 about it is a lot of people don't understand the experience of friendship and the brotherhood that you have with people. They look at the exterior part. But you know, you're not a part of them two, three o'clock in the morning phone calls that I was getting from this dude. When we talked about music, where he was one, when I was sampling his voice when he was in jail, right? Cause I wanted to pay homage to him and keep his name alive. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one. Yeah. I was a lot of... But okay, if you really look at the way Pimp was, you know, and the way that his whole legacy lays out, do you, are you guys happy with it? The way that everybody still shows him love and do you think he gets the love that he deserves? I think he can get more. Oh yeah. I think he can get more, but you know what? Pimp sees so deeply rooted, you just can't, you ain't finna miss it, man. No. You can't. He's an urban legend. Yeah, you can't do that. UGK as a group period, man. Yes. United States the whole world, you cannot miss them guys. You can't. And you get certain people, outcast, not the group outcast, a person that's an outcast. Correct. You know what I'm saying? They would try to dirty up the legacy, say certain shit, you know, because don't nobody fuck with them. But it's a reason why people didn't fuck with you. You know what I mean? Let me ask you this. Huh? We on boss talk one on one. Boss talk one on one. We some bosses. What the fuck is we talk about, man? I don't bring up bitch niggas' nicks. Okay, fuck. You know what I'm saying? I don't turn around and see the D bitch niggas, man. I'm sitting next to the legend, Mr. Lee on the track. Now he talking about it being influenced by UGK. I'm sitting here getting chill bumps, you understand? Because these are my pills, and this nigga's a pioneer. This nigga broke the mo, I'm an artist. You understand? So listen to the beast that I can't afford at the motherfucking time. Now I'm sitting there hoping, wishing and praying, and I'm about to steal one of these motherfuckers and mix tape this up. Nigga, this nigga broke the mo with his sound. And look how unbelievable he is, man. Yeah, to give it to who we go to. I mean, you know the thing about it is a lot of people don't understand the experience of friendship and the brotherhood that you have with people. They look at the exterior part. But you know, you're not a part of them two, three o'clock in the morning phone calls that I was getting from this dude. When we talked about music where he was one, when I was sampling his voice when he was in jail, right? Because I wanted to pay homage to him and keep his name alive. Yeah, come on. That's what my purpose was. Yeah. He knew that when he came out. So you sample Pimp in jail, why he's in jail? When he came out, he said, hey man, I appreciate you keeping my name alive. And then he hit the drum shit. He said, man, your drums is one of the closest to mine that I've ever heard, man. You know what I'm saying? Boys don't know what to do with your sound, man. The way you swing in the drums and the sabbath swinging in the drums going the other way that he was that in tune. He was rap, he was, man, we would be on the phone and do a put the beat on and start rapping on the phone. Come on, man. That's the type of stuff he did. And you know what it is, is the love for what he did. He loved it. And when you able to share that love with other people. That was hard. We don't get that. We don't get that. Now let me say this. He's right about that. Now you got those musical three in the morning conversations. Now me and Bobo got the motherfucking three, four hour of music, isn't that moving? And then they will wake you up and talk to you into the sun, come on. Yeah, we will do that too. Let's hold it. Let's hold it. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101.