 Me and Melvin have been through too much on our own sides. We got people in Pyrrhus that don't like me. Pyrrhus that hate me. But we keep striving. So when you understand, now, all my homies like him, you know what I'm saying? It won't be no debate, man. Where that old nigga from? And then I go to lowrider meetings and this, and I got Crips that walk over me. Oh gee, I like your interview. So we're bridging a gap. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. One thing I've been very, very curious about, because y'all are from two different walks of life, two different sides, I should say. But you are both campaigning together. Because when you think about Pyrrhus, which you say is not a part of the bloods, but, and then you have the Crips. When you see the different cliques or the different gangs, they're total opposites. They're usually rivals. They're not usually people that are together doing things together. But you are breaking that mode. How can you do that without the younger people looking at you like you betraying us? But it's not a betrayal when we're in a position that we understand we got more in common than we got apart. Me and Melvin had been through too much on our own sides. We got people in Pyrrhus that don't like me. Pyrrhus that hate me. But we keep striving. So when you understand, now all my homies like him, you know what I'm saying? It won't be no debate, man. We're that old nigga more. And then I go to lowrider meetings and this and I got Crips that walk over on me. Oh, gee, I like your interview. So we're bridging a gap that as black grown men, these youngsters are seeing like them. I got more Crips that come to me and embrace me in LA than I have Pyrrhus and Bluthers. Wow. A lot of my own people be holding they nuts like I ain't never said nothing. Wow. Oh, that's just more, man. You know? That's crazy. I see other dudes that don't know me from 60s, from A-Trade, from that. Hey, I told them, man, I seen you up. I mean, I don't even know where these people come from. Where did we grow up from? And I'm like, man, no, I seen you in Big Melvin, do this and do that. And it's a testimony that man that you didn't reach these dudes, these real dudes that's in the street. We don't walk with bodyguards. We don't walk with it. We don't be in it. We be in the hood every day. I roll the streets so lo-bo-lo. Because when it's my turn, they say, your arms are too sharp to box with God. I believe in that. Can't nothing happen to me until he say so. No, that's real. And is it the same for you as well? Well, when it comes to me and more of a relationship, a lot of guys, the younger ones, because they come in Crip on Crip blood on blood, so it ain't that hard to fathom a Crip in the blood because of how the allies and the structures are being made, the way you have interactions among others that wouldn't otherwise talk. But in reality, this creates the opportunity to where they side and it creates, where we can create dialogue amongst more factions. And also, this is where money doesn't count in the streets. You've seen so many people get count taken out in the streets. It's where you'll respect your responsibilities, where we get that respect because we played the game within the rules of which the game is played. We are names that's solid. We never faltered, never did nothing scandalous. I never had a scar, a gunshot wound, stabs, none of that. And it's because of the way we move. So at the end of the day, a lot of kids look up to us because not only have we lived this life, we've changed our life. And if we can do it, then quite naturally, you should be able to do it. That's true. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101.