He was not speaking “southern.”
He was speaking “black.”
Just trying to keep it real for the folk....
The magic negro can do whatever he wants
I agree. Southern is usually grammatically correct. However, the rruns on ssylabilation coursing through the discourse will forever be music in my ears. The lack of the cracking hard “T” or the soft murmur of the “M”, sings in my heart. Yes, let’s look at “y” awhile too...it doesn’t hurt that it is soft and flows into more of a “mheh” or ‘mah’ either.