Tell me bro don’t look like Will Ferrell from Die Hard in the mitt tho 👀
@BarsAnderson5 ай бұрын
You mean 'Get Hard'?
@davesnothere88595 ай бұрын
pretty sure that's milk from compton
@hkandm4s234 ай бұрын
Nah, that's David Harbor from stranger things.
@NoDrizzy6304 ай бұрын
That’s milk 74 he’s a Hoover from LA and was rooted and raised by a black family
@YungKashewz4 ай бұрын
BRUH WILL FARREL WAS NEVER IN DIE HARD DUMMY
@elevatedmind2 ай бұрын
Love that Rob was blind folded too. Just incase he forgot.
@CoberBox1Ай бұрын
Good point, why’d he have to wear one?
@eric_stewartАй бұрын
@@CoberBox1 because then he could always sway the vote
@MrMarteloАй бұрын
loooooooooool
@lisalasersАй бұрын
Even the way Rob holds himself when he stands and barely opens his mouth when he talks. socal fr
@buddyguy472327 күн бұрын
So funny.
@erikpeterson705 ай бұрын
Im glad they got an authentic guy for the video instead of just having some suburban guy pretend to act black
@aaronhumphrey35144 ай бұрын
I'd be very surprised if that would've worked. It's all about whether you are raised in a culture or not. If you weren't it's nearly impossible to fool those who were.
@uncommonsense3604 ай бұрын
Maaaan, whatchu mean foo. Don't be playin. Or we bee ops, bruh
@rlmpproductions4 ай бұрын
@@uncommonsense360😄😂🤣💯🔥
@Chtigga4 ай бұрын
What is 'acting Black'?
@johnnyvalentino87204 ай бұрын
@@Chtiggaacting like an african american
@Sockcrust3 ай бұрын
met dudes like this, best people you'll ever find. promise you that, humbled, diverse, not a sliver of racism in them. we need people like this
@ItIsYouAreNotYourАй бұрын
The blaqs are the most racist of them all. Based on anecdotal evidence AND stats.
@JohnSmith-tz7iy27 күн бұрын
For real. One time i worked with this tall skinny white dude shane and he was that dude
@mikebrown82518 ай бұрын
Rob won because he was just being himself in his responses. You can hear the confidence in his voice, he’s not trying to fool anyone.
@Twilight.Princess5 ай бұрын
@schizoposter1499right smfh. People really think people can’t grow up a certain way just because of their skin color.
@lesegogaebeeyn40055 ай бұрын
He black 😂
@cbrowie63295 ай бұрын
Rob played into all black stereotypes (jail, single mother, gangs). Never did he include himself into any of his responses as if he mattered or was part of the struggle. I wouldn't doubt after the cameras cut off his accent reverts back to white America.
@xXLsUTiGeRsFaNXx4 ай бұрын
@@Twilight.Princess I'm white and grew up in ghettos around new orleans my whole childhood. I've hung out with rich and poor whites and rich and poor blacks. I realized a long time ago it aint the color of the skin or money u got. It's going thru the same struggle that make u brothers. I get along with blacks more than whites just cuz I really understand the struggle that alot of black ppl go thru. I was never was privileged like most of the white kids. Couldn't go to places my friends invited me to cuz I was too broke. I didn't have a phone til I was 16. In the hood everyone is family cuz we all go thru the same struggle and understand each other better than anyone else
@Tribossss4 ай бұрын
@@xXLsUTiGeRsFaNXx we go thru the same shit brother, i hope your doing better now fr, i cant speak for everyone but I know that struggle and am just happy people are escaping it. the only color anybody needs to worry about is green.
@experienceofchris11085 ай бұрын
The white dude was the blackest one there 😂
@hurtigheinz37905 ай бұрын
His voice was so deep and he spoke slowly so I assume the others thought he was some grey haired brother dark.
@experienceofchris11085 ай бұрын
@@hurtigheinz3790 yeah, most of these black men were super metro and almost seemed gay. If it was just straight hood dudes I think they would have probably been able to sus him out.
@fey99155 ай бұрын
@@experienceofchris1108 Dude grew up in Hoovers, might not be that easy lol
@wkkqewqaver77665 ай бұрын
crazy right it's almost like race isn't culture mind-blowing fact to the average American.
@jajacando99334 ай бұрын
White dud a LA crip.
@princessbc97913 ай бұрын
I cried for the mixed boy, he started getting emotional. I imagine it was hard for him and his mom, and his dad who married her and aided in the family disowning her. Her fam was dead wrong!
@michaelj75829 күн бұрын
Great example of love being more powerful than hate. Still, unfortunately not an easy road to walk.
@samttk35917 күн бұрын
Classic ignorant jews
@Dazulolwarrior12 күн бұрын
It's the Jews, they're racist as fuck
@Edward_USMC138 күн бұрын
My GF is biracial.. Her pops is black and his family (her aunties cousins etc) literally disowned that side of the family without actually doing it. Her mom struggled when they were little kids because she didn't know how to do the black girls hair and the nuanced differences that exists. SMH really sad when race gets in between blood. It's something that still affects my girl to this day which I understand but she has no contact with us out of her family
@ChrisRedfield987 күн бұрын
Yeah but it was goofy to be getting emotional after being booted from the game, like bro get outta here lol 💀
@jadelee65554 ай бұрын
People in America are so obsessed with the color of each others' skin that they don't realize what they are characterizing is culture and social status, not race. It's where you grow up and who you surround yourself with that shapes you as a person.
@TanukiOfficial4 ай бұрын
It doesn't matter where you grew up because if society is always focused on your race, race is ever present. This is true in every country white people colonized because white people created the concept of "race." White people are consciously and unconsciously obsessed with race. That is why profiling people exists.
@orange222...4 ай бұрын
Have you been to every other country so you can make that statement?
@gamerthings25594 ай бұрын
@@orange222...I think he meant America since he was born and raised there, (Probably) So it’d be kind of hard to talk about other countries because we don’t know much about them.
@sirluis50434 ай бұрын
@@orange222... Socialization is a thing in every country.
@orange222...4 ай бұрын
@@gamerthings2559 I don't know and I wouldn't guess that was his intent. When I see someone posting America, like everyone in America is exactly the same it sets me off. We are in America so why even mention it? I don't like their characterizing for any entire place.
@JoonieJuice4 ай бұрын
Rob speaking about the cookout & rubbing his hands...I forgot he was white while looking right at him 😂
@u_u96294 ай бұрын
Fr😂😂😂
@Mr_Fr34ky4 ай бұрын
Yk he be invited. He seeing that shit.
@Lil_Sina_Blingz3 ай бұрын
Right
@InsideThaJackalsHead3 ай бұрын
Rob is the most hood one in that entire group! He from South Central LA and looks and sounds like a G! LOL
@justrelax129Ай бұрын
Come on bro white people have cookouts too. Haven’t you ever seen king of the hill?
@just-a-bird-with-a-monocle3 ай бұрын
ngl the "sorry for the ads" parts are the perfect setup to talk about a video without making me thing ur just pausing for no reason and yapping
@nya41982 ай бұрын
Trust me
@Dorian_LuL2 ай бұрын
Fr
@biigsmokeeАй бұрын
bruh 18:03 u joking right
@ogboogerdog15 күн бұрын
@@biigsmokee evidently not.
@tbtnr98517 күн бұрын
Ah yes, the good ol pretend you have ads strategy so you can speak about the video without the viewers getting butthurt
@mrader Жыл бұрын
I love how he said I had a good family, that's all that matters.
@killerplunger5 ай бұрын
Family matters
@fey99155 ай бұрын
That was a burn on Rosebud guy :D
@neatchipops34284 ай бұрын
@@fey9915 Real talk... if Rosebud's momma had got with a Palestinian, even then he woulda got held... by "them" on "that" side of his "family" sadly, tho.
@AnaLucia-wy2ii4 ай бұрын
❤
@Sehtlimbo4 ай бұрын
@@neatchipops3428 yep
@Curse445 ай бұрын
Why is the white guy blindfolded, doesn't he know either? 😄😄
@S2BYISRAEL5 ай бұрын
Chapelle got a bit about that....
@ReadyorNot8115 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@ReadyorNot8115 ай бұрын
@@S2BYISRAEL😂😂😂😂😂
@XueYlva5 ай бұрын
maybe he doesn't tbh
@Hawa_Chapal5 ай бұрын
@@S2BYISRAEL lmao ...
@willythe4Ай бұрын
“That’s my wigga” 🤣😂😭 Milk is a laid back dude I remember seeing this and realizing he was the dude I saw on a “prison podcast” a while back. He has a KZbin channel “ITZMILK TV” Enjoyed your video bro you’re good at this.
@poyopoyo2134 ай бұрын
When Rob said "Birf day"... I knew I woulda lost.
@dooby14453 ай бұрын
Rob really lived that life hahahaha
@shadow_realm4713 күн бұрын
He was out in the skreets, dealing and in the system. All the other guys were talking about micro aggression, college and diversity Milk was tweaking in the background like an unc ready to go " boy you don't know how good you have it".
@leoh11915 ай бұрын
The real problem of this scenario is none of these black gentlemen are " hood".. it honestly seems like most are college educated,professional. Rob on the other hand is poor..let that sink in
@AriesSlagv4 ай бұрын
Very good one!
@aaronhumphrey35144 ай бұрын
I noticed that too. The rest seem more middle class and like they went to decent schools. Ron clearly had a lot less growing up. Kind of makes you realize the whole "white privilege" thing is more about one's socioeconomic status and the culture one grows up in than skin color. I bet Ron gets harassed by cops a fair bit too based on the way he dresses, his bearing, his hair, and the way he talks.
@metalheadforlife89284 ай бұрын
@aaronhumphrey3514 Hopefully too many people dont need to come to that realization because it should be obvious from the get go
@jajacando99334 ай бұрын
White dude is a LA crip.
@nikhtzatzi4 ай бұрын
What u said should start a whole social experiment. Very interesting
@ethand83482 ай бұрын
Grew up in the hood wit interracial family. Was around Haitians livin wit me my whole life. Rob was fr just bein himself 😂💯
@KimmyLikesIt4 ай бұрын
I’m a white woman raised by a Mexican family in the Pedro projects and Dana Strand projects in the 70s and 80s. I could probably win the Mexican edition of this game.
@thediaz074 ай бұрын
Can you speak Spanish?
@spitflamez4 ай бұрын
That White dude is Milk from West side Hoover in LA, I think 74. He was adopted by a Black lady as a baby.
@LatAm134 ай бұрын
@@thediaz07that’s what I was gonna ask too lol because even if you are Mexican but can’t speak Spanish you’re getting voted out lol.
@Daniel-xi7gi4 ай бұрын
this make no sense
@martincovey89264 ай бұрын
Congrats?
@EricStevens-u8r5 ай бұрын
White or Black, Rob is the realest mf in the damn cube from go
@Slimeyeddread2473 ай бұрын
True. If you ever got in trouble with these fools they snitching quickly. Even the Asian Jewish guy had more soul then most of them
@Thatdude-iu4eu3 ай бұрын
He's got his own channel. His name is Milk
@Karel.DeruweАй бұрын
That dude is Milk 74
@austinboyd53632 ай бұрын
My dude the lip purse head nod is a silent hello. It's super common in some places. And shy people do it all the time. Sometimes it comes with a verbal hello and a wave but it depends on the person and how busy they are.
@pupsap7714Ай бұрын
Why do balding white men always say my dood
@rebeccam723929 күн бұрын
Yeah I get annoyed when I hear about the white person smile or pursed lip nod. I do that to every stranger. It’s a friendly acknowledgment without being overly friendly or the opposite, a rude scowl or no acknowledgment.
@chuggon75954 ай бұрын
As a white man, we do that lip head nod thing to everyone, including white people lmao
@beastvader3 ай бұрын
I'm British Bangladeshi and I do the same thing lol. It's definitely just a cultural thing
@erichenry63563 ай бұрын
I do too my man. Sometimes people take it real disrespectful walking by them without some recognition that they exist. A quick head nod as you go by is just saying 'I see you bro'
@freshskittles923 ай бұрын
100% lol
@RandomGamerDude3993 ай бұрын
Exactly.
@AvengedKittyLP3 ай бұрын
Its always Nod if walking in opposite direction as a "Hello" Whenever I walk with someone in the same direction, I usually do small talk till next turn.
@TheDylls5 ай бұрын
Nature vs. Nurture! If you haven't had one, you'd be surprised at how quickly a baby starts instinctually doing certain things. That's "Nature". But the way you speak as an adult is completely dependent on who you learned from growing up. That's "Nurture".
@degol56925 ай бұрын
No fuckin shit
@Baset_5 ай бұрын
@@degol5692 It's not obvious to everyone. A lot of racist people think everything is down to nature, and that certain races will always end up a certain way. But that's just not true and Rob is walking proof.
@PDriizzy5 ай бұрын
Well yea, it’s character vs personally one is genetics other is influence. Crazy how many living things have both.
@Publiksquare4 ай бұрын
Yeah so it has zero to do with skin color@degol5692
@scipioafricanus58714 ай бұрын
*Youssuf N'Dour & Neneh Cherry's "7 Seconds" playing:* 🎵We're seven seconds away 🎶 Or just as long as I stay 🎶I'll be waiting🎵
@TheTracepyott11 күн бұрын
I’m a 40 yr old white guy and I have no idea how I got here but I really like your mindset and this video was dope so I’m gonna subscribe.
@cyberbrainmfk4 ай бұрын
That black mother is a hero!! Give her a medal! What a woman. God bless you Rob and your fam. Love from Serbia :)
@TheVidiotz3 ай бұрын
“Alright. Everyone say it together now. N-“ would’ve ended it right there 😭😭
@Poulson_thefit13 ай бұрын
😂
@MustafaErtem3 ай бұрын
he probably say that too. in fact he definitely said n word whole childhood.
@vannarooski87303 ай бұрын
Nah he’s fully integrated lol. Got a 1000$ that he would say it no hesi 😂
@thee_abstractionist39172 ай бұрын
If he DOESN'T say it, he's trying to hard to appease the whites. Be yourself bro.
@WhiteBoyNick12 ай бұрын
Would have been hilarious no matter what happened.
@DynesLair-kb6qs15 күн бұрын
Some of your comments towards the end show you are a smart man. As soon as you include EVRYONE, and actually everyone, that's when everyone is at their best. So glad you understand that.
@Jaydaydesign4 ай бұрын
I’m Australian, white and chose an Italian guy 40+years ago. Was kicked out of home at 16 and they still don’t talk to me all those years later. my Italian mother in law was no better, was always nasty to me when her son left the room, she never bought presents for her own grandkids. Only the full blood Italian ones from his younger brother were accepted. Racism is racism doesnt matter what shade you are. Haters will find a reason to hate. Be the bigger person and raise your children to be better
@DubbleTee3 ай бұрын
Italian family's are rough. I was married to an Italian for three years... happily divorced now. I feel your pain.
@theDavidChannel13 ай бұрын
What's funny is Italian Americans tried so hard to assimilate that they are no longer in touch with their roots, and any chance they get they take shots at other immigrants and ethnic groups, and are now so proud to be considered white. 😂
@DenelsiaWalker3 ай бұрын
Sending ❤
@CJ-osophy3 ай бұрын
Racism doesn’t exiet
@Stopwastingbraincells3 ай бұрын
Here's one for ya, I'm half black half Italian..... that's rough😂😂😂
@HeroinYoda4 ай бұрын
"Did y'all forget how to struggle?" That line is a deep as the mariana trench.
@mtclauraamaral22013 ай бұрын
Missed that one... 🤔
@FBerserkerF1Ай бұрын
Within this context being "black" is far, far more cultural and environmental than it is racial or genetic. My man isn't "white"
@danstearn76974 ай бұрын
The kid’s grandparents that rejected him without knowing him are the real losers. They will regret it sooner or later.
@DenelsiaWalker3 ай бұрын
Idk. Different mentality.
@Shante-3303 ай бұрын
No they won’t
@reginahamilton9823 ай бұрын
They are sooooo wrong for that
@cynthiaholland133 ай бұрын
@@Shante-330why not
@liveforever1413 ай бұрын
@@cynthiaholland13 jews are extremely big on ethnicity. i'd even say that jewishness is ethno-religion, you are a real jew when you are fully 100 percent jew by blood, you may convert, but other jews will not accept you, or will only pretend to accept you. also jewishness is considered from maternal line instead of paternal as usual, so woman having kid with another race is destroying that 100 percent pure blood, thus ending lineage in her ancestors eyes.
@twatts15235 ай бұрын
You could hear the pain in the little mixed kid’s voice. He’s so cute and talented, though. Surely he’ll realize his unique ethnicity is something special to accentuate and own.
@bestbro10185 ай бұрын
I relate to him, my mom is adopted and Mexican, her side of the family never once considered me or her as “family” my dads side however, mind you they are conservative white never once made us feel unloved. It’s a true problem blood should not dictate family
@wkkqewqaver77665 ай бұрын
he is who he is because of where he grew up and where his parents are from not his ethnicity or racial heritage that's all bs.
@rugby3425 ай бұрын
Musicians Ben Harper & Lenny Kravitz are both biracial, white jewish and black
@twatts15235 ай бұрын
@@rugby342 Yes, he has the same vibes as them.
@JoeWayne845 ай бұрын
@@rugby342drake same… if the dad is Jewish it’s one thing but they don’t like it when Jewish women have half black babys … the Jewish heritage is passed by the mother it’s a matriarchal culture… the Jewish man can still have kids with a Jewish woman to pass on the family heritage even if he has kids with a non Jew… but the women are disowned usually if they marry outside of the religion they don’t like anyone besides Jews breeding into there camp not just blacks but they for sure don’t like blacks the black citizens in Israel make up less than .02 percent of the population haha they aren’t exactly promoted to immigrate there.
@amberballard31572 ай бұрын
Black people are so welcoming and loving, family is huge in their culture. I grew up in a rural area and I was always treated like we were all the same. My son is 2, and all my coworkers, especially my black coworkers, are so loving and connected to him. They're very family oriented. I've always had good experiences with black people.
@wolfganghumboldt48305 ай бұрын
My white family didn't want us in and out of the house when playing too. We didn't have a choice either. Had to play outside.
@Peatingtune5 ай бұрын
For me it was go outside, don't come back until it's time to eat. Only really stayed inside if it was raining. I didn't want to stay inside anyway because there was nothing to do except read and play with my old toys. I wasn't allowed to just sit around watching TV. I could play games if it rained but my mom wouldn't tolerate me gaming if the weather was good. Couldn't have friends over 99% of the time I wanted to, either. My mom didn't want a bunch of kids running around and my dad was on shifts so half the time he was asleep and it would have been my ass if I woke him up for no good reason.
@wolfganghumboldt48305 ай бұрын
@@Peatingtune Exactly the same for me. They wanted kids out of the way for the day. And I grew up in socal. Rainy days barely existed. We invented new things to do outside every day.
@ENGLISHMURPHY5 ай бұрын
I wasn't allowed to play outside as a kid, too dangerous
@seldom_bucket5 ай бұрын
Yeah, a lot of these 'black' things are just normal human things. It's sad they feel like they have to put on an act to be black, proper insecure.
@yodieyuh5 ай бұрын
"There's the hose. I'll put some sandwiches on the porch at lunch time. Don't be stupid."
@lagronemikal5 ай бұрын
Saw Rob on another podcast and he's from South Central and a banger. Bro was with the Hoovers. If this show had been a fight to the death Rob woulda been the one walking up outta there too.
@fey99155 ай бұрын
he has youtube channel now too, milktv
@davesnothere88595 ай бұрын
I think I saw him on a white crip prison documentary you make it through prison as a white crip you a bad mother
@douglasstout40704 ай бұрын
Then why he say gang banging gotta stop 🤦
@spitflamez4 ай бұрын
@@douglasstout4070Because people grow up, wow
@Mike_E_DeShaman4 ай бұрын
@@douglasstout4070cuz he aint some fake f boy pretending to be something he's not .. he knows first hand how negative and self destructive that bs is
@Dunimos12313 ай бұрын
Love this. Your commentary really deepened the impact of the material
@rambo28574 ай бұрын
And this goes to show that people relate to the enviroment you grew in, and the financial situation more than the skin color
@Lvxury17 күн бұрын
It doesn’t tho he literally had a black family still
@cajuncaveman5 ай бұрын
Bro, Im a white boy from Shreveport Louisiana, and I said the same shit, my boy might be blacker then some of them lmao.
@kaizatengoku38935 ай бұрын
no
@cajuncaveman5 ай бұрын
@@kaizatengoku3893 YES
@wkkqewqaver77665 ай бұрын
that's what happens when you conflate race with culture like they are one the same most people act the way they act because of where they lived and the culture surrounding that place not because of their skin colour or racial background.
@christoph31874 ай бұрын
Black scholar Thomas Sowell explained that a lot of what is conceived as „black American culture“ is actually originally white southern white folks culture, so it makes sense.
@cajuncaveman4 ай бұрын
@@christoph3187 I can see that, culture is created and then evolves
@josephmcmahon7441Ай бұрын
never seen one of your videos but that first 20 seconds made me sub instantly man. you seem super down to earth and continued to say some real shit through the whole video. Big respect bro keep doing your thing
@PraxisPeabody5 ай бұрын
Lol, as an old white dude. I dont know why i do that lip thing. But i do that to anybody i dont know.
@broskichannel41633 ай бұрын
😂😂
@Secondhandlegs3 ай бұрын
My Dad does the same thing. He thinks it's cool non-verbal way to say "whassup?". It's not 😂
@NisJol21 күн бұрын
Most people do it but only white people get accused of doing it for racial reasons
@revanxl56125 ай бұрын
As a white man the curled lip thing is how we say hello to people we don't know. We do it to each other too so it ain't cause your black or some sort of micro aggression lol.
@alus9924 ай бұрын
Yeah it was so hmm interesting to hear. I constantly do it to almost everybody and I don't know even why and I live in Europe. It has nothing to do with what I feel towards the other person
@DoNotBlink.4 ай бұрын
To me it’s basically a sign to show you acknowledge the other persons presence/existence. Or a „I looked at you, you looked at me“ Situation, don’t know what to do, do the thing. Never occurred to me it could be interpreted like this.(Sorry for mistakes, english is not my native tongue, also live in europe )
@austinhenry40924 ай бұрын
I do it a lot and its not race specific. I think its like after making eye contact "I respect and acknowledge you but I'm not interested in small talk"
@DaftRaincloud4 ай бұрын
If it's a dude older than me I give them a head nod, but if it's a guy around my age or younger I do the lip curl lmao.
@DrBitchcraft.4 ай бұрын
Maybe its an american thing that there's micro aggression? In europe its just a neutral "awkward but polite" greeting to everyone.
@chase_james7 күн бұрын
Love how Rob voted other possible white guys out 😂
@mbuck2533 ай бұрын
“Fitz? I thought you was talking bout having a fresh fits on!” Whole room except for one dying laughing.. Milk: “that wasn’t even funny tho”
@ShyGuyShow4 ай бұрын
Notice how Brevin took his full 30 seconds while Rob only used half of the time. That's why he won there
@Goldenretriever-k8m4 күн бұрын
This was such a great group of guys! A lot of times in these group video things there are some toxic people being racist or whatever, just being nasty, but these guys were so nice and just had some really insightful conversations because they were so friendly and kind to one another. I hope they stayed in touch.
@streettravelxxi Жыл бұрын
Good ass reaction bruh u made hella good points
@lordiari71102 ай бұрын
Agreed
@bongzilla41724 ай бұрын
Everyone should hang out with everyone man, you enrich your life if you do that.
@OrdnanceTV28 күн бұрын
25:58 Yo as a white dude who grew up in south Atlanta I was *always* telling my black friends that same shit, I was like "Why are they making another slave movie?" and they were like "Y'all know you love that shit" and I was like "Bro literally zero white people like these movies, we thought y'all made this shit" and they were like "WE THOUGHT WHITE PEOPLE WANTED THIS, WTF". Those movies are for literally *NO ONE* but rich Hollywood mfers.
@angelagottarock Жыл бұрын
I loved this! It was insightful and humorous. I was impressed with you, being so articulate. I agree that the gang stuff needs to end. Rock on bruh!!!
@angelagottarock Жыл бұрын
I just realised that that sounded a bit racist. I certainly didn't mean it that way. Please just take it in a good way. I love every race. I come from a white mother and a half black father. I was racially targeted when I was a child,by my own mother! Yeah it"'s crazy, but true.If you want to know more, let me know.
@DiqBenjis1 Жыл бұрын
wasn’t racist at all, I got what you were saying 100% ❤️
@ReadyorNot8115 ай бұрын
Im glad you clarified ❤❤❤❤@@angelagottarock
@mickefy4 ай бұрын
@@angelagottarock Your comment made me think of the line in Zootopia where the rabbit says to the fox "You are one articulate fella." 😂 I'm just poking fun, btw, not being mean. Hehe
@beegchunguz74255 ай бұрын
Robs braids are clean but his arm hair is wild. The way he stands speaks volumes where hes from too. Bro when he talked about the worth of gangbangin was real.
@MattR86055 ай бұрын
He knows about that life all too well. He was in the Hoovers. I would easily bet that he has more street cred and knowledge than everyone else in that room combined.
@spitflamez4 ай бұрын
@@MattR8605Facts
@deadassdgaf1004 ай бұрын
😆 yooo! Rob's A1, no doubt, BUT...them braids AIN'T clean, so please 🖐🏼 cut. the. fkn. shit.
@jeremyblackwater4399 күн бұрын
I don’t know why “his arm hair is wild”made me laugh 😂
@seancarter3075Ай бұрын
First time watching a video where I feel welcome and comfortable. No sideways lowkey propaganda or anything just fatcs and great ways to discuss humanity on common ground. LOVE this ish here 💯
@e.d.s79095 ай бұрын
A lot of people think that if you're not a minority, you can never understand or experience harder struggles than others. This just goes to show more ignorant people that struggle is universal, not based on the colour of your skin.
@ReadyorNot8115 ай бұрын
He was raised with a black family.
@e.d.s79095 ай бұрын
@ReadyorNot811 He's still white, and has struggles. If you'd actually read the comment, that's what I'm talking about - the colour of your skin doesn't automatically determine how much you've struggled, so you should always lead with an open mind and not stereotype or assume based on the colour of someone's skin.
@wkkqewqaver77665 ай бұрын
struggles come from where you live and what type of attributes that place has nothing to do with race everything to do with culture.
@thomasflores78174 ай бұрын
@@wkkqewqaver7766also your decisions. You can have all the opportunity in the world and make the wrong choices and its all gone
@wkkqewqaver77664 ай бұрын
@@thomasflores7817 I know that from experience.
@kardaine295 ай бұрын
My grandson his half white and half Hispanic, I can't imagine being so hateful in the heart to cut him out because of his heritage... shit, he's going to be so well rounded, two languages, different cultures and loved deeply by both sides of the family. He may experience hate in this world but never inside our homes or wherever he lays his dead down to sleep.
@verypoopybutt4 ай бұрын
Is he legal?
@meaculpa223 ай бұрын
Hispanic? Do you mean indigenous?
@todydn3 ай бұрын
@@meaculpa22hispanic isnt indigenous to anywhere but spain just so you know mexicans werent mexicans till spain made mexico mexico and aztec is very distant from spanish they fucked the indigeonous people of mexico out of existence nearly completely if we are going for the u.s.a none of the languages spoken by indigenous people are called indigenous because theres like 300 of them dont go being self righteous without knowing alittle about what your blabbing on
@HILTSWALTAI2 күн бұрын
This commentary was really good. I don't watch commentary videos like that but I fw this one.
@unwashedmime4 ай бұрын
Any black man saying micro aggressions is disqualified
@SchmanteZuba2 ай бұрын
Anybody saying micro aggressions is disqualified. America has changed. The general attitude not that long ago was don't let anyone hold you back, don't let anyone define you, be determined to succeed, never give up and never give in. Most black people I've known that went double for. Now, way too many people are woe is me victims. Stop it. Be conquerors of the challenges.
@bebeenderson786329 күн бұрын
It’s part of the black experience. Sounds college educated to me, weird take on ur part
@Spooklilly-Latina4Freedom20 күн бұрын
@@bebeenderson7863😂 You not Black fasho if you thing using the term "micro-agression" is part of the "Black experience"
@ASMRA334 ай бұрын
And here is a demonstration of how skin color is NOT THE SAME THING as CULTURE❤❤❤And you're right...we ALL have ALOT to teach eachother. God Bless!!!
@lrrr616 күн бұрын
i fw u so heavy bro u got a great mindset
@PneumaNoose4 ай бұрын
29:50 I felt this in my soul. I’m white as snow (my black friends called me neon white LOL) but I’m legitimately half black and half white. I was born with blue eyes, reddish hair and freckles. I still have my freckles but my hair is brown now. My dad died when I was a little girl so I lost touch with my black family but I was still “acting black” well into middle school until one of the black kids at the black lunch table I sat at asked in front of everyone, “why do you sit with us?” I said, “because you’re my friends.” But then my best friend (a black girl) said, “shhh shut up, G! Her dad was black!” It was in that moment I knew I would not only never be accepted by my people, but I could never be proud of who I am. So, I stopped listening to black music, stopped dressing black, stopped “acting” black, etc. and started dressing in rocker black clothes, listening to rock music, and speaking like a white person. Now as an adult I play the drums and love rock and metal more than anything, but you put on some Death Row Records and the black half of me pries its way out like a monster LOL. Anyway, my point is, I still struggle with feeling like I belong somewhere to this day. My boyfriend is super white and has zero experience with the black community, and despite having DNA proof now, my dad’s first kids (my half siblings) want nothing to do with me cuz they’re convinced I wasn’t my father’s daughter. I am so proud to carry his last name AND his DNA, but no one believes me that I’m 20% Nigerian, let alone Black American. It’s very painful when you can’t just be who you are just because society won’t accept you or makes a joke out of your very existence. My Papa was my world and losing him as a little girl along with my identity shaped who I became as a person and I just wish I could at least be proud to be his daughter without having to explain why I “came out white” or remember that I’m dead to his side of the family. And my dad actually converted to Judaism long before his kids were born, so we all went to Hebrew classes as kids at the synagogue on base, he has the Star of David on his gravestone, etc. So when he said they sat shiva for his mom… it was like a knife to my heart. I truly felt his pain on so many personal levels. I don’t have anyone in my life who can relate to my upbringing or how I feel about my identity.
@jake-qn3tl4 ай бұрын
You're probably like 70% white in ancestry
@DubbleTee3 ай бұрын
Your comment made me tear up. It seems like you need to vent some more. Venting is part of the grieving process. I know because I've grieved recently. I am here to listen if you need to talk. I'm not a therapist or psychologist... just another human, willing to listen.
@PneumaNoose3 ай бұрын
@@DubbleTee this is by far the nicest comment I’ve ever gotten on KZbin. Thank you so much for being so kind ❤️
@n0rmal9533 ай бұрын
@@PneumaNoosesometimes we want to say it all, even if we couldn’t admit it to another person face to face. I think it’s a good way to rationalize and understand how we feel and why. Your story is important and I feel for you. Hope you’ll have a better day and feel a bit lighter after writing this.
@PneumaNoose3 ай бұрын
@@n0rmal953 that’s so true. If I could afford therapy, I’d be all over it! And I do feel a bit lighter, thank you so much.
@echoparkwino75985 ай бұрын
As someone whos half white half Mexican who grew up in echo park I really do relate to Rob cause I grew up with Spanish as my first language. And I have black cushions I'm a product of my environment and it's a trip watching this and seeing that the truth that when it comes to relating to other people how you grew up is the and where is a big factor. I don't really know what to say other then this episode was amazing people had a lot of good shit to say and in the end of the day it was all love man.
@haroldflowers60033 ай бұрын
Man! What a powerful video...Extremely educational.
@CatieAMillion4 ай бұрын
Sometimes people conflate being poor with being black and it’s a bit confusing
@meaculpa223 ай бұрын
Because racism and classism works together thats how yt supremacy been build
@eio45283 ай бұрын
@@meaculpa22 No. Just no. Stop it. Get some help.
@Lusciouslysorry9 күн бұрын
Thank you! Finally someone who realizes you can edit out the ads! Thumbs up just for that. I hate how many people just let the ad play in the video like they can't just edit it TF out.
@PtylerBeats4 ай бұрын
The white dude repeating “Power Rangers” in the most dismissive tone ever haha that was so funny 12:24
@Fiberton4 ай бұрын
Rob grew up in the hood and those other guys were talking about some kiddo stuff. I am sure Rob was thinking "These mfkers sound gay!!!"
@Mike_E_DeShaman4 ай бұрын
😂😂🤣 That moment right there was the perfect representation of this entire episode
@mrs.spicer4 ай бұрын
Because what!?!?!
@Slenderhand3 ай бұрын
I giggled at your sincerity with "the skreets?" Commenting because you asked nicely!
@oldmoneyswag65042 ай бұрын
that was a dead give away for me. it seems forced. i can hear in his voice that he was white. like i said in my comment. maybe because im an elder. not sure .just saying.
@ChrisStavros15 күн бұрын
@@oldmoneyswag6504 It's not because you're an elder, it's because you can see who it is. The fact of knowing who it is when listening to them speak, and the biases generated from this, are already baked into your assessment of what they're saying and you don't have the ability to realistically assess what your opinion would have been if you didn't have this information from the beginning.
@oldmoneyswag650415 күн бұрын
@ChrisStavros you sound weird my man. I can tell the difference between a white person talking and a black person. Yet you got it. You know me🤣🤣🤣
@ChrisStavros15 күн бұрын
@@oldmoneyswag6504 I'm talking about humans, not you specifically. But you lacking the requisite cognitive self-reflection to understand what I'm saying applies to you as well, is fully consistent with who you're saying you are.
@ChrisStavros15 күн бұрын
"How would you have felt if you hadn't had breakfast this morning," and so on.
@tingtang9302Ай бұрын
7:40 lol dude subbed with this
@opethdan24085 ай бұрын
That dude in the white and red striped shirt was cheating. He could see under his blindfold and kept his head tilted up to peak out. 😂
@opethdan24085 ай бұрын
Oh I just got to the part where you also noticed that same guy was cheating. 😂 I'm not the only one that caught that
@oopsicles5 ай бұрын
@@opethdan2408what. Did u forget to switch account or somn lmao
@ExistentiallyDreading5 ай бұрын
@@opethdan2408 Why are you replying to your own comment? This shit is sad
@unusveritas41225 ай бұрын
@@ExistentiallyDreading Yeah, weird af.
@unusveritas41225 ай бұрын
No, it's not weird, wtf.
@tonyhacker59805 ай бұрын
I had no idea phil lamar played so many characters i love! Thats dope to hear hes a chill dude
@tomevers66704 ай бұрын
The best character he played was the one in front of me, - The Diddler
@rmeredithmАй бұрын
“Gabriel - Black Man” Lololol that’s wild 🤣
@Panful4 ай бұрын
It ain't about race its about culture
@veravance56813 ай бұрын
OMG I watched the 30:22 whole video til 18 seconds left and all I can say is I appreciate ALL my friends who were fortunate enough extend their families by opening their hearts & homes.
@RunningOverRocks2 ай бұрын
So. I am a 68yo (I'm old but I had the best music!) white due who has been called a "whigger" all my life. I went to a predominately black high school (class of 1974, and played on an all-black basketball team as State Boys Champions for the state of Georgia0. So it was refreshing to hear what everyone was throwing down -- especially from my fellow blue-eyed soul brother! 🙂 Because of your excellent moderation sills you gained a new subscriber and a Big Like from me!
@Kimberlymogan4 ай бұрын
My parents were foster parents and took any child, because a child in need is a child we wanted. My mom’s father however was born in 1900 and had other views. However he treated everyone equally but didn’t go out of his way for anyone not Irish. UNTIL, my parents receive “little Linda” my mom, Linda was so excited that she was getting a brand new baby, straight from the NICU. My grandfather came over so excited to meet the new family member. When they arrived with this 4lb baby, all you could see was her huge front. Knowing my grandpas views, my mom tried to step between him and the caseworker, praying he wouldn’t say anything. He pushed her out of the way and scooped that baby up as if she was a long awaited, prayed for, miracle child. I don’t think he allowed anyone to hold her or get a glimpse of her closer than arms length for hours. He told my mom that this little girl needed him, he could feel it, and she would get everything he had to give. She wasn’t abused, her momma was just mentally challenged, and in the end my family taught and nurtured her to the point she got her baby back, but it took 5 years, so we were kinda devastated to see her go. while happy for her and her mother, my grandfather was crushed. This 6’4” 255lb railroad track laying, Irish man who avoided anyone of color, mourned her leaving us.. ‘Little Linda “ was named by my grandfather on day one being with us. We were given that honor and we all voted on names, but my grandfather insisted her name be the same as my mother’s, whom he also named. He didn’t miss a day visiting her the entire 5 years.. I, being the only biological grandchild, was spoiled rotten, but little Linda was the doted on, precious princess in my grandpas eyes. All that to say, skin color is only 1 sublayer of the 5 sublayers of the 3 main layers of skin, its superficial and means less about a person than the type of koolaid they prefer, in the grand scheme. I never judge a person based on something so trivial, and amazingly I learned that from my Irish grandfather the day I saw a little black baby capture his white heart. If I could ever give someone younger one piece of advice that they had to live by, it would be to only judge someone by how they, and they alone treat you and others. BE KIND AND LIVE FREE
@EloiseFleming-j6v5 ай бұрын
Hi …. I’m a great grandmother and this is my first time watching your video….. and I really enjoyed it….but since I’ve been around a few seasons I want to explain to you what “Black is beautiful” means….. it stems from being called ugly names, and dealing with racial stereotypes…. especially if you were dark skinned…..so to compensate and for people to understand we love ourselves….no matter our complexion…. the term WE ARE BEAUTIFUL was born…..I hope this was helpful to you…. keep up the good work…. God Bless❣️
@B7HUNDRED4 ай бұрын
god bless you! 😊
@eugenepaulellsworth4512 ай бұрын
A great video. The content is really raw and on target. Growing up in Massachusetts in the 80's -90's was a mess. I can just relate to a lot of the comments and comparisons. Thanks for sharing this.
@nicolegilmour78353 ай бұрын
This vid is a year old and this is the first time I watched your content and I really enjoyed your vibe and your smart attitude about so many different topics on what you were sharing with the audience.. so thank you for this video and I am going to continue to check out everything you make ..
@bastiwen4 ай бұрын
Is the "No running in and out" considered a black stereotype in the US ? Where I live (Central Europe) that's just a kid thing, everybody's parents would say that, white or not.
@shadrach56812 ай бұрын
19:52 you need to oil that hinge buddy. 😂
@pickachuman28024 ай бұрын
"NOT LIKE ROB" got me dying 🤣
@kafka82975 ай бұрын
Too much love in your heart man? Nah, Be proud man. I see in you that youre the type of person to help heal others. Much love, bro, keep up the good work🙏💯💯
@laurenfrickman7141Ай бұрын
Loved your comment my husband was African-American and my family is white and they could care less that I got more criticism from his family and it did not feel good. You did great commentary. I’ve seen this before four and it’s so good and I enjoyed watching it with your critiques, you’re a young bright man with a great attitude. Thank you for the great show Lauren.
@matthewr.333 ай бұрын
"She was already in her late 50's when she had me"...dude you are lucky you werent stillborn
@mzzkc864 ай бұрын
I knew he had to be raised by a black woman. Rob is BLACK! PERIOD. ❤❤❤
@jaylucas83524 ай бұрын
Facts
@DarkWinter484 ай бұрын
He's still not black regardless of who or where he was raised. Y'all are embarrassing.
@mzzkc864 ай бұрын
@@DarkWinter48 I know that. I'm not saying his DNA has changed 🤣🤣 I'm speaking more of his HEART. Your ignorance is embarrassing.
@freelikeyve3 ай бұрын
@@mzzkc86 thats not ignorance bish you shouldve made that clear in your original comment 🤡👻 still embarrassing
@Sockcrust3 ай бұрын
@@DarkWinter48 tell me how far that hatred gets you fam.
@143abuqasimАй бұрын
Philly in this jawnt. Peace ta my man doin tha reaction. Git ta dat duffle!
@mokadelic40374 ай бұрын
Hey man, I really appreciated most of the things you said, as a white man from Italy I don't often interact with black folks, and I don't really know much about your culture. But you striked me as a really cool and level headed guy, the type of friend that would always have something smart to say to give me a different perspective on things. I'd like to hear you talk more about different things that I didn't experience and maybe even learn something new and intresting in the process. Subscribed!
@Suffragium.3 ай бұрын
I enjoyed your commentary ALL the success your way with plenty of health and prosperity from your Cuban sister in Miami😊
@trueblue8869Ай бұрын
14:35 He really just said what all of us was thinking 😂😂😂. The way my face mad looking at that don't make no sense
@anilu30214 ай бұрын
Rosebud, that is messed up. They’re loss - but just so sad.
@pennybourban37124 ай бұрын
Very much their loss.
@eureka26945 ай бұрын
25:12 I'm a caribbean woman and I've been thinking the same thing! Let's create more shows and movies. I feel you brother.
@Mr_Jamin0075 ай бұрын
Don't wait for hollyweird to destroy your culture, make your own movies and post them on KZbin and get some ad revenue.
@TheDantheman121212 ай бұрын
1:59 I can see that person right there on screen and i am still convinved he is the white guy
@audioface420Ай бұрын
☠️
@roseforeuropa4 ай бұрын
I'm a non black POC. What you said at the end was spot on. I met this retired black man down the road on my walk to church every Sunday who was out in his yard often, made friends with him, and he ended up making this long rack of what I call Black Man BBQ Ribs. He only charged me $20. The first time he delivered it to my Sunday morning and I tried to take a piece of the ribs the bone slid right out and I knew I was in for a treat the likes I have never experienced. The bone was clean and not a shred of meat. I dug into the meat with my fingers, all soaked in all that fat and sauce, and that meat was absolute perfection. I couldn't believe what I was eating. I remember I had a couple of small burps to myself during the sermon that morning and I could still taste the barbeque smoke. This lasted for about 3 hours. I'd even order a couple racks of ribs when I had friends over at the house. Even now, having moved far away, I still think about that Black Man BBQ. It was absolutely unreal. I remember me sharing it with this white lady and she said "black people sure know how to do barbeque". I didn't even know that was a black stereotype. Starting to crave some right now actually.
@Mrs.L.445 ай бұрын
You sound like a good man. I just found your channel and see you haven’t made any videos in a while. I hope all is well in your life.
@blawruk10 күн бұрын
Man I fell out when he said "we from the skreets", then he reacted to it.. 😂😂😂😂😂 and played it back... LOLOL!!!!!!!! Funny AF!!!!!
@Hifivedopamine3 ай бұрын
“Black ain’t always beautiful” that ish took me out 😂😂
@andrewtodd-smith27413 ай бұрын
I was taken a-f**king-back by that comment for sure. Unexpected lol. He clearly pulls zero punches
@samswords99935 ай бұрын
Your skin color doesn't determine your culture. How you're raised is what does it. I know lots of 3rd culture kids.
@vedwards50272 ай бұрын
Commenting cuz dude said "please", I can respect that. Bring back "da struggle" straight up!!! It's hard to be bumpin' shit talkin' about Foreigns and shit when you're skatin' on Remz with a Bose portable.
@experienceofchris11085 ай бұрын
Damn you made a good point about the coolaid that shit was funny
@moufpiee72255 ай бұрын
Fr, deadass i if he came at me about color kool aide…ide think he don’t even love or drink kool aid like that fr. Cuz all you drink is red cool aide dawg? Cmon now.
@Baset_5 ай бұрын
Literally the weirdest thing to get attached to. No one I know has ever paid attention to the kool aide flavour names lol
@Moonstone-vi4ru4 ай бұрын
I love how this breaks the media set norms. And shows heart and community instead of what media uses to divide everyone❤ i went to majority black school. I was 1 of 8 white students. Its very teaching!❤
@WiseAndLocoАй бұрын
You got the best outlook on life that I've heard from anyone. If the world was more like you everyone would succeed.
@charliezelenowski27014 ай бұрын
I am from the U.K From a village where I can count the black families on both hands. It's rare black people move around here, but when they do, they stay. Took the kids 1 week before they were all playing basketball and football together. I've never seen the white kids around here use a basketball. It's so common now though.
@JubeiKibagamiFez4 ай бұрын
31:36 That's just people, though. We're all humans and some of us are effed up. Doesn't matter what the skin color is. Some people are just broken.
@Phinesse-GamingАй бұрын
You got my sub when I saw how real you keep it, I respect that. Real eyes, realize, real lies. Stay blessed yaw!
@elijahmaoate25345 ай бұрын
28:38 “I’m Brevlin 😐” 🤣🤣🤣
@opethdan24085 ай бұрын
Yeah he said that like it was personal for him. 😂 He's like I told y'all I was black!
@ericforsyth5 ай бұрын
"Remember when we were 3v3? Which of y'all stabbed me in the back?"