 When I took music seriously, it's when I was with Young Greatness. I don't know if you knew that. What? Greatness! Whoa! Woo! Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. 101. Yeah, we going to talk. Now, the only thing I was thinking, so when did you finally find your love for music other than like, when did you start taking the serious, I should say? I've always loved music. I don't, I can't, I mean since I can remember, I love music. I don't even, you know, that's something I can't think of. But when did you start taking it serious? Because people can, you can love music, but when did you start to take it serious as in this is what I really want to do? Um, I'm gonna say when I took music seriously, it's when I was with Young Greatness. I don't know if you knew that. What? Greatness! Greatness! Woo! Woo! Oh, my love I had so just to get that mulla and stack my chain. Yeah, so, bro, man, Young Greatness which I just asked somebody else was like, find Young Greatness, family, somebody I want to interview for. I miss family. Are you serious? Not, not by blood, but we like brothers. So man, Greatness was sitting in the house, man, Greatness was sitting in the house and just like, make music like 20 songs and you know, and kind of like a sibling rivalry. It's like, I want to just fuck him up every day we step in, every time we do this I'm trying to like, be better than him. You know, and he talk a lot of shit. Is he older than you? Yeah, he older. Okay. He talk a lot of shit. So, you know, it was always like sparring, you know, and he would kind of, I always felt like he couldn't fuck with me on the songs, but he could definitely talk a lot of shit and get it, get it, get shit going from that, that perspective. I'm going to just talk shit and get fly. I was trying to like get on these songs and go crazy, you know, you know, wow. I just was talking about him on the way down here. I was talking to, I think it was Gita, the, what's his name, G to P or what? I was asking him, I was saying, do you know anybody from Young Green? Cause he passed away, got killed, you know, I was like, do you know, you was, you was probably asleep. We was driving now. Anybody from his family, because I wanted to talk to him. You know what I mean? Yeah. Because of his legacy, because of who he is and because of what he does. That's not a deep thing. But to the question you're asking, that's when I took it seriously, because he took it seriously. Okay. He took it down first. You know, he was really like really doing this. Like, I mean, in high school, I remember he opened up for a LaWayne concert at the, down the street from here when he was in high school, you know, like, and that, you know, so it was like he was pushing for this before I was, I just, I just loved the music before he did, but he really gave it a push first. Cause I remember him first rapping for me and then we kind of like was fucking with him about rapping. Cause I'm like, I rap all the time, nigga. You just started this. Like I was, you know, I don't have a, a start of rap. I was rapping. Your whole life. Yeah. I don't remember not rapping. Yeah. Yeah. That's dope. Yeah. He's one of them ones. When that song, that mula, get that man. Got the trap hop bumpin'. Thirst of the moment when the kids run. Got the whole black choppin' on fire. That name on ring when I come through. This nigga, man, that song, listen, bro, when I started watching him, I fell in love with his style, bro. And it was just a heavy song. All my life, I hustle just to get that mula. Yeah. It's kind of soulful. It's kind of. Yeah. Every night, give me like, he just made me feel like he really gave it all for what he wanted. Like, I mean, this dude was literally possessed by what he wanted. You know, he was different than a lot of us at that age. I wanted to just rap. I wasn't even thinking about it. He was like going, rapping, going to the studio, getting pressed up, you know? He was talking. He just, like, stunning them. He just had, he had that, I'ma beat a shit. I'm going, just a different energy at a younger age.