 Hello, what's up? We are on twitch. We are not live, but you can leave a like comment subscribe turn on your post notification bells Let's continue to grow the family for Chicago to the UK man And before we even get into this man, I ain't even gonna lie to you Following presentation is intended for mature audiences contains graphic descriptions and crime scenes of crime scenes adult language Dialogue strong language view discussion is advice. I got to change these. I got new ones Today we're doing that today. I don't core if I conceptualize condone love while you see it you too. Come on now. Make me alone Let's get into this man. This is being born against Jimmy tippet This is a podcast. This is what was my liquid bullet productions Let me subscribe man. First of all, let me subscribe leave a like Because I practice what I preach believe that Let's get into this man. I was watching something they kept bringing his name up. So, you know, that's not why not So what's what that mean? If you're an engineering leader, you probably aren't thrilled when your finance team asks you I forgot to turn on again This is Welcome to a special edition of liquid bullet productions on Roy Vincent and I'm gonna tell you what special today This is my first interview for liquid bullet productions and I have a very special guest today He is the son of Jimmy tippet senior. He's a gangland boxing legend He's here today with us and he's also an underworld associate. He's very well known in the criminal and gangland fraternity He's also the author of the book on gangster. It's Jimmy tippet junior. Nice to meet you, buddy. And you mate That's all right. Absolutely pleasure to have you on and I've been trying to get you for quite a few months I know Johnny is I obviously I'm selling my mum's house. My mum passed away last year I was grieving and I was going a bit wild and a bit and trying to sort of get me head get together but obviously I moved away got myself sorted up north and Yeah, enjoy life all settled now and crack it on so as last week Very good. Yeah working. I'm enjoying that as a straight pal though And uh, no, we had some good people got some very good friends up here. My daughter lives up here. Lovely And it's nice. Nice. I'm back in the gym training and that so you're looking well I bet I'm doing my dad's book the real deal. So that's coming out soon, isn't it? We're really looking forward to that. I'm writing that with a best-selling climber. I called Julie Shaw 20 number one best sellers. We're hoping to get out in March. We'll have that out for you as well We'll advertise that for you. So she needs you got that up and done ready. Let us know and we'll we get that out for you But we're gonna jump straight in and tell us a little bit about your dad. We dad Everyone knows me dad. It's no big dad. He was like folks like legend. He is a legend He was best best dad in the world. He was like he was like to me. He was like Superman He was like he had a presence around him. He was Reminded me a lot of John Gotti. Really? Yeah, he Killed himself a certain way. He was always immaculately dressed and he had a lot He had tons of charisma. If he walked in a room, everyone knew he was in there Yeah, and they all stood up to greet him. Yeah, it was like it was like He's a great leader He's someone that people wanted to be Someone people seeing no matter you know of a movie star when it was with me dad I remember I was off school or it was a Saturday morning I want to be straight away with me dad because I felt like everyone was looking at him and I wanted to be just like him Yeah, yeah He spoke about him or mother your podcast. Yeah, he did yeah, and he dad was like mesmerizing. It was like he Had such something about him and it was all he was to do with the unlicensed boxing There's not wasn't he? No, he was a he was a professional boxer me dad He and then he got involved in the unlicensed fighting with these partner in Richardson. That's right. Yeah Yeah, he did get involved. They don't think they had their own boxing shows at the downham tavern in the 1980s. Yeah It's heaven. Yeah, don't oh my god. I remember going to the raves. Yeah Jack o Tony Wilkes in the DJ. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah them in the days when they are Brilliant days, but we're let's go to sort of dive straight into where you grow up, Jimmy Lucian and grew up on the ferry restate on the ferry restate. Yeah, concrete jungle Yeah, and just so we live next door to Jim Davidson the comedian really but then obviously in the late 70s Me mum she didn't want to live there. She said to me She was a lot younger to be dead and she said look love. I don't want to live on the council estate blah blah blah So they end up getting a nightclub in Bromley the old beavers Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, which was cool at the time. It was called talk of the county Well, I remember that bought that black club in Bromley a bit more road and then they bought a house their first house in hate There was living on a council was that what was y'all living on a council for if y'all can afford a club Like just because just because it was cheaper 42 by the Avenue. I met the guy that owns that now Robinson Mickey Chapman Mickey Chapman. Yeah, he well, it's his son. He's running. Yeah, one of his sons. He's running it. I think yeah Yeah, excellent. So where was your sort of growing up? Where did you grow up? So I grew up in A's Ken, but obviously the weekends I'd go down with that at the speed up, which is like the legal gambling club where they play kaluki poker Yeah, so I was I used to go spend my weekends down now. Wasn't that good I've done that with my we should call him pop It was my granddad he used to have them because we was all from the all you strung around a lot down the East Lane Yeah, they're near Warth Road. Yeah, of course. Yeah, and he had the illegal betting office in Manor Place Now we used to go down You know Peaky blinders like this is like a recap of peaky blinders like this stuff really be peaky blinders is based loosely on real stuff from the UK Yeah, it's Bob's wait. Yeah. Yeah, that's it. I remember yeah, we used to go down there and Those things I mean used to be feasts in them days. They should nick everything Oh, yeah, yeah, it's like a gun into Aladdin's cave when we use a gun to shot and all the boys are sitting at a green felt table In the background you should take bets for the He was doing he was he was marking up Tony Bell on the chalking up on the bold Yeah And then they had all right the Frenchies the Smiths from Deppford. They'll be playing Kaluke, they'd sit there and there was a what he Easterbrook He was it's only played a big part of my life on the he was the one who had to shoot out with the police Do you remember in 1987 B James? Yeah, and he got shot by the police and I know the she was shooting Yeah, yeah, but I grew up with Ronnie because he was always at the Yeah, so all my mates were going out washing cars for like all day long for a fiver and I'll be up the spill on a Saturday Just do a few teas and sandwiches. Yeah Ronnie go on one of the Smiths. They go, there's a score there Jim That's it. I'm not scoring like the eighties. It's like it's like I've seen that a good Money They cash me jumpers on all out of their little pinky rings on all their nice car And it was just that was what I think that was my sort of I don't know. It was my it was I felt like every out of good feelings. He's like being around all these villains And he would see them all up a snooker and then we're fucking about and obviously my dad would walk in and he was like He never would go quiet. My dad was like Paulie, you know, like he would have walking I don't know, but it was it was great great issues for me with the eighties growing up Yeah, I'm not in 70. I was I'm thinking you're about the same way you're 50 71. Yeah, you're yeah about the same age as me So I was in that area and you sound like you had a very much same life as what I did Oh, I did great. I mean my mum and dad don't I mean my mum she tried to determine from I love the spill. She didn't like me going up there being mellow sort of people But I thought because of me dad and his friends were I'd mix with their children. Yeah So and then obviously we weren't like if my dad was a bricklayer I'd mix around with other builders sons That's true. That's true. Because whoever your people is you're gonna mix around with their kids Product gear environment. Okay. That is what he was. It was all these friends were big like bosses and crime bosses So I'll mix with their children. Of course. You can't get out of it So yeah, so like my mother dad's friends with the great train robbers and like the Brinksman robbers and Charlie Richardson any Richardson So we'd hang around with their families. Yeah, but they say didn't they? So not only was your dad a gangster Everybody around them was known gangsters No, not little ones known big time Okay If it's in your blood, it's in your blood. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I know I sort of grew up with that same sort of thing But what was it like having a fuck? You know having your father figure like your dad who's well-known and popular in the underworld To be honest, it put me to my little fucker and you can I could do what I wanted, but This dude, let me move Let me get That's added on the platform. Let's move around to Maybe I can just get out the way But not okay, that's good right? Yeah, I can see me And then yeah, then you know friends of ours is Paul Stuckton and Johnny Lister as Yeah, but they just always look at I was always up to no good Always like to get me out of trouble. It's me trying to read the closed caption When I was a kid and that's so I always had it I could do it was I was given the keys to the city I could do what I wanted. Yeah, and like with no sort of it really took me a little bit naughty really because it Give you like sort of a license to steal it. They'd give you shit off a license. Yeah That's what I worry about with my daughter, man cuz like me is like Yeah, it's just being me like like she's gonna be like, I'm gonna go get my daddy and then she gonna really go get her daddy And a daddy gonna pull up And he's just gonna be me six to 250 all muscle From the rack from Chicago got Chicago artillery Looking back now some of the things I've done. I'm appalled of these ever since I've lost me Mom was a very hard-working lady and when she died She saw she she really looked after me and she's sort of she said an awful lot of stuff to me You know, I've wasted a lot of years down to cocaine and They see me like silly prison sentences being mad at wrong people and being used by obviously because of every name And what it can do for me, but no, I don't want a totally different life It's I love that I still go out. I've got a beautiful girlfriend And yeah, we have some lovely nights out in London. We travel the world, but it's I'm fighting life quieter now Yeah, you got a step away from it in your son's house. I don't make some criminals anymore I just paid a big pocket fine off which is proceeds of cry back that's been hanging over me for 10 years I've just paid that gets you that in a minute. Yeah What sort of age was you when you sort of realized you your naughty sort of age started? As soon as I was at that piece really Yes, I was always a naughty kid Did you start your sort of I think I said school it was like I remember that like someone up the spill you day Well, I see what you could do with that. They bug me like a soap bar, you know, like the old cannabis resin Yeah, it's sling it in the microwave for about a minute. He said play cut it into little chunks He said you'd be able to do them at ten as a chunk at school and he give it to me for free I thought and all the kids were going well for it. I thought Fucking hell. It's like I've been up the spill when I've heard like I've heard a bottle like just for like that too I'm just being you and I just found I'm 12 years old I didn't like and then obviously all the stolen gear would come up there or they give me the moody much ease And I'll just be like knocking it all out. It was like brilliant. I loved it Yeah, I know does it seem you it is quite an euphoric moment, isn't it? Yeah, and obviously they get and you start to get into designer clothes going out with girls and obviously I started boxing, but Boxing really for me at first it won't know it won't I had a talent for it Obviously was in my blood my grandfather my grandfather was a bare knuckle fighter And he spent five was a better knuckle fighter. I was a great I was a good little fighter, but I never liked the idea of being a super featherweight. Yeah, as I said to you I used to watch Mike Tyson. It was my idol for I want to be just like him and my dad said son You're a featherweight. You're super featherweight. I mean dad. No, he was son that listen, and I hated the word because I thought he looked muggy This is the same old like crime boxing and money UK man, that's the UK gangster for you Yeah The thing is looking back now. Let's see if I'll just say this in February. I don't look anyone out But yeah, you can't need to put weight on to try and get as close as I could to well Yeah, yeah, which was silly because silly because I couldn't win but I'll try my best I give it all I had but I fell into drugs in an early age. So yeah, yeah I think we all did as it was the ease and the raving and the coke. Yeah. Yeah, that started in the About 89 90 Yeah, I mean that was that was the prime time I think I was I think I was sort of 87 I lost my 90s. I put the 90s up if I could delete any part of my life It'd be the 90s Delayed really that you really bad really bad. I went through a lot of times with my mom and dad not talking to me for periods of the whole 90s So I am I really really I was like living from sofa to sofa as it I was It wasn't a good time for me. Yeah, I really hit my all-time bottom low No matter how much of I did all my first prison sentences Getting round the load of gangsters who were no good They was using me because of what dad was they had me round them because it's They got a pain that they get in a lay with my dad like protection like for nothing Yeah, so and I was I was severely used and I'm a bit better interested over that But obviously you live in there and you see that these people are there's no honor amongst thieves No, no, that's all this. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, listen, they don't crash as soon as look at you Yeah, the drug dealers all grass in that person's you get to It's there's no law. We know I'm not someone's wife goes to prison in the first month They try and look after it in other ways. Yeah, that's the way it's going this day and age I know but when when did you actually think that you was different or when did you feel it was a little bit different from others? Fuck as soon as I was at school and it was being told off I know because my mom and dad was always they they sport me wrong Well, yeah, thank you. Yeah, thank you. If I wanted a mini motorbike. I've got it if I wanted it No, no, no, no, no, I don't want the kids around us And then we had horses and then my mother dad went from a three-bedroom semi-detached house This is around the big smat robbery time. Yeah, both my parents are dead now. So I'm not implicated We got to do that too, man. I got I got I Got the documentary, but I just don't if I watch it and I can't post it and it get black. I'm gonna be upset They've been anyway, but no after the bell of banks that time we moved into a big five-bedroom detached like to the style house in Keston, which is like the Beverly Hills of Ken If you lived in Keston, you was like that. That's it. You made it made it. It was the multi minute It was a millionaire's playground, but that we moved up to there and be mother dead Life went a lot lot better then Yeah, it sounds like it as well. I mean what what sort of inspired inspired you at this age? What was the inspiration as a kid? I was just I was never advised Because I used to treat school like a guy like like a party I'd go there to have fun look out all my little bits and pieces and Follow a few of the girls I liked around and just see me friends and have a laugh I didn't take it seriously. Yeah Let's go concentrate. Let's go get good grades. You know saying I would I would do what I had to do the past But I was going more like for the females I was in school strictly for females You know me like for what else I'm in high school. I mean here Tray I remember the careers officer. She went what you want to do Well, I would be like me dad. She would what is that though? Well, he gets up about 11 o'clock in the morning. He puts his suit on Yeah, that's it goes to the snooker as a game of snooker goes for breakfast or lunch with his friends goes to the pub Comes up as a sleep and he goes out to his nightclub. She went. I'm afraid Mr. Tippett real life isn't like that I said well he is I want to be dead do it every fucking day And he's straight away. It was like that was my thing with her sort of was it sort of Your elders who were trying to sort of put you on the right right road And I just thought no this ain't for me. She wanted to give me a job in a bank I was thinking out to get the money out of the bank without work. Yeah It's in you. It's you say you're one Although I know it. Yeah. Yeah, I mean obviously you have to step out of that Literally naughty by nature Honestly, it's it's lovely to be it's lovely to be the way I am now Look back. I mean my mother's death really really Had a big impact on my life. Yeah, I've done a step for a year. We can I forgot to tell you we got a partner with the blueprint mastermind Don't forget to go over there and leave a like comment and subscribe We do do the group podcast over there and you know Stuff like that If you're looking for any of my old videos, I have to delete them off this channel. They are over here on facebook Anyway, it's back to the regular schedule program I got to do more of these podcasts. Y'all used to tell me to do them all the time. It's pretty interesting I ain't gonna hold you it's uh And I saw a lot of people come out of woodwork and scrounge because my mom had a lot of money They scrounge around there And she was a bit wasn't too there at the end of it. And I feel that a few people were close to her Took liberties with her. Really? Yeah. Yeah, that's not good. No, and I feel and My dad would be turning in his grave if you could see it. Yeah, I know I can well imagine But the thing is I got I got well looked after but it's uh, and I've done a few ups and downs But you live and learn I mean look I've done wrong in life. It's What um, what sort of criminality did you start off with? I worked for a gang in south london, uh, funny. I just like driving about like we I drop a little bit of work off here and there and I get paid on on on each bit of work, which was dropped off And then if you use a brown bag boy Brown bag boy pick up make deliveries get the money bring it back Brown bag boy, okay Like move there's a little firm of our brothers They would like they would do their bit of work and it asked me to move one of the cars And he went from doing that to going on a bit of work and having a cash box and I found it really exciting and and the thrill of it. The thrill and I was lucky. I got nicked on a few and I think I was Very lucky because it put the wind up me a little bit because I saw a few pals get 15s Really and there was like a family friend of ours called periteroli He was always in and out for our robberies in south london. Yeah When he says I've seen a friend of mine get 15s. Is that like 15 years? You prolific hard robber And obviously with the big smack boys all get Sentences by robinson close friend of my dad's And obviously, uh, Ronnie used to book getting shot On the bit of work and he'd get a live sentence. Yeah, I know Brian. Yeah Yeah, we all all all them getting big sentences that sort of put me off And then I was sort of then we went up sort of we would then it was just we was going and thieving And we we we go we go you go out you go that for the day really you go and try and lick them up your grand To live that live live live like yeah to live for the day But our days were like our weekends were seven-day weekends. That's what I mean one was four Yeah, we used to party every day the week and in the end it was it was literally we go And that's how I was when I was in Chicago, man. That's how I had to Restructure my life man Party in seven days a week and getting money to do it It get rough It get rough Fueling that lifestyle is crazy I get your money party all night long get up in the morning and it was like a continuous Cycle of drugs violence and fucking thieving. Yeah, thieving. It was like, of course. It was my yeah I was with you all the way there But obviously I was like knocking about in Lucia, which was my dad's manna So you had the snooker all we had the sultan pub and and then you had you go down Deppford You had your speeders down Deppford or we go down Greenwich or Blackheath for the white bars on a Monday You should go clubbing Deppford my bad. Hold on. I put this the last time I pause it I put these subtitles on Because he was talking fast But now I don't really need them anymore, but I'm leaving them on here because it's funny to see These are auto generators. It's funny to see you two try to keep up with what The one Harry Awood's one Flash Harry that's my dad's best mate champs. Yeah champs. He changed. It was cheeks And that's it cheeks and someone got stabbed to death outside. They would become champs and then it was se8s Right, so it changed and then Dave courtly took it over and it would come future when he didn't take it over My dad got Dave Every had a reconstruction order on it. So my dad got in touch with Dave I said, oh Dave defensive running this then Dave started run it as futures Oh, yeah, there was some memorandum days there again. They're the ones Yes, they were they were like really really good nights Yeah, you want to wipe them out, but I just really love to relive them because they were some excellent times Where do you think your activities have got you today? Why is uh smarter? Do you know something Many for the grave I suppose no no, uh Johnny is looking back. I think it's one of the might be dad's book which is I think that's been really inspirational for me Yeah, because we've done it and such an incredible life right me dad's book It's been really inspirational because He's a legendary character. He was the nicest man A friend of mine I was talking to I'm very close to he's very big in the underworld friend of mine called Paul from Essex He sort looks after me now and sort of has my back and he's round some very powerful people And he's sort of just said Jim. I've never heard a bad word said about your dad and even to this day His legacy carries on and that's very strong for considering he died six years ago But my dad was a gentleman he would my dad always said to me he said son forget the gangsters. They're no good He said listen He said the cray twins. He said listen everybody. He said all these people want to put yourself out of great He said there's no value around them son. He said he said listen I he said they're full friends of mine. He said I've grown up from from the age of 12 He said but son there's no value. I said what do you mean? It's son He said you've got two conquers at school. You're playing conkers He said it's like putting a wing mirror on a conker. What do you mean son? He said what's the point of having a wing mirror on a conker? There's no value It's absolutely useless. He said that's with them son. He said he said son. He said They are what they are. He said look they went to prison at 36 They're they they they they gave their own notoriety for like he said That reggie was he said was his favorite because he was a bit of a talker could have around when he said Ronnie He was a bit twisted and a bit like messed up with the medication and that Yeah, Charlie was just like a con man who was just down to try and grab a monkey But don't you say you've only ever wanted was a monkey a monkey A monkey in his pocket for a night's drinking it that was all Charlie ever wanted So what is a monkey? Like monkey is money The how is it a certain amount of money, but okay, here's my coin now. That's a that like that's a good point Gangsters are useless Like let's let's think about it though Like what value are you adding to anything like Like there's hustlers. There's gangsters and there's street dudes Street dudes normally just know the lay of the land They know how to get by They know how to get a little money to get you know, I'm saying get what they need A hustler A hustler is going to get it by any means possible And they normally you can conform to any environment that like chameleons I would call myself a hustler like a like a chameleon I could get in anywhere. I could get what I need him, you know No, but a gangster, what are you doing? What are you doing? What you got going on? Bunch of negativity But me dad me dad was obviously close with Charlie and Eddie and obviously aria Because he was he was born in Greenwich me dad Right, so he was uh south east London boy, but his mother's born in hoxton in east London So we had so to connect so yeah, but would be dad being a famous boxer He would go east west north south. He could go anywhere he wanted And the dad's friends were very powerful people like Georgie Walker Yeah, it was a famous british heavyweight fighter who looked after the old gangster billy ill But but george went on to build a brent walker which was a billion billion pound company And it lost it all they went off to russia Very very powerful man george and his daughter ended up married into a royalty Really? Yeah, so he was like one of my dad's closest friends and then there was ronnie olive from south london very powerful big gang boss He never spent a day in jail same as my dad And then my dad was very close with george porit. I love that the porit's he had a big mansion up, you know rush more ill Yeah, oh no rush more ill. Yeah What I was just saying like against it like not it I'm not saying hustlers are not part of gangs But they're normally in the hierarchy of them, you know what i'm saying the hustler because they have the huster mind Said their problem solvers they get stuff done They're normally at the top of the food chain They're not out doing You know they give them they bark in the water It's clarification Well, like penny noi was up there, wouldn't he? Yeah, yeah, and uh scouse norman But that's friend scouse norman johnson. He was like he's a big big player in libra pool He uh Had an affair with the princess of oman Oh, and he was and then he also used to work with the mafia in new york He worked with russel buffalino who the film the irishman was based over really jo pesky played russel buffalino But norman was working with russel buffalino in the 70s laties. Yeah Yeah, and they wrote a great book called black eyes and blue blood But he was one of my dad's closest friends and it was like a group of them And I don't like the untouchables. They were like they'd all got to the They were like boxers as well. That was a funny thing Yeah But growing up as a kid like we'd have ray winston come to the house and my dad's best friend I'll film with ray. You're raised lovely. He's wicked. Yeah, my dad's best friend was paul moriarty Who played actually arian lockstuck. Oh, yeah. Yeah to the end of my dad died Somewise no, not some wise he died a bit clay at the nursing home in bit clay Right, okay And what happened was paul used to visit him every single week. They caught me visiting him a few times Yeah, we did a lot of famous visitors up there But yeah, paul moriarty visiting him every week in he's he's on his last birthday He kindly put two gym my hero. Thanks for the last 60 years And that was a beautiful lovely he played a blinder in their film Yeah, along the fire they played mazes didn't he? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, he was wicked. They're just playing that actor in He was yeah, he's great. Imagine as a kid coming over. I've got like you got paul moriarty I mean, it was the 18th birthday party. Yeah, we had donald suverland the hollywood actor Bernie Eccleston Formula one motor racing boss georgie wall cut just in the villnove who was the one who made twiggy famous We had bob gildoff It was like And then my dad had just done a film called number one It's the number one. No, it's called number one and it was based on a snooker player Uh, right called the bob gildoff as a snooker player called flash snooker player. What is snooker? I'm learning new sports a snooker player. Did he do this? charry And there was a it was it was based in and around Lucian and defford, but it was all but my dad had a big pie there as well Did he? Yeah, the sergeant cryer out in the bill. Yeah, so we went to the premiere I remember my mum got young because uh, paulie yates was in it. She had all like airy armpits and she stunk I mean, I mean she's not one of those things, didn't she? My mum went fuck sake can we get out of this fucking lift? It's like my mum never swore. She was just like my mum could be a little bit like She was the one who wore the trousers with my dad. Really? My dad was uh, he never cheated on my mum. He was uh, he was He was a proper gentleman But if they went out and then anyone in my dad would only have to look at you He was he had that much power and presence. Yeah. It was very hard really for me To transition over from a boy to a man because of the dad I had really if I had a dad who was a build I'd have been a builder son. Yeah, that's the thing having a dad who I had I mean, I could have been if I would have gotten the drugs. I would have probably been Who knows you don't know but obviously having a dad I had it's sort of It opened a lot of doors, but it also closed a lot of doors. Yeah, that's true How can you forge your own path when your dad got such a big presence? big name And then you're a junior on top of that being a junior of somebody like that. It's tough Can't do work by place kind of because a lot of people were fighting to have to be random because of me They wouldn't want to case anything happen. They've got to answer to it. Yeah, they're dead. Yeah And I saw me dad sometimes when it was in the spiel He was a big shootout one day between the family from Deppford and someone who just took a liberty And my dad got older the geezer coming in the spiel with a big knife And that's the first time I've ever seen my dad go to work and he went listen. He this geezer's name was uh, I could see I could say his name. I like Um, I wouldn't know. No, no, no, no. It was like I tell you I could say his nickname It was called the plug. It was and it it went into Ari Abel's club once and flasharies Stabbed one of the door but right up Ari's pulled the gun out come out and shot him as he was running out the club shot him Bro, hey, it was like a wild wild western London back then, huh? This is like a story gangster background of London like It's like Chicago in the 60s and 70s and whatnot But yeah shot him in the ass But uh, he kept the geezers a lunatic he stabbed up one of the keys on the market store with a big samurai sword Absolute psychopath, but he coming to be dead spiel one day to have a go at me dad I mean, I meant my dad just took the knife off him it him with the right hand. I've just I've just I've never seen It was like this geezer's head. It was like saying out of a cartoon He's like his face went all like distorted He like had seven strokes in one and he just hit the floor and my dad got the knife and ran it straight in his shoulder And I thought I was like Don't let young Jim see that don't let young Jim see that. I was rushed off They grabbed him round pulled up. They'd be down. It comes and then I was pulled out the back Greatly dead to be done in an old voice at the time the silver shadow We've got my dad's old voice and we just drive up my dad went. Oh, son. He was only missing. We was only missing about He's missing about but I knew it weren't missing about no You were missing about that was a real deal Red liquid coming out that boy wasn't it because it was like it was quick over and the boys have got me Rub me to the back of the kitchen and and it was there's some bird who was helping me do the tease She went, no, no, no, you got to go down. You got to go down here And then the next few days in a car we shut off Yeah, you get to see all didn't you know and that's why I cover you up Yeah, and it's like obviously you come from the same areas me voice obviously, you know Me dad's sort of like status, but he was a gentleman. He would never take a liberty of anybody Yeah, no, that's it. If y'all got any documentaries or podcast type things or anything like documentaries Maybe y'all think I can watch what out there being like Overly down my back You know I'm saying just leave leave them in the comments and if you'd like what's going on right now just hit the like button Because this does the gotta be the news type of style man I like when people sit down and just tell the story instead of reenactments and and all this other stuff Because the policies, you know, they're good. Yeah, they're morals. They did in those days I mean no with me I lost taking getting his cocaine was like I would say it's a devil's stuff I lost all all sense of morality all sense of respect. I would have rubbed off my own mum. That's the truth. That's how bad it The coat got me bad I've had little goes here and then it doesn't do the same thing for me now. I think it's totally Yeah It's now there's so much violence when it's it's a different it's a different world now It's I was very lucky to grow up in the 80s. I I mean, obviously I was very gifted. I mean my dad put me in the film business I was in the Batman movie with Jack Nicholson. It was really I was a stunt eyes And he Eddie Stacey was a stunt coordinator on the film really Broke that the best life I ever heard like I'm not trying to condone anything that was going on, but like He got a storied life like this is like he's He's he wasn't the main character because his dad and all these other name characters, but he was like He was on the verge of being a main character. He wasn't a non playable character He was a main Person like if you play group gta, you remember how you could switch over to the next main character You can switch over to him if you want to That's tough Oh, I played a little stunt eyes on there. So I was getting 120 quid a light from six at night till six in the morning Then I would get every time I've done a special action Which is I stung I get 25 quid like pony 25 quid And I obviously I'll fuck it up on purpose because I think every time you do a take So you might be 17 takes That's a pony a take so I thought fucking oh so much. I was taking five six hundred quid a light And I remember buying the first beer. I bought a BMW 316 brand spanking. No when I was 17 But then I thought why don't I want to go to all my mates were gonna work for like silly money hundreds of quid a month And I was only that a light. Yeah, nice. So but with the field game you'd phone up central cast in the garden Because my dad was Jimmy you couldn't have two Jimmy's so I'm gonna be on my middle name I'll go Gary tip it every day at four o'clock. They go. Oh, you've got some work for you, Jimmy It's a paradise club tomorrow. You've got to be a black cave blah blah blah and you go with that call you get you get you Yeah Bro was a stunt devil He was a gangster son He's a author He just had a good life So It's a very fun life You get paid out cash at the end of the day. Yeah, she's well, wouldn't it? Yeah It was all cash, but I'd done press gang. I'd done a kiss before dying The jerry lou louis story we'd done at hammer smith pallet. And we just sit he was just sitting around all day. Love Yeah, he's a lot of sick people perform I really enjoyed that film game and a lot of my friends like Tony denim who's now a big star Tony Tony Tony funny story with me and Tony We was on the Batman movie and uh, we was getting paid out at the end of the film And uh, it was six in the morning and my dad was the security on the film and he was looking after Jack Nicholson So when they was paid out, they had thousands to pay out So they had my dad there when all the money was paid out And in the stunt guy who played uh done all the stunts for Michael Keaton in the Batman outfit was a guy called Dave Lee I'm actually out there. Yeah. I think he just recently died. He died don't be. Yeah And he was in the queue and he went to my dad's power date the olds that's the johnny and davie olds the twins he's uh, baby old son, uh, Dave he went, uh Uh, excuse me, come on. Use your back He took like to take the piss to sign his name on his shit and he pushed in and Dave went, hey mate I don't mind you using your fucking back as a fucking mess. He said, but you're not pushing in, mate We're all fucking extras. We're queuing up the same as you are. I mean, no, mate. I'm the stunt guy I said, you know, do you know I am and I remember Dave getting crashed knocking him a spark out of my hand Tony denim is next to him But it was funny because we was like and then I saw Tony obviously rise through the ranks the same as Tana's done really well Tamarassan, yeah, yeah, yeah I've known Tana for 30 years Oh, it's quite funny because often with quite a few people it was all meant to do The fact that he was on a Batman movie, Jack Nichols, like that's wild Isn't that wild to nobody else but me? Okay, it's just me, yeah It's the same way we lived, it's where we lived. You got all that, I mean, you got JV4, but if I know Obviously, Fred was a good close friend of his dad's I love to say I knew Greg, Greg had the pub in, uh, Farmer Village and then he had the one at the uh The uh, with more, uh, probably You went more green, right? No, but someone, uh, there was a bit, I think you still got it, Lee, with Lisa Is it the, um, The Working Bands Club? Yeah, no, no, that's Jack Holmes, then you got uh, you got the, Dear Tilly Road Oh, Tilly Road, yeah, yeah, yeah No, Tilly Road is, it's near the White House, near the White House, it's up to the end of the pub Yeah, I feel like I know what you're talking about now, yeah It'll come to you So, I mean, after all of that, it's been going on, what was the biggest job that you've actually done? I've got accused of a robbery, which is, yeah, it sounds like I've got accused I've got accused, mm-hmm, that's just as good as saying, allegedly Yeah, fucking, Ocean's Eleven, they'll say, silly like that, but no A friend of mine was leaped on a robbery in 1991, uh, it was the, what they said it was the world's biggest ever robbery, it was the Berabond robbery, yeah, in uh, the city where $200 million per pound worth of Berabond's, yeah, was stolen off a city broker, it was carrying them Okay, yeah But my friend Pat Thomas was the so-called mugger at the time, but he was accused of taking the bonds So that later that day, when he'd done the bit of work, we was all at a place called Charlie's, my bar in Lucian, Lucian High Street, which was one of my dad's friend's bars, every, every villain in the house used to go there, it was like, saying out of good feelings, and it was, the police were watching, you could see the cameras over the road, yeah 24 hours a day, you had, it was full of money Think about this, man, there's so many villains, real life villains in the world that somebody along the way thought about making superheroes, where there's not real superheroes in the world, there's not, like as far as Batman, Avengers, but there's nobody to combat how many villains there are, and when he say like all of these villains congregate, yeah, yeah, you're right Man character villains, and he like he said, his dad never went to jail, that's tough Those boys, he's in Jagsons, every face in London, all the Big Spat boys, anyone who was anyone was in there, and the policeman even made a remark later on in a book, a guy called Peter Bleaksley, said, say if the roof would have gone in that, in the light, in that place, it would have wiped out 90% of South London's underworld Yeah, that's right, yeah, yeah, I don't think it's wrong No, yeah, so Pat did do the robbery, and then Pat ended up getting shot dead on his door, I'd been out of him that day, he got frisked for a gun at the ministry of sound by the boys, refused to go in now, and he got shot dead on his doorstep in broccoli in the early hours of the morning, but it's a shame, and a lot of the sort of crowd, and then I used to work with a guy called Eugene Carter, do you remember Eugene? He was a big time drunk baron, basically what it was, there was a lot of boys in South London who were using Brinks about money to put into the other game, and obviously it was, there was a lot of money around South London, Eugene Cartier they used to call him, because he'd have an underground Cartier watch on Eugene Cartier? Cartier, yeah, he's Uncle Johnny Carr, who used to cut, thank you, thank you, thank you, Eugene Cartier, that's a W nickname, isn't it? Even then, thank you, thank you for having an on-game night for off the years, but everyone's saying bad things about John, but people say bad things about everyone, people say bad things about me, look at social media, if they're bothered to write a fucking comment like that, I could personally be bothered. Yeah, you couldn't even whisper this sort of stuff years ago, do you know what I mean? No, no, no, that's where you've got full-cars branch, but I watch a lot of people's podcasts, I like Kevin Lane, I like Ray Bishop, and I like Terry Ellis, a lot of these people, they're the real deal, very, very strong-eyed men, and they've got a story to tell, and it's how life has tricked somebody, and you only get out what you put in now. Well, it's unfortunate that you're born in such little stuff, and as I said before, you're seeing your blood, and you know, you could be a bricklayer or carpenter or what. You know it's crazy, man, people from the outside looking in, they don't even realize that some people are born into this and they have no, like, sure, yes, you do have an option at the end of the day, but when you're surrounded by it, it only seems like one option. You don't know anything else, because it's not presented to you, and you don't know what's going on. To be honest, I don't think, even if I had the dad I had, I think I'd still be a little fucker. Yeah, I think we'd still have that upbringing that we did. Listen, I always wanted to be better than everybody else, I love the nice bit of desire to close, I always loved the kettle, and I always wanted to stand out for the crowd, and I suppose being naughty was the only way what was going to make me stand out. You always see the boys with a fairer and a gobbie cheese in the earth. As a kid, I always had the gobbie cheese with a smoke bucket and a little gold neck. Yeah, and of course, come out, didn't you see, you've got loads of money, you know, that must be cake, don't you? Bit of Peter Cardy, wouldn't you? Oh my God, we got their memory lane here. When you've done these jobs and, you know, doing the cut and beat jobs, there's a few stories flying about. Did you sort of invest the money wisely or? No, actually, I went out. No, he told us this earlier. No, he said he was living for the day. That ain't changed. I bought him, I think the first job we ever done, I was only younger, about 19, I had about 45 grand, and I went out and bought him a Sadie's Cosworth, one nightly Cosworth, a little gold midi Rolex. Yeah. I had a wild weekend that liked my skin. So you like your watches? Oh yeah, yeah, it's funny enough, that one, my parents bought me that, I mean, 18th birthday, and it's funny because I sold it, I was in Miami a year later, my skin had sold it, so we obviously, when my mum left me a bit of watches now, I cashed one in and bought this one, the same watch I had when I was 18. Right, gotcha, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's got memories for me, but I love watches, I buy and sell watches now, I flip watches, I've got to do really well with watches, I flip watches, but I don't really wear them, if I'm going out in the evening, I won't wear them. Right, okay. I mean, look at London now, I mean, he's getting ripped off, I used to fucking... Yeah, I'm about to say, you wear a watch, man. Didn't a soccer player get robbed in London, a football player get robbed when he was watching London? You can't even wear them, you buy nice. That's around the world, hitting licks is like a, it's like a job now. I nicked enough watches, give me life without fucking, and now it's fucking up for fucking nothing to know, well the person who's nicked here, they're not getting nicked. Yeah, yeah. But I don't want to know, no, London's changed for me now, I still love going out, I love Mayfair, if you've got a motorbike, or a scooter thing, and you're driving around, just as you drive past it, grabbing phones at people's ends. I know, listen, I'm very, very low-key in London, if I go to London now, I tend to go to restaurants which are high up, or we go and get a lift to go up, it's like, especially Mayfair, it's like hunting ground, which you've got the richest people in the world, and then you get all the little predators there, waiting on the street corners, waiting for their little Charles. Yeah, just watching them. It's like, what I say to people, listen, it's weird. It's like California. If I was like, the way I saw it, or I sort of, the people would say that fee, you know, what a disgusting fee, what the, but listen, if I woke up and I was hungry. Excuse me, what kind of car do you drive? Um, a 2014 Parola, like. And how much do you pay for car insurance these days, mate? I've got to go and get something, I've got to go and get something to fill, to fill feed. Yeah. If a lion's in the jungle, it don't say to the little baby antelope, or you can't do that because you're not allowed to do that, it grabs it and kills it, because it has to. Yeah, that's true. It's a cycle of life. And unfortunately something. But you know what separates us from a wild animal? Cognitive thinking. We can think about stuff. We can, we can, we can make a plan. We can, you know what I'm saying? So comparing yourself to a wild animal, it's kind of wild in itself. You know what I'm saying? Because that's literally not the case. But I get it. I give what you're saying. People are still going to love us. And if, I mean, there, there, there, there's laws there, but you know yourself, the government, break more laws than anyone. Of course they do. Yeah, there's no, no law anywhere anymore. But we used to do it just to be able to go out and pay for the first year, Friday, Saturday, Sunday nights. Well, you wouldn't say that. You wrap it to a few wraps of coke and sell a few wraps of salt and sell a few Aussies. I mean, you wouldn't say no harm in that. But now you, now you fucking, you're getting a big prison sentence. And you, you'd always get a prison sentence in, but you'd always get a big prison sentence. But now you get your poker. So crime doesn't pay now. I mean, I've just had to pay a big poker. And it's, it's wiped out most of my inheritance. We can get up to that in a minute. But have you ever been to prison? Yeah, I first went to prison in 1993. I went to high-down prison. Four. That was for Feft. Feft of a Rolex, funny enough. Feft of a Rolex. Feft of a Rolex. Well, we're not on a moped. Many of you were. No, this was a, it'd given it to a cell. And I just don't come back with the money. And it was, no, I got a six-month judgment. It was a short, sharp shock. I remember going into that van. And the funny thing was, it was rude. Because the geezer would put me on the van. It was a geezer I've knocked out at school. No, you're joking. I remember his name. I'll come over and mention his phone number. His name was Brian, a big old lad. And he, I remember he had, he had like an horrible smirk on his face. You know, like, it was like, it was like. Refix, mate. Yeah, and I remember cuffing me up and putting me into the little fucking, the little cubicle. And when I got to my eye down, it was, you know, Banston is sorry. And it was like, I got there and I thought, oh, it was like, it was like, it was like a bad dream. Like the schools could be playing kicks with plastic plate and cup and that. Lock me in the cell. There was no TV set in those days. You'd have to buy your own radio. And this was 93. Yeah. And I remember. So it was terrible. So in 93, I wouldn't play in Xboxes. It was only this year. 2010, no. Lay down a bit. I remember in the morning it was like, and then you could all this here, you know, the doors, the keys, all the doors up and all the echo. They went down to breakfast, like two spices and bread toast and a boiled egg and a bit of beans. I thought, oh, fuck this. This is all. No ham, no bacon, no sausage. No, they gave you beans for protein. That alone should make people want to stay away from crying. Like, come on, man, I'm supposed to eat beans, toast and what do you say? What else do you say? And a boiled egg. Is that when it hit home? Yeah, but then obviously I got nicks on an attempted murder. Funny enough, you probably remember this. It was at the, I always don't know, there was a pub. I was nicked with, well, I took the nicking, but they said it was me, one of the Ariffs, the young Ariffs, Mark Zanelli, and a guy called Johnny Aywood, who later got on 18 years with Stevie Poirot on the way to work on it with a machine gun, back 10. And we went in the pub, but they said we went in the pub. They said we went in the pub, pulled this. You can remember now, allegedly. Guy out, they said I stuck a 10-inch knife in him, which narrowly missed his heart, and then someone else CS gasped the pub. It was the Lord Homestale. Yes, Lord Homestale. Do you remember that? Yeah, he was on the front page of the news shopper. How many stories did Jimmy Tippett got? And this is the junior. How many stories does he got? In this 45 minutes, he's told at least 12 stories. Like, 12 stories that would be enough. One of these stories alone would be enough for the average person. Like, all right, I got to chill out. Bro got 12 of these. CS gas gang attack pub. I got nicked for it. They said I was the knife man, so I got nicked. I spent 12 weeks on Ramon. I downed for it. When I was there, funny enough, I was with Perry Taroni, every page, what he used to book. I was away with Ronny. Really? Yeah, and it was so funny to see Ronny inside. Yeah, of course. Like, seeing him in the spill room for you. You feel a bit safe for him. Yeah, and then the prime robber and someone's in there. Yeah, yeah, you're a prime robber. And then Jimmy said, oh, your dad saved me life one day. And I was around, and it was like proper old Sydney Carter, who just recently died. Champagne Sidney, they used to call it the best cat burger in London. Yeah. And I was around all the proper boys. Sydney Carter, that sounds interesting. I'm going to see that. Oh, we was living life good in there then. It's a laugh. Then I thought, I don't really belong in prison now. I was a bit gated to leave him. And then one day, a couple of scoots went back, your kit tipped it, all your charges had been dropped. So you're going. Really? But then the police were waiting outside for me. I remember his name, D.C. Phillips. He was like an ex rugby copper. He had a bit of a scary looking fucker. Don't forget his name. The scary looking fucker he was. And he went, Jimmy, he said, just to let you know, we know you've done that. He said, but we know you sent people to the hospital, blah, blah, blah, which I never did. But obviously my friends might have done it. I don't know. But I've known it. I was hoping so. But no, they said, we know you've done it. You're lucky. You're lucky. You're lucky. You're lucky. He was lucky to live. Yeah. But obviously that was sort of a little notch into me being a bit of a lunatic. And then I was so obviously had John and Johnny Mr. and Paul stopped him behind me. If things got too wrong. Yeah, yeah. You're safe with him too, aren't you? But yeah, so he's got to blow me nose again. So yeah. But there was a kind of some amazing thing. Because a female Bobby. That's from my life. Bugger sugar, you didn't inhale. Woo. My bad. Would you remember Michael Fitzpatrick? Yes. Yeah. So you remember that murder? Yes, I do. One of the women under the feet. Yeah. Because what happened is Michael, old friend of my dad's, some money. So my dad went up to the scrapyard. Yeah. I went, Michael, where's this bit of money? And Michael, obviously everyone was terrified of it. Michael went, oh, get the money. I'll get the money. And they paid him. And that's at the same time the woman, it was his mother-in-law, wasn't it? Yes. Yeah, apparently they had got her, didn't they? They kidnapped her in the car. What, for the money, insurance money, right? No, for the, the geezer invented the power shower, didn't he, the dad? Yeah. The dad. Oh, was it a demand? Sorry? Was it a demand for money? No, it was. So for what, for what you're hearing the story, is I think the father-in-law approached Michael. Yeah. To get rid of her. That's right, yeah. And Michael, I always liked Michael, but Michael always had that, he was like a grim reaper. He could have a fight, couldn't he? But yeah, he had darkness, too. Darkness, yeah, yeah, yeah. Paul Stockthieber said he, because Paul done the black magic. That's right, yeah. Michael Fitzpatrick had that, he had a dark aura about him. You wouldn't want to fuck about with Michael, because you would take it all next step further. Yeah. And Michael went up, pay me. This is a lot of people in Chicago like Michael. Dad, terrified of me. Dad, so that's what the devil got, the devil got his comeuppance. But no, when she got murdered, there was a lot, the body was being moved about, wasn't it, quite a few places at the time? It was like the big news of the 90s at the time, wasn't it? But Michael then went off with Pickle, didn't he? They was doing the arm rubbers. Pickle, yeah, yeah. He died of cancer a few years back, didn't he? That's right, yeah. He was only 49. That's what I mean, it's no age to die, is it? I've got a friend of mine at the moment, boxer Mark Potter, he's 47, he's dying of cancer. Strong as a locks, but that's what I'm saying, that he lived a healthy life. Yeah. And it's me, I'm 51, I've partied for 30 years. Yeah, same all the time. More often to be self-delayed, what's good. And I'm still strong as a locks, yeah. Yeah, yeah, it's weird, isn't it? It's weird, I guess. I mean, when going back to the prison, sort of when you had... We had a conversation with my friends, like, dang, it'd be crazy, like, you'd be looking at the world, like all these innocent people staying away from this, staying away from doing all these good things. They'd be getting deceased early, man, they'd be gone early. Didn't you take a look at somebody like, you know, just somebody that's not living good. And they just thriving, living a long life, you know what I'm saying? I was having a convo not long ago, man. It was funny that it came up. Sort of partners or girlfriends or whatever. I didn't actually... I wasn't really... She lived back then, I was seeing a girl from Bourbon, see, she used to come and see me. It was... Girls were like very... We weren't really... It wasn't... I didn't have a lot of relationships in the life, it was more girlfriends for a few nights. So it was... Yeah, yeah, it was just always a girlfriend, yeah. I've been here for a good time, not a long time, you know, Jenny, that was funny. It was a girlfriend for the night, yeah. When you was in prison, did you... When you was in prison, did you learn a lot more about the criminal underworld? Of course you do, because you see how people are getting caught, you see how people could have not got caught. It's the university of... Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's the university of criminals. Cool, crime, isn't it? It's the university of crime. It's like the university of the criminals. Because you're learning history of these occupations, you're taking those... I mean, I met some fraudsters in there and some businessmen. I've earned an awful lot of money out of people I met in jail. I met an old farmer once in jail, and he said to me, oh, please come and see me. He had stashed away nearly five million pounds worth of gold. Which his friend had got on a robbery, but then died in France. No. And a heart attack with these mistress in France. But the farmer was so straight up, he'd been nicked for something to do with his tax returns, but then told me, as I've got all this gold, how do I get rid of it? Fuck it off. What the hell am I to him? So to say, I had a good couple of years of living after meeting the farmer. I had some great times. That's his next question. He said, did you acquire any friends in this business? Yeah, loads, loads. Listen, obviously, I'm not through my dad. I know, I'm not going to mention names, but I know the top firms in London. I know everybody, when we're good or bad, but I know everybody, but... And it's, oh, yeah, in prison, I met a lot of good friends in prison, but obviously, there is no other amongst thieves. And if they could get one over on you, it's people, you see money changes, people. Yeah, it does, doesn't it? And I've seen that firsthand with myself when I've come into money and I've missed some pieces. And it's... Now I'd rather choose my friends very carefully. I have a very small bunch of friends on one hand. Yeah, we're checking out social media. We've got about 37 connected friends in our group. Yeah, it's like... Social media's been good, but I find Instagram, I like, because that fits him with my lifestyle, the glitz and glamour. I mean, there's certain faces in London, their lifestyles are like out of the Vizcomic, where I like to think my lifestyles comes out of Hello Magazine. I've always got a beautiful woman in tow, I like to drink the best champagne, I like to eat the best food, and I travel to the best places, and I love the nicest clothes. That's perfect for that, isn't it, Instagram? Of course it is, and I think my life... But Facebook, I find, is a lot of fraudsters, haters, people with no lives who look down on other people's, but would love to see you, like, save someone for... Oh, Jimmy walks in front of the road, they got hit by a bus, he's in a wheelchair, he's not stolen his money, he ain't got nothing, and his girlfriend's run off with a football player. They'd, ah, they'd love it, they'd absolutely love it. But unfortunately, that's never gonna happen. No, they won't. I'm not gonna lie, at 51, he has a great take on social media. That's literally what it is, Facebook and Instagram. Even though they're owned by the same company, they're two different completely black ones, man, that's crazy. I'm one of those people who has looked down and comes back 10 times higher, but... Yes, mate, I know what you mean, but have you experienced any problems with people on social media? Yeah, I've found a lot of haters, I mean, I would love to name them, but the joy is, I normally find it's the failed writers, you know, people, I got approached by John Blake to write a book. He approached me and said, Jimmy, your dad won't write a book, but they didn't agree with it. And my dad said, he said, I would love to get your story, your book, you'd serve the fascinating character. And John Blake, he's like the hierarchy of the publishers. Okay. Right, he'd done Roy Shaw's, Lenny McClain's, I'm not gonna lie, Jimmy, you do got an interesting life. Or Lee, she's done. Anyone that cast pen and he's done it. Anyone who's anyone in the critic, like the Molly Knight, Chopper, Chopper Reed, he's done all the top people. So when he'd done that, I think a lot of people on social media, there's a few people sort of, everyone wants to write a book, everyone's got a story to tell. But not everyone wants to read that story, that story, whether they have any, nothing interesting chapters. But a few people on Facebook, I'd love to lay one of them, but I wouldn't even waste my air time with him. I think he'd done a podcast with him once. But they write books, they publish them themselves because they can't get published by it. Because now to write a book, you have to have a literary agent who submits that to a publisher. That's why it's happening now. It's happening more for your memoirs. Yeah, it's hard to know. I have publishers calling me all the time to write new books. Really? Yeah, because they know I've got a great story to tell. I have people message me on social media and say, your life, you give me inspiration. I look at your life on social media and see your beautiful girlfriend and how you live and what you get up to. And the first thing I do in the morning is put on social media to see what you're up to. And it's nice that you can, and sometimes I do send people nice messages back because there is those secret haters out there who hate to see you get on. Oh yeah. But then those haters make me appreciate. They make me, they make me work even harder because then they're the ones I really want to wipe the smile off their faces. But I couldn't even smile anyway. Yeah. If you ain't got no haters, you ain't poppin' anyway. Well, we're gonna wrap it up there now for where this is the end of Part One. That was absolutely excellent, Jimmy. And we're gonna go into Part Two. So look out for this. Thanks, mate. I don't know if there's a Part Two, but Part One was pretty decorated. Story, there's a lot. He got a lot going on in his life, man. Tell her, let me know. Does anybody, if y'all got any suggestions in the comments, if y'all like this, hit the like button, there we go.