 Yeah, we on boss talk one on one, one on one. Yeah, we gonna talk. You know, when we think about you, I went and I started looking and researching and I looked on Vlad first, didn't I? Cause that's what you're all talking about. They look on Vlad, you'll see him on the hill there. And I looked and it said that you were the original, like one of the main guys that started the Crips, wasn't it? Well, I've been around since the Westside Crips started with Tookie, Monkey Man, Jamele. It's just when it was the Westside. That's when it started? Well, on the Westside, Raymond, Machiling 6970 on the East side of town. That's the other side of the 110 Freeway. They were called Crips with two Bs back then. Then Tookie and Raymond, Washington, Merged and James Compton and others. And they formed the Eastside Crips, the Westside Crips. And it started crystallizing from there till they broke into what they have today known as Sets, Atrey Gangster now at 19, at 15 and a half. I was a co-founder of Atrey Gangster Crips at 15 and a half, which is the Atrey's today. So that's, I've been in the game since I was 14. That's I'm 64 now. I've been out here 35 years in prison, numerous arrests. 35 years in prison? Yeah. High for your life? Yes, wow. And that seems to be the pattern in the staple of what we was doing in. So as I witnessed it as a survival of this violent world, because it's very violent, you see the sugarcoat it is where you can image and act and talk over the internet. And it'll be over in a couple of hours. That ain't how this goes. This ain't over with in a couple of hours. It don't end cut. And we just try to bring awareness to senseless gun violence, other things that are affecting our community and try to build up our community. I love that. I love that because I've always asked for unity. I've always, every time when people come on our show, whether it be rappers or just people who are trying to make a change. And I always say, how are you planning to do this? Because you have some of these young kids out here who feel like they're on top of the world. And no matter who you are or what you've been through or what you've done, they're not listening. It's like, who are you to tell me? Your time, oh, your time is done. Now is my time. I do what I want to do. So how can you get through to people like that? Well, first of all, when you're on the street, your age doesn't, because a lot of them don't dare to get old in this game. That's the first thing. And it's a different standard if you hold yourself up as a man. You know, you start a day, don't know nothing about the struggles, civil rights. They don't look up to Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, they never heard of them. But I got guys, me and women and children, they call me from all over the world, asking me about their life and their decisions in life and what they should do, what they want to hear change. So a lot of times these youths are being, listening to older ones that live that life because they know that they come and they stand in for the truth. Yeah, we on boss talk one-on-one. Yeah, we gon' talk.