 At the end of the day, I mean, I know for a long time, we didn't talk with each other for a while and shit. But me and Trey, me and Trey, it's like through all the bullshit, like I had, man, I'm gonna hustle all the way through whatever the fuck I was. I had a job, I'm gonna hustle, I'm gonna rap. I'm just not gonna rob and steal. That's not my own fuck around like that. I just didn't do none of that. So like, through all the whole shit, like me and Trey, I didn't go come up to my motherfucking job and we'll be outside running it. Because every job I had, I was cool with the boss or the owner. So I pretty much did the fuck I wanted to do it with every job I had, you know what I'm saying? So how did you and Trey still talk now? We on boss talk one on one. But it didn't become like a rap group until like me, Trey, and Zero and Taz put that shit out. Yup. Without first album. How old were you when all of that went down? At 19, 18 and 19. Young kids. Yeah, yeah. But how Trey was the youngest. Oh, really? Yeah, the impact, how did you get that? I mean, when you first, how did you first know, man, we got something like from the people, you know, taking notice? Man, honestly, when everybody was just doing shows, everybody got down work. Because man, we was just niggas who could rap. We didn't know the business and none of that shit, man. We was just niggas who could rap. Like most niggas be. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? We put that shit out. We had our home in Rock His Jacobs. Shout out to Rock Man, Love That Nigga Man. He the one who helped us develop it to who we was. You know what I mean? Yeah. Like he the one who had us singing and doing all this. Zero was already saying, because he. That was he do. You know what I'm saying? But he had us finding our sounds and shit that we good with and using that shit in our music. So that's why we able to do that shit now. So once again, shout out to Rock His Jacobs. And he was making all the beats for us and shit. Zero was making beats and shit too though. Zero make them beats? Yeah, he fuck with them beats. And he good with it. Like gonna come out there with a hit. Yeah, I think he fuck with it. Y'all done heard a lot of shit he done made already. That nigga been making beats like since we was young. In the room, making beats. We rapping, punching holes in a while. What was you at when they made this song? I don't need no help my nigga. I can do bad on my own. In the streets? Yeah. In the streets doing my shit. In the streets doing my shit. They was doing some, they was doing the ABN shit. And I was out in the streets just doing my own thing. That was after y'all had formed. Yeah. That was after the Gorilla Marm shit. The Gorilla Marm, Slowloin and Bangin and then the ABN shit. Okay, got it. How hard was it to keep a group together? Cause you know, groups don't never last. Nah shit, they shit didn't last. I mean, you know, cause I mean, you know, everybody, man, you know, everybody had their own thought perceptions about shit and about what they need to be done or what need to be done. But at the end of the day, nobody, nobody really just knew the business of shit, man. And it's fucked up. So do you feel like if someone knew the business or all of y'all, you think you still be together? Probably so. Probably so. But at the end of the day, I mean, I know for a long time, we didn't talk with each other for a while and shit. Me and Treyk, me and Treyk, it's like through all the bullshit, like I had, man, I'm gonna hustle all the way through whatever the fuck I was. I had a job, I'm gonna hustle, I'm gonna rap. I'm just not gonna rob and steal. That's not my own fuck around like that. I just didn't do none of that. So like through all the whole shit, like me and Treyk, I didn't go, come up to my motherfucking job and we'll be outside running it. Cause every job I had, I think I was cool with the boss or the owner. So I pretty much did what the fuck I wanted to do with whatever job I had, you know what I'm saying? How did, you and Treyk still talk now? Right now. Cause that Trey Day thing is real big down here, man. You know, that's what, but when we was in Atlanta, they were having Trey Day and Cheetan Ass Myron flew down. He did an interview with us when he got back to Atlanta. And it's just a big thing. All the artists were either coming here or either going to that Rolling Loud. And it happened at the same time, that same weekend. So the last Trey, just Trey Day just passed. Yeah, man, I don't stage, perform one of my new songs that I got with Bun B called So Hard. You know what I'm saying? I performed that shit in there. So hard. Y'all got a visual to it, yeah. Me and Bun, me and Bun are my broke kid, James. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101.