Drink Champs - Episode 26 w/ Snoop Dogg (Part 2)

Episode Date: August 5, 2016

N.O.R.E. and DJ EFN are the Drink Champs. In this episode the guys drink it up with the West Coast legend Snoop Dogg. Make Some noise for another Drink Champs / Smoke Champs collaboration! --- Support... this podcast: https://anchor.fm/drinkchamps/support Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is an iHeart Podcast. Why is a soap opera Western like Yellowstone so wildly successful? The American West with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. So join me starting Tuesday, May 6th, where we'll delve into stories of the West and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today. Listen to The American West with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I know a lot of cops. They get asked all the time,
Starting point is 00:00:38 have you ever had to shoot your gun? Sometimes the answer is yes. But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no. This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated. I get right back there and it's bad. Listen to Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on good company. The podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next. In this episode, I'm joined by Anjali Sood, CEO of Tubi. We dive into the competitive world of streaming.
Starting point is 00:01:19 What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core. There are so many stories out there. And if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content, the term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen. Listen to Good Company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Your gut microbiome and those healthy bacteria can actually have positive effects. Your mental health, your immunity, your risk of cancer, almost any disease under the sun. This week on Dope Labs, Titi and I dive into the world of probiotics, the hype, the science, and what your gut bacteria are really doing behind the scenes. From drinks and gummies to probiotic pillows. Yes, really, probiotic pillows. We're
Starting point is 00:02:13 breaking down what's legit and what's just brilliant marketing. With expert insight from gastroenterologist Dr. Roshi Raj. Listen to Dope Labs on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts ready to give you a tour to find the right one. Serving lamb this season? Try it with a bold Cabernet from the trendy Paso Robles region. Whether you're hosting or just bringing the wine, we love to share our always low prices and ridiculous selection. This spring at Total Wine & More. Cheers. Yeah, what's up, y'all? What's going on, brother?
Starting point is 00:03:00 Three Chance Radio. He's a legendary Queens rapper. Hey, Hank, say hi to your boy Champ Radio. He's a legendary Queens rapper. Hey, Hank Segre, this is your boy N.O.R.E. He's a Miami hip-hop pioneer. What up, it's DJ EFN. Together, they drink it up with some of the biggest players in music and sports. You know what I mean? The most professional, unprofessional podcast and your number one source for drunk facts.
Starting point is 00:03:21 This is Drinks Champ Radio, where every day is New Year's Eve. Let's go! I want to ask you, Tupac on Death Row. How was that? Because you had just beat the murder trial, correct? Yes, yes. You had just beat the murder trial. Yes.
Starting point is 00:03:44 Pac comes to Death Row, then Murder Was the case Was like Was that the first record Y'all recorded Or am I mistaken No the first record Is that the first record That came out No the first record
Starting point is 00:03:51 That me and him did Was America's Most Wanted Oh That's what I said That's what I said In your mind In my mind
Starting point is 00:03:59 I'm sorry When I said You said Gangsta Party Yeah No you said Murder was the case Murder was the case Which Murder Was the Case, which is only him.
Starting point is 00:04:06 Oh, there you are. In my mind, I was saying some other shit. Drunk facts. I'm dyslexic. I'm sorry. He was my friend before he got on Defro.
Starting point is 00:04:13 Before that? Yeah. He was at that same Source Awards, didn't he? He wasn't there. We had a cutout billboard of him inside of a cell. We had cells
Starting point is 00:04:23 and everybody was in the cell. His billboard was cut out in a cell. He wasn't even on death row or talked about being on death row. We just did that as a symbol of representing him and fucking with him because he was my friend. So that was a play that I did
Starting point is 00:04:38 to put him in there to represent it. So you're saying he was your friend. I'm the reason why he was on death row. Oh, wow. I ain't never heard that. He was my friend and my thing was speaking with Suge
Starting point is 00:04:53 because after he had got shot, I had flew to New York the next day and it was like shit was going bad for him and he had got locked up and I was like, man, Suge, we need to put that nigga with us. How far back is y'all's friendship? Poetic Justice Rap Party was the first night I met him. And then we became friends.
Starting point is 00:05:14 Actually, MC Breed, rest in peace, was trying to buy some dope, and I knew the nigga that knew the nigga, so Breed got some dope for me. And D.O.C. and Bre was cool, and Tupac, and that's how we all became like a circle of friends. Crazy. Believe it. This is crazy.
Starting point is 00:05:32 That's crazy. I ain't gonna lie. I ain't gonna lie. I got so hip-hop mode fan just now. I was just saying, I'm a guy, I was supposed to ask a question at this point. Like, I was just sitting there like,
Starting point is 00:05:43 I'm just thinking like, so, all right, boom. Like, I was just sitting there, like, I'm just thinking, like, word. So, all right, boom. Now, Pop comes here. He's already there. Y'all already doing what he doing. These records come out. These records, let me tell you this so you'll know.
Starting point is 00:06:00 All eyes on me. When he get out, I'm working on the dog, Father. So, when he get out, my cousin D on the dog father. So when he get out, my cousin Daz is like my number one supplier. Dre basically not really giving up music because I think he on his way out, but we don't really know what's going on. He's doing cocaine in the bathroom.
Starting point is 00:06:18 Don't mind that. Hey, thanks for doing it in the bathroom. So we're working on my record, so when he get out, naturally I tell Daz and the whole crew, Pac getting out, y'all throw cuz all of the music. Get him right first. So he end up getting all this hot music because we was in the process of doing hot shit. And then Pac brought a spirit to the studio that was different than anybody we ever worked with.
Starting point is 00:06:41 He had a work spirit that was like, this nigga could be in three different rooms at one time and making music, and he would never listen to it. Like we was always, we learned this from Dr. Dre, we would make a song, we would listen to that motherfucker for a whole month. I mean, just back to back, 30 days, just listening to the same goddamn song,
Starting point is 00:06:58 partying, inviting bitches over off the same record. And the song might not even come out. Yeah, and then it never come out. The nigga Tupac was like, nigga, when we make a song, when we finish it, when we ain't listening to that shit, pull another beat up,
Starting point is 00:07:12 we doing another motherfucking song, you can mix that motherfucking when you finish, we'll listen to it. He was a factory. He was never about, like, even when we made one song, boom,
Starting point is 00:07:22 motherfucker, the last verse, he'd be like, all right, play it back. We play it down from top to bottom. As soon as that motherfucker cut off, all right, give it to the engineer, pull the next beat up. Never did we listen to a song twice with that nigga.
Starting point is 00:07:35 That's something that I learned from him that I take with me today, because I wasn't like that. I learned from Dr. Dre. I learned from my teacher. They taught me how to... Different styles. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:07:44 Perfection is another type of perfection. But Pac was on something like, nigga, fuck teacher. They taught me how to. Different styles. Exactly. Perfectionist and another type of perfectionist. But Pac was on some like, nigga, fuck that. We going, we going, we going, we going. How you thinking nigga made three albums and motherfucking shit six months? That's Gemini shit, Joe, by the way. That's Gemini shit. I'm a Gemini, so I understand where he comes from. What sign are you, Snoop?
Starting point is 00:08:00 I'm a Libra. All right, what sign are you? Fuck that, we can know your sign. Virgo. I'm a Virgo. I don sign would it have been? Fuck, we can know your sign. Virgo. I'm a Virgo. I don't know if it means anything, but fuck it. Let's make some noise for the sign. Yo, Snoop. Astrology. Listen, Snoop, I can't
Starting point is 00:08:15 thank you so much. We got a couple of questions. No, no, no. In mid-interview, I just want to thank you because, you know what? This is the first time artists, you know. I'm not kidding. But you know what? In mid-interview, I just want to thank you because you know what? This is the first time
Starting point is 00:08:28 artists, you know what I'm saying, is running media right now. Right now, we are running DJs. And DJs. I'm sorry. I got to represent
Starting point is 00:08:36 the motherfucking DJs, man. That's all right. That's all right. You always got to have a Mexican around you. Listen, but he's from L.A. I'm from L.A. too. Yeah. Same shit. Mexican. I he's from L.A. You always, I'm from L.A. too.
Starting point is 00:08:46 Yeah. Same shit, Mexican. I'm originally from L.A., Southgate, whatever. Same shit, same shit.
Starting point is 00:08:52 Yeah, I live in Southgate. You always got a kid, and you know what? Pete Ellis Donge in the motherfucking house. You know what I'm saying? And it's the first time,
Starting point is 00:08:58 you know, this is what I believe because you know you got GGM. Yeah. So now, do you operate GN when you're not there? Because we're going to be in LA
Starting point is 00:09:07 August. Can I co-host GGN? Can we? I love how you do that. Yes. We'll co-host because we're going to be in LA August 27th through the 28th. I got to stay to the 30th. 26th through the 29th. 26th through the 29th. I can make that happen. That's no problem.
Starting point is 00:09:24 I have my own facilities. And I'll co-host. You send me who you. That's no problem. And our co-hosts, you send me who you want. You send us because we're co-hosts together. No problem. Drink champs. He's trying to cut me out right now. I saw that right now. No, I'm sorry. You know why? Let me just tell you something. When I say me, I mean me. Me is me is we. Drink champs.
Starting point is 00:09:39 We got mad sentiments. Let's just make some hardcore nigga noise. Yeah, nigga. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, nigga. Yeah, yeah. Let's just make some hardcore nigga noise It's no much more that I can't respect you because Not only you was one of the most coolest people that I was supposedly like quote-unquote have beef with like, you know I, in the beginning of my career. But not only that, but you continue to show your growth, your prosperity. Everything you do is to uplift. And, again, this walk that you and Game just did was so, like, inspiring to me because it made me want to go back to my own hood and do such a thing.
Starting point is 00:10:27 And so, again, I want you to touch on that, and then we're going right back to your music because there's a lot more shit I want to talk about. Well, you know, one thing that I do is coach football, and I have my own football league. I was just about to say that. The Snoop U Football League, 13 years. I had a question about that. Yeah, we've been doing that for 13 years, man. This our fake sportscaster.
Starting point is 00:10:47 Come here. Paul, Paul, Paul. He wanted to beat you up. Where you at, Paul? No, no, no. He wanted to beat you up. Yeah, Paul, what up? Didn't you say Kevin Garnett was going to?
Starting point is 00:10:54 No, I said LeBron was coming to Miami. I fucked up. Yeah, he said LeBron was going to Miami. I said Dwayne was coming. He fucked up. He just said that eight years ago. Nigga be like, that nigga's a genius. I did say that.
Starting point is 00:11:04 Shout out to Vic. Anyway, I wanted to say that was dope the way you was on Esquire TV. And you did the Friday Night Tykes. Because he coaches his sons. And you did the Friday Night Tykes with Houston and California. Yes, sir. And you commentated the game for the Shorties. Come on, man.
Starting point is 00:11:21 That's what I do. I told him that earlier. Yeah, he really liked that, man. Thank you, dog. That's what I do. I told him that earlier. Yeah, he really liked that, man. Thank you, dog. That's what I do a lot of times. Yeah, both just spoke Chinese. It don't get a lot of attention because I don't ever really want cameras around it
Starting point is 00:11:36 because I do it for the love. I don't really do it for attention and try to make what I'm doing. I want you to come see all this great work I'm doing in the community because community work is supposed to be done regardless if it's the camera there or not. And what I've been doing with these kids, I've been building them and showing them how to, you know, live and go to high school, graduate, go to NFL, go to college and do their thing or
Starting point is 00:11:55 whatnot and give them hope. And we go to areas where the crime rate was really at a high level and now it's at a low level and we're getting gang members to, you know, drop the guns and become football coaches and lead these young men. So this is something that I'm doing that I don't really get a lot of attention for, but it means the world to me to be able to do it, to do it 13 years and running. I got a kid that played in the Super Bowl last year. Years ago, you know, like I said, I'm originally from L.A., and I still got family out there. I live in Downey right now, actually. And my cousin Melissa, she's a teacher at Long Beach High. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:12:30 And she, this is years ago, she told me you came by. I guess an old coach of yours is still there. And she was just telling me how much you gave back to the children there. You came, you would come often, she said. You were like a regular appearance there. That's what I do. You know, I try to come through as much as possible because I like to let the kids see an example of what they can be. A lot of times when I was a kid, if somebody was considered a star, we never seen them.
Starting point is 00:12:54 Like the era that we live in now, you see stars all the time. You know, when I was a kid, a star was way in the sky. You could never just pull up somewhere and see a celebrity. You know what I'm saying? You had to be like somewhere special. And if you seen him, you wasn't going to get no conversation with him. You weren't going to get no picture with him or no autograph. You just seen a flash of him.
Starting point is 00:13:15 So nowadays, these kids don't understand that they get a chance to get up close and personal with these celebrities like myself. And it's our job to give them the information on how to be what we are or be better than what we are. Now, me, been waiting to ask this question the whole night. At one point, Death Row Records was the invincible, the unstoppable, the unfuckable. And at that time, the artist at the height of that whole forefront was Snoop. How the fuck did that fail?
Starting point is 00:13:58 Because we see other people. We see the cash monies. We see the murder inks. But Death Row just felt different because I don't want to say of the gang affiliation, but I'm going to say because of the gang affiliation.
Starting point is 00:14:18 How did that feel? When Death Row was Death Row, how did that feel? Just being in that. I mean, it was a great feeling because we didn't have to be nobody but who we was. We didn't have to fake. We didn't have to try to appease nobody by doing what y'all do or what they do. We did what we did.
Starting point is 00:14:40 We dressed the way we wanted to dress. We wore our hair the way we wanted to wear our hair. We rapped about the shit we wanted to rap about We wore our hair the way we wanted to wear our hair. We rapped about the shit we wanted to rap about. We chose the music that we wanted to rap over. It was like it was a whole style that was unique to who we were and who we are. And that
Starting point is 00:14:56 was the fulfillment of it all that people loved and appreciated me for being me. That they didn't want me to be nobody but me. That was real. Let's make some noise. Thank you. The American West with Dan Flores
Starting point is 00:15:16 is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network, hosted by me, writer and historian Dan Flores, and brought to you by Velvet Buck. This podcast looks at a West available nowhere else. Each episode, I'll be diving into some of the lesser known histories of the West. I'll then be joined in conversation by guests such as Western historian, Dr. Randall Williams, and bestselling author and meat eater founder, Stephen Rinella. I'll correct my kids now and then where they'll say when cave people were here. And I'll say, it seems like the ice age people that were here didn't have a real affinity for
Starting point is 00:15:53 caves. So join me starting Tuesday, May 6th, where we'll delve into stories of the West and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today. Listen to The American West with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I know a lot of cops, and they get asked all the time, have you ever had to shoot your gun? Sometimes the answer is yes. But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no. Across the country, cops called this taser the revolution. But not everyone was
Starting point is 00:16:35 convinced it was that simple. Cops believed everything that taser told them. From Lava for Good and the team that brought you Bone Valley comes a story about what happened when a multi-billion dollar company dedicated itself to one visionary mission. This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated. I get right back there and it's bad. It's really, really, really bad. Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Binge episodes 1, 2, and 3 on May 21st, and episodes 4, 5, and 6 on June 4th.
Starting point is 00:17:16 Ad-free at Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on Good Company, the podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next. In this episode, I'm joined by Anjali Sood, CEO of Tubi, for a conversation that's anything but ordinary. We dive into the competitive world of streaming, how she's turning so-called niche into mainstream gold, connecting audiences with stories that truly make them feel seen. What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core. It's this idea that there are so many stories out there. And if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content. The term that we always hear from our audience
Starting point is 00:18:06 is that they feel seen. Get a front row seat to where media, marketing, technology, entertainment, and sports collide. And hear how leaders like Anjali are carving out space and shaking things up a bit in the most crowded of markets. Listen to Good Company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Clayton English.
Starting point is 00:18:36 I'm Greg Glod. And this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast. Yes, sir. We are back. In a big way. In a very big way. Real people, real perspectives. This is kind of star-studded a little bit, man. We got Ricky Williams, NFL player, Heisman Trophy winner.
Starting point is 00:18:51 It's just a compassionate choice to allow players all reasonable means to care for themselves. Music stars Marcus King, John Osborne from Brothers Osborne. We have this misunderstanding of what this quote-unquote drug man. Benny the Butcher. Brent Smith from Shinedown. We got B-Real from Cypress Hill. NHL enforcer Riley Cote. Marine Corps vet.
Starting point is 00:19:14 MMA fighter Liz Karamush. What we're doing now isn't working, and we need to change things. Stories matter, and it brings a face to them. It makes it real. It really does. It makes it real. Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs podcast season
Starting point is 00:19:27 two on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear episodes one week early and ad-free with exclusive content, subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. We'll be right back. Let that nigga go pink because he got a little baby bladder. Let BB go viral. Baby bladder. I'm going to go next after he comes back.
Starting point is 00:20:07 We'll wait for you, baby bladder. When he said the whole thing about NWA and then he went all the way to your album, obviously there was a lot of dope West Coast albums in between that.
Starting point is 00:20:19 One of my favorite, I think it's an all-time classic hip-hop album is Death Certificate Ice Cube. Dope as fuck. One of the best hip-hop albums ever. DJ Pooh put that together with Sir Jinx. What I thought was ill is when you went to Priority, I don't know what that situation was, and you did all the reissues, the PMD.
Starting point is 00:20:35 My first Priority. That shit was crazy. How did that come about? I had talked to Brian Turner about re-releasing music on Priority Records and giving some new artists an opportunity to shine because Priority Records was a great piece of hip-hop that was kind of like unsung. And I wanted to give it the notarization that it deserved and put some of those songs together on the compilation CD as well as see if I could find some new talent. And Brian Turner was willing to give me that action to do that and um it brought a lot of awareness to a lot of music that people had never heard or people hadn't heard in a long time and it just was a great look it was a look of love you know I wanted to do something that I've always wanted to do I wanted to run priority records and put it back on the map and you should have lied on a lot of records that maybe a lot of younger cats wouldn't
Starting point is 00:21:21 have even checked out like you should have lied on it said, I remember all the reissues said Snoop presents or whatever. And that shit was ill. Thank you, dog. Let's make some noise for whatever the fuck y'all was talking about. I don't fucking know.
Starting point is 00:21:36 Yo, but Snoop, man, like... Fucking asshole. Nah, nah, let me tell you something, man. Snoop is a real nigga. You know what the crazy thing is? I don't got to ask Snoop, you know, what I ask all of our guests. Because, like I said, I think that we should have a hip-hop flag. In every establishment that you ever go to, I think that there should be something that shows.
Starting point is 00:21:58 This is a beautiful hotel. We're not going to shout out the hotel unless y'all say it's okay. No, they ain't paying me. But this is a beautiful hotel we came down all the way to west palm to make sure we see snoop because snoop is that that important everybody else you make them come see us but so and what i'm saying is in certain establishments they have flags shouldn't you think there should be a hip-hop flag like wherever we go like you know just to just to make sure that you're welcome there Just it can be a nine star. Maybe a one star We need it we need to come up with that flag in the hip-hop community something
Starting point is 00:22:41 That we can all agree on that represents hip-hop. And when we know that flag is up, we know we're welcome. Hip-hop will unify the world before anybody else. That's what I'm saying. Before race, before political parties, I think that people should run under hip-hop. And I think that, listen, 50 was just on here last week. And 50 endorsed Kanye West. Is that correct? I heard that.
Starting point is 00:23:04 I thought that was nice. Can you just... I mean, Kanye West can't be no crazier than that motherfucker Donald Trump. Can we go there? Can we go there?
Starting point is 00:23:14 Can we go to Donald Trump? Can we co-sign, say on Drink Champs, that Snoop Dogg is also endorsing Kanye West? Yes, I'm endorsing him. I am.
Starting point is 00:23:24 Snoop Dogg. Yeah. Let's check that. But what does Snoop Dogg think about Donald Trump? Because you smoked with Donald Trump at some point. Yeah, I fucked with him once upon a time. You gave him ecstasy? I ain't do all that. LSD? Nah, I did his little roast.
Starting point is 00:23:42 You made his hair orange? I did his little roast. He had a roast on Comedy Central. Oh, that's right. I remember that. I went hard on him, right? So, you know, I kind of was fucking with him until I heard some of his views and his perspectives,
Starting point is 00:23:55 and that made me back up off him because a lot of the views and perspectives that he got, I have friends that represent those, you know, facets in life, you know, whether they're Muslims, Mexican, whatever they are. And it's like, that's... I love how L.A. people call them Muslims.
Starting point is 00:24:09 That's so hard. Let's continue. That's fucked up how they, like, singling people out. Right. You know, we don't do that. We multi-culture. We fucks with everybody.
Starting point is 00:24:17 You know what I'm saying? So if you start singling out motherfuckers, you might as well single yourself out because you don't know who connected. You don't know who the plug is. That's a fact. Let me just point something out. This is how I know I'm not rich at all.
Starting point is 00:24:30 You see my roaches? Those are my roaches right there. Them motherfuckers are little as a motherfucker. Look at Snoop's roaches. God damn it. I can roll four more blocks out of Snoop's roaches. God damn it. This is how I know I'm not rich.
Starting point is 00:24:43 Let me make some noise for me not being rich. God damn it. That's how I know I'm not rich. Let me make some noise for me not being rich. God damn it. Snoop got... Yo, that nigga wrote... Listen, you can roll two bloods out of his roaches. Yeah, my roaches is long, Kyle. So now, Snoop, this is the craziest shit, man. I've been in the game since 1997, my first album.
Starting point is 00:25:02 Yeah, and that motherfucker was smoking hot. The Rory part. Man, please first album. Yeah, and that motherfucker was smoking hot. The Royal Report. Man, please believe it. But what I'm saying is, sometimes I lose it. I don't want to do this no more. What makes you... You just dropped a new album. We didn't speak about that.
Starting point is 00:25:17 Yeah, well, you know what? I'm competitive. I'm competitive. A lot of times when my competitive energy always... But are you competitive against other people or against yourself? Because I think you're competing against yourself at this point. That's all I'm competing against myself. Okay, continue.
Starting point is 00:25:31 You know, it's like a player that, you know, continues to go to the NBA All-Star Game and he continues to make it to the championship. He don't have time to watch his highlights because he got another game to play, another season to get ready for. And that's how I look at my career is that I'm always preparing myself for the next game, you know? Like, I knew I was going on tour with me and Wiz,
Starting point is 00:25:50 so I said, let me put together an album so that way when I'm on the road, I'll have a reason to be on the road. That's that easy for you. Yeah, I could've went on the road with no album. And you just got Kobe Bryant high. Let's talk about that.
Starting point is 00:26:01 Come on, come on, come on. Why you stitching, man? Kobe, Kobe my nigga. He texted me. He said, come on, come on. Why you stitching? Why you stitching, man? Kobe, Kobe, my nigga. He texted me. He said, Kobe. I didn't get him high, man. That fucked up how they Photoshopped the picture. He come see the dog and they doing wrong like that.
Starting point is 00:26:14 Nah, he came over. You know, Kobe, my nigga, my nigga. Man, I love him to death. He came over to spend some time with me on some, you know, afterthought as far as after his career. They can't do shit to that nigga. You got him high. Fuck it, Snoop.
Starting point is 00:26:24 Nah, for real though. Let's just make some noise for you getting Kobe high. You got him high. Fuck it, Snoop. Let's just make some noise for you getting a Kobe eye. We spreading the rumor, Snoop. We retarded over here. Horrible rumor. You came to the rumor. You got my Kobe news endorsements.
Starting point is 00:26:33 No, because I gave him a car, right? A 66 Pontiac Paris City. A Laker mobile that I had handcrafted for him. Snoop, I need to be more friends with you because I want you to give me a car at some point. I don't know what.
Starting point is 00:26:44 It's okay. You can give me a New York, want you to give me a car at some point. I don't know what. It's okay. You can give me a New York, New York, LA, LA car at some point, like 20 years from now. It's okay, buddy. I got you. So you gave Kobe a car. I gave him a car because 20 years. And the car already smelled like bud? That's what happened?
Starting point is 00:26:57 No, it was a brand new. It was a 1966 Pontiac Paris City, white interior, yellow exterior, purple top. You understand me? Rich nigga talk. Yeah. So I gave him this vehicle for 20 years of excellence for him representing the Lakers and giving us something to stand on. And then he came out, he had red eyes.
Starting point is 00:27:16 No, they photoshopped the nigga eyes, man. You know how they gonna make this shit. I think it was me who photoshopped it. They gonna make this shit worse than what it is man I'm fucking with you Snoop let's make
Starting point is 00:27:27 some noise for Snoop fuck it listen Snoop you guilty if you ain't even if you ain't
Starting point is 00:27:34 association by affiliation association by affiliation yo Snoop man there's no way I can thank you man
Starting point is 00:27:40 you know what I mean Dream Champs it's the first time You know Rappers have took over media We are so excited To come to LA
Starting point is 00:27:49 And DJ's man You gotta say DJ's I'm sorry Excuse me We the rapper and the DJ We the fucking DJ's We the back bone We the back bone
Starting point is 00:27:54 That's right And listen We the rapper and the DJ And we wanna We coming to LA On August 27th K-Day What's up with y'all
Starting point is 00:28:01 We gonna be up there We gonna set it up So that way they can do the GGN Yeah we wanna host we wanna host we definitely wanna host and listen and you know what's
Starting point is 00:28:08 the crazy shit is Snoop this is what we'll do whatever gas you send us you don't gotta prep us you just send us to there we're never prepped I don't ever out of all the shows
Starting point is 00:28:17 I did on the GGN I ain't never prepped I don't have no two nights of getting ready for the nigga if the nigga here? Bring him in. This is the smooth version of Drink Champs.
Starting point is 00:28:29 It's got to be spontaneous. One thing about us as lyricists, as MCs, is what we do, we flow with the motion. And sometimes it's better when it's spontaneous. Because if it's going to be written and scripted, shit's going to be fake. I'd rather go off script. Because that way you can talk about shit that ain't on the script.
Starting point is 00:28:45 Because the script sometimes gonna allow you to talk about specific things, but if you go off script and you go, you know, spontaneous, you can get the in-depth interview that you really look for to make this shit real flying different like the rest of this shit. If everybody's authentic, it don't matter. Like, we all authentic about this shit.
Starting point is 00:29:01 For real. That's a fact. God damn it. Let me make some noise. God damn it. God damn it. God damn it. Let me make some noise. God damn it. God damn it. God damn it. I'm not going to lie. Snoop, you're one of the most, you're like, at the end of the day, brother, you transcended culture. A hundred percent.
Starting point is 00:29:19 And what I mean by that is, there ain't a New York nigga alive that was alive when you when you dropped what was that when you dropped doggy stuff yes porto regent when you porto you gotta forget porto regents so when you drop doggy style there's not there's not a new york alive that can't say that they are identified with you. Like, while some niggas is crippling right now in New York is because, I mean, I'm just keeping it 100. I have to. It's because of you.
Starting point is 00:29:54 And then, are you still out here kicking ass? Mm. Mm. Mm. And I asked you, uh Mm. And I asked you, uh, uh, I asked you,
Starting point is 00:30:08 uh, what makes you keep going? And you said, because you're still competitive. Yeah. Very. Like, I hate to lose.
Starting point is 00:30:17 And if I'm not. but you also keep venturing. Yeah. Like, you did an album with Pharrell. Yeah. You did an album with Master P. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:25 I did three albums with Master P. Three albums with Master P. Yeah, when I left Death Row Records, I signed with No Limit Records, which was the hottest rap label in the industry. This is true. When I signed with No Limit Records, they was the hottest in the rap industry. They was the only niggas getting money in the industry. Right. So how was that?
Starting point is 00:30:43 Let me finish. Let me finish. I got to say this because this is very important. Please, please. Puffy and them was rocking, but they wasn't getting no money like Master P was.
Starting point is 00:30:54 And I had been around they camp. I had been around Def Jam. I was on Def Row. I had seen all the niggas that supposedly had the money. Master P had the motherfucking money. It was true independence. He had the money.
Starting point is 00:31:07 And you said that was three albums. I did three albums with him. I did The Game is to be Sold, Not to be Told. Then I did a movie called The Game of Life right after that. Then I did No Limit Top Dog. Then I did Hot Boys after that. Then I did motherfucking The Last Meal. Then I did The Chronic 2001. That's when I got The Last Meal. Then I did The Chronic 2001.
Starting point is 00:31:25 That's when I got with Pharrell. But I put the Eastsiders out. Put out the Doggies Angels. You understand me? He showed me how to put business because I hadn't had a record label. I was always talking that doggy style shit. But I didn't have no record label. Masterpiece showed me how to put a label together, how to go get money, how to eat, how to make money off my tours, how to make money off of movies, how to create a different lane for me
Starting point is 00:31:46 to be seen differently. He brought money to the industry because I'm telling you the truth, niggas wasn't having no money. And it seemed like he didn't try to hold you in the camp. He was like, yo, go do your thing. He taught niggas how to get it, man, because see, rappers wasn't getting money, man.
Starting point is 00:32:01 This is what I'm trying to tell y'all. Niggas was getting gold chains and you get a big-ass production deal or they spend all this money on your album and marketing, but niggas wasn't getting no way-out-ass money.
Starting point is 00:32:12 Niggas on No Limit had money. Everybody on No Limit had a house, a car, two guns, and a bank account. Let's make some noise for that guy. And then after that, so you said three albums.
Starting point is 00:32:30 Three albums. Or three projects. I went from Doggy Style, Murder Was The Case, Dog Pound, Dogfather, Above The Rim, Outta There, No of there, no limit, game is to be sold, not to be told, no limit, top dog, and last meal.
Starting point is 00:32:51 I did three albums in three years. When you say out of it though, Master P bought out the contract when he was done. Master P went to go visit Suge Knight in the penitentiary and struck a deal because everybody else
Starting point is 00:33:01 was scared of that nigga. Right. That's when Suge Knight was the monster, the boogeyman. Right, right, right. That's when he was the boogeyman. So Pete went? Pete went to go see him.
Starting point is 00:33:11 Struck a deal. Struck a deal. Paid him. Paid me. Got my publishing back. Gave me three albums. I did my three albums. Then allowed me to do the East Side of the Deal while I was in the process of doing my last album.
Starting point is 00:33:24 Didn't get no money. East Side of the Deal was the of doing my last album. Didn't get no money. Eastside was the TVT deal? Yes. Didn't take no money from it. Didn't take no imprint from it. Eastside is when it sold a million records and my record label was off and popping. That's love. That's love.
Starting point is 00:33:37 That's love. Listen, I knew this information, but to hear him break it down and the way he's saying it, I'm sitting over here like I'm back in fan mode. I'm sorry. Do you want me to get back in interview mode? Because I'm still in fan mode. I'm still in fan mode, my nigga. We're always fans. We're fans of the music, guys.
Starting point is 00:34:03 So now you live in New Orleans Yes Would you say About three years Three years I'm about to say three years So now When did you start
Starting point is 00:34:11 Missing Cali And then Now that's crazy You said that Okay Because when I first Go to Baton Rouge Master P tell me
Starting point is 00:34:20 Nigga you can't go back to LA So he basically Put a wall around me Like nigga don't go back to LA Cause that's when a wall around me like nigga don't go back to LA cause that's when them niggas was really still trying to get at me and you know what I'm saying I was kind of leaking in so many words cause I didn't really have
Starting point is 00:34:33 my street shit right in the hood so I went back to New Orleans and I stayed out there but by the time the second album came I started sliding back to LA like for two days here two two days there. And the people was like, nigga, stop going back. I'm like, I can't help it. Then that's when I
Starting point is 00:34:50 started getting DJ Quick and all the other niggas that was a part of the second album. And it started to sound back like Snoop Dogg. Because the first record was South Like a Motherfucker. Then the second one was getting more like Snoop Dogg. Then that's when I got Dre to give me Bitch Please.
Starting point is 00:35:05 Pharrell gave me From the Church to the Palace. Then I did the third one, which was motherfucking The Last Meal. That's when shit was like all the way right. We had Lay Low. We had all kind of records that was sounding like Snoop Dogg, which prepped me for the Chronic 2001 album.
Starting point is 00:35:22 And then he knew I had to be back in L.A. because my flavor was L.A. It was good that I could, you know, jump out of my habitat and get in this environment and adapt to any environment and be a chameleon, you know what I'm saying? But at the same time, I got to go back to where I'm comfortable, at the zone that I'm, and that's where you start to hear those records start becoming more, you know what I'm saying,
Starting point is 00:35:43 like the way they were supposed to sound. Wow. At what point in all that is the C-Murder record that you did? C-Murder record was on the second album, No Limit Top Dump. That's your shit, you know what I'm talking about? Y'all been trying to make that record
Starting point is 00:36:00 for 20 years. He made that record because the Death Row niggas was on the nigga. But originally, you weren't on that record originally. Because I heard the original one. Originally, that's my record. There's a version without you though, right? No, that originally was my record. You heard two different versions.
Starting point is 00:36:15 I'm telling you, that record was made after some shit happened in LA and the Death Row Niggas tried to get me. But there is two versions though. Yeah, it is. But the version that you heard was after the fact version. Right. Because KLC did the original beat.
Starting point is 00:36:29 Okay, okay. The nigga that did Move Bitch, the Ludicrous track. Move Bitch. Come on, man. You know what? I'm going to give it to you. That's what we need. That's what we want.
Starting point is 00:36:36 Oh, my God. That's what I'm saying. Yo, bro. Can I thank you? I'm going to thank you again, God damn it. Come on, man. You got it. When I said, you, you, you, you, you, you, I mean, to thank you again, God damn it. Come over here. Wouldn't ask that.
Starting point is 00:36:45 You M.A. Thressey, right? No? Huh? Oh, shit. This is my niggas. Yeah, y'all got that shit on lock. Do y'all shit. Yo, little Snoop.
Starting point is 00:37:01 God damn it. I can't believe we did it. So, Snoop, we got the Mary Jane website. I'm going to the bathroom. We got the Mary Jane website. Yeah, we do. We got the We got GGM popping on Revolt TV and I got my own
Starting point is 00:37:15 situation. Listen, Revolt trying to lock me down. Should I go with Revolt? You know what you do? You get paid to play. And then you do it and you keep it moving. They don't get everything. You're going to ask the question, should I go? They don't get everything.
Starting point is 00:37:27 They just get some of the things. Oh, wow. Thank you, thank you. Because you're not going to profit everything, so you're going to get some of the things. This is my nigga.
Starting point is 00:37:35 He saying what I'm saying. Yeah, because Puffy, my nigga, too, I want to be like, nigga, why you tell Norway that shit on the camera? Because I told you the truth. No, that's my nigga, too.
Starting point is 00:37:44 That's my nigga too. So you got Gigi in. Mm-hmm. And we're going to try to host that definitely drink chance. You is going to do it. And you know,
Starting point is 00:37:52 I started that shit in the backyard somewhere, man. Let's talk about that. How did you start Gigi in? Yeah. I was watching the news one night and it came on. It was a murder.
Starting point is 00:38:01 It was something. I was like, why every time the news come on it's some bad news? I never seen the news come on with... Well, they got a dick suck. Or something beautiful. In the alleyway.
Starting point is 00:38:10 So I was like, you know what? So I said, you know what? I'm going to start a news network where it's all good news, it's all fun, it's all comedy, it's all me. And we're from that to where it is now. That's a fact. A real fact. That's important. A nigga getting his dicks up
Starting point is 00:38:26 in the alleyway. God damn it. It used to be me. I've been married for a long time. For the space of me before I was married. God damn it.
Starting point is 00:38:37 Yo, my nigga Snoop. Yo, come on. EFN, get your fucking ass out of here. You know Best Buy Liquors, they provided the liquor. We used to have girls here pouring the drinks. What happened?
Starting point is 00:38:48 I don't know. You took a bad loss. I'm married too, but I don't mind having girls. I can't. I'm just shopping. I'm not buying anything. So Snoop, you have never got tired of this lifestyle? Of the lifestyle I live?
Starting point is 00:39:02 Nah. I mean, not the lifestyle I live. That's a fucked up question. But I got tired of recording and doing the same process. That style I have got. I became my own boss.
Starting point is 00:39:18 So being your own boss, you make your own rules. You play your own plays. I don't do what they do. I do what I do. So I drop a record when I want. Do a movie when I want, shoot TV when I want, do a shoe deal, coach football. You understand me? I do what I like when I want to. It's like it's not a script that's everybody else's script. You know, like if I was in the world of sports, I would be my own sport.
Starting point is 00:39:42 I wouldn't even be. I'd be a little bit of basketball, a little bit of soccer, a little bit of golf, a little bit of football. Like, nigga, what sport are you, nigga? I'm just that sport, nigga, everything. God damn it. Let's make some noise for Stump. God damn it. Welcome to Play It, a new podcast network featuring radio and TV personalities
Starting point is 00:40:10 talking business, sports, tech, entertainment, and more. Play it at play.it. The American West with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network, hosted by me, writer and historian Dan Flores, and brought to you by Velvet Buck. This podcast looks at a West available nowhere else. Each episode, I'll be diving into some of the lesser known histories of the West. I'll then be joined in conversation by guests such as Western historian, Dr. Randall Williams, and best-selling author and Meat Eater founder Stephen Rinella. I'll correct my kids now and then where they'll say when cave people were here.
Starting point is 00:40:50 And I'll say it seems like the Ice Age people that were here didn't have a real affinity for caves. So join me starting Tuesday, May 6th, where we'll delve into stories of the West and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today. Listen to The American West with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I know a lot of cops, and they get asked all the time, have you ever had to shoot your gun? Sometimes the answer is yes. But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no.
Starting point is 00:41:31 Across the country, cops called this taser the revolution. But not everyone was convinced it was that simple. Cops believed everything that taser told them. From Lava for Good and the team that brought you Bone Valley comes a story about what happened when a multi-billion dollar company dedicated itself to one visionary mission. This is Absolute Season 1.
Starting point is 00:41:53 Taser Incorporated. I get right back there and it's bad. It's really, really, really bad. Listen to new episodes of Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated, on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Binge episodes 1, 2, and 3 on May 21st and episodes 4, 5, and 6 on June 4th. Add free at Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts. I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on Good Company, the podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators
Starting point is 00:42:33 shaping what's next. In this episode, I'm joined by Anjali Sood, CEO of Tubi, for a conversation that's anything but ordinary. We dive into the competitive world of streaming, how she's turning so-called niche into mainstream gold, connecting audiences with stories that truly make them feel seen. What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core. It's this idea that there are so many stories out there, and if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content. The term that we always hear
Starting point is 00:43:06 from our audience is that they feel seen. Get a front row seat to where media, marketing, technology, entertainment, and sports collide. And hear how leaders like Anjali are carving out space and shaking things up a bit in the most crowded of markets. Listen to Good Company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Clayton English. I'm Greg Lott. And this is season two of the War on Drugs podcast. We are back.
Starting point is 00:43:42 In a big way. In a very big way. Real people, real perspectives. This is kind of star-studded a little bit, man. We got Ricky Williams, NFL player, Heisman Trophy winner. It's just a compassionate choice to allow players all
Starting point is 00:43:56 reasonable means to care for themselves. Music stars Marcus King, John Osborne from Brothers Osborne. We have this misunderstanding of what this quote-unquote drug thing is. Benny the Butcher. Brent Smith from Shinedown. We got B-Real from Cypress Hill.
Starting point is 00:44:12 NHL enforcer Riley Cote. Marine Corvette. MMA fighter Liz Karamush. What we're doing now isn't working, and we need to change things. Stories matter, and it brings a face to them. It makes it real. It really does. It makes it real. It really does. It makes it real.
Starting point is 00:44:26 Listen to new episodes of the War on Drugs podcast season 2 on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. And to hear episodes one week early and ad free with exclusive content subscribe to Lava for Good Plus on Apple Podcasts.
Starting point is 00:44:54 We're back to Drink Champs Radio with rapper N.O.R.E. and DJ EFN. Hey, listen. This is real shit right now. Okay. Gin and juice. You had niggas in The east coast Your niggas was getting drunk on that shit Yeah
Starting point is 00:45:11 How did this concoction This collaboration Collaboration Collaboration Gin and juice collaboration happened When a nigga was a young nigga 17, 16, really didn't have
Starting point is 00:45:27 too much money. We used to buy Seagram's bumpy gin, bumpy face bottle, and we used to get a, it was a drink called Super Saco. And we used to make
Starting point is 00:45:36 Super, yeah. Let's break down what Super Saco is. Nigga, Super Saco was a soccer drink, nigga. And it was like a lemony flavor. You can look it up on Google, nigga. Look it up. This is my cousin. He play soccer. Yeah, nigga was a soccer drink, nigga. And it was like a lemony flavor. You can look it up on Google, nigga.
Starting point is 00:45:46 This is my cousin. He play soccer. Yeah, nigga, look that up, nigga. Look it up. Look it up. It's Spanish. Super Saco. Look it up in Spanish, nigga.
Starting point is 00:45:55 Super Saco was a mix that we used to mix it with. So it gave it a different kind of lemony flavor. And then we went to orange juice. And then once we mixed it with orange juice, we started doing gin and juice. And then from gin and juice, it became a record because it was like, we heard the old song,
Starting point is 00:46:14 what Half Dead used to always sing old songs and he would put new words to it. So the song was, walking down the street, watching ladies go by watching you. So he took that and put, rolling down the street Watching ladies Go by watching you So he took that and put Rolling down the street Smoking a hindle
Starting point is 00:46:31 Sipping on gin and juice So he did that, but then we got David Ruffin Jr. To actually sing it on the album. Let's make some noise. Snoop's flossing on us. Just got that. David Ruffin Jr. on. That shit is real. What do you think about the song?
Starting point is 00:46:47 That's the fact checker. Yeah, but they got it in the bottle, too. See what it look like in the bottle. That's it. You found the brand. That's Hazardous Sounds. He's called our fact checker. That nigga found facts.
Starting point is 00:46:58 Yeah, he found facts. Find it in the bottle. In the bottle, nigga. So, Snoop, you know we're like the black howard stearns i fuck excuse me i'm a black latino howard stearns come latino too god damn it of course but we all together man so it has you still are you still you still looking for that i got it let me see look like a gatorade bottle? That shit? No, like glass bottle. It's like from the 80s.
Starting point is 00:47:27 Look in the 80s. This nigga Snoop. In the 80s. Go back to the 80s. You are prehistoric, Snoop. Go to the 80s. God damn it. Let's make some noise for Snoop being prehistoric.
Starting point is 00:47:38 No, you know what I respect, though? I told Dame Dash, that motherfucking Paid in Full was one of the most gangster movies I ever seen in my life for one reason because I was a drug dealer around that time I never was like money making
Starting point is 00:47:50 Mitch and them but I always wanted to be like them niggas I was that little nigga that was getting it on the plot and to see a movie like that was so
Starting point is 00:47:58 motherfucking inspiring and so so death to find to see that relationship and see how cutthroat that shit was and it really was like that in real life it was a great learning experience too to see that relationship and see how cutthroat that shit was. And it really was like that in real life.
Starting point is 00:48:05 It was a great learning experience, too, to watch that movie for the educational reasons as well. And to relate to it. And, you know, your cousin, Daz, which I love, he sat here and he said he wanted to do Colors Part 2 in New York. And I really needed to direct that movie. I just wanted to throw that out there just so the next time you see him. I'm fussed with that. That's big.
Starting point is 00:48:29 Listen, I want to direct that because you know what? Dad was the most genius. Like, I looked at Dad and you know, me and Dad, we just get high together. When he said that to me, I was like,
Starting point is 00:48:40 this nigga way smarter than me. I was like, nigga said, I'm going to do Colors Park 2. And I was like, word. And he said, but in New York. me I was like nigga said I'm going to do Colors Part 2 and I was like word but in New York nigga I'm going to buy that movie whatever I got to do let's do it
Starting point is 00:48:55 my new dad has been the only the only guest that's been on here twice but Snoop so let me ask you so with that being said, with gangs being, it's origin being from where you come from. And now, I don't know if you know, but how big that shit is in New York, Miami, and everywhere. Did you ever see that? A gang is like hip-hop, right?
Starting point is 00:49:27 It's fun. It's exciting. It looks like it's easy to do. You can do it with your friends. And it becomes something of representation of who you are. And it's a replication of who you are. So it's supposed to travel. It's supposed to go from city to city.
Starting point is 00:49:44 Just imagine if hip-hop would have stayed in the Bronx. You would have never got it. I would's supposed to travel. It's supposed to go from city to city. Just imagine if hip-hop would have stayed in the Bronx. Right. You would have never got it. I would have never got it. It wouldn't have went nowhere. We'd be broke niggas right now. Exactly. So gangbanging is supposed to spread. It's supposed to travel because it's some great shit in gangbanging. I think if somebody
Starting point is 00:49:59 wanted the easy travel guide to how it all spread, listen to Summer Vacation from Ice Cube. Oh yeah. That's one of the perfect examples. all spread listen to some of the vacation from ice cube oh yeah that's that's one of the perfect examples that's like the booklet of the history a nigga setting up shop in one of those cities killed it with that you go to a city where you know niggas is not as fast as la but they will you know they influence by you know they they love what they see because la remember his movies has been made on us, like from Colors to Boys in the Hood. So we have the
Starting point is 00:50:27 perfect blueprint to what it is to be a gangster. So when you have a gangster from LA come to your city and impress you and show you what it is and give you the rules and the regulations, it's easy to influence others and to make them pick that culture up and make it theirs. Just like hip-hop. Hip-hop was born
Starting point is 00:50:44 and bred in the Bronx, but it made its way all over the world. And when it got to Long Beach, I grabbed a hold of it, and I wanted to do that more than gangbanging. So eventually, it's going to do the same thing. Hip hop will move in again and overwhelm gangbanging because the people that ain't from L.A., where it originated from, they're a couple of years behind with the gangbangers. So they'll understand that we at the point that we know how to converse, we know how to communicate. Bloods and Crips hang out and kick it.
Starting point is 00:51:15 So once they get that part, then they'll understand that it's really a real brotherhood. And I'm seeing that with all these marches and you see them Bloods and Crips all over the world tying their rags together because they following what they see us do. And we lead by example. So if we put the right foundation out,
Starting point is 00:51:32 they're going to walk the great path. But do you think that like hip hop, if us come to, this is what I've been preaching on this podcast. I think this is like
Starting point is 00:51:40 our 23rd episode. Wait a second. No, this will be our 24th. This will be our 23rd. 23rd or 24th. This will be our 23rd. 23rd or 24th. This will be our 23rd. What I've been preaching is hip-hop should register as a race.
Starting point is 00:51:51 What I mean by that is we might not win as a black race, but there's people like Martin Sciscrelli that people who feel like they're a part of hip-hop but not be a part of our race. You think that
Starting point is 00:52:04 is that something that we should as hip-hop but not be a part of our race. Mm-hmm. You think that, is that something that we should, like, as hip-hop? Well, hip-hop don't have a race to it because it's a feeling.
Starting point is 00:52:12 Exactly. You know, it don't have no color to it either because it's all about the feeling. There's been some motherfuckers
Starting point is 00:52:17 that I have relationships with in hip-hop that got more soul than the average nigga you could expect and they scared ain't nowhere near
Starting point is 00:52:25 Dark as Mine. Right. So, I just feel like you right about that as far as it should be some sort of membership
Starting point is 00:52:32 or some sort of, you know. Yeah, because this is what I'm saying. I'm sorry to cut you off because people get, they want to kill me when I cut my gas off.
Starting point is 00:52:40 But, what I'm saying is, it's sometimes, it's like a nigga like, let's just say, Nate Dogg. God bless his a nigga like, let's just say Nate Dogg. God bless his soul. Say if Nate Dogg was still alive and then something happened to Nate Dogg, it should be a union that's already established or ready to take care of him.
Starting point is 00:52:59 Like a sag. I think hip-hop should have its own sag. Yeah, that's what we've been speaking about, Dogg. What you think about that? I love that idea, and I love the fact that we even can speak on that because we got the platform. And we're not speaking, like, if we were broke niggas, this conversation would be fucked up. Yeah, because it would sound like we hate it.
Starting point is 00:53:17 Yeah, we mad. But niggas ain't broke here. We okay. Let's make some noise for us being okay. Actually, what we are, we're a voice for those who can't speak. Exactly. You know what I'm saying? Trying to provide something for those who don't have
Starting point is 00:53:31 or may not have the opportunity to continue to be successful so there's to be some step paved the way for them for their hard work and dedication. We just like the NFL, the NBA, all of that. We should have a union. We just don't have a commissioner or anybody to answer to, and that's one thing that just don't have we don't have a commissioner or anybody to answer to and that's one thing
Starting point is 00:53:48 that I don't think we need because that's the only thing that I see fucked up about the NBA and the NFL that they got some motherfucker to answer to
Starting point is 00:53:55 that ain't inhuman you know what I'm saying so it should be you know on a level playing field where we all agree to disagree and we
Starting point is 00:54:02 you know we commission ourselves and we boss ourselves. I don't like answering to nobody. I got a problem with that, especially if you don't know more than me. If you ain't positioned better than me, I really got a problem with answering to you.
Starting point is 00:54:12 But if hip-hop unionized, we would be a voting block. I get that part, but it's going to have to be somebody that's in control. And Russell Simmons is a great guy, but it ain't him. Right, but Prodigy,
Starting point is 00:54:25 he didn't like the idea of that. Do you remember his argument for that? I'm sorry, Havoc. I keep saying Prodigy. Havoc didn't like the idea of that. Of what? Of us unionizing. Yeah, no, that's because he's retarded. The thing about it is this.
Starting point is 00:54:40 Listen. He didn't have an argument, though. He had an argument. The thing about it is this. This is what we't have an argument, though. He had an argument. The thing about it is this. This is what we all need to do. Listen, this is what we all need to do. We all need to have each other's back. Yes. Because at the end of the day, Snoop, listen, my grandmother knows who Snoop is.
Starting point is 00:54:58 Wow. I have two grandmothers who know who Snoop is, and they're both dead. But they still know who Snoop is. Wow. That's a fact. Let's make some noise for that. I don't want to even laugh at you just yet.
Starting point is 00:55:08 Shout out to grandma. All grandmas get that. They both knew who Snoop was. That's a fact. That's heavy. Right? So what I'm saying is alright
Starting point is 00:55:16 but maybe both of my grandmothers know who Coolio is. Maybe both of my grandmothers know who MC Hammer is. Maybe both my grandmothers know who MC Hammer is. Maybe. Guess what? I'm not throwing anything
Starting point is 00:55:31 at those brothers, but I know Snoop is okay. My other grandmothers don't know if Hammer, Coolio is okay. Shouldn't there be something that says when they're not okay. Yeah, that's what we're talking about.
Starting point is 00:55:50 We come in and we say, Slime, you sold 30 million records. You put your fucking money in the G-string. You fucked up. But we got you. And not only them, but people like, you know, who's them real rhyme niggas you know exhibits from LA and the motherfucking
Starting point is 00:56:12 true life from New York and shit if shit ain't never work out it should be a program to take care of yeah you right am I bugging Snoop? you got the right hip hop mind it's just a matter of It should be a program to take care of. Yeah, you're right. Am I bugging, Snoop? No, you're right. You got the right hip hop mind.
Starting point is 00:56:28 It's just a matter of who can actually execute that great plan. Or what organization can help us. Yeah, that plan is excellent. That's an awesome plan. But who can actually make that plan come to life and really see to it? But they got to be niggas like you. And they got to see to it that it continues. Did I throw it on you?
Starting point is 00:56:43 It got to go. Did I throw it on you too much? It was too much. That's a lot, man. My shoulders don't know if I can carry all that shit. I'm going to need an advocate to carry that motherfucker on their head. Do you have any of that shit? But listen.
Starting point is 00:56:58 I was bringing it to the meeting. But that's what I'm saying. In a hip-hop hop concert as long as somebody as long as we try to bear something together because at the end of the day
Starting point is 00:57:11 we gotta keep working if you're not working then you shouldn't be involved and we don't want to take care of the people who's lazy yeah we want to take care of the people
Starting point is 00:57:21 who dedicated their lives to 15 10 years and they got to struggle to pay their rent. Dumb dudes should be taken care of. But that's why I think SAG is a perfect model. The dudes who take the pictures. The dudes who engineer. Anybody that's an actor, you could be a B-roll, you could be a...
Starting point is 00:57:38 But hip-hop, we need a SAG. But that's why I think SAG is a perfect model for what could happen in hip-hop. Right. Somebody just got to put that thing down, man, you know. It's a great idea, but, you know, one thing about niggas, man, we don't believe in what we hear. We believe what we see. Right. So what's the next thing for Snoop Dogg right now?
Starting point is 00:57:59 Right now, we know you had every liquor in the universe. You had every slipper in the universe. I bought like $19,000 worth of slippers. He started the slipper game. Let's just be quite honest here. So what's next for Snoop Dogg right now? Let me get your roach over there. Let me get that.
Starting point is 00:58:20 He needs a roach. Hook him up. Which one of these? I was going to get that. I'll take this one. That's okay. Go ahead. You want some Bacardi?
Starting point is 00:58:28 This nigga Roach is my whole blunt. Just for the record. Go ahead. What's next for Snoop Dogg? Oh, yeah. I got an artist named October London. He forgot this nigga's name. Let's make some noise for him getting his name.
Starting point is 00:58:44 Got you. He is your friend. Where's he from? This nigga from Indiana This nigga's a rebirth Of Marvel No I heard you On Moguls You spoke about him already
Starting point is 00:58:53 You ain't forget his name This nigga's special man This nigga's special So he got a song called Black Man in America That we about to drop In about two days Okay
Starting point is 00:59:01 It's a heavy record He got a mini movie I just shot on him Just trying to do my thing Me and Jazzy Fate We doing it together It's a heavy record. He got a mini movie I just shot on him. Uh-huh. Just trying to do my thing. Me and Jazzy Fate, we doing it together. It's called Cat Like Music.
Starting point is 00:59:11 Jazzy Fate brought him to me. It's a collaboration with me and Jazzy. God damn it, man. Snoop's doing so much. Listen, man. We're going to do a movie together. Yeah, we need to.
Starting point is 00:59:21 I told you that. I told you you're a hell of an actor. You the shit. I love your acting. No, no, this is my thing. Every time I see you on a hell of an actor. You the shit. I love your acting. No, no, this is my thing. Every time I see you on screen, I'm like, this is a bad motherfucker. He don't even know you're a bad motherfucker.
Starting point is 00:59:30 And listen, listen. And he acts mad normal. He don't know you're a bad motherfucker? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Do you know in New York that Ciroc is like the ultimate crip drink? For real? Do you know that? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:42 Well, I mean, yeah. Look, look. It's Ciroc with a C. I guess it makes automatic sense. And it's blue dye. I don't know if you know that. I Do you know that? Yeah. Well, I mean, yeah. Look, it's Cera Rock with a C and it's Blue Dot. I don't know if you know that. The Crips. I think you should just take a sip before you sit for the Crips in New York. Just because
Starting point is 00:59:55 you know, best buy. Look at this, Puffy. I'm going to have to call Puffy and see if he got a few dollars for me to take a sip. I thought you knew that. You didn't know that? No, I didn't know that. Yo, Kareem came in here and he wilded out earlier, right? Let's make it so annoying. Kareem came in here Kareem still be drinking. I don't drink like that.
Starting point is 01:00:11 Kareem did. Kareem. He does. He does. But you did drink a couple of drinks with us. For you, he did drink. He drank two. He took five shots or am I lying? No, he took four shots. Four shots. Four more than he's ever taken. Kareem did four shots? No, no, four. Four shots. Four shots. The worst thing he's ever taken that we know.
Starting point is 01:00:26 Corrupted four shots? No, no, no. 50, 50-70. 50-50. No, he don't drink at all. 50 got lit. We got 54 shots. I put up five.
Starting point is 01:00:36 See, one thing about you. I smoke five. You won't make a nigga break the law, but you'll make a nigga bend the law. Yeah. We got to put that
Starting point is 01:00:44 in the commercial. Use a lot, Ben. Use a lot, Ben. Let me just, I'm listening in front of everybody. Let me just say something, man. From the beginning of my career, I never knew you guys.
Starting point is 01:00:59 You guys did the New York, New York thing. I didn't know if y'all was dissing us or not, but I just felt like it was an opportunity. So I went out there, I did the New York, New York thing. I didn't know if y'all was dissing us or not, but I just felt like it was an opportunity. So I went out there, I did it, and from the first day I ever met you, I regretted what I did, but I knew you understand what I did. I respected your gangster, nigga.
Starting point is 01:01:15 Yeah, yeah, I knew you understood. Good job, nigga. You understood what I did. I always told you I respected your gangster. I always shouted out the niggas that was hard to me, nigga. You was always one of them niggas because was hard to me, nigga. You was always one of them niggas because you didn't
Starting point is 01:01:26 give a fuck. You did what I would've did, nigga. You took it the wrong way, nigga, like you was supposed to. Nigga, there was no explanation.
Starting point is 01:01:35 Nigga, I took it the wrong way, nigga. I thought you was saying this, nigga. We'll get you the explanation later, nigga. And I get that. I say the same thing to Capone
Starting point is 01:01:45 because it's just gangster shit because we respect that shit because always have, always will. And to this day, we still... Listen, because people try to call us old niggas. That's why we don't interview new niggas, right? Let's make some noise. We just want to call us old niggas, right?
Starting point is 01:02:05 But that's okay. Y'all got your own market. We old niggas, right? But that's okay. Y'all got your own market. We old niggas. Who going to interview y'all? Elliot and them niggas? Elliot Wilson and them niggas? Them niggas are boring as fuck. That's the biggest interview y'all.
Starting point is 01:02:17 But we have no trains on this episode. We have no trains. We came to see Snoop. And you know what? Listen. We don't have no Trains Over here
Starting point is 01:02:27 God damn it Make some noise No trains They don't have any No trains Listen We did what we gotta do Snoop
Starting point is 01:02:34 There's no way We could ever Repay you We sat here Getting through All the questions We keep I feel like EFN
Starting point is 01:02:42 EFN got one more question He's just looking at me Like don't you dare end it. He's trying to run from the smoke. I just blew about $47 worth of smoke in his face. He tried to duck and dive.
Starting point is 01:02:51 Nah, I'm smoking everything. He gave you his thank you, but I want to say, to me, this is a milestone. That's right. Honest to God. And I represent the DJ here. You know, we're the people
Starting point is 01:03:01 that are not seen behind the scenes in the culture. Unseen, but well heard. But we're here. We're here. And I rep all the DJs. Shout out to all the motherfucking DJs out here.
Starting point is 01:03:09 Right. And your projects was always a pleasure for all the DJs. The samples you picked, the artists you worked with, everything across the board. I told you the remixes, everything. There was the one joint. Was it the Red Eye remix of... Was it G-Thing? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Damn, you got heat.
Starting point is 01:03:31 I got the record, and you had to play it on a 45 speed. You got heat. I got one more question. You got heat. I got one more question, and this is it. You didn't even let me finish. Go ahead, go ahead. No, no, no, finish, finish.
Starting point is 01:03:42 Go ahead, go ahead. No, no, finish, finish. I'm just saying On behalf of the DJ Thank you Snoop On behalf of the DJ Thank y'all For playing my shit For giving me a shot
Starting point is 01:03:50 For putting me in rotation For fucking with me For spraying it For passing it on To the next DJ For mixing it Putting it in the mix shows Playing me in the strip clubs
Starting point is 01:03:59 On the radio station All day All of the above Man I love the DJs You understand me I respect the DJ The MC ain't nothing without him so still Dre day which is one of my favorite records not not of this I'm not gonna take up another one of your roaches
Starting point is 01:04:16 as you should look at this nigga rope there's a whole blood it's wholesome this nigga this nigga wait Dre day was also the loop this, right? Yeah. No, no, no, no. Yeah. Still Dre Day. He talking about still Dre, not still Dre. Dre Day was the one on the Chronic album.
Starting point is 01:04:35 Right, right. He was getting that loop. Okay, okay. Still Dre was on Chronic 2001. Okay. Yeah, still. But Dre Day, over here was going bananas And they did All kinds of crazy records You talking about
Starting point is 01:04:46 You want to go there first You want to go there first Nah nah Just not Cause he from Miami Nah he from Miami But it was such a hot record No no
Starting point is 01:04:53 Let me tell you about that With Luke right So I'm jumping in This one I'm a young nigga So at this time Luke said something about Dre Tim Dogg said something about Dre There was a bunch of niggas
Starting point is 01:05:03 That was talking about Dre Cause some shit he had went through So I was just a young go Dre. There was a bunch of niggas that was talking about Dre because some shit he had went through. So I was just a young goon. I was like, fuck all them niggas. I jumped in and was dissing them niggas. And in the event of dissing these niggas, I didn't realize who was real and who was fake in the rap industry. We ran up on Luke and them and seen them at a convention
Starting point is 01:05:19 and found out how real them niggas was. Luke, 100%. Immediately. Shout out to the ghetto style DJs. Shout out to Uncle Luke. Immediately. I'm from Long Beach, so I hadn't been outside of this,
Starting point is 01:05:32 so I didn't know that they made gangsters in every state that you went to. No, for sure, for sure. You remember the record? They made a record. It was Cowards in Compton against Fade in Dade. That was the record.
Starting point is 01:05:41 What I'm saying, but let me tell you about after that, though. So we go to a, now we come back to Miami, right? That was the record What I'm saying But let me tell you About after that though So We go to Now we come back to Miami Right This time I'm just Snoop Dogg
Starting point is 01:05:50 And the dog No security I just got the homies With me So Luke Sent a car to get me Just like I said This nigga is
Starting point is 01:05:58 He sent a car To get me a limo Bring me to the club All kind of bitches Laying out for a nigga Like nigga I love you Nigga ain't nothing. Boom. Go back to LA. He come to my house. We make
Starting point is 01:06:09 a record. We forge a relationship with this nigga Luke to where it's like this one of the realest niggas we ever met. I had to learn to not disrespect niggas that I didn't know so quick without knowing who the fuck I'm talking about see cuz that
Starting point is 01:06:26 rap shit to get you fucked up if you don't know who you're talking about let's see a lot of niggas don't know that they quick to be like this bitch ass nigga fuck that nigga you better check that nigga resume for real you better really see what someone talking shit about trick trick in Detroit nice not gonna happen's not going to happen. Knock it off. You got to know who you're talking about
Starting point is 01:06:48 and it was just a blessing that Luke was a genuine grown ass man and he was able to see past the ignorance that we had. He forgave us,
Starting point is 01:06:58 we became friends, we fucked with him, played football against him because he coached football too. Yeah, he definitely did. So it was, come on man,
Starting point is 01:07:04 it's my nigga man. I love Uncle Luke. He always he definitely did. So it was, come on, man. It's my nigga, man. I love Uncle Luke. He always been ready. So this is the last question, Snoop, because you did everything we asked us to do. But listen, Snoop, I've never seen, listen, I'm on my seventh life. You're on your 27th life, which means I've seen you transition, seen people count you out, seen people do that to me like 17 times. You're on 27. I'm following you.
Starting point is 01:07:38 How do you continue to stay here and say, this is what the fuck I'm going to do. I made myself a boss. And I'm just going to tell you the truth. When I first started making money, Jimmy Iovine came to me and he told me, say, buy a studio. And when I bought a studio, I was able to create. It was like buying a sack. And instead of buying a sack, I bought a factory where I was the sack.
Starting point is 01:08:11 You get what I'm saying? So you have to, whatever you love, you got to be able to surround yourself with it. And when I surrounded myself with what I love, the spirit of what I love keeps me doing what I love. So it's never, why am I doing it? Do I ever want to stop doing it?
Starting point is 01:08:28 This is all I know how to do. So I'm going to keep doing it, and I'm going to do it to the point to where it feels good to me. And it's never, oh, this old nigga needs to sit down somewhere. It's like Uncle Snoop when you come in with some more shit, you know, the transition is from young MC, BG, OG, Uncle Snoop. That's a beautiful transition for me. God damn, make some noise. Yo, Snoop, there's no other way I can say anything else
Starting point is 01:09:03 but thank you. Thank you for sitting down with us. And you're going to keep smoking. We're going to keep talking, man. Yeah, it's motivation. It's pure motivation. So listen, Snoop. I was trying to hold this out.
Starting point is 01:09:16 We call this a Cuban goodbye, by the way. No. This is called Cuban goodbye. We never leave, but we say goodbye. Listen, how much pussy did you get there in Doggy Style? Let's just keep it real. Even if you ain't fucked a pussy, you just got the pussy and you send it off to the other people. Come on, Snoop.
Starting point is 01:09:32 Talk about that pussy, God damn it. Doggy Style. You know what? The pussy that came. You know what? Pussy and Doggy Style. God damn it. Come on, Snoop.
Starting point is 01:09:42 Don't dog this question. I'm going to say, you know what? When it came the most, and you ain't going to believe me, but I'm going to tell you the truth. It came the most when Tupac got on Death Row Records. Because I had another nigga that was a player just like me that knew how to play. Because he was knocking these other niggas bitches. Exactly. This nigga, this nigga Pac knocked one of my main bitches, man. This nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:06 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:06 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:07 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:07 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:07 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:08 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:08 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:08 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:08 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:08 this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga, this nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:09 this nigga, this nigga, movie star bitch. We won't say her name because we're going to protect the innocent. Yeah, let's do that. Let's do that. I said it a long time. Let's do that, Snoop. Protect the innocent, God damn it. Yeah, protect the innocent. She's a movie star bitch, right?
Starting point is 01:10:32 Uh-huh. So Pac is on death row now. He out. Yep. So the bitch is in hoopla because everybody wants to meet my nigga,
Starting point is 01:10:39 you understand me? And you know I ain't no motherfucking hater. I don't know how to block. I get out the way. So the bitch like, you understand me? I would love to meet Tupac if that's all right me. And you know I ain't no motherfucking hater. I don't know how to block. I get out the way. So the bitch like, you understand me?
Starting point is 01:10:50 I would love to meet Tupac if that's alright with you. I'm like, bitch, it's going to always be alright with me. And now what state were you in? We was in L.A. Okay, continue. This is where all the stars is at. All the stars. So now, one night, I'm in the club and the bitch is there and Pac see the bitch. He like, like man i want to meet that bitch man
Starting point is 01:11:08 i say hey man that's exactly how he described it the bitch that's my bitch let's continue i'll kindly introduce you to her i walks over to him right and say bitch this is uhupac. Tupac, meet the bitch. So, you know, after he meets the bitch, you know, I walks off. Because, you know, it ain't my job to stand there and see if they're going to talk and hug and kiss or whatnot, take a picture. I walks off like a real player. I guess they exchanged numbers.
Starting point is 01:11:42 I don't know. So, you understand me? A few weeks later, I'm trying to slide by and go see her because she's a side piece to me. I'm trying to go see her on a late night like I normally do. Leave that back door open. I'm like,
Starting point is 01:11:58 what's happening? I'm finna slide through. You know what I'm saying? Leave that back door open. The bitch hit me with, I don't think Pac would like that. Oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:11 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:13 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:13 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:13 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:13 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:13 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:14 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:14 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh,
Starting point is 01:12:14 oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, We talk about Madonna. Let's make some noise. For real, that's what the bitch said? For real, was that Madonna? No, that wasn't Madonna. Hey, that wasn't Madonna. Now look, the nigga, now the nigga, look. Now this is fucking crazy. You don't think I'm making this shit up.
Starting point is 01:12:39 No, no, we don't. Nigga, I'm doing Saturday Night Live in New York. Nigga, it's documented. Nigga, when I had that Tommy Hilfiger shirt on, the red, white, and blue one, blew the motherfucker up. The shirt sold like a motherfucker, right? So the nigga Pac come and see me. He in New York, he bring me some weed,
Starting point is 01:12:55 and he come backstage with the bitch. Madonna. Oh, with Madonna. With Madonna. Oh, we got a Madonna story. With Madonna, for real, for real. I'm about to feel like Acavelio. Was he cocking Madonna?
Starting point is 01:13:08 Man, he brought the bitch to Saturday Night Live, man. So he's cocking, he's cocking. He was knocking the bitch, man, because he brought me some bud, man, and he had the bitch on his own, man, and he wasn't even, like, flossing the bitch. He had her right here. Damn, Madonna had Tupac and Big Daddy King. Yeah. The other way around. Tupac had Madonna Daddy Kane. Yeah. The other way around. Tupac had Madonna, man.
Starting point is 01:13:29 God damn it. Yo, Snoop. God damn it. This is the park. Yo, can I give you a hug in advance? Come on. Yeah, this is park God shit. Yo, you from M.A. 13 for real?
Starting point is 01:13:47 No, no, no. He got cousins from me. All his cousins are from me. I'm not from M.A. His aunties and cousins, all of them. Where am I from? Yeah. He said it's Salvador.
Starting point is 01:13:57 Salvador? Come on, M.A. 13. Where my God? Come on. I'm from M.A. 13 too. Deep in my family I'm spending it too Yeah thank you Thank you
Starting point is 01:14:09 Thank you Yo god damn Your snoop That was heavy right No you gave us crazy shit Them last two right there That was crazy Was heavy
Starting point is 01:14:17 I couldn't believe You were going to do that No I'm serious man That's how this shit went down man And one thing about me And my play game When it come to me And the women
Starting point is 01:14:25 when I was out there like I was really fashionably suit for the game man like once upon a time I walked the red carpet man with two bitches on a leash man this is documented man I got the famous player award card
Starting point is 01:14:40 was your shit gold but did you hear what I said man I said I walked the red carpet He said two bitches on a leash, man. The red carpet, man. With two bitches on a leash and they didn't say one fucking word. I'm talking about this shit is documented, man.
Starting point is 01:14:55 Somebody pull up that picture or that footage of Snoop Dogg with two bitches on a leash. Somebody please pull it up. Do we have any... Listen, you have to mind our manners. We have no manners. Do you have any Prince or Michael Jackson stories?
Starting point is 01:15:10 Yeah, you got Howard. And I know you got Prince stories. You seen... I mean, they ain't really worth telling, man. I had a different kind of relationship with those two guys right there because it was more about the mutual respect that I had for them as musicians to where I kind of like it. When if I was around them niggas, I would like put my weed up and, you know, have that kind of respect for them.
Starting point is 01:15:34 Snoop has never put his weed up. For them niggas. My whole life. For them niggas. You did? Let's describe that situation. Who'd you have more respect for if you had to pick? It wasn't like it was more. This is you have more respect for if you had to pick? It wasn't like it was more,
Starting point is 01:15:45 this is who I had respect for. I had respect for this motherfucking pimp and nigga. And nigga, pimp it. Get a close-up of it. Get a little close-up, nigga. You see that?
Starting point is 01:15:56 Two bitches on a leash and they didn't say a motherfucking word. Nigga, we walked to Red Carpet, they was like, so, what is your mom going to say? I said, the bitches ain't going to say nothing,
Starting point is 01:16:09 so your mom is going to stop asking. But look at what they look like, though. Is they some bad bitches or is they some trash hoes, man? Put them back up, man. This one a nigga was a young goon, man. I was a young... Let me look at myself real quick. That's a hard pick.
Starting point is 01:16:31 Man, what nobody doing? These bitches didn't even have bras on, man. I think that was the MTV Awards or something, man. They couldn't believe how a nigga went up in there, man. That's painful. I fell up in that motherfucker like that that night with a leash, man. And then when I sat down, guess what? I made the bitches stand up
Starting point is 01:16:47 with the leash on while I'm sitting down. Reverse dog. Because you know, normally you make the dog sit down, bitch stand up. The dog gonna sit down and the bitch gonna stand up. That's called reverse dog. We heard of reverse pit, man.
Starting point is 01:17:04 I made a reverse pit, man. We've never heard of reverse dog. Let's make some noise for reverse dog. We heard of reverse pimpin'? I made up reverse pimpin' for Chris. We've never heard of reverse dog. That's reverse dog. Let's make some noise for reverse dog. Reverse dog, yo. That's when you take two bitches on a leash, you walk them down the red carpet, and when you get to your seat,
Starting point is 01:17:16 you sit down and you make them bitches stand up in the air. We put that on TMZ. You ever heard of Twin? You know who Twin is? He's a nigga. He drink fake activists. Two-chain syndrome. I can't afford two-chain lean.
Starting point is 01:17:32 Yeah, yeah. Because he drink fake lean. For real? Don't talk to him like that. Don't drink weed, dude. Leave him alone, Snoop. He gonna love it. Ah, look.
Starting point is 01:17:40 Yo, he fuck with you. Listen, listen. Give me some love. He fuck with you. When Snoop cross your blood, he fuck with you. Listen, listen. Give me some love. He fuck with you. When Snoop cross your blood, he fuck with you. I fuck with the little homie. The little homie going to be something. My pops bought me a chronic album for real.
Starting point is 01:17:52 I fuck with the little homie. He going to be something. Tell him you drink Factivist. Tell him. No, I don't. It's called Caracol, people. Caracol. What do lean make you feel like?
Starting point is 01:18:02 I never drunk that shit. Self-snoop. What do you make you feel like? I never drunk that shit. Self-snoop. What do it make you feel like? I don't know, man. You smoke like a thousand fucking blunts. When it's the end of the day, you know what I'm saying? You smoke mad blunts. You're already like, fuck.
Starting point is 01:18:17 So do you want to have sex when you on lean? Nah, man. You just want to get head. Why do you get that? Just head? Yeah. You don just want to get head. Thank you. Just head? Yeah. You don't want to move your hips around?
Starting point is 01:18:28 You just want to be like this. But that's not something, that's not a choice of my job. I guess when we was young, we just was in the head too. Listen, listen. Now, can I talk to you?
Starting point is 01:18:36 Yes, please. Let's have one ending. Because I love the way you just took it. These young brothers, they drink drinking lean. They can't even fuck.
Starting point is 01:18:48 They bitches, because I'm 38 years old, Snoop. So you're saying the young bitches want to fuck me. I'm going to keep it 100. That holy rock. My young niggas,
Starting point is 01:18:58 I be coming out, I hang out with them, and they bitches come and say, you're sly. You still are. I be like slime this long
Starting point is 01:19:09 dick daddy baby big dick dangler the whole strangler but I don't I don't because I'm married
Starting point is 01:19:16 Snoop but but temptation is a motherfucker what I'm trying to say is is the new generation too much hooked on drugs
Starting point is 01:19:24 I think the new generation the new generation is doing what every generation before them has done. Been doing, yeah. It's just repeating itself. It's just a matter of they have to understand that don't let the drug do you. You understand what I'm saying? The way you can't be in control no more. One thing about my era, when I became a rapper, I was an ex-cocaine dealer. So my mission was to get rid of cocaine and to bring weed to the forefront.
Starting point is 01:19:53 So my mission has been accomplished because now weed is legalizing the whole globe and it's coming slowly but surely to a hood near you. Make some noise for that. Make some noise for that. When you say cocaine, was it powder or was it crack? noise for that. Yeah. For real. When you say Gula, was it powder or was it crack? I sold crack.
Starting point is 01:20:08 Okay. I sold that hula-dula. You want some? I sold that hula-dula. I want some right now. Hula-dula, the crack house hula. I'm trying to lose weight.
Starting point is 01:20:18 Hula-dula. Who want that hula-dula? Cass, I'm sorry. Trick Daddy friend. They smoke crack over there. Sorry. Cass Dula, sorry. Trick Daddy friend. They smoke crack over there. We smoke bunk. They call that a primo when they put that inside of a joint.
Starting point is 01:20:32 They put a little sprinkle a little bit in the joint. Did you hear about how Miami niggas Miami niggas get? They keep it real. Yeah, they do their thing. They smoke that down. And they gangsters a motherfucker out here. I respect the 305 in a real motherfucking way.
Starting point is 01:20:48 They different. No, I respect them niggas. Believe that. Because you've been coming out here 20 years. Can't be real. I fucks with them. Shit, we just found out
Starting point is 01:20:56 our dads lives out here in Miami Lakes. That's that nigga's cousin. He fucked our head up when he said that. You don't remember that nigga? That's his first cousin. That's my blood cousin. Yeah, that's his blood. That's crazy. When dad said that. You don't remember that nigga? That's his first cousin. That's my blood cousin.
Starting point is 01:21:05 Yeah, that's his blood. That's crazy. When dad said that shit, I said, damn, these niggas been out here ever. As long as I've been out here. And you my relative, nigga.
Starting point is 01:21:14 Goddamn it. Make some noise for me. Goddamn it. No, believe me. I don't even know. I'm so stupid. What it do? So, yo,
Starting point is 01:21:22 I can't thank you enough for sitting down with us smoking. I'm not going to lie. I want to smoke. You got another roll-up blunt, too? Right here. Can you give me one? Is this 50 shit right here?
Starting point is 01:21:31 F and vodka? Yeah, that's F and vodka. Yeah, can we fuck with 50? I'll fuck with 50. We got 50 shit and we got puppy shit. There's fat beef on the table. Rich and black taking on Jack Slott. Yo, the bottles is beefing right now.
Starting point is 01:21:46 So Puffy, they ain't even supposed to be this close together. Watch out, watch out. Don't worry about it. Don't worry about it. Do what you gotta do, Snoop. Do what you gotta do, Snoop. Do what you gotta do, Snoop. Do what you gotta do, Snoop.
Starting point is 01:22:04 Do what you gotta do, Snoop. I'm a jail. You was gonna do this? You was gonna do this? You was gonna do this? You was gonna do this? I'ma tell. Nah, that's what you, you making the peace. You making the peace. Which one of these bottles can bust a nigga over the head? I don't know. But one of them niggas gonna get the check.
Starting point is 01:22:21 Three shits, we good. Yo, listen, listen, listen. A lot of people can't do what we just did. Right now, we sat down and talked to the boss of another coast. We chopped it up. We had fun. We laughed. We smoked.
Starting point is 01:22:40 We drank. We did all that. A lot of y'all people, I don't know what, I don't know what it is. What is it? Fucking leave that shit on my shit. A lot of y'all can't do that. We just did it
Starting point is 01:22:51 with Snoop Dogg. He smoking on some Real Cali too. That shit in his hand right there, that's that do it fluid. That's that electrifying. I'm pipping the collar.
Starting point is 01:23:01 He pipping me. I'm pipping the collar. Look, look. I don't even know why I'm pipping the collar. I'm pipping the collar. That's that electrifying leave I'm pippin' a collar. Look, look. I don't even know why I'm pippin' a collar. I'm pippin' a collar. That's that electrifying legal crime. Let's do a drop.
Starting point is 01:23:09 Let's do a drop. Let's do it. Let's do it. End of picture. Yeah. That's that electrifying legal crime. Yo, wait. Hold on, though.
Starting point is 01:23:17 Make some noise for Snoop Dogg, everybody. Yo! Yo! Yo, Snapchat. Yeah, Kool-Aid man, baby. I like that. I like that. I like that feedback. Find all your favorite movies and shows faster with Xfinity. Just speak into the excellent voice remote to search across live TV, on demand, even Netflix and Prime Video.
Starting point is 01:23:52 Now that's simple, easy, awesome. Go to Xfinity.com, call 1-800-XFINITY or visit a store today. Restrictions apply. Why is a soap opera western like Yellowstone so wildly successful? The American West with Dan Flores is the latest show from the Meat Eater Podcast Network. So join me starting Tuesday, May 6th, where we'll delve into stories of the West and come to understand how it helps inform the ways in which we experience the region today. Listen to the American West with Dan Flores on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
Starting point is 01:24:28 or wherever you get your podcasts. I know a lot of cops. They get asked all the time, have you ever had to shoot your gun? Sometimes the answer is yes. But there's a company dedicated to a future where the answer will always be no. This is Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated.
Starting point is 01:24:47 I get right back there and it's bad. Listen to Absolute Season 1, Taser Incorporated on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Michael Kassin, founder and CEO of 3C Ventures and your guide on good company, the podcast where I sit down with the boldest innovators shaping what's next. In this episode, I'm joined by Anjali Sood, CEO of Tubi. We dive into the competitive world of streaming. What others dismiss as niche, we embrace as core. There are so many stories out there, and if you can find a way to curate and help the right person discover the right content, the term that we always hear from our audience is that they feel seen.
Starting point is 01:25:30 Listen to Good Company on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Your gut microbiome and those healthy bacteria can actually have positive effects. Your mental health, your immunity, your risk of cancer, almost any disease under the sun. This week on Dope Labs, Titi and I dive into the world of probiotics, the hype, the science, and what your gut bacteria are really doing behind the scenes. From drinks and gummies to probiotic pillows. Yes, really probiotic pillows. We're breaking down what's legit and what's just brilliant marketing. With expert insight from gastroenterologist Dr. Roshi Raj. Listen to Dope Labs on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is an iHeart Podcast.

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