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The Bird & The Bear - Session 81 - "The Birdy South: Two Piece"

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Content provided by Dimes In The Dozen, Sammy Ray, and Daryl Lazer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dimes In The Dozen, Sammy Ray, and Daryl Lazer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Please share, rate, and review … Follow us on all social media platforms @dimesinthedozen

On this session of The Bird and The Bear … Our hosts, Sammy Ray and Daryl Lazer, continue their discussion about the Deep South with their reactions to the next two installments in a YouTube documentary series on the Deep South by Peter Santenello, “Inside Inner-City America - Breaking Hood Mindset” and “Exploring Wealthy Alabama” … Let’s sort through it together!

(0:00) - The session opens with some elite snack picks from our hosts before they introduce the first YouTube documentary they’ll be discussing, “Inside Inner-City America - Breaking Hood Mindset,” by Peter Santenello - “If you were raised right, you would realize that being an American means that you should you care about your f**king fellow man … So yeah, it is your responsibility to care about this community"

(16:10) - A man named Tommy shows Peter Santenello around Jacksonville, Mississippi and as they walk through Tommy’s old neighborhood Peter compares crime in Jacksonville to crime in Bangladesh - “His tiny statistic that he used to prop up an entire conversation … Is only good in that narrow window”

(24:32) - Peter and Tommy make their way to a community garden and Tommy has a bit of a back-and-forth with an old man at the garden - “There’s no one at the top … They can’t elect anyone who’s gonna lead the charge … To be a communal leader … To, you know, rally the people into change … Like, Tommy is a good example of someone who can help but you need bigger figures than Tommy”

(33:23) - Sammy notices that Peter keeps coming back to the argument that kids need their fathers if they want a chance at being successful - “No guarantee that the next generations of fathers is going to step up, is going to fix the problems of today … You can have a crystal ball and go, ‘Look, all the fathers in the future are gonna be there’ … Great, what do we right now?”

(44:51) - Tommy takes Peter to his alma mater, Tougaloo College, and it sparks a short conversation between our hosts about traditional colleges versus HBCUs (Historically Black Colleges and Universities) - “Where as, if your black in America … You have a sturdy vein of understanding, and culture, and experience … You have that thread that immediately connects you”

(55:26) - The first documentary wraps up with Tommy taking Peter to a local soul food restaurant where they spoke with more of the locals before driving through one of the nicer neighborhoods in Jacksonville - “The people of Jacksonville have made the most out of what they have but they clearly deserve a chance to have more”

(1:05:08) - Our hosts introduce the second YouTube documentary they’ll be discussing, “Exploring Wealthy Alabama,” by Peter Santenello - “These motherf**kers rebuilt a whole 800 square-foot house and it’s gonna be gone in three years”

(1:10:51) - A man named Doug shows Peter Santenello around Fairhope, Alabama and they slowly make their way through the coastal town as Doug explains some of it’s history - “No, you f**king haven’t … You live in a white isolated bubble in southern f**king Alabama … Where rich people rebuild there piers, regularly, and the only black guy in town was a bartender … that DIED!”

(1:16:22) - Daryl points out another problem with Peter Santenello’s documentaries and the hosts go on to debate Doug’s past life - “Why can’t the philosophy of this place propagate outside of this place? Why can’t this be all of Alabama?”

(1:22:45) - The second documentary wraps up with Doug taking Peter to the beautiful home of his friend Michelle where they have a conversation about life in Fairhope - “Didn’t see the Chinese guy and the black guy is dead”

  continue reading

92 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 406387629 series 1421778
Content provided by Dimes In The Dozen, Sammy Ray, and Daryl Lazer. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dimes In The Dozen, Sammy Ray, and Daryl Lazer or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Please share, rate, and review … Follow us on all social media platforms @dimesinthedozen

On this session of The Bird and The Bear … Our hosts, Sammy Ray and Daryl Lazer, continue their discussion about the Deep South with their reactions to the next two installments in a YouTube documentary series on the Deep South by Peter Santenello, “Inside Inner-City America - Breaking Hood Mindset” and “Exploring Wealthy Alabama” … Let’s sort through it together!

(0:00) - The session opens with some elite snack picks from our hosts before they introduce the first YouTube documentary they’ll be discussing, “Inside Inner-City America - Breaking Hood Mindset,” by Peter Santenello - “If you were raised right, you would realize that being an American means that you should you care about your f**king fellow man … So yeah, it is your responsibility to care about this community"

(16:10) - A man named Tommy shows Peter Santenello around Jacksonville, Mississippi and as they walk through Tommy’s old neighborhood Peter compares crime in Jacksonville to crime in Bangladesh - “His tiny statistic that he used to prop up an entire conversation … Is only good in that narrow window”

(24:32) - Peter and Tommy make their way to a community garden and Tommy has a bit of a back-and-forth with an old man at the garden - “There’s no one at the top … They can’t elect anyone who’s gonna lead the charge … To be a communal leader … To, you know, rally the people into change … Like, Tommy is a good example of someone who can help but you need bigger figures than Tommy”

(33:23) - Sammy notices that Peter keeps coming back to the argument that kids need their fathers if they want a chance at being successful - “No guarantee that the next generations of fathers is going to step up, is going to fix the problems of today … You can have a crystal ball and go, ‘Look, all the fathers in the future are gonna be there’ … Great, what do we right now?”

(44:51) - Tommy takes Peter to his alma mater, Tougaloo College, and it sparks a short conversation between our hosts about traditional colleges versus HBCUs (Historically Black Colleges and Universities) - “Where as, if your black in America … You have a sturdy vein of understanding, and culture, and experience … You have that thread that immediately connects you”

(55:26) - The first documentary wraps up with Tommy taking Peter to a local soul food restaurant where they spoke with more of the locals before driving through one of the nicer neighborhoods in Jacksonville - “The people of Jacksonville have made the most out of what they have but they clearly deserve a chance to have more”

(1:05:08) - Our hosts introduce the second YouTube documentary they’ll be discussing, “Exploring Wealthy Alabama,” by Peter Santenello - “These motherf**kers rebuilt a whole 800 square-foot house and it’s gonna be gone in three years”

(1:10:51) - A man named Doug shows Peter Santenello around Fairhope, Alabama and they slowly make their way through the coastal town as Doug explains some of it’s history - “No, you f**king haven’t … You live in a white isolated bubble in southern f**king Alabama … Where rich people rebuild there piers, regularly, and the only black guy in town was a bartender … that DIED!”

(1:16:22) - Daryl points out another problem with Peter Santenello’s documentaries and the hosts go on to debate Doug’s past life - “Why can’t the philosophy of this place propagate outside of this place? Why can’t this be all of Alabama?”

(1:22:45) - The second documentary wraps up with Doug taking Peter to the beautiful home of his friend Michelle where they have a conversation about life in Fairhope - “Didn’t see the Chinese guy and the black guy is dead”

  continue reading

92 episodes

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