 What's up y'all, it's your girl Brianna Imani and you're tuned into another Talk of the Town interview and let them know who we got in the building today. Big China. Not the little one. Period. Coming to New York from Philly, how you feeling girl? Good. Good. All right. I was telling you earlier, I love when we have guests from out of the town because I love hearing like what it is that you've been doing since you've been in the city. So talk to us a little bit about like what you've been doing so far. I'm doing a press, two day press in my face out there and people that know me. Period. Period. Okay. So what we're going to do to do a little icebreaker. We're going to play a game. Okay. Two truths and a lie. Okay. You know how to go? Yeah. All right. So I'm going to let you think for a second about what your two truths and a lie is going to be and I'm going to try to guess it to see. Okay. I can. Okay. I put her on the spot y'all. Are you ready? Go ahead. All right. I don't like ripping. My mom get on my nerves. Don't they all. And I love lip gloss. Well girl, you made this very easy because I was going to stop you before you even got to the second one because I know you don't hate rapping girl, not the way that you be hitting them bar. No way. So I feel like you took the easy route, but okay, your mom get on your nerves and you love lip gloss. All right. So let's get into it. I know you from Philly, Philadelphia, born and raised or yes. All right. So talk to us a little bit about that. What was it like growing up in Philly? Trencherous. Trencherous? Yeah. Like you from what part of Philly? South Philly. South Philly. My mom was nerf. So I was there before. First odds. Okay. So what was you doing? Like what was the day-to-day? Because you said it was real trencherous. Day-to-day rumbling every day. Every day I come outside rumbling. Oh, you was giving baddie. She was giving baddies before. You say something about my grandma, anybody. You was on timing. You was on go. I'm knocking at people's doors. Y'all can jump me and all that. Oh yeah. Well girl, I heard some things about you. Oh my God. I'm like a lot. I don't know if you want to talk about it, but yeah, girl. I heard how you used to get down. And how you used to knock them out. Yeah, I heard too. They used to. So tell me like what was it that got you into making music? Because you started making music like fairly recently, I would say. So what was it that started this journey for you? My brother. My brother kept on asking me to rap. He kept on asking me. He kept on asking me. He kept on asking me. And I'm just like, no. I don't want to be a rapper. And what I thought was so interesting because I heard you talk about that before. And I think it's so funny how something that started off as like a bet wound up like kicking off your career this way. So how, what was it though that your brother saw in you that made him want to push you towards making music? I always used to be with the boys and they just like really like I was the person they talked to. Like they called talk to because I'm just like I was, they felt like I was the realest one. But I felt like that's what it was. He felt like my life was real. I felt like I was real. You kept on saying that. I'm like, why do you want me to rap? Right. You know how I mean people out on four, they don't like me. That's going to make them love you. Yeah. And I feel like, you know, you be talking some grocery. I think that, you know, it's very interesting because I feel like sometimes just because not even sometimes, I feel like just because you're a real person don't mean that you can make real music or that you have a creative sound. So I think it's interesting that your brother was able to tap into something that you had, even though it wasn't something you already dabbed away and like push you towards actually taking this every year. What's crazy is I wasn't still going to do it. But when he passed the way I felt like I had to do it. And you continue with his legacy. Because I'm sure that's what he really wanted me to do. And I love that. So let me know, like what was the first time that you ever stepped in a booth? What was that like? Because it was fun. I did it with them on the blue. We was just in the studio. I used to go with the boys to the studio because everybody from like my block used to really write why I used to be on course. They used to always write. And I used to pay for studio time because I believed in my friends. I used to help them. Like, what's up? We going to the studio there? I got some money for your like, uh-huh. And we used to go to the studio and then they was like, C-Roll, you might as well hop in a booth because my name used to be C-Roll. Oh, I know. When I was up. And I used to fight. They used to call me C-Roll because that was my mom's name. And then I'm like, hop in a booth. And then we just started playing around. We made, you ever heard of Exchange? Vice, of course, yeah. We did that song over. And then me, him and T-A did a song. And then we had a show and they got highest shit. And I had to fight both of them. I remember hearing you talk about that. They got highest shit. And I'm like, why are y'all so high? Like, we can even do the show. I hit on one shoe. I came outside and fought both of them. And we wasn't speaking for weeks. And then T-A reached out to me like, I'm sorry. And then like a couple weeks later he passed. So that's such a funny memory. Why? I was so mad. I feel like not only is it like something funny to think about, but it also shows the dynamic of your relationship. Why? So how do you feel about being on stage, like under the influence? Do you drink smoke? No. No, neither one? I drink like occasionally. Okay. I'm not a drinker. Okay, you're not a drinker. You smoke? You vape. You vape. What's that like? What's T with vape? I feel like everybody be vaping nowadays. I don't know. Is it this? Is it? It is. I saw you with your little rape a couple of minutes ago. Like this. Not ASL, girl. We're going to turn this from an interview to an intervention, because I don't know about vaping at your sleep. It's crazy, girl. That's crazy. So if you weren't doing music though, what do you think that you would be doing right now? I don't know. I do a lot. What else do you like to do? I like... I probably would have been a boxer. Like your mom? Yeah. I probably would have. But they probably would have tired me out too. I'm about to open a restaurant. Oh, burger. Yeah. Okay, so you be cooking. Yeah, I'll be cooking my asshole. What's your favorite thing to eat? What's your favorite thing to eat? Hmm. Probably like stuffed salmon. Okay. So you be cooking for your niggas? Or the people that you ain't in? I don't know what you're cooking. My niggas. You be cooking for your niggas? Yeah. How long does it take for you to cook for a niggas? Because this is an ongoing conversation right now. I ain't cooking for anybody. No. It's not good for everybody. It's not good for everybody. You gotta earn that. Yeah. Okay. And you making the stuffed salmon. Or you got another go-to. Some people can get fried chicken. You know a bonus set about fried chicken. Listen. All right. So in terms of Philly, though, do you feel like you get support from your city? For the most part, yeah. But I feel like everybody trying to bust Uies. They trying to bust Uies? Like they trying to spin the block? They trying to spin the block real bad. Oh. So it's like they know how hip I am. Like y'all should have been there. So it's giving back then they didn't want me. Now I'm hot. They all want me. It's giving fake happy. Yeah. But they ain't got no choice because they already know how I was going to come. Right. So, okay. So then how do you determine because you said fake happy? How do you know when somebody's genuinely supporting you because they really want to see you win versus? I'm like a real big energy person. So I feel it. Like when motherfuckers come around and go, I love you. I miss you. I be like, yeah, okay. You figure shit. Right. Like you ain't got call me sister. My name China. Right. Like I know when people are genuine, like you just see it all in their face. Like the whole body language. Yeah. Damn says you really that fake. I was on law. We're red. So is it like because I, okay. Take two. Growing up, were you like popular? Like were people genuinely gravitating towards you? Yeah. Yeah. I used to have so many people who asked me to like sign money. Really? Yeah. Sign money. Sign pictures. My cousins used to make me sign pictures of me when I was a baby because they knew I was going to be something. They didn't know what I was going to be, but they know I was going to be something. So I guess it makes sense why your brother will push you towards music. Cause you got the vibe. You got the look. You already had the popularity. Yeah. And you was already speaking real shit. So I guess it was like the perfect combination. Yeah. Interesting. So how do you feel about like accessibility and like being in your head? You still hang out where you grew up? No. No. I mean, I stopped by sometimes, but it ain't like drawing for me. I got PTSD. My friends is passing away. Left and right. My girlfriend just passed away a couple months ago. So they really eat. I don't even hang around nobody. So when talking about like losses, especially like back home and when they're very personal to you, does, do you use that as like motivation? Like how does it translate into like the grind and the hustle when it comes to it? It makes me go harder. It makes me think about me when I say I'm stopping. I can't. Yeah. I think about them a lot. And so do you think that you will always be great? Cause I know you just bought up PTSD. Do you think that you would still be grounded in Philly after your career takes off? You would still make? No. I'm ready to go. You ready to go? And I look back. I'm not looking back. I could come back and see my people's because I'm about to have a business down there. You know, you got to start where you came from. Where would you go? Top three places. Top three places. LA, Houston or Atlanta. I knew you was going to say that. That was like the top three hotspots. Right. Cause you can still be outside and still be turned on the music tip. Right. People still working over there. Okay. Cool. So now speaking of music and bring it back to Philly a little bit. Have you seen a conversation that's going on right now with DJ drama saying that dreams of nightmares isn't the Philly anthem no more. And now it's, I just want to rock. No, I haven't seen that. You haven't seen that? Yes. I feel like that is though. You feel like I just want to rock is the Philly anthem now? Yeah. Because it was going on in the culture right now. That's interesting. You see the culture is, that's what it is right now. The hips. Yeah. It's giving all that. I guess because you're from Philly, I can't really debate with you too much on that. But to me personally, like, I really used to pray for times like this, not to a mom like this, but I feel like the, like, I'm sorry, but dreams of nightmares really just does something to me. It does something to me too. I don't care where I'm at. I feel like that's the hood anthem. Like that's the horror anthem. But I feel like for the, I don't know. I just think it's for the culture right now. Like where we at right now on the music tip, because that's what they on. Okay. So you think that an anthem for a city is based on something that reflects the culture in the present time. Yes. That's interesting. Okay. Yeah. Cause well, Meek, if you're watching this, dreams of nightmares will forever be by it though. Cause like I said, it don't matter where I'm at, what I'm doing. It'll be mine too. But I just think that's what they going to pick. Yeah. I just, it's so much pain and struggle and hustle behind it. That's my dream too. Speaking of anthems, you just dropped say song. Yeah. Say song. Really. You got the visuals popping. So talk to me a little bit about that. Like how has the song been received so far? They've been doing really good. We almost had 300K three weeks. So I'm pushing it real hard. And it's going to fuck at it. It's definitely going up. I feel like it set the tone for the year for sure. The visuals was fire. So walk me through those two. Like. Okay. First let's walk through the song. When you was making the song, do you have visuals in mind already? Or does that come after the beat? It comes after the beat. That's interesting. Okay. So let's talk to us. So you got the beat. You write before the beat after the beat. I get in the studio. I get to be made right in front of me. Oh, and then you come up with the song in the studio. I come up with the hood. I get to be made. I get to be made by my family. Well, I or I get. Jacob G. Which is producing on our label. I get them to help me with melody or anything with. Okay. I feel like hook is make this. Yeah. Speaking of a hook. See, okay. Sorry. Cause you say things that's making my mind turn. Because right now it's a big conversation. At least in New York. A big conversation with Lola and Billy. Don't play with it. Don't play with it. know you know that song. And a lot of people are having this debate over the song and its popularity. The hook versus like Billie bars, because she was really spitting, but some Billy, that's tea. Remy the girl that's on the song. She's on the song. Okay. I know it, but I know who's, I don't know her, but I've seen this. Yeah. So, so Billy did her did her thing on the track for sure. Like I personally fuck with her verse and everything. I went on her page too. I listened to her a couple of times, but I never, I don't know why the name. Yeah. Tap them with Billy because she's definitely fired. She got bars, but a lot of people were saying that they knew the song because of the hook. So I think it's very interesting that you said that the hook is what makes the song because it's really really important. They don't even care what you say in the verses. Yeah. And that's a little punchline. It's crazy that that's where we at now. I think it's the attention span. Yes. I think it's the attention span. And then it's like a lot of people are not creative. People are like people say things to people that's very creative, like Beyonce, like she's creative. She comes up with all her stuff. Like, you know, Rihanna, they like creators. And that's where I'm going at with it. Like I have to be, it has to be creative. It's not, it can't be no, right. No, you're giving it. We're not doing no, no. Not no regular, regular shape. No, we gotta go extra. So now that leads us into our visuals, because you actually do a really good job with visuals. Not only just on say something, but like even like you really get creative with like the freak show visual, the Simon Says visual, you had the different comments. Yeah, no, you definitely do your thing when it comes to those. Like, and it was another one that you did. The paper, paper on me. And I did the press conference. Yeah. It's like, you really began very creative with the visual. So how does that work? Do you come up with those ideas you do for everything? Oh, wow. So how, okay. So you know what you want it to look like? Do you have a team that you consult with? We have a team, BMR period. We have BMR productions, BMR everything. So everything in house. I love that. We got content days and we do our content every week. So we could drop a state consistent because once you consistent, they can deny you. What's that? That part. So how important do you think it is to have a team behind you working with you through this process? You need a team. You can't do it by yourself at all. If you think you can do it by yourself, you're crazy. So what would you say is like, maybe like one to three things that you can say matter of fact, that your team has really helped you with that you think otherwise, you don't know, like, it's structure. It's a whole lot of peace of mind. It's a lot of stuff that you don't really have to worry about when you have a team. You just come in the studio and you happy. I feel like you should be happy in the studio because that's where you create. So what's the vibe like in the studio when you in there? I got my own studio. So it's giving pink vibes. Okay. You give that. I wish the camera could see your shoe. I don't know if they could see the shoes, but you definitely give girly like real like artsy creative. So that's that's interesting. So with paper on me, like we said, you did the low press questions in the beginning. And there was a couple things that I really wonder, like, are these things that people really be asking you? Yes. A lot of bitches. They do. They do. Yes. See, I feel like that's come past as like, scratch my ass. And I'm like, why the fuck you just grabbed my ass? You don't even know what me like. Yeah, I feel like that's real bold. Because I feel like it's one thing. Okay, it's a silly thing. Because I feel like it's one thing to say. That's what it is. They gay shit. I'm sorry. Oh, I ain't supposed to say gay. Oh, but how do you how do you feel about that though? Because that's something that I think has also been made very like, it's been very normalized in our culture. I think when we out partying, we out clubbing, even like walking down the street, they just want to touch and grab and stuff. So you don't like that. They even don't like that, like, speak or something like, Oh, wait, hold on. So you saying that it's people that won't say anything to you and just come up to you guys. Like, yeah, it's fair. Oh, feel you on a different side of the time. Damn, you really awesome. Turned out shit. Turned out sure. They like, no. And then like, I'm like, this is how I talk like, so people probably think I'm gay. But like, I'm the way I talk. I'm hard. I feel like, you know what? Like, Christiane, Christiane is somebody that's hard and she talk hard, but she doesn't give me gay. It's just like, you grew up in both of us. Like, Yeah. Okay. I just think. Fuck them. So, um, but when it comes down to being sexualized and stuff, do you feel like in this industry, that's something that comes with it? Have you think all of us are? Yeah. Yeah. I have a big, I had a big artist tell me that like, one of the things I fully tell you what they think we all get all the artists. Oh, wait, hold on. All the girl artists. Really? That's what she told me. Why? I don't know. But like, when it comes to men, like, when I say like, sexualized, do you feel like men will sexualize you as an artist too? Or like, as a woman in general? They probably do. If you say probably that's actually good because that means you haven't experienced it yet. Right. So that's a good time. I guess. Okay. So then now when it comes to your image, how important is your image to you? Because you know, everything is everything. Okay. If you had to describe your style in three words, how would you describe it? Extra, extra real about it. That was about seven. So what's like a fit essential for you? Like, what's something you have to have? Don't say lip gloss, because you said it already. Something I have to have. Chanel snakes, Chanel bag. Excuse me. Therefore, I gotta have jewelry on. I love jewelry. Okay. And so you think image is important as an artist? Especially for a woman. I feel like men, you can get up and go. Do you feel like that adds a little pressure? No. Not to you. I mean, just in general. Wow. Yeah. Yeah. I would think so. I think it's really interesting though that men don't really got to do too much. But women, we got to have the look. We got to have the ugly and everything. Because I feel like there's so much like untapped talent. I feel like there's a lot of women specifically who have a lot of talent and just because they don't have that look or they don't have that swag, they don't pop as quickly. But I feel like the ones that don't have that look is the ones they pop. You think so? Yes. Hmm. I don't even see what's going on. I don't want to put you on the spot, but I'm so curious. This new artist, what? The new ones that's just popping off like. I feel like the new artist that's popping off got something like. Lola is pretty. I think I'm saying like, I don't know. Like in New York, even like, I feel like the girls that's popping right now, even like the Kenzo's, Shawnee's, the Devin's, like I feel like everybody has like a look, something to them. Yeah, down here. But I don't know. If filly and no game. So who's the bad bitches in Philly? Who's the artist that's like doing a shade that we should be tapping into? I can't glizzy. We got Mecca. We got Bumblebee. We got Tiara Wake. Oh yeah, I love Tiara Wake. Yeah, and that's. Yeah, I'm tapping. That's my girl. We got a lot of people. Shea Moore, me and her going to do a feature tomorrow. You said that Tiara Wake is your girl. Y'all both very, very creative. So I would love to see y'all working together. How did that, that connection come about? I think it was Instagram. But then, no, it was Instagram. She invited me to her show. She got me tickets. She said, I was backstage with her, Rico Nasty. All the big audience was the XXL. And then we just busted up and vibe. And then ever since that we was talking, then one day I had to do the come up show. This is when I first started rapping for I had to do the come up show. And she wrote, she came to my house in Impala. So nobody wouldn't know it was her. And parked in front of my door and told me, don't be scared. And like, I was scared. I didn't want to do it. I did not want to do it. She pushed me to do it. See, I like that because I feel like it's one thing to have a team of people that are pushing you to go towards like your craft. But it's another to have somebody who's in the industry that really sees something in you too. And she's crazy. She's crazy. Because just based on like the personality, the vibes that I get from you and then what I see from Tiara, I could imagine. I know y'all be having the time. I know that y'all be having bad fun. So how like when it comes to your sound now, you have a sound that I think is very unique because you do like the little soft voice type of thing. But you really like talking your shit. And sometimes like you were all hard with it too. How did you like find your sound? Like, how would you say you settled into the way you sound now? I kept on playing with my voices because I felt like I was sounding like the same. And I had stopped for a little while rapping. I lost my page. I had to start all over. I think that was like what? 2019? Was it? It was later than that? No, last year. I just lost my page. I thought it was way longer than that. Okay. Yeah. Well, you doing a great job because I thought it was way longer than just like this. I just got a new page. Oh, well, shout out to you. I thought it was crazy. It kind of discovered me a little bit. I was like, I'm about to be done with this. I don't feel like this. Instagram here and everybody's gone. So that means you got caught like when everybody was getting caught because it was a lot of people who lost their pages. I'm sure you were. So how did you, okay, because hold on, we're getting off track real quick. Okay. You built your sound house because we're gonna come back to this. Okay. You built your sound by playing around with your voices and stuff like that. You said you lost your page. So when you came back, is that when you continue finding your sound or did you have it downpacked once you got back on it? I continued finding it. I just kept on making different types of music. Okay. I started singing. I started getting into that. Why aren't you with the vocals? Okay. So you started singing. Now, would you say that when your page got taken down, because it sounded like you was getting a little discouraged when that happened? Yeah, because I had what, I was at like 43k. So it was like, I gotta do this all over again. My page got hit like six different times. I was about to ask you that too. Like what happened? I don't know. I was asleep. I think somebody did it that I know. Maybe haters. I ain't gonna talk about it. We talk about it off camera. Because I think I know who did it. Oh, no, that's definitely too. One of my friends one day was like, send me that code. They just came to your phone. I can't get in my phone. And I started putting two and two together. I said, yo, you what you trying to get me? Like, I was like, Oh, yeah, we done. We've been friends for like, since kids and like, I gotta really be done with you now. That was what I was about to ask you. My question is like, so how do you be moving with them now? Oh, we ain't moving. And do they know why you moving that way? Oh, we ain't got nothing to talk about the no. Oh, well, period. I guess if they tuned in, if you know, you know, you know, you know how I am. Period. Oh my gosh. So we was talking about your sound. Do you think that sound is important to us? Yes. Yeah, because a lot of people sound alike. Yeah, they try to go with other people's ways and they try to recreate it. And it's not good things sometimes to do that. And you know, I keep talking about New York artists, but in thinking about what you just said, that's kind of what happened with like pop and dusty. I feel like sometimes when you have a certain type of voice that people hear a lot, instead of people listening to your music for what it is and appreciating what it is, it's like, it comes with a comparison as opposed to I just was talking about that the other day. What's her name? The one from down here. I quote, what's her name? I'm talking about. She sound like Foxy Brown. Who sound like Foxy Brown? Well, you know who Lola is, so we can't be liable. Oh, Malibu. Okay. Not even her rapping, her just talking. She sounds like her. That's interesting because I don't think I ever really like thought to make the comparison. That's why Foxy goes so hard for her. Oh, she see her and so much in her. That's interesting. Okay. So you think that's a good thing or a bad thing? Sometimes it's good. Sometimes it's bad because sometimes you can't reinvent it. Yeah, they was like the it girls. Do you of course, do you think that people compare you to anybody? A lot of people gave me Trina. The baddest. I don't think I'm like freaky like Trina, but you Okay. So they say Trina because I was thinking like when I said that your sound is very like you give that like calm, raspy, you know, like Cali doing that and chanting is doing that. But I like that you add that to me the other day too. About who Cali and they said, you know how Cali came out and the chance that they got them voices, but choice is like soft and hard. It is crazy. Somebody just said that to me like that's how true it is. That's how true it is. That's crazy. You also do a lot of freestyles and they really be dope. Do you have like a preference between like freestyling versus like sitting down and writing your shit off? No, no, I just go how I feel that they sometimes I turn the song into a freestyle if I know I ain't going to drop it or something. Okay. So was that the case with any of the ones that we had talked about before? Like Simon says, no, they was meant to be on me was going to be a song, but the beat. I like the way you did it though. It worked. Sometimes it works. And I think also to what we were talking about before, but I'm gonna drop them all as singles. So that is giving that you tease in the people. I'm gonna just drop them so they could just have a can of love. Okay. I mean, good. Right. But like Dan, cause we probably would have been like water dad, but if you're giving us something, you know, okay. Fair enough. I'm gonna start probably dropping them this week. Oh, okay. What's the plan for that? Okay, I'm getting too ahead of myself. So how do you feel about collabs though? Cause you do your freestyles, you do your singles, you have a couple collabs. How do you feel about them in general? I love collabs, but I feel like when I first started rapping, I collared with a lot of people and I feel like now it's just like me for me to tap in with myself and make hits by myself because like you will help so many people like, but you need to get yourself out there and you're free. Like motherfuckers be like, fuck you, but it's time for them to do a favor for you or something like that. But I ain't on that. You got to put you first, Lucius. You put yourself out there and then the collabs will come. I would say my favorite collab of yours is, um, you did a song with since 95, is that what it is? Big three? First of all, you ate that verse up. You ate that verse. Um, so I really got to say you did your big one on that. Um, who are like other artists that you will want to work with? Um, Coyla Ray, Milado, Lovrella, Morty, Meek, Black, um, Lovrella. Period. Period. You said Black, so you really tapped into it. So you you like one of my favorite artists because he's got a meaning to his music. So will we be getting singing? We get singing China. Like a little melody. Okay. Cause we didn't gloss over the fact you said you got the vocals. Okay, that'll be China from the block. Of course I did. You singing, but like, if you want a song with black, I want to hear a little more. Okay. Cause you got it in you. I got songs like that. Yeah, I feel you. So now let's talk about you and being signed with a question mark because we're going to get into it. So you are affiliated with Big Money Records. How did that come about and what's that situation? They started all together. Okay. So we started going to the studio. They said they wanted to make a record label and we said it and it was that. Okay. And that was that. All right. So now I see since you've been in New York, you've been in the label meetings and all of that kind of stuff. So what's the intention behind that? What is, what is it that you're looking for? Partnership. Okay. So you would still be with BMR? Always. Love that. Love that. It's a family life for me. Yeah. So what kind of things do you look for in a partner when it comes to going into these label meetings? Like how do you know what it is that you're expecting for them to bring to the table? I mean, the only thing that could give me is probably marketing. I got everything. Okay. Really could do. Okay. Okay. Marketing. So now prior to those meetings, like since you don't have a deal yet, what have you? Oh, what have you been doing to keep yourself out there and to like make people know who Big China is? I just keep on dropping every week, even if it's not a real song so they could see me and I make it as creative as possible. So then that'd be like, damn, ain't nobody doing it like her. You know what I mean? Okay. Okay. So I feel like that's pretty much it right now. And then me going like all around promote in my single. See, I'm the tiktok girl. I definitely think that you you would do all on tiktok and I saw, you know, I did a little snooping. I see you will be posting here and there. I gotta get good at it. I'll be trying for you. I could definitely see like get ready with me since you, you know, you got the style down. Okay. You did the like the sound in the booth like it went from this to this. That's like that's cool. And I think like now we live in a time where like people like to see the personality. So if you got one given to the people, let them see it. That's what my cameraman was saying. Yeah, because you like your music is great, but I also think that your personality is great too. Okay. So that may also help people gravitate towards you. In the meantime, while you're waiting for, you know, the market and stuff to hit labels. I think you got it in you for you to put yourself out there. Okay. Yeah. Um, so something that I saw you say was the worst part about being famous and this was a while back. You said the worst part about being famous was people coming up to your car. People still be doing that. Yeah, I'll be all the way down the street. People be screaming my name. Why? See, how does that, how does that feel? Because I could see pros and cons. The pros and cons. I really like, I really love, I enjoy it, but it just like when people just walk up and stuff like that, you got to be cautious because our city is just so like trenchers. Like my fuck is killing you for just being you or you trying to come up when you like looking like something. Right. Right. Right. So what's the craziest experience that you've had with like a fan or just like a public interaction? Oh, a fan asked me. Okay. So two questions. It was like, girl, a girl, I had to put my hands on her. Wait, wait, because I told her, I told her, no, but the way she did, I told her, no, I don't know. What would make you think I would? That was real bold. What would you, what would make you think I would ever do something like that? Like, I don't even, she just kept on talking about it. I kept on talking. I'm like, yo, I don't get into that. And then she just like burning me out still. And I'm like, yo, just get away from me. Oh, she brought the C-Raw out that day. She walked with me outside and everything. I'm like, yo. Oh yeah, she was really on the C. I feel like that's too much. No means no. Okay. So in the, not in the realm of threesomes, but since we talking about like that life, what's your date in life looking like, sis? What's it giving? It's giving. It's giving life. Okay. It's giving life, whatever that means. How do you handle like dating, being in the industry? Because I feel like a lot of times it's hard to really tell like what we were talking about before when it comes to like fake fans or like people fake being happy for you. I think it's also hard to tell as you're coming up like, who's really in it because they actually interested versus like, maybe you just want me because I'm lit right now. Right. So how do you navigate the dating? I don't even, I just worry about my career. I ain't even gonna lie to you. Okay. Okay. Night time when I'm home or something like, you know, but I just worry about my career. You keep an acute and I love that. I'm gonna let you rock with that. So what is like the plan for this year? I see that you have a movie coming up that you starring in. Yes. That seems to be very dull. Yes. So talk to us a little bit about that. Is that something that you're looking to get into more? Yeah, I do want to get into that more. I'm trying to get it on BMS. But yeah, I did that movie. It's March 9th. So it's called A Body to Kill For and the girl named in the movie, name is China and my name is really China. And it's about this girl from nerf really, and she just run into the wrong men is like, basically watch who you deal with. Mm-hmm. So where can we find it? Let the people know just in case they don't know. It's going to be on 2B and Amazon. We run it out the King of Pressure Mall, well, the movie theater in Philadelphia. And we're going to have a real corporate event. Oh, that's fire. So you said that you want to do something like you want to be and be a man. Yes, I'm probably on the show. Okay, we're going to speak it into existence. Okay, let's see your manifestation. So being map like what I was like, what kind of things would you do a reality TV show? Yeah, I would. You would? What kind would it be like a dating? Would it be a baddies? Baddies. It would be a baddies. Because I was the bitch's leg. Yo, I'm sitting with the shorty with the three so they bringing out C Raw. They going to bring out they not ready. That shouldn't be the baddie. Oh, I feel like it would give though. It would give. I feel like it would give. It would be lit. Okay, so we got that on the TV front and then on the music front, I know you said that you're going to keep dropping stuff. What else can we expect from you this year? Just seeing my face more, everything I'm going to be on it, you know, taking it to the top. I'm trying to get a number one song by the end of this year. Big China, big pressure. All right. Well, is there anything else that you want to touch on, talk about before we wrap up? It's a period. Stream say something. Shout out to socials. My Instagram is Big China, Bigchina, Instagram, YouTube audit, Big China. Thank you for stopping by. I hope you enjoyed the rest of your time in New York. Thank you for tuning in to talk to the town. Bye.