 For the most part, I started seeing like I had songs like Crip Lives Matter. Yeah, stuff like that you did. But but early on, you and YG, y'all did some stuff together. When you guys first, when you first linked up with Adam and you went over there, what was that all about? Like, how did that even happen? It was just no expectations. Like, I ended up I ended up running into Adam at my guy, O3 Greedo's video shoot. OK, him and Max O'Creme moves from Houston. I went to the video shoot. So Max O'Creme, how long ago was that? This was like 2018, I believe. OK, 2018. Yeah. And at the time, like, you know, I heard his name. My little brother put me on. He was like, this guy is the one that's, you know, he's doing all the interviews with the rappers and they blowing up. So everybody in the city wanted an interview. So I ran into him at the video shoot and I was like, hey, introduce myself. I was like, hey, man, let's do an interview. So he's like, I got you. And I ended up doing the interview with him just as a rapper. We had a great time. It was funny, like a lot of great conversation. Like, you know, it's still on YouTube right now. Yeah, it was dope. And I guess I left the impression on him. And I want to say maybe six months later, he was like, hey, we want to test out some things and doing all this. And at the time, I'm not thinking of like podcasting. No, I'm not thinking like I want to do podcasting or I want to be this in this space like I'm thinking like, OK, I'm a rapper. If it's a situation that can help expand my music and give me more eyes than I'm down. So I went and I did like this test pilot for some type of content. And then they probably didn't hit me back to like three months later and quarantine had happened. So, you know, at first Adam hit me. He was like, he got a Snapchat show. He was like, you think I'd be good for it? And I was like, I said, I'll try it out. Like I ain't tripping. I said in my head, I'm like, I'm not going to do this full time, though, because to me, it takes away from the music side of things. So I was like, I never wanted to take it away from the music side. So once I started doing the Snapchat stuff, I was like, all right, you know, it's cool and then quarantine happened. Everything shut down. You ain't got nowhere to go. Ain't no rap shows. It ain't nothing. So everything shut down. I'm like, I'm like, OK, I just kept going back. It was it was convenient, close to my house. And I just kept doing that. And I just noticed, started noticing like different race people coming up to me because before this, like people wouldn't, you know, street background and stuff. People, you know, they would be scared to come talk to you. Yeah. They'd be like, oh, you know, later, they'll hit you up on DM. Like, hey, I seen you after what's the call. I'm like, man, why are you saying nothing? But that's the type of aura that I was giving out. And I didn't like that. Yeah. So I knew that. Did you knew that though? And because a lot of like a lot of my older music, it's a lot of like street game banging, Compton type stuff. And I'm thinking that and now I can, you know, honestly say I came to a roadblock to where I was like, you know what? Am I putting the right message out there to the youth? Because if I'm sitting here, you know, moving on in life, living, you know, living better and doing things, progressing. And I'm taking care of my kids and I'm doing that. But I'm making street songs. And, you know, sometimes people. Yeah. Sometimes people will tell me, like, oh, man, you make me want to go shoot up something. Yeah. And I'm like, that ain't the type of energy that I want to give across. Like I'm a genuine good dude. Yeah, I like, you know, I'm saying I like to uplift people. Yeah, I don't like to, you know, if it's some type of confrontation, I always my grandma always taught me, like, hey, let's try to, you know, rectify the situation. If we can't, then we can get to this and everything else. But for the most part, I started seeing like I have songs like Crip Lives Matter. Yeah, stuff like that you did. But but early on, you and YG, you all did some stuff together. You ain't never had a thought like me from from from from that side. You know, at the end of the day, it was like, OK, you know, at the end, you know, you I understand, but you grew. You got older, too, during the process. So I think that's some because when a lot of my partners get locked up, a lot of time people come home, they be like, he changed. Well, he was gone for five years or he was gone for four years. Or if you just growing up and coming into your greatness. Yeah, you're going to feel like that. And there's nothing wrong with transformation, man, in evolution. Right. So I think that's live, bro. And I think that even though you you see what you was going through and you see those people coming to you, that's just God picking at you, saying you move into the next level, man. That's hard, bro. Yeah. And my grandmother, she would, you know, like I have I have both sides. My grandmother, she was a beautiful angel on earth. Always taught me somebody still from you. You know, they probably need them more than you do. And always forgive people, the importance of family. And I didn't get it, you know, I rebelled against that at a young age. So I didn't like want to hang on my family like that. I was outside in the streets of my homeboys and I felt like at the time, I probably put my friends more above family. And as I got older, I was like, damn, family is really all that you really have. People that nigga can switch up on you and things can happen. And yeah, man, my grandma, she told me that. So I had her heart, but, you know, I'm going outside. I got to adapt. Yeah. Because my homeboys say, we into this, we into this, we into that. Can't go over here, can't go over there. And they didn't understand that. But the thing is, man, like I said, again, having that foundation is so important, man. And I think that's so live, man. I really, like I said, I think with you going over there, just as much as you said that no jumper, basically before Adam 22, like for him, like you said, things changed when you went over there. For as people start coming up to you, I believe that the other side also start coming up to him and it start respecting him because of you. So because of your of your blackness, to be honest, which in y'all being so like people like you, like you probably know who spoke to the nigga for what, for him, they go by it. Yeah. So that's the way it be. And it's a good it's a win-win. So it is a win to me that to me. It's a combo of things, though, correct. Because at one point, yes, he's getting his interviews off. But on the other end, like we don't have no real platform in Los Angeles that you could just go other than the radio, yeah, which like you're one percent that gets to go to the radio. So, you know, in the same sense, yeah, you could say that. But I'm giving I'm going to give respect to say, like, it's a platform that, you know, people from our communities, whether right or wrong, for better or for worse, get to go out there and get some exposure. So to me, that was the dope part. I think that's dope, too. But yet, and still, with you being over there, it brings a whole aura that where people feel comfortable going over there. I got to say that, you know what I'm saying? That that's going to turn it up. I'm beyond it. And it's going to turn it up in a way that where did you and I'm going to ask this and I'm going to let you talk. Did you did you feel like you was making a difference when you was doing it? Yeah, because, you know, now people are coming up to me instead of saying, hey, you you turn me up when I'm doing this. They're like, bro, you're bringing you help bring joy to my life. That's funny. You know what I'm saying? I'm getting I'm getting respected for my personality now.