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cover of Reesa Teesa - Part 3
Reesa Teesa - Part 3

Reesa Teesa - Part 3

Larry Parks

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The transcription is a conversation between two individuals discussing a story told by a woman named Teresa about a man named Legion. They talk about how people on social media are skilled at investigating and finding information, as well as how those who share personal stories should be willing to face embarrassment. They also discuss the importance of telling the whole story and monetizing personal stories. They briefly mention the Fyre Festival documentary and the commitment of an employee to his job. And we're back, right here on the Unemployment Line. Doc and Larry P talking about Risa Tisa, Teresa, Tessa Ressa. I don't know what that lady's name is, man. We're just going to call her Teresa. OK. Teresa. Teresa and Legion. And Legion. Which I think his name is. Surviving Legion. His name is Jerome, I believe. Why'd she call him Legion? She never said. But she was just like, she called him Legion. OK. But yeah, his name is Jerome McCoy. So let me say this. Because I also. Wait, but shout out to the, this is going to go, this may go a parallel with this conversation that we're having on this show. Some of y'all are really wasting a lot of y'all talents. Because shout out to all the investigative people that found this too. She gave y'all small bits and pieces of information. Y'all found this guy. And it was like, all of these are matching up. WWE, he got the trophy belts in these pictures. He's an Eagles fan. He's this, this, this. He lives in Atlanta. How did y'all find this man? Let me tell y'all something. Y'all social media investigators are very, very good. And you're very, very quick. Very. Like this definitely became a thing. This always comes up if somebody does something in public that people deem to be a fireable offense. So if people are caught saying something racist in public. And they find a job. Oh, they will find you. They will find you a job. They will contact your employer and be like, is this the type of person that you want working at your bank? And then you getting called into HR to explain yourself. It's crazy. Some of y'all are really wasting your talents. I need y'all to use that energy for good. But for y'all storytellers, here's your biggest hiccup. And what separates you from the people who make money on doing stuff like this? You have to get past the idea that I am going to be embarrassed publicly if I tell what happened. Yeah, because it's going to happen. And if you truly feel like your story portrays you as the conquering hero or the person who was wronged, then you shouldn't feel that level of embarrassment. But for those of you who was like, or like in this lady situation, because old boy came back and was just like, this is a lie. This is a lie. This is a lie. This is a lie. And people have been able to verify some of that information. Like, well, some of what he's saying is true. So that's kind of what makes it difficult to actually share the story. But if you really want to make money, if you really want to profit, you got to be willing to have a little bit of embarrassment. That's OK. Yeah, because you get it. One thing you got to understand is if you're going to put your life out there, not everybody's going to agree. But if you're going to put it out there, put it out there. Yeah. Don't put it out there halfway. And that's my only, either you're going to be a private person or a public person. And I think that's where what we were talking, the last time we talked about it, it was like this person starts telling the story and then they don't tell us the whole story. No, tell us what's going on. Yeah, and my whole thing is like some of y'all be telling the whole story, but y'all don't be making no money off of this. Y'all can be making money off of y'all stories. If you really going to be that open and tell your whole story, find a way to monetize this. Because y'all selling yourself short. So we've already taken you to the Larry and Doc School of Storytelling. Now let's take you to the Larry and Doc School of Marketing. If you're going to tell a story, what you got to do is, after you've drawn the people in, you got to let them know when they're going to get some more. Yeah. Like, you know, guys, that's all I'm able to give y'all right now. Tune in tomorrow at 5. I'm going to go live again. And I'm going to tell y'all what happened when we went to purchase that house. And receipts. Give us receipts. This right here, this is a picture of the house that he said that he owned. And this was the address. I did a Google image search. And actually, this house is in Seattle, Washington. And this house doesn't exist at all. This man lied to me. They kept telling me that the home was being sprayed for pests. And so that's why we couldn't go over there. And that's why he was always at my house. Like, bring the receipts. Show them text messages. Send them screenshots. And this is going to sound bad. But while you were going through that whole story of the dramatization of your made-up story over there, for the guys out there that's telling these lies, y'all selling y'allself shorts, too. Because some of these lies that y'all be telling be, like, super creative. And I'd be like, look, big dog. Like, the fact that you can lie on the spot and that quickly and that witty, Jesus. You sell yourself short, man. Go make some money, man. Oh, yeah. You need to start a pyramid scheme. Yeah, start doing something. Because I was like, look, man, some of them lies Buddy was telling, I was like, huh. I never would have thought about that one. So let's back up there. Because there may be some nuggets of wisdom that I may not have caught. Because I didn't watch all of this story. So break down to me quickly. What was the part that people were actually like so invested in that compelled them to watch all of this for hours on end? Well, I think the way that she told the story. She told the story in a way, like the chronological way that it happened to her and the realization. So it was kind of like watching, you know, if you watch a movie with twists and turns, and then you finally, you watch the entire movie and finally get to the end of the movie and they recap everything that happened in the movie and let you know like it wasn't what you thought it was. That's how she told the story. So she basically went through the story telling like, you know, Legion would be on the phone for 30 minutes every morning talking to his brother. And then fast forward 20 parts, you realize like she says, yeah, so his brother said like, he's never like, he don't talk to him on the phone. So Legion just be on the phone talking to nobody. So let me, let me shift here. What? That's a hot line takes way too much of a level. That's why I said, man, a lot of these people that's liars, they selling themselves too, because for you to be able to get on the phone for 30 minutes every morning and act like you're talking. And what are you doing on that? Like, you don't think at some point you might be crazy if you're doing that every day? Getting up every morning, getting on the phone. Hey dog, how things are going, man? Yeah, yeah, I heard, I heard about that. I mean, so you going to go to the doctor and get checked out for that? Uh-huh, yeah, yeah. Doing that for 30 minutes every day. I don't have an acting career. You could be on Tubi. You could have a very profound acting career. You are missing your, y'all are missing your opportunities. And maybe the gentleman will like be able to tap into this because I think he should be able to profit from his talents. That's a lot of work and effort and planning and organizing, improvisation, imagination, creativity that he hasn't profited from. She done made money off of it. That's like the dude, you remember the documentary for the Fyre Festival? Mm-hmm. Yeah, lies, big lies. And he got money for it. Wait, wait, what? You never heard of that story? No, what happened? The Fyre Festival where this dude basically, this is a documentary. No, no, the documentary was real. The Fyre Fest was the part that was a lie. Yes. Oh, okay, I was just making sure. I thought you was about to say the Fyre Fest documentary was a lie. No, but he was basically selling to everybody. People were paying him to that dream he was selling him. Yeah, because he was like, yeah, y'all gonna be out here on Pablo Escobar's island and we gonna have Ja Rule and a whole host of other acts. And we gonna set y'all up in these little, we gonna set y'all up in these tents and it's gonna be the biggest thing. And what he did was he got social media influencers. He paid them to be like, yeah, y'all, I can't wait to see y'all at the Fyre Festival. And all of these people flew down there thinking they was gonna see the biggest concert of all time. Not even that. He had investors, like big name people investing money into this. Like, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, we'll invest in that. That sounds good. The wildest thing still is my man's being willing to do whatever to make sure they have some water. Yeah, he was about to go out there. There should not be that level of commitment to your job. I'm gonna just say that. No matter what you do, no matter what you do for employment, it shouldn't be that level of commitment. And for those of you who don't know what I'm talking about, y'all should go watch the documentary. I think it's still on Netflix. Yeah, yeah. But I mean, I think he played for the other team already. So is it really? But, but, but, but, but, but, even if it's a team you play for, do you really wanna do that for your job? But people already do it. If your boss comes to you, right? We're towards the end of the show now. If your boss comes to you and says, all right, Larry, listen, man, we're gonna have some breakdowns with the finances. Things are looking a little rough. But Ms. Charlene is willing to bail us out. Am I profiting from this? Ask Ms. Charlene what she needs. Am I profiting from this? No, you're not profiting from this. All you're doing is keeping your job and I'm not shutting the business down. So I'm profiting from it? Sort of, yes. It didn't sound like this man was getting anything extra off of this. It sounded like they was just getting some water. It sounded like he was profiting off of it. So what you're saying is, in order to profit from it, it's like, you know what, I would consider. Yeah, I mean, that's what I'm hearing. Yeah, if it keeps me my job, possibly. Which is to say, standards and morals are stopping y'all from making money, man. Y'all gotta go out and tell y'all's story, man. Tell your story, do whatever you gotta do, man. Maybe you gotta, you know, give a little show. Do what you gotta do, make some money. But don't keep doing it for free. I think that's the other problem. Y'all are doing it for free. Y'all are posting these things on social media for free. That OnlyFans showed y'all already. Y'all was doing it for free. If you're gonna show your body, then you might as well get paid for it. People posting the same things on OnlyFans that they was posting on Instagram. They was like, oh yeah, y'all like looking at my body on Instagram? Okay, cool. Let me go to OnlyFans. I could show you more here. And then you click on it, and they're not showing more at all. They're just showing the same thing. But it's on OnlyFans now. You have full access to my OnlyFans. Yeah, full access. All right, now let me see what I get for these $10. You know, I think it's a lot of fame thing. A lot of people out there wanna live a OnlyFans life, but they're afraid of the OnlyFans backlash. Yeah, it's the stigma. It's like, you don't wanna be, you don't wanna explain to people that that's something that you've done, but you do wanna cash them checks. Yeah. So you gotta understand, is the stigma worth the check? And I'm not here to decide that for y'all. Y'all are here to decide that for yourself. My problem is, y'all are out there saying, I would never be out there telling all my business like that, but you're telling all your business. Yeah, you do it. And now, but also, don't get me wrong. I'm not saying like these people that are telling all their business, I'm not saying every story is gonna be a hit. No, it's not. All I'm saying is that you got enough in your tank that maybe, maybe not. Well, and see, that's the other issue, because there's no way she's gonna be able to duplicate this. Like, just told her one story, that's all she got. She ain't got, you know, she done threw her fastball. Yeah, and if she tells another story like this, we be like, oh, okay, all right now. I think the problem is you now. Because that's it, like when you was like, there was a Tiger King too, I was like, really? Why? Like, I thought the story has already been told. Like, that's the same thing. It's like, y'all also have to look at, look at your life and examine, is there something compelling enough for me to do this, because you only probably gonna get to do it one time. Unless you have other stories. Unless you're the dude in the situation. Unless you have other stories that, like, are different from this story, because you know what's interesting? What if he admits, like, yeah, I be running these scams, and then he starts to tell the stories of all the women he done scammed? Hmm. There was a story a few years ago. Kendler Swindler. Exactly. There was that story a few years ago, where it was like, this dude was out here, and he was like, you know, lure these women in, and, you know, act like he was taking them on these lavish dates, and then, peace out on them. Yeah. He said, I need help. These men are trying to kill me. Could you send me $30,000, please? What was that accent? That's how I felt like he, please send me $30,000. Kinda sound kinda crazy, though. That's what it'd be on, did you mention Married at First Sight? Yeah. Yeah, that's how that'd be. By the time you done brought in your third person from overseas, I feel like you the problem. Yeah. I feel like you the problem at that point. Like, you done tried three different continents, and all of these people are trying to scam you, you might be the problem. Yeah. But I think the biggest thing about all this, if you really look at it, the Kendler Swindler, Risa Tisa, you know, just all these other pathological liar stories where women get caught in the middle of it. Love is one hell of a drug. And women are willing to do whatever for the name of love. Start an employment line.

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