 Yeah, we on boss talk, one-on-one, one-on-one. Yeah, we gon' talk. Right, cause we've said that, cause even in Dallas, you said that where when you have people who still go out here to try to make changes, you have to also be careful because some people go out here to try to make changes, but just to look good on social media. They go in different cities and say, okay, I want change, I want violence to stop, but they have all these cameras up and, you know, just to make it seem like they're doing something good, but they're not really investing the time and being there when the cameras are not on. Yeah, they boosts around to the ground when the camera's not around. And that's the difference. A lot of times people are doing the real work, the booth, the grunt work, but they don't have the platform to express and give out the information or the things that they're doing to get a community. I've won numerous awards, was involved in the F.C. Hustle, L.A. Gangs, U.N.I.T., Biggie Small, a whole lot of civil rights, Margaret Laverne Mitchell, Amadou Diallo, the Death Row 10, the Howard University Student Kill, Prince John, I can name a litany of things, I'm an author, but I try to not talk about me. I don't like talking to me. I like doing and telling my experience where it's not braggadocious. It is what it is. And give back to the community because of the things that I've done. So do you believe that if, excuse me, if you believe that if there was someone back then who was doing what you're trying to do now and they did that for you, do you think your outcome would have been different than it is now? Well, they did, but it created a gap. We had the Black Panthers, I've witnessed them, us organizations, the Muslims, they were pro-Black. They were standing up for civil rights and they era the 60s to 50s. It's a different era, like 50 years now. My era the 70s to 80s, but the thing of it is we got our ear to the payment where we right there with everybody where we can relate to what's going on because we're feeling I get shot at just like everybody else. I'm still going to jail, I'm 83 years pro. I'm still being unfairly treated in the justice system. So I'm a gamut, all of them. So all of it is painted to me with a brush and we just have to let, like we did if we take away Instagram and all that and let us start telling the stories of how we come up and the things that our parents did and struggled because the number one deterrent for crime is age. As you get older, you mellow out. Exactly. I wanted to just ask, well just kind of, I guess add on or ask about what you said earlier about, I don't know, like you really don't get on, getting on social media is one thing, but without your story, I think the younger generation don't get to see what really caused the thing that, because a lot of times your history is what helps you to understand where you're going. And you are our history when it comes to what happened in LA, right? So in order for us to see that, then you have to be on platforms like this, the VLADs, all the stuff what these young kids are going cause what it does is inject something, some purity in it to show that people do change and that there is a sense of direction in what transpired in our history. Yes sir, and to make it short into a nutshell, falsehood cannot coexist permanently with the truth. On social media, a lot of times people tell stories or tales and there's nobody there to validate them or challenge them to wear their tale or tale. That's all it is, it's a tale. And therefore they're being influenced by guys that aren't real representations of the communities or the gangs that they're representing. And people get confused when that, and we believe that those that are closest to the problem are more likely and not closer to the solution. Okay, and now most of the influence on there, a lot of them are that people really look up to as these rappers, a lot of the music and the stuff that's flowing through those avenues is what's influencing our children. So we have to have platforms to wear some real essence of what really going down. That's why I love podcasting because it cuts through and say, this is it too. This is something that can, music is one thing because these kids are listening to that. But then they jump on listening to our channel and they see in all these different rappers and then boom, we hit them with a person like Mr. Melvin Farmer and then they gonna watch it because we know over time that that's a habit forming thing, correct? Yeah, but also every generation has had music, R&B to 60s to 40s to do what. So we just can't look in hindsight. Their music, it's no more different than we was talking earlier about NWA. It's every 10 years you're gonna get a different genre of music and it comes down to drugs, mental health, homelessness, being tough. These are the images that have been cultivated over the years through the generations of music. So we have to let them know that it's a better way that we can make it a different way and also hold people accountable for the things that they say on social media.