 Tattoo's the 30 day you get that shit back. Face tag. Boom. I'm a gang and you gotta go take a new ID picture. Yeah, you gotta go take a new prison, California prison ID picture. I got mine on me right now. Shit. Oh, you got the prison ID picture. Keep it on. Yeah, right here. Look, check it out. Real certified stepper. On the gang. Really in the stealer. Oh, you keep it. Yeah, that's my ID. You sure? That's what you're talking about. That's what you're talking about. You took it to the airport. That's what you're showing me at the airport. What the hell? Work at the airport. Yeah, we on boss talk, one-on-one, one-on-one. Yeah, we gonna talk. Okay, you was gone for how long? I was gone for nine years. What's changed? What's the biggest change when you came home that you seen? All the girls had different babies. More babies. They all got more babies. They all got more babies. He ain't lying. Yeah, my mentality just to like, when I was, I grew up in there, I learned how to shave in there. I learned everything in there on one prison. But just I came home and just, just the way I act and the way I see people, body language and just, you know, just firm contact and just the way you talk to people and just the way I see and I know how to have conversation with older people, younger people and have more respect and gratitude towards life. But now since I'm getting famous and I'm getting all this money and I'm getting the finer things in life, it's like sometimes I feel like in the beginning, I felt like I didn't deserve it. Like I was like, I was out of place, you know? But now I'm starting to feel like, yeah, I deserve this shit. And the other day I went back to the hood for the first time and like three weeks, my mom was like, hey, come sleep over here. I took her out to go eat. And I said, man, I don't never want to come back to the fucking hood ever again. On the set. Just on the visit. Yeah, I'm cool, dawg, just like the way I'm doing it. So it's getting some of the people that's in that hood or whatever gonna try to hold you back. No, yeah, yeah, it is what it is, but as long as I'm staying righteous and solid and I keep it real and I'm doing me and everybody's getting theirs, everybody's happy and people want to see me win, but ain't nobody gonna stop me. I'm gonna keep doing what I'm doing. As long as I'm going about it the right way, I'm gonna keep doing what I'm doing. Like I read the comments, I read all that shit. Like, you know, a lot of people love me. A lot of people love me, 20% hate by everybody tries to find something. They don't got shit on me. Now I'm real solid. I'm real, real, real, real, real, really out here in the field, really been to level fours, really been to the shoe, really from the hood, really down for the hood. If the homies want to call me to the hood of DP, I'ma go. I'ma pull it to the hood and go get my shit and then, you know, get it in cracking. And it's just like that. That hood shit runs deep. I'm moving the fuck out of the hood, but the hood shit runs deep. They'll always, the hood runs deep. That hood shit runs deep though. Like they could always, it's always gonna be around forever. I'm from the hood for life. I love my hood and where I'm from. You know what I'm saying? That's my body goes all over my face, but I don't wanna go back to the hood. Fuck that. Like, I like nice shit now. Wow. What did you think when you came out and seen all these, the podcast, the bloggers, all this stuff going on when it come to the media? I see, I see everybody's making the money out of it and everybody's eating on it. So like everybody has the promotions getting their money, the media's getting their money, the camera guy's getting their money, the video hinders are getting their money, the rapper's getting his money, the manager, the money's in the music and rapping media. Once you get lost into like the LA rap scene, like with the blacks and like the Mexicans, like it's a trip and people get lost into it and it's just like, that's what we do out here. Wow. I gotta go back into the prison like nine years in prison. What was the biggest ride that you was in? What was the craziest thing? Come on now. You know, we're crazy. Yeah, I don't wanna speak too much on that, but yeah, I participated in a couple of them, you know what I'm saying? I did an indicted interview and I spoke on my prison experiences, but yeah, I participated in a couple of them, you know what I'm saying? That's all I gotta say. That's all you have to say about that? Hell yeah. It's just something else. No, no, no, that's cool. You could ask me, but LA, man, shit different out here, like the homies, you know what I'm saying? But yeah, I've been in them, guys. On the hood, I've been in them. I earn all my tattoos. All my tattoos, I earn them. When they lock you down, I don't know how it is out here, but when they lock you down and they feed you, like where I'm from, they fed you journey sacks. You get like a peanut butter sandwich and I've been there. What's the snacks? Like that's, no, no, that's what they give you. Like when they lock the whole unit down. Peanut butter sandwich. Yeah, you just get a peanut butter sandwich and maybe a drink, that's it. Did they have a lockout down? Hell yeah. What did they feed you? They only locked you down for two weeks now. Okay. Cause I ain't been now, I'm talking to early 90s. Early 90s, that's when they used to lock shit down for a long time. But now the longest you can put your lock down is for two weeks. So it's better. And everybody loves it. Cause you're just in the cell chilling. Nobody wanna go to yard. But they feed you the same food? Yeah, they feed you the same food, they bring you the same food to the cell. Wow, see that's different. Yeah, they bring you the same food to the cell. They treat us bad. Bullshit, that's dog food. On the gang, dog food. Dog food, man, that's dog food. The only thing, and I still eat it to this day, don't think they did it different for us. They gave you like peanut butter and pancakes. Ooh, pancakes. That's all we had. Peanut butter and pancakes? Peanut butter and pancakes, that was best breakfast. Still to this day. They gave you waffles in Pelican Bay with a little sausage right there, waffles, bam. So that's the best, you remember the best meals. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, waffles, chicken day. You better get a big piece of chicken cause sometimes you get a little smoked out chicken. You are mad. They give you a good, healthy piece of chicken. What's up with the, like in, I know in Texas where they give you like thyme, like you can't eat, you can eat, but you get five minutes to eat. Like they knock on that table. Five minutes to eat? Five minutes. Yeah. When you meet him when he come home, you gonna know cause he eating fast, you know what I'm saying? Okay, so in Pelican Bay, you eating yourself. Oh, so they don't let y'all go nowhere. You get room service right there. That's crazy. Yeah, they bring you, yeah, at Pelican Bay, they bring you the food to your cell, boom. And they lock it in. It's chow time and the couple come around and he'll just open your cell and push the food in. And then in Ironwood, you go eat on a three yard, you go eat on a table. And the respectful thing to do is, say I'm eating on the table, I don't know if I'm gonna get some blacks and I'll see what the blacks are in our blacks. You know, cool. And we eat and I'm not gonna leave if the blacks still eating in the homie. We're gonna wait for the blacks to finish. You know, it's respectful. Like, man, gentlemen. And then once he's done, you guys ready? And then we all leave. Wow. Are they hard on y'all? Like I see the tattoos. I know in prison, you get tattoos in the Texas prison, you would get like a case if they catch you. Hitting each other up or you don't like it. Yeah, you catch a case. Like they, in the more cases you catch the more, you know, it stipulates you. You could be doing more time for it. A case? Yes. It's like a case. No write-up, not with no write-up? Well, that's what we call it. You know, you get a few write-ups. You get a 60 day, you get a 30 days. It's different tattoos, you know what I'm saying. Tattoos a 30 day, you get that shit back. Face tag. Boom. Again, you gotta go take a new ID picture. Yeah, you gotta go take a new prison, California prison ID picture. I got mine on me right now. Shit. Oh, you got the prison ID picture. Keep it on me. Yeah, yeah, right here. Look, check it out, real certified stepper. On the game. We didn't steal it. Oh, you keep it. Yeah, that's my ID. You sure? That's what you show them in the airport. That's what you show them in the airport. That's what you show them in the airport. They work at the airport. They work at the airport. They work at the airport. This man got his ID. That's crazy. Yeah, they accepted it. And they accepted it just like a regular ID. When they see me walk through with, when they see me walk through with all these chains, they'd be like, all right. Yeah, we're just gonna make a rest there. Yeah. Let's go to TSA. That's crazy. And to clear? No, we didn't let us go to TSA. Okay, okay. Yeah, but they let us go to TSA. Yeah, this is my recent one for a strap. Look at the gate on this one. That's what I heard. Reception. Reception. 518-2021. That's my recent one for a strap. 518-2021. That's crazy, man. And this shit. So, okay. So when you, how old was you when you first went? 18. He was 18. Juvenile hard too. Juvenile hard. Juvenile hard. Y8 compound, 715-17. Did you see any at home is when you first get there? My homeboys? Yeah, anybody that you went with, right? I went in there with my homeboy. Oh, they went with you? Yeah, my homeboys went in there with me, yeah. Now I went in there with my homeboy in June on and when I was 18, I got caught there burglary. Then I went back again, went back again. And then been back for violations all year this year. Back in the county violations. Because of what I'm tripping on, like when you go. Once you went in the system, man, it's just. It's crazy. It's hard to break that barrier, man. Just to stay out that, get out that mentality, not hold the gun.