 Let's talk one-on-one, one-on-one. Yo, we gon' talk, we gon' have fun. We be on fire, we be live-ly. It's a unique hustle, big shit. Big shit, big shit. It's a unique hustle, nigga, big shit. Big shit, big shit, big shit. Name another podcast like this. We gon' bring it to the table, boss talk. 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 official Ms. Jamaica. Wait. Walk on. How you doin' now? I'm good. Hey, man. So, hey, man, we got a special guest here. You know, I know him old when I deal with him because the dance technique he use, I can't even, I don't know, I can't move like that. You know what I'm talkin' about? I want to what I came, man. Lil' Earl, what's up, baby? I'm good, man. Say, man, we happy to have you, man. I appreciate it for having me. Man, so, man, you are really, really killing it right now when it come down to just when I look at your impact on Instagram, when I look at your impact on YouTube, you know, we gotta find out about this guy. Where'd he come from? Who is Lil' Earl? Who is Lil' Earl? Man, just a kid that want to be at the top, man, don't play no games, really turn in real life. In real life? In real life, really turn in real life. So, what caused you, was it the dancing came first or the music? The dancing. The dancing came first? Yeah. And when you started to dance, how old were you when you knew that, okay, I got some here. I always been dancing my whole life, but I ain't just ever make my first video till I was like 19, 20, actually. I ain't make my first video on social media till I was 20. Really? Yeah. So, 20, which I ain't been long ago cause you look like you bought 16 now. Nigga L. You know what I mean? Right? Exactly. You throwin' these numbers at me, I'm like, damn, that wasn't but last year. Right? Nah, I was two years ago. I'm 22 now. You serious, man? You look good, man. You look good, man. So, man, who managing you, man? Q. Smith on the beat. Okay, you better tell that nigga don't mess up, nigga. I come on there and get you. Q. C. on the beat. No, he got something special going on with you. So, I know you wanna ask him about did he grow up in a single parent house? Did he grow up in a- Hello. Okay, I'm sorry. You ask the question, I listen. So, tell me, how was it growing up? Crazy, man. Really, I'm really a foster kid. Wow. Bounce house to house and I've ended up getting adopted at a young age. Like how old? Two years old. Do you know who your parents were? Not my original parents, nah, but as far as my, who adopted me, that's who I rock with. Cause how does that work? Like, do you have like paperwork that you can go back and find out who your parents are? Yeah, but it was, some people have different situations. My situation was where like, I couldn't go back cause it was just like, I'm gonna tell you what happened. My mom was on drugs and she jumped off the freeway. Not with me inside, but with my sister inside. And that was like more so to the state where it was just tired of the dangerment. We couldn't really go back. So how, oh, were you when that happened? Yeah, she still made, she's still living. Really? Yeah. Oh, okay. So that's mental health, man. Yeah. And so- But did she recover? Yeah, she recovered in- I'm talking from off of drugs and everything else. Oh yeah, yeah, she still, you know how. Have you, have you, have you- I done contacted, I done gotten social media. She done seen what I was doing and actually ended up finding me on Facebook. That's crazy. And she reached out? Yeah. Okay. Couple years back. Did she say I'm your mom? Yeah. And you like- What did you say? You know, I just, I don't know. How did you feel? What did you response? I really, I'm really like, I'm a nonchalant type of person. I was just like, hey, I've been good. You know, regular conversations, just catching up on life, stuff like that. That's good. So you have a sister, are you in contact with your sister? Yeah, I have a sister, I actually live with my sister and one of my sisters passed due to really, probably from that situation, she was crippled so. Oh, after that. Because of jumping? Yeah. She passed. Wow, that's crazy, man. You had a, that's a heck of a story. You gotta write a book, son. Really do. No, no, real talk. Like that's not normal. That's something that's incredibly different than most people growing up. Nobody's, that story is something else, man. You gotta hone instead. You gotta also, like I said, to write, get something done to where people can see your story and can say, hey, man, if he's making it, I can make it. Because somebody else out there probably going through something similar to what you have been through. Believe it or not. Believe it. So where, did you know where your dad, about your dad? Yeah, I lived, actually I lived with my dad throughout this. Your biological father. Yeah, I actually lived with, I don't really, we don't really. So how did you get back in contact with him because you said you weren't adopted? Because my brother, my brother stays with my dad. And then they found you? Nah, it was like, my brother, he stayed, my brother and my sister, they stayed with my dad. And me and my other sister, we stayed with our adopted mom. So it was like, he got custody of them two and we was. So he always knew where you were in foster care. That's what I was trying to see. If, when they give you the foster care, do they just lose contact with him? You can't know where. You get a visitation. You get a visitation. Okay, okay, okay, so. How important is it to break that chain of dysfunctionality, I'll call it? To where, yeah, to where are you now? How important is to you to me and then, how important is family? That would be the question. Family is important. You see what I'm saying? No cap. It gotta be. Family is important. It really didn't hit me as hard cause I was young, so. Correct. Two years old, I'm off rip thinking, this my real mama. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And she treated you real good and everything like that. With your blessed because you see kids jumping from foster home to foster home going through terrible situations. So count your blessings where that is concerned. Yeah, actually my mom was a foster parent. So we had kids come in different situations living with us. So yeah. So let's talk about the music a little bit, man. So when you, when you, what's the process? Like, how did you? Okay, I'm dancing now. I'm about to start rapping. Yeah. How does that happen? The pandemic when COVID first hit, you know, everything was shut down. They had me locked in. They had no job. I was just in the house dancing, making trillers every day. And then I was like, bro, I want to make no money off of it. I was like, man, I got to get to it. So I just end up making a song. My first song was a hit. But it changed my life. Changed my life. Put me in a whole different situation. It did. And who helped you come up with that whole song? Really just me, but my boy called me money. He on the song. He in the neighbor right now. Shout out to him. What was the first song? She gonna enter. And old boy Prince. Nah, shout out to old boy Prince. He be hustling hard. That's my guy. Shout out to my boy. I need to go on live so he can see. He's been on here a couple of times. If it wouldn't, if it wouldn't for old boy, I wouldn't even be making music. Cause I just had the song jumping on TikTok at the time, but it wasn't on streaming platforms. I ain't know nothing about it. Be sharp about it. Prince hit me up. Yo, what you doing? You got it? You not gonna drop the song? I'm confused. Did you know him? Nope. Didn't know him at all. I just knew he, thankfully, stuff like that. But you never knew. I just never knew him. You never had met him? How did he get your number? He actually hit me on Instagram. Yeah, and I gave him my number. And then he said, you what you doing? So he reached out to you? Yeah, he reached out to me through Instagram. And that's a boy Prince, right? Yeah, a boy Prince. You were jumping, but you didn't know what to do with it. I didn't. That's God. For real. That's God. Cause I love all of his videos. Man, he be going in hard in all his videos with all the dancing and stuff, and he be promoting. Yeah, Prince doing this thing. I was with him last night. Okay. Where y'all was? Who was at Turkey Dan with DJ Popper Run. Okay. He was with his little group, Click Full of Stars. C4S. That's good. That's good. He told me I was some R&B artist now. Yeah, K.P. Yeah, he got a couple, he got something. Yeah, man. Boy, I hate, man. I'm so glad, cause you next. You for to be next, man. For real. What you trying to do with this whole thing? This whole newfound fame. This whole newfound, you talented. What are you going to do with the talent that God is giving you now to help take it to the next level? Go crazy, just do something. I'm really just trying to put on for my city, really. That's all it is. Just trying to put on for my city and help my family out. The, I think the city has the boogie movement and all that. This legacy has already been here. So for you to be in that lane right now, I think it's something that it fits. And I think if you really take it and harness it, it could become something great. It's been going for too long, man. Somebody got to bring it back. Yeah. Are you killing? See, you ain't trying to hear it, man. The moves is just something else. So you just enjoy dancing, man. Yeah, that's just, dancing going to always be there. I don't plan on stopping music, but if music stopped dancing, I always going to be there. That's just in my body, that's just me. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So. Dancing just like music. Since I've started this, I didn't realize how much power is in this microphone. I'm telling you, you can heal, you can hurt, you can cry. I mean, like people say things, you know, freedom of speech, but freedom of speech, sometimes people don't always watch what they say and it can hurt, it start beefs, but it can also motivate, it can also inspire. That's why a lot of times though, it's that words are powerful, you have to watch what you say and try to use it to uplift people instead of actually bring them down. And even just like dancing, I can be at home and I'm being a bad mood or whatever, but turn some music on and start dancing and my mood instantly changes. So I'm telling you, dancing is a therapy. People even use it for people who are mentally challenged because even sometimes you might not can speak properly, but through that music, it's therapy. Yeah. Yeah. Different. I agree with that 100% girl, you say it that. And I'm gonna be real with you, man. I can't wait to see the next level, man. So how is the process with you? Do you write or do you punch in or? Yeah, I've been in the studio. I don't write the song before I come in the studio. I've been in the studio, we make the beat on scratch and whatever come to my head, put it in my notes on my phone, I get on that mic, I'm crazy, put it together. Yeah, yeah. So you know anytime you drop in new projects, you gotta come on Boss Talk 101, what a boss is talking. What? I'm here. I'm here. Man shout out to C.C.O.P, man and Mark and those guys, man, I'm even throwing me that help and getting you, you know, to come on the show, man. They say, man, they say, hey, man, Lil' Earl got to come on the show. And how many songs you got on TikTok that's hitting right now? How many you got? I don't got, I don't have three hits. So I'm three for five right now. Three for five. Three for five, he ain't playing with it. What's the secret to that? Some people can't even do one hit on TikTok. It's a dancing, man. What's the secret? I'll just say, I found the algorithm of like what people wanna hear on TikTok. You just, I don't know, anything go viral on TikTok, but music wise, I don't know, you just gotta have that ear of what will and will not go. See me, I stay more in the turn up twerking lane. That's my type of lane. I make the turn up music, club, club bangers, making one get up. Yeah, yeah, yeah. How long does it take, like, as soon as you put a song out, how long did it take for it to really be a hit? I don't drop a song unless it's popping. I put it on, I drop, like before it's out, I put a snippet on TikTok, make a challenge and get it jumping, make everybody like, what's your song called? What's your song called? Then drop it. Like the three that you have that are hot, how long did it take for it to be viral, to be hot? I'd say, like one month, that ain't gonna lie. A month? Yeah, it'd be viral. From the back, went viral after the third week. How many shares and how many views do you have on the highest rating one? From the back got 5.5 million streams. Spotify, yeah. That's my biggest song. That's your biggest one. Yeah. How'd you feel about that? I wasn't expecting it. I knew it was gonna go, but as far as me, and that's crazy. Man, it's wild, it's surreal. It's crazy when you, those numbers is ridiculous. Now, you gotta have some merch, man. That's what I was trying to talk to you about. Yeah, yeah, we could get to it, nigga. I'm getting in there one way or the other, bro. Yeah, I was trying to get that little Earl Merchant going. And once you put it out on TikTok, everybody gonna be hitting you up like, hey, where can I get that? That's what I want. It's gonna be like at Boss Talk. Put it through the store. We about to talk and chop it up, because that's what people don't know, man, but there's so much power, like she said, behind these microphones, on these social media platforms, just dealing with different things, where you working and dancing and doing all the things. You are the brand now. Yeah. The independent move is what's up. And you can make a lot go on in the independent world. You know? And so you gotta stay on that, man. How important is God in this whole thing? Man, in the beginning of my career, I was going through it. Like, I was really going through it. And he just really gave me the footsteps. He kept leading me to the right footsteps, right people to be around with the music. And yeah, really God important. I ain't gonna lie. Very important. Change my life. Yeah, because let me tell you, everybody will have, you'll go up. Everybody always go up. But let me tell you, when you come down, because you can't stay up all the time. When you come down, you gotta hold on to God, because if not, you gonna be so depressed. There's so many people that I know that went through depression and went through self-doubt and all this other stuff because they didn't have God in their life. I believe. You understand? And how I look on life is the fact that everything happens for a reason. So when I say everything happens for a reason, there's a lesson in everything that you go through. So even whenever you come down, or even whenever you're up, you have to look on the small lessons because sometimes it's not always for you, it's for somebody who is around you that needs to learn that lesson. So you always have to move in a positive manner. And that's just how I try to do. You know what I mean? So that whatever his intention is for me to do, that I'm doing it the best of my ability. You know what I mean? So don't ever look on anything as a regret or a failure. It's a lesson. I believe, man, that's crazy. Lesson learned. You see what I mean? I want you to also, one thing I could suggest is that some young kid, 15, 13, that want to be around somebody like you, let them be around you because it's good to help others. And not only that, to put others on. As you process and don't wait, you know what I mean? Most people wait until they know if you see something else so that you can help a little bit, let them tag along if it's a cousin, friend, family member, whatever. You see what I'm saying? Because at some point, you got to create lanes for others so that they can go too. You know what I mean? So not saying to focus totally on it, but let them hang around. Because you never know God to make that thing bigger. You CEO, you know what I'm saying? Little Earl, the CEO. You know what I'm saying? Helping the community and more people you can touch and reach better off it is. Right? Yeah, I believe that. So what is your ultimate goal? Ultimate goal, really move out of Dallas. You want to move? Where you want to go? Atlanta. No. Atlanta. That's what I want. You ever been? Yeah. So you don't want to go to Atlanta? No. Baby Hollywood? No. You want to go to Cali? I said, yeah. I knew he was about to say it. I could see it in his eyes. I was out there a couple of weeks ago. Goodbye. You like it? I love the son of my oldest son like LA a lot. That was my first time I like it. That's what he said, right? When we took him out, he's like, dad, I want to move out here. I'm like really? N****s cold that night. The water that waters is I don't know, man. You know, for me, there's no place like home like they said on the Wizard of Oz. I love Texas. N****, I'm cool. We're going places, but I'm coming home. You know what I'm saying? I got to get out. Look man, there's an opportunity out there. When you do leave, I think it does open big doors for you. When I say that because people some like I always tell people the word of God, say a prophet is what I honor in his own country. So I think when you do leave or if you go places and create those opportunities, those waves, it's going to be so much easier for people to embrace you because here people like I know him, that's a little arrow. But when you go to places, they're going to be like, dang, I've seen him on TikTok. That's that guy. Yeah, that's that boy. You see what I'm saying? That's the guy on Instagram. I follow him. He's any somebody. But it's not a thing about what he does, though, because you dance, you're being put into most of the videos. You know what I mean? Because a lot of people who just does the songs, the songs are there and nobody knows who is behind them. You know what I mean? But the song is going viral, which is always great because the money is still going in their pocket regardless, but they don't have a face to go with the music. Exactly. But because you're doing the dances, you're in there as well. Right. So that's awesome. So you said what your goal is. Do you have a time stamp on those goal? Like, OK, for the first year, this is what I want to accomplish. For the second year, this is what I want to accomplish. Not really. But I do by 25, I expect to be out of here in, like, in a way, have a way better career like 25. I expect to be gone. That's good. Just keep up the hard work because you're young. You can you can do it from the back. I'm looking at that. Yeah, crazy, crazy, man. You how did you feel when you two numbers start going up? It was just a feeling all over again. Not gonna lie, I had that feeling twice. It's a good feeling like it ain't no feeling to have a hit song, bro. You can't even really explain it. It's a good feeling, though. Yeah, they make you want to come with another one. Yeah, like you look like you found your niche. Like you really, you've really found a way on how to deal with the algorithm and stuff. You know what I mean? Is there a lot of pressure? Like you have three out of five, but like every time you make a new song, is there any pressure on you? Like, okay, this one got to be a hit. Like this got to be, you know what I mean? I just be doing me, just chilling and cooling. Really? Yeah. When's the next one coming out? Before, really, before the second week of December. I'm already getting it jumping on TikTok right now. Oh, so what's it called? Bend it over. So I can find it. Yeah, on TikTok, you can go look at the videos. I got 21 videos, girls are really twerking, so I'm gonna keep pushing it, drop it into it. It's like 5,000 videos, that's when I'm gonna drop the song. How often are you putting out a song? Are you planning to put out a song? I really was playing every month. That was my plan. That's it, that's it. You doing it right? No, no, he said but. But, yeah. I caught that but. I ain't dropped the song since from the back. That was like, that was three months ago. So what's the hold up? What happened? You supposed to be grinding. I know, I know. You need to keep yourself accountable to your own words. You said every month. You so right. I know. So what's up? I really been busy. Like, this is my biggest song. So I ain't just ever been, I've been doing a lot of stuff. Like, I been in Atlanta, L.A. shooting videos in L.A. So I really just gotta get used to that lifestyle. I get it. Cause it's different, right? It is. And you like the song? The shows, back to back, going on tour next week. Your manager be booking you? Yeah. Shout out to Q-Taylor too. Hey man, that's dope man, that you got a team of guys around you that's looking out for you and you looking out for yourself. Make sure you, you paying attention to business, okay? Yeah, they keep me on my feet. I'm telling you to make sure you're paying a close attention to business. Yeah, for sure. You see what I'm saying? Because that's important. You know, you need to know what's going on. For sure. I actually do see everything. Yeah. I mean, I say that because it's just something our youth need to know. You need to know, you know, you're not just a... That's what I feel Lil Wayne was, was so much of an artist that he couldn't keep up with his business. He was doing so much work, so many features, so many that I feel like a lot of times, the reason a lot of things happen in his business world the way it is because he was so artistic. So you just gotta be careful and balance. Everything has to have balance. You see where I'm coming from? Be cautious. You gotta have balance. Everything can, you gotta balance life. You know what I mean? Life and everything that goes with it. So who would you like to work with if you could choose? Really, I'm not even really... If you could pick anybody. What would I choose? I'd say the baby, because he makes more so of my type of music. I think, yeah, I like the baby too. Makes more so of my type of music. But I don't really feel any work with anybody, honestly, because I'm in my own lane, like, I don't know. But the baby for sure. Who, Rich, have anybody read you out to you? Like, damn, somebody followed you on IG? Like, damn. And he's like, whoa. Nobody big, but other than people like Dallas people for sure, like Dallas artists, B-King, you got... B-King and Houston, though, right? Yeah. Okay, you all right. DJ Chose. Chose, Houston too. They like what you're doing. They been... Well, I hadn't got B-King, but I got DJ Chose been on here. You know, T-Cash? Yeah. He reached out. Fat Pimp, really like a lot of the Texas OGs type stuff. Yeah, you guys got to keep going, man, so... I want to know your top three artists of all time that are alive and in genre. You heard us while ago. Let's go. Big Yevo. Big Yevo. That's our first one. I need to get Big Yevo on there. That's our first one. He had a song with Luce Ace. Luce Ace got locked up. Luce Ace was on here before he got locked up, though. Big Yevo. T-Sacran. I haven't had that one either. Lil Wayne, yeah. And Lil Wayne. That's dope. I like your top three. So it's Big Yevo. And what was that, the second one? T-Sacran. T-Sacran. Who is that one? I don't know. Yeah, the Houston. You know that song? Mark. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And then the last one was Lil Wayne. If I don't do nothing, I'm a ball. I don't even say I'm a ball. Lil Wayne. I love your choices. I'm from, you know, I keep it Southern. And anytime I'm dealing with my Southern artist. Who's your number one? PMC, you know that. Who's your number two? Number two? Man, that's not going to be, oh, you got me thinking. Why would you do me like that? You always ask me. Number two? Bouse top. Bouse top, that's the truth. But man, who would be my number two? I mean, you know, I would probably say Patty LaBelle. I'm going to hold the camera. You don't know who that is, huh? Well, I'm going to listen to Patty. OK. Number three would be, hey, man, it's. Now you'll be putting in that position now that you put everybody in. Number three hard, I'm scared to say somebody because I don't want to miss somebody. Number three, it's a lot of great people been on my platform. It's a lot of great people that don't support it. You know, what I do, you know, and I'm going to hit you like I would. I mean, you know, that number three would be hard, boy. I mean, don't get me wrong. I mean, I love some TI. He's stalling. Number three? No, but I love Gucci, man. OK, but you're not your number three. I'm trying to think. Come on now. I love some of these guys, man. They dope, man. I can't be out here picking now. You already down just one. I got a little runny, a little runny. I'm off that nigga. Nice. I love a little runny. Do you like how we do everybody else? Only one, man. I'm just trying to think. That's that's a number three. I had to get back with you. Uh-uh. There's no getting back. You never get back. You already gave us two. So give us that number three. I can't make that choice like that, man. Come on, bro. Yeah, no, because I got too many stuff. I can't do it. You wrong. You do this to everybody that come on here. You cannot do nothing about it. But I'm going to go on my YouTube and I'm going to ask I picked these two people. Who would be your top three artists of all time? And then they're rocking like that. That's their top three. That's not your top three, you know what I'm saying? What did you think, little girl? It's hard when you know something. I know a lot of people, man. I think you should have just gave you the whole top three on this show right now. Come on, man. You really need my top three like that. Come on now. The third one. You just need one more. Birdman? I'm flying anywhere, though. He a boss, nigga. Birdman going to be in that list, yeah. That's my guy. So the MC, Gladys, no, Patti LaBelle. Patti LaBelle and Birdman. Yeah, that's my, and it could change, but right now that's how I'm feeling. Okay. You know what I'm saying? Because Birdman is like, he really like, yeah, like when you look at him, you know, he gets so much flack, but he's such a business mogul. And I think a lot of times people don't give him the credit for the stuff that he done for the people careers that he did, that he done him with. They be like, oh, he did this, he did that. But all these people have issues, man. All these people trying to hold all these other guys together, these people getting millions of dollars. It's not going to be no peaches and cream. You can go, you could say puff daddy down. You could say Birdman down. You could say QC down with them. You could say to all these people, Gucci man down and everybody in their camps going to, you know, they're going to be complaining. JZ, he can be in that same seat. They all are just bossed up and you got to realize that and it come with it. It come with being a boss. People going, some people going to love you. Some people going to hate you. And that's the part of being a boss. You see what I'm saying? Did you see our viral moment when we had the OG's up in here when Charleston and the Cripp and they walked out? You didn't know that was here or didn't you? Miss Tendicke, head up. Was that here or did you? Yeah, that was here. Oh, OK, OK. Yeah. Where you thought it was? I thought it was at Digital University because I did see another Charleston white wear. He been on so many. Not like on this one. That was the first, that viral moment was the one. Yeah, the last one was that man funny, bro. He be here a lot, but he come through it. He from the South, so I rock with him. So what did you think when you seen that video? You didn't even know it was here. I did. I didn't even be here. Yeah, but you was like, but I was on the damn thing talking. All right. I don't be put into it. So you're like, whoa. I brought the Cripps and the Bloods down and I organized them to help me sit down with around this round table, August panel of people. Did they know about it or it was? Yeah, they knew about it. Yeah, they knew about it. We were going to talk down and hash it out. Man, that's crazy. It didn't go the way we planned. I knew it wasn't before I even finished the video because I know Charleston white, he's not going to have it. He's not going to have it. How do you feel about Charleston? Because you're a youngster. I don't got nothing against him. He just, he blunt. Very, very blunt. Most of the young people that I talk to love Charleston white, I'm not lying and people don't realize that. I feel with him. I'm like, everybody's young. It's the young people that, the older dudes be mad at him. But as far as a snitching though, with him and the folks on the radio, nah. He's a whole different old man. Yeah, but I'm just saying he's a whole brand. Really though. He's a brand. I feel like he should be bigger than what he is. You think so? Would you put him in a video? Most definitely. I have a marode in my video. Most definitely. I'm going to set that up. I would for sure. Because it's going to blow everything. The front and back video, my manager got a role. Like, I'll give Charleston white a role just like that. For real? No cap. I'm going to link that up. He called me earlier. I'm going to link you up with him. So it's going to be dope. Everybody going to be watching. Laughing ass. Well, I'm going to definitely link you guys up because he love the youngsters, man. That's what people don't realize. That's his passion, is the young kids and the young people. And yeah, he say crazy stuff. But I think most people's biggest issue is they look at Charleston's role and they don't look at their own. We all have issues, bro. Yeah. Everybody. Everybody. Just some of my hide there is better than others. But there is no perfect individuals out here. Right. I'm one of the worst ones. But at the end of the day, when I'm dealing with Charleston and my wife know how I am or anybody even dealing with you, I just feel like God put me in your life and I can be a light that can help. And hopefully somewhere we can do some positive that can help some positive change and help some people down the road. Yeah. Everything happened for real. How can people get a hold to you? Instagram, man. What's Instagram? L-I-L-D-E-A-R-L, Earl with two A's. What about your tic-tac? How many follows you got on there? I'm finna hit 200K, I'm actually. Hey, that didn't compete with me. I got 20,000. You got to help me. I got you. I got 20,000. That's it. 23,000. I'm at 98K. I'm finna hit. You a beast. I'm gonna hit before 22, though. I'm gonna hit 200K before 22. Mark my words. I said it on Boss Talk first. Hey, you got to get that YouTube going two more. Yeah, for sure. Like, get that whole of them numbers got to go. Okay, everything I draw, man, we finna go crazy. And you need to be posting that on your YouTube and pushing your YouTube and controlling your narrative. Yeah, I subscribe to my YouTube too. L-I-L-D-E-R-L with two A's. Same thing everywhere. What thing I can say is, do you think that... What do you think about just the violence that's going on in the rap, hip-hop culture? Some people going to jail. Some people getting killed. How do you move in a world like that? I think your music is better, though, because it don't even look at those narratives. That's what I say. It don't even look at those narratives. I stay in my own lane, so, like, I don't really... I don't really... You still got to be careful. For sure. That's why I want to move out. That's why. You still got to be careful. Because people will put you with somebody and you ain't even with them. Right. That's why my circle so small. We don't even need to be in that type of business type stuff. We just... We ain't scared, though. Don't try to be scared. Hey, hey, hey! Whoa, whoa! We ain't looking for that energy. But we don't really... You got to be like me, man. We love everybody. You just talk like that. Just go and deflect the hate, because most of the people that I've been in the room with, that was multi-multi-multi-millionaires, but no hate in the room. Everybody good vibes. Everybody was loved. It was big love in the room. Loans of our right, we right. Little good vibes, bro. So that's the whole game. To get around those rooms where it's just love permeating the room instead of the hate. Right. Right? And stay in those rooms. Damn those other rooms, right? Yeah, get the thing going in that room. So, I want to tell you, we love you, Lord. Appreciate that. You know your family now. Yeah. You locked in. Crazy. Yeah, boss talk. Hey, what a boss is talk, man. So anything else for Lord? No, sir. Say, man, we love you, brother. Yes, sir. And anytime you got something new dropping, you say, hey, Mr. E, I'm coming over. I'm for the drop. And I got something I want to say. And I'm going to say, OK, let's get it popping. Boss talk. Hey, check it, man. It's been another great segment of Boss Talk 101. Henry out.