No Jumper - Cameron Airborne on White Rapper Backlash, Touring with Caskey, Cannabis Ventures & More
Episode Date: December 7, 2022Cameron Airborne talks about his rise from South Florida, the industry, having his own farm, dispensary and more. ----- NO JUMPER PATREON http://www.patreon.com/nojumper CHECK OUT OUR NEW SPOTIFY PL...AYLIST https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5te... FOLLOW US ON SNAPCHAT FOR THE LATEST NEWS & UPDATES https://www.snapchat.com/discover/No_... CHECK OUT OUR ONLINE STORE!!! http://www.nojumper.com/ SUBSCRIBE for new interviews (and more) weekly: http://bit.ly/nastymondayz Follow us on SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/4ENxb4B... iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/n... Follow us on Social Media: https://www.snapchat.com/discover/No_... http://www.twitter.com/nojumper http://www.instagram.com/nojumper https://www.facebook.com/NOJUMPEROFFI... http://www.reddit.com/r/nojumper JOIN THE DISCORD: https://discord.gg/Q3XPfBm Follow Adam22: https://www.tiktok.com/@adam22 http://www.twitter.com/adam22 http://www.instagram.com/adam22 adam22hoe on Snapchat Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up y'all, man, back.
This T.Rail, and I got a special guest here, man.
My boy, Cameron Airborne, man.
What up, what up?
What's up? Chilling, bro.
Yeah, what's up, G.
How you been?
I'm good.
I'm good.
Been busy, you know, been on the move, but we're here.
Yeah, man.
You feel me?
What's going?
What's been up with you lately, man?
You've been doing your thing.
I've been grinding, bro.
I just got off on Ten City Tour.
Not too long ago.
Dropped a little collab project with Caskey.
Me and him just put out a project.
called Calligraphy, then we toured on that, and then, you know, right back to the grind, making music.
Oh, both you and him tour.
Yes, sir.
You know what I'm saying?
How many cities?
Oh, about 10.
10 cities?
Yeah.
Venues crazy, or are we doing clubs?
No, venues are crazy.
Vennu's crazy?
Yeah.
Yeah.
About 3,500 cap.
Yeah.
What?
That's crazy, bro.
The fans is really being receptive to this shit, man.
If you actually can go on tour and do your thing.
Facts.
Yeah.
A couple shows sold out.
too, so definitely good turnouts.
How are you booking those shows?
Are you got an agency?
A little bit of both, you know.
I just got a good team behind me that really, you know, wants to see me do well.
So they connect the dots for me.
Yeah.
I mean, before we start digging in, you know, digging in, you know, I usually start from the
beginning, especially, you know, if you knew here, if you know of your family, kind of yike, you know, not familiar.
Some of them probably are, but some of them probably now, you know what I'm saying?
But, you know, let's start from the beginning with my boy, Cameron.
Yeah.
Yes, sir.
How you feeling?
Yeah, so where you from?
I'm from, originally I'm from New York.
Right now I live in Florida.
My parents stayed.
They got divorced when I was real young,
so it kind of shifted me between the two states.
Yeah, I'm in Florida now, though.
So you spent the majority of your time in Florida or New York?
Florida.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So you went to elementary school, high school in Florida?
On like a mix, because I was one of those kids that got into a lot of trouble,
so I kept getting kicked out, so I finished one part of the year, maybe in New York,
then finish the other part of Florida type shit.
We're at in Florida, though?
South Florida.
South Florida.
Yes, sir.
That's crazy.
What kind of trouble was you getting in?
Because Florida is wild.
Yeah, it's a little wild, you know.
I have my running as a little young, so just doing shit, you know, 12, 13, 14-year-old shouldn't have been doing.
Got me, you know, caught up a little bit, wound up dropping out of school, and kind of, I think,
it's a blessing because it made me take this shit real seriously because I had a lot of time to focus.
Who more strict mom or pops, though?
Mom.
Of course.
So, mom's had you on your shit.
Facts.
Facts.
Always.
You know, mom know best.
Yeah.
Well, do you come from a musical background?
Yeah.
I would say so.
The guitar I actually played right now.
My dad gave it to me, so he kind of pushed me into going that direction, I feel like.
So while you were in school, did you feel like that was your calling, like music was your calling in school?
Kind of, yeah, because I feel like just like everybody else, fucks in the classroom.
You know, that shit boring.
I'd be daydreaming all day, so that's the one thing.
I feel like I can actually free my mind when I'm doing that shit, so it's pretty cool.
Oh, yeah, because I was in school doing that same shit.
I mean, music was on my mind, too, but I didn't feel like I was going to rap or anything,
but I was listening to Snoop Doggy style in my head.
You know, you know what I'm saying?
Doggy style was going crazy.
Oh, God.
You know what I'm going to do.
But as far as, like, being a rapper, you know, did that come after school?
Or it's like, you know, like, when did you figure out you was going to?
don't do that. Well, that's the thing is because like before I even got into
like rapping hip-hop, I used to playing a band because like I said, I played
guitar so I started playing in a metal band in high school and then I dropped out
and you know just kind of kept it going. So I played in a band for a little while
and now I realize I'm not really like a I don't work too well with other people.
Um, so I kind of just started doing my own thing, write my own music and I felt more
comfortable just doing solo stuff because I could just do it at my own pace.
But being a guitar is like usually when I see guitars, they always say they taught themselves how to play guitar.
Is that like, did you teach yourself how to play a guitar?
Yeah.
That's wild at what age were you taught yourself like in like, I'm pretty good at this shit.
Yeah, like, obviously it's going to take a long, long time.
It's going to take more time if you do it that way.
But I started playing guitar and I was like 9, 10, 11 and just kept with it.
Like to this day, I write.
I write songs and half the time I don't know the notes that I'm playing or anything, I just play.
So I write songs and do chords and I hit a chord and someone else will tell me what the
chord is because I don't even know what it is.
That's crazy.
Like a producer would be in there and tell you like, bro, you need a chord, like this is it.
Yeah.
That's wow.
Yeah, I do a lot of stuff by ear.
You know, I just kind of let the sound guide me.
Yeah, so when you were in a band, did it kind of like?
Was it confusing for your band?
Like, hell, though, you're in the wrong key, bro.
A little bit, yeah.
That was a, so I always hang around, like,
I've always been the youngest
and the group of people that I hang around.
So my brother was actually the drummer,
so it was kind of more like his friends.
So they, instead of being like not, like,
happy about it, they would kind of guide me
and, you know, teach me a little shit,
things like that, you know, that I was messing up on.
And that helped me,
progress. As far as your music, you feel like, you know, like this is like rap. It's the category
that you're picking instead of like a pop. Because usually, you know, like a white rapper,
we always, our culture will always like kind of look different at white rappers. Right.
You know what I mean? Did you kind of get that, you know what I'm saying, coming in to this shit?
Oh, yeah. I mean, I still get it to this day. But I feel like when people actually
see I guess how serious I am with it and some of the things that I do and some of the accolades
that I've acquired, I think they take it a little more seriously and kind of turn their head
a little more like, hey, what's he got going on over there? You know what I mean? Because I just
stay in my own lane and just let it speak for itself. I mean, because other artists, like,
how are you building a relationship with other artists, especially in Florida? Because you had
Jack Boy on a song. Was that like from another relationship or did you build that relationship
organically? A little bit of both. I was real cool with some of the same people that he was
being from, he's from Broward, right around that area and they kind of just connected the dots.
This was during the time on, you know, Kodak was logged up, all that stuff and, you know,
I was just in grind mode. So that was just something I kind of just put myself in the room and
and got it done, you know what I mean?
And from there, it carries.
You build relationships and you start on,
you start rubber shoulders with the right people
and you get connected and it brings you places.
Like any industry, especially rap,
sometimes shit don't go your way.
And then, you know, like,
how do you stay motivated in your music?
Um, I like to use some of my personal experiences,
Because I feel like if you're blessed to be in the position that you actually have a platform that you shouldn't take it for granted, you should try to just empower and encourage other people.
So I let that kind of drive me just knowing that other people probably won't be able to be in the same kind of position.
So I make sure that I kind of speak for those people.
Like has depression ever hit you, you know, dealing with music and any problems coming from that?
not being big as you want to be?
Yeah, I feel like everybody kind of goes through that.
Like as an artist, you kind of feel like you're in a box, so to speak.
And you know what I mean?
It kind of seems never ending.
But as things are actually coming into fruition,
I think that's the more beautiful part of the whole thing is that whole journey
of like really being hungry and trying to push it.
And it's like an emotional roller coaster
Because you could go up, you could go down
But I feel like just like with anything in life
It really doesn't matter
Like if you keep tapping the egg
It's gonna crack
So
Yeah, I feel like a depression is like
A growing pain that you actually really need
To get out of there
Like to grow up like
Yeah, it's like hunger pains
It's like, you know, growing pains
Things like that
If you don't have that sometime
Like you should have that
Because you don't want to miss anything with this shit, because you will get humble.
For sure.
For sure.
You'll get humble.
You don't want to go and be super crazy with this shit, you know, and start acting out.
You feel I'm like?
Because the music industry is like, it's super crazy to where like, you know what I'm saying?
That shit will humble you.
100%.
You got to stay grounded and you got to have those grounded times.
So I say like being depressed and, you know, hopping out of that.
and having people help you and having a head having a shoulder to lean on like those times really do help you
yeah i agree i think they mold you into into the person you become because you're you have to go through
hardships to to to be able to to express that kind of pain for somebody else to relate to it so i
feel like it's all a part of the journey you know do you incorporate that into your music yeah a lot
Yeah, yeah. I tried to touch on things that I've went through emotionally and just put,
just giving my, oh, make sure that what I'm putting out, it means something. It can tell somewhat of a story.
Do, are you an artist that has to use drugs to, you know, get your point across and your music?
No, but what I can say is I've battled with, I battle with addiction that I,
early age, very early age, and that helps me basically relate to the next person. I know what
they're going through. I know that these things, some of the things that I'm speaking on, people,
they're afraid to say it. They're afraid to reach out and talk about these things. So that's,
that's one of the reasons I do it, so they can feel more comfortable in their own skin because
I personally went through those, those hardships. Where were you valid with? What drove?
Where you were you on?
Just very early age, like 12, 13, 14, just, you know, doing shit that a kid shouldn't be doing
Coke and things like that.
I mean, I tried Coke in my older age.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, nigga 13, damn.
Like, who the fuck is giving you Coke at 13 years old?
We need to find this motherfucker right now.
He'll wild, motherfucker, for doing that.
Yeah, he's wild.
But what I can say is.
I don't regret anything because everything that I've been through, everything I've done
is molded me, like I said, into this person that is here right now.
So I don't really, I don't regret any of it.
I would do it all again the same exact way.
How did you battle with addiction?
Like, you know, walk me through that.
How are you battling with addiction at 13 years old?
It's hard because you can't talk about it.
You're super young, trying to hide it from your parents.
So you go through that for a few years, which ultimately makes it worse.
And you know, you just find yourself in a pretty, pretty sticky situation, mentally.
Kind of just dig yourself into a little hole.
Was it any therapy involved there, or did you just get out of it on your own?
No, there was things involved that kind of took me, took me out of that road that I'm grateful for.
grateful for.
As far as your family, mom and dad, when you chose that career path of being a rapper, were
they excited or were they like get your shit out of here?
I feel like nine times out of ten, mom is always going to be like, nah, but my dad was
supportive.
He was like, he kind of saw the potential, so he was with it.
When did you start getting tatted?
Because I know that's like a part of it.
They're like, hold on, bro.
What you doing?
Yeah.
So that was like kind of just going back into the whole thing.
I was telling you, I was doing stuff when I was a kid that grown men were doing.
So I got my first tattoo when I was 12.
And I just kind of went from there.
I showed up at home and my dad was pissed.
He was so pissed off.
Um, yeah, it was, it was a bad time.
What do mom and dad do for a living?
Are they pretty well off or are?
No, I don't, I don't really come from like a privileged background.
My dad, he used to be in the film industry doing color correction, and my mom just works
in a hospital.
But right now, that's my main focus.
is to bring some income and kind of just take us to a different place that you know I feel
like everybody is kind of going for that same typical kind of kind of dream feed your family so
like where were your musical influences growing up on Jimmy Hendricks of course I actually I have
them tatted right here on my hand that's called yeah yeah he was like one of one of one of
the first kind of artists I heard because my dad my dad's an old head so he's like a hippie and I was just I was more
into that really for the longest before I even ever touched hip hop or nothing like that but um
yeah bro I that's I would say him and I like I like more artists that are also into the more
entrepreneur side of thing so like I really I kind of just grew up and watched 50 cents since I was
legit and I like what he does I like Ross and I I
with Bernard because he kind of, you know what I mean?
Doing some crazy shit.
Crazy shit.
I love me too, the entrepreneurial rapper and like coming out of that because
facts.
Music can't make you the $100 million.
I don't know if things like that's like, oh God, no, bro.
Like you got to have that hustle and you got that drive in you because it's only like
be realistic like how many people are hot for five plus years.
Right.
It's not that many.
And the attention span right now with music.
Come on.
But you're going to need something else.
Right.
You're saying.
You feel what I'm?
Like, as soon as you graph their attention, you're going to have to start selling other shit.
I feel like other artists, I feel like other artists can't actually do that shit.
Some artists can't feel like they can't sell shit or, you know, that image is not there for them, you know, a sell shit or market different items.
So you can, though, you got to take advantage of that shit.
I like to take my passions and turn them into business.
Like, one of my main passions since I was young is cannabis,
so I was fortunate enough to transition that into my own thing.
Now, I have my own farm.
I got a facility in dispensary, airborne farms,
out my own strain, airborne OG.
I'm just trying to pave away, you know,
make a different position for myself in another lane.
In another lane.
So you have your own farm and your own dispensary.
Yes, sir.
Let's talk about that.
Let's talk about it.
Yeah, let's talk about it because that's crazy.
Let's let the record reflect because that's actually crazy to have that.
Yeah, how about I have a 15,000 square foot facility with 10, 25 light rooms.
We do indoor, outdoor, greenhouse.
I have a dispensary in Tulsa, brand new one is about to open up, airborne farms dispensary.
you know we're doing some groundbreaking stuff some some stuff that uh you know is kind of kind of
separating me from the other guys do you have partners or do you are you just predominantly using
your music money to invest oh a little bit of both yeah yeah you can't do this kind of thing alone
but you know what i mean it's it's uh it's a mission that's really dope to have your own farm
your own dispensary what city can we find it in uh uh Tulsa Tulsa Oklahoma
Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Yeah.
The farm is in Poto.
It's right on the border of Arkansas.
So you're from Florida.
Yeah.
Daddy in New York.
Yeah.
You got a dispens for you in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Like, what the fuck?
And we're out here in L.A.
And we're out here in Los Angeles.
You got to hit all corners, man.
Yeah.
That's what people, you don't need somebody to put you on if you can just take what you got and put yourself in a position to win.
You know what I mean?
Like, they're going to look at you eventually.
Is that shit more lucrative than the rap do you feel like one day?
You might say fuck the music and just go straight weed?
Yeah.
Yeah.
But it's different because you're talking about something that's a passion that I love.
So it's hard to just be like, yeah, fuck it, I'm going to give it up.
You know what I mean?
Because I love it.
So it's just like breathing.
It's natural.
It's not like I'm worried.
waking up and I'm like, fuck, I got to, you know what I mean?
It's part of my life, so it's not, I could see myself doing this forever.
So what do you like better rapping or are performing?
Like actually writing the music, recording, or performing?
I love performing.
The energy is crazy.
I feed off people's energy and motherfuckers that see me perform, they know I'm jumping in the crowd.
I'm doing the most.
I'm giving them all the energy.
Yeah.
How important is it for you to write your own music?
Oh, you got to.
Yeah.
That's the only way to do it.
I feel like you're not really an artist if you're not writing.
Because not only do you play the guitar or you produce.
Of course.
Yeah.
Yeah, I do collaborative producing, you know what I mean?
I'm some of my productions.
I'm going to the studio tonight, man.
You better get in here.
It's always always always working, you know.
Oh, the studio out here tonight.
Of course.
Do you book studio sessions?
Do you work better alone?
Or, like, do you need other people in there collaborating, you know,
and that energy with you?
I kind of work pretty good by myself, but I like just good vibes.
So we're rolling up smoking.
It's a good time, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
As far as being a rapper, you know, I'm listening to some of your music.
Have you ever, you know, even in the beginning stages, have you ever said,
nigger in your rap?
I don't think so, no.
No?
So you just, you really helped your composure, huh?
Yeah, I just feel like that's not my place, you know?
Yeah, yeah.
That's crazy.
And I know as a rapper, I know, I mean, not as a rapper, but just as a black person.
And if you're in hip hop, if you're white or you're Hispanic or whatever the case may be,
you really indulgent in the culture sometimes.
I don't, sometimes I don't know if I feel like it's a bad thing.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I really wouldn't hold it against you or whatnot.
Yeah, I mean, of course, obviously if it's not derogatory and you know what I mean,
everything is all love and the people, whoever it is that is saying is around people that,
they're okay with it, then I, you know what I mean?
I just feel like I don't know because it's not my place to say whether it's okay or not
because, you know what I'm saying?
Obviously it's not, I'm white.
Yeah, did you grow up, did your mom and dad tell you, you feel me?
Like, hey, hold on, don't fuck with that.
You know what I'm saying?
Don't say that word, brother, you know what I'm saying?
I know you rapping, but make sure you don't do that.
No, I feel like that was just kind of the thing.
like if you were, like if you're a white rapper, I feel like it's just, that's, you know, like,
you shouldn't say that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Do you get kind of discouraged in the rap game right now?
Because the rap game has changed, like I said, and the attention span is like fucking zero.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Yeah, like the fucking, just streams or you have to have so many streams, views on YouTube,
so many artists dropping.
every fucking day.
See, I've started to not really pay attention
to kind of how many views that I get.
Like, I used to be so, like, that's all I want
is just a video to take off, whatever.
But now I'm understanding to just keep feeding
the audience that's already, like,
they're tuned into me already.
So it doesn't matter if this video
didn't hit a million views.
It has 100, 200,000.
thousand these people are engaged, they're tuned in.
Why am I going to wait to drop?
Just keep dropping.
Feed them.
They're waiting.
You know what I mean?
It's building the ecosystem.
How important is versatility to you?
I mean, but too, I'm listening to your music.
I have seen you grown.
Yeah.
Yeah, you've grown.
Like, you have a feel right single,
which is like right now probably one of your best songs.
But I went back to your songs.
Yeah.
anything I won and even past, like, from those songs, like, I can see the growth.
For sure.
Yeah, I can definitely see the growth from, yeah, the feel right song.
I'm like, no, this shit, this shit really bang.
You ain't your bag.
You're doing your thing.
And you feel like, okay, this is me.
Like, I'm entering, like, my thing, my name.
Yeah, this is it.
Yeah, I feel like always as an artist, you get to a point where you kind of just have that, like,
aha kind of moment where it's like this is what I'm supposed to be doing and I've hit those moments
a couple of time and seeing how my audience is reacting to it. I know that's that's what they want.
But just like anything else, I feel like what the listener hears is typically like six months
to a year being held before it's released. So they're never, I don't think actually on time to what's
relevant like right now in this moment.
It's always going to be a little bit delayed.
What's the best song,
their most receptive to when you're performing?
Oh, that's a good one.
It depends because I got a lot of different kinds of songs.
So energy-wise, I've been performing a couple new ones of my,
I've got a project that's about to come out.
They've been going crazy to.
that but my single lower is that's that's the one where people start crying like I've had insane
reactions to that song it's one of my one of my favorites actually it's an acoustic song so I've been
I'll take the guitar out and play it on just live acoustic and it really you can see it just strikes
people different like the emotion in the crowd yeah with the people with the girls like if you have
if you got music and they make it didn't make you
cry? Yeah. Dude, that's on a different level. Yeah, I agree. I think it's, it's amazing,
honestly. I've had, I've had people, my last tour, someone, he got, he got the same tattoo as me.
He wanted, drew it on him, and he tattooed it, and this shit is very surreal to me.
Like, it shows, like, people are, they're really attached. Like, it's awesome.
Who are some of your, um, musical inspirations?
now though not you know what i'm saying yeah right to this date i mean of course i gotta go in my
the homie caskey his work ethic is insane but you know duby uh i really really love jelly
roll like his his his grind is incredible like it's insane um but yeah kind of more that that that
that route yellow wolf um you know like the o gs of this shit yeah like like i like i
Yellow Wolf really rapping.
Yeah.
You know, you can appreciate the craft.
You know what I mean?
It's an art form, so you can't.
You got to nod your head to it.
No, yeah, you definitely got a nod your head to that.
You definitely got a nod your head to that.
I mean, the M&Ms and Yellow Wolfs, I fuck with all of that shit.
And I've been getting into on Kenny Hoopla.
His music is crazy.
I like him a lot.
He's kind of like, he's in between.
He's like alternative, does like, rock and,
pop stuff is just dope artists do you feel like do you see yourself like being bigger than like like
like I'm gonna really take this shit over that's the goal uh I could I feel like everybody has that
dream that's always like the dream that makes people want to start start rapping is take it over
um but I wouldn't I wouldn't say yes or no to that I'll just see what happens how important
important his image to you as an artist?
Because a lot of people out here, I mean, you guys artists that don't give a fuck that just wear
sweats and you know, no socks, no shoes.
And then you got niggas that come with jewelry on.
You got your grill on, your whole little thing.
Like, how important is the image?
I think it's a big role when you're in a position that is, you know, you're not that
big yet.
So you really have to stick out and kind of.
solidify your position, you know what I mean?
Let people gravitate towards you.
So I feel like it plays a big role.
I have a clothing company Lost World.
It's about the job.
It's going to go crazy.
So I think it's going to show more of my artistic approach to the fashion and things like that.
So it's going to be crazy.
No, yeah, that's really dope.
Yeah, but I do feel like as far as the, I feel like it's important.
Yeah, the image-wise is definitely, it is definitely important.
You got to have that shit.
And fashion really plays a part, too, like, in rapping, just, like, everyday life.
Because people kind of feel like, you know, I can do that shit, too.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, fact.
I could do that shit, too.
I want to fuck with that shit, too.
So it does really play a part in the music, you know what I mean?
That's kind of why I kind of gravitates more towards, like, Travis Scott and the Kanye's
and the A-Sat Rockies and shit like that because of it.
No, facts.
They're just swaggy, you know what I'm saying?
They're swaggy.
I can see what's going on.
Like, I fuck with what you got on, what you wear.
Like, I've been in tune with this shit.
You feel me?
Appreciate that.
Yeah, I fuck with it.
My face, bro.
I just feel like it's a whole package, you know what I mean?
And no cat who don't feel good when they get fly is fucked.
Can't say you don't feel good.
So I feel like that energy transitions into the music, and you just, it's all good energy.
How are you doing relationship-wise?
You got a girlfriend while you rapping in this shit?
Of course.
Yeah, you do?
Yeah.
So how is temptation out here on the road fucking with these bitches?
I'm just in grind-mover.
It don't phase you at all?
I'm just there to handle business.
You know what I'm saying?
That's it.
That's it.
For the bag.
Yeah, no, for real.
For the bag.
Because when I was out there doing that shit, too, I was single at first.
Yeah.
And it was crazy.
But when you do get a girlfriend and just, like, when you do get a girlfriend and just, like,
like, what the fuck is going on here?
It's kind of about the bag.
Yeah, because it's kind of like, you can't fuck your fans.
Like, you feel me?
That's crazy.
Nah, you can't fuck your fans.
Yeah, that should go south.
Yeah, that shit will go south.
You can't do that shit.
So, like, but what's, you know what I'm saying?
What's new, what you got out new, man?
You know what I'm saying?
What's new for you?
Um, well, I just dropped, like you mentioned before, I dropped my new single,
feel right?
It's going crazy.
It's doing real good.
People are gravitating towards it.
They're liking it.
They're really kind of just appreciating
the artistic approach to the music.
Just fusing the rock and the rap together
is kind of just, you kind of got no choice
with the fuck of it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
As far as visual-wise,
do you come up with your own treatments
and you have your own ideas for videos?
Yeah.
Yeah.
It'll be a mix.
Like, I'll come up with.
with the idea and I'll either sit down with my manager and my videographer and we'll kind of,
you know, really paint it and put it together and make a, make something that we could be
proud of.
Yeah, because the visual forfeeling, that was a really good visual, too.
Thank you.
Yeah, like the treatments.
Yeah.
You got to have your treatments right.
That's one thing, too, again.
Like, those videos are very, very important.
It's crazy, too, because I know you're seeing the video, I had to pull full of cups.
That was an Airbnb.
I got the shot.
like a millisecond after the last shot, they were like, you guys got to go.
They kicked me out quick.
Out the Airbnb?
Yeah, I was only there for like an hour, bro, and I got kicked out so fast.
Like, why the fuck they be doing that shit?
Why they be doing that shit?
I don't know, but we got what we needed.
Yeah.
Like, did you put the budget behind that?
Of course.
Out of your pocket?
No, that's sick.
I handle everything on that end.
I feel like it's, uh...
How much do a video typically can cost you?
I mean, it just depends anywhere between like two to five.
Two to five.
Yeah, that's cool.
You know, I feel like as an independent artist is more about being consistent
as opposed to like spending all your money on like one masterpiece.
Like you want to keep feeding them.
So if you can just keep putting out content and it's good at a good price, feed the people.
No, that's good because, yeah, some people really don't give a fuck anywhere.
Yeah.
One camera phone, cut, cut, cut, cut, cut.
Not times out of ten, bro.
They're watching it on their phone.
So they don't even get like the full picture, like putting it on a screen.
And, you know, so they're not like, people are like, oh, I got a 7K video.
Like, what is that matter?
Like, they're going to watch that shit in 1080.
Because I don't even think YouTube can go past that.
That's what I'm saying.
It's crazy.
You can't even go past that shit.
Like, yeah, bro.
Yeah, like where you kind of like a, um.
The chat guy, like, are just looking at YouTube, looking at pods and shit like that,
like looking at Adam as far as, like, inspiration and shit, too, like, growing up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, definitely.
That's dope.
You know what I'm saying?
That's dope.
You feel what I mean?
I kind of came here, too.
You feel me, fucking with that, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, and build inspiration from that.
That's one of the, the, I think the best parts about being an artist and entering the industry is, like, growing up.
on certain people that you watch
and then you actually get to, you know,
rough shoulders with them,
get in the same room and connect.
And it really shows you
you're kind of taking those steps
to follow your path.
Yeah, because I feel like
you're an artist that's going to really grow.
And I feel like, on your return back here,
you feel like, you know, you should speak to him.
You feel like me and fuck with him.
Oh, God.
Yeah, he definitely, you know what I'm saying?
No, man, Adam. Adam's a man, bro.
Yeah.
He's a goat.
Yeah, he's one of those guys, you feel me, that I've got.
Sure.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying?
I think you'll be back here, you feel me?
Yeah, definitely, man.
As long as the invitations extended, I'm here.
Yeah.
You already know, man.
But, yeah, before we get out of here, I just want to, you know,
I want you to let the people know what you got coming up,
what you got coming up next any exclusive shit you know what I'm saying shout out your
Instagram YouTube yeah yeah definitely everything you got going on yeah like I was saying
before I got a new project it's about to be everywhere on release days coming soon it's
called conversations with myself on I release a couple singles already lower and feel right so
that kind of shows the direction I'm going with the music I got a lot of stuff coming in
the cannabis industry make sure you follow airborne farms
New dispensary about to open in Tulsa going crazy airborne OG is about to drop everywhere multiple dispensaries
And you know I'm I'm I'm just seeing what's next I'm on the grind so it's whatever comes next
I'm ready yes sir good vibes man oh gosh yes sir all right y'all we up out of here man
Nice having my boy Cameron in the building you know I'm saying and we go
