 Let me ask you this, just flipping back into my childhood, coming up in the streets, you know what I mean? We wore blue. Don't know why. We just wore it. We was in Texas. But my school color was blue, so we wore blue. It was not, I did not know, and my cousin was from Crenshaw. So we wore blue, but didn't really understand it. But then we look up and write down the street from us in Shreveport. In the 90s, they just started flying out of California, coming to Shreveport. And then we see this, and we see them, and now we're riding with them. Certain ones that wore blue, the ones that wore red, we're not rocking with them, even though there are some of them that's flying in too. So they came in from California to Shreveport, which was 30 miles away from where I was raised up. Now I was in the drug game at that time, and I only rocked with the guys who were messing with blue. And this is how it happened. But we saw a lot of killings and a lot of different things on the news and the architects during that time, and it got pretty rough. And I think, I think, Kuber Road right now is one of the places where stills stand true to the blue. This happened. And I don't know what made them start coming down there in the 90s. Do you remember that era? Were you around during that time? I was in Monroe, and West Monroe. Oh, you was in Monroe. I was on the run for a murder that had happened at a school campus in 76, and my mama sent me to West Monroe. So I know about Shreveport, West Monroe, when they had a jukebox where you had to kick it to start it. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And my girl at that time was the only girl in the club, and everybody wanted to dance with us. I never will together. I got out of there in two weeks. Yes, but anyway, from my personal experience, and I knew some people that were going down there with the transformation of the drug game coming out and then in flux of cocaine and the price was so high, because I had a friend named Michael Jordan that married two degrees equivalent of Nikki Barnes or somebody when cocaine was 55,000 a key at that time, he married Rhonda Reese. And so I got to witness 78, 79 eat the basin. And they start shipping out along with the gang members and they started catching on. That was one of the reasons as for its crypts expansion, particularly in Colorado, because in the inner cities of Los Angeles, Colorado University was getting a lot of youths, letting them come out there on a scholarship. And they started transporting back then to Ron Sherry. Now, they also a little bit earlier in the sixties. Mark can speak to that one day when you interview him. It was heron. But as far as the cocaine and the gang activity, it went hand in hand when they started fluctuating from out here, because as of the day, everybody wants a plug in California. Yeah. Same thing as it's California, Florida, Savannah, Houston. Everybody always want to plug from Cali, and that's always existed. And so now, as far as I'm concerned, it just had expanded. And that changed the landscape of a lot of cities. OK, yeah, I definitely I definitely when I look at us coming up at being young and we did not have a clue why we were doing what we was doing. We was I mean, a lot of people say, yeah, we did. I mean, but but it still brought prison and everything else. People going to change and flock up with different groups, no matter what. I believe, you know, even so before cripping before you even had associated with Crip where there are sectioned groups of people that hung out and hung together and pretty much that's what they done. Well, really, before that, it's on the West side. You had cliques, groups of men that ran together. Turkey, Warlock, Steve Goose, Buddha that got killed, Justin, Baycott, Egg Williams, Ricardo Sims, but above rest in peace. Melvin, Hardy, Monk, Joe Ransom. You had a lot of guys to where on the West side, we were into integration. Sixty nine, seventy. You could see Turkey standing at one end of St. Andrews Park and the white folks bowling on the bowling green at the other end. So we didn't have no history of like the slogans, the businessmen, the farmers or guys or gangs on the West side. There wasn't a lot of older guys at the oldest might be twenty other than that, there wasn't a lot of blacks over there because of the integration that was going on. So the West side is unique in that. So as they started the juveniles and they started mixing up Henry Clay, Horseman, the Smacks, the Cafe Boys, those that join me in the junior highs, it started to expand and crystallize on the West side. Then they went and end up being formed as the West side. Crips, Cukes, Mouse, Rusty, Chucky, Todd, Odie Shaw, Odie Gilcrest, Elma Jones, Spy, Trey Bar, Melvin, Hardy, James Miller. I could just name a lot of them that just was in here early in the game and don't need a lost a life where they resting in peace or they resting in pain.