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WHITE GUILT is the final rant of 2025, and ANT makes sure it doesn’t go out quietly. He starts by exposing his own procrastination habits, reframing them as a symptom of burnout culture before turning that realization into a grounded New Year’s reset. ANT then dissects trigger words that dominate online discourse and pivots into sharp critiques of Mayor of Kingstown and Power: Force, using both shows to explore how violence, authority, and morality are packaged for entertainment. The rant intensifies as ANT breaks down the evolution of urban radio, questioning why icons like Howard Stern can sustain relevance while many hip-hop radio personalities fade with the algorithm. From there, ANT analyzes iHeartMedia’s reported Netflix partnership and what it signals about the future of media ownership and cultural gatekeeping. A clip from The Joe Budden Podcast sparks commentary on class signaling and access, while Kai Cenat’s mental-health message forces a sober reflection on the cost of visibility. ANT closes by reacting to white guilt performances, T.I.’s comparison of church to Broadway, and President Trump’s international soundbites, making this rant less of a recap and more of a reckoning.
By FAT LIVER JONESWHITE GUILT is the final rant of 2025, and ANT makes sure it doesn’t go out quietly. He starts by exposing his own procrastination habits, reframing them as a symptom of burnout culture before turning that realization into a grounded New Year’s reset. ANT then dissects trigger words that dominate online discourse and pivots into sharp critiques of Mayor of Kingstown and Power: Force, using both shows to explore how violence, authority, and morality are packaged for entertainment. The rant intensifies as ANT breaks down the evolution of urban radio, questioning why icons like Howard Stern can sustain relevance while many hip-hop radio personalities fade with the algorithm. From there, ANT analyzes iHeartMedia’s reported Netflix partnership and what it signals about the future of media ownership and cultural gatekeeping. A clip from The Joe Budden Podcast sparks commentary on class signaling and access, while Kai Cenat’s mental-health message forces a sober reflection on the cost of visibility. ANT closes by reacting to white guilt performances, T.I.’s comparison of church to Broadway, and President Trump’s international soundbites, making this rant less of a recap and more of a reckoning.