
All right, you're tuned in to the black conversion show with your girl Brandi Grayson on 92.7
FMWMDX.
We are the show where you come for local teeth, polytricks, all the stuff that's happening
with black people that we know of, not all of it because I can't get track key, track
of everything.
I have my co-host cousin Clyde in the house.
I'm super excited about today, so thanks for joining us.
So Clyde, cousin Clyde, there's so much for us to catch up on and so much tea, but I just
want to first start with, how are you doing?
I am doing well, you know, it's the end of the school season and so it's just like wrapping
up with the families and kids and getting ready to send them off into their summer break,
so I got one more week at work.
So what do you do with kids?
I mean, people don't, you know, what do you do?
Yeah, if you don't know, I am in performing arts, so I teach movement and dance, and so
we're ending our school year programming and quickly going into our summer programming,
so I'm not going to get a big break.
But I won't be in the center as much as I was during school year.
Well, that's good.
That's good.
How have you been doing sis?
You know me, bro, I just, I'm just trying to hang in here.
She's just been so much.
So I decided to fast, so I've been fasting since Tuesday at 8 a.m., I mean, I know 8 p.m.,
so I am physically exhausted and super hungry.
And the reason I chose to fast for three days is for clarity, like when I need spiritual
guidance and I feel like I'm out of alignment with myself, I fast.
So I'm fasting for three days, and then I'm going to fast again next week, like intermeanly
one day fast, one day off, and then I'm going to fast for seven days.
Nice.
I need so much spiritual guidance to do, like, clearing cleansing of my aura, the stuff
that I'm stuck in and I'm not seeing, you know, like you ever feel like there's parts
in your life that you're not aware of.
So you keep doing the same thing over and over again, expecting a different result every
day.
So I'm hoping this fast will help kind of clear the way, but this week has been crazy.
My hold, I've had, I'm work for urban triage for our listeners, you're listening to
the Black Conversion Show, I'm the CEO of urban triage.
We're a local nonprofit in the Madison and Dane County area.
We provide a lot of housing resources, transformational education.
We employ about 21 people, well, we did until the other day.
So we had like three people quit at the same time, okay, and it was okay because, yeah,
it's okay because what happened was folks, it was already on the verge.
And that's why I'm kind of fasting because I allow things to fester too long, okay,
and whether in my management, my leadership, I need to do better, right, and in my personal
relationships.
Okay.
So I just hold on to people in things when I know that they're no good.
Right.
Right.
So anyway, I don't know.
That's a kind of weak I had.
And then the week before some family members lost someone very close to them.
Sorry about that.
Yeah, and that was hard to swallow.
And then one of my kids has health challenges.
So I'm just like really like, okay, God, what is you trying to say to me right now?
Do you need for me because I'm all for it.
So let me go ahead and clean my house up.
I love it.
Yeah.
So that's where we're at.
But you're listening to the black conversion show, which is all about the local T. So I'm
going to get off my soap box about my week because who really cares about all that?
I do.
Well, thank you.
So the one thing I do want to touch bases on is, oh my God.
Again, I know you guys are like, you always talk about black women.
But this thing with Angel Reese and the WNBA on June 4th, she was playing again.
What's it?
What is the team?
It was Sky.
And oh my God.
Luke, do you know?
I don't know who they were playing against, but she plays for the Chicago sky.
Okay.
So it was the sky.
She's guy.
I don't know.
But I can't remember the team.
They were playing against.
But any who she receives two technical files and the technical files were based on one
of her, like, the, the, the, the ref had called the file and she was like, wait a minute
ref.
No, that's not.
And she was saying something to the ref.
And then she walked away and did her hands like this.
You know how black people would be like, we're like really expressive with our hands and
she got two technicals that night and then she got thrown from the game.
And then the WNBA turned around and said, we're going to rescind one of the technical files.
But the game is over.
It's over and they removed her from the game, but they were losing anyway.
So I don't know if her being removed if they would have won.
However, I do know that the technical file was called from my perspective because of
her attitude.
Okay.
So I'm wondering, like, what's your thoughts on black women, black men and their attitudes
and how it's seen differently inside different systems, whether it's the NBA, non-profit
or local government?
Well, first of all, the WNBA, I like watching it because it's feisty.
Yeah.
Maybe push it and it be really getting hurt.
But we haven't always watched it either now is just becoming popular because we like drama.
We do.
It's getting drama fire.
So we like drama and we're over there.
Of course, in society, we want women not to get loud.
We want women not to be in the same type of way.
But that's the only reason we're watching the game right now and because the players are
now being loud, being like, egotistical in the sense like men are like, they're, you
know, like they're really in their own right.
Yeah.
And the two texts, I guess, that's, I mean, you see that in NBA too, right?
Like no players is exempt from text.
No, but everyone knows the black and white stripes.
You got to just.
I know, but they just treat us differently.
Really?
What?
Wait, don't play with me.
So when you think that the players in the WNBA are pretty different than the NBA?
No, I'm saying the women that play for WNBA, depending on their intersection, it's treated
differently.
And she's been treated unfairly probably since college, like, people's been following
her conversation.
Well, her playing for a while, and it's always like, if this player does it, they don't
get in trouble.
But if she does it, it's why you said that.
That's what I'm saying.
Why is this the belong here?
She ain't got Nappy.
Yeah, she got long hair, right?
She is.
She's very vocal, right?
She gets right on the internet, right up the game.
How do you do?
Outside of the press release, and I don't think that they want.
And she don't speak when she, that she's supposed to either.
You know, you have to find a thousand dollars for not speaking to the media after the last
game.
I don't know if it was the last game or the game before, but she got to find a thousand
dollars.
So if you don't listen to us and you don't follow us, we're going to find different ways
to let you know where you're in control.
And where is that also mimicked in our life?
Community, government, everywhere, right, grants, right?
Get in line.
Get in line.
I am the master of you.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think she's doing a beautiful job, like she said in one of her press release was that
women have made history in the WNBF, and I will make history in my time.
You will hear my name 20 years and 30 years from now.
Period.
And I love the fact that she's creating her own lane, right?
Period.
She's not following behind who was before her or who's even on the side of her.
It's like if I'm going to be the one to talk my mess, say no to interviews and then go
on my own interviews and get my views up to get my YouTube checks, then that's what I'm
going to do.
It's working with this new generation that society has to get used to.
Well, yeah, can we just honor this new warrior energy that people don't give a F. They don't
give a F about standing in the boxes, being socially acceptable, which is, that's my thing.
That's the kind of box.
And sometimes, but I also lose my voice sometimes because of the politics in local government
and local politics.
Yeah.
So I think what was awesome for me is to watch some of her videos and she's like, look,
y'all watching WNBA because of me.
That's not true.
That's not lie here, right?
Y'all right here because of me.
Right.
So tune in and I'm not going to stop doing me, right, was her is her attitude.
And sometimes I've been wanting to say that same thing, like stop acting like we ain't
set things on the map for other people, made room with our voice, made room for other
conversations, made room for folks to get money because let's, let's just, let's just
be 100.
Right.
A lot of times when the folks, the folks that's out there, the loudest, right?
They didn't try to find what we call safe people, yeah, right?
Yeah, to replace us.
Right.
To push you in the front.
Like come on, come on.
But even that process within white supremacy where other people are put on the front.
And just, just to remind you guys, you are listening to the black conversion show on
92.7 FM WMDX with my cousin, okay.
So even though like they take someone and push him up in the front and say, no, don't listen
to them, listen to the, to the other person.
Yeah.
That's, you're actually benefiting from the loud mouth person.
You are, right?
Like the dominoes.
Because you would not have been called if that person was not loud, right?
Exactly.
Right.
So you're boring.
So we know how that goes.
So give props what props to do.
So we're going to give Miss Reese her props.
Yes.
Keep going.
And I'm not sure why the WNBA receded their second technical file, but they did because
I think they realized it was some bull crap.
And once you get a reputation, no matter what system or business you work in, that's
how people see you.
Yeah.
Because it's already out there publicly, right?
If you did not mention that they receded that second technical file, I would have thought
she had to file.
I would have thought she was just a person that the referees deemed not controllable.
And the tricky part is if she gets seven, she can be suspended from a whole game.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
So we're, I'm going to send some juju out to her and tell it like don't let these people,
you know, make mess up your flow.
But we're going to follow her because she gets seven technical files.
We go let y'all know like, we don't start a petition because it's going to be so
bull crap.
Okay.
Now you got me one to go wash Chicago sky.
Okay.
And why are we on the topic of black women?
Can we talk about Jasmine Crockett?
Ooh.
We only got a little time left when we can.
Okay.
Okay.
But Jasmine Crockett, she's a representative, um, Texas woman from Congress, or a Congress
woman from Texas.
Yeah.
The Congress woman.
Right.
U.S.
Okay.
U.S.
Representative.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But she has been like snapping and not as she just snapped on the Marjorie.
I think her name is Marjorie Green, but she's been snapping everywhere, right?
And I'm just loving the attitude.
I'm loving the flow.
I'm loving like her again, that confidence in that, no, you're not going to remove me
and you're not going to silence me and I'm not going to conform to your, whatever.
Tolerical rules.
BS.
Yeah.
Can we just also acknowledge that, um, Jasmine Crockett, she representative Jasmine Crockett
also has like, she checked somebody.
I was watching it because now I'm all into like, I don't even know what happens in the
U.S.
I just want to hear her talk.
I just like to hear her voice.
Right.
I'm just watching her just googling her now and she told somebody the other day.
She was like, girl, I'm sure I'm more trained than you.
I'm sure I've passed more bars across this country than you can even articulate.
So not only is she gangster, she's.
She's educated.
What?
Okay.
My kind of sister.
So we, when we, you know, we're going to take a quick break in a minute, but not right
now, but when we get back, we're going to get into it.
We're going to get into just work for her because she said some things that you know, it's
trending right now.
So we're going to get it in.
Work for work.
It says, come on through.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Come on through.
And now we got a new word for Karen.
Yeah.
But a new word that might be considered like, again, homophobic because of black.
When we say things, we don't perceive it as the same way as non black LGBTQ.
So we're going to get in that too because I don't think black people felt it was homophobic.
We felt like sis.
That was how you clap back.
Okay.
They didn't make t-shirts, slogans, websites.
Okay.
Black people started donated to Jasmine.
Like, I'm not even from Texas girl, but you can get $5 from me.
Okay.
Almost like the re-bringing of the white.
Yeah.
We're going to be back, y'all.
You listening to the black conversion show.
You do not want to miss this tea with me and my cousin Clyde.
All right.
You're tuned back in with the black conversion show with your girl Brandi Grayson, the hostess
with their Melsters on 92.7 FM W M D X. See, I got it now, hey, and I got in the house
of my co-host, my cousin Clyde.
He brings the dynamic, the energy, and he makes me really happy.
I try.
You ain't trying.
You being in.
Thank you.
Period in period.
So back to our conversation before we went on break.
So prior to our break, we were talking about black women.
We talked about Angel Reese and how dope she is an NWA W N B A. And now we're on the topic
of Jasmine Crockett.
Yes.
She's a US representative out of Texas.
And the girl is bad and she's been like making waves and she's been talking to her stuff
and we like people who talk stuff.
So what we were talking about before is how like how y'all, so I just want to point out
that I never watch like the Congress, U.S. Congress sessions.
The House representative.
Yeah.
I don't know what you call that.
What do you call that, Luke, when they have there?
Is it a caucus?
What do you call it?
It's a committee hearing.
A committee hearing.
Okay.
So I don't watch this stuff because it's like, it's boring.
It's really boring.
You don't know what they're talking about, right?
Well, me anyway.
Y'all might be more informed than me.
It's not going to take me on my job and keep me alive.
No.
Yes.
Exactly.
Right.
So I don't even watch it.
But now, every time there's a committee meeting or a hearing or anything with
her, I'm trying to tune in.
So let's play a clip real quick.
And our folks, let's just play the clip.
And I want you to hear what that change was, this exchange that was happening during this
committee meeting that has gone viral.
Okay.
Yeah.
So let's go ahead, Luke.
Play that little clip for us.
Let us see.
Do you know what we're here for?
Do you know what we're here for?
I don't think you know what you're here for.
Well, you don't want to talk about, I think your fake eyelashes are messing up.
No, I ain't nothing.
Hold on, hold on.
Order, Mr. Chairman.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay, Luke.
Okay.
So, so this lady, I think her name is Marjorie Green says, I don't know, she's like, I
don't think you know what we're here for because she goes left, prior to this clip, Marjorie
Green goes left.
She's already talking mess.
Well, she can start asking about if someone, that's part of the committee hired or employed
someone.
A family member or something like that.
Yeah, yeah.
Representative Crockett was like, girl, that's not why we're here.
We're here.
Yeah.
Stay focused and get back focused.
I don't think you know why we're here.
And then, you know, Karen, right?
We're going to call Marjorie Karen.
She's like, well, I don't think you know why you're here and then she's talking about
in your fake eyelashes.
I don't think you can see what your fake eyelashes are.
So everything in this committee erupts, right?
They're like, Chairman, Chairman, get back order.
We need order.
Yeah.
And it's hilarious, y'all.
And then like this one, I don't think we have the clip, but this one goodness I wish
I wrote and made a note of this US representative congresswoman who stood up for Jasmine Crockett.
It was a white lady.
She was like, baby.
Oh, oh, you're not about to do that up in here.
Yeah.
And I was cracking up watching, like, okay, because that's the kind of white people I need
on my team, okay?
Yeah.
Someone who's going to address when wrong has happened in the moment.
No matter what.
And no matter what.
So let's hear Jasmine Crockett's clap back.
Let's hear that so that we can enjoy it.
Go ahead, Luke.
I'm just curious, just to better understand your ruling.
If someone on this committee then starts talking about somebody's bleach blonde, bad, built
butch body, that would not be engaging in personalities, correct?
Uh oh.
What now?
What?
Bleach, blonde.
Bleach, blonde.
Thanks Luke.
Bad, built, butch body, bleach, blonde, look, and the chairman was like, what was that?
Yeah.
Bad, no idea what she was saying.
They didn't even know she had a hit below the belt.
They were just like, uh, who said what?
But the one to the, if you watch the clip, the one, the congressman to the right of him,
messy.
He was like, yeah.
I was like, oh, this is messy.
We're going down.
But is she?
Butch.
Childless.
And then people were on social media following Marjorie in public and saying to her with the
like, is this bleach blonde, bad, built, butch body, the lady Marjorie don't know what
she was saying.
But it's, it's America is ignorant right now, right?
So I can't even fall either one of them, right?
Because they were both authentic, right?
Marjorie probably feels like what you fake lashes, you in the house of congress.
And then of course our girl feels like, butch body, whatever, that is America.
So this goes back to like what we talked about in the first segment when you said like,
we can't be our authentic selves in any space that we're in, especially a professional
space because the rules are not set for these type of conversations.
No, they're not.
And I think for people known as black, the joy that we get out of situations like this,
the fact that she said it so effortlessly and so witty as a comeback.
So as you pointed out, now people are black people specific, black women, specifically,
when they're running into representative green and traffic or outside or at the airport,
they're literally like, oh, okay, bleach, blonde, blah, blah, blah, like you said.
And I think that's where we have learned to get our power back, you know what I mean?
Like, even though you, we know your races and that your anti-black, this is how we gonna
get you.
Yeah.
We're gonna join you, right?
It reminds me of the incident with the white folded chairs.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The boat, the boat outing.
The boat outing.
Yes.
The famous boat outing.
So listen to the black conversion show 92.7 FM WMDX with your girl, Brandi Grayson
and my cousin.
Okay.
Okay.
So we're just talking about Jasmine Crockett, representative Jasmine Crockett out of
Texas.
And the incident that she had during a committee meeting with representative green and
how amazing we really appreciate her clap back and how that reminded me of the boat
situations.
Yeah.
When those, the white family, it was like a ship or something.
And they were trying to tell the boat, um, a boat operator, yeah, like the, the operator
was trying to tell the another boat, like a pontoon, a pontoon boat carrying is a white
family.
Like, you got to move because this boat, the ship has to dock.
Like, you got to move out the way and they started beating up the dude and the dude was
black.
So, and it was like several white people beating up one black guy, but baby, what they
didn't know was there's a call in nature.
When we see one of us in need, baby, oh, we're coming.
They were swimming.
They was flying.
Oh, my God.
They was dropping out of helicopters.
They was coming out of the sea.
They told them people, uh, yes, they, and when we say they, we mean black people.
Yes.
And like I said, this is where America is.
Back 10 years ago, it would have been like, oh my God, this is crazy.
But we was all seen there like, yes, yes, yes, really about the warrior energy, right?
No longer being complacent and compliant.
And I know that also is the disconnect between our older generations, our elders, what
they say, we are not our ancestors.
And the younger one.
Well, I'm, I'm just going to say that I stand on the backs of my, our, okay, they started
the plow.
We're going to finish.
Yeah.
Okay.
And we're going to finish it in the way that we desire.
But that boat incident, when we saw that black dude jump out that boat and swim like he was
a Olympic swimmer.
Yeah.
All the, all the black people across the country was like, I told y'all black people
can swim.
He swam and reached up and got on the dog like and threw them hands after that, right?
Because baby, after we swimming, I would have been like, I don't have been tired to just
fight over.
I don't have been so tired.
But it was not.
So if you remember the white chair, there was a person that picked up the white, the white
chair folded it up and waxed somebody across the area.
Look, that became earrings.
That became a whole thing.
He sure is the same and trended just like the bleached blonde bad bitch, but white folks
were showing up to.
I ain't going to lie.
They did show up.
They was helping.
They was helping.
They people too.
It was like, white people was joining in.
And black people was joining in.
It was just.
Okay.
And that's what I'm talking about.
I don't know the kind of white people I want around me.
Okay.
Because they're next to me watching nobody treat us differently.
And you talk about you down.
You was not my ally.
Let's swing into.
Nope.
That was helping.
They follow people.
Okay.
Okay.
Let's get back to this thing.
Well, whatever.
You listen to the black conversion show on 92.7 FM.
You don't want to next mix what we got to talk about next to my cousin, clap.
All right, we are back with the black conversion show on 92.7 FM WMDX listening to your girl
Brandy Grayson, the hostess with the most is in my code.
I don't know.
I don't even want to call your co-host.
It's more like a code.
Your favorite cousin.
Yeah.
My favorite cousin, clap.
Clap.
Okay.
Before break, clap.
I was confused because you like the people came to save or fight, but then I thought they
were fighting with the black people with our new ship, but they were actually fighting on
the white people's ass.
Yeah.
It started with like three white folks jumping on one black man and then about five black
people came to help that one black man and then about five white folks came to help
those three white people.
Then it turned into like 20 white people and 20 black folks.
Wasn't a cross-allot ship going on.
Okay.
So I know helping.
I was wrong, but I'm going to encourage you to go watch the video and happen like last
year, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So anyway, we're going to move past that.
So I also want to bring up.
We were talking about representative Jasmine Crockett and representative Marjorie Green.
And I just want to point out that this Miss Marjorie Green is a reflection of Trumpism.
I don't know if that's the thing, but she is, they have set that in the top.
Okay.
So she definitely is.
So she is basically told the black caucus the other day that they worship George Floyd
and she could dims how they worship George Floyd.
And it's like, how do you worship a man that was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer?
So I just want to point out that this is green.
This is representative green and she's always saying some off-the-wall extremists or taking
an extremist position and what's happening right now, she, we might as well go on to Trump.
Okay.
But she's the one that took on that race right now during a very important time within
our history of voting for the next president.
And we pay attention every time it comes down to election, someone is going to jump out
there from the Republican side and spew racism to kick up some dust.
And she was just the one this time to say, I'm going to be that person, right?
Because they can't work with Candace Namo Candace, don't walk up, baby Candace, don't
walk up.
She want to be black now.
Yeah.
She want to be black.
She over time out.
She, she grew up in a church now and she, she just reminds me of our conversation last
week where you were like, when you date outside of your race, you lose some kind of power.
The conversation we were talking about.
And then how I had said oftentimes people date outside their race and then they want to
come back when they 45 or 50 and it's like, bro, you are already broken and traumatized.
So Candace, Owen reminds me of that.
Now you want to come home?
She not been on a breakfast club and everything.
Girls say where you are.
Okay.
We're good.
Stay over there.
We're good.
Anyway.
So as you guys know, let I just want to transition real quick into Trump because last week
when we were talking about Trump, we didn't get to complete our conversation.
He did not.
Now, Trump was indicted on 34 charges, federal charges of like hiding money or lying or whatever
he was doing with those 34 charges.
New York state charges.
New York state.
Yeah.
Okay.
New York state charges.
His own state almost where he runs a lot of his business, where his family is from,
they got down on him.
And guess what happened next?
He raised millions and millions of dollars following the indictment.
And then he walked outside and he gave his fist just like Hitler was like, drama, it's
mess.
Like again, once again, mess wins again.
People like mess as much as folks are like, that's messy and I don't get down with the
mess who wife folks love it, black folks love it.
And one thing about Trump, he's going to utilize it to get what he wants.
So we're about to have a president like this is the thing when last time he's leading in
some of the people.
He's gonna win.
Yeah.
And I was, I was thinking the other day like last time he ran for office, I told everybody
he was going to win because we do like mess, we, it's like we love Hollywood, we like
stories, we like drama, we like anything that's going to keep us, you know, shock us,
shock us, right?
Like it's weird.
I think humans are weird.
Yeah.
And I think we're messy.
That's why I often like to just be at home by myself because humans are very different.
Yeah.
From what?
I don't know, but they're just different.
So the one thing I wanted to address today was Trump in his campaign.
He's about to be the next president convicted right of state crimes or whatever you want
to call.
I don't know the details.
But who gets to run for presidency and have 34 charges and died on 34 charge, Trump?
Yeah.
He does.
And I think this is the beginning of a system falling.
I feel like Babylon is falling.
I feel like the US government is falling and a lot of black people are looking forward to
voting for Trump.
Yeah.
Are you voting for Trump?
Um, I am not voting for Trump.
I might.
I'm one of those people that is like, no, that's honesty, right?
I'm one of those people that is always like Democrat, Democrat, Democrat because the Republican
party has always felt super racist to me, but I'm on my own island now and they're saying
that because a lot of people are like, I'm going to vote for Trump.
And what reasons they give you?
Um, they're giving reasons because his name was on the stimulus check, which is ironic
to me.
They're giving reasons to say, um, some black businesses are feeling that he's going
to, um, offer assistance and support again to small businesses and help businesses come
up, which I do think he did a great job during COVID for a lot of businesses that need
to relieve funds and things like that.
Um, but he really, we just got to trickle down from it.
Yeah.
I mean, he's big business corporate dude, right?
He's all about getting corporations and the folks that run these businesses more money.
And then we got the trickle down and we enjoyed the trickle down because we didn't get
nothing before.
Yeah, but the trickle down runs out.
And so we're here.
He doesn't set us up for success.
Other black folks are also saying that his border control policies and things, they like
that because it protects their neighborhoods because a lot of the immigrants were sent
to Chicago outside.
Yeah.
And black folks had, and we got a lot of reputed Gs here.
Yeah.
And locally in Madison, there was a shelter that was supposed to become a man shelter in
the city council voted it down right on the east side.
And when we got all those refugees, they housed them in that and made it a refugee shelter.
And the question for black people was, why didn't you allow that shelter to be for the
homeless people that were here, but you allowed it to be for a shelter for the refugees
without a problem?
And it passed like this when the conversation around the shelter for the people locally,
it took months.
So it was like voted down.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the policy around the border is really an important policy for black people.
And we don't talk about it because we just assume that black people are on the side of
Democrats when it comes to this border.
But we're not.
A lot of us are not.
Just want to be safe.
Well, that and we end up becoming the second, the third level citizen.
So remember, history of America has always been white, black, and then other.
So as the Latino and the immigrants population is growing, the conversation about the black
needs and the black families and black education and black resources are now going to the bottom.
And you can actually watch it in our local polytrics.
You can also pay attention to the resources that's being allocated to Latinos or Latino
groups or Latino efforts or immigrants versus black people.
So black people are feeling like we're you're losing us Democrats.
You're losing us because we built this.
We built this country.
Yeah.
This country is built on the backs of enslaved African folks, okay, who died, bled, sweated,
you know, I don't care.
We're murdered.
I don't care.
We're talking about the Madison Capitol.
Who built that?
Yeah.
You know, so I think that's a great point.
Yeah.
And so as we hear those stories come from our people, we have no choice but to listen because
we listen to our people.
Yeah.
And then you have people that just downright don't like Trump because of his outright
racist.
I mean, he's racist.
He's sexist.
He's misogynist.
Yeah.
He's really a rapist.
Like he is the extreme of what we would want out of a human being and specifically someone
who's running our country.
However, I do think he represents our country.
Yeah.
I think he's the what our country looks like, right?
What we look like and someone I heard earlier today, someone reference his campaign to like
when Hitler took over his country, like they like the drama they want to see these people
put in play.
These people know how to play the game and they're put in those offices.
So you're right.
He represents our country right now and this is what it looks like.
The president doesn't took for me in the 36 years that I've lived here, the president
and what the president does does not bother me.
Yeah.
I'm sorry to say.
I mean, from the macro to the micro, it doesn't, but it doesn't impact us on the macro
level.
Yeah.
And we also want to say that I don't believe the president actually is running the country.
He's just a puppet.
It's like we like a CEO runs a company and you and the board chooses the CEO.
Yeah.
There's a board out there with the one percenters, whatever you want to call them, but
they really are running the show and they are leading us down the path they want us to
go.
Like it's always like that.
Um, it's, it's the social conditioning and social construct and it's fed to us through
media, through sound, because they run all of that.
Right.
They all work together and they run all of that.
All the media is controlled.
I think by Luke, you know, is it like 10 people or one, you don't know, would you know,
you know, Luke?
Luke run the media.
No.
He's part of the one person.
Things would look a lot different if I was in charge.
Uh, I don't know how many people, but there's very few corporations.
Yeah.
Like a handful.
Yeah.
That control all of our media.
And I mean, everything.
So anyway, that's Trump.
Black people are going to vote for Trump.
Trump is going into office.
Um, so get ready.
Get ready.
Yeah.
He's coming back and it's going to be a show.
It is.
But you know what?
What?
I feel like we will have a bigger voice than we did the last time.
He was an author.
Why do you think that?
Because it's here now.
We're here.
Right.
You racist.
We cool with that.
So give us what we need because we know you racist, right?
I'd rather deal with a racist.
That's loud about being a racist than deal with races like in Madison, Wisconsin and our
city, local county representatives who are not racist, supposedly, but everything they
do is racist.
And what we call that COVID versus overt versus COVID, covert racism, like where is
hidden?
Madison is what I call the sunken place.
It's Pleasantville.
White people will smile at you.
They will say, hi, I love what you're doing, Brandy.
And go to a meeting and say we need to defund her because I don't like what she said.
Yeah.
Kind of like.
They grow that.
Angie Reese.
Yeah, they do that.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So let me deal with a racist.
That's like, I'm racist.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
It's a agenda down by half.
Right.
I don't even need to come in here and be like, you're amazing.
Let's focus on the end.
Yeah.
This is what I need.
You racist.
How can this benefit you?
How can this benefit me?
Let's stay stuck to the agenda.
Okay.
When the challenge with Democrats, especially in our progressive Democrats, oh my god.
We don't even want to talk about the progressives of Madison is so fake.
It's so ugly.
It's so white.
It's so nasty.
What's this?
It's nasty work.
It's nasty work.
That's nasty work.
That's nasty work.
That's nasty work.
Only want to talk about that.
Okay.
It is.
No smoke.
No smoke.
You're listening to the Black Conversion Show, a 92.7 FM WMDX.
Listen to Brandy Grayson and my cousin Clyde.
Hey.
Cuzzle.
Let's transition to something else because I'm done with.
Yeah.
Because we can keep going.
Yeah.
My blood pressure going up and we, election is coming up.
They're going to have to pay us to talk about them.
No, no, yeah.
We just go talk about it.
We enjoy the tea.
Okay.
So do what y'all need to do.
Oh my god.
Look out the window.
No way.
See.
We were like see.
Yeah.
Y'all don't know we in New York.
We see a lot of here.
Okay.
My bad.
Okay.
Go ahead cousin Clyde.
What we going to transition to next?
Well, let's talk about the folks and.
Where?
What?
I don't know.
Go ahead.
See Brandy don't threw me off, but we do this, right?
So okay.
They say the Trump is leading in the people's choice.
He's leading in about five states where it comes down to like there.
You know, like the whole pre-election thing.
Mm-hmm.
So.
Who we voting for?
I don't know.
Do you think he's going to win Wisconsin?
Definitely.
Did he win Wisconsin in the last election?
No.
I don't think he did.
But it was like by the.
But Biden is like old and shrinking away in front of our eyes.
Yeah.
Biden looks like he's about to pass out.
And this is the problem.
We should have had a third candidate.
And I think Kennedy.
Kennedy.
Edward Kennedy or someone from the Kennedy family.
Well, how are we running?
Yeah.
Robert F. Kennedy.
So Robert F. Kennedy.
So Robert F. Kennedy.
So Robert F. Kennedy.
So Robert F. Kennedy.
Junior is running.
I don't know if he's on the ballot here in Wisconsin.
Yeah.
Because he's he.
There's a lot of complexity into his campaign.
His largest donor happens to be Trump's largest donor.
Oh, get out of here.
No.
So that's the.
That's crazy.
So there's a lot of folks out there saying that well, the Trump team wants to prop up that campaign
so that it can take off both from Biden.
Oh, that's funny.
So there's a lot of folks out there saying that well, the Trump team wants to prop up that campaign
so that it can take off both from Biden.
So that's a handful of states are going to have RFK juniors.
That's crazy.
See, that's politics.
This messy.
You got the money.
You get to buy it.
Yeah.
That's all it is.
It's injustice and politics ain't about justice.
It's not about the well-being of people.
So Trump will win from the strategy to the money investment.
The even the indictment helped them.
Yeah.
And in Wisconsin, they show in the tail, right?
Because we're going to talk about it when we come back.
Oh, my goodness.
Your dude are superintendent.
Yeah.
Baribu school district.
Black man.
Rainy Briggs.
Rainy Briggs.
He worked in the, what does surrounding Madison areas for some time?
He worked in elementary school.
He was working with community out in Verona in San Prairie when we get back.
We're going to talk about it.
Oh, my God.
It's made.
How the Trumpers are Trumping.
They're Trumping, Trumping, Trumping.
And it's made national news.
All over.
All over.
People are talking about it.
But my thing is like, this is how they be feeling.
Yeah.
The difference is this man's.
He did it.
And told him, you're not shaking my daughter's hand.
It was.
It's a hot mess.
Hopefully we can play the clip.
And we got, I got the audio.
You got the audio?
But we got to send it to Luke before him.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
But y'all going to look it up.
Right.
Because we're going to come back.
And we're going to talk about the tea.
And what happened with Baribu superintendent, Rainy Briggs.
It's the show.
Okay.
You're listening to the black conversion show on 92.7 FMWMDX with my co-host, my cousin
Clash.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
We'll be back.
All right.
YouTube back in with your girl, Brandi Grason on the black conversion show.
You're listening to 92.1 FMWMDX with my co-host, cousin Clash.
Hello.
Hello.
So we're just talking about Trump.
And we're just talking about Trumpsters and how Trumpsters are taken over and how Trump
is about to win.
Yeah.
And now we also wanted to give you a little tea on the Trumpster incident in our local area.
Uh-huh.
The day-and-count is bearable.
Day-and-county.
It is, ain't it?
No.
Sock County.
Anyway, it's down a street.
Yeah.
It's like 45 minutes away from here.
Uh-huh.
But we had an incident that occurred at a graduation that went national.
Uh-huh.
A cousin Clash.
Tell us about it.
Well, a Trumpster at a bearable high school graduation.
And he went to a guest house in nation.
I think he was a jump up on stage.
And out of, I think several Admin staff.
There was one that was African-American.
His name is Dr. Rainy Briggs.
He is the superintendent.
Super-entended.
Super-entended.
The boss man.
Okay.
Okay.
The father jumped up on stage and basically pushed with both hands with both hands on him.
And removed him out of the lineup where his daughter was shaking the admins hand and said,
you're not shaking my daughter's hand in so many words.
Let's listen to the audio a little quick.
Just listen to it.
It's not a lot, but just listen real quick.
They clap and like, yeah, congratulations.
Excuse me.
You better get a voice back, man.
You see he jumped on the stage.
He says, that's my daughter.
And he said, man, bro, get your hands off of me, bro.
That's good, look.
So, when it happens, you know,
it's interrupted the entire ceremony.
The whole ceremony.
And when it initially occurred,
the folks, the other administrators that was sitting on standing on the stage with Dr. Rainy Briggs,
superintendent Rainy Briggs, they did nothing.
Yeah.
And that's my thing, y'all.
If you, my ally, you, my working partner, you, my white.
My staff.
Look, if somebody come at me, I'm going to need you to do something.
Like, don't stand there and allow any harm to come at me.
You supposed to be my homie.
Yeah.
I felt like there were audience members that entered the stage and actually helped.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Because the folks on the stage were like, oh, my God, what's happening?
Where's Brandon?
Yeah.
Who is Brandon?
It kind of gave you no corporate messiness.
Like, they almost don't like him themselves.
Well, I mean, they're like good.
Somebody deal with him.
Well, it is bear.
That happens.
Bear Boo is.
Yeah.
You know, we're about 50, 60 young white men stood up on their city lines and held up the
Hitler.
Was that a graduation?
What was that?
I feel like that was prom.
Because they were all dressed up.
It was a school prom shoot.
Like here at the Capitol.
At the Capitol.
At the Capitol.
They came, I believe, and they were downtown Madison when they did it.
And they probably put it in their yearbook.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
It's crazy.
So I'm not surprised about the action.
The father told the father who did this to Dr. Rainey Briggs said, I did it because I
don't like him.
And I had past incidents with him.
Well, I believe his daughter was, I don't know if she was expelled or something, but his
daughter was considered a bully.
And I think Dr. Rainey Briggs took like a hard stance against her in the school.
She looked like a bully, her curl pattern.
And it just, she looked mortified in the video.
She looked like, I don't think she thought of her damage.
She went from super happy and excited and felt accomplished, too literally embarrassed.
Like, oh my God, where you can't do nothing because, hey, this is my dad.
So now I can't do nothing.
But what do I do?
But he could have just instructed her, hey, dog, look, don't, she is easy walk past.
And it wouldn't have been that big of a deal.
I mean, you have to have, it's all the time.
It sure do.
You have a right to shake whoever hands, but what you don't have the right to do is put
your hands on somebody.
And I think it's way beyond this whole, I just didn't like them.
As always, this is what racism looks like.
It looks like entitlement.
It looks like you think that it's okay for you to put your hands on me to touch my daughter's
hand.
What?
Yeah.
The carcassity of it all.
Okay.
The carcassity of it all.
And Dr. Rainey Briggs handle his self was so much class because I would, he would have
been fly, you would have seen in the camera him flying back.
Yeah.
I'm not healed.
Yeah.
I still got work to do.
Sometimes I can ground myself in, but when people physically touch me, I lose it.
And I think it's from my trauma and growing up, like in the projects like that, you don't
let people touch you.
And it's 2024.
It's so many active, like violent people at ceremonies and large crowds and everyone
is at on high alert.
I would know.
And you're right.
Like I would have thought maybe there would have been an ambush of this guy because it's
like, who are you?
What are you?
Are you trying to hurt somebody here?
But Dr. Rainey Briggs has been working in these white, predominantly white school districts
for a long time.
And he needs to figure that out.
Right.
Because he was a director of elementary education in Middleton cross planes, which also has
a very high level of racist, oh, excuse me, racist incidents in their school districts
and most of their schools.
So I'm like, Dr. Rainey.
Why are you even going to apply and work in them spaces like no, Shay, like I get it, you
got to feed your family.
You got to do the things you got to do.
And look at how they're treating you, right?
And why are you even in these spaces?
But I think a part of it for black people that are working to navigate these systems is
that we really desire to make a change.
Right.
That's when I'm assumption.
I don't know him like that.
I haven't had a conversation with Superintendent Rainey Briggs.
But I'm going to assume that his, you know, his desire is to make sure it doesn't collide.
Does not agree with me.
I wish you got this piece.
You know what?
It's not necessarily.
I don't agree.
It takes me back to our conversation last week.
Yeah.
What is the dynamics?
How are you in these spaces and comfortable, right?
Yeah.
But I ain't going to say too much.
I'm going to do my research.
Yeah.
And we're not going to make him the problem in this moment.
We're not going to make the problem.
But brother, if you go sit yourself in spaces where people are racists and they have proven
that, you got to be careful.
But isn't that everywhere, Madison?
I feel like everywhere I go, people are looking at me funny or there's an incident or there's
a situation, especially when you're in systems.
That is.
But the school districts normally is the most racist corporate.
What do you think about Madison school districts?
Well, the statistics tell it all.
The data tells it all.
Black kids are about our new superintendent who says he identifies that black, but he's
ambiguous, but I can't tell that he's black, but he identifies as black.
What I identify is he is another person chasing a fat salary and does not know this community
that will.
He's from here.
He's from here.
I think I saw you on Facebook talking about it.
We're a whole different type of people now, right?
We're a whole different type of school district.
So, what it gave was wherever you were at, you chose to now pick a different career path
and you want to come back home and mark my word.
It's going to be even worse than it was.
I'm hoping that we have some type of positive progression.
I hope.
Whether it's baby steps or not.
But I hope that when I hear that, brother, let's not talk about that, brother.
But let's talk about how, when they're, when they're, I don't know how do you say indoctrinating
superintendents and people with influential positions, they go to rich white people houses.
And then they talk about the needs of our community.
And those needs and the conversation doesn't reflect the needs of the community because
you're not even in the community, you're over there on shorewood.
Yeah.
Okay.
And I got some donors in shorewood.
So shut out to shorewood because y'all got that long money, that old money, that money,
money, money.
That's set up money.
That money also disconnects us from the needs of our community.
And oftentimes that's where the separation from the black booze regime occurs in the community
that it should be serving.
So next week, we're going to get into it again because we got a, we've got some research
in it.
Black love and education is going to be our topic next week.
So don't miss it.
You're tuned into black conversion show on 92.7 FM WMDX with me and my cousin Clad.
Until next time, peace.
I know I should wish you a great, I love a dream, I love a good, I love a good, I love a good.