Because I'm a man, I have some privilege in the communities and spaces that I hold. Because of I’m a man, people are going to see me a certain way so then what I talk about what I represent, what I say, what I'm willing to advocate for is going to hold a different weight, whether that's right or wrong, it's going to hold a different weight than if a woman were to ask, or advocate for the same thing. So then what can I do to use that privilege in support of what that community might actually be asking for, or want? That might take a little discomfort on my part, but I guarantee it is way less uncomfortable than underrepresented groups having to advocate for their right to be seen, or heard, or validated in spaces. So those would be three things, I think you could do in that journey. CHANTÉ: Those are awesome things. The one that really resonates for me, too is just the empathy part because I feel like that is a core skill that we're going to need for the future of work. Oftentimes, when I say that people ask me, “Well, how do I develop empathy?” I have my own answer there, but I'd love to hear yours. How do you think people can get better at working on that empathy muscle and if you have anything that's worked for you personally, or that you recommend more professionally that you've seen in the workplace? That'd be helpful. COREY: Yeah, absolutely. Two things. The first thing that came up for me is Hamilton. I feel like everybody has seen it now. If you haven't seen it, spoiler alert, there's a theme that goes throughout Hamilton where Ehrenberg says, “Talk less, listen more.” There's this idea that I feel like with empathy, we often think of it as just like, ”I have to be in touch with my feelings,” but actually what I think it is, is actually a skill, a tangible skill of can I actually listen to someone and I think there's a difference between being able to hear and being able to listen. So I think the first thing that I have done is like, how can I actually actively listen more effectively to the people around me? There's actually this research, I think 2014, 2015, it was focused on can we use empathy? Like, actually measure the effect of empathy on reducing, in this case, anti-trans gender opinions? I think the research was called “Durably reducing transphobia,” but essentially, what they did was it was an exercise around active listening. They used the political tool called deep canvassing to essentially equip these researchers to go into a home where people expressed, or had been exposed to anti-transgender views and they literally just listened to them. They processed actively with this person about why they believe what they believe and then through that process, they didn't actually rebut with facts, or say, “But actually, that's not true,” or “Did you know that that's actually not true?” What actually happened was people realized through their own act of processing that you know what, this is not actually about transgender. It's actually about safety. I can relate now. I can empathize because now that I've come full circle and have been able to tell my story about why I'm processed out loud, I realized that I do have something in common with the transgender community. They want to feel safe. This law makes them feel unsafe. I want to feel safe in bathrooms, but those two things don't have to compete with each other. We're all people that want to be safe. That that research for me really sticks out whenever I think of active listening. I think the second thing is I've talked a couple of times about storytelling; there's a part of this for me, that really is seeing people as these amazing figures in a story you just haven't read yet. I think when I practice empathy, it often is just me really taking an interest more deeply in the why somebody does what they do as opposed to what they are doing. This hearkens back to Simon Sinek, who was a leadership consultant, or coach, but he had that phrase in a TED Talk where he said, “People don't buy what you do, they buy why you do it.” I think for me, that boils down to the core, how I think about if you want to cultivate empathy as a muscle, or a skill, it's really asking that question, “Why did they do that?” An actual tool that I often use in my work is something called empathy mapping, which is often used in UX design actually, in tech, to really think about human centered approaches to product design. But it lays out all of these ways about how do you think they would feel? How do you think they would see this? How do you think they would hear, or receive this message? And then it really gets you to ask this question about why would they react this way to what you're about to present, or why would they react to these set of circumstances in a certain way? CHANTÉ: One of the things that you're talking about here is the empathy mapping. I actually do this course, or this workshop with some collaborators around designing for inclusion and that is something that we really focus on. Have you seen that in practice well somewhere that you could illustrate, or show? I guess, we could provide an example, or a case study so folks know what you're talking about. COREY: Yeah. One of the things that this makes me think of is Google Assistant space, which is also a space that I spent some time in. But within the Google's Trust and Safety team, there was a focus on thinking about digital assistants and whether they had an inclusive voice when it came to gender, because there is a lot of research now that exists about voices and people perceive assistants to be female, but because of the voices. Companies are really doing a lot of that work now to think through what the implications are around that. But at the time, I remember in this work very early on, what I thought was interesting about this was just the steps that the Trust and Safety team went through to actually figure out if there was an issue here because you design a product, the product is meant to respond to queries. But soon, what they started finding was that maybe some of the queries that the digital assistant was getting were actually maybe more vulgar, or maybe more derogatory. So how does that break down? Does that break down like, is it just objectively that's how people talk to digital assistants? Well, no, and actually doing work and trying to reduce those offensive, or shocking, or risky experiences, what they found was that maybe this is actually offensive, or derogatory on the Google Assistant voices that present, or sound feminine. So now that we have done this research, how can we actually address that in the broader product? I think the Google Assistant then did things to try to make the voices more gender neutral, to provide more options so that there were a range of voices and then also, not necessarily default to the feminine voice, or not even call them feminine. I think they started calling them like Voice 1, Voice 2. So I think that that's one example of that I know, that I am aware of where when you're thinking about inclusion as it could be an objective truth that you're here to provide an answer to a problem. But often, that problem that you're solving might actually have many other subproblems within it. But the idea of inclusive design is important. It's an important lens for everybody to have honestly, on the product, because there are a range of things that might be happening that we're just not aware of. But certainly, the power of doing extensive UX research, or a deep dive on some of those things, I think is what helps augment and move us away from those types of snafus happening in our technologies. CHANTÉ: That was a beautiful example. Thank you. That sounds like a really cool project that you got to be a part of. Was there anything else that you learned from being on that project team that you can share? COREY: Yeah. Well, I should say, first off, this happened before I came into the team, but I think it was one of the things that I found very powerful about the team itself, doing the work and also, where they were centering people. I think that was one of the reasons why I've also been very interested in policy within tech, because it very much it's about centering and advocating for best practices for people and defining what users actually are. But I think for me, the lesson that I took from that just was again, that we all really have to be our advocates for this type of work and this type of change in the products and also, that a lot of this is sometimes not as complicated as we make it out to be. I think that it's really about priorities and what we value. What I appreciated about this team was just this idea of wow, you actually value not just the objective user, but the user in a sense of what context would they use this and how would this impact this community that we're trying to build this ecosystem? ARTY: So there's something you said earlier that really struck me when you were talking about this example with empathizing for these people that had been exposed to anti-transgender ideas and sitting down and listening. One thing that strikes me about that is just that as opposed to these people being a certain way, you framed things as these people were exposed to a certain kind of content that then they had this fear that came up in resonant to something that they were exposed to. I see those sorts of dynamics in other contexts. Would you mind elaborating a little more on that thought? COREY: Yeah. I definitely think that we are in – not that 2020, or certainly, the last 4 years since 2016 with President Trump, I don't think that that is unique. I think that it feels exacerbated because on top of that technology has been a lens through which we've seen almost an exponential growth in access to information. It may have outpaced the way in which we also keep up with the ways in which you are skeptically dissecting this information and analyzing it for truth and veracity. So I think that there's been a confluence of forces that have made it so that things like misinformation and disinformation are permeating and now, it is easily accessible. One of the things that I think about a lot in this space, as it relates to diversity, equity, and inclusion and why I think empathy is so important is that I feel like it can become very easy to go down this path because we're always looking for ways to validate our own experiences. So if there's one thing that we – an easy way to do it that is harmful, or damaging to others, is to validate by saying that, “Well, it can't be that over there.” I'm invalidating that to bolster the way that I see the world, or my experiences. What I really focus on from my work and why I think the empathy piece has been so powerful is that it's a reminder as we move through that cycle of how can you be more empathetic, that at the core of our human experience is this idea that we all do not like the feeling of being othered, or unseen. Even if for someone who feels like they are, whether you agree or disagree with this idea, I'm disaffected. I think this election cycle is a great example. A lot of people felt disaffected on both sides like, you're white middle-class, or you're Black and in poverty, or you're white and in poverty. You have all these sects of people that are like, “Ah, nobody's listening to me,” and that's reinforced because you're like, “Nobody has the experience that I have and nobody knows what it's like to feel othered like this.” But actually, the reality is, regardless of whether you understand what it means to be grow up white and poor, or Black and affluent, or Black and poor, or white and affluent, you all have this common experience where you have been othered at some point. Empathy says at the core of that human experience is something we all should be able to understand. So we're not necessarily focusing on what you went through so much as why did you have to go through it? I think that this disinformation, this misinformation feeds the – If we had more empathy, I think that would be the thing that would combat this because it would allow us to ask the right questions around maybe this is true, maybe this is not true. If I don't have the tools to actually assess whether it's true or real, what I can say is that I need to really think about the community that is centered in this story and understand how this would make them feel if this were true, how does it make them feel if this were not true. I think that that's where empathy and developing that as a skill could do a lot more work in this space where we're probably only going to see more honestly, content, or information where we have to vet where it comes from, whether it's real, who’s saying it and why they're saying it. ARTY: Yeah. I was thinking about how powerful it is just that even in listening to this context, as opposed to trying to correct it, what you did find was this commonality of, “Oh, we both have a desire to feel safe, it is part of the human experience,” and then with this disinformation, you've got this dynamic that really plays on fear. A lot of this information that's associated with fear reminds me of this TED Talk by Daryl Davis that I think Chanté, you're the one who actually had me listen to that. But specifically, that ignorance breeds fear breeds hate and then if we can go about empathizing and listening and building those connections and tackling the ignorance, that it can have a chain reaction effect on all of these other things. COREY: Yeah. This has made me randomly think of a song lyric by Nas, street prophet that he is, but his song with Puff Daddy, or P. Diddy, or whoever he was calling himself at the time called Hate Me Now. He said that line: people “fear what they don't understand, hate what they can't conquer. I guess, that's just a theory of man.” I was like, ah, this is making me think about that because I think so often, we are pushed into those lanes where the idea is to think that you have to conquer something. So it's like your safety, your capacity to do what you want to do in this world is won by subjugating, or by conquering something else, someone else and that's the only way that it can happen. And then also that fear piece; if I don't understand it, then it's not safe. So if I can't wrap my head around it, then I need to assume the worst and fear it. I think why empathy has been so powerful for me is one, because we don't often talk about it as something that we can actually cultivate. We often talk about it in a you either have it, or you don't, or it's a natural gift, or it isn't. I think it actually is something that can be cultivated and brought to bear, like in that research, where it’s like this was a community. I think the first time I did it, it was in South Florida, or maybe somewhere outside of Miami. I'm not actually sure of the specific locale, but this community had been subjected to all sorts of messaging around the transgender community, because it was meant to drive a particular position, or opinion on a bill around bathrooms and whether bathrooms could be used by people of the multiple genders, or you had to have separate men and women bathrooms. They were able to do through this research, they were able to find that not only were they able to shift people's perception around those issues—actually shift them positively in the direction of saying like, “Oh, actually I do support transgender rights in this conversation.” But that it was a statistically significant shift and it lasted for three months after that conversation when they did a check-in. So I think that it just really speaks to we don't have to fear what we don't understand. If you really just take the time to let people really work out their own narrative for themselves, they will often figure out that their own narratives are incongruent with how they actually are showing up in the space and it's not about telling them, “Your narrative is off,” like, “You're wrong.” I think that there's value in that, but if you're going to make the real change over time, in psychology, they call it act of processing. There's value in actually getting people to their own whatever it is, whatever reason they have for fearing what they don't understand to process that out loud in a way where they can actually be like, “I was heard and are realized that hearing myself is incongruent with how I actually like what I actually value.” So maybe coming to my own conclusions, I don't have to fear this, even though I don't understand all the parts of that experience CHANTÉ: That was really helpful, Corey and one of the thought bubbles—well, one of the many that popped up as you were responding to Arty's question was how do we then, because it sounds like there's a lot of value in anticipating, or using tech and policy for good in those moments. I'm just wondering, I know that you consult around this. So maybe take us down that avenue, because I think we're at this place where we've seen coming off of this last election, the power of the misinformation strategies and how we've partnered that with let's say, the Cambridge Analytica situation where they used data to underpin those fears and then really influenced a community, or a country to the space that they wanted them to be. How do we get ahead of that? What are some things we can do? Or what are some things maybe you're working on that are worth mentioning here today? COREY: Yeah. So those are very, very good questions, or good thoughts. I think that one thing that just thinking about even as you were saying with Cambridge Analytica, my first thought was just that we have existed in the technological space, in this information age where empowering people online, I feel like it has been separate from the using the data, or giving the data up in a way that, or using the data or giving the data up. By that I mean, essentially, we're using these products and tools, wouldn't have never really thought about it as a platform for change, or a platform to see the world we want to sees except for these little blips, or these moments where there are revolutions around like Arab Spring. That was driven, I believe on Facebook and then conversations again, around Black Lives Matter because of live video that we now have, we're able to capture the experiences in real time. So I think that the first thing that I would say is how can we actually educate people around being empowered online? You have a voice, but it's not just the voice to repeat what you have heard, but really to lend your own voice, your own vulnerability, your own story to what's happening in these forms. I think the second thing really is it comes down to the companies. I think that a lot of my conversations, when it comes to disinformation and misinformation, really comes back to values. Many companies, particularly ones that are community-focused and saying that our users are a part of an ecosystem, have to really ask themselves about what ecosystem are you actually trying to build? Because at a certain point, particularly if you are a private company, there are good ecosystems and there are destructive ecosystems. So it can't be a libertarian view of the technology is just a tool and it will all sort itself out. It actually has to be maybe more curated than that and that might not have been the initial approach of technology. Certainly, wasn't the approach to the world wide web either when it first started out. It was just like, anybody could create a geo site, anybody could do anything on the internet, but in some ways, I think that view of technology maybe has to change. It helps lends itself very well to innovation, but the challenge is that it creates a lot of loopholes for abuse. So then I think companies, as they start curating their experiences more, it has to be centered on very clear community values. What is your ideal world and your ideal state that you want to be contributing to as a part of this broader conversation around information and sharing data for the benefit of others? Most of these companies have that in their mission somewhere. They believe that they're doing a public good, even if they're also profiting in the process. Well, if that's true, then what values get you there and keep you there? So I think that that's how the disinformation and misinformation is allowed to persist, because there's just questions that you have to ask around are some things allowable within this ecosystem? Are we willing to take a hard line on some things for the benefit of the greater good? Then it’s also acknowledging that it is hard being in technology and now it's like, even if you're 99% effective at something, if you have a billion users, that's still millions of people, or millions of cases. You have to then also acknowledge that you're always working and it never will be good enough, but you can try to close that gap and be consistent on what you actually value and believe and that at least shows a bit of sincerity over time around what you're trying to do. CHANTÉ: I appreciate your take on that. One thing I might imagine to be true, correct me if I'm wrong, but I think from what I've seen is that the tech policy space is not Black enough. It is not; I don't see enough BIPOC folks. I don't see people really, outside of cis able-bodied white guys in that space. Is there anything that you recommend in terms of trying to change that so that in the future where we're going to have, for sure, undoubtedly more mixed-race people, just given the trends that we're on, how do we address that, or how do we curate for that? COREY: Yeah. I mean, so much of – it reminds me of the story I was telling about biology and going into lab is that I think so much of it is about really understanding the possibilities of what is actually out there and having someone tell you, or exposing you to what those possibilities are. Some of that is pipeline development. So I think we're many of these companies and also, just not even tech companies, but policy in general. This base is about how do you invest back in these communities, knowing that it might pay dividends in 10, or 15 years down the road to have this more diverse ecosystem of policy people, or practitioners, or technologists. Even if you're not developing them particularly for a job today, but down the road. I mean, I think some of that is pipeline investment and actually just telling people at a young age, “I see you, here's the three things you need to get started,” and then the sky's the limit. I know there are some programs around coding that have taken off where people go into the community and do that. It will be interesting to see how, if we were to look over time, whether that's really changing the overall dynamics of actual Black engineers, or BIPOC engineers, or a diverse representation of engineers. But I think that that would be the same for policy and the other thing that I would say is it would seem that many companies, in the tech space in particular, did not actually have – whether they should have, or shouldn’t have, they didn't necessarily have to focus on these types of questions for their growth and success in the early stages. So I think that that also meant that there just wasn't an investment in the broader, we need a policy team. Maybe there were people there to focus on policy and ask these questions. But I think as we continue to see the growth and the impact of companies on just everything like our economic systems, the way we behave, and the way we think about different issues. Now, it is really important to think not just about whether building this product is going to net an additional 100,000 users, at the expense of so many other things, will it affect the political conversation happening in this country? Will it affect the access to resources in this place? Now we're seeing the investment in those communities and spaces, for companies that are growing, or building now, I think it's about really investing in there early and make sure you have the right team and the right representation of the team to address the issues that you could foresee being a challenge, or being a space that your product will exist in. But I think policy is certainly one of many professional spaces where you do see underrepresentation really because of access, or knowledge about the opportunity. I'll just say, because this is a long, long way of saying, but I want to end with a personal story where it's just even for myself going into the technology space, I was always interested in policy, but really from the lens of how you can go directly into government as a civil servant and I try to push the machine, or move through the bureaucracy to actually make effective rules, or regulations that mattered, or meant something to different communities and I think government can still be that thing. There's a lot of challenges there, but it still can be that force. What I didn't realize was that this existed in the tech world, that these were conversations that were happening, that companies were having an influence on the way we legislate, or the way we behave, or the way we think about all sorts of issues that would “fit squarely” in the policy world. It was only through my kind of exploration, but also, connecting with people who had gone over to these companies, in these spaces and the privilege that I had of being able to go to different institutions, where I had access to people who could have these conversations with me, where I realized hey, I could be in this space. But it was something that I didn't even realize was a thing and would never have explored, otherwise. So I think that that also for me, recognizing that I had access to resources and tools that helped me even see it as a possibility and so, I think that has to be the thing that we're in the companies that anybody who has the privilege, or capacity to do so should be investing in. CHANTÉ: Yeah. ARTY: I feel like there's some things that we could do in terms of new precedent setting, that we could do as a broader tech community, that could help drive change of adopting cultural practices within the context of organizations and everything that flows from there. So one of the key threads you brought up was that it comes down to values and we ought to start with having a clear set of things that we want to value as a community and build as organizations and build around that. I started thinking back to you mentioned early days of the internet when anybody could do anything and spin stuff up on the internet and I think about some of the early tech interfaces and stuff we had and I feel like there was a lot more community and curation type things, too. We had message boards and I think about AOL days where you have little chatrooms that you join and stuff that were topic-focused. It seems like, as opposed to being these topic-focused finding each other kind of things by having similar shared interests, we've shifted to this follower type model where it's just about networking and connecting with the people and not necessarily being connected for any other purpose other than getting the most followers. So the purpose becomes the network and then the identity stuff is associated with how many followers you have and how many retweets you get. The dynamics of how we've framed identity dynamics and communication dynamics in tech has shifted quite dramatically. Tech has shifted the internet and then the people seem to have kind of shifted a mirror of the technology that we built. So I'm thinking if we take a step back and start with what you're saying in terms of community values and what a reflection of that would look like technology wise, but what if we started with a manifesto and some vision, even if it's rough vision, of what that might look like? Do you have any thoughts on, if you were to write some of those things down, what you would say? COREY: Yeah. This is making me – and I don't know them off the top of my head, but it's making me think of some of the AI ethics work, artificial intelligence work that several people are working on right now. I think of Dr. Ruha Benjamin, it was Dr. Tim McGraw, I think of a few other contemporaries of them, but there's actually, I think an Algorithmic Justice League where they are actually thinking of that. There's a manifesto of sorts, or a thing that we should be believing and that underpins the ethics that we should have as it relates to that technology. If I were to think of just a couple of things, the first would really be around the empowerment piece and I think I mentioned that before that we're promoting people to feel not just that they can speak, or be on a platform, or they can have access, but that they are empowered with the information, which in my mind, when I say empowered means that they can actually, it's a call to action. They believe that they can do more of the thing that they want to do. I think that is important because then it helps you actually center, it makes you actually have to question all of the communities that are on the platform and what you want them to actually be able to be called to do. Right now, not saying empowerment means that I feel like you're removed from the actual impact of what you are allowing to be shared, or allowing to be set on the platform. I think the second is while there are a lot of companies that would say they do this; it is important to call out safety and authenticity as maybe two and three. The idea is to really root in vulnerability, the idea is really to root in this idea of safety, psychological safety, but also physical, depending on whatever the product is. Because again, I think that those two things require you to then center the user and actually really think about well, what does it mean to actually build a safe community where most of all people feel safe psychologically and while also being their truest selves. Those were the three values, or the three areas where I feel like you would shape some type of principles around, but I also just want to say, I love your point because I do think that in some ways, the way in which we consume technology, or consume information now has really centered on this viral nature. I think in some ways, virality motivates the way that information is even propagated. Whereas before, when you're talking about these interests, it may have really been just genuinely about the interest and then it coalesced around that chatroom. But now virality, because that is the name of the game in so many ways, it almost requires people who have figured out the model of how to make things viral as opposed to people who have figured out something to say that is substantive, or something to say that is empowering to our broader community. Those two things are not always overlapping and so, you have people who will influence and then systems that might reinforce that influence when the influence is not necessarily earned on the merits of actually being empowering, or safe, or authentic dialogue. So I think you're absolutely spot on that like, the way that we consume has shifted to maybe wanting things to be viral and virality being almost the barometer of truth and value when that's not always the case. CHANTÉ: It makes me think that perhaps we've been focusing so much on the tech and the product space, that nobody is—I shouldn't say nobody—but we probably haven't focused enough on the actual consumer and making sure that we stand up resources, or a hub to inform them and make them smarter consumers. Because as we know, every click leads to a dollar, or every like leads to something. So I think we reinforce the system unknowingly. COREY: Yeah. CHANTÉ: I often feel this sort of pull, I don't know about you, but I've been watching versus on Instagram. Are you familiar with versus? COREY: Yes, yes. There have been some good ones. There also have been some duds, but yes. CHANTÉ: Duds, I know. Don't get me started, but #BlackTwitter, right? I'm like, “Oh wow.” So where I was getting excited and I was online early for the pandemic, but there was this part of me that just couldn't. I didn't want to get too attached, or too into it because I was like, “Man, look, we're on somebody else's platform making them money.” I know that there's some stuff being done to shift that and I see this a lot with the Black culture specifically, I feel like sometimes we're online and we're making this tech space, or this product really dope and nobody's there to protect us as consumers. I get really upset about that and I just want so badly to make sure that the consumers are educated, that they are informed and understanding how they should, or shouldn't be using their social capital. How they should, or shouldn't be supporting something that probably doesn't always have their best interests at heart. I don't know, it's not like there's one or two of us who have to be responsible, there's a whole – it's everyone's job. Do you of any collectives, or projects, or are you a part of anything that is aiming to do that? COREY: Yeah. Again, a really, really good point. That really resonates because, I'll just say before I answer the question, I've had that conversation around memes because I feel like memes are such a way that we communicate now as a part of popular culture, but I don't have the tools necessary to trace the lineage of the first meme, but I would bet again, going back to the virality of means that there was something that was also infused with Black youth culture in America that made memes popular and then made them more ubiquitous. So this idea of making technology cool is because there is a culture that is infused in again, making it cool. It's a tool that then you have a community, it feels empowered to do something a certain way, but then that empowerment is not protected. I would say that just in my experience in tech, I have seen companies that have made investments in this conversation on equity and well-being where really, the goal is to how do you work more closely with and partner with creators? How do you work more closely with users of the platform, either through research, or actually through direct partnerships to understand how the tool is actually being used and what are ways that actually supplement the way in which they are using it today? I know in the very, very beginning stages of Twitter, that was one reason why Twitter took off was because Twitter was just – I think it might've started, was it a 100 characters? I don't even know now is way more, maybe it started with the 140 characters, but other than just being that platform tweet 140 characters, everything else was community generated RTs, the idea of having a retweet button, these different features very early on were all things that had organically risen out from the community and they just listened. So I think in many ways, it was cool to see our product at that early stage just say we've created a tool where they were just going to see how people use it and then build on top of that. I think that that work's still happening. Companies should continue to invest in it, of course, but really listening to your creators and rather than saying, “Here's what we need you to fit, we are going to start doing that,” doing more of learning how you're using it is either about talking to you directly, or analyzing or examining it and really understanding what will matter to you and now we're augmenting that with this feature that we have listened to you and heard that you need. And then on the reverse side, proactively thinking about these are the issues that people are citing that they have, then make them feel unsafe, make them feel like they can actually have a voice on this platform and we are listening to that and we are actively going address that even if it's not going to necessarily net us an additional dollar spent, or an additional user earn. This is important because this is preventing you from using a platform to the fullest. So I've seen some things since I have been in the space, I think much of it is going to have to be a continued investment. I can't think of any one product, or any one area where I feel like it's like really landed. But I also think that that speaks to the broader point, which is that it's a journey and then as you continue to grow as companies, you're going to have more challenges. But also, I see opportunities because you're bringing more communities and more people onto the platform and as you scale, that has to be a part of the conversation. It's not just going to be a monolith, or one trigger response to a collective user, but actually many different types of users on your platform. CHANTÉ: No doubt. I’m trying to remember when it was specifically, it was probably three, four weeks ago when there was all this big announcement about Clubhouse, for example, going and people specifically felt some kind of way because here you had a situation where there was a bunch of Black users who were early on joining and you even had a Black man who was the representative of the icon and people were like, “Wait a minute. We're not being involved in this whole opportunity for more funding and what does that mean for us?” I listened in that week to a bunch of conversations and folks were incensed; they felt left out, they felt overlooked, taken advantage of. I think we've seen some action spur out of that, but it just reminded me of that moment that we have a lot of power collectively as a community. But you have to have times and spaces where people can organize and communicate that are not dependent upon somebody else's online community that looks free, but maybe it's not and my feeling is that it has to be a multi-stakeholder groups that are holding these technology companies and even the investor community accountable, but also at the same time, there's got to be people who are thinking about just consumer education and consumer engagement period, because we're only going to see more of this, not less of it. COREY: Yes, on multiple points. Having worked in privacy for some time as well doing policy work, that is something that comes up continually is that even as you build out more mechanisms to keep people's data safe, or you're like, “Hey, we actually are committed to the cause and this is all the work that we're going to do to protect your data,” the number of choices become unwieldy if you don't also have an education around all the things that a company can do with your data. So then it almost feels insincere if all of these things are offered without the education, or the continual reinforcement in different ways throughout their product, or their company's values. And then your point about Clubhouse. Actually, I remember reading that and I agree. Again, it really speaks to what I was saying about the meme piece where it’s like there is something that becomes really, really cool and it helps the technology take off and then it suddenly comes ubiquitous in this different way and it's like, “Whoa, wow, did we really think about the core experience?” How the course readings was shaped by a smaller community, but a very important one. But then the other thing I think about with Clubhouse, but I think a lot of apps are guilty of this in the US is, also just from a tech equity perspective, leaning into the iPhone development space in and of itself often, I feel like creates its own barriers around elitism and privilege. Not because iPhone, or Apple is uniquely trying to say, “Here's our image and here's who the customers are that we have.” But actually, that just even being on Clubhouse in and of itself, or iPhone only products often leave out an entire demographic of people when you think even in the US, I think 50 something percent of people are still are Android users and then you think globally, Android actually has a ridiculous market share of way more than Apple globally. So I was just what you're also thinking about the equity perspective and inclusion, I often think about that as well. Even at the outset, you're already narrowing the lens a little bit, and I get some of that as developmental challenges, but given all the success—I remember reading this article about Clubhouse and what they're worth, I'm like, “Wow, it's all of that.” It would seem like for me, the next step would be now invest in the development of an Android app in order to really see us reach that community, a broader community of which some of the people who help shape the core experience are representative sample of, but we could probably get so much more from this broader community. CHANTÉ: Yes like, I wish I had a lot of snap effects going right now. I agree with that, obviously. So thank you. ARTY: We're getting to the end of the show where we finish up with reflections. So the thing that—I mean, there's so many things in the show—I've been thinking about this idea of what it means to center around core values and community and what type of communities we want to build and everything that follows from those core values and especially this idea of centering around empowerment. I feel like that makes a lot of sense: centering around empowerment. If our goal in building these spaces is to empower people, then what are all the systems and policies and things that follow with that goal of empowerment in mind, how do we raise and lift up people, and create supportive spaces that do that? I think back to one of the things you said at the beginning around authenticity and the ability to, or this conversation that you had, where I think it was your manager, Corey, that asked you, “How are you?” which is normally this plain old question that you just reply with, “Oh, good.” There's an expectation that it's almost rhetorical like, we're just moving on and touching base and not really saying anything of substance. But there's something fundamentally different there with, “No, how are you?” and it's not about the words you're saying, it's about the intention to actually listen. The intention of giving someone the space to let their guard down, to be their authentic self, to tell you what's real. With this goal of empowerment, I feel like that's another aspect that's really important is being able to create spaces where we can drop our guard and be real. We can say what's really going on. In order to learn, we’ve got to be able to be ourselves, too and I feel like there's a lesson in the small in that of something that we can all make an effort to do when we interact with people to really ask them, “How are you really doing? What's really going on?” As opposed to trying to fix it, to change anything, to just listen, to really listen to what's going on with them, to finding those commonalities of, “Oh, I guess we all just want to be safe.” Seeing those things that are the same, as opposed to trying to fix, or change someone else, just focusing on listening and hearing where they're coming from. I feel like if we move toward those combination of things with that intention, with that goal in mind, with that being our why, that how we design the technology, how we design the policies that follow from that will help move us in the right direction. CHANTÉ: For me, I'm thinking a lot about this empathy piece, because it makes me pause and say, “While I prioritize it, I value it,” I just don't know how many hiring managers out there are actually looking for and building empathy into one of their core values that they're prioritizing on their hiring rubric. But as we move to this next fourth industrial revolution where we're automating and people are losing their jobs, we can't outsource empathy. So it's something that we definitely need to make sure we are working on individually and if you have children, I hope that people are thinking about ways that they can cultivate that early in young and teachers and educators, and especially folks who want to be a founder, or they want to be an investor. I think this is something that takes a community effort and I want to hear more people talking about empathy.

The Boondocks Podcast
Thank You for Not Snitching

The Boondocks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2021 84:40


Thank You for Not Snitching - S02/E03  Lynxi WelcomeEpisode synopsis HBOMax Synopsis: A rash of home invasions has Woodcrest in a panic. When Riley witnesses the theft of Granddad's precious car Dorothy, will he crack under questioning? Pre Show: Reminder: https://www.patreon.com/boondockspod We got confirmation that The Boondocks reboot is still happening and is now scheduled for 2022! Birthdays Aries Dating videos News Reagan White privilege Check on your Asian friends Things are still the same Show: Phone etiquette Dealing with police while Black Neighborhood watch Rappers who out themselves Drake Sean Ellis Children being questioned by the police Getting blamed when you're not white  White People Question:  From TikTok : “Do you have any white folks on your list of who could make the potato salad for the cookout?” (aka The Teena Marie Badge) Have a “Stupid White People Question” you want to leave us?Email us at Hosts@TheBoondocksPod.comor leave us a voicemail at ‪‪(760) 933-8636‬, that's (760) WE-3-UNDO. Post Show Info: We've got a Patreon now. Want a shout-out? Want extended episodes? Want to meet up for exclusive AMAs? Want to promote yourself or an event? Hit us up at https://www.patreon.com/boondockspod Next week: S02E04 - Stinkmeaner Strikes Back Need to see where we are on social media and such?  Come find us!  https://www.theboondockspod.com/links Trivia: The character of Betty Van Hausen was voiced by Marion Ross.  Mrs. Cunningham from Happy Days Robert's comment about "the price of bullets are going up" is a reference to Chris Rock's stand up HBO special Bigger and Blacker. Gangstalicious' appearance on TRL rapping and bragging about his assault on Johnny Guinness, only to be arrested shortly after by the police, appears to be a reference to a 1993 episode of Yo! MTV Raps. Tupac Shakur, making an appearance to promote his film Poetic Justice, boasted on camera about assaulting the Hughes Brothers (directors of Menace II Society). At the time, the crime was unsolved, as there were no known witnesses to the assault; police arrested Shakur and obtained a VHS of the interview, which was used at trial as the sole piece of evidence against him. The jury convicted Shakur based on his own statements. It can also be a reference to an incident on April 15, 1999, in which Sean P. Diddy Combs assaulted record executive Steve Stoute with a bottle of champagne. The assault took place over scenes from a music video P. Diddy was featured in by rapper Nas titled Hate Me Now. The interrogation scene with Granddad is lifted from Menace II Society, complete with Bill Duke voicing the detective. Then, in the middle of the interrogation, Duke says to Granddad, "You know you done fucked up right?", making an obvious reference to the movie.  Show Music: Intro:  #Makeachange by K.I.R.K. is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License. Outro:  Good Times by Audiobinger is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike License. ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★

WrestleRant Radio
WrestleRant Radio - February 25, 2021: The Miz Talks WWE Title Win, Parents' Reaction, WrestleMania 37, His Haters, & More!

WrestleRant Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2021 64:26


​Days removed from winning the WWE Championship at Elimination Chamber, The Miz is on WrestleRant Radio to talk to Graham "GSM" Matthews all about it! Hear his thoughts on becoming WWE Champion for the first time in a decade, why he doubted it would ever happen again, proving his "haters" wrong, how this reign will differ from his first, vowing to headline WrestleMania 37 one year out, becoming a Grand Slam Champion, his "Hate Me Now" video package from WrestleMania 27, if Downstait will ever sing him to the ring, and his parents' reaction to his title win. ​RJ Marceau then joins GSM to discuss AEW's shocking signing of Paul Wight (formerly known as Big Show)! Will he bring value to the company as a commentator? Will he wrestle and against who? Will he make Dark: Elevation must-see? They also get into the Elimination Chamber pay-per-view, what Miz as WWE Champion means for WrestleMania and where it leaves Drew McIntyre, the positives and negatives of doing Bobby Lashley vs. Brock Lesnar, Roman Reigns vs. Edge for the Universal Championship being made official, other possible 'Mania matches, thoughts on this week's episodes of NXT and Dynamite, who will win next week's WWE Women's Tag Team Championship match, why Britt Baker losing to Nyla Rose in the AEW World Women's Championship Tournament made zero sense, and more!

Lyrics & Lattes Podcast
029: How to Deal with Haters

Lyrics & Lattes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2021 15:06


Podcast SummaryLyrics & Lattes is a self-development podcast that uses hip-hop lyrics to inspire and encourage you to show up as your best self and live a more fulfilled life. We release a full episode every Monday and a mini-episode every Thursday. Episode SummaryToday’s solo episode is about dealing with haters and the negativity they bring. These people may be your co-workers, strangers on the internet, and even your family. Wherever you've encountered them - it can have a negative affect on what you think about your accomplishments and how you ultimately feel about yourself. Hate is unavoidable, so in this episode, we offer some practical tips on how to manage what you can't stop. Key Points: Step 1: Your Growth is in Your Opposition (Song: Momentum by Russ, Benny the Butcher, Black Thought)Step 2: Don't Stop Elevating (Song: Hate Me Now by Diddy and Nas) Fan Pick Gabe A. Step 3: Hate vs Constructive Criticism (Song: Hater Players by Black Star aka Mos Def/ Yasiin Bey and Talib Kweli)Stay ConnectedIs there a song that encouraged you or changed your perspective? Explain it via voice note at LyricsAndLattes.com and we'll play it on the show! IG: @LyricsAndLattesHosts: @JasonWallaceDC and @LostinDesauss

The Foobar Show
The Last Show of 2020 Part 1 - Wonder Woman, Cannabis Beverages, & NBA GOATs

The Foobar Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 134:43


Episode 213foobarshow.com | MERCH NOW AVAILABLE!The Foos do their last show of 2020 with their sponsor Alex “G Baby” Luna.-They talk about their appearance on Pigzradio last week for their episode 365.-What did everyone do for Christmas. Music Highlights:-Don't Hate Me Now by Average Joe & The Benchwarmers-Carpet Shark by Top Shelf ShakeGeeking Out:-The Foos review Wonder Woman 1984Music Highlights:-Listen by The Fallen Electric-Weep by AelishThe Joint Report:-420 Christmas presents-"The race to build a global cannabis beverage leader is heating up” by Hightimes Magazine-Josh vouches for hyperwolf.comMusic Highlights:-Hereditary by Wolves Inside-Better Days by AnonymousSports:-The Foos talk NBA and picks for the GOATs.Music Highlights:-Lucy by Soaring Blackbirds-Move To The Sound by The Fallen ElectricFoobar Christmas Trivia:-The Foo wanted to have some trivia since The Foos lost at Pigzradio.Music Highlights:-Transcend by Zolto-Stay Home by The CootiesPodzilla:-Podzilla no. 11 - Godzilla vs GiganSpicy Challenge:-Daebak Ghost Pepper Spicy Chicken Black NoodlesGive us a 5-star positive review on Apple Podcasts and we'll send you a free t-shirt!SUPPORT OUR SPONSORALF Live Events for all of your live audio/visual needs at alflei.comGet your Foobar Show merch at foobarshow.comCheck out The Fallen Electric at thefallenelectric.com for music, news, and merch!

The Foobar Show
The Last Show of 2020 Part 2 - Christmas Trivia, Podzilla #11 Godzilla vs Gigan, & Spicy Challenge

The Foobar Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 84:01


Episode 213foobarshow.com | MERCH NOW AVAILABLE!The Foos do their last show of 2020 with their sponsor Alex “G Baby” Luna.-They talk about their appearance on Pigzradio last week for their episode 365.-What did everyone do for Christmas. Music Highlights:-Don't Hate Me Now by Average Joe & The Benchwarmers-Carpet Shark by Top Shelf ShakeGeeking Out:-The Foos review Wonder Woman 1984Music Highlights:-Listen by The Fallen Electric-Weep by AelishThe Joint Report:-420 Christmas presents-"The race to build a global cannabis beverage leader is heating up” by Hightimes Magazine-Josh vouches for hyperwolf.comMusic Highlights:-Hereditary by Wolves Inside-Better Days by AnonymousSports:-The Foos talk NBA and picks for the GOATs.Music Highlights:-Lucy by Soaring Blackbirds-Move To The Sound by The Fallen ElectricFoobar Christmas Trivia:-The Foo wanted to have some trivia since The Foos lost at Pigzradio.Music Highlights:-Transcend by Zolto-Stay Home by The CootiesPodzilla:-Podzilla no. 11 - Godzilla vs GiganSpicy Challenge:-Daebak Ghost Pepper Spicy Chicken Black NoodlesGive us a 5-star positive review on Apple Podcasts and we'll send you a free t-shirt!SUPPORT OUR SPONSORALF Live Events for all of your live audio/visual needs at alflei.comGet your Foobar Show merch at foobarshow.comCheck out The Fallen Electric at thefallenelectric.com for music, news, and merch!

It's Hughezy, Hello!
Ep. 76: Coronavirus St Patricks Day Party Triggering Comedy Orgy

It's Hughezy, Hello!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2020 57:06


stuck in the house alone? not able to go out drinking? Well don't worry, The H-Man is here to make it all about ME!Hughezy is joined by Joe Feeney, host of Creative Control Daily, and Skip McGregor, co-host of Hate Me Now, to debate:. Is Pete Davidson lying about his mental health?. feminist films bombing. Hilary Clinton destroying the podcasting industry. Transgender athletes.is Liberalism a mental disorder?and much, much more increasingly offensive & hilarious stuff SUPPORT OUR SPONSOR======================go to http://www.bluechew.com and use the code HELLO to you your FREE supply. That's FREE supply. If you don't use the code HELLO then you have to pay... while if you use the code HELLO you get it for free.for NFL betting VISIT https://mybookie.ag/?affid=3339 and use the promo code HUGHEZY to get your special offerSUPPORT THE SHOW==================Hughezy's Wish-List ttps://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/3SCLA5JFIJRPT/ref=nav_wishlist_lists_1?_encoding=UTF8&type=wishlistHughezy's YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDaoIiChjW6pgzc8QqvZb3gHughezy's Twitter https://twitter.com/TheHughezyHughezy's Instgram https://www.instagram.com/thehughezy/FOLLOW OUR GUESTS====================Joe Feeney https://twitter.com/jffeeney3rdSkip McGregor https://twitter.com/Skip315

Rap of Ages
2.7 A Champagne Bottle Is Not a Weapon

Rap of Ages

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2020 49:14


Nas f. Puff Daddy, "Hate Me Now" - The best episode you'll never hear about the best music video you'll never see.

Short Story Long
#170 - Coach Jason Brown | Last Chance U

Short Story Long

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2019 63:42


Reckless Event https://www.youngandreckless.com/pages/ticket-event Coach Jason Brown from Netflix's Last Chance U sat down with me to talk about his coaching style and where that comes from, what motivates him, his true passion and how he loves giving people opportunity that wouldn't otherwise have it. Check out his new book "Hate Me Now, Love Me Later" below: Click Here for His Book Drama's Reckless Picks: https://ynr.la/DramasPicks

Short Story Long
#170 - Coach Jason Brown | Last Chance U

Short Story Long

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2019 63:42


Reckless Event https://www.youngandreckless.com/pages/ticket-event Coach Jason Brown from Netflix's Last Chance U sat down with me to talk about his coaching style and where that comes from, what motivates him, his true passion and how he loves giving people opportunity that wouldn't otherwise have it. Check out his new book "Hate Me Now, Love Me Later" below: Click Here for His Book Drama's Reckless Picks: https://ynr.la/DramasPicks

This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von
Last Chance U's Coach Jason Brown

This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2019 84:27


Subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts http://bit.ly/ThisPastWeekend_ Theo sits down with Coach Jason Brown from Netflix’s hit docuseries Last Chance U. Check out his book ‘Hate Me Now, Love Me Later’ https://www.amazon.com/Hate-Me-Now-Love-Later/dp/195086006X This episode brought to you by… Bombas Buy your Bombas at https://BOMBAS.com/THEO get twenty percent off your first purchase Dollar Shave Club Get your Ultimate Starter Set for just $5 at https://DollarShaveClub.com/THEO Ziprecruiter Try for free at https://ziprecruiter.com/TPW Find Theo Website: https://theovon.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/theovon Facebook: https://facebook.com/theovon Facebook Group: https://facebook.com/groups/thispastweekend Twitter: https://twitter.com/theovon YouTube: https://youtube.com/theovon Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiEKV_MOhwZ7OEcgFyLKilw Producer Nick https://instagram.com/realnickdavis Music “Shine” - Bishop Gunn http://bit.ly/Shine_BishopGunn Gunt Squad www.patreon.com/theovon Name Aaron Rasche Adam White Alaskan Rock Vodka Alex Hitchins Alex Person Alex Petralia Alex Wang Alexa harvey Andrew Valish Angelo Raygun Annmarie Reilly Anthony Holcombe Ashley Konicki Audrey Hodge Ayako Akiyama Bad Boi Benny Ben Deignan Ben in thar.. Benjamin Herron Benjamin Streit Bobby Hogan Brandon Brandon Kirkman Carla Huffman Charles Herbst Christina Peters Christopher Becking Claire Tinkler Cody Cummings Cody Kenyon Cody Marsh Crystal Dakota Montano Dan Draper Dan Perdue Danielle Fitzgerald Danny Crook David Christopher David Smith David Witkowski Dentist the menace Diana Morton Dionne Enoch Doug C Dusty Baker Fast Eddie Faye Dvorchak Felicity Black Gillian Neale Ginger Levesque Grant Stonex Greg Salazar Gunt Squad Gary J Garcia J.P. Jamaica Taylor James Briscoe James Hunter Jeffrey Lusero Jenna Sunde Jeremy Weiner Jim Floyd Joaquin Rodriguez Joe Dunn Joel Henson Joey Piemonte John Kutch Johnathan Jensen Jon Blowers Jon Ross Jordan R Josh Cowger Josh Nemeyer Joy Hammonds Justin Doerr Justin L justin marcoux Kennedy Kenton call Kevin Best Kirk Cahill kristen rogers Kyle Baker Lacey Ann Laszlo Csekey Lawrence Abinosa Leighton Fields Luke Bennett Madeline Garland Mandy Picke'l Mariah Marisa Bruno Matt Nichols Meaghan Lewis Mike Mikocic Mike Nucci Mike Poe Mona McCune Nick Roma Nikolas Koob Noah Bissell OK Qie Jenkins Ranger Rick Robyn Tatu Ruben Prado Ryan Hawkins Ryan Walsh Sagar Jha Sarah Anderson Scoot B. Sean Scott Secka Kauz Shane Pacheco Shannon potts Shona MacArthur Stephen Trottier Suzanne O'Reilly Theo Wren Thomas Adair Tim Greener Timothy Eyerman Todd Ekkebus Tom Cook Tom Kostya Tugzy Mills Tyler Harrington (TJ) Vanessa Amaya Victor Montano Vince Gonsalves William Reid Peters Yvonne Zeke Harris

Around The Way Curls Podcast
Ep 40. The Music Of Our Lives

Around The Way Curls Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2019 102:50


Join us as we talk all things music! We take a journey down memory lane and share the music of our lives from our early childhoods, to the first albums we ever bought, the first songs we learned the entire lyrics to and the soundtracks that played while falling in love and enduring heart ache. We answer who we think the top 5 female MC's of all time are and our favorite albums of all time. Weigh in! Music:Buy Teddy Pendergrass Feel The Fire https://music.apple.com/us/album/feel-the-fire/316075611?i=316075708Buy Roberta Flack’s Killing Me Softly https://music.apple.com/us/album/killing-me-softly-with-his-song/355038498?i=355038523Buy Judy Garland’s Over the Rainbow https://music.apple.com/us/album/over-the-rainbow/1423343729?i=1423344617 Buy Fela Kuti’s Water Get No Enemy https://music.apple.com/us/album/water-no-get-enemy-edit/682960548?i=682961325Buy Tito Puente’s A Gozar Timbero https://music.apple.com/us/album/a-gozar-timbero-son-montuno-outtake/304746406?i=304746422Buy Bob Marley’s Exodus https://music.apple.com/us/album/exodus/1422676686?i=1422677357Buy Spice Girls’ Wannabe https://music.apple.com/us/album/wannabe-radio-edit/723398173?i=723398294Buy Missy Elliott’s Can’t Stand The Rain https://music.apple.com/us/album/the-rain-supa-dupa-fly/302943429?i=302943466Buy DMX’s Ruff Ryders’ Anthem https://music.apple.com/us/album/ruff-ryders-anthem/1444533207?i=1444533214Buy Ruff Ryders feat. Jay Z Jigga My N*%$$@ https://music.apple.com/us/album/jigga-my-n-a-feat-jay-z/1035602470?i=1035603591Buy Eve’s Love is Blind https://music.apple.com/us/album/love-is-blind/1443800666?i=1443801385Buy Nas’s Hate Me Now https://music.apple.com/us/album/hate-me-now-feat-puff-daddy/170439443?i=170439491Buy Diamon K’s Put Ya Leg Up https://music.apple.com/us/album/put-ya-leg-up-b-more-club-remix/419008589?i=419008594Buy Theo’s Shorty You Phat https://music.apple.com/us/album/shorty-you-phat-feat-dukeyman/1449502226?i=1449502227Buy Luke’ s Sheila https://music.apple.com/us/album/lukes-sheila-feat-choclatt-frank-delour-remix/1443211812?i=1443212555Buy Jill Scott’s Long Walk https://music.apple.com/us/album/a-long-walk/1416153023?i=1416159855Buy Erykah Badu’s Bag Lady https://music.apple.com/us/album/bag-lady-feat-roy-ayres/1440755899?i=1440756610Buy Musiq Soul Child’s Love https://music.apple.com/us/album/love/1440921030?i=1440921200Buy Sade’s Somebody Already Broke My Heart https://music.apple.com/us/album/the-sweetest-gift/193532145?i=193532726Buy D’Angelo’s Send It On https://music.apple.com/us/album/send-it-on/1440841365?i=1440841746Buy Roberta Flack’s The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face https://music.apple.com/us/album/the-first-time-ever-i-saw-your-face/120198739?i=120198397Buy Erick Sermon's Music Feat Marvin Gaye https://music.apple.com/us/album/music-feat-marvin-gaye/298321651?i=298321904

The Coach Bru Podcast
Hate Me Now, Love Me Later: Interview w/ Coach Jason Brown of Last Chance U

The Coach Bru Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2019 43:46


An in depth interview with perhaps the most controversial and widely misunderstood coach in America, Jason Brown. Jason is the star of the Netflix documentary series Last Chance U. Seasons #3 and #4 feature Jason and his team at Independence Community College. We dive into how he is such a lightning rod and polarizing public figure, as well as WHY he's misunderstood. The conversation also turns to authenticity in a world of fakes as well as the fact that there's very little "reality" in reality TV. We also discuss Jason's terrific new book Hate Me Now, Love Me Later as well as his time at Indy and the experience of being followed around by television cameras 24-7. There are a lot of people I meet who I recommend write a book, most don't. Jason is one of the few who not only took the advice but also did it in record time. You get to see a VERY different side of the man in his book, I recommend you get yourself a copy here: www.TheRealCoachJB.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/coachbrupodcast/message

The Gametime Guru
Bonus Episode: Coach Jason Brown - Last Chance U

The Gametime Guru

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2019 27:20


It's crazy how people can make assumptions on how an individual is, based on a TV Series. I was super intrigued by Coach Jason Brown's coaching style when the Last Chance U series went to Independence Community College for Season 3, but I knew there was more to him than what the show portrayed.  Today Coach Brown joins me for an awesome discussion about his life, journey and what he intends on doing moving forward. You'll also hear about his book "Hate Me Now, Love Me Later" which you can find on Amazon. (Go BUY it!)  You'll find out a lot about the man from this 25 minute discussion and you'll quickly realize how genuine of an individual he is.  I'm very excited about Season 4 of the show, but I would encourage all of the Last Chance U fans and football fans in general to always be aware of how media portrays individuals. There is almost ALWAYS a completely different side to a story so make sure to try and see all sides before making your assumptions.  I hope you enjoy this bonus episode of the show!  ____________________________________________________   Where to Find Me: Apple Podcasts - https://apple.co/2syRPkw Spotify - http://spoti.fi/2oVVZ36 Stitcher - http://bit.ly/2sR9m90 TuneIn - http://bit.ly/2Fx5UlU  

Average to Savage
Jason Brown | Average To Savage EP64

Average to Savage

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2019 24:05 Transcription Available


This is the sixty-fourth episode of the Average to Savage podcast featuring Last Chance U star Coach Jason Brown. Paul Guarino talked with Jason Brown discussing his football career, his time coaching Independence Community College football team on Netflix's Last Chance U, and the release of his new book Hate Me Now, Love Me Later. Follow Jason Brown https://www.instagram.com/therealcoach_jb/ Check out his new book Hate Me Now, Love Me Later https://amzn.to/2XxKq5g

WASHED CAST
Uncle Biz - Hate Me Now (Prod. Maserati Sparks)

WASHED CAST

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2019 2:47


Uncle Biz links up with producer Maserati Sparks to bring you his single "Hate Me Now" - Now available everywhere music is streamed and sold! iTunes: http://bit.ly/BizHMN Spotify: http://bit.ly/BizHMNs 2019 Itsbizkit

Nick Flanagan, Weakly
You Can Hate Me Now (ft. Marty Topps)

Nick Flanagan, Weakly

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2019 31:32


This is a wacky one. Nick recorded it at Marty Topps' incredible home studio and Marty provides backing on the keyboard, gets lightly interviewed and Nick "covers" a few "standards", including Hate Me Now by Nas. Marty is a musical comedy cult legend, having recorded albums dedicated to the Tap Out brand and about his uncle's seafood restaurant. He's a member of Toronto comedy collective Laugh Sabbath and has incredible and hilarious albums available at www.martytopps.bandcamp.com. Check out more of nick at www.nickflanagan.bandcamp.com and instagram.com/nickflanaganweakly

It's Hughezy, Hello!
Ep. 35 Jeff Lane & Hughezy's Easter Party

It's Hughezy, Hello!

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2019 85:35


on this episode Hughezy talks to Jeff Lane, host/producer for Vince Russo's The Brand about the stresses of podcasting, having to deal with wrestling Marks while not actually being in the wrestling business and the chances of Vince Russo going into the WWE Hall Of Fame.Hughezy then hosts a seasonal party for Easter featuring returning guests Joe Feeney from Creative Control, Jon Wanglund from Wrestling With Reality and FIRST TIME guest guest from the YouTube show Hate Me Now. SUPPORT OUT SPONSERS========================go to http://www.bluechew.com and use the code HELLO to you your FREE supply. That's FREE supply. If you don't use the code HELLO then you have to pay... while if you use the code HELLO you get it for free.VISIT http://www.tiege.com/hughezyhello AND USE Coupon Code – HUGHEZYHELLO for a 20% DiscountFOLLOW THE GUEST ON SOCIAL MEDIA================================https://twitter.com/JeffLane22https://twitter.com/jffeeney3rdhttps://twitter.com/WWRPodcasthttps://twitter.com/Skip315FOLLOW ME===========https://twitter.com/TheHughezyhttps://www.instagram.com/thehughezy/

K.LASS : OFFICIAL PODCAST
My Rap Collection 1999

K.LASS : OFFICIAL PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2019 48:09


Playlist :  01.Dead Wrong (feat. Eminem) — The Notorious B.I.G.                      02.Xxplosive — Dr. Dre                   03.All N My Grill - Missy Elliott                      04.What These Bitches Want - DMX                    05.Kiss of Death - Ruff Ryders                  06.Whoa! - Black Rob                      07.My Name Is - Eminem                     08.The Realest (feat. Kool G Rap) - Mobb Deep  09.Rap Phenomenon (feat. Redman & Methodman) - The Notorious B.I.G.                                               10.Jigga My Nigga - Ruff Ryders                      11.Love Is Blind - Eve                      12.Bring It On (feat. Fat Joe) - Terror Squad                  13.1/2 & 1/2 - Gang Starr                        14.Guilty Conscience (feat. Dr. Dre) - Eminem                 15.Ms. Fat Booty - Mos Def                    16.Hate Me Now (feat. Puff Daddy) - Nas                    17.What's the Difference - Dr. Dre                     18.Jamboree (feat. Zhané) - Naughty By Nature                     19.Caught Out There - Kelis                      20.Discipline - Gang Starr                       21.Mathematics - Mos Def                       22.So Ghetto - JAY Z                    23.Nas Is Like - Nas 24.Find a Way - A Tribe Called Quest 25.Symphony 2000 (feat. Redman, Method Man & Lady Luck) - EPMD                        26.Bitch Please - Snoop Dogg & Xzibit                     27.Quiet Storm Remix (feat. Lil' Kim) - Mobb Deep                       28.Da Rockwilder - Method Man & Redman                      29.Watch Out Now - The Beatnuts                      30.It's Mine (feat. Nas) - Mobb Deep                       31.Got Your Money - Ol' Dirty Bastard

Jim and Them
#573 Part 1: Get It On Til I Die, Yuh

Jim and Them

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2019 99:49


Super Bowl Songs: It’s that time of year! The Super Bowl is upon us so it is time to go through all of the talent out there and hear their best Super Bowl hype/fight/parody songs for their teams! Deepansh Gupta: We may have found the greatest Youtube rapper ever. Returning Greats: We also check in with Boston Dad, Kaity and Kally and of course PAT RIOT. SUBURBAN JIM!, BRITISH BURROWERS!, SCANDINAVIAN SCAVENGER!, PROMO!, HANDJOB!, EBONICS!, THE SHIELD!, FUNKY!, PARLIAMENT FUNKADELIC!, GEORGE CLINTON!, ITUNES!, REVIEWS!, BOSTON!, NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS!, GILETTE!, LA RAMS!, SONGS!, SUPER BOWL!, BIG FANS!, FAN BASE!, ST LOUIS!, RAM IT!, OLD SCHOOL RAP!, MICHAEL JACKSON!, BEAT IT!, THROWBACK!, JERSEYS!, CHEATERS!, COLTS!, SOULJA BOY MEME!, HATERS!, JAM’N 94.5!, BACK TO BACK!, PRODUCTION!, SPEAKER PHONE!, QUALITY!, D-JIZZLE!, ONE TIME FOR THE ONE TIME!, BAD HIP HOP!, DRIP!, DRIP LIKE WATER!, FITTING TO BLOW!, SORRY!, APOLOGY!, BORING!, DULL!, SAY I’LL NEVER MAKE IT!, SCREAMING!, RUNNING IN THE STREET!, SEATTLE SEAHAWKS!, INTERCEPTION!, ORANGE FLOYD!, THE WALL!, DOLLAR BILL!, SHARK TEETH!, MICPAC RULIE!, DEEPANSH GUPTA!, HATE ME NOW!, CRAZY!, MAN YEA!, AM I WRONG!?, I WANT TO GET IT ON TIL I DIE!, UNTOUCHABLE!, UNBREAKABLE!, GOOD MODE!, GOOD MOOD YA!, INDIAN!, SUPER BOWL RAMS!, SAD BOY!, EMO TRAP!, ERNESTO MARQUEZ!, SAD FEELINGS!, RAM’S HOUSE!, DRAKE!, MEEK!, TOM’S PLAN!, GUITAR!, PRAYER!, REVEREND!, SO MUCH RAIN!, TOMMY TALK!, ALL TOMMY ALL THE TIME!, MAN CAVE!, TOM VS SUPERMAN!, RAM A LAM!, GREGORY JOHNSON!, 5 NEW ANGELS!, GOD IS GOOD!, OHIO!, ATLANTA!, FUNKY!, BRADY LEAVE!, ANYONE BUT THE PATRIOTS!, BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY!, JARED GOFF!, PATS GEAR!, ROBERT WOODS!, FREESTYLE!, WON’T TURN AROUND!, GREEN SCREEN!, MANY FANS!, MIAMI!, BABY SHARK!, BRADY SHARK!, BOSTON DAD!, KAITY AND KALLY!, POETRY BATTLE!, ONE VOICE!, PAT RIOT! CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD JIM AND THEM #573 PART 1 RIGHT HERE!

Our Lifestyle Podcast (OLP)
OLP - Ep. 99 - "Party Like It's 1999 w/ Savings"

Our Lifestyle Podcast (OLP)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2018 33:20


Brought to you by Orange Beach Invasion 2019 & Sparkles Detail. Follow @OrangeBeachInvasion & @SparklesDetail on Instagram!    ODB covers some of the BEST deals for Black Friday 2018 for products related to air suspension, clothing, tires, etc.    -Visit OLP’s Big Cartel site to purchase “Minis On Da Rise” t-shirt, in limited colors, & stickers! Use code OLPBF2018 for 20% off for BF only!   -Visit HammerDWeekendWear 2day and pre-order “Bigg Brown - I Get Around” or “HammerD Hardbodies” & SAVE!   HUGE shoutout to All Time Low Magazine, HammerD Weekend Wear, Grinder-TV.com, Aftermath Designs, & ViAir Corp!   Bumper music in this episode includes: “Hate Me Now” by Nas ft. P-Diddy & "The War Iz On” by Krayzie Bone ft Snoop Dogg, Kurupt & Layzie Bone. Both albums dropped 4.6.1999!    Thanks to the Air Head Nation for the continued support. PEACE! We out’cheah!   RIP Mark “Papa Smurf” Ballard! I miss you Dad!

Virtuous Optimist Podcast
Just Journey With Dante' Harris (Part Two)

Virtuous Optimist Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2018 104:06


We're concluding Season Two with the second half of an interview with Rapper Dante' Harris. Dante' & Chazz run it about his artistry/music projects including his latest release Hate Me Now, Love Me Later. He talks working with a “trap legend”, Dj Flippp on the project, how the album title came about, the project being released while incarcerated & so much more. You'll also get to hear Dante' go off the top for our “Show Yo Naked Skillz” freestyle segment!! And as far as music, you know Tune got the vibes for you. This is gonna take our Southern Loved Ones down memory lane. Press play to vibe. All praise to the Most High. Thank you to all of our listeners. We thank you for your time. Peace, Love & Blessings Until we meet again (Season 3 out Summer '18) Tune Samples Bob Marley - I Shot The Sheriff Instrumental (Official) Bob Marley - I Shot The Sheriff Live Easy Skanking In Boston ‘78 Dante' Harris - Get Throwed Feat Big Fazay Dante' Harris - Popular Demand (feat. Big Fazay) Z-ro (ABN) - Still Throwed Big Moe - Choppaz Gelka - When Ya Gotta Go Ya Gotta Go XXYYXX - About You (Slight C&S Mix by Tune) Dante' Harris - FWM News Clip – Burned Studio Footage (LA) Dante' Harris – Hakuna Matata Sly & The Family Stone - Family Affair SCHOOLBOY Q FT KENDRICK LAMAR - BLESSED Tupac Shakur Trust Nobody (The Lost Prison Tapes) Common - The Light Dante' Harris - Baphomet O'Jays - For The Love Of Money Lapalux - Without You Dante' Harris - Do It Again Floetry - Sunshine (Live) Bilal - Soul Sista Keyon Harrold - Her Beauty Through My Eyes (feat. Pharoahe Monch) *PREMIERED TRACK* DANTE HARRIS - REMEMBER Gumbo State Mix (Curated By Tune) Keith Frank - I'm Just A Hustla Gutta Gyrls - Bing Bing Bam Bam Foxx - I'm On Big Poppa - Where Da Pill Man At Master P - Bourbons And Lacs Hurricane Chris - Rollin Like A 18 Wheeler Vicious - That Aint My Hoe A Jizzle - Dumb Wit It Mel Waiters - Got My Whiskey Hot 8 Brass Band - We Are One Show Yo Naked Skills Instrumentals Tupac - I Get Around Soulja Slim - From What I Was Told Blu & Exile - Dancing In The Rain Mystikal - I Smell Smoke Phat Pat - Tops Drop Jazz Liberatorz - Ease My Mind Zapp - More Bounce To The Ounce Mannie Fresh - Real Big Future - Live From The Gutter Capleton - Jah Jah City Music Copyright To The Respective Artists.

7DAE$
Hate Me Now

7DAE$

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2018 64:11


Hate Me Now by Reggie DAE$

The Doug Stanhope Podcast
Ep. #244: SwapCast with Frank Mir & Richard Hunter's Phone Booth Fighting Podcast

The Doug Stanhope Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2018 135:31


Frank Mir & Richard Hunter make the trek to the FunHouse for a SwapCast with Doug, Chad & Jobi. Topics include MMA, starting standup, whorehouse stores & a new addition to the Celebrity Death Poll database. Recorded Feb 07th, 2018 at the FunHouse in Bisbee, AZ with Doug Stanhope (@DougStanhope), Frank Mir (@TheFrankMir), Richard Hunter (@Richard Hunter), Chad Shank (@HDFatty), & Jobi (@StanhopesCDP). Produced by Jobi. Edited by Chaille (@gregchaille). This episode is sponsored by  Audible.com – Go to [audible.com/STANHOPE](audible.com/STANHOPE) to start a 30-day trial membership and download a title free and start listening. Or, text STANHOPE to 500-500.  Order a SIGNED copy of Doug's NEW book, "This Is Not Fame: A "From What I Re-Memoir"" at - [http://www.dougstanhope.com/store/?category=Books](http://www.dougstanhope.com/store/?category=Books) Bingo's book "Let Me Out: A Madhouse Diary" is now available at [http://www.bingobingaman.com/](http://www.bingobingaman.com/) Closing song an edit of Frank Mir's entrance music, “Hate Me Now”, Nas - ft. Puff Daddy. Available on iTunes.  LINKS: Audible.com – [www.audible.com/STANHOPE](www.audible.com/STANHOPE) or text STANHOPE to 500-500 to start your FREE 30 Day Trial Membership. Phone Booth Fighting Podcast - [http://phoneboothfighting.com/](http://phoneboothfighting.com/) Chad Shank Voice Over info at [AudioShank.com](AudioShank.com) Support the Innocence Project - [http://www.innocenceproject.org/](http://www.innocenceproject.org/)

PROPER PROPAGANDA w/Ennis da Mennis
Proper Propaganda Ep. 133, "The Snitches of Eastwick"

PROPER PROPAGANDA w/Ennis da Mennis

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2017 59:03


TRACK / ARTIST “The Magic Hour” Talib Kweli “Jungles” Med, Blu & Madlib featuring Black Shakespeare “Black Still” Scarface “Live Life” Blakface Interlude: Jimmy Kimmel on Roy Moore BG Music: “Jay Dee 51” by J Dilla” “The Difference” L’Orange feat. Blue & Elzhi “Always N Forever” C. Pitt feat. Mickey Factz “My Final Underground Song” Mr. Len x Murs “Purple Kush” Beatnick & K Salaam featuring Blu & T.E.K. “Insert Title Here” LevyGrey “Runaway Slave” Dead Prez & Outlawz “Hate Me Now” Nas feat. Puff Daddy “Break Ya Neck” Busta Rhymes “3’s Company” Snoop Dogg “Pump It Up” Joe Budden Interlude: Borat “Word from the Wise” Poor Righteous Teachers “Helpless” Ashanti & Ja Rule “Deee-Lite Theme Song” Deee-Lite “The Infamous Date Rape” A Tribe Called Quest

Thom's Power Hour
Thom's Power Hour Episode 2

Thom's Power Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2017 23:58


Thom's Power Hour Episode 2 Thom's Power Hour is a podcast featuring music and interviews from new punk, metal, indie, and acoustic rock bands. This week: Breaking Tradition-105 http://breakingtradition.bandcamp.com Atom driver-Hate Me Now and Slackjaw http://atomdriver.bandcamp.com Arrows in Her-I Watched a Show About Space http://arrowsinher.bandcamp.com Cut the Act-The Slice of Life http://cuttheact.bandcamp.com Feeny-Altercations http://feeny.bandcamp.com Lamplighters-Really Into Having a Blast Lately http://lamplightersphilly.bandcamp.com Follow me on twitter at http://twitter.com/thomspowerhour subscribe to the podcast at https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/thom-power-hour/id1203074410

CA$HMERE THOUGHT$ PODCAST
EPISODE 71 W/ THA JERM

CA$HMERE THOUGHT$ PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2016 54:33


ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT EPISODES EVER TO BE RECORDED AS THE GANG SITS DOWN WITH ONE OF THE HOTTEST PRODUCERS STRAIGHT OUTTA QUEENS: THA JERM. FAMOUSLY KNOWN FOR FREQUENTLY WORKING WITH LLOYD BANKS (V6, CC2, HALLOWEEN HAVOC 2, FNO VOL. 1 & 2) & DAVE EAST (KAIRI CHANEL, HATE ME NOW), WE SIT DOWN WITH THE QUEENS PRODUCER AS WE SPEAK ABOUT HOW IT ALL GOT STARTED, HIS INSPIRATIONS THAT LED HIM HERE, INFLUENCES ON HIS SOUND AND MUCH MUCH MORE. DEFINITELY DON'T WANNA MISS OUT ON THIS DOPE CONVO. AND WHILE YOU'RE AT IT CHECK HIM OUT ON HIS SOUNDCLOUD -> https://soundcloud.com/thajerm_soi