 So my dad ended up taking me to the studio. I couldn't even reach the mic. We had phone books, I said we'd talk to phone books. I couldn't get the notes right, so my daddy had to lay a dummy track and I had to listen to it like four or five times. And then my dad was like, can you do it now? Yeah. Bar baby. Pay no attention to that. Bar baby. We on boss talk one on one, one on one. Here we go on talk. When you and Big Mo did that song, how did it, for you, you were young, but how did it, how did it happen in your eyesight? So I was six when it, when we actually recorded the song and D-Wreck and Note D actually called my dad. I was told that they were trying to use a sample. Couldn't find a sample. So my dad ended up taking me to the studio. I couldn't even reach the mic. We had phone books, I said on top of the phone books. I couldn't get the notes right, so my daddy had to lay a dummy track and I had to listen to it like four or five times. And then my dad was like, can you do it now? Yeah. Bar baby. And they was like, yeah, that's it, baby girl, that's it. I didn't really pay no attention. I got down, got my Barbies when sat in the studio while they did whatever they did. When it hit was when I went home and I don't know how they did this so fast compared to now how you got to get everything mixed in master before you even. I got home, getting ready to get in the bed, go to school, and my daddy caught on the radio and he said, listen, you got this brand new joint by your very own big mom, Barbabie. Future and Ron, that's expensive. It's the Barbabie. I'm like, I'm like, I'm like, quick, yo. That quick, that's quick. And I'm just trying to figure out like, how did they, now knowing what I know, like it's processing steps where they just show you how much power they had back then and how the times were and put this on the bed. Put that on there and get it done. I got time listening to the song too. It got to a point where when we were getting the car to go to school and I'd hear that, my granny, what did you do to her? I don't want to hear it. Did your friends know it was you? No, because I went to a private school. Okay. So I went to a Christian private school. So it. Them kids didn't know nothing. They didn't know, they don't listen to that type of music. It was going by y'all over there. They was trying to straight listen to whatever they were being told in that school. That's it. And when I made the transition in third grade to go to public school, some of the kids knew. Yeah. But they didn't know it was me and my daddy had instilled to me, don't tell nobody that she keep it quiet. Wow. This is a public school. Privacy. You don't know how these people are. Oh, you're talking private to public. Yeah. And then I went to middle school, Beverly Hills Intermediate and it's one guy named Ray Gonzalez. I want to play a game of Google. Is that Ray? We gonna Google our names. I wasn't thinking, I was like, We got free to do that. We got free period. You want to Google people's names, Google. You didn't even know what would pop up? We Googled everybody's name, got to mine, probably third to last and it popped up. I know to spend said bar babies, but I was like, oh, I'm getting in trouble. I'm in trouble. What did they say when they seen it? What did your friend say? I didn't have a cell phone. I wasn't allowed to have a cell phone in school. My daddy said the only person you need to call was me and if you need to call me, go to the principal's office. They got their razors, right? And they texting people and I'm like, what are y'all doing? Ray was like, why you didn't tell us? My daddy told me not to tell y'all. I get called down to the office. Oh, you got called to the office for this? I got called down to the office. The word spread that quickly. It spread quick enough to get to my daddy's phone. I got called down to the office. I get down there and my dad and my grandmother and my daddy looking at me like. He was about, what, 10, 11, 12? I was about 11 and 12. He looking like, what did I tell you? It's not that hard to keep your mouth shut. I'm trying to explain to him, it's not my fault it was Ray and he like, who was Ray? He Googled it. And then my grandmother was like, technology. You can't stop that, Brian. Right, yeah. So he was like, we're gonna have to have a talk with the teachers. They had to talk with the teachers. Kids treated me okay. I got a little special treatment, you know. But for the most part, kids, they treated me fine. And when I got to high school, it was a whole different ball game. When I got to high school. He was in high school with me. Oh, this is true. Dad, nigga, high school, sweetheart. This nigga, man, out of nowhere. Did he ignore you? Out of nowhere. No, he was my crush. She had a girlfriend, so. He was my crush. Oh, that nigga Cheetah. Okay. I was nerdy. Like I had the glasses and then I transitioned into contacts my junior year and all that stuff. So when I would see him, it was kind of like, you know, to my friends, nigga, he got a girl. But what I would say was, junior year, senior year, people really started finding out. You said that's that girl that was on the big mode. How did they react? What did they do? High school was a trip. I went from nobody to somebody. It was cool with everybody. You had the people that didn't like me. I didn't really care. You had the ones that was the non-believers, didn't really carry you there. Then you had the ones that were in the music industry that knew, that recorded at my daddy's studio. It was like, nah, you good. We got you nowhere. Then you had just the ones that wanted to just say, hey, I sat with her or I took a picture with her. But I was cool with everybody. I didn't have any problems. I wasn't a problem child because my daddy didn't have a problem coming up to the school. My daddy didn't either. But in high school, it was just kind of like, you sing bar baby. They treated me like a celebrity, but it was kind of like, oh, she cool. Yvonetta, yeah, she cool. She sing too. I wanted talent shows. Wow. So I mean, they would show mad, like North Shore show mad love on talent shows. I get up there and do my little, you know, I sing Chaka Khan. Hey. So I get up there. To the fire. You know, they rock with me. The teachers rock with me. But high school was okay. Middle school just kind of scared me because I didn't know what was going to happen. I didn't know if I was going to get in trouble about Ronnie. Sorry, daddy, call you by your first name. Let me ask you so. So when Big Mo died, how was that? How was, and well, let's not talk about that. Let's talk about you getting older and him still, you know, you and him having that relationship. What was that like? I would get calls. They kept in touch with my grandmother a lot. So I would get calls making sure that those grades never dropped. You know, if your grades drop, you're going to have a problem with all of us. And that just wasn't from bold. That was from all of them. Like all of them. Like who? Uncle Screw. Well, Uncle Screw used to pop up at my elementary sometimes. He was my cousin's godfather. So he was family too. And he wants these money, you better keep them grades above average. I'm letting you slide with the A minus but baby girl education is key. Okay, Uncle Screw, even grades drop. You can't come to the house with no more. You can't be doing none of that no more until you get your grades. And it was the same thing with all of them. My Uncle Derek was the same way. CEO of Rec Shop. Rec Shop. Them boys went home. Yeah. Progress report to report cards was mandatory. Wow. Did you get paid? I wanted to keep ID. As I'm about to say, did you get paid for that report card? I'm still paying to this day. They let me slide with B minuses. But if it was a C on there, we had a C talking. Like sometimes I couldn't go to the studio but until I brought it up.