No Jumper - The Baby Stone Gorillas Interview: Growing Up in The Jungles, Dissing Hoods, YG & More
Episode Date: October 26, 2021Baby Stone Gorillas talk about their come up, Travis Scott and YG cosigns, finding their sound and more! https://www.instagram.com/babystonego... https://www.instagram.com/popkornfoek/ https://www.ins...tagram.com/top5ive_____/ https://www.instagram.com/5much_mvp/ https://www.instagram.com/blocckbabby/ ----- NO JUMPER PATREON http://www.patreon.com/nojumper CHECK OUT OUR NEW SPOTIFY PLAYLIST 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
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No Jumper, coolest podcast on the world.
And today we got some of the most up-and-coming talent out of Los Angeles in a very, very long time.
We got the baby some gorilla's in the building.
Yes, sir.
What the fuck going on.
Ganging and shit.
Oh, yeah.
Am I invited to the gender reveal?
That's one thing I want to know.
Yes, sir.
For real?
Because my kid's one-year birthday is coming up soon, too.
And if you want to get the invite, just let me know, because I can throw you on the RSVP list.
Yeah, right.
Maybe some girls in there.
How are you going to feel if it's a girl?
I can't feel
no type of way, but I'm expecting the boy
I mean, having a daughter is great
like people tell me it's easier
you know, the boy's like more aggressive and shit
but I don't know
you feel like you might have
I don't know more in common
more that you could do together
if it's a boy
yeah something like that
girl just gonna be a lot of problems
yeah
I feel you
maybe we should go around
the table and have everybody introduce themselves just to sort of get that out of the way.
You want to start right here?
Yeah.
Babystone gorilla, B4K.
Top five, Babystone Grillas.
He killed off the block, Baby Stone Gorilla.
Far much, BASC.
Okay, and so I guess an important question for us to get out the way is just kind of like
how you guys know each other from early on.
Like when did, because at a certain point you guys were all just doing songs together before
you decided to take on the group name, right?
Yeah. So tell me about how you guys know each other, like from what age?
This is like, this is my family right here. I knew him since fifth grade. We knew him since
he was 13, 12. And shit, we all knew each other. We all grew up in the same area. They grew up
on the east side for a little bit. They connected and then that's when shit. We all just met right
there on 79th. And then shit, it just took off. And, uh, yeah. What was it?
like growing up around where you guys are from. I guess that's kind of like critical question.
Like what was the environment like that you guys sort of grew up in?
Crazy. Yeah. I mean, so it was crazy, but, you know for me? A lot of life I live, I'm saying.
You guys are all from Baldwin Village or just like that area, generally speaking?
Yeah, we're off in the jungle. You guys know about the Jim Gilliam Recreation Center?
Yeah, that's what we grew up at.
For real?
That's where, like, you feel like we're all happening.
It's right there.
Right there on the change.
That's where, yeah, Park Money Boys.
That's parts.
Because, okay, so that baseball diamond right there is like a super famous BMX and skate spot with those green ledges all around it.
You probably seen people there your whole life, right?
Yeah.
And we used to always be out there, and I didn't really, this is like before I was doing no jumper, just riding bikes and stuff.
I'm cool.
And, yeah, like, people used to always tell us, like, certain people would just be like,
like, yo, you know, this is the jungles, right?
This is one of the craziest areas in LA.
And, like, you guys really just out here riding bikes.
Like, you know, something could happen, but, you know,
we never had any issues or whatever.
But that's, like, it's kind of...
Yeah, because people always talking on what they don't know.
Right.
What, people think is more...
It's more...
More trouble than...
Yeah, then, you know, like, you feel me?
What will we go bother innocent people for?
Right.
For me, you must be doing something wrong if we're fucking with you.
Right.
You know, but in the other case, we ain't fucking with nobody.
Just go up out of our day, they go about theirs.
We ain't bullying people.
We ain't running around doing crazy shit.
Right.
She's crazy, but doing those circumstances.
I mean, but we on all that.
We're chilling.
Do you see a bunch of skaters and they got cameras and shit?
That doesn't stand out to you as like, oh, I don't want them in my neighborhood.
No, they be in the back.
Skateboarding.
They skateboarding.
We chill, gang bang.
They skateboard.
They do their thing.
It's everybody at the park doing their thing.
People that jog.
It's people that walk their dogs.
It's people that skateboard.
It's people that they do everything.
Walking through the park occasionally, you know.
We can't stop them from walking through the park.
How we go stop them from walking through it?
That's their regular thing just like we're doing our regular thing.
Right.
Do you kind of like remember being a young kid and when you realize that where you were from
had a real reputation in Los Angeles as being one of the craziest places?
Hell yeah.
She's always born.
Since you were born, that was just kind of something that would always be repeated
or you just understood that?
I'm not going to say it's going to be repeated
because some people don't grow up in it.
I just grew up in it.
So I just seen it, you know, you know, it goes on.
Definitely.
Were you guys rapping when you were real young?
He was.
Tell him.
Y'all are high as fuck already.
Go crazy, yeah.
Let's talk about that man like the the history of you guys like even just rapping at all before you came together
Let's get a little bit of context of that
I was doing beats and stuff in jail
Yeah, I was doing beats like they had like computers
Like laptops to do work when I used to get on a garage band
Do beats and then we like fuck we're gonna rap on them and I made some and we just like we used to like sing songs and shit
I mean it's like something to do in camp because
He's gonna be bored and shit.
Yeah, but then we end up, me and him, we end up, he ended up, like, telling him, like,
let's get in the studio.
We put the money together, we went to, we went to, go to the red rooms, yeah, shot our
red rooms and shit.
We went there, shit, made our first hit.
The homies was feeling it, the show was feeling it.
Peace time.
Like, it went crazy.
Like, it was like the feel, like the vibe of the song, like, everybody, like, damn, like,
we could read something, this, right?
Right.
It was them too.
And then that's when when P4, top five came in, like, like, shit, we're about to hop on some shit, too.
We started going back to back, dropping songs, dropping song on SoundCloud.
So you didn't really have anybody who helped, like, usher you in or, like, teach you how to make a song or kind of guide you in the right direction?
I don't know.
We just, we just thought we were hopping in the studio, and that'll be a song, you know what I'm saying?
We just basically, like, had the picture.
Yeah, we had it.
Yeah.
Like, we seen people do, we go on YouTube, we watch people rap.
We just, oh, that's how they do it.
Fuck it.
Let's go try it.
You know me?
We just watched how they did it.
And then we went to go do it.
When you were kids, though, was there anybody on a local level that you were looking at?
As in, oh, this is somebody who made it out my section, so I could, I could do it like them.
Yeah, the homies, like, you feel me?
It's like infant, infant and chucks.
Like they was rapping, you feel me, they got some shit that really touched our soul, you feel
me?
That really, like, you feel me, got to us.
Like, you feel me, that, like, oh, yeah, they, they're doing it, you feel me?
You feel me?
They, uh, they basically, like, you feel me?
For me, feeling this, like, you feel me?
Even, like, gave us a, a reason to try.
Mm-hmm.
You feel me?
We ain't never thought about it.
Like, you feel me, we ain't never, like, say we was going to rap or grow up to be like,
I'm gonna be a rapper or I'm gonna be rapping, you feel me?
Right.
You just tried it.
So we ain't, we don't, like, we don't, like,
really got a story behind it.
Right.
Once you started, like, showing some talent and stuff, though,
did you start to feel like, you know, older dudes in your area and shit?
Like, they start kind of coming in and giving you advice
and start trying to guide you all in the right direction.
Yeah.
Like, not even older dudes, like, our boys.
Like, you from me, our boys, like, that's where all started from, like,
our homies.
Right.
Like, the people we'd be with every day.
Like, we ain't never, like, wrapped in front of them or nothing.
Like, we just came to them one day, hey, listen to this.
Played it.
They're like, oh yeah, that's your slap.
Right.
Yeah.
We just like, fuck it.
We just go, I posted the song.
I posted STL Captain Jayhats.
But we wasn't even go make that song
because we was rapping to Detroit Fol.
Like, we'd been rapping like two months before we made STL Captain Jayhast.
We was rapping to like Detroit Flow.
Right.
Those are the beats that you were getting on at that time?
Yeah, at the time.
So that's where we was on SoundCloud.
Right.
You feel me?
So this before we went YouTube, before we made our first song, SEO Caps.
So I go in the studio, I tell these, because, mind you, like we said, we been watching,
I'm like, you feel me, we're from LA, you feel me?
It's me, me, me, people, far as much.
I'm like, I'm like, let's, uh, let's try this beat.
It was, it was, it was Trayway Land of the Crim's beat, but I didn't know that
because it was a YouTube beat.
Oh, okay.
So he like, he like, you feel me, I don't think we should do that beat, you feel me?
I didn't know, you feel me?
because I wasn't, I'm not a rapper, you feel me?
So I'm like, fuck it, let's just do it.
I'm like, I'm like, I feel it?
Like, I feel like, like, I ain't going to say like,
oh, this go, this go get us to where it got us,
but I'm like, it's going to put us in the game or something.
Like, it's go, it's go do something.
Like, you feel me?
That's when he's like, they're like, go spit that shit.
It was them too.
They're like, go in there and spit that shit.
Definitely.
Boom.
I go spit that shit like, oh, hell yeah.
You fucking with that shit.
P4, like, I got some P.
P.4J is like, hell yeah.
boom he spit that shit if you okay if you were to have to describe what the role of each person
in the group is or like how you would describe what each person brings to the group can we get
that opinion because like i feel like y'all all are pretty like consistent like it's not like there's
like one person who's clearly like blowing everybody else out of the water like in some rap groups you know
I feel like you guys are all kind of on the same level but how would you describe like personality-wise
or style-wise, who fits what role?
See, like, he killer, we already know.
High man.
Party pooper, hell, yeah.
You're the energy guy?
Ah, I seen that, yep.
Yeah.
He turned this up all the way.
Far much, something different.
This nigga, sneakie crazy.
People like, he just, he just come with nothing but.
For me?
Gas.
He go in and go straight gas, nothing but he's talking braids.
and active shit.
Yeah.
I just say what I could.
Yeah, are you the one that they kind of have to, like, hold back a little bit?
Or, like, anybody ever asked you to change your bars?
They might be a little too disrespectful.
Yeah, here.
Stop.
That really happened?
Hell, yeah.
Him, too.
Who's the voice of reason?
We have to change some of his verses.
It is versus.
We ain't going too brazy.
You all come to like agreement, you know what I'm saying?
I did a song with this one dude.
Damn, he's not from out here, though.
I did a song with him, you know, I go.
crazy. I'm gonna talk my shit.
Oh, oh. Don't say that.
Lle with half of my fat base.
Feel me? So I just switched it up.
Yeah, because I mean, y'all, like,
you could tell, especially when you hear a lot of your early shit,
that, like, you guys were not concerned at all about disrespecting anybody else or whatever.
That's just us.
You were just really being how you actually are on the block, yeah.
Me too, like, I'm raw. I'm not going to duck it.
I'm not going to not say nothing for nobody if you don't like.
You don't like you.
You like it. You like it.
Like, we ain't like not saying nothing behind like no politics.
It's just because people want real music.
We ain't like, yeah, we ain't coming to politics.
Yeah, yeah.
It's just what it is.
Yeah, because if you think about it, like Chicago's pretty much got some of the biggest
rappers and shit.
They are the least shy about putting the politics of whatever the fuck is going on.
That's the same shit we're doing, but it's just LA.
They send GDK, BDK, we send CK.
Right.
Same shit.
But it's weird because like, the difference between Chicago and LA, though, is an LA gang banging is
hell of old in comparison to Chicago.
Like, there's a lot of OGs.
There's a lot of like people who are kind of like more there, like trying to keep the piece
and they don't want to, or at least like saying that like there's always for like a young
up-and-comer rapper in LA, there's usually somebody to tell them like, don't say this in your music,
you know?
But that's what I think appeals to a lot of people.
You guys are so raw that like it ain't even like a filter.
Like there's no industry connection yet.
That's what it is.
Do you think that's going to change in time?
Yeah, we got some industry.
Yeah, we got shit that's different.
Yeah, but that's a thing that's like that raw shit, me.
That's, mind you, we did.
We tried to rap regularly when we first started rapping.
It did not work.
Really?
I came to the studio and said, let's make this shit.
We made this shit.
We was rock.
We dissed.
They loved it.
Then we made Baby Snow Gorilla.
Nick, we went even crazier.
It went even crazy.
So why we have to do all that?
Why we have to do all that?
Why we got to do all that.
But does it feel like the kind of thing that might go away in time?
Does it feel like the kind of thing that might go away in time?
Like you might at a certain point.
Like everybody always got guns in their videos when they start out rapping.
And then usually within like a couple years or whatever they come.
kind of stop because they'll get a legal situation and they're trying to be brand friendly
or whatever. Like, you know, a lot of people early in their career might be saying certain
things and then they kind of clean it up down the road.
Shit, that's like, shit.
That's who. That's who. That's trying to wrap his head around.
That's the plan. That's the plan. That's the plan. That's the plan.
Because, you know, you got to expand. You know what I'm saying? You're going to get international
so you don't want to just be talking all that crazy, you know.
Shit, we already got some shit that's not Game Bang.
Yeah.
Because that shit will blow you up on a local level.
but on like a big mainstream level nobody gives a shit about who's fucking neighborhood you got a problem with you know what you really going through or something like that like you know what's something different so yeah right but that's one thing i like about you guys too though is that you all talk about like really making real money and like wanting to actually do something important which is which is really good a lot people don't even have they want to be hood famous but they don't have a fucking idea of like what they really want to accomplish in the long term it's because like you for me basically i like cheek codes
You see everybody do it.
Not saying like right the way, but nobody makes mistakes, right?
Definitely.
All right, let me, I have a lot of questions written down.
I'm not even getting into it at all right now.
Oh, man, one thing I wanted to ask about is, what was it like having YG pull up on you guys?
That was pretty crazy to see.
That says a lot about how high everybody's expectations are for you guys in the city right now.
Yeah.
How'd that happen?
Like, who made the connection?
Shit.
Shit.
He just happened.
He told us to come.
Yeah, yeah.
Came.
It happened.
He's happy.
He had to accept.
He told us to come.
We came.
We came out.
And shit.
We just came out.
Where did you shoot it?
That was a music video?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We didn't do no verses, but they just told us to pop out.
They just told us to pop out for me.
little haughty in between us.
What was it like, though?
Was that kind of eye-opening and crazy for you to see that?
I realized, like, this is the life of a motherfucker who really made it.
Like, this shit is pretty ball.
Hell yeah.
That's what I'm saying.
It's crazy.
Like Spider-Man, camera car driving down the street.
Crazy, bro.
Crazy.
It's crazy.
We don't even have to explain it.
Yeah.
It just happened.
It's kind of like brand new.
I even seen you guys coming out at that big show, a big sad concert.
And I was like I could see the energy in you guys.
I was like, man, they're actually like, this is all kind of new for them.
They're really loving this and appreciating all this energy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And she's crazy.
Yeah.
Every day it's something new.
We ain't never thought like, we ain't never thought.
We ain't never thought we'd be in a position.
Like even though like we went to the mic to go rap that shit, we never thought like, damn,
nigga.
We, we right here on no jumper.
Right.
You never think that shit.
Oh, you seen this shit?
shit before yeah we've seen this shit before yeah for real what's the one that pops in your
head like oh I remember that interview I thought that shit was hard as fuck back in the day
who was it I know I've seen what's name one of shit far short um
easy psych was just on the other day here exposed back in the day though you be
you watch you watch interviews of people you don't like to be sad do you watch interviews of
of artists or like rappers that you don't get along with too?
Like are you like curious what the fuck's going on with them
even though you might never actually talk to him?
Yeah, we say we don't watch and we watch but it's not like we too curious.
Not like oh yeah let me watch it, let me see what he?
Nah, hell no.
I got a theory that like people who got enemies
watch their enemies interviews way before they watch their actual friends'
interviews.
I don't know about that.
I don't know about that.
I have some intelligence that's just that, but maybe not
everybody but some people for sure um yeah like who do you feel like it's like the
motivation behind the group like who's the one who's actually like pushing for more all the
time like if you really had to identify one person as being like the one who's kind of sailing the
ship per se so i say i say it's how far okay he's like i don't want this responsibility
i'm crazy i say we all play a port though you know sang goes to say it's one person you know
We all push each other.
Yeah, it's like we all like we all come to, you know what I'm saying?
When it's that time, we all come to one circle.
It's not like we just, we're gonna all like, you know what I'm saying.
Because we, you all go to one circle.
We're gonna listen to everybody where everybody gotta say.
Yeah, we are.
You know what I feel like you bring a little bit of the adult energy too though.
A little bit, but we all gotta come to because we're not, because we don't want to
single, you know what I'm saying, single everybody out type shit.
Right.
We all group, you know what I'm saying?
This baby's don't girl.
We all push each other.
We all in the studio, niggie.
We all in the booth.
We all in the booth.
Like, when we're in the studio, yeah, we're all in the booth, like, all that more time.
How often you guys have been recording lately now that it's starting to actually get popping?
Like, now, like, it's been, it been some days we go, like, back to back.
Yeah.
Some days later, we're going back to back to back.
Yeah, type of shit, like, it would be, like, a four-hour session this day or then, like, an eight the next day type shit or something like on some crazy shit.
Right.
Yeah.
Are you guys actually, like, working hard?
that whole time or does the party element kind of pop up as well.
Niggas be working.
It needs to be working so hard,
niggins feel like it's about to explode.
You don't got no girls in there?
Shit, you ain't got time.
You ain't got time.
You be working.
That's your inspiration right there, man.
We don't be trying to party.
That should be nigger head, spinning off all the lyrics,
yeah, I ain't got time.
I already got being in the boot, trying to write and all that.
You ever tried spitting a verse right after you got some top?
Nah.
You're only going to be thinking about rapping.
You're not thinking about nothing else.
It's just pure rapping.
Lately, as soon as we've been going to the stew, we all got to write.
So we don't, like, work time because we ain't been having time to just sit back and just write.
Right.
I thought about that shit.
So, niggas just been, as soon as we go to the studio, we got to start writing.
We got to punch in.
He got some time.
He got some time in this, too.
I'm fine.
No comment.
No comment.
I was having a right to the mirror.
All right, so what was going on in the video
where I saw you beating the dog shit out of somebody?
Shit, oh, man.
Was that a put-in-on?
Was that, like, it seemed like it was a friendly fave,
but a little too aggressive to be really friendly.
Shit, no comment.
I don't speak on that, you feel of me?
Things happen.
Yeah.
Things happen?
Yeah, it's crazy.
You're cool with the person in that video, though?
Yeah, he's all right.
He's fine.
right sure right definitely who would you say it was like actually really that you guys saw
as inspiration on that you could do it like early on like who who were you looking at in terms of
the city or outside of the city that you were like that person is really killing it and I
feel like we we could be dope as them he's an inspiration I know that's crazy actually you're
rapper for a long-ass time he's just like reaching his heights now because he was supposed to be
just you know street rapper right on like in the beginning you know nobody thought he was going
this fucking big yeah but he's what I'm saying we still we still going through this shit like this
shit is all everything is still do to us mm everything we do is new something new every day
definitely we were just talking about that how he was just in the back of like he was in the back
of uh LA component in their videos mm-hmm I was in the back like he was in the back like
You know what I'm saying?
And now, like, y'all crazy and shit, that's just crazy.
Y'all in the front, you know what I'm saying?
Millions of millions of fans and all that type of crazy shit.
I asked in this one group chat that I'm in, I go, hey,
who Babystone Gorillas got beef with, like, based on where they're from?
And they said, everybody.
Then they specified.
They said, well, actually, not them and not them and not them, but, like, you know, a lot.
True or false?
You guys got a lot of issues.
Yeah, but you're worried about them niggas, man.
But does it feel weird to know that that's, like, the stereotype about y'all?
Is that you guys?
Because I don't know what they're feeling that way for.
They must be wrong.
So they must be doing something.
Right.
They feel like they should.
Do you feel like you're going to have to, like, get along with people a little bit more,
like now that you're really starting to get in the music game and stuff like at a certain point
you can't just be like you know pushing issues with everybody that you run into that you're
supposed to have issues with right you're like i don't know maybe i can everybody i'm gonna you know
i'm gonna say i ain't gonna say got to be cool my fuckers you know what i mean just depends really
I say that like you're gonna just say like we just full flat yeah it's like it's not every
every time it's not just you know like you feel me we don't
know because like we said she's still new yeah yeah yeah just like happening so we still
definitely um are you guys planning on getting set up properly on streaming services and shit
because when i want on apple music it's not like a straight account that has all the music right
yeah no we just post on youtube buddy you're on we go get on mostly not we'll get on on that on all the
platform right what are the conversations
like about signing right now like are you you dealing with a lot of that yeah yeah the label's got
to be calling right yeah yeah he calling they call they're calling yeah but we just taking our time
are you excited about that in some way like people used to be excited to sign the labels now they're like
yeah yeah we only never had nobody yeah we been trying to figure it out this whole time
yeah right niggit now they call it what you just you feel me
I mean, the question is just like if you got that life changing amount of money, what you would actually change?
You know?
Like, what would it really change in your life?
You think about that much?
You got to talk about how you're trying to get to them M's, but, I mean, what would you actually do?
You know?
It's the world.
That's how it's going to feel, shit.
That's how to go feel.
Yeah.
It does.
Right.
Sure.
So, have you guys all done jail time?
Or is, it's just, you got, like, the most jail bars, I feel like.
Oh, I just got out to Brownie.
How long were you in there for what?
Shit, shit, shit.
I ain't going to speak on that, but shit.
Yeah, it was in there for, like, a shit, probably like a week or two.
Okay.
How is that?
What's tough, still?
You're popping in the county, I'm assuming?
Shit, yeah.
We're on their ass.
We're on their ass, but yeah.
I don't even in the county.
Yeah, it was my, like, my first time in the county.
You feel like it's kind of like, like, it's like going to Vegas.
Like what happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas.
Like, you can't really, like, come out of there and just start telling stories right away.
Is that bad taste?
Fucked they talk about.
You seem like you like to fight.
Yeah, I love a bleeding.
Feel me, but yeah.
Hell yeah, though.
You got some crazy little shit going on.
Right.
Crazy lifestyle.
That's not a bad memory, too, though.
That's like, you know, we were having fun out there.
Hell yeah.
I mean, it's good to have the best attitude
you can about anything like, you know.
Some people would be upset about getting locked up,
but, I mean, good spot to also just practice
beating the fuck out of people, right?
Yeah.
That's the bright side.
That's the silver lining on the cloud.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, all right.
How did you guys end up connecting with Travis Scott?
That kind of blew everybody's mind.
The YG thing wasn't that surprising, I guess, in comparison to the Travis connection.
That just happened.
He just tapped in.
He just tapped in.
He ain't tap in with us.
His boy showed him to us.
Show us to him.
Right.
And they told us to come through.
He's seen us or whatever.
He's like, y'all the niggas off YouTube.
For real?
Yeah.
He's a nigga off YouTube.
He's famous.
You know, he's a little.
Right.
But so what do you guys actually end up doing together?
You just linked up and hung out?
They just showed us.
They showed us the shit they work in progress.
and all that shit really get.
Yeah.
He was just talking to.
He didn't tell it.
Yeah, I mean, he made it.
He made quite a lot out of music for show.
He's definitely a crazy inspiration.
How many times you guys seen Training Day?
10,000 times.
That's just required?
For those who don't know, a large part of it
was filmed where they're from.
I ain't going to lie.
I ain't going to lie.
That shit ain't required.
No, I ain't gonna lie.
Shit, that's my shit,
I watch that shit back to back.
Even though it's an old-ass movie?
Hell yeah.
It's real shit, though.
That's why I'm like, I watch that shit back to back.
I tell you like every part.
That shit, crazy.
Hell yeah.
It says a lot about that movie that he's basically playing
like the worst person on earth.
Like he's a crooked cop piece of shit
who's like killing people and doing all this fucked up shit.
But you still love him because his character
is just so good.
Shout out to my nigga
10.
Right.
Tell you to my nigga
to my nigga to Zell.
Nah,
but.
There's some weird
parts in that, though,
where, like,
you can tell that,
like,
when they're filming
I'm driving,
that, like,
it doesn't actually
make any sense.
Like, he's,
like, driving around
that fucking lake in Echo Park.
And, like,
you can tell
that he's driving
in two different directions.
And I'm like,
this makes no sense.
The continuity is all fucked up
right here.
I don't know.
That's just me,
though.
I just seen it for the first time.
People were on my ass because I had never seen it.
I know.
I'm old as fuck.
I'm not really that good with the movies.
I apologize.
That's legendary, man.
You got to see it.
You still got to see it.
I don't know a lot of movies by the name.
If I see it, though, I'd be like, oh, I see that.
Damn, that movie probably going to live forever.
That shit, that shit just, never touching you.
It's probably touching, like, St. Mage's you somewhere else.
Yeah.
You ever think about that?
Shoot a music video.
People want to still be watching it in 10, 20 years?
really like documenting an era in time like music and and and content like that it's really
fucking important when you really think about it that's cool how uh how did you guys connect
with RJ I seen you got a video coming out with him shit my boy cab shit when I was
just big in it with my boy cab and then my boy cavit took me to the studio or whatever
whatever uh-huh yeah i just maddened on me oh that's what's what's so it's kind of a legend
about rj you've been around a long time even killing it forever um all right so what do you guys
got planned like what are the big hopes and dreams coming from here like what you guys got planned
a lot of dreams you know what i just i can't speak for you know what i'm saying everybody but
yeah but it's like we all got the same ambition you know what i'm saying you know what
saying like it's probably like the same goal to reach so it's we got a lot of dreams though so
oh it's a lot of shit for sure yeah yeah sure how long until you guys are going to draw like a
full official project next year next year that's the plan you and just keep doing videos for the time
being nice there anybody you guys would want to do music with that really stands out
That would be like just ultimate achievement.
What do you think?
Shit.
Shit, there's a lot of these.
Feel me if you really think about it.
Anybody we could really,
whoever want to fuck with us.
We could say we want to wrap with this person and this person,
but.
Put it out there into the universe, you know.
Maybe it'll happen.
Shit.
All right.
Um, okay.
So you guys got anybody you want to thank?
Anybody want to shout out?
Anything that you want to put out there into the world before we wrap this?
Shit, um, shout out my nigger Big Sad.
Yeah, shout out my nigga Big Side.
Just appreciate everybody too.
Why you got so much love for Big Sad?
How did that connection become so strong?
That was, shit, I was, we used to this.
Shit, I can't, like, I can't speak on everybody, but shit, mom, I've been around my home.
They know, he's still listening, like, every day, every one of your songs, and now we're working with him.
You feel me?
Yeah.
Shit crazy.
You're all used to listen to music, too.
That's fire.
Respect. Shout out big sad.
Appreciate it.
Shout out.
Yeah, everybody who fuck with us.
Shit show.
Everybody who fuck with us.
Everybody.
Shout everybody.
We fuck with us.
Appreciate you if you for having us right here.
This shit great.
Yeah, yeah.
Shout out my nigga Adam, 22, though.
I'm trying to pull up to the block, man.
Pull up, man.
Let's go.
Let's go.
We're going to go to Jim Gilliam.
Yeah.
We're going to go to get bald up and shit real quick.
You know.
You don't play basketball.
I don't know.
No.
It's not good.
I need a trainer.
I got to get, I don't know.
Kyrie Irvin, he need a job right now.
Maybe give me my trainer.
We need a little.
I like a Drew back.
Yeah.
Sure.
All right.
Appreciate you guys.
Appreciate you.
Yeah, you're looking, man.
Baby sound gorillas, no jumper.
Coolest podcast in the world.
Check us on YouTube, SoundCloud, iTunes,
Patreon, all that shit.
Like, comment, subscribe.
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Yeah.
