Trevor Noah CALLS OUT Neal Brennan for his racist antiques 😂
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 10 ก.พ. 2025
- Trevor Noah and Neal Brennan discuss the racial and economic implications of items people buy. From the Blocks podcast with Neal Brennan.
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Theme music by Electric Guest (unreleased).
#podcast #standup #comedy #mentalhealth
New Blocks w/ Trevor Noah tomorrow. Check out other episodes until then.
Make me
jk I will
Can’t wait! What time?
I knew it!
Love all these podcast episodes Neal
This vid after watching the whole podcast is way better in context than a standalone vid. Great click bait title. A bit dirty; but great.
Poor people cosplay as rich people and rich people cosplay as poor people.
Carpetbagger vernacular.
I saw a pair of jeans for $700.00 (yes, seven hundred!!!) that had holes, rips, tears and were deliberately dyed to look dirty.
Lot of labour went into making it look that way whereas in the real thing it was a lot of laboring 😅
This!!!!
One of the most American things is is for the oppressor pretending he or she are amongst the oppressed!! You can’t be both !!
2:09 Chimamanda Adichie touched on this in Americanah: “Third Worlders are forward-looking, we like things to be new, because our best is still ahead, while in the West their best is already past and so they have to make a fetish of that past.”
Not sure about the "best is still ahead" part.
Love this observation. There's a romanticism of the past but not for everyone 😏😏😏
Chris Rock also touched on this. Chris Rock said whìte people “long for” “the good old days” with Trump, for example, resonating with whìte Amerìca in wanting to make Amerïca great “AGAIN.”
Chris Rock said for Błack people, there were no “good old days.” There was no “great Amerīca” that Błack people want to go back to. He said no days are greater for any Błack people than the days today, regardless how bad it is, it’s better for Błack people than it was. While the past is “good old days” for whìte people, better days for Błack people are always in the future since no Błack person “longs” to have been born in the past. At any time. 😞
If you presume "the west" belongs to backward thinking wyt people.
So refreshing to see Trevor and Neal discuss sensitive topics without malice or anger. Their friendship allows them the comfort of familiarity and trust. If only more of us could engage in this type of dialogue… think how much we could learn from one another.👍
Not when,your dumber and dumber!
"And have nothing positive to say,
to help our younger generation,
have the confidence,
to push forward and be successful!!
Most people, have to be, very determined and work hard to succeed,not to learn to feel sorry for themselves.
Bad role models!!
Trevor is a racist psy
Living on a boat is exotic unless you lost your home…
Only if it’s urban. Otherwise, it’s camping.
I feel like owning a boat with living quarters is pretty rarely a product of unfortunate circumstances.
@@davidshovlin2783 No, but it seems like a divorce has driven people to live on boats because their home was sold in the division of assets. That’s the unfortunate circumstance I’ve read about.
As a white person, I hav never understood pre-holed pants. it has always driven me insane.
I never bought into that fad. Paying good money to look like you raided someone's Goodwill leftovers.
I’ve seen people of various races/ethnic backgrounds wear those (almost always women though). I’ve always thought it looked dumb; why pay for something that looks destroyed?
Yeah, Trevor over analyzes everything. The type of white people I know, including people like, who would be deemed insufferably white by people like Trevor despise white people who treat everyday like laundry day.
Heard a story of a Rural Grandmother (Gogo) who was disgusted with the fact that her Urban Nouveau Riche grandchildren came to visit her with stonewashed jeans and sat down and painstakingly darned them! Told their parents that they must buy the children's clothes from the shops near her because the quality of those from Cape Town was so poor.
"Oh im getting off the grid, i just bought a tiny house on a whim"
This gave me giggles
The tiny house wasn’t that much, it cost 200k. Easy peasy.
I remember the first time I tried to plan a trip with my white friends for the holidays. They wanted to go to a remote area with no running water and where we'd have to cook outdoors and I legit went, "dude, your idea of a vacation is my experience as a poor person. Fuck camping, let's go to a hotel."
😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂
they did not do it because they were white, it was because they had more money than brains..
Sorry you live in tent with no water?
@@RaveyDavey not exactly lol. I grew up in a decent home with running water and electricity in. My point is that I want to feel what it's like to have a luxurious lifestyle instead of being reminded of what poverty looks like.
That was a perspective I had never thought about before.
Then they did not share this memory of theirs in vain.
As a white guy who grew up poor and shopped at thrift stores, I have the reverse aversion, to people who spend too much money on clothes and think looking nice somehow makes them a better person.
Growing up middle class, I agree. And just to toss out a 2100 year old quote: "Wealth consists not in having great possessions, but in having few wants" -Epictetus. As long as you have food in your stomach, a roof over your head and safety, all you need is family, friends, community and a purpose in life. Probably also a dog. You'll feel the richest man on the planet.
As a white person
In my heart I feel
As a Mexican in my head I think
I find it interesting how so many people in the comments section say "trevor is wrong. My situation is different, I choose to have old things." When the conversation, ultimately isn't a few unique experiences, but the humorous take on valuing old items vs new, and the lack of choice many people have due to living circumstances.
Talking about race makes people tense up and worry their life or persona is being labeled as evil, when, in truth, the conversation was never about a moral verdict of the audience, but a vulnerable documentary of the storyteller's lived experiences and how racism in overt and non-overt ways affected them.
This is not a few unique experiences. I there is actually an entire class of poor people who are white. Who live with no electricity. Who buy old furniture from garage sales. This is a class issue not a race issue!
best example: camping aka recreational poverty
Not really, camping was the only vacation we could afford growing up. It wasn’t like “oh wow look, this is what it’s like to be homeless” it was more about being immersed in nature and not being able to afford air travel & hotels. lol
I would actually like to hear Trevor talk more about this perspective tho. I don’t totally agree with his perspective but I would like to understand it more.
I agree this is a good example.
reaching for the sky with that one. it's about connecting with nature.
Literally lived in a tent at a campsite when my single mom was between jobs. No I don't want to join you on your camping trip, Caleb!
No, definitely about wanting to enjoy and explore the world and nature and not having funds to do anything else
Comedic minds (not all) are so fascinating. Looking forward to the podcast.
Some of us white people aren’t rich, but i would rather buy a 100 vintage dresser that is way higher quality than what a hundred bucks can buy new.
It’s not about being rich. If your entire life you were forced to pick up and use old dressers outside from what people threw away and dreamt of having a new one, you will not likely pick a vintage when you can afford a modern brand new one because the vintage is something you will now be sick of. It’s the same with any example. If you grow up in really hot parts of the world with little to no electricity, a safari or camping will be the last place you want to go on a holiday. It will take some time before you have a taste for those things again.
@@Etunu I appreciate that, but by not rich I mean I grew up working class, and I’m barely lower middle class but not really because of student loans. it only takes one garbage ikea dresser that tips over with a stiff breeze to realize new doesn’t necessarily mean quality. I grew up in a house with exclusively thrifted or hand me down furniture, and I I think I’ve bought three pieces of new furniture in my life. One was a three hundred dollar recliner that wouldn’t stay reclined. Sold it. Bookshelves for like 150 that didnt have the holes drilled, returned it. And an ikea bed frame for like 550 and it’s just ok. I think I’m going to save up for a high quality sofa that’s made in the USA, but it’s going to be like 5k. In the meantime I’m thrifting because I’m not going to drop 2k on an ikea sofa that is going to crap out and detracts from my ability to buy the sofa that will last.
I worked for a very fancy housewares brand, and i learned that a lot of housewares is total garbage designed for landfills. I also learned that having the high quality version of the tool saves you a lot of money in the long run. My $80 blender never worked right from day one. My vitamix bought on sale for 300 works and is going to last decades. I’m not going to buy an instapot because it’s a sub par version of three different small appliances. Instead I’m going to thrift the high quality versions of those three appliances or go without. I will go buy brand new high quality cookie sheets, but I just got a vintage Les cruiset pot for fifty bucks on eBay. I just refuse to hand over hard earned money to greedy companies for garbage. If I have to get garbage I’ll try to at least buy it second hand.
@@Etunubut like I think it’s different if you grew up poor and are now wealthy. Trevor can afford to buy new high quality stuff. I would go bankrupt trying to do that. So if the new stuff in my price point is ikea, then buying new stuff only keeps me poorer and living with terrible stuff.
@@criticaloptimist I agree with you. I meant that if you can afford it. If you can’t then there is no choice. I meant that for people who can afford it they will never go back to anything that resembles what they were forced to have especially if they were traumatized by the experience. When the trauma is healed then they get to actually enjoy those things without the trauma.
@@Etunu I love vintage items, but I'm an eclectic person and my decor style matches my personality; quirky, wierd and diverse. I mix old and new. Always have, always will, even if I had millions.
It's a whole brand, Trevor. Restoration Hardware.
Used to be called "shabby chic"
Japanese likes their antique too. It's called wabisabi. Because appreciating the beauty and imperfection of old used things can give you inner peace.
That shits fire. I put it on sushi
Wabisabi I thought was more about repairing things but leaving a small imperfection, or highlighting the damaged area by highlighting in gold. Like repairing a broken bowl but painting the broken edges before reassembling, and leaving one small chip out entirely.
@@AxeMan808that’s kintsugi
@@AlfiTsinela AHHHH! OK. Thank you.
@@AlfiTsinela whoosh! 😊
As a South African, every word is true Trevor. Laughing as I nod my head in self reflection, pain & agreement.
Great interview guys.
This is fire. Critical thinking and processing nuances is not common practice for most people; many comments disliking what was said on here proves that. Both Neal and Trevor are brilliant- two of my top 10 comedians for sure! Whoever is writing titles on these vids is a click bait genius. The comments on here reveal a lot about how ‘serious’ folks take things and they don’t understand the paradox like these guys do. 0:02 The levels are deep. Thank you Blocks crew.
from your perpective..
I grew up around the world. Seems like antiques are enjoyed by lower all the way up to upper class. Sure, poor is poor. But middle class in Istanbul still likes their antiques. Middle class in Hong Kong and Paris and Phoenix, all like their antiques.
Exactly!
Because they are aspirational.
Gotta agree with Trevor on his take here. Antiques 😬 Not really a fan. My family was in the low middle class and I grew up with passed down furniture until we could buy a new one. Some we didn’t replace ever because it’s not a priority.
At the moment I live with my husband and kids in a passed down house built in the 1970s and I’m dreaming of someday being able to afford a brand new modern house and throwing all the old furniture away.
My husband has the same perspective but for different reasons. He went to school with 1800s Spanish architecture from elementary to high school and has hated anything that looks “vintage” since then.
Bottomline: what you grew up with has a significant impact on your adult preferences 😁
What you grew up with CAN have a significant impact. Stop speaking for everyone! I grew up with hand me downs and used furniture, vintage etc. I cherish them to this day because the craftsmanship is amazing. just because it's all you had doesn't automatically make you hate it.
@@calliopemuse3210 it does. But bottom line. People of all classes like antiques is not me saying everyone likes antiques.
I grew up poor with ignorant parents, drug and prison stuff. I want nice things now, while my partner likes small cute old things. I wondered about this.
drug and prison stuff😢
Love getting the clip before the episode! Excited for this one. :)
So you’re saying poor people should start selling their old stuff to rich people at exorbitant prices 🤔
😂
This is a lot more the case regarding class than race. Sure, there is often strong overlap, but this is very true for Eastern Europe and may not be the case with wealthier POC in other parts of the world.
I relate to this, because I pretty much had to thrift my clothes when I was younger, and refuse to do it now. Still love antiques though!
For the first time I cryied listen to Trevor speaking about himself...even if I read his book, this time was hardest for me listening about some stories of his life and listening him speaking about love ❤
As an African I have never understood the concept of paying money to go camping or hiking. Its insane how people even buy expensive hiking gear, met tourists that laughed when they saw me hiking up a mountain wearing semi-formal clothes. I only understood how weird it was for them seeing this when we were going down the cable cart together and I was the only one who wasn't wearing said gear 😅😅😅. Different worlds yet same planet
I understand this fully. Here in Nigeria, I once went to visit some old couple in some other neigbourhood close by. When I arrived, I saw the front door had African carved art design, the coffee table was some African carved artwork thing and there were some carved masks hanging around in the living room. In my mind, I was like, I bet there's some white person living here. Because us Nigerians don't to this African shit, right in Africa. The husband was Nigerian. But he had married a white British woman! 😁😁
Am I privileged because my family never gets rid of furniture and just keeps handing them down, yes! Do I buy used clothes because I can get better quality brands in my budget that way? Yes. I thought I was just being frugal and living within my budget.
Me too! I feel this is more a class thing than a race thing
He makes sense. Iranian immigrants love to have new things when they make it because they want to get away from what they had before.
I dont deny that happens, but there are many, many variations. I'm not in the US, and my relatives keep a lot of old time stuff as "decorations"... old stuff they used, in the same house they have been living for, well, more than a hundred years now (the family, not them, although some of them are 90+). The kitchen, for example, has 3 stoves, the original stone fireplace that was the only one at the beginning, the iron stove they use as heating in winter and sometimes to cook something in particular, and a gas one. There are old oil lamps they keep now as ornament, but they used around 1930 or earlier.
But yea, I can be as Trevor says too. The equivalent of buying ripped jeans.
A related phenomenon I really, really hate is the "I went to on a holiday, and it was marvelous, people there are so happy, I really learned a lot about life from them, how to be happy with so little"... So little as what, exactly, being able to pay to travel the world? Do you realize that they live from your money and thus need to make a good impression and are happy to see the next meal coming? Do you really needed to see poverty to realize that happiness comes from the relationships you have with people? Dont you think they will happily trade places if they could and "learn so much" from living out of poverty?
I was fully expecting the coin banks from "Bamboozled"
Looking forward to the episode! Cheers
I’ve noticed bed pans & wooden clothes pin are coming back into style.
No. Way. Gross.
Wtf bed pans? Is that the modern version of a "chamber pot"? A pot you relieve yourself in
I'd love to see the Jesse Lee Peterson interview. "Are you about to run, Trevor?" 🤣
Hahaha😂
Idk what you're talking about. I'm white and I buy antique/vintage furniture because i can't afford anything other than ikea. I got 4 solid wood chairs for 15 dollars at good will. I can't buy one chair from Ikea for 15 euros. Same for my living room arm chair. I have a solid wood piece for 35, bucks. Yup it doesn't look great but it's solid and an Ikea arm chair cost more and will need to be trashed in a year's time. I get what you're saying. But white people are not a monolith. And Rich people everywhere have been doing this sort of shit sense forever and for a lot of people antiques and vintage furniture is their only way to access something durable.
It’s so funny being poor white and choosing older things due to budget and honestly better quality, and people thinking we’re way more high income than we are due to “aesthetics”. We’ve been on government assistance a few times and they would TRY to take one look at us and say we don’t qualify, and I’d be like no look at our actual bank account and bills… so that’s definitely been an interesting perspective, having to constantly prove that your broke when it’s kind of the last thing you want to talk about. Having other broke people try to look at us for help when we’re all in the same boat, and I’ve often tried to help only to be screwed over each time.
It's like that old saying "We're too poor to buy cheap things."
"white people can dress in a certain way"
"Bummy? You mean bummy?" So quick wirh it
The day I bought my Bowls was the most pivotal one of my life, not because but although they're vintage looking. I had no choice because I needed the PERFECT size and shape. They're very large, enough for at least one big portion of whatever, yet small enough to not make a normal portion appear weird and they're NOT fully round so you can stack them with air flowing in and out which makes them dry faster. It also gives you different shapes to pour out of, it's not all the same curve. Organic shape bowls at the ideal size for you will change your world, I swear!!
Yo, dude. I get this. My Indian family thinks second hand stuff is lowly. You always want to buy new because you are worthy of NEW stuff. WOW.
Personally I think I'm better than IKEA shit and I can't afford anything else so I think I'm Worth used furniture....
I prefer antiques. They aren't for looks. They get used.
I prefer free sh!t. 😂🤘
My wife and I slept in a full size bed for 25 years. It was a cast iron tube style. Trevor would see this as an example of his hypothesis. But, the reason we slept in that small, somewhat uncomfortable bed was because my grandparents had slept in it for 70 years.
Yes, they were poor farmers and I was poor as a child as well. Be careful when you make these assumptions.
Not white. Wealthy. Wealthy people do this.
When i saw the title of this video my thoughts instantly jumped to things like "lawn Jockeys" and blackface "mammi" cookie jars (which people still have the audacity to display in my home state). Thankfully this was much less disturbing.
HA! same!!! Glad we're seeing that crap less and less.
It's true what Trevor is saying about wealthy people's desires being shaped by their upbringing, but I don't see how race ties into it. White people from less well off countries would see wealthy American white people exactly the same way that Trevor does.
He brings up race for two reasons.
1. He’s an African man who is living in the U.S. So generally people of color are a lot more poor than white people.
2. People of color have to present a certain image to get respect. White people can be individuals. So a Black or Latino person has to be well-dressed and surround themselves with nice things to not be discriminated.
I’m Mexican but I can pass as white. My best friend is also Mexican and she’s dark-skinned. Because we often go out, I got to see firsthand that she had to be careful about what she wore to get the automatic respect I got.
@@BbGun-lw5vithanks for the reply. Regarding point 2, I see what you're saying. I hadn't considered it because I personally think it's stupid to judge people that way. But ultimately there are definitely people out there who do... So I agree with you.
This phenomenon manifests in no douchier material practice than relic’d guitars.
“Wait-what if I BEAT THE SHIT out of that mint, new $2,000 Strat first and THEN charged you $5,000?”
“F*** YEAH, BRAH! I hit it big with crypto, why not!”
Still have my 94 American strat. Guitars that have been played over years and years absorb SOUL and it’s impossible for them not to get banged up if you play live. New ones not as good often… I wouldn’t sell it for any price unless I was starving.
I've often mentioned something similar. People who migrate from poorer countries tend to spend more on name brand clothing and dress better.
So true, My ex, who is Black, never understood white people's fascination and obsession with antiques.
Everyday Use is a great short story on this topic.
Trevor's argument about antiques and white people somehow equal privilege made zero sense to me. I'm Latino and I just watched this completely confused, everything isn't nor does it have to be about race.
it is if you're black in the US because those people have been brainwashed every since MLK was killed
Well ur dumb
It's how he made his money, it's called race hustlers.
@@MisterWoes he said don't take it to seriously but u did
@@Gonk You misspelled don't, but don't take me seriously.
the old stuff is quality made. it lasts.
Eh, I'm going to call BS on this too. My mother, was born in Mexico and grew up very poor for many years, still loves to thrift shop and DIY furniture and all sorts of other things that were "connected to her poverty." It's a type of creativity that doesn't just look for the easiest and most obvious aesthetic that you can afford. Like many things, rich people sometimes put it on as a kind of affectation, but that's definitely not the only explanation for it. Trevor seems to be completely unaware of the many variations of people between very rich and very poor.
He comes off so obsessed with race when he's usually talking about class but using "generally white/black people" instead of "generally rich/poor people". Also, he's not funny.
I don’t agree with you, it takes healing to do that. If someone was forced to wear used clothes and had no other choice, when they do have a choice they will not want to wear used clothes for fun because it triggers their traumas. When they are healed and restored they can enjoy everything without the triggers but it takes time and healing from traumas. Your mum may not have been traumatized by those things or she was already healed when she could afford to have the choice to choose what to wear. If you are traumatized by living in a remote cold countryside house with nothing to eat, the last thing you will want to do is camp out in the cold unless you are healed.
What Etunu said. Plus, there are always exceptions.
@@slurmsmackenzie5729 he's African. There is an extremely high and linear correlation between race and class. It might as well be the same thing. As a matter of fact, black people in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Zambia etc. were literally 3rd class citizens, (Indians were 2nd).
Poor people habits become trendy or environmentally friendly when done by rich people, mainly rich white people
I feel like North Americans in particular have no sense of style place or occasion. The African women that I know from Kenya and other parts of Africa dress to perfection. They’re working their farms in dresses. I have yet to see somebody who is very impoverished from Africa, that dresses as poorly as we North Americans do. I dress every day when I go out. I dress more like a European of Italian ,French, Polish, Ukrainian woman would. I live in Canada and I am always being commented on because I dress well. I feel more confident that way. Part of it may be because my mom was raised by Victorian parents. She never worked outside of the home, but if she went downtown, she put a suit on. Today women wear sweatpants or yoga pants and think it’s the height of fashion. It’s so disappointing that we have lost any sense of style. I love listening to Bill Burr because he tells it as it is. White men need Black women in order to show them style. He’s married to a Black woman. She wouldn’t be seen in public with him with some of the things he wore. She has upped his game😉I love listening to conversations like this. It’s so illuminating. I wish I had a quarter of the style sense that many African women and black American women have.🤷🏼♀️
Trevor Noah and his constant word salad. Neal Brennan came in and effortlessly straightened everything out
The nicest house I've ever been to was owned by a black family. I felt too scummy to sit on their beautiful, antique furniture. (but I get what he's saying)
Goodness knows I’ve been mistaken for homeless a few times. I didn’t exactly choose that look, I just didn’t repair my green jacket for ten years and didn’t have a clue what it would make me look like. But could get away with that shit. Mostly because I was unemployed.
Dudes triggered by a copper sink and some antiques 🤣 🤣 🤣
"Shabby chic" it used to be called
One person's junk is another person's treasure. I don't agree with Trevor on this one, but I do understand that how you choose to process your environment is instrumental in your perspective.
Solid hardwood if freaking expensive new. If buying lower quality, synthetic material BS gives you peace of mind, our whole economy is here to support you.
Too often people conflate rich with white. Not all white people are rich. As Theo Von said I know some people had sweaters but I was 2 tank tops in the winter. As someone who grew up in a trailer park and got picked on by rich suburban black kids for being "white trash" I can say its not always so simple.
"Ordinary Use"- Alice Walker
lol, what? That's just decor and aesthetics. They're not thinking that deeply about the product. Antique aesthetic isn't equivalent to growing up poor with "worn" things. What? I get what he's saying but I feel like he's conflating things a bit.
As an old white lady, I thank you. Good for me to keep learning. Not sure what I will do with my new Patina-Love Guilt, but I can work on the cluelessness.
I buy things that look distressed because im distressed
Seems you're making yourself more distressed. Catch 22
It is not white thing, it is rich thing.
So being poor is something only black people experience?
Damn, all these years with a single mom and two brothers in a single room I thought we were poor and now I learn we only had garbage, cause my privileged mom thought it was fancy.
We weren‘t white trash we were minimalistic antiquarians. Thx Trevor!
Some but not all comments seem to miss that they're not necessarily the target of this commentary...
IF we see black ceramic Panthers all over are we supposed to say a black person lives here?
I'm curious... how are people who wish to maintain old things in an effort to avoid consumerism perceived? I guess there is a bit of privelege embedded there, but in my mind, trying to reduce consumption is fundamentally against the privilege Trevor speaks of.
This whole conversation makes "flex culture" make sense😐
Hard pass….. love the channel tho! ❤🫡
2 weeks in a row hard pass.
Thanks for the engagement, but nobody fucking cares that you don't plan on consuming. Good day. Sounds like someone's "distressed"😂😂😂😂
No one cares that you don't plan on consuming.
Lol not nearly as much as is assumed
Trevor is a LIAR
In black South African homes we have antiques and it is classic and homely
Yes and we chose it and hold onto it regardless of economic status:
- decor ware
- blankets
- beadwork
As tradition, after funerals, we black South Africans pass on the late’s possessions to living family members
This from a guy who earned handsomely from the British public (BBC licence payers and tour attendees), and then deliberately ghosted the Queen's passing, and then waged war on British colonialism. His backstory explains his POV, shared by many, but why not boycott British paydays altogether?
lol I have second hand things because it’s cheaper.
I though you meant that you had some racist antiques... like an SS jacket or a plantation chair...
trevor noah is such a tool 🤣🤣
What the Adam Ray Background is happening?
Same thing as. When rich preppies. But very expensive clothes that. Are already torn and have holes, really faded also. In them. Like bum style. Just preppy??? And that's suppose to be fashion. By the way!!!😂😂😂😂 Never got all that.
He’s so intelligent
Cosplaying poverty
Neal, any black women comedians coming soon?
Omit “comedian” from that request and it’ll be far more realistic to achieve.
@@thedonbishop55Ouch!
@@thedonbishop55Little bit racist to say that don't you think?
@@johnbookout3535you're revealing too much of yourself John, shouldn't have replied to this one
@@itcouldbelupus2842 are you 12, lupus?
I'd also suggest that things from a hundred years ago represent an era that was simpler for white people and more dangerous for black people. Which would also play a role in perception. Lady Antebellum could never have been a soul group!
I LOVE trevor noah but EVERYBODY used basins back in the day!! 🤷♂️🤷♂️
antics not antiques 😂😂😂😂
Trevor always speaking real
I don't think it's a class aspect, I've know plenty of white folks that have been poor their entire life thst like antique and vintage things, it's not class based, it's cultural and sub cultural, I've also known very poor whites who do the opposite. It's not that simple
Trevor is conflating "white" with inherently class privileged, even though white folks, even poor have a certain level of racial privilege, you can discount class aspects as if all white folks are middle class or above.
Wow, Trevor Noah brought up race for no reason? I'm absolutely shocked
Race for non white comedians is like gay/trans for white comedians
He's a cardboard cutout poes.
Stunned! Stunned, I tell ya!
This comment is just as shocking
I refuse to spend money on pre-beat-up shite
It kind of obviously sounds like Society is on his mind 24/7..Who goes into a house and looks at things that they didnt own or see growing up?..Does he ever turns that off?
Got your point- and - New stuff is all built crappy and has tons of plastic and chemicals in it- proud of the banged up tables my grandfather in law built in the 40’s and oh well that a friend missed the coaster and made a tequila ring on one of them. Love my 02 and 94 Swedish utility vehicles (Volvo station wagons). And my husband’s original Ludwig drums from the 60’s. So yeah I white-ly resemble your remarks but old stuff is cool and I’ve liked it my whole (au) life so what ever. Fun to find out you too are on the spectrum. Boys get diagnosed. Girls get misdiagnose w psychological fabrication disorders and nonsense labels and can’t access md evals because we have FRIENDs and then we get burnout from lifelong masking and ptsd from fawn response exploitation. These comments are male centric because you are male and my furniture is white peoples furniture because I’m white (and not rich enough to buy new even if the flame retardants didn’t give me migraines. ) So whatever- I get your point and happy your friend got the joke.
Feeling just a little defensive here about my stuff - my house is metal to be fire safe and we used corten to make it look rusted- I’m sure that would fit into your ridicule about fake patina but as a sculptor patina is a thing I take joy in and at least it doesn’t look like an industrial building and it blends into the trees.
Shit, I love old globes.. maps that don’t have updated countries and borders..
Neal looks like my neighbor's wife. She a recovering addict
I like dressing like a slob to mess with people’s perception of me. There’s nothing like wearing a Skull t-shirt at important meetings. Never judge a book by its cover 😜🤣
Or let me put it this way, not al racial differences are racist or have a racist intent.
People like different things and how much $$ you have has no effect on that. It's usually because it's not the norm that makes ppl like antiques ppl like to be different and or stand out. Noah just thinks white ppl are better than him
They're not saying it's $$ that has an effect on it at all. You completely missed the point.
@@vicjames3256 you should watch it again
I have old Jim Crow signs in my house ....
Some people used to call TN a comedian but you sorta gotta be funny to earn that title. At lest he's given up that presence now and has come clean as a want-to-be yet ineffectual activist.
Oh man oh man!
I love Trevor. I shop at thrift stores to save money. Just sayin'
Trevor makes a lot of false assumptions.
About what? He had a different perspective, he's not just flat-out wrong or false