 like this. Check it, check it, check it. It's a unique house. It's your boy. He's CEO. I'm here with the lovely, amazing, official miss Jamaica. What's going on? None. None. He's on my day. Oh, go on man. We down here man in Houston, Texas man. Uh we came down here to see a premiere for uh is it the third or the dirty third dirty third and we came down here because uh uh this guy is sitting on the panel today guys. We came all the way down here. We got the call. We heard he was going to be in it and I say that's my nigga man. I'm going down to Houston man. Regardless of what's been going on, I got to go to you. Remember I told you I said, look, I got to go. My boy. Listen, my partner. This young nigga hard to man. GSO Fats in the building. It was good man. You see, I brought that whole in there. That whole in there dog. God dang. He said, man, I'll be your boss time. This is the way we do it man. It's crazy. Yeah. So you we came down here for that but we we had your own set in Dallas and uh you know, we end up the we had some mishap. The the information got lost. I was hurt because you said they're all day long and uh had a good time with me like rapping and talking and hanging out and doing what young niggas doing, milling all the mother niggas that were coming up. You that you know what I'm saying and I was feeling the energy. I like that that little young nigga the one that's the one nigga all day long. That nigga there is having a good time and he ain't worried about what no other nigga doing. Yeah. So, the stuff got lost. Well, we're here now. So, we got to go back down this road to who you are called Boss Talk Lurian at the end of the day. Boss Talk 101 got much love for GSO Fat and we we running this whole back that rhyme too. So, let's get to it, babe. Yes, sir. First of all, GSO Fatty, you skinny. What's the what's the fat for? Um, I think I was fat when I was little. So, my sister, my sister had nothing to be fat. Oh, everybody just called me in my whole life. Well, I'm chubby babies, cute chubby babies. So, I love, okay. First, I gotta jump in straight into the film because let me tell you, you were the bomb. You had me cracking up. I actually almost shed a tear when I don't want to spoil it, but I almost shed a tear. I'm just gonna say that. You know exactly when I almost shed a tear because it was so believable. I'm like, why? Why did they do that? I was so mad. Man. So, let's let's let's go back into his history. You jump in the shoot. I know. I know. I just had to say that. I just had to say that. I want to know about this dude. Our people don't know this dude on this channel, man. Tell everybody. Where are you from? Where are you from, bro? Um, I'm GSO Fat. I'm from Mississippi. I'm 20 years old. And I've been rapping for like two years. Only two years? Yeah. You know a lot of young kids that we say, oh, I've been rapping since I was five, six. I was rapping when I was little, but I wasn't rapping. Like, I wasn't making songs. I was just like rapping on my home boys while we smoking or something. Oh, really? I like the fact that you're truthful about it and not just try to cap about it. You know what I mean? You're honest about it. I've been rapping in like the studio and dropping the videos and stuff for two years. So what did you want to be when you was younger? I thought I was gonna go to the NBA. You was hooping like that? You was hooping like that? When I was little, I did, but I feel like this is a kid either, but when I got older, I was like, man. So you were crossing the goal back then. I'm too small. Can you still play? Can you still play? I don't know. You haven't played a long time. I can still, but yeah, I was, um, I would play basketball then I thought, I was like, man, I'm small. I everybody was like growing past me, so I was like that. I guess this ain't for me, so. You brothers and sisters? I started getting money. You got brothers and sisters? Yeah. How many? Two brothers and two sisters. You the youngest? Baby boy. So your mama's baby? Yeah. Where's daddy at? Uh, he out there, in that museum. So he was in the household with both of y'all? Um, when I was a baby, but then he got a new wife. Okay. You like her? That's good. So y'all got a good relationship? Yeah. So your daddy was, was he always like impactful in your life? Was he like when you got in trouble, he like pull you up type of dude or? No, he was like, I don't know. He always took my side on his things. Really? That's different because he's always the mommy like. My mama called me like, you know, just that, that I get what I'm like. Like my daddy never whooped me before. He whooped me one time when I had got expelled, I had got expelled from fifth grade. He had whooped me the one time. And that was worse than if your mama ever whooped you, wasn't it? Oh, my mama used to beat the shit out of me. Which one? What was worse? Anytime, like anytime I did some bad, my mama finna whooped my ass. Were you scared of your mama? Was you scared of your mama or scared of your dad? No, I just do bad shit, but I used to be like, I gotta do something. Tell me something that you did was that was real, real bad. I was like be strong. A lot of stuff. Like what? Like give me one thing, example. Like me and my homeboys, we was running in people's houses and shit. Wow. Yeah, but we just doing the shit. So my dad and he he'll be mad too, but he ain't gonna be mad. Like my mama gonna be mad. You feel me? Like say about it, but I was like, I'm being tired. Like we had boats on windows and shit. Because it was the dude, it was the dude staying with me and my mama's boyfriend, his partner. So he was staying with me in the basement room. So I'm like, he was gone. We went in his room, man, out of my home. So we found like two guns in his room. Did y'all steal it? We thought that it was real. They looked real. And it wasn't real. They wasn't real. So I'm like, dude, he got two A-hards right there. So my uncle peeked it up. I peeked the other one up. It was a BB gun. So I'm like, what the fuck is the nigga got a BB gun for? He's gone. So we were like, fuck, we go outside. We just shoot that thing. We shot the candlelight window. You know, BB guns can cause some damage though. You know that. Put a nigga out. Real talk. Yeah. We shot the candlelight window outside. Y'all got in trouble for that? Yeah. I was like probably like, I was like 11. You know why mama's beyond y'all so much? Because that, for me, of course, I'm a mom. So I'd be like scared that one thing I'm like, God don't take their life. Because anything could have happened. You run into a house and somebody pull a gun and shoot you. That's why mama's be so worried. You know, y'all not taken in serious, but for us moms be looking like we just don't want you to get killed. You know, like that's how I think though. Like my mama, she, yeah, she's just be like scared. That's the thing. For my daddy, he's just be like. No, you know all that damn good. You know how we know already. Yeah, mama really do over over the top. She'd be over. She's a rapper, wasn't there? Yeah, I killed her. She'd be calling you all the time. She called. Don't go to the club. Because you don't want to be worried. She still live down there, Mississippi. Yeah, she didn't leave. How you say where you from? Natchez. Natchez. Like none of my people want to leave from our talk. Why? Like my dad. You couldn't wait to leave. Yeah, my dad, he like he hung like he country. He got like. He got them. He beyond deers and stuff. Yeah, I like to highlight that name. My mom. He got them deer sausages. Never man. He got them deer sausages, man. You know, you don't understand, man, when the nigga gonna process right now, add a little bit of that pork sausage in it. I know y'all don't really eat pork if you niggas Muslim. I'm not. But you add a little bit of that pork in just a little bit into that, that, that, that, that deer get it ground up and get it processed. Man, Malkin. Yeah, man, bring me some in that white wrap that they done forgot it. Yeah, I think we gonna eat that sausage sandwich. She got ugly food. So she. Oh, yeah. Oh, she can cook then. Yeah, she can cook. Can you cook? Did you get any of that from your mom? Yeah. I could cook a little bit. Oh, so, so any girl be lucky to get you because you gonna cook for her? I can't cook like that. Well, I can cook like chicken and stuff, like fried chicken. That nigga ain't gonna put a, y'all want it. I can't cook. You know what a woman don't want. No, you don't want to. You don't want to take your a man, but we want a man to do it for us. They want you to get a little white plate. Get some leaves and roll it. No, no, no. Listen to them look green leaves to be on the plate. We don't want that. I don't know. And then they fresh and they put the little straw beers or something to the side. No, we women do that. Y'all need to dress it up with a piece of just throw that chicken right there to the side. That same chicken. But just make sure you get some old grass looking green stuff but on the white plate. And then wrinkle it at the end. Here, baby. She, oh, she cook for me. Man, if you don't go on that. I don't care about the pretty stuff when you cook. Just cook for me. We'll do all that pretty stuff. Man, I cook for this woman, man. Once every, once every I cook for this woman. Man, I come in, man. You know what I'm saying? And I treat her just like she treats me here. Don't go back once you. Yo, you better eat it before it gets cold. You know what I'm saying? Ain't that the way, when you've been with somebody and I don't let them fool you, you better eat your food now. It's gonna get cold. I'm not wanting it back up. You know they don't want to treat you like, like the movies, they treat you real like, like, yeah. But that don't, hell, no. I don't go down like that, bro. They be lying like they do that, but they do that on special occasions. So if you ever mess around and get, jump a broom or get tired in a situation, just know that it's not gonna be good, like, to start it. You know, we, earlier we were talking about relationships. You wanna get off that? No, we're talking about relationships. We're talking about Blueface and Christian Rock and what you think about their relationship? Would you ever date a girl in the industry? No, let me, let me rephrase that question. Do you think she gonna hold him down now that he done got himself in trouble if he get locked up for a long time? That's a good question. Yeah. Do you think she gonna hold him down? She gotta do face on a tooth. She gonna have to hold him down. She might take it out and put a new um, veneer in and let that go. She gotta do face right here. So fast, you think she gonna hold him down? No matter how many years, no matter how many years he get. She got to good day two out the fifth. Mm-hmm. If she do miss somebody's gonna just go viral. She can't even get caught like that. Whole world, no. She gotta hold him down. Just like that time whenever um, that was going viral when people was spreading that picture when she was with this other dude or something like that on the beach or whatever and that picture was going everywhere because everybody was like that's that, that's that um, tattoo. Everybody was looking at a tattoo and like that's her, that's her. Because they couldn't even see her face. I wouldn't want a little girl like they don't like. No. With some other man. Man, if you got a girl who got a tattoo on her back. You might have the same name that her ex-dude have. Yes, some people do that. I had a tattoo before I met my wife, but we don't know. We're not doing that. He's probably not. Yeah, yeah, he's looking at, he, he, he, hitting in front of back and you see his name tattoo. No, I'm not. But hold up though, but if you dating a girl and she said baby, I love you so much, I'm gonna put your face on my back. Would you let her do that? If you want to. I don't know. This, I don't know. Would you put her face on you? No. You know, damn well he ain't doing that. He not doing that. Even if you love her, you still ain't gonna do that. Not even her name. Why? All the way, all the way he'll do that. That's weird. Let me cut it out. All the way he'll do that. How are you gonna answer his question for you? This, if she died, then they're gonna die. But if she don't die, she ain't getting no it tattoo on the news. I know. And then we break up. No, she died. And find another girl with her name. Yeah. If she died, that's the only real way he'll do it. Am I right? Yeah. Or she had his kids. If she died. I don't say that because I got kids. And you wouldn't put your baby mama's name on you. Okay. Everybody's mama, baby, for my baby mama, but it's just weird. I got you. Yeah. So let me, since she jumped into this hip hop phase, let's talk about, you know, I got to get this out. Take off when he got killed here. Did the young niggas move different at that point? Like, oh man, that's crazy how that happened home. I'm not for the move like this or that. Or did they, did they just be like, oh, that's the only new, you know what I'm saying? He got caught up in the situation. How do the young niggas look at it now? I'd be like, damn. That's it. That's the last person. But did you ever meet him? Did you ever meet him? No. Never met him. I ain't never met them niggas, but I met him one time. I'm like, damn, that's the last person I thought I was like, get killed. Because he real quiet and low key. It ain't hard. No. He just chilling. Yeah, that's crazy. That's all I can say. Damn. Yeah. Like in Houston, do you ever been like, have you ever been in that bowl now? Yep. You been over there? What they be doing over there? Party. It's a party. So they always be gambling? Not always, but you know, if somebody want to shoot dice or what? Mm hmm. Like if you bring a lot of people in here. Yeah, yeah, yeah. They gonna be shooting right here. They gonna be shooting. Really, niggas gonna take this table and put a towel on it. Put a towel on it. Yeah, and roll, pad roll on a nigga all night. Y'all gonna be mad at me. But let me ask you a question. So every time when people be shooting dice, no matter where you are, is there always an argument or a fight or a disagreement? Most of the time. All the time? Most of the time they gonna say something though. I don't know. I don't know what happened out there. Cause it's like, everybody had money, so I don't know. I don't know. It probably ain't bounding like that. That's right. Not bad about no money. And you know, you won't know until, you know, somebody decides to speak up that really don't. And even then, you don't know then because people do lie. People say their point of views, but it don't always be 100% true. But when you were down here while this was going on, and like I said, being from somewhere else, even when we spoke earlier, like, you know, family members from, uh, Natchez, you know, they gonna be like, man, you, man, stay out the way out there, man. Don't be, they calling like, yeah, nigga, man, we seen what's happening in Houston. They think it's all over. Now no matter how big Houston is, this is a big place, you know. And then to top it off, Kodak Black come down here and they say, we're fighting last week. With who? Who the hell was you fighting with? I don't even know. I'm telling you, I heard this on the media. That could be true. Allegedly, he was down here and he had a fight with somebody. It's like, what the hell, man, like, why come to Houston right after this? And then they go down like that. But that's what I heard. That may not be true, but it damn sure what I heard, you know what I'm saying? Through the media. Now, you know, these bloggers, they gonna, they gonna sauce it up a little bit for them views. So, but I damn sure know I heard that. You know what I'm saying? You ain't here, you say you ain't know who's here. That's why I feel like don't nobody look at they different like the, like, like the young people. Probably like the older people probably like, damn. You know what I'm saying? Y'all just. I'm telling they young people to like, be careful in Houston but the young people probably just look at them like, because there's a lot of people get killed out of here. So that ain't, that's just the one that was popular that you knew. Yeah, it's like a lot of people get killed. Everyone. So. You know it's niggas down. Everyone. July Chicago. Yeah. So when you just see stuff like that, you just die. And you know, they got fat. I'm going to be honest with you. It ain't nothing new. Like, like we didn't have the internet, but when I was young, niggas were getting killed too. It ain't like it just started just we amplified with these pictures and videos. But it's the same thing. People die every day. You know, people get shot every day. Be. You know what I'm saying? It just, he was famous and he was on tape. You know what I'm saying? Just, I'm talking about. Think about it just for a minute. Let's, let's talk about this here. You basically signed over to Seven Kings. Yes sir. You, this was about two years ago. How do you feel about where you at right now in your career? I feel like I'm here in the right direction. I feel like I've got to be pacing and just keep going. Okay. So how did you end up meeting King Noah? You remember I told you I wasn't rapping for real life. Okay. I started rapping for real when I signed with him. Like, when I signed with him I didn't have no songs or nothing. I had one song on YouTube that like, like me and all my partners and my people from like my six, they like put all their money together for me and made me a video. My first video had to 20K, but really I was just, really just freestyle and making freestyle videos. And really I made my first one on my birthday. It was my birthday. And I was, I was drunk. I had made a freestyle video and my partner had recorded put it on his page. So he had like 10,000 views on Instagram. I'm like, damn. So I just kept doing them on my page every week, just drop it freestyle. I was going to the studio doing that Marble. He knew somebody named C. Meach. And they had told, you know, they talked about it. I don't know. But they ended up hitting me up on Instagram and I was texting for a minute and then we started FaceTime and then like a year or so went by and then he had really found out he had knew all my people and stuff like my mama, my, um, my brother, my brother people because my, man, my brother got different than that. He knew all my brother people like they from the same place on the same street. Because, because no one from Mississippi too, right? Can you know who? Yeah, he from down there. What was he talking that I was I was on probation. So my P.O. was like, if I go to college, see like if you go to college, I'm going to let you out. When you graduate, I did. So I went to college and then I kicked out. But I was still standing. Yeah, kicked out of what college? What was it called? In McComb and Southwest. Okay. It's like a little small school. But it would turn, though. I liked it. You up that kick then, buddy. White girls and shit. It would turn. I ended up getting like a few fights. I ain't gonna get kicked out, but I was running. You feel me? Yeah. Like, every day the dude would come down on the cart, trying to come to my dorm room, tell me to go to the deed. I was gone. Wow. I had stopped going to class, but I was just still standing like in school. Yeah. So my P.O. thing I'm still going to that school. Because about 30, he was playing football, though. Oh, that's what you mean, 30? Nah, 30 of my god, bro. Oh, you already knew him, okay. So y'all just going to the same school. That's the reason I didn't went to the school. I'm like, dude, I gotta go to some college. Yeah. Because this is what kids think, right, the two, though. They're like, we gotta do something because everybody talking about it, but their probation really will be predicting it, too. You know, when I was in Mississippi, too, you know what I'm saying? I didn't want to be nothing in life, you know what I'm saying? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Fuck, I'm going to go to college. That's always much of a misconception, though, just because you go to college don't mean it's going to do, you're going to do you right. Some people know how to fuck. College for certain people, it ain't for everybody. But I ain't gonna lie, everybody need to try college, though, because it's fun. It's fun. I went to college. Like, outside of all the work, and I went to college, but I wasn't in college. I was like you. Yeah. I was up there. That's how I was. I was up there at first, like, man, I'm just gonna do this shit and get off, wasn't it? Yeah. But then I started going to the parties and games and shit. White holes. I'm like, it's amazing. White holes. They didn't miss a white hole twice, like white holes. Really? The white holes is over there. I'm like, yeah, leave, bro. I love that people. Wow. I ain't love like the school part of college, but like, the parties and like, going to the football games and basketball games, I would leave, son. So tell me, like once he locked into you, you basically, you move up to Houston. Was it, was it a long, it was a year of time, was you already on the label? Was he giving you money? Was he hooking you up with different things? I still, I was in the streets real bad. Like when I had talked to him the first time, I was fucked up. Like, I don't know, my mind said I was fucked up. What? But he just was ready for me. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. Yeah. He wasn't gonna do it. Brim died, so shit. I was in college. I was like, man, so you gotta bring me down. Like, I'm fucked up right now. Police at this bitch. Yeah. That's cool. So I got to fighting and I had here to do with some brand numbers right here. And that's how you got that? Yeah. And she, the police family was kind of fine. What? The police and she, that's why I caught him. Like, son, I fucked up and said, I got to go. If ever. Yeah. So then he was like, I had each sent me a ticket. And then I had. Can you know what sent you a ticket? And so you got the whole time he was talking to me. He was sending me money. Like, doing like, showing love, showing your love. Yeah. He was just getting me around. Go do your music. Yeah. Like, I really caught him on. You know what I'm saying? Like, whenever I fucked up and needed some shit, he was. So you were down here in Houston? I mean, he was down here in Houston. Yeah. I hadn't even met him before you. You hadn't ever really. I was just talking to him on the phone. Yeah. So when he, when he, when he called for you, you, you, you, he finally sent you a ticket. You come down at you because you pressed to come down. Yeah. I came down with no clothes. No clothes. Who was the first, because you had already been in the studio. Had you been in the studio with any known person before, before coming to Houston? No. I was, I was just really running around in Baton Rouge. Who was the, who was the first person that you worked with when you got down here in Houston? First person. Was it Young Rowe? Yeah. He was Young Rowe. Young Rowe? Yeah. So how was that? How did you even meet Young Rowe? I had got off the bus. And no one knew me. It got me right. And we went to the studio and D-boyed, no sleep. Okay. He was like, you know, he like court. I don't know. He like got ideas. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, yeah, yeah. He up a nigga. He up a nigga to understand what's going on there. Yeah. I gave him no ideas. You know, helping him out because he's, you know, we all were still new. So shit, he was like, I think he even met Young Rowe through a good song. So we had linked up and made the song Pan. Yeah, yeah. And then I had made a song with Young Lyric too. Okay, Young Lyric. I think she was the first person I made a song with. Oh, before him? She was the first or second. Okay. But yeah, I had him though. How did you think those songs did for you, especially one with Young Rowe? Yeah. Ain't nobody know me in Houston. So when I had dropped them songs, like I was going up in Houston. The nigga started knowing who you were. Yeah. And I just thought being there was ISIS a bit. Hard. Going everywhere. Anything jumping, I was done. The nigga trying to figure out who you was and when you walk into place. It was like, I was really winning, leaving no house because I still had that mindset, like the Nazi mindset. Yeah. I was like, man, I ain't with nobody and nothing like that. And then I just went outside. No, I had went out of town. I just had went outside. When he came back, I knew everybody. I just be J. Prince and everything. So that's it. Yeah. And so how long did it take you to get out of that mindset? A little minute. You know how it be. You just, I ain't never been to the city before. So when I came out. I wasn't when, and I don't mean to cut y'all because we got to get that part. Like you say you met J. Prince and everybody. You don't just meet J. Prince. How did you even meet J? Well, I had met his son in the first. Which one? Junior. You met Junior. Yeah, I met him in the clubs. And y'all just seen each other because y'all be, y'all was out. I had met him in the clubs, but Noah, like I told everybody talking about me out here. So Noah, I guess the old man, J. Prince had heard about me or whatever. So me and Noah went down there and let him hear about my catalog. Yeah. And how was that? How was it? How did, how was the, how was the response? It was all right. You know what I'm saying? He's like, I didn't know who he was. I ain't know who he was. You didn't know who the old man was. He was. So I was just like, So you never heard about him at, at that time? No. That's why I love young little damn though he doesn't know. I was just like, and when he has, you know, When he said something to your son, I was just like, So when did you find out? I said in your mind, you like, why are you telling me to spy on my son? Nigga, I'm the one you listening to. You don't know what's J. Prince. You don't know who learned about that. So how did you feel when you said that? You kind of like, What would it take to tell me that? I don't know. He really, I think he fucked with it though. No, but when he said, you need to find your son, what did you think? Be real. You didn't know him. I was just like, See, so? No. No, because you didn't know him. No, when did you find out? When did you find out? Because sometimes when you leave, somebody pulled you to the side and said, you know who that really was? Like in my head, I'm like, When did you find out? When did you find out? Who told you? When I walked outside, when I walked outside the studio, everybody like, Dude! They would tell me. Yeah. They were like, man, you know who I really was. Because I was thinking, because Carl Crawford was the two. That's who you was talking to. Like, he the man. I was talking to him. I didn't know who. Carl is here, man. Yeah. Because you knew who Carl was. Yeah, because I had, he had invited me to the studio, Carl Crawford. And I had met a son with his artist. Which one of? D-Raw. Yeah, yeah. He been on boss out. Yeah, I had met a son with him when I first came. But that's, I love the young folk cars. You know, I know Jay, much respect for Jay Prince. We in Texas. I'm always show respect. We in Houston. I mean, you know, we in Houston right now. To be honest with you, I mean, the old man, good dude, paved the way for a lot of, a lot of the stuff that, that goes on, that went on back in the days up until, you know, now. Hey, I've never seen nothing fly with, I've seen him at the Palms Hotel in, in 08, 09, when he was up there. Like we used to be at the Palms. And that's what we was at back then. I just remember him being there, Shug Knight, well there, we was all there. It was me, Shug Knight, him, Ben and Segal, it was a nigga named Little Jay, running around, bothering everybody. I can't, he knew the owners of the hotel. So he was just keeping up havoc all through the hotel. I think his name was Jay. If I'm not mistaken. And Jay Prince walked by. And I see him walk by. And we just gambling and shooting dice and me and Shug, I just remember the scenery. We was just there. You know what I mean? This is how we're going down back in the day. But I remember him from paving the way for the ghetto boys. Yeah. Paving the way for the ghetto boys, opening doors for different people in the South, showing love to the South in a way to where people would see us. Even Master P and all the old cats, like myself, they know that, that Prince was one of them ones that really was up on music before everybody else. See, that's who he was. Yeah. But now, I be seeing him a lot like he is. He pull up to like a lot of stuff. He does? He have, yeah. Because, you know, with the family. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. With the Hoover family, he be putting up to a lot of. A lot of events. Yeah. So I be really seeing him a lot now. That's hard. That's hard. I just thank God, you know that you came down here and you linked in and you understand how to move in this city, man. That's big. You know what I'm saying? So. But even seeing that, just a minute, because to me, going through that, it would also make me want to go research past legends so that you don't get caught like that stupid again. You see what I mean? Yeah, that's what I did. You need to know the faces and know how impactful some of these people were on the music industry. Yeah. That's what I did. I had, after I had met him, I was like, when I got home, I just touched his name up on YouTube. I was like, damn. He doing this thing. So, you know, you come down here, you link with different people. Let's just go into a little bit more. Somebody else you work with as well. I was looking at Fastlane. Oh, your OTB? OTB Fastlane. Yes, my brother. So that was, how did you and him even meet? Kind of the same way. Same way? Well, um, like D-boy and D-boy. Same way? Yeah. I had met Fastlane in the studio. Well, we had, we knew if we were to make a song together. Well, he had pulled it over. That's why I met him at the studio. Yeah, we was just vibing, you know what I'm saying? That's all. He followed me though. That's all. He followed me. He followed me. I want to get into the fact that you and Birdman, and when you link with Birdman, just how it was just meeting him for the first time as well. Like, when you met Birdman and you pulled up on him, how did that all happen? Um, I had a, I had an event with Universal, Cash Money, where I had to present all my stuff. Okay. Like my videos. Did you have to rap? No. Okay. I had to present like my videos and my music. Me and Tohe, you know, like all the stuff that we got coming soon. And, um, I was recording at the Hit Factory in Miami, in his studio. Yeah, that's his studio. Yeah. I've been in his room, like the rear room, his room. So I was recording and up. Well, really, we were just in the waiting, waiting until the last people to record. So we just sitting in there, then he just walked in there. But I was like, I don't know, man. He was talking like, he was mad at me or something. Wow. What was he saying? Yeah. What was he saying? Man, he was just like, this shit ain't no game. Oh yeah. Yeah. That's the, yeah. That he talked way down. He was dead ass. I was like, so I'm like, damn, so I don't really mean Birdman. But I had met Slim first. He was a gig. Okay. I had met him in Miami, too. Okay. Before you met, before you met his brother. I had met Birdman, like, like once live. So you met Slim first? Yeah. Well, Slim, what you, how you meet Slim? I don't know, bro. You don't even remember? He was at the um... You were high. I knew it was a Miami. I know, but I don't know how I met him. I don't know who set it up. Yeah. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? What y'all meet up at? At the hotel. And it was Jesse? I think it was some, it was some shit. He pulled it up. It's some kind of loyalty. Yeah. So he was at the hotel. It was me and young Al. Okay. He came out of here. Okay. We was at the hotel in Miami. Matter of fact, we was out there to record it, the hit factor. But we just ended up chilling on smoking. Then he was like, ain't gonna ask that, and get that food right quick fat. He was out. So we like big. Walked out of town. Slammed out at me. Chilling. Like, hey. What do you say? And when you saw him, you knew exactly who he was. Yeah, I knew who he was. I was like, oh, shit. He was tall. Slammed a little bit. Nigga, tall. What? What do you say to him, feet? What do you say? What do you say to him? No more popped out of him. Oh, yeah, I tried surprising him. Uh-huh. So, see, he was just like, oh, we gonna do business in the future. Just keep listening to the North. Hmm. I was just like, all right, big. So, see, we came back to Houston. That was it. So you felt like, okay, we gonna do business. Put it in the hills. Rockin' with a listen to the North. Now for the show. So, see, I felt a little tired with Bob. Then we just, I had stayed in my country. And then we had gotten a little told me something. And then that's when I met Birdman. And Birdman come through and tells you he say this, it ain't no game. Yeah, I had said, he was just telling me like, I can't get in trouble no more. You know what I'm saying? Just think and be patient and just a lot of stuff. You know? Yeah. When was the last time you spoke with him? Hmm. I be texting him a lot on the phone. Y'all texting? Yeah. And um, last time I seen him was like a few months ago. He had called me and told us to come to New Orleans. Oh, you went down to New Orleans? Yeah, me and my homeboys. How was it? Was that Juventus? Oh, no, no, Tuesday. No, I think he had a video shoot with Future or something. Okay. And you pulled up? Yeah. We was really riding around in the Bukku Wilkes. Hanging. Chilling. Bukku Maybach. Bukku Maybach. Y'all hanging out and moving. How did it feel just to be running around in Maybach's all through the town? I said, I ain't want to leave. I ain't want to leave. I ain't want to stay out here. Child born. That's crazy. But how hard being so young and you know young folks get into a lot of mess, you understand what I mean? Because I see it all over social media and stuff like that. When Birdman is telling you you can't get in trouble. Because a lot of times people say, well, I don't go looking for it, but it come find me. How hard is it to stay out of trouble? And do you remember what he said? Like when you see certain things come in your way, you be like, man, I can't, I can't go that route. And you go left instead? Yeah, that's what I do not like. I don't get in trouble no more. I used to be bad as fuck, but I got kids. How many you got? One. One. But I just be like, I don't know. Boy or girl? A girl. That's a whole lot. That is a little girl. Like, you used to be stopping me too, but it really be there. You feel what I'm saying? I be like, yeah, I can't do no crazy shit. But I really just be put up. That's why I've been there. Like here, since I love y'all last time, I ain't been no work. Like I ain't been to the club in a minute. My first time popping back, I was at the movement the other night. I ain't been on social media either. I got my mamma's running my shit by me. See, I like that because for the main fact, I hate to see when good kids or good people, you know, get in trouble or get hurt, especially because we look at y'all like, you have a promising future. People look at you just like the reason why he said don't get in trouble because he know where you can go. And we just don't want to see you mess up that future. You know what I mean? So you got to think about your kids. You got to think about your future. You can't, it's not worth it to go out here and do this stuff. You know what I mean? Yeah. So. What about this song, Quando Rondo? Did it, did it ever move? I ain't never drop it. You never did drop it. Why? I don't know. Just didn't feel like it was time. Will you ever drop it? Yeah, I will. But see. Is it up to you? No. Okay. Collective people, y'all are working together, I'm pretty sure. Let me ask you this. When you and Birdman, y'all built a relationship not because y'all been knowing each other for a year or so, right? Yeah. That's hard. Not many people can say that. What do you expect in the next like this year coming up 2023 from the label, from working with Cash Money, working with Seven Kings? What's the, what are you expecting this year? Coming up. Well, I just, I just took in my first like project. Okay. My first project with Cash Money. That's all right. A few days ago. Let's see what happened. Moving with that something, you know. What about Boosie? I know you did a song with Boosie, didn't you? Yeah. How was that? I'm pretty, I'm asking him to do a song with Son. You know, it's named by two, two years. I didn't hit him up on Instagram because him and my partner, 450. Like, my partner G5, Allum, Gas House G5. He's from Nancy's. Okay. He'd be selling all the rappers, Pluto. So, um, him, you know, him just built all the rappers or whatever. He built Boosie a lot. Yeah. So I was in Atlanta and I was, you know, tapped in with all his people. You know, I just had DM to like, hey, bro, I'm full-fair to live, brother, let me make a song. But how was, how was, uh, how, how, how, how, and when you talk to, you talk to Tully? Yeah, he was like, bitch, send it to me. Did he even know who you was? Nah, he just, he do. Like, I'd have seen videos of him, like, riding in a car, playing my song. Really? With G5, you know what I'm saying? Because my people, they be around him a lot. So they be kind of, you know what I'm saying? Playing my shit, you know what I'm saying? So, I know he know who I am. So I just had DMs and I'm like, look, let me just go and break down here. Wow. So, so the song, I'm going to go back. I'm going to take you back to the song with you and Boosie. How did y'all do it? What was the, how did y'all link with it through King Noah? Yeah. Um, it was really, it was Jay Prince that we were feeding the homeless out here. Okay. And Boosie was out there feeding the homeless, Miss Hoover was out there too. Boosie was talking to Miss Hoover about something. Okay. But I know somehow I got a song out of it. Okay, okay. Got a word. That was like, pull up to the studio. You got a song out of it. They were like, pull up to the studio. Boom, boom, boom. I don't know what happened behind closed doors. Who said what? But I just pulled up and rock out. Like the lady would say, pull up. I pull up. Do you think the song be good with you and Boosie? Did you do what it? That's my biggest song. I feel like I overdrop. Really? I ain't going to say, I ain't going to say it's the biggest song I got. That's the biggest song I dropped for right now. Really? And you feel like... Well, not deep but probably one of the... One of the biggest songs. That's hard. That's real hard, actually. I like it because you got to work well with others. You know what I'm saying? You just hear so many things down here. How are you going to stay out the way, man? Like what's going on? I know your family already telling you to stay out the way, but you're just going to move like you move because you don't be out there like that anyway. I ain't no dumbass. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. Like I feel like I'm raised from all these things. Okay. Just being from Mississippi. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You ain't out here crashing up. I peep shit like quick. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. As soon as I peep something, I... Out the way. Or all the way in the... Whatever's going on, I'm ready. I ain't going forward in no situation. You feel me? No, no, I feel you. So I feel... I could see something happen before it even happened. You know what I'm saying? So really I don't even be nowhere like that, no more. But like when I was trying to build my name up in Houston, I was just... Everywhere like... But now I just feel like I got to slow down because I ain't had no deal back then. Like I had a deal, but I had no major deal. You know what I'm saying? So now I'm like... I got the deal. You got a deal, you got to work right. So would you ever do something with NBA young boy? Because... Yeah, I would. Because I know, you know, he'd be linked with Birdman. So that would be an easy bridge to cross. Yeah, young boy hard. Yeah, so I know they got a relationship. So that would be hard. I'd love to see you and him do something together. Yeah, hopefully. Hopefully, yeah. I just love your attitude and love the fact that how humble you are and to be a 20 years old and to have a demeanor. You already been in a film. You move in the way you're supposed to move. Do you want to be in more films? Yeah, I wanted to get to the point where I just do straight movies. Really? Yeah, because like... Music, that's hard. That's dangerous. It's dangerous. Yeah, you've been at the kill the niggas or the niggas. Yeah, I killed you. Over anything, right. Man, I hope the film thing take off for you like it has. You did a great job in that movie and I'm gonna be honest with you. I respect it. I came down here to see it and you didn't let me down. I definitely can't wait to see you in another film. I'm trying to... I got people working on it right now. Oh, yeah? Yeah. That's hard, man. So who's your best producer before I get you off of here? Producer? I got two. Okay. I'm gonna say three. Okay. Turn me up three times. Okay. Harry Keese. Okay. And DJ Exo. DJ Exo, I met him another night. Yeah, Be Done's two. And to listen to a lot of... Damn. Okay, top three artists of all time did or live. Any genre. Top three, any genre. Juice Wynne. Juice Wynne, number one. Michael Jackson, number two. Two pop. Two pop. Two pop. You like two pop? That's all. I like... I ain't gonna say I like to... I like how he moved. You like how he was moving, how he was doing his thing? Yeah. That's all. You know what I love about, you know, the fact that you're so young and you're still saying Michael Jackson is the fact that he's gonna live on for decades and decades more to come. You know what I mean? Yeah. I'm like, your kids' kids still gonna be like, yeah, I love Michael Jackson. That trips me out like... That's our culture. I think every artist needs to strive for that legacy to be able to leave that for our kids' kids, not just my generation and everybody know me. And then, you know, just like you said, you didn't even know Jay Prince. You didn't know, you know, probably a lot of the older rappers, but look at Michael Jackson where even young kids know him. That's crazy, man. Like I said, man, the main thing I want to say is, man, you know, being down in Houston and like I said, definitely want to show love and pray, you know, send out prayers for the family or the Migos, takeoffs, you know what I'm saying? Takeoff was a real humble dude, real respectful dude. When I met him, when I seen him, he was moving like he's supposed to move then. Some things happened that day too, though, that were crazy. I'll never forget it. That was when Sean Kingston was up there in Vegas. Yeah. I remember that. I was there that day, man. It's just crazy how things be going, man. But I just want to tell you, we love you, brother. You know how we ride for you, brother. And then you coming back to Dallas, right? Oh, yeah. You coming to do the interview when you're pulling up. You got to tell me when. Whenever. No, I'm serious. Like, not alone. Don't let it be like, you ain't got, you ain't called me. I gave you my number. You don't change numbers. You probably don't follow me on Instagram. I'm old. You got to change it. You got to go back and get my Instagram. You know, I ain't been on Instagram. Like all that stuff. You ain't been on there. No, I ain't been on there. That's somebody else. Yeah. It's me. But I just ain't been on there. I probably sent it to him, but I posted it for him or a question. But really, I ain't trying to see no internet stuff right now. Who the hardest out here in Houston right now for you? Like, when you think about the younger rapper? Yeah. Outside of yourself. Just who the hardest out here? Texas. They chat. Who? They chat? They chat. He go hard. Hard. He next up. Okay. Let's chat. Shout out, man. Shoot. I'm going to see what I'm going to check him out. I'm going to ride. They chat hard, hard, hard. That's my point. Wow. That's crazy, man. So, man, thank you for coming on Boss Talk 101. How can people get a hold of you if they try to link? Y'all can really Google me. G-S-O, P-A-J-T, and then I think it'll pop up. Already, man. The Nigga movie star. That nigga didn't say that last time we interviewed. Y'all niggas can just Google me. I'm on this and that play. You're going to see me pop up. What are the films you want to get into? So do you want to jump straight into the movie industry? Yeah. Oh, OK. Because I was like, my first movie, I was nervous. I was really nervous when I was doing it, but I was nervous on how it was going to look. But playing that dude, you played it perfect. You looked the part. How did you feel about it when you seen the stuff on film? That's what I was saying. That's what I was scared about the whole time. I'm like, it was cool, suited, but I just want to see it. So when you saw it, how did you think? What did you think when you saw it? Did you know you was better than I thought it was going to be? You all thought I was fucking up. You feel? You're doing a good job. Like when I was shooting, I thought I was messing up. But I was, damn. I look like a real actor. No, no. You did a good job. I'm telling you, you made, for me, you was the highlight of the whole thing, for me. Because you're not only you were young, but then you gave a different, the energy you brought. I like the comedy side of you. The energy you brought. It was the energy. It was the energy, the way you was asking questions, just like yourself. Just like you was in my store that day. It was the same like you was in your own zone doing your own thing, having a good time. And that's what you're supposed to do. That's what life is all about. Check it, man. I've shown the suit a lot of movies on. Already. It's been another great segment, man. Thank you so much. Thank you, big brother. Boss Talk 101. What a boss's talk. GSO fat just killed another interview on Boss Talk 101. Yeah. Are we out?