Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:05):
The whole point is to share on here.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Oh yeah, yeah, that's right, and there's the ship out
of yourself.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
To keep the conversations, you know, the spot, and you're
doing your fun job on what's happening everybody. Welcome back
to another episode of stardom right here on JJ's lounge. Hey,
some big announcements. We've got like sixteen shows running. Uh
(00:33):
my newest one's characters on TikTok, which is actually where
I found my guest today, Big Red. We're doing big things,
we're growing, and it feels good to kind of get
that acknowledgment from people and to give exposure to people
like this guy right here who's killing it on TikTok
right now, Big Red, Man, Hell the hell are you?
Speaker 2 (00:51):
I'm doing well? How are you? Dude? I couldn't.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
I couldn't. I could be happier, but I'm pretty content,
so I don't have to complain.
Speaker 2 (00:59):
As long as you can't complain, I feel like that's
a good thing.
Speaker 1 (01:01):
That's right, man, that's right. Hey, So let's kind of
give everybody like a real brief kind of who you are,
what you do, and then we'll kind of do sort
of like a background on you and how you got
where you are today.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Man, all right, well, my name's Big Red. I do
a lot of tiktoking content creator. I guess you could say,
I go live and I do a character where he's
he's a soul is ginger who collects souls. It's literally
just a hobby thing. It's it's all for entertainment. But yeah,
I collect souls and I put them in a jar.
(01:36):
It's what I do.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
I love, So I love. It's funny that it's actually
more mellow reactions than I expected. Like you still get
a lot of like the feed, like the kickback, but
I am noticing that there's quite a few people that
just get a kick out of it, which is what
you want.
Speaker 2 (01:52):
It's entertainment. It's entertainment. It's all it is. He's entertainment.
I'm not here to take anybody's souls, for real, I
have not some of Warlock or whatever. No no hate
to anybody who who made me Warlock, no hate. But
I'm literally just trying to entertain people, right.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
And we'll get into that because I've got some clips
we're gonna share and stuff like that. And actually, so
I met you on TikTok and then when I met
you kind of in person, you don't look the same
even literally, there's only two things that change. Well, the
glasses aren't there either. It's maybe three things, but that's it,
and you have a whole different like look right. Right,
(02:33):
So you're from Memphis, Tennessee. You're born in eighty three.
I found that from your IMDb page. Yes, what was
life like as a kid growing up? I know you
listen to death metal because I hear it on your tiktoks,
and I doubt your parents were big metal heads.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
Well, so that's actually funny you say that. So growing up,
of course you know I was a redhead, and people
already know usually redheads get picked on when they're younger,
but they don't usually grow up to be a six
foot night giant. Right. But yeah, but what you're saying
something about the music is actually funny because the first
two albums I ever bought, well, they were cassette. Excuse me,
(03:13):
cassette were albums, But I bought uh Voice to Men
and zz Top.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
Okay, what what were they tape cassette or were they seen?
Speaker 2 (03:24):
They were take cassette? I had had a walkman, I'd
sit in my room and I listened to it, and yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
My very first tape cassette was Ace of Basse.
Speaker 2 (03:34):
Wow remember them. Yeah we're old. We did. We're old.
We are old.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
Desiree wants to give you a shout out, says you're amazing.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
So oh, thank you very much.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
Ray.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
I appreciate you. I see you.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
So you and me, because you've only you've got four
years on me, maybe five, but we both have kind
of grown through the advancement of technology growing up, like
through your school year and everything like that. What was
your life like without the social media?
Speaker 2 (04:05):
Uh? I watched TV and movies a lot. I was
all about watching TV and TV shows and stuff like that. Right.
One of my favorite shows to watch was Jerry Springer. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
That makes you feel better about your life watching.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
You actually that. And I just liked seeing wegg out
on TV for some reason. It was fun, you know what.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
That's that's a fair answer. And so I So I
grew up. My grandpa is kind of my father figure,
and he was real big in Abdon Costello. So I
had a lot of like the seasons on DVD of
Abdon Costello. I played a lot of like Nintendo and
Super Nintendo games because that was what was in back then,
you know, right. And besides that, Yeah, I mean I
(04:55):
watch a lot of like live concerts like maybe King Stevie,
Ray Vaughan, Zeppelin, a lot of that that. My dad
would play drunk out of his mind till three in
the morning, blaring, and so I saw a lot of
that kind of stuff.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
Yeah. My dad was a hel like country music and
of course a little bit of classic rock. My mom,
she was super big into the oldies, like uh yeah,
like the Beach Boys and things like that.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
Yeah, and beach I mean, there's nothing wrong with the
Beach Boys.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Man, I had I think I remember at leasting to
the Beach Boys over and over again. What was that?
I can't remember the song right now, but yeah, I
was definitely a fan of whom I was a child.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
Yeah, I kind of so I grew up. My dad
was more like the old school rock. My mom was
very like Christian gospel country uh stuff, And which is
probably why I don't really care for country so much anymore,
because I listened to so much of that growing up.
It's just not my thing, right, And I don't I
don't hate it, don't get don't get me wrong. I
(05:53):
listened to something like Josh Turner and completely be fine
with that. But then as I through high school, I
started getting into middle That's actually kind of where I
became kind of a social person. At what point in
your life did you go, you know what, I like
this heavier shit.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
That was probably around junior high. Junior high. So in school,
like you had the preps and then you had what
was called the freaks back in the day, which was
the big baggy Jinko pants, the skater dudes, all the
rocker kids. Those were the kids I identified with. I
liked the style. I never ever got to own a
(06:31):
pair of Jinko pants, and I'm sad for it, but
like that whole style was awesome. I tried to learn
how to skateboard and be like one of them, but
it wasn't happening. I got a skateboard for Christmas. One
time busted my ass less than one hundred feet from
my house and I never got back on that skateboard.
I was like, I'm done.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
You're also tall as hell, so yeah, were you? Were
you tall back.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
In school at the age of fourteen, I was six
four damn? I do remember, like fifth grade. I think
it was like five four, five six something like that.
So I've always been a tall kid. Like if you want,
like everybody's got their elementary school pictures, like group pictures, right,
I'm always in the back. Yeah, I was never down
(07:15):
front home on the side. I wasn't that tiny little kid.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
No front in front of you is like three kids,
like right in front of you.
Speaker 2 (07:23):
I remember I one of my mom's uh good friends
growing up. They were midwives together, and she also helped
raise me as well because my mom was on and
off pretty much a single mom for our entire childhood. Anyway,
she told me one time, because she knew I was
a very large child, She's like, you are way stronger
than any of these kids, and you need to understand that.
(07:46):
It's like you you can hurt these children very easily.
You need to be nice. For the longest time, I
had to be nice and not hurt anybody.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
That's fair. I mean, you're probably very intimidating to a
lot of these kids.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
I mean I get that, but like the thing that
was I do remember actually I was eight years old.
I was riding my bike down the street and I
saw his kid in his front yard. Eight years old,
you're like, hey, let's play this that the other. Of course,
the kid goes inside to go check his ask his mom.
His mom told him that he wasn't allowed to play
with me because I was an older kid. But we
were asked about how old are you. He's like, I'm eight.
(08:18):
I was like, I'm age. She's like, she said, I
can't play with you. What.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Yeah, that's ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
But I also did get to get a neighborhood swimming
pool at an early age. You were supposed to be
thirteen years old to go by yourself. I was eight
by myself because you were so tall. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
Hey, for everybody that's tuning in, I see cell of
you up here, feel free to throw in some chats
if they're youngly questions for me. So for me, like
did you like mow yards and stuff as a kid
and make a little bit extra cash?
Speaker 2 (08:48):
Well, I didn't do it to make cash. I do
it because I was told to. I never really had
any side jobs growing up. Very first job I had,
I never didn't decide to other or whatever. Moon launch.
I was a server at Steak and Shake.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
Steak and Shake, so you made like three dollars nineteen cents.
Speaker 2 (09:13):
Well, I think it was more like two fifteen an
hour because then I was a server and then I
made tips which were garbage.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
Yeah, yeah, allthough the food's decent if you don't mind
being on the ship or half an hour later.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Right right, those steak burgers are fired.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
They are good. If we don't. We have a couple
in Kansas City, so if I'm ember near one, I'll
stop and get a six dollars burger and fries. So
where did your career kind of start out out of
high school? I mean, what would you do?
Speaker 2 (09:50):
So I was a server for the longest time, off
and on. Of course I went around at service industry
jobs like drive through and working kitchenes and stuff. I
worked in a buffet for the longest time as a
as a what was it called a display chef, and
I was the guy behind the glad hand you a
piece of steak and shit like that. But I was dressed.
(10:11):
I had to dress and a red chef's jacket and
a black chef's hat. It was ridiculous. But anyways, after
about until about twenty four years old, I was doing
service industry stuff. I was serving tables and then one
day I just got so tired of being treated by
like crap by customers, because like literally, you go there
(10:32):
and you try to, you know, help these people, out
feed them and all this stuff, but something goes wrong,
you get blamed for it, especially when you're a server.
And I had so many people treat me like shit.
I was I'm with it. I was done. I was like,
you know what, I'm gonna go be a bouncer at
a titty bar. My day off was that next day.
I walked in. I was like, Hi, are y'all hiring
(10:55):
for any bouncers. The girl, the girl of door, was like, oh,
she went and got a manager and she walked down.
She's like, she's like, I already felt out the occasion.
She was looking at it. She's like, how tall are you?
I was like six nights. You wrote down sixty nine,
circled it three times. She's like, when can you start?
(11:16):
I was like, I guest start tonight. You need me too,
She's like seven o'clock, we're all black. It was over
with and that started my bouncing career.
Speaker 1 (11:25):
Yeah, and how long did you do that?
Speaker 2 (11:29):
I'm still doing security. I'm not necessarily a bouncer anymore.
Bouncer and cliss I'm working a nightclub and throwing people
out and stuff like that. I still do armed and
unarmed security. My unarmed security is mostly now working concerts
and things like that. Checking takes patting people down, stuff
like that, and then the armed security side of it
(11:50):
I do, like uh, I work parking lots to make
sure cars don't get broken into and things like that.
Because I live here in Memphis, Tennessee, where I don't
know if many people really know this are crime is
incredibly high. Now it's getting better from what they say
with the numbers or whatever. I don't know, it's still shitty.
But anyways, Uh yeah, I basically protect people's cars and
parking lots and make sure uh stap gets back and
(12:12):
forth to their car without betting carjacked or that's awesome.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
There's a rocker. His name's Awesome Ray Ray. He lives
in DC and he does that, but like private people
hire him, like business corporate CEOs that are in town
will hire him to kind of escort him around.
Speaker 2 (12:27):
Well, at the same time, I'm licensed and insured in
the state Tennis well not sure I have licensed and
certified and state Tennessee to do any private security. So
if anybody wants to hire me, I'm I'm hirable freelance.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
That's awesome, that's fantastic. None of this, none of this
is related to what you're doing right this right now
from what I've seen. So where did the line go
to where you're like, okay, I'm going to start acting?
Speaker 2 (12:55):
Okay? So the acting thing was on and off really
now that that started early in my childhood, well not
really early, well maybe early of course, you know, growing
up you're in school plays and things like that, and
everybody when I was a teenager, I was growing up
a lot of people there that I keep telling people
all this all the time because they're freaking out about
me trying to take people's souls. I actually grew up
(13:18):
in a Christian household, and I went to Sunday school
and and and and uh the Sunday school, we Wenesday
night church, Sunday Night Church. I went to all that
shit all throughout my childhood. And I had to go,
like my mother was adamant about you need to go
to church every Sunday with me. Yeah. So uh, then
that fell into the reason I'm bringing that up. That
fell into uh, me doing church plays. A matter of fact,
(13:39):
there was a few plays where one was called Heaven's
Gates Hell's Flames. I played a drug dealer. That's fun.
That was actually pretty fun though because it was a
little on the spooky side because like my name was
David drug dealer and I had a special microphone and
at the very end I set a certain line but
they changed, but they have voice changing on it to
where it made seven. Oh. I love doing that. That
(14:02):
was awesome, like just speaking of your microphone and also
your oh like this And.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
I was like, oh, well and you've I mean, which
people will see here in a little bit on your clips,
but you can alter your voice.
Speaker 2 (14:12):
You've done some I can't today today is a little shaky.
I can do certain voices today, but like like I said,
I'm getting over being sick. But yeah, I uh. That
comes from that. That really comes from being a goofy
kid growing up and just being silly and meeting discovering
things about what I can do with my voice and
things I can say, and you know, just being silly
(14:33):
and I just learned how to do admit. Okay, So
the acting thing like I did, I did the acting
thing and then when I was younger. Also, I started
doing hounting houses. Like well, I was saying about same
age's fourteen years old. Yeah. I was volunteering at our
local zoo Memphis, the Memphisuit, and they were doing Zubu
was called Zubu when they had a little haunted house
and like trick or treeing and and uh scarecrow making contests,
(14:56):
cost and contest face painting whatever and uh yeah. So
uh they were like, oh, we need help with the
hunted house. You want to come hell scared that I
did it. I did so well that year they asked
me to come back and help run it. The next
year They're like, can you help run it, like I
give us your opinion about where to put people and
what to do. I was like, yes, absolutely. This is
my second year doing anything in the house, and they
(15:17):
wanted me to help run it. I did so well
that year they got rid of the haunt house and
didn't do it anymore because to me, parents were complaining
about how much their kids were crying. That isn't a
very much true story.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
Okay, that's that's funny, and it's kind of the point.
That's kind of the point. I'm just letting you guys
know that don't bring your kids to a haunted house
if you don't expect them to cry.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
He said it, not me. I mean, y'all, y'all, y'all
want to pay twenty five dollars and bring your kid
inside and have us make him cry, then you have
to deal with their nightmares and all that shit going home.
That's what I mean. That's your parenting. I'm hired to
do a job, and that's scaring the shit out people. Now, mind,
I want to tell people right now, if you ever
come to the Haunting House with your kid, I'm not
gonna try a scary kid. If you walk up and
he's meet me like up to my knee, I'm not
(16:06):
gonna try it scary. I'm away at it. That's about it.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
Is this some of the stuff that you did right here?
Speaker 2 (16:14):
That is one of my earlier characters. Uh So, I
have a character named Slash that I do. It's actually
a character of mine, and this is one of the
earlier versions of him. So basically I had put this
that mask I have over my head is actually just
a pillowcase of holes in it. That's all it is. Well,
I actually I had my mom round it out my
(16:35):
mom sos and stuff like that, so I was like, mom,
can you do this for me? And she rounded out
the head. So it's basically like an executioner mask. And
what's funny about this picture, but like they were doing
a certain camera or whatever, and then they expected to
come out like this. But I had white contacts in
with my eyes painted black and then the black hood
over it. So when we took this picture, that's exactly
(16:58):
what it looked like. They were like, holy shit, you know,
it's good.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
It's a good picture. I got a couple more here.
I think there's a there's a zomb I'm trying to
find a way to make this tour looks better. Let's
see if we can. It doesn't really work, Bearwood. Mean,
these are some new let's see here now I really
don't work. There's really not a way to make it
look better.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
Right, Well, this one right here, this is from a
more recent movie that I did. It's called Zombies in
the Hood. It's actually I have no idea when it's
going to be let go. I've actually just talked to
the director recently and apparently things are moving really really
slow and editing process. So anyways, the Yeah, I did
a zombie movie recently. It's going to be coming out soon.
It's going to called Zombies in the Hood. It's like
(17:43):
the movie Friday meets the Walking Dead, and the premise
to it is that a certain strain of flowers turning
people into zombies and play a big zombie.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
That's actually pretty comical. A strain of flowers. Yeah, there's
so many out there, and there's so many zombie films
out there, it's insane.
Speaker 2 (18:06):
Right right, But like that, that sounds like a fresh
premise to me, though, Like I've never heard of, Like
I haven't marijuanas turned people to the zombies.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
What I think it'd be funny if it was that
marijuana was a cure so people who were stoners didn't
right get infected. Oh yeah, let's see what else you
got here, got a few few more costumes. Here you
are with somebody.
Speaker 2 (18:29):
So that's that's actually I went to a comic con.
So that's my character Slash that I do. That I
have a movie written about that I'm trying to actually
have made. The guy insteading next to me, his name
is Robert Nukes. He was a house of a thousand corpses,
as well as a few other movies. He's one of them.
Are there, Joe, You've seen a house on a thousand corpses? Yes?
(18:50):
Oh yeah, Okay. Do you remember when they got pulled,
when they got broken down and the guy and the
bear hat towed the car away that got the bear hat?
Speaker 1 (19:00):
Okay, and that was that, like a monster con or
something of that.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
I think this wasnic Tennessee. Yes. I actually got to
meet a few people.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
There who are some of the bigger names that you've met.
Speaker 2 (19:13):
I don't know if you have this picture with you,
but I met the leather I met the leather Face
from Texas chainsaw Master of two thousand and three and
got a professional picture taken with him.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
Is that on your Instagram?
Speaker 2 (19:26):
It is on my Instagram.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
I will find it right now.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
Yep, is on my Instagram. That was one of the
coolest moments ever. I got to do my character and
face off, literally face off with an actual leather face,
a movie leather face. I just don't got too dress
his leather face a really good leather face costume. It
was a forget his fucking name. He's actually so technically
(19:49):
he's the leather face that never was because remember the
two thousand and three uh text chaseaw Master. You're in
the scene where he due gets hit with a sledgehammer
and gets dragged to behind the way. Yeah, that's him. Yep.
That is the actor that played uh.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
Leather Face badass man.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
Yep, that is and I got the face off him
as my character, which is fucking awesome, like right, like,
like dude, it was actually really fun because like, okay,
so you've seen Friday the thirteenth, right, yep, the actor
that played Tommy Jarvis was there.
Speaker 1 (20:23):
Oh sweet man, that's awesome.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
What was really really funny. Tommy Jarvis kept on trying
to incite a fight between me and the leather Face actor.
He's like, you guys should fight, you guys should fight.
At one point, I was walking around the collin I
was walking by the table. All of a sudden, behind
that here, I'm gonna kick your ass. I'm like what.
I look around and the actor that plays leather Faces
(20:44):
just sitting there laughing. I'm like, what's going on? He
points to the fucking curtain and Tommy Jarvis is like, look,
that guy was awesome. That guy was awesome.
Speaker 1 (20:57):
It's funny because we talked about these films and stuff.
Did you grow up a lot of horror for films?
Speaker 2 (21:03):
Yeah, I lost, I watched a few. I have a
lot of Freddy Krueger nightmares. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
I'm actually working on a parody film called Neighbor on
Elm Street, And instead of it being a Freddy Krueger,
It's going to be a Karen, and Karen's gonna be
the h o A of the neighbor, same neighborhood. Yes,
so that's actually I actually got a big name comedian
out of Indiana and she's gonna play the Karen. It's
(21:31):
gonna be good. It will be my first feature film.
I'm pretty excited about it. Yeah, right on, man, right on?
Speaker 2 (21:38):
What else?
Speaker 1 (21:39):
I think I got one or two more pictures here?
Oh yeah, this one was curious about. Right here. That
girl is so cute, man, she's all I got covered
with blood in a little like ballerina dress.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
Right right, So, I forget the name of the movie.
So a movie came out recently, I forget the exact
name of it where there's a little girl that's a vampire.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Yeah, Abigail, Abigail.
Speaker 2 (22:01):
There you go there, So this little girl right here,
So remember me telling you I was on another podcast
similar to this one that was lam on YouTube and
all that kind of stuff. So that was their daughter,
the person who runs their one of the members of
their podcast. That was their daughter. They were at the
Monster con right and I was taking pictures and they
(22:21):
were right next to me. I was like, Hey, is
there any possible way, like I can take a picture
with her? And they're like yeah, So I had like
she tried to grab my whole hand, but I wanted
to make it better. I mean, if you can see
it real close, I had just grabbed my pinky and
it was just an awesome fucking picture.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
I love that was was she scared?
Speaker 2 (22:42):
No, No, that little girl loves everything horror. That little
girl was actually judged costume contests at horror cons before.
Speaker 1 (22:51):
That girl was like, she's seven years old.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
That girl's like six.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
That's impressive.
Speaker 2 (22:57):
Man.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
I've never been any like the cons, like none of
none of the monster cons or any of that stuff.
But I hear like so much. There are a lot
of Even if you're not into this stuff, it's fun
to just go.
Speaker 2 (23:09):
Right oh no. And that was actually my very first
con ever. I always wanted to go to a con
and I've seen videos of people going to cons and
costume and stuff like that. I was like, man, way
do they get a load of me? And sure enough,
when I show up at full costume, people will like
especially when you be a six foot nine giant. Yes,
people are like, what the fuck? Who is that? Guy?
(23:35):
Like she thinks it's hilarious.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
How tall is your wife?
Speaker 2 (23:41):
Five six?
Speaker 1 (23:42):
Okay, so short for you. My wife's like five one
five two and I'm five ten, and so to me,
she's short. My my aunt is six four, so I
do have and my dad sixty six, his brother there's
six eight, and then I have a cousin that's that's
(24:03):
seven feet exactly. Oh wow, So my dad's side's tall,
my mom's side short. I got kind of slapped right
in the middle there. So I got like the size
fourteen shoes, So I mean I've got part of the
height there.
Speaker 2 (24:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:18):
And see I'm narrow. It's hard for me to find
shoes because my feet are so narrow.
Speaker 2 (24:22):
It's hard for my fears are wise.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
I think I'd rather my feet be wide, right, I
fall upstairs. I'm so clumsy man.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
Right, Oh yeah, I'm saying, especially while as a teenager,
and still growing. I was very uncoordinated, but my stepfather
used to say that it looked like I looked like
a baby giraffe trying to run.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
Yeah, that's good. So before we start getting into the well,
let's get into the film that you did first. But
you said you've talked about on your TikTok lives that
you're like a cancer survivor. So what's kind of the
story behind that.
Speaker 2 (25:02):
Man, So twenty sixteen, I was diagnosed with cancer in August. Said, no,
it's late July twenty sixteen. I was so for three
days in a row, I was experiencing a side pain
in my side, and you know, I was getting gradually worse.
And the third day it got so bad that every
(25:24):
time I had haled it was hurting. So I was like, okay,
I didn't go to the emergency room. And I went
to the emergency room. I had this one doctor telling me,
it's like, oh, you got you're a bouncer. You have
a broken rib. You got into a fight, you got
broken rib. I was like, I didn't get into a fight,
and yes, I'm a bouncer. You're absolutely right. But I
wouldn't know if I broke my rib the moment I
got to with a fight. You know what I'm saying, right,
that didn't happen. It's like, oh, but we're going to
(25:45):
some rex X rays. It's a blood test. You'll be
blah blah blah blah and we'll send you home. I
was like, okay, fine, they did the test, the doctor
came back to me. I was like, well, you don't
have a broken rib, but I want to do some
more tests. Okay, okay, fine. That was the last time
I saw that doctor. About an hour later, I have
(26:06):
this lady walking into me into the room and she
starts talking to me about cancer treatment options. I was like, man,
what do you what do you mean cancer treatment office?
Why are you Why are you talking about can't treatment
officers right now? She's like, oh, the doctor didn't tell you.
There's a very good chance you have a cute myeloblastic leukemia.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
Like so, do you even know what that was?
Speaker 2 (26:26):
As the doctor, that doctor was supposed to tell me
left it for the day.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
What the hell?
Speaker 2 (26:35):
What the hell? Man? If I if I knew that
doctor's name, I'd be putting his ass on blast the blast.
But I don't know his name. He was some little
short foreign dude. I'm not I'm not saying any negative
about for people. I'm just describing him as as a person.
Uh he had some sort of accident. I don't know.
I don't know, but anyways, uh So, the very first
(26:57):
time I had cancer, like I said, a cute myleoblastic look,
is a cancer of the blood and bone. It's in
the blood bone. There's no tubers, there's no stages. It's
just in there. It's not anything I did in my life.
It was literally luckily and a horrible term for it.
It was a luck of the draw. It just it
just happened. There was no avoiding it. So I got
(27:20):
the cancer. I went through chemotherapy within a month. Within
one month, I was one hundred percent cancer free. But
cancer treatments are kind of like antibiotics. You can't just
take them until the cancer is gone and then quit.
You have to go through the entire process, which I did.
Was a total about five or six months worth of
cancer treatments, and then once I was done with that,
(27:41):
I was free. You know, I thought I was good
to go. I now, So when I first got diagnosed,
it was had an apartment downtown Memphis, had I had
my life figured out. I was on my own, paying
my home bills. I didn't even have a roommate. I
didn't need a roommate. Cancer came. I couldn't work anymore.
I had to go back to my mom's house, which
is kind humiliating, but at the same time, I was
(28:03):
a cancer patient. I couldn't fucking help it, you know
what I'm saying. Yeah, man, And so like, once I
was cancer free and all of this stuff, I was
ready to get at my mom's house. I was getting
everything weired up. I had things set up when I
was fixing and start, you know, looking for an apartment.
I had got me a dog, this, that and the other.
And then October of twenty seventeen, I got cancer again.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
Same kind or different cancer.
Speaker 2 (28:28):
Same fucking kind, same fucking kind. So what happened was
like I was going to my regular on colleges all
the time, and he, you know, he always does these
tests to make sure that my sickness isn't coming back
or anything like that, and sure enough the tests were
showing that it was coming back. Yeah, I need to
go back into treatment. Now. I did the same treatment
(28:48):
again this time, but the next time it was different
after I did that cancer treatment, that very fast final
keep of therapy. So the little thing about the chemo
therapy I do is called kai dek keebo therapy. It
wasn't like gold chemo therapy. You didn't show up somewhere,
get your chemo therapy and go the fuck home. I
had to stay at a hospital for a week to
do order to get my chemo therapy. The way it
(29:09):
worked is I would show up that day, they will
give me chemo therapy day off, the next day they
give me chemo therapy day off, and the last day
they give me chemo therapy, and then it would set
me home. And then if if, if by some reason,
I would get sick, because what happens is when you
go through that, it took my immune system out every
fucking time. Yeah, what was called neutropenic, which means I
(29:30):
had zero immune system. I was basically Yeah, I was
basically like a newborn baby. Like you know how well
you get a new newborn child and you don't want
anybody around it because it is possible. Germany, they have
they will get the baby will get it. Yes, but
this was back before COVID. Uh, So if I was neutropenic.
Anytime I went anywhere, I had to wear mask and gloves. Yeah. So,
(29:53):
after all my cancer experiences, when twenty twenty came up
and people were like I have to wear a mask,
I was like, I'm used to this shit.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
Whatever, right many.
Speaker 2 (30:03):
So I got a stem cell transplant after the second
treatment because what the stim cell transplant was supposed to do,
it was supposed to keep the cancer from coming back.
Cours is my second time, so we don't know. That
didn't work, but stem cell transplant. So you know how
I told you your immune system get knocked out from
from chemotherapy. Right now, immune system gets knocked out from
about a week with a queue therapy, and you get
(30:26):
a stem cell transplant knocks out of your immune system
for a tire fucking year. So for one single year,
I had no immune system. I could not eat raw vegetables.
Any meat I cooked had to be cooked all the
way through. If I ate vegetables, they had to be
cooked all the way through. I was My dogger advised
me from going anywhere. They didn't want me to go
(30:47):
to movie theaters. He didn't want me to go to
the grocery stores, churches, super bowl parties, any any kind
of parties whatsoever. He he didn't want me going swimming
it outdoor lakes and pools. Period. Uh So I basically
lived my life life as the boy in the bubble
for about a year. I got all the other side
of that. And then the third time I got diagnosed.
(31:08):
Uh yeah, I went in there and did that ship
and uh what what cause? What?
Speaker 1 (31:14):
What was? What was causing it?
Speaker 2 (31:16):
Did you do that? Now? Damn it?
Speaker 1 (31:22):
You can get it again up?
Speaker 2 (31:25):
So uh this time around I was doing Uh. This
time around it was actually very different because so a
q bioblastic leukemia, it doesn't normally mistasticize in the brain.
This time, this time it did. Uh at the same time,
usually when somebody gets a stem cell transplant, after about
five or six years, they're usually declared and they don't
(31:46):
have a repeat. Right, So once again, luck of the
fucking draw cancer again. And uh yeah, I just went
through treatments again. At first, they were like, oh, so
we could either put this whort inside your head in
your head, or we can give you spinal injections every
single time to get treatment. Now I was thinking to myself, O,
(32:08):
so one single implant in the head they'll take you
out when they're done, and I don't have to get
spial injections. Cool, let's just do the But that's why
I got the scar right here. Yeah, so, uh it's
a little port. They put it in top of your
head and literally to give me Kyoba therapy. They was
sticking needle in it and ject the chemotherapy because remember
it fantasticized my brain. They were trying to get the
(32:28):
chemotherapy right where the cancer was so that way it
didn't have to further harm any other part of my body. Ye,
luck of the draw, I got a fucking stab infection
of the bioport after about two or three fucking uh
two or three treatment.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
At this point, I'm not surprised. I'm just saying, oh, yeah, we.
Speaker 2 (32:47):
Gotta take this thing out. It's infected. And then where
we're going to do the spile injections? Right, I was like, well,
so you need to tell me. I could have just
said spinal injections and I had this fucking hole in
my head. Great, wonderful anyways, so I I went through it,
and yeah, I ever said, well, I think my last
treatment was in June of this past year, and I
(33:07):
have been medically proven to be cancer free since last July.
Speaker 1 (33:13):
Not even a full year. Nope, it's good though.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
Yeah, I'm here. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
So do you have like a diet that you have
to follow to kind of help?
Speaker 2 (33:22):
No, No, not necessarily, just just try to eat vegetables
and not eat like complete shit, nothing but dulls and
easy only alcohol things like that thing. Yeah, well, alcohol,
alcohol is a catalyst for for cancers and things like that.
At the same time, I have a family history of alcoholism,
and I try to moderate as much as I can
(33:44):
because I you know, yeah, it's not good for me.
Speaker 1 (33:47):
Even for me, like I don't mind having two or
three drinks here, you know, a couple of nights a week,
But I'm not the kind of guy that's like, here's
a thirty pack. Let's see how many I get chugged before.
Speaker 2 (33:55):
I don't know about thirty pack. Twelve pack. Sure, thirty pack.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
Won't pack last will be like three or four weeks,
two or three hours. So you've cut back. We're good,
all right?
Speaker 2 (34:09):
Yeah? Right, So.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
You if you look at your IMDb and like even
your your social media platforms, they're not that old. They're
only a few years old. Your first film was this
uh cub cubic zirconia is that correct? Or was there
one before that? Or was your name just done something
that wasn't okay.
Speaker 2 (34:34):
So the very first acting job I did, I did
a small part in an independent film that never saw
the light of day because the director missed a deadline
on his main actor who had contract contracted U obligations
with another film at a certain date. So he completely
revamped the whole thing and redid it. That stillency like day.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
So I hear that's actually common. I hear a lot
of films like.
Speaker 2 (35:01):
They just don't make it happens. It happens. There are
a lot of films that one they get filmed and
they all in financial editing, or two they get filmed,
or they get halfway filmed and then, like I said,
they didn't meet certain deadlines and then it just fell
out of it. Shit happens, especially with the micro budget
independent film industry when people are funding, you know, their
(35:22):
films themselves. But I will say that the first acting
job I did, like actual acting job I did, I
did some background work in a show called Young Rock.
I literally just was a background actor. I'd actual lines.
I didn't speak I was in the background, just.
Speaker 1 (35:38):
A guy in the background. Yeah right, so Cubic sircroonia.
Speaker 2 (35:43):
How did you?
Speaker 1 (35:44):
How did you land this man?
Speaker 2 (35:46):
So the way I actually landed this, I have a
good buddy of mine, so a lot of people might know.
He's actually a pretty TikTok famous uh. My buddy Keenan Walker.
He's the Peabody duck master at the Peabody Hotel here
at Memphis, Tennessee. I don't know you are seeing the
do with the guy that walks the ducks down to
the fountain inside the hotel. But he's a buddy of mine.
He's but he's a he's a local uh celebrity as
(36:08):
well as an actual actor. He's been a few movies itself.
And he tagged me and the uh the casting call
for this and there was a certain part that said
that needed a light intimidating male between the ages of
thirty to forty five.
Speaker 1 (36:25):
And I was like, he was targeting you.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
I was like, this guy right here, and so I
sent in now a little uh what I was required
to do a monologue where I had a scene from
a movie. So I acted seen him from a thousand
houses of a thousand corpses were Oh, is just sitting
there cussing at the cheerleaders. Tell him how they are
pieces of shit and he was, So that's exactly what
I said to him, Like, met like nothing, pieces of it.
(36:50):
You're just manufactured pieces of shit of society, mechanical bullshit,
blah blah blah. And that's what I said to him.
He was like, Yeah, you're hired.
Speaker 1 (36:59):
That's perfect man, that's great. Well, let's before we kind
of talk about the storyline, let's go and play the trailer.
As I said, all right, I'm gonna have to remove
us from the screen, so just bear with moving.
Speaker 2 (37:28):
I worked over last night and got dispatched out to
Tamla's sister house. She wanted to follow a missing person
report on Tamla and her two kids.
Speaker 3 (37:39):
After further investigation and the body of Tamiladning was located deceased.
Speaker 2 (37:49):
Netlie Bret TBI, domestic history, extensive bastic inten numerous arrests.
Speaker 1 (37:56):
Tamila is not the same, pretend like she is.
Speaker 2 (38:01):
I'm telling you there is something wrong.
Speaker 1 (38:35):
Let's scusse back.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
There we go.
Speaker 1 (38:42):
Hell of a trailer man. So is this something that
took months and months to put together.
Speaker 2 (38:48):
Well, when it comes to the entire movie, guest very much.
So I was known as a day extra. I was
literally there one day issue all my scenes. Now it
took a couple two or three hours to get our
scenes done what we needed to do. But yeah, man,
it was uh it was fun. It was absolutely fun.
It's so it's so nerve wracking to wait for the
(39:11):
movie to finally come out. Was you like because I
filmed this movie, I want to say it was like
about may Or. So I was. I was actually actually
had to go get cancer treatment two days after the shooting.
I had literally two days after the shooting, I went
and got a spinal truck the spile injection. So that
tells you where I was, my cancer journey would have happened.
So anyway, so it came out I think September, and
(39:34):
it was premiered in September and a movie theater in Jackson, Tennessee.
And uh yeah, I think it started streaming this past November.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
All right, man, yeah, I saw it. I've seen it
on Prime. I need to watch it. It's three bucks.
I'll just pay for it and watch it. It's not
that much like you were saying, earlier. But it looks
it looks decent quality too. Like you see a lot
of like to B and a lot of these platforms
they released films and some of them are so low budget,
like it's like I could, I could do a better job,
(40:03):
and they're still out there, which makes me kind of
want to do it.
Speaker 2 (40:07):
And what's the key to having a good independent film
is your actors. If your actors are good, if they're prepared,
if they remember their lines and they actually act instead
of his reciting lines, you will have a good movie.
Speaker 1 (40:22):
Right, And that's a big part of it. And did
you know some of the cast and crew on there,
besides your buddy.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
That actually there was one certain person. He plays the
husband of the sister of the mother that's missing in
the movie, the chick that's missing her sister's husband. That's
what he plays. And he's actually it was funny because
I didn't know he was only gonna be in the film.
(40:48):
I showed him for a script read right. We showed
him at this piece of place for the script read right. Now.
We had a private room or whatever, and he walks in.
I'll work security with him. We were conscious together and
he walks in I was like, what are you doing here?
He's like trying to be a movie What are you
doing here? I was like, I am in a movie.
Speaker 1 (41:08):
Oh I am. I am part of this. I'm not
trying to be part of that. Hell. Yeah, man, did
you have any like behind the scenes instances that were
like just stood out to you that you still remember now?
I always like to ask actors of those questions because
it's kind of funny.
Speaker 2 (41:26):
So I got a character. I work in a haunted house.
I specialized, and I'm professional at making people feel uneasy.
I got a deep character. I like. So we were
at this house on Spining. I started going through my
(41:46):
head like trying to be the person I was supposed
to be, Like I don't want these people here. This
is my property. If you don't leave, you're not going
to leave. Yeah, and a lot of the thoughts are
going in my head. But I was standing away from everybody,
just sitting there, like you see in the preview meet
with the shovel. I had to shovel in front of me.
I was leaning on it. Just I saw staring at
(42:14):
the director's wife and she she was like over there
and there by standing around. He's like She's like, why
is he looking at me like that? And director Darn
Loggers looks around and looked at me. He's like, he's
a character because that's and that's and that's what I
do because like, uh, one of my inspirations when it
(42:39):
comes to acting, Kine Hauter, Kate Hunter, he's uh, he's
the guy who plays Jason Boor. He's the most huh
one of you. I know it's one of the worst ones,
but was it Jason Takes Manhattan? Yeah, he was in
a few other other ones. I forget the exact ones
he was in, but he was one of the main
Jason Voorde he's out of all the series, okay. And
(43:03):
whenever he was on set, he would get full megap,
full character and he would stay that way. And he
was staying character. He would talk to anybody, he would
associate with anybody. If anybody asked him any questions, he
would say, ship to him. And anytime I get into
character and I and I and I go to the
Haunted House. Once I put my mask on, I'm not
(43:24):
that I'm not meaning anymore, but kind of like when
I do my tiktoks moment, like usually I put my
contacts in, do my eyes and get dressed, and get
my once I put my teeth in that once my teeth,
and I'm not I'm not meaning more. That's that's my behalf.
I love.
Speaker 1 (43:42):
I love the comments. Man, They're so repetitive. You can
tell who watches your lives and who just found you right.
Speaker 2 (43:50):
And I was to actually have one of my followers
her famous sparkle farts. Uh. She actually while she's in
that she's one of my moderators. She keeps track of
how many times you see people ask me, are those
teeth real? I think it's like three hundred, three hundred
and sixty something.
Speaker 1 (44:07):
Well, and so the thing is that people do do
that nowadays they sharpen their teeth, So yeah, they do.
Speaker 2 (44:14):
And I get it and I get it, and there's
a lot of times where I don't want. I try
not to break character while I'm doing my things. So
it's like, do you really want to know, go go
check my profile or before.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
We get into big red, Yes, what is your stance
on social media?
Speaker 2 (44:30):
For me?
Speaker 1 (44:31):
Because I don't I personally I hate it. I love
it because it helps with the promotion of what I do.
And I've actually met and networked with a lot of people.
But I hate how in order to grow you have
to utilize it. So if you're not doing it, then
there's it doesn't go anywhere, you know, kind of get
sucked into it almost right, So don't put your stance
(44:52):
on it.
Speaker 2 (44:53):
So social media. Actually, so the reason I get out
and I do the thing that I do is actually
comes from meat spending so much fucking time in hospitals
and not being able to leave and the only window
I had to the outside of world, the only real
entertainment I had because the TV and the fucking hospitals
was absolutely shiites. I'm gonna tell you that. Now I
(45:16):
can only watch Steve Wilkos so many times, Dude, I
like I watch him.
Speaker 1 (45:21):
I watch his lives on TikTok.
Speaker 2 (45:22):
Sometimes I'm I'm so tired of watching Doctor Phil. I
don't want to watch Doctor Phil. I don't want to
watch Friends, I don't want to watch Married with Children.
I don't want any of that ship ever again. But anyway,
where were we at? Where were we at? Replaying me?
Speaker 1 (45:34):
Like we're talking about social media and how you fixed so.
Speaker 2 (45:39):
I was stuck in this hospital and like there's a
certain content creator named Charlie Classic. I don't know if
you are know who he is.
Speaker 1 (45:46):
Uh, he's he's sounds familiar.
Speaker 2 (45:49):
He's an off the wall kind of risk a type
content creator, but he's he's he's a real code dude.
He like the whole thing he put out there was
like he just tried to make people's day better. And
that's really kind of what he did for me while
I was in the hospital, because I always put out
funny content and made me laugh. It was entertaining and saying.
Because a lot of his content was on Snapchat. It
wasn't on TikTok, it was on snap chest time, and
(46:10):
I would just like comment on some of his videos
and he would respond to me. I'm like, oh my god,
trying to talk to me. And I actually got to
meet him a few times, and I did tell him
exactly what he meant me, because like, let's just say,
when you're stuck in the hospital by yourself and without
being too specific. I also had to deal with uh
at the time though, the first time I got diagnosed
(46:31):
with cancer, I had a girlfriend at the time. While
I was in the hospital fighting cancer, she cheated on
me with multiple people.
Speaker 1 (46:38):
Oh that's the best.
Speaker 2 (46:39):
Oh oh, she took she took them back to my
apartment that I let her live.
Speaker 1 (46:42):
In at your place. She was taking them to your place, yep.
Speaker 2 (46:46):
Perfect. After I was also helping her with her handicapped child,
who is also a cancer patient.
Speaker 1 (46:52):
Thanks everybody that's tune. And I'm seeing those numbers climb
up and down this big red Uh. Most of you
probably know who he is, and if you don't, you
know he's I'm not.
Speaker 2 (47:00):
Seeing many comments. All I see is desertations.
Speaker 1 (47:02):
It's not that one comment. Yeah, people are watching. It's
shown me that people are watching because the number goes
up and there whatever. You know, you guys want to
comic comment, we'll talk to you. But yeah, so for me,
it was lay McNasty. He was the first one that
I really got into. He's the one who does like
the teacher who impersonates the kids. I don't know if
you've seen him at all.
Speaker 2 (47:21):
He does that little timmy voice. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I like, oh.
Speaker 1 (47:26):
Hey, Sparkle Farts is here. High Sparkle Farts.
Speaker 2 (47:30):
Yes, shout out to you. Thank you absolutely. But yeah, so,
like I said, like Charlie did that for me, So
that's kind of why what I do on social media,
and then you're asking my opinion on social media. It's
it's it's good in a way, but you can't circle
your life around it. There is reality, there is something
outside of social media. But at the same time, so
(47:51):
there are people out there that work their ass off.
They don't really have that in my spare time, and
the same thunder A lot of people out there, they're
struggling with mental health, and then I don't they're they're
stuck in their own boss, your own head, or even
even better, uh Like, there are people that like like,
like I was stuck in a hospital. As a matter
of fact, I have a certain follow where there's uh
uh suffering from health issues. I'm not certain the exact
(48:13):
health issues, but I see his tiktoks all the time
where he's in a hospital gown and he's lost long leight.
He's one of my followers, and I like social media
helps people if you use it right. Yes, yes, Now
the toxic people that are there to rage, bait and
shit like that, I don't understand that. Do you really
want to be famous by pissing people off? Right now?
(48:36):
I get it. I am controversial with what I do
and not many people really understand it. Not many real
people like it. But you'll also notice that I don't
go too far into it. I don't sit there and
actually make fun of religion, all it whatsoever. I don't
sit there and promote the devil. Yes, I ask for
your soul, I take your name, and I put it
in a fucking glass jar on a piece of paper.
(48:57):
That's what I do.
Speaker 1 (48:58):
That's so evil, I know.
Speaker 2 (49:01):
I'm yeah, that's good.
Speaker 1 (49:07):
What made you come up with this character Big Red?
Speaker 2 (49:09):
Though? Like it did you have?
Speaker 1 (49:11):
Did you already have the props?
Speaker 2 (49:13):
Big Red? That has been my nickname since I was
about twelve years old, my first so I've lived in
Venismus my life. I also lived in South Haven, Mississippi,
which is right underneath Memphis, Tennessee. It's literally on the border.
And when I moved to South Haven, all of a sudden,
the kids started calling me Big Red. Remember I've a
was always taller than all the kids in the class,
and I had red hair. So I showed up down there,
(49:34):
like we're gonna call you Big Red because you're big
and red. I was like, okay, yeah, so I've been
Big Red all my life. But the character I started
doing so once again, I'm working at the houses you
know I do. I had something. I knew I had
something for TikTok. Now there are spooky creators out there.
(49:56):
There are awesome, but at the same time I had
at first what I did. As I put out there,
They're like, hey, guys, if you follow me and I
get enough followers to go live, I'm gonna go live
inside a haunted house that I work at. Do you
want to watch me? Scared of shout out? People live
follow me. So that got my followers up to the
point where I start going live. So I was like, okay, cool,
(50:17):
I can start going live. I need to start building
more followers. I need to start going to live. Show
people what I can do so I can get them interested,
so I can get them watch me. So I started
doing my thing, and at first I start started doing
random shiit like there are a few videos of me,
like the way the skull mask on I was just
fucking off with. There are a bunch of videos with me,
like my face all painted it up with so much
fucking makeup you, Oh my god, so much fucking makeup.
Speaker 1 (50:39):
Makeup a lot of work.
Speaker 2 (50:40):
And then one day and then one day I was like,
just fucking off. I didn't really have all my makeup.
I have eyelighter and I just put eyelighter on it,
and just my contact and just my teeth and they
just kind of fit into it now the soul taking.
The soul taking was rebecced with me by a girl
that I work with at the hot house named Rachel Uh.
We were talking. She follows my lives all the time.
She comes in there and she just me. She's like, well,
(51:03):
why don't you like start collecting souls and then put
it to a jar. I take the names and put
it into a jar. I was like, okay, And then
all of a sudden, shitn't started blowing up, and I
think what happened there is people like to hear their
name called out on TikTok. So I'm sort of like, hey,
if you say your name right now in the chat,
I'll say your name out loud, write your name out
(51:24):
a piece of paper, and your soul is mine. And
all of a sudden, just I've get a fluctuation of
people now I will say this. I get a lot
of trolls from children, like little child trolls. Those are
expected it's to grown mentrolls. I don't understand. Yes, oh
my god, forty year old man, like, what are you
doing trolling the gold like your wife and kids? Hold
(51:45):
me like, I'm sure you got good to get pet
or something.
Speaker 1 (51:48):
I don't know, right right, hey, you know what, Let's
play the little cliff that I have. It's a few
of your little live streams that I kind of pieced together,
including it ends with one that you have not post
said yet. I appreciate you.
Speaker 2 (52:01):
That I cannot post on TikTok whatsoever. I cannot post
that on TikTok.
Speaker 1 (52:05):
And like I said, I only did like a minute
and three seconds of it. It's like two and a
half minutes long. But still it's it's it's good. The
fact that that dude was so pissy is hilarious to me. Literally,
not a damn.
Speaker 2 (52:18):
I said, was how you doing, buddy? And then all
of a sudden, I bet than you?
Speaker 1 (52:23):
Bub right, let's let's go and play it.
Speaker 2 (52:28):
Absolutely. Hey lady, how are you you just look so evil?
Why do you get why you gotta look right there
because I'm here to collect your soul?
Speaker 1 (52:46):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (52:48):
Hello, how are you so low? What's going on? And
it's so loco, not so low fine, so Loco. I
apologize for mispronouncing your name. It's all right, but what
is going on? I am here to collect your soul?
Oh no, sir, these no? How you doing a bookable? Bye?
(53:12):
Walk away from me? That was rude. Can you do
Optimist Prime? It would share me up. My name is
Optimist Prime, leader of the Aukobots and the sworn in
and set the coins myself. That's so cool?
Speaker 1 (53:32):
Did you get that before me?
Speaker 2 (53:34):
How are you doing? Yeah, you're not gonna offend me.
So I have plenty of gay friends that I am
not homophobe and wonderful.
Speaker 1 (53:44):
I your real team?
Speaker 2 (53:46):
Maybe can I have your soul? Oh god? It absolutely
not whatever you do? Okay, buddy, I think I'm doing
better than you and bub What makes you say that?
Speaker 3 (54:02):
Well, I don't wear a fake context and I'm not
wearing some fake ass teeth.
Speaker 2 (54:06):
Do find fake contacts? Are they real contacts or they
fake contacts? I'm gonna go with that they're fake. Well, okay,
so I no, no, no. Explain to me with a
difference between oh you just got.
Speaker 3 (54:23):
It's twenty twenty five and I don't know if you forgot,
but your phone does have a volume button.
Speaker 2 (54:28):
So this is what I'm gonna do for you.
Speaker 3 (54:29):
I'm gonna sit here and turn my phone all the
way down and you can suck a cock, because honestly,
I feel like you're doining my IQ right now. So
I'm not gonna have a conversation with you because I
don't do shit that win.
Speaker 2 (54:41):
There's my IQ.
Speaker 3 (54:42):
If it dwindles my IQ, there's no point in me
doing it. I'm not sitting here watching SpongeBob.
Speaker 2 (54:47):
Bro, what do you think this is.
Speaker 3 (54:49):
You can sit here and make the population retarded, but
I will not do that.
Speaker 1 (54:54):
Sorry, I lied.
Speaker 3 (54:56):
I will do that, but I'll do that through music
and get paid to do it. I'm not gonna do
it through no fucking.
Speaker 2 (55:04):
Chat. Y'all go ahead and report him. He's muted. I
can't hear shit he's saying. Go ahead. He's honestly very
angry with the world. I understand. I understand. There's a
lot of ship going on in the world. I'm not
talking to you, actually, the love of ship going on
in the world, and sometimes we all just start falling apart,
we all start following me apart. And this this guy
(55:25):
right here, he's angry as fuck. Oh, we can't hear
you either. We can't hear you either. I've muted you
a long time. Wow.
Speaker 1 (55:37):
Yes, people, Man, I.
Speaker 2 (55:41):
Tell people all the time, like when I go through
these lives, what I'll do is all I'll go through
random lives and and and I'll ask people of their soul.
And there's a few different reactions. Oh yeah, I'll get
people that will see me. The more they see me,
they're God. They'll see me like I'm out here. There's
no conversation. I'm out here. Two there are people that
see me they're fast fascinated, like, oh my god, I
(56:01):
love this. How are you? And then we have fun together.
Then there's the third option, where people just lay into
me and tell me how much of a piece of
shit I have for doing what I'm.
Speaker 1 (56:11):
Doing, which makes no sense, man, It just.
Speaker 2 (56:17):
It's an act. It's entertainment.
Speaker 1 (56:19):
Is this is this is why I don't like to
talk about religion. But this is why religion gets to me,
because of how people judge so much if it's not
their views. And it's like there's a huge world of
people out there that are great people that can have
fun and enjoy some stupid humor because it's it's just fun.
Speaker 2 (56:42):
I tell you all the time. God has a sense
of humor.
Speaker 1 (56:45):
Yeah, God, he hung out with strippers and thugs. He
hung out with strippers and thugs.
Speaker 2 (56:54):
So actually, I'm just saying this.
Speaker 1 (56:59):
I mean, judge whatever you want, but that's what we're
going off of.
Speaker 2 (57:03):
No, yeah, yeah, well that's why I tell you all
the time, like people, I'm like, Jesus didn't hang out
with the hierarchy. He hung out with thieves and prostitutes. Yeah, just.
Speaker 1 (57:15):
Saying so, I mean, did you see a pretty quick
incline in numbers as soon as you put on that character?
Speaker 2 (57:24):
Once I started taking souls. Once I started taking souls,
I was No, I'm not saying this happens all the time,
but like on an average every live I do. For
a while there, I was kidding about one hundred followers
every fucking live I did, and that and that, and
that's two or three lives a day, right, because of
(57:45):
what I normally do is I go for live for
about an hour that I'll reset to refresh the algorithm,
because that's that's just the way that sometimes other big
creators can stay on live all day and keep their
numbers up. I'm not that big of a creator. I'm not.
I don't even have eight thousand followers yet.
Speaker 1 (58:00):
Yeah, I mean, I'm just since i started my live
podcasting that I'm doing on here, I've gained like eighty
followers in like two weeks.
Speaker 2 (58:09):
Yeah, I mean impressive, you know, right right? No, Yeah,
but the more you do it, the more you'll grow.
Speaker 1 (58:15):
Yeah, yeah, makes sense.
Speaker 2 (58:17):
Absolutely.
Speaker 1 (58:18):
So as as we kind of wrap this up, is
there anything that we haven't really touched base on that
you want to talk about?
Speaker 2 (58:25):
Not really just uh yeah, I'm just glad to be here,
and yeah, I just I just want to make sure
that people understand the message I try to put it
out there. Is it like life's not that serious? Like
I am an actor, I'm not taking anybody's souls. I'm
a good guy at the same time, like, uh, but
what I try to do as a TikTok creator and whatever,
(58:46):
I try to make the people's day better. I try
to entertain you, make you smile, make me laugh, whatever.
That's what I'm here for. I don't take it that serious. People,
I'm really not taking your souls. Please please stop coming for.
Speaker 1 (58:57):
Me if you think it's that easy, then we're all screwed.
Speaker 2 (59:07):
Good lord, people like, if you're that really worried about
me being.
Speaker 1 (59:11):
Like, it's funny when I when I met you, the
very first thing you said, well, I take people's souls,
but I can't take yours because you don't you're a gender.
Speaker 2 (59:21):
I can't do it. I can't do it. And I
still remember that question. And by the way you were talking,
like I listened to the podcasting, like so in case
y'all didn't see it, he had the way he came in,
he asked me a question. The question was if every
time you sneeze, you turn into a different person, but
only for one minute, what would you do? And so
on top of my head like me being the character
(59:42):
and try and be funny and off the while, I
was like, I gotta say something that's not offensive but
fucking funny. I was like, what's an the refrigerator? Did
this pression have French dressing? If they use French dressing,
they're a fucking communist.
Speaker 1 (59:57):
You're the only one that had that answer.
Speaker 2 (01:00:00):
Later on you were like, yeah, he was random as fuck.
I don't know, that's literally what I was doing. I
had to think of something random off the top.
Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
I was like that, it's it's it's definitely making the
show what it is, though, because I think the random
people hopping on and being like, oh wait, I get
to be on a podcast. They love the idea of it.
And I think, like you said, I'm thinking of followers,
I'm thinking of growth, you know, right, And and I
was thinking of what's something different, and there's not. I mean,
(01:00:26):
there are like talk shows on there, but there's not
a lot of people that go on there and podcast
and talk to people and say, hey, I'm going to
give you exposure, right right, I mean it's I'm on.
I've done nine episodes in like three weeks.
Speaker 2 (01:00:39):
Yeah. Like I said, you keep doing it, You're going
and you're gonna grow. And not only especially if you're
going through the content creators and you're bringing them on. Well,
then when they come on here and do things like
this right here, their followers are coming here and they're
following you because they're content creators on your interviewing and
they want to see who else do you interview? Right? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
And I've i mean, you know, we may from Jackass.
You know, I've had him on twice. He's great guys.
We talked to each other every now. Yeah, I've had
him on twice. Man, So I messaged him on Instagram.
I messaged him on Instagram and a year later he
gets back to me at a random and he pops
on and I've had him on to promote the last
(01:01:20):
Jackass that just came out. He's just a good guy, dude.
Speaker 2 (01:01:24):
Yeah, I'm he's a good guy. I'm glad to.
Speaker 1 (01:01:27):
Larry Larry Hankin from he was the cop and home
alone who was eating the donut talking to the mom
on the phone. He's also on Breaking Yeah, it's I'm
Breaking Bad planes, trains, and automobiles. He's a taxi driver.
He've had him on a couple of times. So I've
i mean, just reaching out to people. I've met some
(01:01:49):
really cool people, man like you. I meant this guy
named Hot Sauce Boss. He's also on TikTok that promotes
just hot sauces. We did. We did a hot Sauce
challenge on here. It was it was a lot of fun.
Speaker 2 (01:02:02):
My bowels could not do it well. Last time. I
ate some of those super spicy noodles that you can buy,
those Korean noodles. Whatever. Yeah, no, I'm not doing that again.
I have I'll eat like regular spicy shit. I'm cool
with that, but the super spicy shit, I'm done.
Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
Yeah, man, I feel you.
Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
Well.
Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
I want to give you a big thanks.
Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
Man.
Speaker 1 (01:02:22):
I appreciate you coming on, and I'm so sorry that
we've rescheduled this twice now, but look at finally.
Speaker 2 (01:02:26):
Look, life happens. The first time you were sick, the
second time you had family obligations, and then hell I'm
sick now. But I was like, you know, whether you're
getting a divorce or I'm throwing up.
Speaker 1 (01:02:39):
No, man, we made it happen and it's been a
hell of a show.
Speaker 2 (01:02:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:02:42):
Well, you're welcome to come on to the other one sometime.
Everybody check out Big Red and you know what, until
next time, man, we'll see you around.