VIB3Z podcast

kings point of view with Jreef, Mr Toxic Chee, Ej and the 1K team

September 19, 2023 Your Favorite Leo “Marcus” and the dark skin Clark Kent EJ
VIB3Z podcast
kings point of view with Jreef, Mr Toxic Chee, Ej and the 1K team
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Are you ready to flip your understanding of gender roles on its head? In an enlightening conversation, we tackle the complex concept of relationship dynamics and how it's shifting in today's society. We question how women are adopting a more assertive role while men strive to maintain their "king" status. Delving into the misunderstood concept of chivalry, we dissect it from the lens of common courtesy, and explore how geographical location impacts these dynamics. 

Ever wondered what inspires an artist or how does creativity spark within them? This episode brings the talented artists from the group to share their artistic process and what motivates them to create. They take us through their creative journey, highlighting the value of honesty in their craft and how they've evolved over the years. From there, we shift our focus to the pressing issues faced by black entrepreneurs. We scrutinize the obstacles they encounter and emphasize the necessity of community support for their growth.

Our episode concludes with an inspiring segment featuring the entrepreneurial journey of Jreef and his team at House of Wraps. We uncover how they honor those who've passed by working tirelessly for the betterment of the community. This episode is not just a conversation; it's a call for unity and support for black entrepreneurs and a testament to their resilience and determination. Join us for a thought-provoking and empowering conversation, and learn how you can connect and support Jreef and his team's endeavor.

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Speaker 1:

Yes, ya boy, jay Reef man, we had the vibes to survive.

Speaker 2:

Blue season shout out to the vibes podcast, Podcast that only carry nothing but positive vibes.

Speaker 3:

Y'all already know, man, this is the way they do that. Shout out to the vibes podcast. Man, she was crazy. Topics was crazy. Man, I know y'all don't like this shit.

Speaker 4:

I understand some of the big folks Time's up. Oh, you forgot about me. Nah, y'all ain't forgot about me. Listen, you know I'm gone. I'm fucking up. I'm getting text messages when I'm bored Y'all know what it is with the vibes, chilling on the vibes. With the vibes, yes, you saying Turn in Every week. We getting more episodes, more people, we getting more vibes. Yes, you saying Y'all already know what it is with me. I'm glowing baby. If you see anything else, you're going to see this glow baby. Yes, you saying I'm being a civilized hey, listen, listen, we back man Vibes.

Speaker 5:

Podcast Two Dimple King, your favorite Leo, listen man. I had to invite some of the hottest niggas in Baltimore right now. I already got Mr Toxic you know him Finally stepping out the closet in the shadows. I got my new co-host. Yeah, I got my new co-host. Go ahead and tell him your name, brother.

Speaker 6:

It's your boy, ej. I'm the new co-host of the Vibes podcast, really looking forward to this opportunity my man's giving me to go ahead and let people get to know me and stuff like that and be on here on a regular basis.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, we got still, I believe, the first or second most downloaded episode from this man when I had the original studio man. Go ahead and tell him where you are, man.

Speaker 1:

Hey, it's your boy, Jay Reef. Man, I'm in the building today. Man, team Sharif is in the building. I'm moving food trapping Baltimore city. Let's get it.

Speaker 5:

And I stand by that man. So, gentlemen, we're going to kick it off by saying what's new.

Speaker 1:

Man, he bitches out here, crazy man. Oh lord.

Speaker 5:

God damn you the fellas in the subject.

Speaker 1:

These bitches out here caught up in something. Listen right, men are kings and these women have tried to be kings. They've tried to transition and be more like men. It seemed like the women are more aggressive nowadays. It seemed like they the ones that's beating motherfuckers up nowadays. They the ones like before the nigga even get to say anything. These bitches out here stop in the front of ladies. Let men be men, Let men be kings. Honor and serve your king. That's all I'm going to say. But to that.

Speaker 5:

I'm going to say we had a young lady come on here, episode pride that was saying we are forcing women, especially black women, to take leadership roles. Are we doing that or not?

Speaker 1:

I really think that the government is doing it. He was saying they giving them all the money.

Speaker 5:

They giving them all the money.

Speaker 1:

You feel me.

Speaker 5:

We not doing that.

Speaker 1:

We try to hold our position, but they getting all the benefits.

Speaker 5:

So y'all don't like aggressive women. Is that what it is?

Speaker 1:

It's not the fact that you aggressive, just if you with your man. Let your man be a man. You feel me. Let your man be a king. You feel me Like who set that rule for a man? Got open every door every time. Your grandfather See I ain't, yeah, I.

Speaker 4:

But that don't have nothing to do with being a king. It's really not. If you think about the reason they asked a man to open the door right, physically you're the strongest person right entering that room at that time, Right.

Speaker 5:

Nothing to do with chivalry, Because I know I'm thinking of it like that.

Speaker 4:

If you want to say that chivalry, right. So at what point is it just a gesture, right? It's just a gesture to open the door for a woman, an older man or older woman or kid, as a man. That has nothing to do with being a king, as much as it's just a gesture. It's a gesture to open the door because you are the strongest person entering at that moment.

Speaker 5:

I ain't, I don't know that.

Speaker 4:

You know, I couldn't tell my lady that shit and then fly like that G because she's looking at it the way he was saying it, or the way he just called it chivalry, when that's not chivalry, as a woman with really a chivalry, like literally giving her flowers is chivalry.

Speaker 4:

Saying good morning and thank you is not chivalry, that's common courtesy, that's manners. We are all just groomed with them anyway, allegedly. We are allegedly supposed to be groomed with those things opening up the door. I was told to open up a door for an old man too. Yeah.

Speaker 3:

OK, so that's a gesture.

Speaker 4:

So what happened to you being a king or being a real man. That's just a gesture. Somebody groomed you with common fucking courtesy.

Speaker 6:

So what do you call it if you get out and pump the gas for your lady?

Speaker 4:

Now shit, a car with you. That's not chivalry, that's common courtesy. I'm talking about it. I'm talking about it. I don't know. I'm talking about it. I'm going to tell you why.

Speaker 6:

Even at seas driving, say seas driving you sitting in the passenger seat with.

Speaker 4:

That don't normally happen like that, I'm going to tell you why, OK, because it's more dangerous to go pump the gas. She's safer in the car Right, it's cold outside sometimes. If the car running, if you're smarter, if you're going to say shut the car down, keep your daughters away from this nigga. That's common courtesy to pump the gas. If it's two homeboys in the car, whoever driving the other guy got to go pump the gas.

Speaker 5:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Because I'm showering you around bro.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, you got to go get that. I'm not saying you don't want to see, so you see how that's up again.

Speaker 4:

I understand it. That's common courtesy.

Speaker 6:

If I'm driving, you got to at least get out and pump the gas, or you got to throw at least $10, $15 in a tank.

Speaker 4:

If me and my girl together and I'm driving. She got to go at least pay for the gas. I ain't saying out her pocket, but she got to walk in the store and get paid for the gas while I'm getting ready to pump the gas. You got to be some team work, then man, that's just common courtesy.

Speaker 4:

You ain't going to sit your ass down the whole time. If that's the case, you might as well get a girl that she's going to sit home and you going to take care of her, and she's still going to tell you what to do Mm.

Speaker 2:

I'm totally different from that.

Speaker 5:

You get it, so I'm going to put it on the table.

Speaker 4:

Mind you, it's a Kings night.

Speaker 5:

Who's in the relationship right here on this panel right now?

Speaker 4:

I'm in a relationship.

Speaker 6:

I'm in a relationship. It's toxic yeah.

Speaker 4:

Same, same.

Speaker 1:

Same.

Speaker 4:

I bet my shit toxic to you.

Speaker 1:

How many times you got your windows and your tires flat?

Speaker 5:

This year Just 2023.

Speaker 1:

Oh, oh, oh, oh.

Speaker 4:

This is 2023. I want to say one thing real quick. I'm feeling like the Baltimore is fine. One thing. I just want to say one thing real quick. And I got my Dior Santa shades on right. I just want to say one thing. One thing I think toxic is positive, so I might be looking forward.

Speaker 6:

I will agree with that. I will agree with you.

Speaker 4:

You're going to agree with that shit.

Speaker 6:

I will agree with that. My pocket starts toxic when it's costing us money, though yo I will agree with that you have to have a little bit of toxicity in the relationship.

Speaker 4:

Everybody is toxic. That's the only other absolute thing besides dying.

Speaker 6:

Everybody. You have to have just a tab of the toxicity in the relationship, because I think that's what keeps the relationship going.

Speaker 5:

So does that like y'all was just saying, then if we going to let men be men, you got to let women be women. If everybody got toxicity, then you got to let them show that bravado sometimes.

Speaker 4:

No, because toxic is a POV, it's a point of view, right, that means there's no such thing as a man being a man or a woman being a woman. It's that person's point of view. So if he messing with a woman that think the traditional man is a man, we're not traditional men.

Speaker 4:

So already, we already in a bad situation because their point of view is something that we are not Right, just like if we messing with women nowadays. They're not traditional women. Yeah, they're not traditional, so hold, they're evolutionist women. So these women are already the same thing that we was taught. Being raised about a single parent. Yo, make sure you do it on your own, be independent, your friends. You don't need no friends. If you got family members, if you got brothers and sisters, your parent told you you don't need friends. You got your brothers and sisters.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 4:

This is saying so. This evolutionary woman is a whole different type of woman than a woman back in the 40, 50, 60, 70s.

Speaker 5:

But so I know you don't, but I'm going to throw it out here. If we talk about being a traditional man and we are not traditional men, is everybody up here monogamous? Then that's the point of view? That's not a point of view, because if you saying traditional men, they're going to lump in being monogamous as a traditional man. Open relationship is a monogamous relationship, but we're talking regular relationship. Are you monogamous? What's the regular relationship Are?

Speaker 4:

you monogamous, yes, but I'm saying what is a regular relationship, a regular relationship, is somebody that don't cheat.

Speaker 5:

It's a traditional relationship.

Speaker 4:

Right, we're not in a traditional family anymore.

Speaker 5:

So you're a traditional man but don't do traditional relationships.

Speaker 4:

No, no, no. You got to have that person that has that point of view that you have Meaning a open relationship is a traditional relationship in 2023.

Speaker 6:

He's right, he's absolutely right about that.

Speaker 5:

So you do, you do, you know you got a regular relationship. I'm not saying I'm not buying any of those rules at all. So what rule are you buying by?

Speaker 6:

Because I'm not living with the current, because, listen, that's not how I was raised.

Speaker 5:

So you are monogamous. You say faithful to your woman.

Speaker 6:

Absolutely. That's what I'm saying, like that's how I was raised, that's how I. That's what I know.

Speaker 5:

Okay.

Speaker 6:

All that, all everything that's going on currently, right now, that's a bunch of new shit.

Speaker 5:

And you, sir, your woman popped your tie, so I know you cheated. Yeah, we definitely cheated, we definitely was coming back. We definitely, we definitely did it.

Speaker 6:

Let the people know you know what I'm saying. Let the people know how, how this happened, who you from. I want to know how many times has it happened this year?

Speaker 1:

Man, it's the how many times bro? About four times Jeez. And I got a lot of cars and then I got commercial vehicles. So you know, the bitch really want to get at me. She gonna fuck my van up.

Speaker 6:

And she doing it, and we still, and then Sean's still being able to pay for it Hell yeah, Sean. Oh, okay, okay, but it's still a blow. You feel me?

Speaker 2:

It's still a blow, but if she really, if she really wanted to be spiked, then boom If she really wanted to be spiked then she could have done it.

Speaker 1:

She was coming to Waco Cup. You got to come out the fucking end of it. And then sometimes one of them just trying to dip. You feel me, my shit, ah, roll around. You feel me, fuck, I'm a rim.

Speaker 6:

So she ain't being spiked, but she just wants you to feel that shit.

Speaker 1:

She just want me to feel that shit. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5:

What did you do, though, G?

Speaker 1:

Man it be working too hard. Man. What's up with the women? They want a man to have a lot of money.

Speaker 6:

I'll let you know right now, that's not how she's doing it at all.

Speaker 1:

You know a man that look like the trapper, but they want your time too, bitch which one you want. So again I got a question.

Speaker 4:

I got a question and we be up. I got a question about that, can we be up? I got a real question about that, because that's a great question. I got a double down question for that. Uh huh, is it the woman, though? Is it the actual woman, though? Right, like, look at the woman that's that want the time, compared to looking at the woman that don't want the time. Right, right, it could be just the woman. Yeah, it could be the man just picking a different type of woman than what he actually want. You might need a woman that want your time so you won't have to do other shit when you got idol time, right, but you might want that woman that don't want your time. She just want you to melvin' her every time you sit Right. Is it sad? So maybe it's the woman. I'm asking you. You think it's the woman, or is it the actual man? Like yo, I'm on here grinding. I got a woman because they want both.

Speaker 5:

Y'all don't know the guys when they gonna show their face, but the guys are saying it's the women.

Speaker 1:

Listen, the women want both. They want your time and your money. No, you got to choose. No, no no, no.

Speaker 4:

is it really the woman that want both Beyond what you got? You don't.

Speaker 6:

That's not always true, though you don't think so no, because you got some women that don't want your money.

Speaker 4:

It's one the time, and they the ones that be at the wine fast.

Speaker 6:

And that takes a very mature woman. Mature woman, the one we talking about the one that got her own already she got her own already.

Speaker 5:

You know what I can't do right now, at 30, I can't really get what a woman that's starting from the bottom right now.

Speaker 6:

That's wild G, I can't do it. You know why that's wild, Not the mid-level.

Speaker 5:

Like you went to college, you stopped trying to get your life together. That's not the bottom.

Speaker 1:

OK, we not talking about it.

Speaker 6:

I'm starting from the bottom, but I'm saying that's still wild. Because it's wild, because fuck, because hold on. Because you got women that are going to start with a nigga from the bottom.

Speaker 4:

That's a lie, though it's a lie baby.

Speaker 6:

I'm different because of where I'm from.

Speaker 4:

What kind of woman? What do she look like?

Speaker 5:

What woman getting you from the bottom, baby, because?

Speaker 6:

I'm beyond the. I know Pini. She got to be 350 pounds.

Speaker 1:

Where I'm from. I know, Pini. I'm across the border, yeah.

Speaker 6:

I know Pini women that will start with a nigga from the bottom. But where are?

Speaker 4:

you from though Florida, jesus From the south.

Speaker 5:

That's the difference. I'm not the nigga who was in the first map, because I'm from the south.

Speaker 6:

Because, listen, i'ma be real with you. I know a Pini women from back home that have been rocking with a, rocking with a nigga from the from day one, and he was at the bottom.

Speaker 4:

You should know why, though right, You're from the south right.

Speaker 5:

So I'ma tell you exactly the reason why.

Speaker 4:

It's your region. The region is dictated on niggas from the bottom, so they gotta get that from the bottom down there, further up north you come.

Speaker 5:

That should die. Get the DC.

Speaker 6:

Get the DC bitches. They should go get you from the bottom?

Speaker 4:

Is it because money is different up here? Yes, the opportunities for the man is a little different up here.

Speaker 6:

True, Because where I'm from you gotta listen. If you don't have nothing going on, if you don't have nothing going on yourself, if you ain't playing sports. If you're not playing sports right now, you have to start at the bottom.

Speaker 4:

You may have to go through some dark times. Some dark times, some dark women down there don't mind having them kind of niggas.

Speaker 6:

That ain't happening and that's the relationship. That's lasting anywhere between 15 and 20 plus years.

Speaker 5:

So if y'all can't hear him, the guy was saying that they do it up here. They were down there, right? That's what you're saying, brother, that their bottom is different than the bottom up here. They're tougher than a lot of the men. That's a fact. Bottom or women, build different, build different.

Speaker 4:

So geographic matter when? We had a certain kind of conversation. For instance, we talked about the women, while the women up north are well off. Financially well off. I've been here going on two years.

Speaker 6:

Attitudes, everything. The way they carry themselves up here is totally different than women from the south. Don't get me wrong. You got some tough females in the south now.

Speaker 5:

I mean, yeah, you gonna find outliers in that motherfucking court, but up here, women up here.

Speaker 6:

They really tell you to your face I don't need you or want you.

Speaker 4:

So, going back to what he was asking, that's why I asked the question. Now, double down. I'm asking the same question. Is it really the woman or is it the man? Right, it can't be a woman that won both, because a lot of women that want money in time, they don't need to be looking that good.

Speaker 6:

Facts. Please Say that a lot for the people in the back. They don't want to say that?

Speaker 1:

Nah, that's too high. You're giving them too much credit.

Speaker 4:

Listen listen, the real average type of woman.

Speaker 6:

The money in the time without that makeup on their face they be the average ones, bro. Oh, average they are four.

Speaker 4:

And they need the money.

Speaker 5:

But do y'all any men up here and I'm a director to you because you got your crew here you rapping now Up here. If we talking in this region, you say how old are you? Right now I'm 30. You're a 30-year-old rapper To a lot of women, you a fucking bum right now. So did you ever process that like I'm really trying to kick off a rap career at 30, bro?

Speaker 1:

Well see, I've been rapping since 15, though.

Speaker 5:

And that's the day going to say you've been doing this for so long. I went in.

Speaker 6:

That's the only hit your, break it. That's the day I went in.

Speaker 1:

I did seven, you feel me, so that was the only thing in there. We getting things back on board. You feel me so um. I'm still at it.

Speaker 4:

You feel me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so you feel like right now, a woman like you really want to be a rapper right now, bro, I mean as long as I talk at the right market audience.

Speaker 6:

You know what I'm saying. That's what it is right now. I got people that support me.

Speaker 1:

It's the level we used to do and they want me to stay the fuck out here, so they're going to support you. Know what I'm saying? I got? I got a question.

Speaker 4:

You're saying how women I might say here bum, rapper, or too old or whatever, whatever, right, that just lets you know the women you supposed to be messing with them. Right, because it seemed like our community, the only community, that aged our people. It's no other community that's going out there saying, yo, you too old to be a rapper. Well, you too old to be a dancer. Well, you too old to do this, or you too old to do that. It's only the black community. Right, it's not no other community. They kept Elvis alive for a thousand years.

Speaker 5:

Niggas ain't even know where Elvis died.

Speaker 4:

But I'm just saying we killed Jamie Foxx as soon as we heard the news. Mm-hmm, it's the same. So it's only the black community. So, and again, I'm not knocking no woman. At their point of view, is you too old to be a rapper To me? That supposed to be the female you don't pose to deal with?

Speaker 5:

or because everybody not meant for you.

Speaker 4:

Once you get choice, I guarantee she gonna let you crack Exactly. You might be too old to be a rapper, but if you go platinum the very next month or the next year, she gonna be the same one, she doubling back now. So it ain't really necessary. I'm trying to figure out why is our community the ones that's aging our people Listen.

Speaker 6:

if two chains could do it, anybody could do it.

Speaker 5:

I can't rap. Would you live a facade as a rapper?

Speaker 6:

Hey, but listen, he made it.

Speaker 4:

At 30.

Speaker 2:

Exactly at 30. At 35.

Speaker 6:

That's another one. They can do it at 30, 35.

Speaker 5:

Dianne, he never popped first.

Speaker 1:

And then, on top of that, the content has to be. You have to be a mature to reach the capacity of people.

Speaker 6:

That's a fact.

Speaker 1:

You have to be very universal and mature to really generate that real money. Any time about that quick easy gold money, so you gotta have some experience. You gotta have some experiences. If you got some years up on it, you feel me. And that's how these niggas is nice.

Speaker 6:

That's why I lie to these young ones.

Speaker 5:

They got some years, the ones that's nice they nice, and they don't give a fuck with you, it's you nice. They still apply pressure.

Speaker 6:

They don't want to come through the industry, they just take whatever they be given to them. Somebody come and tell them oh, we're going to let you, we're going to give you a sign of bonus for like a hundred grand. They've run it, They've run it, They've taken that.

Speaker 4:

So I got a question as an artist. Right, you got a lot of artists, including artists that we hit, that's from here King Lo's, scott Ockbar. They changed their presentation to fit in. Yeah, would you ever change your presentation to fit in, or would you keep what you got and again just target the right market or the right audience?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I would keep what I got. Man, I feel like I'm already. You know I flow like an artist, if the artist in you is going to naturally be with what you wear and how you look.

Speaker 6:

So you're not selling out, nah, and I'm not going to go with the trend.

Speaker 5:

If anybody's saying, you ain't going to stop saying it, like the person's like the person's and all that.

Speaker 1:

I'm seeing niggas with person's and all of that. I can't fade it.

Speaker 5:

The nails and all that.

Speaker 1:

Nah, I can't fade it, I don't know.

Speaker 4:

You can't get a manicure. Yeah, you can get a manicure.

Speaker 6:

We got guys in the industry right now.

Speaker 5:

Yeah right, we got guys in the industry right now that's doing purple, pink, red nail polish and everything on the nail.

Speaker 6:

That ain't what we talking about. It's okay to go get your feet and your fingers done and stuff. Clear coat.

Speaker 4:

What's the difference in down your hair Cause back in the 70s, 80s and 90s? It was a thing when men dyed their hair, like the tips of your dreads, et cetera. That was a thing where, if you did that years ago, you was looked at differently. What's the difference there?

Speaker 5:

Hold on before we get this we got some sponsors that we need to get to and we gonna bring these other gentlemen up here. So shout out to the first sponsor man, Our girl BubblesGaloreMe. Man, the number one DMV soap artist. You can check her out at the. I believe she is at a Rundle Mills. She got TikToks by the million Instagrams by the million. Listen, she single. But I will say this about how proud of her.

Speaker 6:

She slim, though. She gonna get you for saying that right.

Speaker 5:

Hey, listen, she slim. Though Back to the promotion, this lady's soap and everything about this lady's dynamic man. It's absolutely pressure. Go check her out at BubblesGaloreMe man, and we got another one. If you haven't noticed the hat, you haven't noticed the shirt, man, tell them about the brand, brother.

Speaker 6:

Shout out to Sam Box Collection.

Speaker 5:

Sam Box Collection man. You wanna see the video.

Speaker 6:

Y'all gonna see the video. Listen, go check them out, man. Y'all definitely wanna go check them out. Look at some of the clothing items that are coming out of this collection. Good people, they definitely know what's hot right now in the world out there in the street. Especially being a local people, they know what's going on up here. They gonna love to see people going around wearing their stuff now.

Speaker 5:

Right. Shout out to Sam Box man. They approached me, I seen the work and I said immediately that's the one.

Speaker 6:

We gotta put them on.

Speaker 5:

We got to and my guy here listen. He the only person that sent me my own questions to ask, right?

Speaker 6:

So, before.

Speaker 5:

I get up and I'm gonna let everybody speak and let my new co-host do his thing. We gotta talk about the situation that happened with your brother, yeah. We gotta talk about that, we gotta talk about Sharice.

Speaker 5:

We gotta talk about the new business venture that I might be having a motherfucking club in a short, short few months. Man, we're just getting right here, so I'ma get up and I'ma let the guests come on and y'all may pop your shit and we gonna go from there. Come on up, I don't care who come up, all right.

Speaker 6:

So we gonna go ahead. Let one of our special guests that came in to mess with us introduce his fellas right now.

Speaker 1:

Go ahead, jay, yeah, yeah, yeah, man so boy, jay Reef, and he's my bros right here. He's my bros from the mud. Man Came up in the mud for real, for real.

Speaker 2:

Street shit man, flu season top free stylist right here, man, Flu season man Done probably work with everybody, y'all know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, features production, all of that. And then we got my boy. God bro, did you dash y'all, y'all already know what he did.

Speaker 3:

He's the boy that he dashed man, the wildest producer in this out here, man y'all. You already know what he did.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to Anthony yeah, studio, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6:

So I'm gonna ask anybody again so right now, what are y'all currently working on right now, what you got currently going on?

Speaker 2:

right now man right now we just revamped everything I was working on a project like a unified project, with all the God brothers. Okay, cause it's like eight, nine of us, so I was gonna call it the Legion of Doom, okay.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, so we got. Where does the Legion of Doom come from? Where is it?

Speaker 2:

You gotta go get a group of super friends that can match this energy Mm Like cause. The only people that could fight Superman in them was Bizarro anti-Superman Like they had the Legion of Doom, okay. That's cause we trouble for the industry. We don't wanna be like nobody we don't wanna necessarily sign. And if we not all coming together, it's hard to take one of us.

Speaker 6:

Ain't no draft pics over here, so who are some of y'all inspiration? Cause I'm the way I'm listening and hearing everything from you right now. You're really giving me a lot of wu-tang, outcast vibes and stuff like that.

Speaker 2:

My favorite rappers, my favorite three rappers that everybody say I sound like, is 103,000 Devon the Dude and Scarface. Yeah.

Speaker 6:

Okay, yeah, man, that's the left Avery. Hey, you talk about two of those lanes. I know for sure some heavy hitters Right, you took some real heavy hitters now. So you know, we gonna test your skills out now. We gonna have to test, we gonna see where it's at and let's move real to the next man over here. So tell us, what are you just only working with? Or you got some other stuff in New Orleans works as well.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, man, I got another project coming out too Similar to my brother, man 4612. Yeah, you know what I'm saying, with all the God brothers on it. You know what I'm saying, but you know, that's why we working together Cause we got the same ideas. We on the same frequency. You know what I'm saying. We ain't talk to each other about it.

Speaker 5:

We ain't pre-plan it or nothing like that, it's just the way.

Speaker 6:

What's all your understanding gotta be said yeah, you already know, yeah, yeah. So how long you been in business. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

I been a producer ever since I was about 12 years old man. I started making beats on pianos before producers even had computers.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, First of all me to the studio.

Speaker 3:

For real.

Speaker 6:

I was just battle rapping Like he was making beats with all this doing crazy stuff, and how long you been rapping boss.

Speaker 2:

Man, I ain't even gonna lie. My big brother, God rest his soul. He used to ride me around in the car and point at stuff.

Speaker 1:

I say, only thing I could do was rhyme, so like he used to ride around and just point and I just have to make up words and rhymes and schemes.

Speaker 6:

So it's been like since I was four years old.

Speaker 2:

I've been putting words together but, like taking setbacks, it'll make you step back. So I know a lot of people be like but why you ain't pop off or why you ain't? This Like I got a song that tell you why it's a flu season, why you ain't been famous sooner, because the trap you talk about, I'm really in it, yeah.

Speaker 6:

So it's like, oh shit. Like Mark said earlier, we was listening to the track on the way over here, yeah, that's straight out the mud right there. That's where all the gear was on there right there.

Speaker 6:

We already said if it's strapped, we're gonna say something we not gonna. Just we can't, we not gonna. That's a problem with a lot of artists right now. They got people that's just gonna tell them yeah, that's good, but you ain't gonna be honest with them because if it's trash, it's trash. Like be honest with them, like cause, if you release it and it don't do no numbers.

Speaker 2:

If I know you and people know I know you don't go out there and represent me like that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 6:

In fact, everybody wanna be, everybody wanna hold a position of yes, man, but don't wanna really be honest with that man and tell them, hey, you might wanna get back in the studio.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you might wanna revamp that you might wanna revamp that.

Speaker 6:

So how long, how long has this, these group of guys been together, been rocking and stuff like that?

Speaker 1:

How long have y'all been doing this man Since like high school, I would say we all went to the same high school, we all grew up in the same studio, we all had the same Godfather.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to Pops, shout out to Lil' Harah.

Speaker 1:

You know Video Cash. You know what I'm saying. We got a lot of Godbrothers. Just imagine a house that's really built like a 501C3. You know office. You know we had two studios, two levels, homer Avenue, lacey Avenue. You know what I'm saying Right in the trenches, but you know, but they definitely made it something positive. You know what I'm saying. Like, I got interviews with Su-Lin Fest man. We was kids. I was in my school uniform with my man. You know what I'm saying. He was on the news. Yeah, we was on the news, you feel me. So we been at it. You know what I'm saying. We just really starting to come back together. You feel me.

Speaker 6:

Y'all not putting out no BS. That's what I could definitely tell in the music. Y'all not putting out no BS, no BS. Y'all are artists who appreciate the artistry. Y'all appreciate taking your time because you have a lot of artists right now that will just throw a track out there just because they just trying to put something out there. They don't take their time with it, they don't do none of that.

Speaker 6:

So, listening to y'all music, from what I've already heard, y'all look like y'all take your time with everything. Y'all lay rushing in. Y'all got people that's inside y'all circle, that's gonna tell you hey, try that again. It's us.

Speaker 3:

I think it's because we come from that era before social media, like before everybody put everything on the phone, like we was in the studio already just then. They ain't worrying about the outside world at all, so it was like, we really do like.

Speaker 6:

Y'all get in there and lock in Y'all, like once y'all get in there, it's like a situation where y'all just go in there, lock that door and be like, hey, listen, we ain't coming out here until we're satisfied it was an everyday thing.

Speaker 2:

It's like bruh being there making a beat this the best beat I ever heard. I'm writing a 16. He might ask me what I'm doing. I'm like I'm trying to see if he gonna let me get on that he might write a 16. We gonna rush him try to perform the 16. And he might be like man y'all going there recording we was fighting for studio time. It was like the real DMV cash money. Okay, I like that.

Speaker 6:

I like that. Well, I definitely hope wish y'all the best man I really cause I'm looking forward to seeing whatever y'all do next. I'm letting Nora, after hearing that one track and first off that beat was fire, by the way, it's like that Definitely and then the lyrics that go along with it. I'm definitely looking forward to hearing what y'all put out next. We definitely not gonna let you go nowhere without going a freestyle on there, cause we gonna see what you like real fast. So hey, taz, you got an instrumental.

Speaker 1:

Everything one K.

Speaker 2:

Hey everything one K, they snatch my little cousin. I'm starving bout it.

Speaker 2:

Been around that circle then you know it's plotted out. Me and mine is a little different. So everything get plotted out and make no fools without the round table, cause that's how bosses get out it. And I try and move like Gotti, cause them niggas got pheromones. They don't know about whereabouts. I'm trying my mama new homes Slider out to a place where if they know my face they don't know the lawn knowns. Ain't no welcome ass, cause right here ain't no place that is welcome for me. The hospital hospitable, test the squad, we get rid of you. Over the minutes you'll ridicule you Know what flu season through I grab that. Then I won't say, cause that's how they track those and a lot of rappers they be acting Cause they ain't really gonna pack those.

Speaker 2:

My little brother was he tight Cause I wanted to slide with it. He said if you ride with me, then we got God up in this ride with us and I pray he don't let me be me If anybody try to slide with us, cause I promise ain't no soldier, they can never confide with me. Off my conscience, fucked up, and that's all in the science. They try to calm me with a thought and I don't believe in any science. Fuck your big bang and your earth gang. I let the whole world hang. It's a foundation that I'm built on and ain't nothing gonna crumble that main. See a lot of these niggas be cookies. They be moving like pussies. Can I say that word on podcast, cause I am not no rookie, I'm a vet. When it get wet, I know that she was dushing, especially when it smelled like something other than ovens that ain't been cleaned in months. I'm trying to give them subject matter, but she know I hit that cervix every time I enter her bladder I try to change it up and give y'all diamonds about all the matter. And I said the big bang cause God put everything that matters in front of your screen. They trying to tell you what you're seeing. I'm an enigma. That's not a regular nigga.

Speaker 2:

Batman versus Riddler. I got a question mark for you. Can you ever stand in front of me if I'm really coming for you? He's got a plate, he got a knife and I brought the fork for you. Stick a fork in them, cause they been done. The warrior and it's ultimate. That's just a wrestling pun for those that be off the shit. Wwe, we all. We got in this.

Speaker 6:

Ooh, okay, I see you, I see you. Oh, my God, that's what he's gonna be out of this all week.

Speaker 1:

He's gonna come back with us, okay, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 6:

Off the top of the door.

Speaker 1:

Off the top. That wasn't no written. I never heard him ever say that shit on no music.

Speaker 6:

Like how you put the podcast. He's putting everything together. I like that.

Speaker 1:

You feel me Feel different.

Speaker 6:

I like that, hey man please go check these guys out. Did you dash? Go check them out, man. Go ahead and introduce yourselves again for the people.

Speaker 1:

We, the legion of doom ladies and gentlemen, 1k everything, 1k everything.

Speaker 2:

That's an option. 1k his music coming soon.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, most definitely.

Speaker 2:

Right now trust me, believe. We lost a good soldier he was the best rapper alive, so it must be me now.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

It's y'all to fire.

Speaker 6:

Gonna stand on that. I feel you, you gonna stand on that.

Speaker 2:

That's why I'm going extra hard.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, hell yeah, digi, let him know your tag man, let him know where the studio at.

Speaker 3:

Y'all can find me at digi-dash, that's D-I-G-I-D-A-S-H at Digi-dash, on every platform. You know what I'm saying, man, the studio. You can find that shit in my bio. You feel what I'm saying? This is to make it easy for y'all, yeah yeah, digi-dash did it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, when y'all hear that, y'all know who made that.

Speaker 6:

Okay, and where can they find you on social media at.

Speaker 2:

Man, I'm flu season everywhere, Like I'm the first three pages of Google.

Speaker 1:

Tell them how to spell it, though, yo.

Speaker 2:

F-L-U-S-E-A-Z-N. Okay, you know what I'm saying. It mean King, daddy or Sire.

Speaker 6:

All right, Ben Say it, let's all I'm playing. Hey man, go follow these guys. Man, they got something special going on over here. Man, they really do. Hey, y'all heard it here first these guys, they're going to get that, they're going to blow up. Man, y'all better go tap in now before everybody starts jumping on the gravy train. You feel me? Tap in right now with these boys.

Speaker 2:

Support, support, support definitely going to win this. He ain't never too old to be a rapper. All these rock stars been on tours for 50 years.

Speaker 6:

Let me get you. That's all he wants. He wants more than that, but he said just give him two. Right now he going to show y'all exactly what he's about. So you about to come on back in me All right, listen man.

Speaker 5:

Y'all just heard from the hottest rapper in the city right now. Listen when, I went to his page. I looked and I was like I like it. I like it. Let's see if he can do it live though 1K. He ate he ate.

Speaker 6:

He definitely stood on business today about what he did.

Speaker 5:

Y'all going to see his name. Y'all going to see his Instagram. Man. Go check this brother out. We had one of a freestyle. I'm going to put them side by side when we make this. If you torch this white boy, he already told me he coming back. He looking for all rappers. He got some spot out, Frederick, Maryland. He bring the rappers to all expenses paid. He going to make your album, everything. Yeah, so you kill this shit. I'm going to connect you and give you his number. Y'all going to make what y'all need to make happen. I heard both.

Speaker 4:

And I was live for this one.

Speaker 5:

It's different. And I was, and my man Taksa got a question. But before that I wanted to shout out to Sharif man, you had a tough, tough fucking year and the last time I met you, but you have always, on internet at least had this positive fucking attitude.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you got to, man, you got to. That's why I don't believe in that no, ig.

Speaker 4:

We all are in the front.

Speaker 1:

But you still got to show you know what I'm saying that it is a good side to everything. It's a negative side and it's a good side to everything. And Instagram is just that guy. You just showed a good side.

Speaker 5:

Some people show the bad side to them. You not going to catch me crying on Instagram, GM. I'm sorry.

Speaker 4:

I mean, I guess the cliche fake it till you, make it as real yeah.

Speaker 5:

So would you had a question for my man? What was it?

Speaker 4:

So, even with the fake it till you make it right, like it's one of the ones where and it's not even a question, it's just so happening that that's what we're talking about. This is a real question to you, though Is it really bad that you got to fake it till you make it? Because what I mean by that is some investors want you to invest in yourself, so you might be doing bad in reality right but if your platforms don't show you doing bad, do you think that's like a way of investing in yourself?

Speaker 1:

so somebody else would invest in it. Most definitely, most definitely, because if you don't look like money, you ain't going to get no money, you know what I'm saying so you got to already be in the money. It's like you already in the mix, you know what I'm saying. You can't be outside and trying to be in the mix. You got to hop in the mix. You got to look like the mix. You got to mix yourself within the mix.

Speaker 1:

I'm not saying I got to mix myself within the mix, so you know what I'm saying you got to be the mix.

Speaker 4:

So when you say that, again you are a black entrepreneur, right? And I think just being an entrepreneur in general is tough. It is, but being a black entrepreneur. That's just like times 10, right Times 10.

Speaker 1:

That's a 10-fold on it. I don't know no bankers, I don't got no accountants, we doing everything ourselves.

Speaker 4:

So, when it comes to being a black entrepreneur, what's the hardest part about getting support? And it ain't even just the black support, there's support in general. What do you feel like is the hardest part about being a black entrepreneur?

Speaker 5:

You got to love a nigga from radio. I swear for God, you swear for God. I sit here, like he done, been on two shows and none of them been mine. So go ahead, brother, go ahead and answer that question.

Speaker 4:

I interviewed Merlin Mosby.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to tell you it's hard for everybody to realize how much you affect your community. You know like a lot of people don't know how much you know food affects a community. You know, even down to the health standards. You know, and the way that you can make somebody's day. You know just the simple being able to aid somebody if they thirsty. You know so it's just like just understanding. These are essential things too. You feel me you don't want to put them on the back burner just because he sell food or just because he wash cars. These are essential to our community and we all got to support those small business owners. That's very important. So do you think the support is?

Speaker 2:

missing, I think that, because I hear a lot of artists complain about support.

Speaker 4:

It's partially a reason why I laugh at artists for the most part, because I was an artist at one point in time right, they complain about support. You got people that always complain about black people Look how you do business, so that's why I don't support you. Or you always hear a lot of complaints about support.

Speaker 1:

Right. I think you don't get that much support home. I think it takes for somebody to step outside and then people really understand.

Speaker 5:

When you say home, what you mean?

Speaker 1:

Like whatever your region, whatever your region is, or demographics. You know what I'm saying. Well, people used to you at they not you know the same thing they did in Jesus. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 5:

We're just a carpenter, we in Baltimore City. Does that rule count if you so happen to pop in Atlanta and Houston and these supermarkets? Here's a small market so you got to leave, right, but there you pop in Atlanta. That's really the only place you needed to pop at. You're going to go global and from the radio guy I'm going to ask you, if you pop in, say in Atlanta you are at U-Dale.

Speaker 4:

U-Dale. Well, it's one of the ones where, locally, you get the support. You get the support. It's like what you said, though it's such a smaller market it don't seem like it's support Right, right Like if you're from East. Baltimore, west Baltimore, even if you're from somewhere like Delaware right or you're from a smaller part of Virginia. Shout out to Delaware, you're getting the support that you think you're not getting. It just so happened that the market is so small. It don't translate to a bigger look.

Speaker 5:

My guy got a question, say it. I'm going to say it back to the people.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to tell you about the smaller markets like this area.

Speaker 5:

Uh-huh Beads wrappers. It means all of them are not built to persevere around people who don't have dreams, so uh-huh.

Speaker 2:

Now, this is an entrepreneurial vision that the people around you are limited by going to the 95. They've been going to the 95 for 20 years. They can't see the fact that you say I get on this plane right now and change the world.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 2:

We don't understand how to move around the people that they dreams already died.

Speaker 4:

Now again, that's still going against the support, though what I'm saying is so you're, but that don't change the support. So no, no, no, let's fact fact in with support, hold on.

Speaker 6:

You said I'm going to piggyback off of this. Um, like I said earlier in the show, I'm not from here, so down south it's a little different. Like you said, demographic and G is different. Wherever you go, being the fact that I'm from Florida, it don't matter. When you are artists coming out of the state of Florida, you have the whole state on your back, cold ass, you have it, don't matter. You can good, bad, indifferent. If it's trash, it don't matter. They still support them, godness, and I've noticed that huh.

Speaker 5:

Exactly Flowrider switches demographic.

Speaker 6:

Hold on. The crazy thing is people like Flowrider and uh, what's the other artists from out there, Florida? Yeah, exactly, Flowrider and all.

Speaker 6:

There's another. It's another artist that came through saying time is Flowrider, and stuff like that. They can really rap. They can really rap. It's just because of the demographic that they were, that they were coming through. They had to change up stuff. Let's go back to what you were saying. You got to, you got to fake it till you make it and stuff like that. So I know I can rap. But if right now in the club all you hearing is the, the, the up temp, you hearing that. So I'm a, I'm a, I'm a mob, my stuff out to to fit that situation, and that he took that in and he went with it, he went with it.

Speaker 2:

I look like. Look at people like Wayne. I look at people like Wayne. Like when you say like I'ma take the hottest beat out and then I'ma do me Like I don't consider what I do freestyle, consider it flu style because I'ma get on there and do flu, like you might hear another person and they be like oh, I really go off the dome and they might get in the pocket about some weird left wing stuff. It's like I'ma try to touch on relevant topics to me and expound on them. You know what I'm saying Like cause, like we was talking about, I guess, off camera or beforehand. Like my influence is like Scarface, devin the dude and Andre 3000. So when I get into it I'm trying to really get into the mind of somebody, to really show them like nah, this what it look like over here.

Speaker 6:

Cause you guys, all they doing is talking about what they got going on, but again and again.

Speaker 4:

I just want to go off of the support thing. Right, like even when you say Florida, right, the whole state going to support you, merlin, is not recognized. That way the people here don't even recognize the entire state as a support system.

Speaker 6:

I just I'm about to say, yeah, y'all, definitely that's something weird for me. That's why I keep saying.

Speaker 4:

that's why I keep saying Cause, if you think about it, if you're from East Baltimore and you from, let's say, half a row over East Baltimore, the people from half a row in East Baltimore support you. But the people from O'Donnell Heights they not gonna support you cause you ain't from O'Donnell Heights over East Baltimore. Same thing, being from West Baltimore. If you're from West Baltimore, from Pennsylvania Avenue, they support you. Those are the ones that support you. It might only be a hundred people, but they support you. Most rappers here complain about the widening of the support but then they don't go out to get the support, meaning they don't go to Frederick County to get the support, they don't go to Prince George's County to get the support. They literally want everybody to just support them cause they put something out.

Speaker 2:

I think it's the opposite, Like the dichotomy of. It is like when you think about it, if your mother tells you now that's not going to work, but your man supports you, it hurts you more that your mother say you ain't going to make it doing that. A lot of these people.

Speaker 4:

And that's only one person. But that's what.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying A lot of these people are not taught to navigate around, people whose dreams already died Before she had you and your full of brothers and sisters. She wanted to go to nursing school. She wanted. Her dreams have deflated and died here, so she's going to teach you survival. She's not going to teach you ideologies and dreams and that cause hers is dead. She doesn't have it in her to pour into you and people in this area get way. Laid by that.

Speaker 4:

And again. But that's why I asked about the support. How do you change getting the support then? Because if you can't navigate around it right, there you go. You got to go hard. I mean, if you just from East Baltimore, somebody in West Baltimore County should know who you are. You shouldn't expect for somebody in Randall's town to support you if you only go hard over East Baltimore.

Speaker 6:

What I would say about that.

Speaker 4:

No I don't know.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 4:

So if your, mother telling you that your dreams ain't or you can't do it. Well, of course you're going to feel like that, because nobody else, mother, knows you that open mic that you would have went.

Speaker 2:

Why don't somebody else mother know you that that open mic that you would have spent that $10 on to get in Tonight, your mother just stopped you from doing that. But again, that's why, when we were saying about 30, ain't no quitting me? It don't matter. When I get on, it's undeniable what I have. I just need to get into the right room in the right light.

Speaker 4:

So do you need to get in the right room or put yourself in the right room. Like Sharif, they put themselves in the right room. They didn't have to get there. They said no, I'm going to put myself in the right room.

Speaker 6:

Hold on now. That's not always true.

Speaker 4:

Nothing is absolute besides death.

Speaker 6:

So we can't utilize that's not always true, right Because sometimes, sometimes, sometimes, sometimes sometimes putting yourself in the right room is cool, but sometimes somebody may have to navigate you to that. In the process, Somebody may have to you being you gotta have like putting yourself in the one room is you being very aggressive when you trying to, and sometimes and no good wrong.

Speaker 2:

No good wrong, Sometimes it works. It works. You gotta set that up out, you gotta set up something.

Speaker 6:

but sometimes you may get lucky where you may not have to be that aggressive when I'm not saying that happens all the time but you may get lucky sometimes where you don't have to be that aggressive but they still want to fuck with you because they already know what the body of work look like.

Speaker 4:

So as a black entrepreneur, a still up and coming rapper, I'll say still up and coming, right, because until you made it to that platform, we all would be considered still up and coming or a brand new black entrepreneur business. Again. How do you get to the support then? Do you complain about it? No, or you continue to work harder.

Speaker 1:

Brand tough. Yeah, you continue to work hard, you continue to work hard and you branch out.

Speaker 4:

We don't have no bank account, we don't have no accountants, we don't have no chartered accountants that can be in the account here in Baltimore and in Los Angeles. We don't have that. But how do you get it? Not by complaining, right, right.

Speaker 2:

So my thing was a little more, so you gotta go and get it.

Speaker 4:

So my thing was more so about that behind that portion of being an entrepreneur or a rapper is more complaints than hard workers out there trying to get to the actual support. Because if you expect for your family to be the ones that buy your stuff, then you will never get rich.

Speaker 6:

I'm gonna be honest with you, but never get rich.

Speaker 4:

Most people don't even know they fans.

Speaker 6:

I'm gonna be honest with you. I really want this area to take a page out of down south because I promise you, since I've moved up here I've noticed that and I have some extra curricula activities that I indulge in that extra curricula.

Speaker 2:

I'm real big in cars.

Speaker 6:

So I'm a part of a club and stuff like that when it comes to cars and stuff like that. So what I've noticed during competitions for the cars and stuff like that we can be from the DC area but don't get no love. But as soon as we come out to Baltimore, they love us. They love us out here in Baltimore Because our cars look different than how they do cars up here and just like, if we go, say we go to North Carolina. Oh my God, it's totally different in North Carolina because, when you come from here to go to North Carolina.

Speaker 6:

They love the stuff that they do up here because one down south we real big in the dunks, we real big on sitting on real high base, boom, boom you know we're a southern state, right.

Speaker 4:

You know, maryland is the first southern state right, brother, listen, listen.

Speaker 6:

I know this, but I get that. But y'all do things like like northerners up here. I'm not even going to lie to you, I'm going to be real with you. I'm not focused on North fucking Portsmouth.

Speaker 2:

Shout out, shout out 757.

Speaker 6:

So that's the only thing I just really wish they would take out of this area, would take from down south. That. So support, no matter where you go.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 6:

Because I promise you what y'all are bringing to the streets and what y'all are bringing to the table, if they were to support y'all the same way how they support artist down south it wouldn't be a problem. It wouldn't be no problem trying to get to the platform that you're trying to get to. In fact, you would probably have been there by now.

Speaker 4:

And that goes.

Speaker 1:

Along with the food as well. I also want the DMV to come together, man.

Speaker 4:

Baltimore. Come on out the DMV. That's the issue, right, the issue is that we continue to not only continue to segregate ourselves as well, we're a part of the segregation.

Speaker 2:

Ain't nothing wrong with the dummies. Ain't nothing wrong with the dummies. Everybody's street got cigarette butts on it. When your street clean, it in mind, we could be, because your government, doing better. But I'm just going to move in your neighborhood, ain't no difference? I'm trying to wrap with whoever, as much as it sounds good for the.

Speaker 4:

DMV to get together until you get a city that recognizes itself as a state to understand that it would be always tough here, just here. I ain't from nowhere else. So I can't say, but I know for a fact it's people in Dade County that then blew up. I know it's people in Athens, georgia, that blew up, that moved to Atlanta. I understand that, but you can't be from Carroll County moving to Baltimore City and then all of a sudden blow up.

Speaker 3:

Because you wouldn't even get it.

Speaker 4:

Nothing is absolute, so I'm not disagreeing with you.

Speaker 2:

They might want some gold fronts, but I'm just saying for this area.

Speaker 4:

Again, I'm not from everywhere, so I can't really talk about Kansas City, I can't talk about Chicago, I can't talk about these other places, but if you look at the representation that they have put out in the world, they all come from different areas of Chicago East, chicago, west Chicago, north Chicago, south Chicago but yet they represent each other. You come out of Florida. The whole state got your back. I swear if you really follow anybody from here, including myself. I don't ingratiate myself with even Baltimore County, like I don't.

Speaker 1:

The demographic outside of that I don't Like.

Speaker 4:

If you're from Baltimore County, don't say you're from Baltimore City, right, you lose respect right then and there. Because we would much rather you say where you from and not just claim it somewhere you're not from.

Speaker 2:

Represent it like a man.

Speaker 4:

So that's the reason why I support here and again. That's why I'm talking about support locally, because I know for a fact East Baltimore people support East Baltimore people. But it depends on what part of East Baltimore you from Right, because if you're from down the hill, you're going to have a set of different people supporting you down the hill.

Speaker 2:

Let's just change the narrative, because all the stand up, men I agree. We got to change the narrative. It ain't where you from, it's how you come.

Speaker 6:

Come respect, you get respect. Definitely agree with that.

Speaker 1:

I want to see the future with those Baltimore, dc, philly, everybody just had like little links. You feel me East Coast connection, no matter fact that's the name of Pops.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to Reggie Herrod once again. He was in East Coast connection. They got a hit song called Summon the Pops. That's how, god father, that's where we got our stop. 4612 Nacey Avenue, the foundation.

Speaker 4:

But again, think about the people that they put out from Baltimore. How many of them really helped us back out? Right, that also plays a part in it. From athletes, to chefs, to entertainers. We've put a lot of people out there that did not come back and complete for infrastructure or the neighborhoods they grew up in. We talk about deep in the East Baltimore area, deep in the West Baltimore area, stuff like that.

Speaker 4:

They did not come back. We got prime time people that grew up over East Baltimore that you don't see nothing about Sam Cassell here. One, two NBA championships you don't see nothing about. You don't see Sam Cassell name nowhere. Carmelo Anthony from West Baltimore, he from down the project.

Speaker 6:

Oh, he makes it well known. You don't say BNB at all.

Speaker 4:

What I'm saying is his representation was an East Baltimore recreation center Down there near the mill or factory, your first supporters. Right. So as much as people saying I get it, but here again I can only talk about here out. People didn't come back to show us enough local support.

Speaker 2:

And then the ones that did like how you said. They only did it for their neighborhoods.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, they didn't do it for the entire Baltimore city. They ain't doing it for Brooklyn and Cherhill, which we think they are county areas, but they really in the city. Is this saying Like, so that's what I mean by that? When you go to Atlanta, georgia or the state of Georgia, you got a lot of people feeding off of that energy. Go to Florida. You got a lot of people feeding off the energy Texas, et cetera, et cetera. Here is only Baltimore city. It's not Baltimore County, it's not Carroll County.

Speaker 2:

It ain't Anne.

Speaker 4:

Arundel County, it ain't. Let's go to Virginia Like it's none of that. Only thing we know about Virginia is Tyson's corner.

Speaker 6:

Well, let's go ahead and get into what everyone has going on, and we're going to give everybody it's social media. So tell us what you got going on right now.

Speaker 4:

Listen, man, I am what's going on.

Speaker 6:

I know that's right I am.

Speaker 4:

what's going on? I'm hashtagged, mr Goddard Glow. You just say you know how I want to. So they say follow the drip, follow the drip.

Speaker 6:

Absolutely.

Speaker 4:

If you want to find anything worth entertaining, you follow the glow. You just saying Any other way is uncivilized.

Speaker 6:

And go ahead, reintroduce yourself again to everybody.

Speaker 2:

New season dropping the Legion of Doom, I got an R&B rap project out. So, fellas, y'all getting to college, y'all women, and get a moist, you know what?

Speaker 1:

I'm saying For the PG13 crowd like straight bars about relationships.

Speaker 2:

Mr Toxic, I want you to actually go check it out, cause I'm dropping part three. It's going to be called the toxic files, but it's straight relationships, just the second part of the trilogy. I never dropped nothing, gangster. Yet when I drop my games and stuff, it's going on Legion of Doom.

Speaker 6:

It's going to be a different story.

Speaker 2:

Or on my solo project. But I'm working on a 1K project right now and then I got my little brother like, yeah, yeah, I'll play the ring, I'm going to cut you off but the toxic, anything toxic, it is gangster.

Speaker 4:

That is gangster. Go ahead and glitter. I keep rapping love.

Speaker 6:

Let people know what you got going on and how they can all follow you on social media.

Speaker 1:

man, I got a mobile detail. You know miracles cleaning and hauling. You know I do a little trash removal also, detail cause, you know. And then I got the restaurant food truck. I'm a food trapper, I'm a real food trapper. I trap out around with team Sharif man and I help him run his business and franchise restaurants and food trucks. You know, we out there, y'all know us Number one for wraps, number one house of wraps, rotisserie wings, special sauce.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying Shout out to Nacho Bangs.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to new L loves to she. Another artist that's with us. We got a female artist as well as new L love. Oh new L love yeah.

Speaker 6:

And where can they find you on social media right now.

Speaker 1:

So I'm going to add Jreef, j R E F underscore one K, that's for one K, everything. One K off soldier man, one of our good men that passed away a month ago, absolutely.

Speaker 6:

And we ain't go forget about the man behind behind all everything. Produce will go ahead and tell everybody where they can find your social media, what you got going on, I could find me on Digi Dash at all platforms, just at digidash.

Speaker 3:

You know I'm saying I got the studio shit going on right now beats everything Cloven line by the drop. Got to get the shooting video, photography, all entertainment shit man.

Speaker 1:

We going to car bill so we trying to just turn the city up.

Speaker 3:

Man, just give everybody something to do everybody something to get into.

Speaker 1:

Let's come together, let's support each other.

Speaker 6:

Absolutely, absolutely. Hey, man, that's another episode of the vibes podcast. Man, I want to appreciate it. I want to thank all you fellas coming out here. You're supporting us and letting everybody know what you got going on, man. We going to catch our next time on another episode of the vibes podcast.

Speaker 4:

When the vibes chilling with the vibes, with the vibes, you see what I'm saying yes sir.

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Geography's Impact on Relationship Dynamics
Artistry, Inspiration, and Collaboration
Challenges of Being a Black Entrepreneur
Music Industry Support and Collaboration
City Food Trapper and Entertainment