 Yeah, we on boss talk one on one, one on one. Yeah, we gonna talk. Well, what I was gonna say is, you know, when Boosie first came home, that video y'all did when he had that white on, then he had that white on. Yeah, nigga, I don't think I don't remember. Nigga, I'm too old to be here. Yeah, shout out to Boosie for the name show love. Remember that, that was early on, he had just come home. He had just came home. That was the first thing we did. You know what's crazy? So right before he got locked up. That's his number two. I'm going through his top three. Okay, so right before the week Boosie got locked up for that long stand he did, that what I think it was like four years or whatever or half a long that was, he did. That same week I was at his crib in Louisiana. In Baden Rouge? In Baden Rouge, I was at his house and we was working on some stuff that ended up getting the computer guy took because when the feds raided, it was probably some days late and what was messed up is I remember leaving this crib. It was late and I was tired and I was just like, I should probably get these files from the session. I can just get them up. You know what I'm saying? I can get them in anytime and I didn't get them in three days later. His place got raided. They did everything. Computer never gave it back. So never got to put it in that stuff. He did like remix the ice cream paint job. It was another record we did. Like it was just stuff he. I can hear them saying that. He's going to do a remix of that. Yeah, yeah. And oh, it's crazy because it's crazy how Boosie and three linked up and how they were and then how we were. Because Boosie was the first national artist in the industry period to embrace me. Like on tour, we went on tour and Boosie came up to be in just show me. He was rocking. Nobody had done that. Nobody in the industry. Yeah, man. I was always the one either approaching them or somebody would introduce us. But Boosie walked up to me, boom. You know what I'm saying? So it was the same way three was. You know what I'm saying? So when I saw them link up, I liked it. You liked it, right? Yeah, yeah. But yeah, not so when Boosie got locked up, I was like, damn, we didn't get to put the music out. But as soon as he got out, you know what I'm saying? I got in contact with my, I think I think he might have had the same old something. But as soon as he got out, we talked like maybe the same week. And he was just like, hey, what's up? Young did I was like, I got a record ready for you right now. It was built the block you have right on it. Then we end up shooting the video. It came to Dallas, you know what I'm saying? On his own, we shot the video. You just show love and we stay coming Dallas. Yeah, yeah. He was doing that early on. Yeah, exactly. As he loved Dallas. But the thing is, so with all the stuff that happened in Dallas throughout the last, you know, however long it's been, how do you see us getting past all of this? And just because we already moving forward, you know, time heals different things. Yeah, yeah, yeah. But bridging those gaps, you know what I mean? Like I said, I see a lot of stand up dudes that's really, you see some young dudes just rapping. And so it's a lot of people trying, but the city still need healing, man. What do you think? We just got to work. Time heals all, but you got to work and you got to learn from everything that happened. You got to learn from it, you know? And it's a lot of things that came over the city so even like, because Nipsey Hussle, that was a homie. That was a homie? And one thing about Nipsey, when he did pass, his energy went, Nipsey changed a lot in hip hop. Even here in Tech, everywhere, to where you see a lot of the people took on a lot of different mentality to be on some, you know, community happened stuff and that and you know, the stuff that he was on, a lot of people out here in Dallas was influenced by that. I saw that, you know, firsthand. With the three situations, you know, this situation, you know, the city got to learn from, you know, that's the only thing you can do from it. Is it a negative energy? Because when I talked to Darren Chief, he was like, it put eyes on the city. It did. It put eyes on the city in a negative way, but also in a positive way too, in one way because, I mean, Mo3 blew up worldwide through his debt, unfortunately, you know what I'm saying? And he was going there anyway so it ain't like that wasn't gonna happen. He was out, his next step was into the big light, you know what I'm saying? And that would have happened regardless. It wouldn't have took him passing for that to happen. So he was on that. Yeah, that was happening, you know, regardless, but when that happened, that happened. And I mean, at the end of the day, Mo3 made a lot of good music, you know? He was on his own topic and on his own energy, but to say anything, none the less, it was good music. Like as far as just the craft of the music, rapping, the flow, the melodies, the same. He brought, yeah, how he put it together, all that, you feel me? He brought that. So a lot of light got shed on that, that has created it to the city of Dallas that Mo3 gave. So, you know, it's a lot of ways to look at it. Overall, it's unfortunate.