He was so rude to me when I was a little child I have a hard time ever appreciating him. I will never forget how he was very rude to me and my best friend in 5th grade, my old best friend was so excited, her dad was in prison and my dad was going out of his way to take us to a whole other city for a basketball special event in Malcolm Jamal Warner was there doing a meet and greet and he was shaking everybody else's hand but when it came to me and my friend he didn't and I'll never forget how discriminated I guess we felt. Just because we weren't built like DJ from full House and my friend was a real tall yet also overweight dark skin girl. To this day I still think he was discriminating against us because we were with my dad who was single and my dark skin friend and he was letting all two pair white families get hugs and signatures. When it was our turn to get a hug in his signature he looked at us and disgust and told us to keep going and then he gave the little girl right behind us a hug. I was 11 years old.
@@Pugetwitchdamn, never meet your heroes they say. That’s why I tell people all the time who go so hard for celebrities, they would call security on you if you got too close.
Malcolm is absolutely right about the N-word and negative themes in hip hop. Their answers were just deflections away from that. We continue to suffer from Stockholm syndrome
I think it is time to draw a line in the sand to separate nonsensical, degrading pop rap from hip hop. It's also time to stop calling it representative of the culture. It is not our culture to degrade one another. That is what's been taught by the oppressor and those who take up the words and insults of the oppressor are still on the plantation!
Shalom, WAKE THAT MIND UP! This conversation with Malcolm, Candace and Weusi, they are a wealth of inspiration, information, gifted and talented. I appreciate the comment "HOOD is not negative" Malcolm, Candace, Weusi, thank you, kudos.
I get what Malcolm Jamal Warner was saying about the N-word. It's the same reason Methodman said he stopped cursing in his music, it's easy to use the N-word or insert a cuss word, but he wanted to challenge himself as an artist. And all Malcolm was saying is J. Cole is a dope artist but challenge yourself
Yeah, its very cringey when J. Fold...I mean J. Cole uses the N word...and the B word too. It be hella excessive and unnecessary. Drake used to do the same thing in the beginning too. But I get why...because they are mixed, and maybe felt a need to overprotective their blackness or something in the beginning. Idk. Just a guess.
It’s about the fact that black men have only legally been allowed to be fathers for about 100 years. It’s not personal. Black families were systematically torn apart. Black folks had to rebuild family structure and MANY still struggle with that today. 70% of black women are single mothers.
@Allthequeenzhorses I'm married, my brothers are married, my cousins are married, and we all have black partners. All the women and men that have children are married, I think that 70% is a propaganda lie.
So funny i started watching the first episode and got distracted and didn't go back. It is still in my netflix continue watching list. I certainly will be binging this weekend. I love good medical shows and good legal shows. Thx for the reviews guys.
Listened to both episodes, but I was invested as soon as I saw Malcolm's face no matter the topic. Their discussion about not letting somebody sleep over, fixing things or cleaning their place was entertaining. Let these "comrades" win! ❤🎉🍷
This was an excellent interview. All of the participants showed up and showed out. These are the type of conversations we should be having on daily basis. Breakfast club, job well done!
Whoa.... Did not know Malcolm grew up in the "Jungle"!!!! It's an infamous Hood in L.A. known, unfortunately, for negative reasons. I've always said: I'm from The Hood but I'm NOT Hood. We are not a monolith.
Our communities are not functional. We allow a small minority among us to make things worse for all of us. Community policing means the community policing itself to me. We don't can't do that on the first level, which is the values people share and the standards they set for the communities they live in. Few places have these common standards, but most have a significant degree of values they all share . This works to keep a significant degree of stability in most communities, but with all or most things negative we have it worst, and the impact is thus often a double negative given the condition which is the norm for us, in most, if not all aspects of life.
@@siriuslyspeaking9720 and we have to be honest a large part of our community feels like they need the criminal element to prosper, some communities are ashamed to say they want to sell drugs in peace smh
@@kenyardpeacock2526 As much as we have wailed against "other people bringing drugs and guns into our communities, and used this as in excuse for the conditions they have been in, for over half a century, many of us, especially celebrity types, engage in a systemic/structural celebration of those who sell drugs, and the use of them. Warner used the term "dope" to describe how their initial coming together was. The word itself conjures up sad memories to me, having lost many friends and family members during the heroin epidemic. the same for the term OG, to depict something good or desirable. Many of us engage in the worst form of cultural appropriation. I witnessed in real time the loss of Black lives and deterioration of the community I lived in, largely because of drugs. I saw us be primed for it, when I saw fellow neighborhood youth, go from drinking, to sniffing model airplane glue and solvents, to drinking cough syrup, to taking barbiturates and amphetamines, which were called "dummies". How ironically and tragically apt was that? As much, and for as long, as we have been talking about the effects of trauma on us, we have yet to act as if we take it seriously. So much for the idea of triggering trauma, since we seem to have an insatiable appetite for entertainment that depicts the acts and conditions, we say we abhor. This doesn't jibe, in a heathy mind. White people with all their guns and addictions and selling of drugs, don't kill each other, at the rate we do, and again, many today say Black on Black crime is not a thing, basically because, people are likely to harm those they live near. When and by what people, has harming a family member ever been acceptable? This is the thinking as to who we are as a group, that is being projected to the world, and our s allies have been neglect themselves in allowing this narrative which hurts their political and social aspirations as well, They are enablers, just as I and my generation have been, in collectively allowing what we knew was wrong and extremely counter-productive to take root and take over our communities. There is nothing glamorous nor celebratory in that, yet they is a cottage industry in people telling their story of there early life, in this world, and in an nostalgic manner, as if they were the good ole days. Few if any seem to show remorse for their former lives, they seem to where the memories has a badge of honor. This just further blurs the difference between the young who get no direction, and thus we see today how far people will go in pushing the envelope. It doesn't take a prophet to see where things are going. It only takes honesty as you say.
Poor Malcolm. He is vibrating on a higher plane of consciousness. Water finds its level though and I appreciate him, stopped listening to hiphop years ago. It's too hard to explain to general population why we should not use racial slurs towards each other and mysogynistic degrading insults against our Black women. But, at least he tried and maybe he planted a seed.
MJW-- i remember seeing you off broadway in my early years living in NYC. Love, love, love all of your work. Thanks for stepping in and standing up for THE CULTURE (definite article). I'm gonna go all the way hard core here. I am tired of some 'artists', 'politicians', etc talking about how they are repping "the culture". The vast majority are repping a culture (indefinite article) not the culture. They are repping a part of us not all of us. Problem is their megaphones are so loud that they drown out our true scholars and historians. Then, the world thinks we are ALL hood. We need to put our academic and religious scholars back at the heart of repping THE CULTURE and not profit/ego hungry folk.
I would go even further to say a lot of the hiphop music is anti black woman. There's rappers saying things like "i bet that b look better red" and "he gone leave you for a white girl". I would have loved if Malcolm addressed the anti black women rhetoric too.
This interview flowed so smoothly with Jess not being there, with her heavy breathing and empty ad libs. Its unfortunate the FULL Breakfast Club team can't actively participate in the intellectual interviews because Jess lacks knowledge and depth. Claudia Jordan would have been a much better fit for the role
Malcolm-Jamal Warner seems to echo Bill Cosby's message: what works for you might not work for others, and that's okay. There are others out there doing their own thing too. Listen to the music you enjoy and stop criticizing what you can't relate to. If it isn't for you, it simply isn't for you.
Thought it said, Malcolm Jamal Warner and Candace Owens at first and my heart dropped. I was bout to unsubscribe and block them if they did that on Juneteenth 😂😂
Market forces dictate what get popping. Chance the rapper got some light as has rapsody but for some reason they don't resonate with the masses the same. 🤔🤔🤔🤔
@jman1562001 Chance sucks along with his voice, and Rapsody sounds too slow and like she's doing spoken word, and rap is something she is uncomfortable with doing.
Yes, from the books I posted above, there were 100s of thousands of Irish men, women & children shipped to the American colonies from Ireland in the 1600s. Some sold themselves into servitude. 10s of thousands were kidnapped or tricked into going to Colonies but ended up slaves.
With all due respect, MJW don't know what he's talking about in terms of rap or 2Pac, but I love what he's saying about fatherhood. And I 100% understand not wanting to accept specific energy and language in your own realm.
It’s so interesting hearing these narratives about the youth from folks that are slightly older than me. Darn near all the stats were worse in the 80s and early 90s which are the years hip hop glorifies and talks down on the other generations. I get it though. It’s something older men will always do to young men. Im sure it was done to them to.
Malcolm treated me in my dark skin friend like shit when we were at a meet and greet would we were 11 years old. I will never forget that. He was so rude! Shout out to Kenp Big Smooth and Gary Payton they were very kind hard and so was Detlef! Still have all of those autographs
If we as black ppl didn’t use the N word as a term of endearment how would it be used and even more importantly how would it be affecting us when we hear it used today?
"I feel like I integrated my people into a burning house.." this is exactly the n-word. I don't care how many gymnastics you want to use to say that is endearmement...it's all bs. I bet they wouldn't call their kid that, what they called that to their beautiful daughter that just just born or 3 years old? exactly. if you wouldn't call that to that little precious young child, you definitely shouldn't be using it so stop the BS. That word was created to hate you with it, that same passivity that was being discussed is taking that word of absolute hate and trying to say you love somebody with it. it's absolutely ridiculous on his face. it's never been a part of my vocabulary because I took black history in school and even my favorite Brothers making dope tracks, it sounds stupid and silly. LSB absolutely absolutely real, if everybody wasn't using it none of these dudes would be saying it they would have found something else...like comrade. the honest truth is that these dudes are just following each other and they calling each other as a leaders and they are couples and bosses but they're just following with everybody else does and they all look the same anyway.
Dr Frances Kress Welsing told us about babies making babies. She said one of the tactics to save our 'hood is to have men wait 'til 35 and women 'til 30 to have children. Sage advice from a child psychiatrist.
Everyone in the "hood" is not of the hood. The "hood", is a stereotype that many found profitable, and so it came to be marketed, as a reality. It is a mentality rooted in youth/adolescent/consumer pop-culture. It is the precursor of Hip-Hop culture. Most slang terms take on different meanings based on individual's perceptions of them. This is a mistake too many make, in thinking that we all think of the terms we use, in the same way. Communication is not very good among us, because so many value slang. As a group we don't put priority on the standard language, and other norms of the greater society, and as a group, we pay a dear price for it. It is okay to do your own thing, if it is productive, on the other hand, It is senseless to ignore, what is fundamental and necessary. There is no one way Black people have ever been. We didn't arrive here as one people, and have become more different since. As a group we have yet to be real with ourselves or awaken to a state of consciousness. That Hip-Hop can say it "changed the world", while celebrating its 50th anniversary, while not changing the communities it came out of, and those like them, is the epitome, of the level of denial of reality, that exist among us, as a group. Who kept it real, in that particular case of a blatant contradiction, just as who has pointed out the contradiction of many, who were a part of Hip-Hop, when it had their campaign against violence, in the 80's, and were making songs like 'We're Headed For Self-Destruction', now saying - "Black on Black crime is not a thing"?
Peer pressure has long been a big problem for parents, but today it is as great a pressure, as it has ever been. Parent even more early in a child's life, stop being their major influence. We don't take seriously the damage that the influence of media of all kinds have had on us, as a specie. It started shortly after the Industrial Revolution and the invention of all form of communications media. This brought about the creation of youth adolescent consumer pop-culture and the reality and idea of juvenile delinquency shortly followed this period and the First World War, which took many women out of the home to do the work, that would have been left undone, because men were at war. This gave women more direct access to money and entrepreneurs created and marketed all manner of produces to get the spending money they now have at their disposal. The lure for all the new fangled consumer goods, created the desire for even more among the public and we know the rest of that story. The keeping up with the Jones mentality, the old Temptations singing group song about, in one of their many hit songs of social commentary. The 24/7 availability of visual and audio stimulation, has had very negative effects on us - children especially. Many a youth from a Church going family - two parent household, (2 parents in the home, far easily was the norm back then) in my neighborhood succumb to the heroin addiction, when I was youth in the 60's and 70's.
Unfortunately he is correct It is on the parents It's the sins of the parents , that befall on the child That's why it's so important to train up a child n the way they should go Equal amounts of love and discipline and PRAYER If u do not teach your children and be the example to them To put on the full armour of God daily, You will always be open for the devil to slither in
Malcom is on a whole different level. I could listen to him all day!
He was so rude to me when I was a little child I have a hard time ever appreciating him. I will never forget how he was very rude to me and my best friend in 5th grade, my old best friend was so excited, her dad was in prison and my dad was going out of his way to take us to a whole other city for a basketball special event in Malcolm Jamal Warner was there doing a meet and greet and he was shaking everybody else's hand but when it came to me and my friend he didn't and I'll never forget how discriminated I guess we felt. Just because we weren't built like DJ from full House and my friend was a real tall yet also overweight dark skin girl. To this day I still think he was discriminating against us because we were with my dad who was single and my dark skin friend and he was letting all two pair white families get hugs and signatures. When it was our turn to get a hug in his signature he looked at us and disgust and told us to keep going and then he gave the little girl right behind us a hug. I was 11 years old.
Yea learned a lot from him and a few like minded people like him. 💯
@Pugetwitch How long ago was this?
@@Pugetwitchdamn, never meet your heroes they say. That’s why I tell people all the time who go so hard for celebrities, they would call security on you if you got too close.
I know they should’ve just interviewed him
“Why should I borrow a word from people who hate me when I want to show love to my brothers and sisters?” 💯
Malcolm is absolutely right about the N-word and negative themes in hip hop. Their answers were just deflections away from that. We continue to suffer from Stockholm syndrome
I think it is time to draw a line in the sand to separate nonsensical, degrading pop rap from hip hop. It's also time to stop calling it representative of the culture. It is not our culture to degrade one another. That is what's been taught by the oppressor and those who take up the words and insults of the oppressor are still on the plantation!
and Malcolm still looks AMAZING 🤎
Shalom, WAKE THAT MIND UP! This conversation with Malcolm, Candace and Weusi, they are a wealth of inspiration, information, gifted and talented. I appreciate the comment "HOOD is not negative" Malcolm, Candace, Weusi, thank you, kudos.
Always liked Malcolm. Glad he’s here, healthy and still a conscious brother👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
Refreshing I love to hear them speak. Malcolm voice is always soothing.
Isn't his voice amazing?! He should do audio books.
I get what Malcolm Jamal Warner was saying about the N-word. It's the same reason Methodman said he stopped cursing in his music, it's easy to use the N-word or insert a cuss word, but he wanted to challenge himself as an artist. And all Malcolm was saying is J. Cole is a dope artist but challenge yourself
Exactly. How so many of us will miss that is beyond me.
Yeah, its very cringey when J. Fold...I mean J. Cole uses the N word...and the B word too. It be hella excessive and unnecessary. Drake used to do the same thing in the beginning too. But I get why...because they are mixed, and maybe felt a need to overprotective their blackness or something in the beginning. Idk. Just a guess.
I hate when people assume we all come from poverty without fathers. I was not raised in the ghetto and we had a Daddy.
A daddy is different from a father......carry on
@geronimopratt7976 wtf is the difference? My parents were married . I called my father, Daddy, and my mother, Mommy. So what is your point?
Every racial group has their stereotypes. It's up to the individual to change the narrative.
It’s about the fact that black men have only legally been allowed to be fathers for about 100 years. It’s not personal. Black families were systematically torn apart. Black folks had to rebuild family structure and MANY still struggle with that today. 70% of black women are single mothers.
@Allthequeenzhorses I'm married, my brothers are married, my cousins are married, and we all have black partners. All the women and men that have children are married, I think that 70% is a propaganda lie.
I absolutely love Malcom! Keep being great black man!
Malcolm was awesome in the Resident. Really good medical show. Also, Hi Lenard.
He really was… Love that show.
We binged watch The Resident for like 12 hours a day from S1E1 until we were current and got hooked immediately 😅
@@janearhankerson9960 Wow. Dedication :)
His acting was phenomenal. Great show.
So funny i started watching the first episode and got distracted and didn't go back. It is still in my netflix continue watching list. I certainly will be binging this weekend. I love good medical shows and good legal shows. Thx for the reviews guys.
This what im talking about grown man and women conversations that are not always had from Black grown-up Men and Women...loved it.
Listened to both episodes, but I was invested as soon as I saw Malcolm's face no matter the topic. Their discussion about not letting somebody sleep over, fixing things or cleaning their place was entertaining. Let these "comrades" win! ❤🎉🍷
Best conversation BC has had in a while
This was an excellent interview. All of the participants showed up and showed out. These are the type of conversations we should be having on daily basis. Breakfast club, job well done!
This podcast actually sounds like it will be, fact based and informative.
we're two episodes in, take a listen!
@@NAH_NotAllHood thank you so much, I most certainly will be tuning in.
Theo and that earring scene on The Cosby Show with him and Bill is legendary 😂😂 when he tried to hid the earring!
It's *hide* ,not hid.
Also, that episode you're referring to is "Independence Day". ✌🏻
@@jayskicksnfits9372 Literacy is dying.
My favorites were, Theo's graduation day and him discovering his dyslexia.
Love love Malcolm, grown black conversations
This interview well called for!
Really enjoyed this conversation. Will absolutely tune into their podcast
thank you for your support!
Eddie and Malcolm!!!!!!!! Was a fan of the show in 2000s
I'm still watching it today on Pluto TV gang.
@@lordraynation6178 ❣️
One of the most boring shows ever.
@@SparkleInYourEyes2024one of the funniest ever
@SparkleInYourEyes2024 Why you even here than?
New level of conversation...Good job, Breakfast Club!
There's no such thing as the universe. All glory to God!! Christ is King!
Yes! What a great trio of thinkers and artists. My kind of people.
You have a new studio? FINALLY!!! It’s a long time coming! Congrats!! It’s long overdue.
No one talks about the success Malcom is for overcoming all the traps child actors face. I’m happy for him
I felt this entire segment. Great job 💯💯💯
Cole just relating to us and getting in touch with our people
This podcast is what we need.
Thank you Breaking Club for having them on today!
GREAT conversation!!
This was a phenomenal interview..... love this❤❤❤
Great conversation. Salute to all of them.
Malcolm you make me proud I named my son Malcolm lol
An interview with substance 💯💯💯
Malcolm is my man I grew up with him. We’re just alike I love that guy.
Whoa.... Did not know Malcolm grew up in the "Jungle"!!!! It's an infamous Hood in L.A. known, unfortunately, for negative reasons. I've always said: I'm from The Hood but I'm NOT Hood. We are not a monolith.
Yeah, I Always thought he was from NY. Interesting
Love the conversation !!! Let’s have more interviews like this ❤
This conversation is so gooooooood!
That was profound we’re not neighbors anymore that makes it hood
Our communities are not functional. We allow a small minority among us to make things worse for all of us. Community policing means the community policing itself to me. We don't can't do that on the first level, which is the values people share and the standards they set for the communities they live in. Few places have these common standards, but most have a significant degree of values they all share . This works to keep a significant degree of stability in most communities, but with all or most things negative we have it worst, and the impact is thus often a double negative given the condition which is the norm for us, in most, if not all aspects of life.
@@siriuslyspeaking9720 and we have to be honest a large part of our community feels like they need the criminal element to prosper, some communities are ashamed to say they want to sell drugs in peace smh
@@kenyardpeacock2526 As much as we have wailed against "other people bringing drugs and guns into our communities, and used this as in excuse for the conditions they have been in, for over half a century, many of us, especially celebrity types, engage in a systemic/structural celebration of those who sell drugs, and the use of them. Warner used the term "dope" to describe how their initial coming together was. The word itself conjures up sad memories to me, having lost many friends and family members during the heroin epidemic. the same for the term OG, to depict something good or desirable. Many of us engage in the worst form of cultural appropriation. I witnessed in real time the loss of Black lives and deterioration of the community I lived in, largely because of drugs. I saw us be primed for it, when I saw fellow neighborhood youth, go from drinking, to sniffing model airplane glue and solvents, to drinking cough syrup, to taking barbiturates and amphetamines, which were called "dummies". How ironically and tragically apt was that? As much, and for as long, as we have been talking about the effects of trauma on us, we have yet to act as if we take it seriously. So much for the idea of triggering trauma, since we seem to have an insatiable appetite for entertainment that depicts the acts and conditions, we say we abhor. This doesn't jibe, in a heathy mind. White people with all their guns and addictions and selling of drugs, don't kill each other, at the rate we do, and again, many today say Black on Black crime is not a thing, basically because, people are likely to harm those they live near. When and by what people, has harming a family member ever been acceptable? This is the thinking as to who we are as a group, that is being projected to the world, and our s allies have been neglect themselves in allowing this narrative which hurts their political and social aspirations as well, They are enablers, just as I and my generation have been, in collectively allowing what we knew was wrong and extremely counter-productive to take root and take over our communities. There is nothing glamorous nor celebratory in that, yet they is a cottage industry in people telling their story of there early life, in this world, and in an nostalgic manner, as if they were the good ole days. Few if any seem to show remorse for their former lives, they seem to where the memories has a badge of honor. This just further blurs the difference between the young who get no direction, and thus we see today how far people will go in pushing the envelope. It doesn't take a prophet to see where things are going. It only takes honesty as you say.
Love these types of conversations!
Just peeped a couple of his works, and Malcom & Eddie sitcom is the best , thanks BreakfastClub⛽️⛽️⛽️🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥⛽️⛽️⛽️
God send me a Malcolm!! Ugh, let me do better so I can attract a Malcolm!
That last part! Be it unto you sister.
Great conversation 🙏🏾🙌🏾✊🏾
As you elevate yourself and who you are around, you begin to use more elevated language.
Great Conversation, I will definitely tune in to Not All Hood podcast.
Malcolm preaching facts
Great lnterview
Poor Malcolm. He is vibrating on a higher plane of consciousness. Water finds its level though and I appreciate him, stopped listening to hiphop years ago. It's too hard to explain to general population why we should not use racial slurs towards each other and mysogynistic degrading insults against our Black women. But, at least he tried and maybe he planted a seed.
He made me think of his tv dad for a min .
Words are words. It doesn't matter if you get rid of the nword or b word it will get replaced with another word. Intent matters more than words.
MJW-- i remember seeing you off broadway in my early years living in NYC. Love, love, love all of your work. Thanks for stepping in and standing up for THE CULTURE (definite article). I'm gonna go all the way hard core here. I am tired of some 'artists', 'politicians', etc talking about how they are repping "the culture". The vast majority are repping a culture (indefinite article) not the culture. They are repping a part of us not all of us. Problem is their megaphones are so loud that they drown out our true scholars and historians. Then, the world thinks we are ALL hood. We need to put our academic and religious scholars back at the heart of repping THE CULTURE and not profit/ego hungry folk.
Enjoyed this interview
Great conversation!
Great interview
Love Malcolm. Grew with him on Cosby. Love his developed mind!
Top 5 episode of the year 🎉
I would go even further to say a lot of the hiphop music is anti black woman. There's rappers saying things like "i bet that b look better red" and "he gone leave you for a white girl". I would have loved if Malcolm addressed the anti black women rhetoric too.
Theo looks good!!
mannnnn
Malcolm killed it on 911 this season. Been a fan since cosby show❤
This interview flowed so smoothly with Jess not being there, with her heavy breathing and empty ad libs. Its unfortunate the FULL Breakfast Club team can't actively participate in the intellectual interviews because Jess lacks knowledge and depth. Claudia Jordan would have been a much better fit for the role
Great conversation
Thank you Malcom..... a term of endearment makes no sense to me with a word that is so negative. IMO❤
Definitely getting on their podcast list
I really this trio ,chalarmagne , envy and jess . I was not sold at first but now I am hooked
OMG I can't wait to listen to this podcast!
Wow Malcom is 53 😮
I loved the show " Malcolm and Eddie ".
"It's a Gordon Cartrelle"
His posture got my whole back hurting
It’s the industry not the artist. The artist will do anything for a check. Change the industry, change the artist.
It's not changing
So many ppl don't even understand the blueprint of the Entertainment Industry
Was established by the NAZIS
Gr8 content!
My homeboy Weusi proud of you
Malcolm-Jamal Warner seems to echo Bill Cosby's message: what works for you might not work for others, and that's okay. There are others out there doing their own thing too. Listen to the music you enjoy and stop criticizing what you can't relate to. If it isn't for you, it simply isn't for you.
Thought it said, Malcolm Jamal Warner and Candace Owens at first and my heart dropped. I was bout to unsubscribe and block them if they did that on Juneteenth 😂😂
I honestly think it did. Just to get more eyes on it but then they fixed it
Good thing you know how to read
You got Candace Owens on the brain?!,😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Oh no....I'm glad you're ok....I was sooooo worried....omg....so happy you didn't unsubscribe....I am so relieved....
Great Show
I totally agree with Malcolm. Why are we borrowing the colonizers words?
I saw Malcolm Jamal Warner, and my mind was expecting Darius Mcrary for some reason
yea they kinda sort of alike.
I do that sometimes too and they two totally different personalities lol
Absolutely don't get the 2 mixed up. They stand for 2 different things.
Um...NAH! lol @@NBaBall3r26
Micheal Jackson said it best! ALL I REALLY WANNA SAY IS THEY DONT REALLY CARE ABOUT US!❤
I forget these interviews are pre recorded. I was like fathers day has passed lol
THE GOOD BROTHER MALCOLM CAN TALK DAT TALK & SHIT! #Eloquence 👏 👏 👏 ❤
It's on the parents to not let children have access to the nonsense, but it's also up to the networks and labels not to produce the nonsense.
Market forces dictate what get popping. Chance the rapper got some light as has rapsody but for some reason they don't resonate with the masses the same. 🤔🤔🤔🤔
@jman1562001 Chance sucks along with his voice, and Rapsody sounds too slow and like she's doing spoken word, and rap is something she is uncomfortable with doing.
Asking the universe is crazy
I thought he was from New York. Never would have guessed he grew up in the jungle off of LaBrea Ave.
Yes, from the books I posted above, there were 100s of thousands of Irish men, women & children shipped to the American colonies from Ireland in the 1600s. Some sold themselves into servitude. 10s of thousands were kidnapped or tricked into going to Colonies but ended up slaves.
With all due respect, MJW don't know what he's talking about in terms of rap or 2Pac, but I love what he's saying about fatherhood. And I 100% understand not wanting to accept specific energy and language in your own realm.
It’s so interesting hearing these narratives about the youth from folks that are slightly older than me. Darn near all the stats were worse in the 80s and early 90s which are the years hip hop glorifies and talks down on the other generations. I get it though. It’s something older men will always do to young men. Im sure it was done to them to.
Where's the rest of the show
Malcolm was off about Pac but everything else was pretty solid!
MJ-DUB❤❤ aging like fine wine❤❤❤
Idk. I can relate but I see a big difference living in the Northwest
Good morning
Malcolm treated me in my dark skin friend like shit when we were at a meet and greet would we were 11 years old. I will never forget that. He was so rude! Shout out to Kenp Big Smooth and Gary Payton they were very kind hard and so was Detlef! Still have all of those autographs
Do you think it was because of the time of your skin? Either way I'm sorry that happened to you.
Explain further please. How so ?
Wow he does seem very ridged
If we as black ppl didn’t use the N word as a term of endearment how would it be used and even more importantly how would it be affecting us when we hear it used today?
If we didn't use it .then when heard it would be like saying the word bomb at a airport.
Malcolm J. Warner is who we thought Darius McCrary(Eddie Winslow) would become. The only 2 black sons on TV we saw become men.
"I feel like I integrated my people into a burning house.."
this is exactly the n-word. I don't care how many gymnastics you want to use to say that is endearmement...it's all bs. I bet they wouldn't call their kid that, what they called that to their beautiful daughter that just just born or 3 years old? exactly. if you wouldn't call that to that little precious young child, you definitely shouldn't be using it so stop the BS.
That word was created to hate you with it, that same passivity that was being discussed is taking that word of absolute hate and trying to say you love somebody with it. it's absolutely ridiculous on his face.
it's never been a part of my vocabulary because I took black history in school and even my favorite Brothers making dope tracks, it sounds stupid and silly.
LSB absolutely absolutely real, if everybody wasn't using it none of these dudes would be saying it they would have found something else...like comrade. the honest truth is that these dudes are just following each other and they calling each other as a leaders and they are couples and bosses but they're just following with everybody else does and they all look the same anyway.
Definitely gonna listen to NAH!
Dr Frances Kress Welsing told us about babies making babies. She said one of the tactics to save our 'hood is to have men wait 'til 35 and women 'til 30 to have children. Sage advice from a child psychiatrist.
We NEVER DISCUSS MEN DEALING WITH THE LOSS OF A CHILD
Weusi is my guy.
Everyone in the "hood" is not of the hood. The "hood", is a stereotype that many found profitable, and so it came to be marketed, as a reality. It is a mentality rooted in youth/adolescent/consumer pop-culture. It is the precursor of Hip-Hop culture. Most slang terms take on different meanings based on individual's perceptions of them. This is a mistake too many make, in thinking that we all think of the terms we use, in the same way. Communication is not very good among us, because so many value slang. As a group we don't put priority on the standard language, and other norms of the greater society, and as a group, we pay a dear price for it. It is okay to do your own thing, if it is productive, on the other hand, It is senseless to ignore, what is fundamental and necessary.
There is no one way Black people have ever been. We didn't arrive here as one people, and have become more different since. As a group we have yet to be real with ourselves or awaken to a state of consciousness. That Hip-Hop can say it "changed the world", while celebrating its 50th anniversary, while not changing the communities it came out of, and those like them, is the epitome, of the level of denial of reality, that exist among us, as a group. Who kept it real, in that particular case of a blatant contradiction, just as who has pointed out the contradiction of many, who were a part of Hip-Hop, when it had their campaign against violence, in the 80's, and were making songs like 'We're Headed For Self-Destruction', now saying - "Black on Black crime is not a thing"?
"On the parents" argument is flawed. Outside influences have kids in a chokehold.
Peer pressure has long been a big problem for parents, but today it is as great a pressure, as it has ever been. Parent even more early in a child's life, stop being their major influence. We don't take seriously the damage that the influence of media of all kinds have had on us, as a specie. It started shortly after the Industrial Revolution and the invention of all form of communications media. This brought about the creation of youth adolescent consumer pop-culture and the reality and idea of juvenile delinquency shortly followed this period and the First World War, which took many women out of the home to do the work, that would have been left undone, because men were at war. This gave women more direct access to money and entrepreneurs created and marketed all manner of produces to get the spending money they now have at their disposal. The lure for all the new fangled consumer goods, created the desire for even more among the public and we know the rest of that story. The keeping up with the Jones mentality, the old Temptations singing group song about, in one of their many hit songs of social commentary. The 24/7 availability of visual and audio stimulation, has had very negative effects on us - children especially. Many a youth from a Church going family - two parent household, (2 parents in the home, far easily was the norm back then) in my neighborhood succumb to the heroin addiction, when I was youth in the 60's and 70's.
Unfortunately he is correct
It is on the parents
It's the sins of the parents , that befall on the child
That's why it's so important to train up a child n the way they should go
Equal amounts of love and discipline and PRAYER
If u do not teach your children and be the example to them
To put on the full armour of God daily,
You will always be open for the devil to slither in