@Corporal Adrian Shepard comedy is actually a good basis for political discussion, that's why many jokes are about the real world, because you can view things differently through the lense of humour
@@llamadasinrespuesta4631 i know, right? that whole site (at least whatever’s popular and shit like that) is based upon whether you’re racist or not. people cave into the status shit and hive minds like that way too easily.
SAHLISS Precisely Edit: Philadelphia 76ers Allen Iverson EMBODIED that culture and do not forget the corn roll braids under those du-rags. A.I. Reeboks made Air Jordans become totally irrelevant which is very powerful influence. [Stephen Colbert attempted to key ppl in on his sneaker influence]
This reminds me of the vice principal of my high school. He was one of the few black faculty members, and he wore bowties and had an OUTSTANDING mustache He used to talk about how in his day they didn’t fight, they’d just post up on the corner and break dance at each other when they wanted to settle beef I kid you not, this man proceeded to start popping and locking and moonwalking in the hallway and our collective minds melted on the spot
There are still some good rappers that are gansters first rappers second. However generally they aren't super talented when it comes to vocals and lyrics, which is why they aren't as big compared to people who just do music
Two things I miss the most in America. 80s black guys and 80s white girls. Not at the same time because that would not sit well with 80s parents but they were both pretty cool to say the least.
Ironic because on my feed last week was youtubes banner for Black History month, and below it were like 3 videos of some black dudes robbing various stores (because I subscribe to my local news).
1940s black guys: Jazz 1950s black guys: Soul 1960s black guys: More Soul 1970s black guys: Disco 1980s black guys: Aerobics 1990s black guys: Gangsters 2000s black guys: R&B Cranking 2010s black guys: Trap 2020s black guys: TikTok
@redrox3312rock,blues,motown,jazz and more. 50's was the birth of modern blues with the 3 kings, muddy waters, buddy guy, John lee hooker, howlin wolf, Bo diddly i could go on and on
Yeah, I missed the late 90's - early 2000's Stewie when "New Stewie" came along. I'll admit the first few gay jokes "New Stewie" made were funny then it got old and stale quick after that. The "New Stewie" turned me away from Family Guy.
Very true. My godmother and her family are black and the 90s basically didn’t happen to her family. Which is a good thing as they kept being good people.
Ulises Montesarchio ...but, the 2000's police have an entire publicy exposed government backed corruption that excuses the killing of Black people and if they're ever really questioned they get a random Black guy to complain about Blacks in Baltimore or Chicago?
lelennyfox34 ...We live in the information age. You can look up the "truth" yourself. How about looking into the real results that congress hid in the nationwide investigation into how many police departments have been infiltrated by White Nationalists, the KKK, and any other grouo focused on the perpetuation on White Supremacy. It's all there for ya but, it's easier to poo poo it and as Dwhite Goidman said from the movie Dogeball, "...touche".
50s Black Guys - Smooth Jazz 60s Black Guys - Peace and Love 70s Black Guys - Disco, Funk, and Soul 80s Black Guys - Breakdancing and Hip Hop 90s Black Guys - New Jack Swing and West Coast Hip Hop
I remember when I transformed into a 90s black guy from an 80s black guy. Some girl turned me down because I wasn’t dangerous enough for her. Now we’re happily married with 4 kids and a dog name skip
This seems to be satirizing the public and media perception of American black men hip hop artists in the 80s vs the 90s. I mean it's kinda of true. Most of the 80s, except the late 80s, rap was seen as fun, lighthearted, very pop and family friendly. The gangsta rap stuff started around 1987, 1988, and then exploded in the 90s.
@@Knightgang5431 nah 90s black guys are tough. All action no talk. Protecting the Griffin family home from 2 guys tryna dance on Lois's baby? nahhhhhhhh
This was a comedic reflection of how black men were viewed in music in the general eye of the media and the world from the 80s to the 90s! A stark contrast of how Hip Hop stood in the 80s vs the 90s. The 80s rappers actually smiled, were upbeat, loved to dance and were laid back. Where as The 90s rappers were always serious, angry, hardcore and never smiled!
Yes, and actually rock music and rap music both experienced a drastic change in look and sound during the transition from the 80's to the 90's. And i think overall both rock artists and rap artists from the 90's were marketed as tougher, edgier, and overall more authentic compared to their 80's counterparts. You could do a comparison between a band like Poison and a band like Nirvana and the contrast would be similar to the joke in this episode.
80s cats were raw as fuck... Slick Rick shot his own cousin. Rakim always had a piece on him, and was open to scrap anyone. New York and LA both had a sky high murder rate in the 80s.
@@AztecUnshaven That's not the point he making. He talking about depiction not real life. 80s rapper never talked about killing,drugs,and violence. They didn't even cuss in their songs. Yet they were surrounded by serial killers and the crack epidemic. 90s rapper loved talking about killing, selling drugs,and violence. They glorified violence. Rappers still do that today. And its not only a hip hop thing its America in general. America in the 80s was depicted as model citizens but when the 90s happened people loved seeing violence and destruction in the media.
@Wobbuffet It wasn't for no reason. Its alot of things that happened in the 70s and 80s that made killers. Crack,neglect,racism,families being destroyed,no leader,government infiltration. The reason I say no leader is because gangs doesn't mean a bad thing. Gangs were depicted as being good. For example: Most black gangs like the crips and GDs origins are black panthers. Crip stands for community resources for independent people. GD stands for Growth and Development. They actually helped and defended their communities from racist people and corrupt governments. Due to black panther getting hijacked and leaders being took down nobody had a leadership mentality so they basically were scared and tried to hold on to it but they ended up having conflict and killing eachother then gangs like bloods and BDs were formed now thats when gang wars started happening. Then you add in government putting crack in these neighborhoods now you got broken homes and weak minded people that just lost their leader. So now they selling drugs and running into gangs
@@Stunt877 we have to keep in mind those type of raps didn't start in the 90s. KRS One already had Criminal Minded in '86, and Ice T was rapping gang politics in '88 with "Colors."
2010s Black Guy: WorldStarHipHop, DJ Akademiks, Complex, Jordans, Lit, Fam, Boy Get Your *Insert Insult* Lookin ass, Trap Music, Drill Music, GTA 5, Claims Rap Music Pre 2013 Is Trash, NY memes, Designer Belts, Supreme, Skinny Jeans, Extra Small Shirts
You know that's the progression right? Kung fu...otaku...pretty similar substances. Teens, smokes weed out of an apple. Teens grown up, smokes weed out of a bong. Lol
@FZ CBH Actually, the peak of overt autone in Rap & Pop was the Late 2000's - Early 2010's. Rebecca Black & Young Thug ruined it for many people. Autotune started trending when "Believe" by Cher came out in the Late 90's.
80s Black Guys: Prince, Micheal Jackson, Slick Rick, Run DMC, Eddie Murphy, De La Soul, Ice-T, Flava Flav, Heavy D, New Edition, and Rick James 90s Black Guys: Tupac Shakur, Biggie Smalls, Boyz II Men, Puff Daddy, Mobb Deep, Jamie Foxx, MC Hammer, Coolio, Dr.Dre, Snoop "Doggy" Dogg, Ice Cube, Easy-E, Will Smith, Busta Rhymes and LL Cool J.
@Tony Random There was twice as many murders in 1990 than today. 1968 and today are about the same number wise, but since there is only half the people, it was much more violent also. Same amount of violence, half the people, more violence. The most violent and bloodiest era in US history was 1978-1993
@@yes-qw6om 1980's-90's were much worse, the real Wild West days. Tupac Shakur shot two cops and the judge basically gave him a High 5 and said the gangster cops needed to be shot.
@@BreadShowOfficial I forgot the name, but it’s about Lois becoming a surrogate for her old friend. It got banned because it included abortion as the subject.
Just being honest, I think that black people had a much better more positive respectable image prior to the 1990's, at least as they appeared on TV and in mainstream culture. It was then during the early-mid 90s that gangster rap became a mainstream thing that black youth in paticular all seemed to get sucked into. This idea that it's somehow cool and part of their culture to be a criminal gangster thug or at least dress and act like one. It got even worse in the 2000's and never really seemed to go away. Music went from Motown, Soul, Jazz, Gospel, Blues, to mutha fuka mutha fuka..blah blah blah. Even as a kid I noticed this shift and wondered what the hell happened. Not just music in black culture but all music across the board shifted from upbeat positive passionate music to grungy whinny trashy ghetto crap and even to this day it never really recovered. Such music may have originally had it's roots in truly new and geniune things, as true forms of art and culture. However I feel once it became more corporate and mainstream the whole message and direction began to change completly. A conspiracy to dumb down and emotionally desensitize the masses if you ask me and perhaps even an intentional move to try and make black people look really stupid. So today there's now an entire generation of teens and young adults who's taste in music is about as shallow as an empty kiddie pool. An entire generation that acts and behaves as if they have been completly lobotomized. Every year it seems there's some new ghetto retarded song out that all the kids and teens claim to love like a bunch of mindless zombies.
It's called "indoctrination" and it's been present in western media for decades, though in recent years it's become a lot more blatant. You've stumbled onto the truth here my friend and believe me this type of thing isn't just restricted to rap music. Almost everything we see in advertising, TV, movies and publications is just a ploy to make us think a certain way and to buy things we don't need. The ones who run these media outlets want us to be mindless, materialistic sheep, so we don't notice the fact that we're all being scammed and manipulated on a daily basis.
Mike Angelo Neither. Both sides are controlled by the same people and will only bring more of the same. The last time a president tried to make some real changes, he got his brains blown out in broad daylight. It's for this reason why many people voted for Trump, simply because he wasn't a politician and has been calling out the problems of the US for years. However he could easily be just as controlled as the other politicians, so it's just a case of watching what he does and hoping for the best.
Honestly, this violent rap didn't get started until the very late 80s, when NWA and others got going. Suddenly rap went from bouncy and fun to shooting profanity around and talking about committing crimes. Many early African American rappers have talked online about how horrified they are that criminal behavior and violence against women is being glorified repeatedly in recent decades.
It was really the *end of the Cold War* in 1991 that changed everything. Namely, with the fall of the Soviet Union, American culture began to replace *patriotism* with *lust* . Suddenly, rap music wasn't so much "Pump up the Volume" as it was "Let's Talk about Sex."
@@grantorino2325 I would argue that patriotism took a huge nosedive in 2012 after the rise of BLM & identity politics. During the war in Iraq, many rappers were openly patriotic and we had a patriotic rap-group in the Early 00's called The Diplomats, who sampled "We Are The Champions". Trayvon Martin's death, identity politics and political divide & bias has arguably had a bigger impact on society than 9/11 and the fall of the Soviet Union. Nowadays, it's very easy to get into in a heated argument on race or politics with family & strangers. "Suddenly, rap music wasn't so much "Pump up the Volume" as it was "Let's Talk about-" But a lot of R&B music was blatantly s- ual as well before the Late 80's. (Rick James, Prince, Vanity 6, etc...) Hip Hop was still in its infancy before the Late 80's, and it was mostly just dance-music and an extension of Disco with rhyming.
@@Galidorquest We should have never been in Iraq. I'm a proud American, but what we did to the Middle East is despicable. I know the last few presidents all had their fair share of drone strikes and destruction in the Middle East. What's also sickeningly ironic is that "The Patriot Act" got passed after 9/11. An act that was detrimental to all Americans, we gave up the rights to privacy and autonomy with that act. Although I know America has done some really fucked up things, not just to other nations, but to American citizens, just like mostly every country has(Albeit not to the extent America has). Yet I'm a proud American, I wish Patriotism wasn't looked down on these days, every nation has done shitty things, it doesn't mean you shouldn't be proud of the nation you hail from, and that you shouldn't disregard the good your nation has done for the world and for its people. The way I see it, if American citizens have a problem with our nation, then it's their duty to make it right, not bitch and moan about it. That's what freedom is all about. I don't think patriotism took a nosedive, I think it's been a gradual decline over the decades. I understand why you think it has took a nosedive, but I believe that the reason people think that is due to social media, where everyone's thoughts are heard and spread. Social media has caused us to see some things as bigger than they truly are, and I'm guilty of that too.
Interestingly enough, street/violent crime was actually statistically worse in the 1980s 💀 New York City and Los Angeles were the equivalent of Detroit crime for crime, if that says anything.
The red 80s' black guy was voiced by Phil LaMarr. Known for roles such as Static Stock, Samurai Jack, Hermes from "Futurama", Wilt from "Foster's Home", and my personal favorite Bolbi Stroganovsky.
"Run 80's black guys! You're no match for the 90's black guys!" How about the 60's black guys like the black panthers. They would eat the 90's black guys for breakfast.
..noo theyd try to seek peace with them and calm them down lol their anger isnt directed at them, theyd give a sympathetic bias to them just for being black
Black panthers also helped poor kids with not enough money for food, helped old ladies across the street, and were generally good and productive members of society. The only reason they have a bad reputation is because the (at the time racist) government didn't like what they were doing and so decided to try everything they could to paint them in a negative light. Sure, I'm sure a few of them were the extremists that people remember them as today but that's with literally any group in history. "The Panthers also used to ride around and follow the police. So the cops would pull over some sorry black person, and get ready to rough him up, but then there were the Panthers right behind them. Watching, armed to the teeth, and citing legal statutes." thegreenlion14.tumblr.com/post/158950674704/occupythedisco-bossymarmalade-goddesscru
@@chrisrj9871 honestly the 80s liked to cover up the dark side of America at that time, that’s why in the videos it’s always happy and jolly, meanwhile the 90s weren’t as bad but people were getting more comfortable exposing the dark side of America, so therefore the 90s looks worse but it really wasn’t. Blacks couldn’t care less in the 80s because the Hollywood idea of constant joy surrounded them
@@4o8.sebastian No you are wrong. The 80's was indeed a much, much more open-minded and better time than the 90's. Pop culture in the 90's and beyond was almost 100% garbage. 80's didn't cover up anything, that was earlier American culture way back in the 50's. where everyone acted fake like they had perfect lives but it was a lie
@@4o8.sebastian white pop culture was kinda similar. White 80s culture was super plastic and ignorant while white early 90s grunge culture was really socially conscious, dark and authentic.
@@goat504 nah, 80s guys were ruthless. There weren’t enough laws and strategies to go against war on drugs and gang wars so the system wasn’t prepared. That Biden crime bill and 3 strike law slowed things down a bit by the mid 90s
Well um actually to clarify by 1990 crime peaked at the beginning of the 90s decade and would stay very high for the next 3 years,you can see this in new york,la,chicago, and so on
The Crack epidemic was still in full swing until the late 1990s and several bills passed liked the crime bill and gun control laws were targeting African Americans. The 90s saw the militarization of the police and the LA riots. Anybody who remembers the 90s, knows it was bad. Bangers everywhere. Just listen to the music of the time period. The joke was 80s hip-hop was about staying away from drugs, 90s hip-hop was about slinging dope because there was no other option, 00s hip-hop was about getting rich slinging dope and today's hip-hop is about doing dope.
This gives some context to the golden age hip hop I listen to and how gangster rap got so huge around the turn of the decade. It reflects how the growing drug markets fundamentally changed the black community, with both drug use and drug dealing became increasingly common. Sad to see.
how dide it go so bas in just a decade in the late 80s the crack epidemic realy set the stage for the 90s drug and gang problems and from thier it was a wrap
The CEO of Budweiser is a drug dealer too. But he has a permission slip from the government for it. Crack users and dealers had no political capital and became pawns for those who did. The drugs didn't ruin the communities, the government did, all the while protecting traffickers of powder cocaine.
80s: Promoting positivity during the struggle(Dancing, singing, positive vibes to the community) 90s: (Surviving the hard times in the community, to support everyone and themselves) 00s: Partying hard, wearing oversized shirts, white tees, having grillz 10s: Beefing on Social media, all talk but no action(Wannabe 90s guys)
Seems every group is less optimistic and more aggressive these days, regardless of race. The 80s had their issues, but at least people weren't doing cancel culture, nonstop encouraging destructive behavior, and never showing respect to their elders among others. We really, REALLY need to reassess what our culture is promoting and emphasizing.
@@thunderbird1921 it will rubber band back in some time. Though the sanitized bubble that is the modern internet is artificially keeping us in this stage where everyone is angry at each other but can't speak their mind openly. If that were to change, the memes that leak out of the deeper internet without having the politically incorrect parts censored, which would expose the youth, who only use the surface level centralized platforms, and dispell the fear of being life ruined for making a tasteless joke. Jokes would get more and more vulgar, reflecting the societal tensions we are experiencing today. This would lead to an accelerated collapse of the current cultural zeitgeist where all that bottled up anger is let out. This would be scary, but it's inevitable and will only be worse the longer it's delayed. I'm not saying there would be much more violence, we already have that sadly. But there would likely be a brief culture shock where the people scramble to figure out what direction they want to go, and eventually realize that we're all people and people will say shit and that's ok. And they will also realize there is no need to fight each other when that's just what their leaders want them to do to keep peoples eyes off of their own wrongdoings. The establishment as a whole is garbage, and they only survive under the illusion that all of the problems they cause are actually the fault of the opposite political party, effectively pacifying half of the people who voted for them. Then they do stupid shit, get voted out, and the new winner says everything is the losers fault, continuing the cycle. I wrote this in a family guy clip comment section lmao Also don't think I'm incoherently using big words to sound smart it's just me being ocd while writing 😂
Moorm Nothing That's my favorite thing about African American culture, how it helped engineer what we call Rock n Roll. Hell, look at Jimi Hendrix, arguably the greatest damn guitarist in history.
Yes. The skit represents how our culture generally went from positive, innocent role models like The Jacksons to glamorizing the thug life since the NWA.
They needed the '70s black guys who knew martial arts
And have Afros with sideburns 😂
😂
They had The Glow!
Black Dynamite
1770
The 80’s guys were wholesome I hope they’re okay
They were to kill an unborn baby, against lois's will.
@@enemyofdavis6830
Peter definitely didn't tell them that. He just told them to dance
@Corporal Adrian Shepard comedy is actually a good basis for political discussion, that's why many jokes are about the real world, because you can view things differently through the lense of humour
@@everinghall8622 it's official TH-cam is reddit 2.
@@llamadasinrespuesta4631 i know, right? that whole site (at least whatever’s popular and shit like that) is based upon whether you’re racist or not. people cave into the status shit and hive minds like that way too easily.
I kinda enjoyed the 80's guys.
were they big?
I mean really, who wouldn’t?
There ya go 1k likes
Profile picture checks out.
I like them too
80’s black guys = Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo
90’s black guys = Boyz in the Hood
2000's Black Guys = 50 Cent
2010's Black Guys = Kendrick Lamar
@@johnwebb2442 2020s Black Guys: Lil Nas X
@@ericmonaco4509oh nahhh 💀💀💀
@@johnwebb24422020s black guys=JID
60's Black guy = Dr. MLK
70's Black guy = Muhammad Ali
80's black guy = Michael Jackson
90's black guy = Tupac
00's black guy = Eminem
2010s Black guy = *Nicki Minaj*
2020's black guy = Richard Spencer
2010s Black Guy Shaun King
deadbutmoving what about biggie.
deadbutmoving also 60s should have been chuck berry, 70s should have been Jimi.
00's black guy would have on an oversized white tee, baggy as hell pants, du-rag & a boost mobile flip phone.
SAHLISS
Precisely
Edit: Philadelphia 76ers Allen Iverson EMBODIED that culture and do not forget the corn roll braids under those du-rags.
A.I. Reeboks made Air Jordans become totally irrelevant which is very powerful influence. [Stephen Colbert attempted to key ppl in on his sneaker influence]
Daz Krackin I know I did.
Daz Krackin yep those was the days. 3x tall tees
and Timberland boots.
Accurate to the tee
*Get it?*
Thanks for showing the actual clip. Instead of 5 extra minutes leading up to it.
2011zeldafan thought same damn thing
Or when the clip is in the middle and then there’s still like a couple minutes left
2011zeldafann Those kinds of videos need to just go away.
I didnt understood the joke
2011zeldafan 900 like
Dragonball Z doesn't get enough credit for saving so many 90's black kids from the thug life.
That and Pokémon.
someone said this to me once about they boys and kingdom hearts 1/2 on ps2....
😂 you could catch dbZ and still have enough time to thug outside. 30 minutes isn't a lot out of 24 hours.
@@RedFuzeGaming nah. You might be confused. People were sliding around to 60s/70s music. The media doesn't always matter.
Bruh this comment makes no sense
Wow that's so wrong. Can't believe these writers still have a job. Everyone knows 90's black guys hold their guns sideways.
That was early 2000s dumbass
@Brylle Cruz Then you still need your facts straight. Though I also thought it started in the (late) 90s
Everyone here except the commenter and @Brylle Cruz are dumbasses
Brylle is also a dumbass, couldn't tell that Wakka wasn't replying to her and accused em of being a redditor.
That's actually not true, the whole sideways gun thing started in movies.
One 70's black guy would have finished them all. Black Dynamite!!!!!!
rico Pasi ain’t that the truth
Shonuff
rico Pasi But black dynamite, I sell drugs in this community
They wouldn't have impressed Pam Grier!
Yep
1940's black guys: *J A Z Z*
@White Star Alliance My man has a degree in niggaology
@@satan8142 lmao
@@satan8142 oof
Well Satan didn't use the hard -er, so maybe he aight.
Also 1950's black guys: Juke Joint.
1940s black guys: Can I please have a crumb of civil rights ma'am
This reminds me of the vice principal of my high school. He was one of the few black faculty members, and he wore bowties and had an OUTSTANDING mustache
He used to talk about how in his day they didn’t fight, they’d just post up on the corner and break dance at each other when they wanted to settle beef
I kid you not, this man proceeded to start popping and locking and moonwalking in the hallway and our collective minds melted on the spot
Sounds like a really cool teacher.
EDIT: I mean vice principal.
We need more men like him.
Damn so in a world without drugs and gangs, the black community would settle disputes with stylish dance offs.
Why can't we live in that world?
Seems awesome
Wherever your vice principal is, I hope he's doing good
This is SO true. Being black in the 80s was all about rhythm and swag. Being black in the 90s was about the thug life.
What about the 2000s?
@@TheKenji2221 bruh what even
@@PresbianTier 2000s black guys were corny af
@@PresbianTier Kanye was the end of the 50 cent gangster era.
@@michaeljeffery7466 huh? How does that answer my question?
1990: gangsters trying to be rappers
2020: rappers trying to be gangsters
Oh how times have changed
Yes i agree every single black American male is 100% like this
I pray to god that thats sarcastic
There are still some good rappers that are gansters first rappers second. However generally they aren't super talented when it comes to vocals and lyrics, which is why they aren't as big compared to people who just do music
@@erboch7124 Thats like saying every white person sleeps with their relatives
@@Thechosen0010 Correct. But you can't generalize white people. That's unfair
I like how Peter convinced the 80s black guys by just telling them they were dancing “for the kids”
Underrated😂
Your pfp makes me want to commit war crimes in iraq
@Corporal Adrian Shepard its obviously a catgirl profile picture.
@@MisterHunterWolf no it is anime, meaning it is of a japanese origin. This means the cat thingy could be a guy
Two things I miss the most in America. 80s black guys and 80s white girls. Not at the same time because that would not sit well with 80s parents but they were both pretty cool to say the least.
80s: Were here to dance for the kids!
90s: and so I started blasting.
Interesting cross-over...
00s black guys: PUMP PUMP PUMP IT UP
🤣🤣🤣
R. Kelly in 2005: AND SO I PULLED OUT MY GUN!
... all over kids 💀
TH-cam: Celebrate Black history and creativity
Ironic because on my feed last week was youtubes banner for Black History month, and below it were like 3 videos of some black dudes robbing various stores (because I subscribe to my local news).
What history? any thing significant thats black comes out of a white country.
@@DaveSmith-cp5kj that's so fucking funny
@@maninthemask6275 said sarcastic question is still a stupid one
@@maninthemask6275 Look at all the innovations that came from Africa, such as...um...
From Vice City to San Andreas.
Vice City from a moral standpoint was better.
Not good, but better than San Andreas.
I loved vice city
Exactly
LeftAlone SkyHigh Can't complain with that radio.
Demon Rantz exactly
1940s black guys: Jazz
1950s black guys: Soul
1960s black guys: More Soul
1970s black guys: Disco
1980s black guys: Aerobics
1990s black guys: Gangsters
2000s black guys: R&B Cranking
2010s black guys: Trap
2020s black guys: TikTok
facts
50s black guys were also Rock, right?
60s is Funk
@redrox3312rock,blues,motown,jazz and more. 50's was the birth of modern blues with the 3 kings, muddy waters, buddy guy, John lee hooker, howlin wolf, Bo diddly i could go on and on
@redrox3312 correct
So 90's black guys got that stormtrooper aim?
The Stalker Indeed they do.
nah just the aim of regular black people
The Stalker
Everybody in family guy has it
Yes but they got the hold wrong. They shoot sideways
The Stalker YES! OMG, YES! Drive bys hit all over the place back then. Like 2 innocent fatalities for every enemy wounded.
The way they missed every shot was more accurate than anything
Tell that to Tupac.
Lololol tell that to all the kids in driveby shootings fuck that tupac comment
@@beefbite8326 someone got upsetti.
@@SpaceBaked Was it your tummy
@@beefbite8326 yis.
"Run 2010s Stewie! You're no match for 1999s Stewie at all!"
Basically 2000s stewie
LOL! So true.
I like the gay Stewie jokes but I also am nostalgic for evil stewie
Yeah, I missed the late 90's - early 2000's Stewie when "New Stewie" came along. I'll admit the first few gay jokes "New Stewie" made were funny then it got old and stale quick after that. The "New Stewie" turned me away from Family Guy.
Tbh 90s Stevie was prolly removed bc they were afraid of offended someone and getting cancelled honestly it’s so dumb
So true! Im a 80s black guy not many of us left since the great purge of the 90s. 😔🙏
aka the crack epidemic
Very true. My godmother and her family are black and the 90s basically didn’t happen to her family. Which is a good thing as they kept being good people.
In a world of 90s, be an 80
I call cap....you are not an "80s black guy" i doubt you're even black....cuz this is definitely *not true* its just a joke...the 80s was raw
@@princejaxisblack8789 and Reaganomics.
Can we agree that the 80's black guys' voices are smooth asf
Phil Lamar man.
50s black guy, Johnny Hartman, smoothest voice ever....
You should hear some of them from Vietnam talk they were some smooth-talking brothers
If cognac had a voice
Definitely bf material 😁
Notorious BIG wrote a song about this concept. Things done Changed.
Great album
AlwaysC0caC0la at first I read that as naruto
AlwaysC0caC0la the name of song?
+Cero No (Ser) things done changed
Nice TARDIS.
from Michael Jackson to OJ Simpson lol.
More like Michael Jackson to Tupac
So from flamboyant questionably gay to closet raging homosexual?
OJ Simpson was actually before Michael Jackson but I sort get what you're saying
Yanick Norman omg yes. Michael should be added in this scene
tfla11 to me, Tupac is the opposite of Michael Jackson
Its crazy how many establishing shots this show has, this 30 second clip both starts and ends with establishing shots
Just call the 90's police to get the job done.
Ulises Montesarchio ...but, the 2000's police have an entire publicy exposed government backed corruption that excuses the killing of Black people and if they're ever really questioned they get a random Black guy to complain about Blacks in Baltimore or Chicago?
lelennyfox34 ...www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2017/07/20/us/baltimore-cop-allegedly-planting-evidence/index.html
Spit my drink laughing! Bravo my brother!
lelennyfox34 ...We live in the information age. You can look up the "truth" yourself. How about looking into the real results that congress hid in the nationwide investigation into how many police departments have been infiltrated by White Nationalists, the KKK, and any other grouo focused on the perpetuation on White Supremacy. It's all there for ya but, it's easier to poo poo it and as Dwhite Goidman said from the movie Dogeball, "...touche".
The 90's police got away with a lot more.
I hate the racism in this show, the 90’s black guys didn’t even hold the guns sideways, this is so racist.
LOL
Uhmm the black guys in this skit werent even holding the guns sideways lol...... u clown
@@hornypanda9545 that’s why it’s racist you dumb ass, and didn’t say they were, u clown
@@hornypanda9545 u clown
Nobody actually holds there gun like that. Your shot will be extremely inaccurate if you do.
So we’re just gonna ignore the fact that Peter was gonna have the 80s black guys break dance on top of Lois’ stomach?
Yep
That’s how it usually goes ‘round here.
I mean it is family guy
They wasnt gonna breakdance they was gonna breakback
Just a typical day in the 1980s.
50s Black Guys - Smooth Jazz
60s Black Guys - Peace and Love
70s Black Guys - Disco, Funk, and Soul
80s Black Guys - Breakdancing and Hip Hop
90s Black Guys - New Jack Swing and West Coast Hip Hop
I remember when I transformed into a 90s black guy from an 80s black guy. Some girl turned me down because I wasn’t dangerous enough for her. Now we’re happily married with 4 kids and a dog name skip
This has got to be the most wholesome comment here
yeah i was glad i read this
STFU
If youre a 90s black guy then skip has to be a pit.
@@gmfb521 skip is definitely a pit.
Nobody's gonna question how Peter somehow managed to hire both 80's and 90's black guys, and not notice he hired 2 sets of them?
Because they all look the same.(joking)
That's Peter
No, nobody will question that.. Because we have better things to do.
Its peter
He hired the 80s black guys. The 90s black guys just broke into his house
70s black guys: 🕺🏿
80s black guys: 📼
90s black guys: 🔫
Meanwhile 20s black guys: 🎷
📷📸
2020s black guys: 🌇
@@EndOfSmallSanctuary97
Yeah, it’s like they stopped progressing after the 90s.
@@matthew8153 wdym progressing
@@nonagu5704 he probably means economically and culturally black americans didn't continue to progress.
This seems to be satirizing the public and media perception of American black men hip hop artists in the 80s vs the 90s. I mean it's kinda of true. Most of the 80s, except the late 80s, rap was seen as fun, lighthearted, very pop and family friendly. The gangsta rap stuff started around 1987, 1988, and then exploded in the 90s.
NWA
holy shit no fucking way
Actually earlier, in ~1981-1985 years, before N.W.A. In 1987 started population of Gangsta Rap already by N.W.A Before it was super underground theme
why are people trying to rewrite history? black men were always portrayed as criminals, or at least they definitely were from the 60s through the 90s.
@@jal-kx6tm criminals and gangs comes in all races you ignorant clown
The amount of joke stealing in the comments is ridiculous.
It's almost like a 90s black guy was holding a gun sideways to your head.
Nice
@squiddy Getting offended are we?
Nice one lmao
😂😂😂😂
Stolen
What about the kickass 70's black guys?
Matthew Hawthorne get funky
What about '50's black guys? Oh right.. they wouldn't be allowed to walk into Peter's house.
too busy being high in a gutter
Rolling up in muscle cars
Louie armstrong
I like the accuracy of not only this episode, but the 90s black guys, hittin nothin but wall N’ door trim
🤣🤣🤣 omg yes
omg... i didn't notice.
They can’t shoot a gun😂😂😂
In what way was this episode accurate?
80s black guys need to return
hell no
@zackcis hell yeah
@@Knightgang5431 nah 90s black guys are tough. All action no talk. Protecting the Griffin family home from 2 guys tryna dance on Lois's baby? nahhhhhhhh
This video popped up from the TH-cam black history month 💀
Wonderful.
Accurate.
For once.
Hahaha black history month just confuses me like wtf I didn’t even know it was a thing 😂😂 who cares
@@BillyTheKidOfficialYT Next month it's white history month
Why is it that people with your profile pic are automatic dbags
I remember 80’s black guys, 80’s black guys were fun!
Then everything changed when the 90s attacked
Yeah, before AIDS and crack ruined everything.
@@MightGuy15 When NWA launch the gangsta rocket.
As a black person, I approve of this
As do I.
Same
As an approval, I black this.
Love the attention to detail that the 90's black guys don't start shooting until they see the other black guys dressed differently.
This was a comedic reflection of how black men were viewed in music in the general eye of the media and the world from the 80s to the 90s! A stark contrast of how Hip Hop stood in the 80s vs the 90s. The 80s rappers actually smiled, were upbeat, loved to dance and were laid back. Where as The 90s rappers were always serious, angry, hardcore and never smiled!
Yes, and actually rock music and rap music both experienced a drastic change in look and sound during the transition from the 80's to the 90's. And i think overall both rock artists and rap artists from the 90's were marketed as tougher, edgier, and overall more authentic compared to their 80's counterparts. You could do a comparison between a band like Poison and a band like Nirvana and the contrast would be similar to the joke in this episode.
80s cats were raw as fuck... Slick Rick shot his own cousin. Rakim always had a piece on him, and was open to scrap anyone. New York and LA both had a sky high murder rate in the 80s.
@@AztecUnshaven That's not the point he making. He talking about depiction not real life. 80s rapper never talked about killing,drugs,and violence. They didn't even cuss in their songs. Yet they were surrounded by serial killers and the crack epidemic. 90s rapper loved talking about killing, selling drugs,and violence. They glorified violence. Rappers still do that today. And its not only a hip hop thing its America in general. America in the 80s was depicted as model citizens but when the 90s happened people loved seeing violence and destruction in the media.
@Wobbuffet It wasn't for no reason. Its alot of things that happened in the 70s and 80s that made killers. Crack,neglect,racism,families being destroyed,no leader,government infiltration. The reason I say no leader is because gangs doesn't mean a bad thing. Gangs were depicted as being good. For example: Most black gangs like the crips and GDs origins are black panthers. Crip stands for community resources for independent people. GD stands for Growth and Development. They actually helped and defended their communities from racist people and corrupt governments. Due to black panther getting hijacked and leaders being took down nobody had a leadership mentality so they basically were scared and tried to hold on to it but they ended up having conflict and killing eachother then gangs like bloods and BDs were formed now thats when gang wars started happening. Then you add in government putting crack in these neighborhoods now you got broken homes and weak minded people that just lost their leader. So now they selling drugs and running into gangs
@@Stunt877 we have to keep in mind those type of raps didn't start in the 90s. KRS One already had Criminal Minded in '86, and Ice T was rapping gang politics in '88 with "Colors."
2010s Black Guy: WorldStarHipHop, DJ Akademiks, Complex, Jordans, Lit, Fam, Boy Get Your *Insert Insult* Lookin ass, Trap Music, Drill Music, GTA 5, Claims Rap Music Pre 2013 Is Trash, NY memes, Designer Belts, Supreme, Skinny Jeans, Extra Small Shirts
Dank Dank and Young thug
Let me catch anybody black wearing supreme in 2017 I dare a nigga to even come within 10 feet of me wearing that shit.
Nigga thats like 2013 to now
L00NEY GOONZ right 😂😂
Dank Dank Every GTA before V > V
And the 2000s black guys stand on them Baltimore corners, slinging dope.
Ill give u that
String, where's Wallace? String, where the F is Wallace?!?
Look at me LOOK AT ME
Kiano Uy Then get robbed by Omar or yell,"Omar Coming" and run away
This man's avatar is tom green in freddy got fingered lul
And the 2010s black guys buy it from them...
80’s black guys: killers. On the dance floor.
90’s black guys: killers.
The whole black community got recommended this 😂
Facts lmao
Ong😭😭
I'm not black tho I'm Asian
Yangic0rn Ik other their other races I’m just playing around
AEN gone lie. It did and I clicked it. No regerts.
70s Black Guys = Kung Fu Films and Funky Music Fans.
2010s Black Guys = Otaku's and Autotune Sound like Fans.
You know that's the progression right? Kung fu...otaku...pretty similar substances.
Teens, smokes weed out of an apple.
Teens grown up, smokes weed out of a bong. Lol
@@anthonyzullo Yup, that both are East Asians made with epic fighting scenes.
Black people love Asian culture
@@ravravean7368 they love eastern and western Asian cultures but not sure if they love middle and north Asians cultures.
@FZ CBH Actually, the peak of overt autone in Rap & Pop was the Late 2000's - Early 2010's. Rebecca Black & Young Thug ruined it for many people. Autotune started trending when "Believe" by Cher came out in the Late 90's.
80s Black Guys:
Prince, Micheal Jackson, Slick Rick, Run DMC, Eddie Murphy, De La Soul, Ice-T, Flava Flav, Heavy D, New Edition, and Rick James
90s Black Guys:
Tupac Shakur, Biggie Smalls, Boyz II Men, Puff Daddy, Mobb Deep, Jamie Foxx, MC Hammer, Coolio, Dr.Dre, Snoop "Doggy" Dogg, Ice Cube, Easy-E, Will Smith, Busta Rhymes and LL Cool J.
Should've closed both lists with LL Cool J.
90's White Guys: Michael Jackson
WebVMan Bruh, MJ is still black in the inside.
I'm confused as to why Jamie Foxx is considered a 90's black guy.
OkayNiceOne Because he made his debut in Living Color and have his own sitcom.
The 80's and early 90's were both the most violent times in US history
Besides our 2 wars ? 🤨
Yeah 80s black guys were just as violent as 90s, it's just that gangsta rap talking about killing each other was most prominent in the 90s.
@Tony Random There was twice as many murders in 1990 than today.
1968 and today are about the same number wise, but since there is only half the people, it was much more violent also. Same amount of violence, half the people, more violence.
The most violent and bloodiest era in US history was 1978-1993
i thought it would be a mobster era like the 20s
@@yes-qw6om 1980's-90's were much worse, the real Wild West days.
Tupac Shakur shot two cops and the judge basically gave him a High 5 and said the gangster cops needed to be shot.
it's funny because it's true
no it isn't 80s black guys was gangsta too
this is true
Bo Lep I dont watch shit movies
Before and after the crack epidemic
Garrett Gregory Oh-ho-hooo, yes!
run 80 black guys your no match for the 90 black guys
ventedhorizon 64 Run* 80’s* you’re* 90’s*
Yes, I too watched the video
RUNNING IN THE 90S
Smoked Towers LMAO BEST COMMENT ON ALL OF TH-cam
XDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
"You picked the wrong house, fool!" Some random 90's black guy
big smoke!?!?
"Yee Yee ass haircut" 2010s black guy
You can’t tell me modern Family Guy doesn’t have good jokes every once in a while.
Modern? this was 10 seasons ag0
@@CarolynDestruction Still, this was during the time fans were complaining about newer Family Guy not being funny.
What episode was this?
@@BreadShowOfficial I forgot the name, but it’s about Lois becoming a surrogate for her old friend. It got banned because it included abortion as the subject.
@@TheDragonman104 oh ok
the twist is, it's the same guys just they aged 10 years and got into crime after loosing the reck center.
XD!!
Rec. Short for Recreational
@@Alizudo yes thank you for calling out autocorrect cuz whether you believe me or not I typed rec lol
@@josephn.9618 LOL
Thats tends to happen when you get rid of things for kids to do in poor neighborhoods.
0:25 Run 80’s black guys! You’re no match for the 90’s black guys!
**BANG BANG BANG**
Yes we saw the video
nobody is cooler than 70s black guys disco era
Damn right. Soul Train will always be peak of black culture for me.
Indeed. Stylish and humbled.
As a Black man who lived through the 70's, 80's and 90's I found this hilarious and true.
This is a certified hood classic
Certified unoriginal comment.
@@sggdopeyz5346certified underrated reply
Just being honest, I think that black people had a much better more positive respectable image prior to the 1990's, at least as they appeared on TV and in mainstream culture. It was then during the early-mid 90s that gangster rap became a mainstream thing that black youth in paticular all seemed to get sucked into. This idea that it's somehow cool and part of their culture to be a criminal gangster thug or at least dress and act like one. It got even worse in the 2000's and never really seemed to go away. Music went from Motown, Soul, Jazz, Gospel, Blues, to mutha fuka mutha fuka..blah blah blah. Even as a kid I noticed this shift and wondered what the hell happened. Not just music in black culture but all music across the board shifted from upbeat positive passionate music to grungy whinny trashy ghetto crap and even to this day it never really recovered. Such music may have originally had it's roots in truly new and geniune things, as true forms of art and culture. However I feel once it became more corporate and mainstream the whole message and direction began to change completly. A conspiracy to dumb down and emotionally desensitize the masses if you ask me and perhaps even an intentional move to try and make black people look really stupid. So today there's now an entire generation of teens and young adults who's taste in music is about as shallow as an empty kiddie pool. An entire generation that acts and behaves as if they have been completly lobotomized. Every year it seems there's some new ghetto retarded song out that all the kids and teens claim to love like a bunch of mindless zombies.
Well, white pople traded Iron Maiden for Nirvana, so...
It's called "indoctrination" and it's been present in western media for decades, though in recent years it's become a lot more blatant. You've stumbled onto the truth here my friend and believe me this type of thing isn't just restricted to rap music. Almost everything we see in advertising, TV, movies and publications is just a ploy to make us think a certain way and to buy things we don't need. The ones who run these media outlets want us to be mindless, materialistic sheep, so we don't notice the fact that we're all being scammed and manipulated on a daily basis.
Funny thing, capitalists want us to become mindless sheep to obey, communist want us to become mindless sheep to obey, who I suppose to vote for?
Exactly!
Mike Angelo Neither. Both sides are controlled by the same people and will only bring more of the same. The last time a president tried to make some real changes, he got his brains blown out in broad daylight. It's for this reason why many people voted for Trump, simply because he wasn't a politician and has been calling out the problems of the US for years. However he could easily be just as controlled as the other politicians, so it's just a case of watching what he does and hoping for the best.
Early 80’s black guys were just having a good ole fun time until crack showed up.
Honestly, this violent rap didn't get started until the very late 80s, when NWA and others got going. Suddenly rap went from bouncy and fun to shooting profanity around and talking about committing crimes. Many early African American rappers have talked online about how horrified they are that criminal behavior and violence against women is being glorified repeatedly in recent decades.
It was really the *end of the Cold War* in 1991 that changed everything.
Namely, with the fall of the Soviet Union, American culture began to replace *patriotism* with *lust* .
Suddenly, rap music wasn't so much "Pump up the Volume" as it was "Let's Talk about Sex."
@@grantorino2325 I would argue that patriotism took a huge nosedive in 2012 after the rise of BLM & identity politics. During the war in Iraq, many rappers were openly patriotic and we had a patriotic rap-group in the Early 00's called The Diplomats, who sampled "We Are The Champions".
Trayvon Martin's death, identity politics and political divide & bias has arguably had a bigger impact on society than 9/11 and the fall of the Soviet Union. Nowadays, it's very easy to get into in a heated argument on race or politics with family & strangers.
"Suddenly, rap music wasn't so much "Pump up the Volume" as it was "Let's Talk about-" But a lot of R&B music was blatantly s- ual as well before the Late 80's. (Rick James, Prince, Vanity 6, etc...) Hip Hop was still in its infancy before the Late 80's, and it was mostly just dance-music and an extension of Disco with rhyming.
@@Galidorquest We should have never been in Iraq. I'm a proud American, but what we did to the Middle East is despicable. I know the last few presidents all had their fair share of drone strikes and destruction in the Middle East. What's also sickeningly ironic is that "The Patriot Act" got passed after 9/11. An act that was detrimental to all Americans, we gave up the rights to privacy and autonomy with that act. Although I know America has done some really fucked up things, not just to other nations, but to American citizens, just like mostly every country has(Albeit not to the extent America has). Yet I'm a proud American, I wish Patriotism wasn't looked down on these days, every nation has done shitty things, it doesn't mean you shouldn't be proud of the nation you hail from, and that you shouldn't disregard the good your nation has done for the world and for its people. The way I see it, if American citizens have a problem with our nation, then it's their duty to make it right, not bitch and moan about it. That's what freedom is all about. I don't think patriotism took a nosedive, I think it's been a gradual decline over the decades. I understand why you think it has took a nosedive, but I believe that the reason people think that is due to social media, where everyone's thoughts are heard and spread. Social media has caused us to see some things as bigger than they truly are, and I'm guilty of that too.
Crack showed up in the 70s
Instead of running, Peter should have just called the 90s LAPD.
*and then the riots cometh once more*
And 2020 cop while you're at it
Fight fire with fire
Fry em like bacon
RODNEY KING'N THEM
Really goes to show how sanitize some of 80s media was compared to the edgier 90s and 2000s
It took one decade for the american black guy to change from being a cheerful dancing culture to a gangster revering one.
If only Tupac had a father
CHERUSCI 14 how about the medieval times or the cowboy age after the civil war
Troy Mustgrave but he still love this Mom no matter what she was
Troy Mustgrave lol
CHERUSCI 14 well massive drug addiction and extreme poverty also had a major hand in that.
CHERUSCI 14
>whites
> It didnt make them turn everything they touch to shit
did you learn history from a popsicle stick?
From Michael Jackson to 2pac
Sooooooo... An improvement?
Only an improvement for little boys who don't want to be touched by pervs. Other than that MJ had much more talent than Tupac.
Greg is a Whiteboy not at all
Greg is a Whiteboy You are fucking stupid to say Tupac is an improvement of Michael Jackson.
Tupac didn’t kill
Best are 70s black guys like Shaft. They are no thugs but also no softies and would eat 90s black guys for breakfast.
What the fuck?
true
Isn't there a Shaft like guy on that Cleveland show?
Kemal Sunal awesome
A joke is not a black cock. Don't take it too hard.
This video and my comment where about the stereotypes in movies of the time periods.
Interestingly enough, street/violent crime was actually statistically worse in the 1980s 💀 New York City and Los Angeles were the equivalent of Detroit crime for crime, if that says anything.
"See you around carl"
Anit the 80s the peak of the crips and the blood? Seth MacFarlane.
80’s was Chucke E. Cheese
It was worse in the 90‘s.
80s was crack. violent crime may have been higher but murder was definitely highest in the 90s.
Ozone and Turbo,that put a smile on my face,Breakin' 👌🏾
🔥 🔥 🔥
Phew...blast from the past...
th-cam.com/video/5H9sU4bPco4/w-d-xo.html
All this time I thought the 80's guys were a reference to the Jacksons.
Anyone find it weird that Lois has no reaction when the 90s black guys pull out their guns at 0:17?
That would be too much work to animate 😂
+Techana Atil No it wouldn't.
Dude, chill. I was joking.
Techana Atil I see you saw my original comment
Uh, yeah.
2020 black guys: lil nas dressed as a cowboy in full pink suit
@King of The Zinger where was it
@King of The Zinger lmao smh
Sounds like he'd get along great with 90s Dennis Rodman
🤦♂️
giving a lap dance to the devil.
80s black guys: Prince/Michael Jackson, Luther Vandross
90s black guys: Ice Cube, Tupac and Biggie 😂
00s black guys:50 cent/lil wayne/Ja rule
10s black guys:Kendrick lamar/J cole/Drake
20s black guys:21 savage/JID/Joe biden
@@rumaanaboobaker3149 ??? Joe biden's not from the 20s
@@saltedmutton7269 I can't believe u ain't getting the joke
I love how they ignored lois.
these are lies...no 90s black guy would ignore a sexually freaky white lady (lois) lol
Her butt wasn't big enough... had she been a Pixar mom, they would have been distracted.
Get rid of the competition...she's obviously not going anywhere 😏
@Leeroy Jenkins ??
@Leeroy Jenkins oh so whites, got it
The red 80s' black guy was voiced by Phil LaMarr. Known for roles such as Static Stock, Samurai Jack, Hermes from "Futurama", Wilt from "Foster's Home", and my personal favorite Bolbi Stroganovsky.
Slap slap slap clap clap clap
Wait! He was Bolbi?! That’s hilarious! 😂🤣
How did you forget Ollie Williams?
Also Vamp from Metal Gear Solid.
Samurai Jack
POV: You see the same comments about how the 90's Black Guys didn't hold their guns sideway
2010s black guys would just be the 90s ones with bigger guns and tighter clothes 🔫🍭
"Run 80's black guys! You're no match for the 90's black guys!"
How about the 60's black guys like the black panthers. They would eat the 90's black guys for breakfast.
..noo theyd try to seek peace with them and calm them down lol their anger isnt directed at them, theyd give a sympathetic bias to them just for being black
Not all were BP there was MLK as well and those guys would just take a beating without doing anything about it lol
That's because 60s black guys faced real oppression.
Kevin Zhang actually black panthers would defend against attacks.
Black panthers also helped poor kids with not enough money for food, helped old ladies across the street, and were generally good and productive members of society. The only reason they have a bad reputation is because the (at the time racist) government didn't like what they were doing and so decided to try everything they could to paint them in a negative light. Sure, I'm sure a few of them were the extremists that people remember them as today but that's with literally any group in history. "The Panthers also used to ride around and follow the police.
So the cops would pull over some sorry black person, and get ready to rough him up, but then there were the Panthers right behind them. Watching, armed to the teeth, and citing legal statutes."
thegreenlion14.tumblr.com/post/158950674704/occupythedisco-bossymarmalade-goddesscru
This could have all been avoided if he had just gone with the 70's black guys.
What? Disco afro guys basically?
"He actin' like it's 1992 and the best you can hope for is a gold chain and a pager!"
-PlayBoy X, 2008
GTA 4 on Xbox
@@marvinrodriguez7971 Not just on Xbox, but yeah.
RIP PlayBoy X (If you decided to kill him in GTA 4)
@@tmacman0418 PlayBoy was an asshole.
@@tmacman0418 killed him for the apartment
i want the 80's blacks guys back.
A whole decade later and this is still peak comedy
It's really not now and wasn't a whole decade ago either
@@jasonjansen9831 aren't u a happy fella. Get a sense of humour
@@matthewbarlow982 I've got one. If you think this is 'peak comedy' great. Happy for you.
@@jasonjansen9831 give me an example of peak comedy for you then
@@matthewbarlow982 let him scroll through tik tok lmao
So 90's black guys didn't hold their guns sideways?
Some did, not all
Not all sith conjure lightning
They were not in the car. You hold gun like that so wind on the move won't mess with aim too much.
Tyranus421 no i distinctly remember getting shot at by guys holding their guns straight
Okay okay lol
Don’t get it wrong the 80s was the crack era. The dudes from the 90s may have looked tougher but the 80s was a whole different place
Remember Colors......Colors....Colors
should have called the 70's black guys
I will never understand racism, honestly. I hate everyone equally, no specific group of people.
The Wolf of Comedy you hate me?
You hate me too?
Probably because you don't identify much with your group.
The Wolf of Comedy same. i hate all people equally
im a terrorist I'm not talking about Family Guy, I'm talking about these dumbasses in the comments.
It’s ironic because this is kinda a true depiction despite the 80s having a higher crime rate than the 90s
I guess real 80s black people hated pop culture's depiction of 80s black guys? I'm def not black, so, somebody correct me?
@@chrisrj9871 honestly the 80s liked to cover up the dark side of America at that time, that’s why in the videos it’s always happy and jolly, meanwhile the 90s weren’t as bad but people were getting more comfortable exposing the dark side of America, so therefore the 90s looks worse but it really wasn’t. Blacks couldn’t care less in the 80s because the Hollywood idea of constant joy surrounded them
@@4o8.sebastian No you are wrong. The 80's was indeed a much, much more open-minded and better time than the 90's. Pop culture in the 90's and beyond was almost 100% garbage. 80's didn't cover up anything, that was earlier American culture way back in the 50's. where everyone acted fake like they had perfect lives but it was a lie
@@4o8.sebastian white pop culture was kinda similar. White 80s culture was super plastic and ignorant while white early 90s grunge culture was really socially conscious, dark and authentic.
Well shit would you fuck with a 90s black guy? Didn’t think so
"Run 80s black guys your no match" had me dying
@alan caprock damn you have good grammar hope that helps u find happiness and not be such a Lil bitch buddy gn
I just realized Peter was describing the plot to Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo. 😂 The two 80's black guys even dress the same as the main characters.
What about 2000s?
Everyone Wears XXXL Clothes
Same as the 90s, and same for the 2010s and 2020s
Millennials aren’t real black guys. In fact 2000’s black guys are more like 2000’s white guys.
@@SnowMiser2025 ???
@@shearman360 ???
The crime wave actually peaked in the late 80s and was on the downswing through the 90s.
NeRd
The 80s black guys were softer than the 90s black guys
Paid in full vs Ready to die
@@goat504 nah, 80s guys were ruthless. There weren’t enough laws and strategies to go against war on drugs and gang wars so the system wasn’t prepared. That Biden crime bill and 3 strike law slowed things down a bit by the mid 90s
Well um actually to clarify by 1990 crime peaked at the beginning of the 90s decade and would stay very high for the next 3 years,you can see this in new york,la,chicago, and so on
The Crack epidemic was still in full swing until the late 1990s and several bills passed liked the crime bill and gun control laws were targeting African Americans. The 90s saw the militarization of the police and the LA riots. Anybody who remembers the 90s, knows it was bad. Bangers everywhere. Just listen to the music of the time period. The joke was 80s hip-hop was about staying away from drugs, 90s hip-hop was about slinging dope because there was no other option, 00s hip-hop was about getting rich slinging dope and today's hip-hop is about doing dope.
This gives some context to the golden age hip hop I listen to and how gangster rap got so huge around the turn of the decade. It reflects how the growing drug markets fundamentally changed the black community, with both drug use and drug dealing became increasingly common. Sad to see.
how dide it go so bas in just a decade in the late 80s the crack epidemic realy set the stage for the 90s drug and gang problems and from thier it was a wrap
blame the CIA
The CEO of Budweiser is a drug dealer too. But he has a permission slip from the government for it. Crack users and dealers had no political capital and became pawns for those who did. The drugs didn't ruin the communities, the government did, all the while protecting traffickers of powder cocaine.
Oy vey
We got some incredible music out of it, though.
All bullets were eventually stopped by 70's Black Guy's afro.
Family isn’t shamed upon for racism or sexism, because in total:
It’s making fun of literally everyone. Therefore it remains equal
exactly, i don't have a problem with dark jokes, as long as it targets every demographic: white, black, gay, straight, whatever.
switchblades Yeah that’s what I mean
@@jacqyralovejoy1637 thats like me saying i dont have a problem with you getting your toes chopped off
@@blixky2009 no....its definitely not.
Blixky200 That is not even close to what he said
And..
Are you ok?
80s: Promoting positivity during the struggle(Dancing, singing, positive vibes to the community)
90s: (Surviving the hard times in the community, to support everyone and themselves)
00s: Partying hard, wearing oversized shirts, white tees, having grillz
10s: Beefing on Social media, all talk but no action(Wannabe 90s guys)
Seems every group is less optimistic and more aggressive these days, regardless of race. The 80s had their issues, but at least people weren't doing cancel culture, nonstop encouraging destructive behavior, and never showing respect to their elders among others. We really, REALLY need to reassess what our culture is promoting and emphasizing.
@@thunderbird1921 Amen.
@@thunderbird1921: Agreed. The 2020s will be an awful year for American culture if too many people are perpetually offended and butthurt.
You literally have no idea what you talking about the whole drill culture is literally filled with rappers dying for beefing over the internet
@@thunderbird1921 it will rubber band back in some time. Though the sanitized bubble that is the modern internet is artificially keeping us in this stage where everyone is angry at each other but can't speak their mind openly. If that were to change, the memes that leak out of the deeper internet without having the politically incorrect parts censored, which would expose the youth, who only use the surface level centralized platforms, and dispell the fear of being life ruined for making a tasteless joke. Jokes would get more and more vulgar, reflecting the societal tensions we are experiencing today. This would lead to an accelerated collapse of the current cultural zeitgeist where all that bottled up anger is let out. This would be scary, but it's inevitable and will only be worse the longer it's delayed. I'm not saying there would be much more violence, we already have that sadly. But there would likely be a brief culture shock where the people scramble to figure out what direction they want to go, and eventually realize that we're all people and people will say shit and that's ok. And they will also realize there is no need to fight each other when that's just what their leaders want them to do to keep peoples eyes off of their own wrongdoings. The establishment as a whole is garbage, and they only survive under the illusion that all of the problems they cause are actually the fault of the opposite political party, effectively pacifying half of the people who voted for them. Then they do stupid shit, get voted out, and the new winner says everything is the losers fault, continuing the cycle.
I wrote this in a family guy clip comment section lmao
Also don't think I'm incoherently using big words to sound smart it's just me being ocd while writing 😂
70's Black Guys were cool, wore a $100 suit and drove a $5000 car!
JENDALL714 and played great types of music, not to be racist
how would that be racist
Ritschij hes indicating that blacks listen to shitty music nowadays
Moorm Nothing That's my favorite thing about African American culture, how it helped engineer what we call Rock n Roll. Hell, look at Jimi Hendrix, arguably the greatest damn guitarist in history.
JENDALL714 hell yeah
as someone who almost exclusively listens to 80s and 90s hip hop, this is so accurate 😂
Ortensia pfp detected, immediate respect
Yes. The skit represents how our culture generally went from positive, innocent role models like The Jacksons to glamorizing the thug life since the NWA.
And this is why I love family guy. Not offended one bit as a black man. They go after EVERYBODY so you just straight up can’t get mad at the jokes 🤣🤣
Yeah, its cool when we can all make fun of each other as a joke. Its only when people start being dicks with it that it should become a problem
@@violenceisfun991 exactly, I like dark humour but not blatant racism which they claim as a ‘joke’
Look up Don Rickles absolutely roasting Sammy Davis Jr with black jokes. A miracle Sammy wasn't on the floor from laughing so hard.
@@chungarito7739 how is this scene racist
Well... it was also tastefully done.
haha now it's these 2017 white kids acting like these 90s black guys... a lot of confusion going on
TreezyE83 Thank the homosexual Jews who run the music and fasion industry
naw, even in the 80's we had white guys acting like black guys. Vanilla Ice anyone?
Jimmy M That was 1990 to be precise but yeah. Every other race wanted to act black.
Now its 2018 .What's next somebody give a answer or a thought.
Blacks have been confused since before the Cosby Show lmao
I love how this cartoon is so accurate even 10 years later
40s black guys: Ya like jazz?