 Yeah, we on boss talk one on one. I see the D4L change, man. I remember back when I didn't even know who Charlotte Lowe was. I really, I just seen them niggas just doing the dance. And you know, I ain't seen Charlotte Lowe and none of that. I'm being real. He was on the backside when that was going on. Right. And I was like, damn, man. He was in jail then, well. Was he in jail? Prison then, yeah. He was in prison then, but he still, he started it. Right. That's crazy. How did that, okay, how did that start out? And I don't know the history of it, but how did that, from your perspective, how did it, you say he was in jail then, how did they even get that off the ground and then how did he orchestrate that while he was locked up? Well, basically my dad was already a millionaire before he even started rapping or doing anything. Just our street money. You know, my dad said that he's seen his first million by the time I think he was 17, 18. So, you know, so he was already kingpin already. So, you know, he was just looking for ways to invest his money to help his people. And that's when he started the studio, the D4L studio. And, you know, he was investing his money into his group. You know, Stuntman, Fable, Front Street, you know, all of those people that y'all seen. And so basically they was already working and stuff. But, you know, he had got locked up, right. So then when that happened, you know, they were just still doing their thing or whatever. So, you know, they may laugh at Taffy and they had played it for him like over the phone. And then, you know, dad was like, nah, I don't know about that one. But, you know, they ended up being one of the biggest songs, if not the biggest song. It was big, man. It changed culture in a lot of ways, bro. So how old were you then? You was young. Yeah, I was still staying on the west side when that song came out. So I was probably around like 10 or 11. 11, yeah. Yeah, so that was around like the 2003-2004 era, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's crazy, man. So, okay, so you now, I'm fast-forwarding a little bit. But, well, during that era, when he first came out and then that got to go on, he started doing his own solo deal. And when he started doing his solo deal, him and T.I. ended up having issues about was he from going home? Did you even understand what was going on in that whole thing? I mean, from my understanding, from what I know, basically, dad asked T.I. to get on one of his songs, whatever, on the door. Yeah, yeah, yeah, he said that, yeah. So, you know, dad, you know, T.I. was always claiming bank head. But, you know, nobody never said nothing or my dad and them ain't never say nothing because they felt like, you know, it felt good for somebody to be claiming they side of the town. So, you claiming bank head and you doing all this and all that, but then, you know, when the man of bank head asked you for something, you know, you pull the, you know, move on that, but he didn't. So, he was just like, you know, this and that, like now he on the door, whatever it can be. So, dad was like, yeah, so how the hell you gonna, you know, just claim bank head and you know, and first off, we ain't never heard of you or seen you. Yeah. No, well. Yeah. So, but then you gonna do that. Yeah. That's crazy. So, dad was just like, bro, you really ain't from here. We was just, then you claim it. But, T.I. was using my dad cars and stuff in his video. Correct, I heard him say that. I heard the story, but it's just crazy because I just, you was, at that time, you would have been about 13. You about 13 then, cause this one is ballin' down. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101.