 It's a unique hustle, big shit. Big shit, big shit. It's a unique hustle, big shit. Big shit, big shit. Name another podcast like this. We're gonna bring it to the table, boss talk. Check it, check it, check it. This is unique hustle. This is your boy, your CEO. And I'm here with the lovely amazing, outstanding Mr. Mica. What's going on? Not even on my day, I'll go on. Say man, these guys right here, man, pulled up on us, man. The radio station in the building, man. Check it, man. These boys serious, man. They hear a man. In the building. These young Perions in the building, man. What's going on? Hey, bless this man. Appreciate it. I love the intro, bruh. What's the vibe? I was like, okay, we still have the intro. Yeah, y'all do this every day, nigga. I ain't gonna lie, but last time, I think the first time J. Cruz came, I had just opened this thing up. I started sparring with that nigga right here. Yeah, nigga. What you got? Jay-Z tatted on your own, nigga? Oh, man. I get him. He's like, no, don't do that, man. That's how he's talking. No, I just, I was just, you know, just playing, and I did the same thing, it would be local. It's just like, okay, you know, I love to talk, so it don't really matter to me. You know what I'm saying? I can go. Like, I don't care who it is. So at the end of the day, man, it was dope to even get them into our presence, too. And we've been working our way through the radio, where a shot out to my boy, man, Spaceboy Fresh. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? Like, you guys, man, you know, you guys are still doing the radio thing. How did you get into it, actually? Either one of y'all can go down there or whatever, it don't matter. So really, man, the radio station found me in the strip club. Like I was one of the first, the strip club DJs back in 2017. They found me there, and they broadcasted every weekend, and I had got the opportunity to DJ in the strip club on the weekends. I was at a little hole in the wall club that was Cabaret North, you know what I'm saying? Y'all may know something about that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Y'all knew we were wicked out there. Yeah, man. It was crazy. So I was there. I graduated college in 2014, and yeah, man, my first club was at Cabaret North. Shout out to my guy DJ Chubb, both of the Chubbs, because they didn't want to link me in, and they got me in, and them some OGs in the game, and they gave me the game, and I started working my way up, and finally got a chance to work on the weekends, and the radio station broadcasted every weekend on Saturdays. So once they saw me, they was like, who's this new little guy in the club, man? We got to get him on at the station. So that's how I got on the radio. They say he had a real turntable, too. Yeah, I had. Big toe turntables in the club. They're like, who is this? What about a two piece? Yeah, man, I'm really from St. Louis. So St. Louis, I was with the college in Grammar, and I was pretty much the title of the mascot. You feel me? So coming, and I was the network and staying for a class a weekend, seeing you. So that's how I really kind of got in. I just put my foot in the door. Like, hey, I'm going to be graduating soon. I'm trying to come get a job. I was talking to 104 at the time, and then I talked to 979 at the same time. So then, boom, I had some recommendations that got me in. I told them I hit them with an email. Like, I'm on my way to Dallas. What do I got to do? She said, let me know when you get here. Boom. I came out here January 14th. I was at a 2014. So I've done her eight years. So four years there, four years at the beat. You know what I'm saying? So just got speed, man. Came out on the street team, working my way up. You know what I'm saying? Like going to the spots with Jay, Cadetty. You know what I'm saying? They not show up. I've been hosting the hyping, my whole life type thing. You feel me? So then, boom, I just kept networking. And then next thing you know, I got on earth. The same time Mike Brown got killed, St. Louis, like Ferguson. You feel me? So like Northside, North County, like grinding. You feel me? Boom, she kept grinding. Then next thing I got on earth, signed my paperwork. Then I did a song, slide in a challenge. Then next thing you know, the beat. Hit me with a phone call. Like at the Lancaster Band, played it. When I performed, did what I did. I got a phone call saying, can I sit down and talk? And that was four years ago. You know what I'm saying? I've been sitting down talking ever since. Wow. Kimberly, you said you were the mascot? Yeah. Gremlin. Man, wasn't that hot? Get paid for it, though. So I had to work with it. I always want them like, I know them suits be hot. I ain't, you know, that's one of my little jokes I use. You know, certain niggas be around me just to mascot. You know what I'm saying? They don't get to really just run down the field seriously. That's real. But I need them because without them I can't have a good time. There you go. Y'all ain't ready, man. Y'all got it, man. Y'all got it, got it. Let's stop playing with them. So, man, like, like, how is the radio world today? Versus, you know, used to, in order, you know, for artists to be seen or whatever they wanted to be heard on the radio. But I know it's not as extensive as it used to be. How much impact do you feel like the radio gives today's, you know? And I know you guys are going to be a little biased, but still give me your spiel on it. Just let me know. Well, I feel like, you know what I'm saying? Like, and this is just real talk, you know what I'm saying? The radio is pretty much, it stamps you as a superstar back in the day. Like, you didn't have social media, you know what I'm saying? To know you was a superstar, you heard your song on the radio. Now you got TikToks, you got different ways you can go viral and be seen. But all the radio do is really stamps that you are a superstar, that you have proven that your song and your single has gotten these amount of views and it's changing lives and it's doing X, Y, and Z. And, you know what I'm saying? That's why I feel like people will say we don't need radio now because we got different outlets to be heard. It's not just with the radio, you know what I'm saying? But that's still like the Mecca. That's still where labels and they're still the dream, the American dream is to have my song played and heard on the radio throughout the world. And the catch is we in Dallas, we're in the top four of the nation, like the top four Metroplex of a million people. You feel me? So the radio? What's the three? You got New York, you know what I'm saying? You feel me? You want to take it over to the West Coast, Cali? California, Philadelphia, Chicago. Even though Houston is big. I just wanted to ask you cause, what about Houston? We bigger than Houston because we got people on top of us, left, right, and then of course Houston under us. So you feel like y'all bigger than Houston? No, no, no, no. Yeah, okay. Yeah, this ain't one of America Brank's situations. We're going to Texas next weekend for the Texas Green Picnic, you know what I'm saying? Go put on. Shout out to the bros. Man. So you basically, you know, you hear a song, you like the song. Old Boy Prince shouted y'all out because he said, you guys really ride for the unplayed music. How do you play their music if they, you know, if it's not a part of the spines? How do you aggressively get, or do you have that ability to play a new artist's music if you like it? The internet is the truth. If Lil Wayne Daughter say you the truth, and I love y'all videos and she repost you, that's content and that's like putting on for Texas. And that's what 97.9 about, you know what I'm saying? As far as putting in for the community. And we like the faces of the community. So that's community dancing too. If the whole community doing this dance right here, hold on a minute, you gotta hit it one time. You gotta do it. You didn't see what I did in it? Yeah. I messed that whole up, didn't you? We got you. C4S. But the main thing is it's like, I think we're a new generation and we're a new face. And so we came up here and what the radio stations didn't do and wouldn't do. And man, like, I feel like this is my calling. You know, some people got different reasons, you know what I'm saying, to be in radio. So I feel like this was my calling was to always help and try to use my platform to help people. So when we see people like C4S that's putting in the work that's doing the numbers, that helps us be able to go and fight for them to our PD to where I don't know back then, they don't know if people was really fighting for people, if people just didn't see the talent. But like, I know for us, you know, we see the talent, we out here, we seeing the work, and if we can do what we can do, we're gonna try to help you, you know what I'm saying? It ain't got nothing to do with no time. Because you've met people who've been doing this and doing what you're doing before you, right? Right. So have they ever said like, man, we couldn't do that when it was our time, back in the days. You didn't hear them stories? Not so much. I heard they used to make a lot of money back in the day. Yeah, that's what I heard. So you're not making a lot of money now? We do all the muscle, all the heart. We want to see the city win. You feel me? Like, I knew three before we had to change. You know what I'm saying? Like, I've been around her enough to see, oh, that's all Dallas gotta do, be the next ATL. That's all we gotta do is just come together, just a little bit. Pat Pym got the juice right now. You know what I'm saying? He been had the juice. He need more credit. B-King, he the man. But Dallas dancers made B-King's song go crazy on TikTok, and that's when Drake saw it. And that's when Drake put B-King on, and life changed. Right. So how do you think Dallas can come together and make Dallas great? Because that's one thing we've been wondering. We've been like, who can really, because we always feel like it needs one person, or a group of people who can really merge the city together. Right. It's the structure. That's really, we got the talent. It's the structure, you know what I'm saying? Like, Atlanta, they have a structure. They know like, everyone knows what to do and how to do it, you know what I'm saying? And Dallas, what I see coming up, you got a lot of people that, you know, that's either to themselves. You got a lot of people that feel like, you know, they may be Hollywood, that they ain't got to do certain things. You got a lot of people that, oh, I don't rock with this person, so I'm not going to go rock with that person, you know what I'm saying? It's like a lot of, it's a lot of negative in Dallas. But that needs to go. Exactly, you know what I'm saying? And that's why it's like, we the new schools, so we coming into it and we seeing it, and we just trying to do what we can do to show that new face and show that like, we not really with that, you know what I'm saying? And we trying to put this structure, help put this structure together, you know what I'm saying? It's like if they see you messing with somebody, they don't want to mess with you, because they don't mess with that person. But I see changing slowly, but surely, where people like, well, they mess with both of us and they sort of cool, so, you know, it's okay, as long as you don't put them in that situation where that person is around when they're around and stuff like that, so. Right, exactly, exactly. David Bennett just left, like last week, you know what I'm saying, physically, he, was y'all out there? No, we didn't get the invitation, so. Y'all got the next one, y'all got the next one, so I went on with it. I want to be honest with you, you know, we go where we're wanted, you know what I'm saying? Whoever want us, we want them, if you don't want us, we definitely don't want you, so. If you call, we come in, if it's loved, then cause a lot of times, we just not linked. We don't know, exactly. That's how it is, but you guys definitely are doing what you're supposed to do, you know? I really don't just want to be hanging around nobody. I want a person to come on this platform, and I know you gotta be relationships, but damn, I mean, you see us out here, nigga. Whoever that nigga might be. So let me ask you, I'm the big three, cause I saw you with Ice Cube. Yes, ma'am. So how was that? Like, it's major, you know what I'm saying? Like, again, Dallas is just that city who show love, and it's like three parts of Dallas, you know what I'm saying? Not to get off topic, but it's like, you got the street Dallas, then you got the internet Dallas, then you got like the deep Elm side, you know what I'm saying? So it's really more than that, you know what I'm saying? But it just, it's a big thing, cause Ice Cube, y'all always got love for the city. And for you to be here for this last little seven weeks, you know what I'm saying? It's nothing but grace, you know what I'm saying? Shaq live here. I was about to say that Shaq live here. So a lot of people come into Dallas. A lot of businesses are moving to Dallas. So it's like Dallas, people are getting on to realize that Dallas is the next city. Because even like, we've been interviewing like a lot of entertainers, and they say that to get really big, you have to have to come through Dallas. Got to. To get exposure. Like I said, it's the number five market. Right. And it's a gift and a curse, because it's like, we've been in number five market, it's a lot harder to get on in Dallas because we're competing with the Los Angeles, the Philadelphia's, you know what I'm saying? Atlanta's like number seven or eight, you know what I'm saying? They're not even, so they can get away with a plan on one local artist. They may be like, they may be like, I don't know, I gotta check. They may be six, six. They have too far off one of those, you know what I'm saying? But yeah, I think DFW, they count the whole Dallas, Fort Worth, you know, Eulis. Waco. Waco. We almost pushed out to. But a lot of local artists always say that in order for them to get recognition, pretty sure they get more love outside the city than they get in the city. Why is that? That's everywhere. That's everywhere. That's like, that's really everywhere. That's everyone's problem. And it's almost one of those things where it's like, I go outside the city, I get more love. It convinces where you're home at that, oh, he really hot, you know what I'm saying? I feel like we tend to, oh, he from the city. It's one of things like people ain't gonna believe until you make it. But a lot of people keep comparing their city. I'm not gonna say just Dallas though, because I know a lot of other cities who do the same thing. They compare their cities to Atlanta because they feel like Atlanta support their own. What? Compared to every other city. No, that's not what Mr. Hitta said. It's not, it looks can be deceiving. Uh huh. Like, you know, it's not exactly what you might think. You know what I mean? They have their issues as well. Exactly. But at the end of the day, they just keep them within or something like that he said. Right, like the system, again, they have a system and musically and they got the labels there. They got, there's a music mecca, you know what I'm saying? Dallas is not a music city. This is a sports city. This is a money-making city, you know what I'm saying? To where culturally Atlanta is music, you know what I'm saying? So they have a lot more connections and they got a lot more structure to get things in place. Like we don't have a major record label here in Dallas that can help put on. We don't have a lot of music elements here in Dallas. So that's why they say if you make it out of Dallas, you can make it anywhere because it's tough coming out of this big, you know what I'm saying? Well, it's because of what you just said. You gotta have some labels. You gotta have some people that, even if it is, I mean, you got my boy, Radio Raheem. You got some people here. That was Saturday. That was Saturday. That's my brother. And Sean Conn just started his label. Yeah, you got Sean Conn. You got some people that's really trying to develop some things that really can move some things around in the city. We just gotta, you know, we just gotta... Support each other. Support each other. I think it's gonna happen. I mean, you just got a lot of people, you got a big extra plug running around this thing, making it all noise. All the noise. So when you started looking at the people that are tapped in, you know, shout out to Erica Banks, you know that? Whether you wanna, whether she love Dallas or not. You know what I'm saying? She took us to the Lush on record, man. She off the clock on record, you know what I'm saying? You feel me? Yeah, we had to go about that. What did y'all say to her? We said, I said, where is your A&R at? Where is your A&R at? What did she say? What did she say? She like, you know what I'm saying? It's like, what did she say when y'all asked her about it? She said, I'm gonna say it. She said, let's be real. We don't talk about that. We'll talk, we'll talk. She said, like, she love Dallas, you know what I'm saying? She's just being real, you know what I'm saying? And sometimes when you're young and you coming up in the game and you don't have, when you're a major star at her level, it came fast, you know what I'm saying? So not realizing, like, hey, you gotta know how to play the internet. You gotta know how to answer certain questions. Sometimes you can't be too real and just say the first thing to come to your mind. You gotta sit and understand, like you got a whole city behind you. So when you say things like, hey. And she didn't realize her microphone now. Like she is perceived as the queen of, like the princess of Dallas, you know what I'm saying? On the rap side, you know what I'm saying? To make it that far to accomplish what she's accomplished. You know what I'm saying? With the hollyberry and all that. So she didn't realize that. But when we sat there, you know what I'm saying? Took the gloves off, you know, from eating the crab legs, you know what I'm saying? Like sis, you feel me? She's like, oh, okay. It was like one of them. You right? She got at me one day about something that was said on here. You gotta realize I picked her out early, man. Like I always tell that story, but I'm gonna pass by that. But she hit me up because somebody came over here and said something about it. But at the end of the day, you know, that's the part of this, man. You know, I can't control. You know, once you say something like that, these other people gonna try them in. And you know, at the end of the day is love. You know, we definitely love machines over here. And one thing we definitely try to do, if you come on this show and you say something about a situation because it's your opinion. And it's maybe you are in that situation. You were actually there. So it's your point of view. The other person can come on here and tell their side as well. Because that's what we want. We don't want anything that's said on our show to be one-sided. We always open our doors for the next person to come back and say, you know what, but this is mine. You'll see it back in full here in a minute. You ain't seen them over here. I know you ain't just seen them over here. Yeah, it's on, man, it's on. But at the end of the day, we hope it's all love. But we can't control what people say behind these mics. Nigga get his chest stuck out out there. Man, look. Yeah, nigga, what else? Boss talk, nigga. Boss talk, y'all got the cameras here. Bring it out of here, bring it out of here. I want to command job, like I've been saying, y'all get heavy and heavy on the internet. Everybody tapping on it. Calamore came through, and I was like, ah, there it is. That's my boy right there. Yeah, Calamore. I got to drop this interview, too. I ain't even dropped it yet. It's a lot to it, though. He got a lot of elements, man, that got, he been through a lot. I think a lot of times people don't realize people's story, their back stories, you know, like when you start talking about single parenthood and, you know, going to prison and all that stuff, it brings a lot out in a conversation. So I think that's something that we do a little bit more detail than like a radio station where we get to really sit here and talk to you about, like I could ask you, like, nigga, you know what I'm saying? You got any kids? Yeah, yes, sir. How many you got? I got one. Damn, man. Girl, I think I'm done, too. Low sperm count. What, are you done? I'll tell you. I got a low sperm count. No, I'll pull out a game of food. You see stuff like that? Yeah. This is like, then you start talking about it, you know what I'm saying? How many you got? I just had my first one. It's your first one. How old are you? How old are you? I'm 31. You almost didn't get it, huh? I tried to hold out till I was 33 to be honest. You don't want to be Jesus' age, you know what I'm saying? He purposely did it. Boy and girl. Girl, I got a little girl. Both of y'all are girls. The niggas can't push out no boys, but it's cool. I'm chillin'. Y'all don't go broke. It was karma. You know, girls be empty in that pocket that she fall. Yeah, you ain't lying. But let me ask you, both of you, the same question. Tell me something that happened to you back in the past somewhere down there that made you into the man that you are today. I like to hear people about their struggles and stuff like that because there are people who are watching the show that are going through something maybe similar or the same exact thing that you already been through when you overcame. And they might not see their outcome yet. You know what I mean? And they might turn to something like suicide or whatever. So anyhow, we can help somebody we try to. So start off with you. I would say when I was about, so yeah, I want to say when I was about six, my mom got kidnapped by this guy she was dating, you know what I'm saying? And man, I woke up, like I'm five, five or six years old. I wake up, I look at my mom's room. I see the glass broken and blood all over the ground. And I'm just screaming out for my mom. Like the door is wide open. And so I'm just in the house alone. And man, somehow my mom was gone for like two days. And somehow she ended up getting away. I'm at a grocery store. She slid somebody a letter. Like, hey, this guy is kidding at me. Whoop-dee-whop-dee-whoop, call the police, X, Y, and Z. So once I thought I would have lost my mom, you know what I'm saying? Like I wouldn't have grew up without my mom. And we were a single parent, you know what I'm saying? So it was just like that brought it out of me to be like, you know, I got to get it. I got to make it. I can't even be regular. Like this, he could have came and killed the family. You know what I'm saying? It was just me and my mom. And luckily she's still here today. But that pushed my drive to be like, man, I got to conquer. I can conquer anything. We can get past anything. We can boost my drive to go out and really make some of myself. You know what I'm saying? What was your father? Huh? What was your father? Uh, I don't know. You never met him? I didn't meet my father till I was 19, in college. 19? Yeah. He just decided to show up. You know, he must have thought you were going to get a scholarship. He was going to go home or something. What is nigga doing? No, man. He's a good dude though. You know what I'm saying? What was he at? He's in Louisiana. I mean he said, where are you being? I'm sure you asked him that question. He was in the army overseas. You know what I'm saying? He just got back like, I want to say like five years ago, he's been back in the States, but from that time on, he had a lot of kids, bro. It's like, it's like non of us. A rolling stone. Yeah, so he has a lot of kids, bro. So he went to the army and was up, been overseas like for the longest, but once we started tapping in, it was all love. And you know, I understood, you know, being a young man, you wild, you going, you hitting different type of women. Um, and life happens. Literally. Did your mom know the person who kidnapped her? Oh, yeah. She was dating him. Yeah. So she didn't see the signs and all of that stuff? Man, she did. You know what I'm saying? Like, you know, my mom just grew up. I don't know. It was just bad choices in man. You know what I'm saying? I see my mom get beat up a lot. You know what I'm saying? About different individuals. So it was just one of those things to where we didn't know it was going to lead to that. How did that affect your relationships as you got older? I know I never wanted to see that growing up. So I know the women I chose or who I was with. I just knew, like, I stay away from toxic women. Stay, you know what I'm saying? Be, you don't need to put yourself in no situation to go that route. And I never want to see that. And I can't respect a dude or anything that does that because I grew up seeing that and, you know, just being terrified and not being able to do nothing about it, you know what I'm saying? At a young age. So yeah, that definitely hard in my heart to, man. I feel like go out, change my life and get to it. And you? Man, yeah, I'm all right. He's skilled. He's skilled. He's skilled. That nigga went hard, didn't he? You can't, you know what I'm saying? Shut it down. You're the weak wall of that story, nigga. You ain't got nothing for us, do you? Yeah, my daddy used to, my daddy, he didn't come back from the store one day. Yeah, nigga. What you got? It was out there in the cold. Nah, man, my pop's in heaven, man. I just been crying right now. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So he used to be here. For real, there we go. They know each other. Yeah, yeah, yeah. My mom, too. All of them up there. Man, I know. At the end of the day, you know, but that's a situation in itself. How old was you when you lost your father? I'm 32, they have it like 20, 27, 26. Yeah. You feel me? Yeah. I became a dad, lost my dad in the same eight months. Yeah, see, all this stuff matters, man. But you least got to spend that time with him, right? Yeah, that's the dope part. Yeah, man, so having that in mind, I know he ain't get that at all. That's right. At all, yeah. I got a brother locked down right now, you know what I'm saying? And another brother. So your brother on lock? Yeah, on lock, he just came home. He can't, look crazy, think about it. You know what I'm saying? And this is, I don't even know. Came home and flipped that guy. Yeah, came home, did what he's supposed to do. And we came home like pandemic hit, you know what I'm saying? Like 2020 when everybody had to go in the house, you know what I'm saying? Put the gloves on and go in the store with the man. He came home like the weekend of the whole country shutting down. So it been gone four years, come home. And it's like, damn, I can't even get outside, everybody. When I went in, everybody, you can't wear no mask, you know, no gloves. Not everybody wearing them. Man, don't feel bad, man. You know, my partner, he didn't even make it from home. He messed up and was right back in there before he could even make it to the house. Them niggas be, it's hard out here sometimes. Yeah, for sure. Especially when you're trying to figure it all out again. How long was he gone the first time? Four years. Okay. You know what I'm saying? But I'm like the only child who's like raising a household, the same mom, same dad. But they got divorced like she was fifth grade. So I was the only son. You know, all seven kids really get the whole fatherhood treatment. You feel me? So yeah, so now when it's time to do, you know what I'm saying? I'm a junior, same name and everything, you feel me? So, but he always told me, man, I don't even want to say he's on the world. Go on and say it, go on and say it. But like St. Louis and East St. Louis, like we rock with St. Louis and East St. Louis, but bro, we don't really rock with East St. Louis like that. But you know, shout out to Chingin. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You don't know what happened. Yeah, we rock with it. I had to. I don't know, I don't know what happened. Yeah, yeah, but we rock with Raw Reese, you know what I'm saying? We all had Nelly, but Chingin, Chingin was a little different than Nelly. I don't know, there's a lot of stuff out there on these media waves, man. I don't know if it's true. I don't know, you know something? Yeah, that's what I thought. Shout out to that boy, Chingin, man. Really, really, man. Wow. Thank you, I don't know what the hell you're doing, though. St. Louis, man, what's the food that, y'all like that barbecue up there, too? Tiny, that's the best barbecue in the world. Yeah, but you know that ain't that damn good, a lot of cap. Oh, man. Now you know what, I haven't had St. Louis's barbecue as long as we've been rockin', I ain't even, I ain't even been up to the truth. He tell me all the time, but I don't know, man. I haven't had some good texts as well. We came through there and we went fast, we didn't want to stop. Top three orders of all time, did or not. Any genre. Top three, yours first, number one. First, I'm gonna go Lula Chris. Number two. The top back. Yeah, all the time, did or not. Any genre. Any genre. Dang, go to him, go to him next, man. No, no, no, no, no. All right, I'm gonna get Lula, let me get Pop. Okay. And third, let me get Versatile. I'm gonna go Miss Elliott. Okay, cool. It's like Louis. Yeah, it was bad choice, go ahead. Damn, I mean. That's a verse, too. I gotta go, when I grew up on Lil Wayne, Jay-Z, and man, my third one would be like, I like, nah, J. Cole, I rocked with J. Cole. So you take J. Cole over Drake? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Really? Man, the early J. Cole, man, with the punchline, and whatever, come on. Who's your top three? I ain't tellin' ya. I ain't tellin' ya. That's my show, I'm not tellin' y'all nothin'. Yeah, this ain't the damn radio state. Y'all think y'all are 9 to 7, 9 to beat, man. Y'all not for the runnin' this right here, man. Y'all think y'all get on Boss Talk when I don't want to run my damn speakers, nigga? These my damn microphones. Y'all niggas came over here to thank y'all for the run, son. Niggas know y'all got all them damn people watchin' y'all every day. And what time y'all come on? Man, 3 to 7. 3 to 7. Y'all in that one play niggas' music. I already know. We the ones that do it. Okay, well, who is the newest, hottest artist right now? Niggas that they know. Big Tex, big Tex, and thing is? Big Tex. Big Tex. Okay. Big Tex, but like, Biggest thing is? And C4W, she feelin' real talk. They got the internet. Yeah, nigga, you just sayin' because they got you over here on my damn show. Niggas. But look, I'm like an old boy Prince, Fat Al. I been around Fat Al. Yeah, he told me that. He told me that. Yeah, so. He said up here and told me that because he had to go to Batby, y'all. He was like, he man, don't be like that, man. I know you be, let him come on, man. I say, who are these niggas, man? He say, man, these niggas is good. I say, man, I don't care, nigga. I don't know them niggas, man. That's what they say, you tell me. Say, I don't know these niggas, man. But at the end of the day, I just like to get y'all hell. That's what we need, man. We need something real in the city, man. I appreciate you guys, man. Make sure you guys really look out for those youngsters, man. Y'all got to put y'all in the position. Don't be fakin', be aggressive. Walk in that office and ask nigga, man. We need to play some of these local people music, something like that. Else I'm goin' over there and get my own part and interview people. Take the spot on interviews, man. Get the damn phone out. Quit being scary. Y'all need to deal with these people in a way that eventually it'll benefit y'all. That's why we wanted to come up in here just to shed light on things that people may not know about the radio or stuff that, what it really takes, you know what I'm sayin'? So, just information, because I feel like, again, with Dallas, it's the structure of people don't know what to do or how to do it, you know what I'm sayin'? Or what's important or what gets them and these people faces that we can vouch for them and go up the bat form, you know what I'm sayin'? So, and just how this whole thing works. You sound real professional, but let me just be real with you right, Quinn. A lot of niggas is talkin' about you radio folks. I brought West, according to what I'm hearin', the radio is what got him noticed and got him a deal. Say the radio stations were pushin' for him down there. Certain people is really talkin' about that and say that the radio station not helpin' people in Dallas like that. I'm just bein' real. Like they don't put the music out there. They don't pile out of these people name out and really go hard for these people. Y'all can change this city, man. Check this out. Don't let people out make it. 80% of the music I hear, people are like, hey, check this out. Let me hear this, play this. I'ma give you the ear, cause our report card is what you go off of. You know what I'm sayin'? My report card, I gave Ericka Banks a first interview. You know what I'm sayin'? I vouched for Mode 3 on a couple songs, you know what I'm sayin'? But everything, this is what I'm sendin', buckle what I'm sayin', everything don't transfer over to a radio type of song. Yes, it go hard. Yes, you hit. Yes, you gave me the dirty version and I'm a radio person and you still sendin' to me anyway without the EPK, you know what I'm sayin'? Okay. You're tryin' to get out of it, huh? You know, I ain't tryin' to get out of it, but. You know, nigga, what about the clean version? You get clean version. I'ma be listenin' to that nigga. It's gonna be hard. They gotta transfer over, you know what I'm sayin'? And first, broke a love on it, you know what I'm sayin'? I'm like, cause it took a little while for 3 to get back to that hook before Kevin Gates got on. So it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, I can just tell you right now, we gotta make sure that we understand the algorithm of where things are today. And we gotta try to figure it out in a way to where it makes sense for the masses. Our people need your help. Right. You know what I'm sayin'? So we got a lot of work to do, people watchin'. All right? So. Say man, when y'all number four in Houston is number what? Number six. Uh, L.D. Did you hear that? Houston number six, nigga. Yeah. It's love, man. It's love. Houston number six. Man, oh look, man. But now I appreciate you guys, man. Big love. Yes, sir. Anything else you got for us? I just had one more question. Damn. Up to us. Up to us. No, I wanted to know, have y'all ever had a celebrity come in that y'all were just like speechless? Yeah. They changed our lives. Changed our lives right now. That's why we the one that I never showed. Like when I started to say like, Who was that person? It was Juicy J. Juicy J. You feel me? Like, like, I talked to Juicy J like, like a parole officer. He don't, he like that rad jacuzzi. Hey, we made a song. He tell you, they all look ratchet. Juicy J. He like that. He like that shit. Five one, get behind one. We got about 5.8 million. He didn't niggas that big as it all the mic had. Yeah. I don't know about that nigga. First and best. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Three, six, five million, man. One time with Juicy, man. So he changed our life, huh? Show for show, man. Well, how he changed our life? Shoot, pretty much, man. We was at a club. You probably heard about it, but we got this club hot, club prom, you know what I'm saying? That was up not too long ago. So we used to be in a club and he'll be rocking it, man. So he used, I don't know if you ever heard him in a club, but his voice, where he can get people to move. Like this is like one of the top MCs I've ever heard, bro. And he used to say this thing where like, man, find one, get behind one. Like he was telling the girl, the fellas to find a chicken, get behind one. Cause it was a lot of dudes that be too cool, standing against the wall and stuff. So he'd be like, man, find one, get behind one, find one, get behind one. And I'll see this champ. And I'm as a DJ, like he's around dancing on stage and stuff, but as a DJ, I'm watching the crowd get in tune with what he's saying. So I'm like, bro, we got to turn this into a song. We in the club and we on the radio at the same time. Get the live broadcast. I never did talk on the radio with the live broadcast ever in my life. So I got through on some fire then he played that, that black youngster booty, the two, two, shake that booty. So I'm trying to entertain these people who in the room, 300 people. And it's like 3 million people listening on a Saturday night. So I'm like, find one, get behind one. But P, we need some booties in motion. We need some booties in motion. Find one, get behind one. So this went on for like nine months. And digital norms say when him and LaRawney went on tour, they would be using their check to start off they set. So shout out to LaRawney, shout out to digital norm. You know what I'm saying? But he's like, man, I need to make a beat off that. Y'all need to make that. And we can't play everything on the radio as we get, you know, some copyright infringement. So it just so happened, we have finally set still around November, you know what I'm saying? Two years ago and we made the beat from scratch. For nothing. You know what I'm saying? Fast forward, it was the beat in my file. I'm like, we call it BIM, booties in motion. We need some booties in motion. The next day, the next day that we made the beat, like we made the beat at my house, like in my room, me and my co-producer, shout out to my god, Loadies before Quacho. And but we made that beat in about 20 minutes. And like I said, the next day, the next day came in for promo. The song Neighbors, it just came out. He was on the promo with Travis Scott. I'm interviewing, we going, I know I'm wrapping up the interview 19 minutes later. And it's a whole interview on camera, film. And I'm like, man, I'm just trying to give him a rap or something for the content. You know what I'm saying? And I got to go on my email, find a beat. I can't go on YouTube copyright, but I got this beat in my email. I'm like, oh, man, let's play this. I played the beat. And he come on, he's like, hmm, he's like, what's this? I'm like, oh, this, it's called B.I.M. You know what I'm saying? We need some booties in motion. Yeah, we need some booty, buy one, get buy one, send it to him. He was like, oh, it's hard. I'm gonna get on there. He was about this length apart. He said, I'm gonna get on there. It's hard. I said, yeah. Ranch over, shook his hands, shake my hand. Like this. It was a, it was a, it was a, it was a, N-I-G-G-A type of like, shoot! We thought it was bullshit. Yeah, he said, yo, Tim. And he did it. About two days later. Two verses. Two verses, and a hook. And a hook. He did the whole song. Yeah, we went to LA, LAX, Florida, boom. Shot the video, came back. We had 5.8 million views right now, you know what I'm saying? Shout out. That's awesome. And I started not letting you niggas on my show. You're saying my job views niggas? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. I seen that, I said, wait a minute, niggas jabbing? Wait a minute. Yes. Niggas y'all got five. I didn't even know, niggas. I'm crazy over here with it. But I can't believe y'all, I like to messed up. You see how niggas just pushing niggas on me? And I'm finally getting blessed. And look, we dropped that album. And like this is helping out the city. And we just want to bring people aware of what we're doing and using our platform. So we just dropped the album in January. And our album consists of Dallas, local artists, and mainstream artists that we built relationships with. And we collabed them. So that's like our thing, what we doing. We taking artists and we making actual hits and songs with these local artists, you know what I'm saying? So that's our movement. That's just how we giving back to the city and just trying to make it work, you know what I'm saying? That's big. Y'all got Juicy J on that thing, something like that. Project Pat, we got Project Pat too. Yeah, we got Project Pat on it. Little Ronnie, Ericka Banks, part of the Pat long one. You know, them niggas the only one got an Oscar, man. Yeah. Y'all niggas special. Man, that's crazy. Juicy tell us all the time. Y'all special, bro. So what y'all doing to capitalize off of it, man? D-Turge the city. It's what we doing with DTC. It's the first album, you know what I'm saying? And we just really, we on a radio. So we can't really work it as artists. So that's the thing. We on a radio. So it's time now. Now we trying to find that way of being on a radio. I'm just trying to figure it out. I'm just trying to figure it out. Opportunity to miss you, nigga. You better try to, hey, man, listen, man. You don't miss our opportunity, nigga. Y'all crazy? Yeah, I'm so, man. Niggas want, nigga, this versus that. Figure it out. You better go making out the beat. For real. That's the place where it's everything. The place where it's everything. Hey, man, check it, man. Hey, man, thank y'all for coming on the show, man. So thank you, man. We love you, man. I think, hey, man, I appreciate y'all, man. Like I said, this ain't the last time. I'm gonna bring y'all in here to tell some old lies, you know what I'm saying? I ain't gonna do y'all like that. Y'all niggas like to do, yeah. Y'all done lied to me. I'm feeling looked at. So if it ain't got 5.8 million. 5.8, 5.8 on 5 months for a week straight. If it ain't 5.8 on 5 a week straight. Say it, man. Thank you, guys, man. This is another great segment of Boss Talk 101, what a boss is talking. Run the intro bag. Run the intro bag. That was hard, bruh. Love it, bruh. Love it, bruh. See, we're gonna be pushing something. Boss talk, yeah. You should hear the whole thing. It's so hard. Yeah, that's how I go down, man. Y'all get the hell out of here. That's how that your boy's a unicorn.