@@ecuadoramun8646 nah they’ve been a place where respect and kindness would go a long way for them. People who deeply cherish simple values that we tend to ignore would apply it to any and everyone.
love how justin HAD to know he didn't belong on the bottom end of the ranking, but he just chilled there and waited for the big reveal at the end LOL. made for a very dramatic reveal
Everything about his appearance was very anti-badass but you know it kind of makes sense for someone who'd been in prison since he was a teenager. The young black guy in the VERY nice Nikes had obviously not been in that long just based on his clothes.
Mario calculated how long it was since his conviction by using his daughter's age. There is something so so sweet about that and it clearly shows where his concerns lie.
Justin C spent almost half of his life behind bars, that is unimaginable for most of us. I hope he will be able to live the rest of his life full of positive purpose.
1:19 Tyrone was not fooled, he already knew that Justin C. probably had been in prison the longest, he said that Justin might have done a stretch based on how he was talking and that Justin was giving off some "mafia type" vibes. Look at what he said at timestamp 1:19.
@@valoredramack9117 because looks can be decieving. Everyone can guess in here that cholo would be the less one, the big crip guy would be the middle, and either that suit guy would be first or asian guy. And that black guy that talks too much would be lower ranked because he talks too much
As a Public Defender I'm so happy to hear someone who served time appreciate the work done by their attorney. Some people expect their lawyers to get them off the hook completely and if they don't, they consider their lawyers incompetent
You mean public pretender?😅 I don't think I've seen a crime related show where they don't ridicule public defenders. Even Saul Goodman says "Have you ever heard the saying that you get what you pay for?" Lol
They should’ve known. The long sleeve sweater, slick back hair, and white forces. He rocking what every asian OGs from the early 2000s wear when they trying to be low key.
It's pretty rare to see convicts and ex-convicts presented as acual human beings, and it's even rarer for a media to adress the terrible treatements they are submitted to in prison by the state and prison staff. So thank you for that.
You can tell from Justin C’s voice that he really feels terrible about his actions as a teen. I wish him all the best. This was a great episode. Everyone in this episode was amazing. Really enjoyed it. One of the best episodes from Jubilee this year.
This not a hate comment but To be sincerely honest in my humble opinion without being sentimental of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view and without hiding any thoughts in my mind and without lies, to the actual truth with my clear open mind and clean heart, expressing whatever is embedded inside me for a long time which I didn’t say just because I was nervous. But today, by gathering all the courage and motivation, I just want to say that I actually feel and think that I have absolutely nothing to say.
This was an amazing episode and it showed a lot of how we perceive others and what the stereotypical ex-con would look like. Mario being the lowest and Jess & Justin C. being the highest served time was really the icing on the cake!
This has to do a lot with media. You see movies, for instance, how they portray us Latinos or POC as the mafia and bad blood/bad customs people. Also, Latin America is always portrayed as jungle people, un-educated, poor and lazy, and there could be some truth to that, but in most cases it isn't
I'm curious how long the white collar crime guy actually sentenced to. We know what he served but he didn't mention how much time he was supposed to do. I feel like knowing both definitely adds perspective.
@@ztarr they mentioned in the video that you’re required so serve 85% of your time in federal prison by federal law. So he was most likely sentenced to 15 months.
@@Analaya749 Well bc I’mma black male, I have to be conscious of the things I do and the things I wear when going out. Just wearing a hood makes certain people mistake us for criminals. All we’d need is a couple of tattoos, a “mean mug”, and any kind of posture to be considered a felon in a lot of people’s eyes 🤷🏽
Justin C. had me tearing up. It’s sad to see how a single event can change your whole life and I genuinely think he learned his lesson. I hope that he gets everything straightened out with the deportation issue he mentioned.
PD's are cool, corporate lawyers are the real assholes. Also, lot of respect for lawyers who do work defending activists, class-action lawsuits against shitty corporations etc.
With the amount of they got. Who wouldn’t appreciate them. Though there are a few careless apples, major are just stressed people tryna look out for their fellow person
None of them look innocent. Nor do they look guilty. Color has nothing to do with innocence or guilt. I'm not sure how anyone can even tell based on race, gender and tattoos.
Prison is a wreck. I was a nurse for exactly THREE months in a maximum security prison. The things I saw, heard and learned broke me down and I’m 10 years out of that job. I think of injustices I saw at least once a day.
So happy to see you on here. You're wonderful, Jess. ❤️❤️❤️❤️ been a follower of yours for a long time and i was so happy to see you on another great platform.
I genuinely never would have suspected the guy to have served 14 years. I’m so glad that these people have changed for the better. It all goes to show don’t judge a book by its cover.
This was one of the Better Jubilee episodes. It defied expectations, informative, causes the viewer to re-examine there stereotypes and assumptions of people.
@@Jay-jb2vr there shouldn't be but let's be honest, we're human and it's inevitable people are gonna have underlying stereotypes about people based on their appearance. Even if we don't intentionally do it
it did bother me she was the only woman though. like come on, i thought we were better than this. at best she probably felt singled out, at worst it comes off sexist
The whole reason I am going to law school is I aim to be the “public defender that fight like a paid attorney”, it’s amazing to know there are similar minded people in the industry. That’s how we make the justice system better
As someone also studying law and working towards law school (I'd like to focus on transactional law) I would really love to know more about your interest in becoming a public defender and how you got there! So often I hear about how people don't want to be public defenders because they don't want to defend a criminal.
they’re all so sweet. My dad did 10 years and he’s changed and i’m so proud of him and i feel for all these people cause i heard what they go through and they’re just not treated like people at all, i’m proud of them all
This shows are pretty eye opening for the first time. We can see here how people are opening up about their own experiences without having to feel as of they’re being limited.
My boss a few years ago was an ex-con. She was an addict, and had completely turned her life around. She was one of the nicest people I ever met! I loved spending time with her, and we had some of the best heart-to-hearts I ever had with anyone.
It seems that people who go through a lot of struggles and come out the other end as better people, usually are some of the most empathetic and kind people.
@@VX-cy4du Conspiracy in a legal context just means that you agreed with someone else to do something illegal. So because he wasn’t actually committing fraud, just looking away, they charged him with conpsiracy
@@VX-cy4du the basis for conspiracy is just knowing someone can commit a crime and not saying anything. You don’t have to agree to aid in the crime. You just have to know that someone is going to commit a crime and not say anything.
The best episode yet. Clearly they all have remorse for what they have done. Feel sorry for Mario, getting locked up for something that is now legal and widely used is pretty fucked.
Still illegal (for personal use) in the majority of states, and still illegal under federal law which supersedes any state legislation. Be careful depending on what state you’re in, as they totally still railroad people for cannabis possession.
I didn't have a father in my life for 2 years because he had a SINGLE pot plant in the attic. This was in California too, so I really feel bad for folks who got locked up in other states or who weren't white and got worse charges for the same amount.
The guy with the dreads desperately didn't want to be perceived to be the petty crime guy, you can see his frustration grow as he worked his way down towards the end of the line 🤣
@@Tiffymeoww Fr lol and as they kept trying to move the Asian guy down I'm just like watch this guy be the one with the most time. So much that he did a complete 180.
however she made the "American greed guy" joke so many times it wasn't even funny and to be honest it was condescending vibes towards him throughout. "oh we know you didn't do drugs" ..like okay..???
I used to really judge people with criminal convictions until I went to law school and interned with a Federal Judge. Seeing the process, hearing the stories of people, and witnessing their ultimate convictions made me completely change my perspective. Nowadays I volunteer with a local organization that helps the families of those who are unfortunately imprisoned as they make the adjustment to be without the loved ones. The system is so fucked up and I am truly disgusted by the lack of humanity and compassion with which we treat so many people in this country.
That’s true. I studied law in Germany and the system is so different here. We focus on resocialisation rather than on punishment and I feel like that’s better. On the other hand, they’re living their best lives in prison. Their cells aren’t way smaller than my second flat which was only 17m^2 small. They can finish high school or a professional education in prison. That’s crazy, especially because every prisoner can do it. Even the serial killers. They have a somewhat normal life. I still can’t decide what’s better
@@Supraifyification yes, that’s true. I’m not the biggest fan of prisons in general. I don’t think that someone who got caught with weed should go to prison at all. A lot of former prisoners say that they went in as criminals and came out as terrorists because of the environment and I feel like that’s logical. Also, the statistics show that it’s hard to be part of society after being in prison, especially after being there for years. The resocialisation should be in focus and I don’t think that prison is the best solution, at least not for petty criminals. Tbh, that’s just my opinion based on a few criminology classes I had to take for university though. I am not specialised on criminology, so I don‘t know if my opinion would be different if I had greater knowledge on that topic. I might do some research again. It’s been a while 😅
Not to mention that things like financial aid do not treat families that use to depend on the person in jail like They lost a provider. If you need financial aid and your parent just went to jail they still count in your family household. If your parent widows there’s clear procedures on how to apply. There is no support for families
When Justin started talking about the intricacies of state prison and county jail life and said he was only out for 2 years, I knew he was at least top 3. I was not disappointed.
For me it was the way he stood. His body language said he had survived some ruff stuff and came out stronger. I have seen a lot of people who have had military or martial art training stand the same way. It's the I'm not a person to f with aura.
I understand the Korean guy. I was locked due to the same caliber of crime as a teenager in fact, same age as him. I got out after 2 years thanks to my behaviour and no criminal like behaviours in an underage arrest I was in. Currently I’m working as a chef and I gotta say life is beautiful. I’m happy to close that dark episode of past my abusive father created. Never judge anyone by his or her “book cover” but who that person is.
dang, that means Justin can’t even get a green card 🤦🏾♀️. He seems changed and a much better person, I hope everything works out for him in the long run.
It's so interesting to watch the quick, stereotyped snap judgements, and then the way they shift around as they learn more and more about each other. It really speaks to why you should meet people with an open mind and hear their story; listen for as long as possible before your opinion gets set in stone.
Funny how even til the end, the dreadlock dude assumed that the Korean dude did a nail shop scheme. But Nail shop owners are predominantly Vietnamese. Lol
i dont normally click on jubilee videos except for like watching ones ive seen commentary on but this one kept me watching because out of all the videos ive seen this was the most fun because it wasnt really drama it was a bunch of really genuine people and they are so charismatic i couldnt stop watching
Nah from the beginning I knew Mario was the one who served the least, I'm from Mexico and 99% of people who look like him or have that cholo style culture are the sweetest, they take care of their loved ones, they word hard and they are really respectful and nice. One of the best urban cultures Mexico has given to the world.
Yea there's a cholo guy I'used to see on this one mexican girls yt channel. She used to call him her vato. He looked like the guy on here and seemed like such a sweetheart. Very laid back.
I would gladly befriend any one of these souls. It's crazy that four out of the six had nonviolent charges, and of the remaining, one was drug related and the other was under 18. these are people who I'm glad got out of the system and can really live their lives reformed
@@sop6217 I think what they meant is that out of the two with violent charges, the girl had done assault and possession with intent had done drugs at the time, probably affecting her thinking
I used to be a counselor in a correctional facility and had a fascination of their intellect and many were the most brightest and polite human beings. Many of the long term offenders served 20+ years and have changed. I love how this video broke down stereotypes 💕
I love Jessica! She’s told her story about being pregnant in prison and it’s really heartbreaking how some people are treated in prison even though they broke the law they are still humans that need hygiene products
Edit: to everyone either missing the point entirely or saying it’s a double standard, it’s really not. And you can talk about pads and tampons all day (which yes is a major issue) but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Try giving birth in shackles and never being able to hold the baby you just birthed. Try living with an infected c-section scar and dealing with guards who refuse to give you medication to care for it. Both men and women’s healthcare are neglected in prison/jail and I was just saying it was nice to see someone bring that up. Thankfully there are advocates and healthcare providers who see this as an issue and volunteer their time to provide regular services for free. If you really want to do something: bring awareness to the topic, donate feminine products to your local jails, do research 👏🏽 Healthcare in prison is a topic that escapes conversation time and time again so I’m so glad she is advocating for women in prison and jail and how underserved they are ❤
If you haven’t already, check out her channel Jessica Kent, she is an awesome advocate for womens healthcare in prison! Her birth story in prison is heavy but important
for my time in jail, I legit HATE HAAAAATE pancakes, BUT when i was in jail, i got served some pancakes i legit liked! in Jail its not all bad, prison is when it gets more real.
because all of us have been brainwashed by media and live to strive for boring, corporate lives as society has taught us. Ex-cons differ from that norm.
I just want to thank Jubilee for creating this episode. I learned a lot this episode! It really helped remove some misconceptions and stereotypes I previously believed.
i definitely get you with this comment. Ive been jailed for a whoile week, havent been to prison. Once in even in jail, you see how easy it is to have most freedoms stripped away, its boring, zero privacy, bhut you remember how fun it is to read books. Plus some of the other bunkies/ people actually are, no matter what they are accused of
Justin’s story made my heart drop I’m so proud of him though and I wish him the best as for every other person that is an ex-con this could be anyone and life throws you curveballs and having to deal with it in such a horrible state as in prison is a dehumanizing, disgusting thing but the way that people grow because of their circumstances is truly amazing! I love all these people ❤️
1:19 Tyrone was not fooled, he already knew that Justin C. probably had been in prison the longest, he said that Justin might have done a stretch based on how he was talking and that Justin was giving off some "mafia type" vibes. Look at what he said at timestamp 1:19.
@@librarianrose4472 I said at least for me. And I was just venting. And btw, he did build his life.. he graduated and got his GED so it didn’t seem like much to miss.
When my son got out the second time, we told him that he needed to stay away from his former friends. He did that and he is a second level supervisor at a major logistics company, he’s married and has 2 beautiful daughters. I am so proud out of him.
@@ayofrtho7014 no she’s not “yeah we can see that you didn’t do drugs, we can see that,” like everyone looked at her disturbed because she wasn’t funny at all.
My ex boyfriends dad is a prison guard and he always told stories of how he basically abused the inmates (mentally or emotionally) and pushed them around just because he can and since they were there that meant they deserved it. It was horrible and I really hated him for this among others things.
@@kimberleyelle7387 his mom hated it, they’re divorced. He cheated on her with his now girlfriend who is also a prison guard. But for the most part yea thought it was fine
Working at an ER that employs a fair amount of security guards that have formerly worked in prisons has shown me a glimpse of what some prisoners must go through by the way they treat our psychiatric holds. They don’t last long because they aren’t used to their superiors listening to complaints from patients/staff.
Hearing Justin C’s story hit me hard. All young men make terrible choices at a young age. There were so many times my life could have went down the wrong path, because I didn’t have the maturity to think about consequences and long term effects of my choices. The prison system is in desperate need of reform and I’m sorry they failed you. I’m glad you’ve overcome what you have and I hope you can remain in the USA. Much love brother, from one American to another.
1:19 Tyrone was not fooled, he already knew that Justin C. probably had been in prison the longest, he said that Justin might have done a stretch based on how he was talking and that Justin was giving off some "mafia type" vibes. Look at what he said at timestamp 1:19.
I didn’t catch how exact he was the first time. It shows how street smart he is. If you’ve been around certain people long enough, you can spot them in a crowd. It’s like veterans, just by the way you hold yourself or speak, I’ll pick up on it quickly.
His sentence was 82 years to life. He must have done some serious fucked up things to get that. He got lucky they released him much sooner than 82 years, nobody failed him anything.
Justin went to prison when he was 17. He's only just gotten out. That's crazy. I've only spent about 2 weeks in county but it was all in "solitary"... with another inmate. The biggest shock was that the food wasn't half bad, if not lacking in nutrition. The worst part was that the lights were never shut off, so sleep was done in short spurts. Oh, and my mat was on the floor. I slept on the floor. It wasn't really worse than the metal cots, so I didn't think it mattered. My cell mate was literally, medically insane and quite far off, too. He thought I worked for the prison and was trying to stop him from getting $5m from *unknown source* when he got out. There was a list of other erratic behaviors, too, like throwing his food on bed while I got the one shower I was able to have. He'd been in there for months, and I still don't know why. I guess the "best" our little county could do for him was lock him up in a concrete closet and forget about him. I understand that jails house criminals, but we have a revolving door because of the intense levels of inhumanity that reinforce criminal behavior instead of reforming it.
This was an eye-opening video. Hearts out to the panel on this one. The way they were able to connect and get to know one another through this experiment was really cool to see
Wow, 14 years in prison at 16... that's 30. He said he's 32, so he got out 2 years ago. 2 years ago was *2020* ... what a time to be out of a 14-year prison sentence since teenhood. 14 years prior was 2006, that year Kyle XY was brand new on what was formerly ABCFamily (Fox Family/The Family Channel) but is now FreeForm (I think?)... 2006, when Bad Day, Chasing Cars, and How to Save a Life were all over radio, one year before Crank That by Soulja Boy was! The year the Danish cartoonist was attacked for giving face to a religious figure he shouldn't have and a disrespectful one at that... all that happened when Justin C was age 16 and he spends all of 2007, 2009, 2013, 2018... all the way to the virus year (that I'm pretty sure the privileged people in power and not prison were responsible for _back then..._ ). All those years everybody else has lived their lives and can tell you what they associate with each year and he'll just say "I was in prison." So yeah, long time for a teenager and _all his 20s._ Weird to think about.
Y’all need to do your homework for the next one. Kent did less than a year in Arkansas for drug charges. Nowhere near 5 years. The firearm charge was dropped😅
Nicholas at the end saying "don't judge people" when the first thing he did was send the only woman there at the most innocent side and call her a baby 💀💀
@@florianvanderstraeten1489 but how does it make sense for u to say "women are monsters",that's directly contradictory to ur OWN counter argument to men being monsters
Whoa! Just realized I am more influenced by societal prejudices than I thought I was. And this with a more than a fair amount of watching true crime shows. But what shook me was how those who lived that experience are also prey to the same prejudices. One of the best Jubilee line ups, my best to date.
Nicholas is hilarious, you can tell he's fun to be around with. All of them look genuine and really regretful of what they did. Glad to see them turn their life around.
I remember this job I had at a warehouse where most of the employees used to be convicts, minimum wage job. Anyway I remember I felt intimidated and I can say even scared, I’ve never been to jail myself.Then I started to get to know the persons talk w/them and actually get to know them. Now I can say they are one of nicest respectful people and I felt so safe there, it’s kind of bizarre I felt safe with a bunch of criminals, and to this day I kept in touch w/ some of them. How fast we’re programmed to judge people..
Ex-criminals. I think one of the biggest problems with those that are reformed from a criminal lifestyle is that people continue to call them criminals. It really affects them.
I’m not gonna lie tho, that judgement is not unfounded. Like, of course you’re gonna be intimidated by people who have literally been criminals (especially if it has to do with some kind of violent crime). You don’t know if they have reformed or if they’re capable of doing it again. They’ve gotta rebuild the trust of other people. On a smaller scale, it’s like a cheater. If they cheated one other partner before you but swear they have changed and regretted it, they’ve gotta prove it to you. Being “programmed to judge” in that instance is not necessarily wrong.
same. very first job I got in 2010 was through a temp agency and was sent to a factory of mostly convicts. I was barely 18 and not even out of high school yet. it was a little intimidating working with people who had charges for selling drugs and carrying guns but honestly they were some of the nicest people I ever met. I got along especially well with a black guy in his 30's who was an avid gamer. during our lunch we would talk about retro game consoles like the colecovision and intellivision as well as the newest games coming out like mortal kombat 9. I occasionally gave him rides home and he even let me borrow his playstation 3 controller when mine broke. convicts arent all bad people, in alot of cases theyre just people that made mistakes or got in with the wrong crowd and are trying to turn their lives around.
The girl is Jessica Kent, she’s now a UA-camr and makes great content! All about her life and why/how she ended up in jail etc. everyone should check her out she deserves it!!
@ZyklonBeast just wondering what’s so trashy or insufferable about her in this video? Her UA-cam videos are very informative and gives a perspective that people usually don’t see. She knows she’s done wrong back then. She has some more light hearted content, but also serious stuff and admits many times her wrong doings. That doesn’t seem trashy to me.. she advocates for people to get better and not end up in the situation she was in
I feel like she thinks she’s the only attractive woman that’s ever served time and that it makes her unique.. I’ve known and seen way prettier that served time and they like to hide that part of their life because they’ve moved on
Interesting to hear these personal stories. It's a reminder that while these individuals have faced consequences for their actions, there are others in powerful positions who might never face the same level of accountability.
Saw Jessica and clicked. I love her channel. I found it during my Orange is the new black obsession and she really opened my eyes on what prison is REALLY is, not just what Tv shows.
@@embrasil kind of think y’all losing the plot he did say he was rightfully sentenced he knows what he did was wrong he spent more than a decade in jail since he was a teenager. The point is a person can reflect and change their path and that should count too.
All these people seem like such genuine and great people who unfortunately were put in terrible situations but ultimately, changed themselves for the better. For that they have all my admiration. To completely tear everything down and build it back up to have people judge you based on your past instead of what you've done in the present or simply like in marios case having people assume the absolute worst from you. I seriously respect these people thank you for this video
It's not easy. I was released from prison in 1988. That was Florida. I returned to my home state immediately and only recently moved back to Florida. In my home state I worked in a restaurant for years then got a job in a machine shop and ended up making parts for the military. After that I got a job making diamond and gold and platinum jewelry. I got to hold Super Bowl rings and the Super Bowl trophy in my hands and that will tell you which company I worked for and did so for almost a decade. I was also elected to town council not once but twice with full disclosure of my past. Then I decided I accomplished what I wanted to and I was then appointed magistrate to preside over minor cases in the evening. But health has required me to move to a warm climate and the least expensive state that doesn't have a real winter is Florida. Here I can go back to prison just for attempting to register to vote. I am back to working restaurant jobs because the moment anyone sees my background they don't want to hire me. It took me five years to convince a landlord to rent to me. Where I'm from up north landlords can't ask if you have any convictions. Here they are required by law to ensure they don't rent to convicted felons while at the same time any convicted felon on probation or parole is required to have a domicile. The number one reason why convicted felons fail in probation and parole in Florida is due to not being able to find work or housing. Huge difference between the different states concerning this issue. Florida law is deliberately designed to discourage rehabilitation. This is primarily due to the need for slave labor. Inmates are paid up to about 75 cents an hour to do a variety of jobs. The entire prison population with few exceptions are expected to hold a slave job. Some of the slave jobs include manufacturing garments, shoes, a variety of paper goods, lumber, metal parts and other things that are sold to other prison systems around the country at a profit. Other slave jobs include working on highways, construction jobs, building homes for prison employees and maintaining those homes. There are multiple farms owned by the prison system here including a pig farm, cattle ranch, poultry farm and farms that produce vegetables. Less than half of this food goes to prison inmates here in Florida. The rest is sold. Florida has more state prisons than any other state. I believe only Texas has a higher percentage of the population currently behind bars. By contrast, Rhode Island, where I used to live, has half the percentage of it's population in prison that Florida had. About 1 out of every 263 Floridians are in prison at the moment and about 1 out of 20 have a felony conviction and almost none of them can vote. In Rhode Island 1 out of 450 people are currently serving time and about 1 out of 32 have a felony conviction and 100% of them can vote when they are released and all of them can run for public office 5+ years after they are released. In Florida Virtually all employers require a background check and 98% will reject an applicant if there is so much as one felony conviction in 1963. In Rhode Island it is illegal to ask about any felony convictions that took place 10+ years ago on a job application. In Florida it is legal for insurance companies to refuse to sell liability insurance to landlords who rent to convicted felons so 99.9% of landlords won't rent to a convicted felon. The few ex cons who can find housing, like me, live in uninsured illegal apartments that the post office does not recognize as existing which causes problems with mail. In Rhode Island it is a crime for a landlord to ask a potential tenant if they have a felony conviction.
@@nunyabiznez6381 “Florida law is designed to discourage rehabilitation” that is truly disheartening. I wasn’t aware of how terrible Florida is in regards to convicted felons. I mean how do they expect these folk to be model citizens but completely make obstacles impossible for some to overcome. That’s sickening. I’m so sorry you experience that. Everyone should be given the chance to redeem themselves. Have you thought of moving somewhere else Florida can’t be the only area w no winter ? Thanks for sharing that with me I truly have such an interest in prison reform A lot of times people don’t understand the correlation between poverty and crime rates.. there’s much changes needed to be done in regards to not only our prisons and jails but to the whole approach to rehabilitation after jail and prisons.
@@pbird1578 she was interviewed by Montel Williams. He had to keep asking her but she finally admitted she did not serve five years and it was 2.5. Also if you check out her paperwork, it will tell you she did not serve five years. Unfortunately, she has lied about a lot.
@@amna-ox9ur Just because you agree/sympathize more with one side, doesn’t mean you can’t sympathize with the other. Also, obviously people would be more pissed if the crime was committed against them or against someone close to them. But they’re not lol. You know this lol, what’s the point in asking?
@@nooraqueen2716 do you feel bad for the person he murdered that has not been alive for 16 years? Who potentially were children themselves and lost their childhood?
Y’all should see Jessica’s birth story. It’s disgusting. She has a UA-cam channel where she talks about prison and her experiences as a woman. It’s very interesting and makes me hope for prison reform even more.
I was in and out of jail more than a dozen times, but all it took was one prison term to set me straight! I never wanted to go back there again, and so far I haven't. I was released from prison on Sept 6th, 2008, and swear I won't ever go back!
stay strong and dont go back, and tell others about your journey so that they know how awful it truly is and they wont think ''oh I wont get caught'', stay strong :)
I wonder why in the part that's titled "Actual time served " Everyone said there actual time served But Jessica said 5x Her actual time served, She really is Proud of her time served
This was so wholesome. I'd 100% be friends with all of these people, especially Mario. He has a kind look about him. People aren't the bad decisions they made when they were young.
I feel these ex-cons are nicer and more polite than a lot of other guests that I’ve seen on this show
Bc if they don't people would not even think for a second and call them criminals
People who’ve gone through actual struggle can often be more grounded in the end
@@ecuadoramun8646 nah they’ve been a place where respect and kindness would go a long way for them. People who deeply cherish simple values that we tend to ignore would apply it to any and everyone.
Suffering often humbles ppl. Privilege, not so much.
@@zoeyraven4892 both work. They’ve probably also been humbled
Fourteen years and he is 32, got out 2 years ago. That means he got locked up at 16 and spent almost his entire life as an adult in prison so far
😢 so proud of him for he has changed.
@@nishadh366 do you know him personally? People don't change
@@syntheticfiber7388 people can change, not always. but, they can.
@@syntheticfiber7388 people change bro that's how he got the opportunity to share his story
@@syntheticfiber7388
I like turtles 🐢 🙌🤩
love how justin HAD to know he didn't belong on the bottom end of the ranking, but he just chilled there and waited for the big reveal at the end LOL. made for a very dramatic reveal
Everything about his appearance was very anti-badass but you know it kind of makes sense for someone who'd been in prison since he was a teenager. The young black guy in the VERY nice Nikes had obviously not been in that long just based on his clothes.
I could tell he was Korean and their gangs dont mess around.
His lack of eye-contact & semi-nervous, held-back demeanor made me think he served the most time.
Wouldn't say I was confident though
i read this comment before the ranking and got confused cuz there was a justin at first spot - turns out theres two justins lmfao
Both Justins tbh. The other Justin was just standing there at the top and he was like "I think you guys should switch" LMAO knowing he only did 1 year
Jessica was really out here just directing everyone where they should stand and no one even bothered to tell her no.
fr cus noone cared lmao
@@rosapimentel1173 I didn't say it's a bad thing. I just found it amusing.
Let the chicks do the work
Yup, I enjoyed watching it. Lolz
She just decided not to be last lol just made that guy switch with her
Mario calculated how long it was since his conviction by using his daughter's age. There is something so so sweet about that and it clearly shows where his concerns lie.
Yeah, he kept talking about being on his best behaviour in jail, you just know he wanted to get out to be with his baby girl.
Bro he got his daughters age wrong tho 😂😂
@@bobknee4127 Or a Christmas miracle.
Like he was thinking her birth was the first day of the rest of his life. That was beautiful.
@@bobknee4127 bro I get my own age wrong sometimes lmaooo
Justin C spent almost half of his life behind bars, that is unimaginable for most of us. I hope he will be able to live the rest of his life full of positive purpose.
Asian don't raisin. he don't look a day over 21 and well moisturized. he'll be fine
1:19 Tyrone was not fooled, he already knew that Justin C. probably had been in prison the longest, he said that Justin might have done a stretch based on how he was talking and that Justin was giving off some "mafia type" vibes. Look at what he said at timestamp 1:19.
@@valoredramack9117 because looks can be decieving. Everyone can guess in here that cholo would be the less one, the big crip guy would be the middle, and either that suit guy would be first or asian guy. And that black guy that talks too much would be lower ranked because he talks too much
mom did a decade dad did close to 20 all together visited both and it would be so crappy never gonna end up there
14 years is half of a humans life what??
Damn dude 14 years glad he’s able to get his second chance at life , I’m proud of all these people
Exactly what I was thinking. That's an amazing second chance.
14 years after a governor commuted his sentence. Damn Americans sending 16 year olds to life. What a joke of a country.
Im not proud of any of these ex criminals its not that hard to not do illegal things
Proud? Ok your standards are quite low!!
@@Ronline26 exactly
As a Public Defender I'm so happy to hear someone who served time appreciate the work done by their attorney. Some people expect their lawyers to get them off the hook completely and if they don't, they consider their lawyers incompetent
Ya'll are great. Walking heroes with no capes. I've had about 25 public attorneys and most have been gems.
"Better blame Saul"
Public defenders usually suck. Thats why.
@@naysaynetwork5271 They arent bad, just overworked. They have alot of cases at the same time
You mean public pretender?😅 I don't think I've seen a crime related show where they don't ridicule public defenders. Even Saul Goodman says "Have you ever heard the saying that you get what you pay for?" Lol
Justin trolled them all. He knew damn well he spent more time in there than most and let them put him second to lowest 😂
They should’ve known. The long sleeve sweater, slick back hair, and white forces. He rocking what every asian OGs from the early 2000s wear when they trying to be low key.
@@vubu313 facts ☠☠
And he knew Jessica* knew what she was talking about lol I had a feeling she would be in the top
he literally has more time spend than all the others combined 😂
His interview podcast that he did with Hoodstocks goes in depth of how he ended up committing his crimes & getting 82 years to life
Justin being in jail for fraud is the least suprising thing ever.
I could have seen tax evasion aswell. But it was crystal clear that he was a federal inmate from the beginning lol
Justin P. (Justin C. was also there that day. He's the one who served the most time.)
😂😂😂😂 factsss
It was already decided the moment we got to see how he was dressed and how he carried himself lmao
LITERALLY
It's pretty rare to see convicts and ex-convicts presented as acual human beings, and it's even rarer for a media to adress the terrible treatements they are submitted to in prison by the state and prison staff. So thank you for that.
Jessica Kent is very active on social media talking about her experiences in prison. Her videos are a great watch but will infuriate you!
@@DavidLedbetter12 For real. Plenty of murderers and rapists are living better than a large percentage of people in America who hasn't hurt others.
Tf are they usually presented as? Aliens?
@@DavidLedbetter12 dumbo take
Yeah fr
this little group was so cute to watch, this could genuinely b a strong friendship
They'll run a train on her for sure 😂
@@TroubleisHereyou’re pathetic for commenting this, let alone thinking it.
@@TroubleisHereain’t no way ☠️☠️😭😭
@@TroubleisHere dang
@@TroubleisHerebe normal
This is one of if not the chillest and most amicable groups we’ve seen I hope they all got brunch after this
Yeah 😊
lmao
Or rob a bank together
@@keifer7813 Money Heist 3.0
I wanna be their friends lol
You can tell from Justin C’s voice that he really feels terrible about his actions as a teen. I wish him all the best. This was a great episode. Everyone in this episode was amazing. Really enjoyed it. One of the best episodes from Jubilee this year.
This not a hate comment but To be sincerely honest in my humble opinion without being sentimental of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view and without hiding any thoughts in my mind and without lies, to the actual truth with my clear open mind and clean heart, expressing whatever is embedded inside me for a long time which I didn’t say just because I was nervous. But today, by gathering all the courage and motivation, I just want to say that I actually feel and think that I have absolutely nothing to say.
@@iwasher9218 lmao
@@iwasher9218 best comment I ever read LMAO
I dont lol
@@iwasher9218 That hurt my head. You sound like a Democrat.
This was an amazing episode and it showed a lot of how we perceive others and what the stereotypical ex-con would look like. Mario being the lowest and Jess & Justin C. being the highest served time was really the icing on the cake!
This has to do a lot with media. You see movies, for instance, how they portray us Latinos or POC as the mafia and bad blood/bad customs people. Also, Latin America is always portrayed as jungle people, un-educated, poor and lazy, and there could be some truth to that, but in most cases it isn't
I'm curious how long the white collar crime guy actually sentenced to. We know what he served but he didn't mention how much time he was supposed to do. I feel like knowing both definitely adds perspective.
fr
@@ztarr they mentioned in the video that you’re required so serve 85% of your time in federal prison by federal law. So he was most likely sentenced to 15 months.
@@Analaya749 Well bc I’mma black male, I have to be conscious of the things I do and the things I wear when going out. Just wearing a hood makes certain people mistake us for criminals. All we’d need is a couple of tattoos, a “mean mug”, and any kind of posture to be considered a felon in a lot of people’s eyes 🤷🏽
Justin C. had me tearing up. It’s sad to see how a single event can change your whole life and I genuinely think he learned his lesson. I hope that he gets everything straightened out with the deportation issue he mentioned.
Respect to the middle guy for appreciating his PD. It’s nice to know not everyone hates Lawyers.
I think PDs are generally the only universally respected lawyers, unfortunately their lower pay and insane workload doesn't reflect it.
PD's are cool, corporate lawyers are the real assholes. Also, lot of respect for lawyers who do work defending activists, class-action lawsuits against shitty corporations etc.
@@KarlSnarks yup, class action lawyers also do a real service.
With the amount of they got. Who wouldn’t appreciate them. Though there are a few careless apples, major are just stressed people tryna look out for their fellow person
nah we hate our po s
The most innocent looking did the most time. Wow . Never judge. Lots of tattoos don't define what one is .
I think they purposely bought these people to show that...
And the one woth most tatoos and a scar on his face did the least time
@@HumanityNotDoomed fr
None of them look innocent. Nor do they look guilty. Color has nothing to do with innocence or guilt. I'm not sure how anyone can even tell based on race, gender and tattoos.
The only one who looks “scary” is the guy with the tattoos, you’re just racist
Prison is a wreck. I was a nurse for exactly THREE months in a maximum security prison.
The things I saw, heard and learned broke me down and I’m 10 years out of that job.
I think of injustices I saw at least once a day.
That speaks to your humanity, Kate. ❤️
Elaborate?
I can definitely see this as a valid point. Once it becomes Prison, its majoreley different from regular jail.
That sucks. Maybe it's so bad because everyone with empathy leaves.
Very brave and beautiful of you Kate ❤️
Could you remind me again what crime someone needs to do to end up in maximum security prison?
Mario is my favorite person to see on yalls episodes. He’s so wholesome and has such a loving father vibe. I hope he’s getting some compensation 😆❤️
Thank you for having me on!!! Also I’m sorry I called Justin a walking pyramid scheme 😭💚
Stooop, you were such a sweetie! This was so awesome all together. I'm so proud to see you here ♥️
You’re so down to earth and articulate. Glad this video introduced me to you!
So happy to see you on here. You're wonderful, Jess. ❤️❤️❤️❤️ been a follower of yours for a long time and i was so happy to see you on another great platform.
happy to see you in this video, jess 😍
Kicked on the video because I recognized you!!
I genuinely never would have suspected the guy to have served 14 years. I’m so glad that these people have changed for the better. It all goes to show don’t judge a book by its cover.
As soon as he said 14 years I knew what it was for and I was more shocked.
@@mikemac7196what was it for
How do you know that he has changed?
@@senya1696 easy, he judged the books with their new covers!
@@senya1696 He was 16 when he got locked up. That's not enough time to change??
This was one of the Better Jubilee episodes. It defied expectations, informative, causes the viewer to re-examine there stereotypes and assumptions of people.
I fully agree, well said
yes!!
Yes to all of this!!
Shouldnt have stereotypes or assumptions to begin with
@@Jay-jb2vr there shouldn't be but let's be honest, we're human and it's inevitable people are gonna have underlying stereotypes about people based on their appearance. Even if we don't intentionally do it
justin has me in tears. i wish him the best, he seems like a great guy
Let's be real, the dude doing the white collar crime did EXACTLY what we all thought when we first saw him 😅
frfr😂😂😂
No one even questioned what he did lmao
Speak for yourself fella
Two charges come to mind
didnt watch the video but I'm guessing its tax fraud
I’m SO glad you chose Jessica Kent to represent for the female prisoners. She’s such a wise, talented woman I’ve been following her for years ❤️
it did bother me she was the only woman though. like come on, i thought we were better than this. at best she probably felt singled out, at worst it comes off sexist
@@ferninthehouse It might have been harder to find female ex convicts willing to be in the video
@@ferninthehouse maybe because men are way more likely to commit crimes so there are more men that have been in prison. Also what Hans Capon said.
@@samtae6217 people always wanan have a issue with something no matter what it is
@@Eye-Am-exclipse bruh what is wrong w me pointing out that there’s a lack of women in the video lmao. Snowflake
The whole reason I am going to law school is I aim to be the “public defender that fight like a paid attorney”, it’s amazing to know there are similar minded people in the industry. That’s how we make the justice system better
Heroes
As someone also studying law and working towards law school (I'd like to focus on transactional law) I would really love to know more about your interest in becoming a public defender and how you got there! So often I hear about how people don't want to be public defenders because they don't want to defend a criminal.
What is the hole
@@candyflosstiger7777 solitary confinement, so you are locked in a cell usually with no doors and no windows alone. Most people talk through a vent.
@@lvasquez2978 thx
they’re all so sweet. My dad did 10 years and he’s changed and i’m
so proud of him and i feel for all these people cause i heard what they go through and they’re just not treated like people at all, i’m proud of them all
This shows are pretty eye opening for the first time. We can see here how people are opening up about their own experiences without having to feel as of they’re being limited.
Do my name 😁 😁
It's not something to be proud of
@@syntheticfiber7388 opening up and turning your life around for the better is definitely something to be proud of.
@@syntheticfiber7388 Well aren’t you a positive person.
They were limited none of them are going to mention crimes they got away with
I love how they were commending each other in the end for the progress they each made
My boss a few years ago was an ex-con. She was an addict, and had completely turned her life around. She was one of the nicest people I ever met! I loved spending time with her, and we had some of the best heart-to-hearts I ever had with anyone.
It seems that people who go through a lot of struggles and come out the other end as better people, usually are some of the most empathetic and kind people.
I think people who have come out the other side of struggle have done a lot of soul searching and therapy. So this is probably why.
@@girlofanimation Also they don't speak lightly. They learn the hard way that actions have meanings and choices have consequences.
That girl was feeling the Korean guy after he said 82 to life LMAO
"you should be happy for me, it could've been worse" 🤣🤣🤣
No sir u ratted 😂
Yeah that wasn't just a conspiracy 🤣🤫
@@VX-cy4du Conspiracy in a legal context just means that you agreed with someone else to do something illegal. So because he wasn’t actually committing fraud, just looking away, they charged him with conpsiracy
@@VX-cy4du the basis for conspiracy is just knowing someone can commit a crime and not saying anything. You don’t have to agree to aid in the crime. You just have to know that someone is going to commit a crime and not say anything.
The best episode yet. Clearly they all have remorse for what they have done. Feel sorry for Mario, getting locked up for something that is now legal and widely used is pretty fucked.
Still illegal (for personal use) in the majority of states, and still illegal under federal law which supersedes any state legislation. Be careful depending on what state you’re in, as they totally still railroad people for cannabis possession.
I didn't have a father in my life for 2 years because he had a SINGLE pot plant in the attic. This was in California too, so I really feel bad for folks who got locked up in other states or who weren't white and got worse charges for the same amount.
@@isveryniceyes do you feel sorry if it happens the other way around?
Remorse doesnt work they all deseeved the prison
Ehh, if it was illegal at the time they shouldnt have broken the law.
The guy with the dreads desperately didn't want to be perceived to be the petty crime guy, you can see his frustration grow as he worked his way down towards the end of the line 🤣
he was ignorant the whole interview too.
When he said he “unfortunately” didn’t do any time in the hole 🤡😂
@@noahbrennan3449 that's making me think he wanted to go so he could be isolated&run from some problems, without having to check in
Same can be said about the lady 😂
@@Tiffymeoww Fr lol and as they kept trying to move the Asian guy down I'm just like watch this guy be the one with the most time. So much that he did a complete 180.
Only problem is Jessica Kent only did two years not five
I love how Jess is in the video! She does a great job destigmatizing this topic.
Now Read my name
I think it should be restigmatized
however she made the "American greed guy" joke so many times it wasn't even funny and to be honest it was condescending vibes towards him throughout.
"oh we know you didn't do drugs" ..like okay..???
i clicked bc of her
@@hazelcharles1475 i didn't thjink she was rude
I used to really judge people with criminal convictions until I went to law school and interned with a Federal Judge. Seeing the process, hearing the stories of people, and witnessing their ultimate convictions made me completely change my perspective. Nowadays I volunteer with a local organization that helps the families of those who are unfortunately imprisoned as they make the adjustment to be without the loved ones. The system is so fucked up and I am truly disgusted by the lack of humanity and compassion with which we treat so many people in this country.
That’s true. I studied law in Germany and the system is so different here. We focus on resocialisation rather than on punishment and I feel like that’s better. On the other hand, they’re living their best lives in prison. Their cells aren’t way smaller than my second flat which was only 17m^2 small. They can finish high school or a professional education in prison. That’s crazy, especially because every prisoner can do it. Even the serial killers. They have a somewhat normal life. I still can’t decide what’s better
@@fynn8954 They still have their freedom taken completely away from them. I can't imagine having to be in my room or in a closed yard for years.
@@Supraifyification yes, that’s true. I’m not the biggest fan of prisons in general. I don’t think that someone who got caught with weed should go to prison at all. A lot of former prisoners say that they went in as criminals and came out as terrorists because of the environment and I feel like that’s logical. Also, the statistics show that it’s hard to be part of society after being in prison, especially after being there for years. The resocialisation should be in focus and I don’t think that prison is the best solution, at least not for petty criminals. Tbh, that’s just my opinion based on a few criminology classes I had to take for university though. I am not specialised on criminology, so I don‘t know if my opinion would be different if I had greater knowledge on that topic. I might do some research again. It’s been a while 😅
At least you learned when you saw. A lot of people never learn or see. Or they see and they don't care.
Not to mention that things like financial aid do not treat families that use to depend on the person in jail like
They lost a provider. If you need financial aid and your parent just went to jail they still count in your family household. If your parent widows there’s clear procedures on how to apply. There is no support for families
When Justin started talking about the intricacies of state prison and county jail life and said he was only out for 2 years, I knew he was at least top 3. I was not disappointed.
For me it was the way he stood. His body language said he had survived some ruff stuff and came out stronger. I have seen a lot of people who have had military or martial art training stand the same way. It's the I'm not a person to f with aura.
This group should teach everyone a lot, I love this group of people so genuine about turning there lives around and being better.
I understand the Korean guy. I was locked due to the same caliber of crime as a teenager in fact, same age as him. I got out after 2 years thanks to my behaviour and no criminal like behaviours in an underage arrest I was in. Currently I’m working as a chef and I gotta say life is beautiful. I’m happy to close that dark episode of past my abusive father created. Never judge anyone by his or her “book cover” but who that person is.
No you don’t understand he did 7x the time you did
@@coupdegrace7176 he a ganger i think it goes up when you're in a gang
but dang i thought he was chinese or something and in the triads
Wonder if he's got a sign thing that we can sign to help him out 🤷🏼♀️
@Mufi Rune it's not important what others think of you, it's important what you think of yourself.
his name is justin C
dang, that means Justin can’t even get a green card 🤦🏾♀️. He seems changed and a much better person, I hope everything works out for him in the long run.
Dude must've been crazy well behaved to get out on an 82 years to life sentence.
@@KyokujiFGC it was most likely only that high because he wasn't a citizen
I thought u didn’t need a green card to buy weed in Cali
@@Deeznutz... Green Card = Citizenship my guy 🤣
@@Deeznutz... so, black card-n word, green card-weed now? Bruh
It's so interesting to watch the quick, stereotyped snap judgements, and then the way they shift around as they learn more and more about each other. It really speaks to why you should meet people with an open mind and hear their story; listen for as long as possible before your opinion gets set in stone.
yep
Funny how even til the end, the dreadlock dude assumed that the Korean dude did a nail shop scheme. But Nail shop owners are predominantly Vietnamese. Lol
@@sixfeet3550 He was also the guy crying about "racism".
Yep
@@sixfeet3550 he was talking about the girl smart guy
i dont normally click on jubilee videos except for like watching ones ive seen commentary on but this one kept me watching because out of all the videos ive seen this was the most fun because it wasnt really drama it was a bunch of really genuine people and they are so charismatic i couldnt stop watching
Nah from the beginning I knew Mario was the one who served the least, I'm from Mexico and 99% of people who look like him or have that cholo style culture are the sweetest, they take care of their loved ones, they word hard and they are really respectful and nice. One of the best urban cultures Mexico has given to the world.
I thought he was a Crip because of the Tattoo. 😂
Facts!!! My husband, he’s the best 🥰
@@digby_dooright what’s your point?
Yea there's a cholo guy I'used to see on this one mexican girls yt channel. She used to call him her vato. He looked like the guy on here and seemed like such a sweetheart. Very laid back.
Exactly my uncle looks like that and he is one of the nicest person I’ve met
I would gladly befriend any one of these souls. It's crazy that four out of the six had nonviolent charges, and of the remaining, one was drug related and the other was under 18. these are people who I'm glad got out of the system and can really live their lives reformed
i think 3 were drug related? the weed one, the narcotics, and the girl’s possession of drugs/weapons
@@sop6217 I think what they meant is that out of the two with violent charges, the girl had done assault and possession with intent had done drugs at the time, probably affecting her thinking
I used to be a counselor in a correctional facility and had a fascination of their intellect and many were the most brightest and polite human beings. Many of the long term offenders served 20+ years and have changed. I love how this video broke down stereotypes 💕
80% of prisoners committed their crimes while under the influence.
I wouldnt
I love Jessica! She’s told her story about being pregnant in prison and it’s really heartbreaking how some people are treated in prison even though they broke the law they are still humans that need hygiene products
Anyone know of some other vids Jessica’s in?
@@hello12229 she has her own UA-cam channel but idk about other vids from this specific channel
@@hello12229 she also have of
yea it's fucked up how they chained her after giving birth. that's what they do to cows. so fucked up
@@beth_m what’s her channel?
Jessica Kent did not spend 5 years prison lol you all got bamboozled so she could look hard
I like how Mario looks the baddest but only went in for 9 months 😂
Not only that but it was also 12 years ago 😂
For possessing marijuana!
@@oest2029 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Looks aren’t everything.
9 months feels like an eternity in there
Edit: to everyone either missing the point entirely or saying it’s a double standard, it’s really not. And you can talk about pads and tampons all day (which yes is a major issue) but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Try giving birth in shackles and never being able to hold the baby you just birthed. Try living with an infected c-section scar and dealing with guards who refuse to give you medication to care for it. Both men and women’s healthcare are neglected in prison/jail and I was just saying it was nice to see someone bring that up. Thankfully there are advocates and healthcare providers who see this as an issue and volunteer their time to provide regular services for free. If you really want to do something: bring awareness to the topic, donate feminine products to your local jails, do research 👏🏽
Healthcare in prison is a topic that escapes conversation time and time again so I’m so glad she is advocating for women in prison and jail and how underserved they are ❤
If you haven’t already, check out her channel Jessica Kent, she is an awesome advocate for womens healthcare in prison! Her birth story in prison is heavy but important
for my time in jail, I legit HATE HAAAAATE pancakes, BUT when i was in jail, i got served some pancakes i legit liked! in Jail its not all bad, prison is when it gets more real.
🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡
She is annoying af.
how are they underserved in comparison to the men?
Why are ex con’s always so much more entertaining to watch. Always so wholesome and polite.
Not to be too dark, but I think it’s because a lot of them have seen what running your mouth to strangers can get you
because all of us have been brainwashed by media and live to strive for boring, corporate lives as society has taught us. Ex-cons differ from that norm.
People are too comfortable with disrespecting others and not getting punched in the mouth for it. Prison reminds you of the possibility of violence.
I've never been considered wholesome, or polite so, thanks.
People who have moved on from the 'darkening of the soul'-phase are usually more understanding about other people and themselves
This is so interesting to see such different people but all went through the same and can connect on such a polite level! Great bunch of people!
I just want to thank Jubilee for creating this episode. I learned a lot this episode! It really helped remove some misconceptions and stereotypes I previously believed.
really appreciate that ❤
npc
yeah & on top of that, he was detained for WEED
harmless
i definitely get you with this comment. Ive been jailed for a whoile week, havent been to prison. Once in even in jail, you see how easy it is to have most freedoms stripped away, its boring, zero privacy, bhut you remember how fun it is to read books. Plus some of the other bunkies/ people actually are, no matter what they are accused of
🤖
jessica kent & jubilee is the crossover of the century
+
Yes!
Yes!!!
literally 😂
Honestly lol
Justin’s story made my heart drop I’m so proud of him though and I wish him the best as for every other person that is an ex-con this could be anyone and life throws you curveballs and having to deal with it in such a horrible state as in prison is a dehumanizing, disgusting thing but the way that people grow because of their circumstances is truly amazing! I love all these people ❤️
1:19 Tyrone was not fooled, he already knew that Justin C. probably had been in prison the longest, he said that Justin might have done a stretch based on how he was talking and that Justin was giving off some "mafia type" vibes. Look at what he said at timestamp 1:19.
I honestly cant stand ppl who think theyre taking charge its just annoying. That girl is a red flg
16 serving 14 years???
Damn he legit missed his late teens and entire 20s just to get out of prison in his 30s. What a miss in life.
Still have more time to start a life bro.
He murdered someone well deserved
Please… there’s no much to miss anyway.. at least for me. I’m 20 and live like I am 70.
@@marinaSassygUrl88 but that’s your choice he didn’t have that choice plenty of people build their future in their 20s
@@librarianrose4472 I said at least for me. And I was just venting. And btw, he did build his life.. he graduated and got his GED so it didn’t seem like much to miss.
When my son got out the second time, we told him that he needed to stay away from his former friends. He did that and he is a second level supervisor at a major logistics company, he’s married and has 2 beautiful daughters. I am so proud out of him.
As you should be! You sound like a lovely & supportive father ❤
@@yazshaz5720 thank you
glad you supported him
@@TheRcarter8766 still an excon
@@S-fn3oe p
Your point?
So glad Jessica Kent was on this episode. She’s an incredible representation of how you can turn your back on your demons and flourish.
And she's mature
@@ayofrtho7014 no she’s not “yeah we can see that you didn’t do drugs, we can see that,” like everyone looked at her disturbed because she wasn’t funny at all.
@@drivenoffhate i dont think it was meant to be funny?? you can easily tell if someone has done drugs..
@@drivenoffhate what r u talking about? one, that has nothing to do with maturity. two, no one “looked at her disturbed.”
@@drivenoffhate they might have given her a look because they realized she was shedding light into her own difficult past
theyre so friendly and personable omg i love them
My ex boyfriends dad is a prison guard and he always told stories of how he basically abused the inmates (mentally or emotionally) and pushed them around just because he can and since they were there that meant they deserved it. It was horrible and I really hated him for this among others things.
Damnnn did the whole fam think this behaviour was cool too cause wtf
@@kimberleyelle7387 his mom hated it, they’re divorced. He cheated on her with his now girlfriend who is also a prison guard. But for the most part yea thought it was fine
Working at an ER that employs a fair amount of security guards that have formerly worked in prisons has shown me a glimpse of what some prisoners must go through by the way they treat our psychiatric holds. They don’t last long because they aren’t used to their superiors listening to complaints from patients/staff.
@@rainbowsandunicorntits4209 That's so sad.
yeah theyre all disgusting
The chemistry and conversations in this episode were top notch. This has to be my favorite ranking episode from Jubilee.
Hearing Justin C’s story hit me hard. All young men make terrible choices at a young age. There were so many times my life could have went down the wrong path, because I didn’t have the maturity to think about consequences and long term effects of my choices. The prison system is in desperate need of reform and I’m sorry they failed you. I’m glad you’ve overcome what you have and I hope you can remain in the USA. Much love brother, from one American to another.
1:19 Tyrone was not fooled, he already knew that Justin C. probably had been in prison the longest, he said that Justin might have done a stretch based on how he was talking and that Justin was giving off some "mafia type" vibes. Look at what he said at timestamp 1:19.
I didn’t catch how exact he was the first time. It shows how street smart he is. If you’ve been around certain people long enough, you can spot them in a crowd. It’s like veterans, just by the way you hold yourself or speak, I’ll pick up on it quickly.
@@valoredramack9117 why are you pasting this on every comment about Justin? What's your goal here?
@@valoredramack9117 why are you copy and pasting this on every single comment about justin what is the point
His sentence was 82 years to life. He must have done some serious fucked up things to get that. He got lucky they released him much sooner than 82 years, nobody failed him anything.
Justin went to prison when he was 17.
He's only just gotten out.
That's crazy.
I've only spent about 2 weeks in county but it was all in "solitary"... with another inmate.
The biggest shock was that the food wasn't half bad, if not lacking in nutrition.
The worst part was that the lights were never shut off, so sleep was done in short spurts. Oh, and my mat was on the floor. I slept on the floor. It wasn't really worse than the metal cots, so I didn't think it mattered.
My cell mate was literally, medically insane and quite far off, too. He thought I worked for the prison and was trying to stop him from getting $5m from *unknown source* when he got out. There was a list of other erratic behaviors, too, like throwing his food on bed while I got the one shower I was able to have.
He'd been in there for months, and I still don't know why. I guess the "best" our little county could do for him was lock him up in a concrete closet and forget about him.
I understand that jails house criminals, but we have a revolving door because of the intense levels of inhumanity that reinforce criminal behavior instead of reforming it.
This was an eye-opening video. Hearts out to the panel on this one. The way they were able to connect and get to know one another through this experiment was really cool to see
Mario: a lot of people that commit the worst crimes don't look like me
Soooo true hermano
This is the best ranking video I've seen so far. Everyone was so well mannered and respectful.
I pray everything goes well with Justin.. I can tell he was just hanging with the wrong crowd and has definitely changed his life around!
Funniest pary is they're one of the most relaxing, wholesome groups they ever had on one of these videos💀
People are far less comfortable with disrespecting others if theyve seen how bad the consequences of disrespect can be
Wow, 14 years in prison at 16... that's 30. He said he's 32, so he got out 2 years ago. 2 years ago was *2020* ... what a time to be out of a 14-year prison sentence since teenhood.
14 years prior was 2006, that year Kyle XY was brand new on what was formerly ABCFamily (Fox Family/The Family Channel) but is now FreeForm (I think?)... 2006, when Bad Day, Chasing Cars, and How to Save a Life were all over radio, one year before Crank That by Soulja Boy was! The year the Danish cartoonist was attacked for giving face to a religious figure he shouldn't have and a disrespectful one at that... all that happened when Justin C was age 16 and he spends all of 2007, 2009, 2013, 2018... all the way to the virus year (that I'm pretty sure the privileged people in power and not prison were responsible for _back then..._ ).
All those years everybody else has lived their lives and can tell you what they associate with each year and he'll just say "I was in prison." So yeah, long time for a teenager and _all his 20s._ Weird to think about.
Murdered cartoonist?
Danggg bro that’s act crazt
We didnt need the pop culture lesson
@@jootpepet I liked that he added it! : )
@@jootpepet Helps put it into perspective what he missed. Im not a big pop culture fan but it was interesting
Damn I would never have expected him to have the most time in
Y’all need to do your homework for the next one. Kent did less than a year in Arkansas for drug charges. Nowhere near 5 years. The firearm charge was dropped😅
😂🤣🤭How embarrassing.
She did time in NY, as well, or was it Illinois.🤔
Yup. She's a fraud and a liar. Can't stand her. r/ Jkentsnarkk
Nicholas at the end saying "don't judge people" when the first thing he did was send the only woman there at the most innocent side and call her a baby 💀💀
FR i was looking for someone to comment abt this he was being so terrible all the time
@@juliabaker3362 ifkr
@@florianvanderstraeten1489 tf? the whole point of my comment is how u shouldn't judge people based on their gender.
@@maanika_m I didn't. Some people just think that women are holier than the pope but they are not
@@florianvanderstraeten1489 but how does it make sense for u to say "women are monsters",that's directly contradictory to ur OWN counter argument to men being monsters
Don't judge a book by its cover. Everyone has a story. I thoroughly liked this episode
Jessica kent only served like 18 months
Gosh. This episode made me cry. Never judge a book by its cover. I'm very proud of how Justin turned out. It's very inspirational.
such a refreshing content to remind people not to judge others by only their appearance. Thank you, Jubilee!
Whoa! Just realized I am more influenced by societal prejudices than I thought I was. And this with a more than a fair amount of watching true crime shows. But what shook me was how those who lived that experience are also prey to the same prejudices. One of the best Jubilee line ups, my best to date.
This was by far the most respectful behaviour while ranking I’ve seen in this format so far.
Nicholas is hilarious, you can tell he's fun to be around with. All of them look genuine and really regretful of what they did. Glad to see them turn their life around.
I’m Nick, thanks so much. I just try to enjoy life and laugh more these days 🙏🏽
I remember this job I had at a warehouse where most of the employees used to be convicts, minimum wage job. Anyway I remember I felt intimidated and I can say even scared, I’ve never been to jail myself.Then I started to get to know the persons talk w/them and actually get to know them. Now I can say they are one of nicest respectful people and I felt so safe there, it’s kind of bizarre I felt safe with a bunch of criminals, and to this day I kept in touch w/ some of them. How fast we’re programmed to judge people..
Ex-criminals. I think one of the biggest problems with those that are reformed from a criminal lifestyle is that people continue to call them criminals. It really affects them.
I’m not gonna lie tho, that judgement is not unfounded. Like, of course you’re gonna be intimidated by people who have literally been criminals (especially if it has to do with some kind of violent crime). You don’t know if they have reformed or if they’re capable of doing it again. They’ve gotta rebuild the trust of other people.
On a smaller scale, it’s like a cheater. If they cheated one other partner before you but swear they have changed and regretted it, they’ve gotta prove it to you. Being “programmed to judge” in that instance is not necessarily wrong.
same. very first job I got in 2010 was through a temp agency and was sent to a factory of mostly convicts. I was barely 18 and not even out of high school yet. it was a little intimidating working with people who had charges for selling drugs and carrying guns but honestly they were some of the nicest people I ever met. I got along especially well with a black guy in his 30's who was an avid gamer. during our lunch we would talk about retro game consoles like the colecovision and intellivision as well as the newest games coming out like mortal kombat 9. I occasionally gave him rides home and he even let me borrow his playstation 3 controller when mine broke. convicts arent all bad people, in alot of cases theyre just people that made mistakes or got in with the wrong crowd and are trying to turn their lives around.
Generally folks in prison don't like Disrespect the crazy ones that you worried about are probably way too gone to get like a job like a Warehouse job
The girl is Jessica Kent, she’s now a UA-camr and makes great content! All about her life and why/how she ended up in jail etc. everyone should check her out she deserves it!!
@ZyklonBeast just wondering what’s so trashy or insufferable about her in this video? Her UA-cam videos are very informative and gives a perspective that people usually don’t see. She knows she’s done wrong back then. She has some more light hearted content, but also serious stuff and admits many times her wrong doings. That doesn’t seem trashy to me.. she advocates for people to get better and not end up in the situation she was in
Ong on my dead homies I’ve seen her in BLACKED
@@gvs6462 you happen to remember her pr0n name? Couldn't find nothin with her real name.
@@gvs6462 😂😂 AINT NO WAYYY
I feel like she thinks she’s the only attractive woman that’s ever served time and that it makes her unique.. I’ve known and seen way prettier that served time and they like to hide that part of their life because they’ve moved on
Interesting to hear these personal stories. It's a reminder that while these individuals have faced consequences for their actions, there are others in powerful positions who might never face the same level of accountability.
Definitely wasn't expecting 9 months to be the least amount of time served 💀💀💀
I’m glad they brought Jessica, she’s so sweet and super informative about prison life
I just want to see if anyone else thinks she looks like love quin from the show you cuz the resemblance is crazy
@@mexican_wbc9946 YESS SHE DOES OMG
@@melarie205 was waiting to see comments abt that was surprised no one said it😂
@@mexican_wbc9946 I see a slight resembles
@@ily5540 looks more like love quin than the real love quin
Saw Jessica and clicked. I love her channel. I found it during my Orange is the new black obsession and she really opened my eyes on what prison is REALLY is, not just what Tv shows.
You should watch Wentworth, it kind of pisses me off that shows not talked about more. Guess it was too real for people.
Her stories about birth/pregnancy in prison made my cry so hard, I never knew American prisons were that bad.
@@patrickbertlein4626 I’ve seen wentworth, I prefer orange. but my parents (who’ve also watched both shows) both prefer Wentworth
Same. Her story about giving birth in prison touched me for sure
shes a criminal she doesn't deserve anything
I noticed how Mario constantly tried moving himself to last but the group would push him up and thats why i wasnt suprised to see him at last place
Petition for Jessica to have them in her channel! I wanna hear their stories
yesssss
She has her own channel being seeing her in UA-cam for along time
@@user-v5551 I think they meant they want her to bring the rest of these people on to her channel to hear their stories.
Bring them on her channel!!!
Really pulling for Justin. Hope we can get an update on his case.
@@ldov6373 he was a kid too
@@karentapia1466 he murdered someone still
@@karentapia1466 being a kid is not a excuse for what he did
@@embrasil kind of think y’all losing the plot he did say he was rightfully sentenced he knows what he did was wrong he spent more than a decade in jail since he was a teenager. The point is a person can reflect and change their path and that should count too.
Where can I find more information about him?
All these people seem like such genuine and great people who unfortunately were put in terrible situations but ultimately, changed themselves for the better. For that they have all my admiration. To completely tear everything down and build it back up to have people judge you based on your past instead of what you've done in the present or simply like in marios case having people assume the absolute worst from you. I seriously respect these people thank you for this video
It's not easy. I was released from prison in 1988. That was Florida. I returned to my home state immediately and only recently moved back to Florida. In my home state I worked in a restaurant for years then got a job in a machine shop and ended up making parts for the military. After that I got a job making diamond and gold and platinum jewelry. I got to hold Super Bowl rings and the Super Bowl trophy in my hands and that will tell you which company I worked for and did so for almost a decade. I was also elected to town council not once but twice with full disclosure of my past. Then I decided I accomplished what I wanted to and I was then appointed magistrate to preside over minor cases in the evening. But health has required me to move to a warm climate and the least expensive state that doesn't have a real winter is Florida. Here I can go back to prison just for attempting to register to vote. I am back to working restaurant jobs because the moment anyone sees my background they don't want to hire me. It took me five years to convince a landlord to rent to me. Where I'm from up north landlords can't ask if you have any convictions. Here they are required by law to ensure they don't rent to convicted felons while at the same time any convicted felon on probation or parole is required to have a domicile. The number one reason why convicted felons fail in probation and parole in Florida is due to not being able to find work or housing. Huge difference between the different states concerning this issue. Florida law is deliberately designed to discourage rehabilitation. This is primarily due to the need for slave labor. Inmates are paid up to about 75 cents an hour to do a variety of jobs. The entire prison population with few exceptions are expected to hold a slave job. Some of the slave jobs include manufacturing garments, shoes, a variety of paper goods, lumber, metal parts and other things that are sold to other prison systems around the country at a profit. Other slave jobs include working on highways, construction jobs, building homes for prison employees and maintaining those homes. There are multiple farms owned by the prison system here including a pig farm, cattle ranch, poultry farm and farms that produce vegetables. Less than half of this food goes to prison inmates here in Florida. The rest is sold. Florida has more state prisons than any other state. I believe only Texas has a higher percentage of the population currently behind bars. By contrast, Rhode Island, where I used to live, has half the percentage of it's population in prison that Florida had. About 1 out of every 263 Floridians are in prison at the moment and about 1 out of 20 have a felony conviction and almost none of them can vote. In Rhode Island 1 out of 450 people are currently serving time and about 1 out of 32 have a felony conviction and 100% of them can vote when they are released and all of them can run for public office 5+ years after they are released. In Florida Virtually all employers require a background check and 98% will reject an applicant if there is so much as one felony conviction in 1963. In Rhode Island it is illegal to ask about any felony convictions that took place 10+ years ago on a job application. In Florida it is legal for insurance companies to refuse to sell liability insurance to landlords who rent to convicted felons so 99.9% of landlords won't rent to a convicted felon. The few ex cons who can find housing, like me, live in uninsured illegal apartments that the post office does not recognize as existing which causes problems with mail. In Rhode Island it is a crime for a landlord to ask a potential tenant if they have a felony conviction.
@@nunyabiznez6381 “Florida law is designed to discourage rehabilitation” that is truly disheartening. I wasn’t aware of how terrible Florida is in regards to convicted felons. I mean how do they expect these folk to be model citizens but completely make obstacles impossible for some to overcome. That’s sickening. I’m so sorry you experience that. Everyone should be given the chance to redeem themselves. Have you thought of moving somewhere else Florida can’t be the only area w no winter ? Thanks for sharing that with me I truly have such an interest in prison reform A lot of times people don’t understand the correlation between poverty and crime rates.. there’s much changes needed to be done in regards to not only our prisons and jails but to the whole approach to rehabilitation after jail and prisons.
Jessica Kent did not serve five years. She served 2.5. This woman is not a fan of honesty.
How do you know
@@pbird1578 she was interviewed by Montel Williams. He had to keep asking her but she finally admitted she did not serve five years and it was 2.5. Also if you check out her paperwork, it will tell you she did not serve five years. Unfortunately, she has lied about a lot.
I feel bad for the guy that served 14 years , he spend most of his childhood in jail at 16 and got out at 30
@@Alexandra-lx4jq 18 is still a kid , just because it is the legal age doses't mean 18 year olds are magically adults
i wonder if the people who are defending him now would be defending him if someone dear to them was on the receiving end of his crime.
@@amna-ox9ur why would they 😂
@@amna-ox9ur Just because you agree/sympathize more with one side, doesn’t mean you can’t sympathize with the other. Also, obviously people would be more pissed if the crime was committed against them or against someone close to them. But they’re not lol. You know this lol, what’s the point in asking?
@@nooraqueen2716 do you feel bad for the person he murdered that has not been alive for 16 years? Who potentially were children themselves and lost their childhood?
Y’all should see Jessica’s birth story. It’s disgusting. She has a UA-cam channel where she talks about prison and her experiences as a woman. It’s very interesting and makes me hope for prison reform even more.
What’s her channel
@@Mr.Cisco99 Jessica Kent
I knew she looked familiar!! So sad
I loved this group. I'd love to see all 6 of them in more episodes together. This was probably the best lineup episode.
These people have such a calm presence compared to others I've seen on this page, I'm so happy for all of them for making it
He went in at 16????? Mans literally missed out on his whole young adult life. Goddamn
And he almost made someone miss out on their entire life
Ik someone that went in at 17 and is facing life
@@genetakovic2508 But didn't.
He should´ve been in a recovery prison in sweden, not a prison in america that turns people into monsters. I hope america changes for the better.
@@kelseajohnson3211 he a winner you should visit him and not use protection
I was in and out of jail more than a dozen times, but all it took was one prison term to set me straight! I never wanted to go back there again, and so far I haven't. I was released from prison on Sept 6th, 2008, and swear I won't ever go back!
stay strong and dont go back, and tell others about your journey so that they know how awful it truly is and they wont think ''oh I wont get caught'', stay strong :)
I believe in you!
Very proud of you!! 14 years is a long time you should be very proud of yourself. Much love. ❤
YAYYY JESS SO PROUD OF YOU, AND IM SO EXCITED TO SEE YOU ON HERE LOVE YOU LOTS
I wonder why in the part that's titled "Actual time served " Everyone said there actual time served But Jessica said 5x Her actual time served, She really is Proud of her time served
U could tell cause she was forcing it to go up the ranking all video
She said at the end she got locked up twice for other chargers, probably she added em all up
When did she lie about it?
@@Sun-Tzu- i think because she was sentenced to five years but just served one.
@@_Belen4_ She still deliberately mislead them.
This was so wholesome. I'd 100% be friends with all of these people, especially Mario. He has a kind look about him. People aren't the bad decisions they made when they were young.
Until they rob you
Well said!
*super mario bros 1-1 song plays*
My decision to call you cute was never bad, Jess. I like your piercing eyes and eyebrows.
Same I was just about to comment about Mario too lol