Episode Transcript
[00:00:00] Speaker A: Gen X.
[00:00:00] Speaker B: That's my generation.
[00:00:02] Speaker A: Why y' all so soft?
[00:00:04] Speaker B: Soft?
[00:00:06] Speaker A: Soft?
[00:00:07] Speaker B: You. You talking about my generation?
[00:00:09] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:00:09] Speaker B: The 80s.
[00:00:10] Speaker A: Yes.
Twitty in the City.
[00:00:15] Speaker B: Aloha.
[00:00:16] Speaker A: We're gonna keep it peaceful. We're gonna keep it cordial. I'm just playing.
[00:00:20] Speaker B: Don't do that.
[00:00:21] Speaker A: I got fired. THC up again.
[00:00:22] Speaker B: Don't do that.
[00:00:23] Speaker A: Twitting in the city. I'm Twitty. That is thc, the Hawaiian comedian. Hit the. Like, hit the.
[00:00:29] Speaker B: Subscribe.
[00:00:29] Speaker A: You've been doing it. This is for the newbies, for the subscribing, for everybody else. Hit the comments, baby. THC is the one that's commenting back, saying yes, saying no, going to full stories, probably on randos. I've seen so many stories that you've gotten off track with people where. Not off track, but you just dive so deeply with them that you'll be talking about the video. And I go check again, and y' all talking about random stuff like. Like, I don't know. I think the last one I talked. The last one I saw, you talked about four different videos in one comment section. You went from talking about the boat to Harbor Freight because a guy had bought a boat and used the Harbor Freight tool, which then led to him saying how he used to be a Craftsman guy at Sears because of the Sears catalog. Like, it's. It's just crazy. I'm just saying, if you get in the comments, be prepared to get answers back that you might. Because let me tell you what.
[00:01:19] Speaker B: Cuz let me tell you what. It's not that I'm trying to get people lost, but I have reference points. It's what I'm using. So if there's. If there's points in which I had said something in a previous video and you want to say I didn't, I will refer you.
[00:01:32] Speaker A: Oh, yeah.
[00:01:33] Speaker B: Back. So that's what. That's sometimes why I jump back and forth.
[00:01:36] Speaker A: I'm not mad about. I just like seeing it. Because I'll be like, oh, nice, he's responding about that episode. And then I'll go look again. I'm skipping that in the intermission. So I'm just like, how the hell did they go from episode four telling you got back to number three?
[00:01:49] Speaker B: Some. And some of these comments just go. They just go.
[00:01:52] Speaker A: That's what I'm saying. It's a compliment for somebody who doesn't look at them every day. Like I said, I'll literally look at one in the morning, and then the next day I'm like, oh, he's probably still talking about that episode. And next thing I know you guys are talking about Harper Freight.
[00:02:04] Speaker B: Speaking of which though, you know, last week, like, like, like last week I've been sitting there trying to warm stuff up. I've been trying to, I, I, I actually took myself out and I said, you know what, maybe I'm not seeing.
Maybe I'm just, I'm just being mad, but maybe I'm not seeing. So after our last episode when we went back and forth on this leftover thing, Yes, I went through and I started doing it and guess what? I guess what I found out.
[00:02:28] Speaker A: You're selfish. You didn't find nothing.
[00:02:30] Speaker B: Nothing. Garbage. The lasagna, the spaghetti. And I'mma tell you, it was an expensive week. Thank you very much. See, that's where I had to, but I had to because I'm like, if I'm going to have this stance and I'm going to be. Cuz, cuz even after we, after we filmed that last one, you were still hot at the office. So you know what? I had to go and take, I had to take these steps so it was going to cost me. But I went and I got stuff that I know is, is gradually good when I buy it or gradually fire when I buy it and, and I'm eating it and I brought it back and I warmed it up the next day and guess what? Not fire.
[00:03:05] Speaker A: Spaghetti and lasagna, not fire. I can tell you why not fire.
[00:03:08] Speaker B: There was a couple y' all in there talking about fire, fire, fire, fire, fire. No garbage.
[00:03:12] Speaker A: My mother in law didn't make it for you.
[00:03:14] Speaker B: That's why I'm not saying, I'm not saying it's gonna be good, but I want the one your mother in law makes it. I would love it. Right? Fresh, hot out of the oven.
[00:03:23] Speaker A: You don't live far from me when she come.
Guaranteed. Put this on camera.
[00:03:28] Speaker B: And I'm not saying the next day it's not gonna be bomb.
[00:03:30] Speaker A: It's gonna be fire. 2026America. If this podcast is still lasting every year for my birthday so far since I lived in Idaho, mother in law comes down, makes lasagna. You live exactly 11 minutes from me. Yeah, I will call you, you will come over on my birthday. It'll be me, my wife, my mother in law. You think that I'm in Peabody and.
[00:03:56] Speaker B: You think that I'm going to take it. The next day is going to be better than what? I'm sorry.
[00:04:00] Speaker A: Yes, I'm sorry. Yeah, I'm sorry. We going brain Apologize. I don't even know what episode we on. Episode 30. Something 40. Whatever this one is.
[00:04:07] Speaker B: I'm a. I'm a. I'm a. I'm apologizing. Twitter in advance.
[00:04:10] Speaker A: You don't got to. I've told it to her face. And she has. She has accepted it as a true cook.
Cause she knows it's so damn good. The next.
[00:04:19] Speaker B: I'm not seeing it. If I was her, I'd be mad. I'd be mad. Mom.
[00:04:22] Speaker A: No.
[00:04:23] Speaker B: Mad.
[00:04:23] Speaker A: No.
You will not be able to deny it.
[00:04:26] Speaker B: So I'm just saying, last week, I went through and went through it, dog. You went and made it. I pizza. I had pizza.
[00:04:33] Speaker A: I had spaghetti. I said pizza. Was not fired.
[00:04:36] Speaker B: Hold on, hold on. I'm going down the list.
Okay.
[00:04:40] Speaker A: He's doing it wrong, America.
[00:04:41] Speaker B: I'm not. I'm not. I'm trying. I'm trying. I did pizza. I did spaghetti. I did macaroni and cheese. I did. I did lasagna.
I even did. What you call that. The.
This. The pasta that I like. Because I thought. I thought, okay, maybe.
Nah, it was the one that comes.
[00:05:02] Speaker A: Oh, that's. Yeah.
[00:05:03] Speaker B: Like, what is that called?
[00:05:03] Speaker A: Cheese in the middle.
[00:05:04] Speaker B: And the cheese in the middle of that noodle. I can't remember that because that's fire when it's made. And I thought. And you know what? It was still good the next day. But it wasn't as good as it was the first night.
[00:05:12] Speaker A: All those foods you named the cook has to be the one regular Mac and cheese crafts. I don't care what you get. That's not good. Katie Green, Chesapeake, Virginia. I won't put her address out there because I remember it by heart. That is fire the next day.
[00:05:27] Speaker B: No.
[00:05:28] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:05:29] Speaker B: No.
[00:05:29] Speaker A: T. I. I gotta get to the next subject.
[00:05:32] Speaker B: We have two episodes. Let's just get to the next subject.
Last week it went off.
[00:05:36] Speaker A: We still going to be arguing? Because I'm about to attack you.
[00:05:39] Speaker B: I'm still going to be trying to find stuff. Go ahead.
[00:05:40] Speaker A: Let's.
[00:05:41] Speaker B: Let's start with next one.
[00:05:42] Speaker A: Gen X.
[00:05:42] Speaker B: That's my generation.
[00:05:44] Speaker A: Why y' all so soft?
[00:05:46] Speaker B: Soft?
[00:05:48] Speaker A: Soft.
[00:05:49] Speaker B: You. You talking about my generation?
[00:05:51] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:05:51] Speaker B: The 80s.
[00:05:52] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:05:53] Speaker B: Back when football didn't have no rules.
[00:05:55] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:05:55] Speaker B: Back when NBA didn't have no rules. As much these was checking. I don't. I don't understand. Because your generation, this next generation, they got all these rules now. They got to wear helmets. They got to wear elbow pads. They got to wear seat belts. We didn't wear none of this Stuff in the back. How are we so soft?
[00:06:11] Speaker A: Why you so soft to grandkids? You raised us.
[00:06:14] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:06:15] Speaker A: We produced a mini one of us. And y'. All. Why?
[00:06:18] Speaker B: Why?
[00:06:18] Speaker A: I mean, I ain't talking.
[00:06:19] Speaker B: Because we got so much resistance from y' all growing up. Because y' all always had to be right. Y' all always had to think. We had to stop and think about your feelings. Stuff that us Gen Xers ain't used to. We ain't used to discussing our feelings. Our parents didn't give two shits how we felt. They didn't care.
[00:06:37] Speaker A: So now, when we're actually mature and old enough now and we have our own child, I would say, I'll go way.
[00:06:45] Speaker B: That's funny. I would say y' all was old enough. Yes. But to use the word mature, now that's pushing it. What?
Now that's pushing it. A lot.
[00:06:54] Speaker A: Thc.
[00:06:55] Speaker B: A lot.
[00:06:56] Speaker A: Why you. Because you guys did.
[00:06:58] Speaker B: Because you guys have a lot of different things that your fingertips now to make your lives easier than either ourself, the baby boomers, anybody else before y', all, we didn't have. And the people gonna be in the back. Oh, you gonna talk about walking to school. Uphill, downhill, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. It was like. Yeah, but your generation.
Your generation didn't really even catch a school bus.
Your generation. Hold on. You trying to tell me that there was more people who were catching a school bus than there was being dropped off by moms and dads? Because nobody, cuz nobody. Cuz nobody. When I grew up, in elementary school. When we grew up, nobody was being dropped. We weren't being dropped off. My dad had to go to work. We walked to school.
[00:07:36] Speaker A: There you go.
[00:07:37] Speaker B: We walked to school. And we couldn't even text our moms to let them know that we got to school on time.
[00:07:43] Speaker A: There you go.
I like. I like how you just class all millennials. I'm a pre millennial.
[00:07:49] Speaker B: I have to class all y' all because. Because all y' all had this choice. No, we didn't even have the choice, period.
[00:07:56] Speaker A: No, we didn't.
We didn't have a choice because guess what? You. Y' all was our motherfucking parents. Yes, I could have. My mom damn near drove past my motherfucking school. Okay, Guess who still had to walk his black asses?
[00:08:06] Speaker B: You.
[00:08:07] Speaker A: Yes. Yes.
[00:08:08] Speaker B: So Granddaddy and everything, right? We've been doing that since kindergarten. We've been doing that when I graduated sixth grade and got to middle school. Cause our middle school was seventh, eighth, and ninth. We Got outta elementary school in sixth grade. When I got out, as soon as I graduated, I thought, I'm big time. You know what I got for graduation, President? A bus pass. Do I know how a transfer works? I do now.
[00:08:29] Speaker A: So do I. Y' all taught us this. I like how you avoiding the question, though.
[00:08:32] Speaker B: What's the question?
[00:08:33] Speaker A: Why?
[00:08:33] Speaker B: How are we soft?
That wasn't a question. You said, why are we softer? You didn't even give me an example. You didn't even give me an example of how are we softer.
[00:08:42] Speaker A: I witnessed this.
[00:08:43] Speaker B: You said, why are we softer on the next generation?
[00:08:46] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:08:46] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:08:47] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:08:47] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:08:48] Speaker A: You just talked about how we had all these options.
[00:08:51] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:08:51] Speaker A: Last time I checked, y' all didn't.
[00:08:52] Speaker B: Want to listen to us. No.
[00:08:53] Speaker A: Y' all raised us. So we didn't even get the option. The option was out. Oh, no.
[00:08:56] Speaker B: You got the option because we had. There was more people involved. We couldn't handle business like our parents used to handle business.
We couldn't do that.
[00:09:06] Speaker A: Who's we? Who's we?
[00:09:07] Speaker B: The parents today. The parents that had to raise y' all asses. We had to. We had to walk thin lines. We had to go through these things. We had to sit in teacher meetings more than my parents did. My parents didn't get involved. If I came to school and I had a bruise on my leg, and it was because my teacher knew I got in trouble the day before. Okay, so she expected to see the bruise. Because now if one of your kids show up with a bruise on there. Oh, no, no, no. Cops involved. CPS involved. All kind of.
[00:09:34] Speaker A: That's past millennial. I am a pre. Millennial. That I'm. I am your generation.
[00:09:38] Speaker B: So then your. Then when.
[00:09:40] Speaker A: When your generation is pissed that you guys interfere with when we.
[00:09:45] Speaker B: I'm gonna tell you why. I'll explain to you why we softer on the next generation than y'. All.
[00:09:50] Speaker A: Please.
[00:09:51] Speaker B: Because they gonna give y' all the hard time. They gonna make y' all get the hard time. Since y' all didn't want to listen to us. Y' all wanted to do your own shit. And we just had to adjust. See, that's something our parents didn't do. Our parents didn't adjust to us.
[00:10:06] Speaker A: So why you adjusting?
[00:10:07] Speaker B: Because we are being made to adjust.
[00:10:09] Speaker A: No, you're not.
[00:10:10] Speaker B: You go talk to any parent out there right now, there are certain things you got to have. You got to make sure that your kids have. If not, you will get called on by a lot of different functions that wouldn't happen when we was growing up.
[00:10:20] Speaker A: No, no, no, no.
[00:10:21] Speaker B: I knew kids that went to my school without getting their shots.
[00:10:23] Speaker A: No, no, no, no.
[00:10:24] Speaker B: I'm just. What I'm saying is, is we doing that we softer on them kids because. Fine, y' all don't need to listen.
You're going to have to raise those little badasses and guess what? We're going to make those little bad asses. We're going to be soft as shit on them because that's just going to make your job harder.
[00:10:40] Speaker A: That's so foul.
[00:10:41] Speaker B: So what?
[00:10:42] Speaker A: That's so foul.
[00:10:43] Speaker B: Y' all should have listened to begin with. Y' all made like y' all already knew. Y' all grew up like y' all already knew. Why? Because you had. Okay, Google. Okay, Google. Okay, Google. Y' all had Google. Y' all have something that you can. You wasn't looking up in an encyclopedia brown. Britannica, bro.
[00:10:57] Speaker A: You.
[00:10:57] Speaker B: I'm just saying. Hold on, hold on, hold on.
[00:10:59] Speaker A: You keep putting my millennial class.
[00:11:01] Speaker B: You put me in this class already. And then you kind of backed up like, that's not mine. So that's how you. That's okay, so I'm gonna. So you. You representing right now?
[00:11:10] Speaker A: I'm representing for pre millennials. And that is anybody from 89 to 95 that is a pre millennial. That is.
[00:11:20] Speaker B: Are you sure?
[00:11:21] Speaker A: It's, it's no, it's no further than 97 maybe.
[00:11:25] Speaker B: I don't know. I think 95 and stuff goes up to being a millennial.
[00:11:29] Speaker A: We're all millennials. I'm a millennial. But we got to the point because of you.
[00:11:34] Speaker B: Oh, oh. You asked me why I'm so soft, yet you had to take your own generation and break them down into pre post and. And yeah, middle which. Does Gen X get that? Did baby boomers get that? We didn't get that. We. We was one cast classification, one class. But when we come to millennials now, all of a sudden we got pre post.
[00:11:57] Speaker A: Because your generation, because your generation wants to try to foul for the truth.
[00:12:03] Speaker B: If that's the truth, we would have changed ours. Why didn't we change ours?
[00:12:07] Speaker A: Because where was the big change between all.
Where was the change with Gen X where to the point you would want to disk.
[00:12:15] Speaker B: Where was the change, the changes when the schools got involved, the changes when the government got involved? I'm sorry, I'm going to say it right now as a parent growing up. Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. That's where the change came in. You asking me where the Change was back in the days they didn't give two shits about. Hold on, hold on.
I'm talking. What happened? I have the years for the generations.
[00:12:36] Speaker A: You want me to read them? Yes.
[00:12:37] Speaker B: Okay.
Gen x born from 1965 to 1980. Millennials born from 1981 to 1996. And then Gen Z, 1997 to 2012.
[00:12:48] Speaker A: 96.
[00:12:49] Speaker B: 96.
[00:12:50] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:12:50] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:12:51] Speaker A: It was all the way to.
[00:12:52] Speaker B: Thank you, Sean.
[00:12:53] Speaker A: Thank you, Sean.
No, I'm asking. I'm not asking you. What changed? Growing. Growing up for us, your whole Gen X group. Where did the change come to? Whereas you would want to. Want to change. Government didn't change until like 2000s.
[00:13:07] Speaker B: Yeah, but we let that happen. See, we didn't stop that like the baby boomers did for us.
[00:13:13] Speaker A: You still avoiding the question, dog?
[00:13:15] Speaker B: What's the question? I don't understand what you're saying.
[00:13:17] Speaker A: You're saying that I asked why you guys are soft on the grandkids and you're saying it's because we didn't want to listen. But yeah, everything you're naming to me is based on a generation that first of all grew up with stuff I didn't even have.
[00:13:33] Speaker B: First of all, we gonna be soft on the grandkids anyway. That's just what grandparents do.
[00:13:36] Speaker A: But you ain't got to be whole360, though.
[00:13:38] Speaker B: But no, no, no, no. The thing is, is that us trying to get to your kids, trying to get to your kids when you got kids trying to get to them to try to get them to listen, because you're trying to let them know. You're trying to let them know, dude, this is not how it works. This is how it works. But for some reason, they got this. No, you don't know what you're talking about. You don't know what you're talking about. So our only hope is the grandkids.
And since these grandkids are going to be their kids, then they ain't going to listen to us because they going to be too messed up trying to get them straight now.
[00:14:15] Speaker A: No, I don't. No. Nope. I don't get. I don't get that philosophy.
[00:14:19] Speaker B: I don't. What do you.
[00:14:19] Speaker A: What do you mean, that philosophy?
[00:14:20] Speaker B: I don't. I don't understand. See, that's what I'm saying. I don't understand what your question is.
[00:14:23] Speaker A: The question. The question is it sounds like you guys are doing what you're doing.
[00:14:30] Speaker B: We didn't do anything. What did we do?
[00:14:32] Speaker A: A blow to us.
[00:14:33] Speaker B: Okay, but give me an example. What did we do? What did we do? Tell us what we did.
[00:14:37] Speaker A: Here's, here's what I'm.
[00:14:38] Speaker B: Here's. Give me an example. Okay, you say we soft. Give me an example.
[00:14:40] Speaker A: So my friend, daughter, 8 years old, the classic at the house. Dad said no to something, goes to grandma immediately says yes, Knowing dang well dad, mom said no.
Now you're telling that kid they have authority to go past mom and dad. It can go to grandma and grandpa. Yeah, in my own house.
[00:15:07] Speaker B: No, that's up to you as a parent.
[00:15:10] Speaker A: But you just disobeyed the parent in the house.
[00:15:13] Speaker B: No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Not directly, no.
[00:15:18] Speaker A: Don't be slick. Don't be slick. I'm not even trying.
[00:15:20] Speaker B: I'm not even. I'm not even trying to be slick. I'm not.
[00:15:22] Speaker A: How is that not disrespectful?
[00:15:24] Speaker B: Because I'm not going to go behind their back. And if they, if mom and dad says no, if Momma d.
I'm not going to disrespect.
[00:15:30] Speaker A: Okay, there are some, there are some Gen Xers who do that and say, let my grandbaby do this. And it's like, but I said no.
[00:15:37] Speaker B: Well, that's just because they never, that's just because they never connected with their kids. See, I'm just saying, like, you have, you have. At first I thought she was just talking about why are we so soft? I was like, dude, we had to be kind of soft because we were being made to be soft. You know what I'm saying?
[00:15:50] Speaker A: Yeah, no, I'm talking about.
[00:15:51] Speaker B: That's what I thought you were going for first.
I'm just saying it right now.
[00:15:55] Speaker A: There's certain Gen X's you don't want to affiliate with. The same with millennials.
Yes, you wouldn't. But nine times, most grandparents I've ran into, they're like, let my grandbaby do.
[00:16:03] Speaker B: As far as, like as far. But, but as far as stepping on parents toes for them to be their own parents.
Like, I won't do that. I'm not going to step on my daughter's toes when she's, when she's raising her kids. I'm not going to step on my, on my son's toes when he's raising their kids.
[00:16:17] Speaker A: Yes, but there's always a but.
[00:16:20] Speaker B: There's always, always going to be a but. There's gonna be a butt in between every generation. You know why? Because even you, you are going to be an older generation someday and you're going to Have a younger generation that's going to say something to you and not understand where you trying to come from.
You going to have. And you going to have a butt. You're going to have a butt just as well. And when that guy gets older, he going to have a butt just as well. It's going to happen because it's been happening. It happens to every single one. But what I'm saying is. But what I'm saying is, what I'm saying is if I do disagree with what I hear or what I see, I bring that up to the parent. I don't have to talk to my grandchild. Talking to my grandchild means that there was only me to, to give him guidance or give her guidance. If I had to give any one of my grandchildren guidance, that is going to be my own opinion. Okay, then it's gonna, it's gonna be because I'm there, nobody else is there.
[00:17:09] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:17:09] Speaker B: I have to make a decision right now.
[00:17:11] Speaker A: That's fine.
[00:17:11] Speaker B: Now if my son comes in and he says, dad, this is what I do, then I stand behind him in front of the kid.
[00:17:17] Speaker A: Yeah, that's what I'm talking about.
[00:17:19] Speaker B: In front of the kid. I'll stand behind him. But if it's me and him talking and the kid isn' I will bring up what I felt and just be like, look, I didn't say nothing in front of him, but this is how I kind of felt. Maybe you could have handled it this way. But I'm not going to call him out in front of his kid. That's wrong.
[00:17:34] Speaker A: I'm talking about. There are some Gen Xers who call out in front of the parent.
[00:17:38] Speaker B: Nice. I, I want to punch him in the face.
[00:17:39] Speaker A: Yeah, that's why I'm saying, that's why.
[00:17:42] Speaker B: If this you, if you're talking about you, I punch you in the face.
[00:17:45] Speaker A: Why is Gen X soft when it comes?
[00:17:47] Speaker B: Some of us. Yeah, some.
[00:17:50] Speaker A: I'm.
[00:17:50] Speaker B: And you know what it is? I'm thinking with some of them, I think I, I think honestly, some of those got soft like that because they was trapped in their own little bubble. They didn't get out, they didn't go see nobody. They just stayed in their little bubble.
[00:18:02] Speaker A: This is the same reason you go back full circle when you thought I was confused.
This is why millennials have a pre. Millennial, because that certain millennial circle doesn't affiliate.
[00:18:15] Speaker B: But listen, but what I'm trying to say is that Gen Xers, in that 10 year gap, we agreed, in the middle of your millennial 10 year gap. Y' all can't even agree. Y' all gotta split up into two different factions in the matter. So like our. Our jet. Our generation did a whole 10 years?
[00:18:32] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:18:32] Speaker B: Your generation couldn't go six, bro.
[00:18:35] Speaker A: You just said it.
Technology exposure was so different.
[00:18:40] Speaker B: So you tell me why. Why those two had to split? Why couldn't they share 10?
[00:18:45] Speaker A: Because they're so different.
[00:18:47] Speaker B: Why?
[00:18:47] Speaker A: You just said it.
[00:18:49] Speaker B: Because they just. They want to be their own. They want to do their own. What?
[00:18:52] Speaker A: No, you just said it. There's a big difference from.
[00:18:55] Speaker B: But not huge like that. Not huge. As generous as Gen X.
There's a few of us there.
[00:19:00] Speaker A: There's not just.
[00:19:01] Speaker B: There's not a point where we had to take our whole generation and split them by five years.
[00:19:06] Speaker A: Exactly.
[00:19:07] Speaker B: We didn't. We all accepted the 10 year gap.
[00:19:09] Speaker A: All of us can't accept it.
[00:19:10] Speaker B: 65 to 75. What? We accepted that.
[00:19:13] Speaker A: Can't accept it.
[00:19:14] Speaker B: Well, it's. No, 65 to 80. Actually, that's 15 years. 15 years. We didn't have to split. We didn't have to be a pre post in A and A and a.
[00:19:23] Speaker A: We got to.
[00:19:23] Speaker B: Why?
[00:19:24] Speaker A: We got to.
[00:19:24] Speaker B: Why?
[00:19:25] Speaker A: You just said it.
[00:19:26] Speaker B: What? What did I say?
[00:19:27] Speaker A: Technology.
The whole fact of just being privileged.
[00:19:32] Speaker B: Now could I. Tell me how stupid that sounds. Now tell me how stupid that sounds.
[00:19:38] Speaker A: I got to tell you how. How stupid that sounds.
[00:19:41] Speaker B: Yes.
[00:19:42] Speaker A: From being privileged to not being privileged.
[00:19:44] Speaker B: Turn your technology off. Where is your generations at?
[00:19:47] Speaker A: My generation.
[00:19:47] Speaker B: No, no, no.
I'm talking those that millennial. That those millennials. Turn their technology off and tell me how smart they are. Tell me how great they are right now. Tell me how good they are. Because they can't. Ask Google. Tell me how good they are. Because they can't check their.
[00:20:01] Speaker A: You just answered the question.
[00:20:02] Speaker B: But tell me how good they are.
[00:20:04] Speaker A: I can't. That's what I'm saying.
[00:20:06] Speaker B: That's why we had to split them. We had to split them up so bad that half of y' all didn't even want to recognize the other half. Exactly. So why you acting worse? That's even worse.
[00:20:15] Speaker A: That's not worse.
[00:20:16] Speaker B: That is way worse.
[00:20:18] Speaker A: That's just.
[00:20:18] Speaker B: That's how it went.
[00:20:20] Speaker A: No, that's how it went.
[00:20:21] Speaker B: It didn't know.
[00:20:22] Speaker A: That is how some of your generation allows.
[00:20:25] Speaker B: We lasted 15 years.
[00:20:27] Speaker A: If somebody was born, somebody, Sean, our producer just said to 96.
So therefore that generation that we're disowning, y' all put them out here. Y' all produce them.
My Generation didn't raise the next millennial group.
[00:20:41] Speaker B: Why? What difference does it make? You guys all pretty much. They all was raised in the same.
[00:20:45] Speaker A: You just said it. No, it's not.
[00:20:46] Speaker B: Why is it not?
[00:20:47] Speaker A: You turn off.
[00:20:48] Speaker B: Why is it not? Because you guys take your technology and you think your technology is what separates y'. All.
[00:20:53] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:20:53] Speaker B: Wait, okay, hold on. So let me go with.
[00:20:56] Speaker A: I can go without my phone for a whole damn month.
[00:21:01] Speaker B: I don't think so.
[00:21:01] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:21:02] Speaker B: I, I, I don't think so. I don't think so. I don't think so.
[00:21:05] Speaker A: I would give you my wife's phone.
[00:21:06] Speaker B: I don't think so.
[00:21:07] Speaker A: I barely text my wife.
[00:21:08] Speaker B: Brian, you have two phones.
Get out of here.
[00:21:11] Speaker A: That's the.
[00:21:11] Speaker B: Get out of here.
[00:21:12] Speaker A: Get out of here. No, I know.
[00:21:13] Speaker B: Get out of here. No, no, no. You get out of here. You got two phones right now. You got two phones right now. Don't you. Don't lie. Can you pull two phones out right now?
[00:21:20] Speaker A: I can.
[00:21:21] Speaker B: Then you can't.
[00:21:22] Speaker A: And then I've been upset.
[00:21:23] Speaker B: You can't. Not a month. Not a month.
[00:21:25] Speaker A: I've been upset.
No, I'm gonna pull it up right now. I got two phones. Guarantee you I've been on both of these less than two hours.
[00:21:34] Speaker B: I don't care.
[00:21:34] Speaker A: Half of a day.
[00:21:35] Speaker B: I don't care.
[00:21:35] Speaker A: You said you care.
[00:21:36] Speaker B: You said nothing for a month.
A month?
[00:21:40] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:21:41] Speaker B: Not a certain time per day. You said nothing. Zero. Exactly.
[00:21:45] Speaker A: So if I'm only on this thing for two hours and a whole day.
[00:21:48] Speaker B: No, zero. No, none. Wow. You said a month. Wow. You said a month with nothing. You said zero. You didn't say two hours a day. Do you know how much two hours a day is for 30 days.
That's 60 hours. Yeah, that's 60 hours a month. That's a whole lot more than zero, isn't it?
[00:22:04] Speaker A: But compare it compared to.
[00:22:05] Speaker B: No, no, I'm not comparing. No, that's not what you said.
[00:22:08] Speaker A: No.
[00:22:08] Speaker B: You said I can go a month without my phone.
[00:22:11] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:22:11] Speaker B: Those were your exact. Sean, am I wrong? Did you hear that back there?
[00:22:15] Speaker A: I did, but I think Twitty was saying.
[00:22:17] Speaker B: No, no, no. I don't need a definition. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. I don't need a definition.
I just want to hear. I want to understand exactly what he said.
[00:22:24] Speaker A: Are you going to.
[00:22:25] Speaker B: He could go a month without his phone.
[00:22:27] Speaker A: Are you going to let Sean know? Express what I'm trying to say, but as a Gen X, you, You don't want to hear that this is why.
[00:22:32] Speaker B: This is why the millennials are split up. Cause y' all be like, well, that's not what I meant.
[00:22:37] Speaker A: It is what I meant.
[00:22:38] Speaker B: Okay, so it's. So you meant a month without a phone.
[00:22:41] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:22:41] Speaker B: Boom. I called.
[00:22:42] Speaker A: But you're saying I can't.
[00:22:44] Speaker B: I call. No, you can't keep all your work, including your work.
[00:22:49] Speaker A: Yes.
[00:22:49] Speaker B: No, no.
[00:22:50] Speaker A: To go without my phone, without my work. Yes, I can.
[00:22:53] Speaker B: 100%. No, I know this. I hundred percent know.
[00:22:57] Speaker A: THC.
[00:22:58] Speaker B: A month.
[00:22:59] Speaker A: I could go without my phone more than you could.
[00:23:02] Speaker B: I'm willing to put up some money on this. I, I'm willing to put up some money on this one month without a phone.
[00:23:07] Speaker A: Could you?
[00:23:08] Speaker B: No.
[00:23:08] Speaker A: Me?
[00:23:09] Speaker B: No.
[00:23:10] Speaker A: Exactly.
[00:23:10] Speaker B: No, I'm. But I'm being honest. I'm being honest, and I'm only on it because it's convenient for me. I, I, I need YouTube. I need stuff like that. I don't need to, like, be. I don't actually need to. I enjoy it. You Right. But I'm being honest about it. I didn't just come right out and say, I can. I can be without it for a month. One month.
[00:23:27] Speaker A: I can.
[00:23:27] Speaker B: No, you can't.
[00:23:28] Speaker A: I can't.
[00:23:28] Speaker B: No, you can't.
100 can. I know. You can't.
[00:23:32] Speaker A: Because the SB Studios, I don't have to post anything. I know studios, by the way, for editing these videos. Because of them, I don't got to post none of this. I don't got to edit any of this.
[00:23:41] Speaker B: SB Studios, number one, 100. So, yeah, no, listen, listen, listen. You're telling me as much social media as I see you doing, as much things that I see you doing with your phone, you can go a whole month. Garbage. Garbage.
[00:23:57] Speaker A: Last time I. Bullshit. I know how to use that camera. Last time I'm saying I know how.
[00:24:01] Speaker B: To use that camera. You use that camera a lot.
[00:24:04] Speaker A: They got regular cameras I can use.
[00:24:05] Speaker B: Can you take the memory for that whole month we talking about is I can't wait to get in the studio.
[00:24:12] Speaker A: Thc.
[00:24:13] Speaker B: I'm telling you, you not know it's not happening.
[00:24:16] Speaker A: Why are you trying to disappear?
[00:24:17] Speaker B: Because it's not happening. That thing has been a part of your life for too long.
[00:24:22] Speaker A: It has been, but it hasn't controlled me.
[00:24:23] Speaker B: I can go, I can go without my phone. I can go outside my phone for a while, but because I grew up without one. I never had one.
[00:24:29] Speaker A: I did, too.
[00:24:30] Speaker B: No, no, no. I didn't have a cell phone until I joined the military, actually. How.
[00:24:34] Speaker A: How was that?
[00:24:36] Speaker B: I was that was 1990.
[00:24:38] Speaker A: I didn't ask the year. I said, how old were you?
[00:24:40] Speaker B: Six. So I was 25. And 95. 26, 27. I was almost 30 years old before I had a cell phone.
[00:24:47] Speaker A: Okay, I got a cell phone younger than you, but it was in college.
[00:24:52] Speaker B: Of where you did. Hold on. Where.
[00:24:54] Speaker A: No, let me finish. Where I paid for my own cell phone bill. So therefore, guess who was on the lowest ass plan. And it wasn't a smartphone. It was the fricking Razr. Motorola Razr. You know the Razr where you flicked it with one hand.
[00:25:08] Speaker B: First of all, the Razr was a dope ass phone.
[00:25:10] Speaker A: It was, it was indestructible. Cause I threw it at the wall and I got so pissed that I broke it.
[00:25:15] Speaker B: Whoever had a Motorola razr, you know what we talking about? Oh yeah, you understand what we talking about?
[00:25:19] Speaker A: That's the phone I had call and text.
[00:25:21] Speaker B: But what I'm saying is you had the option.
[00:25:25] Speaker A: I had the option.
[00:25:26] Speaker B: But you didn't have the option until I made out. Until I got in my 20s. I didn't have this option until I was high up in my 20s.
[00:25:33] Speaker A: But you're making it sound like because it never existed, you're making it sound.
[00:25:36] Speaker B: Like I had this option that never existed for me. It never wasn't.
[00:25:40] Speaker A: That never existed for me.
[00:25:41] Speaker B: No, what I'm saying is you just told me you had your own plan. You had an option to go out and go get one is what I'm saying. I never had that option. I couldn't go out and go get one. Back in my days, man, when that first came out, didn't nobody want no cell phone. That was hella expensive.
[00:25:56] Speaker A: Yeah, it was. Hell, it still was expensive.
[00:25:58] Speaker B: It was way more expensive than it was when they started coming out with a plan. I remember next tail. I remember Boost Mobile. Boost Mobile. How you doing? Yeah, I remember talking on the phone, knowing my minutes was running out.
[00:26:10] Speaker A: Same. But yours.
[00:26:11] Speaker B: But that was when I was almost 30.
[00:26:14] Speaker A: Okay, but like in life, technology advanced every year. But my generation, we can survive without it.
I'm talking an 89 to a 92, 93 year person that was born and raised.
[00:26:28] Speaker B: Okay, so you're telling me if I gave you, If I gave you 10, 10, 10 random people, 10 random. Just picked random. From this generation and my generation. Wait, that the year from 90 years. Let's do from the, from the pre millennial.
[00:26:47] Speaker A: Okay.
[00:26:47] Speaker B: To the, the beginning of the post millennial. So let's say to like 97. Okay, so if I gave you 10 people from those things, 10 ordinary people, okay? And all I told him was a, you gonna go out and survive on this island with twitty Mm.
For 30 days.
And I took 10 Gen Xers, just regular Gen Xers, and I took them 10 and put them on an island with me. You're telling me you and your island gonna ask outlast us?
[00:27:21] Speaker A: I didn't say I was gonna outlast you. And see, that's what you say.
That's where you. That's where you.
[00:27:28] Speaker B: No, because you said technology. No, because you said technology.
[00:27:31] Speaker A: But that's.
[00:27:31] Speaker B: I'm embracing technology.
[00:27:33] Speaker A: But I never compared myself.
[00:27:34] Speaker B: I'm erasing. I'm erasing technology.
[00:27:36] Speaker A: Of course you're gonna outlast.
[00:27:37] Speaker B: Why? Why?
[00:27:39] Speaker A: It's a freaking technology gap, bro.
[00:27:41] Speaker B: Okay, so what you're saying is, is without that technology, that generation ain't.
[00:27:47] Speaker A: Post millennial.
My generation is. Is the. Without technology.
You want to go. You want to go blow for blow? Yes. Jen asked me to go blow.
[00:27:57] Speaker B: You want to go blow for blow.
[00:27:58] Speaker A: But I guarantee you.
[00:27:59] Speaker B: You want to go blow for blow, but I guarantee you take it to another. I can keep him in your generation.
[00:28:03] Speaker A: But I guarantee you, though, my premillennial will last longer than what Gen X think we garbage. It's not garbage.
[00:28:10] Speaker B: Oh, oh, you said that at the very end. You slipped that in there.
[00:28:13] Speaker A: You slick right there. I'm not slick.
[00:28:15] Speaker B: You said. You said. You said you going to outlast longer than you think we. That you should not that you outlast. You going out. You going to outlast us.
[00:28:22] Speaker A: Get in the comments. When did I ever say.
[00:28:24] Speaker B: No, no, no, you said.
[00:28:25] Speaker A: When did I say my generation was better than yours? Never said.
[00:28:28] Speaker B: I know, I know you never said that. I know. I thought that's what you were trying to say. No, but no, you switched those words at the very end. I heard them and I caught him. No, no, no, I. When you was leading towards that, I was.
[00:28:38] Speaker A: I was following you because guess what? Y' all raised us. So therefore. Yeah, if it's 30 days on the island, you would probably softly give us 10 days. We could probably go.
[00:28:48] Speaker B: I go up. I go up against my dad's friends.
Let me get them baby boomers, too. I ain't scared of them either. You know why, Jenny? That's. That's why. You ain't never seen a president that's.
[00:28:57] Speaker A: A Gen Xer the baby that the baby boomers would knock y' all dry.
[00:29:01] Speaker B: No, no, them in their prime.
[00:29:03] Speaker A: And y'. All.
[00:29:03] Speaker B: Oh, and they prime. Yeah.
[00:29:05] Speaker A: See, now you playing that game. You can't, you can't do a current baby boomer. Now, of course they're older, but if you put a 34 year old baby boomer and you're 34, I hope you.
[00:29:14] Speaker B: Remember this in like 10 years from now.
[00:29:16] Speaker A: 34, the baby was gonna knock us out.
[00:29:19] Speaker B: I hope you, I hope you remember that. That way. What's, what's this Next generation? Generation Z. I don't know.
[00:29:24] Speaker A: Aaa.
[00:29:25] Speaker B: Did we go back to a, did we go back to a. I don't.
[00:29:28] Speaker A: Know how it works.
[00:29:28] Speaker B: Yes. Gen Alpha now. Gen Alpha now. What's, what's the years for gen alpha, Sean?
[00:29:32] Speaker A: Gosh. 2012 to present 2012.
[00:29:36] Speaker B: So they, they took another. There'll probably be a new one coming soon.
[00:29:39] Speaker A: It'll be another one coming soon.
[00:29:40] Speaker B: It's got to be Bravo. Generation Bravo.
[00:29:42] Speaker A: Probably, Probably Kappa Delta.
You ain't slick, dog.
[00:29:48] Speaker B: I know.
[00:29:48] Speaker A: I'm trying to give you credit for how you raised us. And then you started.
[00:29:52] Speaker B: That's not how you started. You started by calling us off.
[00:29:55] Speaker A: Yeah, because how is that, how did y' all raise us?
[00:29:58] Speaker B: How is that credit?
[00:29:58] Speaker A: Y' all didn't raise us. Yeah, but now, so therefore, you gotta also remember why you gonna be soft on the grand.
[00:30:03] Speaker B: You gotta also remember because it's not our time to be hard. It was our time to be hard. When we had our kids.
[00:30:08] Speaker A: Y' all can be.
[00:30:09] Speaker B: When we had our kids, we had to be hard. We had to be mom and dad. We had to stand there and we had to, we had to put our foot down. We had to sit there and let our kids know we had to be hard. So when we got our grandkids. Nah, we wanted a soft side too. We, and we couldn't be soft with our kids or else our kids gonna raise us off when our kids are gonna be raised hard. When our kids are hardest. When our kids are being raised hard, it's because they're being raised hard by their parents, right? Not by their grandparents. It's not the grandparents job to raise the kids hard. It's not our job. Our job is to raise the parents hard. We were supposed to raise them so we didn't have to raise our grandkids.
[00:30:42] Speaker A: Y' all can be at least, Y' all at least no mild sauce. I ain't saying you gotta be hot.
[00:30:45] Speaker B: We are. No, we not hot sauce. We are not. I, I, I'm quick to tell my grandkids no. If I Have to.
[00:30:50] Speaker A: You can be wild.
[00:30:51] Speaker B: I was. I was always used to being bad cock.
[00:30:54] Speaker A: You ain't gotta be worried about it. Zero sauce. I at least. We at least want you to at least be a three or four sauce sometimes.
[00:30:58] Speaker B: No, we. We are. We are. When we need you. When you need us to be. But in the same point is that we let you raise your kids. You're supposed to raise your kids. We ain't supposed to make your kids hard. You supposed to make your kids hard.
[00:31:08] Speaker A: You need to go talk to your generation, though. That's stepping over my generation as parents.
[00:31:11] Speaker B: Those ones. Those ones that do that. Yeah. I want to slap the out of them.
[00:31:14] Speaker A: And those are the ones I was talking about.
[00:31:16] Speaker B: Because they're not giving their kids a chance to become parents. And that's. And that's what's garbage. Because we used to get mad at our parents because they wouldn't give us a chance.
[00:31:23] Speaker A: Exactly.
[00:31:23] Speaker B: And that's. You got to. Yeah. No, I don't circle. I don't step. No. I don't step on my kids. On my kids feet. I don't do that.
[00:31:30] Speaker A: Thank you.
[00:31:30] Speaker B: But what I'm saying is I'm soft to my grandkids because I'm supposed to be. I'm Grandpa. I'm supposed to be. All I'm supposed to do is I'm. I'm not supposed to say yes or no. I'm not supposed to be that one. That's supposed to be mom and dad that say yes or no. And I'm supposed to be like, what'd your mom say? Yeah, what'd your dad say? Yeah, that's what I'm supposed to say. I get that.
[00:31:48] Speaker A: Cool with that.
[00:31:49] Speaker B: But if I'm by myself and I see my grandson doing me like, hey, your stupid ass over here. What are you doing?
[00:31:53] Speaker A: Yes, yes. I'm talking about the part where mom and dad say yes or no. And grandpa's like, if I got him.
[00:31:58] Speaker B: Out and they start acting a fool. Yeah, you see you. You gonna get a nice little tug. You're like, come over here.
[00:32:03] Speaker A: Or you talk to some of them Gen X's. That's just overriding mom and dad. Because we don't like that.
No, we would have did that.
[00:32:09] Speaker B: If I see that.
[00:32:10] Speaker A: Because you know how many I got from. From my grandma stepping in?
[00:32:14] Speaker B: If I see that, I would tell them. I would tell them, be like, this ain't our. This ain't your grounds. This ain't where you supposed to step.
[00:32:20] Speaker A: My grandma did that one time.
But I tricked My grandma and my mom whooped so much of my ass, I couldn't even sit down in school. The teacher had to call, I'm tell you something. And my mom said, yeah, I whipped his ass. He can't sit down. I'm sorry.
[00:32:34] Speaker B: I'm gonna give you. I'm give you something here. And ain't nobody ever known this, okay? Nobody ever known this. I used to have battles daily. Grandmas stepping in where grandmas didn't have to. Grandpa stepping in with grandpa. But actually not really with Grandpa's. Grandma's. Grandpa's always laid back Grandpa. Grandma's always coming in where they ain't supposed to be coming in. Now, I remember one time I was getting in my son because my son, he had messed up. And as I was walking him into the house, grandma was sitting, it's okay. It's okay. You'll be all right, Devin. I had to. Actually, literally, I had to stop. I had to make my kid turn around. And I had to turn around and look at his grandmother and be like, listen, he's not okay. This is not okay. I don't need you to tell him it's okay. It's not okay. He about to get his butt whooped right now just because you said he was okay. Now, that took my kid to a second to look at grandma like, dude, you about to give me more trouble.
Walked into the room, shut the door. Did I whoop my son? Nope.
Nope.
We talked, we sat down, we went back and forth. We. Exactly. We worked out what we needed to. Did people outside think we did? Yep.
And we left it at that. Yes. But you'll know you don't have the last word. No grandparents out there had a last word for they. For they. For the parents that are raising those kids. You don't have the last word. I'm sorry. I know there's a lot of grandparents out there that want to sit there and say, well, I got the last word for my grandkid. No, the word grandkid means is your grandkid, not your kid.
[00:33:57] Speaker A: Facts. Yes, I'm Twitty S. THC hit the. Like. Hit the subscribe. 5K, here we come.
[00:34:04] Speaker B: Here we come.