 It's a demand on 100,000 on my wrist. Fuck a ramp in a few thousand on your bitch. Check it, man. Check it, check it. It's a unique house. It's your boy, E-C-E-O. And I'm here with the lovely official, Mr. Maker. Yeah, walk on. Hey, man. We got a special guest. I know I say special guest all the time, man. The boss's all getting lit up, man, today, man. We got a special guest, man. So I wanna say he from Miami, but then I heard he in Atlanta. I don't know. Hey, International, man. Check it, man. International, man. Shout, man. BGF Shout is in the building, man. What's going on? I'm here, man. I'm here, man. I ain't just Miami in Atlanta. I got ties in Texas, too. Say, what's up, now? What's up, for real? So you got ties in Texas? Got ties out of funky town, man. Really? I know a little bit about this town. Man, I thought we had him fresh, man. Didn't you already know about stop-six and everything? You know what I'm talking about? So what's going on with you, man? How's it being in Texas, man? Man, so far as I'm loving the weather, man. I'm loving the feeling, the vibe, the energy. I'm enjoying it so far, man. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's good to have you, man. Thank you so much for coming on the show, man. Yeah, definitely. Yeah, so, you know, I looked at a few things, man. Just looking at the work ethic, man. And what you been doing, man. Hey, man, I love everything I'm seeing. And it's independent? Definitely, independently. Man, I got my family and my team behind me. But as far as a major label, now, definitely, we fully independent. Wow, man. So you originally from what? Originally from Miami. Miami, that's what I thought. But I was raised mostly in Atlanta. The city of Atlanta, all over Atlanta, West Side for a good part, for the most part. I'm in the south side of Atlanta now. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I've been everywhere in the city of Atlanta, so I represent Atlanta in the totality, you know what I'm saying? Like I said, my father, he was out of here from Texas, Fort Worth. Oh, man. Do you like Atlanta more than Miami? I was going to ask that. I mean, I grew up in Atlanta. I don't grow into love Atlanta, man. So yeah, you can say that. I love Miami just as much. I like the beaches in Miami. Yeah, definitely, definitely. The weather, so you get the best of both worlds. Yeah. You can say that. Man, I tell you, man, it rained a little bit in Miami. Just stop, store it, stop, store it, stop. I don't know about that. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, they got that tropical vibe. Yeah, man, it's throwin', man. But where would you say music scene is better? Would it be Miami or would it be ATL? It had ATL. I mean definitely, definitely Atlanta. I'm goin' with ATL, man, every time. I got to, man. Hard with the music scene. Yeah. Miami is known for having it too, so you can't put nothin' past them. In Texas, man, all three of these states are big in the music industry. That's why I from the South. Going back to history, you know what I mean? Man. So tell me how you came up with the name PGF, Shaw. PGF, that's been my family for a long time. We stand for Put God first. We've always had a strong belief in the high God. That's always been behind us, so we always took that around with it. Became a family, put a bunch of different organizations behind it. We got promotion companies, we got film companies, we got kennels. You can see PGF everywhere, man. You know what I'm sayin'? And that's funny, when I Googled it, I saw all of those names and I was like, oh, see film? I saw all of that and I was like, okay, is this the same person or is this? No, it's a multitude of us. We all branches of PGF, man. We all grew up together. Like I said, we all just got business-minded about what we were doin' and took it to another level. Let's go back, let's go back a little bit, like where, you know, I know you went through, lookin' at the other interviews, you know, from the outside lookin' in, you went through some time periods when you was locked up and let's just go back down through there. Okay. Yeah, so how did, coming up, young man in Atlanta? Cause that's where you was really, 16, 17. Yeah, that's why I caught my first case there. Yeah, that's right. Right. You couldn't, you wouldn't see it, yeah. Yeah, so that's where it first started off at, where you did a little time and sat down for a minute. Definitely, definitely. Yeah, and so basically, you know, is that where the music started at? Did you start writing immediately or was something that you caught on later on? I'll be honest with you, man, I was influenced by music at a young age, so I was always in my head with the music, but I never was no just all-out rapper. I would say that, play with it. I would listen to other rappers impersonate other rappers. That's the pimp, see, like I love pimp jazz. Oh, man, look out, now there it is, that's the punch word right there. Every time that happened, that whole show just happened. I need to get a horn or something. You know what I'm talkin' about, because yeah. That's the magic word. Yeah, that's the magic word, yeah. And when I listen to pimp, see, I ain't feel like he was rapping. I feel like he was expressing himself in talking, and that's how I look at what I do is expressing myself in talking. It kinda feel good, don't it? Man, when I hear it, to be honest with you, you ain't rapping like everybody else. You talkin' about somethin', man. And that's really a old, that's a, to me, a old school way of doin' it. It come across to where it's organic, and it can help somebody. All right, right, right. That's important to me. You gotta message. Yeah, it's gotta message, and it's somethin' that can take somebody somewhere. All right. And that's important, you know what I mean? For me, I mean, because we all got our opinion. No, definitely, definitely. Music played an impact on me. The musicians I listen to, you know, they influenced me. So even though they spoke negativity in some rap, I heard the positivity in two, you know what I mean? So I differentiated the two and learned from both of them. You know what I'm sayin'? Both sides are the good and the bad of the rap industry, so. And when I listen to you, you know, cause I know the Atlanta sound, it's different, man. It ain't like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I get that, I get that. Yeah, no, no, I ain't like that. I listen to everything and all that, bro. I know I'm checking it out to see, you know, who he sound like. Cause that's usually what they do. They ain't gonna say that, but that's what they be doing. He sound like this, but you don't sound like nobody that I, you know, I could put them up. Yeah, that's good. You know what I'm sayin'? You got a unique sound. Yeah, that's what I'm sayin'. Like I said, man, the song Chaucer, that's what really flipped it off for me. Cause I, well, I heard the Boosie one first when I seen him down there with you. When I seen Chaucer down there with you. And then when he showed me that song y'all have together, the one y'all down there working on, oh yeah. I got it right here. I got it in my phone, I got it. But the thing I'm sayin' is that song, man, another banger in essence can help somebody. And that's what I'm on. So you on the same thing, I'm on, really. Yeah, definitely, I wanna have a message in my music, not just all, you know, about negativity. When I speak, I watch what I say will come up my mouth. You know, I know I gotta put that good energy out there to get that good energy back. So you know there's power in your words. Definitely, definitely. Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's power. Like when you say something, it really becomes you. And I've seen that with a lot of different rappers for sure. And negative impact. You know what I mean? And they don't know the power of the words that they speak. Correct. And some of them don't care. At least you do care. You know some of them don't give a damn. Definitely, I have knowledge of it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So when you first started out, how did you end up going to the studio? And how did I unfold? Man, I had actually violated on my last federal sentence that I was doin' the rest of my time federal supervision, I violated it. Going in and out of the state, just traveling. Yeah. Sat down that time while I was like, I was sittin' down at that moment one of my good friend, Deris. Okay, yeah, I see that. You and him got by, I done seen three, four songs. Now you don't like, y'all be workin'. Yeah, we workin', that's my boy. He had done his music thing. He was building his career and I kinda seen how he was workin' for him. You know what I'm sayin'? Like I said, I was lookin' for a way out. I was tired of bein' in the streets, tired of goin' back and forth for, you know, bullshit, to be honest with you. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And it got to the point where I knew I needed to make a change, you know what I'm sayin'? I was ahead of myself and my peers. I knew mentally, you know what I'm sayin'? So I just knew I wasn't where I needed to be or where I was. So I took the time and the mind-friended, put it into this music, man, and take it seriously this time around and put my all into it. You know what I'm sayin'? Don't go halfway with it. You know, it is what it is. I'm out here and it's full time for me. Already. So is there anyone else in your family who does music or where did you get that from? Oh, man, I can't think of nobody else in my family that do music, man. I heard my dad was a great writer as far as writing his penmanship with letters. My mom used to tell me he had good games, trickling and tellin' all type of stuff. So I guess it kinda came from a daddy's jade. I'm trying to figure out where it came from. Yeah, yeah. It had to come somewhere, right? Right, and the first time you actually thought about rapping or writing, how old were you? Oh, man, like I said during my first prison sentence, I was probably about 13. Wow. 12, I was in the YDC Youth Detention Center. Okay. Youth Detention Center, and it came to my mind in about rapping and writing and writing lyrics and, you know, I never got out and actually recorded them, but I was writing. Yeah, that's what I was tryin' to get to. Feedin' on tables. Hey, man! Don't play, man. That's what we doin' to. I didn't know they'd do that. What would you add? Bad fact, they'd do that. What'd they do that at? I was in the, you know, down here, I guess I had a little cat on it the other day. Oh, yeah, I seen him beat on tables. I was in there with him. Oh, they gon' beat them tables and rap, man. That's what they gon' do. You still got some? Right. I can't remember the little raps, but man, yeah, I still got all of them right. I still got all of them. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The thing I wrote, I do. Save, man. Hey, that, boy, you be isolated with time, too. That's all you want. Oh, man. Did you battle anybody in there? I never got into the battle rapping, man. Okay, just makin' some good, just hittin' the table. I was everything. And, right, was you writein' why you hittin' the table? Right, yeah. That's the way it go down. Yeah, just speakin' about what was goin' on in my mind and at the time and my life. That was basically all I wrote about and rappin' about. Yeah. I never got into the battle rapping. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Talkin' bout a little bit. That way in Atlanta and Miami and stuff, they don't really, do they battle rap like that down there? Them boy make good music down there. Y'all make good music, man. Right, they do, man. Like bangles, like, yeah. Yeah, they got it. They got it. Like, the boy just got that hip to him, that soul to him and it come out the way it is. That swag, I don't know what you want to call it, but yeah, it's definitely out of, and it's been there for a while, you know what I mean? I've always asked myself about Atlanta, like how they, I can seem like they may have the issues, but it seemed like some kind of way they keep the music goin'. Right, it's the foundation. It's just, it's still rollin' whenever, no matter what's goin' on, it seemed like they keep that, there's a respect there for it. I can go for that, definitely. You feel me, cause you see other cities, you know, like I'm in Dallas and you see the people and the way they move here and that unity, I don't, it seems from the outside looking in, like Atlanta got some type of, just a little more, maybe they have the backing or it's a discipline. It's Black Hollywood. It's Black Hollywood. Yeah, that's what they always call it. Yeah, being honest with you. Yeah, yeah, that's what they call it. There's a lot of A&Rs there, a lot of big labels there looking for talent, so it's like a hub for musicians, to be honest with you. But they had to grow into that, right? Oh, it did. It did. A lot of the pioneers brought it apart. Jermaine DePre, back in the day, OutKast, there's a couple other groups that's kind of just built and made that music scene possible for Atlanta and that's what it is today. Do you ever see that changing? Because I remember back in the days, it used to be like New York was the place where everybody was, where music was concerned and then now it's Atlanta, everybody's moving to Atlanta for everything. Right, yeah, I don't see it changing. You don't see it changing? No, no. Another city might take over? No, no, I don't see that. Texas? No, I mean, I don't see it as a competition either, but I think Atlanta has got a grasp on it. It's a lot of smart entrepreneurs in Atlanta, you know what I'm saying? That's good. They got their hand in things, you know. I think they know what they're going with. I think it only gets bigger, you know what I mean? And if anything, we help the father-in-city, South Carolina, Alabama, just kind of build up the same way. Where does PGF shot see himself in two more years? Two more years? Man, I just want to be ahead in my music career a lot further than what I am now, building steady prospering, steady going. I wouldn't mind having a platinum song. Oh, really? You got to speak it into existence. Once you say it, it's going to happen. Definitely shooting for that, performing, doing tours. I want to be out here in the music industry, really doing it. Yeah, you've been building that catalog. You've been working. I ain't got no letting up in me. Yeah, I see the videos, Chris, I see why now too. The videos be right, man, I love the visuals. I don't know. Right now I feel like in music, if you ain't got the visuals right, it is. Right, right. The visuals got to be right, man. You got to give them what you're talking about. Let's see what you're talking about. What inspired that manipulation, man? Oh, man, that was a lot of hurt. Okay. A lot of distrust, a lot of disloyalty, a lot of misunderstanding. Yeah. That's why that song, honestly, man, between everybody, I think I made, I did the song myself and I sunk it over to him, he heard it. I think he felt it, in my voice, he felt it, the pain in my voice. And he was like, shout, send it to me and all. I felt it in his voice. It was like, yeah, yeah, yeah. When he sunk it back to me. Yeah. And it was all like, almost like we was talking to each other, but you know what I mean? You could tell. It was real. Y'all got a chemistry. Yeah, we do. The way y'all, you know, the singing comes in the way he does his thing and you do your thing, it's a chemistry there. Right, right. And it's only gonna get better. It's kind of like Pimp and Burnham, when they are outcast, you know, when you keep doing something all the time, cause y'all working together. Y'all be working, man. That's my guy. And since we on Boss Talk, we'll go and tell the truth about it in the song completely. I made the song, I think, I felt like me and him had, he had a situation with all his life. I think they had a shot at his truck. And I think we kind of went distant from them me and him as a friendship and we were always tight, you know what I'm saying? And me not knowing the incident had happened, you know what I mean? It took for him to call me and was like, shout, you ain't hear about what happened. Wow. Right? And honestly, I didn't. Yeah. I mean, I was there the night that it happened. I didn't hear about it, I didn't have no knowing of it. And I think he felt that. And then you could tell him his music, like when his verse came that, you know what I'm saying? The shot of my truck, you know, you didn't even call, I think he felt, you know what I mean? And it was just like, okay, we got it out. We got past it. And we embraced each other in that song, you know what I mean? Man, that's deep though. A lot of people can't get past small issues. They make the issues bigger than they have to be. And I like that, bro. And that's one thing that we teach on here. I'm always talking about bringing people together. So that's heavy. And not to make a misunderstanding and getting in between two people because I've heard so many people telling me that they're upset with someone. And I said, well, does that person even know why you're upset or even know that you're upset? You know what I mean? Right, right. That's what the situation was. Exactly. It was a complete misunderstanding. Yeah. We handled it well. You know what I mean? That's me. I'm glad he picked up the phone and called you because a lot of people wouldn't even do it. Right, straight up. Straight up, straight up. Yeah, because that will be working, man. That will be trying to keep you alive. Exactly. Conditioned. And that's what was going on. I know. So when it comes down to music, man, I know... You say it was UGK that really, really influenced you? Was it... I'm not not just UGK. Man, I was influenced by a lot of rappers. That's what I want to know. Trick influenced me. That's me, T.I., G.Z., Boosie, man, who else is that a name? And Master P. Master P? More than any of them, to be honest with you. I just had K.L.C. on here. So yeah, you know, the drum major. And I heard them Master P story, man, them boys grinded, man. When they were hot, they were working. They outworked everybody. Right, right. And that's what it take, good work ethic, man, it take you far. That's why I say I like what I see and what you're doing. Appreciate it. Who would you like to work with in the future? I was about to ask that. You got me. I got some people you wouldn't expect. I would definitely want to work with Bruno Mars. Okay. Really? Yes, man. That's different. Yeah, definitely. That's going to be a hell of a campaign. Any females you want to work with? Yeah, definitely. I like Milado. She from my hood. You know what I'm saying? I definitely want to work with her. Even past that Cardi B. I like Cardi B. Okay. Yeah, that'll be heavy, man. Like I said, yours different, bro. See, when I listen to your music, now I'm expecting a message. Right, right, right. I'm just being real. Like a lot of them, you listen to it for a club or just to hang out and have a good time. But when I listen to yours, I'm looking for a message. Certain people, you can look for a message in their music. When I think about a message, I think about because your name, what your name stands for. So I'm thinking that you need to always be given messages because of your name. Okay. Most definitely. Yeah, so the new project, what is it all about? Oh man, it's gonna be what you want. It's about messages, man. This new project is called Immunity. Yeah. It's hosted by my man, Bigger Rankin. Okay. And man, this speaks about, it's back to what you own, man. It's all about messages. I don't think it's probably a lot of club songs on it at all, man. It's all about this heartfelt music, serious music, trying to express myself on this myself. You know what I mean? I got like different projects for different things. And I think this is one on one. I just want to express how I feel and how I want immunity from everything that's been done. You know what I mean? I did a lot of wrongs in my life. I just want to be immune from everything, you know what I mean? That's nice. Yeah, immune from the hate, immune from the evil spirits. Just, I just want to be immune to it. Don't bother me. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, cause it, man, I'm telling you, man, the mind's something else, man. Everything starts in the mind. I was just about to say that everything starts in the mind. You have to condition your mind. I always tell all my friends, I always tell everybody, because that will come at you every single day for you to react in a negative way. But you have to turn that negative thoughts, cause people act like they don't get negative thoughts. Cause we can talk about even like preachers or pastors or anybody. Some people put them up on a pedestal. Like they're just perfect, but we're all human beings. So we all get negative thoughts. It's just you have to turn that negativity in a positive way. Correct. You know what I mean? Just stay out of trouble really. Yeah, yeah. Just look at me. You'll see that. Just stay out of trouble, really. So it's everything, how real is everything, man? How real is everything? Yeah, yeah. I've seen the video, nigga. I mean, I've heard something. I've heard something, I ain't gonna put it like that. No, no, no, yeah, it could be. It's like a movement. But I do understand and I do know fellas that have graduated from these streets. You know what I mean? They went on to do better things that's not involved with criminal activity that take that something on the heart. I'm like, yeah, it got me everything. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like a graduation song. It looked like you having a good time, man. You convinced me that you might oughta go in the actin', nigga. You know what I'm talking about? Right, right. You had me enjoyin' myself. I'm like, yeah. Yeah, give me a, yeah, I'm goin'- He's cut out what he does. Yeah, yeah, yeah, he's got to entertain as well. Definitely got to entertain as well. Yeah, no, no, it was a good time, man. I love good music videos. I love them to the fact where, especially when they look like a movie. Yeah, man. Those are the ones I enjoy more. Not just like the classic music videos that I've seen. I love to see ones that look like and have a story that hasn't- Y'all gotta shout out on Drake Hanna's and I'll take Pix ATL for that work, man. Oh, that's what's up. That's my film for Tiger Crew, man. They put in that type of work. So they get the credit for that. And that was your image. That's how you want it. Right, I definitely have a big input in directing a lot of my videos, definitely. But they play a role with me. Yeah, yeah. I was putting it together. They create the masterpiece. I just put it out there. Yeah, yeah. Do you ever think about doing any that you might need a stunt double for? Right, yeah. We got a Narko's movie coming up. Narko's in line. That's what I was about to ask you, so. Yeah, yeah, we working on that, trying to get the foundation of that off the ground. Yeah, so you gonna get into the movie scene. You want to do your stunts yourself? I wouldn't mind. Man, that ain't no joke, man. You have a lot of jacket change on the folks, man. Was Steven Seagal in all of them? Right, right. Man, the folks be looking, what's that boy you be, what's that one you be looking at? That old, they lying, and they ain't doing all them tricks like they say. Van Damme, that's the nigga, yeah. Oh, I don't like Van Damme, I don't like Van Damme. That was when I was a kid. That was when I was a kid. That was when I was a kid. No, but it's so crazy, because even looking at him when you're a kid, you loved it, but now as an adult watching them, you're like, nah. Yeah, they break a lot of arms, man, him and Steven Seagal, but they show act like they really got a, yeah, you be, I catch every now and then. He's all right, yeah. So you gonna get into that acting like that? But it ain't go, some action? I'm into it, yeah. I'm all up for action and acting and all, yeah. Are you gonna do classes? If that's what it takes. Oh, you go on auditioning. You ain't bigger than auditioning. Hey, if it that what it take, I'll try it for a role sometime, you know what I mean? What's that was talking about the other night about auditioning? We spoke to Fat Pimp. Yeah, yeah, I'll tell him. Because he acts and he was saying that acting is actually harder than the music industry. Right, I can see that, I can see that. Yeah, maybe because he's been, he said because he's been doing the music so long, it comes so natural. Now you have to really study and you have to really put all that effort into the acting part of it that he's not used to. Right, right. Have you ever seen like a movie directed and the whole situation unfolds? I watched it, I watched it. I'd like to see that, I'd never seen that. I watched it from behind. How different is it from a, it's like a big video? It's a lot of takes. You see what I'm saying? You know what I mean? A lot of takes, a lot of angles. The one that you watched, how long did it take them? That was like a six month process. Well, that's what I was thinking. That's what I was thinking because that's a lot of work, man. Right. There ain't no game. Yeah, that's a lot of dedication. I ain't thinking of doing that in that long. I'm thinking of something like a short film. Short film. That's what I'm saying. I think that'll be dope. Yeah. How long does a short film take? I don't know, but I remember back in the day, like I remember Gucci and a bunch of them dudes, even just a little stuff in the neighborhood where people would see people, you know, on the DVDs. You know, we can bring some of that back in this era and captivate the moment. Yeah, it's going on now with them comedians, Desi Banks and my man's out of, forgot his name, other guy, but they doing it right now with a short film. I be tripping. A lot of people are talking about short films a lot. It doesn't take that much time. But I be tripping because I'm like, okay, the way that the money moving, and I get it on the, cause a lot of people, you know, they're rapping, but they ain't really making a whole bunch of money. We know that. Right. They just, they rap it, you know what I'm saying? But they don't know how to get that flow. You know what I mean? I'll be thinking about like the mixtape era or how can we get that back, you know, far as in a way to where you can control your market. You know what I mean? Right. That's where I need to go. It's impossible. And it's crazy that you talk about that. I was just speaking with a friend of mine, that's out here. He's into NFTs and I think that's where it's going. That's why you being able to control your own stock. That's it. That's coming up. And I was thinking about like I said, even the short films and stuff, those are ways to captivate, you know, captivate the get the finances back in under control in a sense. Correct. If you do it right. Am I right? Definitely, definitely. If you do it right, you can fold some stuff because your creativity is something else. Right. You know, your creativity can over exceed what the masses is doing now. Definitely. You see where I'm coming from but you got to think outside the box. Because if you don't, you're going to be stuck in the box. You're doing the same thing everybody else is doing. So you're going to get the same results. That'll be different. Real talk. So man, thank you for putting that song together. What inspired that boss talk? Yeah, yeah. Stop playing with me, man. Why are you doing something like that, man? I said a little bit. Wait a minute. I said, I feel like I got pimped. I ain't going to lie to you, my nigga. I said, man, I didn't get pimped. The nigga done pimped me. No, man. The nigga come out with the song before he comes. I did the song already and then I found out your podcast was called Boss Talk. I was like, damn, let me put this behind you. Man. Let me put this behind you. I said, man, I'm going to use this song, man. Yeah, because even just what you were talking about and parts of it, we were like, hold up. He killed it. I sent it to about five, six different people. Man, you need to hear this nigga. I didn't even have to ask the nigga. The nigga didn't have to work it. Yeah. That's what I'm saying. It's just your work ethic, man. It definitely goes notice, you know what I mean? I see it, man. And you can tell the criteria of it's different than what you see a lot of people doing. Because a lot of people, they over saturating this market, you know that. Right, right. So, and a lot of them suck. Yeah, I agree with you. No, no, no. It's a bunch of trash out there, boy. I'm talking about, I get it. It's in my damn. Right? It's in my damn, but I respect because I know they can grow. Definitely. I don't leave them in my damn, though. Right, right. But they're gonna come out. I know they're coming. I'm praying that they come out. You don't have to. I'm praying that they come out the damn, man. We want to see people get better. So, do you mentor some of these little rappers or anybody that you can help any of them? They need your help, brother. Man, I got a bunch of young family members around me that I helped. You know what I'm saying? I wouldn't say in the music industry because I ain't got my young guy on double R. Okay. Yeah, he doing the music. You could say that I mentor him. Yeah, he's one of the ones I'm trying to build and mold and get ready for his music industry. Just preparing for the thing that's gonna be thrown at him. You know what I'm saying? Because I'm watching him be thrown at me. So, there's some things he can look out for. But I think I'm just a mentor to my whole family and my whole team in a totality. I think I'm one of the ones that just kind of keep everybody short when we all, you know what I'm saying? Look in other ways. So, I was looking at TrackMe featuring Pop Lord. Who is Pop Lord? Pop Lord, one of my homeboys out of Atlanta, he's a well-known artist. Yeah, because I hadn't been up on him. I ain't gonna lie. When I rock, I'm like, okay, I'm gonna try to check him out. But he ain't a little different with his delivery, but he legit, honestly. But I've been fucking with him for a minute, man. I called him, asked him to come do something, pull it right up, called him to do the video, pull it right up. It's like one of them summer bangers. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I liked it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, y'all, they go again. They out there with, boy, they got some visuals for you, but they going in, you know? I like it though, man. I think that just shows your creativity when you ain't just throwing something together. You really putting some thought into what the process of the visuals, you know? But I be true, like I said, I think, I don't know. I got to this place where I feel like content was so important. I feel like content was over-create. Like you just, like you gotta have it. Yeah, I had it. Because everything you do is in a situation where everybody, they don't even, they looking, they looking. These some looking niggas, man. Nah, nah, dude, seriously. These niggas looking. They wanna see. Oh, they looking, man. Like, like, yeah, they all through the night looking. Yeah, you gotta give them something. You know what I'm saying? Give them something to see. These niggas is looking, man. I'll make sure I get something. These some looking niggas, man. Yeah. Yeah. So what's up, you wanna go through that top three? Let me ask you one question first before we get to that. Okay, I know, I ain't going through it. So you seem like you're very level-headed and business-minded. And doing the business that you do, do you have time for a family? Do you have a wife or a girl? I knew she was gonna go there. I definitely have time for a family, man. Do you have? That's a priority. Okay. Because it's so hard when you're so busy to find time for that. Yeah, you find time for things that are important to you. That's it. Regardless. I don't care how busy you is, how much money you get. You gonna find time for what you really love and what you really into. So that ain't never been the problem with me. I coulda even think off about my kids. Oh, really? Do you have a wife or a girl? I do. You do? That's what's up. How is it? Because I have a lot of people who have the hardest time. Balancing. Balancing their work life with, especially the business that you're in, where females might be throwing themselves at you or in your DMs and stuff like that. How does she handle the jealousy where that party's concerned? It's a work in progress. I'm being honest with you, not easy, but I'm blessed to have one that's supportive and at least give me that leeway and trust me enough to know that I'm out here trying to handle and make a way for our family to not stress him out and not worry him while he's out doing his business. With her giving me that leeway, I think it kinda makes me kinda treat myself better and make sure I don't violate her in no type of way while I'm out here. You know what I'm saying? Give me that respect. I think I need to give it back to it. You got to. That's good. And cause I always think about communication. Like I always tell the guests when they come on us, communication is key. Not hiding anything and trying to put everything out there. You know, have that open relationship with the person. That also helps. I'm not sure exactly. Definitely helps. You always gotta be honest. You know what I mean? Open about what's going on. But hey babe, I'm going out. It's gonna be me and 12 girls. Yeah. Exactly, exactly. Yeah, but that take a chemistry man. That take time. And it's gonna be some bumps and bruises is me and you will know. But at the end of the day, what is, what is named, how does the initials for his name go? Putting God first? I think that's the most important part. I love the initial. I love what you have. Cause we always say we put God first. God is always in the middle of our relationship and everything that we do. Because in order for you to succeed in anything that you do, you have to have him there. So that's why I love what you, what those acronyms stand for. Oh yeah, man. Like I said, man, you was heavy when I seen that little boy. You was combing his hair on the damn video. Right, right. You ain't see no nigga comb, no nigga on the video. Was that your son actually? Your son actually. No, no, nobody ain't putting nobody's hair on there. They ain't comb, niggas don't even go. Why your mama hat? You know I'm talking about that. You know I'm telling the truth, nigga. Why your mama hat, you know? Tell your mama to comb your hair. But no, not you. You giving advice. You doing it the right way. And I try, I do my boys hair. So after that, thank you. I put both of them right here. Hell, we got a video right after I looked at your video when Charleston was down there with you. I came right in here. Then I brought both of them up here and we sat and talked and all behind your video. I'm telling you. I'm being real, bro. I came up here with no guests, with nobody on the show but me and my sons. And we said it, there you are right there. That shout out to Malachi. Said behind the counter doing nothing on that damn phone. But yeah, that's what we came up here and we sat around and I told him about the video and I told him, I said, man, you know what? I'm gonna shout you out actually. That was what I had planned on doing. I was like, man, I love the fact that this dude really, really went in. I was surprised. Boosie didn't have one of them kids he got on there. You know what I mean? I think that's how he was going through something with the kids. I tell you man, they won't stop. Now I met Boosie. He's full of energy, man. And if he's on his mind, he gonna say it. So he just like, just say what he mean and just say it and that's very outspoken. Yeah, he is, that's what I'm talking about. So what about? But I love the generation that we're in right now where father's doing more of things with our kids like combing their hair. Not only doing it to a boy, I've seen even on the social media, fathers be combing their girls, their daughters hair. I do, I got one dog. Okay. I know back in the days, that wasn't shown at all. People wouldn't even show that part of them. No, they wouldn't. So I love the way how things are changing where that is concerned showing fathers being more of a father and taking that role on and showing that it's okay to do this. Oh yeah, it definitely plays a big part in the child's life growing up. Having your father, even having your mother with you. Your father definitely plays a big role in a little boy's life. Yeah, exactly. I do believe that. I totally disagree, sorry babe. I totally disagree when I hear a woman, and I don't think I've ever said this before, but on here, but I totally disagree when women say, I am both mother and father to this son. I don't know. You know what I mean? Because when a boy reaches a certain age, they need a man to show them how to be a man. And not be, because I've seen that so many times, especially when mothers, they are fathers, they come around and they're like, oh, I'm the father. I'm the one who did this, he didn't do that. But you're not raising them correctly. Not because somebody else's gonna show them, the streets gonna show them how to be a man, if you can't find somebody coming in and feed them, shoot, it's gonna happen one way or another. Exactly. So you come up and you, coming from dysfunctional type, your father was not there. He was- My father was in prison. In prison. For a good part. I never knew him for a good part of my life. Folks who were randomly, sporadically throughout my youth, and before I really got to know him, he did pass away. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, mine passed away too. But did you have a male role model in your life? Man, my uncles, man. Shout out to them uncles. The uncles, they was in the streets. They's in the streets. You know what I'm saying? They did the best they could with me, and I salute them for that, you know what I mean? Man, I don't know, from Magic City, what's that other one over there, boy? God, no. Blue Plain, that's the hole in the wall. I went to that place. And I went to that, did they close? They ought to be live down there too. They ought to be live down there. Three floors, it was. I went over there too. They closed it down? I believe they're doing something with maybe remodeling. Yeah, I mean, y'all, that's what they do down there. When I go down there, when I used to be in that city, I'd go straight to just be at the strip clubs. I didn't need more. That's it, that's it. That's what they, I was going to Stroker's, man. I'll never forget it. All right, Stroker's still there? It's still there. Yeah, it ain't went nowhere. Man, that thing right there, I couldn't leave, man. I was down there, I'm stuck at Stroker's, man. I had a, but I met a group of girls named Digital, man. Digital tried to sell me $40 piece, time three. Yeah, that was about it right there. I said, that's too cheap, man. That's too cheap. Right, it's a store right across from Stroker's right there. And I was over there at that store, she said, yeah, we call Digital. I said, y'all got a name for the group and everything. I'm like, it's wild in that little man, what are they working? I said, boy, I tell you, I ain't no way it's too late at night for this, man. So it's still open. Yeah, Stroker's still there. I think it was Goosebumps down there one time too. That's close. They closed that then. I remember all this stuff, man. I was down there, I used to go every year for my birthday. And I did Miami a little bit, but not like Atlanta. I like ATL, man. Yeah, me and my crew, we used to do club veterans. Really? Yeah, we know about all of them. Y'all, everything. Yeah, we know about all of them. We don't want them out. Yeah, yeah. So thank you for the merch too, man. We're gonna wear that merch. Yes, man, we're gonna do it. We all do it when you put something out and you're trying to push it, and I'm gonna be watching. So you gotta tell us what day so we can make sure we... We can throw it on all three of us, the co-host and everything. The kids too. The kids, we don't have none. He got small for the kids. I get them out of here, don't worry. Oh, okay. You show the whole family wearing it. Yeah, man, that's what's up, man. So top three artists of all time, Dead or Alive? Dead or Alive. Any genre, it doesn't have to be rap. It doesn't have to be rap. Oh, this is easy. Oh, this first one says easy, right? Let's see how easy. Number one. Michael Jackson. Okay, number one. Michael Jackson. And a lot of people say, why Michael Jackson? Well, I gotta ask this, why? I just always love Michael Jackson's spirit. That's why you wanna work with Bruno Mars. I got it right there. Just figure it out. So they got kind of similarities, man. Tupac. Tupac. Michael Jackson and Tupac always come back to back. Most of the time. The time for my third is gonna be pimp and treat. No, you can't have a tie. Oh, no. Choose one. You got it? No tie. We don't allow ties. No, you gotta make a choice. You said it's easy, so come on. Number three. Man, hold up, man. Look how bad he changed it. I know he changed it. Stop playing, man. Y'all better stop playing, man. Say, man, I'm gonna be honest with you, man. That boy was seriously real. He gets in there, he gets to work his way in all these, you know, a lot of people break him. Why chad butler over the other two that you had named just now? It was either him or Trick Daddy. It was either him or Trick Daddy. Well, why he chose him over Trick? Well, I think, I just felt, felt his spirit, his soul when I felt sad. When he wrapped, I just felt no more. I mean, I respect Trick, Trick, my dad. Yeah, you met Trick. You probably know him. Yeah, I met Trick a couple of times. Yeah. I never met Trick. I didn't either. That's it, boy. That's the killer for me right there. I didn't get to meet. I met Bunn because he here, I'd have seen him a few times, but I ain't never get to meet Chad and I can't go back and change it. I went to a couple of shows, but I wasn't aggressive enough. I messed that up. I met Nipsey. I done met a lot of people, man, but Bobby Brown, but I never met Chad. And that's the only thing that really mattered for me. You know what I'm saying? I need, I had some questions. I had he's a Leo on here last week. You know what I'm saying? Yes, he was with that UGK Posse. And so he knew the whole story. He gave his point of view. I listened, man. I was in school class. He loved him. His stories. He loved it. Yeah, and I ain't gotten out of one. See, I wanna ask him why Tupac, because I already know I love Tupac. Because Tupac is a great. He's just great. He's an influencer, definitely. Barry, his lyrics was amazing. Yeah, so how are you doing? How are you doing at Atlanta, man? When you, okay, a brother moved at Atlanta. He fresh, he just trying to get started. He jumped in the city. What do you do, man? How you come up, man? How you come up? How you come up, man? I don't know, man. Yeah, yeah, I'm trying to come up. Let's put him a team together, man. Better get it on. Fleetwood just done that. When he came through Evermoke on California, he stopped by. He said he was moving to Atlanta, but he was with Goodie Mod. He know all them cats, so he had a leeway. I'm talking about a nigga that just shop, just, hey, I'm here to come to Atlanta. You know what I'm saying? I mean, you wanna come to, see, you wanna touch that, you know, link with some people that's well known in the city, man. And kind of build your team from there, man. Build relationships with, you know, people that are like, I wouldn't come to Texas and try and just put it on. I'm gonna build a relationship with E. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Build a relationship with Charleston. Yeah. And we're gonna work as a unit, you know what I mean? Yeah, that's it. I think that's how that works. Yeah, her brother lived down in Atlanta. And her mother, we feel to be down there. When I come, I'm feel to holler at you. I'm an F.A. We gotta come pick up mother. Signing where you rode the red carpet. Oh, man, I'm coming to see you, man. Like I said. So, I see you have a team. And you talk about building a team. I know how hard it is to build a team, a team that you can rely on. All right. Is this your original team that you've always had? That's a good question. Day one. Really? Come on, I can't find no damn body, man. You are so blessed because it is so hard to find loyal people who are on the same level, thinking-wise. You know what I mean? I can't get no big body to build now. I got big Rob right here. He might be here this week, go on the next. I don't know. Somebody's snatching. That's good. That's good. In your family, I guess y'all got some kind of algorithm that works. Right, right. Maybe I'm out of gear with you, man. I'm listening. That's good. Because I don't take people everywhere. And when we get back, they get caught up in other things. Right. But they respect for when they go, you know what I mean? I mean, when we get back home, we all go back and do our different industries and work and businesses. But when it's time to come together, we don't know. Y'all get together for the business. So, because you look like, I ain't gonna lie from the outside, looking in. That's my favorite saying on the show from now on. Not at your dang house. I don't know where you live. But I can tell you, it looked like you got a damn studio because you come up with too much music. I don't know where the hell you be at. I was mad. I was really jealous. I wasn't mad. You and Charleston in the pictures was looking so good. Y'all video. I said, them niggas are doing me. No, I'm serious. Y'all niggas had the door. I don't know why y'all turned the lights down and put on all white niggas. We gonna have to try this. I said, they put on all white. Them niggas sitting in the living room. I think it looked like they was in hell. But I ain't lying. Them niggas were talking. Look at these niggas, man. These niggas really are inflexing. You know, I'm competitive. So I'm looking. Right, right. These niggas got a damn studio down there. Yeah, we working. So, I mean, is it just that easy though? Like, is everything at, like, fingertip? I mean, yeah, it ain't nothing to make a call, man. It ain't just can't reach. Yeah, definitely. That's hot, man. Networking. You just have to know the right people. Definitely. Yeah, yeah, so is it a certain... How do you process the music, man, like in the studio? As far as I'm watching. Punching, or you... It all depends on how I feel and how you feel. Some days I may just go and just go and then some days it's just punching in, but I'm thinking thought process. And then some days I'm just, like I said, in my basement, I'm just recording randomly. So it differentiates. Definitely. How often do you get inspirations for new songs? Oh, man, almost every day. Every day. I thought so. Every day. Every day. Yeah. You just started thinking about something. You're like, oh, there it is. I got a bunch of good characters around me. So every incident they'll do, a thing that happened within that day or maybe, you know, just put a song in the girl. That made me just happy. Yeah, I'm trying to figure out how that ball start came together. Yeah. Because that was quick, man. I said, isn't it good genius? How long ago did you start on that song? And I'll be honest with you, it had to be something that was heaven sent because not long after I made the song, he reached out, man. I was like, that was excellent. I mean, balls taught me how to make songs. It was good. That's what they do when they run a touchdown, baby. It was divine. It was divine. That's it, man. A lot of prayer going through it. That's when you know it was meant. Man, I thank God for that, bro. That's good. You look, I'm praying, you really helping me to see my prayers work, bro. Oh, no, the spirit is real. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because I mean, we pray, and like I said, Charleston, he was just sitting there at that counter and he was like, he showed me that song. And I was like, man, I gotta get him down here. Because I already had, I told you that when I listened to your song about just a little boy, I didn't know that was your son. Hey, shout out, that can't, that gonna be something else, man. But yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But when I listened to it, I'm telling you, bro, you inspire me to bring my sons up here to the stove, get away from the house. You know what I mean? My son, my oldest son was here. He left a little bit when y'all was coming. He had to leave and go do something. But he told himself, but I was like, man, let's go. He drove up and we just sitting here and vibed out, man. So I appreciate you, man. Real talk. Handsome little boy. Thank you. Handsome. Yeah, yeah, so if you could go back and talk to the 15-year-old, 16-year-old you, sitting right there, what would you say? To tell him how to prepare for what he's about to face? Oh, man, best to tell him to avoid all peer pressure, man, for people trying to persuade you to do things you don't feel comfortable with, man. A thing that you feel, you know that ain't right. You know what I mean? I think it would help if he had that advice from somebody to tell him to look out for that. Yeah. I mean, look out for that person trying to tell you to jump in that car. Yeah. Look out for that person, tell you to hold this while he ain't gonna do that. Look out, you know what I mean? Just having that advice, that simple advice. So he be like, oh, my dad told me about this. Nah, uh-uh, I'm cool on that. You can go ahead and know to go the other way. Yeah. Because he got that advice. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But as a young man, I know men and women are different, but as a young man and, because I've heard some people say, oh, even if somebody told me at that age, I wouldn't even listen because I was just too much, too hard headed or too this or too that. Do you think telling these kids nowadays something as simple as that, that they would listen? Uh, I think it's definitely about delivery. I think it's about who it comes from. And even if it don't come from the right person or the right time, because like I said, my mama even tried to tell me, but he called up with me and I came to realize everything she's saying was right. So eventually you're gonna, it's gonna recycle in your head and it's gonna, she beating it in your head. It's gonna catch up to you that. Because I always feel like you people have to bum their head. Yeah, definitely. Some people learn the hard way. I was one of them. Yeah. My mama told me about things to look out for when I still, you know what I mean? And if I would have got it from a man to be like, hey, the nigga, it probably came out different. So it's gonna deliver. See, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's real. Because my daddy, I still, he died, but I never talked back to him. It was something about him. He didn't play like that. Yeah. He didn't play. Yeah. A nigga going inside my head or something. And he told me, he said, I'll break your neck. See, that's why we like to talk about these topics like this because we use our platform to educate people who are watching, kids who might be watching so that no, somebody might not walk up to them and tell them that, but they hear you saying it and they're like, you know what? I'm gonna do that. You know what I mean? Right, right. So that's what we use our platform to do to help people who are watching and trying to do positivity, really. Yeah, you're gonna have to, you're gonna keep, you're gonna, hey, the tour and hey, everything opening back up. You know, Atlanta, y'all never did. They didn't ever close down there. Right. But I was the weirdest thing. These niggas don't close like everybody else did. COVID-19 when nothing of them boys down there. I said, man, these niggas party down there. I seen that versus thing with Gucci and G. I said, these niggas put them niggas jam-packed in there. Ain't nobody got no mask on, Harley. Were you there? Nah, I wasn't there. Yeah, I said, yeah, they doing they thing down there. So I, you know, in Texas, you know, we shut it down. Right, I know. Oh yeah, we shut it down. Yeah, we ain't go out like that. No, no, we wasn't like y'all. See y'all, y'all bold. But Texas was the first ones to take the mask off. Say, I'm gonna say it. No, no, no, no, we didn't take the mask off. We pump faked on that. That was just a pump fake. We'll do that every now and then. We didn't take the mask, the black folks did. And you know we didn't take our damn mask. Matter of fact, you see that woman there earlier? Yeah, that mask, that mask tight on her face. And she already took the shot. I ain't took the shot, but it's on y'all. Y'all do your thing. Right, right, I ain't got no shot on me, but it's all right. No, y'all do your thing, man. I'm gonna stay over here with that. What do you think about that, man? I hate to put y'all on the spot on this. I think it's too early for me. That's what I think too. I think it's early. You know, how long you usually take them to do something like that? And how quick they got it out to us? I think it was rushed. I definitely think it was rushed, I pray that it helps and saves lives. Man, I hear some stories, bro. I got a lot of friends, you know. Five took the shot, five died. I heard, I mean, by people that work on the medical and the police staff that go out, they told me these stories, man. They ain't got a reason to lie to me. But when you look at the masses of how many people it probably helped compared to how many people did, a lot of people taking it. It's more than bad. But what I look at with certain things, okay, back in days when you were younger, we all got immunizations, you know what I mean? So when all of those immunizations came out for the different things that they were trying to cure, we didn't have social media, we didn't have all of this publicity. All right, so we don't know. With all the awareness, so you don't know how many people back then died, because every single immunization or anything made by man have side effects, you know what I mean? She told you. I haven't taken it either, but I'm just saying. Listen, my nigga don't do it. Hey, let me ask you something, let's move fast. The white, man, why are you wearing all this white all the time, man? Like, is why you be doing me like that? Oh, man, the fleas, the fleas and negative energy, man. That's real, because I see you wearing, I said boy, wearing that. So is that what you wear all the time is white? All the time, every day. So you the male Lisa Ray? If that's what you want to call me. You know, that's all she used to wear. All white, Lisa Ray, yeah. We met up a couple times, that she was up there, all white. All white, she would always up top, up top. All she would wear is all white. Yeah, definitely. Man, I never thought about that, that is deflecting the darkness. Yeah, I might have to put my white on. I used to wear, you remember, yeah, y'all got a white side in the closet. Yeah, I might be all right with you. Can I, I'm gonna get my white on, nigga, I'm jumping in the tree. How often do you have to go shopping for white? Cause people can't always take care of that white all the time. My whole closet is white. But how often do you go shopping for new? Because it don't stay white all the time. Right, when I'm out and about, I just, I snatched it up. Is this randomly? You like to say you snatched it up all three times? Boy, I caught that, the niggas. And you can't find white all year round. He snatched it up. Difficult, you know what I'm saying? Well, like I said, when you just, you got back stock of white, it works out. You like that white. Ain't nothing wrong with it, brother. I used to do it, I used to kill them, nigga. Are any of the kids the same way? I've been getting my son, he's on to it. He loves what I'm doing. So he's like, I don't know about white, too. I don't want my two white. Daddy, this got black, this ain't, you know, so he kind of catching it, you know what I mean? Wow. That's cool. How many kids do you have? I got five kids. You saying like that, if I got four? He making stuff, he's making like a battle. I thought he was going to say 13, 14. We had some niggas in here, got a bunch of them? Hopefully not, you know what I mean? If I can support it, I wouldn't have one. There you go, I agree with that. How old is your oldest? My oldest is 12. And your youngest? My youngest is three months. Oh, yeah, so you're not done yet. You still got some more coming. Right. You still got some more. Yeah, that's cool. How many boys, how many girls? Four boys. One girl. Four boys, that's a good number. That girl going to be sport rotten. She is. How old is she? She is nine. Wow. She running things, too. You have boys running the family, don't it? Yes. I was about to say. Do you want more girls? No. Why? For one, I think. Girls are daddy's girls. Right, right. It would break her, if she gets a little older, maybe. Right now, it would break her heart, she was like. Oh, because of her? Why you don't want it? Oh, okay. Yes, yes. When we was up, this new one, baby, was coming. My daughter was just, you better not, you know. That's like what she said. Because she feel like that attention would be taken from her. Right. That's why. That was the way he was so happy. Is she a diva? She is. Yeah, yeah. That's the way they be. They start off, boy, they start at nine. Oh, you and the girl. When they turn about 15, though, they go tripping, man. Get them a car, man. Teenagers are totally there for you. Get them a car, man. It's not about you anymore. Why are you looking at me like that? She makes straight A's, though. My daughter makes straight A's. She behind the camera right there, she. She working. She ain't playing no games. You got to put them to work. Yes, you got to stay on them, man. I don't have to stay on them. She self-motivated. It's crazy. That's good. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Fascinating. Well, for me. For me. Don't play. Don't go right there, baby. Do not play. Do not play. Do not play. You know where it's from. Ain't that something, boy? You just gonna bulldog. You a bully. That's what you're doing. You bully me on the mic. So when you coming back, man, you're gonna be. First of all, how you like the show, man? Man, I love it, man. Man, this ball's talking 101, man. I love it. Yeah, and you know. Good vibe, good spirit. I love it. Five months. Five months. We just, and it been going. People coming in, man. And it's been a blessing, man. You know, we started it just to get people to come to the store, you know what I mean? Right. But it turned into something totally different and bigger. And people, I got three, four interviews tomorrow. I'm always seeing how something's going, man. Working the hell out of my family. I see it growing, man. You like it? You like it? By the grace of God. That boy, he said he already, he had this song, man. I put it right on in the slot. I said, yeah. Every time you get on here, baby, you don't know. I gotta, hey, I can go whatever way I want to go now. I don't have a lot of people to come, but that's all, man. When I heard it and I showed it to my wife, I was like, man, let's do something else. You know, pimp me, man. Okay, we kind of flipping that together at the same time. Wow, man, that's good stuff. God made it happen. Yeah, yeah, man. Thank you so much, man. We appreciate you coming on the show, right? Did you have anything else? No, that's it. KJF show, man. Man, you gotta come back through. Hey, man, how can people get a hold of you, man? Man, I'm PGF Show on every social platform, man. Twitter, Snapchat, Instagram, PGF Show. Yeah, I do. Twitter? I'm on Twitter. I get on there and talk a little bit. TikTok. Chat a little bit. I'm getting new to the TikTok thing. I'm on there. I got 24,000 followers. Yeah, I'm up there. I'm out there bad. I got 24,000 followers. Right there. I'm gonna put my daughter. And there ain't fake followers. My daughter got something going on. I'm a man huffing to work. Some type of range, man. That's them kids, the kids love TikToks. They put me on it. Yeah, they'll put you on it. You know your kids will put you on something, right? Definitely. But you know how the kids are. As soon as too many adults get on it, they move something else. They don't want to be on the same platform that grown folks on. They don't want to keep it for themselves. Oh, you lame as hell. Oh, you lame as hell to them. You mean adults, right? No, you. No, adults. Yeah. I'm the cool parent. You know, it's one cool. Right, right. And it's one, it's kind of lame. You know what I'm talking about? No, no, no. No, she, she both was lame. I ain't go, look. So, so what, what, so Dallas, you here for the weekend? Yeah, I'm here for the weekend. Hey, man. Hey, man, it's, Dallas, something else. Oh yeah, yeah. You got some platforms you feel to be hitting anyway. It's set up and touching skin. How'd you like the, you don't like that. You ain't with yet. Not yet, not yet. You gonna like it. Yeah, that's how girls, man. They do a good job. They been on. They, they love, hey, they love, they be like, E, what can we do for you? You always sending us good people. Say nothing. We just sending you what God sent us, right? That's the way we do it, man. Yeah, so when you frequent and come back to text, you got to come back on Boss Talk, man. Oh man, every time I come here, man. I promise you, you got to come, man. That's my work every time I'm here. Thank you so much, man. Cause we, we, hey, man, like I said, we started off small, but it's steadily, and like you said, it's growing and when people like you, if somebody come into Texas, do them in favor. Throw, throw, you bought a olive branch and say, hey, man, go hold that and check on my boy E. I got to. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like I said, I see it growing, man. Thank you so much, man. We, we just try to stay humble, man. And like I said, the store been there 15 years, but Boss Talk was something, and my wife put them on the, put the Boss Talk on the way we had to go to work. Right. Yeah. That's what's up. KJF, man, shout, man. Thank you so much for coming on this show, man. Thank you. Say, man, Boss Talk. One on one.