 What's the biggest lie you've ever heard about you? Then I got booed, then I got booed on Def Jam. And then they- And it didn't happen. And then Chris Rock destroyed my career. How did Chris Rock- Where did that come from? That, yeah, Mike Epps said that. Mike Epps said that on the Breakfast Club. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101, 101. Yeah, we gonna talk- Oh, a lot of people, I mean, they lie on me. Yeah. You know, so, but I ain't- What's the biggest lie you've ever heard about you? Then I got booed, then I got booed on Def Jam. And then- And it didn't happen. And then Chris Rock destroyed my career. How did Chris Rock- Where did that come from? That, yeah, Mike Epps said that. Mike Epps said that on the Breakfast Club. Why would he say something like that? Because, okay, when I did Def Jam, I had to go so much back, so much stuff happening. See, when I tried to get on Def Jam in 91, I gave Steve Harvey the tape. Steve Harvey showed it to the Def Jam people. And the Def Jam people said, nah, I don't think he can do the same thing that Steve said, they can't do no black cut. They said they didn't think he can do it. I said, okay. Then so Bill Bellamy came down to Boo-Huray, do the show, so I was working with Bill Bellamy. And Bill Bellamy lived in New Jersey and the peppermint room made the decisions on who can be on Def Jam. So Bill Bellamy told me, hey man, why don't you come up to New Jersey? So when the tickets got real cheap, I got my ticket and went up there, did real good. Came down, got a barb song that said you're gonna be on Def Jam. And I said, okay. So I get back to Dallas, we're on the Tom Jonah show. I whispered to Tom Jonah about it. He said, can we talk about it? I said, nah, we can't talk about it, we can't talk about it. And then he kept on nugging me and I said, yeah, let's talk about it. I'm gonna be on Def Jam. And he said, sure, gonna be on Def Jam, bam. And then when Def Jam came, the dude at Eric, they didn't call me. Wow. Then, but I called them. And then they sent me a letter saying, you, we call you, don't you call us? Oh, wow. Woo-hoo-hoo. And then so, and then I just said, man, they don't want that old nasty comedy. They don't want that clean comedy. Because I had to sit back and realize, I didn't really fit Def Jam mold. I wasn't really talking about, you know, pussy, you know, I was- Yeah, I think that they wanted it. But you end up on there, right? Yep. Well, because what happened Bill Cosby said something about Def Jam. And then they changed hosts. Martin left. And so they got Joe Turry to be the host. So they now, they need a new crop of comedians. And so I was working with Tina Graham, who was an assistant to Bob Sumner. So she was pushing for me to get on there. And then I finally got on. But they weren't expecting me to hit, like I hit. I mean, I didn't knock him out the park. I didn't have him falling, but I was steady in my jokes and I was steady in the performance. So who was hosting when you was Joe Turry? Joe Turry was the host. When Joe Turry was hosting and everything, was Steve still involved at this time? Or no? I think we was, I think we was going out. I think we had, cause the club had broke up. I think it was going out. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one. Yeah, we gonna talk.