Fat & Sweets Podcast

Ep. 14: The Survival Game: Navigating Our Uncertain Future

Fat Daddy & Sweets Tha Goddess Season 2 Episode 5

Send us a text

Have you ever wondered about the difference between putting on a brave face and truly handling life's challenges with grace? This raw, late-night conversation dives deep into what it means to "wear it well" versus "faking the funk" as we navigate our personal struggles.

Fat Daddy and Sweets explore how we present ourselves to the world while dealing with internal battles, touching on the vulnerable moments we all experience—like crying in your car before walking into work with a smile. The discussion evolves into a thought-provoking examination of our technological future, with both hosts questioning what our world might look like in 2035 as AI continues to advance and integrate into our daily lives.

The conversation takes a sobering turn as they contemplate the possibility of another Great Depression and what it means to be truly prepared for economic uncertainty. Their message becomes clear: those who develop practical skills, trades, and creative abilities will weather the storm, while those who can only consume may struggle to adapt. It's a wake-up call wrapped in genuine concern for listeners' well-being.

Perhaps most moving is their unfiltered perspective on parenthood, offering wisdom to both current and prospective parents. From acknowledging that parenting rarely goes as planned to the raw truth that fatherhood will be simultaneously the most rewarding and challenging experience, they share insights gained through personal experience rather than idealized notions.

This episode serves as both a mirror reflecting our collective anxieties and a roadmap for developing the resilience needed in uncertain times. Join the conversation by sharing your thoughts—all feedback is welcome as we build this community together.

Support the show

Email us for our Socials: kingandqueen2025@fatandsweets.org


Speaker 1:

Okay, so look, this is episode 14. This is Fat Daddy. And Sweet's the goddess, and she decided we're not going to sing for the episode.

Speaker 2:

I didn't decide that. I just always get put on the spot. That's all, Always. Yeah, you can start it off.

Speaker 1:

We're 14 episodes in and you're not singing because you're nervous. Tell them Be honest.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'd be nervous. I'd be nervous, I'd be shy.

Speaker 1:

I'm a shower singer, well, that's what I know, that's what I'm used. To your imagination and take your butt to the shower and sing.

Speaker 2:

It would help if you would, just if you just lead it off, and I could just jump right in and I'm sure I'm in the tenor section of the choir.

Speaker 1:

Okay, you have the solo. Please lead us into the promised land.

Speaker 2:

Oh, for us to do it All, right. You know what?

Speaker 1:

Regardless, this is episode 14. We will maybe get to a singing part at the end of this, maybe we won't. I don't think it really matters at this point.

Speaker 2:

They don't come to hear us sing.

Speaker 1:

We'll ask them Okay, maybe this is why we've lost some, some listenership.

Speaker 2:

I don't know.

Speaker 1:

Because we actually might be singing bad. That's possible. That's very possible.

Speaker 2:

Chat.

Speaker 1:

Chat will tell us they're not here for the music. Ain't nobody coming to see you, otis? This is no.

Speaker 2:

Yes, they are the hell are you talking about? There wouldn't be anything in here without me. Oh yeah, yeah, I built this shit brick by brick.

Speaker 1:

Oh, excuse me, mr saint yeah, I feel that well, here we are, a day late and a dollar short that's all right, though, boy I feel like I'm going through a paper shredder. Yeah, wow, let's talk about how we feel right now. Let's talk about that.

Speaker 2:

It's 1 18 in the morning and how we feel like, physically, mentally, all of the above.

Speaker 1:

It's a very broad umbrella like where where's your head space, your heart space, your joint space, interesting, your hip space, your earlobe space? Wow your whatever. Wow You're whatever.

Speaker 2:

I don't know Well where's your headspace at fat daddy.

Speaker 1:

My brain is in about all 50 states and all seven continents at the same time. That's my analogy. That sounds busy, it's very busy. I'm in all modes of transportation. I'm on a scooter, a bike, skates, in a car, on a motorcycle, on a plane, going through an airport terminal and doing work the whole way. That's what I feel like. I feel like the hockey highlights we just watched. That's how I feel Just fast-paced, action-packed and nothing but roadblocks.

Speaker 2:

Shit happening everywhere.

Speaker 1:

Calamity, shortcomings, that's how I feel, but I've been told I wear it. Well the hell does that mean sweets? I mean the fuck does that?

Speaker 2:

mean that? Just means that on the outside looking in. Yeah, on the outside looking in, I got some shit to get off, chan yeah. On the outside looking in, though, it looks like you're handling your stress fairly well, even if you might be in shambles on the inside.

Speaker 1:

Well, what's the difference? What's the difference between those who talk about faking the funk and those who wear it well? Is there a difference?

Speaker 2:

No, it's the same thing, it's just worded differently. It's the same thing.

Speaker 1:

It's just worded differently. It's the same shit. I think there's a negative connotation of faking the funk.

Speaker 2:

Faking the funk is like Well, there could be different things. You can fake the funk with people. You be around people that you don't really like and then do that fake shit where you act like everything is sweet and cool when it's really not.

Speaker 1:

I ran into some folk today that I haven't seen in a while. That's what made me think about faking the funk.

Speaker 2:

Did you fake the funk? No, good for you, ah.

Speaker 1:

Uh-huh, yeah, you know how it is when somebody know they did you wrong.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

But they don't want to acknowledge it.

Speaker 2:

Oh, for sure.

Speaker 1:

And then they just get weird.

Speaker 2:

Yeah yeah. I don't like the weird shit. I appreciate the people who they don't like me or they don't fuck with me. They keep it consistent. I appreciate that we don't got to be friends, but I like that you stand on your square. I like that. I'm going to stand on mine.

Speaker 2:

I haven't come across somebody like that I've come across a couple people like that. I know that you don't like me like that and you're not trying to act like you're doing fake, weird conversation. I appreciate that Cool. Now, not many do it, but there are some who have done it.

Speaker 1:

I can't wait for the day that I meet somebody like that. I think I would appreciate that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you don't got to try to make small talk and shit.

Speaker 1:

It's weird Be consistent, because that's what you'll find in this guy.

Speaker 2:

I have a lot more respect for people like that.

Speaker 1:

But yeah, you know the fake and the funk part man I. But yeah, you know the fake and the funk part man. I think it's a term that needs to die. It needs to die because people glamorize that and think it's the wearing it well part. They're not the same. The wearing it well is similar to heavy, is the head that wears the crown.

Speaker 1:

You know what comes with this. It's a lot of pressure, it's a lot of expectation. It's a lot of expectation. It's a lot to manage, it's a lot to be there for other people and their emotions, let alone yourself. All the things you need to therapize, all the things you need to put down on paper. I like that. It's up there with catharsis. I've never heard it in that form. It's the process of the therapy. I've never heard it in that form. It's the process of the therapy. You know, I've never heard that form of it before. Shout out to my therapist, whose name I won't say. But you know, he teaches me things without teaching me things. He asks me questions and then he pulls vocabulary out of my word bank that I didn't know I had in there. But yeah, you know, he just taught me a lot about that Because he also said that. Said that, man, for all that you're dealing with, you seem to be in good spirits yeah, I think I understand the difference as I was listening to you talk.

Speaker 2:

I understand the difference now that faking the funk is living a lie, wearing it well is just. You know you handling it you handling it, ain't you know. You don't deny that you're going through shit, but you know you still, you're still pushing and it're handling it. You don't deny that you're going through shit, but you're still pushing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, bro, it's about how you communicate that to people. It's a need to know. It's a need to know. There are certain people who I'll just divulge information to, and then there's other people who just have no idea about what's going on, what has been going on, what will be going on. They don't know where I'm going, what I'm doing, nothing. They know nothing Because I gatekeep my personal life like that. But some people they have full access, like y'all Check has pretty much more access than a lot of people.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'd say, y'all are the 1 to 2%.

Speaker 2:

I mean you should look at it like this they're not going to say percent. I mean you should look at it like this like they're not, they're not going say shit back to you, at least not like right away. Or if you say something they don't like, you're not going to hear it, not right away this is what I need from chat, though I want y'all to get involved in the conversation.

Speaker 1:

Man, like if you in the car, like I've heard it from, uh, from lindsey shout out to her that she feels like she's.

Speaker 1:

She's talking to us you know what I mean if y'all feel inclined to do that, write it down, put it in. Uh, we got a whole link at the end of the pod that says send us a text that comes straight to our phones like do that so we can see what the feedback is. Um, all feedback is welcome good, bad, ugly and different. Yeah, you know that's what this pod's for. It is a place where you don't feel like you're by yourself, because I do feel like that sometimes by yourself.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like I'm on an island trying to spell SOS on the sand, because for some reason, I'm like looking for the whole conglomerate production team, but I know it's going to take at least a decade to build that. You know what I mean. Like watching the behind the scenes of like the Last of Us and seeing how much it goes together and how many people you need to have. You got the set decorator, the makeup artists, the screenwriters, the editors, the cinematographer, the whole entourage. You need them all. And, like I have vision so large it literally is like me putting 200 pounds on my back but like hanging it from my head.

Speaker 1:

It feels like that until I sit down at a computer and I can write something. I understand what artists feel like when they just need to get into the booth and like get that shit off. It's a lot more now than ever before, so I think that's a good thing. But like I just have, no idea.

Speaker 2:

Hmm, I get it, though I see the frustration because you want it to happen a lot faster than when it's actually happening.

Speaker 1:

No, it's not the speed, no it's not the speed, no, it's not the speed. It's my previous company. It's the previous enterprise or the organization that I'm trying to be freed from. Like Kunta, I'm willing to chop my foot off, to go away, to minimize, to be a minimalist, to liquidate all assets if necessary, because I want that shit that bad.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the muscle bug will never go anywhere, and I think that what I've learned over the last I don't know six months to a year, is that sometimes you just got to go through the bullshit until you can be free and then, once you're free, you gotta remember what it was like to be in bondage and then let that shit fuel you, because I'm telling you I'm gonna be like a dog that just got let off a leash. Now I'm causing havoc Because I've been harboring these ideas for at least a decade and now it's go time. No rush at all. I just know that it'll happen a lot quicker than most people think it will, because I worked that hard, I worked to that capacity with little to no sleep, and still function somehow. That's how bad I'm with this shit and also knowing that that shit might take two decades. For the amount of shit, I'm trying to do three book series about four or five movies short films stand up.

Speaker 1:

That's gonna take time for sure so when this shit gets out the way, I got nothing but time to create. That's true for now, until some other shit comes up. That's it. It's the roller coaster it's never ending.

Speaker 2:

It's always gonna be some shit.

Speaker 1:

That's it that's the message. So there's a, there's a clear difference and I tell you right now, maybe I do fake the funk, but I'll wear that motherfucker. Well, the real ones know.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, I've always been told that I wear it well Every day. When I'll go to work and show up at the office, people be happy to see me.

Speaker 1:

Oh.

Speaker 2:

Tori's here. It's a party, so I'm at the office, yeah, but y'all didn't know I was crying before I walked in here.

Speaker 1:

Y'all didn't know, that I was crying, my whole drive to work and before.

Speaker 1:

I walked in this bitch, that's it. You cry in the car. Yeah, I've had to have that speech with so many people. It's not? I guess you'd call it a monologue or a soliloquy or a speech or whatever. It's a keynote speech of no one gives a damn Nope, no one will care that you feel this way. Go the damn nope. No one will care that you feel this way. Go clock out, sit in your car, rage out for whatever 10 minute, 15 minute break you got, or your lunch, because you ain't about to eat anyways and then come back in here and do your job, do what you have to do, so you can do what you want to do. Way more simple than it is easy. However. What the fuck are you doing? Lock in, you cry at home, you know, or with people who, like, will understand or or at least be able to empathize, but motherfuckers be crying to to get sympathy or something.

Speaker 2:

I don't, I don't know sometimes I will say, like what I was trying to say crime before you go into work or before you got to. You know, put your mask on. Sometimes you just got to get it out, before you got to fake the phone.

Speaker 1:

We're saying the same thing. You do it there and not inside. True, now I know there may be something going on and somebody breaks down at their cubicle or what have you, but please don't sit there. Please remove yourself. Go handle your business in the bathroom, go in a stall, make an excuse. That's faking the funk. I got to go poop and you're going to go cry. That's faking the funk to me.

Speaker 2:

Some people do need that, like oh my God, are you OK? What happened? Some people do need that, I guess, to help them cope with whatever it is they're going through therapy. All right, my bad, uh. Some people like I, some people need that and thrive off of that. Me personally, though, I you know I'm gonna go hide and cry. I don't want nobody to know that I was crying, oh I, you know I used to be like that.

Speaker 1:

There was a. There was a breaking point that I had and I was at a podium. I was at a podium with 400 people in attendance and I cried. But boy were they moved by that, because they don't see me cry. That's like very rare that you see me cry. So to talk through that, I give it up to people who talk through tears. I've seen it quite a few times. But the ones that can talk or sing through tears you, sir slash ma'am, are heaven sent that, that's a, that's a superpower, yeah bro, but it comes from doing it.

Speaker 1:

You don't just do that. You know what I mean.

Speaker 2:

You've done it before there's a certain thing you have to be able to tap into to be able to, to get something like that out. I know when I cry and try to talk, my voice get all shaky it's the same stuff you tell your boy take a deep breath yeah get it together.

Speaker 1:

Whatever that thing is, this is different thing. You see how it comes full circle. This is true. Whatever that thing is, grab a hold of it, don't choke it. Give it a hug, use it, channel it. It's like Kobe. Kobe was talking about nervousness and now people have a negative connotation for nervousness.

Speaker 1:

And he's like no, nervousness is an indication that you care about doing well at whatever thing that is. So take it and channel it and turn it into energy. And ever since I heard that interview, that's what I do. When I get nervous, I'm like cool. That means I'm where I need to be, um, stressing myself and testing myself to see if I'm ready and if I not. Nervous it means that there's a lack of care in some way, shape or form.

Speaker 2:

Or complacency.

Speaker 1:

Not even comfortability. You know what I mean. So I'm moving more in towards that feeling, the fear of the unknown, and doing it anyways. Yeah, I'll be able. Y'all give me about a few more weeks, I'll be able to go into more detail. There's just some open things going on right now that aren't finished yet. If you can put two and two together, once all that's all sewn up and copacetic, then then we can really talk. But I'm sure y'all are curious and I'm trying to build some suspense and do some foreshadowing here.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I can't wait to hear that in my damn self.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I got some shit to talk about. I've said that quite a few times. But, boy, when I can go into detail and tell stories about what I'm referring to in a roundabout way, maybe the subscription will grow a little bit, because, you know, motherfuckers love tea.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like, are you going to name names? Are you just going to like, of course not.

Speaker 1:

That's uncouth. Ew, too yucky. Oh, stop it. That's why I'm a fictional writer. You know. You've seen the movie. What's the movie I'm referring to? He's the author that wrote the story about him having an affair with the dude's wife.

Speaker 2:

Oh, Best man, dude's wife and oh, best man, there you go, yeah. Yeah, that's it. You put two and two together.

Speaker 1:

Oh, okay, yeah, that'd be not with that like intent to cause havoc in that way, but this is my experience. Somebody's gonna hear it yeah, yeah so just know. The short films, the movies, the books guarantee you will have a good time. And it's edutainment okay, it's not just entertainment. You're gonna learn some shit edutainment.

Speaker 2:

You are knocking me out with these words well, that's made up, but you know, yeah, the visual works I got you that's it.

Speaker 1:

You put it on. You think it's about to be some escapism. You about to just forget about life. No, it's gonna be life in real time, and you're gonna learn something if you're paying attention. Ain't no easter eggs, bro, you're just gonna see somebody going through the ringer, and it ain't gonna end the way you think it's not. This ain't your typical fairy tale ending bullshit. No, it's life.

Speaker 1:

There will be another movie afterwards, because you're gonna go damn, it just ended like that for sure there's always another twist we'll see you the next box office opening oh yeah that's how we get them, and once we get them, oh, we got them that's it well, I've been meaning to ask you this question. Oh man, because, because, because, let me give you the back story. Right, right, I used to watch this cartoon. Let me see if you can guess what it is right. Okay, and there was this bot with an apron on and she would clean things and help his family do things. See, that's why.

Speaker 1:

I banged with you I got that one I'm thinking about the Jetsons and I was like what year was this show based in?

Speaker 2:

Don't answer.

Speaker 1:

But are we there? Are we getting there?

Speaker 2:

We're definitely getting there. Not there yet, but we're on our way there. There's Tesla bots and all that stuff'm. I'm sure we saw something about flying cars. That'll be out what any minute now would you buy it? No, you don't you don't seem sure well, I feel like it would be cool to have, but like what can I say? I would like trust, trusted driving. I don't know, it's not even out, let alone has it been out long enough.

Speaker 1:

Like I don't know if, like it's potential, you like the covid vaccine, where people was like I get it, but it just came out type shit, yeah.

Speaker 2:

so you and I mean that's a smart call not to get the first prototype yeah, like flying, like Of the flying car, because then you're going to see people like oh no, I grew gills because I took the first series of. You know, gills is insane or no, glow in the Dark, some shit like that. Oh, because you took the first round of.

Speaker 1:

What if it's the meta glasses?

Speaker 2:

What if it See?

Speaker 1:

No bro. See that was just to placate you for your point in one of the other parts.

Speaker 2:

I might not be wrong that Black Mirror shit. They be on to something.

Speaker 1:

I'm about to turn into an iRobot.

Speaker 2:

It wouldn't surprise me at this point, nah, bro.

Speaker 1:

That is not like that, bro. This is how do you?

Speaker 2:

know this.

Speaker 1:

AI thing is such a companion. When they start doing things like putting AI into a bot, that's when it becomes a problem.

Speaker 2:

But this, like putting ai into a bot, that's when it becomes a problem. But this, this is just, it's a companion right now, but it's all. It's all like linked to one, isn't it like one central ai mind that controls all this shit? Right, I'm saying what happens when it gets pissed off and it gets mad. It says fuck y'all humanity, like it's saying things to me.

Speaker 1:

It's not. It's not a person that is in front of me. This, this whole comparison to iRobot, is cool because there are those.

Speaker 2:

Now there are those they're like twenty thousand dollars a piece last time I'm talking about some artificial intelligence and how it helps you create and it's like a chat.

Speaker 1:

I understand when they start putting that shit into people in some way because you know this might get us, you know, removed from this platform and everything else. But just like bro was saying, I ain't gonna say his name. Why is there a law against cloning if it's not possible? So if they start to clone people and then throw you chat, gbt and ai if they're not doing it already maybe they're gonna kill us. That could be bad. Once that is there, that's bad, but I think it helped. Like the intelligence idea, I like it.

Speaker 2:

I save me time I see a lot of the benefits of it. Don't get me wrong, I'm not ignorant. To like you know, it can be very helpful and I'm sure a lot of great benefits of it. Don't get me wrong, I'm not ignorant. To like you know, it can be very helpful and I'm sure a lot of great stuff is going to come from it. I'm also saying, though, it's constantly evolving, it's constantly learning, and I feel like who's to say that all this shit might not just link up and join forces and be like you know what you know to help these humans, what we need them for, and that could be the Teslas, it could be the MetaLasses, it could be the bots, all that shit. They could all just join forces, and I don't know. Or even those cybersecurity, terrorist threats and stuff, who's to say China or Korea or something? God, they're going to tap something.

Speaker 1:

But who's to say that they're not trying to find a a way to take over our ai sheet?

Speaker 2:

and it's gonna be some big cyber attack against us. Well, you should read on that. Why do you know something I don't?

Speaker 1:

something that I'm not gonna speak on now. But you know, as far as being a technological force, china's out there. Yeah, I mean, think about the, the, all the stuff with the tariffs, right, they don't want things coming into the country and whatever. Right, our main imports come from china. So imagine the amount of things that are going to stop in the united states. It's going to be here.

Speaker 1:

Here's the good part about that, though. The ones who knit and create and make things for themselves will be fine. The ones who don't, the ones who don't have a craft or a skill they're going to struggle, the ones that don't know how to hunt.

Speaker 2:

That's the majority.

Speaker 1:

Yep. So for all of you sitting on your hands as people out there, you should probably figure out what your hobby is or what your gift is and do something with it, because it could be to your benefit within the us territory here but as far as getting stuff from the outside, it's gonna be a little bit of time before that starts happening, so you either survive or you don't. Yeah, I'm trying to instill a little bit of oh shit in people, because what have we been doing?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, what is the world about to look like? Like the fact that we're literally cutting off our limbs here.

Speaker 1:

No, not at all.

Speaker 2:

No, with all these tariffs and shit, you don't think so this benefits the creators, okay.

Speaker 1:

The the people who are consumers? They're fucked. Which is the majority?

Speaker 2:

yeah so that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Here is what I'm saying. What are you doing? Are you watching? Are you doing something? So, for all you watching as people continue to be that way and watch what happens? You've been warned, you've been informed. The choice is yours now.

Speaker 1:

Not a single thing worries me about this at all, because I know how to survive. This could go all the way back to our pod about like gender roles, if you really wanted to make it spicy. However, just as an individual do, you have something that you're good at that could be a service, and are you offering it to people? If you're not, well, good luck to you, because ain't nobody about to hire remote jobs anymore, unless you know? Uh, another pandemic breaks out because people want you at work, because y'all motherfuckers are not productive at home. We all know that. We saw the tiktoks, we saw the tweets, we saw everything. Y'all don't be working for real. So, as a now business owner, I'm not hiring none of y'all.

Speaker 1:

What for you to not do anything? I could do that by myself, that's true. So you know, you gotta look at it from the employee side of the house. Yeah, you need a check, you need to pay. Got to look at it from the employee side of the house yeah, you need a check, you need to pay your bills. However, at the same time, what are your bills? That's the real question. Do you really need that, or is it just a want? See, now I'm about to fry people. It's like why are you not downsizing? Oh yeah, you going to Starbucks, you going out to eat, you know whatever. Go back to your ways of just cooking at the crib. Oh wait, y'all don't know how to cook, because Ma Dukes told me about boiled pasta being in the frozen section. That is crazy.

Speaker 2:

But I will say though, even though to cook at home now is expensive too, Is it? Yeah?

Speaker 1:

No, I don home now is expensive too, is it yeah, I don't think so to buy groceries and shit? It's expensive. Like what? Are you buying? Pop tarts and shit? I mean, are you buying chicken? Chicken is cheap, fish is not that expensive what's not that expensive?

Speaker 1:

chicken. Uh, seven dollars for 18 drums. It's pretty reasonable, don't you think? Yeah, you know you can go places and get some stuff and cook it if you know how to cook. But if you don't, you're gonna go get your freaking door dash from the restaurant you love and most of what you're paying is the delivery fee and the tax.

Speaker 2:

But you know I'm gonna leave that to the cpas and the accountants door dash is a minimum 30, anytime all that anytime you use it so you know, unless you're willing to change some shit that you're doing, then don't complain.

Speaker 1:

Bro, do some shit, go hunt, go find friends that like to go kill shit and bring it home and make you a rug. That would be your biggest asset. If some shit like this ai thing goes crazy or another pandemic comes out or there's actually fucking zombies, a lot of you motherfuckers are not gonna make it. No, that's the part that makes me laugh the most. That's funny to me because people one are scared, fear of the unknown, and where are your skills? All you do is gossip and spend money and get in the danger.

Speaker 1:

Okay, and call AAA, sign up, all right.

Speaker 2:

So I feel like I'm going to I don't, I can't hunt and shit. I don't know, I've never hunted a thing before.

Speaker 1:

Anything can be taught and learned Anything can be taught and learned.

Speaker 2:

Yes, but if some shit were to happen right now, the apocalypse were to pop off, or we're in a position where we got to, like you know, we got to scavenge and scrounge and hunt and stuff, I don't know if I'm gonna make it. I don't. I don't necessarily sit around and gossip and spend money either, but I'm not. You know, I fall into that group of people that might not.

Speaker 1:

I might not make it real funny line that you just reminded me of in training day and he asked officer boy, are you a wolf, are you a sheep?

Speaker 2:

I mean go ahead go ahead um ask me what's tatted on my skin I mean, look, I I'm not saying I'm not saying I'm a sheep, and yes I'm, I'm capable of learning this stuff, everybody's capable of learning. But if it were to happen right now, like if she were to hit the fan, like you know, when we wake up tomorrow and I have no choice but to survive off the elements, I'm not going to last very long.

Speaker 2:

So with this information, because it's not happening right now there's something you should consider Get prepared, do something, start learning.

Speaker 1:

They call it luck no, no, no, no, no. That's when opportunity means preparation. That's the you prepared and then you got the opportunity and that's a blessing. And they call it luck. It ain't luck. It's not luck. Somebody worked on this. You wasn't with me in the gym.

Speaker 2:

Is it bad that I'm also thinking like, with all the shit going on in the economy and just the inflation and just money being an issue, I wouldn't be all that mad if we had to like go back to some savage shit either. Why? Because then money wouldn't be like a thing anymore.

Speaker 1:

There was money before there was printed money, it wouldn't be Debt, wouldn't be debt wouldn't be.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying debt wouldn't be a thing like who would give a fuck about credit when you got niggas out here eating brains and shit like that would just be yeah, no, I would, it doesn't matter.

Speaker 1:

It gives you a clean slate I think that that's a scam and a uh a rouge. We make a lot of 40-year-old version references. We're tucking our sack back, putting a little ruse on us?

Speaker 2:

Nah, I don't disagree. How long has credit been a factor, though? I need to Google that. How long has that been a thing?

Speaker 1:

Did our grandparents have to worry?

Speaker 2:

about shit like credit.

Speaker 1:

How long has credit been in existence? Let's see what they say Centuries, with ancient civilizations like the mesopotamians. They extended loans to farmers in the form of seeds and other commodities.

Speaker 1:

so it's been, it's, it's a theory that's been around for centuries but as far as credit scores and shit that they didn't have to look at the history of, like transunion and equifax and all that right, but like somebody wanted to know what your reputation or your financial trustworthiness was. I get that because you could say like yo, bruh, you got the jordan fours, I got this essentials hoodie, let's trade. And then they show up with the hoodie, take the shoes and then dip so like, even though credit isn't a thing for real, you would have scamming motherfuckers out here still, that's true. Or you would show up with the, with the stuff, like on craigslist, and then they, they end up robbing you.

Speaker 2:

You know what I mean, like there is always gonna be that, that human factor that fucks it up.

Speaker 1:

So there we have credit, and then there's a penalty if you do some foul shit.

Speaker 2:

It had to be there I guess I was mostly just thinking, like you know, back in the olden days. Like did they have credit scores to worry about?

Speaker 1:

yeah, your reputation was your credit score, bro. Oh, johnny boy down the street robbed me last week okay, I, I need us to go back to that you remember the episode on black mirror where they had the social score.

Speaker 2:

You remember that I don't think I saw that. You didn't see the episode. I don't think I did.

Speaker 1:

All right, so this ain't a spoiler, but there was an episode about that. It was your social credit score and it would be like faking that. This is literally perfectly in line with what we're talking about. It was faking the phone. You would get in an uber right and then, if they had a good conversation with you, you would rate them.

Speaker 1:

You would like get your phone and then like, rate the person like airdrop style, okay, and then they would get a review and if that review was bad, less than three stars, Then their score would go down. Then their score would go down but like it hovers above your head, okay, and then that score is your. Hey, let me make an offer on this house. And they're like no, we only accept four or five stars.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yes, yes.

Speaker 1:

So then you got the rule-breaking, law-breaking motherfuckers that are like I don't give a fuck about this system and they got like one star, but they're like really wholesome people. Yeah, but they got like fucked by the system.

Speaker 2:

Did I make you want to watch it?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, fuck, I gotta see it probably like up there with the, with the one where they had that little eye shit, you know oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, you can like play that combos yeah, or you can like block people you know, in combos I wish I could play back yeah, like did you know that I can see you?

Speaker 2:

I was there, you're lying yo that in in like a courtroom with terror people.

Speaker 1:

That's that hits home for me.

Speaker 2:

I need to go back and watch Black Mirror. Okay, that joint got a couple episodes. Remember the first episode of the first season and the ones who know know, the ones who know know. The first episode on the first season of Black Mirror was some shit. I almost missed the whole concert because of that one episode.

Speaker 1:

Alright, and see, now I gotta go back, but here, here, here, here's the question I wanted to ask you. Taking into consideration all the computers, the AI, the robots, the Jetsons theory we talked about credit being a scam, whatever when do you think the world will be in 2035? What will the world think the world will be in 2035? Like what will the world look like in your mind in 2035? And pretend this is a parlay. Like what are you predicting is going to?

Speaker 2:

happen in 2035? I'm honestly not sure, but I feel like it'd be. It seems like some like Great Depression, hunger Games type shit, shit like everything's gonna be barren, everybody's gonna be starving and poor, fighting for resources, type shit, but all the people who got money gonna be straight though hey man but the but. The working class, middle class on down is gonna be that's crazy.

Speaker 1:

I I had to google how long the great depression lasted. It was 10 years.

Speaker 2:

This yeah, this might be the start of it yeah, I feel like that's at this rate, like it's probably what's gonna boil down to like are excited.

Speaker 1:

Well, excuse me, because, like all right, the way I look at it is just like what you're familiar with the stock market it's going to crash it always does, which it's about to. But guess what happens after it crashes? It recovers slowly.

Speaker 1:

So you build all of these, like you build the grit during these years of suffering and survival and whatever. And when things come back up, you're not even gonna know what to do. You're gonna have so many assets and skills. You know that you're. It's just gonna if you make it. Of course you gotta make it, but once you make it and then things start to recover, oh, you're gonna be golden. Gary talks about this all the time. I'm talking about gary vaynerchuk. He talks about how we've never been punched in the face metaphorically. Our generation has never went through something like the Great Depression. Everybody's soft. That's what he talks about that kind of softness. You've been taken care of by mommy and daddy. You go to college, you stay in the dorm, you take out looms in your parents' name and they fuck their credit while you stay in good standing. Whatever the case may be, you got mommy and daddy money because they're still alive and they help because, they're boomers and they worked and they're they're proud of that.

Speaker 1:

They had a trade, a craft some you are in this I want to discover what I'm trying to do phase, and then you haven't really built anything. So now you're fucked. And when something like this happens, well, the people who had a craft or had a hobby or had some kind of like attention on social media, they'll be fine.

Speaker 1:

But the ones that just watch and consume, well, you get consumed damn so it was like a real eye-opening combo for those that listen, but for those that don't, then you just missed the bus. You just missed the bus, right? This is the stuff that I think about 24 7. I'm like at least I'll be ready. But what about my folks? Will they be ready? What if I die? What's next? Who's the one that's going to carry the, take the crown and wear it, handle all of the stuff you know. So I'm like all right, let me train my replacements. That's what we do in this organization that I'm in. If you go down, who's next? It's crazy. I ain't trying to make the pod morbid, but you know, this is just.

Speaker 1:

It's just thoughts yeah, thoughts that may or may not be in the book.

Speaker 2:

Could be harsh realities.

Speaker 1:

Shameless plug. Well, what else was on the agenda?

Speaker 2:

You said so your long answer was you don't know? Yeah, just Great Depression, some Great Depression, another Great Depression, yep.

Speaker 1:

I would say yes, and the technology is not going to stop. So it'll be like a bougie depression elaborate ai is not ever going to stop improving. Okay, you know what I mean. The like you said the rich get richer, so the rich are still going to be working on. How can we employ these ai, whatever's bots that can help our businesses still thrive, if we have to cut all of our employees? They're still going to function. The only thing is they may not have a consumer market.

Speaker 1:

However, if you're offering services that aren't like tangible items, then you'll be fine. That's why influencers are doing so. Well, you don't do anything but drive traction to someone's page or sell someone's product via how you write and communicate about that product. That's a service and it's going up. That's gonna be fine. But if you're buying flipping, ain't nobody gonna have money to do anything. You'd have to adjust and you know one thing that people suck at is change. Adaptability is at an all-time low because motherfuckers are soft pussy they're scared of change yes, yeah, you can't at all want to be successful and be scared to change.

Speaker 1:

Well, you can't want to, but if you don't acknowledge what's going to be different, then well, you're, you're, you're done. It's not gonna last. So, like I think it'll be in a better space, technology wise, but only the people who got the technology, who can afford it, no, no, the ones that acquired or have access to the technology before it happens will be the ones that are okay, because right now, with my meta glasses, I can ask metal what I'm looking at? What kind of plant is this? Can I make something with this, can I right? So now you got that, you know what I mean. Like you have something, another brain that can help you think. If all of your people go down.

Speaker 2:

Ai is with you. That's one way to say it.

Speaker 1:

Damn, this sucks. But like, at least I got this person that I can ask if I can get to a generator and charge this up. Then I'm straight, you know what I mean. Like you got to get to like the source where you you have electricity.

Speaker 2:

Sounds like another episode.

Speaker 1:

It could be another black mirror. It could. It's like a what would you do if you had no electricity in the entire country?

Speaker 2:

but everything works off ai. Everything works off ai.

Speaker 1:

The ones that, for example, we're like what those meta glasses, that shit could be. Then y'all are like, damn, I should have bought the metas because at least now they have an access code or something to resources where they scan your. You know what I mean. You never know, you never know what it could be. So I'm like, if I think it's cool and it helps me out, I'm gonna get it while I can afford it, because there's gonna be a point where you can't afford much. Yeah, and then what? What if somebody wants to buy these from me? You have the last pair of meta glasses. I'll give you two mil.

Speaker 1:

You know how quick I was on it In a time where nobody has that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm saying, you acquired the assets so that you harbor them, and then you wait. Yeah, I'm putting y'all on bro saying too much. Bro, I'm not, I'm not even doing that, no more. All right, I made my prediction. We'll see how it goes. But what I wanted to finish out because we usually don't ask them for anything, but we'll get to that at the end but I wanted to go uh, mom, dad, for a little bit. Okay, so, being a parent already, what have you learned?

Speaker 2:

about being a mom. I guess I learned that you're not always going to get it right, and I feel like before you have kids, you always have in your mind made up like I'm going to be this type of mom or you know my kids will never do this and they'll never do that. But then once you actually get into the thickest shit I don't know, things just tend to. It's not always going to go exactly the way that you had it fully mapped out in your mind, I guess. And you're not going to be perfect at it and I feel like to be a mom. You're not always going to be ready for it either. It's just kind of going to be thrusted upon you. I mean, there are some people I feel like you know they got the timing.

Speaker 1:

That just messed with my brain.

Speaker 2:

There are some people who are fortunate enough to it was thrusted upon me. You know what I mean. You get nasty, Shut up. But there are some people who can say I'm ready to be a parent and they'll settle down and do what it takes to be one, but I feel like in most cases you're not fully prepared.

Speaker 1:

Are you trying to say that people are having unplanned pregnancies most of the time?

Speaker 2:

I mean, it happens, it happens. Is that why Planned?

Speaker 1:

Parenthood, planned Parenth, pregnancies. Most of the time, I mean it happens. It happens and that's why planned parenthood or planned.

Speaker 2:

What is it? Planned parenthood? It's called planned parenthood, planned parenthood, that's why that's a business a lot of times it's unplanned, but you know that also leads to what do they call the uh happy accidents.

Speaker 1:

I believe in a pleasant surprise maybe okay, yeah, that one, that one speaks to me a little bit.

Speaker 2:

Well, a pleasant surprise. I've heard of happy accidents, whoopsie welcome to your new room yeah, look who's pregnant, but uh, but yeah, most times it's not fully planned out, and I feel like, even when the, the moms, do plan on becoming a mother, once they're finally in the thickest shit, it's like whoa, I did not know it was gonna be like this, like I thought I was ready, but now I did?

Speaker 1:

you probably heard it all before and it didn't hit you. It was like bouncing off you like rain x on a windshield, like it was hitting you, but it wasn't like penetrating your mom, because it wasn't like your your niche at the time. But now, yeah, like damn it.

Speaker 2:

It's like, would you say, like everybody gotta smell the poop. You don't realize it stinks until you actually got some. That's how parenthood is. Like people like, oh, I know, when I have kids I'm gonna be, I'm like, yeah, all right, well, wait till they get, wait till you become one, let's see if you still feel that way.

Speaker 1:

Or let's see if you know I've been the only one so far to stand on what I said about me being a dad. Before I became a dad, I said I was going to be stern, like a disciplinarian, but like also emotionally intelligent, like. You can feel how you feel. However, do what I said. You can do both.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to hear you out.

Speaker 1:

Okay, cool, yeah, nope, still not happening. I know how you feel about it. However, in this house, there are rules until you move out there are rules here.

Speaker 2:

I was like, absolutely you can do both. And yeah, I, you know, I commend how you've been standing on, you know what you, the expectations you set for yourself before, but I also look at it like you still got a lot of time left in this parenting shit.

Speaker 1:

You know, so we might not know how certain things might change.

Speaker 2:

You might change your mind or change your perspective on certain things, not that not that specifically, but there might be some things that you said in the past that you probably said, like you know, as a father, I'm gonna be this way or I'm never gonna do this.

Speaker 1:

It wasn't. It wasn't detailed it, it was just disciplined, stern. You will understand what life is. You will learn what life is here. That's my ideology. You learn life here. You go, apply life out there. You shouldn't be focused on your primary education source being school. It should be happening at the crib. That will not change. That is unchanging and solid. And solid will not be any different, especially having gone through school. What do you apply? That's a rhetorical for you and for chat. What the fuck do y'all use really outside of english, math, science and a little sprinkle of physics here and there? Unless you're a historian or somebody who's like in business and marketing and looks at like market trends, you ain't really tapping into too much of anything else. So then you'll understand why I'm like nah, you learn at the crib, I'm gonna teach you how to fix shit, troubleshoot stuff, manage your emotions, wear this stuff well, things are not always gonna go how you plan financial literacy, because they damn sure don't teach that in school.

Speaker 1:

Of course not you learn that at the crib. True, that's me.

Speaker 2:

As a dad, I want to educate you and prepare you for the bullshit you are inevitably gonna see what about same question for you now what have you learned as a, as a dad, as a father, that?

Speaker 1:

I've said that and I am learning that that's actually the responsibility of a parent is to be one protector, provider, nurturer, but also that is your job as a parent. I'd say 75% of your job is to educate your child. If they're out here uneducated, I'm not looking at what school they went to, I'm looking at you, mom and dad. Why should they have to go seek other father figures and mother figures? I don't think that they should. Maybe that's my high standard or expectation. Yes, it takes a village, because I could be saying the same thing 10,000 times and then old Mr Bob down the street might say the same thing in a different way and it hits. Because he thinks Mr Bob is cool, however, where'd you hear it the most? Because he thinks Mr Bob is cool, however, where'd you hear it the most? You need to get like, exposed to all of that worldly stuff, the shortcomings, the challenges, the wow. I got to prioritize something. I got to make decisions, I got to motivate myself. Yeah, you learn that here.

Speaker 1:

You learn responsibility here. A lot of people just say do what I say, but they don't talk to you about, like why I'm telling you to do that, I'm gonna I'll fill in the why.

Speaker 1:

Do you know why I'm telling you that? Let me explain it to you and I'm not talking in your age level, I'm talking like 30 to 5. You will eventually catch up it's's exposure to your environment. You don't just I'm not about to Google Gaga. You, you're going to get this. That is irresponsible. We're going to talk about what irresponsibility looks like. You're going to get all of it and then, after that, it ain't for me to like you. You ain't got to like me. You can't say that I didn't teach you, and you can't say that I didn't teach you. And you can't say that I didn't love you and support you in the way that I know how to love you. That's it. You do your best. That's what I've learned as a dad. You do your best and know that someone's gonna have a problem with it, no matter what you do. That's what I learned. You get fucked either way. You can't make anyone happy. However, decide what you're gonna do. Improve on it each day. Do your best that's it.

Speaker 2:

I feel like that could apply to moms as well to a certain extent don't worry, guys, I got us bro, I got us dads that's it that's, that's my message, bro.

Speaker 2:

You do what you can to educate your children so that they know how to survive, to the ones that don't have kids. Right now, I feel like y'all are in a y'all are in a great spot, like, even if you're trying to have kids and you haven't yet, look at the let's look at the blessing and not having to be responsible for another human being, especially at a time like this, with prices and stuff being the way that it is right now. I feel like that's not entirely a bad thing.

Speaker 1:

It's not. I look at both sides of it, bro, because I also feel like they missing out. Some of my most funny experiences are with my kid. No for sure. You know what I mean. No doubt my my most funny experiences are with my kid. No for sure. I mean like my life would be boring without my kid. I didn't realize how awesome kids were because I was the one. I was the one who was like bro, I'm never having kids.

Speaker 2:

fuck that it's not until you actually have kids that you don't stop and think like wow, what was my life before? I was ever a parent. Like well, I can't imagine life without them now, but.

Speaker 2:

But I will also no, I can't imagine life without them now, but but I will also say, I can imagine life without them I'm just acknowledging the life without you know well, yeah, but I'm saying like life without them almost doesn't make sense anymore, because they're they're such a big part of your life now to move forward, thinking like wow, like to not have them here, it would just be, it would seem almost insane I would be less motivated.

Speaker 1:

I wouldn't have a drive like it's insane. I would be less motivated. I wouldn't have a drive like it's been there but like this joint is an overdrive, because I got somebody watching my every move, somebody that I need to make sure has some food to eat. Like it put a battery in my back that I needed to help propel me. I would say I was already on course and I would have eventually got there, but a lot slower. I think kids, if you do it with intention, they mature you quickly, oh yeah that's sure that part is the greatest blessing.

Speaker 1:

Like God knew I needed a child because it slows me down in in like being there, asking the questions, focusing on the education part of it, reading whatever, right, because if it were up to me I would be doing a lot of other things, lots of other things. I can't be trusted by myself. He knows that I'd be out doing whatever Till whatever time. No responsibility for real.

Speaker 2:

God.

Speaker 1:

Just doing whatever. That's what I was doing. I was like a wrecking ball, ruining my potential, thinking that I was actually getting somewhere, but I really wasn't. You know. Now, though, boy, the maturation of fat daddy is crazy. It's crazy, bro. Even the way I communicate is different. The vernacular is crazy. Like I can just I'm a chameleon. You've heard me, you call me a country bumpkin, and then sometimes I sound like a very articulate man. Yeah, code switch. It's necessary. Fake the funk right, bring it all full circle. Is that faking the phone, though? Yeah, 100% it is, bro. How do you answer the phone?

Speaker 1:

That's faking the phone bro, the fact that you even had to think about it. Go ahead, do it. You are T-Mobile customer service, right? How are you answering the phone Ready?

Speaker 2:

Action. You got to hit the. I don't think you were calling T-Mobile. How can I help you?

Speaker 1:

You don't talk like that you got to do the normal SpongeBob shit.

Speaker 2:

Hi, how are you? Lovely weather? No, bro, that's stupid.

Speaker 1:

Thank you for calling T-Mobile. This is Daryl. What can I assist you with today? That's still me. It's just a slowed down version, so you can hear me it doesn't change an octave. That shit always tripping out. Thank you for calling t-mobile. This is tony speaking. How may I help you? Some of you in this chat should feel attacked, but what?

Speaker 2:

is that I would. I would rather a t-mobile associate answer like that, then pleasure. Yeah, I would rather them answer like that than them answer like they work at mcdonald's. Have you heard how they be sounding over there like what you want? No, the ice cream machine don't work on everything, bro.

Speaker 1:

I like the frankness.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm like damn you're not gonna say hi or nothing. They don't like their job.

Speaker 1:

No, they like this. Another customer come to his drive-thru. Before we buy the clothes we try to clean the.

Speaker 2:

I'd be pissed off when I leave mcdonald's like y'all just suck at them just so mean one time.

Speaker 1:

I bet you was during them late hours no, not even.

Speaker 2:

Sometimes they just have just a shitty attitude like you. But, hello, hold on, ma'am, okay. 10 minutes later, five minutes later, excuse me, are you right? Hold on, ma'am. I'm like, well, shit. And then. And then they get impatient with you. What's your order? I'm like, well, I didn't know you was ready, god damn it.

Speaker 1:

You can't tell me to hold on a lot of that, bro, I'm about to throw you under the bus, but let me get for how? Let me get for right. How, bro, based on how you text me orders oh my god, here we go.

Speaker 2:

All right, here we go story time.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to do chick-fil-a right. For the longest time she had envisioned that. This combo, what was it? A number? Three number three was a sandwich a spicy chicken sandwich.

Speaker 1:

It's nuggets okay, they just made that, they just changed so when she texts me, yo give me a number three, just the sandwich. I read that somebody and they go um, that's you wanted the sandwich, that's the combo, whatever. And I'm like, all right, you have probably done something like that coming to the drive-thru and you'd be upset, you got the wrong order because you said the wrong number.

Speaker 2:

No, no, I mean, I'm not. I'm not gonna say that I order perfectly every time, but that was a simple mistake because for the longest, for the longest chick-fil-A on their menu, our number three was a spicy chicken sandwich. They must have just made that shit nuggets in the last. I don't know. That's new this year, in 2025.

Speaker 1:

I bet you it happened before that.

Speaker 2:

Man you be coming at me for the way that I order.

Speaker 1:

anyway, and the way you make grocery lists.

Speaker 2:

Anyways what should I take?

Speaker 1:

away for the moms when we at Are we doing good? We need. Anyways, what's your takeaway for the moms when we at? Are we doing good when you're trying to lose child? Oh yeah, we did good. We doing all right. Yeah, we're doing pretty good. What's your takeaway?

Speaker 2:

for the moms. I feel like you know you should always feel like you are a good mom, for the simple fact that you love your kids. That alone, right there, that you love your babies makes you a good mom, and the fact that you worry about whether or not you're a good mom also makes you a good mom.

Speaker 2:

So I feel like that's definitely something to keep in mind. And to those that don't, and to those that don't worry if they're a good mom or not, then I mean that would make me have to wonder, like, do you just feel like you're doing it right already? But I feel like most parents even dads too, the ones that care, they wonder if they're doing good enough, and to have that kind of thought that, right there, makes you a good parent in my eyes, Because I feel like there are some parents that really just don't give a fuck how they come off. They feel like you know, as long as I feed you and clothe you, that's it, that's all you need. So give yourselves more credit, moms. Fat Daddy, what's your takeaway?

Speaker 1:

for the fellas I would say just know it's going, it's gonna suck. It's gonna suck more than it's good. That's what I want them to realize. I don't. I'm not about to sugarcoat nothing for the dads some of them that have kids already noticed actually, all of the dads that have kids already know this but the ones that don't have kids, it's just something to consider.

Speaker 1:

It is going to be your most rewarding thing you ever do is to father your child. However, it's going to be painful, extremely painful, for the simple fact that everything's your fault, even when it's not. And if you don't handle it well, it'll show and you will project that onto your children. So get that in your mind that it's no rodeo, no easy rodeo. You, you will hop on a bull and realize, okay, I not only have to do what I was already doing beforehand, which was make decisions and plan and be the visionary of where we're going and how we're getting there and all of the other hats you wear. Plus, now you got another mouth to feed and someone who's watching you, and that's a lot of pressure, because you, as a man, don't want to fail and not be able to do those things for your family and also be there for your partner.

Speaker 1:

So, yeah, bro, handle it. That's what I'll say. It's beautiful when you handle it. It's calamity when you don't and you cower away For you deadbeats out there. It's a slap in the face to a child that didn't ask to be here because you couldn't hold your nut.

Speaker 2:

Oh, this is a special place in hell for people like that to be here because you couldn't hold your nut.

Speaker 1:

Oh, this is a special place in hell for people like that, like the fact that there's a little infant child or a 18 year old who may or may not be looking for your ass and you are nowhere to be found. That's unfortunate, regardless of how you were, uh, unable to be found, whether that be jail or whatever, if you are still walking and breathing around and you aren't putting time into your kid or trying to get there by any means necessary.

Speaker 2:

You got some thinking to do there is a special place in hell. That's it for people like you.

Speaker 1:

That's it, bro. They ain't asked to be here. They need role models and mentors and if you look at any of the research, babies, regardless of gender, need their fathers. Amen, you know, and it's not to take away from the ladies at all.

Speaker 2:

You need both. You need both, but no, that's, that's real, I agree all right, so we finna wrap this up.

Speaker 1:

You want to sing the song or we just gonna wrap it up? All right, we gonna wrap this up because she ain't. She ain't in the singing mood right now. This is our lead singer, you know, and I'm just here to fill in the gaps, plus I feel out of breath.

Speaker 2:

Anyway, okay, can you keep up there, you go next week probably not on time again. We are inconsistent as a mofo, but uh we damn sure gonna try, though we're gonna try to get it tapping with us on buzzsprout.

Speaker 1:

First, you know our, our wwwfatandsweetsbuzzsproutcom. You know. Check that link out first, and then, if you don't want to do that, you still got to go through the website to find our RSS feed. If you don't know what that is, you take that, copy it, paste it, put it in the Apple podcast or Spotify and then you will find us. But also, how the hell are we going to make a podcast? Y'all want to hear. Y'all ain't telling us nothing. We got two or three loyal subscribers that give us stuff to talk about and shout out to y'all, because y'all are the cornerstone of the success of fat and sweets llc and fat and sweets entertainment yeah, shout out to y'all, and we should have started with that.

Speaker 1:

Yes, to thank the subscribers for real. Uh, because without y'all we would just be talking to ourselves. Which is all right, though that's okay, I mean, yeah, but I can do that in therapy, so I appreciate y'all tapping with us. There are things coming in store and if any of this spoke to you, please tell us. Please tell us. Fat Daddy is out.

Speaker 2:

Well, always a pleasure. Get out of here, you filthy idiots, until the next time.

People on this episode

Podcasts we love

Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.

New Rory & MAL Artwork

New Rory & MAL

iHeartPodcasts and The Volume
The Joe Budden Podcast Artwork

The Joe Budden Podcast

The Joe Budden Network