 I work with a guy named Damon West. And Damon and Dak, they pretty cool. And they told me, hey, man, we gonna bring Dak to the prison, we want you to give him a tour. And I kinda laughed it off. I'm like, man, Dak ain't coming to no penitentiary. This is the, we talking about the quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys. They like, yeah. So we get the Dak pulled up. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one, one on one. Yeah, we gonna talk. Connecting with these people as they come home and you really giving them a chance if they wanna take it. There you go. You said the key word. If they wanna take it. If you wanna take it. Cause if you're looking for Bruce to turn your life around overnight, that's not what's gonna happen. If you're looking for Bruce to do the work, that's not what's gonna happen. But what is gonna happen is Bruce are gonna expose to you that you can be successful at a high level. Wow. I'm gonna expose that to you. I'm from the old school, man. We believe in putting in our own work. Let's talk about you taking, I believe when you took little Kiki down there, it was the same prison that he had visited before he told me on here. And let me tell you, I will tell you what's crazy. This, let me show you the irony. The first time I ever visited somebody in the penitentiary of my life, scared shit out of me, you know what I'm saying? I went to, I thought they would keep me in there. I've been so bad all my life that I'm like, boy, would I get it? They gonna keep me from some old age. So it was the Pulaski unit. Yeah. That's the first time I went to see one of my home boys, he got life. And I went and seen him, this was years ago. And my first time ever going back was to the same unit with Brewster. The only two times I had ever been to a prison was boom. And then years later, again, and this time I was, oh, let me tell you, I was in the prison and one of my home boys that been in there about 17 years popped out of there for my neighborhood. I'm talking about went through hell, didn't care, was about to get himself in. What did you say? We hugged for about 20 minutes. Oh man, that's beautiful. Boss man Brewster is demanded here, man. You know what I'm saying? I'm alone for the ride. So the first time, that was the very first prison. I took him to several, since then. But the very first prison that we went to, we was in the car and he was like, where we going? I said, we gonna go to Pulaski unit, man. I'ma take you over to her. He said, Pulaski, he said, you for real? I said, yo, what's up? He said, man, the first time I ever visited somebody in prison was at this unit, Pulaski unit. I said, oh yeah, bad. So when I took him in there, you know, as a matter of fact, when he saw his partner, we had pretty much wrapped up everything we was doing. Dude just walked by talking about, look at our black boy. So when he turned around, you know, we was finna keep everybody walking. He was finna get your case. He was finna go lock up cause he was the turn. He was on some man. I ain't gonna know what I see, little Kiki. You know what I'm saying? That's what he was on. When we turn around, I'm like, what's up, Kiki? Kiki like, oh, nah, that's bro. I'm looking at Kiki, looking at him. Man, he hugged Kiki for about 20 minutes. Damn. Man, he hugged Kiki when Kiki go. Cause he had a real connection. Yeah, that's Kiki's partner for real. They grew up together. Kiki, you know what I'm saying? Now I didn't know when we got to the unit, we didn't know that the dude was her. When Kiki saw him, it was a wrap. Kiki was just like, damn. They were both stuck in a, you know, in a trance looking at each other. He hugged him for a good 20 minutes, man. Wow. I just, man, and when you took him in there on the film that I seen, the warden, the guards, all of them was embracing you guys in a way of respect, you know? And really showing that they wanted to let these guys who wanted to pay part in seeing you guys and coming out and supporting what you're doing, they really seemed like they was into it, you know? Man, let me make sure we send a big, big shout out to the rehabilitation program. Division in the state of Texas, what they're doing with the penal system is hands down, unbelievable. Something that's unprecedented, something that's never taken place. Yeah, we have to give them a very big shout out. They are really implementing real programs to assist individuals like myself to becoming better people. Now, keep in mind, this ain't the Hilton Hotel. It is prison. So, you know, nothing is mandatory, you know? This all about you or about self. The opportunity is there. Now, what you do with the opportunity, that's on you, bro. Wow, and just, you gotta think, man, a lot of those guys are lifers. A lot of them got double life sentences. Never come home, you know? And the only thing, the only glimmer of hope they see is in you guys when you go in there. And I think that's something people don't think about a lot, you know what I mean? That some of those guys stand, you know, they may not be trying to change to come home. They're just changing just because they need to change. And that'd be really my message when I'm dealing with lifers, individuals that got a significant amount of time. It's not even really about whether you are, whether you're free or locked up as much as it's about the man you are. The man you becoming, your legacy. If it's all said and done, what you wanna leave behind? Because long as God is waking you up every day, you got the opportunity to do something great. May that be affect somebody else's life. May that be helping somebody else do something. It's a opportunity you have to do something positive because if you're dead, it's over with. Man, I was gonna ask about the Dak Prescott, while I was in prison. But before you get onto that, I'm still in prison, but I read an article once and tell me if this, how can an inmate get to be able to do this if this is true because I started an article. And there was an inmate who, you know, y'all go to school and stuff, get your degrees. This person actually got a doctor degree as in like medical doctor. Do they? I don't hear that a lot though. Right, so Pete, you were some of the smartest men in the world are incarcerated. Some of the most skillful, talented individuals are incarcerated. So him being able to get that degree. That medical degree. Yeah, I'm not surprised by that at all. I know scholars that are incarcerated. I'm talking about professional professors and, you know, some of the best hidden talent potential we have are with men and women that are incarcerated behind the walls. Okay, but they said that he got it, but my next thought is, okay, so now when he gets out of prison, and yes, you are a licensed doctor, you can do surgery, whatever. How hard would it be for that person with that record to come out and start his own practice and actually start, you know, moving forward? So I'm not familiar with the medical industry in that field to be able to speak on it, but I would like to believe that if you are licensed and you're able to build a platform and get you some clients going, you're good to go. It's like cutting her. Once you go to, you know, getting that clientele up, you know, hey, it's up. Man, so I wanted to go back to bringing, you know, you brought Keke in and you done some work with Dak Prescott. Yeah, Dak, that's my boy. I got major love for Dak Prescott. Big shout out to my boy, Dak. Wow, like what was it like dealing with him and how did you even connect to him to, you know, re-enter the prison system? So I work with a guy named Damon West. Okay. And Damon and Dak, they pretty cool. And they told me, hey, man, we gonna bring, we gonna bring Dak to the prison. We want you to give him a tour. And I kinda laughed it off. I'm like, man, Dak ain't coming to no, you know, penitentiary, this is the, we talking about the quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys. They like, yeah. So we get the Dak pulled up, blew my mind, got out the car, I'm like, damn, that's Dak. I was like, I went over, hollet, what's up, bro? He was like, what's up? I'm like, man, you finna go in the prison and go chill. He was like, yeah. I had a whole nother fine respect for him at that moment. Of course. The fact that the man stopped what he was doing. Man, bro, ain't gotta come away. And we ain't like in Dallas. We way in Huntsville. That's two hours away. Bro came out there, went into the prison, toured the facility, came into the chapel. He spoke, he kicked it with the homers. I'm talking about, I mess with Dak. Wow. And I know that they had to love that, bro. Cause there's people in the free world that's not even getting to see Dak. The evening, the evening was right here in Sparrow. The unit, the unit. At this point, the unit went into a uproar. And the guards. What everybody went crazy, said, I told Dak. I said, listen to them Dallas Cowboys, man. They love them. That's a serious situation in the penal institution in Texas. That's real. Listen to them in the state of Texas in that prison system. The Dallas Cowboys is very serious. You can get your ass worked. Yeah, we definitely can get you. I explain that to Dak, you hear me? He like, you for real, man. Listen, we finna go in this prison. You need to understand some people might say a little something crazy or whatnot. Yeah, cause they for real about them Cowboys. And the one who ain't just for real, not about them Cowboys. You got Houston in there in Dallas. That's a whole situation. Listen, man. The Houston Texans. The Texans. And the Dallas Cowboys. There's a problem in there. That's a problem inside of my penis. That's a problem. Several things will take place behind the Cowboys in them Texas in the state of Texas, man. They serious about it. Do you hear me? So how long did he stay down there with you all day or just after that? He chilled about two, three hours with him. Two or three hours. Yeah, he came down toward the facility. Actually, he helped graduate. It's a program called the Change Agent. Wow. And he helped graduate some of the guys. He was the keynote speaker. Man, Dak was very down to earth. How much do you think that changed the inmates' life that he did help and the ones that's coming home? Do you think it spilled hope on him? Oh, not only do I know what he done, you know, place, you know, hoping them guys, it's what it done for me. Come on now. You know what I'm saying? Just to be able to see, like, that's the sweets for me. People are always telling me from the streets to the sweets and, you know, when I'm saying that, they'll think that I'm talking about some money. I'm talking about experiences. You know, that was an experience for me that I'll never be able to forget. I consider that the sweets, being able to rock with, you know, Dak Prescott. This is the Dallas Cowboys starting quarterback. You know what I'm saying? So to know that you're changing your life will put you in this kind of position. It's like, damn, just doing right in. You know, doing what I'm supposed to do as a man, as a better person, it'll create opportunities like this. Well, you kicking it with people like that. What you kicking it with people like Lil' Kiki. You kicking it with Donk. Lady J, baby. Like, you know, to be, to come from sitting in a sale in your boxes to being able to go to roof Chris with Lil' Kiki. Man, that's the sweets. That's definitely the sweets. That's the sweets. A lot of niggas in the free world ain't doing that. There's a lot of these free world niggas, man. Got clean records. They got nothing on this record. They're not seeing me, man. They're not seeing baby. They're not seeing nothing. That's the sweets for me, man. Being able to do things like that. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one, one on one. Yeah, we gon' talk.