 We gon' talk, we gon' have fun. We be on fire, we be Lidly. Check it, check it, check it. This is your boy, E.C.O. And I'm here with the lovely, amazing official, Mr. Maker. What's going on? Nothing, nothing, you know my dad walk on. Man, we, hey man, we down here in New Orleans, man. Hey, man, we got a real special guest for y'all today, man. This guy right here don't need no introduction. Hey, man, this guy done showed us so much love, man. He brought, hey, he shows love. Anytime we come to the city, man, we checking in. You know what I'm saying? You know the checking thing, people take offense to it, but at the end of the day, when you got real ones, people who you rock with, we checking in for the right reason. Who gon' give us the keys to the city, man. Cause he's been giving the keys. He gon' let us borrow his keys while we here, man. Anytime, anytime, man. Shout out to you. Your wife is in Jamaica. GDP is in the building. Shout out to E.C.O. and Mr. Maker, man. Man, y'all, the blessing, man. Y'all, like I said, I was a fan of y'all. Like I told y'all, it feel good to be back second time around. Second time, man. Steen a hand and all that stuff. Cause y'all do the same thing. And I think it's gonna be a third, eight, nine, 10th time, man. Cause you're just a real one, man. You know what I'm saying? And shout out Big D, too. Not to cut y'all, cause we put that together. Big D to Mogul, man. Mogul media, man. That's the reason. That's the reason for the season, man. That's how I just talked to him. You see how I caught him a while ago. Yeah, I really know, yeah. There's just a lot of love going on, man. People don't realize that, man, when you really link in with real ones. Real, you know, real, recognized, real, but birds of a feather do flock together. So I believe that. Well, I like J.I. and I'm gonna shout out to Sheldon Cosh, say cheese. And you're looking for me. I put my hand on my whole cause my nigga, I feel you. Man, but I gotta ask you this, man, going back. I gotta go into this field, man. This definitely is the month, PymC's birthday, man. So when they come down to PymC, man, and being that, you know, you know, hey, man, boy, it's kicking back. I think it's December 27th. If I'm not mistaken. I think I'm right. I think it's December 27th. Look it up for me. See if I'm ever. You close. You close. It's either December 27th or December 29th. I think that's it. I know it. I know it's after Christmas. It definitely is. Chalemond butler, yeah, cause he died on the fourth, which is JZ birthday. But Chalemond butler from Port Arthur, Texas. And 29th. Yeah. So the reason, like I said, I feel like PymC's so important cause that's why I love the South. Cause PymC stood on that South shit so much and his pride for the South, meant a lot to me. And I just was like, that's why I don't just be like, I'm in New Orleans and fuck Louisiana. Fuck the South. No, I love the South. And I know how big the South fan base is. And I know what it meant to PymC. And I seen how he helped master P with that down South hustle. Cause P had the West Coast bad boys and he had the Wests on lock. But to get that South, he needed a down South hustle song and stuff like that. You know, same way they kind of helped cash money to a bumby doing stuff on my old big time album. So I love UGK, I love PymC and everything he stood for. Wow. Yeah man, from Crowley. Crowley, Louisiana. That's three, three, seven baby kids in country. Man, all the way to Port Arthur, man. All the way to PA. Man, so you know, just loving man. And man, I still, I rock with bumby, man. He got Trio Burgers. He getting ready to open this new spot up. And I think he an H town, but can't wait to get over there and get me a burger. I've been mad at him cause I ain't got to eat me one of them. He got a restaurant. Yeah, I seen that. I think I don't know if he's still a professor at Rice University. Cause I don't know. I know he did that for a minute. But like I said, I always think about PymC say, I got a, we said back to Louisiana and the Fleetwood. I just serve them fiends some shit to put the fiends on their back. Yeah. I'm a pound of them folk. Cause you know, I just paid to, and I love how you say, you know, I got a holly master peak. Cause we got money. Man, come on, man. On that hurdle? Talk about a murdi, you bitch. Then bumby just like, it's just, man, them dudes hard, man. Like I said, I miss him and I appreciate what he did for the South and for us. So for all the artists that's doing what they doing now, you got to always remember that people paved the way for you to be where you at right now. You know, so we still standing on these shoes and all the work that they put in for us to be in a position. We could talk about it because a lot of those media places of North, they was talking and telling this story to where they wanted to tell them. They was leaving us out of the conversation. They didn't want, they didn't want to talk about us in the magazines and all that. So now we could do it on our own. We could talk about PymC and it's cool. But they're not, I don't want to talk about them country. But I guess we could talk about that and love it them country rap tunes. Man, country rap tunes, man. I just, man, I ain't gonna lie to your big fan, pocket full of stones, man. Super tight, man. Shout out to that boy Bobo Lucia, I know, man. But at the end of the day, man, you know, we got to celebrate. It's a celebration, man. Hogan the game, man. Hogan the game, you know what I'm saying? Yes, sir. So let's talk about, let me put you on spot for a minute. Who the hardest rapper to come out of New Orleans? The hardest, to me ever. Yeah, but it's your opinion. I mean, I got to see, I got to go Wayne, because when Wayne took it, my favorite is Soldier Slim and then Wayne or whatever. For a while, I was just like, when he took it at the flows, like Wayne is on a whole other level. So you got to like, every head must bow, every tongue must confess, like Wayne to the world. I feel like people, I love Jay-Z, Jay-Z in Tupac, my favorite two rappers, but I got to say, Wayne took that shit to a whole other level. He mastered his style. So for him being from New Orleans, and I feel like one day on there in the airport or something after I'm big or whatever, but I got to say Wayne. And I know the city loves Soldier Slim. So the King of New Orleans, forever Soldier Slim, because he's so 504. But if I had to say the greatest to ever do it, not just in New Orleans, Louisiana, and just all the time in hip hop, man, I'm gonna say Wayne, because the way he evolved and took the mixed tapes and the flows and the influence he had and everything, I'm gonna give it to Weasley F. Baby. The Wayne called him. That's hard, man. You know, man, when you think about that whole era, I always say Wayne, he hard when it come to the music, but Baby and Slim hard when it come to the business. Definitely. Then I just feel like people be just, you know, kind of, we would say Lil Wayne, but that would have never been no Lil Wayne without the right infrastructure. You know what I mean? Of course. The right foundation. And I think Birdman, I think a lot of time don't get the credit he deserves for it's because of the business behind the whole brand. I'm talking about from early on where people saying he missing this nigga, out of money doing this, but it take a hard, it take a different type of dude to be able to even stand in that gap when it come down to leadership. But this the thing about that too, everybody was talking about the shady business of the music executives. A lot of those guys been having shady stuff when they don't talk about Morris Levy, all the shit he did or whatever, linen chests, it was white dudes that was doing shit, but they always talk about the black music executives. But like I said, Birdman and Slim was learning that shit on the fly. Nobody in teaching. They didn't go to school for this shit. They just was learning from the streets, trial and error. But to say that they did this shit with no college education, them dudes went a long way. And of course, great coaching is just like Phil Jackson, a costumato with Tyson. Wayne them had the talent, but you still needed those great executives to be able to give them that direction and understanding. So I feel like that's why they're so important. That's why Birdman went on live and he was saying, man, I'm the best to ever do this shit. Like, who did it better than us? Like name somebody. He say, yeah, I studied sugar, Knight J Prince and on Puffy and people like easy, but I learned what they did and I did it better. And nobody had a long run. And that's true. Like from even before, Cash Money had to deal seven years before that, when he was doing it with Pimp Dad and UNLV and slew other artists to the High Boys ever to when Jew and them left and Wayne and the big time they had to hold it down to Nikki and Drake to right now. So of course you gotta give it to them. And I heard Joe Button them saying, no, we're gonna give it to Rockefeller. We're gonna give it to Dev Jam. First of all, Dev Jam was more of a, they operated more like a major because they had murder income to them. They had Rough Riders, Rockefeller and a whole lot of the labels. They was Cash Money was more like a subsidiary label under a major. So they used to, for them to do what they did, Rockefeller and I love Rockefeller. They didn't have a long run in them. Cash Money is a whole different monster and they don't want to give them that credit because they're from the South. So they can always be like, I don't country niggas. We can't get in the way it's small. Y'all don't want to give us deals. Y'all don't want to give us labels. We made our own. I just, I thank God for you breaking that down like that. We need to know, like we know what y'all trying to do. And we ain't going for it. And to hear you say it, it just compliments the way I talk. You saying exactly, don't it? It's the same as that conversation. I'm gonna say this too. To even Tyler Perry, cause he from here, whatever. He from uptown with Birdman from, he went to call on the same school that like people like Le Yai and shit went to from UNIV. Anyway, when you think about Spike Lee, Spike Lee kind of looked down on Tyler Perry. Oh, he making these comb type plays and these country people making them look stupid and all that making black people look bad. This dude, Tyler Perry telling his story from the south, from the way he see it. You telling your stories with Crooklyn and everything from your story, going from being from Brooklyn. Now you went to more house, Tyler didn't graduate, but he still learned all this stuff and did it better. You just got a hundred million dollar house built in Douglasville, Georgia. He came along, we got his own studio. So all this stuff that they thought these dudes was dumb and we don't know nothing, but look what Tyler Perry did. So every time they think that these down south boys country and stupid and bunkers, we keep showing them we not. But maybe they're gonna catch on to Tyler Perry and understand that most of the black people live in the south and most of their ancestors came from there went up there or whatever. That's right. We still had to deal with it. That's right. And we had to get it out the mud and we had to make a way, you know, we turned there into diamonds. Man, that's hard. Diamonds and dirt. No, I love it, man, you know, and I agree. So yeah, Spike Lee had his run and that was cool, but he's supposed to commend that younger brother that's coming behind him and doing what he doing anyway, because that's what we do a lot of times. We forget about the fact that God pays away with that new generation. He did it with Joshua and Moses, I'm a believer. So at the end of the day, I see how Moses had his time. Then Joshua came and you know, and so on and so on. But the next generation was always stronger. The younger generation carries the new vision. And we got to respect it. And I think about, I don't know, I might be saying the name wrong, Zola Hurston or something like that. She was a poet back in the day and he was a poet, but he was more like in Harlem and stuff. But they seen the world different. They used to kind of get into it a lot, but she was telling her story from a Southern woman and he was telling the story of living more in New York, saying we're with W.B. Du Bois. He doing the NAACP in Harlem and Bucket T. Washington down here in Alabama. So the way we deal with the white people and the way we had to deal with it at that time, it was different. So he was like, you bound down to the white man, but he like, we looking at it different to win two different parts of the world. So that's how it be with us in the South, even with the music. The way they see it and the way we see it is different. It don't mean as long as just we from two different parts of the world and we just do it different. Explain to me, Shirani, this billboard that we learned about last time. We thought, oh, this painting where people would put their album, you used to, you might've been too young. You talking about Peaches Records? Yeah. Hell yeah. I remember that shit. So tell me what was that about? Well, back in the day, I remember Peaches Records. This was in Gentile. That's where it was at. Now, you know, she got it. Correct. You know, magazine, but back then it was in Gentile, in the 7th wall around Dilly University. And I guess that was the advertisement. So you could pay for the wall. So you might see a No Limit Soldier Rag album on that was juvenile of 400 degrees. You might have the whole No Limit Tank painting on the side of the wall. That was just good advertisement. All the labels wanted to promote the album or the record label logo. So you'll buy the Peaches Wall and that person to paint the wall and everybody that get to see your album, your record label logo on the side of that wall. Like Big Boy Records, Cash Money, No Limit, a slew of other labels releases albums or whatever. Wild Birdman, she said he had the longest run on that where he had it on there for a long time. Like because he just wanted to, she said he baby, you know? Like he gonna do it big, you know? Yeah, that's how he is. He gonna lay a stunt down. Like he really lets you know like, and I'm gonna say this too, because a lot of people over here talk about the stunt uptown. I know from what I, my daddy from uptown, a lot of my people are my dad. Some of my mom are people too, but most of my daddy people from uptown. And at one time, stuntin' was a bad thing. Like, oh, they so stuntin' as nigga, he bragging what he got. That was frowned upon. Birdman made it better, because so the Slim say it's shit like, nigga, thank you, because I'm from uptown and I love stuntin', you got me fucked up with my people though. So Slim was kind of taking a shot at them with that saying like, I ain't no stunner. Like them niggas stunner up, he might say four or five purple homerjacks for the summer, my shit sitting on 20, but I ain't no uptown stunner. So Birdman made stuntin' cool, but everybody uptown wasn't just actin' like it was cool to stunt. And that's documented, there's a lot of other songs I'll be doin' this shit all day. I'm not about to do that, but people from New Orleans know that that was a thing, Birdman made that shit cool to be a stunner, and that's why everybody won't be the number one stunner. So you're telling me from uptown, he, they know him for being stunner? Well, now I would say, I'm not saying, cause everybody in the city, I mean people in Detroit were stuntin' but I'm just sayin' it, but people would look at them and say, Well, now I would say that's like a way of life, that's like what everybody wanna be known for to do, but act back in the day, that wasn't something that people want to do. Now I did it, but when Birdman did it, he changed the culture, yeah. But was he, that was some, that part of the, That was a part of the marketing thing. See, Puffy said, baby said he looked up to Diddy, because Diddy was always stuntin' with the Versace and the drive in the cars, backers with him and Biggie. So Puffy, baby looked up to Puffy, that's why he said, I looked up to J. Prince, Puff and Shug Knight, but he found his own way, so he like with the champagne and all that, he really put that out there, that flashiness, that's why Detroit people love New Orleans, because New Orleans dudes be street, but they stunt, but that's the cash money lifestyle. If you look at No Limit, they really wasn't on that stuntin' shit as much. P. Wolfe aside, he put diamonds in his glasses, but that wasn't the whole angle. Cash money was like, we gon' do helicopters on the stage, we gon' do donuts, we gon' leave the tags on the car, we gon' wear two watches, like that was what baby did. Nobody wasn't doin' that shit like that, like Big Boy and it was going hard too, but that wasn't the image. So when he took on that name Cash Money Records, he really invited this stuntin' flashiness shit, and that was just baby, whole personality, even till his day, it's all about the lifestyle and about the flash and the shine and all that shit. Man, so when you look at the, the diamonds in his mouth, the diamonds in his mouth, all that, that nigga came with it, didn't he? Yeah, took the goods out. The big old buses and all that, man. We, I hate to, well, I don't hate to bring this up. Gunna got out of jail. People sayin' he snitched. I don't know how much of a gangster he was to begin with. What do you think when you see the snitched culture or the people sayin' this and that, just the back and forth from being locked up, to comin' back out, to you seein' it, we just, we just bloggers or interviewers, what do you think about that kinda? And I'ma say this too, cause people be feelin' like just cause you blog, you not directin' the streets, you don't have no business to talk about it. But people could talk about sports all day, news reporters could talk about entertainers, that's their life in journalism. But people that don't really understand, they don't get it why people talk about this. So anyway, to piggyback on what you're sayin', they sayin' that it can't be used against them, but we did see it, that he said that he was in a car and that it is a gang, cause I know Doug and him kept sayin' and his lawyers kept sayin' that YSL is not a gang. It's a label, a record label, you know, Young Stone in life, but they sayin' Young Slime life or whatever and stuff like that. So they sayin' it is a gang. And he did say that he, one of the people asked him on record, he said, yes it is. So I don't know if they could use it, but I know it don't look good for people. And we still don't know what the deal got and we still don't know what's gonna happen. They said the case might take about a year, but that didn't look good or whatever. That didn't look good at all. Lookin' at the other videos with Gunner talkin' to crime stoppers and this and that and then, you know, people talkin' about TI told on this deal. It's like a lot of stuff that everybody actin' like it's cool. I don't know. People move the goalposts for their own liking or they just change the rules of the game when they wanna change them. I don't know. It just seemed bad right now. It just seemed like it's a bad time for people in the streets. So I need to try to figure out something else cause that shit ain't lookin' good right now. No, man. So Juvie Tuesday's still goin' down or what? Hell yeah. When Bibi did the new video with him in Juvenile that all Ali, I'm the greatest since Muhammad Ali, they did that at Juvie Tuesday. So yeah, that's still a big thing and Juvie like the crawfish ball and stuff like that. And you know, Juvie so 504, Juvie gonna wear St. Jersey, he gonna barbecue. I mean, he gonna cook his crawfish and all that like ball and everything. So yeah, Juvie Tuesday's still a thing or whatever and he's still gonna put on. Man, did you see the documentary? So just a minute? Yeah, I see, you know, I had posted on my page on the hip hop timeline with 50 Cent, the guy that do the interviews from Baton Rouge and stuff, yeah. Wow. How did you feel like they portrayed the whole situation? I mean, I think it, I think they did what, a lot of us kind of already knew all the stuff that they was talking about, certain people that was involved in certain stories and allegations. Like we always had been hearing certain stuff about this person could have been involved or this person with the jailer. Soldier Slim was investigated with a murder in the city park week. I remember reading that in the newspaper back then. So a lot of stuff I knew, cause I'm here and I heard it or whatever and stuff like that but I guess it was good to see, you know, all this stuff or whatever cause they did everybody else stuff and all that. But I know a lot of people in New Orleans wasn't gonna be saying too much because that's just what it is. Like this the murder capital of the world of America. And it's been like that, you know, on and off a lot of times and nothing to glorify that but it's just that kind of city. You know, women died, dudes died, people pull up fast and in a small city. So it's easy for somebody to bump it to you. Plus it's an outside city because everybody be at second lines and just like I showed at the end Soldier Slim second line, like people be at shit like that. So it's easy to run into people or whatever. So people just watch what they say, you know? Yeah, I see a few of them not talking on there. Yeah, yeah. Like when Boobie Black, they asked him, he was like, I don't know about that. I don't know about that. I don't know what you're talking about. That's the way they do it in New Orleans. Yeah, yeah. It's cold as hell. They be doing that. Right, right, right. So what's up with, so when, did you like when Yellow Beesie did the- The Yellow Boys song? Yeah, I mean, see a lot of times people from New Orleans might be like, man, why they doing that shit over and all that? No, I think that's flattering. For them to do that, they're inspired by that. Them dudes looked up the cashmoney in New Orleans. So it's a good thing if somebody was inspired by Michael Jackson, you know, Whitney Houston, they might want to try to do their record over because they was inspired by him. So there's nothing wrong with that. People do Wayne shit over. So I think, I like when he did that. I like when Fredo Bang just did the UNLV album. So I think that's a good thing. I just feel like that mean people love what we do and people still pulling from it. So, you know, just like they love our food. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And music, everything. So man, I like it, man. Who the new hot artist down here outside of your artist? All right. Well, like I said, who popping underground right now and I work with her before super bad for the women. She like killing it. She was just on the stage with Lil Wayne. I need a hero. Yeah, you got to, she was all, we're going to get on boss talk next time or something or whatever. I don't know if she probably busy right now, but super bad. She was on stage with Lil Wayne at the Louisiana Fest. That's when he's saying, gold medal, gold medal. Cause she was dancing on our head and Lil Wayne went to ad livin' her and just went to jumping up and he was like, I think I love you. I think, so she really popping. She got the song, Meetin' In My Bedroom, produced by Mikel, which is a producer out of Reserve, Louisiana, St. John Paris. And then you got, like I said, who else I might see? Everybody already know Rife For 9 doin'. Man, there's so many, you know, there's a lot of artists and stuff like that, like that's popping and this always be the hardest thing because it's always like, it feel like it's a hundred thousand rappers and everybody feel like you forgot me, why you didn't say my name? So I guess that's why people always don't really say too much, especially when they don't got in the gang. Cause then it's been a lot of times I didn't say all his name and they wouldn't even repost it. And they wouldn't even say thank you cause I don't have to do that, you know, but they'll get mad at you. But there's a lot of times I do say people names and stuff like that. That's hard, man. But there's a lot of them I like. Like I said, I like Cudder, Gang J, Black. I like Junior Montana. I like C-finance, Reedy. It's a lot of them, bro. J.R. Osson, Iceberg, man, I can't. You can go to Blankin' Out of New Orleans. I gotta ask you though. I gotta ask you who the hardest producer ever came out of New Orleans? The hardest producer that ever come out of New Orleans to me, I'ma say Manifresh. And then I'ma say Kel. Manifresh? And then I'ma say Precise. Precise? Precise gonna be third. Precise was the producer at Big Boy. Okay. With Big Chuck. With the recipes Big Chuck. He was the man behind Big Boy Records. That was the label partners and Crimes on PNC. But I'll say Manifresh, then Kel C. And then Precise. Wow. That's a hard top three right there. That's hard, man. So how can you tell a Kel beats? Well, Kel, the way he run his drums, like when you hear like move, bitch, get out the way when you hear stuff like, motherfuck them other niggas. Excuse me, like fuck them other niggas cause I'm down for a minute. It's like the way he run his drums. I can tell Kel C. stuff. And I can just tell first stuff too. I like first like just bouncing is like when he make like I need a hot girl. And I can just hit her on her back the ass up. It's just like, they got different sounds. And that's what I be telling to people. It's still a distinctive sound to New Orleans that we could tell. I was still able to tell like a Big Boy record, a No Limit record, a Cash Money record back in the deal when I was younger. And all of it sound New Orleans, but it sound different. It's like different variations of Gumball. It's all our Gumball, but it's the way these different restaurants make the Gumball, but it's still a Gumball. And that's what people understand. So who is, when you look at the artist from down here, who's known for lyrically, like one of the most lyricist artists? I mean, I'ma say- You see what I'm saying? I mean, in the female category, I'ma give it a 3D-NATI on a whole another level with the lyrical shit. Like she, man, she on a whole another level. But my favorite lyrical spitter, besides I already said Wayne or whatever, I'ma say Mac, no, Mac. Camouflage assassin. Mac was that nigga. Mac, Mac. Mac, McKinley, yeah. Yeah, McKinley, yeah. I interviewed him last time. Mac is, he loved, he used to love the East Coast feel because of his lyricalness. Coogey rapping, all of them. That's who inspired him. And that's the same person that inspired Mr. Marcello. He was a spitter too, but and I want to say it too. Me and Mac, mama got the same name. Mac, mama name shit. My mama name shit. I think his daddy named George, my daddy named Gregor. So our parents got the same initials and stuff, but his mama name shit of mine, name shit of too, but Mac, Mac the true brother. I remember when I first, like a song I used to play all the time was with him and BG on Choppa City and stuff like that. And man, he went off on that. So that song on Choppa City with Mac and BG, that was the shit, bro. So. Well, BG, it's supposed to be getting hot soon, but that was a, that was a clone or something. That was somebody that they say was BG on the internet. Man, that was click B, man. That man, it didn't even look like it. It didn't even have no, I don't know if he had a grill or something, whatever it was. I knew it was, it wasn't BG from his mouth. So I'm like, man, this ain't a damn BG and stuff like that. And nah, man, he's still coming home soon, but that definitely wasn't nothing, but that definitely had the internet going crazy and all that stuff like that. You know, everybody, then that stuff with Gucci, man, gonna give BG a million dollars. I don't even think that was true. I think that was some fake little internet shit too. Cause I know damn well Gucci, no BG work way more than a million and BG could get his own thing going. So I think that was, I don't think that was from really Gucci, man, official Twitter. I think somebody did that shit. So is, I see where Birdman went down to see him and say, he's time, you know, go sign him when he come up. I think they is gonna definitely do business and stuff like that. Cause I feel like they got everything straight, just like him and jewelry back in a good place. You know, Wayne and baby back in a good place. I feel like, you know, a lot of that stuff, they kind of getting the right and stuff like that because they know what they mean to the culture. And I feel like seeing them all on the same stage again, years later, all the fans gonna appreciate it because BG and the hot boys influence so much in the world. And BG and all these dudes saying step and step on because BG, BG said that I'm all on you. In my city is a struggle. We hustle to live larger. You step or get stepped on times as hard. Shit, get real. His give us blood spill about having things. That's why I want a meal. Shout out BG. You're a hip hop he is. Yeah. Ever since you were young. I love it, bro. My daddy, like I told you, my daddy made music, sung songs. And my big brother used to be gone, I used to get them old UGK records, Spice One, Two-Shot, A-Ball, MJG, and EZ, E-Tapes and all that shit. So I was always listed as Al Cool J, like, you know, I was listed. This is about your brother, man, for a minute. You know, I know he locked up. Yeah. Just what, will he, is he gonna come home? Well, right now we talking about my brother, Boss B. Brandon, well right now we just, I mean the Supreme Court denied this stuff again, so they, like I told you, they got the Jim Crow law that was around after the Civil War, where you needed 10 jurors, instead of 12 to convict somebody. And the Supreme Court said it was unconstitutional, but they sent it back to Louisiana to let them decide. And then when they did try to decide, they still, you know, denied it again. So they still couldn't change, their predecessors messed up years ago. So they, they not messing with it. And I guess it's just like these people sitting in jail, 1500 of them throughout the state of Louisiana, women and men that didn't get a fair conviction. They never got a fair day in court. But like you was telling Kuta, can you really get justice in Louisiana? I mean, the proof is in the pudding. Oh, it's been corrupt. It's been dirty. And then we're in the South. You know, we lock up more people in Louisiana than anyone on the planet. Like four times probably more than Iran and China and all these places in Louisiana. And we got the highest murder rate. So we lock in all these people up, but we still ain't stopping the murders. We got the highest murder rate and the highest incarceration rate. So that's not changing then. So like I said, it just, the judicial system fucked up. And me and my brother and my family, we still working on other stuff, trying to get people to get to the DA office to try to reach out or whatever. The Prime Minister just did a great job trying to help all the other people. But it's just like, it's kind of just getting a little harder because they just keep closing all the doors. How do you, how do you try to keep a smile on his face and keep him encouraged? One of his favorite things that make a smile and leave it or not is that when we made that song we're gonna be poppin' for Pimp. Go on poppin' for Pimp is the song that we made for Pimp C and that's what they always say, be like, keep it trail, man. So if I say some Pimp C type shit, I'm fuckin' with Emmett, man. I'm fuckin' with Emmett. These diamonds, man, you see these diamonds? So saying some Pimp C shit because before he got incarcerated, we used to always like to watch the boosted DVD in Atlanta in that Pimp C Pimpulation DVD. So that DVD was something that he always liked to watch. And so saying some shit about Pimp C, he used to keep me good spirit and just other little shit or whatever, but he loved Pimp C like more than me. Now he loved Pimp C like you love him. More than, he like that. He love him like you love him. That's a hell of a way, boy. Like I'm telling you, I'm gonna bump it all away. I just had to keep myself off of this time cause I was trying to bump some new stuff to just hear the audience I've been interviewing, right? But usually it's Pimp all the time. No, when Pimp C died, I cried. Honestly, like tears like, and it's crazy to say that shit. But I'm just being real, like I'm not about to get on an interview and fake no shit. Like my dad was like, man, he really, I'm like, man, I felt like I really knew him. Like I really did like the way he talked, the shit he talked about what he still for and just his pride. So I just try to keep that going. And I just hope I always say, man, I ain't gonna be able to meet him cause you know, I might meet Bumbi, but I just like hope I'm making a proud standing on this down south shit and putting it in their faces, man. Like he said, I think that's all of us. I think that's all we can do. Right. And you know, like, you know, you really been really, really, really rocking with him when you get them calls and they be like, man, what you doing on Pimp birthday this year? What you do? Cause they know, like when I started this podcast, it was, it was Pimp for me. And that's what we doing in Texas. And not only Texas, Louisiana, that's me. I'm five miles from Louisiana. And I'ma say this too. I know he liked the rails one of his favorite colors. So. That's why I put this red on the day. Oh yeah. And you know, he always wore dicky fits. Yeah, you did. You love dicky. That's why you did it. He's not a mistake. You rock with it. I did that for Pimp's seat. That's hard man. That's hard man. I didn't even think about it. I saw, I saw your fit, but I was wondering. Cause some people might think, oh man, he got blood. But he a blood. No, I'm not. I did that for Pimp's seat. You did it for Pimp man. I know he like dicky fits and all that. That's hard. Oh, I see it a hog in the game though. Hog in the game man. Trying to solve the town. Man, I can't, man, I can't just express enough how his music was so different, but he made a nigga feel him no matter where he was at. Then he would fly with it. And your K.O. was talking about that. You seen the one? Yeah, he talked about what he made that damn on, when they made that on, pull a kick door, and when they made that on, damn, that's on. That went crazy on the internet. Yeah, it was a kick, it was a kick door and he made another break-em-all song. Make-em-all song. Yeah, break-em-all song. Cause he was gonna call him, he was saying the drums and all that. So yeah, Pimp's seat really played a big part in that shit. And even when man in first seat, he made it back to that stuff. He was inspired by the song, all super tight and all that. That's hard, man. But the strings and shit, yeah. Man, how can people get a whole day if they trying to link up with you? Well, they can find me on Twitter at GEDY, underscore P. And if they want to find me on Instagram, cause this is my full one, cause they keep deleting me. But I'm on my full one now, is GEDY, Pee Speaks, all together. So that's GEDY. Why they keep deleting you? I don't know, man, that's, I don't know. What you be putting on there? I don't really know, cause sometimes they might tell you, sometimes they might don't. I don't know if people are flagging it cause they hating her, putting the wrong shit. But I'm thinking if people were just hating her, I don't know, but I just keep getting up. But they knock me down and I just get up and just keep going, they got people that love what I'm doing. So I ain't gonna stop with them. So I'm gonna just come back 10 times stronger. Man, well, anything we can do for you, man. You know, we here, man, it's for real, for real, man. Thank you, I appreciate you. And did we miss anything, GEDY? Cause you know you're the governor. Nah, y'all, y'all. The mayor. Nah, y'all. President, baby. I'm just trying to, I'm just trying to just, just do my thing for my people and just, and make them proud. And I hope I do, and make them proud. And thank y'all for coming, driving out here, you and your wife. I always come through and see you all. I'm gonna be this, this is like second home, right? We country cousins and all that. But I just wanted people to know before I go that it's cool to be Southern, you know, cause a lot of times I felt like I said, New Orleans, we got away from that Southerness and I remember Master P having a whole Louisiana boot on his ring. And I remember babing them, just loving that down south shit of a soldier slim. So I'm the other down south hustler down here, besides Master P and baby. So I just want people to know it's cool to have Southern pride. And that's what I like about Memphis and a lot of other places in the South. I got my Southern pride because like I said, people like Baby, Jay Prince, Tony Draper, Ball and G, Outkast, all them dudes and Master P. So I just want you to know, man, thank you. And thanks for representing for the South. Man, I love, man, I love. Appreciate that. Check it, man. Hey, man, it's been another great segment of Boss Talk 101 where the bosses talk. And we out.