 When you play the same person over and over every day, like why hasn't Jalil White been in no movies? He's an amazing actor. He's a phenomenal actor. But he played Urkel every day. And that's all they saw. Yeah, we on boss talk one-on-one, one-on-one. Yeah, we gonna talk. Go ahead. No, no, no, no, you go. No, I was gonna go back into the film a little bit. Oh yeah. But, cause I know you did scandal. Yes, ma'am. And so, but what do you prefer to do? You prefer to do TV series or movies? Like an actor. I prefer to do music. I was gonna get into that. I know you love music, but if you had to choose between those two. Movies. Why? Cause I don't wanna play the same person all the time. I like to change. I like to embody characters. And when you really embody a character, you have to go in. And so, you know, when you go in, you gotta also get out. And when you get out, you need some time to like, refine yourself. But when you play in the same person over and over, or you know, every day, like why hasn't Jalil White been in no movies? He's an amazing actor. The people see him as that person. He's a phenomenal actor, but he played Urkel every day. And that's all they saw. That's all they see him as. You know what I mean? I didn't wanna be Harrison Wright all every six years. I'm a man, I hit it and I quit it and I keep pushing forward. Cause it's the ball. We gotta keep evolving. We gotta keep pushing. We gotta keep growing. So I never get, I'm never comfortable with where I'm at. But at least in movies, I get to emote and I get to tell the stories. You know, I don't wanna tell no more slave stories, man. You know what I'm saying? I got projects. You know, I got the life rights to Doc Ellis. He threw a no-hitter on LSD. Amazing story. No way. But the story is not amazing because he threw a no-hitter on LSD. The story is amazing because this man struggled with addiction. He struggled with alcoholism. Is that the one that you studied? You actually became, had to become an alcoholic? No, no, I haven't done it yet. Okay, cause somebody was telling me that you had to play a part. Oh, Cadillac records. Right, so you actually became an alcoholic? I was a method actor then. And method is amateur night. And I realized that because I was so scared of losing him. Right, losing it, losing the character. Like if I go home, I'm gonna forget, I'm gonna forget how to be him. I'm gonna forget how, so I gotta be him at all time, man. Nah, now, growth. It's like you go to work. You put your lab coat on. And when you leave, you take it off? You take it off and you go back home. And that's where I've grown to. How long did it take you to? 39 years. 39 years. Today, today's your birthday. So, I mean, when I seen you play those anger parts, you really embodied those, when he was mad on this Christmas, he was upset on something. I've been mad my whole life, dawg. I've been mad all my life. I've been mad, I've been mad, I've been mad. But the character, the character said, man, nigga, got him. I said, man, that boy played up parts right there, man. It is real, too. It's real, like I'm like, I'm into it, bro. But that's what I love about acting. And I love about music. I love about art. Art allows you to emote everything you can't deal with in your real life. But then sometimes, which happens with a lot of actors, think about all the actors that have killed themselves. Rock stars that have killed themselves or died or OD'd or anything, it's because instead of dealing with our issues, we hide in our craft. The character. Not in the character, the art. The art. And when I could hear a guitar, I don't even care. Jimmy Hendrix didn't care. He could put that asset right on there, tie the thing, tie his bandana in, sweat it out on the stage, and high as a giraffe's ass, doesn't care. Because he's emoting and he's living, he's not thinking about anything. But that's not the way to do it. But at the end of the day, when you finish that, you go back to reality, you have to deal with it. And that's why nobody wants to be back and nobody wants to be with reality, right? So it's like, let's get to reality, dude.