 It's a unique hustle, big shit, big shit, big shit, it's a unique hustle, nigga, big shit, big shit, big shit, name another podcast like this. Check it, check it, check it, it's a unique hustle, it's your boy E.C.O. And I'm here with the lovely official, Mr. Mako. What's going on? Nothing, my dad will all go on. Hey man, how you doing, man? Good to see you. You see me all the time. You just look different behind the mic. You look real good to say no one in the mic. Check it, man. Hey, man, check it. We got a guest today. You know, this here, you know, we're trying to bring music back. You know, there's been a lot of stuff been going on. And you know, this rap is over saturating the market. But we got Chi Hindi in the building today, y'all. Get ready, man. We about to go in, man. Just want to talk about, you know, really the music and just how she got into what she got into. Her backstory, of course, we got to get some of that. We want to know who she is, where she from, who she be with. Check it, man. So, hey, man, so I guess you can just give us a spiel about yourself. Just tell us a little bit about who you are. All right. My name is Chi Hindi. Not Chi, but Chi Hindi. I'm from Marshall, Texas. Born and raised. I'm a part of Fast ENT. Y'all make sure y'all look us up. I ain't got to look y'all up. I've been doing the real and the hell out of y'all. Don't just sit up and make y'all look us up. You talking to my people on everybody. And the listeners is the listeners. Everybody. Everybody. Go ahead. Tell us some more. So how did you get a name Chi Hindi? Well, first, Chi comes from energy. It's an aura that you have about yourself. That's true. Hindi comes from my last name, which is Henderson. So I decided to make it short a little bit. Jimmy Hendrix going on, but the Chi Hindi. And you came up with the name yourself? Came up with it by myself. How long you've had that name? About two years. I started out trying to be Cee Lowe. And I was like, nah, it's already taken. Cee Lowe. You better add your damn vocals right. Because you got to say what a hot-pitched voice it is. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. You know what I'm saying? Oh, yeah. What's that song you got? She might have it. She already got it. What's that song you got? You know, he sound like it. You know, he could sound. We're going person to you. That was up, man. But no, I mean, he's different. But I get it, though. So was it, how did you discover, okay, that you love the music early on? Or was it later on? No, or were you born with this talent? Yeah. I was born with it. I started out with my dad writing songs at four years old. Oh, so your dad is also a musician? He can't sing at all. Okay. But he can write. He taught me how to sing at four years old without being able to sing. Okay. And from there on, I just started singing with other people that were in the church. I could never do runs for nothing. But just being around them, listening to them, it was kind of like being a sponge. Right. And listening to what they had to offer. I wish I could do runs, too, like that. But it was just a straightforward, just regular singing that I could never get the runs at all. Even now? Now I can do it better. It's come over time. Yeah, it takes time. It takes practice. How hard is it to learn how to do that? It takes a lot of practice. It does. Jasmine Sullivan, I'm still not messing with her, but it takes a long time to learn runs. Okay. A long time. So I don't want to talk about the runs. I want to talk about what neighborhood you lived in in Marshall. Were you living off Rogers Street, 59, 80? Where was you at in Marshall? Off of University Avenue down the street from Wiley, Newtown. Ooh, that over there by Bella. Y'all left. Ooh, you go down through there, boy. By the time you get through there, yeah, it gets real. Yeah. So how was it? Is it rough? It do get rough. I can remember parts of it being rough. Bella's apartment has its ups and downs, but I handed it. I enjoyed it. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? It was our people. Everywhere we go, when we in Chicago, they say on the south side is rough. When we in Vegas, they say on the west side is rough. Wherever we go, they say it's rough where there's black people at. But at the end of the day, those are our people. I love them and I always would frequently visit them. You know what I'm talking about? Right. How was it growing up in those neighborhoods for you? It was pretty smooth because back then it wasn't too much going on. You had your different areas where you had a lot of stuff going on. But through time, after the college kids left, it got worse. Yeah. It did. It got really bad. You stayed by the detail shop right there? A little bit further down. We came to tell you something. But I remember my boy Nunu and a black man used to live down there on that street. I know my stuff now. Yeah. I'm all up in there. And it was a little barbershop. What was his name? That old man they used to have. He probably don't remember. I know who you're talking about. Mr. Fisher? It was someone else. My son. I can't think of it right now. That's the neighborhood you grew up in. Right. I can remember. I remember a little girl running around. Her hair wouldn't come. I drove through there one day and I think that was you. I don't know. My auntie was a hairstylist. She might get pretty mad after she heard this. No. No, but that's a good area. Do you have any siblings? I'm the only child. Really? I'm the only child. I could have told her that. She got a only child syndrome. Just like your mama. What is a only child syndrome? Oh, that's when they think everything belong to him. You know, she sat down in that chair and she just grabbed a mic like it belonged to her. And she's sitting there and everything good. I'm TND and my name stands for greatness. I'm a great person. How about you? And that's the way you go when you're the only child. Right. You feel good. I don't believe that. Check those mics. I have two other siblings outside of my dad and my mom. My brother and sister. They're my half-brother and sister, but I call them. They're still my brother and sister. That's good. So you weren't really raised by yourself, so to say. Right. I was really raised by my grandparents. Oh, okay. So your mom and dad? So you're sneaking boys in the house. Yeah. Grandma them slow as hell. You ain't gotta fool me. I know what's going on with grandma. Grandma can't get up. She got that old house coat on. She's sitting there watching TV and you walking around. She said, who is that in that back? You say, oh, that's such a such. She said back down. But we know. Well. Grandma's only into making it. You know what I'm talking about? Yeah, but a lot of times, you know, yeah, in the country, that's good living. You know what I'm saying? I love the food because you cook. Yeah, she could cook. Well, she's still living or she ain't living there? She's not living now, but she could go down. Can you cook now? Oh yeah, I can go down. Okay, because you should have the recipe. I had to slow down a little bit. I would get a little plum. No, no, no. I get it. I get it, but when I come through, I can get a fish sandwich or something. Not a fish sandwich. What you got? Maybe some neck bones or some collard greens. I hate no neck bones. Yeah, I went over to South, South Dallas Cafe. They had some neck bones over there off of Camp Wisdom. Yeah. Yeah, that's the only place I can find some neck bones. They don't be requesting that a lot. You request oxtails. That's what I'm saying. That's because I'm married to Jamaica, but I eat some neck bones. Hey, you don't think I eat some neck bones? I cooked you some. How many years ago? I ain't gonna go there. Okay, you brought it up. How many years ago was it? That had to be about, I'm gonna say carry the one. It was probably about 16 years ago. Okay. Okay. Isn't that a shame? It is. I bet you can throw down. Oh, yeah. That's why I don't have to cook it no more because she cooked the mox tails. Okay. I need to know this. I see my woman's perspective. Just because a woman can cook. Right. Does that mean that a man don't have to cook sometimes? No. No. Well, first of all, you don't even have a man. So how are you gonna tell her? I do have a man. Oh, you do? I do. She said she got married. And you got you a cooker. I'm not a cooker. You know what I'm talking about? I don't cook. Like you got your man cooking. He cook. You know, most of the time I cook. Have you ever heard of Kevin Samuels? I have. Don't go. Don't go. Kevin Samuels. Get Kevin Samuels to talk to him about all this cooking. This is a good show. I like it, man. I get up here and have a good. Do I be kicking it or do I be kicking it? Every time. I have a good. I don't care who's sitting there to see this going down. So, you know, just the fact that you are from East Texas trying to come out from under that whole shadow because a lot of time it's the stigma and the artist down there is so hard for them to penetrate what's going on in the industry. How have you been able to get those, you know, those looks that everybody long to get in the industry? First of all, connecting with the team because you can't do it alone by yourself. It's very hard being a female artist and not having a team to help you. Support you and motivate you during the way. It's very hard. I started out doing music back in 2010. I started stopped and finally I got back here to I came back here to East Texas and decided to make it a permanent thing for me. But where were you doing music when you said you started doing music back then? I started in Tyler. In Tyler? At the 220 lounge with Nico. Okay. Shut up, Nico. That's my guy right there. So when you first started, what gave you the motivation to step out on faith to do that? At that time I was young. I just I just knew I could sing and all I want to do is look cute. Let me ask you something. When you were looking cute one of them niggas senior took you up to Tyler. Yeah, that's what I already know. I was just going to pursue it. No, there's a nigga up there and he like, oh, she can sing. We got a studio. We got a studio. That's what the nigga. That's his juke. That was it. That's his juke right there. That's how you get in. He like, yeah, we got a studio and everything. You might come to then you get up in the nigga to fall in love with you and y'all trying to focus on music. But you know, you got, you know, you got the niggas in your ear or cause. Yeah, but I know how I go. You got, you made it though. Right. That's what mattered. I started out with DJ CP. Okay. And Chuzoo. Okay. From the very beginning with Chuzoo's dress like that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Right. Yeah. But I started out then with a jazz wheeler as well. Okay. DMV shot at that time back in Tyler. Cool. So we had a lot of good things going on and I ended up having my baby. Okay. Shout out to Brooklyn. How many kids you got? Only one. Only one. Okay. And she's three and one, but she beautiful. Three and one? Three and one. You know. So that means you don't want anymore. Not right now. Not the time. I'm focused on my career. As you should be. Who got your baby right now? Your mama. Okay. Just checking. I'm gonna check. I'm gonna check. I'm gonna all up to this. You ought to be all the way there, isn't he? No. But we put it out there. Daddy got the baby. Just in case y'all niggas didn't know. Boss talked 101. Got responsible parents on here. I want y'all to know that. Well done. So as you got into your career as you was up there and what would you say was one of the bigger songs that you happened to drop back during that time in Tyler? Well, it didn't go as planned as it needed to go. You didn't get one? No. That nigga just wanted to do something to you. It didn't go nowhere. It didn't go nowhere. You didn't take it up for their music. Every time you went over that, that nigga was plotting. It didn't go nowhere. I don't know who this nigga was, but he ain't even getting no songs out. We sent it off to DJ, I mean not DJ CP, DJ Juice. And he said, well, she got some more work to do. I'm glad you said that. Yeah. That brings up another valid question. You got some more work to do that was in 2010. 2010. Now, fast forward to you and Enchantment during the song in 2021. 20. 2020. Did that song play on the radio? Not at all. Bam, I got them right there. Not at all. Now, so when does Chee Hendy become good enough to play on the radio stations locally there by DJ Juice and all of them? Chee Hendy's good right now. No, no, no. I'm just saying, I'm asking that question because it's been coming to me and I'm wanting to be spending that real fire. Yeah. I'm trying to figure out how do you get there if Enchantment and you and the songs that you placing out there are good enough in your eyes. How do you get some spins? How do we get to get some placements? Right. I'm just asking. See, what I've done is I've emailed the radio station. And it never does. And I was supposed to have a radio interview and it never happened. Never happened. How long ago did that happen? I was talking to one of the ones stepping right across all that and just saying whatever. Do you see a lot of local artists from East Texas being played on the local radio station? Not really. Not really. So Bond just came up here and he had this complaint. And then Aldi said, no, they do play it if you give no. But Bond said no. Bond said he had the biggest song he was from down there. He didn't hardly get any spins. Homegirl was the song back when it hit. I know y'all know the song. He said everywhere else he would go, even including Dallas, he would get like 50 something spins. It was 70 something spins up here, but down there it might have been 20, 25 spins. And he said that was the reason a lot of artists are being held back in those areas is because they don't get the recognition from the radio station. Now other people are going to look at this and say, oh well, but it don't matter about the radio station. Well, it does because local artists, you can't get no signal down there. You get down there, you turn it on, you're 979, fade away. Next thing you know, you're trying to figure it out. You got the gospel station on one old folk and fade it all the way into my stuff. And now I'm like, okay, you turn the local and I don't get to, you know, the Chihendis and the local people from there. And I don't, I don't know what the problem is with that. But that's something that I will be voicing my opinion on strong here on Boss Talk 101. You know what I'm talking about? Because I think you guys do have the talent and I think it's something that should be recognized. Right. And thank you. It's been a long, a long way for me and especially for us to work as hard as we've worked and not even hear like one song of one of our team members on the radio. It's bad, you know, because I know we have talent. East Texas has a lot of talent, but you never hear us on the radio. You might hear a couple of artists during certain picks, but that's not fair to the artists that actually are registered artists and that actually are on all platforms. I think from 2010 to 2020, 10 years, a whole decade, that you guys would have some, you've gotten one play. You saying you've never heard yourself on the radio in those local markets. Right. Never had a radio interview. And you've put out different projects. Right. Different projects. And you got songs with Ann Chanton. Right. Drop Gypsy Waves last year. Drop Gypsy Waves last year. And I think that's an issue. Right. Yeah. I think that's an issue. I'm going to say it. I'm going to scream it until they understand we mean it. You know what I'm saying? I think, you know... But when you're talking about the radio stations and you have these local DJs who are working at these stations. Right. Is it up to them? They make it seem as if it's up to them. I think there are people above them who are saying, well, this is who you have to play. This is a list of it. These are people who are paying. These are people who are not. This is who I am during this time. Because of course, you know, more popular ones are going to play during your five o'clock, four o'clock, when everybody's going home, early morning times, so forth and all of that. So I don't think there's a pawn in the big game. Well, you know, I tend to disagree. I think that if you want to do something and you work somewhere long enough and you've built those relationships with those people, you can't build jellyfish in the midst of people. You have to have some backbone and you have to step up and speak about things that you want to see changes in. That's true. Yeah, there's been times when I know it probably was those people that had big brother mentality over them. But after you've been on a job for so many years, you've built a bond. The top man know, hey, what's going on, buddy? Are they treating you right here? They come and ask you that. And then you have to say, hey, no, they ain't treating me right. I got a couple of local artists. I want to at least get to play them at night sometime. Right. Or sometime, man, at night. Late night like they do in Dallas. A lot of time these artists, is that right, baby? At night they'll play them artists up here in Dallas. They play the local talents and they find strategic ways to make sure that they have their time period. And I think that's something that can be done anywhere. If people step forward and voice their opinions. Because back in the days when you think about DJs, and this was back when people had CDs and going to radio stations, they'll go and take a CD or whatever. This is the DJ and pay them some money and say, you know, they want to get put on to this slot and whatever, but things have changed. So artists don't know how much has it changed. Can you still just go, you know, slide them some money or whatever and get your stuff played? Right. Listen, man. Listen, man, I'm not going to excuse the fact that we're not in 1965. Ain't nobody sitting outside with no news or whatever. What they hang on your... Newspaper. You know, the little rope thing. The hanging, you know, what they're hanging at. What does that have to do with everything? That's the racism that occurs back in the day. Those are signals. You might not know because you're from Jamaica, but it was certain things they would do to black people to scare them. You understand? We're not doing that. We're not falling for that no more. All I'm saying is we're in a different time period and people, if, you know what I mean, they stick together. Look, man, Floyd, they stepped on his neck and we convicted a man behind it. What I'm saying is we have to, at some point, come together as a people in these situations, in these small towns and say, hey, man, because if you can show up at every event and support them, then you should be able to support them on the radio stage. True, true. Because these same people are running around with different artists and all kind of stuff. I mean, DJ Juice came over here. I didn't know any of this was going on. I'm definitely going to call and reach out to him. I'm probably going to see him at y'all's event. I'm going to do, they're going to ask him. Right. And Bone was like, Bone, say, when you ask me, I'm going to go... Like, it's not going to mean anything, what do you say? Right, right. Because they're not going to do them but go back to the same... Paralyzed state that they ran. Again, maybe it's out of his hand. He's just... I'm not just playing little juice. Well, you know what? I hear other artists that, from our area, it's like certain pics that have gotten played on the radio. Okay, question. Does Smitty get played? I barely listen to the radio, but I have heard of it before on the radio. I've heard Camp, I've heard Camp Nowhere. I've heard R&B Marco. R&G Marco. I'm just trying to figure out, I know you being what they call him when somebody goes the other way with it. Right. You know what I'm saying? I'm just curious because that is his artist. Right. Okay, well, I'm just curious to understand, he ain't the only DJ down there. Hell, it's a bunch of them, ain't it? I don't know all of them. What's the radio state down there? I think there's three of them. And there's one in Jance of Canada, too, right? Yeah, we ain't never tried to do it now, too. Well, when the guy that came here, he lived... Just so happen, he lives in between both of them. And that's why he voiced his opinion like he did. Right. So, you know, like I said, he brought those... Bone brought those... If you go back and watch Bone's episode, you'll see he's strong about that because he really would love to see... And he got a master's degree in history and all that, so there's stuff messing with him probably. So, how much do you think that if your songs got played on the radio, how much effect you think it would have on your career? I feel like just hearing it at least one time on the radio should do something to you as an artist because I know my music isn't garbage. I know the music that we have as a team isn't garbage. So, why not one time can I just at least say, Mama, my song is gonna be on the radio. Damn. Listen in. Okay, but... That is so dope. Something you said earlier when I asked you, do you hear it on the radio? You said, I don't really listen to radio. How many people listen to the radio anymore? Mama listen to the radio. Quite a few, quite a few, because I'm the type of person I'll listen to our songs or listen to artists around the area, then I'll teeter-totter and go back into the radio. But, you know, still, even with me, I was supposed to have a radio interview. And after that, I never... Who was that radio interview with? DJ Juice. Okay. Yeah. I wonder what happened. Juice, I'm gonna be calling you. I wanna know what happened on that interview with Chi-Hindi. You know, it's stuff like that. And like I said, he could be out of his control. Juice seemed like a dope dude when I met him. You know, he seemed like a dope dude. He from Atlanta, though, right? Right. But at the end of the day, I just, I understand that my point in this is to apply pressure in places where I feel like that it'll help, you know? Right, right, right. I wouldn't be right if I get on here and ignore the fact of what people are telling me, sitting in the seat that's from where I'm from, you know what I mean? Right, right. So, and it's not to choose shots that are like that, it's just to draw attention to it. Right. So we can say, hey, man, you know, we need to try to figure out a way to get that radio play in those areas. Right. Let's get back to your music, though, because you got some dope music, man. Okay. Thank you. Thank you. Let me see what I can do, you know, because somebody... You know, because your stuff might be copyrighting and all that next thing, you know, they flagging my channel. I done did all that on here. They restricted my YouTube. They saying that, you know, because, you know, it's copyrighted. And I get it, you know what I'm saying? Right. But I would like to hear it, though, but I guess you can sing a little bit for us here, too. Sure. Yeah, I want to hear it. Yeah, I'm going to tell you what song. See, that natural song. I'll let you pick. You want to go acapella because it was a girl. Yeah, I understand. You know, it doesn't just be real with you. You know, your homegirl come up in here sticking her chest out. Mama Scott. Mama Scott. Oh, yeah. And she was talking about, uh, she'd have been out there. Period. I said, what? Oh, Lord. I said, that's a hard thing. I said, I don't know about that. She said, she put you to a stand-by. I said, I don't know about that. I don't know about that. Ooh, Mama. And I said, I had a girl over here just another week and she sang what? She could sing... She sang what? She could sing... Yeah. And she's a vocal coach. She's a vocal coach? Ooh. That's pressure. But then a double trip. Your natural song... Your natural sound could be... But then we had another girl and then she sang and cried and sang and cried. It was such a beautiful thing. Go back and watch, uh, art. Official art. Official art. She had a great interview. In certain people, man, we've seen some great talent come through here. And she's from down here in Thailand. Yeah. Really, really. Love the music, man. She's in country, too. Oh, that's good. Like, she's a young girl, but, you know, I think about 24. Mm-hmm. Yeah, she really care about the music and she's been through a lot. Wow. Shout out to the official art. Oh, that's a beautiful name. Yeah, and it's really when in her initials or was it her name? I can't remember. But anyway, it's about you today. Right. Yeah, she handy as in the house. I know. We've got to get into it. So what you going to sing for us today? Well... Listen, if you don't want to get booed... I want to go back. If you don't want to get booed, we're going to sing gospel. You don't talk about... No. She didn't sing what she wanted to sing. I was about to say... I'm just messing with it. I was about to say it just depends on what kind of mood you want to be in. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? Like, with gospel, I can take you to another place. Okay, give me gospel. Okay. All right. We'll start off gospel because I want to get it all. You want gospel first? Why not? I'm going to get in the spirit. Okay. Really? Really? What? Okay. We're going to sing because he lives. All right. Let's go. God sent his son. They called him Jesus. He came to love. He lent forgiveness. He lived and died. To buy my son. And life is worth... Let's just stop right there. You know, that was enough for me. I'm tear-eyed right now. You know what I'm talking about? I don't even know if Jesus probably put a wall through the door. We don't know. I don't know if he's coming through the roof, but they say he's coming back. You know what I'm saying? Yeah. No, that's... I love the way that you just go right into it. That's confidence. Thank you. You know what I mean? I like that, man. I mean, the most important thing... Not a shy bone in your body. No, no, no. It probably used to be. She probably got over all of that. Right, right. After not being playing on the radio, singing in the neighborhood. She's singing in the neighborhood. Hey, you know, come on now. Yeah, that was beautiful. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you so much for that. I hadn't sang that in like two, three years. No, no, that's good. That's good. Yeah, but that's good. Thank you. You know, just to share your gift with everyone. People, you know, they need that. You know what I'm saying? You don't just... You can't just go through life and not understand that. Right. That right there. The Bible said make a joy for noise before the Lord. Oh, preach it. You know what I'm saying? So you definitely got to understand that that joy for noise is something that can bring people to a place where they might be, you know, prostrate on the floor. The next thing, you know, they're standing straight up in joy. Sure. You got to look up. You know, get up and look up. You know what I mean? When you have a talent like that, you can share it because music does so much for a person's soul for their mental state. And I was even talking to a friend of mine earlier who she has that gift that where she can sing, she'll make you cry. Right. But out of nerves, you know, everybody has that courage to go and pursue it. Right. And I tell everybody, including her, I said, when you have a talent like that, you should because you don't ever want to live your life looking back. Right. And wondering if I could have gotten, you know, I know exactly what you're talking about. I know exactly what you're talking about. She came over to the house singing behind that damn refrigerator. I know exactly what you're talking about. I ain't going to call her name, but she got in the room, got in that corner, she wouldn't want me to see her. I got to go all the way in the back of the house just for her to see. Some people don't want, you know, they don't want you to look at them when you smile. They, the confidence, you know what I mean? Right. But they know that they have a beautiful voice. Right. But, you know, it's just to get out there. I remember when I was younger and, you know, I didn't have the confidence with certain things. Right. And, you know, people will say, yeah, you should do it. You should do it. But then, you know, how you didn't get it from the right person telling you. Right. So you're like, okay, yeah. But you feel like, say examples. So if I could sing and I heard it from a music director, I'm like, okay, I'm ready. Come on, I can do it. But if you just hear from your friends, from people, from friends on who say it. Exactly. That's really what I think would make a person, you know, really get up and do what they're supposed to do. Right. Get the inspiration from her. Right. Hmm, hmm. Okay. Right. You know, there's a couple of things I want to hear out of you. Okay. Yeah. You got a little R&B now, you know. Yeah, she says you're going to do R&B out of you. One of your songs. Sure. I have, I want to do a little bit of R&B and hip-hop. Mm-hmm. And it's all for the Gypsy Waves album. Everybody that's not following me, follow me, Chihendi, CHI underscore H-E-N-D-I on all social media platforms. Even TikTok? Even TikTok, Chihendi. Okay, just want to make sure because a lot of people will be saying that, oh, they're on all of this, but they're not on TikTok. Right. So I just want to make sure. You can even Google me. Oh, here they go. You know, y'all are trying to get fly. You can't just Google your name and it pop up. Don't try to get fly like that. And we can be the pop you up. You can, you can get on the damn radio down at home, but you done met up with Google? I'm just saying, you can, you get on the radio, but you're straight to the universe. Like, who called to get on Google? Hey, I set that up myself. That's dope, man. No, no, no, you're supposed to man. A lot of people don't do it, because I've Googled a lot of people pop up, but you can't find any Wikipedia talking about their background or nothing. Google business. Yeah, you gotta know how to deal with your brain. So you are a complete artist. You're not just a singer. You know about the business side, too. I do. I'm studying right now music business. That's dope, man. That's awesome. Two months left. How long is it taking? It's taking me two years. Two years. Is that when you came back into it? Okay. Was that when you was in Tyler when they had you in that studio and y'all were making no music and you stopped? No. Yeah, it'll stop if you want it. These niggas will really deal. That's what complete, I stopped completely doing music after that. Why? I had my daughter and you just decided. And I wanted a relationship with her before developing a better relationship with music. That's important. I wanted her to be able to know and take her with you sometimes. I do, I do. She gets mad when she can't go. Really? Mm-hmm. Does she try to sing too? She's a good writer already. Really? Yes. Awesome. Your daddy helping her with writing? No. Okay. That's her talent. I think I've been writing a long time. I think I'll help you with photo. I think I'll help her with what? Everything. More than everything. Already. He's probably serious about his grandbaby. Yeah, he is. But I started back here and when I moved back here I met Trillie Millie which is a say look out Trillie. Shout out Trillie Millie. I met Mama Scott. Mama Scott. How long have you met her now? We've all been together three years now. Three years. Already. And I met them and I started becoming more consistent with what I was doing. You had to. They depending on you. Right, right. We all depending on everybody flake everybody flake. You know what I mean? Right. So you got to be careful when it's a team you know what I'm saying? It's a team effort. Right. And it's a mastermind concept that comes behind that as well. You know what I mean? Because now you got more people thinking and then organically something's going to happen because God see all three of y'all playing seas but I'm not going to go there. Shout out to Mama Scott. Already. You know what I'm saying? So how did you meet Mama Scott? Sorry about that. I met Mama Scott because I was mad because I didn't know how to do that. Dad. Oh my God. Is this a revenge? Oh, and you called them? What the hell? You wanted to be in that thing? I did. I saw everybody else. I said, you know I've been doing music for a song. I guess I'm not know yet. Okay. So I called Mama Scott. Well, really I reached out to Trilly because Twan Visual said Shout-out to Tuan Visual. Should I look out Trilly? Say look out Trilly. And I'll see your damn phone sometime. For real. Go ahead. Well, I think I won't like that on his phone. out truly from Tuan Visuals letting me know he was a good producer within this area. And then later on I ran into Mama Scott almost literally two weeks after that and sat down with her and said, I want to be in the fast batch too. And she looked at me and she said, well, you gonna be in the fast batch. Hey, man, it's up. Did she say it's up? She didn't know it's up back then. She didn't know it was up, man, she. But it was up. It was up. Already, man. It was up. So anything else? What you got? I'm waiting for that song. Oh, yeah. I'm sitting on the edge of my seat, waiting to hear it. Well, we want to keep a little bit more and suspend, let's keep on talking. We don't want to just give it to her right now. You give it to her now, you got to make them wait. That's the way T.I. do it. Yeah, I want some hip hop stuff at the end. Anytime you go see these celebrity niggas, they make you wait. So we're going to make them wait. Once you wait, then they come and it'd be more exciting. We put a rock with it right now. So let me ask you this. No, I'm just kidding. Oh. Oh. Now go ahead, man, let's go. Get that song going. I want some hip hop stuff at the end. Okay, that's fine. However you want to put it. It's your world. I'm just a squirrel living there. All right. So this song is called Pretty Pretender. Okay. For all those people that have been heartbroken in their lives, kind of contemporary. I'm just going to sing a little piece of it. That's it. Everybody in here. Ooh. Everybody's been heartbroken at some point. Life will do that till you have to get so old. You ain't never lying. All right, here we go. Pretty Pretender, your lies affected me. Kisses so tender, turns out they just make me leave cause I see your cards. They're not who you say you are. King of diamonds, you only leave a scar. Lately I've been acting so cold. Your heart has turned to stone. Take your crying eyes and leave what's left of me. Oh, you could have fooled me. You say that you love me. You never would hurt me. Then why do I bleed? Oh, you could have fooled me. Say that you love me. You never would hurt me. Then baby, we'll see. Oh, love, oh, love, oh, love, oh, love. Man, once you grabbed the mirror phones, I know we had to start. I had to get into it. She was in another world. She had left straight up out of here. Balls don't want a one, wasn't even the thing anymore. So we had to bring you back. That was beautiful. Thank you, thank you, thank you. What did you think about that? I loved it. Really, you said no with a smile on like you. Cause she made me smile. At first I wasn't smiling, I was just listening and when she hit that, I just couldn't help but smile. Wow. Thank you. And we definitely love what you're doing, man. So you're going to be on Fast Bash and you've been there how many years now? Two or three? This is my second year doing Fast Bash, right? Okay, that's dope. What do you think you're going to gain from doing it this year? I can tell you right now, the production is on a whole other level if it go the way I think it's going to go. Right, right. It's going to be bomb. Yeah. Y'all just get ready. Last year, last year, you weren't able to look at it but over and over again, I'm going to make it where you're going to be able to see it every time you're ready. So you're coming out with dancers and everybody. Dancers. They're going to be ready. Oh, you got dancers? I'm going to tell you right now, I'm booing them off to say they don't come right. I'm coming down there. I got a little room. Make up everything. I'm going to boo. Boo, get off the stage. Who are that girl up there? That girl said, yeah. Right. You're going to make sure they're right. They're going to be right. How many R&B singers? How many R&B singers? Just me. Just you. Just me. Well, no, no. Half Paint has, I'm going to say one. Seonny. Yeah. Seonny performed down there. Yeah. She been on the show. Right. Yeah, yeah. Seonny shot it. And Mohenry. Mohenry. Seonny dope. I love Seonny. The whole top off team over there, I shot a top off. And Mohenry from Longview, Texas. Mohenry. You got a guy? It's a girl. Mohenry. Mohenry. Never heard of her. I'm going to look her up. Very confident. Okay. Okay. All right. Well, who else? Who else? I know you going to shut it down though. What time do you know what time you perform? Around nine o'clock. Right now. He done left once you get the line. He said I'm gone. Around, in between seven and nine. Okay. In between seven and nine. Okay. All right. Well, we definitely going to be on the lookout looking for you. Right. Thank you, thank you. If you had to name your top three artists of all time. Top three artists of all time. They're alive. Top three artists of all time. Any genre? Any genre. Number one. Number one. That's hard. Brandy. Okay. Wait a minute, Brandy. That's the first Brandy we ever got on here. Brandy. Which one do you like? The song. The boy is mine or whatever. All of them. Really? Mm-hmm. Brandy. Number two. Number two, I would have to say Chris Brown. Really? I'm sorry. Chris Brown, he just got the whole package. That's most explicit. Now we said they're alive. That's who she wants. Damn. Shout out to ALD. You just said that too. Number three. Go ahead. Number three. Donnie Hathaway. Boom. There it is. Only one that I can really relate to because I'm a old school girl. Donnie Hathaway. Donnie Hathaway. Did y'all hear that? Donnie Hathaway. Donnie Hathaway. He did now. Damn. Donnie Hathaway and his kids. Shout out. You know what I'm saying? That's a dope pic. Layla Hathaway. Layla Hathaway. Yeah, that's dope. Yeah, we lost her. She from Jamaica. Yeah, she ain't no kid. No, no, no. I know who that is. I know who that is. You just said Beanie Man or somebody. Hush. Sean Paul or something. Donnie Hathaway. Boy, that's nice, man. Yeah. That's all right, then. So where can people reach you if they want to get a hold to you or if they want to try to see where you perform and jump on it? You can reach me at Chihendi. Speaking to the mic. All right, you can reach me at Chihendi on Instagram and Facebook, TikTok and Twitter as well. You can check me out at the Fast Bash 2021. It's going to be lit. I'm telling you, you're not going to want to miss this for real, for real, Fast NT in the building, for real. Wow. Yes. So, hey, man, you know, the thing I can say is we appreciate you for coming on the show. Thank you, thank you. Is there anything else that you would like to talk about before we shut that mic down? I would. Let it go, then. Let's go. Cross the water the big day. I've been in war with the same man. Bricks on my score like a teleband. Run them numbers like a million men. Send my package out to Cuba. Cuba linking with the Cubans. Send my money to a rover. Running heads like my dooser. Can't feel my body. I can't feel my pain. VVS stones all in my hand. Hey, man, I didn't know you ran. When did you start rapping? I don't rap. So you just acting a fool. Just acting a fool. I love it, man. That's dope, man. Hey, man, that's what I like. I like a free spirit. You acting like me now. But I would have got that second verse while you playing right up in this thing. But I got to have some beat on them because that's what make me go hard. Right, right, right. There ain't nobody like damn, like, yeah, I could have made it. Long as there ain't nobody else in the car, I could have made it, nigga. Right, right. For real. Check it, man. First of all, we love you. I got to say that. I love y'all too. It's been a pleasure. We love you coming on Boss Talk 101, man. And we definitely going to be watching out for you. And if you got anything else you're trying to put out, make sure you come make a holla at us, man. Check it, man. It's been another great segment of Boss Talk 101. And we out.