 Check it, check it, check it, check it, it's a Uniconsistio boy, CEO, and I'm with the lovely, amazing officer, Mr. Mako. What's going on? None, none of you know my dad walk on. Man, check it, man. Hey, man, we got a guy here, y'all, y'all know this man. He here, guys. Hey, man, and this nigga gonna freestyle today. We already know what this one of the coldest niggas when it got to that freestyle, babe. We ain't doing no freestyle. Got a visa in this, got a visa in the building. It's been a, what it do? What's going on, man? Hey, how you doing? Man, thank you for coming back, man. Thank you for coming back, blessing the platform, man. Helping us keep going, man. The shoulders at home, right? Man, thank you, man. We appreciate it, right? Yes, sir. We, you know, man, Dallas, man, Dallas has been in the uproar, man. When you look at all of the different things that been going on around, man, the internet, the bloggers, everything been popping off, to be honest with you, then you got the music. Yellow Bees, he got a song that he done put out called Badass Yellow Boy. I ain't seen the nigga, he been on No Jumper. He been on, what's that other one? The white boy, Kevin Kev, or whatever. I don't know that nigga. And then he went on Gilly the Kid. I guess boss talk ain't big enough for the nigga. I'm here, but we're coming for the nigga. I have to say that with you on here. You remember last time you was on here, I called him out, I always call him out, baby. Nah, but it's love, bro. Like, I love seeing the movement. I've been a fan, not only, I love the way he, his music, his cadence, all the way back to Trapping Designer, Stevie Wonder, all of those different songs, man, you know. So, and I know you already, cause last time you defended his honor when you was on here, you was like, man, he be busy. Man, he gonna come, maybe he gonna come. He might not come. That's why he ain't gonna come. But it don't matter, like I told you, man, as long as I got you coming, I'm happy. You know what I'm saying? Yellow coming, man. Yellow coming, man. Yellow coming. Yellow coming. Say it, man, so. I got a question. Go ahead. You know, I see all your tattoos. And one thing I'm always curious about, why would you tattoo your face? Oh, I might tattoo me or something, so you know. I know, but the position of where it is means something to? Again, I'm a certain spice, I just put them there. So why did you put that one above your, I brought, I want to know. Cause, you know, no matter what, when I wake up in the morning, I look at it, you feel me? And there's one thing I'm always do, no matter what. And what does it say? It say maintain. So no matter what I'm doing, maintain. Okay, I see. So I put it there. Okay, cool. Wow, you know, you basically, you left here last time, dropped me a hell of a 16 man, I enjoyed it. To be honest with you, thank you for blessing the platform. Sure. One of those guys, man, like I said in last time, I didn't really speak on it really, you know, a lot of people compare your style to other people. I just said like that. I ain't gonna really just go there, but at the end of the day, what makes you different than the other people that they compare you to? That's where I last did it, right? A lot of people don't, a lot of people don't live in, you know, rap, you feel what I'm saying? Write what they do every day. Make music, like live and then go to the studio and rap about it, you feel what I'm saying? So that's one thing with me, like everything that I rap about every song that I ever made was something like actually like ever happened. Like that shit really happened. That's what we really doing, you know? So that's what made me different from a lot of people. Cause a lot of people got a good imagination. My imagination is trash, I ain't even gonna lie to you. Right now, working on this tape was kind of difficult because right now I'm at a very chill moment in my life and feel, you know, I'm having family business, you know, tying up loose ends and, you know, just, and it was kind of tough because I'm not rapping about the same screech that I used to rap about. I feel, so, you know. What's the difference between the Godamese that's sitting here today and the one that was in the back? I seen you in the back of a car rapping one time. I seen you just, what's the difference between those two guys? Cause that was a early Godamese. That means that they had no love. This means they got a lot of love now, like for us and family, you know? Yeah, like real family, you know? I got a baby on the way. Wow, congratulations. Yeah, so I got real people who really actually love me. Back then it was just like, hey nigga, if you lose your life, you lose your life. I, you know, hey, it is what it is. How hard is it to stay on this path? Oh, it's tough. I ain't even gonna lie. It's real tough. You don't wanna call me every day. I ain't even gonna lie like you. I can imagine because, especially when you're used to a certain lifestyle the way how you were before and that came easy because that was you for how many years and now that you're trying to change and, you know, the devil come at you in so many different ways every single day because they want you to go back that way. For sure. How, like, what do you do to calm yourself down because so that you don't go back that way? You all know the truth? It's true. I play more to come back. I ain't even gonna lie. Like, I'm so real shit. Like, that's the God of the truth. So you take a young girl out in the game. I be pissed off. Like, I be like, my mind I go to racing and it's like, usually when my mind go to racing I smoke weed. You feel me? Because I love weed, you know. But I can't smoke weed. So it's like, damn, me's what you gonna do. Then I'm on the legs and I can't just take out walking. You feel me? It's only, I can only go so far. You feel me? So it's like, what you do? I ain't fucking with the music in my head right now. Like, I don't even want to hurt no beats. You feel me? Or my attitude just that bad. None of them see this fucking stick. I be kicking ass on that hoe. Bitch, bitch, bitch, I'm going off. You feel me? I play that game for like a hour. Ain't even gonna lie. And you feel better when you get done? When I'm through, I'm gonna come and say, well baby, like, baby, look, I was mad. I'm sorry, I apologize. Look, I was wrong. You know, I shouldn't have said that. You feel me? Yeah, it helped me. I ain't gonna lie. And she know that when you start playing the game she need to really stay away from you because you had that point. Nah, she'll still come, yeah, you know, it's just my way to fucking help. You know, that's my way to help myself, you feel me? But she don't give a damn. She still swang and fighting cussing, yeah. You know that there gonna be a time when somebody else, other than her, pitches you off and you not gonna have that game. Oh yeah. And she helped me in a lot of different ways, but I ain't gonna lie the way she helped me be aggravating ways, you feel me? But you at least you recognize it's help. Yeah, for sure. And that's good. I recognize it, 100%. Don't be over there laughing because he know. He just say the way. See, I know exactly what I'm going through. That's why he over there laughing. Hey, wow. Because women and men are totally different. And the funny thing is that we mean it a certain way, like we women can talk. And we understand how we mean it. But to y'all, it's aggravating. Y'all feel like we nagging you, we diss, we that. But we only doing it because we love you. You want you to diss. But right now, you doing it because you love me is not what I'm processing in my mind right now. I'm really processing to get the fuck away from you before I kick your ass, you feel me? But hey, you know. Yeah, you man, you know, relationship goes, man. You know what I'm saying? I love the fact that, you know, love is in the air. You know, thank you so much, for everything you've done for me. I really be trying because like back then, I really didn't, I really didn't care. That boy, that boy that was in that backseat because that was a little boy. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, he went hard though. He went hard, but he was lost. He had no love, he didn't have no real family around him. You feel what I'm saying? So, you know. What made you change? She made me change. How, okay, she made you change, but how long did it take her? Cause she, I see a picture on IG, she been down with you when you were locked up. So, how long did it take her to get through to you, to have you change? Because I'm sure it didn't take overnight. She still, she still got her helmet on there as they are working on me. You feel me? I'm still in there. I ain't God. They both, she got one side, God got the other side. They working, but, you know, it didn't happen overnight. Nah, yeah, nah. You know, but I am changing. It's because I love her, you know. When you really love somebody, it's like, it's like, they saying, yeah, you were gonna, he will change if you really love somebody. But when you really love somebody, it's like, you want to change. Be a better person. You want to get a, the love that they giving you, you want to get the same love back. You feel what I'm saying? That's good. So it's like, it's like, it comes to the point where you're like, well, when you going to be real, you feel what I'm saying? When you going to say, hey man, you know what, I'm going to give everything. Everything I give for somebody, that's what I'm going to give to them, you know? And if they giving me a thousand percent, why not give them a thousand percent? Feel what I'm saying? So why would I give her a thousand percent? I mean, why would she give me a thousand percent? I give her a five hundred and fifty. That's good. It only makes for a better unity anyway. You know what I'm saying? Unity in the community. Yes. That one. Man, so I mean, you know, what was different about this project, the new project? What is the new project called? Let me look here. All lies on me. All lies. That's the one we talked about last time. I thought it came out already. Uh-uh. That's it. For real? It's coming out on Friday? Friday. Hey, spend them. That whole, that whole, how many tracks on it? 12. Ooh. Man, how long was it? About two minutes and 20 seconds. All right. All right, then. Quit. You got inspiration from Tupac? Yeah, yeah. I liked at that point of time. You know, these tracks, all lies on me is that you, you, you, you know, you, that sounds like a Tupac slogan, man. I mean, you, you, you already had in your mind when you was locked up that you was going to do that one? Yeah. Okay. And these tracks, though, they was inspired outside of there, though, once you came home, so I'm over. All of them was. All of them? That's what I thought. You know, you did rap and everything, but it was more. Oh no, one of them, one of them is, uh, more of a, you know, like the prison field. That was the idea she gave me. She was like, somebody was like, I mean, baby was like, um, I think you should. Help people understand, you know, the state of mind you was in. Yeah. And the growth, they can see the growth. That's the main thing. People want to see, because so many people who've been locked up and they had to go through the same things that you're going through now, mentally, and then now physically. Yeah, some people who can't survive out here, they do dumb crap just to go right back because they can't survive in this world. All they know is prison. Sure. You know what I mean? So here, and that's what we were talking to someone earlier that people do what they hear. Yes, what they see too, but because so many people listen to rap, they emulate from that, that music, as much as music is your therapy, it's a lot of other people's therapy because they can relate to what you're going through. And depends on, you might be a state in your life where they're not yet. They're where you used to be a year ago. Sure. But because they see where you're going and they're like, man, I can do it too. I tell everybody who rap, put motivation in there because you don't know who you might have. Even if it's a little bit, put some spoken words, some motivation just to help somebody. You can say all your other stuff, but put a piece in there. You don't know who it might help. You know what I mean? A thousand percent, for sure. You, when you came home, what were your intentions? We're now in a fourth quarter about to be. You got the holidays coming up. You know, what did you envision when you knew you was coming home? And I know you got kids, I know you got family, but what was your thoughts? Because I'm gonna take it there because I know already you thought about these things. When you locked up, you think about things because you have time to think. So what was the thing that you wanted to make sure that you stayed true to when you came home? Care. Okay. Just whatever she, we rocking this out. That's it. And that's your focus. Mine focus. That's real. That's real. What did she do to prove herself to you? You, I mentioned make you don't know me, you feel me like we wasn't, we not in the same neighborhood, you feel me? So you don't know how I was raised, you know how I grew up, you feel me? Let us in, because that's what I want my fans, they're now seeing a new side of you. For instance, the little boy in the back seat. I mean, I went through a lot of shit, like a lot of shit. And it's different when you actually share like your history with somebody and they take it and embrace it and careful and protect it, because most people take your history and use it against you and damage it. And it can hurt you and put you in a bad place. But she didn't do that to me, you know? And all my life with my friends or anybody I was ever cool with or anything like, I could tell them like, hey, bro, that's what I'm going through, you feel me? And it was always a joking matter or, you know, hey. But when I actually came out and said, hey, man, look, hey, it's fucked up for me right now, you feel me? She came in, she gave me an umbrella, you feel me? Yeah, yeah. I just, with Dallas, man, again, last time I may have mentioned Dahl for whatever, but now it hits close to home, man, just so not even a week ago, Strap, he was gunned down inside Dallas. Like what, did you even know him? Did you know Strap? Yeah, I fuck with Strap. Good nigga. What was, what goes through your mind when something like that happens? That's cold, I ain't, you know, when you know somebody, you know, you got a relationship with them, you know, and they leave, you know, it's live, but at the same time, it's like, Dahl, you never thought you wouldn't see that person again, not that person, you feel me? Yeah. You know, a couple niggas or the niggas, yeah, I know you was gonna die, nigga, but that person, nah. It was kind of cold, you know, that's why I kinda like, if it ain't business, I ain't dealing with it, you know, if it ain't money, I ain't dealing with it, if it ain't, you know. What was, what was something that you and Strap talked about? Did y'all ever have conversations or did you just meet him on the music tip? How did you guys even know each other? That's how we met on the music tip. On the music tip? Yeah. You know, he knew him of me, you know what I'm saying? From back then, you know, bumping into each other, some of his people know, some of my people, you know, so I just told him to stay focused, you know, shit. He told me the same thing, keep learning, bro, keep learning, and he's gonna pop, you know, I know I'ma see you at the top. We used to always tell each other that shit, too, like, hey, bro, I know I'ma see you at the top. I'ma see you there, yeah, I'ma see you there, yeah, yeah. I know he was gone. And being so young, he was only 22. He was so young. I love that Everyday 420 nigga song that he had done. I thought that was one of the most dopest song when he came on my platform. I was like, man, that's it right there. Yeah. Yeah, I was like, man, and I told him, I said, you, like, he had a style. I was like, man, you like a little baby or something. You remember I told him that? I was like, I just, out of everybody that I interviewed, I knew this nigga could rap. Like, not just, not freestyle, not like what I think of you on Fritz and just gonna put a project together and it sounds good. You know what I mean? That's what I looked at with him. And I had called to check on him before the end. You know what I'm saying? We text each other through the DM or whatever, after the one time for sure I remember. But the thing I always would tell him, man, is about, like, when I went back, if you see the interview, I always talk about God, because I know where I come from. And God didn't put me in this seat not to even bring him up when he done blessed me. I've been here 15 years. My wife and me have been married 20 years, man. So when I see somebody like y'all, I show love, you know that, and it's like real. It's like, yeah, nigga, I get to see my home, I'm gonna get your hell, we're gonna have a good time. And then we're gonna, you know what I'm saying? That's what it's all about. But then to lose somebody and you don't tell them about God, I can't sit in this seat, I can't do it, bro. And that ain't the first, it's been three since I've been doing this a year and something. That passed away. That passed away and it's crazy. So I always be, I feel a certain type of way about it. You know what I'm saying? Cause I know God is my ministry to talk to y'all. When I get in here to talk about God or say, hey, man, I've been through there, I've been through, I'm here. I'm an old nigga, but I made it through, bro. Like, hey, man, make sure you keep him in your life. Cause if it wasn't for him, I'd have crashed that back then too, for real. And I was out there in the streets. Well, you know, if you got the key, you better use it. That's it, that's it, that's it. God give you the key, you better use it. So my next question is, I see you were in that music necklace. Yeah, I like it. And when I think about PMB, who, when he, they said they were trying to steal his necklace. When he was in California, he was there. You know about the case, right? He was there, Roscoe's eating with his wife or girl or whatever and the dude came in and just shot him and was trying to steal the stuff. How careful are you when you go out? Maybe not even to be live or, because people do drop a location. People do be watching people on social media. That's how a lot of people get merked or whatever, you know what I mean? Because people be watching their Instagram, Snapchat. I mean, everything. Cause people be putting stuff out there, especially when they're traveling. For sure. Cause they want everybody to see it. And what discussions do you have with your wife to say, hey, don't be doing this, don't be doing that. You already know I'm out here like that. I want to say out here, don't mean on the streets or nothing like that, but I'm talking in the music, you know, she better see me. I mean, people's eye, people might look and be grudgeful or, you know, whatever. How do you have those discussions with her? And how do you move? A lot of, all the time. And at first it was kind of like uncomfortable to her because she so used to being, you know, regular. You know what I'm saying? But as we started going out and she seen, you know, different situations and, you know, she got to being, you know, more aware of, you know, what they're doing, what not to do and how to move and how not to move, you know. Even with me when I'm, you know, slipping, she be, hey, nah, not her, you tripping. Oh yeah, you right. You feel me? And it's actually, that's why I say it's a good thing that, you know, you can have somebody who, who just like, you don't have your back because once you do tell them that, they are aware all the way around the board. You feel me? And it always happened, no matter where you go, no matter where you be, they always gonna have your back. You feel me, sir? Well, you, you want to, like I said, the one thing I'll say is you are a goddess to the scene like you was rapping early on and the blocking and the interviewing process and the people that were doing this before when you was, when you was rocking, one that's predominant now as they are. And like, like, like, how are you capitalizing on these movements as far as the way you promoting this project? I mean, I really, I really don't, cause I don't be like in tune with the bloggers and shit like that. Cause a lot of them hate me, if it, if it, but I really don't give a fuck. Nigga better not be hating you. But I really don't, I really don't, I really don't, you know what I'm saying? I don't be paying attention to this shit. I just drop, I just do me, honestly. I'm just keeping it real. Like I don't be worried about people. I don't worry about what another nigga got going on or whatever a blogger say or whatever they try to, I don't worry about none of that. They've been trying to ex me out since I came in to rapping in Dallas, you feel me? Ever since I started rapping in Dallas, they been trying to ex me out, you feel me? So it ain't nothing they can do to me now, you feel me? I'm scared. Yeah. Well, the one thing that I would say is basically when you, when you out here promoting this thing, if you need me for anything, no, no, real talk, like this is it right here. Like you can come, we can do it tomorrow, nigga. Well, what we gonna do? I mean, we set back up, rap, whatever, whatever. I thought you meant like, For promotions, whatever. Oh, I thought you said the blogs, they come in, you were gonna pull your pistol. No, nigga. I thought what you said was, you said it when I need you, call it, we're gonna. No, not like that, no, nigga. Yo, my bad. I'm talking about we gonna promote the music, nigga. We trying to blow, nigga. You trying to blow? Not like that. I'm trying to say what you're on. Like, what's the play? No, no, no. You said call you. Yeah, and we wanna know when we trying to promote the music. Yeah, this nigga crazy, right? I ain't got no control, man. I thought you were, I'm just gonna talk to you for a minute. I mean, we gonna shoot for a minute, man. I thought you were gonna shoot for a minute. I thought you were gonna shoot for a minute. Yeah, we shoot the video, nigga. We gonna pray for you. Look, we gonna love it. Out of control. Out of control. No, man. So, what do you think, what's the, how do you plan to push the market to this project? Cause like I said, you got, you do have outlets out here. You do, you can make press runs. You will there be, how many, how many visual, how important is the visuals now compared to when you first doing your music before you got locked up? I feel like people don't listen to music no more, they see it. If you feel me. Okay. So, if they can see the music, they can like the music. Yeah. You know, give them something to look at, they'll like it. Yeah. Forza, and if you just give them a picture with a song, you know, it might go hard, it might fuck with it. Yeah. It'll be a little bit more better to them if you put the video with it. The video, okay. Okay. So. Yeah. We'll run it down. That's, and so, are you, are you, are you, you good with everything? Cause you know how when you get through the project, you be like, man, I don't know, should I have this, should I have that? Are you good, absolutely good with this project? Nah. Nah. Nah. I ain't even gonna lie. Like, like I've been going back and forward for management for like a week and two. Like, but they like, nah, they just want that. I'm like, nah, that ain't what I want to do. Like that ain't shit. But people, they love my music so much. When I did, like presented to them, like, hey, look, here it go. 15 songs, y'all pick out 12, you know? You know, drop all eyes on me. When I did give it to them, it was like, oh, you feel me? And I'm like, this ain't the best music for me. It's just, you know, I'm loading up. You feel me? It's time for me to drop, so I'm loading. You feel me? So y'all can take that if I want it. Like, oh, we finna put this out on the 30th. I'm like, that ain't really, I can give y'all some more shit, like some little extras. Nah, we want this. So like, nah, I don't think, I'm not 100%. I'd say I'm probably like, like 85. Are all the songs named after like songs from Tupac? I was, I was headed that way. I ain't gonna lie. I was headed that way, but it didn't work like that. Why? Why you change shit? It didn't come out like that. Cause I started getting beats from different producers. If you feel me? So it was like, as I started going and I didn't write none of this music. So like, I just went straight in, like. Punched in? Yeah. I didn't write a song. Is any of these incomparable to many men or any of the first ones you did when you first got out, like after the rain? Nah, they're actually different. They're actually different, different sound, different, you know, different vibes, you feel me? Yeah. I'm very versatile, so don't like, you probably heard two songs from me and be like, damn, I like them too, but these two don't sound not like these two, you know? And it's two different genres, you feel me? So I should be kicking that shit. Oh, really? So, so who would you like to work with? Is it anybody on this project? Oh, is it just you? No rappers. Just me. Who would you like to? There could be a singer. No singers. No rappers. So, and I like that, I like that though, but if it's anybody that, well, maybe the next project will get a feature or something. Oh, yeah, for sure. Okay. I got some features, I got songs with niggas, I just ain't put them out yet. Why? For, cause I'm working on music right now, I just. It's all about music. Yeah, I mean, I just got out like, I just got out six months ago, you know, and I'm fine, I've been at home for like, at my house, like in my house for like, what? Three months now. I was in the halfway house the rest of the time, so. Yeah. So you said that song that came through, that was about your wife? Yes, ma'am. So, give me some insight into that song. Tell me what's about. Chiara? Yeah, I got a song called Chiara on the tape. We, we, we, we, us as rappers, like we glorify a lot of shit, you know. And me being who I am today, like the man that I am today, like I'm gonna glorify anything. It's gonna be two things, two, two situations. And that's God and my wife, you feel me? So, I just, and again, I didn't write it. So none of this music. So the day that I went to the studio on this particular song and I heard the beat, it automatically called my name, you feel me? So when we press record, it was, it was, it was natural, it was a natural feeling. It was very exciting. It was a very happy moment for everybody in the studio because it wasn't, it wasn't a dull moment, you feel me? And it was very natural. So, you know, everything that came out, it was very easy. It wasn't a hassle. Was she in there when you did it? Nah. When she heard it for the first time, what was her reaction? I don't know, I wasn't there. But my, my, my boy was there. I had something to my boy, first KV. I had something to him. And he was at the house. And I guess he tried to wake up. She sleep, he tried to wake up. She don't wanna wake up. But then when she finally heard like the song was about her and he left out the room, she won't wake up and hear the song, try to song by herself. Like, she really don't care about it, but she really do care about it. Now, if you ask her where that song is on her phone, anywhere, it's a ringtone now. She don't know how she got a ringtone on the iPhone, but she got a whole ringtone iPhone, it's Kira. Sort of got. She cares. That's good though. Tell me about the homicide. Homicide is a, just, just talk about my hood. Like East Dallas, you know, growing up in East Dallas, what I seen, what I'm going through, you feel me? So just put it on, put it on wax. It's very deep. It's a deep song, you know? You can ride to it. Wow. And so what inspired, who produced it? Shafer. Shafer. Did he produce all the songs or? Yeah. He went down through there. Yeah. So I won't ask you that again. Yeah, man, Shafer. Shafer that guy, huh? Yeah, Shafer, Shafer the show for sure. Man. If a person who said, like you said earlier, that you always put everything that you go through in your music, right? What would you say about those kids out here who's doing street stuff and putting all that in their music when, you know, feds, cops, and everybody watching and they, you know, they use that against them? What do you say to those people? You gotta, you gotta know what you're doing. You gotta be prepared for what you're rapping about. You know, you gotta know what you rap about is gonna be used against you one day. You know, whether if it's in court or with your partners or whatever the fuck. You know, especially if you're really living like that. Cause I was one of those. You know what I'm saying? When I went to federal court, my music was played. My music was in evidence. Pictures was in evidence. Pictures that they took was in evidence, you know. So if you're really living with what you're rapping, best believe they come in and they gonna ask you about it. So did you ever feel like, dang, I shouldn't have put it in a song? When it was too late, yeah. When I was already like, matter of fact, I remember that day too. I was leaving from court and my lawyer came and told me like, hey, you know, that song you got called, I can't get caught. I was like, yeah, it was like, they know all about it. I was like, what the fuck? He said, before what? You know, so when I got back to the precinct, I had called, I had called back. I was like, man, they tell my, she said, I did that damn shit. But the song had a lot of stuff in it. It had to do with your whole case. And he was like, damn, I feel like I shouldn't have done that damn song. I mean, at the time I wasn't thinking of it because I was only just doing music. You feel what I'm saying? But, you know, when the face came and the shit got going down, hey, yeah. If that's the case, then you should believe in the fact that what you speak out here into the world, that it has power. So what energy you put out into your music? That's what you can come back and get you. I learned, I learned, I know that now. Back then I didn't know that. You know, back then when we rapping, everything that I rapped about then, I used to always say, like, I know I'm gonna go to the fizz. I know I'm gonna be like my uncle's, my uncle Jeff, my uncle Jeff. So you accepted it? Mama, I already knew this. You feel what I'm saying? So when I rapped about it, I did it. I was the word like not knowing. Subconsciously. Subconsciously rapping about my, you know, what I'm doing, not knowing that. It's in my future, you feel what I'm saying? So when it did come and I'm sober, I'm still not, and I got enough knowledge to realize, like, damn, I spoke this shit over myself. You feel me? If I was rapping about different shit, different shit probably would have happened. You said when you were sober, so that mean when you were doing all these music and all of that, you weren't sober during that time. So you weren't able to really think it through. I'm hot, you know, shit. When you finally sit down in that seat and it's cold, you feel me? You just, you by yourself, you know, you get that time. And that's when I really came to knowledge, you know, like, damn, I spoke everything that's going on right now. I spoke this shit over myself, you feel me? So when niggas shoot videos and caskets and churches and shit like that. And I see that. I don't do that type of shit because I know, like, me getting that casket, acting like I'm dead, you feel me, shit. It'll be around the corner, you feel me? Wow. So I don't do that type of shit. I don't talk about me dying. I don't, I don't, I don't rap about me. Nah, yeah, nah. I don't eat now. If you, if you once you listen to my music, you want to hear me say like, oh yeah, shit. I know them hoes watching and I ain't doing none of that. Superstar. Superstar is different. It's a rock star song, you feel me? That one just came naturally. I'm beginning, like Shafa, he worked a guitar, you feel me? So shit, he was kicking some shit with a guitar. That one just happened. That was just like magic, I ain't even gonna lie. Like, that shit just happened. It was just like, it was meant to be. That was a song that meant, that was supposed to be on earth. It just happened like that, that feeling. Damn it, man, superstar, man. That thing, it better be everything that I hoped it would be, superstar. Paisley Miggins on, like all of them, this came to you so easily. Which one of the songs was your most difficult song to do? Oh. I would say Dizzy. Why? Because my little boy on there, he's his first time rapping, right? How old is he? I think Dizzy 12, no, Dizzy 10. Okay. Dizzy 10. So we put Dizzy on the track and like, me coming from Cussing and shit like that with him being so young. It's like, I can't put you out there to the world like that. You feel me? And this, I'm thinking about making this my first artist. You feel what I'm saying? So when we get him in the studio, it went from being scared to being excited. You feel me? So I gotta teach him like, hey, how to punch in, how to say this when this come on. Ooh, ooh. So I'm working myself, but I'm actually working with him too. At the same time, a person who ain't never worked before. You feel me? So once the song got complete, this where the hard part came in. Song got complete. We playing the song back and back. Everybody listen to this jam. It's hot, it's hot. So we look around, we look at him. We're gonna do another song. But we ain't gonna start this. We ain't started. Hey, hey, you got your one song. That's it. You feel me? You on the music table. That's what he wants to do now. That's where the hard part came in. We couldn't keep him, we couldn't sit him down not the rest of the night. He won't get on everybody's song. He won't record back and back. So other than that, it was pretty much an easy process. I've been waiting on this for a long time. So I was ready for it. That's real, man. I was ready for it. So, man, I gotta get ready for my freestyle. I'm ready for that. We ain't freestyle in the day. Yeah, bro. We're not freestyle in the day. See how he act, man? He don't want to do no freestyle. Freestyle Kera song. Cause you know, she love that over there. She don't even smile in it, you know? I don't want to see her blood. She be over there. Yeah, I mean, you know, one of the things I do value is being the fact that how often are you going to do projects? Cause you got to have more like next year. How many, how many are you going to do? Well, I get 2023. We should know how many we got coming. It got to be a lot of them, bro. I'm going to try to catch out again, December, cause my birthday, December 30th. So I want to drop some on my birthday for him. But as far as the next year, I'm ball hogging. I'm going to keep it real. Like, I ain't going to pass the ball at all. You don't keep ball, keep it on in there. I got to, you know, I'm home. I'm good now. I'm straight. I'm on my feet. So it's time to get the ball rolling. Make sure, yeah, we for now. Hey, and I want to, I want to thank y'all too, man. I like y'all, man. Why? I like most blogs and shit. We just been kicking it. You know, a lot of people do a lot of fake ass shit. You know, they got a lot of blog sites, man. Say a lot of gay ass shit, you know. Try to act like they got evidence, knowledge, some type of bitch ass shit. You feel me? A lot of niggas do a lot of gay ass shit, man. I just want to say, man, you know, I be watching y'all, man. I might not like how I post something like that, man. I be watching y'all, man. I just be watching it. Why you don't be liking it? Cause my finger just won't let me press the heart. You feel me? You know what I'm saying? I just can't press it, but I be like, ah, look at me, it's your regular. Look at me. Chillin', baby. You see, y'all, I'm billin'. Y'all comment. The fire mode is what you can do. But y'all be havin' some bitch ass niggas on this show. Oh, man. So I be like y'all, we got questions, but I be like, what the ass the hell are they doing? They should have had me that question. Man, we just happy that you still come spend time with us, bro. That's all. I'm be real, like we just, I appreciate it, man. Like I said, we comin' this game, man. I really understand what it was gonna be. We just doin' us. We been here doin' business, but to just come in and be able to get y'all to embrace us like that, that's love, bro. So I don't, I stay humble by it. You know what I'm sayin'? We need this, though. We need this, cause a lot of shit, like, could be misunderstood, and that's why people call them places like this and they don't even talk. Yeah, you seen chief. I know you seen chief over here. Chief was over here cuttin' up, yeah. Chief had a control over him. Chief had a fucking control over him. Do you agree with Chief, dawg? Do you agree? People sayin' that chief shouldn't rap, he too old. They sayin' a lot of people too old to be rappin'. Like all the legends need to sit down and... Get a label. Get a label, help these youngsters come up. Nah, nigga, help your mother fuck yourself, nigga. The fuck you gotta help your fuck? Get off your ass, get your own bag, get your own cash, nigga, fuck your man. You know what I'm sayin'? He gotta get a label. Get your own label, nigga. Even if you don't get a label, but actually educate a lot of these young kids because they have a lot of people who see you doin' what you're doin', never did music but wanna do music, don't know the first thing about it, end up in bad deals, all of that. But if you reach down, tell somebody don't do this, don't do that, learn from my mistakes. You know what I mean? Yeah, we have these platforms now where we're asking those questions and it's out there so people can see on YouTube if they do their research and hear the answers and not actually meet you face to face. But back then you didn't have that. So it's just the same thing academics was talkin' about too. Just helping the people coming up after you. You know what I mean? For sure, but how could you ask that, did you listen to that person's music? That's the question I was asked, you feel me? So how you gonna ask this man for help you ain't listen to his music? How you know he not tellin' you what to do with his music? He done drop, he greeted 17, 18, 19. He tellin' you how to fuck to get money. He tellin' you what to do. You don't wanna not listen. I didn't think about it. He go to the studio every night, and rap what the fuck he live, what the fuck he go through, what the fuck he, you know, his dance, his ups. You not takin' the time out to say, man let me listen to what you talkin' about. Feel me? How can I not? He on ain't, everybody know his name. Why would I not listen to him? Feel me? Okay, yeah, chief said don't do this. Chief said grind like this, hustle like that. Yeah, you might get like this. Hey, this might happen so be, you know, and take that, digest it, go about your day. But he got here a whole ass nigga, cause he ain't got no label, he ain't give a, you know, gang. He don't understand that. Is he chief for ledger? Yes he is. In the city? Definitely. He put enough work in? Definitely, most definitely. And then this another thing. Most rappers, I already got a crazy job as being rapper. See feel me? But when you a rapper and a screen nigga, you feel me? Like a real screen nigga? When you, you know, before the rap, you know, we was really jacking, we was really finishing shit. We hit a couple of niggas for some bridge, you feel me? A lot of niggas looking for a nigga. So I gotta deal with this on top of the rap shit. Wow. It's crazy. What does it take to be a legend in your eyes? You gotta put the work in on both ends of the board. You can't just wake up one day and be a hot rapper and say, oh, I'm a legend. You feel me? You're a legend in the music, that's cool. Congratulations. But it's different when you're a real shit, real shit. You gotta put in like 10, 20 years. Real shit, man. I wouldn't say that, you feel me? But yeah, somewhere close, 19. Do you, when you see stuff like a Big T, two, three niggas shot up, and was it like that before you went? I mean, I remember somebody did shoot at somebody, but to see what I seen that day, we was in Atlanta when we come back. I'm like, they sending me these pictures. I'm like, I can't believe that these niggas really wildin' out in there like that. Is it turned different than it was before you left? It was getting, it was from the head to that point. Where it is right now, I seen it. I seen it, like before I left, I was like, oh yeah, in a couple years, this shit gonna be wild. You feel me? I seen it. I think people are getting more bold. That's the thing, cause every time I pick up, I don't watch the news anymore, but the news is on my phone, the news app. And not only in Texas, but I've seen where people, broad daylight, walking up to people and shooting them, like out in public, don't care who around, whatever. Back in the days, they'll wait till nighttime, they'll go do this, you won't know who did it. But now they don't care. It's the, and it's sad to say that it is the music. You feel what I'm saying? Cause you got a lot of niggas out here who ain't never did this shit, and it's so easy to go to the studio and see it, because they don't give a fuck. You feel what I'm saying? They don't care. Yeah, nigga, kill that nigga, spend on that shit. You feel me? Cause they don't, they ain't never been through nothing. Instead of, you know, the real one, when you got niggas like Chief, and you got niggas like Trapper, you got niggas like Yellow, you got niggas like Zeddy Wayne, and Levi Cartier and Mises, you feel me? They got to choose who they listen to. You feel me? Who actually can tell a nigga on the microphone and say, I just left that way. You feel me? That shit is serious. Niggas dying everyday in that bitch. Don't do that shit. You feel me? You know, so. But you talking about in the music, but a lot of people would say, it's also in the video games that you talking about playing earlier. Well, the comeback ain't gonna hurt no better. Now, look. What is that, Grand Theft Auto and all of that sort of stuff? I don't get that far. People was talking about those two. I'm not far in the games like that. I just play one game. That's all I can do. I can't play men. I can't play none of the extra shit. I don't do that. I just play more to come in. That's all I can do. I just fight. Far as in the Grand Theft Auto and shit like that. Nah, that's for a game or something, not a game. I'm just a stress reliever person. You feel me? I can't smoke no weed, so I do that shit. But I feel like if people listen to music and digest it and understand both sides of the fence, then they'll make the right choice. But if you don't make, if you don't understand, if you don't know both sides of the fence, you're buying a crash. You're gonna do some dumb shit in broad daylight and then get a life sentence. How hard is it for you to punch in without smoking weed? Because a lot of musicians, all the artists always feel like they gotta be either drinking, smoking, gotta have their honeys around, they gotta do this, that to get a vibe, to be able to produce. Vibes is real. Vibes is real. But I'm a natural, you feel me? I can do it under pressure. I like pressure. One thing about me, I'm cold under pressure. Let me get that freestyle in me. You ain't get a freestyle. You see what I'm saying? That's pressure. Tell us you've seen it. I'm cold under pressure. I love pressure, you know? So me, it was, it was, you know, I could do it. But far as in speaking on orders, like having a good vibe is a key to make a good music. Because you can fuck up a nigga vibe and fuck up a nigga whole song, you feel me? And they shoulda pissed a nigga off too. Like for real, I am out riding. Man, they done fucked me up, you feel me? So, you gotta have a good vibe for sure. Who you liking? You liking Big X the plug in the city? Yeah, I want to tap in with him. I like X, man, you feel me? He's a big nigga. X need to come forward at me this shit, man. Turn that boy up. You think y'all can do something special together? Oh, yeah, definitely. Yeah, already. He don't give me no freestyle this time. You see how he do me, man? Damn, man. We don't boss talk talk at all, boss. That's it, you don't give me that, I don't let you get that over, man. Nah, I'ma let you make it, I see he's persistent. So, I think we talked about, is it, if we forget about, I know we didn't name all of the songs, but is there any other song that you want to talk about on this project? I did Homicide, I did. I know it was one, I know, I got a song on her about three, you feel me? Cause it's a lot of shit that people don't, like people interview me every day or try to interview me every day, you know? Try to pay and shit to get to like, you know, the back, oh, what the fuck really happened that type of shit? And that shit really be gating me cause I don't get down like that, you feel me? I didn't ask you about it cause out of respect, I know, you know, y'all have a past and it's something that we, we talk about it with everybody to be honest with you, but because of when we first talked, when I talked to your wife, she was like, nah, you know what I'm saying, just, but, and I'm real respectful. Cause a lot of people do that shit and they take that shit and they be messy with it, you feel me? They be on bitch ass shit with it when they not understanding that this was once upon a time, like once upon a time, some real street shit going on. You feel me? He couldn't, niggas, it was real. Let's just say that, you feel what I'm saying? So with them coming to interview me and asking them about some shit that can get me in prison, you know? And I'm on camera with this shit like, you know, for what? You feel me? Ain't no price tag big enough for me to give you what the fuck is really going on. But it's your choice, nobody can't make you talk. It's up to you to say whatever you want to say. Exactly, but sometimes you can piss me off and not get me easy, you feel what I'm saying? Cause only cameras are behind these microphones, people be trying to be, you know, the right way, you feel what I'm saying? And I'm not all the way there yet, miss your mic, I'ma keep it real. Everybody's a work in progress, there's nobody that's all the way there yet. You feel me? So a lot of these niggas be trying to, you know, ruffle my feathers and I'll be willing, I'll be ready for them to ruffle my shit, if I ever... Just think of all the things that you have to lose. And feel me? So, but that's why I made the song, you know, to help them understand what the fuck going on between you. I can't wait to hear it. It's cause I ain't mad at you, that's the only one that's mad at you. He said Friday, all of this coming out? Yeah, Friday. I can't wait. What time? Yeah, midnight, 12. And we going in at midnight, right? Midnight. I can't wait. All eyes on me, so. Wow, so I think that's gonna be a dope thing cause you get to, everybody been waiting to hear what you got to say about that. And that's something that, I think it's gonna be something that people need to, need, you know, it helps man to talk about stuff. I'm telling you, you know that. You know what I'm saying? So it's just on your time, you know? A lot of people do that shit for the wrong reason. They doing shit for the views or the likes or to piss people off. You feel what I'm saying? Nah, this ain't what the fuck going on. So why would I get on camera and do the lame shit? If it's real, it'll be done the right way. Is the generation we're in, the negativity cells, that's how people get views. So that's why a lot of people end up pushing all that. I remember when we started this, we always just wanted to do everything positive. But we remember we started getting some slack for, you know, some negativity, but it wasn't from our part. It's just people saying certain things. But we realized there's a yin and yang to everything, you know? So you can't just always be all positive. You know what I mean? You can't be all negative. Right. I mean, that's why I said I like y'all shit. If you even cause, it's not just a whole bunch of bullshit coming on, a lot of niggas gossiping like hoes or something, you know? Nah, it's from the front though, you're gonna have a laugh. If you even believe it, you know what I'm saying? So, you know, and doing this right here and actually being able to talk about some shit and get it out the right way, that's the best thing possible. And I feel like that's what y'all in it for. You feel me? I like this shit for it. We getting better too. We grow with everything we do. You know what I mean? Like when we first came on, we definitely tried to keep it just all the way positive and tried and people would come in and say whatever. And then I can't let this person say something, don't let the other one say it'd be like that. Like, come on, man. But see, that's the whole shit about it. Like I seen some of y'all interview, I come on here right now and crush a lot of niggas when they came on the same microphone. Yeah, yeah. But for what? I ain't got time for that. That ain't what the fuck I'm finna do. But you got good music, man. You got good music. You got a lot of stuff that you're trying to accomplish. And at the end of the day, I think it's a buildup. You know what I mean? Like say, say 2023 when you come up this project right after your birthday and all that, there should be something else special that you're creating. You know what I'm saying? All of these things is stepping stones, man. That really should help educate somebody younger than you. That 10-year-old you was just talking about. To where he conceived, man. My pops did it this way. I'm finna do it. And the next thing you know, he gon' do it. And it's going down. You know what I'm saying, right? So that's what it's really all about, man. Man, we love you, BZ, man. For real, bro. Gonna be in the building, y'all. We did it again, nigga. And he didn't rap for me, but nigga, he coming back, nigga. I would've rapped for him, but he forgot. He owe me five dollars. I bought him a chicken sandwich. I bought him a chicken sandwich. I was up here. Last time I was up here, I bought the niggas. I bought the niggas, the chicken sandwich from the Popeye. The niggas ain't gave me my five dollars back. The niggas ain't gon' do a boss talk, so I'm forced to send it back to me, too, y'all. So be on the lookout for that. He gon' throw me something back so I can rock this boss talk. Cause see my boy out of Miami gave me this one. This ain't nothing but some boss talk. Yeah, shout out to shout, man. All that Atlanta slow, man. Atlanta or is it? He from Florida, but he livin' Atlanta now. You gotta give me one, baby. I like the fur one better. Yeah, all the old girls. See a lot of people like that. Y'all all good, ain't so. That one hot, though. I ain't gon' lie. That one hot. That one right there. That one different. Yeah, that's signature. That's it. Everybody love that one. I think that's why ain't nobody say. They sayin' to go over here and say, they're gonna fuck you up. We be livin' big, big, big. You ain't done ridin' the whole time, she gon' eat. That shit sound like Pete Manning for the come on. That's it. Big shit, big shit. Name another firecat like this. She went in the whole time. That was hot. That's dope. That's it. That's the one. You don't need no more. I just can't shit on him, man. I grab verse on this one. Yeah, we came from the show. You don't need no more. You know remix with it. Yeah, I'ma let two or three round me get on that one. Please don't go down through there. Who's hot? Who's hot? Who really on top? I need you to set up a microphone right here and give him a beat. Yeah, a boss talk. That's right. That's it. I'm gonna get a boss talk beat. Name another firecat like this. Give him a boss talk. I need him a fire. I'm gonna give him a boss talk. You know what I'm goin' on. I'm gonna get a boss talk. Tell us, nigga, give him a fire talk. Hey, man. That's another great segment of boss talk. One on five, man. Well, the boss is talk. And we out.