 And this was a more professional situation of Paul Wall is on time and he's gonna kiss all the babies in the room. It's a thousand people in there, it's gonna be a thousand autographs, it's gonna be that extra three hours. And I just learned a lot about being on time, you know, sitting up straight, smiling, doing the things that me coming from being S.U.C. and just being gangsta in the hood and getting this money and being a legend, but this was a more professional side to get me ready. And it was a one album deal and we got it done and it gave me the legs and the foundation to be one of the best. So you was in, you live both worlds. You signed to Swisher House. How was that going from S.U.C. to Swisher, live both movements? How did you, how did you end up like, like, what, I know it was a move on, but like, was it big to you that you moved to Swisher House or signing with them because you all killed it when you did, but that was a business decision that most people can't make. I was more enshrined in what I was doing. I was a part of the screwed up click, but right at that time, I had a legal situation, a bad legal situation that I needed to get passed. But besides the legal situation, we wasn't in favor at the time. What I mean by that is, you know, Pat had to pass away, screw passed away. It's going on. We kind of in a situation of trying to fight back to just to keep our name good as far as S.U.C. and what we've been doing is music because I didn't drop tapes, hopped and dropped them. We just kind of added what we're about to do. They kind of at the rise. They were steady reaching out to me to get a deal done. I knew that this was going to be a big decision based on the side of town I was from. And the main reason that I made the decision that I knew that I had the talent to take care of it. And in that they were pushing our type of music, doing what we do, what we made, what we built the city. I just felt like I needed to take the opportunity for the win that they just kept on asking. And I knew that it would be something. And I didn't actually sign with Swish House. Me and T. Farage done a deal. The T. Farage was a part of Swish House. And I wouldn't take it back for nothing in the world. You know what I'm saying? But I really feel like I knew this. I was like, man, it's going to be a lot of criticism for this. It's going to be what's the best thing for me to be able to get out of it. I got to go hard. So I got to come with this chunk of the dudes. I got to come with this. I'm a G. I got to come a little by a few 80 by a minute. I got to come ABA. I got to come Gangster Grill. And I got to give it to them. So I don't think if my it wouldn't have went over well, if I'd have flopped with it. You know what I'm saying? So I just knew that I had to work hard. It was a great opportunity. And I wouldn't give it back to nothing. Powerwall, I learned a lot from going on the road with Powerwall. I learned a lot from just having a new day. I was from being drinking and smoking and missing shows and tired and not. And this was a more professional situation of the Powerwall is on time and we're going to kiss all the babies in the room. It's a thousand people in there. It's going to be a thousand autographs. We're going to be there extra three hours. And I just learned a lot about being on time, you know, sitting up straight, doing the things that me coming from being as you see and just being gangsta in the hood and getting this money and being a legend. But this was a more professional side to get me ready. And it was a one album deal and we got it done. And it gave me the legs and the foundation to be who I am today. Did you learn by seeing or did you learn by him actually telling you those stuff? No, I learned by seeing by seeing. I learned by seeing Powerwall is very, very humble. You know, when I was in situations and got in trouble and had to come home and he was doing he was at it was at points where he was 25,000 or so. And he was splitting it with me, you know, to let me do chunk up the dudes at his big shows and everything and really doing not only just me being his favorite rapper, but, you know, reaching back. And he had he had no reason to do this. You know what I'm saying? So I really appreciate the switch house thing was a was a was a great moment in my career, even though it was controversial. It did a lot for me as a person on, you know, from a learning standpoint and learning how to admire other people that and I went over there and did my thing. Mike Jones was Platinum Powerwall was this and such, such. I just knew that I was going to come over there and tie that microphone up. All right. Yeah, I seen it. I seen it and I remember that was on my mind. Go hard, go hard, go hard. And I started with that ABA and we hit him with that ABA and it kind of took me back to the mixtape field. That's what they kind of wanted. They hadn't seen the mixtape because that's kind of what happened with us. When we let the mixtape game go and we start doing Platinum in the ghettos and and hardest pits in the litter and Big Mo, we kind of left the screw tape game alone. We stopped doing the mixtapes and they picked right up on it. Yeah, yeah, they picked right up on it. So when I got over that, one of the first thing they wanted to do was put me back in that element of freestyle in it. And we hit it big. We hit it big on ABA, man, just to be honest. It was bigger than love, I feel hate about me. Oh, yeah. Shit. Man, the impact of ABA was legendary. Chunk of the Deuce really is on that album. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because we hadn't got that clear yet. We really hadn't got the deal for me yet. See, it's so many stuff going that Mike Jones had a deal over here. Paul Wilde had a deal over here. They was trying to get me a different deal, you know what I'm saying? Instead of going through Asylum and Warner Brothers, they wanted to give me a different deal. So we went through Universal, but that was a transition. I had to go do some time in that, in that. That's why I missed the break-em-out video. I had situations, so it took a lot. And I really commend Swishows for what they've done of taking on me because I brought a lot of baggage. I came over that with warrant, warranted. I had baggage, you know what I'm saying? I get it, man. But me being a G, I didn't take a dollar upfront. Yeah. These people were platinum, millions. Yeah. All I wanted was an opportunity. All I wanted was gangsta grill. ABA, I'm a G, chunk up the deuce. And I knew that that would give me a platform. When I first got there, man, I was at... I had bagged my bag down to five dollars a shot.