 it's a unique hustle nigga big shit big shit big shit big shit name another podcast like this we're gonna bring it to the table boss talk with your girlfriend we're gonna do it how you want Check it check it check it it's a unique house issue boy e ceo and I'm here with the lovely official mr. Makel What's going on? Jamaica Dana, the host. Huh? What the hell is this? What did you say? Jamaica is here. Okay, okay, you know, after 18 years, I'm still trying to figure all this out. Okay, okay. Save man, check it, man. We got a beautiful guest in the house today, y'all. Somebody who don't really need an induction. I'm gonna be honest with you. Everything I ever seen in them, I've been watching men and dang, she fly, she dope. She work hard, work hard. So I like that, man. Check it, man. Kate Breeze is in the building. What up, Kate Breeze? Oh, what's popping? I should have said red to him, good Kate Breeze in there. You know, they only have bosses here. So, you know, it was only right I came. You had to show up, right? Nah, for sure. So, man, you know how we always started off, man. That's how we get y'all every time. We be wanting to hear who you are, who you were. Okay. And who you want to be. You know what I'm talking about? Before any of that. Yeah, yeah. When we get all the way into just, because what we look at is, it's a lot of people that listen and tune into our podcast. We're on Apple Spotify, Google podcast, and we're on YouTube, and somebody, some young girl out there, she's striving to be an artist. Right. And we want to paint that picture for us, especially our little young black girls. You know what I'm saying? So just tell us how you ended up. Not only just want to be an artist, but somebody might hear a certain situation that you had faced in the past and be like, man, that's where I'm right now. I didn't know that you overcame that situation. You know what I mean? Yeah, for sure. So what's up with it? She a little background about me. I'm from Dallas, Texas. I was born in Oak Cliff. Oh, Oak Cliff? You know, one of the most notorious neighborhoods in Dallas, like we be like, everybody know Oak Cliff now. What part of Oak Cliff were you in? Really go inside, Keystone, Westmoreland. I'm from Briar Gay Departments. When you say that, I gotta know, since I'm not really from here, I wanna know, what makes Oak Cliff so notorious? Not even on a negative tilt. I'm just saying, period, we kinda the heart of Dallas, like all the culture come from us, like from the way we talk, the lingo, the way we dress, a lot of the fashion starting Oak Cliff. Like you see a lot of the dudes, they had to shag her, couldn't. The duck tails, that's kinda like a Dallas theme, like people on the outside. That started in Oak Cliff. I would say it started in Dallas cause I've seen different hoods, but I feel like Oak Cliff niggas were at the base, you feel me, you know. Yeah, it's just a certain charisma. I don't know, it's something that's just in our genetic code when you from Oak Cliff. Okay, I got you. So, let's talk about it, let's get into it. So you come up, your sisters and brothers, nobody, you just on your own, you just- I'm the Golden Child, I'm the only child. Wow, that's dope, yeah. All my brothers and sisters are like people I met, like my best friends that became family on some sheep. But I'm really the only child single parent home. I never met my dad. Oh really? So mama held it in, my mama was against it. Yeah, yeah. But you knew who your dad was, and you just never met him? I knew he was, but I never met him, I never got to meet him. My mom- Is he still living? I don't think so. Okay. I don't even know. You don't know? No, my mom- Have you ever asked her? Really, he kinda lost topic. Okay. My mama just passed in March. Wow. So I just lost her. Man, you'll never be able to feel that spot. Nah, for real. I know I lost mine in 96 and I was 23, 24 at the time. And yeah, yeah, yeah, that's something else because you never feel that spot. And, but you always can talk to her. You know what I'm saying? Nah, for sure. I go outside, it may sound crazy when I'm in the backyard or I'm in the garage to something I talked to my mama. I mean, I'll be like, you know, the conversation we used to have, you know, it'd be like that, you know? So, man, coming with that gonna be different. Nah, for sure. I feel like when I lost my mom, that was my first real heartbreak experience. I really feel like something kinda died in me, but also something else beginning me, if that makes sense. Yeah, it makes a lot of sense. So I'm at the beginning of that right now. Yeah, yeah. So like, yeah, she was my best friend though. Our relationship was like out of this world, like people would wish they had that type of relationship. I'm talking about like, since I was young, I always been thugging. My mama would take, I was 12 years old. My mama, I was throwing parties at little clubs and skater rings. My mama, the mama that's taking all of us out. Y'all gotta find a right home. I drop y'all off here and stuff. Like, just to cool y'all tough. Yeah, for sure. That's really what it is. She made y'all tough. For sure. What did she, did she die of cancer or something? I'm not sure why she died. We thinking it's so hard to tell, but we still, it's too early to call it, yeah. So it was unexpected. Yeah, it was random. She didn't have bad health or anything. It was just random. You know, that's why I always tell people, you know, you gotta live every day like it's your last one. Nah, for sure. I really do. You gotta talk to people, hug people. I told everybody on the show, when I started this podcast, it was when Kobe Bryant died. Now I stopped because Kobe hit for a whole year, but we was here and I told people, you know, you didn't know Kobe really, but at the end of the day, you should be hugging and your kids and the people that you got this dear to you that's here, you need to love them more and hug them harder tonight. You know, stuff like that. So when you got an opportunity, you gotta love and hug, man, you know what I'm saying? And age, death has no age. Not for real. So you gotta tell your kids and explain to them about death because it's not only for you, because you think, oh, your kid's gonna be here forever because they're younger, but it can go either way. So if you leave before them, you don't wanna leave like your mom leaving you, you don't wanna leave you where you weren't able to handle it. Because yeah, so many people who break down don't know how to go on without a person and all of that. So you wanna be able to tell that person that, hey, when I'm gone, it could be 20 years from now, 40 years. I want you to move on with your life. I want you to love. I want you to do this. You wanna say those things. And some people be like, man, I don't wanna hear that. Nobody wants to talk about that, but you need to. Yeah, so just a little bit, when you went to school, where'd you go to school at? I went to A.W. Brown Elementary. That's on Redbird Lane. I went to school in the Soto for middle school. I went to Hampton Preparatory. And then I graduated from a school called Triple A Academy on Lairbidder. Growing up, I played basketball. Could you? Hell yeah. Man, come on down here. I got a basketball scholarship to college. Bro, you really could get out there. Nah, for real. What position did you play? I was a lot of girls come on here. Really whichever one I had too, because at the time, you know, girls- You were that good. Yeah, girls weren't really tall. I'm five, seven, so I was kind of big. So if we playing a short team, Kasia might put me in a post. But really I was like point guard, shooting guard in college. But I played everything in high school. Where'd you go to college? McMurray University in Abilene. Yeah, for sure, yeah. I thought basketball was gonna be the way up for sure. Man. But you know what? I feel like I was kind of brainwashed and tricked into that though. How and why? Cause I feel like as an athlete, no disrespect to athletes or anything like that. This is my connotation and opinion of it. We kind of, I feel like after I stopped, I stopped playing because I ain't living no more. But I feel like being like a child athlete is kind of like slavery in the sense. Yeah, yeah, I get it. I got good and bad out of it. But I'm like, bro, what if I would have been, like we would practice three times a day. Like I was in AAU, like I was a real hooper. So like with the other time, like damn, what if I would have started music earlier and start like that same energy I was putting into basketball? Did you have a love for music early on? Yeah, I started rapping at eight. So my big cousin, he kind of helped raise me too along with my mom and my aunt. You know, he looked like Tupac. He ballheaded. Really? He got the Thug Life tattoo and he had a studio in the house. So as a little girl, he taking me to school. I mean, my car seat rapping Tupac lyrics early, you know. Really? So he did music and recording and stuff. I recorded my first song with him when I was, I want to say maybe 11, but I was rapping at eight. Like it's a little, we got a little VHS videos of me, the eight year old me rapping, which I plan to put out some time. You're going to put that on a video. Nah, for real, that's what I'm going to do. Man, so once you, when did you get serious about the music? I want to say about three years ago. Three years ago? Why so long? I want to say 2017, I got serious. Why so long? Okay, cause I was hoping again, I thought I was spending hoops. Cause she's still young. And you fin, how old are you? I'm 24. Okay, so you finished college. Did you finish? Nah, I dropped it. But look, I'm finna tell you this. So boom, I dropped my song. And um... Was it pop there? No, I dropped a song that was a feature, right? Okay. I dropped it. I'm sending this to everybody. This is my first song. And I, and at this time... Cause I thought you hit it off the bat. Look, I'm going through it with a basketball. I don't think I love this number. I went to a school. It was kind of a Caucasian school, right? And it was a lot of politics. I didn't know that she, if your parents sponsored the team and they put money into the team, you probably going to get a little more love. Yeah. And so a lot of that was going on. And I was maybe one of three black girls on the team. And I threw the black girls. We was good. We was colder than the white girls. Of course, of course. So we start, they start playing them games to where I'm whooping this girl every day in practice. Like I'm going up. But then you playing me not that much time or trying to find a reason like I'm doing something bad. Like that's why you're not putting me in. But in reality, it's cause these people, parents are paying. That's right. So it was some weird stuff going on, which kind of made me, I ain't going to say just made me lose my love. I was like, I don't really want to do this. I've really spent all my life doing this. So... Everything happens for a reason. Exactly. So I said, you know what? I'm in school. I'm like, God, I think I'm going to quit this team. There are ideas. I don't want to quit something without starting something else. I like all I've done growing up is rapping, dancing and music in a basketball. So I was like, let's see what rap going to do for me, God. And if this for me, like show me. This one, I first start understanding the high pal wind. It does sound. So I made this feature with my partner, Unique. We dropped the video. I'm sending it to everybody or our rappers. At the time, my three was the hottest rapper at the time. I sent it to him. As soon as I sent it to him, he DM me. He was like, hey, I'm going to sign you. I'm like, what? And he was like, I want to sign you. So he took me under his wing for about two years. I went my separate ways from him and his camp because kind of how they was doing business. I ain't like how they did it. But you know, I got the game I needed and I just moved along. But let me, let me just say something, man. Just phases of life. Yo, for sure. Exactly. It ain't no hard. No, no, no. People evolve. And a lot of times we had to learn, even being here for 15 years, we had to learn to let people walk in and out of our lives. And we had to get used to that. With tough skiing to say, we cool, but it's okay for you to leave. It's okay for you to come. Because that's how you learn where God wants you to be as you position yourself. Something that you said was, God, you kept saying, okay, God, if it's for me. See, that's the key element. Right. And I dropped my first home. My third was the hottest rep in the city. I was like, just nigga fuck with me. And so God pretty much put it there. That was a sign. That was what you needed. And he stamped it and I dropped out of college and went back to Dallas and started. But so in music. Wow. So that's crazy. And so did you and him ever do anything together? We got about four unreleased records that I still have in my email. You got them? Yeah, I got them. But if you hear them, you can tell I was 18 on the song. That's fine. Yeah, but they're dope. But yeah, I got them for you. But couldn't you make them though? Yeah, nobody said you had to redo your side. You had to redo your side? Yeah. But I would, to be honest with you, because your career is taking off. And you're so dope, man. Yeah. But it's kind of, it's kind of sweet now. Now that he not heard. But it's still like I talked to Mr. Leader of the night. Mr. Lee did. He did Tupac's album after he died. He did. He did PMC album after he died. And he did Blue Laces three. There were two and three. He actually got three coming out with Rick Ross. We just talked about this the other night. So it's okay. You should do injustice because that's what he would want. He would want his legacy to live on. You see where I'm coming from? And you dope as hell. And you can always do like we're a percentage of any money you make. Go back to the family. To his kids. You know what I mean? Yeah. That's dope. Y'all got some crazy records with him. I actually, we did draw one record that was on his album. It was called Gangsta Love 2. The song was called Drunk Love or Drunk Sex. It was called Drunk Sex. It was good. Did you like it? Yeah, it was cool. It was like one of my first songs in the studio with him. And especially learning like they sing and shit. Like we're out of tune in my melody. He taught me a lot of that. I learned a lot. I picked up a lot of that from him. Wow. How would you describe Mode 3? I never got to meet him. Like him as a personal artist. Yeah, him as a working with him. Both, both. Okay. You saying both? Both, yeah. It's a person, like he just a regular dude. Yeah. But as an artist is more what I was into. Woo. Like. For us his work ethic and how he influenced you. He had a great work ethic. I would watch him go in the studio. At this time I was writing. Me, I'm a writer. I don't know. I like writing stuff down too. Cause it's kind of therapeutic in a sense. But he wasn't really no writer. He'll hear a beat and just go on there and just say this hard shit without nothing. He ain't do no drugs and he ain't do no alcohol. Real sweet, funny guy. Yeah. Just a hard worker like about his business. A lot of people try to paint a bad picture about him. But really he just like everybody else. If somebody won't this then that's what it's gonna be. You know what I'm saying? It's like people become what you make them in the environment that you're in. Right for sure. So if somebody come at you in a way or whatever's going through you develop around that whole scenario. So I get it. Sometimes you can be a good person but hell. Like you can be an angel but you got devils around you. They can taint the view of what I'm looking at at you. Definitely. Definitely. I could tell everybody like bro this my best friend, they great. Everybody like nah. And I'm like what do y'all see that I don't. But sometimes it be the people around you that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I like the way that you got something that a lot of people can't say that they was signed. I mean did he have other female? I think he did but it was never like on the paperwork thing. It was just like he was trying. Yeah. But yeah. That's dope. That's dope. You got something that you can have. Now that's a blessing for sure. And at the end of the day one day. One day one of his kids may get older and they may want to know about something that happened with him and they could talk to you. Because you be looking for that. They don't, they're young. They're too young to do so. They don't take them too young in the room. So at some point maybe they pull it up on the internet or see that you had dealings with him and want to seek you out just to understand. Yeah. So that's the stuff, that's what this all about. Nah, for real. Just making sure that these avenues out there that it can help somebody else that might need to see something. So when you think about it, when you think about the music and everything that you put together and pushed into this whole realm, do you feel like you were you ought to be? No. And the reason I say that is because me, the type of person I am, like I don't expect everything to fall in my life. I kind of fall in love with the process of growing and changing every day. So I don't think I ever just be like, okay, like I made it. Like me, I always want more. I get that. And yeah, like I kind of, I like to grow. I like to hustle. Since forever, I always got it out of the mood. I made something out of nothing. And I feel like just having that type of work ethic, especially when you made it and you getting Ems in, everything straight, keeping that same energy. That's what I'm all. So you want to go ahead and ask? So what's the most difficult, looking back on your life when you first started till now, what would you say would be a challenging moment in your life being a female rapper that you couldn't name? Man, I was just about to say that, really everybody's trying to have sex with you. Man, I had some people on here. We hear that all the time. Everybody's trying to have sex with you. It gets annoying, doesn't it? I was saying some things from big artists that I could not believe these girls show me. I'm like, are you serious? You said, what? And it showed and said, that's this number right there. And I'm like, are you serious? Yeah, it's like. It's like they think you owe them something? Nah, it's just like we got to work 10 times harder because like we, it's like we're a shiny object that everybody won't write. So it's like they'll play friendly like they want to do business. But at the end of the day, they just trying to get you some. But that's why I don't know about it. I know I was going to ask you about how was it when you first went in the studio and Mo3 was there and other men was around? Was he protective over you? Yeah, definitely for sure. Like he was like, hey, y'all don't know none of y'all. She, yeah, she not know how none of that she already, she like wanted, she like sis. So y'all treat her like that. He ain't never come at me crazy or anything like that. I just wanted to put that out there. So, you know, they need to go out into the wave. A lot of the dudes that surround me like my manager, Supreme, my team, they don't play about me. Like niggas know, conquer it, you know? Yeah, yeah, yeah. But I think it helps, cause I've heard a lot of people say when you have a team and a good manager, it helps you deflect certain things rather than when you're just independent and you're trying to do it yourself then you get more of that type of energy from guys trying to, you know. Yeah, for sure. So do you still get that now? Yeah. Like a lot of my friends, like me boys in girl shit, but like, they don't come crazy. They might say something crazy on the internet, but in real life, like approach me on there like nah. Nah, they don't do half the stuff. It just be crazy. What's the craziest dream you've ever gotten? Good and bad. A good and bad. Cause I know you've probably gotten some good ones too. I would say, boom, I got a DM. I'm gonna say good first. Okay. Jazzy Faye DM me and he told me like I was hard. That's dope. Me and him probably finna do some work soon. Like coming up. So I would say that's one good one. Yeah. A bad one. Just people sending threats like they gone, you know, with me or something. Yeah, yeah. If he liked it, like threats. Let me ask you this. Did you work with Duffy some, right? Yeah, yeah. For sure. Was she manager or what was your situation? Yeah, she was a part of my management team. She actually helped me nail my first record deal. And that's when I dropped Popdick. I saw my first deal, boom. She helped me lock that in. That's dope, that's dope. We gon' get into some songs now. I wanna ask you about a few of the things that you've accomplished. And what was the process of it when you done it? Okay. First let's talk about Popdick. That's the elephant in the room. You know what I'm talking about? That's the one that when I look at it, I seem like you got a lot of people on there with you, don't you? Yeah, the remix. Yeah, the remix. And I'm gonna ask you how you put that together. But let's talk about the process of Popdick. How did you come up with that? So Popdick was originally just a dance move that some dudes from Out Cliffs was doing. One of them reached out to me. I'm like, hey, Bracey, you a dope rapper. We got this dance that every time we do it to any song, everybody doing it. Can you make a song specifically for it? And I'm like, yeah, so I make the song. They liked it. We started making little videos on Instagram, dancing to it, and then we went viral. Like everybody was just dancing to it. It was on the radio. I started doing a DISD school tour. And that whole tour started just because my little cousin, he was telling people at school, like this song, y'all saying, that's my cousin. And they're like, let me be blonde, ain't you? That's what I do to my people too. And he called me, he was like, man, can you come to our homecoming because they don't believe you, my cousin. And I was like, okay. And then his teacher really called me, like, hey, can you come to our homecoming? I came to one homecoming. And it was on the screen. When I tell you, I walked out there, they screaming like I'm Michael Jackson or something. Yeah, it didn't make you feel good. And from there, every other school, hey, I don't know what this is or what you doing, but can you come do that here? Wow. And I really love kids and giving back to the community. So I went to Islam School's free, DISD, Orleton ISD. How did it make you feel? Fort Worth. It made me feel good because I know how I feel to be in their shoes. Especially like it's a bunch of little hood kids, that I ain't really seen nothing. So by them seeing me, touching me, feeling me, hearing me, taking pictures with them, I'm letting them know like, you can do this too. Like, you gonna be like this too when you get out there. Yeah, that's dope. Did the school tour. Still doing shows from that record. Still making a hell of money. Like a great living off of it. Again, it just hit the internet and went crazy. The streets ain't had no choice but to rock with it too. So on that remix you had, you had Lil' Ronnie. Right. You had with Trap Boy. Trap Boy. And Yella. Yella and Asian Dora. How'd you put that together? It was at the time, it seemed like a lot of music that were coming out of Dallas was like beef songs. And it was Dallas beefing with Dallas with Fort Worth beefing with Fort Worth. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I was like, hmm, what if I put all the top dollars on this song? And we showed that it is unity. Like it ain't no pressure on nothing. So that was my purpose of doing it. And so I just want the show like, hey, like, everything ain't all bad, but everything ain't all good. But like we can link up and do this. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You definitely are one of the, I mean, most creative with your video process. And with you and Lil' Ronnie, I knew that was this last one y'all did. Oh, yeah, yeah. I'm just like, you like, I'll be thinking about Missy Ellen. I don't know why. Yeah, I am. I'm the new wave Missy Ellen for sure. And the way you be. And she accepted too. Yeah, I didn't want to offend you by saying it because it's what I thought about. Nah, she the goat. Yeah, yeah, of course. But I'm like, you know, maybe you want to try to create your lane or whatever. But I'm like. I appreciate that. No, she's very creative with what she processed and it stapled a point in time. And so now I look at you and I'm like, man, she got it. Nah, seriously. It's all of the elements of her, though. And I got a little bit more. I got a little bit more that she didn't have. Well, I don't know if she had, but she was a producer. I produced my records. Like I actually produced the Pop Dead beat alongside another producer. Who taught you to do that? My brother. He was a producer. Okay. And he showed me and I'm like, all right, big. And I just pick up shit real easy. I'm a fast learner. I'm also an audio engineer. So I record all my songs and mix and master. And I record a lot of artists in the Dallas area as well. So I make beats. I record. Right. I write for a lot of artists too. A lot of artists are coming to me like, hey, you dope, bro. Like, can you make me a song? So I write the same thing Missy did. People come to me breezy. Can you make a script for my music video? I want to, you know, a thing. They'll pay me for that. So, like, and all those aspects, those are some stuff she did that a lot of people don't know. They just know her songs. So you're an all around artist. Right, exactly. But where as the business side, where would you think that you stand? Whereas the business of artistry? Yeah. From a one to 10, where would you think you are right now? I said, right now I'm at a good 7.5 and I'm a hit of eight about next month. Because I really studied this, like, some people just rebels because they think it's cool. They want popularity and they think they're gonna accumulate money. But the money come out of what you put in it, literally. Like, I don't work a job. I'm blessed to say that. But, like, if I didn't put the energy into it, like, God, like, this is all I want to do. I quit my last job. I had a $400 check. I was working in QT. I was like, man, I'm tired of working out one night. I can't do this no more, God. Like, please show me something else. And he showed me other ways I can create my own little businesses and hustles. And just make it easier for me to do the music. You dope, man. Like I said, I'm telling you, you dope. And, uh, Runny, when Runny was here, you know, we talked about his video creativity, right? And the way he direct and try to get it to be the most interesting video. And when I looked at yours, I got that same vibe. Yeah, he's very creative. You know, like, you ain't right. Same thing. And was it crazy for you at all? No, for sure. I'm being real. And Runny, I've been knowing Runny since I was probably 12 years old. People don't know this, but I used to be a dancer back when the Dallas Boogie moved me. Oh, I got the exclusive, huh? Look, the Dallas Boogie movement was popping. I was one of the only girls that get out there and hit it like a nigga. You feel me? And I got a lot of respect for that. My sister did as well, honey, A. Tony. She done shoot my video. Shout out to A. Tony, man. Yeah, she shoot all my music. A. Tony feelings. And she good with it. Yeah. Not real good. The video with me and Runny, she did that. Popped it, she did that. I went on the show. A. Tony, you got to come on. You got to come on, boss, Tony. Yeah, because I liked it. We hadn't had a female. No, we hadn't. We had Twon. And she wanted the best out of Texas. I'm telling you. We had Twon, we had Heat HD, we had Cam God, we had Sean with Ovid Media. I do all of the visual. Guys, I like the back scene. The back scene people. I love y'all too, but I want them to get shine, you know? Not for show. Not for sure. Because they play with me far. They work hard. They are the reason it happens. Video's not easy. Listen to me, and visuals are important. Not for sure. What visuals do you think you're supposed to have on each project? Or how you laying it out? Isn't the album important now? Yeah. I dropped my work in projects. Why? My test in run for this was like, popped out, dropped, popped it, but I ain't dropped no music after that. And people was wanting more. It's like, we want to get to know you now. Like, we like you. Like, I'm a fan. I think I've seen some. I was wanting to ask you, and I don't want to get it, wanted to get away. But when pop that, when you did pop that at Pink Lounge in March 2020, that was right before COVID or right when COVID hit. So that had to take a toll on you, right? Right, definitely. I was doing some shows, but shows kind of stopped when the clothes closed. So I had time to get to the music and creating stuff. A lot of stuff slowed down for me. How did you cope? What was your money making venture at that time? Cause you gotta try to make money. I started out online boutique. Okay. So streetwear accessories and clothing. Dope. So, you know, I sell basically like the high end looks for affordable. Dope, dope. Kind of like, Oh really? You gotta do it, man. Not for show. You gotta do it. That's the hustle. Not for sure. So really with me, I like, okay. Yes, I'm Kay Brizzy, but that's my brand. That's my business, right? I don't take nothing personal. Like my real name Kiki. So, okay. Like Kay Brizzy is Kay Brizzy, but Kiki is Kiki. Like this music don't make or break me. Like for him, like I got cousins, I ain't these uncles, siblings that's depending on me. Like no reps. Like their rep stuff is just, it's just a business. And you know, with business, it can boom, it can stay the same or it can fail. What's the difference between, you said it too, between the Kiki and the Kay Brizzy. What's the difference? If you had to describe this person, just like Darrell came on and he has six, three, and he has Darrell music and they're two different personalities. And I'm sure you'll have him by himself. So, all right, so Kay Brizzy is your favorite at your home girl, crazy energy. I'm not like that all the time. Now Kiki, she spirit, so she be reading books, just chilling, cooking up. You know what I'm saying? You know how people meet you and think you just gonna be crazy and so I don't know. I got stories. Stories like that where I meet, take people to meet people, they want that character, you know what I'm saying? Exactly, so Kay Brizzy is just a character. You know what I'm saying? It's just a brand. It is a part of me, but really it's like 15 people inside of me. No, that's right. So like, you know, just at the moment or depending on the situation, you might be me and Kiki or you might be me and Brizzy. But they the same, but it's like, you know, don't get them confused. Like just respect them, respect both of them. Yeah, hey man, shout out to 88 before I give man. Yeah, shout out to 88 before, man. Yeah, that dude right there, he told me I had to get Kay Brizzy on here and then he started working on it. Like I got to get over here. He's seen the point, he's seen it. He was like, I got to get over here, man. He wanted the hottest producers too. He been producing for maybe three months now and we got some crazy records on our way. I'm about to have him on the show with two more producers on behalf. I think, but I don't want him to know or meet like he came with DJ Ice. I don't want that. I want three that don't know each other, two that don't know each other. And I'm going to put like him and Sergeant J. And I'm going to put, I want to hear of their process. But that's hard because a lot of producers in Dallas, they know I'm working with each other. No, no, no, but they don't work together like that. Like these guys work together, like they was here together and all three of them had music together. I don't want them three to come together. I want to make it to where it is. It's some different. Yeah, I want them to talk about the process. You know what I mean? That way our people can listen. But let's get back to Kay Brizzy. How did you get the name Kay Brizzy? Who gave you that name? Saw my first name, Kiki. Yeah, of course. That's the K. And then the Brizzy, like people call me Brizzy cause like I'm just, again I got swag, I got charisma, I'm so cool. Like they like, that's a little Brizzy. Like yo, she cool, like cool Brizzy. So, yeah, everybody just starts calling me that. And you like to see this like I'm just. Yeah, I'm just like. She's got the Dallas man. I love when I get like Dallas don't like, they don't even know. A lot of people be trying to steal our drip and our swag and everything. But we got it. You got to come on with it, man. Nah, for real. We got it right here. You can try to copy it, but it'll never be like the original. No, no, no. So top three artists of all time. My top three? Dead or alive. Any genre? Number one. Lil Wayne. Lil Wayne? Lil Wayne. Check it, man. Missy. Missy Elliot. Number two. Number three. Always the hardest. Always the hardest. Number three, come on with it. Cause everybody won four, but I only can do three. My third win will have to be. Top three artists of all time. Dead or alive. She giving it to us. Any genre? Lil Wayne and Missy Elliot made it to the list. I got to say my girl, Whitney Houston. Whitney Houston, man. Shout out to Shamaria. That's my daughter. She love Whitney Houston. She over there talking about. That's dope. That's a dope. That's a dope. Top three, right? I like it. So what's so good about Lil Wayne? Man, his boy, he the best rapper a lot. Really? For sure. His bars, he kind of the originator of the melody. Like making rapper star. I feel like they can use auto tune and kind of sing on it. His videos, his energy, his look, everything. His whole transformation from like he kind of started is like a hood project rapper. And he turned like mega star. Like he was skateboarding and stuff. I'm sure if he wasn't rapping and getting money, I'm sure he would never even think about doing things like this. No, he's trying to get outside of the box. Exactly. He don't want to be putting. And I love that. Different genre of people. Yeah. I love that. I love that. Do you ever feel like you would like to go back to finish school? I think I want to. I definitely want to. I don't know. You don't know when or. Yeah, or what degree exactly. But I definitely want to. I've been tapping into real estate. So if I need to, for school. Maybe a hundred. Yeah, you were tired of coming home. I ain't got that many lives. You want to come home, though? Yeah, like I wanted to just do music. Music, yeah. I wanted to do music. You can do online courses nowadays. And you don't even have to go back to school, so to say. For sure. You'll probably be like a business class, real estate class, real estate degree or something. So if you had to, sorry, babe. If you had to bucket list wise. Where the music or the business is concerned. I'm not going to say just music or the business is concerned. Give me top three things on your bucket list. Of having a business. Of with artistry. Okay. With your business, with your brand. Top three things that you have written down are gold. That I want to do. That you want to do. That you got to achieve in your lifetime. Okay, I got to get on billboards. I got to do a record. With who? Definitely Missy. Oh, really? I got to do a Missy record. Yeah. That'll be fly. And I want to produce for a major artist. Like produce songs. Anybody in mind? Like Megan Estelle, yeah. A lot of the girl artists. She's just someone I could. Okay. Have you 24, right? Yeah. Have you ever mentored anybody or the little girls that made anybody ever look at you and say, man, what do I need to do to get in the game? Yeah, a lot of people ask me. I give advice as I can. But really, I tell them, I mean, really, this is my journey. Yeah, correct. So I can't say that you're going to go through the damn files or the ups that I'm going through. But I kind of give them a general answer of how you can do things. If you were going to start a podcast, what would you name it? It's going to be called Bunnies and Billies. Man, are we talking about that? Where do you get that name from? That's different. I want everybody to come on there to be chill. I'm going to have my bunny on. We going to be thugging. I'm going to get in whoever come on there. If it's a girl, I'm going to have a bunny for her. If it's a dude, I have a do-rag for him. That'll be dope. And we going to talk big, how to make money. Because you know, you have, what's her name? There's those chronic, the bonnet chronicles. Oh, so you're saying that? I didn't even say that. You ain't seen her. Oh, Jesus. I'm going to put me on her face. But everybody's seeing her. Bonnet chronicles, that's that. Yeah, but they can't be, they can't do it like you. No, for sure. No, no, I haven't seen you doing it. No, no, no, you get down. Tammy, Tammy, Tammy. Oh, Tammy, do it. Yeah, Tammy, I don't know. Rivera? I don't think I've seen it. You ain't know where you haven't seen that. Yeah, the thing I want to ask you too is about slip and slide. Like about them old ladies, how did you come up with that concept? So, I seen on TikTok, like it was a thing that girls would dress up as old ladies and go out for real, like, and be in a club. And people would think that, oh, but they really just dressing up as old. And I thought it was fun. Yeah, Tammy Roman. Oh, Roman, okay, nice. Oh, I got it. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, I know Tammy, but I ain't even know she was on Bonnet chronicles. Yeah, yeah, for years. I need to follow her. Yeah, but let's, let's get back to slip and slide. I don't even know about that. So, yeah, so me and my friends, I was like, yeah, y'all are just like greenies in. Yeah, do it. Like, yeah, I was like, all right, get the walker, you get the cane, we get the wigs, and let's do it. How hard was the process just getting it done? It wasn't hard at all. It wasn't hard? Yeah, that's dope. It was another one as well. I wanted to ask you about the one where you featured Erica Banks, Rock Out. Mm-hmm. Yeah, how did that come about? That video, it went hard either at the time when I... It looked like you was really just hogging the whole video, ain't it, like? Yeah, yeah, I see it. No. It looked like you were boss hogging it. I mean, it wasn't real. No, it was a good video. I loved y'all the way y'all chemistry was. It was great. Yeah, it was just a good... Shout out, Erica Banks. It was just a dope feature. At the time, this one popped out, and we kind of linked up, and we just worked it, and we both climbed the ladder. She would top off at the time? Yeah, she would top off at the time. So did they kind of make that come together? No, it was just a deal, and she was there, following the deal. I don't know what I love about y'all, man. You know, we're in a place now where people can do what they want. They're holding themselves back. If you make a move, and you didn't try to make that move, and you got all this opportunity out here, and you didn't try. That's on you. You talking about Miss Elliot? Okay, hit up. Niggas are so easy. I could DM her. Exactly. Stop playing. And then it's all going on my page. Exactly. Or email. There's so many different items. No, stop playing, man. Text the number, and they buy y'all the link. Exactly. And now I'm... No, no, I'm gonna tell you what I do. Tag them. I really want them. Tag them. No, I go off and they're looking at friends, then one that they follow. And then I go to the one... Listen, I call DJ Quicks a partner. That's what I'm saying. Yeah, I say, Niggas want DJ Quicks, and he's like, oh, I get him for you. And this the thing, find their DJs, find their friends, their DJs, they got low followers, and go ahead and... I ain't trying to use you, Brad. No, that's what it is. If you're hungry, you gotta go eat. Not for real. Yeah, so I think, yeah, that's dope that you gotta do it, man. Yeah. You gotta get it. I can't wait to hear it. Not for real. That's gonna be legendary. Oh man, because y'all both dope. She ain't really been... Has she been doing a lot of things? No, really, I think she been slow boogying, but the stuff she do drop, it go crazy every time. I think she be dropping, like, maybe once every couple months or something. If you could talk to that girl that left college that day. Uh-huh. And she said she was going to pursue her music career. Yeah. What would you say to help her to move to get to where she need to be in a better way than where you are now? I would tell her. Now, you're talking to yourself now. I would tell me. I would have picked up the hustles I had, these extra hustles I got now, way back then. So I would have had the money to invest. Yeah, I would point her in the direction, like, hey, you need to do A-S-Y-Z, because it's crazy how you could be trying to do something and the people around you could have hustles and not even tell you, like, hey, you should do what I'm doing, you know? I would tell her to pick up them hustles. I would tell her, like, really, she did a good job. She never faulted over nothing. Like, the worst of the worst. Like, my mama just died, you know? Yeah, yeah, yeah. She still ain't faulted. Most people would have hung it up. Yeah, yeah, yeah, no, no, no. You dope, though, you're different. Like, what would you say about Carrie, the... You talking about the girl that just got that... was smoking at your mom's house? Because her mom had asked away right before, and, you know, they say that's the reason why she was smoking and stuff like that. I ain't gonna lie. I think that's all just the marketing scheme. Like, she probably got a publicist to say, let's just use this. People try to use deaf is the excuse for a lot of stuff. But she probably bein' smoke. I feel like she... Bro, keep it against the law. You from Dallas, like, just saying, I was smokin', would you? Y'all. But this is the limit she tryin' to make it to. That was dumb on her. I'm not gonna lie. It's like, you just got these million followers. You want everybody to support you, then you do this dumb shit. Like, you make us look dumb, like, for real. I don't put friends talk hooded. Like, Carrie, if you watch... That was dumb, bro, for real. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Like, come on, you could have waited until after the celebration smoke, you know? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Or, why they not... No, you right. Why they not... Why she ain't clean her system out? Why she ain't use somebody else's pee? That's easy money! Why she ain't use somebody else's pee? Nah, for real, you could have tried to use somebody else's pee! Hey, you mean it! Who is your manager? Who let you get caught, bro? That's it. Nah, I wouldn't let her go out like that. Nah, for real. Yeah, my... Yeah, yeah, yeah. But the only thing I say to her... But the only thing I say to her... But they people all the time. The only thing I say to her is that don't give up, because she is very talented. Very young, too. Look, now you got to discourage her. Now you got a million followers. Now you can start your own business. They going to buy whatever you say. Look, now, start your own weed stream. This is a track pic. You can start your own region. This is an Olympic pic. Nah, that girl that will have a win in the Olympic... Oh, we'll have her back your badge and I'll do make a pay-per-view event and get paid. Because everybody wants to see that race. Easy. For real. You can do so much if you really want to do it. I'd call old girl the one that I got the fastest time with, the Jamaican girl and be like, what's her name? You Jamaican, I don't even know your people. Listen, man. The girl that ran the... She ran a... What did she run? She ran a 10-6-2. And that carry girl ran a 10-6-4. Yeah. Oh yeah, we'll link up. Now for show. Oh yeah, that's a pay-per-view event. Man, for sure. Like the Olympics. I told y'all we like to get money. Y'all making the Olympics have like... Veronica Campbell. Veronica Campbell. Fuck they bring. No, no, no, no. That Veronica. Not anybody Veronica. It's Shelley and... Shelley and... Shelley and... Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's... That's who it is. Yeah, man. So you had another song. You be freestyling on people beats and stuff. And you did the Megan one, and then you did one more too. I want to say, oh, you did that, that song, Me, that remix, that thing. When you brought that back for the female. For sure. So, and I was like, man. And every time, like you trying to kill them and eat verses, like you just want to eat on that thing. I don't waste no verses. I don't waste songs. I feel like a lot of people, they ain't get where they want to get because they just be making songs about stuff that don't matter. Like you got to get straight to it. I want to get straight to the point where I want you to feel whatever emotion I'm trying to get across in this seat. All right, let's get to this music. Where does inspiration come from? Oh, you okay. My musical inspiration. I think my life, like I feel like if I ain't do music, I'll probably be messed up, I'll be depressed and stuff. Music is a therapy for me. Like definitely. Let's get to it, man. I want to hear it. Hold on, I want to hear something, man. We don't go to five on it be, hold on, man. Let me bring it back. Yeah, man. Anybody go down, man. Kate Breeze in the building. Is that too loud? Nah, it's good. If it's too loud, tell me, cause we'll turn it down. I don't want to make a show. I'm ready. She ready, she ready. Check it, man. Say it, man. Check it. Kate Breeze in the building, man. This boss talk one on one, man. It going down. Let me tell you about my life. A little bit about where I'm from and how I came up and go like this. Ay, love. 1996, I was born in Parkland Hospital. I started writing raps when I first learned how to scribble. And in the second grade is when I first learned how to dribble. I was hustling at the school selling hot chips and skittles. My mama did a thing, though. I ain't have a father. Most baby first words be mama, da-da. She my first words was probably money, dollar, ever since I can remember, I been popping my collar loose. In school I was a scholar, but I dropped up out of college, though. I put down a basketball and picked back up that microphone. Credit fucked up. I'm getting all these fucking student loans. Callin' my mama. She gonna be like, you call me from jail, phone. I'm gonna do it. Oh, man. Check it out, man. Check it out, man. Check it out, man. Woo-hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo. I don't even want them on. Man, that's so dope, man. Nah, for real. Say it, man. I'm trying to say it. No, don't do it. I'm trying to say it. I'm on nothing else. That's too much, man. He niggas ain't really under that. I don't want to hear more. She's not. I feel like he's settin' over there, nigga. Don't try to play me, nigga. I be settin' over there, too, like this, nigga. She is. I and her. Nigga, I wouldn't move. You're a n***. Man, thank you so much, man. Nah, for sure. That was dope, bro. She's good. She just summed up everything she probably just told us. Yeah. Hey, man. Stop, man. Hey, man. You know how I can be a road manager? You know what I'm sayin'? Nah, who's a locking? I try to put my little coins together. Say it, nigga. Let me lie. Nah, for real. Like, for real, for real. On some real shit, I'm really like that. Like, for real. Nigga, you can put any girl, any boy in front of me. I kill them. I believe you. Like, for real. I kill them. Give me a beat. Give me some time to memorize my words. Oh, my God, man. Like, I'm like that. Say, that was soothing, nigga. I be havin' everybody rappin'. Ain't nothin' to say, man. Nothin' like real rap, man. This is real rap, man. This is real shit. Man, I love it, bro. This is real shit. How long does it take you to write a song? You better calm me down. Not really long, because, like, I already been been through a lot of stuff I be rappin' about. Right now, I've been focusin' on the sex rap. So, that's why I do the slip and slide and stuff. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Because this was goin' on. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Like, and all of my friends, my fans is strippers and freaks and... Yeah, but you killin' that too. Yeah. You puttin' that together. Exactly. I'm not givin' you what every other girl givin' you, but I'm givin' it to you in another way. Like, my way. But you're a well-rounded artist. You can do it however. Like, you can, if I come to you and be like, hey, I wanna paint this picture. That's what I'ma paint. And you think she gonna paint that picture. That's what I'ma paint for show. And I see what's goin' on. But the way how she rappin', she almost, to me, it'd be like a person that could come in this freestyle. Man. From the top of your head, not even write it, just the way in which how you rap. I can't. Like, you'll do, like, battle rap and... Yeah, but I could do better rap. That's what... I can do that, but, again, my brain's so full of shit. Dope, man. I'm a producer. Like, now I'm a producer. I gotta have my rap brain on for real. Like, it's like, I'll unlock different pockets on my brain. Yeah, too many hats. Yeah, for sure. Man, I know why Mo3 came at you. Nah, for real. He told me... He said, I'ma beat. He said, I'ma leave you alone. For real. Nah, for real. Listen, man, I know why now. I'm sitting here seeing it. I know. I ain't no fool, nigga. I like money. So I'ma... But I like your voice when you rap. I like the way you rap. I like that confidence. I like the way you do it. I'ma say, man, the mic's smokin' over there. I already know that there. I'ma have to get a new pair for that damn thing. Nah, for real. Ain't nobody else can talk on this mic after this. I'ma retire. That's what I'm gonna put down in the bag, man. Nah, for real. Nah, man, you dope, man. God, I leave you, man. I appreciate it for sure. Appreciate it. Breath of fresh air, man. Dallas in trouble, man. Say, hey, Breeze is the one. I can promise you right now. Old Cliff, man. Y'all better stand up, man. Nah, for sure. Hey, man, give her a rose is why she here, man. Nah, for sure. Say, I'ma puttin' the cipher together. I'ma try to get you on that thing for Boston. Boston cipher. I got the girls. I'm picking the girls that I'm doing it with. You might want to put me with the boys. Nah, I ain't doing no boys. I ain't doing no boys. It's gonna be a four by girls. I'm paying. I don't care. You put the beat together, though. I produce the beat. Yeah, yeah, yeah, man. You a beast, man. We can do the cipher at that party. Yeah, we both throw a party. We invited RSVP in, you know, certain months. That would be part of the entertainment. Yeah. That'll be dope. That'll be dope. Because most of the people going to be there, most of them would probably be musicians and stuff like that. Yeah, celebrities. People that have been on the show. Yeah. We were inviting everybody to come and hang out, you know, paying for everything. So that everybody would have that air for it to tell you. Hell yeah. But if you ain't no Boston, you probably ain't gonna be in the building. Nah, for real. You gotta have a Boston band. You gotta be in the living bed, yeah. For real. Oh, you getting sad. You gotta play it. That's it. You gotta play it. Nah, for real. So let me ask you, like, who else would you guys that you would like to work with? Um, what male artists would I like to work with? Definitely Kevin Gates. I love Kevin Gates. That's my boy. The one that's on C.C.P. C.C.P. just job one with Kevin. They got the video and everything. Yeah. I got mostly all my Texas people. I want to work with Sauce Walker, definitely. He heard it right now in Dallas. I love Sauce. And then they can rap, too. I love his style. He really be playing. I know it. He just having a good time. Exactly. He getting so much money. He don't give a fuck about music. Like, he like, y'all need to just dine to go on here and say this and that. He'll go in there and have fun and still go hard and then you can entertain you with the same song. Okay, but let me ask you this now. To be different, to cross over, to me, what artists, whether it be R&B or pop, would you want to collaborate with? Definitely. Or it could be a rock. Okay. Um, a pop artist I definitely feature with. Did I really want to work with? R&B, bro, for show. It was like Bruno Mars. Oh, yeah, I love Bruno. You would make some crazy shit. And he don't mind going out there. He'll go all the way out. We'll go back. Yeah, yeah, let's double. He probably will put me on some 70's shit. I ain't even know. Does he do anything anymore? I haven't heard from him. I think all his music be straight. Like, new, 80's music. When was the last time he put anything out, though? Even till that money got good, quick. No, yeah. And that money got good. It could be that, but it could be other things that's going on in his life. That money got good, quick. I know that money got paid off all that he was doing. Not for real. So, how can people get a hold of you, man? She didn't ask me, she didn't answer me the R&B person. Oh, the R&B person? That she would like to work with? Yeah. You want to just say, uh, what's that nigga name? I don't know. She don't want to work with Gene Wine and Tyrese. Nah, a little sexy motherfuckers. Take it right there. So, you did a song where you called that nigga's man like all the- Oh, Wet Dreams, yeah. Wet Dreams. What was that all about? You just wanted to show homage to everybody? Some of them you jerk back, like nigga, I would say this too. Well, see, some of them somehow had niggas, but I still wanted to mention them, but not in a like derogatory way necessarily, because at the time it was a lot of diss songs. I was like, how can I talk about the people here, but not diss them, but talk about how I'm going to have sex with them. Wow, you're so dope, man. Yeah. You dope as hell. I knew you were dope, but now that I met you, oh my God, like, wow, like the talent is undeniable. No, but y'all appreciate it. Listen, man, you can't deny Kay Breeze is a beast, nigga. Same, man. And I'm going to tell you something, man. I'm rooting for you. I appreciate it. You know, when I get these people and I'll be rooting, I'm rooting for you. I will be. You're going to follow me today. I'm going to be able to hit you up and be like, hey, where you at? Nah, for sure. Do you believe this? That's the way I am, man. I love heart, bro. Nah, for sure. That's the way I am. Once I link with you, I'm linking. We locked in. Yeah, we locked in for sure. Yeah, me and Supreme been on the phone ever since he called. Yeah. He is on the phone. Yeah. So many people called me. Supreme is somebody else's phone. Everybody. My turn. My turn. Hello. Yeah. Yeah. It's all good though. We're going to get there. She's like, yeah, I love her look like. Yeah. Yeah. Say, check it, man. So people can get ahold of you on Instagram. Yeah. Instagram really my favorite platform. Okay. Okay. So my Instagram name is Kay Breeze, underscore to great. I have Twitter at Kay Breeze to great. Kay Breeze Ali. But I really like Instagram. I'm over Twitter. That's where everybody is. Twitter was like when I was 16. Yeah. But you still got people on there. Let me check some. No close. No door. No stage. See, I can't get on the wave. Maybe. You got to. Listen, listen. You made for it though. You made for TikTok. You still young. You can't say it's hard. You made for TikTok. Your whole brand is a TikTok movie. No, for sure. I'm telling you. No, for sure. Like I got, I got 24,000 followers. On TikTok. Yeah. Damn. I'm a beast, my nigga. But you need to put me on. I'll set you up. You don't talk about. Put our freestyle on there. All right. And go in. You know, we bought. That's going to be a nice dope spot right there for me. Say, check it, man. We thank you for coming on the show. Thank y'all for having me. We love you. And at the end of the day, we wish you much success, right? Your freestyle going to get a lot of comments. You think so? We going to see. All right. Thank y'all. Say it, man. We love you, man. And hey, man. Another great segment of Boss Talk 101. And we out.