Million Dollaz Worth Of Game - Episode #10 - "Important Nobodies"
Episode Date: June 18, 2019You can find every episode of this show on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or YouTube. Prime Members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music. For more, visit barstool.link/mworthofgame...
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Hey, million dollars worth of game listeners.
You can find every episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube.
Prime members can listen ad-free on Amazon Music.
Right.
The Finiske!
all the time all the time all the time all the time all the time niggas done yeah shot's fine all the time all the time all the time all the time all the time all the time niggas dying knicks crying hummuside homicide all the time all the time all the time all the time all the time all the time all the time
I like that's fun.
Mama's curve.
Homicide.
All the time, all the time, all the time.
All the time, all the time.
I like that right there.
Pounce out, man.
Rapid fire, man.
Check him out, man.
But listen, man, man, man, man.
This is me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, million, million, million, million, million, million, million, million, million.
I go by the name of Gilly the king.
Gilly the nut.
I'm wallow two, six, 70K grandmaster.
You know, I'm just out here doing my thing, Dojo King.
That's what they call me.
I don't call you that shit.
You don't know when I go with Dojo, they call me that.
When I go in dojoos, they call me, they're like, yeah, he's a dojo king.
They call me D.K.
Dojo King.
They call me D-K.
Dojo King.
All right.
If that's the story you're running with, I'm going to run with it with you, too.
Listen, man, first we went getting to our sponsors.
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Everything, Dey Glam, our sponsor, man.
Listen, I'm going to say this, man.
I'm about tired of, man.
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I'd love to have some waves just for the summer.
Let's go get that whole kid.
Oh, no, because you keep talking.
You're talking about you.
Let's relive our childhood one more on time.
They're going to know anyway.
You think I pop up with some luxurious and glorious hair.
Niggas ain't going to know.
They don't know.
They probably think that we got here.
Some people might think that.
No, they know you got their drop top with the tent on the sides.
And you can see my join.
That's why I like summertime.
You get dark.
You get the 10.
Nobody can tell that you got your brains flowing out.
When you turn into Dominican low?
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, that's what they are.
Are you Dominican?
Are you Ethiopian?
Yeah, sometimes.
It depends how I'm feeling about how I respond to that.
So you want to get into,
Um, there's May and Oz were for games.
Let's get into it, man.
Okay, the first thing we're going to talk about is the DJs.
Did it, you know what?
I ain't going to tell about it.
Because, no, you know what?
You know what?
Because a lot of people always put it on the rappers.
Oh, they fuck the music up.
Oh.
What rappers?
The newer generation.
No, no, no.
That's what they do.
But what I'm saying, that's what they do.
They don't like to respect the young ins craft.
And what they do.
And they say, oh, the youngest, they fuck it.
They fucked the music up.
Oh, the South fucked the music up.
Because the South got anybody trying to sound like this.
Let me tell you something.
If y'all want to blame it on the rappers, let's blame it on the DJs too.
How are you going to blame it on the DJ?
Because let me tell you something.
At one point, a DJ's job was to chase records.
They took pride in that shit.
Breaking that record.
Breaking the record.
We didn't have the Internet.
We didn't have none of that.
So a DJ had to be in tune with what was going on in the streets.
Yeah.
Then the 2000s came.
And I'm going to keep it all the way real.
You want to know a DJ that's played a big part in fucking the music industry up?
Who?
DJ Clue.
How?
Because DJ Clue went and got a rapper.
And then he showed all these other DJs that you don't have to just be confined to get
and your little DJ at the club checks.
And if you work at the radio, your little radio checks,
you could get this money outside of the radio.
Clue ran the back.
And I can see why he influenced a lot.
He ran that bag up.
He ran that bag up.
And then what happened?
Every goddamn DJ in the country was trying to get a rapper.
Was trying to put a rap on.
So now them DJs wasn't concerned with chasing no goddamn records no more.
And why should I play?
Why should I play you if you from the city?
I got my own artist.
I got my own artist.
All I'm concerned about is playing my own artist
and trying to live this rapper's life.
Because the rapper life, let's be real.
It's way better than the DJ life.
The DJ ain't got five women wrestling over his dick
into four seasons.
Let's just keep it real.
The DJ Klu came around pretty slow.
DJ Klu had a lot of those sessions.
You feel what I'm seeing running around here with Hove
and fabulous and this point.
person and that person and he making money
off the books. Real real, you ain't, like
some DJs, you ain't even know. Like,
you ain't even know. Before the internet came,
you ain't even know what the DJ looked like. Absolutely.
They wasn't putting them in, they wasn't putting them in rap pages.
They wasn't having them in the source, the exit. They didn't have none of them
Jones. Right. And then
the 2000 showed up and all
the DJs tried to get rappers
either they tried to put their own album out.
Yeah, it was a lot of DJ. Okay. So now
when you hit their airwaves.
That was legendary though for a DJ to sign a record deal.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
And I'm not saying that they was at fault in anything.
I'm just saying they help fuck the music industry up too
because at the end of the day,
if you are DJ and you about to go on the radio at 8 o'clock,
whose music is you going to put in that motherfucking slot?
Yours.
You got to play all the big artists.
They're all we on the list.
And then you're going to throw yours.
If you slide somebody in locally or a couple of spots, you're going to put your artists in there.
Or you're going to put, you're going to represent your album on there.
Yep.
You ain't worrying about, it's no longer you worrying about breaking other artists, looking for the hot records, being in tune with what's going on in the streets.
No.
You're number one concern when you come to work is pushing your album or pushing your artists.
So now she gets watered down.
Because now the streets are saying,
oh, he's pushing such and such and such and such,
but he ain't really that hot,
but we got my man over here.
That's bubbling for real.
That's bubbling for real.
Who's not getting no look because at the end of the day,
what is the DJ trying to do?
He's trying to get that rapper money.
He's trying to get them dick sucks.
He's trying to get that Rolex.
He's trying to get whatever the name of his company is.
Fuck your rapper.
I play my rapper.
He's trying to get one of those chains.
You hear me?
There was trying to live.
the life you're right because that's why till this day then the internet came along gmail came
along everybody now djs ain't chasing records they're waiting for that motherfucker to go through
their email let me see if i like this nah i don't really like this why would you i like this
why don't you chase the records when they come to uto now because at the end of the day because at
the end of the day you still want to be well i don't know about the djays of today but back then
they still wanted to be the person that took the responsibility of,
I played this record first.
See, now that shit really don't mean.
Back in the day, a DJ pulled up in the studio.
Absolutely.
At the session.
Absolutely.
They was at them sessions.
You know when the DJ coming to the studio now?
If you Drake.
If you Meek Mills.
If you Fabulous.
If you Migos.
If you, uh, the baby.
See,
Now you've got to be up here for them to visit the studios.
Cardi B.
Because let's be for real.
The DJs then got too fucking important.
Now, real quick, you think some of the DJs was trying to maybe restore the balance
because you know when hip hop first started, it was a DJ.
Eric B and Rock Kim.
It was a DJ.
DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince.
So for a while, the DJ kind of did take on a different role.
Do you think by any chance that maybe?
some of them was like, man, it's time to try to get the DJ back on top?
Fuck, no.
And I'm going to tell you why.
I'm going to tell you why.
Because the DJs was setting up their own companies.
You feel me?
Hold on with that.
Is anything wrong with that?
I'm not saying nothing's wrong with that.
But I'm saying it, what I'm saying is if you're setting up your own company
and you go and get a rapper to be on your company,
then you're low-key trying to be puffed now.
you're trying to be Jay-Z
you're trying to be
Russell Simmons you're trying to be
the executive
let's be for real
a lot of them wasn't even built to be
executives they was built to be
exactly what the fuck they are
DJs
so now
you're coming into a game where
you know little about the business
but you're learning as you go
ain't nothing wrong with that and I'm not saying
there's anything wrong with what they did
what I'm saying is they have to take
credit for fucking the game up
too. That's all I'm
saying because at the end of the day
all of them had rappers
and once you get something that you
solely got to focus on, you're not
focusing on all the other shit.
So you know how many rappers
that was really hot that came
and went and never got their opportunity
because
I got to focus on
him right now because
this is my money.
You feel what I'm saying? If I'm
If I'm a commentator, right?
And I commentate for the NBA.
Am I focusing on football?
Am I focusing on soccer?
No, they don't fucking pay me.
The NBA pays me.
Right?
So that was the mindset that the DJs took.
All of them ran around, set their companies up, got a rapper.
And now they was like, I'm focusing on him.
And then you got to look at it.
it like this, if
I'm focusing on my
artist and this artist's coming
up and he's hot and he's
my artist competition.
Block him. Um, block him.
Uh, De Kenbe Matumbo, don't bring that shit
in here, move the four guy.
Don't bring that record up to this
radio station more than four guy.
Because you getting on
is taking a shot away from
my artist getting on. That's how
they was approaching the game.
That's how they was approaching the game. So, even
if they didn't necessarily block you out of that was their mindset,
but that's what they did subconsciously.
So you had so many rappers that couldn't get on
because DJs, you got these DJs that's at these major stations,
and let's be for real.
Back in the 2000s, radio was everything.
If you was bubbling out of Philly, what did the record label do?
They called down to Cosmic Kev and said, Cosmic Kev,
what's up with uh meek mills is he he's is he really bubbling like that oh yeah yeah he he's popping
out here you play in him absolutely i'm playing him you know how many calls cosmy kev got like that
you know what i mean calls funkmaster flex got like that dj clue reg out on connecticut
all these places gregg street in alana greg you heard of uh bobby bobby uh bobby johnson
Yeah, yeah, he's popping out here
Johnny Donut
Johnny Donut
Yeah, he's popping out here
He got a record out here
Yeah, that joint movie
You playing it
Yeah, I'm playing it
That's how record labels
Would check the temperature
On a rapper
Because they like
If that nigger's popping
In Philadelphia
Like he's just saying
He was in his office
Cosmic Kev would be playing him
So let's get the confirmation
Kev are you playing him
Yeah, he's popping
Yeah, he's doing this thing
All right, cool
We could do business with him
because he didn't pass point A.
He's already at point C before he walked into this office.
But then when all the DJ started to get artists,
that shit went out the window, man.
That shit went all the way out the window, man.
So I just want the DJs to accept responsibility for fucking the game up, too.
Because they always want to say the new.
You see it too. You say it too.
No, I'm just saying.
You're trying to say two.
Because when I talk to DJs, they always say,
the newer generation
they ain't talking about nothing
I don't agree with them
but I do talk to a lot of
DJs who say
and I have over the time
over all of these years
man the music industry
watered down
what's watered down what is they talking about
that's what they say
about what what do they mean
okay you know how I was watered down because you got a lot
of
one hit wonders
you got a lot of you got a lot of these
artists who
they do something
on the internet
they get popping real quick
they get a song real quick
song might not even be hot
it might just be lukewarm
but because you're popping at the time
we can run with it you can make some money
and then you're out of here
but who's the say of the song hot
I mean the people determine that
that's what I'm saying so we can't say
but listen okay prime example
gold all in my chain
gold all in my ranks
Gold all in my watch
That nigga can't get $800 to perform
No fucking way of right now
Yeah but they had songs like
I wish I was a little bit taller
I wish I was a baller
They always had a one hit one to do
That's a part of the game though
Listen but listen
They didn't have so many of them
Is the point
See now
Now when that song came out
It didn't have no gimmick around it
It was actually a hot song
This nigga was walking through
the goddamn projects with a dog like this,
go, don't believe me,
just what, nigga, knicker, nagger,
looking like Martin, looking like
goddamn, what's the nigga on Martin?
Rommy Roe.
He's looking like Rommy Rome and shit.
You feel what I'm saying?
So people wasn't really focusing
on how hot the record was.
They was focusing on the look
and the whole gimmick, and it was funny
the motherfuckers. So then, as
it catch your attention on being some
funny, goofy shit, after you
hear it, 100,000 fucking
times didn't you psyched the fuck out but let me ask you a question you hear anybody playing that
motherfucking record today no that's my point it's still motherfuckers till to his day they had
jump in their car some old heads i wish i was a little bit taller i wish i was a baller no no you
out of test it is yes it is yes it is no one because that was an organic let me tell you something
about organic man it always beats that bullshit that
come with the glitter and it's like it fucks your brain up that shit was organic there's a bunch
of one hit wonders that was organic that you still will play their song them that nigger that
nigger's not getting $350 to perform no fucking way of right now you just hit 800 you might get
$350 to perform no way because it wasn't organic man and shout out to him because he came in
he made his bag real quick i ain't hating i'm just speaking what the facts is you feel
what I'm saying?
Organic, let me give you a prime example
of organic.
When Drake and Meek Mills was going
through it, right? Drake
dropped that bomb on Meek, right?
Niggas was in the studio
saying, I don't know, man.
It might be over for Meek, man.
I don't know.
I'm telling you, dog, niggas ain't
failing him right now. I might be over and I sat there
and told niggas that'll never be over for Meek Mills.
You know why? Because
niggas love Meek Mills when a niggas
didn't have a coin in his fucking pocket
and he had some goddamn straight back
breeds to the back that was raggedy
and then the motherfucker looked like he never got them
bitches done. That's
organic. Yeah, the people love him for real.
That's organic. I think
that's different than like some of them songs
that was back in the day, bro, to be honest, that
these songs was pushed out
by the label because remember us growing up, we didn't have
no option but with the radio or what
MTV gave us. You know what I'm saying?
So some of that stuff was budget. Yeah, it was
budgeted from the record label
and given to us, too.
So we did have organic and non-organic stuff back then, too.
You know what I mean?
We did.
Not to the level that we got it right now.
Yeah, now it's a while while.
Right now, somebody could shit in a bowl, put whipped cream in a fucking cherry on it,
and call it a shit, a diarrhea shit Sunday, and eat that motherfucker,
and he's going to have a million five followers tomorrow for eating shit.
Them kids couldn't do that that put that record out.
But you got to understand this at the end of the day.
It's like, we're living in a time, which is great because a lot of people say,
fuck the DJ.
Because they feel as though they don't need them because they got the internet.
Why do I need the DJ when I got SoundCloud?
Right.
Why do I need?
Because at the end of the day, we're in a place now.
Whereas though, you can say, like Nipsey was saying, fuck the middleman,
and you can put your own stuff out and you can have the people.
The people is putting the people in position.
See, the roots hold up the tree.
The bottom, they take the top.
And that's what's going on.
The people, when you put your stuff on SoundCloud and you put your stuff on YouTube and you
start popping, the people
are saying they like that. So it could be,
you know, BS
to billions
of people, but it don't take billions of people
to get some traction. Oh, you need this couple hundred thousand.
And you're popping out here, and it's a couple hundred thousand
that's going to like your stuff no matter what you put out.
And my point is, you've got to connect with them.
The DJs downgraded their
significance in the game. Yeah.
That's why when the internet came
out, the motherfucker's scene, you know
what? Fuck them niggas.
Yeah. I ain't got to go through them niggas,
no more.
I ain't got to go.
That's because
niggas was tired of.
You think motherfuckers
while looking back saying
I want to say some names
but I ain't going to say no names.
Man, that DJ
got that rapper right there.
Man, that nigga ain't shit.
Everybody
know I'm hotter than this
nigga but I can't get that
motherfucking DJ to play nothing to minds, man.
I'm hotter than this
nigga on the streets right now.
I can't get that DJ
to play nothing of mine.
because I'm his artist, competition.
Do the radio matter?
Right now.
So do artists really care about getting played on the radio?
I mean, in 2019, yeah, if you're an artist,
your dream is still to get played on the radio, without a doubt.
Do people listen to radio?
Yes, because if nobody listened to radio,
then radio would have been folded.
They would have been tapped out.
You feel what I'm saying?
So as an artist, there's still no feeling like when you hear your record
come across that radio for the first time.
I don't you fuck who he is.
You can try to lie.
You can try to bullshit.
But when you hear your song,
come across that radio for the first time
and you're on your homies wherever y'all at
and y'all snapping, y'all losing your mind.
Y'all like, you did it, nigga.
It's still a certain feeling, man.
When you come across that airwaves, man.
Granted, the DJs downgraded that.
They downgraded their significance
because they all took on the artists.
All of them.
I think that feeling that you had,
I think that feeling that you're saying about,
that you're speaking about getting your stuff played on the radio,
I think that's the new feeling is not really getting played stuff on the radio,
getting a repost from somebody that's big.
I think that's that feeling now.
I think it took that,
that's that feeling now.
Because if I'm an artist.
That's one of the feelings.
If I'm a rapper and I'm coming up and somebody big repost me,
that's more of an impact than me getting played in my little town on my city.
So it's like, oh.
But you got to understand.
You got to understand.
Most artists want to be the man where they're from.
Yeah.
And that's it sometimes.
That's it.
I mean, motherfuckers walk up on us, yo, I'm the hottest nigga in Philly.
And we're like, mm.
It's a big world.
You're talking about Philly?
You're talking about Philadelphia.
Okay, Younger.
That's the mindset that a lot of, a lot.
And the artists who don't have that mindset, a lot of times be the artists that make it out.
Because they don't, fuck, they don't program their mind
to just think about a 200 block radius.
See, a lot of times when you just thinking about,
oh, I'm the hottest nigger in West Philly,
you making music for West Philly.
I'm the hottest nigga in North Philly.
You're making music for North Philly.
Is a nigga in New Orleans going to want to listen to this?
Is a nigga in Atlanta going to want to listen to this?
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis.
So are you making music for South Philly?
or is you making music for the world.
But you got to remember this.
Whatever town are you from,
you got to make your sound.
You're talking about it all the town.
So sometimes your sound might sound like Philadelphia.
Your sound like, you know, South-South of Chicago.
Your sound might sound like Bankhead,
but that's what people look for.
Right.
They're looking for your sound that you, you know,
from your place on this world,
they want, they only, they already know they sound.
They know the people to listen to from their town.
Right.
That's Bankhead Mike.
Mm-hmm.
You see what I'm saying?
But if you're from Philly,
They want that Philly sound
You're from New York
They were the New York sound
And I think
This is why the South is so powerful
In the history of hip hop
Is because you never seen
Like even when New York had the crowd
You never seen a place
Whereas though
Everybody is trying to mimic
They sound around the country
People that rap like
In Houston they rap like
You know boys from Texas
People that rap in Compton
They rap like Compton
You know Philly rap like Philly
Like New York
Philly don't rap like Philly
No No I ain't listen
Whatever you say
I'm just talking about, I'm talking about as it went before.
Yeah.
And then you have Andreina, down, Andre D,000 and all of them.
You had Luke down, down Miami, rapping the way they rap.
Right.
Now, the South is so powerful that I don't care.
We, you can hear somebody in music.
You don't know.
Where are you from?
You don't know if they're from Chicago.
Can identify with them.
You don't know if they're from New York.
You know, I didn't heard dudes in New York sound like they're from down bankhead.
Right.
I mean
Every time I'm in the studio
A young boy say
Let me let you hear some music
Gilly throw it on
Gabbah da dibibibah
Hey
Howba di di Bidda sioux
Hey
Howba de Bid B
Hey
What fuck are you from?
West Philly
Oh
That's the sound of West Philly
No
You sound like the bootleg Migos
You sound like Cheetos
Nigger get the fuck out of it
With this
Hey
And the ad lips be like
Yeah, yeah.
Ta-ah-ha-ba-ta-rah, rah, how-a-do-oh, how-a-ta-ta-ta-c get the fuck out of here, man.
Where are you from, man?
Let me tell you something.
When Atlanta niggas put a Philadelphia nigger on, guess what they want to hear, a Philadelphia nigger?
Right?
They don't want to hear bootleg Atlanta nigger, but see, you know why niggas don't understand that because niggas don't never go to Atlanta.
so they don't understand that they got 132 rappers
132,000 rappers down there
that's rapping like that down there alone.
And then you go and you say,
let me hear that you hear some shit.
Where are you from?
I'm from Philly.
They think they're ready to hear some shit
that sounds like Gilly, Beanie, Meek Mills,
Freeway, even Will Smith.
You should have seen the people dancing and shaking
and moving and jumping and spinning and clap it
by the beep bop was grooving and screaming and yelling
and on the microphone I was flowing ain't no
yah yah hey hey
woo woo
but we live in the world we live in the world of
everybody want to be lit
everybody want to be important nobody
so you got to understand now
now it's just about I want it right now
oh that worked for them it's going to work for me
everybody listen what is you kidding me
everybody is mimicking anybody no I said
I said nobody just because it's
working for a motherfucker that's from another place that you're from don't mean is going
work from you because that's what I'm saying because no but that's that's the mindset of people
because we live in a place like I always say where everybody do what everybody do absolutely but the
only people who's going to win is the people that just jump off the bridge first you're not going
to be able to I don't see too many of that happening where people was able to mimic somebody else
situation but that's the the world we living in is down is I want to be lit I want to be popular
I don't want no money I just want people to know me wow I want to be important important
nobody's that's the whole thing.
instance, I'm not saying, I just want to speak on the thing.
You have people out here on social media, a bunch of people following, but they're not making
no money.
Right.
They're just on there to be on it.
You had the one girl, but just came up, you know, I think I name is Ari, A-R-I-I, she's on,
she was on social media, had like 2.6 million followers.
She couldn't sell 50 products.
Because people ain't, people not, um, follow on her for selling products.
They follow on her probably for the way she looked.
You know what she could have sold?
What?
Some of that pussy.
Oh, we're not.
We're not promoting prostitution.
I'm just saying.
I'm just saying there's a lot of women out here that, oh, they might got 1.6 million followers.
They might got 4 million followers.
But at the end of the day, most of them got that many followers because you are advertising your ass and not your class.
If you take all the ass shots down, all the shots of them in bikinis, all the shots of them with their puppies sitting up on the fence, trying to hop the gate.
And you just put up all face picks.
Them bitches followers would go from $4 million to $40,000.
Because them bitches is quick to flash you, that donkey and not that fucking monkey.
So let's be for real.
You know how many women I follow because the ass popped up on my drink.
God damn.
But see, my whole thing, why is you talking from that place?
If you tapped in, you tuned in?
Because what, okay, what man don't want to see a nice ass?
Don't want to see a nice round bubble
What would you care that?
But the way you just spoke like you
At the end of the day
I'm speaking the facts
I only push follow too
Because I've seen the ass
Like if the bitch
If the bitch would have got all mug shots
From the neck up
My fuckers just start unfollowing
Bits look like Caesar
Goh!
Fuck it's wrong with you
But it goes back to this
It goes back to this
We live in the world of important nobodies
And everybody want to be important nobody
Whereas though you're not selling that
You're not trying to make it
You just want to be popping
So I don't care what you're doing
Him doing and He's doing
I want to do it
Let me do it
I want to get popping
Uh huh
Everything is about getting popping
Right now
Being lit right now
I just started rapping yesterday
Post me
I'm trying to pop
Everything I'm selling here
I'm doing whatever
Everything is about
Mimicking somebody else
Right
The people that's going to win
It's going to be the people
That's going to do some shit
That nobody else is thinking about
Right
Go find their own thing
Do some research
Oh Dan ain't got that
Let me feel avoiding the market place
That's the stuff
That's the stuff that always explode
Avoid in the marketplace
Instagram came and said, you know what,
let's make this shit as simple and dumb as shit,
simple and dumbed down as possible.
Picture, video.
This before, picture, picture, and it's going to be simple.
And that's what people like, simplicity.
And it's just crazy, though.
Everybody wants to ride everybody else's wave.
They love it.
Get your surfboard.
So look how many niggas running around here.
I'm going to get y'all some game.
I'm a gie-all free game.
But them niggas don't get the traction.
I get, you know why?
Because everybody's like,
that's gilly shit um you're a bootleg gilly you're belg so let's be for real i got i got me alone
i got 800 niggas on the internet trying to trying to mimic what i do you you might
inspire them i don't think you probably mimicking they're trying to mimic they talk about free game
if my shit is called million dollars worth a game for free and you say i'm giving out free game
you're fucking mimicking me you trying to do what i do
But the fact is, your mouthpiece
ain't luxurious and glorious as minds.
I call it what I see it.
Okay.
Fuck it.
Now, I ain't going to put a nigga on Front Street.
I'm a let a nigga live.
I don't put it like that because...
I'm a letter to let a linger live.
I don't even see it.
I see that you can inspire people to try to do what you do to them.
Okay, let me tell you something.
If you inspire a motherfucker, then they're supposed to name
they shit something else.
Boss talk.
or or something else
how you just going to take the exact same fucking words
that I use and say you're not mimicking what I do
okay so if you put out an album called Walido's Way
and a nigger named Carl put out an album called Carl Lido's Way
but the fuck that ain't mimicking
you inspired him
no he's a professional dick holster
A lot of people like to mimic somebody like I know it's somebody
Listen, we're going to cut to the chase
because I know you're always talking this,
but you like to mimic people when you did it before
because you used people that you, who would you be?
Dionne Sanders, Bo Jackson, Sammy Sosa.
Three baseball players.
You know, football, football, last baseball players.
Who would you be?
What you said, Bo Jackson, Dion Sanders, or Sammy Sosa?
Yeah.
that ain't even close
why ain't it
I would have to be the legend
the goat
Dion Sanders
by far
easy
because Dion Sanders
had the same type of swag
as a nigga
he didn't give fuck
and he spoke his mind
Dion Sanders is a thief
he stole that song off me
he must be the money
I wrote that song
yeah you ain't write that shit
I didn't write that song
I wrote a song similar to that song
and he bit it off
What was the name of your shit?
Must be the honey.
These chicks is on me.
Get the fuck out of him.
Must be the honey.
They give it to me free.
That was my song.
He stole it for me, and I had a Jerry Care on Chains,
and I was playing football at the time.
He's a thief.
Let me just say this, right?
Beyond's a thief.
Let me just say this.
Bo Jackson is definitely a legend,
but Bo Jackson career wasn't that long.
That's what people don't talk about.
Well, Jackson was a monster.
But his career was not that long.
All right, all right.
And then I definitely wouldn't be saying,
Sammy Sosa, because that nigger went from chocolate milk, the goddamn skin milk.
That nigger cut his head off and put it in a motherfucking washing machine with three
gallons of goddamn chlorox bleach, man.
I'm definitely not ever claiming that.
Listen, first of all, first of all, you got to say this.
Let me explain some of this.
It's hard being black.
First of all, you think they don't still look at Sammy Sosa as a black man?
I'm just saying, man.
He probably thought he could blend in.
Blend in.
He thought he was going to blend.
He thought he was going to be a little.
Oh, damn, man.
Like a black.
You know what?
I wanted to get his whole body done up like that.
You got to get your whole body dipped.
Of course.
Because if you're on a beach and you got a light skin and you got a white head,
you can't have a black body.
Yeah, I wanted to he had to.
He had to get dipped.
So he threw his whole, yeah.
And they got dipped in vanilla chocolate.
He said, I'm getting dipped.
I got to, he said, if I could get dipped, I could dip from the brothers.
And they got dipped in vanilla chocolate.
Even though he's Latino, he still.
dark so you know you're getting the same thing to do.
All the Latinos mad at shit. When they seen that shit, they
was like, my god, it's gonna father, some one.
At the end of the day, Sammy Sosa, I said, if I get
dipped, I can dip. He said, this mighty
gone. But, but, but, but
think about this. If I get dipped, I can dip.
Listen, let me tell you something. Let me tell you
something. It's cool. It's cool. Let me tell you something.
At the end of the day, it's sad,
but ain't nobody trying to be black.
At the end of the day, at the end of the day, at the end, no,
no, it's cool that act black,
But being black and going through the struggles that black people got to go through, going through that?
No, it's cool to mimic their culture.
But no, no, I'll mimic the culture, but I ain't dealing with the struggle that come with that.
I'm not dealing with that.
See, that, now, that's what we're talking about.
Okay, now, now, I could agree with you with Sammy Sosa if Sammy Sosa did that shit at 14.
Sammy Sosa got dipped and dipped after this nigga got millions of dollars, man.
so he was way out to struggle
I didn't even recognize once he got dipped
I ain't even recognized it
so the dip worked once he got dipped and he dipped
because when I seen him I was like no it ain't
Michael Jackson got dipped
Oh hold I'm talking about Mike
Don't do that
I'm speaking on facts
You can't speak on Mike you can't speak on Mike
But Mike got dipped too
You can't speak on Mike
I'm not I don't want to feel like I'm being biased
But don't speak on Mike don't do that
I speak on whoever the fuck I want
I'm saying that's Mike that's Mike
Mike got dipped
too.
Mike was off white, too,
like,
you are not alone.
Mike should have to go.
Come on, man.
Don't speak on Mike,
man.
Don't do that.
Put one of them
got them
got their orange joints
around his neck
that's on the sneaks.
That knick is off white.
You know what?
Virgil,
I think him and Virgilablo
probably dipped him.
What the fuck is that?
That's who created off white
your nut,
Virgilablo.
Oh, I don't know that.
He probably got dipped.
He probably dipped him.
He probably dipped him.
He probably dipped him.
He probably dipped him.
He all white.
Listen,
they need to start selling off whites.
Sammy Sosa editions.
The jerseys and all of the all whites.
For real, everything's off white, got a little dirt tint to it,
but it's like white with a little dirty tent.
Yeah, that's deep. That's deep. The Sammy Sosa
additions. Because, listen,
I didn't respect it when Mike did it. I'm just keeping it real.
I'm not going to speak on Mike. I don't want to be biased,
but Mike's.
There's certain people, listen. Even when you get dipped,
you still got that little dirty black tint to you.
You feel like, so you're not really white.
And the culture, and listen. You tan and shit.
You like cocaine.
I'm going to say this.
I'm going to say this.
You like crack cocaine and shit.
In the black culture,
there's certain people
that you just can't speak about.
Listen,
hold,
let me run the list now.
Okay.
Michael Jackson.
I just spoke on them.
Listen,
Muhammad Ali,
Prince.
Michael Jackson,
Muhammad Ali,
Prince, James Brown,
Martin Luther King.
Fuck you mean.
Oh, shut up,
shut up.
Let me let me,
James Brown was the legend.
Oh,
let me see.
Hold,
I ain't finished.
I ain't finished.
Okay.
Martin Luther King.
Karate Earl, Bruce Lee
There's certain people you can't speak on
All right, for one, thanks for sure
Two things for certain
Martin Luther King was a legend
But Martin Luther King was on some nuts shit
All right, but listen, we're not going to talk about that
We're not going to disrespect nobody like that
We ain't disrespect, I'm just saying
Don't do that, don't do that
Because you got Earl named dirty out here
Don't mess it up
And you know what's crazy
No Earl got his own name dirty
No he didn't
I talked to my mom
She's going to make a public announcement
that stuff she said, she going to take that back.
Because she told, she said Earl was tricking.
She's going to take that, but she said she missed it with somebody else.
But listen.
No, she did.
Yes, she did.
Listen, listen.
I just had a dream.
Listen, unbelievable dream two days ago about Earl.
It was, listen, I was mad.
Listen, I was mad his shit.
April woke me up.
Baby, woke me, baby, you got to go.
You got to go.
I said, yo, what is you?
I was pissed.
I was so, listen, I was pissed when she, she shook me and woke me up.
Because guess what?
I come out of a nanny house.
I'm doing my mind of my business.
La-de-da-di-da-di-da-de-da.
I'm whistling and walking and all that.
I walked on a corner, like, it was a corner,
it was like the sun was beaming down.
So when I walked to go around the corner store,
it was like, it was a glow coming from the corner store.
I looked, as I got closer, it was karate Euro.
Listen, listen, it was karate, Euro and James Brown.
Together?
Yeah, they was drinking the ICF, Ice Coal 40.
So let me ask you a question.
Hold on.
So if I'm telling me, I was, I was done.
Karate Erle be in your dreams?
He's a legend.
This is my sensei.
But listen, people have.
I think Karate Errol touched you, man.
No, he didn't.
No, he didn't.
Don't say that.
I think he touched you.
Stop slanding.
I'm telling you, stop slanding.
Stop slanting for you being in this hospital.
Emergency Division.
Now, listen, this will happen.
What happened?
What happened he messed up?
And I never knew.
I never knew this.
And this stuff is starting to come out to me in my dreams.
So when I go up to him, I'm walking up.
I'm a little distant.
Karateero had a J in his hand.
smoking some jay him and him and him and james brownly passing the jay back to four i'm like
and he see me when he seen me he was like student what was how you what's going on i'm like
sense he like go back go back around the corner i said no we we must talk i mean what's going
on and what's nice nigga give me that give me that right here james brown snatched the little
riefer j from started smoking it how mean and he just starts tweaking out i don't know if i don't
I'm not sure if it was a turbo,
you know, they got the Rambo too
where it's weed, wet, dope,
or everything in there.
I don't know what was it was a regular Jay or was something else.
It might have been laced.
I think this one was laced.
Because listen, listen, listen, listen, listen,
because, listen, James Brown smoked it.
I got that feeling.
I said, oh, what the hell's going on?
So hold on.
So you've seen James Brown and Karate Earl
and your dreams, Chil, and you was more concerned with
Karate Earl than the legend James Brown.
You was more concerned with a nigger
who got all.
his pussy for free.
James Brown, you was more concerned
about a nigga that buys crack-haired pussy
over a nigga that got all his pussy for free.
That slander. That's slander. There's no truth to that.
But James Brown, they're on the same light level. It's cool.
They're legends in the ghetto. That's all they are.
They legends in the ghetto.
No, James Brown's a legend all across the world,
not just in the fucking ghetto.
No, but they legends.
Karate Earle's a legend in a three-block radius.
I know. Allegheny.
Allegheny is the only place where I go and the guy's like,
yo girl, for real, though.
Rottie Earle was a fucking old.
Only around here to y'all, niggas.
No, no.
The Rottie Earl would have it came up here you have.
Nobody would have known there to shot him right out of that fucking geek.
Marshall Arts is globally respected.
So Karate Erle is globally respected.
He represent the arts.
But what I'm saying is, what happened is, so listen, right there,
when Earl, Earl kept telling me, go back around the corner, Stu.
And the next day you know, Abe will shake me, woke me up.
That's the whole dream up.
Messed the whole dream up.
I ain't see Earl in years.
In years.
Earl died when I was in jail, man.
Do you know how it was?
when I got the information that earlier.
Speaking of jail, man, let's go to stories from a cell, man.
Stories from a cell is deep.
And I'm going to go back to what you was talking about being black
and why people don't want to be black.
Like Sammy Sosa?
Yeah, like Sammy.
He got dipped.
He wants to be a D.
Off white.
Off white Sosa.
Listen, I will say this.
I will say this.
Off white Sosa, raw reasons rovers.
Yeah, then pull over.
Then do nana no, nova.
Off white Sosa.
He needs a remix that show.
Sammy.
Yeah, that'd be crazy.
Sammy.
It will be deep.
And then he had the off white sneakers on in the video and all that, the jacket and all that.
But Dick, so you know it was deep.
Nobody want to be black.
See, people want to act black.
People want to live the black.
But it's hard.
That shit is dangerous.
It's hard being black.
For instance, stories from the cell.
I got it.
It just, it was, first of all, David Day, I want to give you a shout out.
I like the remix people name.
I like to say nickname.
That's who directed.
And I mean, when they see us, when they see us, Netflix.
What is that?
Unbelievable story.
It's a movie or something?
No, no, no, no.
It's a series.
This is what I told you to watch.
A series?
Yeah, I told you.
What's the name of it?
When they see us.
I told you and Gina to watch this.
But stories for myself.
It's interesting about me, personally, I came up in the juvenile system for those that
don't know.
First got locked up when I was 11 years old, spent five years in juvenile system when
spent 20 years in prison.
What I've seen on when they see us is something that I seen happen when I was certified
as adult.
17, I got certified as adult, two armed robberies, two firearm charters.
I got sentenced to 19 and a half to 52 years.
So just for the people, before you going any further, you did 20 years you came home in 2017.
Yes.
Just, I'm going to let you get right to your story.
When do you get off parole?
October 29, 2048.
2048.
Yeah.
Okay.
So what happened is this.
This is what happened.
Everything that happened to them with them getting railroaded, but them not properly,
properly
a lot of them
didn't even get rid
the Miranda rights
that was never even
read they was
these kids didn't even know
what Miranda rights was it
was five kids
and what happened
can you tell me the story
well a woman got raped
these kids was in the park
and they just start
picking up kids
that you know
they felt it was in the park
someone wasn't even in the park
they picked them up
oh we got to get them
you have an overzealous
district attorney
that's building a rep up
because that's what happened
a lot of times
a lot of times these district attorney
they're chasing convictions
because what the convictions
is once they build
they rep off with a lot of
of convictions, they get the rep, they get all their connects, and the district attorney's office,
and they go into private practice, defense attorneys, and they big time now.
A lot of times, they be big time, you're like, damn, I want them to represent me, because they got
all the connections, and they ain't no joke.
They highly respected.
So they build, they will, they will mess your life up just to get a conviction, even if
it's inconsistencies within the evidence, inconsistenies within the statements, this is what's
going on in the crowned across the country in America, inconsisties, and it's like you
there, you don't have a proper representation because you live in the ghetto.
a lot of times people don't have the finances.
That's why I tell people.
Cause too much to be a criminal.
Remember where you're at.
This shit ain't,
it ain't no joke.
So now you get in there,
you can't pay the bell.
The bell is too high.
They know your mom ain't got it.
A lot of times they can't even mortgage the house
because someone was on Section 8.
They don't have a house.
It's just crazy.
So now you're in jail,
waiting trial.
You expose, especially as a young,
a kid.
These guys was kids.
So so much pressure coming away,
they try to offer them a deal.
Usually they always come with a deal.
And a lot of the,
the dudes break and they take the deal because they just they just want to get it over i want to go
home i want to be and they don't even know what they're setting up for yeah they and and mention bro
that they interrogated these kids for like 40 something hours no food no food no no no guardians
no legal guardian you can't nothing parents some of the parents was scared and one of the fathers
convinced his son to say that he did the crime sold the son out just because they threatened him
were taking his job because he was in the joint before now was so crazy about the
this is this
was sad
me about this
whole experience
that I witnessed
guys that wasn't
a part of the
criminal
in the street
element
they might get caught
at one time
or one of these
friends might do
something
because I didn't
been in jail
with a lot
of times
where it'll be
four or five
dudes
one homicide
or one
major crime
and they all
on the same
case
and they got
they got them
telling on
each other
because they
ain't exposed
they're not
regular street
people
they're not
they're not
they're not
part of
the rules
of the
United States
of America
Street Code
manual
because they
don't know
nothing about
but they're regular kids
and they might do some dangerous shit one day
not knowing what they've done
and next thing you know
I'm in the jail with them
and I'm seeing them like they're going
they're breaking down
but we were so sad about it
when I seen them breaking down
is that I was so program
institutionalized
because they was normal
human beings
and I was detached from the reality
of normalness
due to the fact of I was programmed
by the system
to be in jail
and taking it like
it was just cool
and dealing with it like
it was just cool
that's my that's the program
and I
had. So when I see them and they're breaking down, they're going through stuff like my man
wise that was in there. He was going through stuff. And it was so, it was so crazy that as I
seen him going through stuff, I've seen many people go through that in prison, whereas though
they just, they just resistant to that. They're not going for it. They always like, this ain't
normal. And then you'll see dudes like me and some of my associates that grew up in a criminal
element that we normalize pain. We normalize this whole struggle of prison because it was a part
of the lifestyle we chose that was normal,
where we really fucking crazy.
But I'm in here thinking I'm going insane
in order to stay sane
because I'm like, everything I'm seeing, this is real.
So when I'm ready to go home,
I could go back, I could reprogram myself.
I got to deprogram myself first
to reprogram myself to be able to go out to society
because now I'm dealing with real life.
But I was in jail looking at this shit like this real life.
But when you see a dude like going on us
that was going through what he was going through,
it was crazy because this dude never did nothing.
He didn't do none. He wasn't at the part.
He just went to go, go to the question.
I mean, go to the police district to support his friend.
He's like, if I don't go with your mind, going to kill me.
And his life got traumatized.
He got beat, all type of stuff happening to him in prison.
He and there going crazy, hallucinating all this stuff.
Because this is the effect of a person that's not no criminal.
And even if you're a criminal, jail is not normal.
But sometimes we've been told in the ghetto that jail is normal, jail is cool,
that when you get there, you convince yourself that that shit is cool.
And that's some crazy shit.
Like, think about it.
You sleep for years and years, I slept inside.
of a bathroom
with another man.
You're sleeping inside a bathroom with another man
for years and years and years
and it's normal. You're going to, you're in your cell, you're living
in a cell. All that stuff is normal. You're going
out in the shower room. There's 50 people in the shower.
Like that stuff's not normal. But I was able
to normalize and that's what made me
that it throw you off. So when I've seen this,
I'm like, whoa, I've seen these
DAs that I know. I see how they be in that
courtroom. I knew the whole process they was going
to. I seen dudes that was good kids that came
in there that got statements coerced out of them.
and a curse so it was like
seeing that shit I was like damn
I seen the front row seat of this
I seen CEOs that was
you're saying to yourself damn this CIO from the hood
the CIO live two
two neighborhoods away from me
but they're going above and beyond
the code of duty
and they're just going somewhere else
to impress the white COs that they're down
and they're not with us
so they're doing all types of crazy shit to you
coming in your cell when you ain't there
taking your property
putting you through this strip searching you
All this over extra stuff to prove to the system.
And they're saying, I'm with y'all.
I'm not with them.
I'm not one of them.
And it's not about me.
Listen, your punishment is your sentence in jail.
But I'm punished by my sentence in jail, but I'm not, you're not posing me in here punishing me.
This is my punishment to be taken away from society.
But all that extra shit, all that you, masony, all that you, you know, when you go to the hole,
you got, they be having dog leashes on you.
You'll have, you'll have a belt of.
around you, you had the shackles on your hand, I mean, the cuffs, and then sometimes they
have a leash behind your back walking you to the yard out of your cell when you're in the
hole.
So they might have like four or five people walking.
They got two leashes.
There's two dudes over here, two dudes over there, and they're walking, got the whistle names on their wrist.
The cuffs on their wrist with the belt around them.
And then they take you to a dog cage.
Like that's your 20, when you're in the hole, 23 and one, that's your hour out, dog.
And you go right into a dog cage outside.
And it's like a take cage.
two men caves, you're in there like a dog, like a dog kettle.
Right.
So it's like the treatment is just on a whole other level.
Right.
Me, I'm not, I did what I did.
I ain't, I ain't, you know, I wasn't one of them.
I wasn't innocent.
I was out here committing crimes.
Do I think my sentence was just?
No.
Do I think, you know, the procedure of sent to me, the procedure of my trial, do I think
everything was cool?
Was it just?
No.
You got to have a lot of money, man.
You need a lot of money to get the most powerful representation, man.
And let me tell you all the youngans out there.
You've got to understand this.
When you get locked up, the DA has one job to get your ass found guilty.
If the DA could see the paperwork, no, it's not right.
No, this story ain't adding up.
But you ain't got a mouthpiece to articulate that this story ain't adding up.
You're going to jail.
You know why?
Because the DA ain't trying to lose.
Nigger, they had the semen.
She's not trying to put that on her record.
They had the semen, bro, of the culprit and then just tossed it to the side.
Because you know why?
The DA is not here to lose.
This is a business.
She's trying to get as many people locked up as possible because you full of jails up.
That make you money.
It's making somebody some money.
And the funny thing about the money part,
do you know I never bought myself or my mom a house?
Do you know how many houses I bought?
Do you know how many people got houses off of me being incarcerated
out of the homies being incarcerated?
Do you know how many people bought houses?
I had this one guard, right?
Me and him used to go back and forth.
His name was Skeen.
That's mostly all that named Skee.
This dude was an extraordinary dickhead, right?
And I was a dickhead right along with him
because I used to put my paperwork in.
I knew how to, I knew the codes of ethics
that they posed to follow.
I suppose the curses, you know.
They got a code of ethics that they pulled to follow.
So me and this dude used to go back and forth.
Just down the third.
Yeah, whatever.
So one day, I'm coming out of the yard.
This is one of the most painful, you know, in the actions I've had with a guard.
So he said, oh, yeah, people, you got some mail.
So I came to the yard, come from the yard, go to myself, coming back up to the desk.
He said, hold up, look.
He went inside of his shirt, and they weighed like these vests.
He's like, for like knives and somebody stab him.
Not like vests on it, but it's like a vest.
He said, oh, let me show you something.
He went inside his shirt, he poured out a little envelope, right?
So what's your showing me?
He took a picture.
I said, look, check this out, people.
I said, what?
He put it on the desk.
He said, you and the homies got that for me.
I said, what?
It's him in front of his house with a boat, and then, like, in the driveway in the house,
with him and the son, he said, y'all bought all that for me.
That was the most painful shit I have experienced.
Because the reality of the truth that we did, these people would be coming there,
graduate all you need is diploma they come in there young they come in there young and you'll be in prison
and was so sad about prison that killed me today but was so sad you see two families in prison
you see the family or the dad and the son that's doing life or doing big numbers together in jail
and then you see the other family the family of the guard you had a grandfather the son
the grandson, the grandma, the wife, the sister.
All working at the prison.
You had seven different family members working at the prison,
making a living off everything, making a living off the homies.
And all they did was plug each other in.
And they plug each other ineptism.
They plugged each other in.
And you sitting there with your family in prison.
They're in there making money.
And one another thing I've seen.
I never forget this shit.
I'm in a visiting room.
I used to work out front.
In Dallas, penituary.
I used to work at the front gate.
So I'm in the front gate, but I'm in the back area.
So why you never ran, nigga?
No, when you're working out there, you're ready to come on.
I'm going to run for it.
So I'm in the back.
I'm going to run it all the time.
So I'm in the back, right?
I didn't clean up.
I had to mop up and all that.
You know what I mean?
So I'm in the back.
So a Muslim sister come in.
He got a little son with him.
He running around, energy, and all that.
I'm sitting in the back.
They think I already left and went back to the block,
the two guards that was working there.
It was a sergeant and the regular guard.
So I'm sitting in the back.
So you had the kid running around, right?
A little baby.
He ran around and all that stuff.
She's like, boy, come in him.
So they get it through, pass it through.
They sometimes do the swipe machine with you.
Sometimes your family arrived hundreds of miles to see you,
and they can't get in because they might have a wire bra or whatever,
but she cleared it.
So the little baby, she said, tell her baby, come here.
So when they buzz the door, pop up!
And she walked out to go to the visiting park,
he told her other guy, guess what, man, you know what?
He said, you know what's crazy.
One day my grandson going to be watching him in here.
That was some painful shit.
That was painful.
That was some painful shit.
because the reality it is, that might be true.
So I'm in the back, I'm like, these motherfuckers.
Because you'd be mad, but when you hear certain things, it's like,
you'd be mad, but it'd be truth to it, and it's just, it cuts so deep.
And it's like, that's the reality we'll be going through.
Because if it's father in here and it's like, you know what I'm saying,
it's like, more likely, who's educating him on the outside?
Absolutely.
That's just stories from the cell, man.
This is deep.
Absolutely.
So to all the young is, just understand this.
And please.
The DA's only job is to find you guilty.
And please watch that series when he see us on Netflix.
The DA only job is to find your ass guilty.
That's only job.
And she went as at least blemishes on her record as possible.
If she could lock up 100% of you, niggas, she would.
He would.
Just keep that in mind.
Let's go to million dollars worth a game.
Million dollars worth a game.
So this girl hit me up.
He says, Gilly, I'm so sad.
I really love you and Tudy.
I've always been super nice and understanding,
but I always get played by my husband.
He is so mean, always staring at younger girls.
I want to leave, Gilly, but I start putting guilt on myself.
You know, my mom just passed.
I watch you all the time when I'm at work, of course,
because he says I'm on your dick.
damn why can't we be cool like you and your wife what should i do gilly i hope you reply back
if you're not too busy i still love you and tuti he's a hater yeah number one he's a
hater because um because you decide you know to check my million dollars worth of game out and
you decide to upgrade your mind in the way you think you got to be on my dixie what he's trying
to do is he's trying to program you into doing into not getting any nine
He wants you to stay in the, uh, over here in the dumb lane.
Now, don't listen to him because he going, he's going to make you tighten your screws.
You feel what I'm saying?
He's going to make sure that the way you start thinking is on point.
So he's going to throw that out there, get off his deck, you want some nuts shit.
No, what you're on is you're reading a book that you don't have to physically sit there and read
because I'm putting it in your mind.
I'm building it in your mind.
so you don't have to physically sit there and read,
but I'm giving you so much information
through these one-minute videos
that once he see that you're applying it
in your everyday life.
Now, he's trying to, what you say,
deprogram.
He's trying to reprogram you.
He's trying to deprogram me so he can reprogram.
Absolutely.
Oh, get off his dick.
Stop stealing why I'm spilling, too.
I'm just saying, that was a good one.
You back in the day when I used to write raps for you.
Okay, that was a good one.
You know what I mean?
So he's trying to deprogram you to reprogram you and make you think you're on some nuts shit.
As far as you're saying, he's staring at younger girls and, well, that's disrespect.
Because if you're in a relationship with a guy and he's purposely staring at other women while he's with you, that's disrespect.
Now, I'm going to be the first to keep it real with you.
I don't care if you've been in relationship for 20 years
When you're not with your woman and you with the homies
You're like, God damn, shit
You might not say nothing, but that's what God gave us eyes for
To be able to look
So, and I'm pretty sure you might be out
You might see a nigga that look good
You might not say nothing but you look over and acknowledge
He's a nice looking guy
You might not say it, but that's just what God gave his eyes for
So at the end of the day, you say you put guilt on yourself.
Why would you put guilt on yourself about something that has nothing to do with your relationship?
Oh, I want to leave them, but my mom died, your mom passed, and then you leaving him in a relationship is two separate things.
You feel me?
See, you're not putting guilt on yourself.
You're making excuses.
You're holding yourself back from probably prospering and doing something
and being something greater in life
and getting a man that truly love you and truly want to be there for you
because you're addicted to a bum-ass nigger.
You're addicted to a nigger who's not willing to build you up when you down.
He's not willing to respect you like the woman you're supposed to be respected as.
But then again, you're going for it.
And you're making up excuses.
My mom just died.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Listen, if you're not in a happy relationship, leave.
Because unhappy relationships just don't become happy relationships for no reason.
So the only way you're going to be in a happy relationship is if you make him step his game up.
See, long as he could deprogram you to reprogram you,
you ain't going to never be in a happy relationship.
But you got to reprogram yourself to believe I ain't going for this shit no more.
You know what?
I'm cool.
I'm going to step away from this relationship.
Now, if he really truly love you,
then he's going to deprogram himself to reprogram himself
and come back and treat you like you're supposed to be treated.
But you can't ask for that if you're making up excuses for a raggedy nigger.
that's the best advice I could give you a man is only going to do in a relationship
what you allow him to do and if you don't allow him to do that and if he don't come back
and as the man you want him to be that he was the man that was meant for you anyway
is too they allow you to be a nut absolutely she allowed me to be me oh was you you're admitting
that you're not that's what you want to look at me no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no
You admit to be in a nut.
You admit to be in a nut.
I'm in a living.
You admit to be in a nut.
I'm in a living.
You admit to be in a nut, does it?
Okay, I might be a nut, but let me ask you a question.
You're mad that it's your girl because she woke you up out of a dream that's not real.
Where James Brown was smoking wet.
When James Brown was smoking turbos.
I said I was just short if they was.
With karate Earl, a nigger, an old-ass nigger from the hood that wore a guy in the summertime and bought crack-haired pussy.
And you mad at your woman for waking you up because of that, but I'm the nut.
Okay, cool.
I'll be the nut.
We're talking about James Brown and Karate Earl.
Right.
Like, we're talking about two legends.
Two niggas that shouldn't be mentioned in the same sentence together.
Why shouldn't he?
Why shouldn't he?
If you don't understand that, then it ain't on me to tell you.
Hey, this is your marketing, too.
Okay.
So, shorthy, if you're tired and you don't want to be in a situation, get out the situation.
See, people don't come for me.
A lot of people come to me for game
And a lot of people come to me for reassurance
You already know what you want to do
You already know you don't want to be
Be in that situation
Get out
You know how many motherfuckers is in a situation
With somebody, they've been in there
The relationship for 15 years
And they've been unhappy for nine of them fucking years
Why is you wasting time?
People don't want to start over
But people don't like the fact that they're sisters and all I'm talking about her.
Look, she can't keep it, man.
Look, she's by herself.
People don't want to be by their self.
They grew up, their mothers was by themselves.
They seen their big sisters by themselves.
They've seen any honest by himself.
They all things, I got a man.
I ain't got no, my man, love me.
Don't matter if the nigger.
Going through a bunch of shit.
Right.
Don't matter if the nigger doesn't packed you out.
Nigger them fucked you up.
Nigger cheating on you.
He out here pistol whipping bitches with his dick.
Like his going out of style.
He doesn't, he doesn't, he didn't, he didn't, he didn't, he didn't fucked up all.
your goddamn income tax money
nigger doesn't put
you got a brand new car
you only drove
8,000 miles on that motherfucker but that bitch
say 62,000
that nigga don't even pay for oil changes
tune up spark plugs and nothing that nigga won't even buy your
fucking car new windshield wipers
but you cool with that shit
so at the end of the day
stupid is what stupid does and if you allow
the motherfucker to treat you like you stupid
and you go for it then
keep acting fucking stupid outheaded
you know what I mean women
is in miserable relationship you know what I mean
niggas is in relation shit with women
they fuck love them
they don't even like the bitch no more
but
bitch keep the refrigerator full
the bitch provides shelter for a nigga
wave cat Mike
you hear me
bitch she you
you got a car to drive when she at work
so it's a process
and if you're tired of going through
the same bullshit
then get out
stand for something
because if you don't stand for something
you're going to fall for anything
am I right
ain't that the same
I believe
stop falling for bullshit
stand for something
this is million dollars
worth a game
I appreciate you all
make sure y'all
go to Mworth of game
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Subscribe, share, share, like, like.
Yeah, all that stuff.
We appreciate the support that we get every single week, every week, man.
And this is me, me, me, me, man, million dollars worth a game.
I'm Gilly the King.
I'm Wallo 267.
And he's just like that.
Right.
