 He wanted to be in Baton Rouge because he really didn't want to be in the city. In the city, it was just going to be too much. Yeah, everybody when he moved, right? So he wanted to be kind of outside the city. And which body do you want to come home? We just missed home. I don't know. And the thing about it when we came home, he said, man, just leave. All that is take the equipment. Left the left the apartment full of full of furnish. All of that he just left. We just left all that. He said, just take your clothes and equipment. All this other shit. We're about to go back to leave. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. Came back home after how long? After us being there for a year. And then when you came back home, because you had to go back again. How long did you come home? No, no, no. When we came home, we was home. You're home. That's when he was like mammary. He was more like mammary to go back home. Did y'all come to New Orleans? Did y'all come to Baton Rouge? Where did y'all go? No, we all came back to New Orleans. But at that time, he wanted to be in Baton Rouge, because he really didn't want to be in the city. In the city, it was just going to be too much. Yeah, everybody, when he moved, it was. Right. So he wanted to be kind of outside the city. Why did he want to come home? We just missed home. I don't know. And the thing about it, when we came home, he said, man, just leave all that shit. Just take the equipment. Left the left the apartment full of full of furnish. All of that he just left. We just left. All that he said, just take your clothes and equipment. All this other shit we about to go back to New Orleans. How? Y'all just love home. No, no, this is how we left. He woke up. It was like 20 months. He came in and said, come on, we're about to go. He said, just get the equipment. Y'all clothes. And we out of here. Wow. He didn't even know what he was talking about at that time. No. We said, we're going back home. He said, we're going to the city. We're going to New Orleans. OK. But the thing about it that, just imagine that you just getting up in the middle of the night and say, come on, let's go. We ain't never coming back. Did you feel hurt? No, not because I really. He about that works. I know he about that works. See the thing, I really didn't establish no friends there, though. He was working. I do work in so much. Right. And during that time, they was putting out a lot of music. They was working. And at the end of the day, what did it help coming back to New Orleans because of the field? Yeah, but see when it came back, that's when everything started popping. So I was able to bring in the artist. Yeah. That's when I came aboard. So it just now. And y'all just left. Mac Finn. Y'all left the big court. The big court didn't come with it down here. He went back to Kansas because he said he can't see the Missouri. The big court went back. But the thing about it was I didn't know how that situation was going to play out because when court and I worked, and I had to tend his ass in the studio. But it made him a better artist. It made him better, yeah. He said you was looking at him. So you just be staring like, do it again. Yeah, like do it again. Because it's like when I was working at that, when artists are artists, I listened for pronunciations. I listened for making show. Even though it could be some street shit. Yeah. I still wanted you to say it right. That's very important. We had an artist came on the show and he was talking about it. I think it was Eclipse Darkness because he's one of those that he can spit real, real fast. According to him, he's faster than even Twister. Well, you got songs with Twister. But the difference is because like Twister, when he go really, really fast, I can't really can't understand him as well. But this dude, whenever he did it, I could understand every single word. Right. He was like, he was like, Annunciation is everything and how he pronounced that word. But see, that's what I was on court about. It wasn't that he wasn't saying the right shit. He was saying the right shit. But I wanted him to say it to where one of my fucking hear it. They understood. They heard it and understood it the first time they heard it. Yeah. But it was just more me coaching court about being a better artist of your product. Him being an artist of delivery and saying it. I just wanted him to say that shit right. Which is understandable, you know? Like the thing you gotta understand, you guys, y'all were doing something that was going to change. It actually, it swayed hip hop in a way, you know? Right. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101.