 Big shit, it's a unique hustle nigga, big shit, big shit, big shit, name another podcast like this Check it, check it, check it, it's a unique hustle, it's your boy E.C.E.O. and I'm here with the lovely, amazing, official Mr. Maker, what's going on? None, none, you know my dad walk on? Man, hey man, you know, we out here in Las Vegas, y'all once again, you know, we always, like we always do at this time, that's what Kanye say, man. Check it, man, we out here, man, and uh, we ran into a gym, man, my boy Moody is in the building! How's it doing, what's going on? Man, what's going down, brother? Shit, just out here grinding, doing this, this agent work. What is you doing in Las Vegas, Nevada, man? Well, I'm currently out here working with a few talents, uh, looking to find who's the next big thing, you know, out here from Nevada, because I ain't really heard at all, a few artists out here. So I'm out here just working, walking the scenes, you know, walking the strip, peeping talent, you know, see who God put on next. Wow, man, hey man, you know, I gotta hand this over to Ms. Jamaica, man, it's the latest verse, so she's gonna more than likely ask you some questions that's gonna, you know, take you back to some places where you can just kind of give everybody a spiel on, you know, how you did it and how you came up, for sure. Okay, Moody, so, you know, our fans, all of our fans might, some might know you, some might not. So for the ones who don't know you, tell us about where you from, um, were you raised in a single parent household? No, uh, I was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, uh, I was raised while I grew up in Wisconsin, a household of nine kids, you feel me, a full household, you know, bedroom sharing, you know, everybody was young, yeah, nine siblings. Wow, that's crazy. Yeah, it was a full house, full house, uh, you know, little town in Wisconsin, Somerset, Wisconsin. So how old were you when you moved to Wisconsin from, cause you say you were born somewhere else? Yeah, I was born in Minnesota. How far has Minnesota from Wisconsin been? 40 minutes. Oh, so it's not even that far? 40 minutes, you know, from the small city that I went to high school at. Okay, so how was it growing up in, um, in Wisconsin? Cause I heard that's country. Yeah, Wisconsin, uh, all white school, you know, very country, you know, slight, you know, very slim black people, you know, I was like one in probably like 10, you know, How did that feel? That's weird. Uh, very, a lot of attention on me, obviously, cause I was a colored, you know, black kid, you know, all white school, it was, it was different, you know, Did you get bullied or, you know, did you face racism? No, yeah, there was always racism, you know, in Wisconsin, people with the Confederate flags, you know, uh, you know, what they call them rednecks, you know, it was people with Confederate flags, you know, I was always, you know, people hated on me in school because I stuck out. I was the person, you know, doing the back flips, you know, at the football games, I was the one stepping out, being different, you know, from the other people. Tell me one instance where you faced racism growing up that stood out to you? For sure, you know, at the football games, you know, from other schools and stuff, you know, I was performing at the halftime shows, you know, it'd be rivalry schools, you know, it'd be rivals, you know, I'd show out, you know, take their girls, you know, doing flips, you know, just impressing, and, you know, and, you know, their school would always, you know, bring out the Confederate flag, you know, and stuff like that, you know, and think it'd be cool to say the N-word, you know, stuff, they get ticked me off, but growing up and, you know, in that area, I knew what, you know, what was chances of me facing racism. So I never really let racism get to me. So you never said nothing about it, or not? See how brother, he said nine of y'all, how many boys, how many girls? Yeah, damn, I'm damn, it's a lot of them. Yeah, it's a lot, because I have stepbrothers, too. So where do you fall in between? Were you the middle child, the youngest, oldest? Where did you fall? Yeah, third to the oldest. Third to the oldest. But how did it feel growing up in a household full of so many kids? I know that in my mind, I'm like, okay, it can be fun, but sometimes it can be terrible, because you're sharing everything, you don't really have nothing for yourself. Yeah, it was always, you know, everything that we did in the house, we always had to share, you know, showers, bathrooms, you know, blankets, everything, clothes, everything, you know, living on the budget. It was always, you know, living on the budget, you know, nobody got more than, you know, the other. But yeah, it was always living on the budget, you know, and you had to, you know, do what you had to do, you know. Does your mom and dad live together? Yeah, no, my mom, well, my mom passed when I was four years old. Wow, from what? She was just very sick, just very sick. Do you remember her? No, I really don't. You know, my older brother always told me what type of woman she was. And, you know, family and friends always told me, you know, what type of woman she was. I didn't really get a chance to meet my mom because, you know, I was very young at the age, but I grew up with my pops, you know, my pops, we grew up in Minnesota, I mean, grew up in Wisconsin. So he had a girlfriend at the time, so she was like a step mom. Okay, that's good. At least you had that female influence in your life. Yeah. And hopefully it was positive. Yeah. That's good. So when did you discover the music? I started, you know, I was always the kid in high school getting kicked out of class, class clown. I didn't really tell you high school series because I just didn't think it was for me. When I just growing up, I had a lot of ADHD energy, and it always was just getting me kicked out of school. So at that point, when I got up to high school, I was flunking class, getting asked, but you know, in my high school, they were still moving you on, but like, it was still matter about the GPA and stuff about graduating on time. And that's pretty much like my high school, like I was just flunking school, getting kicked out, suspension, after school and school. So I really, I wasn't graduating on time. So I had to come up with a plan to like do something because I was at the point where I wanted to drop out and I eventually ended up doing it, but I ended up doing it after I figured out what I wanted to do and how to do it. So there's a lot of the litany of artists that you've engaged with because of you venturing into whether it be promoting or whether it be, you know, just going into different business ventures. Who are some of the people that you've worked with? Some of the artists that I have worked with. When I first started my career in Minnesota, I was always on top of the concerts. When it was coming to my city, to Minneapolis, I was always on top of them. I never knew the promoters. So literally when the concerts came to my city, I was usually, I had a mouthpiece. So I always was using my mouthpiece to finesse it and, you know, talk to people and tell them who I was and stuff. And it always just worked out. And I always got myself in through the back door, you know, the back gate, just using my mouthpiece because I realized how promoters and how business people were moving and how to move to get to where I wanted to be and the people that I need to connect with, I always just had a mouthpiece to get my way in the back door. You say you always be observing. Is there any one person that you observed that you're like, man, I can pick up a lot of game from them? Yeah, there was a lot of mentors, you know, people that I looked up to. When I moved to Minnesota, I had an OG, you know, big homie AK shout out big homie AK for many of Minnesota. He put on for the city. He is a big OG in Minnesota. He helps put artists on. And it just he's just been doing it for years. And when I moved to Minnesota, I went from sleeping in a music studio to him helping me throw my own shows, put together shows, learn how to book artists, you know, get them book. It was just a lot of things that he had taught me from sleeping on a studio couch to now I'm living in LA, Miami, wherever now. That's awesome. Who was some of the artists that you booked? Some of the artists that I don't work with are Help Get Book, NLE Choppa, 21 Savage, Young Thug, Chris Brown, Law Shorty Shorty, some of the new cats, Lil TJ. I've done a lot of work with a lot of people. Yeah. So when you think about some of those ones that you set up, which one sticks out for you to where it was complicated, but you got it done and you it was a breath of fresh air once you made it happen? There's a lot. Yeah, but it's one of them that you was like, damn, by the heralds of my chinny chin chin, this thing almost didn't happen. You know, sometimes it's be like, like sometime the club may be going close early, the artist may be late, a flight may be delayed. There's a lot of things that happen when you book and show. You know, I see, you know, oh, there was. There was. You know, when cities, you know, like I say with Lil Durk, Lil Durk, I had Lil Durk. I had a big show I was hosting in our city with Lil Durk. It was Lil Durk sleazy go. It was a lot of stuff. But like every time, you know, the police, you know, when Lil Durk, he's a big artist and you know, you know, from from Chicago and stuff like police will start tripping. It was supposed to be at the big Target Target Center in Minnesota. And the venue, I don't know, venue wasn't really tripping outside promoters. But did you get to get to make it happen? No, we never made that happen. The promoters never made it happen. They had me on it hosting. But yeah, we ended up having to cancel the event because, you know, they got to give everybody back their money. Yeah, with the rap that these current artists bring with them with a lot of baggage that they bring to each city because of all of the violence that goes on with the artists. You would probably run into that a little bit more than often where people are very leery about inviting certain artists into the shows, right? Oh, yeah. There's I ran into, you know, a few times where artists in fuck with each other, you know, mess with each other, my bad, artists in mess with each other. And they just, you know, people had beef, people had rival gangs, you know, you know, as somebody shows, you know, areas, you know, Chicago, Atlanta, you know, it all happens, you know, people have their rivals in, you know, there's stuff like that where people will pull up after a show and just cause a scene or sometimes in the concert cause a scene. But how can you control all of that? Because, you know, you say with security, but even with security, you can't cover everything. Sometimes it, yeah, sometimes when you get events like that, that were shootings or fighting, like, it just you can't control it just happens, you know, sometimes it happens just in the crowd. You feel me? Like sometimes it's the blame, the venue, the venue security, you know, venue security, maybe buddies with the shooter, you know, stuff like that. And, you know, letting them come in. So it's really a lot of responsibility really on who you have securing the venue. Wow. What about this chain? I see you got on. I like this chain. This piece is nice, man. This piece, the LA piece, it resembles I got the LA piece because it resembles how I started my career in LA. So when I first moved to LA is when I started started to get in buzz. I was throwing mansion parties for these celebrities. I really built a base in LA and it meant something to me when I started tapping in with the OGs and working with how to promote, how to move. Shout out, Big U, the OG with unique music, learning from him, watching him on his podcast, checked in from my OGs, working with him. I learned who he was and how he maneuvered around and helped grow artists, you know, like Nipsey, working with people to help grow them and market them and put them on. And I really learned a lot from just watching OGs like him. Wow. So you basically are saying that these guys influenced you. How difficult was it going to LA and trying to learn how to move? You said move. So you have to move a certain way in LA. Yeah, for sure. We just left LA a couple of days ago. We interviewed a lot of people. My main concern was, okay, how do I invite this person and that person versus how things are going to be organized when we get there to where it keeps everybody safe? Because everybody don't rock with everybody in every city you go to. So, I mean, how difficult was it for you trying to understand how the boundaries were set in LA like that? It was very hard at first. I sold everything from Minnesota when I moved to LA. I sold everything and went out there with two bands. I sold everything. I got over you. This was like, I want to say like a year and a half ago before COVID during when COVID started in LA. So beginning of COVID. So like last summer, something like that. It was beginning of COVID. I moved to LA when everything was shut down like at a wrong time. But so it was kind of hard and stuff. So I moved there with two bands and literally got a monthly Airbnb for $1,500 to have $500 left in my pocket and ended up tapping in, you know, with the influencers, the TikTokers and stuff like that. When I moved to LA, I realized that everybody was a TikToker, a model. They was doing something. You feel me? And it motivated me to become and tap in with TikTokers, just people who had that type of fame or following and to see how people were doing it out there and how to maneuver and stuff like that. I was tapping in with the influencers and I ended up living in a content house. It was called the drip crib with a bunch of other TikTokers and I ended up building my base and learning how to grow, make content, be consistent with it, and stuff like that. And so you found out a lot about the TikTok world. Yeah, I ended up, I was living in a content house for a little bit. It was called the drip crib. But it was a serious, like those guys, they understand how to maneuver in the TikTok. Yeah, I moved in that house and them guys had like 5 million followers. Like all them content creators had millions of fans. How did that happen? And I was in there, I was nobody. Wow. How did that affect you and your movement? Did it help? Yeah, for sure. It helped me being in that content house. It helped me realize how people acted when they had fans, you know, people who looked up to them, how they moved out there. You feel me? Because when you're known in a such area like LA, you have to, you know, you have to move cautiously because people know who you are. So, you know, when you're having that big image, you soon realize who's real and who's not when you first get that big image. Because when people get that name, it just starts to see, you just start to see who's loyal and who's not. And one thing that's a good thing you said that because I see you have that tattoo says loyalty and death before dishonor. So I know honor and loyalty is very, very big for you. Is there something that happened? Why you, you know? Yeah, I grew up one of my favorite artists, Dodd. His name was XX Tintasheon. So I'm a celebrity host and I used to do concerts, a few concerts with him and my bro Schemes. They're really brothers. And so when I was doing shows and concerts with him, I had that energy, their energy inspired me to be how I be on the stage when I'm doing my MC and my hosting, like it's often off the top. And when X pass, I had got this tattoo death before dishonor, which meaning like I would die before I disown my family and my own that I love. And loyalty, I'm very, very big on the loyalty and the people that I bring into my life and around me. Okay, so X passes. Just walk me through the time when you had to deal with understanding, man, my boy is gone and he won't never come back. I really listened to his music. You know, I was, he inspired people. He did a lot of things for people. And so like when I seen that, you know, he was killed in LA at a car dealership, you know, in his own, you know, state, it just, it just made me want to go harder and just broke me. Like this guy inspired me. You feel me? It's, it was sad, you know, but I use his energy that he provided for me and I seen and I realized when people started making comparing me and him and our bro scheme match, like the energy stage wise and stuff like that, it was just that I just need to keep going and his legacy and his energy, I'm gonna keep it live, like keep it on. You feel me? I'm gonna keep it live. Wow. So, you know, with that being said, you know, after him, that was tricklings of artists that just kept getting killed, whether it was pop smoke, whether it was a Motory, whether it was golf, whether it was in the list goes on. There's a few LA artists that I can't name, but I remember them passing here within the last year. Like how do that affect you when you know you're moving in some of those same circles? It affects me because some of them artists, you know, that have passed, you know, I've done work with them, done got them bookings. So, and don't have like deep conversations outside of what people think with social media, you know, on my page, you go on my page, it's me pictures with a bunch of celebrities and stuff like that, but behind the scenes, it's really deep conversations. It's really business talk with these, you know, artists that a lot of people like the world don't know about. Wow. Man, you know, just wanted to one of the guys that out here in the waves, man, these young and the young waves, you know, I respect you guys movement so much being that you guys are the future, you know, so and y'all pretty much hold a key to the future, you know what I'm saying? For me, so when I see a young style here getting to it, it's so much respect and love. There's a lot of different young people that God has put in my path and I'm glad that you want over my brother. For sure. Moody is in the building. We are in Las Vegas, Nevada, man. It's going down, man. We are here for magic. We've been out here now. We was in LA, but we in Vegas now guys. So yeah, it's going down, man. So go ahead. I got a question. So out of all the whether you actually promoted this event or not, what's the craziest thing you've ever seen at an event happen? Somebody get killed in front of me. Right in front of you. Where was that at? When did that happen? LA. He was just promoting the gig and see because that brings up some shit. But go ahead and tell me what happened to you. You didn't see it coming for sure. No, I didn't see it by sort of argument. It was just some beef, you know, LA some rivals, rival stuff outside music festival, not a lot of security, you know, I was hosting for a little bit, you know, I was there with a few artists, you know, few artists that really not big, but I was, you know, bringing them to the festival and stuff like that. But no, argument broke out and done scene. The person pulled the gun out, like shot it, shot the dude a few times and took off. Wow. It was right there. You didn't run? No, yeah, for sure. Everybody bailed for sure. You guys are about to say. When a man got a gun, everybody run. Let me tell you, some people are in shock. Will you just stand up there and be like, I can't move. No, my brother was asleep one time when they started shooting and I drug him and then he started to run. But nobody stand. That's the big for me. I don't see a lot of shootouts. Ain't nobody standing around in those shock. They're trying to get the hell out the way. No, as for show, you just, you just never know if the shooter, you know, is just going to spray. You just, you just never know if he's just going to shoot. How did you feel about it? Because that could have been, you know, standing so close. Yeah, it was like, it was like three, you know, three people away from me. You know, I wasn't really that far. Like, I saw, I saw the argument, you know, you, when you see people arguing, you know, you're going to look and see what's going on. So I saw the argument and I'm like, I told my brothers, I was like, we might have to go, man. Shit. You know, so I was getting heated over here. So we started walking. You know, we still looking back. Then as soon as we see him pull the gun, we just look, look away and just tell him, you know, we heard the shots and we just got out of there as soon as we came. You know, that's that's kind of the stuff, you know, that happens in LA. So when you got into this business, the reason that you chose this business, was there anybody else in your family that was in this business already? Yeah, my family was always, you know, some of my brothers, my older brother was always, you know, a rapper growing up. You know, I seen him do his little shows. I just couldn't go to him because at the time I was very young at the age. So I seen how my older brother was an artist and a beat producer. You know, so I seen how, you know, he was making music and stuff. He always wanted me to become a rapper too. He had a, you know, studio in his house and stuff. Always, you know, be trying to still to this day, trying to get me to get on the mic. You feel me? I've gone to Mike few times, but like, I never, you know, I just never took the artist. I have too much. I think I have the energy. I just like hosting. You feel me? I like, um, yeah, I like the hosting because how I host, I host like I am the artist. You feel me, but I'm just not rapping a song. What makes you different from every other host? Why do, why should people contact you, book you, anything like that? The difference between me and other hosts. I'm just not, I'm not the type of host that's just sitting there just talking on a mic, you know, just talking. I actually get in a crowd, interact with them. Crowd serve, open up a circle, dance circle. I'm doing backflips off the speakers. I'm an energetic kid. You know, I did gymnastics for a little bit. So I'm on stage flipping. I'm different from a lot of hosts. You know, you see these concert hosts, these older guys, young guys, you know, just talking on the mic, but you know, I'm different. When you get, when you book me, you get the whole package. You get me bringing a fan on stage, flipping over him. You get the whole package and, you know, So you want them crazy dudes that I see like on social media, you know, when you watch those videos and they try to backflip over cars, like a speeding car coming in and they try to backflip over. Yeah. And that's how I got big in LA doing that. I was doing it. You actually did that with a car? Yeah, I was doing that in front of the Staple Center. And that's how I got recognition from camera man, camera people outside the Staple Center and a bunch of, you know, tours. How many cars you've done that with? Is only one car you flipped over or two? Yeah. When I show you my IG, if you pull up my IG, yeah, I have a video of me flipping over a green Corvette in front of the Staple Center. What's your IG for them to know so they can go searching? My IG is a young Moody official, Y-U-N-G-M-O-O-D-Y official. How long ago you did that? That was probably like, I still can flip now. Yeah, that's why I was like, you still do it like that. I still can flip now, but I don't think I gained, you know, so a little bit of weight. I chilled out on the flipping, but that was like, like when I moved to LA pretty much, I was just straight flipping for companies. I was getting brands. I was flipping for Pete Diddy's son, King Combs. He has a drink called Wave Juice. Shout out Wave Juice. Shout out King Combs. I still do promotion and brand and bastioning stuff for his juice, Wave Juice. And yeah, I started flipping, getting drink sponsors, weed sponsors, you know, all types of stuff. And you feel me? I drink the drink and then Ron and go flip over the car, you know? And it was good promotion. That's dope. It's really good promotion. But that takes a toll on your body, I guarantee you. Yeah, for sure. You know, I always, like, I don't know. Like I was always like... Have you ever felt like not actually been able to do it? Like, because some people think they're invincible. They keep doing the same things over and over. Yeah, for sure. And keep adding on to it. And then it's scary because you can't really get hurt. Yeah, for sure. I've done it. I've tried to do it, you know, Corvette, kind of a little smaller. So with a Corvette, I was clean. I tried to do it with a charger. I ended up like barely clipped my head, you know, as I flipped, luckily, I still landed, you know, safely. But like, yeah, it's still... I still clipped my head on the windshield and it hurt a little bit for sure. You know, if he was going any little faster, he was smoking me. Wow. Usually they go, I have them go by like, you know, 5 to 10 miles. Yeah, I was about to say, how fast are they? 5 to 10 miles, probably, you know, moving. So when these videos actually... Because to me, they'll be looking like they're going really fast. But if you're saying they're going 5 to 10 miles speed limit, I mean that when the video comes out, they speed it up to make it look like it's going faster. No, 5 to 10 miles, probably, is fast. It's still fast. It's fast, like fast. I have a video of me doing it on the Hollywood Boulevard in front of the whole strip where I had literally stopped traffic. I had literally had my guys stop traffic to do this in front of hundreds of people on the strip. Like when they seen this, I flipped on, it went viral on the news, you know, Hollywood news was talking about it. It was on TMZ for a little bit. It was literally just like teenager flips over, moving car on Hollywood Boulevard. But you know, it makes it where it starts a trend because I've seen a lot more people do it. But you weren't the first person who'd done something like that. You have other people that you've seen before you. No, yeah, there's a lot of, you know, people, street performers and stuff like that. I look up to, I've seen like that flip harder than me that are flipping over, you know, multiple cars in a row. I'm like, damn, okay. Yeah, they working. They working. Man, you know what. So you were, I remember, I think you mentioned about DC. Just understand and know, how did you guys link? No, me and OG DC, I had met him in LA while he was working and doing his strip clubs and stuff like that. He had, I just came, literally, I just came to one of his strip clubs, the home he was talking about it, doing security there. He's like, man, I think you should tap in with this OG. You know, he runs clubs. He's been doing it for a minute. And, you know, he's from your state, you know, and Houston and Dallas. He does it in the Dallas area. I'm like, yeah, for sure. I pulled up, you know, introduced him, told him who I was, what I did. You know, I showed him a, I showed him what I literally showed him was a flit video on me flipping over a car. And he said the same, he's like, holy shit. You feel me? See my following and stuff like that. He told, you know, other people were like, low, low bro lit, you feel me? And so I tapped in, I told him, I'm like, look, I'm trying to promote, you know, get into the promotion, promote this stuff, you know, for the club scene and stuff like that. And he, you know, had put me on, introduced me to, you know, the people that he was working with. And I've been working with them, helping them promote his clubs and stuff like that all over. Man, so do you, I mean, being that DC does a lot of different business in a lot of different cities, you never know where he's going to be next. I've watched his movement, man, real fund of his movement. Just, just a litany of places like Atlanta, New Orleans, I've seen his movement down there and the LA movement now. Have you done anything in Vegas yet? I don't. Yeah, DC, actually shout out to the OG DCs. He's opening up a new club this Friday. This Friday, August 12th, it's called Euphoric, Right in Las Vegas. It's a brand new club, you know, a lot of 50 beautiful women strippers. And it's a grand opening. It's this Friday, August 12th. So it's a cabaret. Yeah. Okay. I'm just happy about the way that he keeps hustling. Yeah, for sure. It's not as big as V Live in Dallas. It's a little, you know, a small, little classic club, you know, only like 50 dancers. But yeah, it's going to be a nice good look. 50 songs a lot. Is it upstairs downstairs? Is it going to be a nude topless? What is it? I haven't actually, I haven't actually seen it yet. I will be seeing it this Thursday. Okay. I'll actually see it this Thursday. I've seen like, you know, on the online, the outside, and a little bit of what the inside looked like. But I'll be there this Thursday to check it out. But from the looks in, from the videos and stuff, promotion-wise, it's going to be good. It's going to be open all weekend. Wow. You know, my boy, Money Moses, he always stepped on the scene. For sure. You and him both got that income and it's our both frock out with DC. Yeah, for sure. He worked at the V Live up in Dallas. For sure. Man, what's up, Money Moses? Man, welcome to Las Vegas, man. I'm in time. Bro, give us some help. Hold on. Oh, look at this. You just sit here and say, you got 50 girls. V Live didn't have a 20. V Live didn't have a 20? For sure. For real? Yes. I mean, a girl, unless it's a big event and they come from out of town, they're like, that's about it. That's a big deal. Yeah, nah, yeah. What I was told, like, they had like 50 strippers, at least dancers, you know, hired at the new club. So I'm like, okay, sure. Wow. So you, knowing how do you feel about DC? Like, when you and him worked together, was it was it cool to work with DC? Because he be everywhere. He a cool person. Like, he bring the money. He bring the money. He bring the money. That nigga supposed to have been on Boss Talk a while back and he didn't show. He said he wanted to come. Well, you didn't think nigga know Boss Talk over here and we're serious with it. He flew out of town. He always flew out of town. We flew him up out of town now. We have been Vegas, man. Bro, I can tell you that stuff is about him. What is this, our third trip up here with Boss Talk? You was with me the very first, I mean, is it four? One, two, one, two, three. Three. Three. Three, yeah. Man, so we up here for the third time in Las Vegas shooting, man. And we done set out with Moody today, man. This guy right here, you wanted one of those guys. So what do you think about the promoters and the promotions that was going on with VLIVE Money Moses down in Dallas? We probably needed him. I'm not gonna say it was the clubs. I'm saying it was the scene because all that stuff was happening. So it was like, everything was happening. So it was like, you couldn't really just do nothing because too much killing happening. And most of the shooting was really after the club, after VLIVE really. So it was like, it's always around the club. It's like then, the ecstasy, the club next to it, it's like they do a lot of shooting over there, but they always blame on VLIVE. Wow. So it's a, so do you think cause VLIVE, didn't VLIVE close now in Dallas? It's closed now. They turned to the fours, it's like a restaurant. So, so basically now the shooting, suppose they had slowed down, but another young lady got killed at ecstasy or something. That was the security guards. Wow. That's something they had something to do with it. Wow. So how much, I know you talked about killing a little bit, like dying at these shows or whatever, man. How, how tough is it for us, the security manager that you guys take when these shows are going on? Experiences is big, you know. When I'm, I'm never the person to book the security, but you know, sometimes people recommend, I know a lot of, you know, professional security companies. So the investors always would ask me, like, you know, what's a good security team and stuff like that. You know, I'd give them a few recommendations of people that I have worked with, some companies that I personally have worked with, and people who have done personal security for me and stuff at my events and stuff like that. So I would just give the investors or the promoters this recommendation. Most of the time they already had, you know, their people book for the security. Well, Travis Scott though, he was one that had a show that went crazy for a while. Back in the day, back in a while back, he's, I've seen him kind of resurfacing again and trying to move past what had happened. For sure. And have you ever worked with him? Yeah, I've done, Matt Travis Scott a few times. I was supposed to be at Astro World, literally when the news had happened and stuff like that. But I had some other bookings to do. I was supposed to be with a few other artists that were going to be on the lineup, but I ended up having to do some other things that day. And I really was sad I couldn't go because Houston, that's where I went to high school and stuff with for a little bit. So I really fuck with Houston and how. What house he had. I went to a task you see the high school. Oh, very, very huge school. What you about to say money? I think when they book securities, they need to book securities from another city, not the city that you in. Because the city that you in, they know, like he said earlier, they know the people's already that's around them. So they know people's like, they're going to let someone with guns, you're going to pay the brain guns in. So that should be securities from out of town. That way they don't know nobody. I agree. What do you think about, okay, so you said something early about an off the camera about a documentary. Give me a spiel on how you plan to do a documentary on how you, how's it coming? So right now I'm documenting my lifestyle of how I be coming. I'm right now, I'm documenting my lifestyle of how I'm working as an emcee, as becoming from becoming nothing to now becoming something as a big emcee, a hype man pretty much. That's how I carry myself is how I hype man because most of these people, you know, my supporters family, they know me as a hype man who turns up, you know, concerts, club events, stuff like that with all these celebrities. So I turn up the crowd before they come out. Wow, man. So, man, top three artists of all time did our live. Top three artists of all time did our live. Number one. My favorite, I got to put X on there. Okay, X, X, X, X number two. Juice World. I worked with Juice World for a minute. Them guys really inspired me. So I got to put them on there because they inspired my lifestyle and my energy. And the third one, I got to say Polo G. Polo G, man. I see where you at with yours, man. Polo G. Yeah, you can tell this style. Yeah. Man, so how can people get a hold of you if they're trying to link up with you, man? Using my IG or my email, I have a business email people can use, but most of the time I'm very active on my Instagram and I'm always getting back to DMs right away. It's quick to catch me on the Instagram. Instagram, man. If it's family or friends, you get my Facebook. Okay. And what is your Instagram again? My Instagram is youngmoodyofficial. Y-U-N-G-M-O-O-D-Y-O-F-F-I-C-A-L official. Man, you know what, man? Hey, man, we love you, brother. We appreciate you for coming on. For sure. We link for life now, man. You boss talk 101, certified. For sure. And just before we cut the podcast, I just want to say I'm a prime example from coming from nothing to something. And I became what I became because of who I am and I stayed true to who I was. And I just want to say, man, you can do anything. God gonna bless you if you work off of that shit. Man, that's real talk, man. Hey, man, thank you so much for coming on the show again, Money Moses. We out here in Las Vegas, man. How you liking it out here? Bro, it's really fun, but it's just the heat. I hate the heat, bro. We can't go no more without sweating. Man, so, you know, we've been tackling this for a minute now, man. And boss talk 101 been around for it. Like I said, it's the third time we've been up. We came on early in the game. Vegas was one of the first seats. Then we come before the pandemic, right? We came before the pandemic. We came one time before the pandemic. Then we shut down for a year. That's why we consider ourselves to have been around for a year now because the pandemic kind of shut everything off. And then we went for four players, I believe, in 2021. And we're here right now, man. So for boss talk 101, Las Vegas, Nevada. For sure. Make sure you guys like and subscribe to our channel. All the people, if you look in the sponsor us, you know, we put out our own money because we're bosses right now. We've been bosses. That's why it's boss talk 101. We've been doing the Vegas thing, Cali thing, the Houston thing, the Atlanta thing, the Chicago thing. Let's go, man. Arkansas. Arkansas. Little Rock. Shout out to the girl on TV, man. Hey, Louisiana, man. How you down there? We everywhere, man. Everywhere. Like my boy said, he say the Earth is what? Yeah, Earth is our turf. Hey, man, check it, man. It's been another great segment of boss talk 101. What a boss is talk.