 Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. That I see in you, man, was those beats, that music, what you done during that time is crazy priceless. And when you think about when PMC came home, you know, I get on PMC because that's, here we go, you got to give me a PMC story because, and I don't want what you're giving everybody else either. I want to hear about the music process because he was a producer as well. And then you come, because that's a, that's what K.L.D., he gave me a story about their situation and how he helped him as far as on his producing thing. You was already, you was a vet. You was in it too when he came to you. What did you, what did he think about your music and the way you processed it versus what he was doing? Did he even think about it? Cause he's very particular. Yeah, he is. Oh, he was bad. I mean, he tell people, I used to tell people all the time, I had the closest drums to his than anybody else. Yeah, really? Yeah. We used to, he used to come me two or three o'clock in the morning. We would talk music all night. Man. And you know what I mean? I love that dude. See that? We were together right before he died. He called me the day before he flew out to LA. And he was supposed to be flying back and I was going to link up with him then. And you know, it was just a lot of different things. He wanted to sit down with me. We used to pick each other's brain. And one thing he used to always say, he said, man, he came to my house. And when he, we had had this situation when he at first came home. But we didn't really talk to him. And I wanted to get a verse from him. And I talked to my partner, Mike Moe. And I was like, man, I'm gonna hit up Pimp and ask him what he gonna do for me on a verse. And Mike came back and said, man, Pimp said 10,000. I was like, man, I ain't doing no verse. I ain't doing that shit. Mike was laughing and shit. And then Pimp had came out to my house and did a verse for Slim Thug on Slim Thug's album. And I produced the track. Then he laid it. We exchanged our information and all of that shit. And he started calling. So that was when you first met him? Yeah. No, I met him. No, he met him before that. Before that. But he just, but this was when he came home. So he had a, like this is what I'm doing now. He knew his value went up. Oh, he already knew that. He knew his value went up. I mean, his value was always up. No, no, no. But coming home after all that free to Pimp, see y'all was doing. And that nigga was like, shit, this is gonna be a team. I'm gonna kill you, nigga. So I wasn't really personal with him then. You know what I'm saying? And then when he came to my house and he saw what I had achieved and how I was living, he was like, man, I need to get your number. I'm gonna talk to you. I need to talk to you about something. I said, cool. He hit me up and said, man, I need you. I need to sit down with you, man. And pick your brain on some different shit. And we were just became friends, you know what I'm saying? He's like, man, I just don't even see how the fuck you got everything you got this fast. I need to sit and see what's going on. You know what I'm saying? So we used to talk about shit all the time, man. But he was definitely a super crazy heavy influence on my music. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Did you see him process any of the music for us to produce it? I did. I had the same drum machine he had. Okay, okay. So y'all could, they could have conversations that other people couldn't have. That was my dude, man. He used to sit. I mean, the dude used to call me and wrap over the phone. He'd put the beat on, wrap over the phone. And you know, he'd be like, yeah, man, you the mother nicks don't know what to do with this shit, man. I'm gonna show you. I'm gonna show you what to do with this, man. That's how I used to talk and shit. But, you know, Pimp was a super intelligent guy, man. He was, you know, and he was so smart until he knew how to turn Pimp's thing on and how to turn it off. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101.