No Jumper - Molly Brazy on Motherhood, Beefing With Girl Rappers, Social Media & More
Episode Date: February 3, 2021Molly Brazy talks in depth with Adam about her childhood, growing up in Detroit, family dynamic, motherhood, how her career started to blossom, her creative process, her relationship with Cuban Doll a...nd announces her upcoming project! https://www.instagram.com/mollybrazy/ ----- CHECK OUT OUR NEW SPOTIFY PLAYLIST https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5tesvmDS8h50LkjnSAWMOs?si=j6sJD6DkR4mk5NZZWnlK7g FOLLOW US ON SNAPCHAT FOR THE LATEST NEWS & UPDATES https://www.snapchat.com/discover/No_Jumper/4874336901 CHECK OUT OUR ONLINE STORE!!! http://www.nojumper.com/ SUBSCRIBE for new interviews (and more) weekly: http://bit.ly/nastymondayz Follow us on Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/nojumper iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/no-jumper/id1001659715?mt=2 Follow us on Social Media: https://www.snapchat.com/discover/No_Jumper/4874336901 http://www.twitter.com/nojumper http://www.instagram.com/nojumper https://www.facebook.com/NOJUMPEROFFICIAL 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
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No Jumper. Coolest podcast on the world.
And today we got the one and only Molly Brazy in the building.
How are you feeling?
I'm feeling good.
How are you?
Excellent.
It's a good day.
How old is your kid?
He is three months now.
I'm going to be four.
My kid is two and a half months old.
Really?
When did you have?
Two and a half months ago?
Like what month?
November 14th.
November 14th.
I had my baby October 1st.
Right.
So who's the death?
Who is the dad?
Yeah, you got a secret boyfriend we don't know about or is this,
did it just happen or was this a whole big plan?
Oh, see, I don't know.
I'm kind of in the, who's your boyfriend?
His name is Martiz.
He, you know, like, you know, not a celebrity and stuff.
Okay.
But if you're deep in the Molly Brazy world, you know?
Yeah.
Okay.
Definitely.
Damn.
So how's that going for you?
Like, how is me and the baby?
Yeah, just like how's the whole experience, Ben?
I feel like that's fucking, it's got to be a huge change in your life.
Yes, but it's lit, though.
like he is like everything you know like everything happened for a reason so I feel like he came at
the perfect time where I need like motivation and stuff so it's like we like best friends all right
it kind of changes everything about how you view the world you know everything everything all of a sudden
shit's way more serious yes oh my goodness I feel like I wasn't like all that worried about dying before
but I said the same thing right because you're like if I die that would be so fucked up because my kid
Like, what are they going to do?
Right.
I say, like, what I said was I value life more.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
For sure.
Because you got somebody you got to live for.
Definitely.
So that was your first one?
Yeah.
Okay.
Very exciting.
How old are?
I'm 21.
21.
22 next month.
Holy shit.
I feel like I'm known about you for way too long, but I guess it's not that out of
an ordinary to know about a rapper when they're, like, 17 these days.
Yeah.
I started real early.
Yeah.
Definitely.
Okay.
Tell me a little bit more.
Maybe we can get back to the baby talk towards the end.
but tell me a little bit about your upbringing and what you were like as a kid and everything.
As a kid, I was just like, I was a tomboy.
I was big on the tomboy, you know, like I was, I have all brothers.
So, like, I was always following them around and, like, doing the things they was doing into the things they was into.
And it's like, what started me is they used to, like, freestyle and rap towards each other, but be talking shit.
And I tried it one time.
That's why I don't freestyle anymore, because I tried it one time I said some bullshit,
whatever just came to my head.
And it just fucked me up for life.
So I just never said it, never freestyle again.
Wow, you lost your freestyle confidence right there?
How old were you?
You're probably so young.
Yeah, I was like 14.
Yeah.
I definitely can relate to that.
I remember back when I was a kid, like somebody trying to like do something similar
where they like had a beat going and they asked me like, do you, honestly, that might be a huge
part why I never rapped.
Is that kind of like froze?
Yeah.
Didn't sound good at all.
I was just like, I'm never trying to like.
Right.
That's how I be.
So were your brother's like super masculine energy?
And do you think that that had a big ass impact on you?
Yes, they was very overprotective about everything that I did.
So it was like once they went to jail and stuff, like that's when I start like, you know,
taking routes on my own.
Like I start going to the studio or I just write a wrap in my phone and just, you know,
just wrap it out out just for fun because that's what we used to do and I can't do that with them no more, you know.
But they all got locked up.
Yeah.
For the same thing or for different shit over the years?
Three of them did for the same thing.
They didn't want.
Really?
And they've been gone for years and years?
And like how long of a sentence are we talking?
I had my brothers in the ninth grade, so 10th grade they left.
10th grade?
Damn.
So you're 22.
So that's about six years already?
I think six years.
I don't really want to count because of how many years they do have.
Right.
Wow.
So was that huge when that happened?
And like...
That was very huge.
Those was my best friends.
Like, I don't...
I didn't need friends when I had my brothers, you know?
Right.
And they really taught me life.
And you know, they boys at that.
So they was like, you know, always fucking hos and stuff like that.
So they didn't want me to be those hoes.
So they was like big on me about everything.
That's interesting.
How do you think that that impression of, you know,
women kind, like, affected you because, you know...
I feel like I wouldn't be as confident if, um,
I took a different route.
Like, if they wasn't like that, like, yeah, I hated it in the moment.
Because, of course, I want to like boys.
I want to, you know, feel attractive and stuff.
But anybody I liked or if they heard that they like me,
they would literally, like, beat them up, like, real bad.
Like, beat the fuck out of them.
Like, even if they hear that we like each other.
So it's like, you know, in the industry,
when you're trying to get a feature or something like that,
niggas is going to come at you like, yeah, we can do the feature,
but pull up to here, you know, shit like that.
Like, just trying to talk to you.
They didn't really trying to do music and shit.
Right.
So that.
on high alert for that from early on.
Yeah, I feel like it really helped me, you know.
Yeah, because when I think about what it would be like to be, you know,
now that I have a daughter, I kind of like think about the advice that I'm going to give her
when she gets old enough to need the advice.
And when I think about the older brother role and everything, it's kind of like,
there's just so much shit that you're going to have to warn a girl about.
Because if you are going into this shit, very Pollyanna-esque and thinking that you're going to
like be, everybody's just going to appreciate you for who you are as a person and
everything. I mean, there's just so many scenarios that you would want to warn a girl about
before she ended up in those scenarios, right? Yep. And definitely because of Instagram and everything,
like, you're already exposed to a lot of things. So I feel like the best you can do with a girl,
you can, like, just make her feel really comfortable to tell you anything where she don't have
to sneak around and do things. If she's sneaky, then that's when it's going to get bad, you know?
If with boys, you know, he can never do anything, but I know the streets, so I know how to tell
him how to move, you know, that's the only thing I'm worried about him. It's not about holes or anything like
that but him moving a certain way and not trying to you know he of course he's going to listen to my old
music and be like you know but i'm going to definitely warn him about you know what he up against
especially in today you know with everything going on so when your brothers got locked up did if
i'm paying attention correctly here it's like they get locked up and then your music starts popping
off like not too long after that no i never was rapping when they was out like i never did it
before i just had rapsed in my phone and then um the day i got kicked out of
school, I recorded it because I was at home early as fuck and nothing to do, everybody
gone. So I just recorded it on some board shit, uploaded it and it went viral.
And then every sense, like, rappers I was listening to in my city, they was hitting me up
to do songs and getting the studio and shit.
So after that, I start going to the studio with them, making songs.
First song I dropped hit a million in, like, I want to say two weeks, two to three weeks.
It hit a million, like, fast.
So then I kept doing music.
I already had a fan base from doing free stuff.
on Instagram. Oh, okay. But when you say freestyle, you're saying, like,
written to other people's beats? Yeah, like I would remix. I always used to remix,
like, Young Thug and, like, beats I find, like, Detroit Beats on the internet and shit.
Interesting. So do you think, like, when your brother's left, looking back on it now, though,
do you feel, like, how did that affect you emotionally? Because they were, like, a very much,
like, your security team, your, your safety blanket. They were kind of probably protecting you
from a lot of the bad things around. And then all of a sudden, they're gone. Like, how did that affect
to you and how did you adapt?
It affected everything about me.
I ain't going to lie.
Like I was barely able to function and do things when it was early, you know, going on.
But how I dealt with it is like, you know, I talked to them every day when the coronavirus
wasn't out.
I was able to go see them.
That helped a lot.
But I feel like if they, if, you know, things happen for a reason.
So if they was here, I wouldn't be doing shit.
I would, I would just have them like they would, you know,
provide everything. So it changed for the good and the bad. Like, how can I put this? Okay, well, I lost
my dad early in my life. I lost him very young. So dealing with a death that close, like,
you know, people passed away in your life. But, and you were, you were close to your father?
Very close. Like, that was my best friend. And how old were you when he passed? I was like seven
years old. What happened? So he got shot 17 times. Wow. Yeah. So that was really, really hard on me.
And I couldn't see him when, when everything was happening and stuff. So I felt just,
lost like you know we had the closest relationship out of everybody so um dealing with that kind of made
it a little easier on me just because you were i mean not easier but you were already kind of numb
to that pain or losing someone you're close to right now it's bad like you know i don't even like
going to funeral or none of the type of shit because it's like can't do this shit no more you know
yeah well but what's your mom the relationship with your mom like oh we are best friends like
that's that's my baby because um she she she was
was into the street shit too, you know?
When I started rapping, I kind of took her away
from that. So, you know, that
motivating me also, you know,
her just coming
from that, like, you can get over those type of
things and her boyfriend died.
I want to say, the year
that I got signed, yeah, right before I got
signed, he passed away.
They was always together. A couple years after
your father passed? Not a couple
years, because that's when I first
started rapping, so I was like 16, 17,
he passed away. Okay, right.
And the things that was going on in the city, I just had to get out of there.
And it's like, God always got something going on for me in store.
And it's like, when something really bad happened to me, something really good happened to me.
Yeah, I guess it does seem like that, huh?
Damn.
That's super sad.
I'm sorry you had to go through that.
In terms of your overall growing up in Detroit, though, like, you know, you're saying your dad was kind of wrapped up in the streets.
Your mom was into that.
Like, were you exposed to a lot of crazy shit?
when you were young, did it very much?
Definitely.
You grew up with knowing that all this wild stuff
was right outside your door.
Definitely.
I was always ahead of my time.
Like always, people always told me that new people.
I met, they always were like, you ahead of your time.
How you know that?
Stuff like that.
Why do you think that was?
Because I was exposed to so much when I was younger, like, you know.
But my mom, she don't sugarcoat shit.
Like, she's going to tell you how it is.
Even if it hurts, she's going to tell you.
So I was never like,
I'm very open-minded, let's just say that, to everything that's going on.
You didn't have the luxury of being naive or of thinking that everything was sweet.
Yes.
That got taken away from you at a very young age.
At a very young age.
I don't even remember when I thought she was sweet.
Right.
Like life just always been fucked up.
But, you know, good things come, but life just to fuck that place, you know.
Definitely.
Were you your mom's support network in a way when that happened to her?
Like, did you feel like that brought you guys together in a sense,
or you all of a sudden had to support her,
and she had to support you, vice versa, through that?
Well, she always supported me and anything that I had going on,
but she was with him a lot, you know?
Like, she was still being in the city while I'm traveling.
Like, he passed away when I was in Atlanta.
I was recording a song with Cuban and Mazzo when it happened.
So, and I actually finished the song, that's crazy.
But he the type of dude, like, his name is Vito, when he passed away.
he always told me, like, no matter what's going on,
you still need to do what you got to do.
Like, he was very motivating, and, like, he showed me the music
that I wanted to listen to for real, like, you know, like, new music.
Right.
Now, I'm hearing you talk about music, it seems like the local Detroit music
was kind of your influence-based more than a lot of times you talk to kids,
and even if they're from New York or Atlanta, like, it doesn't,
they just listen to the top artists on the radio or on MTV or YouTube, whatever.
But you were, like, naming off, like,
yeah, I grew up listening to band gang, and I'm like, oh, shit.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Like, you sort of grew up with, like, a different set of references, I guess.
Yeah, like, when I was younger, my mom, she used to play, like, Trina.
I remember knowing Trina songs when I was, like, I was definitely in elementary school.
Going to that bitch, like, got an ass so big.
Like, on some bullshit, just because it's my mom.
Right.
Yeah, they just always listen to explicit music.
Wow, that's dope.
would you play
and this is a totally off topic
from the story of your life right here
but there was that controversy recently
where Cardi B was listening to Wop
on live I think and her kid came in
and she immediately turned it off
and she's like oh you can't hear that
and a lot of people were like
oh like you know how is it okay for our kids
to have to hear this shit
and you don't even want your own kid hearing it
which to me sounded insane because it's like
listen people make porn
exactly it's not for kids
this is an understanding that they make
porn it's for adults you don't show the
kids that that's it. Wop is not porn, but it's certainly, you know, it's edited on the radio for a
reason. It's like, you know, you're not supposed to play, you know, the same reason I grew up
listening to NWA. It's like if I had a fucking three-year-old, I probably wouldn't want to listen
to him, I wouldn't want him listening to E talking about shooting people and shit, you know?
Yeah. Well, how I feel about that is them your kids, so, you know, if you don't want your kids
listening to that, don't let them listen to that, you know what I'm saying? But it's like at the end
of the day, they're still going to get out here and they're going to hear it. So why not hear from you?
then hearing it when they were with somebody else,
then they come back home like,
get a bucket and a mom.
Then you're like, what the fuck?
Like, hold on when you learned at, hey,
I told you you couldn't listen to that.
But I had friends growing up, they was like,
I'll be playing something.
They'd be like, oh, my mom don't let me listen to that.
You know, I'll turn it off.
Like, I ain't tripped, you know what I'm saying?
But it's just about how you were raised.
Like, if you scared of your people,
which is good when you're scared of your mom
because she can really, you know,
even when you're out of her sight,
you still remember what she would do to you.
if she saw you doing what you're doing.
So some people, when they are away from their parents,
they'll be like, you know, I can't listen to that.
You got to turn that off, you know.
Right.
No, yeah, I've thought about that a lot because my girl is very much like,
oh, like, you know, once she can speak,
I don't want to listen into, I don't want to play this type of music around her and stuff.
And I feel it, but at the same time, I'm kind of like,
isn't it kind of pointless because it's only a matter of time
until she's going to be hit over the head with us all the time?
Exactly.
But it's also kind of like there is a period in their life
where you're just not going to be able to explain.
that the baby says fuck, but you're five years old, so you can't say fuck.
But, you know, basically one day you're going to be able to say fuck, you just have to
make sure you don't say it in front of your teacher.
Yeah.
It's kind of like convoluted.
At the end of the day, it's about how you're raised.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, I was always like, I had manners like a month ago when I was younger.
Like I didn't cuss around my teachers and other adults and stuff.
Like I can cuss around my mama.
Like I always say stuff.
Like, you know, singing a song.
She let me sing a song and say cussing words.
Like other than that, like I can't just be like, bitch, you have.
got me fucked up.
Like, you know, any time of the day.
Yeah.
It was sometimes my mom, it all goes back to how comfortable you make your children around
you.
Like, if your kids grew up, like me, I grew up where I could tell my parents anything,
like, like, first time having sex, I can talk about that.
You weren't scared to tell your mom about it.
There wasn't, like, I'm hiding this.
Like, for me as a kid, I'm hooking up with girls.
I'm fingering some girl when I'm 14.
I would never have told my mom.
No, like that's the best to have that relationship where you can talk about that.
That's where you save yourself because your parents have been through that before so they can tell you how this going to end up.
That's how my mom used to be.
She is like just straight up cut into me like, yeah, you're going to get a disease.
This is going to happen if you do this.
Like, so, you know, it was just already planted in my head.
Like, yeah, let me move right because this happened.
You know, I worry less even about the swearing so much as like the ideas or like the themes.
like, you know, one time, like, because now I got a kid, I'm sitting there listening to music,
and I'm thinking about what they're actually saying, and I'm hearing Rio the young OG say
something about beating his bitch up, and I'm just thinking like, oh, my God, like, I wouldn't,
it would be so hard for me to explain to my kid that he's joking, I guess.
It would be really hard for me to explain that.
So that in itself, it's like, he's fucking around, but it's like, there's nothing that
would suggest to a young kid that he's fucking around.
How are they going to know?
Right.
You know?
They show.
Yeah, I don't know.
But, okay.
Let's go back on track.
So you, you start putting music out, and it's almost like immediately viral.
Wait, can we get a fan?
Because I'm hot as hell.
Oh, yeah, that's a good idea.
I was kind of thinking that, too.
Sorry about that.
You know, because the weather out here is fucked.
A couple days, it was so goddamn hot.
And then today it's just freezing.
But then for some reason, here it's super hot.
Okay, you put your music out and starts kind of blowing up right away,
which is interesting because a lot of times it takes people like a really long time
to have a song do well, never mind their first song.
going viral. What do you think it was that sort of made that happen for you?
I feel like because it was organic. Like, you know, like it just, it wasn't forced.
I didn't come into the music industry like, oh, I've been going through coaching. I've been
wanting to do this my whole life. Like, no, it was just something. I'm just talking about my life.
It's just even when people be like, oh, you got some hard ass bars, like even me and Trina,
and she telling me my shit's so cold and all this. I'm like, wow, I'd just be saying shit,
you know? I just be talking about my life.
Yeah. You're just talking.
you have no idea until people start telling you how good you are or how bad you are then you
don't really know what what other people are going to perceive this shit as right that's interesting yeah
i feel like when you kind of came out is like you had a little bit of that like chief keith type energy
where it's like everybody just sat back and i'm like couldn't believe chief keith when they first song
because it's like how the fuck is he this raw and this from the streets and he's making songs that are
this big and he's blowing up and like you know there's something that was so raw but but also good
musically that just kind of made everybody unable to look away.
I feel like you had a little bit of that effect.
For sure.
I definitely was listening to Chief Kiefer.
That was one of my favorite rappers.
Definitely.
So, okay, how did you even start getting beats in the beginning?
Or how did you actually go about the process of making music?
You just had a microphone?
Beats.
Nah.
Remember I told you I was doing the freestyle, so, like, I already had fans.
Mind you, I'm in Detroit.
So people used to be, like, talking to RJ Lamont about me.
Like, anybody that went around, they said they heard my name before.
And I'm like, how?
What the fuck?
I didn't, I don't understand that because it's like I'm not out here.
I don't have no music out here.
I don't got nothing going on, but y'all know me.
You know, that's weird.
But how I got producers.
RJ Lamont was my first producer, if I'm not mistaken.
Yeah, he was my first producer.
And we just had a relationship.
Like, we was just, it was like he was my big cousin type of relationship.
Like, this nigga gave me his fucking college car.
When I was younger, yes.
And I used to be driving it around.
That's a lot of trust.
man, I would be terrified to give a young girl a car.
My manager at the time was so mad.
He was like, don't get her to car.
And then I'd go back over there and he'd just let me take it.
But our gentleman, we had a relationship and stuff.
So it was different.
John Boy, that was one of my producers.
Hell of a.
We got a close relationship also.
And he's really big in Detroit as a producer.
So then was like my early, you know, who else was it?
Aunt Beats, you heard of him.
And beat some stuff.
But wait, you said you had a manager.
When did that come into place?
And how did that happen?
And when did you realize you needed that?
Well, my manager came into place.
How did he go?
Oh, I knew this boy for a man.
Boy, sounds like you really disrespecting whoever this guy is.
I know this boy for a minute.
And he was a photographer.
Uh-huh.
But when we first talked, he was with GT.
And that's one of the rappers that I looked up to.
the city. Even back then.
Even back then. Because somebody like me, I'm just finding out of a GT in like the last year.
Yeah. So that's pretty good.
Yeah. He'd been, you know, out on the scene in Detroit. Like we've been fucking with him for a long
time. So it's like, okay, he FaceTime me. I think he, yeah, he facetime me either in a car
or in the studio with GT. And they're like, yeah, put up to the studio.
Mind you, it's late as hell. I had school the next day. And I never snuck out the house
before. Why sneak the fuck out the house? Because I stayed like, right.
right there where the studio was at.
Like, it was, like, probably, like, two minutes away from my house.
So, snuck out, got the car with these niggas.
Went to the studio.
And after that, like, I really had a relationship with everybody,
and they just wanted me to get in the studio.
Like, we was in the studio to, like, 3 o'clock in the morning.
Snuck back in the house, but, mind you my mama, she was out.
She was in the streets and shit, so she, she was sleep.
She wasn't even there.
No, they was there.
When I was sneaking out the house, there was no chance in hell
that my mom was also just going to be outside the house.
My mama, like, any little noise, if she knocked out snoring, you make a little noise, she's going to wake up.
Really?
So I had to, like, do some super spy gadget type shit and just get the fuck out of there.
But that's what set my shit off for real.
Like, that's my first time going to the studio, recording anything, meeting rappers, you know, all of that, the whole, everything, that night.
How was it overall, though?
Was that all of a sudden you were just way more motivated to do this?
Definitely way more motivated, but that's where I met my manager.
That's where I was getting at.
That's where I met my manager at the time.
Yeah, he was there.
That's where they took me to his studio.
And he just like, you got that shit.
Like, you need to work.
Did you feel like being around all these rappers and stuff?
Did you feel like there was an extent where people trying to sign you?
Did you feel like people were maybe having bad intentions for you
or wanting to, I don't know, getting involved in your career or whatever?
This might be like L.A.
Me speaking because that's what happens in L.A.
If there's like a talented artist, you just have all these fucking just vultz.
just all over them?
Definitely. But when I was younger, I didn't know nothing about that.
I didn't know nothing about the business side.
I didn't know nothing about making money for music.
Didn't know nothing about none of this.
So it really fucked me up, you know?
Like the first things you go through and it's like I was so loyal to my manager.
Like I loved him.
I thought we was going, you know, get rich as fuck together when I did start seeing a little
money from me, you know?
And then finding out things, you know, it really fucks you up.
Like, you know, it kind of intimidated me with the,
music shit. I barely wanted to go to the studio. I barely wanted to make music anymore.
Like, I just lost my passion for it because it's like it's motherfuckers that really want to
just have you around to make money off of you and not support you or anything that you,
you know, I had real life problems. Like, you know, mind you, I told you, he passed away when
my career first, like, was jumping off and shit. So it's like, I don't know, like that nigga.
No, I feel you though. But that, that's why, honestly, like, I've had this conversation with a lot of people
the music business, but you've got to do good business.
Because if you are out of your screwing people, I mean...
It's like I really just did not understand why, because it's like...
It was so many people around him.
He had taken me places, and people would be like, oh, you know, I can manage you.
I can get you on this.
I can get you on that.
And I'm like, no, you feel me, I got a manager.
Like, I used to get mad at people for saying shit to me.
Like, people was trying to warn me, like his...
I mean, I didn't say that.
But people that was around was trying to warn me.
like you know you should be on this site and you can get money for this and that and that and
I'm like no I'm pretty sure it's already set up you know just trusting him in everything like not
even asking him like so what about this or you know like oh I just heard this is this true you know
none of that because I was just rocking with him and I thought he was rocking with me you're young
and you want to trust people and you feel like you could just take a step back in reality
you handle the business side I'm gonna just rap that's what I was thinking I just wanted to make music
right definitely so do you feel like that kind of slowed your career up at some point
It definitely slowed my career up because, you know, having to fire them, leaving, anything like that.
You got to get the team back up because that's when I know about the business shit.
Once I left, I'm like, okay, now I got to get on this business shit.
I can't let nobody fucking play with me.
Then my producer I was working with at the time, Pooh Beats, he introduced me to my next manager after that.
And everything was just so perfect.
Like, it was just a fucking dream come true.
but things that's too perfect don't be what it seemed.
It don't be, you know, it's always something to it.
How did that one not work up?
I feel like it was communication.
Really?
That didn't really work too much.
Not communication on my end, but, you know,
I didn't know a lot of things that was going on at the time.
That's the only thing that, you know, I would say about that relationship,
but I still love all of them.
Like, I really do love them, but it's just like, you know,
things happen. It's crazy because it just occurs to me that when you have a new artist,
you could either, if you're a, you know, a manager or if you're another artist,
or if you're trying to make it your business assigned young artists,
it's like you could so easily have the biggest most positive effect on their career or the
most negative effect on their career. And I hate when I see people take advantage of that
and abuse that privilege. And it's kind of corny because I already mentioned them.
But when I was talking to Rio recently, he said he's talking about Pizzi.
how when he first met with PZE, PZE
he showed him a fucking tune core check
and showed him like how he was going to people's spots
and like linking up with them and doing features and stuff
and just gave him the whole game.
And that right there is like, you know,
it almost brought a tear to my eye.
Honestly, listen to him and say that
because I'm like, this motherfucker didn't have to
and he put you on the whole game
and turned you into an entrepreneur.
And that's just such a beautiful thing to me.
And when I see the opposite of that,
which is to, you know,
maybe you're on okay terms with some of them,
but sounds like kind of you,
had sort of an opposite experience.
And I just think that's like the saddest thing.
Yeah, because at the end of the day, I would say, like, pooh, that's my brother.
Like, I love him so much.
And I know that wasn't his intentions, you know, but it's just so much you can control.
It's just so much you can do to, you know, because we was on the same team.
We had the same manager and everything.
It was times I was looking at him, like, so you ain't on this one?
You just playing with me or, like, what's going on?
But he really didn't know.
I feel you. Yeah, I mean, if you're just ignorant, that is one thing. But if you're kind of like inherently trying to like, you know, if you really want to take advantage of someone, you're just going to keep them cut off from the outside world as much as possible, you know, and you kind of see a lot of people sort of going in that direction at times.
Okay, but so your career, though, like, once you really start popping and everything, what were like the biggest moments around that time or when did it really start to hit you? Like, damn, people are really fucking with me.
That's hard.
When I did my first show.
Really?
Where was that?
In Detroit.
It was definitely in Detroit.
I wouldn't say it was at a fucking high school.
I was doing like a little high school tour.
I don't know if that was my, yeah, I think.
I'm going to say that was my first show.
I was going on like a little high school tour and every fucking school was like screaming.
Really?
I never saw that before my life.
And I'm like, I never met you.
I never talked to my fans.
was I never did a meet and greet before it is.
I never, like, I never knew.
And it's like going into them auditoriums,
I think it was a fucking, what is it, prep rally.
Okay.
So they had me come and perform.
Man, they was going crazy,
standing up, throwing each other over the damn bitches and shit.
I'm like, wow.
It was one show I did.
Like, they all just ran out the bleachers
as soon as I came on the thing.
And, you know, being in high school,
you know how pep rallies go.
You can't run out the damn stands.
You can't do that.
Yeah.
But they was on my ass.
they ran out there, man, I was so happy.
I wanted to cry. I ain't allowed, but I'm too gangster for that.
They can't see me crying.
That's a special kind of energy, too, though,
knowing that these young-ass high school kids
who realistically, like,
whatever they like musically,
it's so raw, and it's not necessarily
the same way when you look at, like, a 30-year-old
person listening to music where it's just music.
But they can relate.
They've been into a million bands
or a million rappers throughout their life and stuff,
but when you have, like, a 16-year-old,
and you're the one thing that they care about
in the world. That's a special type of fan. It's a special type of fan. It's just, that was a very
amazing feeling. I remember I had a fucking show. I keep kissing. I had a show. You can swear as much
you want, just for the record. I had a show, it was a girl's sweet 16, I want to say. I didn't
want to go at first. I didn't want to go. I didn't want to go because I'm like, I'm cussing. I'm saying
all this. I know she got young friends and I don't really, especially when it comes to females,
I was like, yeah, I grew up this type of way, and I was always into this, but I don't really want y'all to be doing that.
It's not that I don't want.
I don't really like when people, I like when people look up to me now because it's more positive.
Like, I got more, you know, positive things to talk about.
But back then, like, it was all, like, I was just, my head was just all over the place.
And the things that I went through, I wouldn't want nobody to go through that.
So it's like, for them to be so into it, I didn't want to go to her birthday party.
But when I pulled up, when I say all of these little girls was just screaming,
like, I just saw one girl crying, but I heard another girl crying like in the back of the crowd.
Like, oh, my God, I just want to hug her.
So the girl I saw, I gave her a hug, and she just started falling to the ground.
Like, it was crazy.
I'm like, wow, like how much power, you know, you can have from making music.
That's crazy, though, because do you feel like, well, I feel like, to a certain extent,
When you blew up, a big part of why you blew up is because it's like, oh, look at this
young pretty girl who looks kind of sweet and looks nice, but then she's rapping, she's
really talking about some sort of crazy shit.
I love that.
I love going to a fucking show.
And they, like, it'd be people behind the scenes that don't know me or something.
Like, it'd be older people.
And they be like, what are you from to sing?
What you sing?
I'm like, nah, just watch me.
Yeah.
Get on stage when I get off.
They'd be like, oh, my God.
I was not.
expecting that like yeah don't play with her okay that's funny no yeah definitely but okay so at a certain
point though like when you're doing a sweet 16 thing that's got to sort of make you realize like this
business is me showing this crazy as raw side of myself where I'm talking about all the shit that
I ever seen in the streets or whatever and I'm selling it back to kids who never been through that
who look at it like this shit's a fucking movie and if I'm talking about seeing some crazy shit go down
they have no fucking possibility of ever seeing something like that in their life
but somehow they're really attracted to the fact that you can speak about that authentically
they well mostly in Detroit
there's other places they're like can you talk about love can you talk about this
then I make a love song everybody in Detroit why the fuck you want that sweet shit
I want to hear that drill shit like damn my nigga can I just make music like what the
fuck right you know what I'm saying but it's cool though you know it's cool you know
just being myself making music how I want to make it,
but introducing them to that lifestyle
if they don't know about it,
I don't really expect them to relate, you know?
Some people just like to turn up and just say harsh shit.
But those kids, like, they might not even, like,
know what they're listening to,
but when they listen to Amigos song
and they're talking about, well, I don't know,
amigos are the most violent talking dudes or whatever,
but if they listen to Gangster Out Music,
they like the way it sounds
when people are talking about pulling up
and spraying up the block or whatever,
but if you're somebody who's actually
like been around that energy
you know it's not a joke
you know it's not fun to have your fucking block shot up
but from your perspective
you've seen a lot more of it so is that kind of
a tough decision
at times? Sometimes
because
it'd be people
that I know
ain't like that
and they
are a gigantic percentage
of the rap industry
yeah
gigantic
let's be real
and it's like they got so much
respect and that's because of the internet you know my fuckers don't know this internet should be
fake his head like i don't even post like that i don't i'm not really i've never been a social
person like i'm not like that but i have fans at the end of day so i have to be like that
i got these bathroom oh yeah for sure we can take a break for the people at home we did a little
pee break and then we were listening to throat baby but i feel like a big part of what made the
people pay attention to it at first though was the fact that it was just they're saying throat
baby like the shock factor i think helps a lot with making people attracted to that song but one is
catchy too i like go baby better like go baby like my nigga you know it give me out like okay
but i like it reminds me in the 90s when like all the best songs were like offensive but then they
had the censored versions you know that's what i think it's kind of cool yeah let me ask you that though
do you think that that kind of song in any way like like you you don't i feel like
like you don't like get overtly sexual in your music so much that song is very much like doing it
for women it's like a dude who made a song that's basically like encouraging women to be proud of
their throat game for lack of a better term how do you feel about it how i feel like how do i feel
about the what he's saying or sure like the topic that he's talking about yeah i don't suck
dicks so i don't know for real at all yeah these niggas be wow how do you have a baby
Maybe. That's different. I've been with him for a long time. Like, that's different. He's going to get that work. But, you know, any other nigga, like, you know, it's just different. Like, you know, I don't suck dick.
That's your attitude is that that that's like the golden goose. Like, that's just the prize thing that very, very few people ever get to his friends.
I feel like you got to earn it. Dennis nigga's saying throat babies. So, I mean, he's nothing in the bitch mouth. Like, I don't know. That's too much too much. That's like spitting in somebody mouth.
I know. I've seen what you got going on. You know what I'm saying?
Oh shit. Call down. Oh, man. That's funny as fuck.
Okay, well, let's continue on that subject, though. Like, could you see, do you think that you
would be good at making music like that? That's like purely sexual energy.
I made some freaky-ass music, like, definitely. But that's not what my fans look at me for.
So, yes, I made this freaky-ass song. I don't think I ever put it out, though. Yeah. The most
freaky song I made, I didn't put it out, but I got a new song coming out on my, on my EP
I'm dropping Pink Molly. It is, it's called Fuck Me to the Beat, but I got to change the name
because, you know, it ain't going to go. You're not going to, like, put an asterisk, like F, asterisk,
C, K to the beat? That's a long-asserts title.
It's not really making it any longer, but yeah. It's long, but I feel like, I don't really
like my names of the songs to match the song.
which is interesting because I always feel like that in rap
throughout rap history people have mostly like named the song after what they're
saying on the hook of the song.
I feel like that's regular.
I don't like being regular.
I feel like young nudie is one of the only people I've seen who just names the songs,
things that have absolutely nothing to do with the song.
Chris Brown did it for me.
Really?
Yeah.
He named a song something that wasn't even, it had something to do with it like
all together, but it wasn't the name of it.
Like, he didn't say that word in the song at all.
Interesting.
I like that.
It's, like, artistic for me.
What do you have playing for this EP that you're talking about?
Like, what's the artistic statement that you're trying to make about your career these days?
Okay, well, my new EP is kind of like a stepping stone for my album.
But this is going to be, like, way different, Molly.
Like, this is, okay, my album never been my baby before because it's like I'd just be making music.
and then they be like, oh, I like this one.
I like other people pick the ones that they like,
and then I end up putting it together on the thing
because I'm not going to make no music that I don't like.
I'm not going to keep on recording it if I don't like it.
So, yeah, when other people would be like, oh, yeah,
I like this song, this song, this song, this song,
and then I play it for other people,
and they be like, oh, I like that song, you know, stuff like that,
and I'll put it on a tape, which is this,
like, in the era that we're in right now,
the things that I'm talking about is relatable for right now.
And that's what I want to start doing,
like making more music that's talking about what's going on,
because everybody can relate to it,
everybody's sitting in their house,
we ain't got nothing to do.
We locked down here and there,
you know, stuff like that.
So I want my music from now on
to be in the moment
but things that you can listen to years from now.
Motivational.
I've always grown up loving motivational music,
which is like,
dough boys cash out,
band gang, like,
even though they be talking about
the same shit I be talking about,
it's like it's still messages in that shit
because we're from Detroit
and we understand what we're talking about you,
for me.
It's not all about killing
and oh,
pop your ass shit like that but it's like
pop your ass if you fuck my bag
that's really what it is you know what I'm saying
yeah I feel like it's hard for people to understand that like
music about selling drugs
and scamming and stuff really like
it motivates me to be a better person
or to work harder work harder like
why am I not in this bag you know what the fuck
so that's why I be one of people who listen to my music for like motivation
I mean if people are willing to risk you know
federal charges and dozens of years in prison
to make money it kind of like puts it
perspective of like, oh, maybe I should really go hard on these interviews today.
I should start doing just anything, get my hands into everything.
Because shit, free money is free money.
For sure.
How do you feel about seeing all these female rappers starting only fans?
What do you think of this trend?
Shit, that's free money.
Just like the scammers, like just because, like, the same pictures I put on Instagram,
I could put on OnlyFans and make a bag.
But I got a baby, so I can't have OnlyFans.
I don't know.
My girl would tell you differently.
I just feel like if I had the only fans and I'm a celebrity,
motherfucker's going to screen record my shit.
They're going to pay for it screen recording and put it on a regular internet.
Why the fuck would I do that?
But you could be like Ruby Rose.
Well, I'm not going to say she's not showing shit,
but she's definitely showing her pussy or her nipples.
But I show shit on Instagram.
So it's like, what's the difference?
Do you think that it would cause people to put you in a different category
and maybe not really check for your music like that?
No.
I feel like they definitely put you in a different category.
category, but it depends on how you feel about it.
I don't give a fuck about what nobody got to say at the end of the day.
It's just me with having the only fans.
It's just not where my head is at right now.
Like, I look at my baby like the little sweetheart.
Like, he's so innocent.
And I don't want him to grow up.
Like, he already got to see the other shit that I was doing on the fucking internet.
So it's like, you know, why add to it?
Let me just be a grown woman.
I have a baby now.
Let me step it up a notch.
Let me get my grown woman shit, get in my bag and just take care of my baby.
If you were going to go on tour right now, would you bring the baby with you?
Definitely.
Really?
He loved my meat.
music. When you hear my music, like, when I play him like ABC, okay, just like he was saying earlier, they shouldn't listen to this, certain shit, this and that. He don't know what the fuck going on right now. But, like, when he was in my stomach and I had a new single coming out and I was really excited about it, I'm like, listen to the song I'm rapping it on live and he kicking the shit out of me. So then I'm like, he must be excited or something. He'd get out. I played the same song again and he like, he had talked during the whole song like he's singing a song. So when I play, he. He's
A, B, C's, one, two, three,
like, little baby stuff, he'd be singing along with it,
like, but, you know, in the baby voice type.
So I'm like, okay, he liked that music.
That means he was, like, in my music,
when he was, you know, kicking me and talking
when he heard my music.
It's crazy hearing how bad they want to talk.
So bad, like, I'm like, what did you say?
Say mama.
You get them really happy, and then you just,
you know what I notice is if you make mad vowel noises,
like, ooh, e, e, that's the easiest shit for them
to sort of get into.
And as soon as you start talking in a monotone,
like, hello, dear, how are you doing today?
I had a nice day at work.
They're like, it doesn't really do it for them because it's not,
they can't really tell that those are different words.
Yeah.
Like, what are you talking about?
Yeah, definitely.
Do you feel like in any way, like the, like, were you worried before the baby?
And are you worried now that this could take away from your career or take away from
what you're trying to do?
Because I see it with my girl that it's hell of hard to balance having a baby and still
trying to have a career and make YouTube video, do whatever.
Like, you know, it's a challenge for sure.
It's a challenge, but it's definitely not.
hard. Like, I expected it to be 10 times worse. Like, I thought that, you know, he would be crying
while I'm trying to do interviews. You can literally look up interviews that I deal on the
internet and he's sitting there just chilling. My baby do not cry unless he hungry, unless he
want to be changed. He cry if he wants to bath. Like, he do stuff like that, but that's like
that's different than, you know, babies just be crying for no reason. They just be, you know,
just all over the place. They got to be held. They got to be catered to. He don't, he, he, to
himself. He don't care if you hold him or not. He'd just be chilling. So he really
make my career like easier with a baby. I see other people they do be struggling with,
you know, balancing those things. But it's really easy for me. I take him to the studio.
He'd be everywhere with me if, you know, if I'm around. Like out of town, you know, this
LA, this is different. I don't want to bring him on a four-hour plane. For no reason. Yeah, for no
reason. He's going to be sitting around. I don't want that. But other than that, he's with me at all
times 24-7. That's a beautiful thing. Just, you know, a lot of people. We're so used to rappers
like not really having that much to do with their kids. So it's like very good to hear you being so
open about it, you know? Yes. And that was one thing that really like touched me with being
pregnant when I was because it's like, how was people going to take this when I come out with
it and then people going to be looking at me like, oh, she's a mother now. Fuck her music. You know,
stuff like that. No. I wanted to show people.
female rappers at that because, okay,
I don't know how to put this,
because last time I talked about abortions,
it just went all over the place,
but I don't really agree with it.
I feel like if you sat there
open your motherfucking legs and let a nigga,
fuck you were all, and he came in you, you know, that type of shit.
You signed up for this.
Like, that baby didn't ask you,
can I come in your belly and beer, baby?
Like, no, that's not what the fuck happened.
You set your ass right there and you did that shit,
so you need to take responsibility for it.
other than that, it's other things that go on, like rape, you know, things like that and, you know, stuff happened out of control.
That's when it's okay.
You know, it's like, cool, but it takes a toll on you as a female.
Through the whole pregnancy, well, through my whole life, I never really, like, thought about abortion that much.
I always thought of it as something like if I had to do it, if I got to go pregnant by accident, I would do it.
Right.
But then when I'm looking at my girl, and she's like six months pregnant, and I'm looking at how fucking big her belly is and just thinking on how far along the kid is,
I would never be able to make that decision
with just acting like, oh, it's all good.
It's all good.
Like, it's a very serious decision.
I don't know how, like, what percentage of people
make that decision so lightly.
Oh, sure.
Yeah.
I know for sure.
Yeah.
Like, it's people that just talk about abortions.
Like, it ain't shit.
Like, bro, I don't know some bitches that fucking got money for abortions
and spent it on something else.
And then come back around like, I'm pregnant.
What's all?
Yeah, that's so real.
I remember back in the day, me and my friend,
hooked up with this girl back in the day.
And then she asked her boyfriend for money to get an abortion,
even though, like, like.
It wasn't his case.
Like, she tricked her boyfriend into nothing inside her and then asked him for money for the-
To get an abortion.
And then, but in reality, she already had, it's kind of gross in retrospect.
It's very gross.
You and your friend than him, you know she could be pregnant.
But all y'all.
There's a whole preschool swimming around in there.
Oh, my God.
You know what?
Baby Cemetery.
Officially.
Cross the line.
No, definitely.
Let me ask you this.
You've beefed with other rappers in the past.
You've been wrapped up
and all kinds of drama and stuff.
Do you think that that stuff is positive for your career?
Is it something you're going to avoid in the future?
How do you feel about that?
First of all, I wasn't beefing with nobody ever.
Yeah, people beefing with you.
Yeah, you know?
That's life.
That's been since before I was rapping,
which is beefing with themselves, you know what I'm saying?
But you say, well, I've already been moving
different, you know? Like, before you would catch me screaming at my phone, doing shit, like,
you know, I got to put everything on the line right now, like, y'all got me fucked up. You know,
I just had a recent situation, and I just had a baby. So it takes a different turn for me. Like,
I'm not about to play with none of y'all bitches. Any of my real ops, I have real ops, not
rap bitches, stuff like that. I have real ops. You would never know. We're not on the internet with
the shit. This is real.
real life, you know?
So that's how I know these rap bitches don't really be with that type of situation.
So I don't take them serious.
If I'm talking to you on the internet, if I say anything about you on internet, I don't
take you serious.
No matter how serious I look, I don't take you serious.
I really come from this shit.
I don't want, you know, looking back at my old YouTube videos and people screaming,
queer my lives and shit, that shit makes me feel like less than myself.
It don't make me feel like Molly Brazy.
Like, that's not me.
I don't know that bitch, but it's the heat of the moment, you know?
You're just going at it.
You just, you just mad.
Like, bitch, you said, this is about me old.
Bitch, you thought I was going to say nothing?
No.
Now I'm a grown-ass woman.
I know what the fuck I can do to people.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like I'm not stunting that shit.
Was there ever a time where you felt like you were really, like,
not in control of the narrative about your career
because you had people making dissons about you
and putting Molly Brazy diss in the title?
You don't have to put that in your own title, right?
Exactly.
Because, bitch, you're getting class.
out of me. I'm not getting clout off you. If I even, if I put your name on their bitch,
you about to be the biggest bitch on the month. You about to be the best rap bitch, period.
You know what I'm saying? Just for me putting your name in my shit. Right. You know what I'm
saying? But it's like, I understand where they're coming from because bitch, if I was
in your position and you was in my position, I'll put your name on that bitch too.
Let me get, let me get, you know, let me, you know, because I'm going to get viewers just
from your name being in this shit. But nowadays, like,
Like, what I'm dealing with, I got so much shit going on when it comes to business.
I want to be a business woman.
I always wanted to be a business woman.
Rap just came along.
I always did it here.
I always was productive.
Like, I've always made money.
So if it don't make no money, it don't make no sense to me.
Like, it's a lot of shit that I can't say that I want to say.
We talk about it later.
But, you know what I'm saying?
Like.
Well, but I mean, you've been depicted by, you know, Internet ops at times.
as being mega savage.
Like a picture of you and what you're willing to do
in a conflict that's sort of been painted of you at times
that definitely even me made me sit back and be like,
Jesus Christ, this girl fucking crazy?
Thoughts.
Thoughts, but you ain't never saw me do no shit.
You ain't never, that's, that's, I'm innocent.
I'm very innocent, especially when it comes to 2021.
I'm very fucking innocent.
I don't, like, I have a son now.
I have things to live for.
before I go out here and do whatever the fuck is on my mind.
Like, I don't give a fuck.
Now it's like I got to move different.
Like, I can't even take care of shit for real, like things that I used to do, you know?
I just got to do other shit and move a different way.
I can't really talk.
I mean, there's just no use in sort of like putting your energy towards beefing.
And in particular, like beef.
And not only that, these bitches don't have nothing to live for.
Right.
They don't have shit to live for.
or they don't even have shit going for themselves.
These bitches never even moved out of their motherfucking city.
Okay?
Yep.
So, you know, I've been grew up since I was like 16 years old.
Yeah, it still fucked with me back then.
I would say something about it now.
I don't give no shits because these bitches don't really be on that shit for real.
Like, I had to learn that from actually linking with bitches off the internet
and they want to talk.
Like, but then when it comes to the internet, the internet is a different place.
and that's what I really want people to understand.
I got to say this.
The internet will make a motherfucker look like something that they're not.
They really don't know what the fuck going on.
It's not about being tough.
It's not about being that bitch or showing what you can do.
Because at the end of the day,
the only thing you're doing is incriminating yourself
if you really that bitch, if you're really about that shit.
The only thing you're doing is letting people know, like,
take me to jail.
Like, bitch, just you talking about this shit,
the feds are looking at you like okay let me see what she really be doing like i had to learn that
early as fuck when i was playing with a toy gun with my look you know i'm gonna but definitely but
i mean also like the internet make bitches think they are something that they're not right until
you got to and what is it that about like you know certain girls in the rap game that seem like
super comfortable like basically snitching on people on the internet and we kind of like it's weird they
They get a pass, I guess.
But like, I've seen people try to blame stuff on you on the internet that I'm like,
whoa, this is like mega dry snitching.
Trying to put it in the way.
It's the clout.
Clout is the new jug now, you know?
So even if bitches don't know what the fuck really going on, they're going to say it because
they're going to get the clout.
It's mostly kids on this shit.
Like, bitch, you're not talking to motherfuckers is going to know what's really going on or
or been through this shit or none of that.
So they're going to come on your page after like, yeah, bitch, you scary as fuck.
he was doing this, you did da-da-da-da-da.
I heard you did this.
Like, girl, you're 12 years old.
Shut the fuck up.
So when you see me on live, like, I just be looking like, I barely even talk to the comments
because, bitch, if I go to your page and you just said I got a big nose, bitch,
your face looked like a motherfucking goblin or some shit.
Like, bitch, you really got, like, fucked up.
And I would feel like less than Molly, motherfucking brazy if I say anything back to you.
You have to start picking your shots about who you're willing to acknowledge at a certain point.
I don't acknowledge none of these bitches because even bitches,
hired me in the fucking rap game
look at my shit
copy my shit
I've even heard bars on the fucking
radio that was my shit that I
wrote months before
and these bitches never acknowledged
me, never said nothing to me and anybody that I
like I'm going to say that to them like oh you
raw as fuck you feel me
no and that's why I feel like that's why
I'm not so far in my career as I could
be but the underdog always
gets it like it always comes
and it's going to motherfucking stay
I don't want to, I did get my career fast.
I did, you know, get popping really fast.
But when it comes to linking with people in industry, stuff like that, that's different.
Like, motherfuckers being intimidated.
I don't have writers.
I write my own shit.
I'm talking about my life.
Can't nobody write my life for me.
So.
For sure.
When people tell me I got writers, I'd be feeling good.
Like, yeah.
Do you feel like you maybe were like a couple years early on,
And like nowadays it feels like everybody's kind of lining up to embrace women in rap.
I feel like you were maybe like a year or two before that really like kind of became this big thing.
You ever feel like sometimes like you're sort of unfairly left out of the conversation in a way because they're all everybody in the industry is about new shit.
Definitely because motherfuckers used to look at me back in the day like, oh, she pretty.
She, you know, she can rap.
Let's put her on some shit.
Now motherfuckers just cute and people will take them off the internet.
Like, let me give you, let me make your image.
Let me give you some bars.
Let me, you rap, and not you a rapper.
I'm gonna take you to the top.
Bidges don't even really be knowing what the fuck going on for it.
I don't even be knowing.
Like, I acknowledge real artist.
Real artist.
Like, I love linking with real artists.
And you're gonna feel that shit through the phone.
Even if you don't know that bitch, you're gonna feel that shit.
Like, bro, this bitch, real.
Like, she really mean what the fuck she's saying?
Ain't nobody writing this for her.
You know what I'm saying?
At the end of the day, I do want to say this.
I don't, I'm not against writers.
I'm not against people that have writers
because you can be in the industry for so long
and you got your own sound now.
So other motherfuckers can be like,
you know, write a rap for you
when it sound like you wrote that shit
because they know your life,
they know how you rhyme,
they know, you know, things like that.
I'm not stunting that.
But it's the bitches that come in the industry
with other people bars.
Them's the things.
You came up on somebody else's bars.
You, you, you, because of somebody else bars.
You know?
That's what fucks me up.
Like, I'm going to have a show when I get real rich.
It's going to be called writer or reciter.
Anybody that I invite on there, they're going to be, it's going to be known.
Like, oh, I'm about to hit up da-da-da-da.
Let's see if she want to get on it.
Because there's a lot of people I sent features to, and they like, oh, I got to wait on my writer.
Bitch, what?
Does that let you down, ma?
Do it let me down?
Yeah, does that make you feel like, damn, like, I think a little less of you now?
Definitely.
But it makes, no, let me take that back.
No, it don't make me feel less of you
because it depends how you came in the industry.
If you came in on your own bars,
you came in writing your own shit,
cool, you can write a rap.
You feel me?
But my whole thing about the show is
I'm gonna call them on camera.
And they'd be like, oh no, I gotta weigh on the,
I gotta do this, I gotta do that.
We know what type of rap for you
is you're a fucking reciter.
You're not a rapper.
It's just interesting when you look at like
the who gets respect in terms of girls
versus who gets respected in terms of dudes
because even though we all know
that there are plenty of rappers
who have writers and stuff
is like in terms of the men
I feel like if you're a guy
who is like notoriously
does not write your shit at all
that you're gonna just very much
be viewed a certain way by other men
but you can tell when a nigger
is not rapping his own shit
you can tell with a nigga
you can't tell with a bitch
you can't tell
because these holes they know how to put
on that voice you can train a bitch
to rap right
you know what I'm saying
like that's just so different for me
like it took a lot of what what is the word it took a lot of um passion out of me out of the rap
shit right like it made me not really want to realize and then you're competing against people
who have basically like have like a whole machine that's kind of like engineering their personality
yeah it may it took the fun out of it for me it's not it's not fair yeah do you relate to somebody
like Meg, who's like very clear, like I write my own shit, period, and I offended by anybody
who suggests otherwise?
Well, I relate to Meg because she, she would tell you like, oh, I ain't write this hook,
you know?
She don't give a fuck.
And that's because she came from writing her own shit.
Like, you can look her up on the internet, you can see her old-ass videos when she was
grinding.
You know she didn't have no fucking writer back then.
You know what I'm saying?
So it's like, I can definitely relate to her.
and I love that she got the recognition that she has right now.
Like, she that bitch for real.
And I like that it's organic.
I mean, when it comes to hooks and stuff, it's like, you know, if you're doing-
You're doing a song with Juicy J and it's like he wants to write the hook, okay, you're
juicy J, you get to write the hook.
It's all good.
But it ain't even that.
Like, that's why I said I'm not against writers or nothing like that because, you know,
it comes to a time where you can't really think as an artist.
Like you don't sit everything you need the motherfucker's say.
And it be, you know, you and you and.
in a studio every week, every day or whatever the case may be, and it just comes a day where you just
stuck, like, what the fuck am I going to say next? And that kind of really occurs me when I moved to
Atlanta. Really? Yeah, because I was rapping about shit I was doing every day. And then you get to
Atlanta and there's more like real music industry shit. Oh, yeah. It ain't about the industry shit.
It's about what I'm doing, you feel me? I ain't know nobody in Atlanta. I'm just out there, you
me but I had to move because of the things my peoples was into you know
motherfuckers my neighbors start knowing me and shit like oh Molly Brazy stayed there and
now I end up finding out motherfuckers sitting in front of my house like I couldn't I
used to walk to the store like I wouldn't drive to store I'll walk to the store no more
motherfucker bro this nigga was following me one time that's when I had to move like he
literally following me driving talking to me like you're Molly Brazy right I heard you a fan
we you know I fuck with you because you were a fan but you
I'm not about to be following me, my nigga.
No, no, that's creepy as fuck.
Man, like...
Being in Atlanta, do you feel like a lot more
like a normal person?
Like, you can just sort of blend in a little bit?
I feel too normal in Atlanta.
Because if I'm not going somewhere,
it's my day-to-day.
You know, my day-to-day lifestyle is, like,
boring as fuck.
I'm used to being on the block.
I'm used to be on my niggas.
I'm used to just...
Being on the block in the hood
is, like, a whole fucking party.
Like, you know, you live in your best life on the block.
And you can kind of see why people basically end up just spending their whole lives kicking in their neighborhood because when you are friends with all these people and everybody just sort of is getting fucked up or doing whatever.
It's like, oh, you could easily just blow 10 years doing that.
Even if the motherfucking block gets shot up, I can go and talk about that shit.
Like, you know, we got some people.
We got a slot on these other.
I can talk about that.
We got this going on.
We just did this.
I can talk about that.
In Atlanta, I don't know.
Nobody, I'm not on the block.
I'm not doing shit.
I'm sitting in the fucking house.
So I'm talking about, you know, the fact that I got motherfucking deer is running through my neighborhood.
I got motherfucking shit.
Nobody know where I stay at.
Motherfuck is, you know, it's just a different type of lifestyle for me.
Like, it's luxury shit.
So now I'm talking about everything that I used to do plus what's going on now.
You know what I'm saying?
So then I had to start going back to the city and just doing me.
Man, going back to the city.
Biches want to prove how tough they is.
And they fuck them up.
you know what I'm saying because it's like bitch I'm me I'm not about to beat your ass no more I'm not
fighting no more it's just bad from here you know right so I just now I got to just try to stay
to try to not be in a city like that but now I got a son but when you go back to take him back
to see his family you got to be real serious about how you move just to be on top of whatever
I don't know because I don't like that shit I don't like security following me around I don't like
people driving me around I want to do my own shit so if I got to move with security
it kind of takes the fun out of it to a certain stand right i don't want to do that shit i want to chill
on the block nobody watching me like my security be on my ass like they staring at me everything
i fucking do i don't like that shit like somebody judge me i don't like people judge me yeah i hear that
um you know i feel like this interview went pretty good i was kind of worried you're going to
walk out on me why because cuban walked out on me that's different you know you had her fucked up
You know you had her fucked out.
You know what's funny, though?
Is this the end of the interview?
Sure, we're winding down.
Okay, well, I thought you was going to come at me on some bullshit.
You're like, oh, I talked around all the Grammy shit that I was talking about earlier.
I just sort of made it vague enough that you couldn't feel like I was an agent.
Yeah, it's about the way you ask it.
It's not about, like, you know, you was different.
You was just straight up, like, saying shit like, you know what you was doing, bro.
Well, yeah, but everybody wanted to know about the situation with Tate-on and whatnot, yeah, I get that, but it's not, nah.
Nah, yeah.
You don't do no shit like that.
Well, with your shit, you know, I got to talk around it because it would sound crazy as fuck if I didn't talk around it.
I figured that was my best bet at getting some information out of you in terms of understanding the mind of Molly Brazy.
Are you still brazy?
Big Brazy.
You know, well, I'm sure you know.
You did a song of my friend, A.D., who does the podcast with me.
Mm-hmm.
And the first thing he said was something about how you're brazy,
but he's a loke, so he's going crazy or some shit.
He always did that to me.
Like, what he said in our song, he said,
Molly Brazy crazy, but I'm spitting on the look.
Right.
But she's spitting on a loke do, some shit like that.
Right.
Okay, cool.
You know, I ain't on a trip.
Probably every time you ever do a song with a Crip rapper for the rest of your life,
they're going to have to make it clear.
Definitely.
But I make it clear, too.
I'm on the brazy song, but I'm not brazy.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, definitely.
That's definitely how I go.
I don't be tripping on that.
I got a lot of looks.
I know you.
I ain't tripping on it.
Okay.
That's good.
It's good enough.
What schedule are we looking at in terms of this project coming out?
Also, can you help me to fix my relationship with Cubendell?
You're putting in a good word for me and be like, hey, Adam was, I'm sorry that I offended you.
I didn't mean it.
See, I'm sorry.
Yes, you do that.
Follow me that.
Okay.
Okay.
I like that.
So I'll help.
Imagine you guys doing the interview together.
That's what I wanted.
That's what I wanted.
I wanted that.
But we on two different sides of LA right now.
So I'm like, fuck, you know.
It would have been, she would have been late as hell, you know.
But we can do it again.
Okay.
We can definitely do it again.
Because our last interview, that bitch went viral.
Like, it's everywhere because we even just laugh.
We just fucked up.
Really?
You guys could walk out together.
Yeah.
No, we ain't walking out.
We ain't walking out.
out shit. But yeah, it was funny. It said that was our first interview we ever did together.
So you got to, you got to catch that vibe. It's lit. Fingers crossed. Definitely.
Okay, so shit you have coming out. What's the game plan?
So, all right, I'm going to drop the date on your shit.
I'm dropping Pink Molly the day after my birthday, which is February 23rd. And I have
merch coming with Pink Molly. It's going to be.
pink everything.
I have something I can't speak on.
Okay, I have a tech deal, which is I have headphones coming out.
I'm going to get you a package.
Wow.
I have headphones coming out.
I have Bluetooth headphones coming out.
I have a speaker, like a portable speaker coming out with Pink Molly.
Some of the kits, like the one I'm going to send you, the one I'm going to send
DJs that's been spending my music, stuff like that.
They're all going to get a kid.
from that merch, all of that.
With that, so I need everybody to stay
tuned for my tech
situation.
That's dope, though. That's good to hear.
Yes, it's called Brazy Bangers,
and they are hard. Like, they are nice-ass headphones,
and they sound really good.
Like, even you can record in the studio with those,
and I don't like chords while I'm recording.
So that's something that helps artists as well.
Wow, changing the game.
Changing the motherfucking game.
More than music.
Mm-hmm.
There it is.
Okay.
Anybody you want to thank?
Anything else we need to know before we wrap us out?
I want to thank Brad, my motherfucker producer.
He's the motherfucking shit.
He is a motherfucking wizard.
Okay?
Like, he, he know me, okay?
Brad, for show.
I want to thank my whole team.
I want to thank Mia.
I want to thank you.
Oh.
I want to thank just all the fans that Brazy Baby is like y'all the shit.
For sure.
I hope my daughter one day has a Molly Brazy poster on the wall or like a t-shirt,
a little baby t-shirt, you know, something like that.
That'd be dope.
I'm going to say her some stuff.
I'm a holiday shoot about the merch, though.
I'll get my girl kidded out in the pink and whatnot.
Yes, you got to get her.
No problem.
I appreciate you coming on.
I appreciate you for having it.
No doubt.
Molly Brazy, No Jumper, coolest podcast in the world.
Take us out on YouTube, SoundCloud, iTunes, like, comment, and subscribe.
Nojumper.com.
if you want to support.
The bullies.
Appreciate you.
