 He be dressin' like a Cuban cab driver. Word? Y'all ready to go to work? I ain't bet, cause it's about that tired man. Got a little, yeah. Now you know we would be remiss if we walked all the way through the black market and did all this shopping with all these different businesses and didn't get no hair cut. Come on. I know thousands of barbers. Come on. But in order for them to come on, I had to go get the coldest. It's just my opinion. And a lot of other folks' opinions, too. Plus my dog a comedian, man. So that automatically bumped him up the list. And he funny his hair. Come on. And I knew it as a comedian way before I even knew about the barbership. Come on. But dog be following my nigga on the ground. You'd be surprised the type of clientele that he got. Cause the work just speaks for itself. These the type of hair cut that you see and want. You ain't even give a damn what the price is. Baby, look, I'm gonna get one of these. That's how cold he is. When niggas show up with a picture? Yeah. When they ask for a hair cut that they know that you did, that's when you're doing something right here. You give me. I put it around. Not only that, he's so cold, bro. He's sponsored by these folks right here. They just, they've been looking out for him since the beginning of this belt. Signature fade when the velvet blade. When they dropping your haircuts in wraps, you know you on the some, man. Amen. None other than the Marcus Harper. Yeah. Yeah. Love you to God. Love you to God, man. Welcome to the black market, man. Thank you all for having me. And congratulations on all your success. Come on, man. Oh, yeah, man. Thank you, man. Hey, man, God bless the trap, man. You know what, man? I just want to say I'm proud of y'all, man. Thank you. I really am, man. Like you said, we've known each other for some time, man. And like to see what you guys got going on here is just like inspiring. I see how y'all affect like the whole country, whole world, bro. Like y'all affect the whole culture. And that's something that nobody really be able to like can really claim. You know, I hear you say a lot of times like they suppress my numbers, but like the way that your name drops in the streets, bro, y'all, hey, man, God bless the trap. We thank you, God, for this blessed place. Let it continue to flourish. Let all things come to your glory in this place. We thank you in Jesus' name. We amen. Amen. Bless the trap, bro. I'm glad that you know the truth. Because the people need to hear somebody else say it. They think I just be saying shit to say shit, but they really trying to, like you said, they trying to suppress the numbers. They don't show the real. The impact in the streets is real, right? Yeah, we so far ahead of the game, we can't even hear criticism no more. That's why we had to open up the black market to let everybody know. You can get some of this, too. Clayton, man, shoot marvelous, you know, same thing. Come on, man. Heavy. I'm over here like, didn't it? I subscribe, brother. He in there, man. Y'all in there, bro. I rise for that. I'm proud to be here, man. Man, give us a brief intro. You was telling us how you first got into the game, but tell the people, tell the world, man. Introduce yourself and all that good stuff. Yeah, my name is Marcus Harvey. Some people call me D. Marcus Harvey. I've been cutting hair since I'm pretty much like 12 years old. Started off in the shop in Gwinnett County. Started off sweeping. I was a little fat kid in the shop. They used to call me Bookman. You know what I'm saying? Word. Nigga is, oh, bro. They used to be on my ass. Ain't buffin' no butt. You ain't try to work. You ain't try to work. It's like 12 barbers in there. So I'm like sweeping up here, cleaning clippers, making store runs, getting a lunch, all that stuff. You said this was in Griffin? No, this was in Pwinnett. Oh, Pwinnett, okay. Yeah, like literally right down the street from the theater where they have it over there. Okay, yeah. Like the next complex. It's crazy. So there's like a little trail behind my apartment complex I go run. Go check it out. You know, one day I saw this little kid sweeping up here and I was like, yo, that's my barber. He was the owner. I was like, yo, how can I get down and do what he's doing? I see y'all giving him cash. Bro was getting cash from everybody. You know, at the end of the day, they just get hit him with $5, $10 or a haircut. So that's 12 barbers. So you know, he coming out, peeling out right. Right. So I was like, yo, let me try that. So one Thursday he let me come through, work there for like three, four years, man. And then randomly eighth grade, my homeboy, AJ Templin, shots out to AJ. I was over at his house, man, and we had these little Walmart clippers and I attempted to cut his hair. It ended up being a baldy. It was supposed to be an evening. Then it turned into a fade and then it kind of came to another and it just kept, two hours later, it was a baldy. So pretty much it's where we ended up right at that. So, you know, and then that was the start for me, man. He let you cut him again after that? Yeah. No, he definitely trying to get me here, cut his hair now. True. Like now I'm just saying like, in eighth grade, was he a repeat customer? I ran away from it at that point. I ran away from it at that point, but had to go back to, man, my mom got into a car accident. I'm going into my ninth grade year. So we had to move to Tennessee. And you know, I'm used to like getting like fire haircut from like a land of barbers. And we in this small town called Morristown, shots out to Morristown East. You know about it. I'm from Tennessee. Yeah, I'm from Tennessee too. Oh, okay. I'm from West Tennessee though, from Denmark. Okay, cool, cool. Yeah, East Tennessee, right outside of Knoxville, you know, you know what it is, you know what it is. My family, my mom. Yeah, we live in Knoxville. Everybody sounds like this a little bit like, hey Harvey, you know what I'm saying, say to your last name a little bit like that, you know, how you doing with it? Jeet Jeet. Hey, hey, I love you. Harvey, you're going to run that football for us this Sunday, huh? Yeah. You're going to run that A gap. Suddenly I got a lot of money riding on you. That's how they used to hit me with it, so. You know, there wasn't no barbers there though. Like it was a small town, so there's like two barbers. One was like old time, you know, he drank a little bit too much, so he's getting cast a little smiley face lined up. Oh, man. I wanted to let him do me like that, and the other one was just too busy. So I started lining myself up with some rusty clippers my cousin gave me, and then I started cutting cats on the team, then kind of started growing from there, then came back to Atlanta, started counting in Atlanta, and it was like I was at Georgia Preliminary, I was at the 13th grade, as we all know, GPC, Shots of the Georgia Preliminary College, you know what I'm saying?