 Which, what was the song that mostly stuck out to you when you really tapped in the P.M.C., man? Or U.G.K.? Ah, man. Probably have to go back to, um, I want to say Pocket Full of Stones, but I got a Pocket Full of Stones. About that, what was the name of that album that you're working on next? Oh, The Resurrection of Chad Butler, man. What, what, first of all, some people would say what make you even tap into Chad being that you, you actually from way down, you in Florida? I was born, born in Florida. Born in Miami, Florida. Yeah. I was actually, you know, raised most of my life in Atlanta. Okay. Got ties here, you know, my daddy was here, born in Fort Worth, Dallas. So I got ties here, I got ties throughout the South, Alabama, Memphis. So, you know, I'm a country boy, and you want to really get to it, you know what I'm saying? To be legitimate, but I'm from the South, man. You know what I mean? You can't just put me one area. So what made you tap into Chad, like that Chad Butler is one of the favorites on this show? My favorite artist, man. I grew up listening to Chad, man. And he really got me into music. U.G.K., Bumbie, you know, always a big fan of their music, man. I always want to be like Chad. What was the song that mostly stuck out to you when you really tapped into P.M.C., man? Or U.G.K.? Ah, man. I probably have to go back to, I want to say Pocket Full of Stones, but I got a pocket full of stones. So many songs before that that kind of got me engaged to Pimpin' Ain't No Illusion. Man. Man, look at me. Man, look at me. You got so many, you know what I mean? I think I just caught on to all of it. Every time he dropped, it was just like glass to me. I was just into it. You remember when he went to prison and all that? All of that, man. Everything that hurt me when he went down. You know, I liked the way he was always expressing himself about the South. We get on radio shows. He wouldn't hold him back. You want to get mad at me for the way I feel? Then God will get mad at me and a fight going with that. You see me? By nothing, he had the expression. So he was, you know what I'm saying? Just wide open with what he felt. And I appreciated that. I loved his accent a little bit the way he talked. That country slang on the track. Like he was just all, you know what I'm saying? It represented the South and that was what I represented. What about that time when he jumps on the radio at Atlanta? And he just go down through there on the fact of how he felt about it. He really would call in a few people out on it. But he didn't really just, it would count as a blemish. You know what I'm saying? You know why I'm mad? Let me tell you why I'm mad. I'm mad because everybody don't need record life. That's the film. He can do that. He's feeling it. He can do that. I remember I came to Atlanta and them dudes were like, man, you know, Pimp just went off on Atlanta. I said, no, for real. And that's kind of, I was in Atlanta. I remember right after that. And it was like, it was a thing where he really was just telling people to sharpen up. You got a line on these tracks. I need price, which I get to square, folks man. I'm serious. You were late, everybody.