No Jumper - The King Combs Interview
Episode Date: August 21, 2019Music industry royalty King Combs stopped by the No Jumper podcast to chat about his flourishing music career, entrepreneurship and the release of his Wave Juice soda! --- FOLLOW OUR NEW SPOTIFY PLAYL...IST! https://spoti.fi/2vi9lsD 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 and iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/no-jumper/id1001659715?mt=2 and follow us on Social Media: http://www.twitter.com/nojumper http://www.instagram.com/nojumper http://www.reddit.com/r/nojumper JOIN THE DISCORD: https://discord.gg/Q3XPfBm follow Adam22 as well: http://www.twitter.com/adam22 http://www.instagram.com/adam22 and follow adam22hoe on Snapchat Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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No Jumper, coolest podcast in the world.
I'm in here today with the one and only King Combs.
How you feeling, bro?
What's up?
I'm feeling good.
Happy to be here.
Hey, man, I'm happy to be here as well.
You bring a lot of energy to the room when you walk in.
I like it.
Oh, thanks.
Thanks a lot.
Appreciate it.
Okay, so I want to just start with this topic because I think it's important
and it kind of ties in to what we have going on today, in the shop, everything.
When did you first have waves?
I first had waves, I would say.
in seventh grade.
Okay.
And do you remember anybody in particular putting you on?
Hmm.
Nobody really put me on.
See, I know my pops always had the waves from back in the day and I always was brushing my
hair since I was a little kid.
I always made sure my shape up was right, tape up, hair line was good.
So that was just something I always been into but one day I was brushing, I just seen like
two ripples and I was like, oh, hold on.
So is that?
And I just had to keep going, get them three sets.
them 360. So you just brush and brush and brush until eventually that just starts to happen?
Yeah, well, it like kind of came together naturally. I ain't going a lot because when I seen it at
first, I wasn't going super hard on my waves. Right. And then when I really noticed that they could connect,
that's when I started going hard, putting the du rag on conditioning, you know what I'm saying?
Oh, so the wave juice. Oh, so the wave juice take? Okay, yeah. The secret formula to it all.
Right. You know what I'm saying? Did you feel like your life? Did your life change once you like
started to have waves like people in terms of like girls giving you attention and shit did you start to feel like they were just putting you in a different category of dude because you had the fresh-ass haircut now I'm a wavy guise and before I was just Christian right but the waves on wavy geyser that's fire but yeah but so was there a point where it sort of started to become kind of almost like your brand like it's just you know after a while like would you name in the soda after and everything it's kind of like you decided to sort of use it for marketing purposes and
in a way. Well, definitely. I always love my waves and it really became a part of me when
like people was posting me about my waves talking about, yo, this is the new hairstyle of 2016.
That's when I was like, oh, like, I'm really the wave. God on the love. But yeah, now, you know,
I'm saying, I make sure my whole crew got waves. Really? I see why I ain't got the spins on deck.
Where V at? Tell Vee, pull up. That's what's up. I mean, it must be so sad when a dude who's
had waves since the childhood, just all of a sudden
its hairline starts kind of receding and just not
really working the same way and they got to just sort
of fall back. It's not going to work for that.
Yeah. God damn, people
calling me in the middle of the interview? How dare they?
Yeah, that's crazy. So,
what made you decide that you wanted to
name your signature soda
after the wave concept?
And what exactly is wave juice?
Shout out my guy, Jay. He presented the idea
to me. He was like, yo, I got this soda.
You want to be a part of it?
I'm like, soda?
I don't know. I was like, hold on. If a soda could give you waves, that's a whole different
type of soda. So I'm like, hold on, let me call it the wave juice. Right. And the wave juice
is here. Did you have any particular affection for the blue flavored soda or anything? Is that
just always been your favorite thing? Yeah, like from a kid, I feel like the blue soda was kind of rare,
like the blue fanning. I always loved that and I never like got it enough. That was something I love
and I wish they always had in like fast food restaurants and stuff.
Yeah, it's crazy how the whole exotic soda thing is kind of taken over.
It's like before, it never even crossed my mind,
but now when you actually go to 7-Eleven and look at the sodas that they got,
it just seems boring as hell.
Yeah, facts.
Yeah.
Definitely, you need some color, need some vibe in there.
So 7-Eleven, come get some wave juice.
You need it.
I don't want to be too materialistic or anything,
but what era is that Sean John Shane changed from?
It looks like you might have, like, whipped it out of, like, the archive.
It's from this era, though.
Oh, it's new, okay.
Shout my guy Aviani.
Wow, really?
You put the blue face hunts on the...
I've never seen that before.
He actually has the hundreds making up the chain.
Sean John pendant.
I just felt like it was such a 90s vibe when I was looking at the blueprint.
I was like, oh, adding Sean John on it would be harder than adding King Combs or something.
I feel like...
Right.
It's just making like a T-shirt, like a design.
What's your thoughts on the Sean John brand name?
Is it still like, you still focused on keeping it alive?
Oh, yeah, of course.
I mean, I always rock with Sean John. I got a special collab coming with them soon.
Really? It's gonna be real dope. Yeah. Oh, that's what's up. So stay tuned for that. That's gonna be crazy.
You know, I didn't even notice this till right now, but you got Stanley from the office on your shirt, too. You're a fan of Stanley?
Not really, actually. I just like this shirt. I was like, yeah, he just sitting here with it.
He's just in his own vibe, no worry about nothing else.
He's one of the greatest characters in the history of modern television. I'm gonna be totally honest with you.
Like, that's a whole vibe right there, him just hanging out in the warehouse by the 50s.
fake palm tree.
Fake palm tree just creating his own Hawaii.
That's Stanley for you.
So, okay, tell me a little bit about your upbringing and shit.
Like, for people who aren't super familiar with you, like, tell me about your come-up.
Yeah, so people who aren't familiar with me, I grew up in New York, born and raised, and I moved to Atlanta, LA.
I was moving a lot when I was young, and I was living in New Jersey before I moved to Los Angeles.
Okay.
And when I came here, I don't know, it was a little, it was a little, it was a little, I was a little,
funny. I didn't really rock with LA
at first. Wait, so what age did you make the transition
from New York? I was in seventh grade,
six year. Oh, okay. That must be weird
because New York is such a particular
place to grow up. Yeah, yeah, no.
It was definitely different, but I got used
to it and definitely loved it. And what people
may not know about my upbringing, like,
it wasn't all just flash
and glistened glamour. Like, I spent time
in the country with my other side of the
family, my mom's side of the family who's not really
you know what I'm saying, as privileged and doesn't
have all that. So it was dope to see, like,
both sides and always kept me grounded and humble.
Was that because you were acting up that they were just like,
we know, send you to like the simple life?
That was there for a little too long.
Your Paraselton type moment where they make you just go stay on a farm or some shit?
Nah, it was dope though.
It was real like, that's where all my cousins and stuff is at.
Like I don't really have a lot of cousins in New York and stuff.
All my cousins is in the South and stuff.
So it was a whole different vibe, but I loved it.
It was never a time where it was like, yo, I miss going back home or something like that.
Like, I always love being out there.
Right.
And I feel like that's a big side of me, too, the countryside, the down-the-earth side.
Right, for sure.
Dude, you were born in the middle of, like, the craziest era of bad boy, basically, right?
Yeah.
So do you have her-198?
Do you know that, like, when you were one or two years old, that you were, like, being on stage,
wow, that's concerts are going on a tour.
Do you know anything about that?
When I was seeing it, it was real crazy for me, and that's what really shaped me to have my dream as being an artist myself.
Like seeing my pops on stage, seeing people's reaction to him, like how the fans would just react.
It made me look up to him even more too and just like really study and see what's going on and not take it for granted.
Right.
Yeah, it must have been like a crazy.
Do you have a memory of like that sort of moment?
Or did you always know that your dad was this big star?
There was never like a moment where you realized.
I never really just knew.
But the moment, yeah, there was a moment I realized.
And it was when he was on stage, like Madison Square Garden.
Right.
Like his tour, it was like one of the first days I ever went to.
And I was sitting there in the viewing area and then lights go off and everybody just started
screaming, ah, and you see him light up in the white light and all that.
Come out looking like God and everybody going crazy.
That was just a crazy feeling.
From there on, I definitely knew, you know what I'm saying?
And especially because we're-
We them guys.
You're looking at your other friends and shit and their dads, you're just sort of slowly
realizing like, oh shit, like his dad is just a regular guy.
Like, his dad's friends with my dad, but nobody gives a shit about his dad.
He's just a regular dude.
Like, this is a weird thing to comprehend.
I never really thought like that, though, for some reason.
Like, that never really, like, went in my mind.
I really felt like my pops was a normal person at the same time, too,
because a lot of my memories was with him just in the house.
It's chilling.
Right.
So it's like I've seen a dope thing everybody's dad, you know what I'm saying?
It wasn't like I seen my pops as such this big hot figure and look down on everybody else.
Right.
Everybody else still out of out of me.
And it must be weird because, yeah, that shit,
or you're seeing him on stage,
rocking a huge crowd of 100,000 people.
It's like that is a very small percentage of the time
compared to the time when he's, like,
hanging out, like making you some toast or some shit, right?
Yeah, for sure.
It's a whole different experience.
It's definitely crazy.
That's wild.
Definitely blessed to be able to experience that.
Shout out my pops.
Damn, crazy.
So did you, early on, start to think of it
in the sense of, all right, this is a lineage,
this is a family.
I want to continue on, whatever,
it has already been built before me.
Yeah.
Did you acknowledge that sort of responsibility,
almost?
Did it feel like a responsibility?
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, back when I was little,
like, real young, I really wanted to be an artist.
Like, I was, remember watching his video,
Let's Get It with G. Depp, Black Rob.
And it would just inspire me to really be doing it myself
and really make a better song than that.
Free G. Debt, man.
You know what I'm saying?
That's a sad story.
That's a fact.
Yeah, yeah.
That's my guy.
So yeah, watching all that inspired me.
And really from day one, I was like, yeah, this is going to be me one day.
It's going to be me out here.
You're going to be me out here?
Shout out, surf in the West.
My two videos out right now.
You ain't checked them out yet?
No, I definitely checked it out.
I was really surprised to see you on song Grito and shit.
That's crazy.
Oh, through Grito, Freehan.
Yeah, freaking out real soon.
I've seen it up in the sky at the end of the video and shit.
That's late.
Yeah, how'd that come about?
Do you know Grito?
Yeah, actually, that came about through my brother.
That's crazy because I was with Grito and Shoreline one time.
video shoot and your brother showed up.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I didn't know there was a connection.
Yeah, that's actually when they linked up.
And then they told them that they want to do music with me.
I actually have a song with Shorla and Mafia.
That's gonna be dropping soon.
And around that same time, we linked with O3 Grito.
And Grito, we really got like three unreleased songs together.
Wow.
He came in the studio that night and did like four tracks
back to back to back.
Like he usually would do whenever he was show with somebody's studio,
it would just be so much energy, right?
Yeah, yeah, definitely had a lot of energy.
Like, he was definitely a real happy soul.
Like can't wait till he gets home. We're gonna celebrate for sure. Yeah, that's just crazy. Who's the other artists that's on that song?
Cock Cash. Right. Yeah, that's CY and my guy. Okay. We're in the same clique. You know, we grew up together since we was like
Seven, eight years old. Oh, okay. That's fire. What's the other single you have right now? Is the one with the young Miami? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Miami. A.
A.C. T. Grizzly.
Yeah, A.Z. Chike. I was really surprised to see you on that, too, because that's kind of like
the same click with, like, Grito and everybody. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I just recently linked up with
all of them, like, last year. And every time we link up, it's always, like, organic and just
extra cool. Like, it already feels like family. And I feel like everybody that I collaborate
with is, like, family to me, like, from across the world, different artists. Like, it's all
like a bond. Yeah. That's a pretty wild idea. Is that your idea to be, like, young Miami,
A. Z. Chike and T. Grizzly together for like a crazy-ass pool party video, basically.
What was the thought process that led you to put all those artists together?
Well, in the beginning, it was just like, yo, this beat is crazy.
And I'm about to spit on this beat.
A. Z. Chike was in the studio with me.
We was doing something to our other song on it with one take J.
And he did that.
And it was just me and him at first.
And then T. Grizzly came to my crib.
And then I was playing him a bunch of my songs.
And he heard that when he was like,
Yo, there's five.
And then at the end, that's when I was like, hold on.
I could really do something special with this.
We got the East Coast, West Coast, down south.
Yeah.
I got to get young Miami on here.
So I was like, yo, I really need something ratchet, like, to really turn the party.
So I'll call her, and she was ready right away.
That's crazy.
Yeah, it's like the age of the female rapper right now.
So it's kind of like you've got to get a girl involved on any song with more than two, three people.
You start looking sexist if you don't have the female energy on that, right?
Word.
Is she like your favorite?
woman rapper right now
who clocks on your...
I would say she is.
She definitely brings that energy and that swag.
Hell yeah.
Yeah.
Do you remember being around
like Foxy Brown
you're a kid?
Yeah, definitely.
A little Kim and shit.
I was just recently
with Foxy Brown in New York
she's still real cool.
Really?
What were you guys doing?
I had this like show
for Fashion Week.
Oh, okay.
I feel like this brand.
It was dope.
That's crazy.
You got a lot of those opportunities?
Yeah, yeah.
I'm really connected
in the fashion world.
Shout out, Do Jacob Bonnan.
I never even thought
that it was going to be like that.
Like, I always been into fashion and designing,
and, like, my whole swag is a big part of, like, myself.
But Doche literally called me randomly, like,
yo, we want you to walk on the runway.
Like, I never wanted to be a model or nothing like that.
But when I see that opportunity, I was like,
oh, of course, that's next level.
That's fine.
And ever since then, I got to work with Tommy Hill,
figure, Philip Pline, a lot of other brands, Dior.
Wow.
And so you're kind of coming into that conversation.
Like, they wanted you there.
that you probably don't have to deal with as much random as bullshit
that a lot of people might have to deal with as models and shit.
Wait, wait, wait.
Now, you know, I've been in some situations,
like, a little cast and stuff.
I was like, how about this?
This is a little extra.
They got you sitting around for...
They got you sitting around for mad hours just waiting on shit.
I feel like being a model is got to be a lot of that.
I ain't a lot of it.
Modeling thing is fire, though.
Like, when I first came there,
it was a lot different from the rapping thing.
I really felt like I was the prince of New York coming in there.
They was like, Christian, you need this, if you have the driver, this, that.
And they do that for everybody.
Really?
You get real good treatment once you, you know what I'm saying?
Make the list and whatever.
But of course, with anything, you got to grind.
It's some type of grind in it.
Do you feel like one takes away from the other in the sense that the modeling thing kind of takes away from you being an artist?
Or that if you being an artist could potentially take away from it, if you, I don't think you want to go fully hard with the modeling thing.
But if you did, like, do you think that being an artist would kind of be a detriment to that?
Nah, I think for me, because I'm real style for it in my music and stuff like that,
like I think it goes hand in hand, honestly.
And it just goes hand in hand with my lifestyle.
And I like to do anything that's just organic for me.
Definitely.
That's what's up?
Yeah.
So what's your creative process like in terms of you getting into the studio
and actually working on music?
Like, how often are you doing that?
Where do you record?
Yeah, I try to do that every day.
But usually I don't force it.
Whenever I'm really in the vibe, whenever I really feel like, yo, I got to go in the studio
and catch this vibe.
And I usually record in my studio.
It's in Hollywood.
It's called Bad Boy.
Okay.
And it's a little studio.
It's real intimate.
It's like a home studio that we put together like six years ago.
Oh, okay.
And yeah, we record out of there.
I usually just have my crew in there, CYN, a couple vibes.
And I really just like to lock in and just focus on the track.
And I really have too many distractions.
Definitely.
Who else is in CYN?
Oh, yeah.
You got my man, Kod Cash, bass swag, tank God, N.
Nico Brim
Tank God
RJ
Oh so you got
producers on there too
Oh yeah
Yeah
Nice
Producers, DJs
You know
Managers
Artists
That's what's
So
It holds well-rounded
Click
Hell yeah
Yeah
What's your
relationship
With your brother
Like
At this point
Justin
Oh yeah
It's real close
Yeah
Me and both
My brother is real close
But me and Justin
Like we live
together
Right
So we're out here
Just moving
Yeah
Like I'm
Like I'm
Like I'm
You too on
On stage
The while
And out
Thing
And it was
Mad funny
To see him
just hyping you up and shit.
And I was like,
man, that's so interesting to see, like,
what the brotherly dynamic is right there.
We always had, like, a close bond.
Like, to be honest,
me and my brothers never fought.
Really?
Like, I don't know why.
We never, like, got into, like, a fist fight
or, like, really got angry at each other
to where we had to spas out.
That's interesting.
Because I feel like I fought with my sister
so goddamn much growing up.
But when you, when I look back at it,
it seems crazy.
It's like, how the fuck are you?
Like, what do you got to fight with your family about,
like, that?
Like, you really have no reason.
We get into arguments, but it never escalates to that next level to where we're angry, angry.
You know what I'm saying?
We always laugh it off, say something crazy.
Definitely.
But so do you feel like you're doing the rapping for Justin since he don't actually rap?
Nah, no, no, no, definitely not.
He never expressed interest in that, though?
Is that almost kind of, it's almost weird to not be interested?
Yo, you know I got that one track?
Whenever y'all go blow up crazy, I'm hopping on that one verse.
Really?
Yeah.
Wow.
You think you actually pull the trigger?
You think he's just trolling?
No, he's definitely going to pull the trigger.
for sure.
That's so interesting because coming from your family, it feels almost like being,
not wanting to be an artist as like the different type of decision.
Yeah.
I mean, well, in my family, I'm kind of the only artist.
Oh, no, me and Quincy.
But my sister's really like trying to be models and stuff.
They're not really on a singing type of vibe.
A lot of times when you talk to older rappers and you ask them like,
yo, like, how do you feel if your kid became a rapper, they're like, oh, hell no.
No, no way.
My kid's going to have a normal job, blah, blah, blah.
Was that like a conversation that you had at any point in your life?
Yeah, I remember when I first actually told my pops, like, I'm taking this serious.
Like when I was like 14, 15, I really just gave him the headphones and played in one of my songs.
He was like, oh, this is a lot better than I thought, boom, boom.
He was like, yo, I'm just tell you right now, if you're going to get into this music industry,
you don't come to me for no handouts.
I'm not going to be helping you with producers, writers, none of that.
You need to learn how to write your rhymes by yourself, do this, that.
In the beginning, it was a whole thing where I really had to learn to write by myself
and teach myself how to make my own style of music without his help at all.
Did that seem unfair to you at the time?
Like, come on, Dad.
Give me a fad verse.
I was just like, oh, no, yeah, let's get it.
That motivated me to really prove to him that I was nice.
Yeah, because I feel like there's so many people who want to be rappers that it's like,
if you really actually want to be a rapper, it's like, there's just no faking it.
There's no element of like, like, if I,
picked out some rapper tomorrow and I wanted this to be my rapper and I'm just constantly
bringing him around saying this is the dopeest dude whatever it's like that that will help him
a lot if he actually is dope if he is not dope that literally will not do anything this dude is
never going to go anywhere and that's like my co-sign and I can say the same thing if drake came out
tomorrow whack-ass rapper not only is this dude's career not going anywhere but everybody can't
be laughing at Drake like that's just not like you can't like you want to help somebody out
you want to give him a handout but that's not how it works at all exactly it's
definitely no handouts.
And he made that known for me to day one.
He was like, yo, first of all, the people are going to not like you off the writ.
Like, it's going to take you.
Even if you have a hot song, it's going to take you two more to really get the people,
like maybe somebody that the people never heard of that come from the mud.
They get a hot song, whatever they might be on right away.
He said, yo, you're going to really have to prove to them, like, who you are.
That's dope.
It's going to be no handouts.
That's, like, an important thing, I think, to keep it real about that,
because it must be a weird situation to have to even have that conversation as somebody who's done so much in the music game, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, my pops is always real straightforward with me, so I always knew whatever come out of his mouth was a fendie fact.
He's not going to cut it short or try to say nothing to make me feel better.
Yeah, definitely.
That's a fendie fact for sure.
That's a snapple fact.
That's what I said.
Snapple fact.
That's hard.
That's hard.
My friend, Black Dave, from Harlem, he always hits me with that.
so I got to say that.
Black Dave.
Black Dave.
Shut up Black Dave.
Actually, when we were at Lyrical Meman Festival in Chicago,
I was like telling the lady at the guest list thing.
I'm like, yo, my homie got to come and pick up a pass.
And she's like, what's his name?
I'm like, Black Dave.
She's like, it probably doesn't say that on his license, huh?
I'm like, nah, but you'll know because there's a black guy named Dave.
I'm assuming he's going to be the only one.
He got in, right?
Yeah, he got in, too.
He walked right up.
He said, I'm black Dave.
They're like, all, cool.
What?
I don't know how that worked.
Yeah, so in terms of, do you feel like you've had to go through a lot of, in terms of like
finding yourself as an artist?
Has that been like a whole process for you?
Like when you look at your early work, was it not even close to what you feel like you're putting
out now?
Yeah, like when I first, very first, was making songs, like one of my first songs, of course,
it was a whole different type of artist than who I am today.
But I always feel like I love the nostalgic vibe and really in my music.
having it be soulful and not just saying a whole bunch of nothing.
Like, I like just bringing that vibe and tapping into the ladies.
I feel like from the beginning, that's how it's been,
but I definitely evolved for sure.
Like, if you listen to my mixtape 90s baby,
that's on SoundCloud, it was like mostly, like, 90s beats.
Right.
Because, like, in the beginning, that's how I was, like,
learning to figure out my flow and figure out my vibe.
And then on my new EP, Sincerely C3,
it's like nine tracks full of whole different type of vibes,
like a West Coast vibe, a New York vibe,
chill vibe, turn-up vibe.
Right.
So it just shows, like,
my ability as an artist to tap into
different areas.
Yeah, that's really interesting because, I mean,
I was listening to that song
that you got with Tiana Taylor.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And now it was interesting because I'm like,
damn, that's so crazy that they, like,
went with a sample straight out of that era,
that literally, like, the era you were born in that song
might have came out, like, right before you were born type of shit.
For real, though.
How'd that song in particular come out?
We always been thinking about collaborating with each other.
I remember I hit her up in the beginning.
So that was the first time?
Yeah, that was the first time we ever collabed on the track.
But I hit her up before saying that we should collab on one of my projects.
And then she hit me, and right away we just went to the studio.
She called me at her studio.
I came there.
And yeah, I rocked with the beat.
I knew I could flow on it.
She wanted me on it.
Did you put any thought into what flow you were going to go with?
Because it felt like, you know, there's certain things.
flows that made sense during that time period compared to flows these days and I felt like that
was an interesting flow that you went with because it was sort of it was like hearkening back to
the older era but it wasn't like totally just rehashing the flow or anything yeah I feel like
that's kind of came to me organically like right when the song played and I heard what she was talking
about I know I had to like tap into that vibe and really talk to ladies so definitely go check that out
right now if you haven't seen it tell me what you want Tiana Taylor
show. You got a girl?
Yeah, huh? Okay. You've been with it for a while?
Yeah, for a minute since, like, sophomore in high school.
Oh, wow, okay, because I just wanted to make sure it was the same girl that I watched
a vlog of y'all in Dubai. Yeah. I definitely saw you kiss a dolphin.
You ain't see that, man. I did see it. I would do the same thing, dude. I would fucking
swim with the dolphins any day. I thought that was glorious. You never went before?
Not to Dubai, nah. I was watching it, though. I'm like, man. You never swim with the
dolphins there? Oh, no, no. Actually, to be, to be real, I would be kind of scared.
It is kind of scary.
Because they're all big and strong and shit.
But it's fun, though.
It's a different experience for sure.
That was lit.
Is it kind of weird to have your girl making a vlog sort of just like putting your vacation
out all out there and shit?
Nah.
It was pretty baller, though.
I told her to do it.
I didn't want to put it on my Instagram.
I mean, my YouTube, so I just let it put it on her.
That's smart.
I like that.
Let them see a different side of you, but have it, like, filtered through the girl.
So you can't be calling you soft.
It's like, it's her video.
She made it.
Word, though, right?
That was fine.
The only other thing that really stood out to me
about that video, too, that I was sitting there on the couch
watched it last night, is that you were even raising canes
in Dubai. I'm like, damn.
Oh, yeah, I love Raising Cain.
I didn't know how in Dubai. That's amazing.
Yeah, they got shake, shack, all types of stuff in Dubai.
I was kind of shocked when I went there.
I was like, yo, this is some type of different type of world.
Because all those rich fuckers out of there,
they're like, they want all the cool shit that they know
we got out here. So they're like, yeah, build me a Pinda Express.
I don't know, probably.
I ain't going to lie. Dubai is hard.
I wish I owned Dubai.
Wow, yeah. That's gotta be a spot.
It's crazy.
Definitely got to get some cribs out there.
Yeah, oh yeah, I have one other question
that I really wanted to answer before I just wrap this up is,
are they really bringing back making the band?
Yes.
Are you going to be involved with that anyway?
What's the idea?
Yeah, I'm going to be a little involved.
I can't give everything out right now.
I'm going to let my pops, you know what I'm saying, debut all that.
But it's going to be crazy, and I know he's going to bring something different to the
table this time than last time.
So it's going to be a little bit more.
interesting than the last one was, even though the last one was crazy.
Yeah.
We're taking it there for coaching.
I'm so excited for that.
And I was thinking about the other day, I'm like, man, they brought back TRL and nobody
cared.
But if they bring back making the band, everybody's going to go crazy for it.
You know?
Making the band going to go up.
Yeah, just because it's like, that's so, like, I still feel like they also need to do
a really good version of, like, American Idol with rappers.
Yeah.
That would be hard.
Because one of the final.
Watch some people go out there and just bomb, just terrible.
That would be so fun.
Yeah.
That would be the best.
That would definitely be hard.
So what are you got coming up?
Coming up, I'm dropping a lot of new music, being in the studio, you know what I'm saying,
the rest of the summer.
These videos I just dropped surfing the West, keep pushing those new content out to the fan.
Wave juice.
Got my merch site up, Finally, Sincerely.
Brand new merch on there.
Hell yeah.
Just working, working a lot.
For those who don't know, we got the wave juice in store right now.
Wave juice is in stores right now.
right now so if you buy mail rolls
pull up you know we're at on
some shit facts and if you're trying
to pour up in an exclusive
beverage there you go yeah it's a great
chaser you can turn that thing purple
you can pour up anything that's I'm not
applying anything you can drink anything drink some
tequila with the wave juice it don't matter
for the ladies sarahs sarah oh yeah
the best chaser for the wave juice
by the way is the peach sarac or the apple
so you're
you're chasing soda with alcohol
or no you're saying you chase the alcohol
with the soda. Yeah, yeah, whatever. I go out with the soda. Yeah, yeah. My bad.
That's the rock is good, though. What's the odds of us getting in case of that out here?
Easy. I got you right now. I'm going to be drunk tonight. You know that? It's going down.
All right, man. I appreciate you coming in, talking with us and getting the soda in the store and everything.
Yes, sir. We got to pull him up something. Let's do it. Is there any wave juice for my man?
I need the wave juice. I ain't had sugar in weeks.
And we need some ice for them. Facts. Oh, you want a lot of taste to us? Let's do this. We got some
Nice.
Live taste types right now.
Take your time with it.
It's every flavor.
Ooh.
They need that.
It reminds me when you used to go a burger came back in the day and they would have the red and the ice, like the crushed ice type smoothie things.
Kind of reminds me in the blue side of the aisle there.
That was gas.
That's one of my favorite things.
So every time I go to the movie theater, I get a blue raspberry slush.
See?
There you go.
That is a classic.
Classic.
Makes sense to me.
All right. King Combs.
No Jumper.
Coolest podcast on world.
Check us on YouTube, SoundCloud, iTunes.
Like, comment, and subscribe.
And definitely come on in and cop some wave juice.
Come on, man.
We're here.
Let's get it.
Easy.
Appreciate it, G.
Thank you, man.
