 Time is of the essence. It ain't always on our side. So we gon' live it up because you only get one life. I believe it's only one or two places, but when you die, when you visit, you gon' stay, so you gotta live it right. Christian Fulton, there are so many things I want to talk to you about. I'm so excited to have the chance to sit down with you. But I don't want to start with football. I want to start off the field and I want to start at your store, The Trenches. Why did you pick the name The Trenches for a clothing store? We wanted it to be something that everybody could relate to. It's a lot of people that's from there and that's kind of the environment that we kind of grew up in. And just the store location where that kind of reminded us of home, when I'm from New Orleans. That's kind of how we came up with the name. And it's kind of like The Trenches tightens teeth, so it kind of had a catchy thing to it. So you put it in North Nashville. That's where you decided. What was it about that location? You said it reminds you of home. What about that really struck you? We're a black-owned area. They have a couple restaurants over there that's black-owned. And they have a couple lounges over there that's black-owned. It's kind of a black-owned street. We thought that would be a perfect spot to where it could be a one-stop-shop for everybody that can't visit. So describe it a little bit because it's more than just clothes. There's more to The Trenches. Yeah. So yeah, we sell streetwear clothes. We sell art. And we sell shoes. We also have a design lab in the back. We'll have TSU interns that those who are graduating will have interns come in and they can work in the back just to get some experience. And just learning how to design and working with people in the retail area. So why so many things? I mean it's pretty easy to just open a clothing store. This is so much more than that. Like I said, you know just want to give everybody else an opportunity. You know a lot of people don't have the opportunity going up. People kind of fall into the high-end luxury brands of clothing stores. So we want to give those unknown brands, you know, black-owned feet brands, you know, opportunity, you know, to broadcast their talents. Now you're doing this with your brother. Did you always want to go in business with your brother? Sometimes they say working with family is hard. Yeah. To be honest, we never grew up thinking that, you know, that we wanted to go into business. You know, we kind of stuck to sports. Now you guys did play together though, right? So you can work together, you can bond, right? Just having that experience playing together, take out some of the brotherness that could kind of happen in a business? Yeah, definitely. On the field, you know, once you're playing with each other, you got to push each other on the field. That's kind of my job, you know, to make sure that he stays on top of this part, you know, in the business side, and he kind of puts me on the football side. You know, I let him handle the business side and he kind of puts me on the football side. Now you're in year two. There's a lot of expectations on you and there's a lot of conversation about what you could be for this Tennessee Titans team. Do you thrive under that pressure or do you try and stay away from it a little bit? I mean, I try to stay away from it, you know, at the end of the day, football is football for me. So I don't kind of, I don't really go up that expectation. Everybody I have for me, I go up my expectations and that just will push me every day. There are other younger guys on this team. Caleb Barley was also drafted and has some expectations based on his college play a lot like what happened for you. How do you help guide someone else, a younger guy, through that same scenario? Just try to give him pointers, you know, where I lack that and where I don't want him to lack that, you know, because like I said, expectations are high, they're going to expect him to come in. So I mean, I just try to go out of my experience and go out of the experience that the older guys in last year gave me, you know, is always good to pass it down to the younger guys.