a16z Podcast - a16z Podcast: Straight Outta Compton, The Interview (including Ice Cube and Ben Horowitz)

Episode Date: August 15, 2015

This special episode of the a16z Podcast is based on a Q&A from an early screening we hosted of Universal Pictures’ Straight Outta Compton, the story of the group N.W.A. that revolutionized musi...c and pop culture. The Q&A features Ice Cube, producer, rapper, and one of the original members of N.W.A.; director F. Gary Gray; and Corey Hawkins, Jason Mitchell, and O’Shea Jackson Jr., who play Dr. Dre, Eazy-E, and Ice Cube, respectively. Their wide-ranging conversation -- as interviewed by a16z's Ben Horowitz -- covers the struggle, the drive, the creative process, the cycles of history, the city of Los Angeles ... and why “it’s cool to be a nerd”. photo credit: Khristopher 'Squint' Sandifer

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Yeah, that's me. And last but not least, and I'm apologize, but if there are children here, you already heard a lot of this, a crazy motherfucker named Ice Cube from a dance. Hey, yay. How y'all feeling, man? Wow. It's a great night. Great movie. Great audience. Let's do this shit. All right, so I'm just going to ask a few questions. And then if everybody here has questions, they have everyone's agreed to answer your questions as well
Starting point is 00:01:01 so everybody's excited to be here Gary yes this movie you know was such you made an epic picture it's not the way most people would have done a
Starting point is 00:01:14 kind of a movie about hip hop there's never been a movie about hip hop quite like this you know how did you conceptualize it and you know how did you think about developing this story? Well, first of all, I'm honored to be able to tell a story about such a phenomenal group that changed the course of popular culture. You know, history was changed when
Starting point is 00:01:38 NWA came out and made straight out of Compton. And how I approached it, you know, it was actually, it was hard and it was easy. It was hard because it was so many major things that happened with this group, so much controversy, so much drama. And it's so many, it's like, guys over the course of 10 years to actually choose what to put in the movie was really, really hard. What was easy about it was it's not only hip-hop history,
Starting point is 00:02:06 it's American history. And these guys, seriously, this is, these guys wasn't really interested in serving polite society or being politically correct. And this is something that, you know,
Starting point is 00:02:23 you can go your whole lifetime and not learn that less. lesson and they did it as young guys. And to tell that story, it's just kind of a universal thing that I think anybody can actually identify with. And when you have a story that has a brotherhood and that has triumph and tragedy and rags to riches, that made it easy for me because these are all universal things that we all can identify with that has nothing to do with where you come from, what your culture is, or even if you like hip hop or not. So it was hard, but it was all so easy. Thank you for
Starting point is 00:02:58 that. Great. Well, great work. I appreciate that. I've loved it. That's it. But kind of coming off of that cube, you wrote Fuck the Police. The Police.
Starting point is 00:03:16 The Police. To pronounce it correctly. That's right. In 26 years ago now, and as Gary said like you know how did you come across you know at that point so honestly
Starting point is 00:03:33 to tell the truth like that and then how do you feel about how things have unfolded since then it's almost like we've waited until today to really understand that song well we was just
Starting point is 00:03:49 so frustrated at the time you know we was dealing with Darrell Gates who was the chief of police in Los Angeles at the time. And he had declared a war on gangs. Now, to most law-abiding citizens, the war on gangs sound pretty good. But if they think every black teenager they run across or brown teenager they run across is a gangbanger, that means it's a war on black young teenagers and brown young teenagers.
Starting point is 00:04:25 It was a war on all of us, whether you was banging or not. You were swept in it, caught in it, steamrolled by it. And it was no relief in sight. Before NWA, if a cop testified against you, everybody believed them you were going to jail, straight up. After NWA, people started to say, hmm, is this true? is this true? Then the Rodney King incident happened to let people know what we was talking about was true and that it was thousands of Rodney Kings all through the community in every community.
Starting point is 00:05:08 Then, you know, people start realizing, oh, man, they are serious. So, you know, we really decided to use this song as a weapon as our protests against what was happening to us. Then now you look up and people realize that it is an epidemic because we have camera phones, body cams, dash cams, all these things are letting people know the things that we've been knowing for hundreds of years in this country that, you know, the law enforcement is really stacked against us. And, you know, it's a shame when a country prays. on its own citizens, and that's exactly what's happening right now. Thank you for that.
Starting point is 00:06:06 That's a great commentary and explanation in Israeli. I hadn't thought of it in that way, but you have a war. It's a war on your own citizens. You're going to war on your own people, and you train people like that, and that's what you get. It's terrible. But one of the amazing things about the movie, and O'Shea Jr., like, this is your first major role,
Starting point is 00:06:33 is my understanding, which is shocking because it was spooky watching you because, you know, I watched your father when he was, and it was like hard to tell that you weren't him. Like, you were that good. And I don't know what they give Best Actor 2 for, but, like, if it's recreating Ice Cube, like, completely, like, you should win it. That was amazing.
Starting point is 00:06:54 Thank you. Thank you. I appreciate that. How did you like how did you even go about approaching it though? I mean because you're so close to him did you have to then go back and study him or how did you how did you get to that role? My preparation was the hardest part.
Starting point is 00:07:13 You know, he brought me the idea of being in the movie before there was a script and he flat out said I need you I need you to play me So, you know, you kind of got to get this. So, you know, we talked to Gary and Gary got me, you know, the acting coaches I needed,
Starting point is 00:07:34 Aaron Spizer, Susan Basson, and Dustin Felder once I got the role. And I was auditioning for two years before I got the part. And that's annoying. That's the longest last mission ever. But because, you know, there's the idea of you're not going to get it. You know, you're not going to get it. and that would uh that would have killed me that would have really uh in a way humiliated me you know it's my father this this movie is so much bigger than music is so much bigger than a group
Starting point is 00:08:06 you know this is my family's legacy and it means the world to me that i have the you know the opportunity to cement him in cinema forever and that's something that i felt like i needed to do for him but can we back up just a little bit you know I want to dispel any rumors that or any thoughts that this guy actually was given this role. He worked the hardest out of anybody in his cast to get this role. It took him two years of auditioning and callbacks and chemistry tests. And even with the chemistry, tell him what happened with the chemistry test. Okay, okay, okay, okay.
Starting point is 00:08:44 Let's back it up. We want to work for this role. So two years of auditioning, and then we finally get to. a chemistry test. Now, I've never done a movie. I don't know what that means. I'm just thinking it's going to be a cube, or easy a dray. We're going to do some scenes. So, I get there, I walk in there, I see a Jerry curl. Now, I know I'm going for Q. I step up, you know, what's going on? How you doing? I'm O'Shea. You going for Easy? No, no, I'm going for Cube. Oh, okay, okay, okay. Well, I got some bad news for you today. You know, and so I had to deal with you.
Starting point is 00:09:21 with two other cubes there. Competition, if you will. But, you know, it was just things that, another challenge that I had to get over from the get-go, me and these two guys, man, we clicked. These dudes are, you know, some of my best friends at this point.
Starting point is 00:09:39 And, you know, the chemistry test was just another notch in my belt. You know, all the hard work, everything I had to go through. It was all building confidence that I needed in myself. I needed to cram as much, experience as I could in a short amount of time to give y'all the best project that I could.
Starting point is 00:09:58 You did it. You didn't even have to tell us that, Gary, because he proved it wasn't nepotism in the movie. Like, that was great. Come on, Brian. It's stages, you know. He did an amazing job in the movie, but he did an amazing job really earning the part. You know, people don't realize that these guys. went through boot camp
Starting point is 00:10:23 not only to just earning the part but just actually preparing for the part so I'm going to let you do this thing but I want people to understand no go ahead it's just one of those things man I've been involved with this project for four years it took me four years
Starting point is 00:10:40 to get this on up to the screen I think it took Cube over a decade maybe 13 years to put this on the screen so this is not something where we woke up and said you know what we want to make a movie okay NWA it's a slam dunk it's a passion project. It's a laborer love. And everybody who's sitting up here really, really put their blood, sweat, and tears into making this movie what it is today. And, you know, nepotism was not a part of this project. Because when it's all said and done, the novelty of Cube Sun playing Cube wears off after the first five minutes. If he can't carry a movie, this movie doesn't work. Period. So I really wanted to put that out. there because these guys really worked
Starting point is 00:11:23 them, worked hard to do this. Thank you, Gary. Thank you. Thank you. That's a great commentary. So actually picking up on that since I got my co-interviewers doing an excellent job, Gary. I can't help it. Gary and I were actually talking backstage about one of the things that struck me about the movie, there isn't really
Starting point is 00:11:43 a movie with characters this complex and multi-dimensional, you know, outside of like Shakespeare. And in particular, the character who is the most complicated, one of the most complicated characters I've seen on screen in decades was EZE, because Easy, you know, he starts out, you know, drug dealer, band leader, the rookie in the band not into music, then the tragic character. And Jason, just tell us about, like, how did you prepare for that and how did you, you know, how did you play such a multi-dimensional role where you were so many things throughout the movie?
Starting point is 00:12:21 I had a lot of drive, you know, coming into the part from the beginning. And I really had the opportunity. I saw EZE as an opportunity to not only recreate him and, you know, recreate people as they know him, but to really be able to pull all my creative guns out, you know. And I had to make a complete transformation to do it because I had to drop the accent and learn how to talk and walk like I was from California and learn the music and learn how to rap and learn all these different things and eat 4,000. and calories a day to get my chest big
Starting point is 00:12:53 and box and do all these things. I'm like, oh, easy, he wasn't doing all this, you know what I mean? But you know, I had, it was a heavy task. It was a heavy, heavy, heavy task. But that was before I could get to the point where I could take direction.
Starting point is 00:13:10 You know, because all of these things are things I felt like I didn't want to worry about while trying to act. You know, because acting it has to be real. So, there were a lot things that went into that, but Gary, Q, the rest of NWA, you know, really, really, really helped me channel what I felt like was him and to give him a real opinion. But Gary had this
Starting point is 00:13:36 real safe zone for each of us, because everybody had their own things to do, you know, like he worked super hard, you know, but he had a vision for everybody, I think, and it was kind of chronologically set up for us to develop a real thing. Brotherhood and a lot that we did that, you know, kind of transfers on screen well well. But listen, you guys have to appreciate the transformation that Jason made because it's one thing if you're from the streets of L.A. and you are from the streets, but the streets of New Orleans, which is completely different. So he's from the South. So learn the culture, learn the swag, learn how to perform, get larger, all these things you have to do in such a short amount of time.
Starting point is 00:14:18 The transformation was crazy. And the boot camp, that you had to go through in order to give such an honest performance was absolutely amazing as well. And I've, you know, read these stories about some of my favorite films like Raging Bull, where De Niro has to gain weight and lose weight and do all these things to give such a great performance or a city of God where the director works with these kids for months and months and months. Like I think you worked with him for nine months. You guys came in eight weeks, recorded the entire Straight Out of Compton album. these guys the actors recorded recorded the album gained weight lost weight
Starting point is 00:14:55 Corey went to school to actually DJ and you know you bring up Shakespeare Corey actually was doing he was on Broadway doing Shakespeare something like that and went to Julia come on let's talk let's talk yes that's uh it was Romeo and Juliet I was reading yeah yeah that's amazing so what was it like going like one from that and then to play not only to play a living legend but a living legend who my understanding was like on the set every day like yeah um what was that like how did that challenge what's the difference in those challenges uh man i don't know i just i look at it all as is a just a huge blessing you know first and
Starting point is 00:15:48 foremost because your life as an actor, man, especially as a black young brother, you know, in this business, you never know where the next paycheck is going to come from. You never know, you know, some of y'all here might know, you know, but you never know, you know, what the next opportunity is going to yield. So, you know, as we always say, Jason says, you know, a lot, it feels like we hit the life lottery with these roles and these characters. And we, it wasn't lost on us the task that was was ahead because initially with dray i'd you know got the call to come in for him and and i was like nah i don't think i can do that i don't think i'm the one who can you know i don't think i look like them sound like i'm act like i'm none of that you know and um but it was a lot of
Starting point is 00:16:38 just your actor insecurities you know what i'm saying getting your own head and and and getting in your own way and um i remember you know just if when i found out gary was involved and our heavily cube was involved and dray it was like okay it's game time now all right you know what i mean because i knew this story was going to be epic but i didn't want to be the one to mess it up but you know thankfully i got the role and you know these guys though man they made it easy you know what i'm saying working with jason working with shay outis hodge who plays wren neil brown junior who plays yellow we became brothers doing this whole process man like we really, I mean, I can't even like put it in the words, man, how, how closely we had to
Starting point is 00:17:23 to get NWA right before we could even step on set, you know, the two months of prep work. And Drey was there for the whole thing, man, from the very beginning. He was there on set every day. And anytime I needed something, if four o'clock in the morning, if I called him, he'd pick up the phone because he's in the studio working. You know what I mean? But it was a lot, man. I had to learn how to DJ, never did that before in my life,
Starting point is 00:17:49 never had to learn how to produce, you know what I'm saying? I think the amount of respect that these guys had for what they was trying to do. Exactly. Because, I mean, they're legends. Who sits in the presence of legends like that? You know what I mean? To the point where they falling asleep, like, all right, I'm still here. I'm good.
Starting point is 00:18:03 You know what I mean? And Cube's shooting right along, too. You're like, well, I feel like Ice Cube behind me right now. Somebody got the iPad. He's like, Jason, you good? I'm checking up on you. I'm like, wow. You know, but to know that the same people,
Starting point is 00:18:16 who like put that huge insecurity or that huge fear or whatever you feel when you first meet a legend they completely swept that off the board for us and be like man you're the man for the job you know what I mean and we trust y'all to do this but we're going to watch you know right and yeah man I think we really came out with something good it's about capturing their humanity man because we're not playing who they are today we're playing the young men they were then and you see, you know, you can look at who they are today and you see where they came from and everything they overcame.
Starting point is 00:18:51 You know what I mean? That's what we wanted to capture. Just who the men were. And, you know, like you said, you were talking about Shakespearean, man, it is Shakespearean. In Romeo and Juliet, there's the Montague's and the Capulets and they feuding for no reason.
Starting point is 00:19:05 Nobody knows why they're feuding. You can look at the bloods and the crypts and you can see that same energy as there, man. Like it's in the language, man. And hip hop, it's the same, man. it's like it all it all correlates man but we pulled on everything Gary gave us everything we needed you know to get this job done and then the big homies the big uncles you know what I'm saying they they were there every single day to make sure we did it right well you did it right and
Starting point is 00:19:30 just just as a as a statement of this you know my wife and my mother-in-law are here and they you know they started out in Compton and um watching them watch the movie it was like If you want to stand up, Nana, Felicia. Hey, hey. Like the shirt. Right? I see that NWA shirt. I love it.
Starting point is 00:19:55 I love it. You put them in a time machine. It was like they literally went back in time. I mean, the look on their faces was unbelievable. It was like they were watching their life 20 years ago. You got to get back to this man right here. He's a genius. He's a real life genius.
Starting point is 00:20:13 He put you in a time. caps, we'll shoot you back. You know what I mean? Yes, he did. Thank you. And so what I'd like to do now is turn it over to Gary because he is the director. And if anybody has any questions,
Starting point is 00:20:25 Gary will direct. That's what I said. Go ahead and get it out. Thank you, Mr. Horowitz. I want to thank the Horowitz family for bringing us all here today. What an amazing opportunity. So I have a quick
Starting point is 00:20:37 question and a comment. My name is Latifah Simon, and I'm really excited because just yesterday I was elected to end as a new board member for the National Black Lives Matter movement. Wow. Congratulations. Amazing. That's what so. In this moment, a couple of things. This movie matters.
Starting point is 00:20:52 And many of us who are writers, we want to run to our computers immediately and write a commentary about why it matters, the commodification of hip-hop, the forgiveness and love and humanization of black men. And all that you all did in two and a half hours, I can't even begin to capture what this will do for movies. in this time. So my question, damn, this was a damn good movie. Wow. Thank you so much. I'm shaking. A couple of things. And I'm shaking because many of us
Starting point is 00:21:28 who were involved in the HIV movement 20 years ago when we were 16 and 17 and 18 and on the streets. When I saw that amazing scene, I want to understand how you all prepared for that. When we saw Easy's patch years and years ago, and we brought the quilt to Hunter's Point and seeing mothers wheat because they had lost their babies and they were never able to talk about losing their babies. Easy gave HIV voice in our community. And what you all have done with this picture, you reignited because HIV is still the leading cause of death of black young people in the Bay Area.
Starting point is 00:22:02 Let's speak. So not murder, not homicide. I want to know from Mr. Cube and also senior and also the director, your hopes and dreams for this film. So I'll give the microphone to Mr. Horowitz. Well, you know, I want people to be inspired by our story. You know, our story can be any person in here, you know, who has a dream, who won't be stopped
Starting point is 00:22:37 You know, we did this with creativity You know, we fought back with a pen And a piece of paper You can do the same thing With a laptop, iPad, whatever y'all fucking way right about now Yeah, but it's all about creativity You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:22:54 It's all about, you know, being constructive and not destructive And, you know, you're going to have powerful forces against you, you know? I mean, what we didn't show It's people that was in our neighborhood and our families told us we couldn't rap that we weren't going to be nothing and we didn't listen to nobody. We just was ourselves and it was all right. And, you know, so I want people to be inspired by the story.
Starting point is 00:23:23 You know, it's a great American story. You know, it's youngsters with courage standing up for what we want to do. Now, everything we did wasn't positive. That's not what we're saying, but everything we did was honest. And people like that. People like when you're honest. They don't like when you're full of shit
Starting point is 00:23:47 and when you're lying all the time and when you're just trying to put on the good face or putting on the good mask. And a lot of artists would do that. They put on the good mass when they get on stage, get off stage, and be Ike Turner. You know what I'm saying? So, we just like, if you want to be Ike Turner, let us know.
Starting point is 00:24:09 Be that shit on stage, so we know who you are, so we stay away. So don't hide behind no masks. And, you know, so I just want people to be inspired. That's all. That's all. For me, it's a movie of a lifetime for me. It's a project of a lifetime because it's very personal to me. I grew up in South Central L.A.
Starting point is 00:24:28 In the 80s, in the 90s. And I worked with Q. at the beginning of my career. He gave me my break. I did Friday. That was my first movie. Thank you. And so when you talk about L.A.,
Starting point is 00:24:46 South Central L.A., that era, hip-hop, movies, and all of the points that we kind of, in the topics that we touched on in this movie, all these things don't normally intersect. You know, you bring
Starting point is 00:25:01 up HIV and AIDS and, you know, police brutality and, you know, if you're going to be politically correct or not and serve polite society and however it works out, it's a project of a lifetime for me because it's not only personal, it's relevant in so many ways and it'll be relevant for a very long time. And when people say what was going on in America, 100 years from now, hopefully this is a film that they reference. And I just wanted to be as honest about the depiction as possible. And, you know, fact is sometimes stranger than fiction. You know, all these things where a guy starts off DJ in a garage and becomes a billionaire,
Starting point is 00:25:48 and another guy starts off riding in a bus at school and becomes a Hollywood mogul. You can't write that. If someone sent me that script, I would be like, that's bullshit. you know and so to touch on these topics honestly I don't know if any of these things will ever intersect for me as a filmmaker ever again and so it was really important for me to make it as honestly as possible
Starting point is 00:26:13 and I'm glad that it's relevant but at the same time I'm a little sad that it's relevant you know I wish I could say remember back in the day when the music was great remember back in the day when the police used to overstep their boundaries and abuse their power. That was then. We're all kind of doing our thing now as Americans, but it's sadly not the case. But I will say that I'm cautiously optimistic that all of the pressure from the headlines and women like you that are stepping up and actually doing something
Starting point is 00:26:45 about it, it's going to force change. And it's going to put pressure on our leaders in law enforcement. It's going to put pressure on our leaders in Washington. And for those law enforcement officers that are out there that have the tendency or the propensity to actually do things like that. Maybe they'll watch this movie and think twice. So thank you for that. We really appreciate what you do as
Starting point is 00:27:08 well. Thank you. Good luck to the second question. He put his hand down. Well, I just have a question about, you know, it was a struggle obviously from inner city. and from getting out, but it was also a struggle for the art form to gain respect. And
Starting point is 00:27:32 you know, I wonder now you look at hip-hop and it's a global phenomenon and it's changed. So, you know, for Cube and for Gary, how much, you know, could NWA come out now? Do you think? Yeah, definitely. You know, now is probably more easier for NWA
Starting point is 00:27:48 to come out than back then. You know, hip-hop was you know, it was the underground the enemy of music back back then you know you hear a lot of people in the movie saying you know rap is not a art
Starting point is 00:28:04 nobody want to hear that rap reality bullshit you know they're saying all that to us you know the soul music R&B music singers hated us though he was the scourge of the earth
Starting point is 00:28:19 you know and so you know we wore that as a badge to be ourselves even more you know the more that the industry hated what we were doing the more that we wanted to do it and be ourselves
Starting point is 00:28:35 and we didn't care about what they was saying about us and what they was thinking about the music we knew that you know this music was powerful and it finally gave the youth a voice you know the youth is voiceless
Starting point is 00:28:50 nobody listens to the youth and with rap music you got to to listen. So it was just a powerful time against powerful opposition, but, you know, that's why this is movie worthy, because it's so many obstacles that were in our way that tried to take us down. A few of them worked, but most of them didn't, and that's what it's all about. I look at it a little differently. I kind of feel like there'll never be another group like NWA, because they had to do it without any reference, you know. There was no real examples of guys stepping up and doing it the way they did it,
Starting point is 00:29:37 facing the opposition of the FBI and law enforcement having to build a company without any real reference. So you look at cash money records, you look at death row, you look at bad boy records and things like that. they all had ruthless records as a reference, you know, and unless you look back at like maybe Motown or something like that, which was, you know, not even the generation that they could really kind of connect to in that way business-wise, it was a bunch of young guys just finding their way. And we watched them grow up on whack, so I'm not really sure if you'll ever really see another NWA.
Starting point is 00:30:12 And while I appreciate there are a few guys out there that are really doing it, Jay Cole is doing it. Kendrick Lamar is doing it. But there's no Kendrick Lamar without NWA. So I personally feel like, you know, I hope it inspires artists to actually get out there. But again, they'll still be inspired by groups like NWA. Man, I just, Q.
Starting point is 00:30:38 I just say, what's up and how you doing, man? What up, homie? South Central is in the house. Yeah, what's up? We brought four or five kids. Can you guys, can stand up? Five kids. We drove from South Central.
Starting point is 00:30:52 Just come see this today. That's right. That's right. Let me tell you why, though. Let me tell you why. So I grew up. I grew up in Watts. I grew up in Watts.
Starting point is 00:31:01 And it's such a great pleasure to be here today with you guys. Because this morning I was in Watts talking about the, today is the anniversary of the Watts riots back in the 60s. So now I'm here watching this and I'm like blown away. And the reason why, because NWA has been insane. inspiring me ever since the 90s, ever since the 80s when I was growing up in South Central and Watts. And ever since then, I thought, man, we got to keep doing something different, do something new and get the youth to be inspired and you used to speak out. So you guys had NWA. We have
Starting point is 00:31:32 TXT, which means T's exploring technology. And this is the future technology, young entrepreneurs in South Central, Los Angeles, doing things. That's what I'm doing hackathons. Yeah. And we just had So look, we just had the biggest hackathon in Watts right now. We had about 200 people, about 100 kids in the Knicks. So if you know the Knicks and Gardens down in Watts, we had 70 kids, 80 kids down there. And we are facing the same thing that you guys face with music about, no, rap not being artists or rap not being a music. Now, we're facing the same thing because people in Watts or leaders or police officials are telling us hackathons are a bad thing. so that's what they're telling us like hackathans teaching kids how to code it's a bad thing
Starting point is 00:32:19 it's going to hack into a computer they're going to do something illegal and we shouldn't be doing it but we brought it to the nix we had a hackathon my question to you is this there's kids down there doing this and they're they're hacking away learning how to code and building our own tech companies not having a lot of knowledge how the tech world starts and how the tech world gets going I'm asking you today you didn't have any knowledge of the rap and the music industry what advice would you have for kids now to say, hey, keep going. I met O'Shea at USC with QD3, and I remember him telling me that you said to him, hey, I want you to get your degree first before you come and work with me.
Starting point is 00:32:59 And he got his degree at USC. I remember him talking to me back there. But I'm asking you today is what advice would you have in order to inspire kids and say, even if you don't have everything, all the tools necessary, to keep going and achieve their dreams. you know you got to believe in yourself you know it's all about you know having that self-determination you know you know what you're doing is right it feels right don't worry about what people say you know don't let people discourage you into not doing what you know
Starting point is 00:33:34 you want to do and what you're feeling uh even family members uh friends you know close people will try to discourage you and get you off your path. It's just natural, especially when they don't see the light at the end of the tunnel. But you just got to work and be determined, not care what people say, and study. You know, everything you want to learn is in a book somewhere. And so that's what it's all about. It's all about getting your determination up and getting your passion up and trying to be great at what you do. And to me, that's all the amnition you need to get out there and do anything you have your heart set on.
Starting point is 00:34:20 And, you know, so like, it's not cool to be what they call a nerd now. Or it's not cool to be smart, which is the dumbest shit in the world. But I don't know when that happened because it was cool to be smart in my neighborhood. It's cool to be smart. Because everybody knows that, you know, all the cool people, you ain't going to be doing nothing but working for what you call the geeks anyway when you get out of high school anyway. So you need to kind of get your shit together,
Starting point is 00:34:55 and you might need to become a nerd and a geek too. You know what I'm saying? Nothing wrong with that. Nothing wrong with that. You know, they give it these names, but that just means you're smart, you focus, and you know what you want to do and know what you want to be, and nothing wrong with that, man. Don't let nobody make you feel ashamed of that.
Starting point is 00:35:14 You know, that's cool to me. You know what I'm saying? It's cool to have things and to be smart, you know. So that's what it's all about. Okay, we're going to take two more. Two more questions. Hey, Vijay, a couple of questions. You know, for the actors,
Starting point is 00:35:34 what are you going to take out from the movie going forward? There must have been scenes that brought you back, to, you know, what you went through at that point in time? Well, well, the things that I'm going to take from this film that I hope everybody takes from this film is the confidence that NWA had and, you know, their courageousness, you know, that they're willing to be the straw that stirs the drink, you know, and anybody else who follows in their footsteps are just caught in the current.
Starting point is 00:36:07 and everyone should take the kind of confidence and integrity that the characters show and apply it to anything that you do from the custodian to the president you know everybody should take the same kind of characteristics you know the things that speak to the human character in this film are things that I feel like we as society need to be refreshed on constantly so I just want everyone to take that from the film and to apply it to your everyday life no matter what it is that you do. Yeah, that's super important because, I mean,
Starting point is 00:36:45 if you take my situation, for instance, I've only been acting for five years. Like, I never thought this could happen. You know, if I'd have wrote my own story, it wouldn't be this good. You know, so I think, you know, like watching NWA, you can see that they were just five guys of a like mind
Starting point is 00:37:02 and they changed the world. You know what if it was 10 guys? You know? And we got to start thinking on that level. We got to start thinking like, I mean, we could do anything, like, for real, for real, for real. You know? And for me, what I took from this movie really is that these guys never changed. You know what I mean?
Starting point is 00:37:23 Like, I'm somebody like from a street. And I always thought that I would have to articulate so much better and, you know, do these things and wear these kind of pants and have this kind of job. You know, and none of that is true. You know, you just got to be you. And if you continue to be you, it'll bring you exactly where you need to be. You know, so be happy with that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's real talk.
Starting point is 00:37:54 Be you and be the best you, though. You know what I'm saying? Be the best you, be to positively you, you know? And from this film, I take away, you know, going the path left's chosen, you know what I'm saying? And being strong enough to make that decision. Because for me, I grew up in D.C., you know, my mother is a police officer. My dad, you know, dealing with drugs and, you know what I'm saying? It's a whole other lifestyle.
Starting point is 00:38:27 And for me, I grew up seeing both. You know what I'm saying? grew up sort of on both side of the tracks, you know, and I grew up watching a lot of my friends go that way. And I had to make a choice, you know what I'm saying? Everybody else is doing that. That must be cool. What's the choice that's going to lead me to go this way? You know what I mean? The same way the NWA had to make a choice. When the FBI came down on these teenagers for speaking reality, they made a choice to put their foot on the gas and keep going, you know? That's the thing that I take away from it is that it doesn't matter where you from or what your
Starting point is 00:39:05 situation is, whether you're white, black, Asian, Latina, whatever your race, whatever, your socio-political, economic, whatever, you can be the best you. And this film shows that because you see what they came from and you see who they are today. And you see the choices that they made to get there. This isn't no fairy tale. This isn't non, this isn't fiction. This is real life. And like Gary said, it's like, you can't write this shit.
Starting point is 00:39:30 Like, you really can. you know if you think about oh this would be a great movie not no this is this is reality it was funny because we would be on set man and and i remember dray was like man this this could this could be a movie man because this this this part was and we were shooting it like you know so it's just it's just be you you know what i'm saying have have have have that confidence and go get it you know Some of my favorite parts of the movie is like that I remember real vividly happening like on the bus that day
Starting point is 00:40:09 when dude got on the bus tripped out gave the fucking motivational speech and boned out and then you know performing that doodles you know I remember that vividly. You know, my favorite part, though, is
Starting point is 00:40:27 going in Brian Turner's office with the bat. Yeah. You know, that brings back memories right there. Yeah, I was on one. I was on one. For real. But we cool now. We cool now. You know? You paid me my money, too. Shit. Okay, I just wanted to know what made you guys want to become actors in the first place,
Starting point is 00:41:01 and why did you guys choose to audition for this film? I just needed new friends. For real. I was like, mm. I don't really like what y'all into. Maybe I'm going to do this, you know? And it was something that, like, I never really thought was going to turn out like that. Like, they just had this lady who just had this acting workshop, and I was like,
Starting point is 00:41:22 they might have some nice-looking females in there, you know? So I'm like, all right, let me go do this. And maybe like three weeks into it, I was like, I really, really, really like this. Like, this is something that just was expressive. You know what I mean? And I can go there and just do something different for four, three hours out of my day and be like, you know, that's what's up. And maybe like five weeks into it, they just had an agent coming there and check me out. And she looked at the whole class and was like, everybody needs to take this.
Starting point is 00:41:55 serious. You want to know how serious it is? I'm about to sign him. Like, what? You know what I mean? And yeah, hell of large. And it took me maybe like about five or six months to book, but after I seen one of them checks, I'm like, man, hey, hey, hey, you know? And after that, it was all about trying to push and get to the next level because you're really nothing without a resume and acting. You know what I mean? Everybody got to start somewhere, but you have to humble yourself and say, I can't take that lead role, you know what I mean? Because you think you know how to act until you get there and have 80 different setups that you got to do
Starting point is 00:42:31 and you got to do this and you got to do that and you're like, ah, wait, you know, because they don't have time to teach you when they're spending millions and millions of dollars. So, yeah, it just, it was one thing that kind of, you know, was going to the next, in the next. But I was always so happy to work that people were like, man, it's just a good dude to work around.
Starting point is 00:42:49 So it was like, man, maybe we should try to read them for a lead. Sliad me that easy E, murder she wrote. Murdered she wrote. For me, I don't know. I just like telling stories, you know? I like the old tradition of the grios, you know what I'm saying? Sitting around a cap growing up here and grandma telling stories. I just, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:43:12 I just love being able to translate real life to screen or to the stage, you know? Because we get to do this for a living. This is fun, man. This is fun. It's a blessing, you know what I mean, to be able to wake up every day and do this and be able to be here with you guys. But the truth is, like, I'm more of a, you know, reserve kind of guy. Like, I'm not very, you know, but when I get to get on stage or get on film, I can let go and just let loose, you know. That's, it's sort of an outlet for me, whereas it could have been something else, you know.
Starting point is 00:43:49 So I just encourage people who are interested. I mean, I don't know if you are, but like, yeah, you know, go for it, do it, because you can be here, you know. You will be here. I'm really into screenwriting, you know, I'm definitely into writing scripts. I've always liked telling stories and things like that. And he's really the reason why I got into it, you know, I saw that he needed me. He told me in the beginning during the audition. process that, you know, it's a lot of people that don't want you to get this, you know, plain
Starting point is 00:44:28 and simple because of nepotism and things like that. But, you know, knowing that all that people don't want me to do it, but he want me to do it. And that's really all that I needed. And, like, I, you know, I had never act before. I got the AEE and drama in high school. You know, that's what that's, that's really it. but I had fun I had the time of my life I'm not going to act like this movie didn't drive me crazy
Starting point is 00:44:57 but it's all because of the pressure I put on myself and while I was filming I was thinking about my screenwriting friends like you know they go chew my ass out oh you're an actor now this is what you do you know so it was all a collective things
Starting point is 00:45:10 I feel like I know what goes into a good movie and I've had way too much fun on this project these guys you know great morale makes great movies You know, I pray that I get another set like this because I didn't put all this hard work, you know, just for one.
Starting point is 00:45:28 I'm trying to be here for a while, y'all. That's right. All right. Please give it up one more time for straight out of Compton. Thank you, y'all. Thank you, thank you. Thank you, thank you. Oh, wait, wait a minute.
Starting point is 00:45:43 I'm tall, I'm tall. I'm tall. I'm not, but I'm going to stand up with you. Thank you. Thank you, God. Thank you. We just want to thank you all so much for making this movie and for sharing it with us and coming and talking about. It's been a great honor and privilege.
Starting point is 00:46:00 And I think I speak for everyone in Silicon Valley when I say, damn, that shit was dope. Thanks, Ben. Thank you.

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