“Aries Spears Clowned By DJ Vlad And Corey Holcomb At The Same Time!”
- Dr Ranessa Harding
- May 22
- 2 min read
Boss Talk 101 stepped directly into another culture-heavy conversation — and this one got layers.
What started as comedy commentary quickly turned into a bigger conversation about respect, ego, platforms, and how fast the internet can turn on somebody once the jokes stop landing the same. And honestly… that’s what made this episode hit.

The conversation around Aries Spears isn’t just about one interview or one moment. It’s about perception. In today’s media game, once audiences feel like the energy shifted, EVERYBODY starts adding commentary. And that’s exactly what Boss Talk tapped into here.
From DJ Vlad’s platform politics to Corey Holcomb’s unapologetic style, the episode breaks down how certain personalities in entertainment know how to keep narratives alive — whether people agree or not. One thing about Corey… he gonna say what he wanna say regardless of who feelings get hurt. And Vlad? He’s mastered turning controversy into conversation.
But the deeper layer here is how comedians are treated in this era.
Comedy used to be untouchable. Now every joke gets dissected, every opinion becomes a headline, and every public disagreement turns into content for the internet to run with. Boss Talk 101 did a solid job highlighting how quickly public opinion can shift when multiple voices start piling onto one person at the same time.
And let’s be real:
The internet LOVES a public dogpile.
Especially when it involves:
• comedians
• podcasts
• old industry beef
• masculinity debates
• “who fell off” conversations
That combination is social media fuel.
This episode felt less like gossip and more like watching the hierarchy of media personalities and comedians collide in real time. Everybody involved has their own audience, their own ego, and their own version of “truth.” That’s why conversations like this spread fast online.
Boss Talk 101 continues to lean into the raw barbershop-style energy that keeps people watching because it feels unfiltered, conversational, and culturally connected instead of overly polished media training.
And whether people agree with Aries Spears or not…
one thing is certain:
The internet never misses an opportunity to humble somebody publicly.





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