 Don't get me wrong, my children have done some great things, but to see if she would have gotten scared or ran off, nobody would have blamed her. But she, somehow she knew, and I get emotional when I talk about it every time, somehow she knew if she didn't do it right, it was gonna fuck us up. The confidence she showed gave us confidence that it didn't fuck the, cause what could have happened was every artist would have thought down what if it happened to me. Yeah, we on Boss Talk TV. Shout out to Ihi, the reason you see me. Okay, so Super Bowl. Yeah. Say you get... Hypothetically. Hypothetically. Or speaking futuristically. You get invited to do the halftime show. Right. And that's all yours. Who would you bring on the show with you? What songs would you perform? I got it. See, here's the thing, here's the thing. When these are the type of situations, these kind of things have arisen before in my life, right? I've been given very, very big opportunities in life, and we've always tried to figure out who do we share this blessing with, right? I gotta bring in this, if that... I can't answer, I know she probably backed out like, oh my God, I know she backed out like, please don't save me, please don't save me. But that would definitely be a group decision. That would definitely be a group decision. Ms. Freeman. Who, if Bumbi gets to do this, let's say the Super Bowl come to Houston, right? They give me the Super Bowl, like they gave it to Dre and LA, right? They saw what I did with the rodeo hop, came ready to rodeo, right? They was like, okay, you've been able to fill up, give an entertaining show in the stadium before. Like, what part of that show would you present? Or what would you create for this show? Ms. Freeman. Who would we bring into the Super Bowl? Le Kiki, that's my boy. See, that's Bias. I was waiting for it, I was waiting for it. That's Bias, because Le Kiki is her favorite rapper. That's my boy. Le Kiki is her favorite rapper. He gave you a helping shout out too, when we came, and I'm gonna say this, we came up the day after y'all performed at the rodeo and interviewed Le Kiki, and boy, it was going down. We talked, he was so, you know, he showed us so much love. You caught him on the, he was probably still on the high. He was. He reached out, and he could've done something and made it all about him, and he gave an opportunity for, the city came out, man. Like, crazy. So who all performed? You, bud? Me, Slim, Bun, Z-Roll, Willie D, Flip, Pokey, Pow Wow, Latoya Lucky. Y'all shut that up. H-Town. H-Town? Knockin' the bootchip. Le Le, ESG, they brought him out. 70,000 cents. I'm gonna be, boy, I'm gonna tell you, baby, bitch, nigga, I'm for the talk, baby, little nigga, when I see you, me wrong for that, man. Mine can bring anybody out. That took us, what, about a week, Queenie, to really actually come off of it. I know, because it had never happened like that before. It had never happened, and up until showtime, we didn't even think it was gonna happen. Wow. It's the worst sound check I've ever been a part of. And not, not like the rodeo didn't have this shit together. We had so many moving parts. I had so many performers that night. They had never had to mic up that many people. 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20, 20... See, that's the first time they had anything like that. That's what I was sayin' when I asked Kiki out of the bottom of my singing, somethin' like that. They normally had a Peter Pablo, the little, I mean, you know, like, a flow rider. You know, called a B. They had called a B, but they don't have no, no gangster rap, nothin' of that magnitude, you know. So it was beautiful. You know, they was on your ass though. They say bun kind of opened it up for everybody. He did, it was bun show, wow. So that alone took like two and a half hours. And then just to get everybody's mic level and all of that, then we had to go up and start performing the music. Every run through didn't go through perfect. So at the end of a like, I would say four and a half hour sound check. We had nothing concrete to tell us this shit was gonna work in front of people. Wow, I never would have knew because it came off so good. And but if you were in the room that night, the first performer to come out was Lele, right? A pre-teen, right? The youngest performer of the group came out first and her sound went out and she kept going. She pushed through. We all got nervous and anxious for her. And she just stretched her fucking performance. She did what she was supposed to do. I had never been more proud of a child in my life. Don't get me wrong, my children had done some great things, but to see if she would have gotten scared or ran off, nobody would have blamed her. But she, somehow she knew, and I get emotional when I talk about it every time, somehow she knew if she didn't do it right, it was gonna fuck us up. The confidence she showed gave us confidence that if it fucked up, cause what could have happened was every artist would have thought, damn, what if it happened to me? That shit might happen to her in my show. Now you go into it nervous. Yeah, yeah. But she went through it like a motherfucking G. And so we was like, shit, if she can go through it, if the sound fuck up, we gotta go through it. We gotta go through it. We the pros, we the OGs. It set the whole tone for the night. Man. Everybody walked out like, I gotta wreck this hope. And they did. There's still, and it took days. Every morning we wake up and people with Texas, man, I can't believe what I saw. And then it hit YouTube, like on that second date. Oh, man, I seen it. And we saw it because we was in the, we on the stage. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, y'all can see it. It's totally different when you see it on YouTube. We saw it how they saw it. And I like, I like Bluetooth it, like from the laptop to the TV. TV, hell yeah. So we like made drinks. Yeah. I don't know if that's my cell phone. We went like, we would go to a concert. We sat down, we made drinks. I rolled up a couple of squads. And we sat there and watched it. And we were like, my God, look at this room. Man. And when them slabs came out, then people started screaming. And then we call other people, we call Kiki. Y'all right? Man, bro, I still can't believe it, man. I just saw this. Man, did you see what they did with this? And then you call ESG, you call Slim. That's history. You call everybody and everybody's like, man, I can't believe we did this. Everybody in the interview. Everybody in the interview. It's still driving, it's still alive. They love it, man. Listen, man. It's the 50th year of hip hop and nobody is celebrating us. And that's cool because we celebrate our love. Man, I see that in you, too. Is that my big thing? I'd be like, the sounds they just don't, they don't give us the kudos a lot of time. The country rap tune thing, I respect. For the rodeo, I was like, we can go get this person and that person. Queenie's like, no, no, we can just get Houston. I love that. Them people gonna love to see Houston at the road. She couldn't have been more right. We gotta get you out of here. I want to talk about the Trill Burger. I want to ask you a question. Ask what you want to ask, man. Go ask what you want to ask. I want to ask you a specific question about... And take your time. How do you make Piltwood feel about Trill Burger? I got to ask that. I think the only person that eat at Trill Burger's more than my wife would be Chad. I honestly believe that he would have sold, he would have felt like a personal stake, even if he had no financial stake. I think he just would have wanted to see me succeed. Yeah. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one, one on one. Yeah, we gonna talk.