 People feel like that's where you're gonna be just because you're from the hood. Boy, you could also be like, look at Nipsey Hussle, bro. You know what I'm saying? Like he was all hood, crib until the day he passed away, bro, and he still made it out. Yeah, we on boss talk, one on one. Sorry, what I can't stand about the hood or being raised in the hood is the fact that a lot of people make you feel like you're gonna either be on the streets in prison, you know, like. Or dead. Or just because of the environment, like there's nobody good, but I've met people who were raised in the hood, still had a single household, all of the statistics, and still came out whether a doctor, a lawyer, I mean, actually rose above it. And you know, so why do people feel like that's where you're gonna be just because you're from the hood? Boy, you could also be like, look at Nipsey Hussle, bro. You know what I'm saying? Like he was all hood, crib, until the day he passed away, bro, and he still made it out. It's cause a lot of people in the hood is talented, it's just lost talent. And if one person comes in, like he was giving, like he, I know he helped a lot of his homies come into the music scene, you know what I'm saying? And go forward with it. You know, and that's the kind of what I'm trying to do. You know, trying to do the same thing. I have the lights, so I have a lot of homies around me that is talented. And once you, it's like, that's what it's hard to get is to make it in the music industry. That's the hardest thing. Once you're in there, then you go forward and you push and you grind. You know what I'm saying? It's the work you put into it. You know, you can't put music and you're not going to the studio. You can't be like a rapper. You're not going to the studio laying down on tracks. Right. One of, out of, maybe you put out like 100 tracks, but every one of them is a hit. You just need one hit. You just need one shot. I see the Lupe 46th Street, the crib, 46th Street crib. How did you end up even in, how did you get in? How did that happen? I just, you know, when I came to the hood, bro, I came to the hood, bro. I went there when I was 19. I started hanging out with them and then, you know, I became. How long did it take for you new that you was a part of it? Not too long, bro. Maybe about like six months. Really? Can somebody be hanging with them and not actually join? Well, I was, I was like, I did, you know, you got to do certain things. Right. Right, to be initiated. But can you like say, I don't want to join, but I also want to just hang with y'all. We got, we got some homies that, that are not, yeah. I didn't know if it was allowed or not allowed or whatever. It's, it's like, even some homies from, from different states that they're not from there, they just hang out, you know what I'm saying? They do certain things, you know, they might help that what we need. And then, you know, they, I think some people feel like I don't have to join, but I'll be protected if I just hang out. I know it's not that it's cause a lot of them are like grew up there, they were born there. So like they, they grew up with everybody. Yeah, they grew up there. So it's like then they're like, basically they're like their family, you know what I'm saying? They become part of it, but they're not. All right. You know, so they, they, oh, they're always there. They're not, they're always going to be there when we have parties or, you know, we have funerals. Oh, you know, they're going to be there, bro. Don't boss talk one on one.