They just left out the best line aaaaa When the first guy says to the second "you step on my friends lawn I'm gonna bust your ass" after just having a shove fight about sports.
Ever wonder how it looks from carls perspective, a gigantic cup with a ball of meat that has two eyes, a flying cup of fry’s that shoots lasers out his eyes walk toward you
Just realized a few yrs ago people thinking like putting black paint on your face being bad is all just a 'taught societal concept'. I wish more people realized it's all fake. It isn't like you just say 'racism' or 'blackface' and then stupid people gang up on you, even if that's what they tend to do, it's example of teaching people to do something stupid.
@@BlackOps78321 Blackface is much more than just dark makeup used to enhance a costume. Its American origins can be traced to minstrel shows. In the mid to late nineteenth century, white actors would routinely use black grease paint on their faces when depicting plantation slaves and free blacks on stage. To be clear, these weren't flattering representations. At all. Taking place against the backdrop of a society that systematically mistreated and dehumanized black people, they were mocking portrayals that reinforced the idea that African-Americans were inferior in every way. The blackface caricatures that were staples of Minstrelsy (think: Mammy, Uncle Tom, Buck, and Jezebel) took a firm hold in the American imagination, and carried over into other mediums of entertainment. Blackface has also been seen in Vaudeville Shows and on Broadway. Yes, black actors sometimes wore blackface, too, because white audiences didn't want to see them on the stage without it. We have blackface performances to thank for some of the cartoonish, dehumanizing tropes that still manage to make their way into American culture. Beyond that, blackface and systematic social and political repression are so inextricably linked that, according to C. Vann Woodward’s history The Strange Career of Jim Crow, the very term “Jim Crow” - usually used as shorthand for rigid anti-black segregation laws in force between the end of Reconstruction and the Civil Rights Movement - derives from an 1832 blackface minstrel number by Thomas D. Rice. No, minstrel shows don't really happen anymore, but keep in mind that it hasn't been all that long since blackface in its original form existed. And it was regularly seen on television as recently as 1978 in The Black and White Minstrel Show. If respect for people who had to live through a time when blackface went hand-in-hand with day-to-day hateful and discriminatory treatment isn't enough to keep you from wearing it, consider this: there's a case to be made that it's tied up with some of America's worst racial dynamics. Blackface is part of a history of dehumanization, of denied citizenship, and of efforts to excuse and justify state violence. From lynchings to mass incarceration, whites have utilized blackface (and the resulting dehumanization) as part of its moral and legal justification for violence. It is time to stop with the dismissive arguments those that describe these offensive acts as pranks, ignorance and youthful indiscretions. Blackface is never a neutral form of entertainment, but an incredibly loaded site for the production of damaging stereotypes. The same stereotypes that normalize individual and state violence, American racism, and a centuries worth of injustice. Today, blackface reinforces the idea that black people are appropriate targets of ridicule and mockery and reminds us of stereotypes about black criminality, and danger. This can serve to support implicit bias and discriminatory treatment in areas such as law enforcement and employment. Plus, in a society that allegedly values racial integration, isn't there something unsettling about the idea that the closest thing to an actual black person you know could be someone smeared with face paint and wearing an Afro wig at a Halloween party? This creates a false sense of diversity in at atmospheres that include everything but the actual person, the community, and the culture. Does that sound like somewhere you'd be proud to be? The harm, whether it's harm in terms of eliciting anger, or sadness, or triggering various emotions or causing black people to feel both hyper-visible and invisible at the same time, is there. When someone says, 'I didn't mean it that way,' well, their real question should be not ‘Did I mean it?' but, ‘Am I causing harm? The ability to be ignorant, to be unaware of the history and consequences of racial bigotry, to simply do as one pleases, is a quintessential element of privilege. The ability to disparage, to demonize, to ridicule, and to engage in racially hurtful practices from the comfort of one's segregated neighborhoods and racially homogeneous schools reflects both privilege and power. The ability to blame others for being oversensitive, for playing the race card, or for making much ado about nothing are privileges codified structurally and culturally. So, maybe you don't know anything about the history of minstrelsy, and maybe you don't know anything about the pain and trauma of living in a society that imagines blackness as comical or criminal. The question, to ask yourself if you claim ignorance is, "Why do you not know, and what have you done to make sure that you continue to not know?" After all, embracing the chance to mock, dehumanize, and to dismiss the feelings and demands of others, all while re-imagining history so that only things you deem wrong are wrong, is a pretty great way to perpetuate a racist society that treats black people like crap.
My dad is one of these mfs but he's got a better moral compass, talks like Carl but is more clean and stable. I can assure you this is true for Jerseyians.
Remember,shake is so impossibly obnoxious and narcissistic that NOTHING wants to actually be near him. Even a robot girlfriend literally tailored for him would rather be with Carl.
@@Rubyofthedead every time somebody makes a comment like this on a YT video, they already know.. they're just trying to sound more perceptive than they actually are.
Here come that cup, that mutha fucken cup - tat tat tat tat......... I'd love to play that shit for an hour thru the bluetooth speaker at work in the big glorious kitchen I sometimes work in. Great clip & gave me some needed laughs in a break from all the bad shit going on in the world. Thanks man! :)