 The podcast like this, we're gonna burn it. Check it, check it, check it. It's a unique hustle. It's your boy, E.C.O. And I'm here with the lovely, amazing official, outstanding, incredible. Ms. Jamaica, what's going on? None, none. You know, my dad will all go on. Man, it's going down, man. You know, back on the set, man. Back on the scene, man. Hey, I don't never start like this. Make sure y'all like and subscribe to the channel. Man, appreciate all our subscribers. Everybody's been rocking with us, man. A1 since day one, man. Hey, check it, man. Hey, shout out to them boys in Atlanta, man. They showed us so much love just a week ago. ATL, shout it. Also, shout out to all the people that just love every time, yeah, we on balls talk one-on-one. Come on, man. Check it, man. And don't forget to like, subscribe, follow us on all social media platforms. Sorry. That's all right. Get it right. Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, you name it. Come on now. Check it. Hey, man, we got a very special guest in the house today, y'all. He don't need no introduction. This is not his first time here. Matter of fact, this is third time here. It's going down, man. Check it, man. He's back, y'all. We heard about it, man. Hey, so what's going on, man? What you? Man, I'm good, man. I'm glad to be here, man. Long 12-hour drive, but I can't straight here. I see, man. You know what? And you need to come straight here because people been coming behind you being here ever since you left. You know, I ain't no follower. I'm a trendsetter, you know what I'm saying? I drive the train and I pick up people along the way. You see your stop where you think you can do better, get off. Say, man, so, you know, comedy, man, is one of those things, man, that you've been blessed to pass the test, I'll say, man. You always, when I came to the show, we definitely loved your show, bro. So what, man, you say I passed the test, so y'all doubted me in the beginning? Oh, well, we didn't doubt you. We just didn't know. We ain't know. No, because you got to think about it. Just like the same thing I said with Jordan when he came on the show, I'm like, when you see somebody on the internet doing their thing and they're funny, you just see them as that internet comedian, but when you actually see them in person and they're funnier in person than they are on, it's just like mind blowing. Well, see, I started off in comedy first. So comedy was before the internet. I did comedy and music first, and then the internet just trail came along. You said music, so you sing too? I know, I sing in the bathroom, but I rap. But I rap. I rap, you know, I write R&B, you know? Okay, okay. Man, you know, just the way that the game is now, comedy is something else, man. We've been seeing a lot of comedians. We hadn't talked to you since Chris Rock, you know, got lifted up by Newsman. I know, right? But that ain't the kicker, man. The kicker is, man, that he's really backed off of everything for as we'll go. He came out and said one thing, but it's really crushing his spirit, the way that that happened. You can tell that it took effect on him, according to the way he's pushing back now. What the thing is, man, people been getting hit for a long time. You know, I ain't saying he didn't got hit, well, he didn't got hit before, cause he got brothers. Yeah. But you know what I'm saying? On national TV, man, just take it in, and we'll work this out, cause y'all like some of the trend sellers for us. So if y'all can't work it out, then what other comedians are getting to it, how y'all expect us to work it out when we look up to y'all? That's right. So we're looking for y'all to work it out in order for us to come along and be probably y'all footsteps. But before anybody can work it out, what I think it is will have some, I'm not gonna, well, demons to work on themselves first, because I don't know if he's going through therapy and I hope that he is, but it seemed like he was really, really hurt, not only by the situation, but because a trending of all the things that's been leading up to that point. Well, yeah, cause man, Chris been shooting shots for a long time. That's right. But you know what? Hey, that's comedy. That's part. If I know I can go to this joke and I know they gon' laugh, but you can't just blame it all on Chris because guess what? You got people that write these jokes and they say, look, we're gonna pay you this much. This is what we wrote. They give you the strip until you go in there, you read the strip. Some of you look like, wait a minute, I don't know if I should say that, or you know what I'm saying. But it depends on how much money you're getting. You gon' still say it, right? Yep, I'll take that slap. Come on slap me. Hey, give me that money. You know. And by the back, you need to slap me again cause that first one didn't go right. Come on, huh? Well, I'll tell you, man. You know, Bostalk, ever since you left, we, you know, when you first came on the show, there's been a lot of people from FaZe on Love to Cheetan Asmiron that you brought to Carlos Miller just left the other week. Yeah, thanks. Nick shots out to Carlos Miller. He made my shot in Atlanta. He did what? He gave me my first shot not my first shot on stage in Atlanta. He did? Where? Yeah, where Carlos- I talked bad to the nigga. I thought I knew he did that. I wasn't being so hard on the nigga. I was being bad, hard on Carlos. Carlos used to tell people, you know, take me off and put him up. Really? Or cut my time and put him up. So I appreciate that Carlos Miller, you know what I'm saying? O.D. O'Dell and Yo-Hunt say, and Chris set it off Jones. Them four guys right there in Atlanta paid the way for me to go in Atlanta and be able to hit any stage. Man, you know, and that's real, man. He, you know, unseemlessly came by Boss Talk 101, man. Shout out to that boy, Dump Maus, the two for linking me up with him. But it's just so, it ain't easy. A lot of times you invite people on the show and they don't, some show, some don't. It's just a part of, some of them busy, some of them not. Some of them just not ready to come this way. Y'all just gotta put them on. Exactly. I almost didn't come because y'all didn't have no handicap park. Well, we don't have no handicap park and you know we trying to get it. You know they got it, they got it all the way down and in. All the way down and in. It's all the way down and in. It's all the way down and in. It's all the way down and in. It's not happening like that. But we have those guys on here now. One thing that I've been asking all the comedians because this is the challenging question. We did Alex Thomas over in California as well. And so the question is, and then this is a question that everybody's had to answer in the comedian world, including Jordan Jackson last week, that you guys are like a new wave comedian even though you old school. You might be the bridge. But at any rate, let me get this question now. You guys, some of you guys, when Phaedon was on here, Phaedon said that he said that basically the new way of doing comedy is really not sustainable in so many ways because it does not pay residual income. And he says basically he gets residuals. But then turn around, Mike Bless came on here and said, no, Country Wayne is making $480,000 a month and said that he's basically taking care of a whole bunch of people. And this question right here, I've got, you know, I got to see that there are some gaps in the comedian world because of the fact of some being on the stage and stand up and from the old way of doing things and some being on the stage and stand up and still in that social media world. So there's two different worlds that's trying to collide. And basically you guys are having to work together a lot of times. How do you look at the whole situation? Do you feel like the old way is better or the new way is better? Or what do you think? No, I ain't gonna say which is better because whatever works for you works for you. Like the old wave taught you how to talk to people, communicate, get out here and meet people. The new wave, I can get on the internet, I post some funny, you like me. You don't even know me. You know what I'm saying? And you get to follow me. But the old school way, I'm out hand in hand. You got to, you got, I got to bring it on stage and ain't like no stop and redo. On the internet, you mess up, you can stop redo it before you post it. But people think it's easy doing social media. It's hard doing either one. For one, to be a stand up comedian, if you're on stage, if you mess up, you gotta correct it right then. Because people were booing. And it's hard to come back from a booing. I had somebody boo me the other night, but I'm reckless, I'm with the shit. So you know what I'm saying? You come at me, I got jokes already that I know I'ma say to you make you shut up. So they got to mess with him. I said, no, I'll leave him alone. It's a comedy show. He wanna be, he can watch the show or be the show. So you know, you gotta be able to handle your business on stage. And even when on the internet, if you're an internet comedian, it take time to create the idea, make the idea come visual. And you got a video of it and you got to have the right angles. If you don't have the right angles or the right lighting, it don't even, it's just like being on stage with a bad joke. So all that is hard work. So all the internet comments, I applaud you. You know what I'm saying? It's a lot of work. And you gotta post not just once, three to four times a day. And think about it. You got Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok. You gotta post. All that three, four times a day, but you gotta post different videos. Cause if you post it on Facebook, you can't go back and post it on Instagram right then or social or the next one. So we shoot about 15, 20 skits a day. And whatever I post on this one, I post this one on this one and this one on that one. And then I go back and rotate the days. Well, what about Phazon say that it does not pay residual. So when you, when you get older and you can't do them no more, or if you get something happening where you don't have that outing, you don't have a source of income coming in like the old comedians who did movies where they had those residuals coming in. That's where I'm in at cause I do movies too. I'm nine movies in. Really? What movies have you been in? Well, eight movies. I did Slice one, two, and three with Pierre. I did Apartments with T.I. I just shot the movie Finding Love. Have all of these movies been out? No, the new ones that they're about to get ready to drop. I just did the Boosie movie, The Water Boys. And it's another movie I just did, Holding the Wall. And I was on the Ricky Smiley, Ricky Smiley for real. Wow. People don't know that. So I'm out here. I'm not just stand up. I'm not just internet. I'm on TV too. So you're one that's able to understand that there has to be a balance in between your comedian life and the way that you strive to accomplish it, right? Exactly cause like when you're doing stand up, you're only in stand up world. So everybody that does stand up don't do social media. So when I went from stand up to doing social media, all the people I hung around and did social media, everybody didn't do stand up. So when you fall into that social media world, you forget, hey look, I'm a stand up comedian too. So I had to back up off that and go back to the original people that put me in the game and like, hey look, I need to get on some stages. So I had to back out of social media and go back over to stand up. So I don't get rusty. But when you look at a country, Wayne, and you look at these guys that's making or a bubble dub, that's making $100,000 in one month or $400,000 in one month, it's kind of hard to say they ain't gonna be okay in the future. Well, when you make that type of money, you gotta invest it the right way. That's true. I don't care even if you sold dogs for a living. If you don't invest your money the right way then, hey look, who's to say, you're gonna make it in the future, even a rapper. You know what I'm saying? Even people that get residual soft movies, if you don't invest your money the right way, all that money can blow in real quick. And when you say invest, not only invest in your future, but invest back into you, as in with a comedian, what I would think is investing in whether paying the right person to be on one of your skits, just to get seen more. Because I'm sure not everybody that you put in your skits do it just on the real. Some people you might have to actually hire to be in the skit. Sometimes you don't have to get people that's big to be seen more. You just gotta have the right people for the right video. Okay. The right because you've seen a movie that got a whole lot of stars, a whole lot of hit people with it. I don't like those. And when you see it, the movie not even adds good. Or basketball team got all the all star players on it. And they still not that good. I wouldn't name a team, but I don't want to put them out here, you know what I'm saying? But I think y'all know who I'm talking about, but I'm a Laker fan, no, no, regardless of what, who plan die hard, Laker fan. But it's not who you do the video with is putting the right people on the right video to where it makes sense. If it makes sense, people gonna watch it, people gonna follow it. My first video that did a million views, it wasn't even, it was just me and Sheena as Myron. And then I came right back. And my next two videos, it was only me by myself. And I did what one of them, I did 14 million. Wow. I did that by myself. And then I did the dog video and that did like 30 million. And it was just me and the dog. How hard is it to keep coming up with content, keep coming up with ideas of how, what to do next just to try to, you know, get entertaining your views? Now it's not about coming up with it, it's everyday life. What do I see that people do everyday? You know what I'm saying? Like you can take a wig and put it on your head and stretch your head and the wig go back and forward and post it and it's gonna go viral cause somebody gonna be like, wait a minute, did her wig just go back and forward? Did, wait a minute, they gonna keep on watching it. And then they gonna go to sharing it and everybody gonna be like, I know that ain't no wig going back and forward. So it's easy to come up with content. You know, it's everyday life. But when you put a lot of thought in it, like, oh, I want to do this, I want to do that. It don't work as good. Cause when I did silhouette challenge, it was like, I knew what I was gonna do and I didn't put no thought into it. I just said, shoot it. And when they shot it, my daughter played right into it. And I did what, the next day somebody called me and said, hey, look, Snoop just shared your video. So big shout out to Snoop. Just Snoop Dogg. Yeah, Snoop. But y'all make it look so easy though, that's the problem. It's like for people who are trying to get into it or people who are just now venturing off into the social media, you know, era, it's like we want to try to jump in and start doing weather skits or try to post more, do more things. But looking at your, it looks easy. It is. But I've seen click full of stars come in here. They always have their ring light with them. They always have their phones. And anywhere they go, no matter where they go, they gonna pop that ring light out and they doing a dance, they doing a skit, they doing something, every single time. Because I came over to skit, I wasn't gonna tell nobody, but I'm gonna tell y'all, you know what I'm saying? I came over to today, it was like a robbery gone wrong. Where you don't need nobody in it. I can do, as long as I do my part, a guy come in but like, give me, I don't think you got no, you ain't got no shirt on. Can't see nothing else up under, up under of it. And the right guy come in and be like, hey, give me everything. Like you want me here and the dude like, man, you gonna rob him naked. He's like, man, we come to get, we come to get. He's like, man, we got everything, let's go. The other guy said, huh? He's like, man, we got everything, let's go. He said, no, I want a shot of that. And I just do a facial reaction, like what? You know, see, and just that, just that, just that phrase will automatically make people like, wait a minute. Try to think and try to figure out what she talking about. In today's society, things are going so crazy. You know, when you look at some of the things that are happening, you know, far as some of the jokes that you told a long time ago may not be permittable today because of how sensitive people have gotten. We look at Aries Spears right now. He catching a lot of flak for some stuff that he done. We talked about that today, me and Pierre. We talked about it. How do you feel about like the way that he's getting backlash? And it seems to have really, he talked about, what's that girl named Lizzo, not in Houston, and once you talked about Lizzo, everything started coming out like, that's the way I seen it. I could be totally wrong. I could be totally wrong. He, Aries Spears been like that. I asked Aries Spears, you know what I'm saying? I asked him about getting on the show. Somebody say, he don't do black people on this show. He put white people up. Are you serious? No disrespect. Hey, look, thank you. At least I asked, you know what I'm saying? Then I was like, hey, can I get a picture which he said, nah. He wouldn't take a picture? I'll take a picture. But at the end of the day, I still said, thank you. I still support you. You have a nice day and kept on going. Wow. So you really have people out there that get on the stage with you the same night that have differences on even dealing with you? That's crazy. You got people that won't even put you on the show if you're funnier than them. They're watching to see if you're funnier than them so they don't have, they don't get overshadowed though. You got people, this is this thing that they told me in the comedy world. Think of being too funny and not funny enough. You don't know where to be because if you're too funny, they be like, no, don't put them on the show. If you're not funny enough, they be like, don't put them on the show. So it's like, where do you go? So I'm blessed to say the people that put me on the show with them, they don't hold back. They say, man, give it to them. They rather put a whole show to be funny than just them. One person, not funny, you know? So that's one, I feel like when you're on a comedy show, the first person starts it all, set the trend. The second person picks up from there and take the energy up. The headliner is the big boom. Like a relay, just like a relay. No matter who you is, if you're headlining or wherever you at, you got to take advantage of your moment. If you're the headliner, they're gonna laugh at your stuff pretty much regardless because they paid to see you and anybody that's up under you, they're probably not getting paid what you get paid. So long as your check's still right, it don't matter who up there, keep bringing them to keep your show funny. So they won't be like, hey, he was funny, but that, no other two dudes, they weren't that funny. But if everybody funny, they're gonna be like, man, his show was good from beginning to the end. How do you, like you say, like going back to every spear is just for a second. Like how do you, like if you was able to, you would still help him if you was able to set up a show and you wanted to invite him on? Yeah. You know, because certain people, it don't matter- You're not gonna make a right. Exactly. That's why I'm just sitting back thinking about how do you bridge the gap between those differences? You know what I mean? How would I bridge the gap? I don't know how I would bridge the gap, but I just look at, I still will work with you just because you who you are. And at the same time, people gonna be like, people gonna go watch, cause they're gonna be like, you did a, you went back and worked with him cause they wanna see what you did with him. Yeah. Even if it's good or bad, they're gonna be like, hey, what did y'all do? What made you wanna do it with him? And why you picked that particular video or why you put him on that particular show? It's all about setting up the right things for things to grow on the end. Well, you know, the video clip that I keep seeing is with him and another guy, and he turns over and they have a cozy moment to be kind of nice about the way I see it. And people are taking that and they are hammering that thing. Every time I turn the internet on, I see it. It's like, he turns over, he gets a little smooch from the other guy and then they be like, dang, just the guy that said this and it's like, Touchy, touchy. Have you seen it? No. Oh, it's all, you seen it? Oh, I ain't seen it, but you know what I look. Oh man, it's on there. I look at whatever you choose. That's what you choose. Cause I went to Atlanta, they almost got me. What? They did, you know, but I love Atlanta. I love them too. But you know what, the guy seen me when I first came up, he said, I like you, you funny. I said, thank you. Can I get a picture? I said, yeah, I took the picture with him. He said, oh, you coming in here? I said, yeah, he said, hold up. They tell you what kind of club this is. I said, no, he said, is some of us and some of them in there? No, he said, yeah, is some of us and some of them. I didn't know what he meant. I said, look, I know my sexuality. I come to have a good time. I kick it with everybody. He said, I'm glad you think like that. So I'm like, all right, we start walking in the club. He said, wait a minute, the floor looks slippery. I don't want you to fall. He grabbed my crutch. He's sticking his arm out like holding on my arm. I'm gonna walk into your section. I'm like, okay, but while I'm walking in, it looked like I'm his girl the way I'm holding on his arm. He said, wait a minute, just don't feel right. I'm like, exactly. So I dropped my hand and he dropped his hand and somehow his hand locked with my hand. But while we're on our way to our section, when we get close to my section, I hear somebody say, oh, he hitting that. I'm like, no, no, I'm like, no, no, it ain't that type of party. You know what I'm saying? So somebody else come up and see me like, oh, you here. I can't believe you're here. Can I get a picture? The dude that walked me to my section said, no, we ain't taking pictures. I'm like, I didn't know it was a we, you know what I'm saying? So, you know, I'm like, yeah, I'll take a picture which don't worry about that. We taking pictures. He didn't order me drinks. I didn't order drinks. The bill come. They say, who paying? I say, him. Jesse, you something else, man. But you do find yourself in situations. I find myself in situations trying to support people that work for me. And they was, you know, they was different. They did just things a little different. This is my thing right here. When people talk about that, people see girls liking girls. They think it's cute. They see guys liking men. You say something about it. I'm not saying I'm like that, but how is it a two, like, how are you gonna like a girl that like girls? You know what I'm saying? And say it's cute. But then when the guys do it, you can't accept what they do. You know what I'm saying? If you're gonna accept the women, you gotta accept the guys too. You know, as long as you know your sexuality, you know what I'm saying? It ain't, it ain't nothing you should be worried about because guess what? At the end of the day, there are people and them people come out and support you. I seen one of my guys from Luther Rock, Arkansas in the mall in Atlanta. He dressed like a woman. You know what I'm saying? But he cool with me. His name is Tony. I seen him in the mall with some of my homeboys. I was like, that's my homeboy. They say, who? I said, right there. I said, man, that's a dude dressed like a woman. I said, I know that's my homeboy. He from my hometown. I hollered from the other side of the mall like, what's up Tony? My homeboy don't look there like, man, I can't believe you. I said, man, that's my dog. At the end of the day, they support. He support me. I respect what you do. I respect how you move and what you do, how you grind. And he respect me the same way. They never try to holler at me. They be like, no, we can't mess with little handicapped dude, you know what I'm saying? He already can't, he already can't walk that dude, you know what I'm saying? We don't wanna put that much pressure on him. Man, this dude gives out so much using that handicapped dude, don't he? I gotta be careful with trying to use that. I think of one time, I tried to fall over. No, one dude would say, hey, took that thing, go, take that thing, take that thing. No, no, no, no, no, no. So, man. So, Atlanta was the right move for you. No, we need him back in Dallas. Stop playing. My wife actually went and found the house and surprised me for father's day. Wow. Yes. So y'all really gonna sell it down there? No, man, we're gonna do that. She wanna move, she wanna move that like towards Arkansas, closer to family. She more a family person. And I look at it, I got a wife now, so, you know. Congratulations on the marriage. Yeah, appreciate it, appreciate it. So, I be on the road all the time. She on the road with me most of the time or whatever. So, I feel like if she giving me the opportunity to travel and do whatever, I don't want her just sitting at home feeling alone and ain't got no family there to, you know what I'm saying? Go see so. I'll take the sacrifice of moving back to an area where she can be next to her family and I can still travel. Okay. Wow, that's dope, man. That's live. But I know my hustle. My hustle, I'm gonna travel no matter where I'm at. Yeah, you always get my dad. So, I'm a grind. We know on each other 20 years, so ain't nothing but love there. Man, you turned it up on the skits more than usual. We've been watching and just how do you keep coming up with different ideas and different ways to make yourself stay and maintain that relevancy that you do? Everyday life. Everyday life, I look at what you do or whatever and I could take a video by watching you sitting in that chair and come up with skit, you sitting in that chair. Okay. It's just a visual, people take their time to think too hard for a video. The simple things will work. Yeah, yeah, that's, that's, that's. It's so easy, like, I'm about to call the police on you and I hold the phone like this. You see the phone is wrong. You're gonna get in the comments like, he ain't even calling nobody, that phone turned backward. You know, it just, it just comments or. It's self-awareness. And I hang some draws up in the back. What I said ain't got nothing to do with the video. I mean, with those draws, they got nothing to do with the video. They go like, wait a minute, is it, nobody not see the draws hanging on the door. You know what I'm saying? They go keep watching it just to see, you know what I'm saying, underwear on the door. So it's, it's the smallest things will work. The process. A lot of people over exaggerate the process of doing the skits. I've learned lately that mostly it's your iPhone. It's only, it's not the cameras like it used to be. Is that a thing or what? iPhones are the new wave right now. I can edit my video right there on my phone. Well, you can edit right there on the phone. Now it depends on what shot you're looking for and where you're trying to go with it. Cause Netflix, you gotta have a certain kind of camera. You gotta have it in a certain format. But if you just doing Instagram, social media, your iPhone. But when you think about storage, cause you do a lot of content, that's the problem. I got over two terabytes on your phone, on my phone. So I'm not, I'm not, I'm not worried about the storage and I'm in, I got the iCloud. So I paid that extra money cause I'm investing to myself cause I know what's going to happen on the end. Wow, man, just, just love what you're doing, I've been watching you, man. Love your movement, love, I know when I come to Atlanta, I'm going to find you somewhere on the stage. If you're even in Atlanta, cause you travel every day and week. I got a question for y'all. First time y'all said y'all never seen me do stand up. So what was y'all experienced with y'all? What was y'all, what was y'all thinking when y'all first seen me come up on stage? For me, I didn't know what to expect. I was definitely going to, I was very judgmental. I was looking to see what the hell you was going to do up there on that stage. I had seen your skit. So I was like, well, I know he ain't can't do skits up there. You're going to have to come on with it. So when you got up there and you had a whole lay out of just a litany of jokes and stuff, I really, really enjoyed it. She definitely enjoyed it. We was just talking back and forth for how good it was. Man, you had great stand up, great presence. Really, like I said, I watched, was it D-Ray? D-Ray, yeah. D-Ray, but really we came to see you. No shade to D-Ray, but we were there for you. So at the end of the day, it was something about that night that where we felt, man, we came all the way to Atlanta, we get to see Jesse, it was just a live moment. So your stand up is, it can't be denied. And I've been telling everybody about it every since. Appreciate it. And one thing, thinking back on it, you didn't fall not once in that show. They don't pay me to fall on stage. That's not a skit. That's what I was telling you. You gotta pay for that fall, you know what I'm saying? Yeah, he's skidding, it's a difference then when he's on stage, he's very professional. He brings it the way that the traditional comedians bring it, but in its own way. And I just felt like, you know, I didn't know how he was gonna come, but he was so professional and you could tell he was a veteran in what he was doing. So that's dope, man, that's live. And then the fact I thought back on the Steve Harvey moments, not Steve Harvey, but Ricky Smiley moments where you say he sat on the edge of the stage and watched you and you could see that you had already been through so many different things and channels to where you was a veteran on that stage, like I said. Oh yeah, and I still talk to my mentors. K-Dubb, I talk to him a lot. D-Ray, I hit him up and his security, they helped me out with a lot of, a lot of jokes. That's the big guy that I seen? Yeah, Trey. That my boy. He probably know IG. Trey, he cool as hell. Trey will hurt your feelings, too, if you're a comedian. You be up there doing your jokes and you come on stage and you say, Trey, how I do it, man? I think you should wash cars. What? He was there that night, man. We sit back and talk, man. He on my majority. It takes somebody like that to be hard on you. You gotta be able to take a constructive criticism. If you can't take that, man, whatever you do is not gonna work. You gotta be able to take the criticism. What, how can people get a hold of you? On Cash App. You can reach me on Cash App at all times. I respond rapidly. Hey, man, man, on IG, where you at? I'm comedian Jesse McDonough on IG, Facebook, Instagram, comedian Jesse McDonough, Facebook, comedian Jesse McDonough is still funny, cause my page got hacked. Really? Yeah, my page got hacked. I just got it back. I had a hundred and what, 70,000 followers? How many you got now? I got a hundred and 74. So on Facebook? Facebook. That's one page. My other page, I think I got like 5,000 followers and maybe 500, some friends. 5,000. I heard that Facebook money different, man. That Facebook money, yeah. But you gotta work for it. Nothing in life is free. If it's easy to get, it's a catch behind it. If you work hard for it, then you got something to tell the people alone, tell them about your journey. If you say, hey, look, I woke up, I put a video up and I'm successful today. 20 years from now, how did you get there? You know what I'm saying? You ain't got no story to tell. Me, I tell people, I drove 20 hours. I drove 15 hours. You know what I'm saying? I slept in the car before. Y'all, you know what I'm saying? People ain't got no struggle. You gotta have a struggle and so you can tell people how you got there. Wow. If you got here, how did you get here? Wow. You know what I'm saying? It's more to it than I just posted one video it went viral. This is your first time doing a video and you went viral. But what you gonna do to stay there? If you hustled to get there, you know how to stay there. You just overnight success and you hear how you gonna, that's when some people become what they call them one hit wonders, you hit overnight. What are you gonna do to stay there? Man, thank you so much, man. Every time you come to town, man, you always bless us with your presence with great conversation. Man, just anytime you're in Dallas or if I'm in Atlanta, I was just in Atlanta. I was downtown and we wasn't there alone cause we were gonna go to South Carolina but we got rained out on a show, on a deal we was gonna be attending and we ended up changing and coming back to Texas. But man, just thank you so much for supporting us all the times, man. Man, if it's anything you ever need and boss talk one-on-one can be a part of it, please let me know. Yeah, I need some right now. You can just surprise me on Cash App. Shout out to the Cash App King that boy Justin McDonnell, comedian Justin McDonnell. He's in the building, man. I am. Check it, man. That's not to my wife, you know what I'm saying. My new, you know, she always on the road. That's my road manager. Hey. That's my road manager. Man, check it, man. And my friend. Hey, man, check it, man. Hey, man, it's been another great segment of Boss Talk 101, what a boss is talk. Yeah, and if you watching this right here, make sure you go follow Boss Talk and follow me on Cash App.