Million Dollaz Worth Of Game - SLIM THUG: MILLION DOLLAZ WORTH OF GAME EPISODE 217
Episode Date: April 30, 2023We sit down with the legendary rapper, entrepreneur, and community leader Slim Thug. Slim Thug quickly became one of the most prominent Hip Hop artists in the early 2000’s with hits like "Still Tipp...in'" and "I Run", showcasing his distinctive Southern drawl, laid-back flow, and impeccable style. But Slim Thug is more than just a rapper. He's also a savvy businessman and investor, with a diverse portfolio of successful ventures in real estate, fashion, and more. On this episode, Slim Thug shares his wisdom and insights on everything from the music industry to entrepreneurship, from building wealth to making a positive impact on the world.You 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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Right.
Welcome to that episode of Million Dollars Worth for Game.
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of a million dollars worth of a game.
Like, share, subscribe, buy some merch, and it's just like that.
Right.
Listen, it's going down.
We in Houston, Texas.
Slip Thub, how I'm living.
A million dollars worth a game.
This is serious.
Yes!
This is a car edition.
Car edition.
I mean, you see what's going on?
Big stuff.
Welcome to the H, baby.
We're in the H, baby.
We're in the H, baby.
What's going on.
This shit is,
you've never seen it before,
a million dollars of every game.
Look at the motherfucker wips.
Look at the whips.
Let's start off with this.
What is this right here?
Man, that's the TRIs, man.
That's the slider,
that's the everyday, you know,
with these pothos in Houston.
You need something fast.
That's going to be able to go over anything.
Okay, now what's this?
This is the Bronco, man.
I had to do the Tudov Bronco.
This is his dedication to OJ,
or is this?
I really, I was looking at the 60s, Bronco, and I wanted one,
but they was like 200 and something, and this was brand-known.
It looked just like.
I said, man, let me get one of these, and I can really enjoy it, you know what I'm saying?
Jake, hold on, man.
Yeah.
You've got the big tides, I don't see.
I ain't do nothing but put big ties, and it looked totally different, you know what?
Yeah. That's what beats it up, though, bro.
Absolutely.
Yeah, man, I love it, though.
That's my favorite car right now.
Just that big...
This is a big escalate on 30s, you know what I'm saying?
On 30s?
I'm the Tirties.
That's the E-Rum damn they're bigger than you.
Please, down, man, hold up, man.
Look at him, he's a room now.
This thing is a room.
This thing is going to go up in the room.
This thing is going to go up in the room.
Now, you got the LAMBO truck right here?
I always wanted to LAMB.
I really want that LAMBO, but I can't really fit in there comfortably.
You know what I'm saying?
So I had to do the truck.
You know, I got the.
May back truck like my boy, you know what I'm saying?
We're in the family together, man,
man, the Mayback truck. Yeah, Mayback
truck, man. Black on black. I see you like that black.
Black out. Black is out. That's what I'm
gonna do every time. You know what I'm saying?
I got the ghost, you know, the brand new
ghost. Yeah, man.
Brand new ghost. It's got the
light up grill on it, you know what I'm saying?
That's the difference from
the new ones and everything
and the old ones.
Look at that blue interior.
Yeah, grill light up.
Yeah, grill light up.
That's the difference in the new one.
See, right?
If a nigger pull up in a famine and that grill don't light up.
You can't knock a fan.
I can't knock a fan.
I'm just saying.
I'm just saying, though, for the nigger pull up
and that grill not lit up.
Yeah.
You know, they don't do it on the trucks yet.
You know, I have a truck.
I was going to get another truck, man.
I wanted to do the light-up grill, man.
Let's go to these bikes.
Okay.
What?
What's up these halls?
That's on what?
That's what 30s or 32, bro.
I had a scooter that was similar.
I had a little scooter.
That's when I started to got in the bike game.
You know what I mean?
What about the guy?
This is the truck, man.
This is my motherfucking here.
This is a motherfucker man.
See, he's going to make me get one of these.
That's some different time.
I ain't going to fall because they got the two little ones.
Look how big the wheel is.
It's a 32-inch wheel.
Goody out of.
I'm gonna pull it out.
I'm pulling out.
Pull that motherfucker out.
Hey, see it a little bit better.
Turn that motherfucker up.
Is that key up in this one second, bro?
Yeah.
What a fucking lion's in them?
Oh, fucking lions in them.
Why that dude?
That bitch!
What you're on the side?
What you're going to be?
You can't what to you know you must see.
We know
Which where you're going?
I got shit, baby.
This is what I'm talking about, man.
Fuck the whole lot of place shit, man, going on.
Whole lot of place shit going on.
Now, we're going to take it back to the cars.
Right here.
Now, what's this right here, Slim?
This is my granddaddy, man.
This is the 56 Cadillac L dog, man.
You ain't going to see too many at ease, man.
I got a picture of BB King in this one.
I got this one way from where they make the wine that in the cabin.
Maple?
Navy.
I got that way from there.
This is a 57 bill out.
I got the L.S.
You know what I'm saying?
that's just like the regular sliding in that crate this the this the one though this is my 59
catalect i got it done on the tv show called texas metal you know what i'm saying so this like
something real serious you can go look at the interior everything they got everything all of them
got new molars and shit you know what i'm saying we do no ls is in them you know what i'm saying
this is my 64 lincoln i got i tried to do something from every era you know what i'm saying one from
every decade
You know, I try to get like a 50, 60,
but some of them I just had to get motor
because I just, this is the suicide dope, you know,
drop photo.
What is this?
This is a 64 Lincoln.
Yeah, Connell.
Yeah, both doves open, you know what I'm saying?
This motherfucker cold.
This is the 74 Caprice.
They got the LSN in it too, man.
That's what I like to do.
I like to put the new motors in my eyes.
Big-ass screen in this one fucking, too.
Yeah, you got the hot pad on the dash.
You know what I'm saying
Speaking of this shit
Loud of that shit
Custom
Then we got the
75 Cadillac
El Dorado
This is the Texas
Slab
You know what I'm saying
That's when we're coming down
Slab
You know what I'm saying
With the swanker stick
Who were the first
motherfucker from Texas
To pull the slabs out
Oh man
I don't know
That's like in the 80
That's so far back
It's a real OG
We've been doing this
For a long time man
Like the Rams
The Rams actually came out
In 83
This is a remake of the Rams
But the actual
Real rims came out in like 83, so it's really like a whole lot of old-school
So ain't nobody responsible for you?
I'm sure it is.
I'm sure it's going to be a couple people probably say they the first, you know what I'm saying?
But on history, it's probably something.
You don't know who it is, bro?
Who the first is on the slabs?
Y'all don't know.
They're sitting on something out here.
Like, I think it's a dude from the south side.
I forgot his name.
But yeah, it's somebody.
This had to be one of the first bins that you used.
This is the 600 bands.
Really, this was something I just, as a youngster, this is all about it.
They had the V-12, 600 bands.
I just had to have one when I got older.
Got the phones in the house.
Same thing with the Impala.
Telephone's coming up.
Yeah, they got the other phones in another.
The Apollo, 9-6 Apollo, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
A lot of people love it.
Get a phone.
Oh, school bands
Yeah, hell yeah
This was that shit
Like in the day
It was the one
This was a black man
This was a black man's dream right there
They had that motherfucking
Bands with that V-12 on the side
This was a black man's dreams
I got an 87 Monte Carlo
I'm getting the LS swap on it right now
So that's why it ain't
Why you do the LS?
They the best?
Man look
I'll be outside with you know
Just jury
You don't want to be on the side of the road
Bro like you know
These cars
bro, like old school's going to break down
and they're going to get you problems. The thing is,
look how many cars it is. I can't
drive them enough to keep the batteries
going and, you know what I'm saying? You're always
having to be doing something. So when
you put that LX in it's a brand new car.
That's a brand new car. These cars probably, the Mac
ain't got 10,000 miles on it, you know what I'm saying?
So it's start right up.
Boom, you know what I'm saying? That's what you do
the LX put, you know? So, yeah, I like the old
motors, too. Like the old school
cat at the 56, I ain't going to touch it.
On most of our old schools, I like to, like I say, just put the, I'm going to black it aisle out, and then I'm going to put the L.S.
You know, that's what I'm going to do to forge you. That's what I'm going to do to forge you. That's the tradition of me. You know what I'm saying?
Fordian, I don't make the best rid of. I don't know. I mean, my personal opinion, you know, they look like, you know, the designer wheel, you know, to me. I've seen a lot of the wheels and, you know, forgy to me have the best selection, you know.
So I had a good relationship with it.
Absolutely.
This is the 1996.
High boy.
I knew that was the 9-6, nigga.
Yeah, listen.
All eyes on me.
Blacked it out, though.
You know what I'm saying?
Gave it.
Yeah.
I love it, man.
How much in cars?
My head.
Man, it's got a million dollars
worth of a car.
A million dollars worth of a game.
No, man.
That's a good thought.
That's a way more than a million dollars.
That's my idea.
That's right.
About $300, right?
You do a $3 million, right?
Right, exactly.
God damn.
I just, I don't really do a lot else.
Like, I don't play video games.
My hobby is cars.
Like, I do this every day.
In the daytime, I'm working on cars, you know what I'm saying?
Or riding and, you know, trying to fix them up or whatever.
That's what I do.
You ain't never thought about selling none.
Man, I'm the cool.
Like, as I get older and trying to keep up without this,
I'd be wondering that I want to keep up without leaves.
It's really anchors.
This million dollars worth of the game
You gotta keep it real with the people, bro.
Everybody won't all this shit,
but it's anchors, you know what I'm saying?
I can be going to L.A.
I can go kick it with y'all,
but when you got so much shit,
you got to get back home to it.
You know what I'm saying?
So on the cool,
it's a good idea in the beginning,
but to keep up with all this shit,
it's an anchor.
It's going to keep you at home
working on some shit or watching it
or whatever it may be, you know what I'm saying?
How much jury you got on?
There's got to be over a million worth of jury, too, shit.
My little homies got on me about this, bro.
See, me, I did a podcast not too long ago,
and I ain't have on them but like a little chain.
They're like, man, what is you doing, bro?
Like, they get mad at me because I don't wear out of this shit all the time.
You know, I be feeling like, you know, it is what it is.
I weigh it when it's time.
I do a show of some shit.
Right.
Yeah, they'd be like, man, you need to put on that shirt.
You're chirping, kid.
That shit, you mean, bud.
Because maybe he'd be like, man, you be tripping, y'all.
You in Houston, bro.
Yeah.
Niggas don't know who you mean us, bro.
They'd be like, man, people don't even know what you do
or who you is, bro, because you just be so
cool with it, but in Houston
everybody knows it. Everybody knows.
Absolutely. Absolutely.
I don't travel enough.
You know, you know what they love is in Texas.
Let me get my motherfuckers sound right, man.
I mean, we's turning my shit up like that.
This is ready to go down, man.
Listen, man. If you don't know what's going on, you're now tuned
tuned into me, me, me, me, me, me,
million dollars worth a game, man.
We got slim thug.
Listen, man, it's going down.
We're in Texas, man.
Houston, H-town, that is, to be exact, listen, man, there's been a long time coming.
Showed you them whips.
He's been in the game for over 20 years.
He got about 20-something cars, cribs, businesses.
The money don't stop.
He got a million dollars with a jury on a million dollars worth of a game just for general purposes.
And the day, today is a Monday, bro.
This is just on a Monday.
This is Monday shit.
You know what I mean?
He disrespected the podcast by having that juries on, but that's another story,
Phillies.
That's what I did for y'all, man.
The Phillies fans, you know what I mean?
We was at the World Series.
Man, we had, we was up.
We was like, we got these motherfuckers.
Came back to Houston and he bullied the month.
It got crazy.
That real disrespectful, man.
Go straw.
But one thing about us, man, we not no fucking hate us.
Right.
So we see Luke, y'all.
You're being here in St.
You all ain't robbers.
You know.
So shout out to the Houston Astros.
Congratulations.
We be back next year, though.
Let's go.
Let's go.
Let's get it.
Well, I just didn't like the niggottom Mattress Mac.
Ah, he wasn't with all that goddamn payball.
He was a big roll out for y'all, boy.
Mattress Mac, got damn cleaned up.
He hit the lotto, man.
What?
But I'm going to say this.
But he lost that on that Dallas shit.
He did.
Fucking with Dallas.
He went down.
I'm going to see this.
20 years in the game.
How did this shit start?
When did it begin?
Because you're still here.
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Oh, man, it started before, well, the money started when I was in high school.
I was 17.
I started rapping when I was around 12, you know, young.
But around 17 is when I teamed up with Swisher House
and, you know, we started doing the underground mixtapes.
You had DJ Screw on the side.
That's the piece, DJ Screw.
RIP, DJ Screw, the goat, the originator of the Chopin' Screw movement, right?
So they didn't mess with the North Side like that.
You know, like, so we had to kind of create our own lane, you know, in that world.
So we did the Swisher House on the North Side, you know, and it was kind of like a, you know,
Crips and Bloods kind of thing.
Like they did the red, we did the blue, you know what I'm saying?
Like when we ride candy on calls and stuff like that, you know what I'm.
saying we was braided up they had the phase it was you know all that type of hood stuff you know what
i'm saying so yeah it was just a different environment and we created something over there
underground that was prosperous you know as as a high school student you know i never had a job
before in my life i just started doing this underground music and i never stopped i'm still doing
it to this day you independent who taught you to hustle who taught me i thought i taught me i feel like
the hustle was just and still i just had to hustle you know no but
What I'm saying is the hustle of, you know, putting a work in, the rap, the, who gave you the hustle of, no, we got to stack this.
How to rap hustle.
We got to stack this.
We got to do this with the money.
We got to put the money here.
We got to.
Or did you just learn it by?
I think it was just seeing like, like my older brothers was in the streets a lot.
And they would be in and out of jail and stuff like that.
So me to see something.
Right.
So me to see something I can do.
Legally, you know what I'm saying?
Like, that's all I had to see.
Once I seen that I can make money off of it, I seen a return,
I began to take it serious immediately.
I was young trying to put, you know, cars together.
I was 15 before I was slim thug working on my old school L dog, boss hog.
That's how I got the name, like driving the L dog.
I'm just driving, really, honestly, I was trying to be the Mac, you know what I'm saying?
I was looking, trying to be goldy.
But as I cruise down the street, you know, old jeans would be like,
boss how you know so it kind of turned into boss how you know what i'm saying but you know i already
had things i wanted as you know so soon as the money start coming in on the rap side i took it
very serious and began to you know hustle you know like none like none ever that was just straight
off the time now now when did it turn into like you was over there with swisher you're fucking with
them when did you start doing your own thing i started with swisher house in 1998 and uh it immediately
you know took fire
like it was like it had a big movement
behind it you know everybody
was you signed to them? No I didn't sign to them it wasn't
we weren't doing albums this was mixtakes
this is freestyle the still tipping
song come from a freestyle I did
on a Swisher House mixtape
when I was 18 it's the same
words like look look who creeping
little good crowling all that
still tipping on four foes all that is from
my freestyle and
like I say they would just be on fire
I would do shows out of these free
styles from Texas to Louisiana. I would be doing shows. So I was getting money out for the shows,
getting money selling the CDs and tapes. I had my own store. Eventually, I felt like we was
being held back. Like, I couldn't, you know, like, I don't like rules. I don't like people
telling me what to do. I don't like waiting on people. And I'm hella confident in myself.
You know what I'm saying? I don't feel like I need nobody, you know? So me and my brother got
together we started bouts hog out louds and um after that man the sky was the limit bro it's like
because now not only do we have our stores that was you know designated to us we have everybody's
stores you know what i'm saying so now we can sell our stuff to everybody so now the money went
up in a in a major way so you know after seeing that it's just like you know how could you stop
you know what i'm saying but but you must have been selling units you see he was doing shows over
freestyles
right from Texas to Louisiana
Texas to Louisiana
since I was 17 I missed prom
doing the show like you know it was like
it was since I was in high school
and it was understood the teachers knew
I would sell so many CDs and tapes during school
like all that man so you know
immediately I got to see my self
value you know and that's what a lot
of rappers don't see
and that's why they sign
on record label deals earlier
and for anything, you know what I'm saying?
Because they think that's just the normal process.
Because it is the normal process.
But if you knew how much you was worth, you know what I'm saying?
Then you'll be more hesitant, you know what I'm saying,
to give up all that, you know, for the money they'd be offering.
All right, so what happened when you, you know, Still Tipping come out?
How did it go?
How did your shit change up after that?
Yeah, Still Tipping came out.
That's the first song that took, like, Houston.
Houston music has always been legendary in the South, like from Houston to, you know, all over Texas, for sure, and Louisiana, like, probably going to almost to Baton Rouge.
All of that was going to be on Houston music.
They're going to listen to Houston music.
You're going to do shows.
You're going to give you support.
But when still tipping came, it crossed boundaries.
The chopped and screw movement went all around the board.
People finally got it.
you know what I'm saying
they finally understood
it all a little bit more
enough to you know
make them vibe to it
you know what I'm saying
so that just woke the world up man
and everything we did
just went you know
times 10 times 20
and just kept going up and up
it went to MTV Awards
VET Awards
like we was just doing everything
man and it led to so much
other stuff you know what I'm saying
tell me if I'm wrong
because I don't know you know what I mean
I think though that was the first time
or maybe not the first time
but
one of the times
where Houston culture really
was put on Front Street
that's exactly what it was. It was the
description of Houston culture
put on Front Street all across
the board like you know
it had never been presented
to the world like that before so
they started to see the Rams
they started to you know
I understand what Chapters
and what Chapton Screw was
and all that so
you know, it really, like, yeah, it turned the city up.
Yeah, because I ain't had cable TV growing up, so I ain't, I didn't can, you know, I don't know it was first.
It was the, but I know by the time, you know, I was, I'm rapping now when I see, and that was the first time I saw Houston, like, damn, they had the brims poking out, and they had, I'm like, oh, okay, so it was like, you could appreciate it's like, that's some Houston shit.
That's a real Houston shit like that.
Like a look, you know, hydraulic, six-fold, and poly.
It was our first description of, you know, that people could really see of what it looked like in Houston.
And it was a different look for me.
Growing up for me, listening to the ghetto boys, big mic and all of them.
It was a different, totally different new look.
It looks different.
See, they're real rappers to us.
Like, you know, like, that was real big rapper.
Like, we put them up there with everybody else, you know, like.
Scarface is Jay-Z to us, you know what I'm saying?
Absolutely.
So it's like, we didn't look at that.
them as our peers. We looked at them like
they're legends. They got deals and everything
they're for real legends, you know what I'm saying?
Same with UGK. You know, we looked at them
as, you know, for real
rappers, you know what I'm saying? But we was
underground, you know, the DJ
screw movement, SCC movement, was underground.
It was more cultural bound. Right.
You know what I'm saying? Talking about the
candid calls and the swangas and sipping
serve and, you know, they weren't really
talking about that. No, they was talking about
they was really talking some
universal shit
they were talking about
something for real
they were really
they was really talking
some
whereas though
y'all
y'all was talking
some
Houston shit
that just
took over the world
you feel what I'm saying
I sit alone
in my full corner room
that shit
could put you anyway
you feel what I'm saying
your niggas came on
and y'all was talking
some Houston shit
but it took the world
by storm because
number one
y'all niggas looked like y'all was together right number two yeah it was a movement y'all niggas look
like y'all was really doing it right you know motherfuckers believe when they're like wait this
nigga he got he got his name tagged in his shit like that's really his shit right this ain't no
fucking rebels right here that always helped but uh i would say like when the dj screw movement i want
to make sure i get them credit you know because i feel like they highlighted the culture of the city
you know, and started to, you know, talk about the rims
and the candy paint, pop trunk, you know,
all that, the culture of the city.
So they definitely was the ones who started the culture rap,
DJ Screw it all the credit for that little Kiki Dada and Fat,
you know, Pokey Island was definitely the pioneers of that, you know,
so when we did it, you know, we just, it just went bigger.
Yeah, it went to another level.
And that's good to know who was the first to do.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
And so, but still tipping was years later.
Like, they, their years of starting the screw was like early 90s.
And still tipping came early 2000.
So it was like about 10 years in.
And Swisher Highers had been in the game since 98, and we've been making a lot of moves on that.
I think I had the deal, didn't I have a deal before still tipping even pop?
I think I had to deal with for real before the still tipping even pop.
Yeah.
So, yeah, we did that.
And then it's still tipping pop.
It really just went to the next level, man
It took us to our to the next level
We look like a movement
Me, Mike and Palm
By you being
But I just want to say something
That's like that's
That's the realities in life
You know what I'm saying
Big Daddy Kane
And all of those rappers
The hip
The hot was their name
You know
Yeah all them dudes walked
So now the rappers can run
Right
You know what I mean
So shout out to all the rappers
From Houston
The Lou Kiki
the, you know, DJ screw, everybody that walked
so that you, Mike Jones, and Paul Wall
and switch the house.
They still active, though.
Everybody who you name, everybody is still active.
Like, Kiki's still dropping music.
Still doing shows.
Kiki got slabs, too.
Kiki got cars, like, you know, big pokey Jada just dropped something.
Like, everybody is still active out here
and dropping music independent.
It's just like we ain't on a worldwide scale
of promoting it. We ain't on no major labels
so we ain't doing press runs
out of the town. We just, you know,
satisfying our direct
customers. You know what I'm
saying? And if you tapped in through Instagram,
you can see, but for the most part, we
ain't really just hitting the road. Like, hey, let's
put up some posters, you know what I'm saying?
We just catering to the fan base.
I'm 42 now. You know, I ain't really
it's like I'm retired, bro. I'm just having
fun doing whatever I want to do, you know?
Dropping when I want to drop, you know,
and just having fun with the music.
I think it's real wild
the fact that
after all these years
you've ever maintained
an audience of people
and the fan base
because since you came out
to now
there'd been like
200,000 rappers
and they came and went
Right
Some of them had
biggest bigger success
than you.
Yeah, I've seen a lot of that.
About them 200,000
about like
five, six hundred
that had biggest success
than you ever had
and they're gone.
Exactly.
It's a lot of that.
I see that so much, man.
Like,
and then especially like living
they're not living like me.
You know,
And that ain't no shame.
It's just like to, you know, my thing is this, I'm independent.
So my thing is to advocate being an independent artist.
You know what I'm saying?
If a dude go get a record label deal and that's what he do and it work out for him
and that's what he wanted to do.
I'm not hating on that.
I'm happy for that dude, you know.
But as an independent artist, I feel like I should advocate being independent
and tell what's good about it.
Like, that's exactly what you said.
Bro, I've seen so many dudes be up.
and you know when they're hot and they're putting that money on you and you doing shows yeah you up
but when you don't own nothing uh five years later you're not eating out for that bro and look at
TikTok look at this new stuff coming on you it's a different way of listening to music today
okay you used to have to go to the store and buy your favorite artist CD you know what I'm saying
now everybody got access to everything bro like people is going to find old songs and
falling in love with them and turning them up, you never know what's going to happen.
And at the same time, streaming is only like at, what, 8%?
It ain't nowhere near where it's really going to be, you know what I'm saying?
So the catalog is priceless.
Like, you never know how much that's going to go up.
You know what I'm saying?
So if you're depending on being hot and when you're doing your shows and all that
you're good, but when that died down and they putting their money behind the next dude,
what that's going to leave you?
And in the long run, if you ain't really owning nothing,
you ain't getting no checks
I'm getting a check
every month out of catalog
you know what I'm saying
and I ain't really got to do nothing new
you know it's gonna be still coming
even if I stop rapping right now
but when I do do new stuff
it's just you know
add more to it so it's like
you know it's fun
it's like that's how it's supposed to be
though you're supposed to get
the majority of your bread
from an independent
standpoint that's how I look at it
you know I feel like
that should be everything though
right I feel like
I feel like a lot of black people
complain like on Instagram
I get in trouble all the time. I'm blocked
on live right now actually. It's
because I say the wildest shit
but I just stand on
you know with the culture you know we
should all get the most of
whatever we do you know what I'm saying? Whatever we
majority of whatever we make cool
we should get the most of that. We don't mind working
with people and them getting paid
but the major label should be
a partnership it shouldn't be an ownership
you know what I'm saying? Right. And that's
how a lot of this stuff set up for
Listen, that's why we, in the long run, be broke again, you know what I'm saying?
But it shouldn't be the case.
You know what I'm saying?
If you own your catalog, that won't be the case.
You'll still be getting paid.
You know what you're a portion of your catalog.
If you own a good portion of it as a partner, like I say, I ain't saying I don't work with nobody, like, because everybody need money.
But I'm saying when people know that and they give you, you know what it is like.
And then it's like this here.
people who ain't got money think money is everything so when you get a little money they say well you got money you got this you got a million dollars but what if you made them a hundred million dollars and they only gave you two you still get minimum wage you know what I'm saying like so you got to know your self value and what you really supposed to get or whenever you get paid something working with somebody figure out what they got paid you know what I'm saying and then that'll make you look at stuff different nobody ever will think about how much they got you know
I'm saying.
Now, hold on, but let me say this.
And a lot of times you see artists, right, they come out, they pop off.
They do their shows, they're running around.
You know, they was young, though, when they came in the game.
So they get some money.
And when your shit pop off, a lot of times the artists don't be worrying about the
backhand money, the residuals, how much money they, no, because I just made it.
100,000 at that show last night
and then I'm making 100,000 a night
and then 100,000 on Sunday
and then I'm doing this a week
for the next having to my songs burn out.
Right.
But then when 6, 7, 8, 9 years go by
and that money slow up,
but you still got that
$40,000, $50,000
bills, $60,000 all that a month.
And you know a little more?
Now you want to start doing investigation.
I mean, what the fuck's going on?
Hold on, man.
Yeah.
Because, right.
Exactly.
How much did I make the company?
Exactly.
Oh, no, nigga, don't even worry about that.
But if you fuck, you had some questions.
Well, no, I'm just trying to figure out how much I made the company.
Hey, I tell you shit.
Yeah, I mean?
No, you can get the label ordered it.
You didn't get the label audited and the truth come out.
Oh, yeah, you made them a $117 million.
And you're sitting there like, man, I got $942,000 in my account, man.
What do you mean?
I made them $117.
$117 million, man.
Now you mad.
Now,
that's when they go right at their labels.
That's it.
That's too late.
If you were to want into the game,
a lot of times because artists today understand this.
Y'all got,
y'all hold more fucking weight than y'all would ever imagine.
You know why?
Because labels don't sign niggas that ain't already moving.
See, back in the day,
you could just walk up on the nigger and rap.
you hot get them in the studio
put some shit around them no they like
you can't do that shit no more you got to already
have some movement you already got to add some
so when you getting in front of their face
you already got movement you're not behind
the eight ball so you could be like
oh no man that's some bullshit man y'all niggis tripping
man yeah and guess what they got
more money
they just was testing you
if you
if you're going to take a bag of fucking coins
then that's what we're going to give you
but hold on wait we got we got the bag of
hundreds we thought you was going to take the coins but we got the hundreds back here hold on
don't go nowhere you just got to understand what you worth and negotiate what you worth that's it
i mean a lot of people don't even understand contracts so they take advantage of that bro like
you know we coming from the hood you ain't never seen a hundred thousand dollars in your life
and they offering you that for a rap you want to be a star like they take advantage of the
situation bro but at the end of the day with how the world set up now with social media like you
say you got to have movement anyway to get you know something if some if they can just stay down
for a year or two and see how the money come in out for them being independent then they can
understand that you know because if you even sign a deal what they're going to say man what they
i just held in the instagram they take 200 and some thousand to make a song you know what i'm saying
How are you going to know how much money they spent on you and what they did or what they didn't do?
It's a scam to me, bro.
I ain't no way you can feed you.
I ain't that way you'll ever know.
Like, you know what I'm saying?
Only way to know is to really own your shit, bro, and that's it.
Straight like that.
But it's like, like I say, everybody thinks the system and this is normal.
Like I said, I don't shame nobody to get mad at no artist going to get no record deal because that's just what we taught to do.
You know, you want to be a star, you got to go get a record deal, and they're going to make you.
you hot or whatever, but you scamming folks kind of, you know what I'm saying, unless you really
out there out for who you really are, that extra money you paying to get this played, is that
really your fans, or is that them just making you look like you hot? You know what I'm saying?
Like, that's why I can be here 20 years, because these really my fans, bro, I'm talking directly
there. I ain't putting nothing on the radio. I'm talking directly to my people, you know,
we got a real relationship, you know, this is real fans. I'm not paying nobody to run my numbers up
on YouTube or nothing because
what does that matter?
You know what I'm saying?
At the end of the day, I want to see
who I really am.
You know what I'm saying?
If this shit went or not, you know,
just I can learn from that.
You know, but at the end of the day,
it's all income.
Whether they do a million or 100,000,
it's all income, bro.
It's all coming to you.
It's coming straight to you.
You know what I'm saying?
Once you, and I'm not out here
trying to wrap on Metro Boomin' Beas for
$200,000 or paying
no astronomical feed. I'm rapping on my
home boy beats. You know, I'm keeping
the Texas. I'm giving you culture, you know,
still. Because I believe that's what
people want to see. When I hear Snoop, I want to
hit some West Coast shit. When you hit Slim
Thug, you should want to hear some Houston
you know, shit. And that don't
mean go jump on the hottest
produce and pay them out of this money. Now,
I got to get past that to get my money
right now. I'm going to fuck with the people
around here. The youngsters who
out here doing their thing, young Sam,
you know, G&B,
the lead that's my number one
producer so
the same dude I started with basically
and I'm gonna give you that culture
you know and that's a part of being
independent too like
don't go too crazy on your budget
you know you gotta you're independent
you want to be in it you want to build your house
for the low and be able to
you know profit off your shit
don't be in the real max exactly
you know what I'm saying
and that wasn't no shot at the Metro boom
because I know how the internet
no I love Metro
I would love to I would love to have
Metro Boomin B, like, he's one of my favorite
producers, but as an independent
artist, it's just like, I know I can't
afford that, you know what I'm saying?
Absolutely. Like a Metro Boomer, say, Thug, I fuck
with your high gear, yeah, I would, come on,
huh? No, because, you know, I just got
to clean it up for the net. Now, I'm a big fan. Because you know how to
net a net, yeah, I know, I'm a big fan.
And then next thing, you know, they'll be talking
of Slim Thug, this is Metro Boomer.
He's one of my favorite producers, bro. And tells
rappers don't do this. No,
some, most of you digists need
that Metro Boobin. Can't afford it.
I can't afford him that
most of you
niggas need him
to blow
so you better
spend that fucking
$200,000
so your fucking
career can take off
he's already
a fucking made man
I'm 42
I can't afford that shit
I'm sticking to my sugar
he already
made man with
paid fans
and they fucking
guess how old his fans
is
422
and he got a fucking job
so
so you dick is
21,
2019
y'all might need
Metro
to get this buffing
I love Metro
Louis peace
he wanted
to my favorite
producers of the day. Absolutely.
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This business spotlight is bought to you by Bars through Sportsbook.
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Welcome to another episode, a million dollars worth a game.
Yeah.
Today, listen, man, we have the 1% club.
Listen, man, we're talking about that family trust.
We listen, I don't think you understand what's going on.
We're talking about the family trust.
This is for everybody.
You don't have to be starting a business
You don't have to have a million dollars right now
We're talking about the family trust
Every human being on this planet
Need to be, listen
Send us to a friend
Send us to your people
Everybody on the planet
Need to establish a family trust
Today we got the 1% club
What if you don't trust your family?
No you ain't got to trust your family
To get a family trust
Like is it
That's deep that's deep
Just just thinking
He said you only got to trust one
person. So you ain't got to trust your whole family
but still you got to get a family trust. That's why
the 1% Club is here today and right before
we even get started we're going to give you a free
ebook. My family is debt free. The free
ebook, what I need you to do is I need you to text family to
832-621-0820. 8-2-621. 08-20.
I'm talking about, listen, the 1%
club is not playing. Also go to
club 1% dot com. Stop playing these brothers right here
Tyree, Coast of Mott. I'm at Tedric.
Listen, they're not playing no game.
Straight out of Texas.
They're not playing.
They're giving out the game.
We're talking about that family trust.
Everybody's sending this to somebody.
You need to trust.
They're going to give the game now.
Coach DeMont, tell me what y'all got going on.
Tell me what this 1% club is really about.
So 1% club is we all came together.
Tedric, Tyree, and myself.
We came together.
We merged our companies together to give families the information that the elite families have.
So like the Donald Trumps and the Kennedys and the Rockefeller.
So we give people that information.
Now, this is what I need to know.
Why is it important to get a trust, a family trust?
It's important to get a family trust because you want to set your family up for success later on when you leave here.
You want to not have to pay taxes on non-taxable events when it comes to putting things inside the trust.
You can put your LLC inside a trust.
You could put yourself inside of a trust.
You know, you could put your business inside a trust.
You can put anything that you own.
on your jury, you could put your assets, your money,
you can put anything outside of family trust.
Now, this is what I need to know, Tyree.
What, like, you know, growing up,
when we heard the trust,
we thought about all these big town,
Rockefeller people, we thought about these big families.
Right.
What do I have to do or be doing to have a trust?
Could I...
This is the difference between the product we got.
It's for any and everybody, right?
So you don't have to be elite already
just protect what you do have.
So I could be working at a,
I could be the regional manager
for a target.
Yes.
Because you still
got stuff
that you can protect
and at the end of the day
the most
popular conversation
we hear about
is what
generational wealth
right?
But if you don't
have structure
is really
no generational wealth
so any
and everybody
needs it
because everybody
needs structure.
Oh so I can get
a trust
no matter what?
Yeah.
Can I throw him
in a trust?
Yeah.
Fuck would you think
in your
way.
Oh, you
lead me to money.
No,
no, I'm putting
you inside of it.
I'll get you dust
at all from me.
I'm going to
what you're working with.
I want to put him in the trust
I'm going to put his name
I'll be crying
counting the shit out of your mother
He's back in the day
He's going
He don't understand
I trademarked his name
I still got the own
So can I just put his name
In the trade mark?
Oh damn
I'm putting your name
in a trust
All right
I'm going to be
Yeah I got the trademarks
I'm going to throw his name
In the trust
If all the other people
that have LLCs
You can put an LLC in a trust
You want to protect your
your LLC
So because the LLC can be pierced
So right now
If you have a business and that business is in the LLC and somebody falls off a roof, you can get sued.
Well, with a trust, you can't get sued because why?
Because you own nothing but control everything.
Now, let me ask you a question.
I'm like, how much do it cost?
Because people sitting here listening, they'd be like, all right, if I'm going to put my LLC, I'm just Johnny, nobody.
I'm just figuring out, I got a little company.
I got a landscaping company.
And I want to put out, how much do it cost?
So in order to join the 1% club, you got to join the member.
Membership, the membership costs $997, and it comes with a free trust.
All right, so outside of the membership, how much do a trust cost?
Normally, if you go through a lawyer, it costs $14,000, $15,000.
Oh, so everybody don't want to, everybody don't want to just do a trust,
because everybody might not have to finances.
You've got to be in position in some type of way to do the trust.
Every member in the 1% Club gets a trust, and we teach you how to use it.
We give you all the paperwork that you need to transfer your assets to it,
And then Ted was going to talk about how we use the trust to get people and help them to become debt-free and to fix their credit.
How do you do that?
So what we do is we use the trust, right?
We move the debt, transfer the debt over into the trust.
We go through the court system and get it invalidated.
When we do that, the debt leads your credit and transfers over to the trust.
So it's no longer on your credit anymore.
The only difference between it is credit repairs a band-aid.
You can still be sued.
you can still have judgments on you
they can still come after you legally
even if it's off your credit you still be gone
as your wages all that type of stuff
with us once it's moved over into the trust
then and it's invalidated
they can never
the debt is gone
it's gone from the system
is gone from the bank
you don't owe the debt anymore
you can't be sued nothing
so all the people that's doing
credit repair right now
you need to be a member of the 1% club
because there's no other credit repair
company out there doing this
damn so you could just take the
like is he like a debt to me
so I could just throw him in that joint
and I ain't got to worry about the shit no more
yeah go away
because he's a fucking headache
so I ain't gonna get headaches no more
it could be medical bills
it could be cell phone bills
it can be anything
anything can go in the trust
damn
your jury your hat
you know we have people
that come to us
dealing with all kinds of situations
got people come to us
to be having child support issue
where they freeze in their bank accounts
taking their money
and if you have a trust
in a trust bank account
you own nothing
but control everything
you're just a trustee of the trust
so child support
can't even take the money
out of the trust
the IRS can't
touch the money
inside of the trust
so Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett
paid less taxes
less in taxes
than he paid his secretary
so just say for instance
he made $2.7 billion
he only paid $100,000
in taxes why
because he only pays
himself as a trustee
from his trust
So when you have a trust, you only pay yourself for taxable events.
So whether you have a business or you are just the everyday worker, if you have a trust, you only pay taxes on taxable events.
So that's what we teach inside the 1% club.
Now inside this book, my family is debt free.
First of all, you're getting a free book, what you need to do right now and you need to get with the 1% Club.
The way you do that is you text family to 832-621, 0820.
8-2-6-1-8-0-8-20.
they're going to get their free e-book.
I'm talking about it's totally free.
You're getting this e-book.
My family is debt-free.
What is inside of this e-book?
We give you the seven secrets to using a family trust
to being debt-free
and to having a $750 credit score.
Damn, $750, okay?
So y'all, y'all tighten the person right up.
Taint them right up.
That's $750 is anything.
Gil got like a $3.50.
So are we working on this stuff right now.
I've seen Gil pull out of an eight-mace card early.
He ain't got $3.50.
The colorful one, Nick.
A colorful one.
Fuck, not the regular one, nigga.
I got the one with the splashes on one of the shit.
You know what that mean?
I don't get a fucking Bugatti right now, nigga.
It ain't even going to question it.
Put that on my card, nigga.
I pay you niggas next month.
Yes, sir.
Nine million, nigga.
Fuck, bro, with you.
But what's going on is that this is great as nix.
This is great as coming to the game.
And, like, everybody's is out there.
Like, I need everybody to really focus and understand this.
This is for everybody to trust.
You got a lot of business owners out there.
A lot of people got trucking companies.
They got restaurants.
They got a lot of stuff.
A lot of people become liable because they're out there
and somebody could come at them, you know what I mean?
And, you know, sue them or whatever.
So it's like...
So it's good.
It helps you become bulletproof.
Bulletproof, okay?
It's good to, uh...
What was that line?
Y'all keep saying?
I like that.
I own nothing, but control everything.
I own nothing, but I control everything.
Nelson Rockefeller started that.
He said, I own nothing, control everything.
That's why we still know the Rockefeller name right now.
It's because he set up what Tyree said, a structure.
So if we want to start talking about,
do we want to build generational wealth?
Do we want to help the next seven generations of our family?
It's 150 years.
150 years, nobody in this room is going to be sitting here.
No.
But our structure will still be in place because we own nothing, but we still control it.
So you two, you'll still be controlling a million dollars worth of game from y'all grave.
If it's in the structure of the trust.
If it's in the structure of a trust.
A trust is contract law.
It's not based upon the constitutional.
I mean, it's not based upon the, it's based upon the constitutional law.
It's not based upon the law, as we know it, right?
The statutory law.
So if it's written into the law, which is the contract,
which there's over 150 different types of trust.
So if it's written into the trust and you say-
What's the best trust?
An irrevocable trust, but it really depends on what you're trying to do.
You're doing real estate.
A revocable trust will help you because you can change it.
But what we teach is an irrevocable trust.
So that means that whatever you say, if you say,
hey, my daughter, I want to give her $10,000 when she gets
married. A, my son, I want to give him $20,000 when he graduates from college. The houses that
we have in our family, we don't ever want them sold. This is like the show power. You see how
Ghost controlling his son from the grave? Yeah. Because Ghosts, even on that show. He's still making
him go to school. Ghosts had a trust. That's the reason why Tariq got to go to school and graduate
college. That's one of the biggest difference of it, a trust over a will. Like, for example,
you know you got 5 million to leave your family right but and you got to leave it to your son
your son 18 you end up you know passing away you give your son 5 mil or 18 going to blow it
what's the chance of him doing the right thing he can work that 5 mil out exactly you got to trust
you get to still allocate the money to him how you want even when you're not here right so that's
the control and that's the structure that you need now now if to be a member of the club 1% right
1% club but club 1%
com you go on
with all the benefits of being a member of the crew
of the club
go ahead go ahead
well pretty much you get access
to all the other clubs we have
so once you become a member it comes with a free trust
but it's like this basically
our community heard of trust right
but nobody teach you how to implement it nobody
teach you how to use it nobody teach you what to do
with it it's just a topic it's a
conversation it's just fluff really
but what we're doing is now
you got to trust with the membership
Okay, what else can you do with the trust?
So we got other clubs.
If you want to learn how to transfer your assets, you want to learn how to put your LLC inside that.
You want to learn how to save on taxes, right?
Or if you want to learn how to get funding for your trust.
So your trust got his own bank account.
So you won't get funding.
Like I just saw, you had a business, amex call.
Yeah, man.
You had the same thing for your trust, right?
So if you want to learn how to do those different types of things, we teach you how to do all that with your trust.
So it's not just the 1% club.
You get a trust.
and you're just saying, oh, I got a trust.
We're not even going to be here for them.
Yeah, we're not just selling you a trust.
You're just walking around with a box.
So that's one of the main things,
like the community that we're building
is like, it's game changing.
You find out these niggas,
the party promoter is trust funds.
Once you get to the party,
we went up the back door for you.
That's the freaking rum back there.
That's the liquor room back there.
So once you get in,
you get invited to all the parties.
All the parties.
And Nipsey Hustle got,
rest of the soul. He gave us the blueprint in one bar. He said open trust accounts deposit
wrecks million dollar life insurance on my flesh. Beamer's Benz, Bentley or Lex for Ari's
all them Lambo's. That's what's next. So he gave us the blueprint. He said open your trust
then get your life insurance which is which that creates your family bank. That's how you get
living benefits. Then you go get the cars. You go get the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the
liabilities. Then you leave
all of that to your family and to your
children. That's how you build true
generational wealth. And that's why to this day
Nipsey Hustle's trust is still
paying his children. Puma
is paying it to Nipsey Hustle's trust.
He still, from
his grave, Nipsey Hustle is still
taking care of his family and still doing
his endeavors. You can't do
that with a will. You can't do that with just saying
hey, I want to tell my sister what
I want done when I die. That's not true
generational wealth.
Give him that number again
So right now
I need you all to get this free ebook
Right
The 1% club is giving out a free
Ebook
My family is debt free
Like nobody in my family
Have any debt
Because I've got this
But what you need to do
Is get this free ebook
What you need to do is text family
To 832 621
0820 82 621
0820 text family
And you're going to get the free
My family is debt free ebook
And also I need you to go to
Club1%com
Now before we get out of here guys
What game y'all want to get a people, man?
All right, so one of the things I want to give people is
when you look at rap artists, right?
Because I know you used to be in that lane.
What record labels would do is
this is how important insurance is, right?
So what record labels would do is when they give you that advance,
they'll put a life insurance policy on you
and make their self the beneficiaries.
So they're protecting their asset.
So why don't we protect ourselves and our families from when we leave here?
I got to get life insurance on this, nigga.
They already got two of you.
Just in case he fall down on the steps.
What makes it more powerful is you could put a life insurance,
your life insurance policy,
inside of a trust,
and create a family bank.
Like the Rockefeller.
Like the Rockefeller.
And you could put money,
so I can go deposit $500,000 until my life insurance policy.
So I don't have to benefit from my life insurance policy
just when I die and let other people benefit from it.
You can benefit from it now.
Can nobody sees it?
Can't nobody touch it?
Can nobody.
put a freeze against it, it's protected.
Yeah, so what you could do is you put,
I can put $500,000 into my life insurance policy.
Go pull a $500,000 back out,
and I can still be getting 10 to 16% interest
on that $500,000.
So I could benefit from it now, not later on.
So it's the real,
y'all niggas get this information, man.
Study it, man.
So what separates us from all other,
even when I was, I'm going to go to credit, by the way.
You know, but what's the goat?
The goat.
Even the ones that call itself to go
Call me to go.
So the reason why I've been so successful
on the credit side before we even start the trust
is because I studied a law of credit.
If you go to court and you got a public defender,
what's going to happen?
You're going to jail, right?
So you're going to hire these credit pack companies
that are just sending out letters
but don't understand the law of credit.
Don't understand the loopholes.
You're going to credit jail, nigger.
What's going to happen is your credit's going to not going to move.
That's the reason why half of the credit pack
company's not giving results because they all doing the same thing.
So you got to study the law of credit.
So that's what we did before we started this trust.
But the trust is a whole lot better.
And when you're getting your credit repaired legally, they can't tell you a time frame
on that have it done.
They're not supposed to collect money up front.
But with this trust, it's different.
We transferring a debt over and getting the debt off your credit.
How long do that take?
It takes no more than 90 days.
I can give a money back guarantee.
money back again too so what y'all need to do right now listen man this the 1% club man on million dollars where we can't been in spotlight but we got a free ebook for y'all right now you're going get it my family is debt free i need you to text family the 832 621 0820 also go to club 1% dot com check these brothers out tedrick coached of mine listen so they got what's going on what's going to get y'all today man so we want to plan to see into what you guys are doing in the community so that 100 years from now
We'll still know your name
So we created the million dollars worth of game
Family Trust
Wait wait wait
Who name that shit on?
Because I just you just sitting
You set some shit up in here
I can put you in your trust
I'm putting you in your name
This is called a business trust
But we're also giving each one of y'all
Individual trust
So we're giving each one of y'all individual trust
And we'll help you set it up
Where each one of y'all can have your own
family trust
seven generations, people still know who you are.
But this is your business trust.
This is how you're going to create non-taxable events for million dollars worth
to gain.
I know all the millions of dollars that you're getting, all the land, all the, all the
Lamborghinis, all the roads, all of that is going to be in your business trust.
So we're going to show you how to do that to create non-taxable events so that you are
protected.
My billionaire mentor told me, you said, you hold my shit for, man.
My billion.
My billionaire mentor told me, he said, he said, the more money you get, the more people go try to come and take what you have.
They're not taking shit.
The more guy elevates y'all, the more people go try to come and take what y'all have.
So we want to help y'all to be protected.
I'm part of the 1%, nigger.
Yeah, y'all definitely are part of the 1% club.
That's up.
On nothing, control everything, John.
In order to be in the 1% you got to do what the other 99% won't do.
Right.
Let's join 1%, nigga.
And they won't bust a move like we do.
Look at that.
This is my shit
He ain't got nothing to do with this
I'm gonna put some shit up at his name
But don't worry
But we're gonna
We talk about that later
And it's just like that
Right
You know what
When did you tap into
Because you said you did a deal
Fuck you need a haul smith
No that's cool
He said you did a deal
With Star Trek slash
No get out of here
He said you did a deal
With star tracks
Star Trek slash
Interscoop
Yeah
After that you got into the
Independent mind
Because that was a deal
Was that one regular deal
Or what was that?
With the interstate?
Scope did.
Yeah, how was that?
No, so that was a, that was a label deal we did with, uh, Interscope, appreciate that.
With Interscope and, um, Star Trek.
Yeah, but after that, the whole label we was with, they switched up my A&R, everything.
So I was like, man, I got to get back to motion because they had me held up for a second.
So I was like, man, you know, I talked to everybody over there.
I had to end up giving them something out of my second album, but I went back independent, though,
you know, and ever since then, I stayed independent, man, like, it's just a more.
fit for me because I would like to move
when I want to move and how I want
to move you know I would the same thing
with for real like I would love to have for real
tracks but as an independent artist
and I know how much they really worked I can't afford it
you know what I'm saying so I just stick to
you know my culture guys out here
you do that deal what happened out of that you come
up out of that yeah then what you go right into
because I know you went into the game and I know you learned a lot of shit
in the buildings right exactly I already
had the promotion for real made me a start
already.
So he's like better cool.
Now I'm going back down with.
I could just use that as a tool to, you know,
keep pushing my independent stuff.
Boss of our bosses is probably my biggest album, you know,
honestly independent.
The song Thug and I run probably got...
How many records are too?
I don't even know, you know what I'm saying?
But it probably sold.
Now, I would say I already platinum did sell more than it.
Yeah, I already platinum soul more.
But I'm saying the songs, when I go do a show,
it's going to be thug.
I run.
You know, I rarely perform.
my i ain't heard of that and stuff like that you know what i'm saying because the people who come to
my shows is cultural people you know what i'm saying they want to hear that you know that texas shit
as it right now how many shows you do a year ah shit i don't know i did two last weekend like
shit i would say about four a month you know what i'm saying so like that strong you be in
yeah it booked all the time bro that's what i'm saying like i was just in san antonio uh what was that
Friday in Victoria, Texas.
Texas is a whole country,
Texas is a whole country in itself.
And then I still, you know,
out for having the success of a steel tipping,
you know, the stuff for real.
I can still do the out of, you know,
state shows and stuff too
and, you know, get paid out for that too.
So it's like I get the best of all worlds, for real.
So now that you look at the game, right?
Because, you know, a lot of times
you be on Instagram and you say stuff
and they just go.
Yeah.
You know, the power of the gram.
Yeah.
What state is the hip-hop game in right now?
Man, the hip-hop game, I mean, like, you know, it's up.
Everybody get money.
I think they said they made more money out for us streams than ever.
But how much did the rappers get?
It was like $16 billion, I think, $15.6 billion.
How many rappers was big in there?
you know what I'm saying like that's what I'm saying bro like that's my whole point being
independent that's all I can think I can't think you get more than me you know what I'm saying
so I look at the talentless people I ain't gonna call them talentless well fuck it I will
I'm just saying like I just feel like it's just set up like that for them to own us and
get out of this money out for us and and it's just been like that and that's why people do it
but I believe as artists these days they need to tap into that independent world with
social media you don't need a label man
young boy show you that
he ain't on no radio nowhere
but doing numbers like what Drake
probably more than Drake
young boy doing he don't know doing his numbers
exactly you can do it like all you need it
once you got your fan base and a direct fan base
you up bro you don't need no record label you should be getting more than
them is how I feel about labels
you know and I feel like that
about the NFL the NBA
everything we need to start out of that shit over
bro and get more than everybody because that's our
Wakanda, bro. That's our what they got
over there that they won't sell.
We can't sell that shit. We can't let them
get more than that, bro. And that's not
no hate. Hey, man, I love everybody,
but I just know I can't go in nothing Jewish.
And they say, this black man
fin to get more than me off of all this stuff.
I can't do nothing in the Mexican community
and say, I can't go open
no taco shop in the middle of Mexican hood
and just say, man, I'm feeling
just do now it ain't going down
bro only thing that only people
who let that go down is black people bro
Chinese people ain't going for it nobody
going for it but the Asians come set up
shopping at hood and they
yeah they set up and then that's
my thing they raise three families
off that motherfucking store exactly so
that's our community money though and
you know we can't do it in their community
so I feel like you know we need to take advantage
of all those opportunities
and stop asking people for shit bro
like I just be embarrassed to
all these grown-ass men with all these rules like grown-ass men rich but can't do what they want to do man
it's just like you know and how to fuck slim thug can uh go on instagram and show his gun and
job morrette can't if he worked 200 million dollars he ain't trying to kill nobody if he got a gun
it's to protect itself and he out of the town and you want people to know that he can't have a gun
so he out of out in colorado and you want him to not have a gun and just because of the way he worked man
He ain't bringing it to the game.
He ain't bringing it on a plane.
He ain't, you know, I feel like the rules that we accept are disrespectful, man.
And then the owner go home and go hunting with his kid.
You know what I'm saying?
You feel me?
And they can do it, but we can't.
Like, but oh, he rich.
He took the contract.
He signed it.
You know what I'm saying?
And everybody who ain't got money, think money is everything.
But I don't got nothing else I can buy right now.
You know what I'm saying?
So what a job of rent can buy?
$200 million.
money ain't everything
bro it's only a little so
your freedom is important bro
he should be able to get out work and do whatever he
want to do long as he won that game and
performed up to his standard bro
like and it ain't about people's
man they put a nigga of pitchers out of him
in the strip club I'm saying like
exactly does they have to do with anything
exactly he out work man they played the game
bro why people care what people doing when they get
out work man like you go to work
if you a regular motherfucker going to work
doing your 9 to 5 and can
go off after that and hold your gun and do what you want to do.
Why job my rent can't?
Oh, because he's rich and he got a, you know, like, I don't look at life like that.
You know, you know what's really sad, though.
What's really sad is that you could go somewhere, you could run out a private room.
Oh, let me get this private room.
Exactly.
And then you could get into a situation that ain't got nothing to do with this situation
when I was at this private room.
It has nothing to do with this, right?
And then, oh, we're going to throw this out there to the media.
You know why?
Yeah.
Because our club's going to be attached to that.
And that man was in the room by itself.
Guess what?
We get free marketing and promotion.
Yeah, exactly.
And then we had to we leak it out,
and we make him look even worse than what he look.
Then we're going to double back it and write a speech and say,
he's a great guy.
Exactly.
He didn't do nothing at night.
He came in and he just
was to himself.
A million dollars worth of,
multi-million dollars with rublicity.
But you just
you threw this man under the bus,
got the man pictures of him
in the strip club just to get some
marketing and promotion.
That's what it happens.
This shit crazy out here, man.
It's too crazy.
But he should be free enough to do that though, man.
Ain't nobody got no lick in the strip club anyway.
You know what I'm saying?
So if you ain't,
ain't break no law. You shouldn't be getting fine and losing millions. If ain't no law, if you
ain't go to jail for what you did, then you shouldn't have to, you know, pay these people
these crazy amounts of money, man. Like, it's just disrespectful, you know, to me.
And it's crazy. It's like, once you get to a certain level when all the money come, you don't
handle privacy, you can't do nothing. You got to walk a thin line because everybody is out
to try, you know, because a lot of people don't like any lives. So everybody is out
to get some clout to be the first one to post something about you, doing something.
You could be living your regular life
But if they think it's out of line
They're going to post it and write a caption
Or do something to act like you out of pocket
You know what I'm saying?
Well, how I look at how I look at
How I look at the John Morant situation
You know, I gotta keep it
I look at it like you're a professional athlete
And you got responsibilities as a professional athlete
And a nigga that make 200 million
You know what I mean? Hold on, wait, hold on bro
You got a lot of kids in the world
That look up to you
You're on TVs, you got a lot of sponsors
That's behind you.
So flashing a gun in the club probably ain't the right thing to do.
You flash the gun in the club?
So wherever you was at.
So to me on social media, I don't think that was the right thing to do.
You know what I'm saying?
Do I think that you should be crucified and all that how they try to fill you under the bus?
No, because I think that when you're young, sometimes you make mistakes.
Exactly.
And that's just a part of life.
Exactly.
You know what I'm saying?
So it was like, okay, you made a mistake.
Okay, let's let them mistake.
He fucked up.
Let's let it go.
Like, but how it is today is that we want to take a kid.
We want to make him bigger than what he is, though.
He's just a 23-old athlete that played basketball, man.
He made a mistake.
He ain't harming nobody.
He wasn't shooting at nobody.
He wasn't.
He didn't even point the gun and say no threat.
Right.
He just showed a gun, bro.
But he made a mistake because to all the future athletes,
you don't want them to feel like that's what we're doing when we get to the NBA.
When we get to the NFL, when we get to the NHL, when we get to wherever we're going.
No, you've got a responsibility now to be a professional.
You know, and a professional is not somebody that's flashing a gun or you feel what I'm saying?
You could do that because Slim, you're a professional rapper.
A lot of that come with being a professional rapper.
A professional athlete, you've got to be a professional athlete.
So do you think professional?
at least should be able to have a gun
and buy that lot of them? No, no, absolutely. You should be able
to be able to carry? Absolutely.
Okay. I think you absolutely should be able
to protect yourself at all
cost when you're worth $200 million
$100 million, $100,000
$100,000. If you ain't worth
shit, you should be able to protect himself.
And I believe that, I believe that
even if we don't agree with
that, even if that's our opinion to say
we don't like that he did that,
you know, we want him to
be a professional and I
at the, I believe that if he ain't
break the law, it shouldn't be no
fines, it shouldn't be no
nothing, but, you know, them being
just them saying he shouldn't do that,
you know, because at the same time,
his owner going to go hunting
and shoot hogs and shit with his kids
and show their gun on Instagram
and ain't shit going to happen to them.
This dude still a grown-ass man,
if you work $200 million, you should
be able to do what the fuck you want to do every day.
You know what I'm saying? After work.
Not at the gym.
Don't run.
the gun to your locker room.
Don't bring it to the plane.
Don't do no shit like that.
But after you out for your job, like, why the fuck?
I'm from Texas, though.
Everybody got guns, bro.
It's not a big deal.
You know what I'm saying?
It's a little different now.
Yeah.
It's like that, you know.
The part about him being in the strip club, I don't, you know,
I think he should be able to go see some ass.
Strip clubs don't sell liquor, man.
And that wasn't no strip club.
That was a private room.
Oh, he was really getting busy.
Okay.
Yeah, you all weren't going to get a little release.
He's been through a lot of pressure lately.
I mean, he wants to go to his couple, you know, some asses bouncing around.
You know, ain't that wrong with that.
He better have a gun.
I mean?
I mean, he a black man worth $200 million out of town.
You should have a gun, bro.
Like, that's what, see, that's what I, that's what my problem is.
I don't move off of, let's do this for the kids.
Because that's how niggas get killed trying to look good for kids.
Nigger, like, you were $200 million out of town.
And it's two in the morning.
yeah you need a gun like that's what common sense tell me but i don't work for nobody so rules
don't register with me on a lot of shit common sense do you know what i'm saying but then also
the flip side of that you say you john moran you worth 200 million why you just don't hire
some top flight security niggas right that just even they even played with you like
you shoot six niggas in one second i totally i totally believe
That's exactly what happened.
I believe that was a bodyguard gun
and he picked it up on some shit like that.
I don't believe.
He ain't in there with no pistol like that, bro.
Come on.
So, you know, it's always a flip side,
but, you know, overhead million dollars worth of a game,
man, we don't ever beat the young kids up, man.
We're about giving the youngest game.
That's got his attention, motivation, and education.
We love you over here.
I love.
You feel what I'm saying?
Keep doing your thing.
I love a young job, man.
I love a young job, man.
Getting into the arena singing and be a young boy in my city.
Yeah, you know what I mean.
I like John Moray.
Yeah, shut up, man.
You don't let him.
You're a bum, dog.
Every fucking basketball player that was on this show said you was a fucking bum from Kevin DeRank.
He's an NBA-B-A-A-A-V-A-V-A-V-A-B-A-B-A.
My fucking Damian-Liard, he's a bomb.
Jason Tatum.
Damn.
Balo, you're a bomb.
Carmelo Anthony.
Carmelo Anthony.
Hey, how you know you, Walo?
Carnet, they hate it.
They hate it.
Shack.
He's an NBA.
He said he got two left feet.
I was a football player.
That's why they be hating him.
You're a fucking jail player.
Fuck is you talking about.
A fucking boat.
Man, what you got coming up, though?
Man, I stay active on the independent side.
Man, I drop a project or two every year.
I'm working on a new project called Midlife Crisis.
Oh, you're having a midlife crisis, huh?
I'm having a midlife crisis.
I'm buying up everything, man.
Diggins, you ever get in a woman?
Does you ever get in a woman?
I don't think so, man.
It don't seem realistic.
Why?
You know, like I say, man, I move out common sense.
and, you know, seeing so many marriages go bad
and the billionaires even leaving their wives
so it don't seem like a money move, you know,
and I make money moves.
So if it ain't going to add to the money
or be more positive for me,
it's going to take away from the kingdom.
I don't want it, you know what I'm saying?
So that's all I see.
I understand that I'm Slim Thug.
My name is Slim Thug.
I come from a toxic environment, you know what I'm saying?
I see a lot of marriages work.
So I do think different than,
a normal person, you know what I'm saying?
So that's just what my life
is, but I ain't gonna lie, I love it, you know,
it's very, um,
I can, it's a, it's a variety pack, man,
you know what I'm saying?
You know, I just want to go back to that night.
Yeah, I want to go back to, fuck out,
he pulled up, he pulled up, fuck then, I'm telling
this story.
We was at a random gas station in Texas, right?
Pull over, I need some backwoods, right?
Next day I know a fucking Rose Royce pulling.
It was a rose you was in, right?
I was in a rose truck, cutting it.
He jumped out.
Was I am?
Four bitches.
This nigga followed.
This nigga followed.
Shuggan-ha-to-one with one of the bitches.
It was like, oh, my God, because the two's bitches that was what Slim was glowing.
I'm going to go with Slim.
Yeah, I'm going to go on Slip.
We had to go to film somebody.
So he told him, I'm going to go with Slim.
He ain't even know Slim.
This was his first.
But, man, think about that, though, really.
Like I just, like I say, man, I'm like.
He had four pieces in the carving, man.
He said they was glowing.
But if you got a girlfriend, you can't do that, though.
You see what I'm saying?
So he picked that light up.
It was night time.
They was glowing in the dark.
He said your bitches was glowing.
They was glowing in the dark.
It was night time.
I said, they lit the gas station up.
Oh, man.
I said, this shit is.
The niggas said, man, I'm looking.
But he was dead.
Like, I wasn't even did.
He was talking to us.
He's like, man, I want to go with the hug.
You should let me know, kid.
He was like, shit.
But you know, that was his introduction to you.
Damn, baby, you're a legend.
He didn't even take the bitches who's going to jump out.
You're a legend, nigga.
I listen to your shit, gentlemen.
Scott, he's like.
Oh, man.
That's good.
We represent it right.
Ace Town.
He represented right.
The bitches are growing.
Cush.
Did you see him?
That's how it's supposed to be, man.
I went to go to thug.
We're from Africa, wild old man.
And Africa.
Talk about it.
You could be a polygamist, man.
What?
I don't know.
I don't know.
I forget.
You can have one of the bitches.
Man, he fell in love with the bitch.
It's like, no, the bitch, they had that blue one.
You see that, man.
Yes, you did.
I don't even remember who it was.
You said the best they had the blue one.
I wish I knew.
I wish I remember when it was.
I was talking about her all fucking night, man.
I said, could believe this.
Shit was the fuck up, man.
That's hilarious.
They were killed from bitches, man.
You keep talking about it.
Now, Houston got fine women, bro.
Yes, he do.
Houston got some fine women, bro.
Like, you know, I don't appreciate them enough because I live here.
But they, yeah, they're fine out here, bro.
How are you feel about the women in Houston?
I'm going to say this
Two of my
Gilling somebody else told me this
Say Houston got the baddest women in America
I believe so man
It could be possible
I came down this joint
Dude dog I learned that in 1999
It's a lot of
It's a lot of different kind out here
Man it's a lot of beautiful women
I learned that in 1999 man
When I signed with Swive House man
And I went out with Drake
Yeah
It used to be different back then
club man I could not believe
that shit I was like
it was crazy back then though
in the 90s like that's when it was really crazy
like now everybody migrating
you know it's different
it's still beautiful down this man it's still beautiful
you got a lot out of town of though it's
it's a nice scene man out here
with the ladies so it's like why would you get a
relationship
you know what I'm in the club like
I was young as shit I'm like what the fuck
it was crazy man shit was crazy
that was the day I learned I was
Like, from that down, I was like, Houston, Texas probably got the prettiest women in.
That's a lot of, man.
Houston, the chief seat.
Where is it going on?
I don't know if it's the whole Texas or Houston Tech.
I just was in Houston.
It might be the whole Texas.
They got a lot of beautiful women all over Texas.
I was to Houston, Dallas, yeah.
99.
It's nice.
It's popping.
I mean, you just got to get them out, bro.
I'm telling you, like, you get the, you do the right party and they come out.
You'll see some, yeah, there's some beautiful women out here, man.
All over Texas, though, it's a lot of beautiful women, man.
I ain't never really did, no shit, like, in a bunch, in Texas a bunch of times.
Yeah, some real, like, let drink.
Don't somebody pull up in this bitch, Drake do a party or some, yeah, they're going to come out.
You know what I'm saying?
So, yeah, that type of shit.
So, man, we appreciate you, man.
You brought us in.
Show this thing.
We started off.
We showed y'all the cars.
Ah.
We should.
Nigger.
It was crazy saying.
I'm glad y'all came down, man.
I've been checking y'all out since y'all started, man.
I've seen the growth.
I've seen you boys turn this into a million-dollar podcast, you know what I'm saying?
So, big salute to y'all.
I'm tapped in on the gram.
The positive messages in the morning, Wallow, putting in that work, putting in that work, man.
That's why you're blessed like that.
You do it every day, bro.
Putting that work, get on people that positive motivation.
Yeah, man.
Keep that good work up, kid.
I'm proud of y'all, well.
Yeah, man.
Appreciate you.
And you got a million dollars with you.
on million dollars in the game.
And he showed
there's two million dollars
worth of cars.
Turn out,
man.
It's good to be independent,
man.
Shout out to the independent.
Independent is real.
I'm just saying,
listen,
like to the rap game,
this is considered
the old dick.
I'm all for show.
I'm just saying,
right,
you don't really see a lot
of old rappers.
I'm not talking about
CEOs.
I said rappers,
but you are a CEO.
Yes, he is.
So you don't eat.
I don't even.
I don't ever.
Yeah
They don't be having
16, 17 cars
Six bikes
And you got a bike
In that garage
And no reason
There's just
Right
Houses, mansions
You don't stay here
You don't even stay here
Man
I'm at the apartment
Man
But you know
Like I say
Man
Hey to the youngsters
It's million dollars
Worth the game
Man
You know
Like I say
I'm independent
It's my job
To advocate
Be an independent
Man
Integrity man
You know what I'm saying
If Malcolm X was here
He'll call a lot of
Nigger sell out
bro because we letting other motherfuckers eat more out for us than we are and that ain't cool you know what I'm saying we gotta get to a point where that ain't cool so it can be some real billion dollar rappers out here you know what I'm saying walk around here we gotta get that somewhere we gotta you know shoot the dice on ourselves enough to at least know how much we work before we just go sell ourselves you know to some cheap deals where we get minimum wage out for what we really work you know what I'm saying making people a hundred million and they're giving you
you won that ain't adding up you know what I'm saying so that's my preach to the you know
youth out there man quit trying to run into you know uh signing or giving the way ownership
and try to build something from the ground up authentic you know try to get a real direct fan base
you can really trust it ain't depending on being on the radio on the hot song they're gonna be
there regardless you know what I'm saying so just focus on that that's it that's what it's about
man. That was a million dollars worth of a game.
That was a hundred million dollars worth of a game.
And we live from a, you know,
one of a slimm's motherfucking beast.
You know, been to a couple
of them in the day. And he got his own garage.
Nigger did this with the sliding doors
and all that with the 18
hidden black whips for no reason.
And the roads roads were he only got
216 fucking miles on it
because he drove it one time to a club
and then he's...
And it's just like that.
Right.
Thank you.
