 What they gonna do with me now? I'm still a troke of the town. Got me the sisters, I'm hooking them down. What's up y'all, it's your girl Brianna Imani and you are tuned in to another Token of the Town interview and we have a very special guest today. Who we got in the building? With those drunk guys, we're Vezo. Yes, I swear Vezo. Thank you so much for stopping by. We're so happy to have you. Before we get into it, we're gonna do a quick round of rapid fire questions just as little ice breakers so we can get to know you a little bit more. All right? Ready? Yeah, let's get it. All right, favorite color? Blue? Best fast food restaurant. Raisin' Canes. Oh, and they just opened one in New York. Three words to describe your city. Which city? Oh, that's a good question because you have Detroit. Detroit. Gangsta. My fucking turnt up with trendy. All right. A song that's attached to one of your favorite memories? My favorite. I have to say one of my songs, Money Phone. Money Phone? Yeah. Okay, that's just real quick. That's one of the songs that like your real fans, they always say like, people be like, oh, you're not a real Iceware Vezo fan. If you don't know Money Phone, Money Phone, that's what they always say. Okay, a celebrity you would let play you in a movie. Let play me a celebrity. Damn, that's a good one. I don't know nobody that look like me though. They don't have to look like you. They ain't gotta look like me. Like maybe they could have the same swag, the same like move, similarly. Yeah. I think Lil Meats. Lil Meats? Yeah, for sure. All right. Yeah, for sure. I'm popular opinion. I'm popular opinion. Just overall? I'm popular opinion. Damn. You give me one, give me example. I believe in gender roles. I think that men and women, while we should have equal rights, men definitely have responsibilities that they should play in the household. I'm with you on that. I believe a man should take care of the household. I think now we're in a time where everybody wants everything across the board to be 50-50. No, I'm old school. I'm with that. I feel you on that. That's my unpopular opinion. No, you can't take mine. No, I'm not. How you gonna ask me for an example in the music? Because that's called up, but ours on a different side. You saying, so you saying you don't think women should do nothing either? I never said that. I think that women definitely should contribute to the household. But I think a lot of men think that when women say that we should be equal, it's across the board. Like, I think that men should change their tires. I think that they should provide for the household. I don't think that if I'm living with a man and we're married that I need to be going 50-50 on a rant. I believe that I can take care of the household. I'm keeping up with everything that's there. I'm making sure the family is straight. But there are responsibilities that I feel like a man should take care of. I think that is 50-50. But you have people, so like Dwayne Wade and Gabrielle Union, for example, she was saying they go 50-50. They money different though. So it's like she got. But I feel like money and gender. Dog shit just sitting in the bank. It's just like shit, let's just finish it. You know what I'm saying? Like I think if she ain't had a type of paper that she got, it wouldn't be like that. I think he'll be holding down. Maybe, but I think that if we both got it, why not do it as the man? Maybe it's like an empowerment thing to whom she might not mind. I think she just not petty. It's like shit. You think it's petty? I think it's petty. I think if a woman got. I think it's only petty if you're actually counting it. You know what I like for instance, right? So say if I'm up 10 million, my old lady, she come in, she only got a dollar, a million dollars or something, right? Then all right, all is well. I got it. I'm gonna hold it down. But if I'm up a dub or a dime or something like that and my old lady, she up a dub and a dime the same way. Let's just finish it. Like it's all, let's just finish it. I think it's petty not to. But I also think it's petty if you got way more paper than your old lady to make her put in on. Absolutely. I think that's petty. Maybe that's a missing component. I don't know how much they both have. So I'm just gonna based on speculation what I'm seeing in the video. She already got some cakes. Oh, well I know that. I know that my girl Gabrielle should be putting in our work. So all right, but wait, hold on. Cause you still didn't tell me your unpopular opinion. We over here having a whole side conversation. Don't think you're escaping it. I disagree. Yeah, I was about to say strip clubs got the best chicken wings. Strip clubs got the best food, period. Strip clubs, I haven't had food outside of chicken wings in the strip club, but I came out like for show in Detroit, the strip clubs got the best food. Really like across the board. Across the board. What should we gain from the strip club to eat? It got everything in that motherfucker. Bake, but like, you know, the Alfredo potatoes and shit like that. But the Alfredo, okay. So my whole thing is like, I feel like wings is a quick little finger food. You know, you got the dances. They come around. You could do a little boom. You could eat a little wing on the side. How do you want to eat a whole load of baked potato and throw your money? And like that's a lot of multi-tasking. When we got the strip club, we get our shit to go. Yeah, that's all good. We ain't sitting down eating, we taking that shit home. Oh, see me? I'll be hungry. So maybe that's why that's the only thing I got. They come in full course meals at our strip club. They got some shit, seafood, platas, all kind of shit. I gotta go out to Detroit. I said that when Skillababy was here too. Like definitely got to make a trip to Detroit. All right, so you stole another unpopular opinion, but it's okay. I'm gonna let you rock. A word that you use often? A word that I use often. See where I'm from, we always say, we say shit after everything. It's just how we, on the flow, it's on the flow. On the flow? I say that all the time about any scenario. And if you're from Detroit, you know exactly which way I'm using it, depending on what the conversation like. That's interesting. It's on the flow that motherfucking like universe. So it can mean anything. If it's like, you seal ops or anything, it's like it's on the flow, you know what I'm saying? Or if it's time to go, it's like, man, it's on the flow. Or it's like, shit, we bought a turnip. It's like, man, it's on the flow. You know what I'm saying? Or if you got some shit on, you got that shit on, you dress, you looking right, that shit looking good, it's like, yeah, it's on the flow. Nah, so it's very much a context-cruel situation. Yeah, I say that shit all the time, man. We all say shit, but we say it. It's how we say it like shit about everything. If you hear a Detroit person saying that, just know they laugh and at you. And they saying some suckers shit about shit. Nah, okay, that's good to know. So put it on, you said on the floor, is that, you're saying that's from Detroit, or are you saying that that's just something I'm saying? Without a doubt. I ain't gonna just say Detroit, it's from Michigan period, cause Flint folks say it all the time too. Okay. They say it's on the flow. Everybody in Detroit and just Michigan overall, we all say that. We've been saying that for years too. That's interesting, cause I didn't know. So how do you feel now that like, you know, we gotta put it on the floor. It's a big song right now. Do people do a remixes, Incorporate Night and A-Lingo? I think it's two different beds. I think like put it on the floor. I don't think she mean like. That on the floor. It's on the floor. I wear it. It's on the floor, not put it on. No, I know. But I didn't, I don't care. All right. It's a different bed. Excuse me. If you put together, if you were to put together a safe with three, do you smoke? No, I don't smoke. Okay, I was looking at three of your pictures, like you don't have no pictures like smoking. Usually artists be like in the studio smoking. I wasn't sure. It's like cigarettes. I stopped smoking. All right, so you, okay. Let's say, okay. Let's say a safe, not a smoking safe, but a rapping safe. You have to put together a safe with three other artists. Who do you think would go well in a safe with you? I talk that shit. I have to say, Rio, Krispy Life Kid, and RMC Mike. For sure. Okay. Shout out to them. Favorite cologne? Baccarat. Period. Black owned business. Fresh and pressed juices. Okay. And to wrap it up, 2023 so far in one word. Fast and a motherfucker. Fast. Fast. Quick. Okay, that's a good one. I mean, I say this all the time. Tom is definitely illusion. I can't believe we're already like like this shit going. We're halfway through the year already. Yeah, literally. So, okay, you said it's been fast. So how, like if you had to do a half of the year wrap up, like so far, what have been your takeaways from the year so far? Like, how's it been going? I just been cooling for real. I've been, this year I noticed that I ain't been like rushing to do too much shit. I just been letting everything play out. I ain't been forcing absolutely nothing. And I'm proud of myself for that. You know what I'm saying? I've been kind of just coasting like it is what it is. So you're clearly here in New York. So guys to have you. How's your time been here so far? I'm fucking New York. I'm gonna fucking be outside though, like. Outside? I ain't came in the summer though. Listen, we extra outside. You said you fucking New York. What are your like top five cities? Cause I'm sure you be going around. What's like the top five cities that you been to? Or that you really like fuck with? I'm fucking Miami the long way. I'm fucking Miami or Atlanta for sure. Miami is a Bob. Houston and shit. New York and Chicago. Okay. The hotspots. Yeah. I haven't been to Chicago yet, but I really do want to go. I'm fucking right. Okay. So recently the BET Awards, you know, just came. Did you go? No, I had an event to do that day. Okay. Did you watch? Nope. I could. We had a picnic in my hood that we have area called the six Nick. Uh huh. So I was doing that shit during the BET Awards. Well, we're definitely going to get into that. I think the bunch of the highlights though, like the shit was turnt this year. We're definitely going to get into what you were doing on that day. But with the BET Awards, yeah, there were a lot of highlights. I feel like one that definitely stuck out to me, of course, was the Migos tribute to take. That was very, it was good to see them come together. And it was also just, I feel like a moment for everybody to really remember the impact that he had. And I know he had an impact not only on us as consumers, but you as an individual. Yeah, that was really my homeboy like in real life. He was the first big artist to like, you know what I'm saying? Fuck with me just overall, pull up to my hood and show love just period, you know what I'm saying? Gave me game about all this shit. Like that was really my homeboy like in real life. That was my friend. And I think it's always important as an upcoming artist to have that support from someone who is considered to be a big name because it just, you know, it helps you believe in your mission just in case you have any shadows without. How important do you think that is to have somebody co-sign you who already has a name like that? I think a co-sign always count, you know what I'm saying? But for me, bro, it wasn't necessarily a co-sign. It was just a game, you know what I'm saying? And just like you say, most important thing was just showing me like, damn, I must be doing something right, you know what I mean? Keep going. It was just that motivation to let me know it's gonna work, you know what I'm saying? So I think that's extremely important. It helped a lot of artists, any artists that get that, you know, every artist can tell you anytime they do get that, that shit just, it just motivated and it revamped that dream and it keep that hope right where it need to be. Cause it's like, yeah, I got it. This shit gonna happen. Right. And it's definitely like a full circle moment also because now you're assigned to QC. And also, I mean, you are in a position where you can now, you know, encourage people who are coming up as well and give them that same kind of confidence boost or even reassurance about where they're going with their careers. Who are like some artists right now that you feel like you are like backing and in support of that are like up and coming? For show, Krispy Life Kid from Flint. It's another young dude named Jungle. He from Detroit. Like he going crazy, turning up heavy right now. Who else? Chucky, you know what I'm saying? Man, it's a lot of guys. I tap in with everybody. I make sure every time somebody like on the come up in Detroit, I reach out, give them verses, videos, whatever it is. I make sure I try to do my part. So you're still doing it cause I heard and want, well, I heard you say in one of your interviews that you were giving out like free verses. And I thought that that was really dope because a lot of people, they want verses from people that they may listen to on a day to day basis, but they can't afford it. So how do you determine like who you want to give a verse to versus like who you were charged or like, how does that situation go? It's more so like, you ever, you ever cut, you ever heard of somebody before you actually heard them? It'd be a situation like that where like the young homies keep telling me about certain niggas and then it's just like, it makes sense. Let me, you know what I'm saying? Homes on this way, let me play my part to kind of push them over that edge as far as in Detroit, you know what I'm saying? That's how I play it for real. Okay. I don't take money from niggas who I know ain't really got it too. I don't like that. I don't have people try to spend their money and pay for features with me and shit. But I just knew they ain't, you know, they was spending their last or they ain't have it. They say it up. I don't even, I don't, I'd be feeling crazy doing it. Were you ever in a situation like that where you had to spend your last for a feature? I always give money, I ain't. I don't, period. I forgot what I'm talking to, my bad. Not even trying to play, though. I'm afraid of like respectfully, I've been giving money for a long time. Well, you know what? Let's talk about it. You have been getting money for a long time. I know that, well, let me not say I know, but I think that I know that at a young age you had bought a restaurant. Talk to me about that a little bit because not only did you buy a restaurant, but there was some things that was going down in that restaurant. Yeah, that shit was just crazy. Let's talk about it. So how old were you when you bought your restaurant? I was 24 when I grabbed it. Yeah, I had a restaurant, a dispensary, and a car wash. They was all in the same block. My restaurant and my car wash was next door to each other, but them shits kept getting raided, so I had to shut them down after about a year and a half. Yeah, about a year and a half. It definitely gives, I'm not a businessman, I'm a businessman because you have a lot of things going on. I didn't realize that it was that late in the game, though, because you have some stuff that predates that I definitely want to get into, so we're gonna rewind it back a little bit. Growing up in Detroit, what is your first music memory? Like at what point did you realize that music was something that you wanted to get into? I knew I wanted to rap since I was a shorty. Like, you know what I'm saying? I just, just looking at the guys like the street lords and Blade Icewood and all them, I knew that's exactly what I wanted to do. You know what I'm saying? I idolized that type of shit. Like I loved, when I was a kid, I loved like jewelry and cars and just being one of them niggas, like I wanted that shit, yeah. So, you know, I knew that's what I was gonna do. So, I know that you were born in Minnesota, moved to Detroit. How old were you when you moved? So, we first moved when I was six months, then we moved back to, so I was born, then after six months we came to Detroit. Then when I turned two years old, we went back to Minneapolis. Then when I was in third grade, I believe we came back to Detroit. Okay. Okay, so you basically were raised in Detroit. How long do you feel like a person should live in a city before they're considered to be like an artist from the city? I ain't gonna lie. I think you gotta be raised in that city to consider yourself an artist from that city. Cause you can move to a city when they're 19 or 16 and stay there for 10 years and now they're 26, I still think they're technically not from that city. That's how I think, you know? Yeah, I think it's- I feel like wherever you was raised at, where you were, you fell and bumped your head, where you grew up at, where you aged at and learned your mistakes at, got your first piece of head, all that type of shit. I caught my first case, got my first piece of pussy, all that in Detroit. I was literally raised there, you know what I'm saying? I never lived nowhere else in my life. So I think that's important. Me personally, if I live in a city for even 15 years, I wouldn't claim that city. Really? I would. I think it depends on the age. Cause I know you said 16, I still feel like 16. Let's say you have like a 30 year old, like I know you're in your 30s right now. So like if you, let's say moved to Detroit when you were like 14, 15. I think that's too late. You think that's too late? That's too late, that's too late. I wouldn't do it, I wouldn't claim it. I feel you wouldn't at, because even when it comes to like Myrtleby, she's a New York artist. And there's like a debate about where she's from, how long she's been living there. Like people tend to bring that up a lot. And she's like, it was only for a few years. Cause you gotta think how impactful your childhood is on your period. You know what I'm saying? Your childhood is, that shit is what shape you and what define you as a adult. That shit is extreme, it's important. You know what I'm saying? Wherever your childhood memories is, that's where you from to me. I think if a motherfucker like five years old, then yeah, they respectfully, they can claim that city. But if you pass 12 and 13, like you say 14, 15 years old and you say you start rapping at the age of 25, you not from that, you from where the hell you live at from the age of one to 14. Okay, does it change if you started rapping at 14, 15? Cause you're still very impressionable. That might be different, you're right. You're still very impressionable at a very impressionable age. You're still kind of working on your craft, building, you know. They can have that, I give them that. So, okay, it's situational. Situational, that's good. We'll leave it at it's situational, but something that you said was your childhood is very important, the way that you grow up. I know that you also, before you became solo, you were part of the Green Guys rap group with your family, was it? No, Green Guys was a group, was like my family. They had their little thing going on and we just started kind of rapping it in Detroit and then we became a rap group. It was Peasy, Babyface Ray, GT, Dame Dot, Lil Perry and Rest in Peace, Team East Side, Snoop. They was all a rap group called Team East Side and GT and then I joined that group. And how, how were you at that point? We was shorties, we was like 19, 20, something like that. One thing I will say is it seems like there are a lot of relationships in Detroit that go beyond just like the music. Like it's like I really grew up with these niggas. Like I really know them outside of the songs that we want together. That's how it is, that's how it is. And you know, you, Peasy and Babyface Ray, give me that, cause there's only a few tapes, a few projects that they don't make it on. One thing about Iceman Bezos, he's gonna play Babyface Ray and Peasy. On a track. And I think that that's so dope that you have those lasting relationships with them. So how would you say like the Detroit music culture is now in comparison to how it was when you first started making music? I think we've super turned. I think we're doing an amazing job right now. When I first started, we ain't had this type of recognition like worldwide. Nobody understood our music cause our music didn't change. The same shit that we put out now, that's the same way our shit been sounding. Nothing changed about the music. But motherfuckers didn't understand it. I remember probably like 2014, I came to New York and the biggest song in Detroit at the time was a song I had called Dancing and Got It All Alone. It was two of them. I'm talking about this shit was super huge on the radio all day, every day. It wasn't no car driving in no hood that wasn't playing this whole project. It was clarity too. We brought that shit to New York and was planning for the DJs. They was sitting there like. They wasn't jacking in. What the fuck is this? It just was trash to them, you know what I'm saying? But now they understand that same sound that they didn't like, so. That happens though. A lot of music, I feel like when it's native to the city that it's from, a lot of times it's not really as transferable as it would be. I feel that way right now. I'm starting to like transfer into appreciating it a little bit more about go-go music. People from the DMV love go-go music. I haven't been able to really get myself into it that much, but I know if you're from there, it's like fire. Like it hits a different part of your soul. But what do you think it takes for a song to go across different cities and kind of connect with people that aren't familiar with the sound? I mean, right now that's easy. It's social media. It's as simple as that. Social media is what played the part in us being able to brand our way. It's social media, that's it. I think people outside of the few people that I did was playing the shit folk. You never know. People probably would have been fucked with it if they just had a chance to hear it. They just didn't have a chance to hear it. Now they got a chance to hear it and see it. So social media changed everything for us. So how do you feel about people? Because I think the same. I think that even when it comes to music outside of the Detroit music, when people see something on social media as trending or a lot of people are kind of like gearing towards a specific type of sound, they'll try to mimic it or try to hop on it because they know that it's popular. Have you noticed any artists picking up that Detroit sound? Yeah. No, I noticed that. Everybody noticed that. I mean, I noticed it too. So how do you feel about that? It is what it is. I appreciate the shit. They helping us turn the sound up. I look at it like they getting more people to accept it. Yeah. That's a win. You know what I'm saying? It's a win. Do you feel like they're doing it justice? Yeah, they are for sure, without a doubt. Because now when we do it, it's going to be more acceptable, faster. And I think as long as motherfuckers know where the sound come from, it'll do us justice. But if don't nobody know where the sound come from, then it might hurt us because you got people that'll be like, oh, they trying to copy such and such. This such and such sound. They don't know these folks got this shit from us. Well, I think the good thing about Detroit music specifically is the Detroit. Yeah, I was about to say, y'all on the map, and y'all are doing what needs to be done right now. So the focus is on y'all. So whatever comes from that, it's been official for so without a doubt. OK, that's good. So one thing about you that I really admire is how involved you are in your community, not only when it comes to incorporating your neighborhood and your music videos and stuff like that, but also just giving back in general. And I know we just talked about BT Awards Day. You had something, was that what, the 23rd? Yeah, the 25th. The 25th, OK, excuse me. You had something going on. Talk to us a little bit about that and also the importance of doing stuff like that in your community. Well, we had the 6th Nick going on that day. We do this every single summer. For the last 25 years, it's been going on. This is my second summer actually paying for it, myself type of shit. So you know what I'm saying? Well, we separated. So like the 25th, we did it for the shorties. And then we're going to have another one for the grown-ups later on down before the summer end. And we gave away free clothes, free shoes. We had rides. We had a bunch of special guests pop out. You know what I'm saying? All that shit. I just think it's important that kids be able to see niggas that's from the same hood as them. You know what I'm saying? Make it out, get some money, do this shit the right way, do it legally, and still be able to see them and touch us. You know what I'm saying? And just be able to fill our energy overall. You know what I mean? I think that's important. I think that's going to help inspire them as well to want to do the same shit. I think that that's dope. I also think that reminds me of I was watching Lil Baby's documentary and it was a part where they said Doug had offered to pay him whatever it was. He was making on the streets just so that he could get off of it and work on his craft and focus because he's got a potential in him. So I really, I really like, you know, when people take that responsibility to show the youth like there are other options, you can still get to it. But just, you know, make sure you're mindful of the way that you're doing that. But in the vein of your neighborhood and like just the things that you do for your community, I know that you have a project coming out based on the way that you grew up and based on, you know, what was going on. Talk to us a little bit about that. Let us know what the name is and what the inspiration behind that project is. It's called Live from the Six, you know. So I'm basically just bringing the whole nation into Six Mile. I'm letting them see how we rock, you know what I'm saying. Hear how we think, you know, all the way down to the slang we use, to the way we look at shit and just overall, you know what I'm saying. I just want to bring the whole world to my hood verbally. And in terms of like the vibes that we can be getting from this project, what would you say if you had to use about like three words to describe what the feeling of the project would give you? What would you use? I think it's, you know, it's just real, you know, it's gritty and it's original. Okay, any features that you could? No, I ain't put no features on it. No features? Wow, okay. I'm gonna thug it out. I got a gang of features too, just sitting, but I just want to do some shit by myself this time and give myself a chance to just pop my shit, you know what I mean. And it's your story to tell too. It's my story and it's about my hood and they ain't from there. Right, so I know our time here is very short and I know you have to get ready to go, but I have to ask you, I know that now you do have a deal with QC and you have a song with baby already. Now, are there any other QC artists that you would either like to work with or you have something that you've worked with already in the club? We all work together already, you know what I'm saying. We got shit that just ain't, me and baby even got music that ain't came out yet. Me and Yachty got shit that ain't drop shit, you know what I'm saying? You said all. Carisha, JT? I want to work with them, we're gonna work with them. Hold on, let me find out. You got about girls at the time. We just thuggin' though, you know, everybody over there doing their thing. I do know it's all respect all around the board with everybody from the artists to A&Rs, to the people behind the scenes, to the CEOs. It's just respect, you know what I'm saying? Okay. It's family over there. All right, and now, you know, you have to come back. We're gonna do an air pinky promise that the next time that you come to New York, we're gonna do a part two so that we can really get into it, but before we really wrap it up, I have one more game that I wanna play with you. You dropped a song with GZ last December, one time. Really liked it, 2.5 million views on YouTube. Y'all really ran it up, it was really good. But I wanna ask you about the one time, you just gotta give me one time that certain things happen in your life, okay? All right. All right, one time a fan made you smile. I just smiled at my concert in Minneapolis. I feel like you're gonna say I just smiled, like, okay. One time someone in the industry had you all the way fucked up. That's more than one time. But just one time. The first that comes to your mind. Oh man, I ain't even gonna say home's name. One time, I was at the radio station, right? And I was coming to do some whole other shit. And my man was a DJ, he was interviewing an artist, a national artist at the time. I didn't know this artist was down there. I was literally meeting somebody in a camp to do some other shit, you feel me? I walked in the studio park and the nigga literally said, I just want everybody to know I ain't taking no pictures and I ain't trying to listen to nobody music cause I ain't signing nobody right now and I looked around and I'm like, who he talking to? He like, I ain't talking to nobody's picture. I'm like, I don't think I don't give a fuck about you, my nigga, I ain't here for that. Yeah, I don't like that. He a big artist and I don't wanna, it's another time where another artist, a little girl drew him a picture, right? Drew him a picture and she tried to give him a picture and he said he wasn't taking any gifts. And then she had me mad. Not for a little girl. Like that, see, I feel like, you know, obviously I don't know what is like. But at the end of the day, you don't, you know, just thinking, thinking where I'm at now, like it's just like, you don't know what the situation was, but that first situation had me fucked up all the way. Yeah. All right. One more, cause I'm getting evil. All right. One time you felt accomplished. One time I felt accomplished. I feel accomplished every time my mama smile and tell me she love, I mean, she proud of me. I always feel accomplished. I mean, when she tell you she love you too. Yeah, for sure. There's nothing wrong with that. She been loving me though. Okay, so now I know you have a lot of things coming. I saw you posted with Felicia Rashad that y'all have something coming out. I used to wear a bezel getting into his jacket bag. You know what I'm saying? We love to be the burst of tidility. Like I said. I got movies out though. No, listen, I know. I know, Tuvi, Amazon Prom. I know. See, I fuck where y'all here. She a real one. We made our pinky promise y'all. So like I said, we not really even getting into it. Cause what's it about me? We gonna get into it, but let us know what we can expect from you just like coming up so that we can stay posted. Obviously we have the project coming up. What else? Mo movies. I'm jumping that bag. Like real, you know what I'm saying? We gotta shoot. I'm filming a new movie in September. You heard tag the movie out right now. Price the Love out right now, but I'm fucking with the movies and them TV shows. We on that. We on everything. I'm on everything. I'm catching me a hundred Ems this year. For sure. I know, I'm sorry. I'm still gonna make me a hundred Ems. Big ice, we coming. All right, well listen. Let the people know where to find you until the next time. I swear underscore a bezel on all social media platforms. Follow me right now. Stay tuned. Right now. We on everything moving. You heard big ice. Thank you so much again for coming. It was so good speaking to you. And until next time. Bye y'all. Appreciate it.