 Check it, check it, check it, it's a unique hustle, it's your boy, E.C.E.O. and I'm here with the lovely, amazing, official Mr. Maker, what's going on? None, none. You know my dad walk on. That is. She banged. Hey man, we up here in Las Vegas, Nevada man, and hey man, we got some of our favorite people on the set today, I done had a good time, hey, we did what we came to do. Man, hey man, we got a very, very special guest and she heard today we met her at our store, right when she came with the bike, supporting baby girl, her best half, AKA Denise Markham. What's going on? Hey, how are you guys? Man, I know already, you know, when we first met, I got the pictures. See, I got the visuals, I keep all my visuals and I was just happy to really link with you and shout out to my boy, Sage, you know what I'm saying, in the building, but at the end of the day, just love the bike, but want to get on into the details of what even made you get into the game, you know what I'm saying? So, I know she liked to try to start this thing off right. Okay. Yeah, before we get into all of that, I need to know where you were born, where you were raised, all the stuff you went through to get you to where you are today. Okay. I was born and raised, I'm from Raleigh, North Carolina, but I was born in Wilmington, North Carolina, my parents are from a really small town, my dad was from Wallace Rose Hill, so if y'all, Michael Jordan, y'all, y'all always think Wilmington. Easy from Wallace Rose Hill is where Michael Jordan is from, and my mother was from Cremor, North Carolina, so really small towns in North Carolina. Okay. And were you raised both with your mom and dad together? Nope. I was single parent. Other siblings were raised by my dad, with my mom and dad, but she was quite... She didn't want to let you go? She was quite the hell raiser. Oh. She held it down. Okay. So, were you involved in your dad's life at all? Yeah. Okay. Not as much, but yeah, he was there, he was present, but my mom, she held it down, she took care of four kids, sent us all to college. Wow. She was a real boss. Wow. Wow, that's a good thing, man. You got the right infrastructure, right? Oh, yeah. She didn't play. And that's the whole game. You know, a lot of people don't know, man, the way it used to be. She's one of those parents. The way it used to be. You got to make your bed every day. You got to iron the clothes on Sunday, the lasher for the week. You got to bring all your clothes out all for the whole week. That's the whole thing. She was strict. Church, hold on. But don't that make you better? That builds integrity. It does. That builds morals. That builds character. Character, principles. Principles. We need more of that today in today's world that we live in. That's the problem. We don't have any morals and no principles or values. That's right. But my question was, since you said your mom did all on her own and he wasn't really, and he was in and out, did that affect you anyhow with, you know, things that you went through in the future? I had brothers, and they were. So my mother was older. So my brothers, or one particular brother, was like my dad. Okay. So that's why I ride a motorcycle, because him, he had the baby set me. Okay. And I used to be strapped to the back of his motorcycle while my mom was at work. Wow. So, yeah. So, no, I had a dad. They were father figures. They were leaders. They had great jobs. Okay. I didn't want for anything. That's good. I didn't struggle. So I can't say, oh, I have this terrible story about growing up. I don't. No. And that's dope, because at the end of the day, we need to show that Black people that they can make it, that they can do it. Yeah. Old school. Old school thing. Real work. You might have to sing a few church hymns while you're in the house. You know what I'm saying? Whoop his work. Whoop his work. Whoop his work. Yeah, a switch. Yeah. Oh, a mini switch. You know, they had a switch design where they would take a little one and roll them together. She slide it all the way to the end and leave like three leaves. Three leaves. So she can hear it whistle. Yeah. And it'd be a little bit green. Yeah. Yeah. It'd tear a little skin off. So, you see, you know, we got one. No, that's the bell. Uh-uh. No. They pick the phone up if you want to. And it would well pop a little bit. I was well. I don't know. And if that pointed line, you know, that pointed line, they got you. Your neighbor might pick the phone up anyway if you're trying to call. You might think you got away and be still in trouble. But most of the kids didn't do that, though. What's a real weapon? A real weapon is you get out the shower and you win. Oh, man. See, they call that abuse now, but this is what we need. I think a lot of times, man, some of the children, some of the stories that we see in today's society would be different if the school structure hadn't changed so much. And if people really dealt with the children on the level to where they had to, you know, really stay focused enough to, you know, understand what the kids are doing, right? All these kids out of control. Because they is in the room on the games. They ain't even outside no more. Uh-huh. Right? I don't remember any roller skates with metal wheels. Yeah. Yeah. Old-school roller skates. Old-school roller skates. Kids don't go outside no more. They don't do it. And so, now, you being a woman in this bike game, I want to know, are we okay to move into that? Yeah. Yeah, go ahead. I want to know, like, what gave you the drive to say, I want to do something with my bike that nobody else has done? And when did you buy your first bike? So, when did you buy the first bike? Yes. Okay. So, I've been riding, like I said, because I was a kid. So, I always had a motorcycle. And it never was just a regular motorcycle. So, I worked and I was determined I was going to have the chrome wheels, the chrome frame. So, I used to ride a sport bike before Harleys. So, I hadn't been through about eight, ten motorcycles. Dang. Yeah. So, have you ever slid one? A little bit. A little bit. Mm-hmm. Yeah. A little bit, not enough to stop. What about these crazy drivers out here that pull out in front of cars? And I know you've heard of some horrific, some crazy stuff that's not happened. It happened to me. Well, it'd have to be number God to keep you safe out there like that. Right. So, give me a situation where something happened that kind of shook you up a little bit, but God kept you going? I got two. Okay. I was riding a sport bike and I was showing off with some friends and I was going at least 100 miles per hour. Wow. And came through an intersection, but the light changed and gravel was on the ground. So, when I started hitting the brakes and downshifting, it was sliding. And none but God because the light changed for the oncoming traffic and they stopped. And I was sliding through the intersection and then it straightened up and it let me go on through that. It was like God held them. Go ahead on full and let me through and I made it. That sounded like something in a movie. Yeah, but how much does that change the way you think and the way you drive when you out there? Young and dumb. So, you was younger then? I was younger then and I was dumb. I didn't have a child and I was dumb. And did you stop after that and just think about wow? Or you didn't even think about it at the time? adrenaline rushing. I made it. Well, that girl good. Oh, that's it. No, I didn't think. Oh, thank God. But I was like, oh, thank God. I made it. Did they see that? Yeah. I wish they'd had video cameras. That would have been something. No, that's why. That's why I say it sounded like something in a movie because I only see stuff like that in the movies. And give me that other incident. I was in. This is when I had to hardly. I was in St. Pete at Baddest Backer. Everybody hanging out riding. I'm in a roundabout minivan mom. We all supposed to flow like this. She went a whole another way and ran into me. Wow. Caught my leg between the wheel and her car. Yeah. And it was thank God I had on some boots. Boots. And that's what saved my ankle. Wow. I had on some boots. Now, this bike that you have now. Like I said, I want to know about the design of the bike. Big baby. Big baby. I want to know about, because I've seen it. But I want to know about how you put it together and kind of how you, you know, orchestrated that bike. Okay. So for years, I go to every bike rally there is Myrtle Beach and Daytona. So if you want to know what's trending, you go to Bike Week. So I go and you got to go to White Week to see what's new. So at White Week, I'm out there. And I know I want this body kit. So I chased this particular guy down. His name is Scott Owens from the Saint Asylum. That's over 10 years ago. Wow. And now I'm sponsored by him. Wow. So I bought two body kits and put the bike together. Well, I didn't put it together. I had a builder. So I knew she needed to be wide in the back and small in the middle. Because I always had a girdle on and I was wide in the back. So I didn't, I didn't know what it was going to look. I knew what the body kit looked like, but I never knew the color or any of it. So the first time the bike was revealed, it was purple and gold, kind of like Omega. That wasn't what I asked for. So, but because I was a female on a bike and I'm the first, I had the spinning wheel. Okay. So the spinning wheel broke the internet just because and it just went from there. Like I never had a regular bike. It was always custom something. It was always chrome. It always had a big wheel. I never had a small wheel. I never had a stock wheel. Wow. Or I had the stock wheel and I picked it up from the dealership and then a couple weeks later, everything changed. Wow. That's, that's what I'm talking about, man. Like for you to get that bike and take the time you took with it. And how many times do you go up and men don't, you know, they get offended or insecure men because you come with the bike. All the time. She ain't ride it. She can't ride it. She can't drive it. And so what do you, what do you think about it? When you, because you're used to it now, but you like man, you know exactly as hate because they don't, they, they don't want to let you live in that world because it's a male driven world. Yeah. But you still continue to fight on. I tell them I got more miles backing up to the curve than y'all got going forward. And I do. Wow. So they have to respect it. Wow. I come from the set. I don't come from the custom world. Yeah. So the custom world is different. That's the world that I'm in now. So it's about how much money you have. I come from when you get respect from riding. So they have to respect me because of the years I have in the game. Wow. So it's not about how much money is about she ride and you got to respect her. You don't have to like me, but you got to respect me. You putting them women in them baby girl T-shirts. Yeah. I'm trying. You know. I see women riding. I love it. If I can help them, I want to help them. But don't slide by these T-shirts. Do you have a T-shirt brand or anything? I do. Bigwood women. We have our own T-shirts. We have lip gloss. Yeah. We have shea butter. Yeah. Let's plug it in. Yeah. I got to do it. Baby girl. Well, bigwoodwomen.com and then baby girl Florida TV. Wow. So this Florida thing, man, you know what I'm saying? It's something to where everybody's about, you know, speed, dogs, class, you know. Is it something that that you knew you've seen growing up where everybody was a part of something? Or is it something that you feel like you drove your own lane to get to where you are? No. I was in the motorcycle club for many years, for 10 years. And I walked away and moved to Florida. Okay. And I knew I was going to run it. If you're familiar with outlaw, when you claim the state, that means you run it. Yeah. So my name was always Baby Girl except for it was QT because the club that I was in was Queens Together. Okay. So I changed my name to Baby Girl Florida. Wow. Yeah. And pretty much they had to respect it. They had to. When you see women riding bikes, because my wife, she likes to try, I want to ask you a question. Like, when you see, you know, why do you like to bother me about motorcycles all the time? Because I love motorcycles. Nothing sexier than a woman on a bike. Right. Wow. Or in a fast car. Wow. She said it. She's right. Wow. So, and I was really not, when you came last time, I was not expecting that, you know. I expected the guy to roll up with the car, you know, maybe, or not even have a car, but you came with this bike. And it was a beautiful bike indeed. It was a beautiful bike. But I knew it was going to start messing with her again. I had moved on past this. I had to move on past this. We did this probably 10 years ago. We've had these conversations. But now we're right back. You brought it back alive. That's all right. And she's from Jamaica? Oh, yeah. How many motorcycles in Jamaica? Exactly. Oh, I like that. Yeah. When I went over there, everybody was riding them big bikes, trying to get through traffic. Yeah. And they can't drive for nothing, but I ain't going to go there. We not, that's not this, not that show. They got five lanes of bikes and two lanes. Two, three lanes is really different. That's right. But boy, you said we're having a good time over there when you go there. You can say, oh, cook. Oh, yeah. So when you, okay, what's the next move for the bike game for you? I mean, you guys, do you have girls that ride with you? I do. I just recruited a couple new girls. Okay. And anything other than stock is a big deal. Okay. And then I always say, So you don't have to have a big wheel to ride with me. I just want to encourage and empower other women to ride. I don't want them to get hurt trying to ride a big wheel because I got a big wheel. Yeah. I want them to start off with a smaller wheel. So it's harder to ride that big wheel? It is. It is. What makes it harder? It makes the bike heavier too. Yeah, it definitely makes the bike heavier. But what makes it, well, yeah, what makes, you have to know the technique. You can't make the turns that everybody else made. You can't go to speeds that everybody else goes. You can't do it everybody. You are truly in your own lane doing your own thing. What's the fastest you can ride that like 70, that's still a good 75 on a good day with the strong wind behind you. But it's full of music. Yeah. It's not just the wheel. It's full of music which makes it really heavy. So we get to a certain speed. They start to dance. Yeah. But I'm the show. I don't need to get the effect. Because you had a hell of a system on that thing. That's what it is. Let's talk about that for a minute. What type of money in that thing? Hell yeah. What type of money in that thing? Hell yeah. Break that down to me because I want to understand how you even get that type of system on a bike. So my builders are Dan from DK Electronics in Florida, South Carolina. And I recently became sponsored by a euphoria expert. So it's full of euphoria speakers. It's basically a new sport. Okay. So they pack a bunch of speakers and music into a motorcycle and you're looking for clarity, song choice, volume control base. Base. Base with no rattle though. Okay. But doesn't that add more weight to it? Oh yeah. She heavy. That's what I can tell you. She heavy. But the sound, how much would you say a system like that would cost? A lot. It's still a lot. A lot. No. So we're upwards 20, 30, 40. Wow. So there's classes like boxing. Lightweight, middleweight, heavyweight, welterweight. So I'm considered a welterweight. Okay. It's a lot of money. And we host these sound dogs. Okay. So I have extreme class. And these guys have unlimited over 15, 20 speakers in a bite. And they sound like a concert rolling on two wheels. Ah man. Man, the one thing I do know about it, man, like I said, that thing is nice though. It ain't just got no, it ain't just got no speakers on it. You can't even really see that that is there. When I looked at it last, I was like, damn, where is that? You know what I'm saying? But you hear it. Yeah. So my bags are sealed. So I have subs in the bag. Okay. So she's, it's tucked away and it's clean and it's neat. So you can't tell. But it's different from when you saw me in Texas. Y'all changed it up. Yeah. Changed it up. Had a little situation. What? Give me the dirt. So. I'm going to be real honest. First, I wasn't going to say anything, but I feel like other people can learn from it. Okay. I don't know if you heard them say that they were having a, what was it? A muffler contest? Yeah. And you can get, what was it? Factory pricing for one of those rams. I was like, let me get saved the truck. I'm going to see if I'm louder than this other bike. So after I did it, it wanted me to go down the track. So my bike is on air. You know, when you saw it, it sits really low to the ground. Yeah. So I was just sitting, well they asked me to shed it off and so to shed it off and to bring it down, I have to let the air out of it and sit on the ground. So then they told me to go down the track. Well, I shouldn't have went down the track. First of all, because I had no helmet on. Yeah. Jacket or anything, but I wasn't going fast. I rolled down the track, but it wasn't raised. And when I went to make the turn, it wouldn't make the turn. So it fell over. Nothing major. I was fine. And when it fell over, when it fell over, it cracked the whole front. Are you serious? Oh, yeah. Yeah, we're there. But I don't know. Yeah, we didn't see it. So I hurried up and nobody knew. Only Sage knew and a couple of people, because the police set it on the mic on their little walkie-talkies. But I yelled at the police officer. So loud. He was like, you scared me. I was like, come pick up my bike. Come here. Hurry up. Yeah. Because nobody would see it. Nobody would see it. And when I came back around, we just flipped it around the other side. So you couldn't tell me that. You couldn't tell it happened. And then I called another builder. I showed up. We had a show in Mississippi the next day. I showed up in Mississippi. Turned it around so nobody knew. So I got the kids sit on it, played the music, got back to South Carolina. I was like, we got to fix things because I had to go to Rick Rochelle. And so what did you do? So I called the builder and I'm sponsored by the wheel company. I called the wheel company and I said, I got a remake big baby. So they said, OK, pick the wheel you want. I got to have that 34. That's the biggest they got. Yeah. So I got the 34, a sane asylum. Shout out to the sane asylum. A sane asylum. Scott, I wanted to really hook me up. He said, hey, she's got to have the rehab 2.0, which are audio bags. We want her in the best bags. They sent the bags. Euphoria came in. They sent speakers. And we jumped into motion. They rebuilt that bike in 32 days. Damn. Sage had a painter. Mr. Seeds, Gary Seeds. Shout out Gary Seeds. Yes, sir. And Goose Creek. He painted my bike in two weeks. Wow. Two weeks. And they unveiled it at the Rick Rochelle. I didn't know anything. I only knew with the wheel because I picked the wheel. And the seat got accidentally sent me a picture. It wasn't supposed to. Damn it. But that's it. But I didn't know anything else. So I saw the seat and I was like, I don't like that. But then once he did all the other stuff, I was like, oh, okay. So. So when they revealed it at the Rick Rochelle, how was that for you? Oh, I was tickled. I was worried. At first I was worried. Damn. What is this going to be? What is this thing going to look like? Yeah. Yeah. Is my face going... Yeah. Is my face going to tell something different? So I was worried. But it ended up being something that you were good with. Oh, yes. Great with. I'm great. I'm happy with her. Wow. I'm happy with her. Baby girl, back at it once. Back at it. She big in the back. She thin in the waist. She got a cute face. Big baby. Did Sage know that he see it before you did? He was the mastermind behind all of it. He was running back and forth. Yeah. He knew. I didn't know. He wouldn't tell. He did it. He wouldn't let that mess it up for you not to like it. He wanted me to know. He was like, why would you do that? I was like, I never know what it's going to look like. He was like, that don't make sense. Why don't do that? We something else, man. Oh, we ain't trying. We want everything to be known. Yeah, you're supposed to tell them what you want. We don't want no problem. But y'all like suspense and all this other stuff. We trying to figure it out. No, I wanted a surprise. See what I'm saying. He went back and forth. He made sure it was right. Why do y'all act like this? That's the woman. Oh, yeah. Damn. I got to get y'all going, man. I wanted a surprise. I wanted it. Wow. That's crazy. So you get down there. Do you drive it down there or just sit in the show? Oh, it came through. Oh, no. They unveiled it. Oh, I had to stand all the way. I'm the only girl. You stood up. I'm the only girl. Excuse me. Woman. The only one that was there that was doing it like that? The only woman on the motorcycle there. Are you serious? Dead serious. You killed the game. Killed the game. No matter how you look at it. With pink and purple glitter. Well, the boy was looking like, oh, she in the building. I came through. Came through. So, and that was something else too, just to go down there. How long, what was that like being at that Rick Ross, you know, the whole setup? Just the show. His eye. His eye. It could have been better. It was a little dusty there. Yeah. I've seen it online mostly, but, and I didn't get to go. But at the end of the day, I've seen y'all. And like I said, when I see my people, I'm like, yeah, you know, I got it tapped in no matter what. You know what I'm saying? See, women. See, y'all are Baker Caten. Yeah. We'll put the icing and the sprinkles on it. Correct. I tried to tell them, let me help you with the bike part. And. Because the same y'all frame off and all that. I got the same. I got a frame off. Yeah. My frame now black. It's purple glitter. So you can do all the stuff that the cars can do. I got all the same money that those cars. My one wheel costs what they spend for folk. No. Stun on them. Y'all in here that did just, she said, her one wheel. My one wheel. Costs more than what y'all pay for folk. Yeah. That's heavy. That's heavy. And at the end of the day, they got to respect that. They do. They didn't give me enough. Because money, money taught. Yeah. But that's cause they probably uneducated. No, they know. They knew. They knew. So they were hating. You ain't, you ain't going to be at a dice in life. They hating. They had to give me a little bit of hate, but that's all. But that's good. That's good. Cause if ain't nobody, if you ain't got no haters, you ain't even poppin. You ain't even poppin. Well, man. Hey, man, just we definitely thank you for coming on the show, man. Give me your top three bikes. No. Top three. Well, I would say riders. Top three. Female riders. Cause you know you don't have a lot. No. You don't have a lot of women. So the percentage is up to 42% of women. Really? Yeah. Yes, ma'am. Top three riders. You know who that is? So Portia. To her? Portia Taylor from Black Girls Ride. Okay. And where is she out of? She used to be out of New York. I think she's out here. I think she's in California on the West Coast now. Okay. But she's sponsored by Indian. Okay. There's another girl. She's back in North Carolina. Her name is Tutu. Tutu. Tutu. I like that name. She's one of the first female motorcycle clubs. Wow. And when I say this, she can ride. She can ride. Yeah. I grew up and I rode with some of the best women to do it. Wow. And we came together and they threw some of the best events. There's everything. Before you say number three, who is, what woman started this? Do you even know the name of the person? Bessie Springfield. She started it. Bessie Springfield. Mm-hmm. So now everybody does the Bessie Springfield ride. Wow. What year did she start? Now I don't know the year. A long time ago. A long, long time ago. I was just curious to know how long ago. Before my time. Yeah, yeah, before my time. This is so curious. Yeah. Because I can imagine the stress she went through. Do you know the story? I don't know all the story, but it's basically kind of like the Harriet Tubman motorcycle. Wow. It's impossible for ladies to be out there and ride. She went when nobody else was going. Yeah, she used to sleep on her motorcycle and she went, she toured the world. That's heavy. I can imagine because a lot of men back then would have definitely be teasing and ridiculing. That woman. Yeah. Yeah, that's heavy. That's dope, man. I need to look her up. Say the name one more time. Bessie Springfield. Bessie Springfield. Okay, and that number three is that you? It's me. Hey! So I'm glad. I just knew that. Because I know she wasn't going to leave herself out because she bad. See, when you're bad, you've got to definitely put it. If you don't think it, who's going to think it? Sure. It's not a long time. Exactly. You put that work in. Yeah. That's the most important thing. You put that work in. So what's next for you? Is retirement anywhere down the line? No. I do a show every year in Daytona at the Hard Rock in March and October. So I'm preparing for bite week. Fashion flashies coming. So I'll host the sound off there. So no, I'm not getting ready to retire. Next 20 years? How old do you intend to still be doing this professionally? Until I can't ride no more. Yeah, yeah. Then I'm going to get an extra wheel. I don't want to. But then I'm going to get a truck. Man, hey, man. But for right now, I'm going to ride them too. Ride to the wheels fall off. To the wheels fall off. So let's stop playing. On Boss Talk 101, man. Say Baby Girl in this thing. Y'all better understand and recognize, man. How can people get a hold of you if they're trying to get a t-shirt? Why can they get it? How can we do this? Baby Girl, underscore Florida, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok. And Big Will Women is my organization. Man, hold up. Say, man, it's been another great segment. A Boss Talk 101. I can't wait to start riding. Hey, man, like I said, now we better shut this thing down. It's been another great segment of Boss Talk 101 where the bosses talk. She right.