 What they gonna do with me now? I'm still a twerk of the town. Can't do the scissors, I'm hooking them down. Ritching the smiles and the frowns again. You gladly take it. That's just how we brought up. That's just how we're strengthened. Niggas out, shit warm, we're s- We're here for another interview with Tocca the Town. And today, I have- Roddup. Roddup. And we're here. So, let's get right into it. So, where you from? From Harlem, 114, 114th, 8th. Niggas know, you feel me? Okay, so, of course you got two names floating around here. So, we gonna get into Roddup first. How did that name come about? Roddup, to be honest with you, it came about like, me just, I had a story went about, I was in like this little clique or whatever. You feel me? And Niggas had categories, so Niggas was like, you got like Top Bosses and you got Top Rodder. So, I was the Top Rodder. At the time, I was gonna buy Rich Ralph, but there's like, yo, Rodder Ralph, Rod Ralph. So, I'm like, I like how that shit fit, you feel me? So, I just took it and ran with it. But I'm trying to like get that shit to stand for something, you feel me? I don't wanna just be known for, yo, that's Rod Ralph, like, nah, bro. So, what do you mean, elaborate on that more? You mean, like, you wanted to stand for something in terms of what? Yeah, like, something meaningful. Like, I was writing some shit, realized your destiny ain't here. So, I was like, all right, I could kinda fuck with that. But then I could kinda feel me choose something different, too. So, you wanna turn Rodder into like an acronym? Yeah, basically. Okay, cool. So, is there any difference between Rodder and Rodder Ralph? Cause I see them kind of in TV. You could say that, cause like, Ralph and Rodder, they completely two different people. Like, most females, they know me as Ralph. Most of my Niggas, they know me as Gutter. So, it's like, only the real that know me could call me Gutter. But if you know me as like, from the music and shit, just call me Rodder Ralph. So, you see, it's funny that you say that because your Instagram name is Gutter Rican. So, I mean, you don't have Rodder Ralph in your Instagram name or anything like that. So, what made you choose that as your Instagram handle instead of your artist name? To be real with you, shout out to my brother, Quay. He gave me that name, Gutter Rican. I just always wanted to keep it. You feel me? I didn't know where I would put it, where it would do, where it's gonna fit. I was probably gonna turn it to song, probably even an EP, but I'm like, yo, I'll put it as my Instagram name. And I had that shit for demo, so I just kept it. So, Roderican comes from what you being? Yeah, me. I'm black and Puerto Rican. Shout out to my Boricuas. Feel me? So, is there any, can we expect any Spanish, Latin, Asian, somewhere down the line? Nah, no funny shit. I'll be with it. Like, you feel me? Say it's like a female or even a Latin artist wanting to collab, excuse me, wanting to collab. I'll be with it. Like, I'm with it. I don't speak Spanish, though. You feel me? Okay, so no Swabian names. Yeah, like, I could, you know, two steps here and there, feel me? But, yeah, I'm gonna try to figure it out, though. Okay, so how long have you been making music for? To be real, I've been making music since I was, like, dumb young, probably like, like 15, 16. That's when I was really taking the serious. Like, before that, I used to really, like, write poetry at that time. You feel me? That shit, like, had a nigga escaping. So, but, yeah, like 15, 16, like around there, I started taking that shit real serious. I'm like, yeah, fuck it. So I start doing songs and all that. Like, I ain't really, like, share the songs to nobody and none of that. I'll just do them and, like, keep them shit for myself. So then, yeah, probably, like, to be honest with you, like, really putting music out there, I'll give you, like, a good three, four years. I was really doing that. I think it's interesting that you said that you started off writing poetry and then went into music. Because I was just watching an interview with Laquia and she said the same thing. Like, she did a poetry stand, a poetry slam that somebody recommended that, like, she would become an artist. So when you were writing your poetry, did you, like, feel it in your soul that you wanted to pursue music or did somebody give you that push to get there? To be real with you, like, I always loved music, but I ain't never really know the format. I ain't never really know, like, yo, this gotta be a 16, this gotta be a hook. You can talk your shit ahead. You can have some space to leave out for the beat right there. I ain't never know that. So it was just like, that shit seemed, like, too difficult for me. At least when I was writing poetry. So I'm like, poetry seems simpler. Like, I can just write eight bars and won't even know it's eight bars. So. So do you still work like poetry or are you now just focused on music? Nah, I gotta really be inspired. You feel me? Like, if I ain't inspired, it makes no sense to write it because it ain't gonna come out like, well, it ain't too much about how it's gonna sound or is it coming out. It's more like what you feel. So, yeah, if I'm feeling inspired, I ain't gonna really have a feeling to do it. So what would you say is the difference between you writing poetry and you writing music? What causes or sparks your inspiration for you to write your music? Mm-hmm. Because when I'm writing poetry, it's more relaxing. Like, it's crazy because like, I don't even do it, but I just find myself doing it. Like, I might be trying to write a verse and the shit come out to be a whole poet, like poetry type shit. So it's like, I'll just sit there and be like, you know what, four bars is good enough. That's how I was feeling. Now, let me just write some poetry, you feel me? So, but a lot of people don't know, like I'm really like deep like that, but I don't really be trying to put that out there, you know? Okay, all right. So walk me through your creative process because you just say, you know, sometimes you can write one bar and then it turns into a whole thing. So like, what is your creative process? Like, where are you comfortable writing? What does that look like? Me being comfortable writing, I'll have to, of course, be by myself. It ain't gotta be a time or a day or a none of that. It's just like, say if I'm going through something or maybe even one of my men's is going through something or a situation I probably just read about or saw about. I'm probably just put myself in their shoes for a minute and just write something. Cause it's like, it's relatable. So that's really how I do it though, but I'm just, yeah, just sitting there by myself, probably smack, probably just finish doing music and like, let me take some time to just get my mind right, get intellectual real quick. Okay, so I know you had a project that dropped not two months ago with demonstrators. How did you feel about that rollout? How do you feel about the feedback? The feedback was, I ain't gonna lie, better than I imagine. Cause like, I haven't heard nobody say like, yo, you gotta work on this. You got like not every song on there, nigga telling me, yo, this part, I fucked it, that part, I fucked it. Yo, this song, yo, play this song, when it start raining, yo, play can't stay in the rain. So it's like, it's so much shit that, that like I really didn't anticipate was going on with the tape. So everybody else just made me feel like, yo nigga, like keep doing another one. Like, you feel me? Or if you're going to not do another one, do a video for everything. So just so we can have something to watch when we listening to this shit. Right, right. I mean, it really did seem like the feedback was pretty good. I saw a self-played game face, like one out of five, so that was late. A full fact. So do you feel like, I know you from Harlem, do you feel like your people like got your back? Do you feel like the support is there? Nah, yeah, of course. I'm gonna always say that. You feel me? Even regardless, cause in your city, you gonna tend to get more hate than you do love. So it's like, I'm gonna always feel like the city behind me. But at the end of the day, I'm gonna always feel like niggas is gonna hate too. Cause that's just what niggas do. Of course, I call them niggas. Exactly. So some niggas can't do what you do, but they gonna hate. But at the end of the day, you probably knew this nigga, this nigga was probably your man, this nigga could be even a family member. But the haters gonna come regardless. So I just make sure I maintain that love though. You feel me? Cause that's what keeps me going. Cause without the love, it's like, all right, man, I gotta do something else. You feel me? And I don't wanna do that, so. Of course not. All right, so going back to the project real quick, I wanna hear what's your favorite track and what track do you think is the most left on? All right, I ain't gonna hurt you. My favorite track is the intro, the first one. Like, the straight, exactly. No filter, no nothing, no fucking cut, no nothing, bro. I was just in that shit. I feel how I felt, I heard the beat. I'm like, fuck it. It's time to really like put in pain. Like no hook, no singing, no none of that. That's really my favorite song. Cause I could be in the fucked up mood. I could even be like doing something. But I know when I hear that shit, I'm up. I'm jumping, I'm dead. Exactly, like the whole aura of that song is just crazy. So yeah. And so what song do you think is the most left on? The song I think the most left on, I would say to be honest with you, probably these hands. A lot of niggas really be sleeping on these hands. Like, if you ain't never had these hands, no funny shit, go and listen to that song. These hands is serious, like the beat, everything. Like I wasn't even, like how I'm on my rapping shit now, I was just trying to spit on that shit. Cause I already knew like this shit gonna go crazy. Wherever you play it, call in your crib, in your room, you doing whatever the fuck you doing, this shit gonna go crazy. So yeah, these hands, y'all niggas need to wake the fuck up. Tune in, show me. Okay, so what's your thoughts on music today? How do you feel, not only like in Harlem, but just overall, what do you think is hot right now? As far as like music, like my thought on music today, I fuck with it. You feel me? Like we doing what we doing? You feel me? Niggas is blending in, niggas is doing all types of shit. You feel me? Niggas got Latin drill, Afro drill. So niggas is mixing it in. And that's what I like though. You feel me? Everybody could just stay in one pocket. You feel me? We all got to touch on different things. So you feel me? I love that shit. As far as like the music scene in like Harlem and how I'm feeling about that, like I feel like as far as niggas in Harlem, like I'm gonna keep it a bin. Like we gotta do something. Like we gotta like stop with all this. Yo, I'm number one. He taking over, he taking over. Cause that shit really not doing it for us right now. And I'm gonna keep it, I'm keeping it a G. Some niggas feel like they want to take over this and leave all the niggas out here so they can just focus on taking over this and it's not about that. If you can see like Brooklyn and the Bronx, these niggas is clicking up, linking up. And it's like, of course they dissing each other but they still promoting each other. And that's the thing, bro. Niggas is not like really in tune with that. Even if Harlem, us Harlem niggas is not dissing each other. We still on some shit like, yo, we got a voice. You feel me? We gotta be heard. I just look at it like, I fuck with all Harlem rappers. You feel me? You from Harlem, you getting it? You trying to put on for your block or whatever and keep doing it. You feel me? I ain't hating on nobody. I ain't shitting on nobody. But when they come down to me and my niggas, they all not fucking with us. You feel me? That's another story. But I want to see us do good. I mean, realistically, you really just said some real shit. Because I mean, I'm from Brooklyn but I can't acknowledge that right now. I think what Bronx is doing really, really well is they are all working. They're working. They're working. You see one, you see and feel it all at the same time. They really each other up and featured on each other's song. So I definitely can see where you're coming from with that. And I mean, I haven't really heard of any Harlem artists that's really like, you know, out there working. That's what I'm saying. Like that's- So I definitely feel you. I mean, it takes more than just, you know, self-promotion. You really gotta have it behind you. Who else better to promote you other than people who are doing the same thing, you know? Come on, you. So, yeah, yeah, yeah. I definitely, definitely, definitely. That's a fact. Okay, so you mentioned the drill. You mentioned like two different types of drill. Yeah. So you into the drill scene right now? I'm into it. It's crazy because a lot of my niggas, some of my niggas, they send me beats. Like I just bought a beat. Well, I just bought a whole pack from Nico. So I asked Nico, but some niggas be sending me beats and I fuck with it. But that's the thing. Like I said, I don't want to get stuck in one pocket. Right. So yeah, that kind of leads to what I was going to ask you. So how would you classify yourself as an artist as you feel like, you know, you in your own box, you versatile. That's what I get from what you've been saying. No funny shit. I just feel like I'm more like a diverse kind of artist because it comes to a point where I could find myself singing and like I probably got like two R&B songs in the cut. Yo, I ain't going to lie, man. Listen, listen, listen. I sing and break down like Jodeci right now. So I mean, I love you so much. But like, I just love all types of music. So that's one. But as far as like just me like classifying myself, I'm an all around artist. So we can do the lyrical thing. We can do the drill thing. We can do the melodic thing. We can do it all. But just know I'ma, I'ma put on, I'ma do me regardless. So. Don't give shade. All right, so what were some of your inspirations growing up? That's crazy. Musically. All right, so of course I'ma always give like the props to like two pot and all that. Cause like, he was the reason I wanted to rap, period. But as far as like, what get me motivated to like do more music and really like keep shit going. Like no funny shit like Wayne, Future, Gucci, you know what I'm saying? Thugger, like these niggas, no funny shit. And I could say New York niggas of course, like Jada and 50, but it's like, when I listen to these niggas kind of music, it's like, like, yeah, oh, he just said some shit. He recorded this probably like 10 years ago. I'm just now catching on like, oh shit, he really meant that. Fuck that. You know what, let me go ahead and do my shit too. You feel me? So I really give like props to them niggas. Everybody I just named, I give props to them niggas. You feel me? Yeah, I mean, I was doing some research and I feel like you had said back in like, I want to say 2016, 2017, you were like, yeah, Jada is like the number one, he's been the number one since like 13. No, no funny shit. Okay, so Jada definitely has to be in your top. It won't, let me not assume he's still in your top list. Yeah, he's in my top five. Let me hear your top five. All right, my top five, what you want, dad or a lot, because I'll be like crazy, but. Let's do a lot, top five or a lot. Let's do a lot, all right. So my top five or a lot, of course, I give it to Jada, number one. J Cole, number two. Damn, future, number three. Thugger, number four. And for the fifth one, I ain't gonna hold you. The fifth one, I give it to Dirk. Okay. Dirk is, you can't go wrong fucking with Dirk, like. Okay. You know what I'm saying? So I mean, out of all the artists that you just named, everybody has some sort of artistic quality that makes them stand out to not only you, but people all over. So what do you think that you have that makes you stand out from all the rest? Shit. To be honest, I'm me. You feel me? Like only I could do what I could do. You feel what I'm saying? So only I would know the difference. You feel me? Of course, I'm gonna express the difference to y'all and that's for y'all to find out. But at the end of the day, I'm me. You feel me? Like I could definitely do different things. And I'm pretty sure other niggas will tell you like, yo, I'm different because I come from here. I come from here. We all come from the struggle, you feel me? But that's what makes us different because we all got different stories. Niggas all got different stories to tell. So it's just really up to you, like whose story you really want to listen to. You feel me? A lot of niggas will sit there and be like, man, this nigga sound like this nigga. But he probably came from a whole different country. Whole different background. Probably the realest shit the other niggas ever did. So it's like, at the end of the day, you got to listen in and you feel me? You make that decision for yourself. I'm different. Okay. I mean, that's fair. So what so far has been like the highlight of your career? Uh, man, the highlight. I ain't gonna hold you. I had a couple of highlights, but the one that was definitely in my career is when I met Mac Miller, R.P. the Mac Miller. You feel me? Now, when I met him, it was just a different turnout. You feel me? He made me see like, yo, this shit is possible. Like, it could really go down. Like, how the shit happened. No lie, I was traveling. So how I met the nigga, I was traveling. Like, of course I was still doing songs, but like I said, I wasn't putting any shit out. But I was traveling. So the nigga, he came to the store right next to Amy Roof. Anybody that ever been to Amy Roof, it's a store right next to it. Trapping by myself too. Nigga comes, he's walking by himself. He's dolly. So right from the corner of my eye, I was probably on my phone, but from the corner of my eye, I see a white nigga walking to the store. So I'm cautious. I'm like, oh no, who this nigga? Like, you feel me? So I looked through the glass of the store. I see like, he don't look like no DT. You feel me? He buying cigarettes. So I'm like, all right. So I'll go back on my phone. I'm guessing this is pre-gentification because now I know you see. Yo. That, I mean, it's not crazy anymore. Nah, it's not. It's not. To be honest with you. So when would you say this was? Just so that we have a picture of? This was probably, what, 2017? Okay. Yeah, around there, 2017, 2018. Had to be 2018 the latest. Okay. Yeah. I see him going to the store. So, yeah, he get his cigarettes off of him. But yeah, he come out. I'm like, oh shit, this is Mac Miller. I think at the time he just signed the new deal for like 10M. So I'm like, oh shit, like, I'm a hood nigga. This is closest to a nigga. I've ever been to 10M, do you feel me? So I'm like, fuck that. I'm gonna say something to this nigga. So I walk up to him. He ripped the tip of the cigarette, like the shit. I'm like, yo, you Mac Miller. He like, yeah, what's up, bro? So I'm like, oh shit, what's good? Like, man, humble. I'm like, nah, I'm chilling, bro. I'm like, I fuck with your shit, bro. Like, I'm just, and at the end of the day, I just keep saying nigga. So it's like, I know he used to a nigga saying that, but it's like, I'm like, yo, chill. Like, you feel me? So I'm like, yeah, yo, I fuck with your shit. My nigga, yo, yo, you feel me? Like, I'm, he like, so what you doing out here? I'm like, I'm traveling, bro. I dated my pocket. I showed him everything I had. Like, he like, damn, bro, you got to be careful. I'm like, yeah, I know, but back to you, bro. I really fuck with your shit, bro. You feel me? But then I had spit for him a little bit. I like, at that time I was mad shot. So it really took me a lot to really say what I said. So he's like, yo, bro, I like it here. He grabbed my phone and put down his email. So he's like, yo, send me some more shit. So at that time, I didn't have no hope. So I'm like, oh shit, like, this nigga have no security. He talked to me. You feel me? I really spoke to him on some one-on-one level shit. And he was like, yo, send me some shit. I'm like, all right. And he walked off by himself. And I'm like, yo, and then to see that he passed, I was just like, yo, this shit is like really crazy. Cause it's like, he gave me inspiration. Absolutely. Magnether definitely was a real one. I mean, I fucked with him from Kool-Aid for some peace and aid. Of course, of course, kids, yes, yes. That's definitely dope that you were able to meet him before he passed. So who else have you met so far that has left some sort of like impact on you? I ain't gonna hold you. Bro probably gonna laugh too, but he ain't give me no, I'm not gonna shit on him and say he gave me inspiration, but you know what? He kinda did though. So niggas went to high school with Bari. All right, niggas went to high school with ASAP Bari. Now at the time, I ain't gonna hold you. I was a freshman. I think the niggas was a senior or some shit. So we went to Chelsea high school. Now this is, I guess before the ASAP days, or he probably was still jacking ASAP and nobody knew what ASAP was, right? The niggas probably got, he probably left school probably like a year or two. After that, the niggas was like with ASAP doing ASAP and all this ASAP shit. And I'm like, bro, I was just in high school with this niggas like, like, what? And then like to see what he became, it was just like, like I'll be lying, not to say like, I'll be lying if I say that wasn't inspiration because like niggas, I saw this niggas. I remember he wasn't even going to class. Niggas was cutting class, everything. I had Dom's lab all that, bro. Like niggas really know. So it was just like, damn the fact that, you feel me? He doing the balloon and all this shit. I'm like, yo, nigga came up. That's how it should be. You feel me? Like stay down to the come up. So what does the come up look like for you? What does success overall look like for you? Success is where you can take care of your people. You feel me? A lot of niggas get success twisted with greed. Like, you feel me? Like a nigga could have money, but that don't mean he successful. Cause at that day, he probably don't get no respect. He probably don't get no love. You feel me? He probably can't call nobody when it's really like that time. So it's like, what really means success is when you can really put on for your people, your moms, your aunts, your mans, they aunts, they grandmoms. You feel what I'm saying? Cause everybody always going through something. So it's just like, if you, that's a suffer to the point where you can take care of your people, then nigga, at the end of the day, you already know the blessings is going to come back. So that's what I look at as success, feel me? So what advice would you give to somebody who's in the music industry right now, if they wanted to know like how they could become successful? Shit, stick to your heart. Trust your gut. Don't be afraid to step outside the box. Cause a lot of niggas is not really going to put theyself out there. Like you might want to put yourself out there. So if nobody's uplifting you, if ain't nobody like really like telling you like, yo, keep doing what you doing. If nobody checking up on you, making sure you doing what you doing, then it's like, fuck them. You feel me? Just keep doing you. But just know like, if you got that hope and that faith, that's all you really need and just be your biggest fan no matter what. You feel me? Niggas could tell you this, niggas could tell you that. A hundred niggas could tell you your shit ain't shit. You ain't gonna never be shit. But as long as you, your biggest fan, that's all the motivation you need to just keep going. So. And I think the work kind, I mean your words kind of speak for themselves. Especially being that you say, you know, you started writing when you were 15, you didn't start putting music out until you, until like three years ago. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, now you've already got the projects out, you have a couple of videos, like you know, doing your thing. I saw, like you did a show with like PNB Rock. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's a fact. You were really good working. And so, you know, you gave yourself that push to do it, to do it. So if you're hearing this, he means what he's saying. He's saying what he really is. That's the fucking fact. You know what you're talking about. Okay, so what you got going on, like right now? What's coming out, any new projects? Oh yeah, that's a fact. I got a project with me and my brother. My brother, that is worthy. Yo, yo, yo, you can get on this real quick. Come on, game, just real quick, just say something. Come on, guys, let's go. Come on, come on, what's it? What's that? Leni. Show me, took it, took. School life, school life. Yeah, that is worthy. That's my rap in there. And where do you come to, to Harlem too? Yeah, Harlem and the Bronx. All right, so y'all got something coming out or something out already? What's that, tell us about it. We got the OMB at fall, collabed me and my brother right here. We've been working on this probably like a year and a half. Like, if you notice, he on Demonstratus too. He on Supreme. So at the end of the day, me and him been working. We've been on some shit. Like, look, we got to put out a collab. Because at the end of the day, like I said, you don't see niggas really sticking together. And it's been my brother. So it's not even the fact that we just do all this collabing. It's just the fact that he got potential, he talented. I know I got potential, I'm talented. So why not just shit on these niggas and go crazy? So that's really what I got coming out. OMB at fall, only my brother's forever rich. You feel me? It's coming out. You got single buttercup, about to go crazy. You feel me? Got everything. So it's like just being told, you feel me? Okay, so as our surprise guest, I'm putting you on the spot here. And being that you up here because it is collab, I want to hear who's five artists that you would want to collab with? Five artists I would want to collab with. Absolutely. I'd say the baby, little baby. Dirt, the top two. Make it a thug in the future. All right, so I'm gonna have to edit my question because I hear no New York rappers in there and nothing like that, like damn, come on, can we get a couple? Nah, I got you. All right, my boy, Sleezes Bryce. Okay. And shit, my boy, Chiba Lynn. Okay, so the whole gang make music. Okay, I see what's going on here. All right, well, let's go. All right, so I know you have, now I don't want to put your name, but you're a CEO of what? Forever Rich. Forever Rich. How's that going? What's that about? Now Forever Rich, that was like, it started off as a group to be honest with you. And I don't want to get confused with my shit and Rich the K shit because I know he got the same name, Rich Forever, whatever it was called. Okay, so let's clear the air. Yeah, let's get it. All right, so go ahead. All right, so no disrespect to nobody. You see what I'm saying? But we been on our Forever Rich shit since the beginning. Like, like no disrespect. Like we been on that shit. You feel me? We been on that shit. So just the fact that wherever he come from, he come from wherever he come from. Now me, we been on our shit. So like, Forever Rich, that's the label. You feel me? It started out as a group. And then to the point where Niggas really got on some real business shit, it was like, fuck it. We making music. We got artists. Why not just put this shit together and just really like try to make something out of it? So, and we trying to build a legacy behind it too. So that ain't just a name. You feel me? Like this shit is really a lifestyle. Like Niggas got shit. This shit tatted up and all that. So just to let Niggas know, you feel me? I don't want Niggas to get confused. You feel me? We doing us, we been doing us. That's the fact. All right, that's dope. So what would you say is the hardest thing about being an underground artist and does you more than welcome to answer this too? Shit, the big road to, why a blizzard? The hardest part is like, I'd probably say like the promotion. Okay. And like just getting it out there. Like, cause people would be like, who's this person like, you know? So it'll probably be like the promotion. And shit, I'll let you say something. I'll be right back. Yeah, no funny shit. He write the promotion. Yeah, like the promotion, the marketing. All of that shit come into play cause it's like, number one, you gotta be strategic, especially when you come to market and promote and then cause it's like, so much shit is viral. Everything is like changing. So it's like, gotta be up to date with everything, TikTok, Trilla, everything. So a nigga like me with, I'm mainly with tail niggas that's on some underground shit. I call y'all the underdogs, but I'll tell y'all, look, just make sure y'all on top of your game with the promotion shit. Before we wrap up, in five years from now, when we look back at this interview, where do you see yourself? Shit in me, on top of the fucking world. What does that mean? Like, on some real shit though. I picture everybody I'm here with, still with, of course. I picture us, M's, richer. You feel me? I picture us way more happier. Not to say we ain't happy, but you feel me? That money do make you feel good, but of course, just being around in love, the support, the happiness, the family, a nigga like me, five years, trying to make sure that a lot of my niggas, you know, get the benefits or whatever they wanted to do, whatever hobbies they ain't never really think they could do, we can make it happen. So it's like, I know a lot of niggas that's doing clothes, like, ah, a lot of havers a fucking store where there's nothing but like, like black owned designers, like, even if you're making your shit from fucking putting the shit on from the internet on your clothes, whatever the fuck y'all niggas do. I want to support y'all. I want to make sure everybody eat and take care of Harlem and just you feel me have my music still out here. Of course, five years from now, we definitely gonna be up and that's a guarantee. So, okay, we said, like, opening on businesses and stuff, keep being here for like the long run. 30 years. Okay. All right. Well, I'm very happy that you guys stopped by. I'm so sorry. Thank you to Vada. Thank you to our special guest. I'm sorry. That's worthy. Shit in me. Make sure y'all shout out your Instagrams and social media before we wrap. Yo. Oh. My Instagram, like she just said, gutter, underscore, recon, you feel me? Ah, you can reach me Instagram features, email me. And that's it. I know the vibes, man. Feel me? Look out. Music on the way. Shit in me. Stay tuned and tap in the demonstrators on all streaming platforms. That's a fact.