 I hate to say that and put it out there like that, but you know, I'm kind of the... So when the movies don't have the budget to pay a Mari Hartwig and Michael J. White, they come get me. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101, 101. Yeah, we gonna talk. So I saw where you posted once. You were behind the camera, you were doing some filming like a movie. Yes. What is that movie and when is it coming out? Oh yeah, I did a movie called Dating COVID. We did that in Atlanta and it co-stars as myself, Jasmine Lewis, Travis Cure from the Oval, Jasmine Lewis from Barbershop franchise. Lisa Wu, right? Yeah, Lisa Wu, Rashan Ali, so you know, it's some black... How did you get that, bro? Man, I know a little bit of everybody, you know what I'm saying? You know, I'm kind of the... You know, I hate to say that and put it out there like that, but you know, I'm kind of the... So when the movies don't have the budget to pay a Mari Hartwig and Michael J. White, they come get me. You the backup? So yeah, so I'm the low budget, you know, I hate to say that for myself, but you understand. No, that's wrong. But don't worry, for every role you get, your price get a little bit high. Yeah, for sure, for sure. But you know, I've acted for many years, people don't know that, but yeah, it's a, I would say it's a romantic comedy. Well, now it's a dramedy, really. But I play the toxic ex-husband really well. You know? Really? Yeah, yeah. Coming there mad and all of that? Oh yeah, I'm toxic, I'm abusive, I'm controlling, I'm all of that shit, you know what I'm saying? So I play that well. Is there any genre of movies that you have not mastered or cannot do? I know you, can you do the comedy very well? I can, yeah, I can. Action, of course. Of course. Drama. Yeah, I done the drama, I cried in this movie. I cried on Q, yeah. He been crying a lot lately, he was pretty happy. What did you think about? What did you think about to get yourself to cry? I can tell you that, it's funny, cause Fiti did the same thing on Howard Stern, and he's correct. So I took acting classes years ago, my acting coach was Larry B. Scott. He's the black dude that was in Revenge of the Nerds. Oh, okay. And so what he teaches is like the, what they call the Meisner technique. And some people say it's antiquated in Hollywood, but basically where you learn to catalog your emotions. So instead of being in the, you're in the moment, right? But you already kind of have in your mind what's going to trigger what? You know what I'm saying? And then the words are the words, right? So it was easy. Like I knew how to open up that door, I thought about my mother, right? You know, I was a mama's boy and my mother died in 2010. So that's always something that's there, but as time goes on, you learn how to suppress it. You know what I'm saying? So, you know, when I knew what was going, what we were shooting, even though it had nothing to do with that, right? But that's how I opened the door to them emotions. But do they ever ask like, okay, a scene comes up and you don't just need to shed one tear, you need to boo who cry. Oh yeah. Do they say that? No, no, no, no, no. I mean, you know- And I'm wondering, you think you see some films where they might shed one tear and in my mind, I'm like, oh, somebody gave them an eye drop, put it in there. It depends on the moment and what's being filmed. You know what I'm saying? I mean, because when you're doing a movie, it's real. You know what I mean? So you know how you gonna cry. I mean, if he say something that hurts your feelings, you know, you as a couple, I mean, you may drop a tear too, but you ain't gonna just- No, I'm gonna get mad first and then drop a tear in the room. But yeah, but you're not gonna- Look at him. He's like, hold up. You supposed to boo who? Man, you supposed to cry and go on. High five. I ain't trying to start no tears. So, you know, you ain't gonna just boo who. So it depends on what it calls for. You know what I mean?