 Boss talk one-on-one, one-on-one. Here we gon' talk, we gon' have fun. We'll be on fire, we'll be live lit. It's a unique hustle. Check it, check it, check it. This is Unique Hustle. It's your boy, E-C-E-O, and I remember the lovely, amazing official, Mr. Mako, what's going on? None, none, you know, Medeo all gone. I want y'all to stop what you doing right now. Go like, subscribe, follow us on all social media platforms, I mean your Facebook, your Instagram, your TikTok, your Snapchat, and whatever else is new, we on it. But first of all, go check out our Patreon channel for those who love to see our full-length interviews before all these clips come out, because let me tell you, the full-length interviews are out. First, before the clips start coming, so if y'all complain about the clips, y'all go subscribe, y'all go, you know, for the membership, support the brand, cause we know y'all love us, cause we love you, so. Wow, man, hey man, listen man, you guys, you in for a treat today. This guy don't need no introduction, man. He really frequents the show. This is my guy, man, by way. Very knowledgeable. But this is first time in Dallas. In the studio, in Balls Talk 101. Dallas, baby. Right in here, live in Living Colors. Live in a concert, like Pimps said, live in a concert, man. GD, he is in the building. What's up, what's up? Thank you, Miss Jamaica, and what's up, you back in Medeo, finally. Still, I used to look at y'all, interview people in the pictures on the wall, and feel like I'm like, man, damn, all the pictures on the wall is just like, man, I'm finally here with her, and all that, yeah. Man, I'm just happy to have you. I'm so, man, I was so happy. I've been waiting on you to come to Balls Talk 101, even though we was doing them in New Orleans, and we were coming down there. I hadn't been to New Orleans and did interviews with our interview in GD, and that's the cold part about it, you know? And the way it is, God put you with these different people, and you know it's God sent. Heaven sent, bro. So I just want to thank you for even pushing like you do for the show, and always, you know, you brighten my day when you send me messages, and just, you know, just talk about, you know, the South and the things that mean you agree on and talk about and touch it, you know, touch and agreement on, because we like, you know what, man? This is this, so that's that, and we'll talk about it, and sometime here, give me something that I didn't think about, or I'll give him something that he didn't think about, but it's just a blessing to have somebody that I'm sharpening out on, my brother. So thank you for always being there for me, sending me the messages. I'm gonna keep applying this pressure, man, for the South, and I'm gonna be honest with you, man, I love the East and the West Coast, but I'm from the South, and it hit different for me when I'm talking about what I did coming up. You know what I'm saying? And it's just something when you really start to look at it. So, man, we feel to get into it, man. So thank you, and Mr. Maker, you got something to ask him, you want the top started off? And I want to just tell you- I just want to just tell y'all thank y'all too, right quick, but shout out to the Midwest because you didn't say it, because I know they're gonna feel like- I didn't say the Midwest! So we said, shout out to the- And I'll be up there! Right, that's sad. So I just want to make sure I do that for you because I don't want them to come from my bro. Yeah, I'll be up there. Yeah, so the Midwest too, and like I said, the South and the West and the East Coast, but thank you, and thank y'all because, like I said, the two times y'all did come to New Orleans, y'all set up the shop at the hotel, y'all did about 3D, 9T spotting, saving all Paris, and I came through and all that. It's Serrani's? It's Serrani with her, Miss Peach's record. Y'all did it over there by her, and even when you did the stuff with Jay Merck when he came over, you did it with Coulter and stuff like that. So I just want to tell you thank you because, like I said, I did get on the radar with Sean Coppin to say cheese stuff, but the interviews that you've been doing me and the relationship we've been building is like no other. So I just want to thank you because Texas got this shit on lock with this media. I know Atlanta got a lot of rappers and all that, we're bigger and notable, but with y'all doing the media, y'all kicking ass, especially for the South. So I'm just saying, PMC would be proud of you. And he'll be glad to see what you're doing. Man, we're independent, man. And I think that's what gives us our freedom is that not just us, but all the other people from Big D to Mogul, from all the Trio Talk, No Peer Talk, like I said, a real, what is it? Real Life Street, Real Life Street. All of these different people, Bobo, Super Tight, these different, when you look at what we got going, it's another one too. And that little young dude been doing good. I know. I can't think of that. And I'm like, what do you call it too? He pulled up on me. I know exactly what you're talking about. He pulled up on me. That's it. Rude something, rude. Rude something. I keep saying rude. The young boy, he respect most all. And I love the little dude. I love you guys. Don't keep pushing. Yeah, and his camera work is great. I want him another. I gotta holler at him too. He didn't give me his number that day. Urban politicians too, he out of Houston. Yeah, he gave my boy down to Houston. Down to Houston out there too. Like I said, Big D always come on taping with Big D all the time. He went from Detroit. But he been out here. You know what I love about them too? Because, and I don't know where everybody's from, but I know you have some podcasts out there who probably be hating, but you have a lot of them who will be pushing for other podcasts too. They try to do things together because a lot of times I post stuff and I see other podcasts be sharing it or commenting underneath it. And I love that because it just shows comradery between the media industry. You don't have to be hating on another person just because they got interviewed and you didn't know our advisor or whatever. But if we could all work together, we can all make something great because when people are trying to do a media run, they're not just trying to come to one person. They're trying to go to everybody. Exactly, just like if somebody going to, they going to sweep in the morning, they going to the breakfast club, they going to Big Fakes or whatever. Like, you know, they going to Big Boy in the house. They going everywhere. So you're right. So people want to make a nice press run. And I feel like I wish we could do a lot more than like that in Louisiana. And that's why I always try to spread love. And if somebody want to know how to use this after blog and they're trying to do this or learn this or what book you read, G, I'm going to give them a nine. I'm not going to hold it back. I feel like we're stronger together. And we could big one another up because your style, even if you still interviewed, somebody interviewing the style is still different. So just because Katie Kirk interviewed somebody, or Gail interviewed somebody, it's different. A 60 minutes a date line is still like. But we all push each other. Right. The more you grow and get better, it's going to make somebody a step up their game. Right. You understand what I mean? Right. But first of all, I want to start it off by asking you, I see your logo GDP, right? And that's an eight ball. Is, am I correct? Yeah. It's a P inside of, yeah. It was an eight ball. Why the eight ball? Well, this is the first time I've ever said this. The idea from this tattoo, you know, I'm a big Master P fan too. Okay. And on Master P had an album that came on 1994 called the ghetto trying to kill me. Okay. The album cover, he got a woman on top of him in bed. And he got his name Master in Old English, and he got P inside of an eight ball. Cause back in the day, everybody liked the eight ball jaguars, and it just was something against about the eight ball, I guess. So, and a lot of people had old English tattoos back in the 80s and the 90s. That was the thing or whatever. So I'm a fan of hip hop. And I like, I admire your peaches like I might cash money. So that's why I got that deal from. So that come from Master P 1994, the ghetto trying to kill me. Cause when I think about the eight ball, I think about completion. Cause that's the last ball you have to, to hit in before you win. So I think about completion. For my partner, I got a partner named Shea, I'mma see this. He out the eight ball. And he was like, man, how you gonna take an eight ball and put a damn P in there or whatever, man? Cause they out the eight ball and a lot of them out the eight ball used the eight ball or whatever, some time or whatever on tattoos and stuff like that. So he was just messing with me. He was like, man, that's it. I like the tattoo, but you got a damn P inside of the eight ball. What the hell are you thinking? So that's funny. Cause he out the eight ball. You know, we got wards in New Orleans. So he out the eight ball, shea. So I, you know, like I said, man, you, you stirred up a lot of trouble on here, you know, for, and you didn't even do it purpose. So was it good trouble? Like John Lewis? It was, it was, it was, it was, it was just the way that people felt about, you know, you being the spokesman for, for New Orleans. You know? Yeah. Like people, I seen people speak out about that. But who made him the spokesman of New Orleans? Well, you got him right here. I ask you, who made you? Well, like I say, I always taught Sean Cotten from say cheese, give me that nickname. And not like I said, I'd never said I was no spokesman. I just was saying, I was speaking about how I felt about my opinions, but Sean just liked it. What I was saying that I haven't been from New Orleans and I was defending New Orleans a lot in hip hop. So when somebody said, oh, we was doing this, Sean opposed me and I come with the receipts. And if somebody says something this, I defend bad rules or Shreveport or ratchet city. Like I was defending them. So he started. Because you're from your city. Yeah. I'm from my city. I was even becoming for my state because I was defending stuff that wasn't even in New Orleans. And Sean said that. So I didn't give myself the nickname Sean Cotten from say cheese TV. He don't want to call me New Orleans spokesman. And even with you being a New Orleans spokesperson, you're not only the spokesperson for, cause I see you be posting stuff and I see the way how the knowledge you've been given on our platform, you don't just be talking about things and that happened during your error. You're talking about from things from the past, things to come, everything like that. So it's not like you just deal with people in your generation. Exactly. Am I right? Yeah. That too. And like I said, talking about law, like I said, going to the state capital building and bad rules, advocating for laws and stuff like that. So it's way bigger than hip hop. It's just I know people love hip hop and they gonna listen because they like the music. But in the mix of that, I could sprinkle a little game and open your mind. That's why on my Instagram page, I pot it, you saw me post the stuff about the guy in Mississippi that got killed and they just swept his case under the rug. You might see me post the stuff about, and I know how they would try the reparation thing out with the weed and the real estate tax or how they was trying to pay people $25,000. So just stuff like that, to educate them on top of the hip hop, I try to do all that or whatever and people don't even see that stuff. But the funny thing is that when I see you post stuff, sometimes I look, cause we'd be so busy, but I know recently I see you post something about, I think it was from our show. I think it was when you reposted to Mo Bo Joe and what he said and so forth. And I was reading the comments cause I wanted to hear what all your fans were saying. And some people were like, well you charge them to be on your show and whatever and then some people were like, and they say you charge them to be on your show and you only deal with street cats and you only diss that, whatever. No, you only deal with celebrities, one of them not saying that. I've seen that, but I've heard also street cats, but then I've heard some people say, no, because he didn't charge me and I'm a street cat. So you have, you know, some people gonna say, well he didn't do this, but yeah, he did this and there was like a lot of... Conflict. Yeah. Because a lot of people don't be accurate. I remember Mo Bo Joe said that I didn't post the stuff about his case with his song, Street to the West Bank. And the tomorrow song, what Glorilla I did post about that and then a lot of my followers was in the comments saying, now I remember we talked about, I wasn't even gonna say nothing, but they would be saying it. So when you posted it, did you tag him in it? Yeah, people probably saw it now or whatever, but they was saying it and a lot of them were saying they saw it on there and even Q-rayed on the track that made our NBA Young Boy beats. He was like, he was one of them. He remember he seen it. So like I said, I work a lot at my regular job. I still do this blogging stuff for the culture and I'm still working on trying to get my brother free from prison. So there's a lot of things I got going on and I'm trying to make sure my family good. So everybody constantly putting that in thinking, you ain't doing enough for us. You ain't doing enough outside. You don't care about us. You can't satisfy everybody. Right, it's like a prison song. Remember when Doves Christ said, maybe just like a month, she's never satisfied. Like nobody is never enough. But in the comments, like one of the dudes said, he was like, man, I'm more of a rapper like Juice World. He said, I rap about, you know, guitars and melodic and I'm not a street dude and you post me a lot of times. Exactly, I didn't see that one. Other people that say, yeah, he interviewed regular people and all. I didn't interview regular people, I interviewed people that got out of prison. People just see what they want. Plus, I bet I really don't even be interviewing. So I don't have a show, like y'all got a show, like y'all really do this. I don't really be on YouTube like that. I be on Instagram. So that wasn't true that I don't be, I be charged people to get on my show. I might charge them a little something to be on Instagram and the dudes that I do charge, they be like, you really showing us love. Cause you really can be hitting us over the head. Exactly. And I've been doing this stuff for three years, not probably going on three years. And I was getting a lot of attention on my page cause there's a lot of people that, I'm going to say this on Rest in Peace, Boogie B used to tell a lot of history about New Orleans, about the projects in Storyville and all that stuff like that too. He's a very knowledgeable guy. He got shot by a straight bullet when he was sitting in the car unfortunately for around Christmas Eve, I think it was. And, but they have certain people that they might do these stuff, but they don't post other little all this stuff like that, the highlight. I was doing that. Not no knock from Boogie doing it cause he was a comedian, but he still was educating people. But I was like, I'm going to get my page popping. I'm going to still try to post all this here, so they could get a little shine. And I still ain't enough. I still open my platform up, but I didn't really have to do that. But in reality, and we have succumbed to this many times before, is the fact that people will say, oh, you ain't interviewed this person, you haven't interviewed that person. Nobody really goes back to look, to see if you did, put it in. Just like you said, you post something, not everybody's going to see your post. So when people say, oh, he didn't show this or he didn't show that, nobody goes back and what, six months, three months, whatever, and actually go down your page and say, okay, did he, before I say this, let me see, did he actually post it? Is the same thing with us too? Yeah, like I said, I posted that stuff with Mobile Joe on here. I posted something else that Mobile Joe did on Real Life Street Star. I posted someone, Ricky B, which was an artist that was signing Mobile Joe, one of my favorite songs ever in New Orleans is called Shake Shake For Your Hood. It was all good. That was all Mobile Joe record label. Chinky Black that made twerk and papa, twerk, something, twerk, something even real. That was one of Mobile Joe artists. So I'm very knowledgeable with what they was doing, but like you said, I got so much stuff going on that they just think I don't, but I can't be everywhere for everybody. Like Dion Sands couldn't even cover the whole world. Like he tried to be covered his ass off as a cornerback, but he still couldn't be everywhere all the time. So like they got to just understand I'm doing the best I can with what I got. And a dude said that the day he was like, he just do this. People complain about he ain't posting us enough or he don't post this one or whatever. But they're like, this dude's spending his own money. They got to pay for their own rental car. They got to buy their own food, their own hotels. And still got a regular job. And he put money into believing in himself to hit the road. Why y'all think y'all shouldn't bet on yourself if I'm doing it? Right. But they don't see that or whatever. They just think everything coming back. No, I'm putting the work in and I'm betting on myself because I believe in myself. But you should be, people should look at it in a flip way as motivation. And if they feel that you're not doing or representing why don't they start their own podcast? Why don't they start their own blog and push the city even more? Exactly. You understand? And wherever they think that you're lacking. Right. Go ahead and pick up that slack. Exactly. Because and work together and that's even gonna make the city even better. Exactly. Because you ain't gotta tell one down to build another one. You can just build another one. So that's just another bridge. New Orleans surrounded by bridges. If anybody understand bridges and how important it is it should be New Orleans. So if you stand out on bridges, we can't cross them. Maybe we tell it out of Crest City Connection. We tell it out on a slide there. We tell it on a causeway. We tell it on these bridges. There's a lot of them. We tell these bridges down. How are we gonna get around the city? We can't move nowhere. Well, let me go back to Movo Joe for a minute just the fact of when you said, you appreciate me for saying that you talk highly good about him because people don't realize before they, before he did that interview I actually text you and say, hey man, what can you tell me about Movo Joe? And it was just utter praise and good stuff about him being from the West Bank and just him being the first one and the twerking, the whole twerking movement. And it's like, you know. Yeah, I told you that. Yeah, I told you that. That was the reason I was able to ask certain questions because of that. I'm always wide open to tell the truth about different things. I'll use you a lot of the time or Trio talk. You're very transparent. And you always come through even on silk. Anything, anything we ask you, you got something. And I would, I was second to motion that Sean Cotton said, I definitely know you the spokesman because of the way that you always have so much love not just for one individual. It couldn't be just cash money. It can't be just no limit. It can't be just a West Bank, it can't be a West Bank. Yeah, it ain't, you love it all of them at the same time. And I wanna say, man, that's big, bro. And he has knowledge. That's one thing I admire about you. You have so much knowledge about the city and what happens in the city. You understand? It shows through the love. I was just telling somebody at the restaurant, there's a white lady came in there and her friends, there was eating, one of them was from, two of them was from New York and I think she was from Texas. And she was eating collard greens. They're a side of collard greens. Y'all know the restaurant, y'all ate them. So we, they was eating the collard greens and the lady was like, she was like, you eat, try the collard greens. I said, well, you ever ate them on rice? She was like, no, I don't eat collard greens on rice, do you eat them on rice? I said, well, we eat a lot of stuff on rice in New Orleans. She was like, why y'all eat collard greens on rice? I said, because when the French had control over Louisiana, a lot of the French was going to get a lot of slaves from like the Senegal area and bringing them back to Louisiana. They bought rice cultivation to Louisiana. So you get okra, you get like the watermelon, all that come from the Africans but okra definitely was a part of the gumbo, the original gumbo, that's where the name come from. And a lot of rice dishes come from the love of rice because the Africans like this. So, you know, you got, when you think of New Orleans, you think of like jambalaya, crawfish, they too fit, dairy and rice, red beans and rice, gumbo, just everything that we do, even green beans, when we eat our green beans, we do it right. So that's why we love rice a lot because- And you mix the rice with the collard greens mixed together or you just have it side? Well, sometimes you might put the rice on it and just put the greens on top. But you're going to mix it in, but yeah, we eat the green rice, like gravy and rice, everything we eat. Eggs and rice too. Like MassP said- Eggs and rice. Yeah, like eggs and rice, MassP had a song on a true album when he was like on camera 97, he was like, I always, Moby Dick on hook, I always feel like somebody's watching a paranoid, can't sleep in the street. Every where I go, I think I have to give him that. He said, I ain't never had nothing in my whole life. I'm from the ghetto grew up on eggs and rice. So eggs and rice is something that we might eat when we don't have nothing to eat. So we have leftover rice, like say my mama made red beans the day before something, we don't have no more red beans, but we have a lot of rice left. We'll take some scramble, we'll scramble some eggs, I'll put some butter and some pepper or whatever on it and mix it together and we'll eat it. It's not, it's like shrimp fried rice, but it's whole-meat and birdsie cause you ain't got the shrimp and the green rice. You just got some pepper and rice, but a lot of people put some butter in it. That's what we ate or whatever. So we just do everything with rice. Like we love rice in Louisiana. What made you do all this research into your city? Cause not every kid or every person living in New Orleans have the knowledge on the history cause they don't teach it in the schools, do they? No, not when I was coming up. Another thing, I just love to learn and I love where I'm from. Just like with the French Quarter, the original French Quarter was all wood cause the French believed in building everything close. So the original city is the French Quarter, then they started building back because it's close to the river. So the original city was the French Quarter and it was built wood, two great fires in the late 1800s. So when those fires burned down and then the Spanish took control, then the Spanish used a lot of the courtyards type of stuff. So that's why it looked like the West Indies like up the Dominican Republic, Haiti and all that with the past style colors. And they got the courtyards and all that. That's because the Spanish influence on architecture. All the colors. Right, the colors and even the courtyards and all that and stuff like that. The balconies, a lot of that stuff is Spanish architecture type influence. I don't think that was French. It sort of looked more French than Spanish. No, it was first the French had it first, the French made it take, but then the Spanish put the balconies and stuff like that. The balconies and the courtyards and all that. Then the first got it back when Napoleon got it with the First Republic. I got to ask you about Charleston White using the NIGGA brand, Tupac's brand. Like when you think about how he pretty much uses that, what do you think about it? Well, first of all, I want to shout this pitch out with Paco on the wall. That's Pac right there. I've been on it ever since I opened the store. Pac right there. Shout out to Paco, Marri and Chico. First of all, I'm going to say this for you though, because Pac got his name from a Peruvian Liberator. I think the guy you have is from Peru. The original Tupac Amari is a tribe of him. There's a lot of him named after that or whatever. And Tupac Mama named in that because she wanted to know not just Black people went through a struggle. Different people went through a struggle. And Tupac Amari was trying to liberate his people, but they killed him. They tied him up with horses to his arm and his leg, and they pulled him apart to kill him. But he was a liberator. He fought for his people. So Tupac believed in fighting for his people. They loved his people. Now Charleston White's saying that they gave him, thus they gave him permission to use the NIGGA acronyms. And like Tupac people said, nobody know what the Z stands for because Pac never clarified that. But never ignorant getting goals accomplished. Tupac Mama, Charleston White said, he, for the Black people, right? But you say that you wanted to have babies with Mexican women, a woman that's not Black because, and it was on y'all's show, because he felt like the hair going to be nappy or coarse hair. So he don't want to have a baby with a Black woman because he don't want no NIGGA hair he was saying. Tupac love NIGGA's. If you want to have a baby with a Black woman, Tupac love NIGGA's if you want to say that. He love Black people. His mama was very, very dark. His sister set is very, very dark skin. And she was four Black folks. And his mama has a nose, wide nose features, really African features or whatever. So for you to say that you don't like that, Tupac Mama, when she left North Carolina, she was born there, when she moved to New York, she wanted to be a cheerleader. Everybody teased her because her hair was coarse and she wore her hair low. She was pro-Black because she was a Black Panther. So she love Black people and she love herself. So for you to say you represent that and you tan Black woman down, then one time he was saying, oh, a woman didn't want to give me no sex. So I forced myself on her and tried to eat her pussy. You talking about rap people, you talking about rap songs, talking about running trains on people, but you contradicting yourself. So that's a contradiction. You talking about the rap dudes trying to train girls, but you talking about a girl that won't let you have sex with us. So you forced yourself on her. That's wrong or whatever. So like Tupac said, I wonder why we hate our woman, why we rape our woman. It's time to be real. Black or the bearer, the sweeter the juice. So I hope that if he want to do that, because Tupac, I mean, on Stepdad, Matulah Shakur was definitely a dark guy too and he definitely love Black people too and his hair was locked up or whatever too because he wanted to show his pride. So I just feel like for him to represent that and saying that he wouldn't, that's why he didn't want to have kids for a Black woman because he didn't want to have no nigga hair. I don't really know what part of Pac inspired him. Pac inspired me and I would never say nothing like that. I would never look down on darker complex women because these mama or daddy at the time probably didn't get read by a slave master. I had that type of hair. So I don't know, I just feel like that's crazy. And even when he still said, I think dudes should get locked up to go to jail. Young dudes, that's the better way to get it right. Every Black guy don't got to go to jail and a lot of times they go to jail, they be worse. Because they don't help them psychologically deal with what's going on with them or the trauma that they probably had in their life. Losing family members, being poor and being from the conditions that they come from, you feel like bring them from one, from out the fire and pan into the fire and that's going to fix it. Like I just feel like you lead, he lead like a broke clock could be right two times out of the day. That's all I say. Man, so, and you know, just the fact of just all the time that you be reporting different things and saying different things, man, you always be on point. Always be on point. Bro, you, that's a gift, man. That's a gift, bro. I sure want to see that podcast or them interviews more. Because I know they're going to go live. At the end of the day, the way that you prepare yourself anytime you speak, and I know if you do an interview, it's going to be on a whole other level, man. And shout out to Big Boss. I've seen that interview deal with him. I love when I rock out with somebody that I haven't seen you do, I got to go back and investigate. Man, where the heck is Jay Merck? What happened with him? Well, Jay Merck, I can't get in all the details of the case, but he got locked up on this. The craziest thing is, you know, I used to work with BTY Youngin before, and Jay Merck, I met him through Youngin. Yeah, through Youngin. So, but when Youngin got killed on April 29th, I think 2017, Jay Merck just went to jail on April 29th. He got booked in jail this year. So I was like, that shit was crazy to me over there. The same day that Youngin lost his life, he went to jail or whatever. Now he's fighting this case that he's fighting, and they ended up dying to him. And like I said, we got to see how everything worked out and stuff like that. But, you know, because he had, his sentence was on 14 years, but he had 12 years he had done and two years on parole or whatever. So like I said, I'm just praying that everything worked out for him. He had just dropped his mixtape and he didn't even get a chance to see it like come out. He had to put it out while he was in prison and stuff like that. And people been listening, you know, and a lot of people liked the song that he did about, you know, about what you're gonna call him and stuff like that. So everybody, everything was going good or whatever. And then that happened and all that stuff like that. But I just thought that was crazy. I told him that. I was like, damn, like, he was like, damn, I didn't even think about that. You're right. When he looked at the dates on his, on his sheet or whatever, when he got booked in or whatever, it was that date or whatever. And I was like, damn, it's crazy. That is real crazy. So I had to ask you, because recently BT Awards came up. Right. And we were watching it and I remember his reaction when he was watching it. He was, I was upset. He was wanting more Southern representation till when he saw Master P come on. I got excited. No, I promise you, he got so excited. Right. And then when Master P came back home and made his speech and he mentioned Cash Money, I was like, you were like, right, right, right. You know, but why do you think Cash Money wasn't there alongside them there at the show? I talked to, I talked to Baby all the time. Matter of fact, I talked to him four times yesterday. I think it's because I don't know what happened with Cash Money and BT. I don't know if something happened or Baby, I'm just probably busy. They probably, I don't know. I really can't see that part because I don't know. So you don't know if they reached out? Did you reach out? Yeah, I don't know if they really reached out to him because I didn't ask Baby that or whatever and stuff. I heard a Turk see on the show that they didn't reach out to them before in the past. But I don't know if they reached out to Baby and talked to him and I didn't ask him about that. I mean from New Orleans, you would think that he would have brought more and I'm going to give him a pass. No, no, no. You gotta give him a pass. I'm going to give him a pass. I'm the reason why I'm giving Tyler Perry a pass. Because he just got it. But they said some people told me he didn't really close the deal. He didn't really got it. That's what I heard. Now I could be wrong. Somebody was saying they don't know if the deal already closed. But I know Booster did sit on the red carpet. Man, I'm in here. It's Tyler Perry. Yeah. I don't know what's going on but I'm going to say this, if that thing would have had cash money on it boy, that would have been a whole other level. Man, you can't have Southern, like I said, I like what they did on there and I love what they did for Uncle Luke. And they did a lot of stuff for Atlanta artists. But man, come on, man. Like cash money, the most influential record label of all time in hip hop. Like all of them eras Drake, Wayne, Nicki, the hot boys, Baby is a personality. Man in first the beats, Drake in them, Wayne, Nicki Minaj. I think it's coming. I said I gave Tyler Perry a pass because for the main fact, he just now got it. All of this stuff. You got to think about companies, period. Companies plan this stuff months in advance, maybe even a year in advance. And he's gotten this mid-year. You know what I mean? So I doubt he had that much influence. He had probably some pull, but not a lot. I look forward to seeing next year and see what he does with it. I definitely know, like you said cash money, you know, people definitely was like wondering like how they not on it because like you said that label had such a long run and did so much for the culture. So like I said, I was glad to see Peter and I was glad to see that piece that showed love to baby and gave me flowers and stuff. Yeah, but I got to say, man, you know, it didn't surprise me because I know, I've been devil-y really, you know how I feel about devil-y. You know, I really didn't like the way BET was doing things and I kind of turned my back on him. He did. Years ago. But, you know, the Tyler Perry thing, it kind of made me look back at it. But I really, I wasn't surprised that Beyoncé didn't show up. That my boy, you know, that Birdman. Yeah, yeah, but they should have gave, I'm gonna be honest with you, you cannot, you can't nitpick the South when they come down to the South. When you look at, not only, you got, you got Alcatres, UGK, Good and Marve, you know, all the different, come on man. 3-6. 3-6. You got, you got 8-Ball, MJG, you got 3-6 Mafia. There was a litany of people that wasn't there. Right. But Cash Money, by far, you know, reinvented themselves over and over again. For each era, they had something that they fulfilled a need for our people. Definitely. So, in the South, ain't nothing else when they come down to that. I don't even connect that with anything else because of the way it is. I'm 50 Cent, I'm a big 50 Cent fan. Right. Because of the way he always showed love to Cash Money. Right. That makes me even rock with him harder, even the fact that he's a smart dude and he's making it easy for me to rock with. I rock with 50. Right. You know what I'm saying? Right. When they come to the East Coast and it's 50 or nothing else to be honest with you, when you leave the Rock Him era, I'm a Rock Him fan too. Right. Right. And Eric Sherman, you know, I'm not saying Eric Sherman come out. Right. But I'm just telling you 50 is my guy when he come down to, you can't, you say J, I'm gonna say 50. Right. I know, far as just not lyrical, none of that. You just love everything about him, yeah. I just like the way that he came on the scene, the hustle, the rejection, the street, the being shot, the street, all that stuff. 50 was disruptive, like 50 was disruptive at the time. That's what I'm telling you. I'm not saying he came out. You know what I'm saying? He was disruptive. I would say like 50 was disruptive the way DMX was disruptive when Puffin was dancing around in New York and Shani Susan then DMX brought it back to the streets with like, you know, Rough Friday's Anthem and everything. He did. So that was disruptive. 50 was disruptive. That's why JZ said, y'all niggas better get y'all records. They got a nickname 50's scene coming and he ain't playing and it's right behind him. So you right. Now I would say Dipsett. That's why I came was on my page and I was spitting out his effects because I was talking about when he went to college thinking it was at Narva or something like that the junior college down here. He went to Juco playing basketball and when he came down he seen how much people rock with J Prince and Master P and baby and Swabba and he said, I studied those dudes and I took that back to Harlem and I really put that game down that I learned from down south. Not from Russell Simmons. Not on not on Andrew Harrell. You know, not none of those dudes from New York. But I really, he was saying P, baby and J Prince. That's a campsite. I had studied Cam like that on that episode. Thank you. I appreciate that. Cam, Cam, look. He was standing on train champs. He said, they had dudes in our block at Harlem that wanted to be like no, no, let me soldier. Soldier slim. Sea murder. This girl going to be Meal X. They was really saying that. I seen him and yeah, that was him. Jim Jones did it too and two years ago Wayno had cut Jim Jones out. He was like y'all influence a lot of people who influenced y'all. He was like he influenced you with the Birdmans then everybody in New York started laughing and they put the little effect on where it make you laugh. And then he asked him another question. He said, so he said, yeah bro, master P influenced us too with the deal and all. Oh man, he influenced you with the minyades. The other dude said that. They laughing again. The man trying to be serious and say who influenced him since you asked him who influenced him. They making it out of a joke. They always trying to make us look like bammers and bunkers and country boys slow with y'all ass on paper. And like master P said, the south gave y'all the blueprint for this rap shit with how to get some money. Wow. Reading and weeping. Wow. It ain't nothing you can do to get around it. There's nothing you can do to get around the fact of how the south came and changed the game in Hillpop when he come down to independency and really doing deals. You know, J Prince first started it off to be understood. Right, right, right. And then Luke and then he had master P he came hard, man. Right. The capital and all that. So you can't deny. Right. And then Birdman is still, he still deals. So, you know, you can't deny this stuff. And no matter how you try, you got to always respect. And Pm deals with own priority. Priority. Yeah, priority. Because I know you always got people in the college saying priority. I know it priority because when I interview what's that boy name? Reggie. Reggie Wright. Oh, believe me. Right. He made sure he had meetings with him. Right. He kept saying it. Right, right. Did you see that interview? Which one? Well, me and Reggie Wright, the one that used to be with Dev Jail. I probably. Not Dev Jail, Dev Rowe. He told me boy, I was like security guard. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I know he told me. He was actually security, but when you look at it. He was a police system too? Yeah, he was. But when the children were in jail, Pog, he had rights to all of Pog's music. Right. He was the one putting all the music out. Right. Pog died. He controlled everything. Pog died. He was the one controlling that whole. Pog Mama got the access to the music and everything. That was a whole game at first. Right. Wow. So since we've been talking about cash money so much, I want to know why is it that Birdman wants you to be the N.R. for cash money Southern region? Well, I think because he been watching me and he been listening to me talk on shows like y'all and seeing me talk on my Instagram page and knowing like he said, he kind of got on me too because Young, you know, I was working with Young and he said, you know, BTY Young and spoke highly of me. So him figuring out who the face was, he probably heard of me from Young, but he didn't know who I was till he saw what I was to do with GDP. That's the one he was talking about. So you see my knowledge and stuff like that and then he's seeing I'm curating things on my Instagram page posting videos that he like ground with it or whatever. So I think it was that and just seeing that I'm a student of the game. I think him and his brother really smart enough to really know when somebody else got something special in him and I think that's what he see too because I feel like he ain't been wrong over the years on the talent and the people that he didn't thought was dope. He was right. He was right a lot of times. How long did he reach out? When he first reached out to me, that was like around Valentine Day I want to say I think. And you know, we've been rockin' ever since. YID and a lot of us on my partner OBG Bang G Jerk a lot of us had went up there to Miami and we went to Hit Factory and you know, we recorded some songs and he gave us some game and you know, and it was a nice experience. I had never been to Miami and stuff like that. Really? No, I never had been to Miami. How'd you like it? Man, I loved it. I was like, God damn, the woman beautiful You were in the South Beach. Yeah, the woman was on the South Beach. Because you know, the houses like, you know, it was just just being there. For that it was it was a beautiful experience whatever. Like I said, I just like the whole vibe of Miami. Like, you know, you can see all the Jamaican influence, the Haitian influence, just the Caribbean's. It felt like Caribbean's in even though I never been there but it just gave me that with all the different mixtures of people. Like it was like Miami's a big melting pot. Yeah, it's like a big melting pot. It's just in America, you know, so that's probably how it would be. You should be proud, man. Like I said, people get excited you know, about different things going on the East and the West Coast but in the South, man, when you when it come down to Birdman and Slim and just cash money and the moves they done made ain't nobody really used to talk about disruptive about 50. These dudes, man, these dudes, these dudes change the game, bro. That was disruptive. Like the way you and I came with that Hanson, that was just the way he was rapping the way he was rapping back to that stuff. You working with some guys? Yeah, yeah. We talk like that or whatever. That's disruptive because people like what the hell is he doing? Like how is he writing like that? But that's how we talk and we talk. Juvenile, I like to call it off the post flow. So that's kind of how he rapped. Like he rapped from the project steps. Then you got, like I said, cash money just doing what they doing with the diamonds and they mouth stunned doing donuts. The calls, the helicopters coming on the stage, the helicopters, everything that they was doing, they didn't respect us. And that's why P was the same way too. We're going to pee like when they think he dumb, he was smart enough to know I got to go pay a lawyer to give me the knowledge and information that I need so I could get the deal I want. Nobody was trying to think like that or whatever. But these dudes from New Orleans, even when you, like I said, go back to Tyler Perry. He was smart enough to know how he won his deal. Now he worked over two billion dollars. This is all coming from where I'm from. So that lets you know the type of mindset that people have from this is a part of our culture. And like I said, that's very disruptive. That was disruptive with the deal in hip hop. And that's why they don't want to let shit like that happen again. But you got P from quietly controlled the CEO. He probably got a lot of respect for Jermaine Dupri. And I love Jermaine Dupri, but he always give more credit to baby and P. That's who we look up to because he identified more with them because they from the streets, I guess. So he can resonate with them more than an LA read Jermaine Dupri. And that's a lot of dudes from Nipsey was like that, Dolph, Yo Gotti. I mean, I could go on and on or whatever. Turkey Mel, even the CEOs of bad rules that was doing business with P.M.C. All them dudes looked up to baby and slim and master P. or whatever. So like I said, every head must bow every tongue must confess that those dudes. I told baby that a day on the phone, I said baby, one day I hope it be 100 years, 200 years, and I hope you live forever or whatever. But I said one day they're going to if they don't do it now they're going to have statues with you and your brother and they're going to have a little kind of homely. They go out to Sheila where nobody can take the diamonds out of rubber but they need to have his mouth shown with all his diamonds because that's what he wanted to know and he wanted you to see that bling and he was going to put it in their face and let him know I rock ice. Man, I got a shot Slim out for that book where the secret reminds of a million everybody T.Hon Velka. It was a book that he was reading and you don't get much from Slim. Right, Sugar Slim. But Slim was reading that book that he was on the airplane reading that book and I went and got that book man. That book helped us so much man and finances just because I pay attention to it. Right, I'm going to get that book. Yeah, I see the minds of a millionaire. It's a really good book man and I got that from Slim because you don't talk much but I got that from him. I just ordered the book too. It's an old music executive but I just be trying to see because they always try to make like the black music executive so bad but I'm getting still doing a lot of shit with the mob and doing a lot of bad shit and it's a white guy but they just try to make like all the black executives so bad but they've been doing the Leonard Chess, all them guys stuff. So I want to read the book. I know about them but I just want to read so I'll be getting a lot of books on Amazon. That's one I got coming in now too. I got a question so back to the in our part of it you step into that position what is it that you would bring to the table that nobody else would? Well I mean like I said I feel like I got a good if a talent I feel like I know how to nourish talent if there's talent there I feel like I could work with it and stuff like that I did before when I was doing stuff with my cousin at 06 I worked with the artist that he had so I feel like if they got some type of talent I could work with them but I feel like my eyes out there because I'm on the thing blogging and I got a lot of other friends and good people that got great tasting music that be like look I see this I see that I see this hot or it's the nice clothes to wear so those people help out too so it's a lot of good people that I feel like I got around me too but I feel like I got an eye and an ear for it and I feel like he just realized that I do too whatever I just need the opportunity to be showcased that or whatever a lot of times people just need a chance you know you got like Jay Prince always say you got a choice and a chance every day you know choose wisely so I feel like I can make the right choices to benefit you know the whole team or whatever my goal in life is to be big with music I want to be to help a lot of people and put more people in position when I get on I want to try to make other people entrepreneurs and help shine a light on other people because I feel like we shine together like Big Meets always say you know we shine like new money and we shining together everybody could be bosses everybody could pull each other up and like Jay-Z say before no one would ever fall then that could kind of help more the people I feel like a lot of times people get the ball and run off with it and don't share so I really would want to share and help people you know I saw the Billboard Magazine man Top 50 greatest hip hop groups I'm going to say Top 3 man Top 3 groups man of all time your Top 3 my Top 3 and I'm going to go from every era because I'm not going to have no limit but that's not going to be my choice my Top 3 in the last 50 years when I'm looking at the music the impact how many albums a lot of them had number one I got to go outcast I got to go outcast because yeah I used to like outcast a lot like I still like them but when I was younger I was like one of my favorite groups I always like the Andrew 3000 I'm a big boy I'm a big boy I'll be forgetting about big boy man maybe as good as I was if I wasn't next to my brother but it was just something about Dre that just drew me to him when I was younger maybe because he was so different I felt like I was a lot different but outcast like I love outcast a lot of it I'll probably say outcast number one and like they was right that's how I got something to say who knew that Billboard put in number one you know it came full circle so I would have to say outcast because the impact the albums just the shit they was able to accomplish with the music they shattered it number two I got to go NWA the world's most dangerous group easy Eric Wright you know Ice Cube Dr. Dre on the beats MC Ren and DJ Yellow they was disruptive at the time they spoke to the times you know they spoke for the Doughboys that was in the hood that made Doughboys feel like you could really get some money in this rap shit cause easy E doing it so I felt like that inspired a lot of people and it brought us into Compton just like infatuated with this city and just wanted to know more about it and it felt like they represented us and they were speaking to us and the times like I said in number three I got to say Run DMC because they impact at the time and what they meant to hip hop and just like I said the swagger the music pimp see one of his favorite rappers is Run you know so a lot of people love Run DMC and a lot of people was influenced by them and they was just so great together collectively and they mean a lot to not just the East Coast as a whole and the foundation the barriers they was able to break the things they was able to try and even the style that they bought you know so I got to say that's my three and that's one from the East the West and the South man you was fair you was fair I've been known not to be fair on this show with a couple of times like I said I know I like I like A-Ball and MVG and UGK and you know I couldn't get that list but that's who I got to go and I look at it like just factual and just being fair you know and not trying to be biased because I know I'm from the water thing and oh yeah we won't see that you know and yeah I feel like hot boys really influenced you you share it amongst everybody hot boys really influenced you and Dimpsett was really influenced you in my era but I'm talking about 50 years you can't just go from 10 years or 20 years you got to go from the beginning to right now to present and look at who did all this the most stuff in that time and the impact that's still around and I remember Melly Mel said from the legendary group Fear is Five he was like you got to look at greatness about how things change after he said Tupac is greatness because things change people want to put tattoos across their stomach everybody want to do this and do that to bandana like the music he made and still to this day all the rappers saying he the next Tupac I love Biggie but you know he a lot of dudes saying he the next they always say that's the next Tupac that always piss everybody off compare a new rapper to Pac and watch how people get mad they gonna feel like you can't compare the Pac and what he represented cause greatness when you have great leaders or great conquerors they came and they changed religions they changed cultures they changed a lot of stuff they just changed things and Tupac did that just like Michael Jordan even Steph Curry with basketball he changed the way you got to defend Michael Vic changed the way you have to defend this movement so all I'm saying is that these people that I name changed the game and that's what greatness do wow wow you like basketball don't you I like it a little bit I was more of a football I like Adam Navison but I was more of a football no because what I was thinking about cause when I heard you mention NWA and I know Ice Cube right now is going through the big three the big three and he came on his social media was talking about how the NBA thought about it before that NBA would probably give him problems because of how the big three is moving and it's not that the fact that he want him to come on board but he just don't want him to give him any problems which apparently they've been giving him some you know flack with his three on three so he's about to start going on tour talking about it right and really advocating for his three on three and how much the NBA is giving him flack for all the stuff you know he hasn't really gone into everything cause I'm thinking he's leaving that for the podcast that he's going on and another reason why I brought it up because I love the fact that when I was listening to him he didn't say I'm going to all these radio shows he didn't say I'm going to all these TVs he said I'm going to the podcast I'm going to these media outlets he's not talking about you know so I'm like for him being who he is and seeing that this is the new wave of course I mean that's what it is right now like the everything changed and I remember I was you know talking I was talking he was like bad fat and all that worked on the radio and I was telling him about how powerful I see the blogs what I'm doing another big blog podcast that's where everybody going people getting hard interviews they're not getting all the soft stuff that you might have got that regular radio when they just say all the good stuff and it's just be you know you could just pay somebody to get in the magazine now you got bloggers, kirin stuff like to say cheese or the academics you got people like y'all coming up independent black owned black operated freedom of speech start with say freedom of speech you could talk about what you want and we could build our own audience and get right to our people through these YouTube channel because everybody was on the phone so now everybody and Juggy said this too he was like he was telling us the mass people who's paid by the store and read it because that's how they come up but people reading they stuff on the internet they reading on Twitter and they getting the information from all of them these YouTube blogs and stuff like that I use podcasts so Ice Cube was very smart to use that because you see that's the new tool that you got to use to get to the masses it's true the internet because the internet that made a lot of millionaires and Dolph said it before too he said you want to become a millionaire figure out how to use this phone this small phone you can figure out how to use the internet so when I first started boss talk it was because of the way that our children stay on the phone and because I see people on the phone and I see all this different stuff going on and I was like I got to inject something into that to where we can basically have a voice that they can at least have an opportunity to you know pretty much go and look at and that was big for me starting out even though it was other things too but that was a huge thing for me saying how do I get to you know where the kids are not just seeing this one way with this one way that things look I want to give it something special from my point of view my standard and I thought that was pretty good and I'm glad you did do it or whatever because like I said I admired it from the first time I saw and when I saw the different camera angles and the setup I was like what the hell is this like this shit like hitting off some shit and like you know I'm looking at stuff from a vault and all that but y'all ain't even y'all independent y'all just you're so good at the camera work and knowing that having a background that it just made it where it was like all right damn I can use my background from where I come from I already love what I'm doing all we gotta do is just start you know and just start somewhere that would a lot of people understand all you gotta do is make a chance and a choice to just start and just start moving and the more you go to doing everything just start coming together by chance did you hear about the name of his tour by the way Ice Cube Ice Cube to know what it's called it's called F the Gatekeepers podcast tour wow after gatekeepers yeah so do you think we gonna be able to get him on boss talk I would look boss talk one on one come on now you know I really beyond what you we spoke with Mo Bo Joe about master P and baby you know coming on boss talk and having that interview put it in the universe right you know if they gonna do it anywhere it would be on boss talk cause we the most southern platform baby like boss talk and you know when I was on the phone when I was on the phone baby the other day I had him on the phone I had you on the phone I was talking to you and baby happened to call me Birdman and I said I'm about to click you and I clicked you in cause he was already talking about you before whatever when he said I won't do your show I won't put what I like what y'all represent I love him personally and you know he told you he rockin' with you oh yeah man dope dude man like I said that was easy conversation because I already been coming for this dude I love the way you know he's a detached boss he basically ripped aside from a place where you can't you can't swim he makes his own decisions and that's the part that I like you know what I'm saying and it don't matter what you think he gonna do his thing and I always was like I don't care what nobody else doing cause I know already what it is to come out I know what it is before hip hop even started I'm an older cat so I watched hip hop come into play and I watched phases of hip hop so to see somebody of his stature doing what he's doing and not nobody twisting and turning his moves is just spectacular because everybody else but to me him peeing Prince Prince again starting this thing out they're not being they bosses his boss talk one-on-one they're not gonna break his boss talk one-on-one you can't just throw no little numbers in front of them you can't make them feel like no man we know we deserve and we know we won't and we ain't gonna we ain't gonna compromise we're gonna we're gonna negotiate we know we got we got the leverage and we got the ammunition we got the we got the fan base so we know we deserve and that's kinda how they still is today and that's what Rapmaster P's glasses me and you and my wife and him you know I don't think nobody ever just brought that the diamonds the diamonds and the glasses and what made you think about that well I mean I seen a lot of rappers in Detroit doing it and it got popular even more with them because a lot of more rappers from Detroit got big on the scene like back in the day I didn't really remember seeing that many Detroit rappers growing up and stuff like that that I knew was but it wasn't like to me like that was the main one then you started seeing like Big Sean and then you get the T Grizzly into what Detroit at night so I didn't see no Detroit rappers with the glasses because I because Eminem wasn't doing it so you know when I seen Big Sean was fly and you know I seen other dudes from Detroit but I seen Master P with it in my city with the diamonds and the glasses but then I seen him on the movie Foolish he was like yeah she was like with diamonds in the glass he was like I sell a lot of cars so in Detroit they really known for putting diamonds and they and it was and stuff like that and Blade Ice World from the street law is real popular for doing that like he was the one that they say like really popularized a lot who started it well people might say they started it Detroit I'm talking about did you do your research and luck Silk said the first person I seen doing it on TV was Master P that was the first person I seen in pop car not saying that this was something everybody knew what I was doing but you don't know if they started it first this was not on TV it couldn't have been on TV see that's like that's like D on Sanders like somebody could have been alright like I'm going to say like Michael Jackson like they probably had people moonwalking anywhere they had a dude from California that was on social that's right but Michael Jackson did Motown 25 Motown 25 he did it so yeah Motown 25 that was the first time he showed that dance to the world so when everybody saw it that's when the world saw it and everybody resonated that with Michael Jackson yeah when Adam Robinson was doing moves that people probably was doing in rucka park where I got on Harlem rucka park where people probably was doing on the rucka park where Adam Robinson did it on the basketball coach so we was like damn that's the first time millions of people when Master P the first time I seen it and like his brother Silk the shocker said dudes on Master P I already got gold sand in the list 300 million out of deal that shit was nothing but spending diamonds out the damn mouth man they could put diamonds in everywhere put diamonds in a damn champagne glass they put it in the glasses so that's the first person I seen it and I said in Detroit probably wasn't doing it but it wasn't we didn't see it so we probably started seeing them on we're all starting on YouTube videos and now that they pop and yeah I give it to them they buffed up they arrived on a ride from they be jacking from they sell them on a black market it's really a part of their culture they like the woods they like the buffs with the with the white sticks like they call them but like I said the first person I seen on TV because I seen them in New Orleans with it but I seen them in a movie was Master P the the one of the biggest to do it and from New Orleans diamonds and diamonds so you talking about Master P but what makes Master P sugar slam and baby and baby so important to the hip hop what makes them so important because they show people how to own stuff and not bend when you know you got a good hand don't let them tell you nothing different if you want this go get it you got to be independent you got to build something you got to be able to work hard for it they told us that you got to grind you got to hustle peak grind out the trunk cash money grind out the trunk when they were passing out flies getting out CDs building their name coming to Texas doing shows they got old footage Texas when nobody wasn't even really moving towards to the music but look at them now they put the work in and then they didn't just put the work in they owned it when I look at the show with Wu Tang clang like Joe Budden going to say nobody want to watch Master P move that's the dumbest shit I ever heard I want all the cameras that's the dumbest shit I ever heard Joe Budden going to say some stupid shit like that on national TV I mean on his YouTube channel that's all these people watching who not going to watch Master P come on man if you're a hustler and you come from the bottom who not going first of all you got a story all that stuff that was going on in the Calio project how they going to set that up but just uptown at that time when P was coming up in the 70s in the 80s to the 90s what was going on at that time then you going to get the stuff he was doing in the 80s to the 90s in the Bay Area so that's going to be a whole another fan base that's going to let it tune in on that then just when you got the deal and all that shit so how these dudes not important these dudes got deals that Russell Simmons couldn't get Russell Simmons and getting make the record these dudes getting real money these dudes dropping an album every damn Tuesday these dudes dropping damn the 28 albums in 1998 who could do that y'all got to wait to drop one album a year y'all got to cry to drop one song these dudes man drop one he won't drop man he's like a wake up and say I want to drop an album no more and he could do it so them dudes like I said they show people how to hustle how to be bosses how to own your shit and how to make something out of nothing and that's what Master Pete did and that's why niggas respect the South now shout out to what Atlanta is doing now but you don't get the South dominance like that and to cash money and no limit kicking the deal cause Pete kicked in the deal and show them how much money niggas getting that's why like I said Jay-Z said you need it I got it I spit that Master Pete by the body he knew what they was doing now here so you get and it was on the same label cause Rocker fella first album came out on the priority that was the same label that Pete was on shout out to Dame Dash shout out to Dame Dash shout out to Biggs shout out to Biggs don't do that shout out to Biggs you know I'm real into it you know what I'm saying shout out to two from Harlem shout out to Harlem oh yeah Harlem I'm a big Dame Dash fan yeah me too me too Dame Dash one of my favorites I ain't gonna lie when I really when I really started looking at the moves that was made and the way he done you know a lot of people say oh man he ain't this and he ain't got that but he did some things man you can't take from him and they try hard to feel to this day you know pushing this independent wave and doing this thing and looking out for his kids man that's what being that's what's gangster you know that's what's real gangster when I see whether it's Dame or whether it's Jay-Z or whether it's a masterpiece in his boys you know and his daughter and just the family that's what's gangster the bird man and his son you know what I'm saying his family the way him and Lil Wayne Regenade all of them hang out that's more gangster than the music I ever be that's more gangster than the streets I ever be taking care of your family loving your loved ones as I always tell people way harder than everything Damondass I always say you gotta hustle way harder Damondass I always say you gotta hustle for your last name and that mean a lot like they ain't always fought for the coach always fought for his company he fought for the underdog and that's why I always liked him too because he was all his advocate but back to the stuff with your button Master Pete definitely would deserve a show because when I was looking at Wu-Tang stuff Rizzle was fighting to get $100,000 or $50,000 or $200,000 for each artist with different labels that was all signed to with the Wu-Tang members but nobody didn't have a deal like Cash Money nobody didn't have a deal like No Limit but this what they won't put on and that's nothing wrong with Rizzle them only thing I didn't like I didn't like when Rizzle did that damn move in New Orleans and he tried to make like dudes in the night war fighting like y'all made that shit look bad dudes ain't doing that type of shit in the night war cross cannell so I didn't like when Rizzle did that shit needed because he was out of touch but they out of touch Joe Budden Yo buddy y'all better stop playing with GD GD not trying to hurt Rizzle was out of touch he knew how to study the damn Chinese culture with the Wu-Tang stuff and all that to do that but you didn't know how to study New Orleans culture and nobody not down and fighting them damn raccoons and no damn cages outside no cages another thing people would definitely watch a Master Pete series and I hope 50 Cent get behind that because Pete helped them out back then and I hope he could return the favor and shit like that another thing that was groundbreaking I just told you 50 my god don't play Stars if y'all don't want to get 50 we need 50 need to go somewhere and get that check because he deserved it but Master Pete definitely deserved a show a series to tell his story and cash money too and another thing that was instrumental with Babynum did and Pete did and so on and on so you heard the music then you got to see the projects and just the way Nick was living down here and that was different or whatever so like I said shout out to Babynum you think Pete just was a little bit before his time the way he came in the game he was independent to hold when he first came and he still he went to the movie wave and all that other stuff he came something would say before his time he definitely before his time he definitely before his time he even played basketball sports management he was doing this like all of rap was trying to do sports management now he probably didn't have it all the way right I wanted to have it where it was like great but he was on the some early though for him to even jump into that doing the stuff of Ricky Williams he was still on a lot of things early so Pete just he just like a serial entrepreneur he always got his hands in something now some might say Kobe Bryant locked in on just basketball Michael Jackson locked in on the gym Lil Wayne locked in the studio same thing but on like anybody that just really locked in Michael Jackson Michael Jackson Floyd Mayweather when they just locked in that you know you're going to get those type of results you try to do a lot of stuff you over here you know like I feel like when Roy Jones went to doing other stuff and others it kind of kind of hurt him and Roy Jones was a boy listen he had his run yeah he had ain't no taking that people have a career yeah that's what I thought Muhammad Ali got beat sometimes like I'm saying this is his career when you look at his career was a phenomenal power for real yeah can't take nothing away Roy Jones was nice with it but I know he still was doing other stuff so I just know I'm just saying like when people kind of really just be all into one little thing and that's all they being to they just be so great because that's always and he just do it so good yeah but like you're talking about boxing what you think about EJ and Crawford fight coming up that's B I'm going with a who you who you you and Dallas don't play no leave him alone he can bet on who you going to bet on what why nah nah nah I'm going to go with E going with no no no who you why I'm Dallas but I don't know I'm not going to deal with you man that's a scary fight of course Earl got the bigger frame as people keep pointing out but this dude Crawford he's shooting from each angle he can go Southpaw he can go to do versatile but a lot of people you know they Dallas like nah but I'm telling you bro this is not going to be an easy fight for either one of them right right I think it's going to be a battle to take that's why I think the light is going to be so hyped up at the end of the night I feel like it's good for the coach I ain't been keeping over boxing like my dad do because he love boxing he love boxing a lot who you that bad now my dad better know who y'all better know Earl yeah for real yeah my dad better know him but he like I say he know he be keeping up with all the boxing but you ain't asking why well I'm going to have to ask some why but I know he got a good reason for both of those guys and both of those guys are dope you know what I'm saying they both champions no matter who win or lose that's what that's the problem from what Kansas now he from up top man I want to say look it up I just want to say Utah but I know man from Utah look it up from the Midwest or something like that the bar from up top man but I think I think you know when you think about boxing man it hadn't had a big fight like this in a long time right we've had some fights but not like this one right what you think two people who have never lost that's what I was saying that's what I was saying it's going to be a big night in Vegas it's going to be a big night he says Omaha Omaha I told you from the Midwest yeah Omaha in Nebraska yeah that's definitely where he's from how many bells he got one about four maybe five I think four I bet none spent why because he didn't take bells from yeah he has more to lose than Crawford with so nah he ain't going to lose he going nah it might be a draw you never know I know one thing when was the last time you seen a draw it's been a minute okay but it can happen she wants to see somebody my whole piece getting knocked out no I want to see nowadays every time I see a fight it look more like a show fight I don't see yeah I don't see you know like real fight yeah like a real fight like gladiators yeah this is like a show fight I'll be getting disappointed so I don't be like trying to watch because I remember when people wanted to watch a fight everybody get the popcorn and the wings and all that and they really have a fight night and it be a long fight but it be like man we really made I want to see a knockout another drop him in the river so drag him in the river you want to hear I want to hear I want to hear somebody else come out with some heart to that beat like juvie did like they did coming out I want to hear that beat again what you think I mean a lot of people been using that UNLV beat over again you know Juvenile did it on set at all but that's really I know that so I've been saying I want to hear it again I've been hearing a lot of young dudes doing it at the time and then it was a this song so it hit a little different because it was this any time you got a this song on top of the beat being hard you know it was a this song and it was hard and it was of the time so it just it probably ain't gonna that's like somebody rapping on hit him up it's gonna probably do that thing and Wayne probably even go off or hit him up but it ain't gonna hit like when Park and Outlaws got on because it's just what it meant at that time so I think that's what it is too I think you think about the whole the names you tell me what comes to mind I'm gonna thank you some people say K.L. K.L.C. K.L.C. a legend legendary producer past the snake Beast by the Pound popular DJ in the streets of New Orleans just like a real musical genius love the culture like baby said a great friend of his been dope since the beginning or whatever and like was the main person you thought of when you thought about Beast by the Pound like you don't get that sound that chains with bout it bout it if you don't get K.L.C. or whatever so K.L.C. means a lot make them say um you know um fuck the mother niggas cause I'm down for my niggas a lot of shit um won't won't so many songs that that still stick with us to this day you know introducing and helping soldiers slimming out like being really instrumental in his career like we love soldiers slimming New Orleans like he mean a lot and K.L.C. was to him I think he called a funky beats that's what I said if you know you're just running through people K.L.C. what bout Scarface Scarface man somebody say he won't say it but King of the South I mean Lyrical as hell being the secret favorite rapper Jay-Z love him a lot you know uh man I still love diary like it's just like Scarface like a great storyteller and just his paranoia that he had when he sounded like he paranoia and rapping about seeing shit in the streets and just going through stuff and looking over his shoulder game but not being able to trust people and who really for you who you can trust who friends and who folds like and just the way he put it together was just great as hell like his pin here real jeans and stuff like that so shout out to Scarface what you said about Eminem Eminem I mean Eminem dope too whatever you know I like motion matters whatever Eminem had the great flows and Eminem rhymes shit don't run again a little bit but they were still talking about two different things though but Eminem went hard though but they were talking about two different things but Eminem definitely is dope as hell I don't care if he white or not he really can rap he deserve to to get recognizing the culture cause he really like you know he nice with his pin and all that and Stan and just a lot of songs like but you know when they say the best rapper alive and Google search they say they say it's Eminem well I mean you know there's probably a lot of Europeans on there and all that stuff and that foolishness on there and stuff like that you know they make up majority of the population in America we only represent probably like 14% so they would push that narrative through Google and we know who behind Google so that makes sense but he not no damn top to me I mean he not no damn than the top three but he definitely great but out he wouldn't be my top three that's all I'm gonna say and Google they probably gonna do that but look at the damn the damn Grammys they get it wrong on the time with the Elmer I mean the cool control Google Sean Cotten say cheese TV Sean Cotten mean a lot to me man Sean Cotten turn me up Sean Cotten got me out there he put a light on me like I could never thank him enough I tell him thank you all the time I tell him on Twitter people like man why you always gotta say thanks Sean Cotten you don't gotta do all that you don't gotta sign me you dick right I'm like dawg what's wrong with giving people these flowers what's wrong with Sean gratitude thank y'all too like thank people it's nothing wrong cause he came on our show early on a couple of times and he didn't have to do that you know what I'm saying so he definitely one of those guys that I always show love and gratitude to it's along with Big D to mogul cause he didn't want to introduce me to you I just don't play with it when somebody do something and rock with me I rock with him man I don't never turn my back either as long as you as long as you come and come straight I'm rocking with you I'm rocking with you I don't care either one of them I can call me I'm gonna be there you know so like I said Sean mean a lot um shout out to Big D too from media mogul but Sean mean a lot cause like I said he didn't want to give me a nickname New Orleans spokesman like I said I don't have to be the New Orleans spokesman I just do my work for what I do and if people like it they like it they don't cool you ain't gotta follow me you ain't gotta watch my stuff but I'ma just do my part you know and I'ma use that name wisely for him to say that that's why I don't wrong Jim Crow law it's not gonna just tell another brother I don't because I don't agree with him we don't always have to agree with each other I don't gotta say bitch ass nigga I'ma kid you cause I don't like what you saying we just don't gotta agree we could agree to disagree why as adults as men we gotta be so toxic we want another way we talk to each other we just could say I don't agree with your point you might have this religion you might have this favorite food you might want this car that don't make me better than you that's just my preference so whatever you like that's what you like whatever and all that I think people just need to learn how to appreciate people and there's nothing wrong with just big and one and another so like I said I'ma always be showing no matter how big I get I'ma always tell him thank you cause I appreciate what he did for me let me ask you about Boosie man you gotta give me insight on Boosie you see what he been going through here lately just let me know like you know I really really you know because of the link with Pimp C and the way we all link with Pimp C I always rock with Boosie no matter what but I said that to say we gotta figure out like you know how can you know Boosie Boosie speak for the real man you know like family man again I don't you look at the part of he good rapper that's cool but I look at the part of having all them kids bringing them together I look at that part bro I look at Webby and his daughter whoever you know when he I look at that part the family man I just don't play by family bro and when I see these guys doing that that's what's gangster to me right right so what do you think about Boosie and what he's been going through here I mean I hope he come out of this case with the stuff with the phasen picked up the gun truck they say they saw him take the gun I don't know how true it is you know you've said all kind of shit on the internet but like I said I hope he come out of it Boosie beat cancer he beat that room so I feel like his God got fave on him and he going to come out of this situation I hope he do because I know what he mean to the culture and I definitely know what he mean to not just Baton Rouge but to Louisiana and to the south so you know Boosie voice is very disruptive and it's crazy California Pimp C had a high pitch voice for a dude from the south and Boosie got one too but his voice is disruptive and he going to speak from his heart he's unique yeah he's like the people in my like Pimp C in my he in my Tupac and those people talked a lot and Pac always say you know what you feel like people know you about my big mouth I say what I want I speak from my heart you know I don't know everything but I'm I'ma say things and maybe I might not be right but I'ma learn but y'all can't just get used to get clown for how he sound but not everybody got his voice he always on the shade room he always on everybody podcast everybody want talk to Boosie not the same person that nobody didn't think nobody was going to like his voice is everybody his voice so it just show you how things can come full circle and how you could get pushed to the front so like I said I hope he come out of this situation somehow to get used to music for entertainment I thought Boosie and Webby Webby Fanatic Webby I think he in town tonight Savage Life Still to me Y'all you agree with me Listen Savage Life to me the best rap album ever came out of Baton Rouge to me I'ma say that See that I'ma say that The best rap album ever come out of Baton Rouge to me man is motherfucking Savage Life look at all him hits on that record that dude and put more videos out cause bad bitch was hard gassed him we know about a girl giving that but it was so many other ones that coulda went already way back behind it was a lot of man come on man how he ride it was a lot of it's so many of them like that coulda went you know so that album that I don't think people give me enough credit for that I love what Gates Kevin Gates did and Young Boy and Boosie and Young Bleed and a lot of them Savage Life one it's over you want G shit? you want G shit? I'ma give it to you the production and Webby knew how to write songs even when Webby was on gangsta ghetto stories he was still in the show he'll get on there and do like money cause clothes hold he'll have songs like if you're gonna do that shit the nigga do it do they say I'll gas you out and go to circuit if you're doing good then shit you do it he's just shit like that like that was his now Boosie song and that was like you know I had a dream and that was a good one too but it wasn't like money cause that's what magic and them took and Roy Jones and made do it big I smoke I drink that was two of Webby's songs money cause clothes and do it big they combined them together and that's how they made the song I smoke I drink with Roy Jones in magic rest in peace magic from out the night well so shout out to Webby I know they always try to say Webby be tripping and this and that but before everybody in Chicago was calling themselves a savage wow that's just my opinion man like I said we done covered a lot of stuff huh what do you think do we miss anything mm-hmm you sure mm-hmm I gotta make sure I can't let you get out of here cause I know already you know a lot so I can't if you don't know what you're gonna speak on it anyway and you're gonna bring some light to it God gonna make sure of it who the hottest rapper right now this young coming out of New Orleans that you see I know you're gonna give me your right your opinion baby just text me just not home man like I said it's a lot of them bruh and I hate to drop name cause people always gonna say they gonna say man you're gonna get out of my way so when people be saying give me a couple of man man to see them say every time I do this shit they always get mad and baby I didn't say this for a sad person whatever and I just be hating them it just really just get tired it's a lot of good music it's a lot of good I'm gonna just say that for one brother it's a lot of good music cause like I'm gonna wait for that watch this whole interview and then I see a name and then I wouldn't say a certain name then they'll be like he don't fuck with us so it's like it's sad bruh I hate to do that whatever but I just gotta just keep doing my stuff on the low end and stuff or whatever just find a tan like that cause like I said when you drop a name and you don't drop you don't fuck with us whatever you're doing such a great job man I just wanna say that and thank you for coming on boss talk one on one again and I just wanna say make sure y'all like and subscribe to our channel but first of all how can people get a hold of you let me stop that look before we even stop I'mma say I'mma say some names whatever I quick to whatever I'mma just say I'mma just say it I'mma just say it I'mma just do it anyway though cause I mean this is a dope interview and people might see I'mma say YID Free J Merc whatever J Black J Arson Tatiana XL treaty got a hot song out there that's hot right now Blazing Up Viny Vicky Lodino Ring Gits Icebird fucking weed junkie putting out a wild but he was dope who else whatever man it be so many people you can't even think of Cole Young dope or whatever got something he just dropped out or whatever I'm saying you always go blank cause it's like it be a bunch of rappers but you can't think of everybody and stuff like that it's like man it's just so many people on I don't know bruh it be so hard to remember all those damn names and all that shit like they be trying to remember everybody name but like I said man I just hope that us doing stuff like that and discovering people and all that stuff like that I just hope it bring more life to the city and stuff like that what's the female rapper down there in New Orleans is getting down the one that got the song popping right now hard is treaty like I said super bad that Bayroom song right now treaty got a song that's real real hot that DJ Black and Ma produced and Black and Ma worked a lot with like Frida R.I.P McNoy Shorty Drake and stuff like that Beyonce so this will produce a record or whatever and it's going crazy whatever and all that called making love so How can people get a hold to you if they trying to reach out GD on Twitter is G-E-E-D-Y underscore P and on Instagram is GD P as in player of Paul speaks GDP speaks all together so GDP speaks on Instagram man man hey man thank you man thank you for like it hey make sure you like and subscribe to our channel GD just came through man it's been a great interview man I can't wait man this here going to be one for the books we always do a great job together man and we going to keep on making it to you it's been another great segment of boss talk 101 what a boss is talking and we out