 Yeah, I think last time we spoke a little bit about the Mode 3 incident, because it was fresh back then. I mean, you talked, and you was like, you know, niggas really seeing us now. Right, right. You remember that? Right. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Now, they're looking at us on a national exposure because, you know, his death was more of a, it was one of those national, like, headline moments. You know, it was not to take none away from the music, but the death, you know, overdid all the music. And then the music, you know, came afterwards, you know what I'm saying? But the death is what put the eyes on the city. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. Yeah, we gonna talk. And now it doesn't really change because, you know, for the music part, on the hip-hop part, when they used to think of Tix, they only used to think of just Houston. You know what I'm saying? They did. Dallas got that motion. Yeah. You know, for the new era, we the ones who've been, you know, popping them out, you know what I'm saying? Yeah. Kind of in the sense for the streets. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? Like for the street, you know, we the ones been getting the attention. So it's like, you know, now, you know, it ain't just, you know, and that's just for the culture, entertainment, that's from the boxing, the sports, the cowboys and the marriage. I see that. Like, our whole run is good, you know, and for a little while, you know, James Horton was down there. Them boys were running. H-Town was the talk for basketball, you know, football, you know, they was beat better than us. Rome won't produce any shit like that during things of that nature. But now it doesn't switched over. Yellowhead, you know, you know, had more, you know, had Bobby Billions, you know, and these, you know, you know, had, you know, a few people that don't came from Dallas that, you know, Kater took that represent the street to where, you know, when they think in the text and it's been coming from that movement been coming from Dallas, you know, instead of, it used to be in just H-Town majority coming from Dallas. So we got motion now. We just got to produce a little bit more. Yeah. I think last time we talked, we spoke a little bit about the mode three incident because it was fresh back then. I mean, you talk. OK, OK, you was like, you know, niggas really seeing us now. We, you know, you remember that? You say, yeah, yeah. Now we, they look, they looking at us on the national exposure. Yeah. You know, his death was more of a, it was a, it was one of those national like headline moments. You know, it was, it wasn't not to take none away from the music, but the, the, the death, you know, overdid all the music. And then the music, you know, came afterwards. You know what I'm saying? But the death is what put the eyes on the city. You know what I'm saying? Just to have something like, you know, one of the local faces of the city to get gunned down like that. That was like, you know, shit. That was some crazy shit to be on. So it drew that kind of attention. And then when you had the rappers, that was, you know, who was aligned with them and fucking with them, that was, you know, got hacked them platforms. They was showing the love. It just, it just made it all just come together. You know what I'm saying? Then you got, you know, yellow just had, you know, his success, you know what I'm saying? And had went through a state, you know, so they, you know, we was getting that. So it was just like, that was just on the gangster side, the street side. What went on with motive counter certified the city as a whole. Like, oh, yeah, they for real down there. You know what I'm saying? We, we've been for real. But when they seen it like that, they're on national TV. They seen it live. They seen it live. It was like, oh, them boys for real. In they shot, it was they rapper. It was some kind of rap nigga. Then once they got to digging about who he is and it just made it just like, yeah, Dallas for real. We got there. They're about that shit. Yeah. No, I definitely know they knew it. We already knew, but they, I think they start to understand it can go down. Yeah. They got a real understanding. You can't just go down that plan. You said it because when it happened, I actually felt it. It's like, you got a vibe when it should happen. It's like, damn, they really did this. Yeah, I felt. Yeah, yeah. It just solidified us on the, on the from the underworld aspect in the hip hop, like being connected to the streets. Like we really had never had a rapper or audience that was just solely locked in certain, like identified with the streets that were successful. You know what I'm saying? So when she did that happen to him and he just got to help me got his, you know, certification card. It just, it just made it like, oh, they for real on that street. Shit them rap niggas for real. So them boys do be talking that talk. They're about that shit too. Yeah, it can happen. Yeah. It made them roll out that too. It made them really. Yeah, yeah. No, I agree with that.