 What's going on, everybody? Welcome to a very special episode of Farm Bros. Food. Today, we are on the Lower East Side. We're gonna be touring some black-owned businesses because after all, it is February. It's Lunar New Year and Black History Month. Who better to join us to do it, but comedian Charles McVe. What up, what's going on? What's going on, my guy? Yeah, I mean, real quick, tell them who you are because obviously you've performed all over. Comedy seller, the stand, you've been a professional comedian for quite some time. Also, the head writer on Charlemagne's Hell of a Week. Yeah, Hell of a Week on Comedy Central is a executive produced by Stephen Colbert. We were nominated for a WGA award. Just been doing the damn thing, man. Stand up, writing, TV, acting, the whole night. Hey, man, it's Black History Month. Black History Month, baby. It's Lunar New Year. Lunar New Year. Black Asian Fusion, baby, let's do it. Rush Hour, let's do it. All right, so this is dope because I know you just came from Harlem, right? Yeah. And did you know, I mean, the LES to me is really cool because it's almost like a hybrid of everything. Right, right. Right now, we're at Pig and Butter. Right here, you can see Black Own Restaurant. Black Own, baby. Yeah, let's talk to Sherry. Let's do it. What's up? Hey, how are you? How is it? Good, good to see you. Yeah, yeah, yeah, good to see you. We actually filmed here a few years ago, right? When they opened, now they got a bar open on Avenue B in Alphabet City. So, man, we're excited to try some stuff. Avenue B for Black Own. Yeah. Pig and Butter. I'm just super excited to try. They actually have like Fusion, I want to say the food here. It's almost like soul food, food, shit. Nice. Yeah, I want to do it. I want to get into it. No, I can see, like, I would say to that, just that amount of bacon just right there. Boom. You already know what it is. Listen, I'll form my Muslim brothers and sisters. Listen, hey, I know y'all don't get down, but I'm about to get down on that right there. Yeah. This is like the essence of Fusion, yo. I love it. Where you starting off with, I'm going here, right here. You know what, I'm going to just go ahead and get some of this like orange chicken and waffles. Yeah. Have you ever had that before? Orange chicken and waffles, not. Chicken and waffles, absolutely. And you got orange chicken. This is like... Because you're from like Toledo, Ohio, right? Toledo, Ohio. Were you shocked at how much like Chinese food is eaten in New York? Like, and it's like everybody, like white people got their Chinese spots, black people got their Chinese, like everybody has their own Spanish people got the Chino-Latino spots. Yo, you come to New York City, especially from where I'm from in Toledo, because it was kind of, it was very sacred. It was like white people on one side, black people on other sides of the city. And there's no other races. There's no other races for real. Like you might see, I had one Asian friend in high school. And they were not adopted. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Yeah, yeah. It wasn't until I came to New York, I was just like, oh wow, this is what they say. This is what they mean when they say nothing five. Right, right, right. And you're dating some Asian women? What? Listen, I mean, I've dated a couple. I got some of your jokes that I want to go over as we eat. You have a joke about how everybody is just better at everything online. Like no one ever keeps the same energy, no online, as they do in real life. So like when it comes to Twitter, everybody is more gangster, more woke, more spiritual, more, what a, more better, more everything, right? Like everybody is a better person online. Everybody's more gangster online. Everybody's everything online. Everybody's the version that they wish they was in real life online. Whether it's good or bad, it makes no difference. But like you get to be, not your authentic self, because it's a different version, but you get to be like your avatar version of you. Right. Either you have so much power that you don't think that there's any consequences or you have complete anonymity, so you could just do whatever and not get caught. That being said, what do you think about the comment section of Instagram, of all these, Instagram tends to be a little bit more real, because it's more tied sometimes to your actual profile and people can go in and roast you. And that's always an interesting thing to see the Instagram section. Yo, I feel like Instagram, I don't know, my Instagram comments aren't as crazy. Sometimes they can get crazy, but they, a lot of it is just people that are kind of on the same page of what I'm putting out. But on Twitter, that's where it gets crazy. Cause I'll be a little more political. I'll be a little more like, cause I'm commenting on what's trending or whatever. Like what, what do you think of that? Like how everything turned into a race war in the comment section nowadays. Is that reflective of the environment? Or like you said, is people just engaging in something that would be taboo at work, not HR acceptable, right? The more polarized we become in real life and the more PC and the more we're unable to like just have conversations and say certain things or worried about getting canceled in, in regular life, the more people are just going to be that much, you know, at eyes and, and seeing that wild crazy shit online in the comment section. So whether it be race, whether politics, whether it be men and women's, you know, sex, all that. Cause you can't have, there's no more conversations, no more. Right, right. There's no more nuance. There's no more gray area. Everybody's just, is that why the comment section on any WNBA highlight is like, Oh my God. Get back in the kitchen. Oh my God. That is crazy, bro. Right, right, right. So you talk a lot about that. I feel like you have a lot of really nuanced, insightful takes on sort of like everyday things that people might overlook, right? Because people are not even thinking about how the comment section is reflective of potentially how restrictive everyday IRL societies become, right? Right, yeah. What do you think influence your ability to like sort of suss out those insights where even your average comedian is a little bit like they're going, you know, cause there's some hot button issues that it's almost easy to attack. Yeah. Versus you're almost like sussing out another layer that the people overlook. But that's just the thing. That's, that's kind of a thing that I do on purpose. Like I'll go, okay, what's my immediate kind of gut reaction to this? Or whether it's the joke. Cause I really don't look for the joke first. I look for like, what's my honest take on it? Or what's my like spend on it? But then I go, is this hack? Or is this been done? Or is this easy? Like how easy is this? Is there another angle that I can look at with this, whatever the take is? Say, just use politics for example, if I'm from a Democrat side or a liberal side of the angle of it, I don't want to just look like some liberal on stage just talking, talking, talking. I'm gonna be like, but what would a conservative say about this? Or what would, if I'm talking from a man's perspective, what would a woman's perspective be? Or what, you know, saying, what would her angle be? And I try to find that nuance. So it's not just me. Cause sometimes the comment could be just on stage, on they like, on they, what is it? Like soapbox or something like that. And I never want to come across like that. You know, they come across as almost like a PR rep for a political side. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Like a funny bro shirt, tagline writer. Yeah. And that's how you get claptor instead of laughter. Cause people just be in your audience just doing this the whole time in the grin. But you don't hear no gut belly last. I want to last. I don't want to give you agree with me or not. I want you to laugh hard. And I feel like, you know, whether you agree with his political leanings or his perceived political leanings or not, that's why like Shane Gillis is so popular right now because he's like getting laughed at. Actual laughs. People are watching like, what the hell is this? Is this laughs coming through? Like it used to be where you could watch a special and it felt special. It felt like you was watching like, like he was hearing some shit that you didn't, you felt like, oh man, am I allowed to even hear this? You know what I mean? And now other, now it's like you said with Shane and people like that is coming back around. But for a long time it was just people just saying talking points of what they, of whatever it was or being safe. Can you talk about this one joke where you said, I'm biracial and then you took a long pause. We'll just play the clip right now. It was weird, man. It's weird growing up because like, I come from a small town and used to be hard for me to fit in with other kids, especially other black kids in my neighborhood. Mostly because I'm biracial. We both, my parents are black, but I listen to Coldplay's when I'm trying to say it. Like that is, that was a joke basically where it's commenting on that whole like, oh you not black if X, Y, Z. Right. Oh you listen to this, you not really black. Oh you like to do this, you not really black. I came up, I call myself a Kodasak Negro. Like I grew up in the suburb, but I was like, when I was young, we was in the hood, but parents was like, this shit is getting crazy. Moved to the suburbs. And then I, you know, ended up being around kids that I wasn't used to being around when I was younger. And my teenage years was like, okay, what's this? What's going on? What is this hacky sack? What is that? What are we all doing? What's going on here? What is this hacky sack? Cause this is like more suburban on high. Suburban, yeah. Which is more like apocom. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So I went from, yeah, exactly. I went from like LeBron James, like Akron to Apocom. Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. So I had both, I had both worlds to pull from. Certain things I was peeping like, you know what? I actually kind of like guns and roses. Like this is kind of hard right here. Or I actually kind of like nirvana. Like this is dope. But sometimes you go back to the hood or you go back to some of your old friends and they like, what is this? What do you want? Like what are you talking about? Oh, that's why you want that white, white people shit. So that's just a joke that kind of played into, played into that whole kind of narrative of just like that people trying to put you in a certain box when being black is being black. But like sometimes it's, sometimes it don't be other people. It don't be white people sometimes. Sometimes it'd be your own people that try to put you back into some box. I feel like there's no right or wrong when it comes to a person's personal lifestyle or life choice or who they are as a person. I'm of the belief that every individual person has a right to live their life as they see fit as long as they're not hurting anybody else. But also on the other side, people are like, that's cool for you, but don't try to force me into whatever your lifestyle, your thing is, as long as I can respect what you do, as long as you respect my values. I feel like there's conversations being had in the black community, because it's like, it used to be like, it used to be on some, you black, you black. But now, and I don't know how it is in Asian community, but now after like, there's like, people are kind of getting into their own different tribes a little bit, like in the sense of just like, well, we're foundationally black, meaning like our ancestors were brought here as slaves. So we was like, this is our black. And then you might have like, well, we're from Trinidad, we're from the islands, so we over here. So we're from Ghana. We're from Ghana, we're from Nigeria. So it's like, it's less just, we're all black people. And now it's more everybody kind of in their own tribe. Though we're all just black. Yeah, I feel like it was at least the way I grew up. But then again, like I said, I grew up in Ohio and in the West. So it really was just mostly African-Americans. But I feel like that conversation of just everybody just repping their own set. Do you feel like, and this might be like, I'm speaking from complete ignorance, right? Is it a thing of just like, if you're Korean, you're Korean, if you're Japanese or Japanese, like do y'all, is there a complete sense of like unity as far as just like, where are... I think generally, Chinese tend to be a little bit more Pan-Asian. And because there's sort of Chinese history and Chinese bloodlines in every Asian country. But I can totally respect and understand why other Asian countries that are smaller want a little bit more of that exclusive representation. So it's almost like, depending on which one you were born. Do you know what I'm saying? The Chinese everybody's like, well, everybody already considers everybody Chinese. And it was like very influential in an ancient sense to the whole zone. And then at the same time, some people didn't want to move away from that in the modern day, which I totally get to. So it's to your point where I'm like, ah man, I usually unite to have power in America, but that's not how people are orientated to like structure their whole life, to build power. They're like just trying to live their life. They're trying to live. And that's like identity possible for themself. And how they view their fish bowls of life. And not everybody's like super power centering. All right, you guys, we're wrapping up here at Pig and Butter. What was your favorite thing, man? Man, I can't even pick, bro. I've been going ham on this orange chicken and the waffles, but like the French toast, my God. The French toast, for me, the cornbread pancake sandwich. Cornbread pancakes. Yo, come on, yo. You talk a lot about the 90s in your work, right? And I was just thinking about this because I would generally agree with you that like it seems like the art was better, the hip hop was better. Even the, you know, you talk about, I have a lot of jokes about TGIF. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You know what I mean? My friend orders a $500 bottle of champagne. Now I don't know if any of you have ever ordered a $500 bottle of champagne. Well, if you've ever seen someone order a $500 bottle of champagne, or if you've ever watched a rap video before. But when somebody orders a $500 bottle of champagne, things get crazy, right? First of all, four of the most beautiful women you will ever see in your life appear out of nowhere, right? They're holding the bottle in their hands. Now the bottle has 4th of July sparklers shooting out of the bottle, right? They parade the bottle through the club. Now everyone in the club is focused on this bottle and everyone simultaneously says to themselves, oh my God, who bought the $500 bottle of champagne? Then they place the bottle at the table and now the person who ordered the bottle has to sit there and act like he didn't know this parade was about to take place when he ordered this bottle, right? My friend and I are standing there and we're having a good time but then he starts to tease me a little bit. He's like, yeah, I'm balling. I'm living life. I know you wish you was balling like me. Like can I go into a hip hop club, order a $500 bottle of champagne, have four beautiful women bring it out while it's on fire and have everybody in the room go, oh my God, who ordered the $500 bottle of champagne? No. But what I can do is go into a TGI Fridays, order the sizzling fajitas and get the same reaction from everybody in the restaurant. It's the same. How come it seemed like everything was better? But then I was looking up the racial statistics at that time and it was like America was 85% white. It was 10% black and literally everybody else made up 5% of America. Obviously now the stats are way different in 2024. Is that weird that for people to be like that was the best but then it was like it was so white then but it seemed like it felt like the minority stuff was maybe even more minority, I don't know. I think it's similar to what we talked about earlier where during that time it was either pre-internet or the internet was there but it was pre-social media. So it wasn't like a lot of the online fighting, cancel culture and that whole thing just wasn't around back then. So you actually had to be present in your community or in your home or with your friends or with your family and actually taking life for what it was. But it also was just like a simpler time where things moved a little bit slower and I feel like even though we longed for world moving faster back then with the future and what was gonna be in the future, now that we're in the future of then we're kinda like, you know what? We could slow this down a little bit because things are kinda getting crazy right now. We're walking over to actually Pig and Butters' other spot in Alphabet City. I'm pretty excited to do that. But what I was gonna say is like, what do you see right now? There's a lot of like articles coming out about how I guess the black electorate or black voters, they're more moving towards Trump or they're just dissatisfied with Biden. What do you see there? Yeah, I feel like it's more the latter. It's more like dissatisfied with Biden and dissatisfied with the Democratic Party. But then when it comes down to actually passing like bills and laws and doing things that actually help the black community, then they be like ghosts, you know what I mean? Where's all this money coming from when we ask for certain things that are of a financial sense? Well, we just don't have the funds. Whoa, whoa, whoa. We can't locate them. We don't know how. We don't know where they are. Oh my God. You need six trillion to fight this thing over here? Exactly. Here you go. It's like they're playing in your face for a certain amount of time. You're like, all right, y'all playing with us? Okay, cool. This is what we're gonna do. So that's where a lot of black people are right now. Right, right. All right, so we're on to the second location of Pig and Butter, but real quick, we just walked by a boba shop. Charles, have you ever had boba before? I've never had it. But you know what it is. You know what bubble tea is? Yeah, yeah, bubble tea, yeah, yeah, yeah. Wait, you have bubble tea? I've had bubble tea, but I've never had. What is it, boba? Boba is just another word for bubble tea, but you know what it says, is it? I'm learning something. But it's more like advanced than bubble tea in a way, if you have it regularly. All right, you guys, this is Charles McBee's first time having the pearls, the tapioca pearls. You had bubble tea though. I had bubble tea. But not with the bubbles. Not with the bubbles, so we're gonna rock it out. Oh yeah, that's good. What do you think? That's good, that's fire. Yeah, it's like something to chew on. Black on too, right? What? Black on? I don't think so. I'm not in that spot. You know what? This is a black person working there though. You know what that is? Donald Glover Childish Gambino does have a boba spot in L.A. Oh yeah? Yeah. Don't check that out. He's an Asian, bro. Like a lot, he really likes it. No comment. We were talking about how like, you know, people kind of use different coded language to get around maybe direct reparations to foundational black Americans, right? Like, what is, like, I guess, what is that? Well, how people try to... You know, I remember when Biden was running and a lot of the, yeah, a lot of black people on his team one night and it was going out and saying he's gonna do this for black people, he's gonna do that for black people, right? And it came out with a whole, literally plan for black America. Like they had their whole thing. The first election. The first election. And they were like, you can go to our website and you can read it for yourself. It's there. And I was like, you know what? I'm gonna go and read this. But then when you would read the actual fine print, it was like, we're going to help poor people, you know, by investing in minority communities. And it was just like nothing that said specifically black or African-American people. It was just like poor people or, but in bold, they'd be like, here's how we're gonna help black people in this way. And then you would read it. And they'd be like, so we're going to do this for diverse businesses and communities. And so it's a lot of coded language that's just like, you're playing, it's like you're playing in our face a little bit. It's just like, we want to hear something that's specifically, what are you specifically going to do for us as a community? As a, don't just say, well, we're gonna do this for criminals. This is like, what the hell? There's a definitely mainstream type of media narrative that black people are all poor, busted, broke, struggling. And it gets kind of like celebrated and funded too, so that it becomes this narrative. And then you become synonymous with like black men in prison or black women on welfare. It's like literally that's how that shit started. Where the most people that are on welfare are white people because there's more white people. But it's just like, but we get all of a sudden become the face of these things which is not, it's not us. There's a whole, there's a bigger system that plays into that and actually feeds that. Media is big. Like people don't understand how important representation and imagery is. Like it really feeds people's perception of who you are as a person before they even meet you. All right, you guys, we've made it to Alphabet City. It was quite the walk, quite the characters. Yeah, I'm gonna be a little more aware of it. That's a great thing about New York. You don't know what the hell is going on around here. I guess, you know, we're talking about the perception from the media that has been pushed that way, whether it's intentionally, unintentionally, probably both. I guess, do you feel like in the same way? Cause I grew up with a lot of middle class black people, both parents, parents are working professionals, but sometimes even my friends would feel that pressure to adapt to like the national perception. Yeah, yeah, totally. Even though that wasn't necessarily reflective of their families, but maybe a cousin or a second cousin more, I guess it was like fitting that archetype, but then they almost want to adapt to their cousin. Yeah, if you, I mean, when you're trying to like make it, you know, in a dominant society, it's not, when you're in a room with people that looks more different than you, than actually you, then you're just naturally going to kind of fit into that environment a little bit. You're going to kind of go, well, I'm trying to be upwardly mobile. And so you're naturally like some of your, you know, you're naturally going to cold switch, if you will. But I don't think that's necessarily a person selling out. I think that's just, you're just adapting a little bit to your environment. Another thing with social media, you're finding these pockets of like black people who are going out of the way to make it okay to identify with certain things that we normally wouldn't identify with. So it's just like black people that ski, like there's a whole group that goes, you know, like a whole weekend, it's like black people ski weekend, where you go on skiing or you go, you know, black people that swim, like all these stereotypes that people think that we don't do or not into, you're finding like these groups are coming together and being like, nah, we actually into this too. I mean, I think you just kind of have to be unapologetically you and also exposure. It's just exposing people to some new shit. So sometimes people rebel against or sometimes people like try to, they're afraid of what they don't know. And because they've never been outside the outside of the black or outside of the city or outside of their own circle or their own bubble, then they kind of like, you know, they look down upon it. But if you kind of expose people to certain things, they'll be like, yo, just kind of lit over here, like come, come check this out. Like more people, more people will just, you know, be on board with it. For sure, for sure. I think that's the, that's like, that's the thing. It's just like a lot of, a lot of kids grow up, especially like from where I'm from, they grow up not even knowing what's, what's even out there. Like they don't know, you don't know what you don't know. So you can only go by stereotypes and shit like that. All right, you guys, we're about to link up with Chef Sherry again. This is our second spot. Picking butter, just opened up. It's a bar. Let's do it. I don't know, if you try to get a link. Could you give us a quick breakdown? So it's a picking butter bar with elevated bar food, signature cocktails. We have some flaming going on with Rosemary. We have a special genitonic section with like a purple gin. We have some sweet and smoky flavors for our cocktails. And then for the food, we have a truffle honey pancake, Korean short ribs and grits, Korean short ribs and fries, Spanish tuna pizza. We even incorporate some Thai flavors like a Thai mushroom tostada. We have, we have everything here. We gotta try it. It looks delicious. Thank you. All right, you guys, our final section in this video is here at Picking Butter Bar, Alphabet City. Yeah. Yo, this is crazy. They got the Bloody Mary. This is a whole meal though. Yeah, this, yeah, I'm about to say this. This is definitely a Black But Bloody Mary because they gonna give you a little bit of everything. They give me Thanksgiving dinner. They give you, they give you bacon. They give you the olive, the devil egg. Right, right, right. Well, we'll see what drink they give you. Oh my God. But real quick, you know, we're here. This is the final part of the video we gotta talk about. I guess, what do you think the relations are? And this is a big question, right? There's a lot of people who even debate if this question is a legitimate question. What is the relationship between the Black American community and the Asian American community in Europe? It's a couple of different conversations that I see from afar kind of happening. There was, well, one, I think there's a, there is a mutual respect. There's conversations of just like a mutual respect there because, I mean, going back out, like I talk about the 90s and all that. So we grew up, you know, Wu-Tang is obviously having his influence. We grew up watching, you know, karate films and being, you know, influenced by like the Bruce Lee's and all of that. Gently Jackie Chan, like that whole thing was like, we was heavy into that. I felt like there was a narrative of like, it was like Black people versus Asians. I was like, where did that even come from? I'm just looking at it. I'm looking at it like, are these trolls? Are these bots? Is it real? Is it not real? Like, what's the, I didn't understand where that narrative of why it was kind of like being kind of, you know, pushed in that direction. There's definitely certain parts of the community where it's like, they're not getting along. But like you said, like people in comedy or in an industry or in a field, that's like a whole different segment of person where that, I feel like almost like being a comic is transcending sort of sense of tribalism. But I know that the more blue collar, more salt of the earth people from each community may not be getting along or may have more extreme perceptions of each other than people who are educating people with a similar mindset, thinking on the same geometric claim. Also, if you go in like black communities, like there's Asians in those black communities like co-excited, co-inhabitant. There's a food spot. There's an Asian food spot, there's a Chinese food spot there in those black communities. Like, there's a long history. I guess it's both. There's a long history of us coinciding together. There's also a long history of there being tension in those communities because in the whole sense of like, oh, what? Oh, my goodness. Is this just more your speed? Pinkies up. I don't know. All right, we're doing it. My goodness. Oh, boy. Two lunches. We starting off. We got a truffle deviled eggs. This is chashu Cantonese roast pork with gochujang and a fried egg. These are coquito whipped crepes. The whip is made out of coquito, which is like a Puerto Rican Dominican liquor, right? Yeah. And over here we've got Korean short rib with grits. And I believe, but smoked salmon pastrami, right? It's mixed. Yeah, go for it. Shout out to pig and butter. Shout out to pig and butter, man. I'm gonna go in on these coquito whipped crepes. Bro, that's crazy. You know, oftentimes I wish people from different communities could have this unique experience that I'm sure you had, that I had growing up. Obviously, I played sports. I played basketball, football, track. There was black students in my honors class. Shout out to Nicole Sharper, she's Jamaican. I had so many different experiences sharing things with other people. Obviously being in entertainment as a media, as a career. I've been able to meet so many different types of people connect with so many people. For example, obviously I'm Asian, Asian-American, connected with African-Americans, but also people from the Caribbean, people from Africa, people from all around the world, believes. And it's like, but I just know that a lot of people, regardless of whatever community, they don't necessarily have that opportunity to be so worldly or cultured or meet so many people across the spectrum. Exactly. That's why a lot of times people just go on based off of stereotypes that they know from media or from online or social media or whatever, because they don't have that one-on-one personal connection where they're like, oh no, that's not, you can't base a person or a community on stereotypes that you've heard. You gotta actually know somebody and really have that conversation. And it helps so that when you hear someone else talk negatively about that community or about a certain person, you be like, nah, it's not really like that because my homeboy is Chinese I'm with his family all the time and this is how we get down over it. Like you can able to combat that, but if all you hear is these negative stereotypes and you don't have any personal connections to combat it where you just go, oh, it must be true. And it seems like for people who don't work in really like diverse fields where everybody's like, not just visually, aesthetically, genetically diverse, but actually like putting themselves out there and talking about the differences. I guess the only other time where I see people like from very disparate backgrounds get on the same page is like in the military like we all become like police officers or of course that's gonna put us in a situation where we all try to have each other's back. Right, you're just blue at that point. I have a joke where I say you gotta hang around people that's different than you. You can have your people that's obviously in your community. You gotta hang around people that's not like you and not from a whole different background perspective. It's just not only, not just because it's like politically correct, it just keeps you from saying and doing stupid shit. You know what I mean? Keep you from sounding like an asshole sometimes, sounding ignorant. There was a test that they used to do with kindergarteners where it was just like, you had the blue-eyed people over here and the green-eyed people over here and they would like give the blue-eyed people a little bit extra free time or a little bit extra snacks and saw how they interacted with each other and it was always just like it became very tribal and the green-eyed people became, you know, hatred of the blue. It was just like we find little, you could be all white, blonde hair, blue-eyed culture and it'd still be like, yeah, but your hair is this lean, my hair is that lean or you're this tall and we're this tall. It's gonna be something that human beings find to beef about. Right, like I know in England, especially at a time where England was completely white, they used to go off accent. Yeah. Oh, you're from North London, I'm from South London, you're from Birmingham accent. Exactly. Hey man, this was a great discussion. The food was amazing. What was your favorite thing out of here? You gotta try that real quick. I'm getting in on this. Honestly, I'm gonna go ahead and say that this Chashu Cantonese roast pork with the gochujang and the fried egg, this was the one for me. That's what's up, man. I'm in on this grits. You can't put a plate of grits in front of me and I don't go in on it. So it's like ribs and grits mixed together with the sauce. I never even knew I needed this combination. I did not know I needed this combination until just now. Well, hey man, this was a great discussion. Yo man. Where else can they find you and what can they look forward to? Everything, Charles McBee, MC, B as in boy E, Charles McBee, YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, everything is the same as Charles McBee. If you're in New York City, come see me do stand-up, man, pull up. Hell yeah. All right you guys, until next time, y'all, peace. Peace.