Joyelle has brought the wittiness and the wisdom these past two seasons 🎬Check out more of her best #WHM moments so far: kzbin.info/aero/PL0Nt0EhyWcy-M5GkeCi1YJ79qPSg-fbsd
@iamestellekeita5 күн бұрын
Incroyable ! We have the same intro music , i use for my podcast 🤣, i just found out your channel,
@WateringHoleMedia5 күн бұрын
No way! Great minds think alike 😄
@--REGULAR--REGULAR6 күн бұрын
Illmatic is perfect and nobody has rapped better since it dropped. Mos Def came closest on black on both sides but thats where it ends
@WateringHoleMedia7 күн бұрын
It seems like chat’s consensus is that Damon’s take is wrong 👀Catch the full episode of Tap In for the entire convo: kzbin.info/www/bejne/hYGuYaurd9ZnmZY
@WateringHoleMedia7 күн бұрын
Love hearing from Mandela? Check out this episode of Tap In: kzbin.info/www/bejne/gYKYaamneN6NkJI
@WateringHoleMedia7 күн бұрын
Want to hear more takes from Damon? Tune in to Tap In: kzbin.info/aero/PL0Nt0EhyWcy_jrTlIGf_JZF8QMJ_3P7GV
@WateringHoleMedia7 күн бұрын
Want to hear more from Ashley Allison? Catch up on all episodes of Wait A Minute: kzbin.info/aero/PL0Nt0EhyWcy_4mAqnutP2OYxZ00SIr-c5
@WateringHoleMedia7 күн бұрын
Want to see more of Maurice? Check out Tap In's premiere episode kzbin.info/www/bejne/qqPHqYCnrbmrhcU
@habloespwnol21179 күн бұрын
Speaking only for myself and what I’ve seen at the local ranges - you’re welcome anywhere I’ve been, armed or not. Dismissiveness, predjudice and bigotry are THE ENEMY on any firing line I’m standing at. Rights are best protected when exercised by everyone, and, if you’ll excuse the pun, anyone pushing you out of this club is shooting themselves in the foot. So long as human nature is drive by violence, ignorance and greed, I applaud you for taking the precautions you need to take to be safe. 🙏🏻 Stay dangerous, ladies.
@dajhedi12 күн бұрын
Good troll 😂😂I mean I’m not going to watch you guys again and I’m mad at myself for pressing on this but good troll nonetheless
@blessdunn12 күн бұрын
People just say anything
@juanchojack12 күн бұрын
This is enough internet for today lol😩
@ruiferro416013 күн бұрын
Riding Nas to try to get mainstream. Maybe i'll work but no one will buy this hot "ignorant" take.
@AhmedMahmoud-or3zs13 күн бұрын
I know y'all are very small channel with an average of 30-100 view per video, but you ain't gotta do that to get them views.
@vOOvit13 күн бұрын
illmatic trash??!! Run my fade famo🤬
@kriskros474913 күн бұрын
sheesh!... there's some numbers on that cd that you couldn't perform with a page of text in your hand, cause you would choke on your own lungs... tell me you know nothing about rap without tellin' me you know nothing about rap...
@Beanz0613 күн бұрын
Nasty
@SabrumBaker13 күн бұрын
It’s not trash it’s just not THAT crazy to be honest. Their have been multiple albums that have been better since then
@tyisnt13 күн бұрын
It’s extremely crazy. It’s insane. Bro was a child when he made that album. Not even a huge nas fan but to understate the impact of that album and how crazy it is is not good lol
@byanymeansnecessary932913 күн бұрын
Name 1, you can't. Very few hip-hop albums are close, 1)Black on Both sides 2)Word... life 3) Internal affairs
@user-hk7iy2vt5y13 күн бұрын
Brother has the fashion sense of a 5 year old, of course he doesn't fw illmatic.
@gowthamgangaraju288113 күн бұрын
That's the stupidest thing I ever heard
@yc.221113 күн бұрын
Bruh just say you don't like the genre or sum tf🤣 Literally wth r u talkin about?
@desean340213 күн бұрын
No one said Nas chooses great beats and man if you’re judging an album strictly by the beats you should just call yourself a casual or Karen and keep it pushing. This ain’t the genre for you
@Coarse-wuan14 күн бұрын
That's not a hot take, that's a stupid take.
@rellj861114 күн бұрын
Clown talk. Calling it trash just tells me you don’t actually listen to music & also lacks an understanding of context about the timeframe the album dropped. Nas wrote them lyrics between ages of 17-20 years old.
@justrok7915 күн бұрын
Nah, your man is tripping. He gotta be trolling.
@derekmoss268017 күн бұрын
First clip I've seen from this channel. I am hoping for a ton more of this!!!
@WateringHoleMedia16 күн бұрын
Appreciate the support. That's the plan!
@musclehead864918 күн бұрын
So what happens to brothas like me who's been protecting providing supporting standing with my black wife for years and has gotten nothing but disrespect neglect rejection stress and used in return?
@rockfresh199316 күн бұрын
They feel u supposed to serve them and they gotta do nothing for you 😅 fuqqem
@tracyclark756019 күн бұрын
The title stopped me in my tracks! God bless you brothers, may the highest force in our universe continue to keep you in leadership loving intelligent wise successful man head of our lives position. What are you here for, what's your mission? was your lead in. Love it, love the conversation. Thank you.
@gmf35719 күн бұрын
Cosby Show Martin The Wayans Bros Fresh Prince
@garyspence212819 күн бұрын
I appreciate this conversation. I grew up facing some of the same resentment because I was a nerd. Was Urkel before the TV version showed up. But my mom was a teacher, and she encouraged me to be the best version of myself. To understand that if I was going to have any success in this society where white folks were calling the shots, I needed to bring my best efforts to whatever jobs I did land. It wasn't about acting like white people. It was about doing my best, and showing that I knew my stuff. And being self-reliant enough to understand that not everyone is going to be a fan. You would expect that not all white folks would be an ally to you, but it's more disappointing to discover that certain black people didn't have your back at this workplace or that. Or in some social situations, some other black person would remind me that I spoke like a 'white guy'. It would make me chuckle, but I also thought why we as a people had to all sound alike? Was there a regulation for black speech style? Should I be snapping my fingers while talking, or shaking my booty? You read me..? I am who I am, and I'll always be this 'uppity' black man, even if I do sound like Walter Cronkite! "And that's the way it is"...
@MIZRAIM190620 күн бұрын
WTF does “Blackness” mean? Yall are some racist
@MinnesotaEverything20 күн бұрын
There has to be some checks and balances as FBA though…. Blackness can’t be flat! Tiger and Kamala are not black don’t even try it!
@TheNBCI20 күн бұрын
The childless sisters are lying. They want a husband and child!
@jessicaberry8720 күн бұрын
Oh, I've had a moment like that at a job and had to quit too. Going to watch videos on this channel.
@bozoclown209821 күн бұрын
We all speak different
@TrwoDuce21 күн бұрын
Full Respect on Blackness being a wide Spectrum. I am gonna tap in and do more understanding, instead of judging. Start seeing where you at on #TheBlackSpectrum #WeUs
@Mwingate1521 күн бұрын
It sounds as if it comes from fear, or wanting to keep our culture normalcies intact. We would say "that's what white people do" in the 60s and prior to remain safe from sundown towns, Swimmingpools (they put acid in them), etc. It is sad we still use the phrase when we're children of the earth. Ex. Hiking is a white person thing. But what do you think they do in Africa. There's nothing more exhilarating than being surrounded by nature. Yet, we remove ourselves for what? I'm glad to see nature based activities has an increasing black population tho
@raymanjohan883821 күн бұрын
I think our culture is highly sensitive to certain things. Some of us take a lot of things verbatim. Calling someone white or saying someone is acting white alot of times is not meant to take away someone's blackness its just stating that the person does things that relates to things we perceive that more white people do. Also certain parts of our culture will crack on anyone not just those who act \talk "white", we crack on you if youre broke, have money, clean, dirty...no one is above the ridicule unless youre a brawler and even they can get it. Many black people tend to not understand that our culture is fractured in so many ways. We come from free blacks in the north and slaves in the south, then from those who were educated and those who were killed if the were able to read. Those who want the approval of the dominant American structure and those who want to establish our own. The points that we argue about wont go away until we can accept that every black person has a different view of society and learn to value each of those persons POV. We need our intellectuals as well as our hood folk, we need our religious people as well as our spiritual people. We are having the right conversations but our way of trying to solve the problem seems to be either get everyone to act the same or to cast them out. We are all needed, every level holds value. MLK, Malcolm, The Black Panthers, even The Bloods and Crips (at least what the Original Bloods and Crips was created for) all had the same goal but different approaches, but we allowed outside influences to destroy our connectedness. Our collective experience is not from the same origin so our view of the culture as a whole will stim from this. W.E.B. and Booker T wanted the same thing but were from different origin stories and if this conversation was going on back then it will continue to happen if we dont recognize the value in every level of being black.
@trollthumpermicnastywitit200122 күн бұрын
The delineation is ongoing and necessary. Power is exclusive, not inclusive. #notlikeus #getthatsoftassshitouttahere
@TheGreatness-gg1jx22 күн бұрын
If something can be "taken away" YOU NEVER HAD IT. The JAPANESE never had any idea that anything or anyone can take away their Japanese-ness". Just think about how IDIOTIC the idea sounds. But here we are seriously being emotional about this bullshyt. There is no such GD thing as "blackness". Skin-color is NOT AN IDENTITY. You're still following the irrational, mythological ideas created in the late 1600s, beginning with the skin-color idea of "white" and simultaneously "black". NONE OF THIS SHYT IS A REALITY. NONE of it has any DEPTH, and BREADTH. It is entirely SUPERFICIAL and mythological, that's why it has been such as sensitive topic. The word we have ALWAYS been told to NEVER use to describe ourselves is the word AMERICAN. We only recently developed the balls to use a hyphenated word about a place on the other side of the planet in conjunction with American. Meanwhile, those foreign places don't have a GD thing to do with US.
@MrFattarot22 күн бұрын
This is very refreshing. This whole taking away blackness thing is so backwards. To many of us black folk equate blackness to being uneducated, illiterate, playing a particular sport, or liking a particular type of music. Then we complain when other people see us the same way we see ourselves.
@clintzeke22 күн бұрын
I love my culture and my history. What I don’t like is stereotypes. And I don’t like blacks who think you HAVE TO live the sterotype to be black. Also I never cared if someone was in a interracial relationship as long as the person still respected their culture. I’ve met so many blacks that don’t like blacks, that don’t like dark skin, or light skin. I’m proud to be black and wouldn’t be anything different. My parents taught me just because I love me (my culture) doesn’t mean I have to hate someone else
@domonicjames13724 күн бұрын
Good Times Cosby Show The Jeffersons Martin
@WateringHoleMedia22 күн бұрын
That's a fire lineup!
@titkosnagyon26 күн бұрын
hello im budapest hungary 👻👻👻👻👻👽👽
@AnimalsCryToo27 күн бұрын
BAF is crazy. Living Single for sure. My wife and kids
@WateringHoleMedia22 күн бұрын
Can't forget Living Single!
@Mr.Xfrompartsunknown29 күн бұрын
As a White person, I guess I am a part of the "external world". And women like this wonder why no one cares for their crap.