The Smith House Podcast
The Smith House Podcast
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Charleston White Interview: Unfiltered Thoughts on Hip Hop, Black Culture, and Social Issues
In this exclusive interview, we sit down with Charleston White, a controversial and outspoken figure in the world of hip hop and black culture. Known for his unfiltered commentary and fearless approach to tackling sensitive issues, Charleston takes us on a journey through his life and experiences. We discuss a range of topics, from his personal journey through the criminal justice system to his views on the state of hip hop culture and the impact of social media on modern society.
But it's not all controversy and confrontation. Charleston also shares his insights on the importance of being the change you want to see in the world, starting with yourself and the children in your community. He opens up about his own struggles with addiction and how he overcame them, offering hope and inspiration to those who may be facing similar challenges.
This interview is a must-see for anyone interested in hip hop culture, black culture, and social issues. Join us for a thought-provoking and candid conversation with one of the most talked-about voices in contemporary culture.
#CharlestonWhite #interview #hiphopculture #blackculture #socialissues #controversy #insights #candid #thoughtprovoking #criminaljustice #addiction #recovery #changemaker #inspiration #hope #youtuber #podcast #spotify
Переглядів: 203 514

Відео

"Charleston White's Perspective on Being the Change You Want to See"
Переглядів 603Рік тому
In this inspiring interview, Charleston White shares his vision for creating positive change in his community, starting with children. Join us as he discusses his personal journey of self-improvement, and the importance of mentoring and guiding the next generation towards success. Tune in for a powerful conversation about the impact of positive role models, education, and self-accountability. #...
"Charleston White's Thoughts on the State and Fall of America"
Переглядів 456Рік тому
In this thought-provoking interview, Charleston White shares his unfiltered thoughts on the current state and fall of America. Whether you agree or disagree with his viewpoint, this conversation is sure to spark important discussions about the direction of our country and what we can do to create positive change. #CharlestonWhite #stateofamerica #politics #racerelations #socialmedia #hiphopcult...
"Charleston White it's the Black Man's Fault for the Collapse of the Black Family"
Переглядів 25 тис.Рік тому
In this powerful interview, Charleston White shares his thoughts on the root causes of the collapse of the black family in America. Tune in as he talks about his own experiences with absent fathers and broken homes, and how they have contributed to the challenges faced by black communities today. Join us for a thought-provoking conversation about the importance of family, parenting, and communi...
Charleston White Interview "I'm quitting this character."
Переглядів 483Рік тому
Charleston White is back and he's breaking his silence! In this candid interview, he talks about his decision to quit playing the villain and embrace a new chapter in his life. Tune in as he reflects on his controversial past, the impact of social media on his image, and his plans for the future. Don't miss this powerful conversation about growth and change. #CharlestonWhite #villain #hiphopcul...
Charleston White Interview: What Was Your First Viral Moment.
Переглядів 1,8 тис.Рік тому
In this video, Charleston White shares the story of his first viral moment and how it changed his life. 🔥 From going viral on social media to appearing on major TV shows, he's now using his platform to inspire others and bring attention to important issues. Don't miss this candid conversation with one of the most unique voices in the game! 🎤 #CharlestonWhite #viral #socialmedia #inspiration #TV...
Charleston White Interview: What's Next
Переглядів 172Рік тому
Join Charleston White as he discusses what's next for him and his community. 💬 From his personal journey to his plans for the future, this video is a must-watch for anyone interested in social justice and community empowerment. 🔥 Don't miss out on this thought-provoking conversation with one of the most inspiring voices in the game. 🙌 #CharlestonWhite #socialjustice #communityempowerment #black...

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @danaberry2
    @danaberry2 4 години тому

    Comments low on this one lol

  • @timjhonson3792
    @timjhonson3792 5 годин тому

    They should stop giving air time to people like this dude the real reason that the black family got destroyed was because of welfare. My man, the women took the welfare and the black woman kicked the black man to the curb. Let's tell the truth home dog.

  • @studio619_
    @studio619_ День тому

    Goofy

  • @ossh72
    @ossh72 5 днів тому

    Man in the mirror.

  • @qdontae6
    @qdontae6 6 днів тому

    Thank GOD I had a good daddy, cuz I didn’t understand how important it was as a kid but now I see

  • @mellendysparkman3822
    @mellendysparkman3822 6 днів тому

    The body becomes a shell .once the soul is no longer there .

  • @maxxfatal
    @maxxfatal 8 днів тому

    Charleston is leaving out the fact that BW choose who shoots their clubs up. They intentionally chose the worst BM to procreate with. 🤷‍♂️

  • @Djd271
    @Djd271 9 днів тому

    He is right in someone but at the end of the day there are more morhers than fathers in the community it’s not proportional

  • @Jus4-Us
    @Jus4-Us 11 днів тому

    CW is not accurate. Here are written testimonies.from researchers who had their own personal experiences with welfare growing up: Before we moved into Before we moved into Pruitt-igoe, the welfare department came to our home, they talked with my mother about moving into the housing project, but the stipulation was that my father could not be with us. They would put us e housing project only if for the twelve children If he left the state. Mother and father discussed it and they decided that it was best for the father to leave the home, and that's we got into the projects. -Jociquelline Williams, Pruitt-igoe resident There was even a night staff of men who worked for the welfare department whose job was to go to the home of welfare recipients and they searched to find if there was a man in the home. Sometimes men came back at night to be with t their families. Some wen found in closets hiding Joyce Ladines PhD,

  • @danielkyles470
    @danielkyles470 13 днів тому

    Nobody was really planed to be here we was all born on having sex n a good time

  • @pgppe9488
    @pgppe9488 14 днів тому

    Charleston is correct and I would love to see him on the remix of the Boondocks

  • @TantrumKnows
    @TantrumKnows 14 днів тому

    It’s crazy that made people watch this video and they didn’t subscribe to your channel bro. I got you, Homie.

  • @infinitytricks3716
    @infinitytricks3716 14 днів тому

    My black children will not be slaves. Both children exposed to different cultures. Own their own skilled trades business. Homeowners, landowners. Assets outside of the dollar. No distractions, profits received from proper efforts. Proper preparation prevents poor performance. Every time I listen to Mr. White I get motivated to make progress. Laughter rarely enters, mostly perspectives on American life.

  • @y.m.6667
    @y.m.6667 19 днів тому

    NO LIES TOLD!! He hit the nail on it's HEAD!!

  • @NuwnaRe
    @NuwnaRe 20 днів тому

    Black Man , Earn your Resoect back in the World. ,, Yes , that’s the biggest lie told , We kicked the black man out the house “ This was an gut wrenching honest spiel right here , but yall will down play it 😱

  • @Brittbrat1000
    @Brittbrat1000 21 день тому

    "A man teaches as he ACTS"❤ "People can cry much easier than they can change" - James Baldwin

  • @duketruly
    @duketruly 25 днів тому

    Not snitching is a concept we had long before the dope game, we used it to survive slavery, the sad part is it we are not governing ourselves well

  • @devonperson8928
    @devonperson8928 27 днів тому

    Is this shit a joke or something? Oh ok I guess this for views.

  • @Rob-u6u
    @Rob-u6u 27 днів тому

    The majority of Black men have no children. You're talking about a small number of Black men running around being community D. I am getting tired of being blamed for community problems when i didn't contribute to said problems.

  • @SheedLordBear
    @SheedLordBear 28 днів тому

    Black women do not earn black men. Where is he getting this from?

  • @jasper1949
    @jasper1949 28 днів тому

    ua-cam.com/video/eXU9IozIs2Q/v-deo.htmlsi=3YNPsMuwKFouNnx9 From another black man r I p David Carroll born in 1965 died during the pandemic he stated the black woman co sign with the welfare state kicking,stripping the father out the house etc creating this ish you see today,CW is talking about it post the damage was done not what caused it

  • @amun1999
    @amun1999 28 днів тому

    The white man is the root of the mentality of our people as a whole which is why we act the way we act. Plymouth rock landed on us

  • @kimbernard2546
    @kimbernard2546 28 днів тому

    What is sad, is the damage done to our children, the rise in violence and poverty is not a coincidence it’s designed that way, gentrification is designed by black men, they think they are better off being with non black women, they have made it difficult for her to live in the community she was raised in, let’s look all who were given the keys, who did he want as his neighbor, it was not her was it. The model is already organized they just signed off and approved it. You can’t blame white Americans for everything.

  • @aquilthesolarexpert9460
    @aquilthesolarexpert9460 Місяць тому

    Black man… Use AI to help fix yourself, your family, your community, then the world! It’s not to late.

  • @robertperkins1420
    @robertperkins1420 Місяць тому

    NOOOO!! IT WAS 400 YEARS OF CHATEL SLAVERY.

  • @SelfmadeWeasy
    @SelfmadeWeasy Місяць тому

    This interview was straight factual from everything he said about the black culture and what’s to come this going go down in history

  • @robertsessoms
    @robertsessoms Місяць тому

    100 years of segregation is why Black people are poor now

  • @Kehli_5StarMom
    @Kehli_5StarMom Місяць тому

    They outfits lit ASF😮😮😮😮

  • @Dwight-n3o
    @Dwight-n3o Місяць тому

    He ain't never heard of Willie lynch syndrome.

  • @jeffghant4760
    @jeffghant4760 Місяць тому

    1:30- Bro. He had no choice, fool!!😅

  • @atrain30001
    @atrain30001 Місяць тому

    he wants us to b better and do better and run this country

  • @malachi711
    @malachi711 Місяць тому

    Takes 2 make a child and if the woman didn't have her legs open, a child would not have been developed so you can't blame the men for what women are doing with the bad choices that they make with the news.I men that they pick

  • @blaq7892
    @blaq7892 Місяць тому

    Women have 20 forms of birth control plus condoms 🙄. We aint out here stealing puzzy!!! 😅

    • @charlyb9194
      @charlyb9194 Місяць тому

      No, but you’re busting in them. You’re just as responsible

  • @shanedoughty6844
    @shanedoughty6844 Місяць тому

    Suga Free said it!! Don't be thinking wit yo dik boi!!!

  • @RepublicTeaRoom
    @RepublicTeaRoom Місяць тому

    Ain't nobody mad but mammies and followers of non straight Kevin Samuels et al

  • @ZeeNakamoto
    @ZeeNakamoto Місяць тому

    CW is the only person to hold black men accountable and show how our culture blames white men for everything

  • @MarteezChew-qe3qy
    @MarteezChew-qe3qy Місяць тому

    Not only do the poor decision a men make effects him but also the people around him

  • @athmanikumasi3565
    @athmanikumasi3565 Місяць тому

    I don't agree, the bw can't say no? You're wrong. We got a part but so do they. Who raised these ninjas you talking about?

  • @jackpalance9509
    @jackpalance9509 Місяць тому

    Vince Everett Ellison has enlightened many about the moves that were made…If you watch him you’d best have an open mind. This Brother delves into history in a raw fashion and the chips fall where they may…

  • @diamondgrice3916
    @diamondgrice3916 Місяць тому

    Billy Joe Shields killed his parents in Texas and was given 30 years

  • @JamesAllen-c7j
    @JamesAllen-c7j Місяць тому

    Wow it's funny how people decide to let only one man determine the facts about black man is insane 🤦 and y'all wonder why we lost 💯😉🤷

  • @JamesAllen-c7j
    @JamesAllen-c7j Місяць тому

    A y'all also forgot when CW said "i say anything n charter mode,i say i cheat on my wife don't mean I do"..... Guess what.... When he said that he was really actually cheating on his wife 😉

  • @JamesAllen-c7j
    @JamesAllen-c7j Місяць тому

    Boy CW worshipers act like y'all just got dropped on this planet last night 🤦 Y'all know that don't apply to all black men, a to my brothers n the comments is all of y'all the way he says black men r🤔🤔🤔.. I rest man case😉🤷💯

  • @HubbieBro
    @HubbieBro Місяць тому

    🎤📢🦻📣🫵🏻👁️👁️🎮🍿🍿🍿CW funny and real at the same time type thang I hear you I see you game is elevated

  • @mologotthatheat
    @mologotthatheat Місяць тому

    🗣️🧏🏽‍♂️✍🏽🙏🏽✅‼️💯

  • @Jus4-Us
    @Jus4-Us Місяць тому

    CW is pushing rhetoric not based in actual facts. He giving his opinion on matters but his opinion has many fallacies. The truth of the matter is that BW are just as much to blame for some of what has happened to Black families as BM. Each has played a part in its destruction but not as much as the outside influences have. During the 60s amd 70s, after Civil Rights was passed and Blacks began to fully integrate into mainstream White society, BW wanted different men than what they were used to having. After BW got access to higher paying jobs, voting rights and educational opportunities, and saw what they could have with more income, the old school garbage workers, janitors, and blue collar earning black men were not good enough for them. They wanted more "things" and like we hear them say even today, they did not want to settle for the blue collar brothers. BW changed their standard for mating with BM and they did not consider the historical factors working against BM that prevented them from climbing the corporate ladder as professionals. Only few BM were allowed to climb those ranks and those were the kinds of men that BW desired and still desire to this day. Here are the facts: In 2010, the Pew Research Center asked respondents to rate the importance of various factors when choosing a mate, and found that black women have high aspirations. Asked how important it is that a “good husband or partner provide a good income,” two thirds of black women said it is very important, compared to 32% of white women. Roughly 55% of black women said it was very important for a husband or partner to be well-educated, compared to only 28% of white women. Half of black women said that financial stability should be an important precondition for marriage, but only a quarter of white women felt that way. This proves that BW raised their preferenced for what qualifies as marriage eligible black men. Their requirements were even higher than that of White women for White men. Make that make sense.

  • @Jus4-Us
    @Jus4-Us Місяць тому

    Calling Black men lazy and unaccountable during the 60s and 70s is an outright LIE from hell! Anyone who reads the history and statistics during those times knows full damn well that BM were being intentionally locked out of the labor market and discriminated against in the housing markets and every other sector. CW on that b.s. What about the milions of BM who died in the Vietnam War, and the ones that survived coming back home addicted to drugs due the US government giving them opiods while in combat to remove their anxiety and stress in the war? What about Operation Flood Out led by J.Edgar Hoover which flooded black communities with Cocaine and armed drug dealers in order to destroy the Black Panther Party that was expanding across America at a rapid pace? The following paragraph comes from an article published by the Center for Economic Studies: "Black men were significantly discriminated against in the labor market throughout the 1960s and 1970s, experiencing lower wages, limited access to higher-paying jobs, and higher unemployment rates compared to white men, despite the Civil Rights Act of 1964 aiming to combat such discrimination; while progress was made, systemic barriers and occupational segregation still persisted during this period."

  • @Jus4-Us
    @Jus4-Us Місяць тому

    His depiction of Black men is not representative of the majority of BM. Were there issues in Black marrisges like infidelity? YES! But that was happening among all races. The destruction of Black families was manufactured by the US government under policies like 'No Man In The Home Rules' initiated in the 70s. Also, birth control pill mandates that required welfare recipients to take the pill to keep those benefits while at the same time BM were being discriminated against in the labor market during the 50s, 60s, and 70s. That is why their were riots happening throughout those years in Black communities. Dr. King was MURDERED in Memphis, TN while he was planning a garbage workers fair wage march. Although, CW makes some valid points, he overlooks the other facts that were the roots of our family destruction. But to place all the blame on Black men and dismiss the blatant racism of the 40s, 50s, 60s, 70, and 80s in this country is ridiculous and not credible at all. In the 60s, Blacks were creating grassroots movements left and right to fight against racism, white supremacy, and unfairness in the labor market. Google the 60s civil rights movement and select images and you will clearly see Black men marching holding signs that say 'We Need Jobs". Something about CWs disdain for Black men rubs me the wrong way. He is clever but it just seems more like he is a double agent and setting himself up to win the women support because he knows that they will give money to anybody who excuses them from accountability. That's what I'm hearing from Mr. White. He's pandering to BW to get their financial support.

    • @amenajackson8133
      @amenajackson8133 Місяць тому

      Take accountability..the yte men is not stopping you from marrying blk women and taking Care of your children.

  • @Jus4-Us
    @Jus4-Us Місяць тому

    To get SNAP or section 8 housing benefits as a married couple the total household income has to be well below the poverty line to qualify. It's a safety net for a spouse who is the sole breadwinner and becomes disabled but if both people are able to work and do not have any medical-related health problems that prevents either of them from working, it will be very difficult for two able bodied adults to qualify for those benefits. Let's be honest. What woman who is of working age is going to stay married to a man who is able to work but wants to apply for section 8 housing and food stamps to provide for her and his children? I don't know of many.

    • @francisikwueme1688
      @francisikwueme1688 11 днів тому

      Facts and the whole man in the house rule which was taken down in 1968 was to discourage dependency on welfare if there is an able bodied man in the house .

    • @Jus4-Us
      @Jus4-Us 11 днів тому

      @@francisikwueme1688 There used to be night raids in poor black communities where women were on welfare. They raided the project homes or people on government housing vouchers to catch them with a man in the house. If caught, those "black men" were charged with welfare fraud. This was happening in the 60s. BW on welfare were unfairly targeted for trying to maintain relationships with their children(s) fathers, and BM were unfairly being prosecuted for just being in the homes, even if they were not living there. CW sounds like he knows what he is talking about but I'm older than he is and I study the historical records on those issues, and the image he is projecting about BM is inaccurate and remiss of the racial biases that went along with those policies. In the 1960s, 70s and 80s the U.S. government created policies that intentionally discriminated against Black people, and BM in particular. Some of the new generation of Blacks are not aware of such things because many of them either do not care to know, or do not reseaerch the historical record to find out the truth. So, it's quite easy to get on social media and tell them anything. Just be consistent and most will believe you even if facts backed by data says differently.

  • @standan5084
    @standan5084 Місяць тому

    True in the 70s to the 90s, nowadays the women are now living just as foolishly.😢