What Now? with Trevor Noah - Trevor and Friends: What’s Diddy Got To Do With It?
Episode Date: March 7, 2024Trevor catches up with Josh Johnson and Christiana Mbakwe Medina to hash out some of the biggest news stories of the week. They debate whether Margot Robbie deserves an acting Oscar for playing Barbie..., if Bitcoin will always just be a scam, and what the new emerging sexual assault allegations against Diddy say about masculinity in hip-hop. And, Christiana won’t let one question go—is Trevor a CIA operative? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Discussion (0)
I'm just going to share it with the world, but I genuinely believe Trevor is a CIA asset.
Wow.
I just think it's funny how you show up to places and they change.
That's the interesting thing to me, because that's what the CIA does.
They just show up.
You said I show up to places and they change?
That's what you said, Trevor.
Wow.
Wow.
These are my friends.
You come to America, next thing you know, Trump's in power. Coincidence, much? I don't know.
These are my friends.
We are absolutely your friends, so that when the CIA comes for us, you could be like, no, they are cool. I like them.
Exactly.
Don't touch them.
You're listening to What Now? The podcast where I chat to interesting people
about the conversations taking over our world.
This week, we chat about the Oscars
and why good-looking people can never win an award.
We also ask whether your grandmother
should put all her money in Bitcoin.
And we look at what the latest allegations
against Puff Daddy reveal about masculinity in
hip-hop. Now, the only thing I love more than peeling back the layers of a story is doing it
with some of my favorite thinkers. So once again, I'm joined by writer, journalist, and in my opinion,
professional hater, Christiana Mbagwe. And stand-up comedian, late-night TV writer,
and human chill pill,
Josh Johnson.
Josh and Christiana,
you're recording your audio?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm getting megabytes over here.
Okay, everybody's on.
Everybody's on.
My name is Trevor Noah, and this is What Now?
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All right.
Happy podcast day, everybody.
Happy podcast day, man.
Happy podcast day.
Good to see you guys.
It's fantastic seeing all of you. How's the week
been? Good. Josh, you look good. You look healthy. Christiana, you look rested, which is always a
compliment for a mom. Yeah, I'll take it. I've been called worse. Yeah, yeah. Just doing shows
in Birmingham, Alabama. Ah, nice. That's one of my favorite places to be, actually. I like that.
Talking about places to be, Trevor, where are you right now?
Where in the world are you?
You know, when most people ask me that question, Christiana, they ask it with
a curiosity and a flicker of joy in their eyes.
You ask it as if you're accusing me of something.
Because he's always in different parts of the world.
Traveler.
He speaks many languages.
South African.
And I actually think his conception was planned. Wow. It just doesn't, none of it makes sense. So
Trevor, where are you and why did the CIA send you there? Okay. So I will first of all deny the
accusations. The CIA has sent me nowhere. And I'm coming to you from the United Arab Emirates,
Dubai, Habibi. Nice. Hello, my friend, my friend. How are you? How are you? I'm having to you from the United Arab Emirates, Dubai, Habibi. Nice.
Hello, my friend.
My friend, how are you?
How are you?
I'm having a great time.
Actually, I was in Qatar, and then I was in Abu Dhabi, and I was in Bahrain, and now I am in Dubai.
It's fun being in this region.
I'm not going to lie to you.
It's an interesting place to be because there are a few places in the world that you get to see transforming rapidly. Like I know everyone has opinions about the Middle East
and parts of it, but I've been to a few places in the world where every five years I see like a
massive jump in how they think, what they're developing, who lives there, how they accept
people. It's really wild. I loved it.
I loved it.
I did almost get arrested though at the airport in Abu Dhabi.
I was, so I got pulled aside for additional screening,
which never happens to me.
It's been a while since that happened to me.
I wonder why you don't get pulled aside for additional screening,
but go on.
Objection, objection, Your Honor.
But I'm having a blast out here.
And no, please, I am not a CIA operative.
Well, this entire story and description of why you like the Middle East so much
has been a horrible denial.
I feel like, for the most part,
my man is telling us, you're telling us,
oh, I love to watch how, you know,
everything changes around a society every five years,
much like the CIA does.
And you also didn't help your case by the listener
cannot see you potentially,
but you showed up looking like the reboot
to Mr. and Mrs. Smith.
Wow.
You got the black on black.
This is, I'm wearing a black hoodie.
It is evening time for me in Dubai.
I'm just trying to be warm.
And okay, let me ask the two of you this.
Let me ask the two of you this.
Like, have you been anywhere in the world
where you've actively seen the place developing and changing?
Like literally in front of your eyes,
not your parents going,
oh, it used to be like this when we were children.
This place used to act, like I mean, actively, have you been anywhere where you've seen that?
I live in the Western world. So I'm just watching the active demise. I'm just watching it go
backwards. I'm watching America go backwards. I've watched England go backwards.
Yeah. Okay. Okay. I will say this. Yes. I am often in countries that are changing or
change very rapidly after I visited them.
However, I don't think this is any of my doing.
I'm not part of the CIA, nor have I done anything to any other country.
I'm just excited to visit countries when I see the, you know, like the spark of change.
Like for instance, okay, I'll give you an example.
When I first came to Dubai, if you were watching, you know, movies at the cinema,
half of them would like have Arabic subtitles
or they would be dubbed or they, do you know what I mean?
Now, when you're here in the region,
you're just watching the movies.
Everyone is there.
Like people in the region speak English.
They watch the same movies that you're watching,
the same TV shows that you're watching.
Like people are literally excited for Dune, for instance, Dune 2.
Everyone here was telling me it's like the most perfect movie of all time.
And I think maybe it's that.
I would put the CIA behind Hollywood in helping to shape the world, to be honest with you.
I mean, Hollywood is a CIA.
No, Christiana, not everything can be CIA.
Not everything can be CIA. Not everything can be CIA.
Now you're making me sound like a conspiracy theorist.
But it's like, they are, I have to be very careful now because I work in this town.
I love Hollywood.
Hollywood is a great place.
Okay, disclaimer out of the way.
Disclaimer out of the way.
But I will say that like, Hollywood has also been used as a propaganda tool especially
to actually demonize a lot of the regions that you like going to you know yeah definitely definitely
I'm surprised that so many people in the Middle East are excited to watch Dune because now I feel
like when I travel people seem to be more into what's coming out of Korea or what's coming out
of Africa or it's very localized and regionalized. I think there's just like less influence in like just Western art and culture.
Like Barbie for me like really took me by surprise
because I can't remember the last time there was an American movie
outside of like the Marvel type of stuff.
People around the world are like, we want to watch that.
Now I just feel it's like, oh, we're going to watch Squid Game, Korean.
You know, to your point, actually,
I wonder if it's less that America has lost influence in the world in that way, or Hollywood, and more that, I don't know, like everyone having their own thing, everyone having their own TikTok feed, everyone having their own Instagram, YouTube, etc.
I wonder if Hollywood holds the same relevance anywhere, to be honest with you.
Because, okay, like, let's look at the Oscars coming up, right?
Like this week, we're going to have the Oscars.
Now, I don't know about you, but I feel like every year, the Oscars has become less and less relevant in the zeitgeist.
Just people chatting about, oh, the Oscars is coming up.
This movie's on, that movie's on. It feels like to me, and this is anecdotal,
but it feels like Hollywood and the Oscars are becoming sort of less relevant. I know more people who have watched like a video of some guy in Columbia who took his shirt off to like run away
from people shooting at him than people who have watched Poor Things, which I hear is fantastic.
So I would say yes to all of that, except this year.
This feels like the first year where people care again, because so many movies that also
happen to be popular were incorporated into the Academy votes. I think that in the past years,
there have been movies- You mean because of Barbie and Oppenheimer?
Barbie, Oppenheimer. I think poor things actually did do really well on a commercial level.
Yeah.
Because so many people had feelings that that's how I know it maintains some relevance.
Yeah.
Like it wasn't the regular outrage.
It was actually like, wow, how do you, I mean, I said this, I was like, you know, you may
not think that Barbie deserves all the Oscars or anything, but it does feel weird to have
some people in the movie nominated and not Barbie. That feels to me a lot like when you, let's say we're talking
about the 90s bulls and we're like, man, Pippen was great and Dennis Rodman was great. And then
there was this other guy. I can't remember his name, but there was another guy that was very good.
Very, very good. Can I tell you my theory this is this is
not going to be popular but i will say i think there are some people who are voting for which
person gets an oscar nod who think that margot robbie is not acting because she looks like
margot robbie and is margot Robbie. And I think that those same voters
will go like, oh, Ryan Gosling is acting because like we know him as all these other things. We
definitely know that he is acting. And the reason I say this is because I've always noticed
that every year the Oscars will come out with a foreign movie that's done really well and not in
the best foreign film category because that's different. I'm saying a movie that's done really well and not in the best foreign film category because that's different i'm saying a movie that's foreign and it's nominated in the main category the whole
best film have you noticed almost every year like parasite was nominated and then the actors weren't
and then i think it was one which was like a really special occurrence slumdog millionaire
the movie was nominated yeah and then the actors weren't and i sometimes think it's because some
people are like you know that movie was was, I mean, that was spectacular.
That was just great.
That was great just to, and you're like,
well, the way they were acting is like,
well, I mean, I don't know if they were acting.
I think they were just being Indian.
We just captured the Indian-ness
and I mean, to see what was going on.
I mean, it's powerful.
And then the filmmaker gets the credit,
but the people in the movie, they're just like,
yeah, you are a slumdog, you know?
Yeah, Margot is just like the curse of beauty.
Like, I mean, she's blonde, blue eyed.
So she kind of like won the genetic lottery in terms of like the benefits that come with
it.
But the curse of beauty is also being like, we do not believe you can act like a Barbie.
You must be a Barbie.
Yes, that's what I mean.
So I think you're completely right, Trevor.
Yeah, yeah.
Now you'll have to correct me, Trevor, because now I think, to your point and going further,
I don't think that a white person has ever won the Oscar for a slave movie.
Because I think that also feels like, nah, you meant that.
This is it.
You see?
You meant that the whole movie that this is a powerful i feel like we've just made a powerful powerful realization the three
of us right now i don't know if it was the three of us it was really your idea that that no no no
we did this together this is some cia operative type stuff i wasn't thinking like this but we
hopped on the call no no no cia jen CIA Jedi mind trick right there. No, no, no.
Huh.
Has a white person ever won an Oscar
for acting in a slave movie?
Because Leonardo DiCaprio was phenomenal in Django.
Oh.
But I don't think he was nominated.
A bit too phenomenal.
A bit too phenomenal.
Yeah, I mean, like, ooh, ooh, ooh.
Ooh, booga booga. Like, I mean, like, ooh, ooh, ooh. Ooh, booga booga.
Like, sometimes you see them, and especially,
I hate when my actor I really, really love
is the white person in a slave movie.
The same way that I hate when someone I like runs for office.
I'm like, oh, you about to ruin my whole image of you,
because I can't unsee it.
Yeah, agreed.
I cannot unsee what you're about to do.
Don't press anything. We've got more What Now? after this.
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I'm excited for this year's ones.
I don't know.
I thought Barbie was fun.
I think Greta Gerwig did an amazing job with a very commercial property.
Like, you know,
how do you even make a movie out of doll?
Like, people forget that there was no
Barbie storyline.
It was just Barbie has houses and cars and lives a good life that shows you never played with barbies trevor what are you talking about i played with barbies there was
no storyline tell me the storyline we imagined them yes but that's what i'm saying there was
no fixed like i'm saying like there are other like toys or properties where they were created
with a storyline from the very beginning yeah
like i had my own storyline for barbie for instance in my world whenever i played with barbie
she was always always sneaking off to hook up with he-man because i didn't have a ken doll i did have
a barbie because barbies you could find everywhere by the way i don't know if you you've experienced
this when you travel there are barbies in every country in the world. Like we had Barbie in like the dusty townships in South
Africa. Someone had a Barbie doll. I don't know how, but everyone had one. I mean, it's kind of
how white supremacy works, right? You're like, oh, damn. I think the most amazing thing that
they've done is that they've reclaimed a really messed up image of beauty and turned it into like
this pseudo feminist empowerment. But isn't that what made Barbie so good was the fact that it was,
they had everyone be Barbie now. So you had the Issa Rae Barbie, you had the America Ferreira
Barbie, you had the, you know what I mean? Terrible. Yeah. That's how white supremacy
works. We're like, we're actually going to embed you into the system. You're not going to disrupt
it. Like Barbie still isn't fat. Like it's revolutionary. If like Barbie is really fat,
what's considered unattractive, doesn't have typical features. And you're like, I want to be
that, but no one wants to be that. You're still like, Issa Rae is like a goddess. She's so
beautiful. Like this is not disruptive. Like I just, I just hate that it's being seen as a
disruptive feminist project, but it's genius. They're genius. I would love to make a billion
dollar movie. Trust me. I would love to do it. All right. Let me let me ask you this, then let
me ask you this. So do we then say that the same thing should be applied to boys toys? Because
if you take away Barbie and all of that, like the Ninja Turtles had six packs in a shell,
by the way, which always used to confuse me. Like, you know, Batman had like the six pack on his on
his outfit, by the way which
i always thought was hilarious because i was like that's like a new level of vanity where you go
like i'm gonna i'm gonna fight crime i'm gonna save gotham city and by the way alfred can you
ask you to make sure they got a six-pack on the outside of the of the suit i gotta i gotta oh why
why why master wayne i does that sort of purpose i mean it looks it looks pretty cool
alfred um you got like a you know what i mean just like a six pack because i always thought
it was weird but if you think about all the all the boys toys he-man um spider-man you name it
anything man whatever had like buff arms six pack yeah and so is it bad to have something
aspirational be something that applies to like you pushing
yourself to be or look the best you can be absolutely i think like those when you say it
is bad yeah it is bad even like the marvel cinematic universe i feel so sorry for men
like watching those movies watching like captain america and like all these ripped men because like
most men cannot look like that without starving themselves, steroids, being in the gym all the time.
I think it's terrible for men's body image.
But generally, I don't try and think about men's feelings too much because men want in other ways.
So it's not like boohoo men.
But as a mother of a boy, now I have to care.
And I'm like, actually, I don't like that.
I hate that having a son, because I don't like men apart from my husband,
has made me care about what happens to men. So as a mother of a boy, I think it's actually,
I think it's terrible. A few things. I will pitch you this because off of what Christiana is saying,
I do think that there's something interesting where there will be a thing in the movie that
then translates into real life in a way that makes people's heads spin so for what christiana is
saying about like yes even though barbie even in the movie is trying to be like oh there's not just
one bar but we can all be barbie and everything in real life it's translated to why isn't this
like you know beautiful white woman the winner winning it all right much like how robert downey
jr everyone wanted him to win for Tropic Thunder in the blackface.
So we went so full circle where he was like, he was so good that blackface,
he should have won the Oscar.
He was phenomenal.
He was very good.
I still think that is one of the most misunderstood roles or movies ever.
And people can fight about it forever.
But I always loved the satire of what Robert Downey
Jr.'s character was doing. It was like a commentary on Hollywood itself. It was a commentary on like
acting and what are you allowed to do in the pursuit of acting? And is it no holds barred
because you're acting? Like we're talking about with slave roles. It's like, can you just run
around saying the N word because you're in a slave movie is i love that role so much i feel
like people should have studied tropic thunder like when he grabs i think it's like brandon t
jackson he grabs him after brandon t jackson says the n-word and he grabs him and he's like boy don't
you ever use that my people fought too hard to never use that word boy how people fought too hard
don't you dare use that word around me boy that is one of the greatest scenes, in my opinion, in movie history.
That, Josh, should have won an Oscar.
By the way, who do you think is going to win?
I think Oppenheimer is taking it for everything.
Yeah, because everyone loves a brilliant white man.
So, of course.
Christiana, he's a fan.
What do you mean?
It's also...
Okay, I will say this.
I like that you said brilliant.
I like that you said brilliant, though. I do think it's also... Okay, I will say this. I like that you said brilliant. I like that you said brilliant, though.
I do think he's brilliant.
I think that people, they like heroes and they like those people to be men.
And the Academy voter likes to feel important, likes to be like,
I am a Christopher Nolan fan, and that's why I think he's going to win.
And it's not his fault.
He didn't ask to be born a brilliant white man.
But he was, and here we are.
Well, either way, we'll see i'm putting i'm
putting all of my money on oppenheimer because i think it was a brilliant movie about a man who's
brilliant who happened to be white that's where i put all of my money or all of my bitcoin i think
i'm switching all my money to bitcoin don't do that christiana i you actually wait wait let me
ask you a question let me ask do you have do you have, do you have Bitcoin, Christiana? No. Ah, do you remember there was a
moment in time, I want to say six years ago, where on black Twitter specifically, black women were
telling other black women, get Bitcoin because this is like your, do you remember this? And I
didn't listen to them because once black people start telling each other stuff on the internet it tends to be bad advice i love my people but sometimes on the
internet we get into corners of the world that was that was when i was like no fiat currency for me
i just don't have the appetite for that type of risk but i do know it's the future and i'm gonna
have to contend with it at some point.
Does that make sense? Yeah, it's weird because I saw. So, okay, for those who don't know,
there's a really important moment coming up in Bitcoin, right? Obviously, the price of Bitcoin
has essentially doubled over the past few months because the securities exchange has allowed a
trading platform, blah, blah, blah. Don't worry. The the point is bitcoin is not as shady as it
used to be when it comes to trading just think of it that way however there is something i find
fascinating and that is very shortly there's a moment that's going to come it sounded biblical
that's why i found it interesting where they said the bitcoin harvening is upon us and i don't know
if you know of this but apparently the way Bitcoin is designed every few years
at a certain amount of time
the mining of Bitcoin
becomes exponentially harder
right
and with that jump
you make less money in mining Bitcoin
and if you make less money in mining Bitcoin
there are fewer people who are going to mine it
and there will be fewer Bitcoins made. And so that is supposed to preserve
the value of Bitcoin and not allow inflation to just go out of control. Because there's going
to be limited Bitcoin, apparently. That's what's written into the code. And I mean,
I'll believe it when I see it. I don't know anything about it in this way. I know enough
about Bitcoin to have a conversation, but I don't want to know so much about Bitcoin
that I have
like an underground basement in my house. Yeah, I feel you. Yes. You can mark my words that this
will go poorly and do not get into Bitcoin now. If you got into it right when it dipped or at the
very beginning, then you will be fine. But this is bad. And I think people don't recognize how bad it is
because yes, it's becoming less shady,
but that's incidental.
It's not becoming less shady
from the same people trying to make it a commodity.
Please note that the views of Josh Johnson
are the views of Josh Johnson.
Josh Johnson is not a financial advisor.
Do not listen to Josh Johnson.
Also, don't listen to me.
I'm just talking about Bitcoin.
Also, save your money. Yeah, look, I just think it's, do not listen to Josh Johnson also don't listen to me I'm just talking about Bitcoin also save
your money yeah look I I just think it's um there's something fun about it I always find it
fun when this there's a random destabilizing thing that is in the ether do you know what I mean
said like a true CIA agent sometimes they destabilize entire regions.
If I was, if I love the CIA, why would I like Bitcoin?
What are you talking about?
You could move dark.
You could move dark easier.
It's true.
It's true.
It's true.
You think the CIA doesn't know how to Venmo money without you knowing. You think the CIA agents who are like, I want to destabilize Ecuador, but the emojis keep giving me away.
What do we do?
Come on, Josh.
No, no. You think they need Bitcoin? I just think you're getting closer and closer to the MI5.
I don't know. I just like the idea of it. I think I sometimes do think this, and I'm going to regret
saying this because Christiana, as my friend, you will always pounce on my weaknesses, but I do like
the idea of having something like Bitcoin in my life in case I ever need to like disappear or go.
I've always thought to myself, it's crazy that your money is just like somewhere and then you have to ask somebody for it.
And then someone else can be like, no, we're not giving you your money.
And it's because I grew up in a culture where all my grandmother's money was either in her bra or under the mattress.
That's where the money stayed.
In her bra, under the mattress.
And then when I would say to her, Gogo, why don't you put the money in the bank?
And then she would be like, whose bank is this?
And I was like, what do you mean, Gogo?
It's, I don't know.
It's the bank.
I'm like a six-year-old.
She's like, whose bank is this, Trevor?
Yes.
And then I'm like, it's the, I don't know, it's i don't know it's the bank i'm like a six-year-old she's like whose bank is this trevor yes and then i'm like it's the it's i don't know it's the bank and she's like and when i want my money i was like you go to the bank and she's like and what if the bank says no and i was like
why would they say no she's like if they say no i was like well then you don't get your money she's
like exactly exactly and then she'd give me the money that I just asked for out of her bra.
And she'd like go through it. And then she'd hand me a note.
And it would be warm and would smell like my grandmother's warm bosom.
It was a very homely feeling. I like that.
I like knowing when we were passing money around back in the day,
that we were passing around like a family feeling as well. I miss that. But, but, but.
And by the way, this is not me endorsing Bitcoin.
I'm closer to Josh on all of this.
I'm like, I don't know about this stuff.
But there's just something about like somebody saying you can't do something with your money
or have your money that sometimes makes me a little, you know.
I just think it's exciting that the Bitcoin harvening is approaching us it's like
the rapture but for bitcoin i'm excited for that moment yeah i mean i'll just say very very quickly
i don't know everything in and out of bitcoin or cryptocurrency but i do know scams i've been
scammed many times and so i know what scams look like and i also know when a scammer comes back
around because you were so gullible the first
time that they're like, I get a little bit extra.
And so I know what this looks like.
And I'm telling you right now, it's like when my friend sold knives and then he sold
supplements.
It's the same pyramid scheme, just with a different sort of casing around it.
Knives and pyramid schemes.
Well, on that note, let's go sell a few knives
and supplements
and we'll be right back.
So,
every week when we're recording the podcast,
I always think to myself,
what is the story I'm dying, and I mean dying, to speak to Josh and Christiana about?
Sean Combs aka
P Diddy
aka
Brother Love
aka
Sean P Diddy
Combs
Brother Love
Puff Daddy
Puff Daddy
yeah
I was just trying to make sure
I get all of them
now
wait
before you say something
Josh
before you say something
I'm going to try and
I'm going to try and
bring everybody up to speed
on this
so
if you do not know
who Puff Daddy is
I cannot help you
I'm shocked that you listened
to this podcast because like he seems to have spanned every generation and everything i'm still
grateful for you as a listener though but for those who do know him puff daddy p diddy sean
combs brother love diddy etc has recently um had a few incidents that have shaken up his otherwise rosy world. His ex, Cassie, who was a very popular R&B singer for a while,
sued him and accused him of everything from sexual assault
all the way through to domestic violence, battery, etc.
Let's put it this way.
The allegations were so extreme
that they had a trigger warning on the actual court documents, which is rare.
That happens. Diddy comes out and denies it, then very quickly settles out of court. It's a whole
huge thing. So just like most stories in the internet and the zeitgeist, it goes up, it goes
down, it disappears. Now, just a few days slash weeks ago, I don't even know when this really popped up, another person sues Diddy and alleges similar things.
But this is a man, right?
And says he worked for Diddy.
He says there were orgies with underage women.
There's a history of abuse.
You know, Diddy would flash himself to the guy.
He'd be naked. He'd make him watch him shower. And then he'd tell him it's part history of abuse. You know, Diddy would flash himself to the guy. He'd be naked.
He'd make him watch him shower,
and then he'd tell him it's part of the job.
And when he discussed it with his superiors,
this employee was told that he should just get over himself,
and Diddy likes him.
But what was really interesting in this story,
in this moment, rather,
is that the documents that came out,
the court documents,
had a few allegations that were redacted.
Like when the CIA has those documents where they black out people's names because they should not be revealed because they're important to the mission or to national security.
Names were redacted on these new court documents.
However, some of the redactions left descriptions that some people feel are really easy to figure out.
So for instance, one of the redactions, and this I stand to be corrected.
I mean, allegedly one of the redactions was this person blank, blank, blank was also there.
And they performed at the Super Bowl halftime show recently.
And people were like, huh?
And like, we think we know who that is.
And there was another one.
There's another one.
and like we think we know who that is and there was another one there's another one one of the biggest ones is of an allegation that Diddy had sex with a rapper whose name was redacted
but has now been speculated to be Meek Mill speculated like nobody nobody knows who the
names are in the document right now Meek Mill came out and he denied this but I mean even even his
denial tells you a lot about hip-hop it it wasn't it wasn't just a denial like hey listen i'm i'm not gay there's nothing wrong
with being gay and you know i don't know why people are spreading rumors about me he he denied
it like he had been accused of crime like a like a real big which i understand i understand you know
it it was it was really really intense see. And that didn't stop.
I mean, if the internet loves anything, it's somebody coming out and defending themselves.
And this has lit the internet ablaze.
What's really interesting about this as well is the fact that Diddy, when the original
case with Cassie happened, when it came out, he lost all of his corporate support.
You know, so Diageo, the alcohol brand, pulled out.
You know, a few of the TV productions he was doing pulled out.
Like, that side of his world collapsed.
But in a strange way, it seemed like, you know, hip-hop didn't really shun him.
And the internet, I know it's a strange thing to say, but it's almost like the internet almost moved on.
shun him and the internet i know it's a strange thing to say but it's almost like the internet almost moved on whereas with this with this it feels like in the first instance diddy lost
corporations and then with this story he lost the internet do you know what i mean
those stories and ideas don't seem to have made as big a splash as the possibility and the allegation that he and
another rapper are gay like have the two of you seen that at all i've i've seen it uh i will say
this for you know especially for the allegations and everything diddy has too many aliases to be
an innocent man that's you don't go by that many names
if you didn't do anything.
Everywhere I go, I am Josh Johnson.
I'm not Jay Jiggle.
I'm not Jajong.
I am Josh Johnson.
That's what it says on the birth certificate
and on the passport.
I'm not running around here
with all sorts of different names.
That sounds like you tried to dodge the case.
I agree.
Very suspicious. But to your point trevor to
your original question i do think that there's something to be said in a lot of hip-hop culture
outside of being like um a little nas x where you're not only coming out but you're like i'm
gonna embrace every uh yeah this is my every insult or every stereotype or like, I'm
actually going to make everything that you say against me armor and just like have it a reflection
back at you. I think that for a different era of hip hop, that they truly do not see a world
where they can be gay or bi or anything other than the most masculine. Because you got to remember
that most of hip-hop
comes from a place of hyper masculinity and on top of that hyper masculinity is also being like
street enough being hood enough which is which is yeah a whole exponential squaring of the amount
of masculinity that a regular man should be walking around with so the idea which look if you ask me
they're looking at it wrong if you ask me it's it's terrifyingly
gangster to be like i might bang you i could shoot you or i could i could touch you up i could do
anything that's way scarier to me than than just like not seeming a hood enough yeah i mean it's
sometimes it's difficult to have these conversations because there are so many potential landmines.
So I start by saying this.
One, these are allegations.
I'm not saying that Diddy is or isn't gay, bisexual, anything.
I don't know.
I don't know that Meek Mill is, isn't gay, bisexual, whatever.
I also think it's their prerogative.
It's like, hey, man, if they are, they are.
If they aren't, they aren't.
Live your life, et cetera, et cetera.
I honestly believe that and what i find interesting in this conversation is how
you know to your point josh it's become i like i don't know how to explain it it's become an
allegation in and of itself it's like that is the allegation yeah i don't know i you know what i
mean i wonder where it'll lead i i think it's really disturbing that some people are more alarmed at the potential that Diddy could be gay or bisexual than Diddy being a rapist and an abuser.
And I'm just like, that's kind of scary to me because like, what happened to Cassie?
I remember when that New York Times article came out about it
and then I later read the lawsuit.
It was really hard to get through.
And then this man, if he's saying it's true,
he was being like coerced and assaulted and harassed at his workplace.
And I'm like, the sexuality to me is, I don't care.
I care that this guy is potentially a monster.
Why are we discussing, you know, who he's attracted to? I don't care. I care that this guy is potentially a monster. Why aren't we just like,
why are we discussing, you know, who he's attracted to? I don't care about the attraction.
I care about the fact that this is somebody that seems to have a history and a pattern of violence
towards men and women. Like why that to me, he's a, he's a, he's not a safe person.
It also makes you wonder if and when the music industry will ever have a Me Too moment.
Because there's no denying that, you know,
the Me Too movement completely swept through Hollywood.
But a lot of people kept saying,
when will music have its day?
Will it have its day?
Or is it just a completely different world?
And it feels like this could be the first crack in the eggshell.
The Cassie lawsuit to me is like, it was scary.
And I think with Diddy, we're getting to the point where we're majoring on the minor parts of the case rather than looking at the fact that he's a scary man.
So I've been thinking about this quite a bit.
wondering is it because everything else that he is accused of he has in some way shape or form sort of said that he does or is in his music you know like when when you're when you're a hip-hop
artist if you go back especially and you listen to like Diddy's music and a lot of hip-hop guys
were saying I will kill you you know I will end your life yeah in a weird way
it's like this is terms and conditions this is who we are this is what we do now over the years
I do think hip hop evolved or rather the artist's experience evolved but then a lot of hip hop and
what the lyrics were was sort of maintained like people were like I'm still going to rap about this
even though I don't sling dope or, you know, shoot people or whatever.
I don't accept that premise because Quentin Tarantino makes deeply, deeply violent films.
Right.
Yeah.
Way, way more violent than actually any hip hop album you listen to.
Like you watch Kill Bill.
You're like, what the heck is going on in this guy's brain?
Yeah.
But that doesn't make me think that like Quentin Tarantino goes around.
But he doesn't say, no, but he doesn't say it's about him.
I think that's the key difference. But that's the thing with hip hop. Quentin Tarantino never around and he doesn't say, no, but he doesn't say it's about him. I think that's the key difference.
But that's the thing with hip hop.
Quentin Tarantino never says, this is what I do.
You know what I mean?
But this is why I think it's also becomes very racialized because people don't imagine
that young black men or young black women can be imaginative and playful in their work.
Because most rappers, maybe they've been exposed to some violence,
but they're not necessarily doing it.
It's a fantasy.
I'll be honest with you.
I've always felt that America doesn't necessarily celebrate the cleaning up of the image that hip hop had the same way it'll celebrate it for the Rockefellers and that whole generation.
You know, there was a whole generation of people in America who were these men who, you know, bootlegged liquor, who had underground operations, who basically committed crimes.
And then they cleaned up their act over time,
or they were able to find a way to make legitimate money.
And those families get celebrated in America,
and people are like, yeah, but that's the American dream, you know.
He came up and he changed his life. That's how it is.
I feel like hip-hop artists have done a very similar thing.
You know, they've gone, this is what I used to do.
I used to sling dope.
And you cannot deny, go back to like Ice-T and those guys.
Christiana, they were in it, in it, in it.
They were not third person saying, I saw something.
But this is a bigger thing.
I think if they were really in it, they'd be dead.
Like to me, and that's my objection to Jay-Z.
A lot of them are though.
But a lot of them are.
Some of them, like, and this is a thing that I experienced growing up in South London.
I don't know.
The guys that were really, really in the mix were in the mix.
And then there were guys that spoke about being in the mix, but they weren't really in the mix.
I mean, whether that's the case or not, I think that these men don't say in their music all the time, we rape and brutalize women.
That's not stuff that Diddy spoke about in his music.
To me, because Diddy always kind of made
party music in my opinion he always made it seem fun like everyone's there to have a good time
like i i think in hip-hop even though people speak about violence and shooting and killing
and horrible things there's very few rappers who can be like oh i will rape a woman starve a woman
and then lock her in a hotel room and pay off the hotel staff and say she can't leave until her face heals up like that's even beyond the pale for hip-hop i'm totally i'm
totally with you i i agree with you but i do think there is an explanation for it that is quite easy
i think many people when hearing an allegation about something that happened a while ago, or an allegation where somebody's seeking some sort of remuneration,
there are many people who think that that is automatically a lie.
Take it away from hip-hop.
Take it away from Diddy.
Countless times, a woman has come forward.
Me Too was a great example.
They would say, this happened to me too.
And what was one of the number one responses that they got from people?
It was, well, why are you only coming out now?
Why didn't you say something back then?
There's definitely a reflex that people have in denying the experience of a woman who was
abused by somebody she was with, whether it's a woman or not.
Because even with this guy, people have said the same thing.
This is a man.
And people have said, oh, he's only coming out now.
Oh, now he's going to talk about Diddy being naked?
Oh, now he's going to.
Seems to me like somebody saw Cassie's money and now he wants some of that money.
And I understand that.
I understand it.
I don't agree with it, but I understand that inclination that people have.
What's interesting to me, in this situation is how the same
level of skepticism hasn't been applied uniformly and this is what i mean is like if the guy in this
case came out and if he said did he did this to me did he did this to other people and Diddy was having sex with other men and the people who heard this said
I don't believe any of it or I believe all of it I understand I find it particularly fascinating
that people will say but this oh this is the bombshell yeah for me it is such a fascinating
look into both hip hop, toxic masculinity.
I almost feel like someone should study it so we can really look at what this moment reveals about society.
If I understand what you're asking, I think I can offer up a thing that makes sense to me of why this is the thing is because you know i i do believe a little bit of what you're what you're
saying as far as like um it's not an indictment overall on hip-hop but there's a certain thing
about walking around with a persona but to christiana's point you know diddy called it a
tail feather like he like he was making like radio clean party music so it's like not a whole he was
telling us who he was the entire time okay okay but okay, yeah, yeah. But I also think that the idea that a woman might tell a story to make money
or to defame someone or something like that is one thing in people's minds.
I don't think anyone is walking around thinking,
especially a straight man, is lying to get money or is lying to defame a person.
If a straight man tells you that another man did this thing to him, because this is a thing that a
lot of dudes take to the grave. A lot of dudes get abused and they're like, I'm never telling
anybody because a lot of men, especially in a hyper-masculine environment, live in a world
where they're kind of like living in jail. The most hyper-masculine place is jail.
And then there are some men who even outside of jail. The most hyper-masculine place is jail. And then there are some men who even outside of jail
live in this hyper-masculine space
where being perceived as weak, being perceived as gay,
being perceived as a victim
is an automatic ticket to more victimization.
So they're like, guys, I'll die.
Nothing happened.
You know what I mean?
And so the fact that a straight man is like,
look, he got me too, is a bombshell.
Because that means that this guy's willing to put himself out there in the way that women already do.
I'm not saying that it's easier for a woman in any way.
It's interesting.
But as a guy, to be publicly known as someone who was deeply, deeply abused and exploited, you're going to wear that for the rest of your life in a public way now.
And so nobody's lying about that.
And I'm not saying nobody's and it can't happen.
And I'm not saying nobody as in women do.
I'm saying that like this thing is such a different thing.
Yeah.
It's poignant and it's painful, actually.
Yeah, because men are victims too of sexual and physical abuse as women especially black boys
um in terms of just like sexual assaults how they lose their virginities how they're exposed to
violence from men and women in their life it's very common but black boys and men are very often
not perceived as victims do you know what i mean and so so, like, I think Terry Crews is a great example of that.
When he came forward and said that he'd been like fondled by an agent
and how violated it made him feel, people were laughing at him.
Like the response he got to that wasn't what people, you would think.
And since then...
There were memes about how he's
muscles type things yeah no one ever frames him as a man who was assaulted right and is still
trying to work in the business that where he was violated whereas if terry cruz was a woman perhaps
there would be a different framing i'm not saying there'd be a compassionate one because we treat
victims terribly irrespective of their gender identity but i think for women
it'd be like we'd see that there was a break so josh i do think that's a big point that like oh
it's a straight man saying it and because of the stigma that comes with a straight man saying he's
been abused or assaulted you know it's it's it's interesting there are tons of memes roasting diddy
roasting meek mill you know and the joke is now oh you can always you could
have always told and you can see all these things people laughing laughing laughing laughing and
it's interesting I was chatting to a friend and he said to me he's like man it's it's so sad like
why why is hip-hop so homophobic and like from how black men were treated in America.
Like if you look at the very inception of being black in this country, you know, in the US,
you're shocked at how many times sodomy was used as a way to make black men feel like they were less than or to even embarrass them in front of their families, in front of their communities, just to show everybody like, hey, this is what happens if you think you are anything.
You know, we live in a world where people often want something to be clean and easy, but I don't think you can tackle homophobia specifically in the black community.
think you can tackle homophobia specifically in the black community you have to ask yourself how much of it is also tied into how black men were treated in america and how they were oppressed
and what was used to oppress them do you know what i mean it's a homophobia used on them
which has then bred more homophobia in the community and And I wonder if that's something that can ever go away. I don't
know. Maybe Lil Nas X is the answer. Maybe he begins the wave and then-
And can I pitch you this? Not only is he important, but I think that showing the spectrum
is also important because someone who is both private, but also not closed off to the point of denial is Frank Ocean yeah I think that someone
like Frank Ocean oh yeah yeah made way more waves than people will ever give him credit for
because he made it like a nothing thing yeah I you know we don't give those people enough credits
and I love what you both said I think you know now when I see Both of them Even in their music
I'll just be like wow
What a
What a seismic shift
You have made
In many ways
This conversation we're having
Is one of the reasons
I love being in places
Like Dubai
And in Abu Dhabi
And in the Middle East
It is interesting
To be in a place
Where you see people Grappling with the reality of where they are,
where they've been, and where they hope to be. And you see people saying, there are aspects of
our culture that we want to maintain. There are aspects of our culture that make us who we are.
These are things that we're proud of. We also understand that as we move forward,
we're going to have to be that as we move forward we're going
to have to be more tolerant to outsiders and outsider could mean anything people who look
different speak different have different um sexual proclivities or preference or whatever it may be
but it's i'm always fascinated by that because i go it's something that doesn't have a manual
it's something that that nobody has figured out in a way, but to actually see it on the ground
is a special and inspirational feeling
that, yeah, I love getting.
And so as somebody who's come to the Middle East for,
I mean, now it's going to be maybe 15 years,
I've seen the change.
I've seen a place where people said it would never change
and I've seen the change.
And I know for some people, it is not
a fast enough change, but I do believe it has been a sustainable change up until this point.
And maybe in many ways, I hope the same thing for hip hop. I hope that hip hop finds its reasons to
evolve and to become something more, to become something different, to change, to grow. And you
know what, Christiana, maybe even Hollywood, maybe we'll start to see more movie stars that are a little less jacked and and steroided yeah call me josh you work out don't
let this guy like exactly don't let those dulcet tones fool you josh jones he goes to the gym
he he josh johnson is one of those quietly strong individuals who will choke you out in a bar fight.
And you will be shocked when they show you his picture afterwards.
You'll be like, that person did that to me?
Josh Johnson does not mess around.
That is why he does not need to change his name.
Well, not now.
I mean, now everyone's going to know this is a very popular podcast.
That's why Josh Johnson doesn't need to change his name.
He goes from town to town.
Josh Johnson. Birmingham, Alabama. Josh Johnson. New York City. Josh podcast. That's why Josh Johnson doesn't need to change his name. He goes from town to town. Josh Johnson.
Birmingham, Alabama.
Josh Johnson.
New York City.
Josh Johnson.
You know why?
Because he lifts weights.
Christiana.
Josh, this was too much fun.
Good seeing you guys.
Great seeing you.
It was wonderful seeing you.
Take care.
I will see you from the next country.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
Bye.
We'll see you from the next country.
Bye-bye.
Bye.
Bye.
What Now with Trevor Noah is produced by Spotify Studios in partnership with Day Zero Productions and Fullwell 73.
The show is executive produced by Trevor Noah,
Ben Winston, Sanaz Yamin, and Jodi Avigan.
Our senior producer is Jess Hackle.
Marina Henke is our producer.
Music, mixing, and mastering by Hannes Braun.
Thank you so much for listening.
Join me next Thursday for another episode of What Now?