Series
.

Nickelodeon Creeps and Graffiti Tower Dreams

March 20, 2024
Cubanos Pa’lante founder Marley Pulido on Cuba’s latest protests, artist CJ Conde wants L.A.’s graffiti tower turned into a gallery, actor Laith Ashley opens up about anti-trans legislation and Jean hits the streets to find a real Bad Bunny fan.
Show transcript
00:06
Yeah. What's up guys?
00:08
Welcome back to Lincoln Bio.
00:10
I'm Gene and I'm Jenny and we got a packed episode for
00:13
you guys today. Elon is in a K hole.
00:16
Can't get out. Dan Snyder has ruined our childhood sick bastard
00:21
Incest is happening way more than we think.
00:24
Stop DM and your cousins Nyc Mansion squatter battle tenants have all
00:29
the rights. Plus we got what's happening in Cuba with Marley
00:34
Polito, hate crimes with Lathe Ashley and graffiti skyscraper with CJ
00:40
Conde. Have you seen it?
00:42
I need to go.
00:44
Let's get into it,
00:45
Jenny. I know you've been watching the news.
00:48
You seen what's up with Nickelodeon and all that drama from back
00:51
in the day? From Nickelodeon?
00:53
Oh my gosh, dude.
00:54
It's, it's crazy what that was,
00:56
what was going on behind all the cartoons and the,
00:59
the shows like all that and stuff.
01:01
So now the documentary Quiet on set is exposing the executive
01:07
Dan Snyder. Have you seen Dan Schneider before?
01:10
Are you familiar with him?
01:11
Yes. And I always knew that guy was off.
01:15
Did you leave your kid alone with Dan?
01:17
No, he looks like somebody that walks around with like mustard
01:20
and ketchup stains all over his shirt all day long.
01:23
So on set, Jenny Snyder was toxic as hell.
01:26
He wrote inappropriate jokes and mind you,
01:28
this is all for kids.
01:30
Yeah. So like he's writing these jokes and,
01:33
and these scenes with like kids in mind and like,
01:37
why are you sliming somebody's face like that?
01:40
She's like 12 years old.
01:41
I would never look at slime the same way again,
01:44
1000% even their logo is questionable now like bastard.
01:48
So Drake Bell, a popular actor came forward in,
01:51
in episode three of the documentary and he confirmed that he was
01:56
a John Doe in a sexual assault case that he was
02:00
you know, sexually assaulted by a acting coach hired by Nickelodeon
02:05
and guess what you would think that they would have caught on
02:09
and like fired him.
02:10
No, my man went and got another job at Disney after
02:14
he got caught up in Nickelodeon.
02:16
So these dudes are,
02:18
I don't understand, man,
02:19
getting more horrible than felons like what the fuck.
02:22
And yesterday Snyder came out with a statement finally after years of
02:26
this, you know,
02:27
of this behavior, he basically said,
02:30
yeah, I did that shit.
02:31
My bad. That's exactly what he said.
02:34
I'm not in those words but like that's how that's the vibe
02:37
you gave off. Like my bad.
02:39
Like my bad, your ass should be in jail,
02:41
bro. Like it's like the trauma that he caused all those
02:44
kids that. I mean,
02:45
he's stressed though. He's lost like what you say like £10.15
02:49
pounds in yo, £20.
02:51
Damn sick. I'm like we still know you,
02:54
bro, you could grow all the beard you want.
02:55
Like still know it.
02:57
You dad. Nice.
02:58
Try, stop looking at y'all primas like that.
03:05
She's family, man.
03:06
Stop DM me, stop forwarding her pictures to your boys.
03:10
That's your little cousin.
03:11
The latest data suggest that incest occurs in about what in one
03:18
in 7000 people in the United Kingdom,
03:21
one genetic genealogist says she knows over 1000 cases,
03:27
guys, over 1000 cases of incest,
03:31
these people were born to parents who are first degree relatives.
03:36
So like a brother and sister or parent and child.
03:41
And contrary to popular belief,
03:44
many are born healthy.
03:46
So a lot of these cases,
03:47
I think you know,
03:48
there has to have been some form of sexual abuse.
03:53
So yeah, it's family tree is short as hell.
03:55
Just one branch. Yeah.
03:57
Like mom, dad,
03:58
his brothers and sisters.
03:59
That's my grandma and dad and grandma.
04:02
Yeah. And I have a few cases in my family too
04:05
some people have found out the truth after doing
04:08
ancestor DNA and 23 and me tests which connect you to your
04:13
biological parents. So imagine doing that like with your partner
04:18
and being like, oh shit,
04:19
we're primos oh my God,
04:21
like the telenovelas. But it's crazy because even in my
04:25
family, I mean,
04:26
it's not like, like brother and sister or nothing like that
04:30
But it's, it's like primos,
04:33
you know, and it's like,
04:34
like primas and primos and,
04:37
you know, they've got married and,
04:39
and it's like, so it could,
04:41
it's either our second primos.
04:44
There was one case,
04:47
there was one case where they were first.
04:49
That's was the baby born with the tail.
04:51
No, they were good.
04:53
They were good. But it,
04:54
I mean it happens especially in the Latino family is like next
04:59
story guys, Johnny,
05:02
you drive a Tesla,
05:03
right? I got some cheese smack on line.
05:07
You're familiar with Elon,
05:08
right? So apparently in an interview he admitted to using Ketamine
05:14
Exactly. Right.
05:15
That explains the cyber truck design.
05:18
So Lan says that he it's prescribed by an actual real doctor
05:22
and that he uses it every other week to treat a depression
05:26
to get out of a negative frame of mind.
05:28
Wait, so you can get a one,
05:30
you could get a prescription of ketamine and two.
05:35
That's a horse tranquilizer.
05:37
I mean, Lan is like a billionaire you in he probably
05:40
paid the doc the doctor for that prescription.
05:44
Yeah, he says it's good for the Tesla investors.
05:47
He's building value for investors and he's taking something he should keep
05:51
taking it. So he's basically saying like it's working for me
05:55
shut up and let me do my job because I need
05:59
this or I will go crazy.
06:03
Tesla and spacex executives were concerned about his drug use
06:07
and saw the stock owners because that shit is going down and
06:13
you know, I don't know if you've seen his comments
06:15
on Twitter, I can't call it X I don't know why
06:20
I just can't. But yeah,
06:21
so maybe his Ketamine news can explain his insults about black
06:26
pilots and all this other shit.
06:27
He's rambling about all the time.
06:29
But like what is Ketamine?
06:30
What does it do to you like when you take it?
06:32
Like why, what,
06:33
what is it like?
06:34
So it's like an hallucinogen,
06:36
you know, like it's some shit that they give to horses
06:38
So what do you think that shit is gonna do Jenny
06:41
It's gonna fry you.
06:42
Does it make you like does it make you like just I
06:46
mean, I've never done it but you see the Elon's face
06:51
he don't look normal when he,
06:53
he's off the cage and he has no equipment to get out
06:59
Not even the cyber truck you get out of that ho
07:02
who? Let's move on Jenny?
07:05
You're familiar with squatters,
07:07
right? Yes. Isn't,
07:08
isn't that when people move in somewhere?
07:12
And they just kind of just don't pay rent,
07:14
they just literally squat there.
07:16
They squat. So a New York City woman was arrested trying
07:21
to kick out squatters from her own family home.
07:24
Crazy, right? She was arrested,
07:26
she was arrested. So she inherited her parents home in Queens
07:31
That's valued at a million dollars.
07:33
And in February 2 squatters moved in before she could sell the
07:37
home. And now they've taken over the house.
07:40
So they just went in and just squat like she didn't even
07:44
rent it out to anybody.
07:46
And then they just stopped paying rent.
07:47
It's just, they just,
07:49
they just took over.
07:50
So I, I believe like last week she had a,
07:53
a news team reporting on the squatters at her home and she
07:57
called the NYPD on them and on film,
08:00
you see them take the squatters out,
08:02
remove them. Everything's all peaceful.
08:06
Then she goes and changes the locks to the house and that's
08:10
where she fucked up because in New York City squatters have tenant
08:14
rights after 30 days.
08:16
So it's illegal for homeowners to change the locks on them,
08:19
turn off utilities and remove their belongings.
08:23
So she got locked up for changing the locks to her own
08:27
house and it could take up to a year to fight it
08:30
in court. So the alleged squatter is saying he is renting
08:34
the home, but the homeowner denies this and is fearful that
08:38
they're going to get away with stealing her home.
08:41
D damn these squatter rights man that your parents home or like
08:45
I know like you grew up there,
08:47
like you imagine growing up there and then the sentimental value there
08:51
I mean, what would you do to a squatter?
08:53
Well, I would throw a Mexican party every weekend at that
08:58
house Mexican parties. Now the Paredes Reginan like,
09:08
dude, I'm not gonna like,
09:09
they're gonna leave after that.
09:10
You know, I'll be like,
09:11
that's the house guys.
09:12
Pull up, pull up flyers everywhere.
09:16
Squat party. Let's squat together.
09:17
Fuck it. So what would you guys do if you guys
09:20
were dealing with squatters at your family home?
09:23
Second amendment. No.
09:27
Transition to the next story.
09:34
So what's happening in Cuba?
09:36
To help us understand.
09:37
Here's one of the founders of Cubanos Palante Marli Polio.
09:41
Hey, what's up,
09:43
Marley? Hi, welcome,
09:46
welcome. So how are people's daily lives affected by the recent
09:50
long power outages in Cuba?
09:52
This is a very sad situation.
09:55
We're seeing people demand freedom,
10:00
food and power outages in like the same sentence.
10:04
power outages are not new growing up in the nineties,
10:07
we would spend many hours of the day without electricity.
10:11
But the economic crisis right now is worsening because the way
10:15
we're governing ourselves, like living in dictatorship with the centralized economy
10:19
we're made to rely solely on the government to meet our
10:22
basic needs. So what happens on the island is that
10:26
power outages don't hit everybody the same way.
10:29
Power outages know what zip code not to hit out and,
10:34
and how are families and communities dealing with the shortage of food
10:38
in Cuba? This is equally sad because as I said
10:42
we're made to rely on the government,
10:44
but we're also made to rely on the government to stay fed
10:47
We're made to rely on them to eat rice and
10:50
beans and a fried egg.
10:53
So when we see people in power,
10:55
the government, the families running the country,
10:58
they are unable to provide,
11:00
we can't even have a healthy breakfast or a healthy lunch.
11:02
Just like with electricity.
11:05
Food knows with zip code to just like disappear from and
11:10
some neighborhoods are, some are more of a food desert than
11:13
others. It's a really weird situation that we're seeing right
11:19
now because the crisis just doesn't seem to end.
11:22
And what we are also seeing with the government is that they
11:25
know there's a crisis,
11:27
they know people are not happy.
11:28
So they're just introducing in a very like neo liberal capitalism
11:35
way introducing austerity measures like raising prices of food,
11:39
raising prices of transportation,
11:41
raising prices of electricity.
11:43
So people are unable to pay at the current prices.
11:47
There's no food, there's no electricity and prices are going up
11:50
It's bonkers Esan organ like they're like drowning and instead of
11:55
like helping them, they're like throwing more water,
11:58
you know, and how are Cuban citizens helping each other during
12:02
these tough times? This is a very tricky question.
12:05
I'm a historian and sometimes I wish people would learn about more
12:10
horizontal ways and people center ways to help each other.
12:14
We've done it before and our history,
12:16
mutual aid societies were crucial to poor neighborhoods and poor communities before
12:21
1959. But right now,
12:24
as you said, people feel like they're drowning.
12:26
So it's even difficult to think about your neighbor.
12:31
So, are there any ideas being talked about to help fix
12:34
the crisis? I think before thinking about the ideas,
12:39
I wanna say that this crisis is not new.
12:42
We saw the largest protest that I had ever seen in 2021
12:47
and there's still over 1000 political prisoners from those protests.
12:51
People were demanding the same things or it's not just the economy
12:54
And until we get rid of the current political system,
12:57
until we get rid of the dictatorship or this like very centralized
13:02
way of running the economy,
13:03
we're not gonna be able to build the economic system that works
13:07
for all of us.
13:08
People are tired of the government,
13:09
they're tired living in fear,
13:10
they're tired of being over policed and silenced.
13:13
And today for the first time I saw someone post,
13:17
it was kind of like a serious post thinking about what would
13:22
transitioning to something else look like because this is not working for
13:26
us. And in a different political system,
13:29
these people in power will be removed from power.
13:32
But on the island where we have a centralized economy and a
13:35
centralized political way of running the country,
13:39
a dictatorship, it's difficult to remove people from power and find
13:43
different ways and experiment.
13:46
I'm also seeing people talk about the right that we don't
13:50
necessarily have constitutionally but the right to peaceful protest.
13:54
So I'm seeing an awakening of the political consciousness of folks on
13:58
the island and it's beautiful to see even when we're in a
14:01
really terrible crisis. Yeah,
14:03
the unity of the people and I hope they get their points
14:06
across and hopefully that there's change soon in Cuba.
14:10
Well, thank you so much Marley.
14:12
We really appreciate you coming on and,
14:14
and speaking more of this huge issues that are going on in
14:18
Cuba. How can people follow you and Cubans Palante?
14:23
What's the social handles that you guys have?
14:26
Yeah, you can follow us at Cuan Palante on Instagram and
14:30
Twitter. We're one of the organizations trying to truly mobilize
14:35
Cubans across the United States.
14:38
So yeah, Palos A Cu Palante.
14:40
Thank you so much.
14:41
Thank you so much Marley,
14:47
bullying and attacks against LGBT Q kids are up across the country
14:52
Experts say it's coming from politics with laws going after trans
14:57
kids and adults. Well,
14:59
today we have artist Lathe Ashley to talk about his experience.
15:05
Hi Lee. Hey,
15:07
how are you? Thank you for having yourself.
15:10
I'm doing well. I'm you know,
15:12
trying to do the best I can with like what like
15:14
Mariah Carey said with what I got.
15:17
There you go. Same on this end.
15:20
So we wanted to talk to you about what's going on
15:24
The Washington Post found that hate crimes against LGBT Q
15:28
have quadrupled in high schools,
15:31
does this sound familiar?
15:34
It's not surprising at all.
15:36
If you look at,
15:38
you mentioned politics,
15:39
if you look at what a lot of politicians are saying about
15:42
the trans community, of course,
15:43
it's going to incite violence.
15:44
I think that parents want the best for their Children.
15:49
But when they're constantly being bombarded with a negative commentary about
15:55
trans people in the trans community and the safety of their Children
15:58
which is, which was what they're saying is a,
16:00
is a complete lie.
16:02
It's going to incite violence,
16:03
it's going to make it so that our visibility is it
16:08
becomes kind of a catch 22 where we're told,
16:14
for example, if I'm doing an interview or if I'm being
16:17
called to do something for the trans community,
16:20
for example, for trans state visibility,
16:21
that's at the end of this month,
16:22
you're told you you're brave,
16:24
you're resilient for being visible for being who I am.
16:28
But we've always been here.
16:31
It's our erasure that's made us have to be visible in
16:34
the first place and then it causes,
16:37
it's kind of a ripple effect.
16:38
It causes trans people being more visible to lead to violence against
16:42
us with no institutional support and nothing to protect us.
16:46
Have, have you felt that getting worse recently?
16:50
I mean, look at all the bills that are,
16:54
are, are attempting,
16:55
they're attempting to pass over 400 anti trans bills,
16:59
which again initially started with protecting the kids.
17:02
but it's now moved into blocking trans adults from accessing health
17:07
care. So it was always about moving an already marginalized group
17:11
further into invisibility if you will to ostracize us to keep us
17:16
from existing within the social realm.
17:20
What do you think it will take to for things to get
17:23
better? I have no idea,
17:25
to be honest. I mean,
17:27
the internet has done so much for us.
17:28
We're able to have this conversation right now.
17:30
We're able to post our ideas and our thoughts on social media
17:34
But I don't,
17:35
I don't think that social media is going to be the thing
17:37
that brings people together.
17:38
I think that having real personal conversations is the only
17:45
way where people can see each other's humanity.
17:48
And I know we've been throwing those words around,
17:51
throwing around humanity, dignity,
17:53
nuance, empathy, togetherness.
17:55
And I don't think a lot of people actually understand what
17:57
those words mean because it may start that way,
18:01
but I don't think anyone is really listening to each other and
18:03
what ends up happening is bickering again,
18:05
online violence, anger resentment,
18:08
and that's what we're seeing now manifest in real life.
18:11
And I mean, what would you say to the kids in
18:14
school? Dealing with the bullying?
18:16
I don't know if you want me to say what I would
18:19
say to them. I mean,
18:20
look, I'm Dominican my mother taught me like to stand up
18:25
for myself. And I know that everyone is different and I
18:28
know that depending on where you are in the world,
18:30
you're not going to have the same resources or the,
18:32
or the ability to do.
18:33
So, especially in a school.
18:38
like next Benedict's school where as we saw that no support
18:44
And even the the politicians there saying that we there was
18:48
no remorse, There was no empathy for this child's life
18:53
that was lost. It was just like,
18:55
oh we have to get rid of this gross thing that's happening
18:58
in our society. So I don't have the answers.
19:01
I just hope that people really open their eyes and see like
19:04
these are, these are people,
19:07
they have families that care about them.
19:10
Is there anything your mom would tell you to tell these bullies
19:12
Like I'm Dominican as well.
19:14
So you already know my mom,
19:16
my mom would mama said knock you out.
19:21
But a again,
19:22
again, not everyone has the capacity to do to do to
19:25
do that. So I'm I'm speaking,
19:27
this is what for myself.
19:28
I didn't stand for bullying.
19:29
In fact, anyone would try to bully me.
19:32
I would stand up,
19:33
stand up to myself and they would back off and I would
19:37
usually be the one defending any other kids that were getting
19:40
that were getting bullied for being different.
19:42
I've always, I don't like injustice.
19:45
I don't like when,
19:47
a group attacks a smaller minority or a group that's,
19:52
or a person and an individual that's,
19:54
that doesn't have a way to defend themselves.
19:56
I don't like injustice on a macro level.
19:58
It kind of, it can weigh on you and it makes
20:00
you sick and you,
20:01
you, you wonder how do we get here and how do
20:04
we move forward?,
20:06
I think ultimately, if there's going to be any change,
20:08
we have to move past the binary systems that we live in
20:11
and really take time to listen and get to know one another
20:14
Like I said before,
20:15
ultimately, what I'm saying is to care about people and try
20:19
to have an understanding that's like bigger,
20:24
see the bigger picture,
20:25
not just, you know,
20:26
here people put blinders on and they're like,
20:30
these are my beliefs and I'm not changing my beliefs and I'm
20:32
just like everything is changeable,
20:34
things are constantly changing.
20:35
They say change is the only constant.
20:37
So when you discover something new,
20:40
it's ok to change your mind and you're going to continue to
20:42
discover something new because that is life.
20:45
I wish for the best.
20:46
I want people to be able to live and be themselves to
20:50
make, you can make mistakes and then learn from them.
20:54
That's again, that's the beauty of being here and being
20:57
alive. I agree 100%.
21:00
We just want to thank you so much for your time for
21:03
speaking with us. I know,
21:04
you're exhausted. So it really means I wish I almost was
21:08
like I rolled out of bed.
21:09
I was like, oh my,
21:09
I have to get cute for this and I'm like,
21:14
you look great. You look great.
21:16
Well, before we go,
21:17
we wanted to ask,
21:18
is there anything big coming up?
21:21
And where can people follow you so you can follow me
21:24
on, you know,
21:25
all social media platforms at Lathe underscore Ashley.
21:29
and things coming up.
21:30
I don't know if I'm supposed to talk about this yet,
21:32
but I'm going to say it anyway.
21:33
I'm the thing,
21:34
the project that I'm working on here in Atlanta is called
21:37
Wicked City. There,
21:38
we're filming season three right now.
21:40
So I'm one of the new cast members,
21:42
which is really exciting.
21:43
It's it's kind of kind of witches in,
21:47
in Atlanta, in the Atlanta area and kind of how they
21:50
they it's almost,
21:51
I hate to say this but it's like they say it's like
21:53
a black charmed. But yeah,
21:56
I, I don't want to give too much away.
21:58
It's on, it's on the all black network and yeah,
22:02
the cast has been amazing.
22:03
The crew has been so cool.
22:05
It's been a lot of work,
22:06
but I think it will be,
22:08
it will be worth it.
22:09
Oh, yeah, I'm so excited for that.
22:10
That's awesome. That's so cool.
22:12
Congrats on that. Leit.
22:14
Appreciate it. Thank you so much.
22:16
We appreciate it again.
22:17
Have a good one.
22:18
Love, take care,
22:19
take care, take care.
22:24
All right. So everyone's heard about the graffiti tower in downtown
22:27
L A. It was a billion dollar project that was abandoned
22:31
and it's slowly becoming L A's coolest art piece.
22:34
And today we have CJ conda artist based in L A to
22:37
give us the downlow on how this tower came about.
22:41
What's up with it?
22:42
What's so CJ, what's up with it?
22:44
How you doing, man?
22:46
So why did artists pick this tower?
22:48
You think? Honestly,
22:49
I don't even know,
22:50
but I do know that graffiti artists like to choose like very
22:54
challenging and very exposed buildings to kind of like show their mark
23:00
tell people who they are and just,
23:02
you know, choose something that is big and bold.
23:05
Got you and clearly like from I was there the other day
23:08
It's like that's like the 15th floor.
23:10
So you gotta climb,
23:11
there's no elevator in that shit.
23:12
So you gotta climb and you know,
23:14
ain't no emergency staircases,
23:17
none of that shit.
23:17
You gotta climb up there.
23:20
How many people do you think it took to pull this
23:22
thing off? Do you guys all hang out or have like
23:24
a group chat? Like,
23:25
what's going on? Is there like a,
23:27
a Reddit thread that I don't know about?
23:30
Like all look straight up.
23:31
I'm not part of that group,
23:33
so I don't know,
23:34
but I do know that it probably took hundreds of people.
23:38
They're all down as fuck.
23:40
And can I cuss?
23:42
Yeah, they're all down as fuck for doing some shit like
23:44
that is crazy and shit.
23:46
They're ninja turtles to me.
23:48
For real. That's dope.
23:49
Like what do you think the city will do about it?
23:52
For one? They're gonna complain.
23:54
But straight up, this is what they should do.
23:56
They should turn that place into a giant art gallery,
23:59
set up galleries in every floor and the profits should go to
24:03
community based art projects and stuff like that.
24:05
But yes sir, capitalism,
24:08
corruption. What are we gonna do?
24:09
Right. We'll do that for one week and then they'll start
24:11
charging people and then the money won't go nowhere.
24:13
You know how it is,
24:14
bro. So why is graffiti important to the city?
24:17
Are there any new art trends you're seeing?
24:20
I, I think graffiti is important for any city.
24:23
It's like artists reclaiming a space that was probably owned by like
24:27
corporations or city officials who don't really give a fuck about like
24:30
the community or the people there.
24:32
But I don't,
24:34
I don't know, I'm,
24:35
I'm not wanna pay attention to trends like that,
24:37
but I am seeing more people kind of like taking a grip
24:40
of this com like this community of this world and just doing
24:44
amazing things with it.
24:45
And I feel like graffiti artists are transcending the street space and
24:49
they're also going into like galleries.
24:51
there's this graffiti artist called Ozzy,
24:53
he's killing it and that's pretty much what he's doing is just
24:56
transcending the street space.
24:58
Got you. And I prefer this over.
25:00
What, what's that Jacob?
25:01
Dude, he's everywhere.
25:02
Like give me this,
25:03
fuck, that lawyer,
25:04
whatever his name is the other one.
25:07
Adriana. Yeah. Get that shit out of here.
25:09
Give me the fucking upside down,
25:11
upside down fucking with me,
25:13
man. Like, what's this?
25:15
Hey, oh that's one of my pieces.
25:18
Hey, so we got,
25:19
so what do you have coming up?
25:20
Let's talk about your art.
25:21
I got a piece right here,
25:22
man. She looks sick.
25:23
I appreciate it. So this is an oil on canvas painting
25:26
It's kind of like a little tribute dedication to my
25:29
pops. But right to that car.
25:33
Yeah, but I got a art show on the 29th
25:36
of March. It's in Koreatown.
25:38
Y'all could pull up a lot of dope artists,
25:40
some graffiti artists, some more studio based artists,
25:43
but it's gonna be tight.
25:45
But it was good,
25:45
bro. Can I keep this piece?
25:46
My, my walls are dry as hell in my room.
25:48
I'm not gonna lie.
25:50
Let me keep that sweater.
25:51
Then he wants to do sweater.
25:55
And where can we find you online?
25:58
I'm obsessed on Instagram like I'm on that app 24 7
26:01
So just follow me there at Carlos CJ Conde.
26:04
I'm always posting my art,
26:06
my Rios, my animations,
26:07
my murals all that good stuff.
26:09
So check me out at Carlos CJ conde.
26:12
Thank you, bro.
26:13
Much. Look forward to that show,
26:14
bro. Yeah. Yeah.
26:20
Hi Jenny. You know who's in town?
26:23
Bad bunny, baby.
26:25
Yep. So, you know,
26:26
we had to pull up and interview some fans before the concert
26:30
and let me just tell you some of these fans are questionable
26:36
Oh, why,
26:37
why do you see that?
26:38
There's certain things as a fan you should know like what,
26:43
at least the man's full name or where he's from.
26:48
But let's, let's,
26:49
let's, let's check out some of these fans shoot.
26:55
Oh I don't know his full name.
26:57
I just started listening to him last year.
27:00
Ignacio Benito Benito something.
27:09
Benito Antonio, Benito Ocasio,
27:12
Martin. Where? Oh my God,
27:16
I Puerto Rico. We're going to ask you guys to do
27:22
your best impression of bad bunny.
27:25
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
27:26
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
27:28
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
27:29
My funny baby. So j you were there?
27:34
So would you say that like,
27:37
well, have you ever been to a bad bunny?
27:38
Cause here before I have in New York?
27:41
OK. But what's,
27:42
what, what do you think is the difference between the west
27:46
coast here and the east coast in New York?
27:49
Like based on bad bunny fans?
27:51
Well, I have to say it probably has a lot to
27:53
do with, you know,
27:54
the islands are on my side.
27:56
East coast, close,
27:57
close, we're closer to the source pr the Little island that
28:03
controls this whole Latino fucking movement music,
28:05
reggaeton, whatever you wanna call it.
28:07
But yeah, out here there's fans,
28:08
everybody dresses up, you know,
28:10
they, they play the part but they play,
28:11
they play the part.
28:13
You know, if I'm walking down the street and I see
28:15
you. I'm like,
28:15
oh, he's a bad bunny fan.
28:16
But are you really a bad bunny for shit?
28:19
But you know what?
28:20
There's, there's more Dominicans and Puerto Ricans in the east for
28:23
sure. Like I remember when I used to live in New
28:25
York. I'm like,
28:26
oh shoot like wow,
28:28
like different than out here.
28:30
Yeah, it was cool but I was also like we're the
28:32
Mexicans at but it is dope.
28:34
It was dope seeing like real bad bunny fans that are from
28:37
out here that are Mexican and know everything about him.
28:40
Like that shit is dope.
28:42
Yes. Yes, I agree.
28:43
Like those are the real fans and those fans are everywhere.
28:46
So you're right, you're right.
28:52
So that does it for this episode of Lincoln Bio.
28:56
I'm Jenny. I'm J and I don't have a car so
29:01
I know y'all seen Doom.
29:03
Better call my ride over here.
29:04
You ready, Jenny?
29:08
What's your R Gene?
29:11
You know them big ass worms and dune,
29:14
you know, ain't no traffic in the desert,
29:16
baby. We're riding these shits all day since you're doing the
29:21
you're, you're calling the worms.
29:22
I'm gonna do the sound.
29:30
That's Yeah, I think you're scaring them.
29:37
All right, we out take care guys.