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  • The Disregard Cast (feat. David Got Jokes)
    Jan 25 2026

    Episode 134 of the Jungle Squad Cast brings laughter, insight, and a little tension into the den as we welcome David Got Jokes. Known for his sharp comedic mind, his role as general manager of the Stress Factory, and his work alongside Queenzflip, David pulls back the curtain on what it really looks like to build a career in comedy from the inside out. We talk about his journey, the grind behind the laughs, and how navigating rooms full of egos, talent, and pressure shapes you over time.

    The conversation naturally drifts into media politics and personalities. We break down the difference between the Joe Budden Podcast with Mona and without her, how behind-the-scenes roles can quietly change the entire tone of a platform, and what listeners don’t always see. Things get personal when Queenzflip blocking Ape comes up, leading to a moment of accountability, reflection, and a real-time apology that reminds everyone how small the industry can feel when pride gets in the way.

    Music keeps the episode moving. Wiz Khalifa’s Khaotic sparks discussion about evolution, consistency, and whether artists should chase their old sound or embrace where life has taken them. A$AP Rocky’s Don’t Be Dumb leads into a conversation about intention, artistry, and the pressure of being both fashionable and musically respected. Plaqueboy Max and Bryson Tiller’s “WYD” brings R&B back into the room, while Fivio Foreign and Lil Tjay’s “Sexy” keeps the energy playful but still rooted in today’s sound.

    The Jungle then turns to the headlines. Martin Lawrence going viral for his weight loss opens a discussion about aging in the public eye and how celebrities are treated when their bodies change. Meek Mill showing off his dance moves becomes a conversation about confidence and internet ridicule. The mood shifts as the indictment of French Olympic swimmer Yannick Agnel is discussed, leading to a serious and uncomfortable conversation about power, abuse, and accountability. We close the segment with Power Force’s season finale, breaking down how the show continues to keep viewers locked in and debating character loyalty.

    As always, the episode finds its core in the relationship talk. The squad reflects on entering their 30s, how perspectives change, and what plans start to matter when time feels more real. One hypothetical stirs the room: a ten-year relationship where your partner comes out as bisexual and asks for a threesome to be “sure” — do you stay or walk? The honesty gets sharper as we ask what would realistically end a relationship within the year if things didn’t work out. And to close, a tough power question hits the table: would you rather control all the money, or trust your partner with it, knowing there’s no middle ground?

    Episode 134 blends humor, accountability, culture, and real-life tension in a way only the Jungle can. Big laughs, uncomfortable truths, and conversations that don’t hide behind polish.

    Welcome back to the Jungle.

    Subscribe: YouTube.com/@JSCNetwork_ Follow: @thejunglesquadcast Ape Loso – @apeishere_ Rad – @radical_jl Rahh – @_rahhbanks Guest: David Got Jokes

    #JungleSquadCast #Episode134 #DavidGotJokes #ComedyCulture #PodcastTalk #StressFactory #HipHopDebate #RelationshipConversations #UnfilteredPodcast

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    2 Std. und 26 Min.
  • The WE QUIT Cast (feat. Samar Foe)
    Jan 19 2026

    Episode 133 of the Jungle Squad Cast brings fresh energy into the den as we welcome Samar Foe, a rising artist out of Connecticut whose name is starting to circulate for all the right reasons. We kick things off by getting into his journey — the grind, the setbacks, the motivation, and what it really takes to stand out in a state where talent often goes overlooked. Samar opens up about his path as an artist, the sacrifices behind the scenes, and what separates chasing a moment from building something that lasts. Once the story is set, the Jungle moves into the music. Coke Wave 3.5: Narcos brings gritty nostalgia back to the forefront, sparking conversation about street rap, evolution, and whether today’s artists can balance realism with growth. Yung Bleu’s Therapy shifts the mood toward vulnerability, prompting discussion about emotional transparency in hip hop and how pain gets packaged for mass consumption. Ari Lennox’s “Vacancy,” with her album on the way, opens a conversation about R&B honesty, intimacy, and why authenticity still cuts deeper than perfection. From there, the room turns its attention to what’s shaking the culture. J. Cole announcing The Fall Off dropping on February 6th sends the conversation into expectations, legacy, and whether fans are ready to let artists close chapters they’ve been holding onto for years. Questions swirl around Kai Cenat and whether he’s stepping away from streaming, opening a broader discussion about burnout, pressure, and the cost of constant visibility. Fetty Wap being free sparks reflection on second chances, missed time, and how the industry moves on whether you’re ready or not. And Druski’s Pastor Tim Ross skit leads to a deeper conversation about satire, religion, and where comedy crosses into commentary. As always, the episode closes where things get personal. The squad debates whether people really racked up more bodies before Covid or after, and what isolation, apps, and shifting values did to dating culture. Then comes the age-old question — is love a feeling that hits you, or a choice you make daily even when it’s uncomfortable? And to wrap it all up, we ask the most dangerous question of all: if you could know exactly how a relationship would end, would you still choose to begin it? Episode 133 is reflective, hungry, and honest — a mix of ambition, culture, and uncomfortable truths that defines the Jungle at its best. A rising artist, real conversation, and no filters in sight. Welcome back to the Jungle. — Subscribe: YouTube.com/@JSCNetwork_ Follow: @thejunglesquadcast Ape Loso – @apeishere_ Rad – @radical_jl Rahh – @_rahhbanks Guest: Samar Foe

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    1 Std. und 53 Min.
  • The Mid Pack Cast (feat. Toya Top Floor)
    Dec 13 2025

    The Jungle welcomes a new voice in Episode 130 as Toya Top Floor steps into the den. As the host of Unknown Plug CT, Toya lives at the intersection of media, culture, and conversation, making her a natural fit for the Jungle’s unfiltered energy. Before the debates heat up, we take time to get to know her — how she built her platform, what drives her voice, and why Connecticut continues to produce conversations louder than people expect. Music opens the episode with the squad breaking down fresh drops and shifting sounds. Polo G’s “High Tolerance” sparks discussion around pain rap and whether vulnerability still hits the same when success changes the struggle. Lil Uzi’s “Regular” brings the conversation into individuality, evolution, and what it means to stay weird while staying relevant. A$AP Ferg’s “Flip Phone Shorty” taps into nostalgia, image, and the balance between simplicity and status in today’s culture. From there, the Jungle turns its attention to the headlines — and the reactions don’t disappoint. Lena The Plug inviting Blueface into content territory while Adam watches sends the room into a deeper conversation about boundaries, performance, and where spectacle replaces intimacy. Juelz Santana’s comments about kids not needing to know how to read ignite a necessary discussion about responsibility, influence, and how careless words travel further when you have a platform. OBJ admitting he can’t make $100 million last shocks the room and opens a bigger conversation about financial literacy, lifestyle inflation, and the myths of generational wealth. And 50 Cent promoting a Diddy documentary on Good Morning America becomes less about promotion and more about power, timing, and who controls narratives in real time. As always, the episode finds its core in the relationship talk — where the jokes fade and the honesty sets in. The squad asks whether people still need to formally ask someone to be their girlfriend in an era where situationships run the game. Then comes the uncomfortable hypothetical: if your partner allows a threesome but it can only involve your pleasure and not theirs, is that really freedom or just control? The conversation deepens as we explore where honesty crosses into oversharing, and whether being too available actually kills attraction rather than builds security. Episode 130 balances insight, humor, and tension — a conversation shaped by media minds, cultural chaos, and relationship realities that don’t come with clean answers. A new guest, familiar Jungle energy, and another reminder that nothing here is meant to be comfortable — just real. Enter the Jungle: Subscribe: YouTube.com/@JSCNetwork_ Follow: @thejunglesquadcast Ape Loso – @apeishere_ Rad – @radical_jl Rahh – @_rahhbanks Guest: Toya Top Floor – Unknown Plug CT

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    1 Std. und 51 Min.
  • The Kay Bunnie is BACK Cast
    Dec 7 2025

    Kay Bunnie returns!Episode 129 brings a familiar face back into the Jungle, but this time the conversation cuts even deeper. Kay Bunnie returns to the den with more experience, more confidence, and a clearer sense of who she is — both as a creator and as a woman navigating an industry most people only think they understand. From the moment she sits down, the energy shifts. What starts as playful honesty turns into raw transparency, and the Jungle becomes the safest unsafe place for the truth.

    We open with an icebreaker that immediately heats up the room. Kay breaks down the turn-ons that work every time, and the squad jumps into one of the oldest debates in the bedrooms of America: what matters more — length, width, or the consistency of the stroke? The conversation sets the tone for an episode that doesn’t hide, doesn’t shy away, and definitely doesn’t pretend.

    From there, we move into The Come Up, where Kay unpacks the early struggles, the judgment, and the unexpected support. She explains whether strangers or people close to her were harsher critics when she started building her brand, and how the adult industry reshaped her views on dating, love, and commitment. Then she gives a glimpse into the future: what kind of content we can expect from her in 2026, and how she plans to evolve in a space that changes fast and tests everybody who steps into it.

    Sex Reality Talk takes the episode into a deeper, more emotional lane. Kay speaks on the mentally draining parts of the job — the side of sex work that most people never consider. She opens up about the last fan who became emotionally attached, and how she maintains boundaries between her real self and the persona the internet thinks she is. It’s honest, complicated, and eye-opening.

    Then it’s time for the DMs, the digital jungle where anything can happen. Kay reveals the emoji men use the most when shooting their shot, and the squad laughs through the stories that follow. She also breaks down the moments when a supposed business inquiry turns into a kink request, proving yet again that the internet never fails to be unpredictable.

    Bag Talk is where the episode gets strategic. Kay details how her brand has grown since her last visit, the business side of her platform, and the lessons she’s learned about protecting herself from scammers, chargebacks, and people trying to eat off her grind. She also shares how she makes money outside of OnlyFans, showing the full range of her hustle.

    The closing conversation brings everything back to the person behind the persona. Kay talks about what she’s proud of that has nothing to do with adult work, the debate around whether sex work empowers women or exposes them to more harm, and the misconceptions she wants to clear up before she leaves the Jungle once again.

    Episode 129 is unfiltered, intimate, and boldly honest. It’s a conversation that goes beyond content, beyond sex, beyond the platform — straight into the heart of a woman building her own narrative in a world that tries to write it for her.

    Welcome back to the Jungle.

    🔔 Subscribe: YouTube.com/@JSCNetwork_ 📲 Follow: @thejunglesquadcast Ape Loso – @apeishere_ Rad – @radical_jl Rahh – @_rahhbanks

    #JungleSquadCast #Episode129 #KayBunnie #SexWorkDiscussion #AdultIndustry #OnlyFansCreators #RelationshipTalk #BagTalk #PodcastUnfiltered

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    1 Std. und 39 Min.
  • The Rated 8 Cast (feat. Neida)
    Nov 30 2025

    The Jungle opens its doors to new energy in Episode 128 as R&B singer Neida steps into the den. From the moment she sits down, the conversation shifts — softer in tone, but sharper in honesty. This episode blends artistry, vulnerability, and real-life perspective in a way only a guest with a true story can bring. Before we dive into the chaos of culture and relationships, we take our time getting to know Neida: her latest project, the moments that shaped it, the sound she’s carving out, and what’s coming next in her journey. It’s an introduction, but it feels more like a reveal.

    Music sets the tone as always, and the squad breaks down the latest drops shaking the rotation. Stunna Gambino delivers with Save Yo Tears, Wale returns with Everything Is a Lot, Lola Brooke pops off with Iight Bet, Mario brings true R&B emotion on Mood Swings, Meek Mill taps back into his hunger with Indy Pack, and Lil Baby drops the Real Shit EP. Each track sparks its own conversation — from artistic growth to authenticity to who’s actually feeding the culture versus who’s just participating in it.

    Then we pivot to the headlines — the loud, chaotic, and sometimes unbelievable moments that shape the digital world. News breaks that 6ix9ine’s mother was robbed and held at gunpoint, raising questions about family, safety, and the consequences of celebrity. Ja Rule allegedly gets jumped in New York, adding another chapter to a career already defined by controversy and reinvention. And a man named David is now officially viewed as a suspect, sending social media into a frenzy of theories, opinions, and misinformation. Every headline turns into a deeper discussion about the way the internet reacts, rewrites, and magnifies our reality.

    But the soul of the Jungle — as always — lives in the relationship topics. This week’s questions cut straight into the core of modern love. Can love truly last without intimacy, or does the absence of touch slowly dissolve connection? Are relationships failing more because people are overexposed to too many options, or underinvested in the one they chose? And the big one: is love something you feel or something you decide? The squad breaks down the difference between emotion, effort, timing, and choice. Finally, we end with a conversation about love’s longevity — are we built for one great love that defines us, or multiple meaningful ones that shape us across different versions of ourselves?

    Episode 128 balances music, culture, conflict, and emotion — but the presence of a new guest makes everything feel fresh. It’s honest. It’s layered. It’s pure Jungle Squad energy with a new voice added to the fire.

    Welcome back to the Jungle.

    🔔 Subscribe: YouTube.com/@JSCNetwork_

    📲 Follow: @thejunglesquadcast

    Ape Loso – @apeishere_

    Rad – @radical_jl

    Rahh – @_rahhbanks

    #JungleSquadCast #Episode128 #Neida #RNB #Wale #MeekMill #LilBaby #Mario #StunnaGambino #PodcastUnfiltered #RelationshipTalk

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    1 Std. und 37 Min.
  • The Max B is Fee Cast
    Nov 25 2025

    EPISODE 127 – THE JUNGLE SQUAD CAST Hosted by Ape Loso (@apeishere_), Rad (@radical_jl), and Rahh (@rahhbanks) 🎥 YouTube: @jscnetwork 📸 Instagram: @thejunglesquadcast

    The Jungle stays loud, heated, and honest — and Episode 127 moves with the momentum of a culture that never sleeps. With no guest this week, the den becomes a closed-circle conversation, letting the squad dig deeper, joke harder, and argue freely without holding back for company. These are the episodes where the Jungle feels most like home.

    We open with music, because that’s where the pulse always starts. Wale’s upcoming album Belly has the culture buzzing ahead of its Friday release, and the squad breaks down what they expect from one of hip hop’s most poetic storytellers. Lil Baby returns with “Try To Love,” sparking a conversation about vulnerability in men who were never taught how to show it. And Jim Jones drops The Fall Before The Rise, leading to a conversation about legacy, longevity, and what reinvention really looks like when you’ve lived multiple eras in rap.

    Then the spotlight shifts to the headlines — and the Jungle reacts accordingly.

    After years behind bars, Max B is officially home, setting off waves across the hip-hop community. Trump is teasing the possibility of new stimulus checks, and whether you love him or hate him, the economic conversation gets loud. Deon Cole presses Lai Cenat, giving the internet its newest viral clash. And Jake Paul is reportedly finalizing a December fight with Anthony Joshua — a matchup nobody predicted but everyone has an opinion on.

    But as always, the heart of the Jungle is in the relationship talk, where honesty meets discomfort.

    We ask whether people today are more loyal to their comfort than they are to their partner — a question that hits deeper the more you sit with it. Then comes the modern dilemma: are we confusing sexual chemistry with emotional connection more than ever? The squad breaks down desire, intimacy, and the illusions that come with them. From there, the question becomes even more psychological: Why do people crave being desired more than being understood? And to close it out, we explore one of the most misunderstood dynamics in love — do people keep their partners close out of protection, jealousy, or possessiveness… and does anyone actually know the difference?

    Episode 127 is introspective, chaotic, funny, and brutally sincere — exactly what the Jungle is supposed to be. No filters. No fronts. Just real conversation in its rawest form.

    Welcome back to the Jungle.

    — 🔔 Subscribe: YouTube.com/@JSCNetwork_ 📲 Follow: @thejunglesquadcast Ape Loso – @apeishere_ Rad – @radical_jl Rahh – @_rahhbanks`````````

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    1 Std. und 54 Min.
  • The Intermissions Cast Pt. 2 (feat. Mbm Drino)
    Nov 16 2025

    The Jungle opens its gates once again, and this week a new presence steps into the clearing — MBM Drino, an artist whose energy carries grit, honesty, and a lived experience you can hear before he even speaks. Episode 126 moves with a grounded intensity as Drino sits with us to peel back layers of music, culture, and the realities most people avoid.

    We begin with a musical rewind that takes us straight to the trenches. G Herbo’s Lil Herb era resurfaces in conversation, reminding us what uncut storytelling and survival rap really sound like. It’s a reflection of hunger — the kind that shaped a generation. Then the mood shifts into something spiritual with Popcaan’s Nothing Without God, sparking a conversation about purpose, faith, and the quiet inner battles that define manhood in 2024.

    When we step into the news, the temperature rises. Grammy nominations drop and immediately ignite debates about industry politics, snubs, and the shifting definitions of excellence in music today. Elsewhere, Antonio Brown is extradited back to the U.S., another unpredictable turn in a saga that seems to get stranger every chapter. And somewhere in the background, Kanye is back stirring cultural noise in ways only Ye can, forcing us to unpack whether we’re witnessing genius, chaos, or a combination of both.

    But the heart of the Jungle — as always — lies in the relationship conversations, where honesty hits the hardest.

    This week we dig into the emotional aftermath of long-term relationships: How soon is “too soon” to claim someone new on social media? We challenge the idea of cheating — is it rooted in lack of love, or is it more about lack of discipline and self-control? And the big one: Are people falling in love with potential instead of reality? The answers reveal a lot more about modern dating than anyone wants to admit.

    With MBM Drino in the den, every topic lands raw and unfiltered. No masks, no performance — just men navigating life, relationships, and the world around them with the honesty the Jungle demands.

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    1 Std. und 36 Min.
  • The What Happened To the Streets Cast
    Dec 21 2025

    Episode 131 strips the Jungle back to its core. No guest, no buffer, no outside energy to balance the room — just the squad in their purest form. These are the episodes where the conversations breathe, the jokes run longer, and the disagreements hit harder. When it’s just the Jungle, nothing gets softened.

    We start where the pulse always lives: the music. 21 Savage’s What Happened 2 The Streets? opens a conversation about whether street rap is evolving or disappearing, and who’s really carrying that sound forward. Nas and DJ Premier reunite on “Light Years,” reminding everyone what mastery sounds like when legends refuse to age quietly. Lil Tjay’s “Used 2 Love” pushes the room into emotional territory, questioning whether heartbreak records still feel authentic when vulnerability becomes a formula. Friday’s “Everybody Got Somebody” adds a smoother contrast, while DaBaby’s “Letter to My YN” brings the conversation back to responsibility, mentorship, and what it means to speak to the next generation. Popcaan and Sway’s “Tek Time” shifts the energy global, and GloRilla’s “March” closes the music run with raw momentum and presence.

    From there, the Jungle locks in on the culture. The Diddy documentary sparks debate over accountability, timing, and who gets to control the narrative once the damage is done. Netflix and Paramount battling for Warner Bros. opens a bigger discussion about media consolidation, power plays, and how streaming is quietly reshaping what stories even get told. The firing of Ebro and Rosenberg from Hot 97 hits close to home, raising questions about loyalty, relevance, and what radio looks like in an era where platforms rise and fall overnight. And as wrestling history approaches a turning point, John Cena’s final week in the ring becomes a conversation about legacy, knowing when to walk away, and whether icons ever really get to retire on their own terms.

    As always, the episode settles into its most honest space with the relationship talk. The squad debates whether long-term relationships thrive more when partners are similar or when opposites force each other to grow. Personal stories surface about moments when something serious was shared with a partner — only to be brushed off — and the lingering damage that dismissal can leave behind. The conversation closes with a tough, uncomfortable question: should someone even be in a relationship if they don’t make at least $50,000 a year, or is that mindset reducing love to logistics?

    Episode 131 is reflective, argumentative, and unapologetically real. No guest. No distractions. Just the Jungle doing what it does best — saying the things most people only think.

    Welcome back to the Jungle.

    Subscribe: YouTube.com/@JSCNetwork_ Follow: @thejunglesquadcast Ape Loso – @apeishere_ Rad – @radical_jl Rahh – @_rahhbanks

    #JungleSquadCast #Episode131 #HipHopCulture #NasAndPremier #21Savage #DiddyDoc #Hot97 #RelationshipTalk #PodcastUnfiltered

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    1 Std. und 58 Min.