 They just know what the police be acting like they don't know the law. They know that sometimes they really don't really don't. And that's why they get in trouble. Fucking cops as dumb as rocks, bro. For sure. You see all the different ones that go viral with one be this one pedestrian who gets pulled over and tell this nigga the law, right? And he be like, oh, hold on, really? Like, and they be like, throw them back that you know this shit because they don't know it. Yeah, that's the fact. They're not going to college for law. That's the fact. But it's over. As soon as you call your supervisor, it's over. So you don't call your supervisor. You was in trouble. You think we as a culture take high speeds. And we do all that. We take it all because what is a lack of knowledge in niggas be panicking license, like a license, guns in the car, merchandise in the car, smoking weed, you know, they. I mean, is it the same now when they smell weed in the car? Yeah, I think they can still do that. Yeah. Niggas cannot smoke in the car with me. You understand me? You see the weed or protection, nigga, what you want? Yes. Look how I tell niggas all the time, what you trying to do? Yeah, we're not going to do that. Yeah, man. Oh, momma, you ready to not have no strap because you want to get high. Watch your damn mind. You can smoke outside, nigga. We need strap. Yeah, for real. I put on cologne today, nigga. What are you talking about? I'm not trying to walk up there. I was running with Sim that other day. You know, we going to this little spot out in Malibu. This nigga blowing a hole. I like, I got, you know, I got me some good cologne on. Yeah. I don't know what I'm about to, you know, chirp into. Oh, momma. And shit like that. This nigga done blown two. So you walking and smelling like straight niggas. Straight niggas. Like, I'm trying to dance this perception. You know what I mean? Like, nigga, I'm not high. Is that a turn off, Lil' Kayla? I mean, I don't really smoke, so. Is it a turn off of a nigga walking and smelling like straight niggas? No. Yeah, you don't go. That's how you are. Oh, this nigga got peas. He must be the plan. Exactly. So they don't really bother me because it's like that's that's all. I know growing up like everybody smokes. So they don't really bother me. But stepping in, but all my stepping into, like, you know, trying to get away from these stigmas, I mean, of how they perceive us, you know, in general, like, you know, I dress how dressed what I may be, but I'm always looked at and designated as a rapper, right? So regardless of it, but now. But you can look like a rapper no matter how you dress at this point because I'd I'd be looking like how I look and every time I take a picture with somebody to wipe you. Oh, my God, are you a rapper? Exactly. But that's what I'm a macker. Yeah. Throw them off. Say some shit. Yeah. But then it just adds on to that other layer. If you come in smelling like a whole gang of weed, you know what I mean? It makes them and then you try to have an intellectual, you know, conversation with them and they're like, yeah, yeah, whatever. And like, then you're not, you know, you're not. You're not welcomed. You're not welcome. Now, we're welcome regardless. Exactly. No, no, no, we get. No, we welcome. I see what you say. We welcome. You know, because we cool. Why do you feel like we welcome a little bit? I mean, because you got a trip. Half the people who welcome them us, we making the money. So of course they go welcome us. This little nigger can make us some money. Yeah. Like, you get what I'm saying? And you feel that way as a woman. Yeah. So I mean, you just got to know how to play. You just got to know how to play the game. Oh, mama. Yeah. Yeah, I know you. You walking in them rooms now. Yeah. You understand me, little Cali. Give a round of applause to little Cali in the building. You understand me? It's the Cali kickback. You understand me? You know, I got my play upon the Jamal True Love and this thing. Special guest. You understand me? San Francisco, fine. You understand me Bay Area's on. You feel me? The whole soil love her. The whole Bay Area behind her. Man. Little Cali, man. You understand me? One more time. One more time, man. How you feeling, girl? You just got signed? Record deal? I still feel regular, though. You still feel. You still just saying that, huh? I'm just a regular person. How you still feel regular? Bus down, change. You understand me? Hey. Signing deals. This shit comes off. Talk your shit and say it's there, you're not on you. Yeah. Like, when I do shows, I go home and lay down. I'm going to sleep. Like, you get what I'm saying? I stay in the house every day. If I don't have nothing to do, I'm in the house laying down on my phone. And you know what? I think that's what attracts a lot of people to you, because you are organic into who you are. You're not trying to be something else and so forth. You know what I mean? It's not a certain type of outfit you've got to wear in order to show up and do a show and shit like that. And you were late, so people were late with you for show. Sometimes I'll be feeling bad because people think on the outside, looking in, they think I'm just this lit-ass person. I barely even talk. I'm quiet life. I don't know you. I really ain't going to talk to you or say too much to you. You think that's you being a regular or humble or that's you being traumatized because you know? I think I'm just a little antisocial. I really don't like to talk to people. People being the club. If I go out to the club, everybody just want to talk. And I'll just be like, I'm not in the mood to talk. But I don't know how to tell them. I don't really feel like talking. I'll just be. I realized something was wrong with me until I got to a certain level in my career. And people was asking me, what's wrong with me? Because I walk in, and you know, for the environment we come from, if you don't know somebody, you don't speak to them. I don't know that nigga, so I'm keeping it lit. You feel me? But you know, the more you move around in a different environment you be in, you be like, damn, you kind of have to, you have to kind of adjust because it kind of come off like, damn, we like you. But do she like us? It's like a switch that I have. Like, I turn Lil' Kayla on and I turn her off. Like, you know what I'm saying? Like when I'm in a studio at shows, like I'm a damn near like a whole different person. Like, versus when I'm just regular chilling with the team, with my friends, like, it's different. What do you think the, you know, the anti-socialness comes from? I don't know, I just always been in the house. Nah, you been outside Lil' Kayla. I mean, when I was younger, like, yeah, like I used to fight and stuff like that. But like, as I got older and like got my own house and like, I don't know, I just started standing out. I done did everything. When I was 15 years old, I'm getting booked for every club in the Bay Area. Me and my friends not even old enough to be in here. I'm at school. I'm the most popular person in my school. People, you know what I'm saying? I'm the most popular person in jail when I'm in there. Like, you get what I'm saying? So it's like- You like the damn, you like most of it. But to me, it's still surprising to me, like, damn, like, I'm really this person. Like, I never expected none of this. Like, when I first start rapping, it was just like a little fun. We had a free studio. Thought of being on, me and my friends fighting. This, these bitches real quick. And it started, like, I don't know. It just started happening. I didn't know what was going on. And you say you only 24. So you only 24. And you to experience all of this shit already. You didn't damn near been a part of High Speed Chases and all type of shit. So it's like, I'm just so born. Before 25. Like when we just had a show in Vegas on Sunday and my friend came, but everybody was trying to come. Like my family, friends, they like, what we going to Vegas? So my one friend come, we get there. I go straight to sleep after the flight. Cause we don't got to beat her till one in the morning. She like, if I don't know, you was gonna be just dry. I would have never came. Like I could have stayed home. I said, bitch, what you want to do? Walk the strip. Right. I'm born as fuck. She might want to sell that shit. But I'm not. She not that type of girl. But I'm, I'm. Like y'all wasn't out there. I was like, come on. Let's walk the strip. Like I caught, like somebody had come to my house. We had just, I sit there and silent. Cause I don't turn the TV on or anything. Like so I'm getting ready to go to sleep. You don't think you traumatized on some hood shit? On some street shit? I don't think it's that. I think I'm just tired of not, not tired of people, but I don't like everybody don't deserve a conversation. That's a good point too. That's definitely, that's definitely true. I think, you know, I mean, we from the same place. Sunnydale project. Just to, you know, let y'all know on some shit. Me coming up, you know, I was very anti-social as well. You know, being in the projects because, you know, you kind of taught not to be so open, you know, to motherfuckers and vulnerable to motherfuckers. You grow up with that, you know, that tough exterior and so forth. So I can imagine, you know, these unknown traumas that, you know, that, that we have, that ultimately we have to bring, we have to let go coming into an industry and so forth, such as, you know, being an artist, being an actor and so forth and so on. How do you think that, you know, you're transitioning or have you transitioned yet to get outside of that mindset, to be a little bit more vulnerable, you know, and stuff like that, being in LA and being, you know, on your tour and stuff like that? Honestly, I don't think I ever will. But that's how I feel right now. Like, I don't know. Like, I'm just, I'm dry. I'm not gonna lie. Like, I'm like, this tour, like I'm just thinking how I'm gonna make it. Like, you know what I'm saying? I know everybody go wanna party, party, party. I wanna go to sleep. I wanna cut the lights off. I won't complete silence. I don't even wanna hear no noise if it ain't coming from me or my phone. Yeah, I feel you. I'm like that too. I'm fucking excited to party and shit. I'll be like, man. But I really realized, I think, I don't like partying all that shit cause growing up, going to hella house parties and shit going hella functions and all that shit gets shut up. Shut up and shit. That's what I was trying to tell you. Like, you think you might just be on that shit cause you fake traumatized? Cause I realized I'm traumatized. Everybody be having a good time. Yay! And not be in the club, like, looking at everybody like. Nah, I'll be saying like that. Cause I feel like when they get loud and everybody having fun, that triggers me like something to happen. Yeah, I had tweeted on Twitter one time, like, sometimes when I be in the club, I just be thinking like, if it go down in this bitch house, we off into make it out that door. You see what I'm saying? But when I do go party, like, I do have a good time. Like, I really don't be worried about too much because nine times out of 10, when I am going to party, I got all my niggas with me. I got probably like one or two security guards with me. So, and then it's like half the time when I'm going out, it's a show or something. So it's all about me. Everybody who come in here, come in and see me and show love to me. And a long, a long time I didn't go outside because I just felt like a lot of people didn't like me. I felt like niggas wanted to do something to me. Niggas wanted to rob me. Like, so I didn't really go outside but when I first started going outside, it was when we went to Patrick Brunch. I was the littlest person at the fucking bar. I had a ball. I had a fucking blast. Like, I went to halftime for the first time. And Oakland. Yeah. We went to cry, baby. That was my first time there. I had a fucking blast all night. And I got so much love, it made me want to start going outside like, damn. Like the love, all the way, the hate. You overcoming the trauma because you enjoy yourself so much. I had a fucking blast. And then like, you know, where we come from how, you know, Kayla, you know, came up around, you know, around niggas, you know, and shit like that. Like, you know, I know being from San Diego and like San Diego niggas like typically we talked about this, I think niggas in general. We talking our language too much though. For the people that's not familiar with the Bay Area, especially San Francisco. San Francisco is a city, you know, most people view as, you know, you see the bridge, you see the tech shit, you know what I'm saying? The scenery, the nice part. But a lot of people, that's not even from Northern California, you know what I'm saying? They don't understand San Francisco. Got a lot of projects and it's really spicy. We got the biggest project in San Francisco. We got the biggest project in Northern California. And we got 26 projects in the city in general. See, and I got grown and I started realizing that. I did, cause I only went from Oakland to Antioch. I never crossed the bridge. See, I never left either because you got a trip. Our school is right up the street. We just gotta walk two blocks. You feel me? We got our corner store. We got a studio. We got an exercise room. We got a computer room. We got fucking a room for meetings. Like, we really didn't have to go nowhere. We got the Boys and Girls Club. We had Gaza. It was like a girls group. They taking us on field trips. We didn't really need to go nowhere. Yeah, I got grown and realized people in San Francisco feel how people in Oakland feel like. People in Oakland feel like they don't gotta leave Oakland. Like, nigga, I'm from the town. I don't gotta go nowhere. We got everything. I start crossing that bridge. I'm like, shit. Third Street, like E-1-4. I'm like, oh, shit, these niggas getting money. They don't need nothing. They don't gotta really cross the bridge. But I'm like, damn. Oakland as a community kind of traveled within Oakland. San Francisco as a community, right? You traveled within only your area or where you from. So like what she was saying, like, Sunnydale, if you're from Sunnydale, you're typically not going to Hunter's Point. You're not going to make it. Not even saying, it's like to a point we couldn't go. Yeah, you can go. Like, I remember. Going to the regular San Francisco is like, you don't even feel comfortable going there because you walking and you instantly looked at as a criminal, you instantly looked at as somebody that's up to no good. So you being stopped by the police, you know, all of these different things. Back to what we were talking about, not having a license, you go ahead and go try to go to that mall downtown. You're going to get ganged over. You know what I mean? So it's really segregated. It is. It's San Francisco. I went to Juvenile hard one time. And like, you know, every time you went to Juvenile, they put you in a program. So they put us in an ERC program on Third Street. We told them, me and my cousin, we told them we cannot go to this program. They was like, no, I say they pick you up from school, take you to the program, drop you off at home, blah, blah, blah. We still telling them like, oh, we don't really feel comfortable at this program. But it's either you go to the program or you go to jail. You feel me? So we went to, we didn't even last a week at the program. We go to the program. They picking us up, fill me program. Boom. One day, two bitches that we beefing with come into the program. You feel me? The gate posted me locked all type of shit. Feel me? I don't know how they got in. So me and my cousin, we know it's about to go down, but it didn't go down. So we calling all our people. When I tell you, nobody answered the phone. Like not, we calling our mamas, aunties, friends, sisters, cousins, nobody's picking up the phone. Yeah. They partying and shit. It's a Friday. Yes, they're my sister holder. We sitting there, next to you know it. We hear them bitches running up the stairs, kick the gate down, beat our ass, like sent us to the hospital. Damn. And then we like, we told y'all. We never could have sued them for real. Cause like we told y'all, we couldn't go there. And y'all still sent us there. That like, that's the other side. Like we, I don't even know how I have to be started with these bitches, but it's like, our niggas beefing with they hood. Fuck it. We beefing with the bitches. Like. Oh, so that's how that worked. Cause I always go ask you, how do women find they ops? What the fuck y'all fucking over? Like, bitch, you can't get your hair done over here. Yeah. And then it's like the schools were segregated. Like Viz is like a Sunnydale school, but tower people come into the school too. You know what I'm saying? And we got MLK, that's where people find a point. Towers is another project. Sorry. Is that a project? It's right across the street from us. And we beefing. A block away from Sunnydale. Yeah, I was, well, that's one thing I learned about even growing up in Antioch. Bro, I didn't realize San Francisco motherfuckers, cause there's a lot of people transition from everywhere in the Bay Area to Antioch. And then it was motherfuckers from the towers and this motherfucker from, and I don't even know why these niggas be here cause we not from San Francisco. See, everybody went to Antioch, they had a little bit of money. Yeah. No, the niggas on section eight. The niggas had, they had a big ass house and it was empty. Oh, mom. I know some people though, they got that check and they mama's got the little house and you know, they putting them in the schools out there. It matters, it matters what. Trying to get them away from the shit. Yeah. And then you got everybody else sneaking the same thing while I'm trying to get MLK away from the shit and they all end up at the same place. Exactly. That's why I was, that's why it was bad. But I didn't, I knew about that type of shit being in Antioch cause I didn't even know, I don't know no San Francisco funk. You know what I'm saying? It's like, nigga, we know Oakland. So we looking at the San Francisco people and what the fuck these niggas mad at y'all? Post me from San Francisco. I know all y'all supposed to be cool type of shit. But it's niggas from different projects in one city and they didn't even know that was, so they funkin' out the way. Oh my, this shit, I don't get the San Francisco shit. Yeah. I mean a lot of people, you know, because of the perception of San Francisco, if you don't know San Francisco, I actually like really, you know, been in San Francisco like that. See, I go to Oakland to get away with being black, right? But if you black coming to San Francisco, you're not going to the projects. But that's what people is. So when you go to San Francisco, you go into the same places that we trying to, trying to go to and get away from, you know, you know, but try to get away with going out without being pulled over or being spotted by somebody else. Now I mean from, you know, a op or something like that because we looking at ourselves the same way as the police looking at us. So if I'm out and I see somebody else black in San Francisco, this nigga is from another hood if I don't know him. You know what I mean? Do I got problems with this nigga? You know, and shit like that. So you instantly pinged out, you know, as a potential suspect. And we do it even to ourselves, you know, because San Francisco, everybody is, everybody is funkin' with somebody that is lying with somebody else that may, you know, phone pimp you. Exactly. And that's why a lot of times, like why I kind of was saying, she just started getting out because her mind said, like I'm not about to be outside. Now I mean, somebody phone pimp me or something like that because like, if you in the streets and you doing some shit and you get that call that this motherfucker is out over here at this club and you pulling up and you waiting outside and you gonna get on something. Now compared to like, you know, being that, being like in the town is kind of like blended in a little bit more. It's not so, you know, stand out like, you know. And the people that don't understand this city and town shit, San Francisco is the city, Oakland is the town. We be talkin' about this shit like everybody know and people really don't be knowin' for like, yeah. Like when I was in a studio, I was in there with a fat trail from Washington, D.C. And I'm just talkin' like, just how I regularly talk and he like kept stoppin' me like, what that mean? What that mean? Like what? And I'm like, oh, that mean, and it's like them like, we really talk different than other people. Like to the point they really don't understand what we're saying. But people don't know what the fuck we be talkin' about. I had to start changing, I had to start changing my vocabulary when I'm tellin' my jokes because my joke is funny, but they don't catch it because I'm sayin' a niggaboocy. And they not laughin' in certain cities cause they like niggaboocy. Like is he talkin' bout a boocy? Yeah, we'll be up like, oh shit, that's what they worth. I realize we got bait words where nobody else say, feel me cattin' all talkin' shit. Where it's like, man, people don't know what we talkin' bout, bruh. That'd be crazy, just like, damn, we got our own low. But everybody else do too, like every other state, like they probably got some shit that they say and we don't, we be like, what the fuck is he talkin' about? But I feel like that's why the whole, I feel like that's why the whole barrier really rooting for you and everybody behind you because you really like one of the few female artists to really represent our culture that we relate to. You know what I'm sayin'? And you know, like, I feel like all these other cities got these major artists that we can, we understand they culture because they made it out. So like Detroit got a cash dog, you feel me, these other cities, Atlanta, what's the mulatto or, you feel me, Lotto, like they be havin' females makin' the stallion that represent their culture. But see my whole thing is like, I really come from the projects. I got my whole hood behind me. If nobody else behind me, my hood, my niggas, they comin', shawls, they're supportin'. You feel me? A lot of bitches don't got that. They rap this hood shit and all this and all that. They don't got that for real. Facts. They don't got no big homies. They don't got niggas in jail callin' they phone. They don't have this. We have mutual friends, Lil' Katelyn. I don't have no mutual friends with these other bitches. No. I'm just sayin', though, like, you know. I don't know who they know in the bag, but I guess, fuck it. Like. And she right, like, you know, like in hip hop for the females and for obviously a lot of males, you know, jumping into rapping and stuff like that don't truly come from the essence of poverty, you know what I mean? And growin' up actually havin' a gun at the age of 12. You know what I mean? You know, just to be cool, right? But ultimately knowin' that you might have to end up usin' this motherfucker, you know what I mean? Or bein' subjectin', you know, subjectin' to havin' to sell drugs cause your parents don't crack. You know, shit like that. But I feel like in the other cities and states that I feel like they be, you know, they make it, not make it out, but, you know, they get behind it more because I feel like the Bay Area is so diverse where it's like, you know, it's so many people that grew up in the Bay Area but everybody got, I didn't realize it was so many different type of Bay Areas. Meaning like, you, I don't wanna explain what, just sayin' somebody name, but like. I feel like I know what you're sayin', it's like you got the skateboarders. For instance, you got the K-Wonnie's. You got the, you got the hers. Like, all of them, they from the Bay. You feel me? I mean, I don't really wanna get into that because that's why I don't be wanna say the wrong thing. I don't wanna say the wrong thing too because I love everybody. I mean, I don't too, but if we gonna really break this shit down, what are y'all doing for us? What are y'all doing for the Bay Area? 100%. Because me, I know my goal for the Bay Area. And it's like at this point, if you is from the Bay and you ain't, you ain't backing me, it's like you hating at this point because it's like everything I done did from 15 till now it's like a nigga got to respect it. Like, damn, she doin' her thing. Like I done had niggas that I really genuinely thought didn't like me. Like I got them blocked on social media and hellish shit just cause I don't, you feel me? They came up to me as shows and shit. Like I gotta give y'all props right now. You doin' y'all shit. Keep going, like shit like that. And they make me feel like, okay. Cause like from my lens is you don't only female artists that we didn't literally seen grow. Like for the most part, you know, like, I'm gonna just be honest out of the Bay Area when it comes to like artists. Like I discover a lot of people like, oh I didn't even know they was from the Bay Area. Like I seen them on TV first. And it's like you the only artist where I'm literally like, we didn't see, you been poppin' in the Bay for like seven years now. Like legit poppin' everybody fuckwinter type shit. You know, and it's like you still growin' and you growin' and you growin' each year. And I think that's why I feel like your support is different from anybody else because it's like we really watch you grow. You feelin' me? And yeah, and a lot of artists like, credit to what Ken was saying, it's like, you know, in the Bay, and I noticed this as well, it's like, you know, as much as we're independent and we act like, you know, we are our own support system, it feels to, you know, people that's up and coming and doing a thing, it's not because you don't have like these pillars or these people who have heavy influence to even, you know, if it might just be an Instagram post or it might be a picture or it might be an introduction, not necessarily happening, you know, gettin' behind, you know, the young up and comin' and people that, you know, so it's like, you know, we be feelin' like motherfuckers is bottling, you know, their celebrity, you know, for them to stay as this in fear that you might either surpass them or not wanna contribute to somebody else's success. And then that's when it comes down to what you was saying about, you know, these different Bay areas, right? Because you have motherfuckers who feel like they are from this part of the Bay, whether it's, you know, Vallejo, Oakland, Richmond, San Francisco. We segregate, you know, we kinda segregate it in general, but now, when it comes down to it, the Bay area is the Bay area within these seven counties in general, in order for us to, you know, compete in an entertainment market, we have to be together because we're goin' up against Los Angeles as a county that has all these cities, but then all these cities, they're supporting each other because they are this county, they are LA. They reppin' LA. And LA goes so far, sometimes they repp the West Coast. They be like, West Coast. The Bay area be like, no, I'm from the city. All it's like, bruh. And Atlanta, it's a lot of people that's from out of Atlanta that made out of Atlanta, they not even from Atlanta. You go to the city of Atlanta, they be like, it's really like six niggas really from Atlanta. Everybody else from the Oscars. But we don't know. But in order to identify, exactly, we don't know. But then that's why I say, you know, like, you know, in the Bay, we have our own, you know, kind of economy when it comes down to, you know, popularity and so forth, right? So you'll have like a motherfucker that we look at as a star, you know, killing it, doing a thing, you know what I mean? And then go somewhere else. That motherfucker might not even know who this person is. Thanks. You know, we are music. For instance, you go to almost every club. We always hear our music, but a lot of that music is from 20 years ago, 15 years ago that we're still keeping live and they still making money on it. Like I'm traveling state to state. Like Cleveland, Atlanta, hell of states and all I got to do is say, you never heard a song that made kids' pockets hurt. They be like, that's you. Like that's no way that's you. And I'm like, yeah, like that's my song. Like 11, 11, they playing my shit faithfully in Houston and Atlanta. They don't even know who I am. I go out there, they wouldn't have a clue. Why is that? Why do you think that happens? I don't know. Like the music going up, but they don't know who I am. Like I don't know how to explain it. I think a lot of it is, you know, a platform, right? And a platform based in an organization, you know, when it comes to, you know, who controls, you know, the social capital, right? And that's typically, you know, social media as much as we all have access to social media, but who is really like, you know, the people on social media, the people with the millions of views. And I mean, the big influencers that can say, hey, you know what, let me go ahead and, like, I know this person, Lil' Kayla, on some shit. Let me go ahead and put Lil' Kayla on this platform or Segway Lil' Kayla over to this relationship over here to make sure that we could break her face. They know her music, but break her face into, you know, the social media, you know. Do you think sex is the reason why meaning sex, meaning like, do you think, because you don't promote, you know, shaky ass, you ain't naked, you ain't, you know what I'm saying? I mean, but I do, so you know. You be shaking that shit, but you don't be naked. I sometime, but when I be naked, I feel uncomfortable. You feel like this is comfort for me. That's how I feel. That's what I'm saying, like you covered up today. I'm saying these female rappers, they never covered up. Yes, you know, I can't say. Yeah, because she ass out all day and I love it, but. Like I swear to God, one time I had a birthday photo shoot and I was like naked and stuff. I turned 22, I was in the tub, all type of things. You know, it was cute to me. I felt like he's about to go up, he's cute. I posted it, nobody from my hood reposted me and told me happy birthday. Wow. Look, so when I go to the hood of the day, what's up, I'm like, no, I ain't fucking with you. I'm like, none of y'all posting me for my birthday. They like, we weren't posting them pictures on our page. Yeah. Like you get on like, I can't, I got like, I can't do it. I just like hearing every now and then, you know, I put on a little broad top, little shorts, little, you know, but I can't do that all the time. But you know what I think, I think again, that's why a lot of people resonate with you. You know, when I see you, you know, performing on stage, like when we was at Cry Baby and you know, these other places, you ain't been out for never on some shit, right? And then, but every, all these girls, even guys, you know, black, white, peppermint, striped, LGBTQ, ING, I don't care what it was. They was all right there, they knew every word, right? And these is regular people, you know, that ain't, you know, you know, pretending to get out and, and spend hella money, you know, and stuff like that. They, they having a good time on some shit, you know what I mean? And they resonate, they resonate to the music, they resonate to the energy. And that's why, you know, I see, you know, you being able to go, you know, real far and be able to do something different for the Bay Area. And of course for yourself as well, you know, moving forward. Yeah, I just be, I'll be always passionate about like, man, the Bay need feeling me like, I'll be feeling like, you know, the world haven't seen a lot of real authentic Bay females. You feel me? And then it's like, for me, it's like, no, no, listen, I'm about to back you up on that because it's like, sometimes I, you don't gotta always pay me to perform. Like sometimes I might just pop out one night and they play my shit, give me the mic. And boom, I'm turning the whole club up. That counts because I feel like I lose all my respect. If I just blow up, move to the hills and never come back and do nothing for my city, they gonna be like, damn, I thought you was, the one, you feel me? Versus, boom, I blow up, boom, I got my big house, I got everything I want. And I'm still in the Bay doing turkey drives, Christmas giveaways, back to school giveaways. You always gonna be connected. I just shit like that. Yeah, just showing my face sometimes, every now and then. Showing like, I'm really from here, I got my respect here. This is where I grew up. Everybody knows me. It's not to a point where we ain't never seen Lil' Kayla at the, you feel me? Nah, y'all seen me? Y'all know me? Like, you feel what I'm saying? I ain't never be at the niggas. You did crime in the Bay. You and Jen, you're solidified. Yeah. We need somebody from the Bay to actually scan, sew some weed, we need that person to make it. Yeah. Yeah. We made it through beef snicker, all types of shit. Now I mean, moppings, niggas at motherfucking, rolling lousings, all types of shit. Like, I had niggas telling me like, bitch, when I see you, I'm gonna slap you. Yeah. Like, you know what I'm saying? Yeah, like, so it just be like. You don't fuck with niggas. That's amazing. Yeah, like. A female be fuckin' with niggas. I had a mouth on me. Like, I said whatever I wanted to say. Like, you feel me? And now, I policed my mouth. I gotta watch what I understand. Yeah, you gotta be mindful of the things you said. That's why I feel like I'm kind of fuckin' up talkin' to your ass. You bring the real Bay five out of the way. No, listen, listen, listen, listen. Cause I mean, that be no real fuckin' for me. They broke up some shit on Twitter. And you know how we talk like, bitches dressed like Mexicans and little shit like that? Like, they crucified me for that. Because they on the outside looking in in different states and not knowing that's how we talk. Like, oh, that bitch dressed like a Mexican. But that's not necessarily an insult to the Mexicans. It's just like, bitch, you don't know how to dress. Or you dress basic or little shit like that. But they crucified me for that. And I like, it took me a long time to like, make amends with my Mexican friends because they was on me. Like, to the point, I was scared to get on social media cause I didn't even want to see the shit. Don't fuck with the Mexicans and their ass off. I didn't even want to see it, but when I got on there, it made me feel a little better cause I did have like a lot of people defending me and like, nah, it wasn't like that. Like we united in a bay. Like Mexicans and black, like, I'm like nigga, have my friends like us. Like, yeah, like, so it was like, I was like, damn, like they taking it the wrong way. The Mexicans be at the side of the show, saying nigga, I'm talkin' to them shit. Swing that shit, nigga. They not knowing cause they, a lot of my fans are not from the bay. You got a trip, I got, I'm all over the world and it's surprising to me like, damn, like how the fuck do y'all, did y'all even find my music in the first place? They show. And when Lewis say they act like us, he means they act bay area in general. No, I'm just, no, they act black. They act black, bro. All right, but listen to this. There's no necessarily acting black when you grow up a certain way, right? I'm here. Yeah, exactly. The Asians and the Latinos grow up with us and they use the word nigga. And we understand why they use the word nigga. But now, the population of the world or the states will never understand that. So that's what I mean that they act like us because they grew up with us. You know, talkin' the same way in the same type of environments and so forth and so on. So put it like this, I'm glad you said that too on this episode, cause I just had an episode I did with Keisha E, shout out Keisha E. She from Detroit, I was trying to explain the difference between like niggas and African-Americans. And it's like, you know, it's like sometimes and you know, in California, I know in the Bay like, you don't have to be black to be a nigga. It's some Samoan niggas. It's an Asian nigga, like the niggas like, it's legit. Like we all dressed like from Asians, Mexicans, like Samoans, everybody dressed alike. Everybody got buzzed down, everybody in the field, everybody, we all doin' the same shit. Yep, so yeah, that's some real shit. How do you feel about the Bad Girls West, that thing that they doin' on Zeus Network? I don't even wanna speak on that. Oh, you're on some gangster shit. Nah, I ain't gonna speak on it. Cause it hits a lot. For real? But let's say, let's access, would you, do you ever see yourself potentially being on the Bad Girls West? No, okay, that's not why. Cause I bein' Jew. I don't play them little games that them bitches play. Do you think that this, You just scared me doin' that. I don't play them game, bitches playin'. All right, I'm sorry to exit the question. No, some real shit though, like I'm not about to be doin' all that for no TV. I'm too real for that. But do you think that a lot of your feelings on that stem from, you know, like your old beefs and stuff like that? Of course, of course. But even then, first of all, no bitch about to talk to me crazy. But they letting them choke him on the show. But I don't got time for no security and all that. You feel me? If we about to do it, we gon' do it. Fact! And we gon' do it. And we not hangin' out after we choke him in front. Come on. Oh my mom, I told her, you're livin' to say shit. I'm not one to say shit. I told MTV that same shit. I'm ready to call all my folks up. We gon' really get it going. I don't niggas can't. So I can't. So I can't. Yeah, you can't commercially phone. Yeah, I don't know how to play, I don't know how to play like that. Yeah, play like that. I don't, I, mm-mm. See, that's why I want you to be the biggest motherfucker out there, babe. The world needs to hear this. For real. So yeah, I can't do it. Commercial phone gon' get it. I can't do it. So another question, right? So I know we have, I think before we started rollin', you guys said that you used to bit, right? If people don't know what bippin' is, bippin', you know, in the bay is when you break into a motherfucker's car and steal a shit. And I mean, but it's this little piece, this little object, you just pop, and I mean bust a window. They got bips on shins. I just tweeted that. I was on there like getting me some little. She still thinkin' about comin' out of retirement. I ordered me one. I'm gon' keep it real. Just in case I ever need it. Like, one time the nigga pissed me off, I'm finna come drop all your windows. Like, you feel me, but I don't do none of that no more. So what I was gon' say is like, you know, like, when you guys said that, one of my questions was gon' be like, how do you feel about a nigga, you know, bippin' as a hustle? Because I remember on one of your songs, you guys said you want, you know, more of a pack-selling nigga and not a bipper or some shit like that, right? No, I said, I don't like scammers. Oh, you don't like scammers? Oh, yeah, yeah, scammers. I mean, I fuck with the bippers because my LJ was a bipper. Like, that's the first Oakland nigga that I started fuckin' with and brought me to Oakland and got me familiar with Oakland. So it's like, first I used to just sit in the car, like, you know, just, you know, how you just ride with your nigga. You just want to be with your nigga, like, so I used to sit in the car, he do his little thing, we cashing, gon' get our money in. So when I start seeing him, I'm like, I'm in the mall, but you know, you can't go to the mall every day. Like, if you go, yo, they gon' start goin', so you hear me, you gotta try something else. So when I start gettin' in the field and start, you gettin' laptops, you gettin', I'm a rapper, I'm gettin' clean ass, notebooks, backpacks, like, it's not just necessarily the money, it's like, you gettin' hell, we had a thousand charges. You gettin' assets. Yeah, like, you get what I'm sayin', so. This is bippin' for assets. You can hit for money, you can hit for, nigga, you can hit for brand new Chanel coats. You can hit for a Bible, like, man, I was looking for a Bible. Yeah, like, you can hit, you can come up on anything, like, you know what I'm sayin', you just never know what you could come up on, just bein' in the field, like, especially if you, like, I used to get up, I used to wake up at five o'clock in the morning. You couldn't have a job if you was that disciplined. You know what I'm sayin', it was like a job, like, I would get up at five in the morning and go in the field, the mall's not open til nine o'clock. You feelin' me, so, boom, hit the field for a minute, nine o'clock, I'm parked at the mall, soon as they open the door, we in there, out. Next mall, in there, out. Closing, we doin' it, mall's closed, what, nine, ten o'clock? We ain't even eatin' all day. So you goin' all through the bay, instead of just bein' in. All day, yes, we drivin' all the way to Tracy, Chico, like, we, L.A., like, yes, like, one night, we made $18,000 out of this one. We talkin' different, we talkin' different. No, I'm talkin' in the mall. And biffin', both of them, because you can't keep goin' to the same spots. You gettin' on, see, you gon' make it hot. So you gotta, you gotta every now and then, you gotta get a different route. You gotta find it. So what I'm sayin' though, when you talkin' about bein' in the field, you talkin' about slidein' to the mall, scammin'. No, I'm not scammin', I'm runnin' out, I'm fillin' up garbage bags full of shit and runnin' out. Next level with this shit. Yeah, like, we walkin' in there with no bags. That thing, we comin' in there to shop, we pullin' out garbage bags out of our family and just. You did that sober? Yeah. Oh, I can't do no shit like that. I'll be too terrible. Yo, adrenaline is runnin', so once you hit that first store, it's like, you gon' put your shit up cause you ain't gon' be no room in the car to keep him on storage, boom. Go put your shit up somewhere, hit another store, by the end of the day, you gon' see the Mexicans. They cashin' you out for whatever you, the Mexicans gon' let you know exactly what they want. And exactly what's for us to go to. I want some fielas. Exactly. I want the khakis. So some of the hits be easy, cause it's like. You got a big five. It's for me. Exactly. No, I'm saying, we buy all type of shit, you gon' be surprised what the Mexicans want, cause I don't even wanna say what they doin' with the shit, cause they still doin' it, but the Mexicans, they be text, they still to this day, when I see certain Mexicans, like when I be out, they be like, no work, no work. I'll be like, no, I don't work no more. Like, you feel me? Like they used to be texting, like when I first got out of that, they used to be texting like, hey, can you get this? Can you get that? Like sending you pictures of the shit that they want. So you gon' go get it and come sell it to them. For sure. That little key like niggas employers, you know what I mean? Exactly. Like for real. Exactly. And when we say Mexicans, because growing up, Mexicans always bought the stolen shit. I don't have one of my buyers build me out. What? Yes. Call him. See if he, what he didn't put up the money to build me out. Just cause he know I'm bringing the shit. Every day, just imagine, every day you coming and they cashing you out, every day that shit add up. What's more paranoid? Bippin. Bippin. Really? Maybe you gotta, I would think that you gotta, you gotta Bippin. Because Bippin, you gotta understand Bippin, you outside, you ducking in between cars, you got, what is it called? Like pedestrians, like just out, they looking at you, they calling the police on you. But motherfuckers Bippin, you all too though. But in the mall, it's in and out, like when you running out the mall with shit, all they gonna do is just look. Yeah. In your emotion. You know what I'm saying? You just mobbing. Bippin, it's like, It's like really hitting the house lit. You got ski mask on, you got gloves and you don't wanna get your fingerprints on nothing. You jumping in somebody's window, you get what I'm saying? You can't open the door door, alarm go go off. So you in the window, like it is definitely more risky Bippin than hitting the store. Yeah. And then a lot of times motherfuckers that's Bippin, they got somebody, the risk factor, somebody's in a car with a gun, right? And we didn't see, you know, a Bipp turn to homicide. I was just about to say, I know people that didn't got killed Bippin. For sure. For sure. China, you know. Back up, that go back to the one with the high speeds. And I was about to say, I know people that died from high speeds too, from hitting. Yup, from hitting. Yeah. I know at least three people that didn't died from high speeds hitting. For sure. Well, we so happy that you know, you to turn the page in that life. Give a big round of applause for Kayla. Lil' Kayla changing our life. For the better. You know, for the better. But I'm still buying everything. So you come up on the song, you know, I'm gonna miss you. Like I didn't bought purses on a big car. You still supporting the community. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Just in a different way. Yeah. That's hella funny. The whole big one Lil' Kayla to make it hella big. Man, all the big ones go hella shit. But you know, you know, another thing, and I gotta say this, right? You know, why Biffin turned into such a phenomenon in the Bay Area, right? Okay. My car is broken right now. And before you tell the story, I gotta update the people more about time, man. Oh, there's no car out there with a broken window. Yes. Wait, I'm like, He got Biffin in the back. Wait, I'm like, it's already people with windows broken out here. I can't leave my shit in the car like this. This is the back of the car out here. All it takes is one second. I'm telling you. For sure. One second. You know what they, I gotta get the bit going. Milly, Milly, let me update the people. For the people that's not, or just tuning in, or you probably smoking a blend or something, whatever, you done rolled up, feel me, it came back. Biffin, me, with somebody breaking the car, they just Biff your shit, bop, break the window or the shit, take the shit, and then bop. They go about their shit. You don't even gotta have nothing in your car. It's some shit where you pop the seat to go in a trunk, to see what's in the trunk. That's what happened to my car. That's what happened to your shit. And they just bit the little window, right? Wish the little window cost the most money. That's all you need. The little window is back order. You can't get your window for four months. You know what I mean? That's kind of what I'm dealing with. That's what's outside right there. Cause once you, if you see a something in a trunk, that's when you break the, and you go in. And I think people don't realize why people do it. But if it ain't nothing there, boom, we on to the next car. Because San Francisco, Oakland got a big, I would say San Francisco got a big tourist attraction, you know what I'm saying? So why people started that shit and doing it because, you know, it'd be a lot of tourists coming out of town, leaving the airport, got hella stuff in their trunk, hella stuff in their car and all that. Laptops and all type of valuable things. And then people feel me the locals. They stopping at coffee shops on their way to the airport or leaving all they luggage in the car with everything that they fucking own. And I will say, I know there's a lot of niggas in the bay that we know that got rich. I ain't gonna say super rich, a hundred thousand dollars rich, right? Hundred thousand. Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars rich off of a BIP, right? And then they talk about it. And then they live in their life. And then it became almost an everyday hustle. And crack is dead now. So, you know, it's hard to, you know. That's really a bad thing. We not promoting this and we're proud of you niggas. But at the same time, we just, you know, update. This is what's going on. Yeah. This is what I wanted to say, right? Why BIP became such a phenomenon in the time that it has because when Gavin Newsom was mayor, right? He made breaking in the cars, like petty crimes that were felonies, like receiving stolen property, which was a felony, right? Breaking into a car, which was a felony. They changed the law and had it minimized to a misdemeanor. So that's why I'm over. He's like, shit, I could break into a car, or I could, you know, sell this stuff and get arrested for it and get off for it. Yeah. Cause that's why people stopped hitting house licks because house licks was to go to a high school and then I think they changed the law on it. Yes. Like if you going to somebody's house and you're damn near getting life. So people stopped hitting houses. Exactly. And niggas like ours, we gonna hit a car. And that's why, and that's why every time you see on the news, it's like San Francisco has a problem with people breaking into cars and doing all this shit and stuff like that. And Oakland, the Bay Area at this point. Which we don't, which as much as, you know, it's kind of like, you know, it's helping motherfuckers, but then it's hurting motherfuckers too as a culture, right? Because we're not, we're not getting a lot of, no, listen, what I'm saying, we're not getting a lot of time, you know, for which is good, right? You shouldn't be getting, Is that a good thing? Yeah, you shouldn't, you should have been sentenced three years for four years in prison for breaking into somebody's car. You say that until your ass get big. You like arrest these niggas. These niggas got me hot. I feel like that now. Maybe you breaking into my car. Niggas, you on the way to LA with no window now. Yeah. Cause niggas get this nigga a year at least. Listen, I was mad, I was mad as a motherfucker. But you know what? I come from the streets. I come from Hustle, you know what I'm saying? But when I came up, you know, you was a petty car thief, you know, bringing in somebody's car, trying to take somebody's radio. That was boosiest fuck, man. You know, Boosie is a bad word. Yeah. That mean lame. You wasn't respected, you know what I mean? Now if you was, you know, robbing somebody's house, you know what I mean? Not necessarily like your neighbor house or shit like that. And you was coming up, you know, it's almost like, you know, taking from the rich, giving to the poor type shit. You know, if you was selling drugs, these were like the hustles. But now, you know, right now, a main hustle is breaking into people's cars because we done seen the outcome of somebody, you know, hitting, you know, for $250,000, you know what I mean? $100,000, then motherfuckers like, damn, you could hit for that much by breaking into a car. Exactly. So a nigga wake up at five o'clock in the morning, breaking into 25 cars throughout the day and they done made out of them 25 cars that have made three bands. Yeah. Hard day at work, right? I'm just saying. I mean, but sometimes it'd be slow. And sometimes it'd be slow. It'd be that day, like, like. We got the kids watching. I think we leading, we misguiding to you. Nah, nah, we there in their mode, it's by a little nigga watching us right now, you know, after the hit. Nah, but see, that's why I'm on a different, like I'm off to come out with a program that's like a mentor program to, I want to help send kids to college and shit like that. Like you get what I'm saying? It's gonna be called life, living in firm experience, be ready, because I'm gonna need you. And it's basically gonna be like, okay, I done did this before. I done been to jail, a nigga that played me before. I done fell out with my friend before. Like you get what I'm saying? Just to let them know, like what you going through is small. All my misery is pain. You know what I'm saying? Like you, you need to, we need more doctors. We need more, we don't need no more bippers. We don't need no more rappers. We don't, you know what I'm saying? We need, like, there's just saying, like, if everybody got BVLs and everybody want to be bottle girls, everybody, who, who gonna be the nurses? Who gonna be, who gonna be the dental assistants? Who gonna be, we need that. Thanks. And you know what, I'm glad that you guys said that. Like, so my boy gonna goes global. He's dropping, you know, ghetto therapy, right? That girl. So kind of like, you know, shout out, gonna goes global. He is, shout out my player partner, man. You know, ghetto therapy is being able to break down and be able to talk to, you know, ourselves about these traumas that led us to, you know, making all these other decisions that, you know, we are hyperally known for. And typically it falls into crime as in prostitution, selling drugs, killing, you know, all of these different things, which, you know, I tell people, when I was raised inside of my house, I was taught everything good. Yeah, me too. Everything I learned, you know, bad was me stepping out on my porch. Exactly, going to school and seeing other people do it. My pops taught me some ignorant shit, though. My mama did a good job. My pops, okay. I love what Kayla do when a lot of people don't do, she saw herself going to church. I go to church every Sunday. She go to church, you know what I mean? But you gotta understand, there's a lot of criminals in church and they kind of cover up for the church. Cause you go to church, don't mean you're a good person. No, I'm not at all. It is helping me be a good person because not only do I go to church every Sunday, I am like, y'all need to come to church. But I invite people to church because my church, I don't know how to explain it, but my church is not that kind of church. And I be to myself like, when I bring people to church, sometimes I do be embarrassed like him. Like they smell like weed or they ain't dressed properly or you know what I'm saying? But again, you gotta think at least they coming. Do you want to clean them up? Do you want them to know God? Do you want to like, or do you want them on the streets and you feel me? Like you can't like, when you go to church, like you can't have mean people on the church because it's going to make them not want to come back. Exactly. You gotta make it feel like a second home. My church support me 100% when my rap career, like they don't try to change me. They let me be me. So it'd be the whole church, 11, 11, they send me them niggas with them raps. I don't know, but I mean. To preach you like, yeah, man, we got a little telly this month. Billby, come on, 11, 11, send them niggas with them raps. No, but she do be wanting me to come up with like gospel raps to perform with the youth choir and stuff like that. You can sing, make them pockets. No, no, no, no, come on, for real, I don't play with God, but for real. But like, I'm just saying though, that's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. I'm just saying though, like, do you want the youth or you got a trip? Most of these churches, they don't have no youth because they run in the mall. Most of these church, like my granny church, it's all old people. And you know how them type of churches be. Yeah, they're standing on it. You do comedy, you know. But you know, in churches. I want a church where it's like, I could go to church and I feel like I'm at the club cause it's so lit, the music, that's how my church is. 11, 11, you need to make your own church. It made me, 11, 11, oh, that church, you go crazy. The 11, 11 church. Oh my God. And like you said, you get a little concert. But see, I got an idea as to where I want to do like a youth night where I just go out to the bay, go to all the churches, get all the youth. We rehearse a couple songs and we just go like stomp. That's a lit church song. We could turn it up. Like, you get what I'm saying? Like you just have a church night to where we can, you know what I'm saying? I know what you're saying. I'm telling you on the slide, I'm going to perform tiptoe and everything, that thing. So yeah, it's just, it's definitely helping me become a better person, I like the life. Kayla really, you know, do what she talk about. You know, I just ran into Kayla the other day at Chicken and Waffles at Oakland. She had a whole gang of like eight kids. Talk to the mic. She had like a whole gang of eight kids. I'm like, hold on, Kayla, what you doing? Like, you know what I mean? I didn't see Kayla. You know what I mean? She's like, man, I just got the kids out. You know, I'm about to take them to the movies, you know, and stuff like that. And I was like, damn, you know, I didn't even want to talk about business or nothing. I just wanted to like kind of admire, you know, what you was doing in your moment of your organic, you know, day to day process in general. I think you can't feel when you're organic. You could never let people down if you just being organic. You understand me? Cause it's like, you know, that's why you feel the way you feel. Where it's like, I just feel like I'm me because it's like, that's all you got to do is be you. And it goes back to the point where you know what I'm saying? Certain things where, you know, people portraying theyself as like they're you and they're really not you. It's just like, that's just the artist version. Like, even like in the Bay, like I didn't met some people like just cause I like how they rap and be like, damn, like she tight and I get with them. They can't even buy theirself a cheeseburger. And I'd be like, well, you just, you was rapping about like, you know what I'm saying? So I just be like, you really just have to be yourself. You can't fake it because when you fake it, everything done in the dark comes to the light. It's eventually going to come out like, damn, you be rapping like that. And you- But you know what it is it's us saying, Carl Fagerty, make it now. But it's not for everybody, right? It is not for everybody. And credit to what you saying, like when you come from a certain place, like, you know, like I was telling a little earlier when I was growing up in Sunnydale, you know, we called ourselves the know you because we had a heavy New Orleans influence, I mean, with cash money and stuff like that. So we mimicked almost everything that they did because that's how we identified. And it's like, okay, if we do exactly what they did, right? Because this is who we are, then we could be able to get that spotlight as well. So that's what developed our projects into being like one of the most notorious projects in California in general, because they had choppers, we got choppers. Like, you know what I mean? Like they wore them, we wore them too. And it kind of created this, you know, this fun evening with them. They got choppers, we got choppers. Yeah. But it's like even like, you got the niggas, and then you got the bitches like, all right, we got a big ass project. So we got like, we called ourselves the Smalls, right? So we got the older Smalls, the grown bitches, and they fighting the grown bitches. And then you got us, the teenagers, we fighting the teenagers, and then we got a baby squad that's fighting the baby bitches like you feel me? So just imagine that we all out together. It's going down like. It's going to be terrifying. Exactly. And we use some mob like that back in the day. It's the granny, the mama in the grand baby too. We on the bus 50 deep to the movies. You better not let us catch nobody by theyself. And that's how we use it too. If we outnumbering them, we beating ass. Oh my God. We use some mob together like that too. You know, like our projects, like even in San Francisco, it used to be prideful to, you know, be prideful to be where you're from, right? Yeah, I heard somebody in San Francisco roast a person from San Francisco because they grew up in the house. Like, oh, that niggas square, he had a house. God damn you. Because you know, you know, you got a few projects. It ain't like the whole like, we got hoods too though. That got houses like, you know, a lot of the hoods in Fillmore, you know, it's houses, not projects. Fillmore got projects as well. But Lakeview, Lakeview ain't got projects. I mean, they got houses on some shit, you know. So it doesn't, you know. But that's why y'all related to the New Orleans shit. Yeah, exactly, we see people from the projects. Projects relate to other projects. Yeah, all around the world. A project is a project. Yeah, but you know what? But also the funny thing about it, like project living is totally different than hood living. The person that lives in the project doesn't have the same mindset as somebody living in the hood. And that's what I learned because I never lived in a project. So me being in the prize, I'm like, oh, I can't imagine fucking with this. This too much. It's too many motherfuckers, just right in my head. It's a little bit more rural. That's why New York trip me out too. Like, I'm seeing them build us. I'm like, so all these niggas is in this building. Imagine this. Imagine it being like, you know, in Sunnydale, we have, you know, we have our, we have like a, we have a H, right? We have two streets coming down, really about three streets. But let's call it, you know, two streets coming down with Blightdale and Sunnydale going down. Then we got Santos, the borderline, right? Now every, yeah, of course. I'll just talk about the H. Now in between these, you know, in between these buildings, which is old military buildings, all cement. There's no police. There's no safety at all. Now, growing up in that, like, it breeds crime. It breeds, you know. It was a project. And then it's like, we. People in the hood, right? What house is, you know, it's a little bit different because you have these streets. Police have access to these streets and stuff like that. So, you know, it ain't too much that you could get away with, you know? But within these buildings, every, the only people that's within these buildings is the people that's living in these projects. And that's why, you know, murder's going soft. That's why motherfuckers get played, you know what I mean? And all types of shit within these buildings in the projects. And that's what makes the projects that much more, you know. Like, see, when we was beefing, like, we from the same hood, but we from two different, like, I'm from down the street. He from all the way, like, you know what I'm saying? It'll take me five minutes to walk from where I'm from to where he from. Just walking up the hill just, you feel me? But it's like, when we was beefing, we and every bitch said, we slyin', we find in our grown bitches got cars, they takin' us to fight, but a bitch would never come to our projects. Like, they would never come to our projects. This is my thing. I'm tryin' to figure out what happens. Look at the internet. Just back on the internet, Facebook, MySpace, and... So how could it start, like, example, right? Like, are you funky with this girl for what? All it take is one person to fight. Yeah. And boom, you fought my sister, so when I see you, I'm fightin' you too. Do you think women? Cause I know, you know, it's been female rappers, but you know, I feel like the female rappers is kinda runnin' the gang right now. Like, the ladies is goin' crazy. Got all the female rappers out there. It's hella female rappers goin' crazy, right? And a lot of females is talkin' about, you got a lot of females that's poppin' they little sexy shit, the sex talk, but you got a lot of women that's really poppin' like some gangsta shit, too. And I think that's influenced it. It's gonna influence, like, a young generation. Of girls. Of the girls. Gonna be more with the shit, right? Do you think, moving forward, do you see women shootin' each other and killin' each other like how men do it? I mean, look at where me ma. But that's one person, we not talkin' about it. Yeah, a long time ago. I mean, I can't really speak for everybody cause I don't know everybody personally to know how they really move. Like, it'd be people surprised that I be havin' my shit with me. Like, oh, like you get what I'm sayin'? Like, I gotta keep this with me. Like, you feelin' me? So it'd be people, like, you get what I'm sayin'? And I'd be like, you don't got one? Like, you feelin' me? Like, I don't know, like, you rap like you be havin' it? Like, where are you at? Oh, so some of them just really rap it. Yeah, yeah. So that's another thing, right? Like, playin' both sides of the fence, right? Like, credit to what you was sayin'. It's like, you know, you have some girls, you know, kinda like yourself that really come from that shit and will really have a booed owner. You know what I mean? Compared to a girl who talkin' that shit. But then once it come down to some shit, it's like, oh, I'm wildin'. I'm wildin'. But you talkin' that shit, and this is what the shit leads to. You know what I mean? It ain't just talkin' that shit, poppin' that shit. Oh, now you wanna be innocent compared to all the shit that you've been playin'. I think that gunplay come about, like, even for guys, right? I feel like the gunplay come more about, all right, you fake, on the under, you fake scared to fight. So now, everybody just wanna upstrap. Nobody wanna chonk about it. First, when we was growin' up at least, we chonked, we did, and then we worked out strats. And then we chonked, we did that, because it'd be like, okay, if this nigga killed my brother, I gotta kill this nigga. Or I gotta kill somebody close to this nigga to make this nigga feel how we felt. Like, sometime it'd be some shit like that. Like, it just... But even then, do you feel like women gonna be like, all right? Because we've been still fighting. No, because it's gonna keep going. Because once you, it's back and forth. For sure. And this goes for a whole another conversation, right? You know, like, I always, me and Gunna, we had talked this one time, right? I said this, this is the plain English of it, right? If you go, if a nigga killed your mans, for instance, right? And you believe that your mans went to heaven. Do you think that your mans up in heaven saying go kill that nigga? I know I'm going to heaven. If somebody touched me, my niggas better paint the whole city, yeah. But you say that, but you say that, but you go to heaven, you not over there, you sayin' that as you know right now, damn. But when you in heaven and you a god... What about the church people? You ain't got that, you're not gonna have that. You can imagine you're not gonna get that. But they gon' do that anyway. Yeah, I understand that. I understand that, but I mean, you know, at some point we have to, you know, start really talkin' about, and I mean solutions to these long-term beefs, right? And these multiple mans. Yeah, that's it, but I'm definitely on my stop the violence shit, like, don't get me wrong. I wanted to a point where I can go and take all my niggas with me, so they don't even have to be on the block, like it's to the point where I can put all my niggas on, to the point they don't even have to worry if we in the hills for sure. With it, like they can just kick back, come to my house, like everybody come to my house, like type shit. Now that's what I wish I could, I mean, I want, you know, when I'm workin' for this. That's what we pushin' for, ultimately. It's like, I don't want my niggas on the block, cause if somethin' happen to one of my niggas, I'ma be hurt about it. Cause I feel like niggas been niggas. Exactly. I think niggas been niggas for a long time. I think I just see a lot of change with the women nowadays. Yeah, facts. Women is with the shit. Like, women always been about that shit. Don't get it twisted. My grannies and all them hat straps and blow that motherfuckin' if it came down to it. Guaranteed. For sure. But what I'm sayin' is, it wasn't, my granny then wasn't listenin' to rap music, too. They be like, I wish a bitch would. You feel me? So it's like, all right, you got women that's kinda extra with the shit now because you got women that probably wasn't with the shit and they grew up around that shit influenced by some music. And do you got, you see what I'm sayin'? And people feel like they got points to prove. Do you think that the music industry might be targeting young women coming up to be influenced by the things that female rappers are sayin', pertaining to selling sex, selling violence, and stuff like that? Because like I said earlier, when the hot boys and all them got put on, right, it motivated us to, in order for us to get on and talk about this real shit rapping, you gotta live it out. You can't be talkin' about no fantasy shit that you actin' like you're doin' but you're not doin' it. That ultimately that whole hot boy shit like that, a lot of my niggas done been killed from that, a lot of niggas done been put in jail from it, tryin' to have this aura, either tryin' to rap or tryin' to identify what these rappers and stuff like that. And you see it that much more now today with women gettin' BBLs and becoming strippers and sayin', hey shit, I'll fuck you if you gon' give me some money, prostitution and all of these things. And these are a lot of the things that's, you know, and more, so now with violence and shit like that, bein' in females raps, bein' you know. It's like women been makin' me pockets hurt. They feel me, but it's like, now we got 20, you got 20,000 females in the crowds. Make them pockets hurt, it's like, man. Me personally, music ain't never influenced me to do anything. Like you get what I'm sayin' like, the first female rapper that I ever heard was Will Kim. The first rap that I ever heard when she was, the rap's on the movie. Your whole world changed when you heard me rap and the niggas bet to grab it. You feel me? That was the first female rapper that I ever heard. You feel me? Then Lil Wayne, that was my favorite rapper. So it is just like they never made me oh, Lil Wayne said he did this. Let me go do this. Everything I'd rap about came from my own experiences growing up. Like I didn't even know I knew how to rap. You know what I'm sayin'? I was in a studio playing around and I'm like, I'm actually kinda good at this. Like, okay, let me keep going. See, cause it's hard to have a conversation with you because you're organic like the planning. You understand me? We talkin' about the motherfuckers that's influence. You see, I can't even speak on what you have cause you, you, you, you, you heard. And then it's just like, it's like the way it was raised too. Like some people parents make their kids be hoes. Or you might be out, a kid might run away and meet a nigga and now the nigga got her hoin' and now that's all she know. Like she didn't make so much money from hoin'. It's like, what else am I supposed to do now? I gotta go get a job. And I can make this much money going to go fuck a trick. You know what I'm sayin'? You got a point. It's really how your life is. Do women manipulate men? Period. Sometimes. Yeah, I like that. So sometimes, yeah. They do? How? A woman can manipulate anything. How do, how, how do a woman manipulate a man? It really depends on the situation. It really depends on the situation. Like I'm not online to you. It really depends on different type of situations. Yeah, cause the goal, you know the goal most of the time you don't get that money from that guy. But see, not for me, like it's different because I was raised around family. Like my auntie and uncle, Mary, we always at their house. My granny and grandpa, Mary, we always at their house. So growing up, me, I always wanted a big family. Like I want like at least five kids. Like I want a big family to the point where when I'm older, everybody coming to my house for Christmas. Everybody coming to my house for Thanksgiving. Granny Kayla. Yeah, you know what I'm sayin'? Oh, this is my blood line running around. Yeah, my mother's. You know, like a big family, family reunions and that's how I grew up. Like you got a trip when you in the projects, everybody around here is your family. So when we had birthday parties and it's family versus just, oh, you going to this birthday party, you don't know nobody, but two people cause you related to them, two people. Are you getting what I'm saying? It's like I want a big family. So that's why you ain't out here manipulating men? I want real love, old school love. Really? That's what I'm talking about. Like I keep me a boyfriend. Oh really? Look how we got a boyfriend? But when I'm doing me? I think I know your boyfriend too. I ain't gonna, I know your nigga though. But my first boyfriend, he a real nigga though. He a real repable nigga. I was like, I'll tell him my partner, I'll tell him my good friend. I said that nigga made a good decision. Yeah, we been together for a good almost three years now. Really? Yeah. So it's like, I think y'all going to work cause both of y'all days this. He got kids and stuff like, you know, we get his kids and you know, stuff like that. Lil' Caleb Boy from the gangsta. So y'all better not play with her y'all. She going to get your ass and he going to get your ass. I can't fuck with no square. You can't even mess with a square? Why? Why not? Because I feel like I would just run all over him. Like I need a nigga that'll tell me about myself. Like a nigga that'll cuss me out every now and then and put me in my place. Like, you know what I'm saying? I can't have no nigga that, I'm telling them what to do all the time. But what about if he loved you and treated you better than that hood nigga? We was just, me and my cousin was just talking about this. I was young, I was probably like 17 and a nigga bought me some flowers. Yeah, okay. I was so fucking bad. Like, why the fuck would he buy me some flowers? But I didn't, like now my niggas send me flow like the other, like probably like two, three weeks ago. He been having hella card parts come to the house. So one day he's like, babe, I got a package and I go downstairs, there's flowers, edible, and rain. And that shit, like, it made me so fucking happy. Like, okay. But why did, why you didn't appreciate it coming from the other guy? I don't know, like I just wasn't feeling him. Like I wasn't feeling that. Was he a good guy? He was, he was, he had a job and on the fire. Like, and he was feeling, he wanted to talk to me basically. And so he came one day and he like had some flowers. So when you seen the run, he was like this nigga, bitch. I'm like, this nigga, corny as fuck. Hey, so everybody that's watching this episode right now, why, that's why you see Bey niggas so traumatized and militant and feel like we don't want to do certain things for women. Because when you try to be nice, he's a square-ass nigga, mom, he's a square-ass nigga. But now, now my nigga buy me flowers often. And that makes me happy. But you appreciate it because you know he wouldn't do it for, well, yeah, why, why do you appreciate it from because of you square-ass nigga? No, not even that. We in the relationship, why? Oh, no, that was a different episode. It's a difference, like, you know, being a square-ass nigga, you know, I wouldn't imagine being a square-ass nigga giving flowers compared to a nigga being like, you know, a nigga also shitting on me. That's like, oh, really? You liking flowers from niggas, not African-Americans. No, no, I just, I don't know, like coming from, if you ain't came from the same background that I came from, I can't see myself. Exactly, but that's what I, that's what I really mean. That's why I only date black men because if you don't have four black grandparents, I can't, I can't fuck with you because you, you can't, you ain't on the type of time that you, y'all, your family, I can't even go to your family house for no soul food. Fast! You feel what I'm saying? So I can't, I only date black men and only date black men that come from where I come from. Let's give a round of applause for that. Oh, mamas, it's a difference between African-American and niggas, instead of me. That was African-American that bought you the flowers. You like this bunk-ass nigga. No, but he was mixed. See? He was mixed, but he was a square. He was African-American and some other shit. I forgot what he was mixed with. Even then, he was a square, he had like a nine to five. Like, I don't know, it was just, I wasn't into that. So if a guy had a nine to five, do that make him a square? No, cause I know some hood niggas that's changing their life around. Like, you feel me? Like, I'm not, what's the cause of them? They just went in to go be firefighters. Like, you feel me? Like, we are hood niggas working at the wreck with us. Like, you did what I'm saying? Yeah, well, you know how many hood niggas work at Tesla? Yeah. So niggas at that Tesla warehouse are murdering your ass. I don't know what makes a nigga a square. All them niggas that be dropping off Amazon packages are killing your ass. They changing their life. Don't get involved. I don't know how to identify what makes a nigga a square to me, but it's like, you just know. Like, he's a square, like. Yeah, it's a certain swag. Like, I can't even have a conversation with you for real, for real, like, and really talk about shit because you don't even understand where I'm coming from. And you know what? I think we might be men. Could you date a bus driver? No. I know what you got that from, though. You see I'm clickbaiting right now, right? I'm trolling your ass, I'm on your ass. But, yeah. Why not? Why you couldn't date a bus driver? I don't know. I just don't see myself dating a bus driver. Why? Like, I don't know. I can't explain it. What about if he's a great guy? He's staying on 10 toes, he got his nest dropped. Lil' Katelyn, that's my woman. I do anything for her. I respect her and I love her. I mean, I can't call it because, you know. Yeah, it is. Look, you know what's funny is like. If he was a hood nigga, like, if my nigga was to go drive buses. Yeah. That's different. Exactly. But me just meeting a nigga that's already a bus driver and he's trying to pursue me in this and this and that. Like, I want to take this shit because not even that. I make a lot of money now. You know what I'm saying? So it's like. Let me hold a hug. I got you. But a nigga can't do nothing for me that I can't do myself. So all the purses and shit my nigga buying me, I can go do that myself. It just, it's like, oh yeah, my nigga buying me whatever I want. It gotta be more and more shit. But what about if he got a good life and he could provide, not a good life, but like, say if he, a bus driver, and you know, he working on the five and all that, but he could afford all those things, say if his mama passed down a house to him type shit. You don't say it from him. It ain't even about materialistic things with me though. It's about, like I said, like what type of background do you come from? Like, can I go to your family house and be myself? Or do I have to turn on the switch when I go around your people? Like, you get what I'm saying? Like, it's all about that with me. So if you could, like, you know, if you come from the shit or whatever, and then, you know, on your way out of the shit, end up getting that bus driver job, then it's like, okay, I could identify with you because you come from the shit. He got to be fighting demons on that bus. No, we got a lot of, he got to be like, man, sell y'all, y'all better sit your ass down, cause I'm really not a bus driver. We got a lot of niggas from the hood. I'm driving this bus, but I'm not a bus driver. We got a lot of motherfuckers from the hood who drive the bus, who come from the shit. And I remember, my daddy used to drive a bus, right? And when I was a kid, right, having a city job, you know, put your name on the map and that's getting a city job. My auntie used to drive the bus to ACU, AC Transit, nigga, shit, pop your ass. Good benefits, making a hundred thousand, eighty thousand dollars a year was big if you was on some nine to five, you know, job type shit, right? But, you know, coming from the hood like now, we do see a lot of, you know, our peers and motherfuckers having jobs now, which is cool. And we're, I'm starting to see them younger, getting jobs, you know, 25, 26. I mean, there's nothing wrong with having a job. Don't get me wrong. Like, there's nothing wrong with having a job. Yeah, you just gotta be a hood nigga. Like, I didn't work at the airport, hell shit. Only reason why I stopped working is because people started noticing me, like, coming and going, oh, okay. Oh, yeah, yeah, for sure. You know what I'm saying? I, like, you know what I'm saying? That's another announcement I got to the people. If a nigga work at the airport, he's dangerous too. Yeah. It's a lot of hood niggas that work at the airport. So if a nigga do like, he work at the airport, that on me, he is square, he has slapped the shit out of your ass. No, for real. And he might be sliding those facts. He might be the plug. Or still a little plug. They still a shit. That's the reason why they getting on my phone. Yeah, they getting everything that comes on. Hey, look, maybe you're a nigga too, you know what I mean? Because you know you sent that package out. Yeah. Yeah, so more of the stories that if you, you got a job don't mean you a square for show. Like, a square, it's like, it's different. Like, I don't know, like, you raised in the suburbs. You went to school with the white people. Like, I can't date one of them. I understand. I understand. I understand, because that's crazy that we having this conversation, because literally one of the previous episodes, I don't know how I'm gonna place this shit, but we didn't have this conversation here before on the Kali kickback. And I was talking to a young lady about the difference between niggas and African-Americans. And she was saying, a guy that I thought was a square, I don't know the guy, but what I'm saying is the thing she was saying, the guy was doing, I'm like, only a square nigga do that. You feel me? And you know what I'm saying? And she was like, nah. And I was like, nah, it ain't no nigga gonna do that. So I see what you're saying. Like, if a nigga gonna be vulnerable and open up and be a good guy to a woman, it gotta be like his, feel me? Like, soul tie type situation. It ain't gonna be like, no, cause I want to fuck and I want to maintain this relationship. I got to maintain this relationship and I got to keep her happy. So I'm doing this. Like, when me and my dudes first started messing with each other, the shit that we talk about and shit now, before we never talked about that, they'd be like, why won't we never talk? You know what I'm saying? I just come chill with you, but won't we? Your little head. But we never really had conversations to the point where he'd call me like, babe, why would we? And we actually talk and have a conversation. You know what I'm saying? About real shit, about family. We telling me shit about his past now. You know what I'm saying? So now it's like, okay, now I get you. Like, you know what I'm saying? But before it was like, I don't really know you. I don't really know who you are. Cause if I see you with a square, I'll be like, she's manipulating this nigga. I see it, I see it. Oh, shit. But I couldn't even do that because if I genuinely don't like you, I can't even fuck with you cause this is going to be all over my face. Like I'm going to have an attitude. I ain't going to want you to touch me. We definitely not kissing. Like, so. You couldn't fake it for the money. Like basically like, say if a dude got hella money, you feel me? Unless he like, did he or something? Yeah, right? He got to have that type of chicken where it's like, then you turn on your little, oh my God, voice and all that shit for the cheese. I feel you, I fuck with you. You keeping it lit. Mm-hmm. Just keeping it real. Yeah, not that, that's true. But like how you had said, like you see it more the square niggas like, oh yeah, you manipulating that nigga and shit like that. I mean those, I did what shit like that too. Like not necessarily like, you know, dealing with bitches or shit like that or whatever it may be. But dealing with like, I got my white boyfriend, you know, not boyfriend, but my white boy nigga or some shit, you know what I mean? And he don't look like we identify at all. But I wasn't even, I can't see myself with a white man. No, no, I'm talking about like a friend, a friend, that's a partner. That's a whole different conversation. We gonna be here all day. No, but listen what I'm saying. So look, you got, you doing business with this white dude on some shit like that, right? Instantly people think like, oh, she manipulating this guy for something. Same with like me, if I got, you know, a business partner or whatever it may be and he white and he wearing a suit and I mean, motherfuckers like, oh yeah, he manipulating him or he getting some money from him or whatever it may be. It's like, hold on, why? Why just because I look the way I look and this person looked the way that they look, you have to, you know, pinpoint us as in doing some type of criminal or manipulating type shit, you know what I mean? Why can't I just be cool to this person and this person see a value in me, you know? Like don't get me wrong, I didn't mess some cool ass white people like at the airport and shit like, and you wouldn't even think they are that cool today. Nah, like just flying. See the next little white person, that's how I'm an eight. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's different from, I truly understand what you're saying because it's a difference between building friendship, building trust with different, you know, cultures, different people, you know what I'm saying? But like, it's one thing to be sleep with somebody and really be fighting demons with somebody. It's like, you know, like, yeah, that's crucial. Like, you know, you just really hella comfortable, you just locked in. It's like, oh, okay, you really, you know. I can't, they know, like, cause it's like, what if I go to your grandparents' house and they racist? Yeah. And you bringing my black ass in here. And you not asking the man, and you a nigger. And on some, get out, shit. Like, you know what I'm saying? So it's just like, if I can't be myself around your family and shit, I can't see myself. You know what I'm saying? I think that that's kinda like, you know, a little fucked up too. And I say that to say this, right? And I'm like super fucked up that you said it because like my dad, you know, chills and mess with a white woman, right? And my white mama ended up messing with a black dude. And because they started, you know, they found love. They've been together for, you know, 38 years. But my dad black family never accepted that he messed with a white woman. So now us as like, you know, the nephews, we never, you know, was like super invited. It was always uncomfortable. And then when my mom's side of the family always, you know, looked at it like, hold on, you messing with a black guy, like type shit, you know what I mean? And now that side of the family is just like, uh. So like, you know, I got a grandmother that I only seen like probably four times, five times everywhere in my life. I got cousins that I've probably only seen about three times, four times in my life. And that's on the white side. On both sides. Really? Yes, on both sides. So those stigmas, like what she said, she can't see herself bringing home, you know, a white guy or, you know, something other than what your color is because it's gonna be like, hold on, are you going to their house and they can't cook tofu? Yeah. You know what I mean? Yo girl, bring that bunk ass potato salad. What raises this shit? But what can I say though, like she liked that old love, right? And I want to get back to that. And I mean, you know, love is, you know, love is love and I've grew up, you know, with the last name, true love. So I've always had this thing about me where it's like, man, I got to find true love because if I got to get this last name away and when that girl get that last name, she gonna feel like, damn, God really blessed me with true love. True love. So it's just gonna be so, it's kind of, you know, it's deep. Yeah, it's deep. I hear you, man. Yeah, man. But until then. Yeah, man. It make love sound pee. Yes, that me? Because pee is love, yeah. I know how to be in love, but I know how to do me too. Yeah. I always remind you, niggas. I know how to love your ass and I know how to be me. All I got to do is go outside, start replying to a few films. TVM's. Mm-hmm. It's on. That's why I always remind everybody, everybody is 1DM from losing a bitch. That's all right, so. All I take is 1DM. All I take is 1DM. Yo girl, go. Like I was just telling my manager, somebody, it was a post that's my partner posted. She's like one of my OG partners, like married and all the shit. And she posted like, damn, what the posts say? Be careful or be my piece. You already not the man I really want. And her caption was like, wait till you get married. It seemed like all the niggas of your dreams start coming for you. That's why Eric Abadou made that song, Next Lifetime. I guess I'll see you next lifetime. In the next lifetime and knock your ass. Not for real. But it's like, I would never leave my dude for another dude. It's like, you ain't gonna take care of me like he take care of me. Like my man take good care of me. You know what I'm saying? What about if your man run out of chicken or whatever some happen. But it ain't about materialistic stuff with me. So we don't get it back. We don't get it back. We don't get it back. Not my tears. Yeah, we ain't go back to the malls. Get on your paper, Steve. Not even that. Cause I done lost it all and went and got it back before. Like every time I went to jail, I lost everything. I'm talking about car, apartments, just hell of a shit that I done took losses on. Money, bailing myself out, paying for lawyers. I done have to spend all my money. Like I gotta beat this cake. That's why nigga learn a little bit just for show. Cause you can lose and bounce back with a little bit. And it's like now I'm in a position where my nigga code go invest in some merch and boom. You invest in that merch, you spend 10, you make 30. Just cause my friends is super crazy around me. They go buy that shit. You know what I'm saying? So I feel like now it's to the point I have outlets to where everybody around me can make a little bit of money. That's gang. Speaking of clothing, y'all go on 2x.crazy.shop and buy my son a sweater, man. I told them I'd go ahead and do it. Okay, I go crazy, man. I need one, yeah. Hell yeah. For sure, man. Shorty, man. Shout out to my son, man. Hey, man, y'all go check out, since we promote merch too, y'all go check out Do Too Much ENT, standme.com, man. I just dropped some Sam Oakland hoodies yesterday at me cause we sharing the words at this point. The words went from Oakland to San Francisco. I know the city said they had it first, but whatever, we sharing the warriors. Yeah, we sharing them. So San Oakland is the Bay Bridge. I mean, what? Cause we sharing that water. The longest niggas ain't rooting for Lakers and all that, man. Right, yeah. I don't think he's... I'm the Oakland Warriors, you understand me? San Francisco and Oakland, we sharing the warriors, man. So go get them San Oakland hoodies. You understand me if you're supporting this movement with the Bay Area. You understand me here playing shit. Little Kayla, what you gotta tell them before you wrap it up, ay? You don't know, now you know. Here, little Kayla, what's up? Oh, whoa, stop playing. That's how you know you go crazy when niggas be fans of you. You got niggas, little Kayla, what's up? Nah, it'd be surprising for sure, but... You got grown ass street niggas. It'd be hard, man. Come on, 11-11. Yeah. Yeah, it definitely is hard one when they make me feel more confident about myself. Okay. Make them pockets hurt. I got the city. Hey, look. You said it at the whole time, like, nigga, not mine though. Oh, whoa, whoa, whoa. You know what? One of the first things my nigga told me, he said, you can't make my pockets hurt because I got hella that shit. Oh, that's a boy's shit. Nah, you can still get it, man. You got that shit. You got that shit. You got that shit. Start pointing that through Roy's race trucks. He got one though. I know that, boy. I'm saying that you can keep asking for shit. You still have to stop eventually. All right. Yeah, like, hold on. All right. I need this private jet. And then he like, all right, you load it, man. Yeah. We can get on Delta first class. No, for real. But that's some players shit to say, though. I like that. Yeah, shout out to my player partner, man. Yeah, I don't even want to know. I don't even want people to know. I know you niggas, man. You talking about nigga, you politicking like, nigga, I love everybody. No, for real. Yeah, that's me too. I'm a peaceful person. Yeah, we love everybody. Black power. Yeah, yes, that me. My Jamaican shit, one love. Yeah, you feel me? This what this about, man. You understand me? I know you've been on a media run. Everybody been interviewing you, asking these same-ass questions. You got to fight these things. This was a good one, though. I enjoyed this one. It's the Cali kickback, man. We just come pop shit, you understand me? When we pop it, we don't stop it. Shout out to my nigga, Mr. Phab. I got that one from Phab. All right, go on. When we pop it, we don't stop it, man. You know, so, yeah, this thug mansion. You understand me? Y'all tap in, man. Key support in the show, man. Subscribe to the channel, man. To the YouTube. Shout out 85, media, man. We out here, we mobbing, man. From the beta to LA to the A. Yes, that me, yes, lord. Cali kickback, we gone. Come on, man.