Episode Transcript
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(00:11):
M hmm. Let's see if Ipucked this up or you know, the
camera's going right now right we stillsee yeah, yeah, yeah Cooper.
(00:36):
Real ladies and gentlemen, welcome toanother episode of Real People Off the Record.
We're in the building today as usualwith my boy Tony d Yeah,
and we got a very special guestwho's normally on the show, but also
in the building in the flesh today. It's very special one and the only
(00:58):
show it's it's a show what whatwhat's up about? Time you in Florida?
Man? He has to come outhere, you know, do some
things than I had to make sureI quote a flight early so that way
I could do this with y'all.That's what's up. That's what's up now.
I've been trying to figure out whatour next steps are to, you
(01:19):
know, curate this show that aswe have it now. I know we're
doing so great right now, butI want to kick it up a notch.
How would we do that? Howdo you think kick it up?
A kick it up a notch?Like if all these artists stopped trying to
get a bang to do an interview, I mean, can't help that,
you know, um, everybody wantstheir bag, everybody wants their money.
(01:42):
But I think that we've only beentogether for three months now, ye and
together now, and if you checkthe views and you check everything, it's
it's popping. Um. We're growingexponentially, very quickly. Down We're pretty
ahead of schedule, honestly. Youknow, I've seen other podcasts start out
and they're not even breaking a thousandviews or anything like that on YouTube,
(02:06):
and I'm surprised where we are now. Um. I mean, we're also
getting downloaded on all social media platforms. Of course, there's Apple Music,
Spotify, heart Being, you nameit, we're on it. Um.
So you know, wherever you takeyour podcast, that's where you get to
listen to it because we are everywhere, and we will actually be going onto
(02:29):
more platforms coming in the next coupleof months as well. Be sure to
look out for that. I'm definitelylooking into different avenues to distribute our podcasts
to get more of a reach andhopefully sponsors. Sponsors, please reach out
and let us know what we coulddo for you. And thanks for listening,
(02:50):
Thanks for listening. But I thinkthe thing is maybe doing a concert
or a comedy show or a partyof something to get a group of people
together to understand what we're doing andhow we're doing it and maybe reach more
people. Yep, that makes sense, yep, yep. Um. I
think we should get you know,some prospective artists with a decent following to
(03:16):
do a couple of shows, maybea one headliner, m do something like
that, or maybe multiple or howeverwe see fit to do it. I
think that's a good avenue that wecould take to you know, take it
to another level, because I thinkthat will help out a great deal.
By putting our banner up on alarge scale and doing it that way,
(03:37):
I think that'll help us do that. I think that is the wave.
Now. The question to you andto Jay and to the people is who
that is very interesting now I wouldlike to see And it doesn't have to
be rapid. Could be you know, other like R and B artists.
(03:59):
Could be a singer or you know, somebody that integrates and that well into
you know, our culture and youknow the culture that we uh that we
hold dear to us, that we'vebeen following and living by our entire lives.
Um. But you know, rapis probably you know, going and
get us a pretty good nudge inthe right direction. Who for that matter,
(04:21):
is uh, you know, someonethat not necessarily headlines, but not
necessarily opens. Who do you thinkwould be a good mid tier that ready
to take that next step? Well, that was a rhetorical question I was
asking. That's why I didn't reallyThat's why I really didn't answer it.
Did I really say that I reallyanswer it? I did not. I
(04:43):
think it's just somebody that's really umthat that is able to, you know,
take their reach to the next levelas well, because we want to
grow with them, and I thinkthat's another aspect that we can possibly take.
Dude, I agree, I agreeas Jay. What do you think,
all right? Hear me out?Why is it always beginning something when
(05:04):
you know, you know, somethingso outlandish's going to come out of his
mouth? Underground fight club? Ithought, we don't talk about fight club?
Yeah, but you know, howdo you get the word out?
You can't talk about it. Wedon't talk about it. We just do
it, film it, don't talkabout it. Okay, But I don't
(05:27):
see any concept, honestly, howwe could take it to the next level.
Are we still talking about the show? Are we going back to the
next level? Because it felt likeyou didn't want me to answer that.
Why not? I think that's thesame conversation. Okay, So, if
if we were going to do ashow, you know, it's tough to
say who would bring out a decent, decent enough crowd. I would probably
(05:49):
say I would want to keep itin the house, you know what I
mean. Like, if we're gonnado the show in Florida, probably probably
keep it in house, brings somebodyto Florida, and maybe Rod Wave I
don't know, and then somebody openedup for him. I feel like he
would draw a decent crowd. Yeah, it's from Saint Pete holds it down.
Yeah, But also you have toyou have to think that we don't
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have to stay local because we're onthe internet and podcast reaches very far.
That's true, very far. RodWave is a very rap, very rap.
He's more like, you know,singing song yeah heartbreak, which is
cool. I with a lot.I would like to see Rod Wave do
some some more flashy shit, youknow what I mean. But I don't
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know if we had to bring theFlorida I mean, just any artists,
I probably, like I said,you don't want to reach too far because
you know, they're just going tospit in our face. And at the
same time, we don't want torun. We don't want someone to insult
anybody, um by saying, oh, you know, we're a small promotion.
Let's uh, let's try to dosomething like I don't I don't want
to like insult somebody for saying thatthey're on like Arlo, We're trying to
(06:55):
build ourselves up, um So wedon't want to bring anybody down. UM.
So we have to find something equalor someone that will work with us
in helping us attain certain notoriety.So that's that's a question for everybody else.
This is going to sound crazy too, but maybe La Russell. I
(07:16):
feel like he has a big enoughfollowing on the internet, you know what
I mean. We turn around andyeah, you know, we work with
him. You know how it goes. You dip into his honeypot a little
bit, take some and some ofhis followers open up to our stuff,
you know what I mean. AndI think it would be a good move.
And uh, he's he's like he'slike a new age businessman, like
(07:38):
he's learning how to do all thisstuff with the new social media stuff.
I just like to pick his mindabout all that stuff, or or here's
here's a thought. We reach outto all these YouTube rappers and try to
put a showcase together and see becausethey get paid off YouTube very well.
Um, so they wouldn't necessarily belooking for a bag from us. They're
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gonna get their views, they're gonnaget a show, they're gonna get like
tickets portions. So I don't seehow that would be negative on that because
they said they're gonna get their views. And if they're and they're gonna be
benefiting off of other artists on thatshowcase of their audience. I mean,
there's gonna be some crossover, butthey're still gonna be um. They might
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be able to grow their fan basesthat way as well. So I think
that's another opportunity that we can lookinto. Um we can reach out to
some of the YouTube rappers or YouTubeartists or singers or whoever, because there's
there's a ton of them, butthey gotta be original, not cover artists.
I think that might can work becauseI think everyone wins in that take.
Taking it back to the old schoolwhere you're doing, like you said,
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a showcase, ye, and thisrappers or artists A is bringing their
people artists B and C or bringingtheir people and artists C and B might
not fans might not know about A. Fans might not know about BE,
so forth and so on. Yeah, and we'll stream it on everyone's channel,
on each one of their channels aswell as ours. And what if
(09:07):
we did it more like not justa concert, but more like a celebration
of hip hop where yeah, it'snot just a show. Maybe we could
have like something old school like Bboy battles. We could do like DJ
battles, you know what I mean. We could have all types of DR
battles, you know what I mean, where it's like we're not just celebrating
an artist per se, We're morecelebrating the art. You know, skys
(09:30):
a limit we could do whatever wehave I think, um by well,
we also got to look at abusiness wise. We got to see how
much exposure we have, how muchliabilit is we have um in that aspect,
because a lot of that stuff accountsfor a lot more insurance, a
lot more putting on shows. Idon't I know we put on shows,
but you know, some of youguys out there don't know the costs that
(09:52):
are involved and putting on shows,such as security, such as people taking
tickets, such as set up,set up, cleaning, set up,
just just an artist, entourages,travel, hotels, stagings, riders like,
there's a whole lot involved and justyou know, putting on it.
You might just come to buy aticket, go to a show and see
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it's easy, but it's not becausethere's a lot of different steps that you
have to take with each individual artistsas well as in the each individual company
that's involved, and they all haveliabilities, and they all have insurance that
they have to mind for, andso does the actual person putting on the
show. They have to get theirown insurance policies on any anything that particularly
happens, whether it comes to moneyticket sales, because everyone has a minimum
(10:35):
of ticket sales to break even,and if they don't reach that, the
insurance was what basically they would haveto pay to break even on that because
they're not makeup breaking you, butthey would have to hit that plateau.
So everyone gets paid. You maynot get paid because you didn't reach that
ticket sales. But you know,that's a lot of times it's for the
exposure. It's not necessarily for thebag you get at the end of the
(10:56):
show. So that's one of thethings I think I would be down for
doing that because I think there's alot of people that if done properly,
yep. Um. We could doone here in Florida, yep um.
We could do one in Maryland.Keep where on that and then of course
hit New York City. We coulddo you know, a couple of them
and take not the same artist butmaybe about the same artists. Or we
(11:18):
can look into regions. Yeah,and seeing how we can cross pass because
like I said, once you crosspass, you're growing their audience, You're
growing our audience. Everybody's growing together. Makes sense, right, yep yep.
So I think, um, likeI said, if we if we
stick to like influencers and like YouTuberappers and Instagram and TikTok and all that
(11:43):
and just make it a whole Ithink collaborat. First thing we need to
do is stop calling them YouTube rappers. Well, that's what they are,
That's that's how they get paid.But but that's how they get paid.
It's like it's like being are theycall themselves? Yes, I don't know.
I feel like I feel like,you know what I'm a box they
are. That's how they distribute theirtheir box. It's just like SoundCloud rappers.
(12:07):
Yeah, SoundCloud rappers for a thing. But I just remember nobody liked
being called the SoundCloud rappers. Ohthing, you know what I mean?
Like, you know, it's likethey are where else did you hear them?
I mean that's a good point.Yeah, So so let's just call
it. But they don't like it, let's just call it what it is,
just YouTube rappers, hit us upum TikTok rappers. I mean it
(12:33):
may be you know, I mean, they may look at it negative,
but they can't forget their roots andhow they got got their come up.
Like I that's how I look atit. That's your come up. Like
are you gonna are you gonna badMap a company that you work for because
they helped you come up? No, you're not gonna do that. So
I don't see why YouTube rappers wouldbe a negative connotation personally, because,
like I said, that makes senseto me because that's how they made their
(12:54):
millions. That's how they made theiryou know, how they made their bad
how they get sold their mirk throughYouTube, Google, m everything like that,
So why look at it as aas a negative when it's probably your
biggest you know, you know,but what about you? Wouldn't that be
the same thing as how females don'twant to be called female rappers. They
just want to be rappers? Whereare they rapping? Tone is gonna message
(13:22):
up before you even gets sping YouTube? But I don't. I don't call
female. I don't say female rappers. But I'm saying you don't think it's
the same, No, I don't. I don't think because YouTube rappers and
identity female rappers is supposed to beas a you know, you're a female
that wraps. So, however,we have YouTube versus SoundCloud versus Spotify rappers.
(13:48):
Yeah, I think SoundCloud and Spotifyare gonna have a lot of cross
everything for now. Anyway, Idon't know. Some some some pretty decent
ones blew up off the SoundCloud.I can't believe sound I was like the
whole thing now it is, well, look look kind of like do you
see how it's format it? Ithasn't updated every for the ads. Yeah.
(14:09):
Yeah, So basically they're using thosefunds for nothing. They're just collecting
that money, clicking that paycheck andkeeping something very dost they don't stream I
mean, they don't pay the artiststhrough streams, right, No, I've
never know. They get paid offof sales on their particular MP threes or
whatever it is. Yea, yeah, on their sales of music. Um
like Spotify they pay for stream royalties. But that's just like point point zero
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zero zero zero zero, yeah,one percent. That's why it's like hundreds
and hund thousands of a penny needto listen, So to make a dollar,
you gotta do like a thousand listensand it's just ridiculous, and they
gotta listen to the whole thing likeone hundred thousand maybe for a dollar.
It's just it's just ridiculous. Um, which you know, that's I don't
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know, I can see why peopledo it, but people just find that
as as an outlet for people tohear them and then they refer them back
to their website or something to gettheir merch And because that's how black people
are getting their money, you gotto funnel them, you gotta capture them.
Yeah. So you know, thewhole music industry is a very insensitive
area right now, like for peoplegetting with that have actual talent to get
(15:22):
paid because like I said, theold way of record deal and you know
label is out to the wayside becausepeople don't want to do that anymore.
People don't want to be on thewhim of a record label and getting you
know, having to owe money toyou know, the label unless they break
even or above and then they getpaid additional. But other than that,
it's not as lucrative as it was. Honestly, I don't think. Yeah,
(15:48):
it's probably a lot easier with likemajor label backing to get you know,
put in the game. But ifyou could do it indie like Russell
Russell Ya Russell right, Yeah,he's dropped like sixteen seventeen albums before he
was like finally yeah, contending withmajor labels, you know what I mean.
Like he's doing numbers and it's it'swild. But he's also a fucking
(16:10):
talented too. It makes like alot of decent musically well. But you
know the whole thing about when peopleget like platinum records and stuff like that,
you know, the label buys likea lot of that, Like they
self buy hundreds and hundreds of thousandsof you know of records. I'm at
Russ but no, I know,yeah, not again. Um, but
(16:30):
um, but that's what they doto make artists, um hit an album
like gold, platinum, bronze,they buy that. People don't know that.
People just think it's just off offlat record sales. Yeah, fans
like, now, now that's nothow the not that's not how worse And
that's how they based it off ofof um like billboards too, because you
(16:56):
know, they look at sales,but you know, that's not that's that's
the reason why a lot of artistshaven't gone platinum or gold or whatever nowadays
because they're not doing it and alot of people don't realize that they did
that before. Yeah, so Idon't know how how it works now with
the stream system because you could goplatinum off the streams and stuff too,
which is crazy. I just don'tknow how it works. But well,
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it also looks at you know,you know, if they're on a label,
if they're self promoted, they're independent, or you know, they're just
you know, a self project.Honestly, it really depends on who's backing
it. And if they're backing itthemselves, they got to work a lot
harder to get on it on thosebillboard lists. They got to work a
lot harder to get all those sales. If you've got a company us,
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if you're on a label, you'repretty much piggybacked off of the person ahead
of you, or you know,the people behind you on the same label
are piggyback to you. So basicallythey just do it that way and they
use one act to promote the otheractum. So that like, that's why
this whole music industry is so allfuck because they tell you who you're supposed
(18:02):
to like basically, not because they'regood or they have talent or they're talking
about anything real. They piggyback themonto another promotion. Um. I'm not
going to name any names, butI have plenty on that list that should
not even be even recognized and theyare unfortunately. Um but that's how these
(18:25):
why regulabels are looked down on fortheir deals that they do because you know,
they're they're they're not on the upand up as I would say.
Yeah, they're juice in the numbers, yeah, and they're all doctoring it
and it's just not accurate to what'sreally going on. It's just like like
the like if you drop something andyou girl goes down five hundred thousand copies
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of it. Yeah, it's thesame thing, So it's weird. That's
what A six nine was talking abouta few years ago. Seriously, who
yep, yep, that's right,that guy, that the Rainbow guy.
Yeah, the Rainbow rat. Yeah. What was he saying? No,
I think he shot it because hewas contending with somebody thinks like, I
(19:07):
don't know if it was already onA Grande or whatever, or Taylor Swift
or something, but he said thatthey were they were numbers. No,
I think, I mean, Idon't know, I don't know what the
situation was, but I remember himtalking about how people were buying thousands of
thousands, like hundreds of thousands ofcopies of their own. Oh yeah.
He was like, I'm able totrace it back to two debit cards,
and I'm like, what the fu. Yeah, that's literally investigations. That's
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literally how that industry works. That'show he got big, because that's how
he got out there, because ofhe got recognized for the album sales and
not where the sales are coming from. Um, you get more exposure when
you get on those lists because theyjust bought on that list. Just like
when you go to award show Alot of those awards are bought, bought
and paid for it, same thing. That's how that's how you get more
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exposure. You buy to get onthe higher platinums or platforms, to get
on the front page of Spotifying,get on the front page of Billboard,
to get on the front page ofMTV. Well, I don't know if
MTV does anything anymore, but justto get on the front page. That's
how you get your cliques. Yeah, like TMZ, like they do some
outlantis to get on TMZ for peopleto talk about them. They they look
(20:14):
them up and they find their stuff. So that's one of the other things
behind media and news. That's togo back to what I what we kind
of open the show with where we'rereaching out to artists and they're like,
well, what's the budget? Ye, who you mean, what's the budget?
Like, I understand you got youhad to pay to be in a
certain space, or maybe it cameout of your budget, I should say,
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because they didn't have to pay.The label, you know, advanced
them and they deducted it. Wedon't know how that works, but any
exposure should be good exposure. AndI understand there's a Brazilian podcast out there
and you have to do your duediligence as far as who's doing what numbers
and how they're moving or whatever.But you never know what somebody's listening to
(21:02):
where you will gain a fan from. And that's the way I see it,
right, because you know, ifsomebody's never heard of me before,
and now you know, Jake Jay'speople is watching, tones peoples is watching.
Now they heard of me, theymight like my personality whatever. Same
thing with y'all people and I knowmight have heard of you, might have
not have heard of you or notto you. Now they like your personality.
(21:25):
Like what we're talking about now,you're gaining a fan. Not that
I need fans or we need fans, I mean we do, ye,
I mean say that, but youknow what I mean. Yeah, Um,
we don't want groupies. That's whatwe don't want. But anyway,
um, sorry, sorry to speakfor yourself content to make anyway, but
(21:48):
yeah, so like it's to me, it's like any exposure. It's good
exposure. You should want to doas many as probably and then in the
day of this age where you don'thave to show up to the studio,
you don't have to you know,be there live. Because remember back in
the day, it was phone calls. Everybody called it to the radio.
They called, Hey, yeah,da da da, I got this going
(22:10):
on. This is what I'm promoting. Blah blah blah. You were privileged
to get certain artists in the studiowith you. Yep, now little zoom,
they could kind of be there.Just have a strong Wi Fi connection,
a decent camera, and a decentlike you could do the damn interview
What do you need a bag for? I understand why you want the bag,
but what do you need it for? Yeah, you're only as good
(22:33):
as the last time you appeared insomeone's screen. That's literally how this works.
If you did something fifteen years ago, they're outside out of your mind
that they have no idea, Likethey know you, but what have you
done lately? What Janet Jackson said, what have you done for me lately?
That's how this whole concept of entertainmentand media is is what have you
(22:56):
done for me lately? Where areyou? Where have you been? Like?
That's why you know people. That'swhy UM record sales go dry because
they're not they're not in the lineright, they're not get they're not promoting
they're not marketing. That's why allthese moved in the movies. They do
all these interviews. They do awhole tour of just a press tour of
(23:17):
just interviews to to you know,to make everyone aware. They don't they
shouldn't stop doing that because the movieis ten years old. They still go
have interviews like, yeah, let'stalk about the movie. Yeah, that's
literally with it. Basically what comiccon is all about? Any any conventions?
Really? Yeah, it's just likethe dude from I can't think of
his name right now, the dudefrom The Last Dragon, Bruce Lee Roy,
(23:40):
he's always at comic con. Yeah, dude from m Karate Kid,
he's always at comic yep, RalphMachio, Like, there's I got a
I got a friend of mine thatactually lives in Florida. Um, he's
been on The Walking Dead, he'sbeen in his first commercial. One of
his first commercials was you remember thatJ. G. Went Worth commercial It's
(24:03):
my money and Idi in and nowhe was one of the first dudes to
do that. But as a recentUM, he got booked in Um a
Marvel movie. Uh, they juststreamed it. What is Hawkeye? He
plays one of the Burrows and Hawkeyeone of the tracks to Mafia Guys.
Yeah, he plays one of theand he now he's booked all over to
(24:25):
UH comic cons And I'm like,yeah, what do you do there?
He's like, Yo, we justsell like the picture, you know,
we have him a picture, wesign it, you sell en them for
like five bucks. Yep. Theymake that bird. Plus the person that
throwing the whole thing is paying themto be there. Yep. Plus you
get to sell merch on top ofit. Yep. So like, I
don't see how it is negative atany standpoint like that. There's so many
(24:48):
people in the convention circuits that that'sall they do. They just promote old
projects and they, like said,they sell autographs and pictures and and they
deal with the algia and they workin the nostalgia factory of your mind because
they're bringing ship back, like theyI don't like, I said, I
don't understand. I mean, Iunderstand it. They want the money now,
(25:10):
not long term. You're ready forthe ultimate nostalgia thing. This is
what I told my wife. I'mover Christmas. Can I paint the picture
for you right now? Right?You walk into a movie, you walk
into it sorry a banquet hall.You sit down, you have a three
course meal, right, Okay,you get a movie that's forty years old,
and then somebody walks in and it'sAlpaccino and you're watching Scarface with him.
(25:34):
How much does that worked to you. I'd rather watch any giving Sunday
with her. But yeah, Ithink it's five hundred and forty dollars in
Miami in December ninth. I thinkit is a December tent. You can
watch Scarface with Appuccino on a bigscreen and have dinner and everything. It's
(25:56):
like a banquet hall. They havedinner, three course meal. And when
I wandered, like a whole group. No, the whole group sits there,
you know. And yeah, andand then you get to watch the
movie like he does. Allegedly,he's gonna be doing his rounds to all
the tables. It's gonna be tables, you know, like a banquet all.
Yeah. Um, he's gonna dohis rounds. You're gonna talk to
(26:17):
him, shoot ship with him fora little bit. And then you watched
the movie, which is three hourslong. Still um, and then and
then he's gonna sit in the frontand everybody gets to like raise their hand,
ask a question or whatever. Itold my wife. I was like,
you don't want to get me nothingelse, just give me that.
I'm cool, yeah, because thatto me would be dope. Right.
Alpaccino is a living legend for sure, and still having kids. Shut up
(26:40):
him. He's he's doing that thing. He's gonna have to check that.
DNA was like, I don't thinkit's seventeen for him, and I think
eleven for Robert de Nira. Imean, and Bobby d get down like
that too. Yeah, he justhe just uh announced that he's having a
baby. He too, Frankie Munez. He's actually in the circus too.
(27:07):
He's got like fifteen kids or someshit like that. And they got like
all different. Baby, I couldbe wrong about that. I remember,
I don't know about that. Thatguy's name is Nick Cannon. Actually I
look, oh yeah, names,but that is the way to get to
(27:27):
get the money. Because there wassomebody I'm not gonna name their names that
we had asked and we all know, and they said, oh, well,
if you got a bag, andI'm like, bro, we ain't
got no bag. Two days later, I see somebody that I know that
has a podcast and he's gonna havethe same artists on and I'm like he
(27:53):
paid them, Yeah, pay them, which you know, shout out to
you. You want to pay peopleto do that high cool. It's not
that um, it's not that deepfor me yet, I guess because I
know once this pops, and it'sgoing to pop. Once this pops,
they're gonna wish they were they cameon here and they had that relationship with
(28:14):
us. Yeah, that's like beforeseeing what's going to happen. Yeah,
I'm notating everybody that you know,I wanted to say something slick or something
stupid, you know, request moneyand how much they don't realize. Like
just so y'all know, forgive mebecause if we get big, I'm a
ship talks, but I'm still gonnatalk. This room that we're shooting this
(28:37):
podcast from is temporary. Is no, not even temporary. Well, this
room is temporary now because we're movingto another space, but it's not even
a quarter of the whole entire buildingof studio that we have here. Nope,
And they don't realize you build arelationship with us, you might have
some other access to other things thatwe have in other rooms of this building
(29:00):
that we that release yep, hopefullysoon buy so that way we pay ourselves.
That's all. It's about. Itsrelationships to me. So, like,
you know, I got a coupleinterviews coming up that people want to
interview me because the things I've done. You you think I'm gonna say no
just because I'm at the game.Now, I'm gonna go do it.
(29:21):
But I'm gonna plug our podcast,right, you know what I'm saying.
That's the way I gotta do it. You know this, There's this chick
that my wife knows. She hasI think like a food show. It's
like cooking hip hop or something likethat. So she wants to sit down
and like cook. Well we're interviewing, Like I guess I'm gonna cook with
her or do something like that withher. I was like, yeah,
(29:42):
I'll do it. My wife islike you should. I was like,
just tell me when I got itright, Like I smelled you. That's
how hungry I know you are.You said you said hip hop food show.
My stomach rumbles. I literally justhad plucks out here. I went
to a lot to this. Itold you I was going straight off the
(30:04):
plane went over there, off theboat. Damn that went over there.
We're sitting there, he's sitting thereeating. I'm having my block don't know.
I'm having my eggs with my blankPUNCHI blanchid and just dude comes in,
starts talking crazy and he's sitting nextto my wife. Because you've been
(30:30):
to countertop so you it's not boots, it's not private. Yeah, he's
sitting there. My wife is like, please don't say nothing to my husband.
Please don't saying my husband. Buthe's just talking. Yeah, but
you knew he was on something.So but yeah, just like welcome to
Tampa. Tampa's like that. It'slike, welcome to Tampa. I was
like, good thing. I'm fromNew York. Creatures everywhere literally and I'm
(30:52):
like, yo, when since whendid like cracking eggs go together? Like
because it was like thirty in themorning. Bro, Like this motherfucker's gang
banging on breakfast. For me,it seems like all the hidden Dampa spots,
like good food spots, are alwayssomewhere sketchy as fun. This is
what is it? Three coins diner, No Tampa. Oh. I avoid
(31:14):
going to Tampa as much as possible, but this is act like Tampa's man
far it's all Nebraska. No,it's not for me. It is Abraska
that's on the other side of theworld. But it's safe though, because
it's where all the police et lunch. Yeah. Well, to me,
that wasn't sketchy because it's right byRaymond Jane Stadium. Like it's literally right,
(31:37):
I don't think that's sketchy. Imean, it's not the best area
for me. It's shout out tothe winghouse girls over Tampa, flor Winghouse.
You ever see it on the streetsbehind the back, Yeah, that's
were they all park on their grass. So I'm talking about I'm talking about
the football games park spots. Look, do you know, all right,
(32:00):
let me tell you how much ofa hustler I am right. I'm sorry
we're getting off topic of music,but we're talking about hustling this this.
Uh So we talked about music hustling, We talked about comic con hustling.
Now we're gonna talk about the ultimatehustle. Twisted tea. I told you
we need this to come through.So there's certain twisted teas they don't sell
here in Florida, Right, Yeah, I gotta start drinking though here they're
(32:22):
good. They're really good. Yeah, they're certain twisted teas. They don't
sell here in Florida, but theysell the Maryland. Yeah, like um
BlackBerry blueberry um uh. They gotthe one that's really from Boston, but
they carried it in Maryland for alittle bit. It's called cherry lime aide
um. They got a mango coollott of coming out in the end of
(32:45):
no we should you go? Butso this is what it is. I
swear up and down. I hadto. I had to put it on
my on my stories on Instagram.If you see it, I'm taking them
out of my luggage like I'm pullingbricks out because I had them wrapped in
every thing. I didn't want themto break in my luggage. Bro.
They sell these for um persons notwatching. They sell these for two ninety
(33:10):
nine in Maryland, the different flavors. Yeah, I got this one from
here. I was. I'm sellingthem to people that asked me to bring
it for five to six dollars akid, yea doubling, you know the
money. And I got about threecases in my hotel right now, and
I'm just gonna One person already sentme bread for for for twelve and she
(33:32):
sent me seventy five dollars. Mquick flip. Yeah, I'm telling Twisted
T because they got a watermelon theyhave. They got pineapple, mango,
peach, raspberry, the half andhalf, which is half lemonade, half
the original, the original one whichis a sice tea. Yeah, um
(33:58):
uh? The berry lemon flavor.Huh would it be lemon flavor? What
the original? Yeah, it's justRelA mine. Before this, I like
the raspberry one. But but nowthat I got to hold of the BlackBerry,
the BlackBerry something something different. ButI love me some BlackBerry. I
don't think I've ever had a Twistedteam. Man. I saw that dude
get slapped by that joke. Idon't know if I ever want to touch
(34:21):
one of those. Bro. WhenI tell you, with a lot of
power comes a lot when I tellyou, yeah, how much sugar?
That's kind of look. I waspulling them out. I was like,
yeah, they need to send youa T shirt that I got. The
crazy part is that I got this. I don't know if you saw it
(34:43):
on on Instagram or Facebook, ifyou want to follow me on faith like,
bro, I've been drinking Twisted teaso long. They sent me a
head cut out of myself. Idon't know if they can see it.
They sent me a head cut outof myself. Twisted Team needs to sponsor
us, but I tagged him ineverything, so I'm waiting for that sponsorship.
(35:05):
But I have spoken him about sponsoringmy softball team, So I already
knew the people over there that dothe sponsors. I just gotta get them
to understand that this is gonna bea little different. Yeah true, because
you know what could happen. Wethrow the concert or the showcase and Twisted
Tea winds up being all Bob Wiserand they had me and sponsor of it.
(35:27):
That's how you get it. Yeahtrue, true, But they got
Twisted Tea is just crazy. Theygot a whiskey barrel flavor, they got
yeah everything, it's crazy. Idon't know what play ride like. Probably
that happened, Probably happen whatever.Mango. I always focused a mangoes.
Me and mangoes, I have alove hate relationship. Well I got one
(35:47):
of these mangoes from one of myclients the other day in Saint Pete.
He claims to have the biggest treein Saint pete mango tree and in his
backyard he has a smaller one whichis still fucking huge. But I gotta
mango this from this guy's fucking yard. Wow. And it was like it
was so big that I didn't evenlike slice it. I peeled the whole
ship and then I cut it,sliced it bro in half or not,
(36:10):
just like cut it all off theseat and then cut it into little slices
and stuff. And yo, thebest mango I've ever had. So look
I got I got them all righthere. So it's the original half and
half peach pineapple. Then a lightlike a like a light um tea flavor
(36:30):
which is nasty raspberry. Then theygot blueberry mango BlackBerry. Then this is
the one that's coming out mango,not a mango ladder. Then they got
the sweet cherry line, and thenthe big daddy of them all, the
sweet Tea whiskey nice. I knowtoo much about twisted tea. Yea.
(36:52):
I need to cut the check already, yea. Um, so I think
it showcase will be good. Um, just to get other banners up there,
and there's co sponsors of this showright on the beach. M H.
I think we're reaching on that one. But yeah, he knows exactly
where I'm talking about that, soI'm not even gonna look at him.
(37:15):
He knows exactly where I want todo. Yeah, I'm not too familiar
exactly where live is a dope locationtoo. I don't know if I've ever
been Saint Pete Yep, yep.Where is that right across the Ray Stadium?
I think so. It's somewhere downtown. I think I can't remember it
was. I saw Jake Cole performedthere years ago before he was doing stadiums
(37:37):
and ship Yeah. Wow, itwas dope, bro, it was it
was. It was weird because itwas like a venue stacked in the middle
of like apartment buildings, so itwas like people could look out of their
fucking windows or on there. Ithink there was fire escapes maybe. Yeah.
It was weird because it's like almostreminded me of like New York when
I was in the venue because itwas like so packed and people were like
(38:00):
literally watching Jay Cole perform from theirfucking windows in their house. I was
like, that's dope. She wasclean. Yeah, So we touched upon
it a little bit during the show, like we are moving studios that is
in the works. Within the nexteleven days, we should be in the
new studio, in the new seal. Not next show, but the show
(38:22):
after will probably be in the newstudio studio studio and it's a moudio.
It's uh, it's a lot biggerspace. This one is quite a bit
as well. Um, but thenew space is almost double. So we
got a lot of a lot ofplans in the works right now. We
got a lot of opportunities to youknow, stretch our capabilities into a facet
(38:47):
into a headspace where you know,sky's a limit at that point. Well,
if it's like the one here outsidethe like the Photo Photo studio we
got here, it's gonna be thatopen right, Um, I'll have there's
actually two of those, That's whatI'm saying. So it's but it's open
(39:08):
space. Man. We could dothat. We could do the showcase right
in house. Yeah, honestly,put a little stage probably not no,
probably not uh think you know,um, just where it's uh located and
how it's set up and parking.Yeah, we wouldn't be able to do
that. Yep, I'll be wordyep, and noise are ordinances and that
(39:32):
Port neighborhoods. That's what I wassaying. Though the fight club, you
could definitely do it in the newstudio. Do you you have some beef
to get out, dude? Like, do you have something like that?
Man? You refer to this fightclub. You know, you feel like
you have some anger that you needto work with, work on something like
(39:52):
there's an open market in Saint Petewhere we could just have a bunch of
people come whoop each other's asses andcapitalize on it. You know, if
they're doing it in Vegas, they'redoing it everywhere. Nobody's doing it in
the same How do how do youknow that they're doing in Vegas? They're
not supposed to talk about it.I mean, you know, it's boxing.
We're just gonna call it fight clubon the ground. To have the
(40:13):
h the boxing match of all radioDJs and Central Florida and Tampa Saint Pete
area now, But seriously, ahip hop celebration showcase would be dope as
fuck. Yeah, you know,with it without the fight club, I
think he I think he needs tojoin the gym, like a boxing gym.
Yeah, I've been I've been dyingto get back into a boxing gym.
(40:35):
Man, it's it's been a minute. It's been a minute. They
have there's a couple are on there. Yeah, right where I stay is
when like five minutes down the street. I know them Allfuer's been working in
there too, just because it's sohood, you know, the hood boxing
gyms. And I said something fuckedup, like you don't think that's fucked
up. No, I didn't saythey were like hungry or anything like that.
(40:55):
I just said they work. Youknow, I prefer my boxing je
I used to. I used togo to the Hurricane Sammy gym out on
Tampa and before he passed away,I think they killed him in Puerto Rico.
Right, it is a hurricane Samsome legend. I think you're talking
about hurricane So anyways, um,I went to his gym and there was
(41:16):
no wayc. It was like agarage bay that they converted into a gym,
and it was dope. There wasno ayc. Everything was runned down.
Everything looked like it looked like ifyou stepped on something wrong, you're
gonna need a techting shot, youknow what I mean. But it was
it was tight. You went there, you put the work in, you
sweat as soon as you walked in. Well, yeah, because as they
see, Yeah, and the blackmole probably didn't die that fucking heat.
(41:39):
Man. I don't know how placesget away with no ac. They gotta
have some great circulation. That motherfucker. No, every everything's open. It's
like garage bay doors. Everything wasjust open. But it was so high.
It was just staggering at air somebays, you know what I mean.
I remember the funniest thing that wasa rope and I went to go
climate. He's like, you gottause only your hands, and I'm like,
what if I make it to thetop. He's it. If you
(42:00):
make it to the top one ofyour hands, you're gonna be the champions.
Needless to say, he didn't makeit a quarter of the way.
Damn did you expect to? Iwas hoping to, you know what.
I hope I didn't stick around thatgym very long, going to another gym
because Hurricane Sammy went to Puerto Ricoand got killed. I was gonna say,
(42:20):
because you couldn't make it up therope. I hope I'm saying his
name right, Oh man, ohman. So what you'll think about this
um whole usher? Kiki Palmer herman coming out saying she's a mom,
she should have dressed like that.Who's her man again? Exactly? That's
(42:42):
that was my point. Kiki Palmer'sfine, so agree, I mean,
let her do her. To me, it's if you trust your girl,
what's the problem that? And andlike you alluded and well kind of just
you and he's nobody. So ifyou're a nobody's he's a beta. But
(43:04):
if you're a nobody and your girlis a somebody or a big star,
you know you're gonna catch heat somewheresomehow, because yeah, somebody is gonna
be you know, trying to tracesongs your girls still your girl, because
they're gonna be like, oh,who is he? You know what I
mean? Yeah, you got tobe confident in yourself to do that exactly.
But it's I mean, I'm I'mgonna call him U I'm gonna say
(43:25):
I said beta. But he's justnot in the same class, honestly.
I mean they might they fell inlove actually in during COVID's that's when they
had the baby. Um, andi mean, good for him, he
took advantage of that. I'm notsaying her, I'm saying of the situation
that he was in um because sheprobably wasn't working because of COVID because California
(43:46):
was locked down. So it wasNew York and so it was a lot
of the Northeast and other states,so other than Florida, big cities.
Yeah, so they were shut down. So you know, he felt like
he was right the same class becauseshe wasn't doing right now. I was
working, yeah, right now.Just you know who she was when y'all
(44:06):
got together. You know exactly whatshe was about. Like, she's not
cheating on you, She's just livingher life. I don't see a problem.
I know you got a girl.Would you have a problem. See
I'm not jealous. I would youhave a problem if you went if your
girl went Girl's Night Las Vegas.Usher pulls up her on stage and he's
(44:27):
singing to her and she's dancing withhim with about you. I mean,
I'm not gonna sit there and actlike oh and be like well it was
a lot. A lot of thatwas too because her ass cheeks were out.
Yeah, but I mean, whowas that again? I was a
man? Yeah, I mean,hey, let her live her life,
you know what I'm saying like that, But that's what I'm saying, if
(44:49):
it was your girl, would youhave a problem. It wasn't serious.
I mean now, now if youtook her backstage and brailed her, Yeah,
that's a different story. I'm saying. It's the context of it.
Yeah. Maybe maybe it was somethingdeeper than that, but for what I
see for fake value now, Idon't think it was that serious. And
then if and then to me asbeing you know, a married man,
to me, even if my wifewas Keiky Palmer or whoever, and I
(45:12):
felt some sort of way about it, I'm not putting it on Twitter.
Yeah, I'm gonna talk to herlike, yo, why would you do
that to me? As soon asdone to me. Dudes see a kink
in your armor in your relationship,they won't capitalize and clown the shit out
of you for it. Yeah,I agree, as soon as they see
that weakness that that ain't it.That ain't it. Because because Kenki saw
that too, and now she's gettinga lot of in her ear and dms
(45:37):
like, oh, he just shouldhave stayed stayed off the internet with it.
Yeah, family sho. His familyshould agree. Hey, you know
I didn't feel comfortable with that.Yeah, and you keep that in house
like with your girl, like youknow, but in the same token,
it helped Usher and it killed usyour show. It helped Usher because now
people are like Usher still in Vegas. Uh huh, Right, And I
(46:00):
guarantee all a lot of his show'sgot sold out after that. I mean,
if they weren't already a lot ofYeah, but a lot of shows
got killed by celebrity because the nextcouple of shows, Um, it was
like, sweetie, she's a rapper, right, sweetie. She went with
her man and Usher was walking by. She jumped out of her seat and
sat on her man's lap like,nah, you're not You're not singing to
(46:22):
me like that. Like so it'sit's messing up the flow of him doing
that, which is supposed to bean experience. And if you're a celebrity
and you're in the building, I'mpretty sure he'd rather do that with you
knowing that nothing's gonna happen. Ye. Then Jenny from the block chick,
that's like, oh, so afterthis, we were gonna need something because
(46:42):
you know that's what's gonna happen.So it like hurt but helped him in
the same song or get him onthat group's tip in the back and then
he's gonna have another song burn again, penicillin again. But that's like,
that's just ridiculous. Like I said, men just be men. Did y'all
(47:07):
hear about the uh uh Adam twentytwo things? Yeah, Adam twenty two?
Oh dude. Yeah, so he'slike married to a porn star,
right, She's been doing porn longbefore that, he's a porn star.
Yeah. Well they only did pornexclusively together, except she did she girl
Girl, she did well. Ithink I think they So they had a
(47:28):
podcast and they started like like aporn podcast, and they would start smashing
the guests after the yees during theshow. Well that's all. Yeah,
that's their thing, which is fuckingnuts to me. But anyways, it's
just it's just a wild lifestyle,like I couldn't imagine, that's all.
I'm not saying it's wrong. I'mjust it's just nuts to me. But
anyways, nuts and butts. Anyways, Now see the issue that everybody's making
(47:51):
on the internet, and I justwant to see how y'all feel about it,
because I personally don't think it's abig deal. Is that they recently
got married and then she did ascene with another man, like so exclusively.
Yeah, and now everybody's clowning him. To me, it's like he
knew what she was when he married. Yes, that's her job. Yeah,
it's like I wouldn't you know exactly. That's how I felt about it.
(48:12):
But funny again, there's more contextto that. So they're both porn
stars. They all did it togetherexclusively, and then she would do girl
on girl porn without him. Yeah. Now homeboy that did it was a
black dude. Yet um, itwas the first time she ever had sex
with a black guy. And whenPodcast got wind of it, he asked
(48:37):
her. He was asked, doyou think you pleasured her? Pleasured her
more than her man? And hesaid of course. So he started up.
He started up. Yeah, hegoes, you know, she wasn't
She's not into me the way she'sinto him. He goes, but I
did what I had to do.Yeah, you know whatever, So that's
what stirred the pot. Now AntonioBrown comes in and goes, I got
(49:01):
next because I could do it betterthan him. Oh my god, Antonio
Brown bee wild and for what hehe's in Tampa right now. Yeah.
No, he was just so youremember, Yeah, I see him all
the time on his on his feet, right, Yeah, he goes to
the studio of the same studio.I'm well, I haven't been there in
a while, but you know he'salways in there. Ye ab. But
(49:24):
I mean to man, why youhad to say that about Tom's wife brou
the whole season up bro um,but that whole situation. I mean,
they're in porn, Like what doyou Yeah, that's what I was like,
I thought, I'm not saying they'reless less people, but that's literally
what they do. Like there's adifference between what when like he would would
(49:46):
have three soomes with another female withher with his wife, so him her
sleeping with a dude. I mean, it wasn't behind his back or anything.
It wasn't like it was all acting. Yeah, it was a job.
Yeah, and they probably made it. They probably made a bag off
that too, still making a bag, yeah, off free sales. So
(50:07):
I don't honestly, I think,you know I do. I call it
a non issue And now and nowthey're gonna make more of a bag because
now everybody's talking about it. Yeah, so they're gonna be looking for their
porn that they do together. Orif she has only fans with him.
Yep, that's about the pop orbecause now everybody wants all these real all
these current port lets have only fanslike it should might as well capitalize and
(50:30):
uh and accounts on porn help theymake the money on that too. It's
like being an indie rapper, youknow what I mean, like SoundCloud rappers,
Like I thought I thought we werecalling the Solows SoundCloud rappers. I'm
gonna start the reason for only fans. What well, no, it wasn't.
Yeah, it was actually start supposedto sell people, start selling as
(50:53):
it was supposed to be for exclusivecontent only. That's where it was supposed
to be. Like if you hada stand up special that you didn't want,
you know, sold out there,but you didn't have a Netflix deal,
you could throw it on only fansand people could see your stand up
special for one flat rate or whatever. But I'm about to come up with
(51:13):
my own site for girls that can'tcook. You're gonna call it only pans.
That's good for girls or can't cookshit that should to help them cook.
Yeah, we're gonna call it onlypans. I don't think girls are
going to join that, especially inthis generation. Now, when do we
(51:34):
get girls don't want to cook?When do we get in a generation where
a chicken roll of blunt really well? But you know what I'm you know,
some part of me is kind ofokay with that. If you could
roll that nice and tight, I'llfry the eggs, honey, yeah,
or or I'll just get the maidor the bring another girl. And I
actually enjoyed cooking. I wish Ihave. I used to enjoy cooking until
(51:59):
I marry a chef. Now youcan't compete, right, You realize,
like, damn, I gotta stepmy sh u yo. One of the
first dishes I ever made my wifeand she's in another room, just in
case y'all think I'm talking about her, and BANK pretty sure she could hear
me. Um I made her.I thought I was throwing damn that homemade
meat balls pasta balls. Yo.She ate it and she was like all
(52:22):
right. Of course, years yearslater, I was like, they make
you the homemade meat balls, Ihaven't. She was like, yeah,
as long as you donna make itlike last time. I was like,
whoa. She was like they werea little dry, didn't have enough seasoning
on it. Why didn't you putseasoning in the pasta in the in the
pasta sauce something like, because Igot it out of the kin. She
(52:43):
was like, still got to addseason into it. I was like,
you know what, never again?So you cooked it like a white chicken
cooks chicken, No, I putseasoning on it. But she was like
they were dry. I'm like,bro, but my wife cooked. My
wife went to salt pepper is notseasonal cooks. My wife went to culinary
school for like French studies or somethinglike that. She can she can cook
(53:07):
her ass what a white chicks putin Potato's? Hell it again? Raish?
I hear that like on walling outall the time. You don't want
to be white. When you hearthat, it's hilarious. I can't even
remember the last time I had araisin, to be honest. Yeah,
I see kids with them like alittle the little sunmade boxes, those little
(53:28):
that you put into stuff. Idon't think i've much boxes. No really,
I mean I mean unless you wantto call you know, a live
raisin or great, then yeah Ihad a great. Yeah, totally different.
Sun drives so good, Like whywould you try it out? It's
just just raisins are pretty good.Yeah, they're not bad, but they've
raisin bread. But like you notice, you know there was the white on
(53:50):
a good right Dad. I don'tthink I've ever had raisin bread, but
you had corn bread, right allright? With that bread is good?
God, damn it is. I'mnot just I'm not fighting it. I'm
just saying. I'm saying, areyou listening living the stereotype? Or am
(54:15):
I? Like I think I thinkwe might both. I'm not tell me
more about. Hey, I'm notDominican, but I had those this mornings.
I love. You Know what Idid make for my wife burger,
(54:38):
make the plato the bun ye,and I put a burger in between it
with an egg on it. Yo. Now, I said burger. You
know what I knew I was introuble with When my wife are cooking.
She made me a lobster burger that'slike a homemade burger. And I was
like, oh, make it likeI want a burger, but something specially.
(54:59):
She made me a whole made burger, put the cheese, put the
cheese inside so it melted from theinside out, and then threw a piece
of lobster on it with the eggand then put the bunt on it.
She was like as big as ittwisted tea can. I was like,
dad, what do you want meto do with this? And she was
like a like something you see inScooby Doo. Right. And then another
(55:21):
time I knew that I was introuble with my wife was I was just
like, she was like, hey, you want you want some ice cream?
I was just like, yeah.She goes all right, she goes
into the kitchen. All of asudden, I hear ying ying yang yang.
I'm like, I didn't hear her. No, she said she was
(55:43):
in the kitchen, and I'm like, I'm like, babe, what you
doing. She's like, oh,making my own whipped cream. I was
like, what, you can't justbuy this. My wife makes her own
barbecue sauce, her own hot sauce, her own sauces, taraki sauce.
She she puts it down. Man, shout out to my wife. By
the way, she also got twolevel steps promotion. So I told you
(56:07):
I was gonna write my book Howto Bag a six figure Chick. We
got a little couple more steps togo, and then I'm gonna write the
sequel to my book how to Baga quarter million dollars chick. Be on
look fethers, I got child,I'll do the audible. Everybody thinks I'm
joking when I say I want to. I want to buy. I want
(56:28):
to, I want the audible.And I'm gonna say this, and I'm
a voiceover actor. I'm gonna saythis. I'm gonna say this and tone.
I needs you to send me thisclip just so that way I could
actually put it out there. Peoplethink I'm joking when I say I want
to I want to write a bookon how to bag a six figure chick.
And it's not because I bagged asex figure chick. And it's not
because I'm about to be you know, she's about to be a quarter million
(56:51):
dollar chick a year at her job. It's about understanding what you want as
a grown man and putting your childishways to the side and understanding that if
you believe in a chick the wayyou should, and you treat a chick
the way you should, and notgo off of what your boys think or
go off of you know whatever,like, go what you like. Yep.
(57:13):
I've always liked, you know,thick women. That's been my thing
since shit I could remember, andeverybody in school be like, yo,
you always talking with the fat pitch. I'm like, no, that's what
I like. What do you want? You know, like I need?
You know. I remember with somechicken. Her pelvic bone was on.
I'm like, bro, that hurts. I was so skinny. I was
(57:35):
having sex with this girl. Wealways made a fire. I literally right,
but I remember, like I rememberthe chick. She was not a
chubby chick, but she was like, you know, like average chick.
You know what I'm saying, Likelike a chick that's not thick, but
not a chick that's skinny. Andshe went on this health kick, got
(57:57):
a six pack. I was like, yeah, I'm done. She was
like why. I was like becauseI can't, And she was like why.
I'm like, yo, I wantto. I want to lay down
on like a pillow, not arock. And I literally broke up this
ship because she had a six pack. Yeah I couldn't. No mo,
Yeah, um, that's racist.How that racist? I broke up with
a chick because she cut her head. We can't go to the same barber.
(58:19):
I'm sorry, I'm okay with it. You know, I think you
know I like girls with short hair. I like girls that if she wants
to buzz it, she wants toBritney spirits her shit really absolutely like if
I find you attractive on the inside, don't I don't give a damn what
you do. Well, you canjust know, makeup, you can do.
You can shave, that's kind ofwave your eyebrows, you can.
(58:40):
I mean you gotta shape your armpits because I can't do that was kind
of where I was going. WhatI was saying is get what you like,
yep, you know, don't letother influences. Like I know some
dudes that don't bring the girl aroundbecause there's a shame of what their girl
looks like. That's ridiculous. Butthey're cool with their girl at home,
(59:00):
but they don't bring her out inpublic. You know what I'm saying.
And I'm like, how how areyou gonna be Well, you can be
faithful to a chick like that,but how can you live with yourself as
a person doing something like that,because and then you got the chicks that's
comfortable being in four walls. Dude, she's never seen outside, never met
his friends, never met nothing.It's like link twice if any help.
(59:22):
Yeah, Like, that's what Imean when I literally want to bag it.
I literally want to write a bookon how to bag a six feet
chicken. It's not gonna be along book. It's just man explaining to
men. Bro, you don't haveto go with what society is, go
with what you like. If andand that's a PSA to everybody where.
I'll even take it a step further. If you gay, be gay,
(59:45):
it's fine to be gay. Igot friends that are gay in jail,
very republican whatever. Y'all didn't cassa joke I said, I got friends
in gay that are gay in jail. Is that a joke? Hey,
Jay's face is like what I heardsomebody say, so so foul shit what
(01:00:05):
they say? I said, ifit's in jail, it ain't gay's gay?
So what like that? Live yourlife? Yeah, if you like
it, you like like it?Like it if you bro. I remember
when I used to smoke of sittingdown smoking with this dude and we had
(01:00:28):
two separate blunts. Just to beclear, I'll tell you why. Sounds
like the direction. I'm gonna tellyou why we had two separate blunts.
He was gay. Um, Idon't know where his mouth has been.
He didn't trust my mouth either,But all jokes aside, we're sitting there.
You know you have these I don'tknow tone smokes or not, but
(01:00:49):
I'm gonna say he doesn't you stillsmoke? You know, you get those
little feelings that you start having thesewild conversations like if Mickey's a mouse and
Pluto's a dog, Like what isa goofy? You know what I'm saying,
Like, you know, you justsitting there. So I asked them
sitting there smoking with him? Bro, all these fine women out here like
(01:01:14):
as titties, beautiful brow how manhomeboy took the hills, told him his
blunt got bed at this, smokedout and said, I can't trust nothing
that bleeds for seven days and don'tdie. Oh I say that all the
time. I literally say that everymonth. Every month. Now I think
(01:01:37):
about that being high. He waslike, I can't trust something that don't
believe that bleeds for seven days anddon't die. Truly, but I still
love women. Doesn't mean I trustI don't trust thing. Yeah, crazy,
but hey, yeah, I gota little bit of everything. I
got the music, talk, wegot what we're about. To do um
(01:01:57):
for the next coming seasons of RealPeople Off the Record. Y'all got how
we feel as men. You gotquick conversation. I mean, I think
they got a lot today. Yeahthey did. They did. I think.
Uh. I mean we spoke aboutI don't know if Jay talked that
much, but no, I was, you know, I was absorbing it
all. Yeah, he was giggy. With that being said, ladies and
(01:02:23):
gentlemen, thank you for joining uson Real People Off the Wreck, Twisted
Tea High Adams, Jay Chilling.It's a bitual shout tone death for Florida. Sure,