 Think about when people pass away like that, a lot of people don't know the conversations that were had, plans that were being made. I was supposed to work with Pimp when he came back home. Okay. We was going to do an album together. You know what I'm saying? I think it was going to be his last album or rap a lot or whatever it was. And we were talking. And a lot of strong points I had in my career I was giving to him. And when he passed away, bro, it devastated me. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. So Mr. Lee, I listened to that whole last project you did. You went and dealt with a lot of niggas on that project, man. Yeah. I was like, what the hell? This nigga on there? Because I had to go back and listen to the whole thing. How important was it for you to touch that in the right way, you know, as far as knowing that this would be the last project? I mean, for me, it was just closure because think about when people pass away like that. A lot of people don't know the conversations that were had, plans that were being made. I was supposed to work with Pimp when he came back home. Okay. We was going to do an album together. You know what I'm saying? I think it was going to be his last album or rap a lot or whatever it was. And we were talking. And a lot of strong points I had in my career I was giving to him. And when he passed away, bro, it devastated me and I'm saying that a lot of things, a lot of albums got done after he died that I didn't have anything to do with it. But when I got the opportunity to do that, it was like me getting closer. I cried. Yeah. Many nights working on that album. I felt like he was in that with me too. A couple of times. Listening to them vocals. Yeah. It's wild. They're looking over my shoulder like, man, cut my, you know what I'm saying? But it was just more than that for me. It was just getting a closure of it for me. Yeah. I really enjoyed it, man. You had a bunch of people on that thing, man. He met your friend. I think David Bannon was on there. Yeah. Which one was that? Yeah. What was it called? He was on that song. I forgot what the name of the song was. No, I'm talking about the whole, the project was a long, little pill, a long, little pill. The white coat. Yeah. Yeah. Now I'm going to say this and I'm going to get off it. Now a lot of that stuff, I had to stop listening to it because it was a lot of shit that went on that nobody knew about. Just like myself who got taken off a lot of these monumental songs that people would have seen. Damn. Them niggas was making some P.A. ass shit. Some U.G.K. posse ass shit. Yeah. Yeah. Niggas, our vocals got clean, swept off them hoes and other niggas put on them. By the time it got to me, it wasn't even on there and I know what you're talking about. Yeah. But I ain't disgruntled because a nigga got some paper and a nigga get cagoga every night with some fire-ass head and I don't give a fuck because my name is out there like a motherfucker. Come on, man. You man. You man. You brought it up. I got to his bunch of niggas and this bop, talk about it. Yeah. Spent your truth niggas. Yeah. I got a bunch of phone calls unknown from people that I didn't know. You know what I'm saying? But it was all good. It was some people that was on there. You know, just different people like, hey, man, I was on this song. I was on this yada yada. I said, look, bro, I don't, it's not my decision for that. No for sure. And you know what I mean? Once we got past, it was all good. Shout out to Beto, keeping me on the cover of the Motherbuck. Beto! That's what we're gonna do. Man, that's my dog. So when you, Mr. Lee, so when you did that, how did you go into preparing who you would put on different tracks? Like you said, I talked to Beto. His wife had some input in a couple of them and the label. And we just put it together. I know for me, like David Bannon was one that I got. And it was like two more that I got on there. You know what I'm saying? But it was just a collaboration of that Juicy J was. Juicy J was over there? Yeah, he was over the project before I got there. I can't even say I ever heard it. You ever heard the album? I'm a whole-eyed nigga when it comes down to it. Oh, petty. Man, that shit hurt her nigga feelings, man. Really? Yeah, because think about it. If we in here right now creating content for boss talk one-on-one, something happens unfortunately. Somebody else get their hands off it and they sweep everything we did collectively and just replace it. I put it, I talked about it in my book though. Appreciate it. You know what I'm saying? You know why I talked about it in the book? Because people out here spending their money and their time and their efforts doing a lot of things. And when somebody unexpectedly passed away or get killed, we have sympathy for that family we should. But that family don't have no mindset to finish the business or let the business go through that that artist had with other people. Yeah, for real. You have people out here spending $20,000 on verses, $15,000, $10,000. And then they get ready to put their records out and the family's putting season to season until they can put it out. We all get out here, everybody has a mistake, makes this main mistake of getting a feature from an artist. Our producer is going to be and don't have no paperwork. And when the people pass away, oh my God. There's going to be some other shit going on. You know what I'm saying? So that's something that I wrote about because I want people to be aware of it. Look, man, do your business, get it out because you never know what situation you're going to be faced with. And if you don't have paperwork in place, these people are not going to honor the business that they love on was involvement. They don't care. There's no loyalty in that.