FOUND OUT YOU'RE A RACIST TODAY......EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW
@abrahamkabole22553 ай бұрын
Good country song
@jandeband3 ай бұрын
Beautiful
@lulabradbury28174 ай бұрын
Beautiful song ❤️
@kenleylord38444 ай бұрын
Love the song and video!
@stepheniedove3134 ай бұрын
This was lovely.❤
@Jflux694 ай бұрын
Love David's songs.
@BlueShift3D4 ай бұрын
Nice country song and looks like a very happy couple.
@chuckincharlo Жыл бұрын
Well spoken man... thought he would have a southern drawl...since he's from Georgia
@jubalcalif9100 Жыл бұрын
Talk about a bodacious "blast from the past" ! Fascinating ! I read Ty Cobb became a very wealthy man. I wonder if he invented the Corn Cobb Pipe. They were very popular at one time. Even Gen. Douglas MacArthur smoked one !
@StanStacks Жыл бұрын
He was an early investor in Coca Cola when it was a tiny upstart company. He made millions many times over from it
@tahoepoet2 жыл бұрын
in the clip starting at 6:30, who is with Cobb? There's his hunting companion, a black man (Robert Robinson or Alex Rivers, perhaps?) and another dark-skinned man handling the horses. Who are they?
@StanStacks Жыл бұрын
Could be Rivers but I believe he always stayed in Detroit. Rivers was also extremely short and man in video doesn’t appear to be.
@tahoepoet2 жыл бұрын
at 3:50 Cobb says he wouldn't play again, but mentions the possibilities of becoming a manager, director or president of a ballclub. The year before, in 1929, Cobb was engaged in talks with the Philadelphia Phillies about becoming a part owner and manager. The deal fell apart when the Phillies went on an 8-game winning streak (imagine that!) and the owner upped his asking price.
@MapleSyrupPoet2 жыл бұрын
He exploited his gifts 🎁 he knew he had them ...and that the records would fall
@mfbinc2 жыл бұрын
so misunderstood and wrongly painted as a racist
@bobbydoddsghost2 жыл бұрын
The greatest of all time.
@redrum94843 жыл бұрын
The Georgia Peach!
@QuarrellaDeVil3 жыл бұрын
Be sure to visit the Ty Cobb Museum when you go to pay your respects to the Georgia Peach in Royston, GA. As the crow flies, I don't live too far from Tris Speaker territory, and I paid my respects to him again about a week ago. Having grown up with the Tigers, it's still funny to me to think of Speaker as a "teammate of Ty Cobb" when the man had his own story and was among *the* legends.
@allenmurray78933 жыл бұрын
Greatest ever? No argument from me.
@masonrahal69803 жыл бұрын
Greatest all around player in MLB history. He was miscast as a racist. Wasn’t the case. His family were racial freedom fighters. He was a huge fan of Willie Mays.
@kathleenmccook81465 жыл бұрын
Ty Cobb, Walter Johnson, Christy Mathewson, Babe Ruth and Honus Wagner-- HOF Class of 1936.
@jamesoconnor35626 жыл бұрын
Dead ball era, though.
@jarrodromanowski75595 жыл бұрын
What about it though?
@QuarrellaDeVil3 жыл бұрын
@@jarrodromanowski7559 Amen, brother. Back then, they called steroids "alcohol", and they certainly could have benefitted from some of the medicine and technology that has preserved and extended careers today. I don't like to get into the comparison, but I think some of the players of Cobb's time would have been in hysterics with laughter about certain approaches to the game today. We're not going to see anybody ever win 511 games, and hell, as things are now, best of luck seeing a 30 game winner, which happened "only" 53 years ago.
@jarrodromanowski75593 жыл бұрын
@@QuarrellaDeVil I no doubt think the dead ball era would be disgusted with the peds. But it's so ingrained in all of sports that it's almost a requirement these days. My Brother in law is great friends with a guy named Owen Schmidt that played fullback for the Raiders and a couple other teams. He said it's not really talked about but 90% of the league uses them. Pretty much all the big names cycle on and off. But think about guys like Ty Cobb or Honus Wagner or Babe Ruth. With today's dieticians and training regimen or even the peds, they would put today's talent to shame and back then these guys hit the bottle heavy, were smokers and didn't really train much and got by on their talent alone. Guys were throwing 90mph fastballs without peds or proper fitness and nutrition. It would take some adjusting but guys like Cobb could damn well have played today.
@Breeder3336 жыл бұрын
He was a great ball player.
@joeferguson26067 жыл бұрын
great hitter, racist man
@wesleyfricks76947 жыл бұрын
Can you provide some facts or evidence of your claim that Ty Cobb was a racist?
@HolmesUkraine6 жыл бұрын
Actually, no he was not the racist he has been portrayed as.
@vgr1122616 жыл бұрын
Wesley Fricks other than Al Stump’s one sided narrative, no.
@turtlesimage72125 жыл бұрын
It was a different time.
@thomasshort17844 жыл бұрын
@@vgr112261 I used to own a copy of Al Stump's biography of Cobb and a DVD copy of "Cobb" with Tommy Lee Jones. Due to discovering the falsehoods Stump wrote about Cobb and helped incorporate into the movie as a result, I've long since thrown BOTH into the trash and I'm better off for it! I learned even Cobb's own family didn't have a nice thing to say about Stump, who I'm now convinced was a liar and con job. Anything to make money was the way he (Stump) saw it.