 Lincoln with Sway, you know, how did that whole relationship even start? The Scarface, Slim Thug, Bun B, Pimp C, and the list goes on, we're going to add him to a Don Tiki. We're going to add T-Mode to it. We on Boss Talk 101, 101, yeah, we going to talk. No, but so how did you end up Lincoln with Sway, you know, how did that whole relationship even start? The Scarface, Slim Thug, Bun B, Pimp C, and the list goes on, we're going to add him to a Don Tiki. We going to add T-Mode to it. So high back in 2017, South by Southwest, you know, Sway always come down and, you know, they host a show and mutual friends I had from my college days, you know, they still in the Austin area. They was like, hey, Sway going to be here. So I went met them, rapped for them, and we just done built that relationship from there. Just networking, man. Put myself in the right place at the right time. What do you, what are some of the things like, like over the years, did you, you know, confide in him on any of the business moves sometime like, man, what do you think about this? No, man. It didn't get that heavy. I actually, you know, Sway, Sway is a, is a piracy, a rap piracy, man. He didn't seen it all. He didn't interviewed everybody. He didn't, he didn't been around the biggest names in the game. So, you know, even though I was rapping for him and I was nice, I wanted to make sure my resume made sense for me to go on his platform and in the represent for the state. Yeah. Not just this is a good rapping ass nigga. This is a good rapping ass nigga that didn't work his way up to be able to have a conversation with me and, and display his skill set on my platform. So that's really what it was all about. I could have went on Sway, you know, a few years ago, but let me make it make sense. Yeah. And you, and you did that. Sway, Sway show and love the whole, you know, the way he, he, he holds it down for the culture. Yeah. That's real. And he, and he, and he's, to me, one of those guys, I put him on a pedestal when he come down to the lyrics and really recognizing the craft. Yeah. He loved it. He really loved it. He didn't tell you if you suck. Yeah. Yeah. Don't mind. Yeah. Don't mind it all. Don't come up here with that bullshit, man. I'm going to go for you rap. So you already got that in your head. Yeah. If you, you know, if you not up for the occasion, you already got man, it's Sway. And he's saying, if you suck, I'mma tell you. So if you ain't ready to, you know, snap when them lights on, it could be tough, man. Man, it could be real tough. It could be tough, man. I was ready for it. So what's the first project you put together? So the first project I put together was called I Got the Juice. Really? Yeah. Based off the movie, Juice. And how long it was this and how old were you when you really started taking serious? I was taking music serious. I probably was about 22. Okay. And so this project I made when I was about 25, my first project. So it lets you know from the time I decided to rap for it, how long. But I always been an observer and a studier. So I used to be in a rap group back home and we had these Waco ciphers. So the whole city attuned in to these ciphers and I killed every ciphering. I just felt like I wasn't getting the respect I deserved. So one day I was sitting in my sister house and Juice came on the TV. I've seen it a million times, but for some reason that day I was just like, man, I'm finna kill all these niggas, just like two pot. My friends included. I love it. So I made a mixtape, 17 tracks, just me, just displaying lyricism, but just going at everybody. Wow. Everybody whole city. Anybody got friends too? How was it received? Niggas was mad. They was, but what can you do about it? Because you can't rap me at this point. Nobody didn't like, okay, I'm gonna beef with you and lyrically beef with you because of it? No, they'll be dumb. So what I did was the movie kind of played like a soundtrack. So I would take clips from the movie and the clips would relate to whatever the song I was making. And then I was just being super lyrically on top of that. So I was doing a lot of stuff at one time and people were so ready to hear a project from me. The people that didn't know what I was doing just love to hear the raps. But the, you know, the rappers, they was like, man, fuck him. Did you have a vision for that? You didn't do a video? I didn't do it. I did maybe one, but I didn't do too many visuals. You produced it yourself? No. It was so I took instruments. Like it was like a mixtape. Yeah. Yeah. So I had like a couple, a couple of regular instrumentals that I got from producers, but the rest of it was instrumentals. Ain't nobody else this? Not anyone. They ain't come back. Out of all of them that you did, out of all those 17, give me the hardest first out of all of that right now. Bishops atrial. They say being lyrical don't make a good rapper. It's just because you rap good don't make you lyrical. I said that I'd be a beast if I ever give them both. But they don't feel me though. I just need you to see my thought process. You simply be amazed at the levels that my mind catch. I'm anti-wee, so getting high there's no need, hurt your head trying to think like me. I'm blunt force trauma with no blunt objects. See what I mean? Damn it. Damn it. She gon' be in Michigan. She gon' be in Michigan. She gon' be in Michigan. This is a long time ago, man.