 I'm gonna go back to that FB, how do you say his name again? FYBJ man. FYBJ man, this OOPS cereal, is it? It's called Woops. Where can you get them at? You have to buy them online, they're $100 a box. Y'all, man, you know, it did. And people buy them. Yes. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. 101. Yeah, we gon' talk. He came out, and then he went right back in. And he was 30 days, not even 30 days. And now he mad at his family, cause they didn't go to. He mad at L, and it's a court day. Niggas man. Niggas think the world will revolve around them, bro. I hate niggas. But you would think that people, especially if you think of prison. Like I told y'all earlier, life go on, man. People got bills, people gotta eat, the world getting crazier, more dangerous. I'm not about to go to keep going to this niggas, man. I signed the artist, and I told him, there was this one Dallas artist I signed. He was nice. And I met him at the, I met him in juvenile when I went to go talk to him with Traboy. I met him. Super nice. Super dope. I signed him. I told him and his mom. I looked him in the eye. As I said, if you go back to jail, I'm not bailing you out. I said, I'm not bailing you out. He went back to jail, I bailed him out. He went back again. I'm not bailing you out this time, bro. Why do you think they can't learn their lesson? Ego, pride, anger, disappointment, like they, they disappointed in themselves. They hate, they mad at their position. Counseling. Counseling. They, the, the household. I ain't, and just to my point where Honeycomb, nah, bro. Like, it's a plan. Do you think he's gonna ever come out and become me? Nope. You think he's done? It's too easy to trick him off the street. If Honeycomb get out of jail, you could be a rapper and say, fuck you, nigga. Fuck you and yo, whatever happened to your family. He gonna crash out. It's easy. These niggas make it easy, bro. Wow. It's, it's easy. It's easy to get these niggas out, out the way. It's easy. It's super easy. You can say any words, get to all these people. Wow. Word get to everybody. You just said you don't read the comments. That's why I don't. That's why I don't. Words get to me. We're human. You know what I'm saying? Like who, because it's like who the fuck you think you is talking behind a keyboard like that? Like who you? I'm not the toughest guy in the world, obviously. But who are you? He had a verse saying, you gotta catch you in person and I'll break your fingers. Something? When the D were hard on that verse, that was on one that, that uh, he was talking about quitting the South Verse. Yeah. You know, like the, uh, FYBJ main, this dude, man, like you, you and him connected. I only seen him through you. Mm hmm. Like, did you, when you first started dealing with him, did you know he was gonna like that? No. At first Victoria kept hitting me up about him and I'm like, who the fuck is this? Because he kept this in King Von. And like I told y'all, I don't really like that. Like I get a few like poke at people and shit like that, but he like kept using King Von like this and King Von. But as I like got to know him, he kind of like found itself and he caught a niche with his, it hit different and the phrases and the cereal whoops. Yeah. He just gave my whole basketball team whoops. So I've seen your basketball team. I was going to ask you about that. Top 10 in the nation. I've seen him with the cheese on the shorts, man. Yeah. Congratulations, man. Different stuff like that. Like doing, you know, I hardly put that on my page and stuff like that. But I do a lot. I try to do a lot for the community. As you should. Like cause you got. I go downtown, feed the homeless. Whenever we throw big parties, like fight parties, when there any leftover food, we, me and my girl, we always go down there and just give them whatever we got. That's that's it. Never, we never put it on a, on Instagram, like, cause that's not what it's for. And it feels good too. Just to see they smile and they're so grateful. You know what I'm saying? Cause I'm so used to dealing with people who ain't shit. No. Who don't even say thank you. Man. Yeah. Have you ever seen a homeless person like that? Cause when you give it to him, do you ever stand up and like hear their story and talk to them? I need to do better with that. Because. We treat, we treat homeless people like, like they dogs. Like have you ever been at a rail on a bad day? You've been at a red light and you just didn't even want to look at them. You just look straight. Cause you didn't want to make eye contact. Right. It's like, damn, like everybody do that. Everybody don't want to. And then, and then they start to feel invisible and they start to feel worthless. So that's right. You're right about that. Yeah. Cause I would love to hear some, cause some of these people. Would I be wrong to go downtown and interview and do interviews? No, you wouldn't be. That would be some dope interviews. Cause they do that in Philly and Kingston where the, the, the, the people be shooting the heroin and they be hearing their story. They be paying them. Is that, is that bad to do? No. I don't, I don't feel that way. I don't know. But I wouldn't pay them, but I wouldn't pay them. When I say I wouldn't pay them. Yeah. Cause they go buy more drugs. Exactly. I'm the type of person that I'd be like, okay, what do you need? You hungry? I'm going to go buy you some food. Do you, um, this, this food place right here. Do I need to pay it for a month worth of food? And you go over there and get lunch every day. You see what I mean? I'm going to get with somebody in the city and we, what we're going to do, we're going to get, we're going to get a few homeless people and we're going to, we're going to get a, we're going to get their hotel for, for, for a month or like a week. Wow. That's dope. Wow. You see what I mean? That's, that just touched me. Yeah. Cause I feed them and I don't talk to them. Yeah. Damn. And they regular people. Because I've met, we met, I remember the time when we met this lady at Yoke and she works in there. She said, she was telling us her story cause we talked to everybody and she was saying she was homeless at once because her husband who was rich whatever ended up putting her on drugs and because he wanted her out of the way. So put her on drugs and she ended up being homeless under the bridge or whatever. And she only had one Bible that she would always read and that's, that's what helped her get clean and get out of it. But just to hear her story and the things that she went through and where she was, she was up here. You understand what I mean? And to know that you can be up here and ended up under the bridge. You understand what I mean? Yeah. My girl, she keeps in touch with this homeless lady and when the homeless lady needs like, she needed a bigger suitcase to store her stuff in and my girl went and gave it to her. But when you ask me that it's like, damn, I really don't be talking to him. I just go ahead and get out the way cause I don't know if they're going to try to like, you know. Yeah. Yeah. I think you just, you got to go with the spirit to move a guy. Yeah. Like, what do you think? Like the L, I'm going to go back to that FB, how do you say his name again? F-Y-B-J-Man. F-Y-B-J-Man. This OOPS cereal. It's called Wooks. Where can you get them at? Oh, you have to buy them online. They're a hundred dollars a box. Y'all, man, you know. And people buy them. Yes. Was you there when he came up with that? I wasn't there. No, I wasn't there, but. It's like you almost introduced me to him. You helped his brain a lot, bro. Yeah, for sure. Like, so he blew up quick. Like, like, like, I was trying to figure that out. I'm like, these platforms, you really can take somebody and let them. Yeah. And the same thing with anybody. Like, if you can believe, like, you know, how Vlad has Boosie. Correct. And all them different people. And if it's somebody in your bond well and the numbers go up. Yeah. Put them under contract or, you know, look out for them. And shit. That's hard. Yeah. I just see him moving. He was homeless too. But he, yeah. But this is public though. He went online and he was homeless, homeless. And one day I picked him up. He was at a U-Haul. He was about to move. He had his last money. I picked him up and I said, here, bro, I gave him a good amount of money. I said, bro, this is for two interviews, but you better not run off on me. Real shit. I said, this is for interview the next time next month. And so that money got him to where him and his family. Wow. Yeah. Then he ended up with Cardi B or something. Yeah. Yeah. This nigga was moving. I said, this boy here. I said, he's moving. And he, and like I said, you only going to see more people like that. Like how do you know who to pick? Bro, like she just said, like y'all just said, when I, when I picked him up at the U-Haul spot is just when he got in the car, it was good energy. It was his, it was good. Like just good energy. And I was just telling to my, I was just telling myself, I'ma, I'ma help this kid, man. I'ma help this dude. And then I just, I handed him the money. He was like, bro. And ever since then we've been locked in. Wow. Now he interviewing people. I see him. I see him. I see him. I see him. Then he do one with Ray. I know you and Ray and him did one together. Then they do one by themselves. Nah, me and Ray did. Oh, they did. They did. He interviewed Ray. Yeah. I remember that. Me and him and Ray interviewed him at $600,000. I think something, $700,000. Wow. I gotta get him in here one day. I'll be cool. He has a real story. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like outside the funny shit, he has a real story. No, he's, I hear good things about him. I hear that off camera he's real like, he not even like all the way like that, but he's real like a respectable dude from what I hear. I just go by what people tell me. He's a real good dude. Yeah.