One Song - Doja Cat "Paint the Town Red" with Laci Mosley
Episode Date: September 25, 2025This week on One Song, Blake and LUXXURY are resharing their ‘‘Paint The Town Red’ episode in celebration of the release of Doja Cat’s new album Vie. In this episode, they discuss her rise fro...m viral star to super star and unpack the #1 Billboard Hot 100 hit alongside the 'Scam Goddess' herself, actress and comedian Laci Mosley. Don’t let financial opportunity slip through the cracks. Use code ONESONG at MonarchMoney.com for half off your first year. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey, One Song Nation, we're bringing back an episode about a contemporary artist that we can't stop talking about.
And that's Doja Cat.
That's right, Diallis. She's got a brand new album.
So what better time to revisit our deep dive into her song, Paint the Town Red?
And by the way, we weren't alone on that episode.
We had the hilarious actor-comedian and friend of the pod.
Lacey Mosley joined us for the ride.
That's right.
We love Lacey.
We love this song.
And we think you'll love this replay.
Let's get into it.
Luxury, my man.
What's up?
Diala, my friend, I'm doing great today.
And how about yourself?
I am doing great.
I'm so excited because we're going to be talking about a new song today on one song.
On this show, we usually celebrate songs for the past.
We've covered era-defining classics like Nirvana smells like Teen Spirit,
Queens Under Pressure, the Beatles come together.
And that's a little by design.
It's hard to write history as it happened.
That's true.
There's no grand perspective yet.
But we like danger here at one song.
We live on the edge.
We live on the edge.
We don't mind being wrong.
So we are going for it.
Today we are going to be talking about a song.
by one of the leading artists of right now.
Number 15 global artists on Spotify.
Absolutely.
This song dropped last summer,
and we think it could be around for many years to come.
That's right.
It's a song that went to number one in 19 countries,
including Brazil, Bulgaria, Lithuania,
and even here in the US of A.
It also topped the Billboard Global 200
has the distinction of being the fastest song
by female artists to amass 100 million streams.
Yeah, that's real.
And more than that, it represents the creative zenith
for an artist who was once dismissed as a novelty act.
That's right. I said what I said.
And this is that time on one song where we're going to do...
Doja Cat.
And the song is Paint the Town Red.
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All right. I'm actor, writer, director, and sometimes DJ Diallo Riddle.
And I'm producer, DJ, songwriter, and musicologist luxury.
AKA the guy who talks about interpolation on the internet.
And today we have a very special guest with us to talk about all things doja cat.
You might know her from her roles on a black lady sketch show and I Carly.
You may have seen her on Sherman Showcase if you did.
Thank you.
And you might also know her as the scam goddess.
That is the title of her hit podcast.
Lacey Mosley, welcome to the show.
Hey.
Why are the other one clapping?
Yeah.
Why are you not clapping for me?
You know.
Merge your hands in a violent motion.
Violence with your hands.
I don't accept the West, the Western civilization tells me this the proper way.
I looked at you and gave you an approving nod.
Because that's what we did in the Motherland.
We didn't do this.
We didn't do this in the Motherland.
Show me applause in the Motherland.
We was never over there.
We don't know what they did.
I did the research.
That's my favorite awkward question when people were like, oh, where are you from?
Like, where's your family, your genius?
And I'm like, yeah, I don't know.
West Africa, somewhere they could talk a boat.
Somewhere over the ear.
I look mine up. It was Angola.
I'm not giving the government no more of my information.
I gave them all my DNA.
My cousin's got two strikes.
We can't do it on that.
They're like, we've got a match.
Okay, so Lacey, my friend, we're discussing Doja Cat today.
I want to start off by asking you this.
If an alien fell to the planet Earth and had no knowledge of pop culture,
how would you explain to this alien?
Nogicat.
Because we are friends, I am here.
Did I put you on the spot with that?
I'm sorry.
No, you didn't.
No, I'm glad you said it because discussing musicians has got me in a lot of trouble recently.
Well, we were going to stay far away from that.
I'm here for you.
I'm here for you because I love you.
But I guess I would describe DojKat as some, like, okay, welcome to our planet.
I'm trying to do y'all voice.
You're getting the accent.
That's good.
That's what you're going to find it.
Yeah.
So I've been, because I got accidents.
It's in 1960s alien, first love.
I'm glad you picked up on that.
And it's like, like, so Dolgucat is an internet sensation.
What your children have been watching on live.
She's constantly online.
And she started off with, like, making these videos on a camera that broadcasted them to the world.
and they were her eating burgers and drinking milkshakes
and playing music on her computer.
And then we got a beautiful, life-changing, iconic zenith.
Ooh, there it is.
That word's going to come up a lot in this episode.
Called, bitch, I'm a cow.
So she was doing that kind of stuff before moo came out.
Yes, before moo came out.
But I go, moo.
Yeah.
And we're going to get into a little bit of mood.
Yeah, and I just love that we are all kind of these drones.
She's sending it out to the people and we're like, whatever you say, Doja Cat, whatever you make up in your bedroom while you're eating burgers and bullshit.
We are going to do it.
And then she exploded into this kind of genre bending odd, very much child of the internet, had all of the my spaces up to the, you know, TikToks that we have now.
And to be clear, I mean, like, you know, we're going to be, you know, talking about Doja Cat as we dive into her music.
But, like, she had actually been signed before Mooh.
Like she had been signed to an actual label
And, you know, she was doing all this weird stuff
On like E-Bom's world in MySpace
But like she was signed before
You know, she ever had sort of like the weird
Breakout, I think.
I didn't know that.
That's a good scam, honey,
because she had that parisocial scam
Where it was just like, I'm just a girly
In my regular apartment just like y'all
And I'm just over here with like probably thousands of dollars
worth of equipment but we don't know what that stuff costs.
You do.
You do luxury.
So that's interesting.
So you think because like I've, I've
kind of grown up. My assumption of her is that she came up exactly as you put it.
Like almost like in my mind, I'm kind of think there's like a through line a little bit.
Like she and Lil Nas X are kind of in a similar realm of like coming from internet performative
and really knowing the language of the internet and being involved deeply. And like the music is
almost like it could have been something else. They could have, they're sort of memeers in a way.
They're meaning with music in a lot of ways. So do you think that that was a front she was putting on?
like, because she does have a little bit of a, her background does seem to have a little bit of, like,
privilege, if that's what you're, it sounds like you were kind of referring to.
Well, yeah, and I mean, and with Dialo's sharing that, like, she was already signed,
what I'm saying more is, and I do this too.
I'll tell you all my scum.
But, like, the parissocial relationship with your fans, and I don't take it too far because
if you open the door, they're walking in, okay?
So it's like, I open a window and be like, hey, you're all blues clues.
Tap the Brown.
But like, creating that kind of authentic relationship with her fans
and knowing how, like you said, luxury to communicate on the internet,
like it does create this, like, authentic character
that doesn't seem like an industry planner.
It doesn't seem like something that's being shoved down your throat.
It's like we all got to feel like we organically found her.
And we all know the people who really love music,
I don't gay keep like this.
But I do feel very special if it's like,
I listen to your mixtapes and now you pop it.
I'm not going to hate on you when you pop it.
Like, do your chart topper.
you know, I loved House of Balloons
from the weekend.
Right, I remember that.
I mean, it's kind of still my favorite thing by it.
It's my favorite thing.
It's my favorite thing of his.
And then when he was like, I can't feel my face.
I was like, go ahead, King, do that.
But I was happy that I was never
house of the balloons.
I was happy I was there for so far gone.
And that's what she's saying, like her true fans
are sticking with her through the highs, the lows,
the, the like, popular, the unpopular.
That's exactly, you sound like one of the true fans
that she wouldn't be trying to, like, shake off.
Right.
Because I'm really entitled to people that, and probably also because I work in this industry,
but like, I don't feel entitled to people's work or who they are or what I projected onto them.
Like, I think that's really unfair.
I'm like, get your bag, girl, you know?
If don't you want to throw some ass for target, I'd be like, yes.
If you're a true fan of the artistry, you're there for the journey, right?
Yeah.
You know, I want to put it out there, you know, just to make it very clear.
She was signed in 2014.
Okay.
To Kimosabi Records.
That's Dr. Luke's label.
Yeah, exactly.
Record producers.
Yeah.
And they had a song called So High, and it was featured on Empire, and it was supposed to be sort of a breakout.
You know, it did something.
Right.
You know, it didn't do a entire, it's a whole lot.
That's a tough spot to put it on.
It's like there's so much music on Empire.
Like, listen.
I know.
Drip, drop, drip, dribb-drib-drib-di-drop.
By the way, breaking songs on Empire, that's first season.
Second season, I don't know what they could break.
But first season, oh, absolutely.
And I have to point out
So after she leaves that label
She was briefly signed to OG Mako's label
I did not know this before we started to prepare for the show
For those who don't know
Oji Mako is
He's very sort of mid-20 teens
Famous for the song, You Guess It
Let's just play a really brief snippet of that
Bitch you guessed it
You're strong
I mean
That was such a huge hit
When that song came out
You saw that actually just jump out of me
I was like bitch you get
You was right.
I mean, you was right.
I was like, this is a hit song.
It's so simple.
And I'm proud to say I'm the piano player.
Are you serious?
No, you know, I did it under a gnome to plume.
That is not true.
But I did always say that that would be like great bragging rights to be the person to play at the piano.
It's one finger playing the piano.
You don't need all your fingers.
I think it seems like a cat doing that.
Yeah.
Accidentally.
She was walking down the keyboard.
So she was signed to OG Mako.
Believe it or not, O.G. Mako could not break her big.
She ended up breaking herself big.
We're going to talk about Moon a second.
But right now in the current moment,
Dojik had has hit a creative high point,
her zenith, if you will.
She dropped her album, Scarlett, last year in 2023.
Luxury, I know you've been listening to Scarlett recently.
Lacey, I'm sure you've already heard it.
Let's start with you, luxury.
What did you think of Scarlet?
I got to admit, like, she's becoming one of my favorite artists.
And I think maybe this happens when you kind of lean into an artist
and you start to get all the nuance.
But in particular, there's something about,
Doja. First of all, the music, I love the music, musically speaking. She's doing really cool stuff,
like mixing rap and like she's like playing with different characters and different voices.
Like I was listening to the first song, Attention, I think. That was the first single from Scarlet.
And I was like, it sounded a lot like, there's one cadence where she's like, I thought it was
Ladybug Mecca from Digable Planets, you know. And then she's sort of jumping around these
different characters. It can sound like a lot of different. It's like an actress.
It sounds like a lot of different people. The music takes a lot of twists and turns genre-wise.
and as a person I was just drawn in by the charisma of this human.
I was just like, I just really like her as a person,
which is the core of what a pop star is what they're doing at heart.
It's their persona.
They're going along for the ride.
And what they're doing visually and musically and kind of in the culture
is all a part of that package.
But it comes down to the person.
So I'm really attracted to the person as a person.
Like, I want to hang out with Doja.
You find Doja Cat attractive.
We got it.
As a person.
No, I'm playing.
And she's an attractive to that lady.
That was way too eloquent.
I had to step in with my silliness.
What do you think about, what do you think about Scarlet?
I love Scarlet.
It very much gives me, like, early aughts of Lady Gaga's career.
I can see that.
You know, like, a lot of shock, a lot of camp, a lot of, like, big swings.
And things that we've seen before, but kind of bend on their head a little bit.
You know, Scarlet's got bawdy, honey.
You know what I mean?
So it's still sexy.
Yeah.
But it's also just, like, you know, kind of weird and and androgynous.
and dark, but, like, in a way that's still giving me pop.
It's just giving me, like, Lady Gaga meat dress, you know.
I'm so glad you said Lady Gaga, because, like, I didn't want to interrupt, but, like,
just really quickly on that point, when I said Lil Nas X, to me, there's, like, a through line.
There's lots of artists in here.
But, like, I think from Bowie to Gaga, to Lilnaz X and to Doja, there's a connection
where, again, it's music is important, but it's not everything.
There's the persona.
There's the, like, what they look like, what they dress, how they communicate in public
It's performance art.
It's performance art, thank you.
It feels like performance art
of which music is an important part
but not the only thing.
Yeah, but the aesthetics are the things
that last with us forever.
Like you think purple, you think prints,
you think of that phallic guitar,
you know what I mean?
Like those things are also a part of the performance
and unfortunately now that we don't have
as much artist development happening in music
it's like they pluck a girl out or whatever
and they be like, get on that stage, girl,
just do a two step and do whatever.
You know, and it's like,
we're happy with that,
because consumerism and like our attention spans are so short that we're like,
okay, yes, girl, get up into your sponge bob pajamas and give us nothing.
And it's like, it's nice to see someone who's put some thought into it and put a little something that lasts with you.
And it seems so genuine.
And it makes it more sustainable because we all can name, can think of artists that I won't name,
or you can sort of like mix and match what they sing with who they are.
And they don't really have that hold on pop culture.
And that's all, that is what's happening behind the scenes, by the way.
A lot of these songs are kind of like being traded from one artist to the next.
And it almost doesn't matter.
Or stolen.
Right. But with Doja, it all feels, to me at least. It feels a lot more like an authentic artist is at the core of it.
I like what you said about like, you know, artist development and how it takes some time.
She got signed in 2014. Like, think about it. She's been getting developed. She's, she feels like she just got here.
But she was signed 10 years ago. And I think that that's important. Maybe to some of the listeners out there who are trying to break it.
Like, it takes some time even after you think you've made it to actually blub. But if I can get my own take on Scarlett, what I actually liked about it is, you know, like,
Her land planet her was like a pop record.
Right.
There's a lot of actual rapping going on on Scarlett.
Like just the fact that she's got a song called like 97, like she was like, I want to let people know that I am a rapper.
You know what I mean?
Like I really feel like Scarlett at its core is a retort to anyone who didn't take her seriously as a rapper.
In fact, back when Twitter was still called Twitter.
It still is to me.
I'm glad.
I'm going to call you with your mom named.
She was working on Scarlett.
and she said, and I quote,
don't ever fucking disrespect me as a rapper.
After the last song drop,
you will respect my pen,
and that's fucking that.
And I got to say as somebody who writes stuff,
bravo to you.
I'm going to start talking to the studios like that.
After the last script,
I submitted to y'all,
y'all will respect me as a rapper.
At the very least.
Respect my pen.
Clearly I need to write a rap script.
Anyway, after it's released,
the album was lauded by critics,
and widely regarded as Doja's best work
and a showcase for his skills as a rapper.
That's now.
But I want to rewind us back to 2018
when a lot of people first became familiar with Doja.
Lacey, you touched on this earlier.
It was because of this song.
It is the famous, maybe infamous, moot.
Bitch, I'm a cow.
Bitch, I'm a cow.
Bitch, I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I go moose.
That made me so happy.
Now, some of our listeners, I guarantee you.
Thank you for that man performance.
I know.
Those of you watching on YouTube just got a great show
and Lacey, great hat, by the way.
We said we were talking Dodgers
so I had to bring some energy.
Oh, you had to, and I love it.
I love it.
Listen, I know some of our listeners
don't know Doja Cat that well
and they definitely have not heard mood,
so they're probably like,
what the hell is happening on one song today?
But we're so happy to be talking about this
because this is a song that I think had,
you know, one intention when it came out,
but like among, you know, younger hip-hop listeners,
They were all over it.
She wrote this on a live stream or something.
I watched that live stream where she wrote it.
When it was happening?
Yeah, because I was following her.
And I really loved her in her bedroom.
I told her she would wear the cutest outfits.
And it was very, like, anime girly.
And also, she was, like, playing music.
So when this song dropped, you were aware of it.
Yes, I was there.
You watched this get made.
That's so dope.
That is so cool.
And also, like, what I love about it, I'm like a secret.
What I love about moo, bitch, I'm a cow.
Well, like, I'm a secret music.
Like I can see I used to do like musical theater.
I need my own theme song.
Oh no, later I'm I am going to sing through.
But I come on now.
But it's like the thing that I'm kind of, it's like, you know,
basketball players want to be rappers.
Right.
Rapers want to be basketball players.
Comedians want to always do music.
Comedians want to do music.
And it's like we have to do it under a pseudonym.
We have to like childish Gambino it.
And then if they like it, then we're like, it's me down the glove.
You know what I mean?
Like I want to do that too.
It's like my secret like little.
embarrassing thing. But one thing
that I really loved about moo and I think
why it was so catchy is like you know when you
get like a sample track or something
sometimes like remember when Kanye did this
to Drake on a song that he was supposed to give to him and it was that
Scoop-dity woo. Skippity do. Scoop-a-dooop!
Scoop! Like I actually know the whole thing we did a bit for a sketch show but the
whole point is like this is the beat.
This is where the words should be.
These are the syllables.
Right. It's doing placeholder stuff but that works.
Yeah. And so Cal to me
feels like campy placeholder.
Or it's like you would have loved the song like got milk, bitch, got steak, hope, got
cheese.
It's like you're feeling the motion of it more than the words.
Sometimes it's music.
We always say.
Black IPs are great at that.
Come on now.
All these songs is like boom boom, boom, pow.
Like what are we doing?
It's such a testament to like the power of improvisation and the power of just like trusting your
gut and your instinct because that was first idea, best idea, right?
I always come back to the Beatles scrambled eggs.
Yeah.
Grambled eggs becomes yesterday.
Oh my darling, how I love your legs.
That was the beginning of yesterday.
A lot of people didn't take Doja Cat seriously as an artist because of this song.
But I think looking back, it's not fair because like you said, it's all just the creation
and like the syllables fall where they need to fall.
Luxury, you have the stems for this song.
And I just wanted to play just two parts that I thought were kind of wild.
So this is something I never noticed until I heard it, isolated.
Check this out.
from the stems of moo.
I'm excited.
No.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
I'm a cow.
Now, I never noticed how much, like,
soldier boy with the long vowel sounds.
Like a long vowel sound just to get really reductive.
Woo.
Yeah.
Exactly.
It's like, doja cat up in this.
So, like, you know, that was something that jumped out to me.
And then one other thing, I mean, like,
I knew that there was a sample in there.
But now.
to hear it, you know, played.
This is Pocodots
and Moonbeams by West Montgomery
the song that underlies
Mooh. Check this out.
I mean, it's so beautiful, right?
This is why I love sampling.
The juxtaposition of context
because in Mooh, in
Mooh, that sounds so fucking silly
and like simplistic
and dumb, like in the best possible
way. And then it's like this like
were a smooth, sooky New York nightclub
in the 60s or something.
Somebody was listening to West Montgomery.
Yeah, that's classy.
Jazz guitarist.
And we're like, yeah, I'm going to put this out of it.
Nothing is cool.
I don't need a song about a cow.
That's brilliant.
But I think that's also what she's really good at.
Doja loves to troll and she's a child of the internet.
So it's like you got trolled by listening to this song that you didn't know had West Montgomery as a sample
that you didn't know had all these background and stems and stuff.
And you thought it was just like a fun little ditty bob, but it's like this was what music can be.
And I also really love that because.
In the terms of, like, maybe not being taken seriously in language that you use through music and through art to speak things to people.
It's like her saying, like, you think I'm goofy, but if you were actually smart, you would know how smart I am.
Yeah.
You got to be smart to know how silly this is.
Exactly.
And it's like, I love that shit.
Like, even in fashion as an actress, like, when I go on a carpet or a show or whatever, I talk to my stylist that I'm working about about what are we trying to say when I walk in this room.
and that's how we make the outfit.
We start with the communication.
And so it's like every little thing you see,
like if you are really an artist, it's not by accident.
No.
I always say that things like The Simpsons and Conan O'Brien,
they're really dumb jokes for smart people.
Not too much of my father, Conan.
Oh, no.
No, I'm joking.
I know you said something nice.
I just wanted to bring that up.
Conan, please come on the show.
But I just flashed on something when you said that.
I just saw this like TikTok the other day
where someone pointed out,
they were just like, it was just like a woman in her car going like,
I'm so tired of you.
Like, so child, she points out how like childish can be, you know, like when rappers say puns,
they're like super clever, but like when we say it, they're like dad joke.
Exactly.
It's a dad joke.
The line between dad joke and like, and there's a childish Gambino line about like something,
something Acme and then it's like, you know, a cartoon character.
It's really not fair.
I always said like when my 20s I used to dress like a granddad,
but then somewhere when I hit my 40s,
dressing like a granddad, people just think you're a granddad.
It's not fair.
context is everything.
Yeah, because we call it coastal grandma.
I'm like, oh my God, I'm giving Diane Keaton walking on a beach.
Oh, that's...
The line between corny, the line between dad joke and profundity is all context.
Profundity, Zenith.
You know, come for the songs.
Stay for the vocabulary.
Lacey, when did Doja stop being the rapper with a song about Kausie?
Like, in other words, when did she stop trolling and really get rapping?
And, like, do you have, like, a favorite Doja Cat song?
It's funny because she's kind of like disparaged her pop girl era
It was like this isn't it
And I feel like that's just her artistically trying to get to the point where people are like
Realize like I'm smarter than you
She's screaming it at us
But I think even the stuff she was trying to throw away
Like for me it was like I love streets
I mean that was pandemic like everybody was like
Totally wearing a church dress and then to turn their lights off and putting a red lights on
And do
The streets is amazing.
Love streets.
And also, I'm sorry, but I'm a say-so girlie.
I love say-so.
Say-so?
It makes me feel good.
My kids like Say-so.
Yeah.
My kids like Say-so.
Let's play a little bit of streets.
A lot of people might not even know that's a Doja Cat song.
But I guarantee if you've ever spent any time on TikTok, you do know this song.
It is Streets by Doja Cat.
Okay.
See, y'all guys are, I'm like, we're a family show.
Lacey, we don't do that here.
We just had our make-out tape episode where we're talking about, like,
what song do you make out with your better have?
But I will say one saw that definitely made the tape with my wife and I need to know.
Love your wife.
Need to know.
I'm going to tell her you told me.
After the break, we'll start painting the town red and get into the origin story of the song at samples, walk on by.
No, but stay here. Don't walk on by.
Stay in the podcast.
Please stay here.
Let's walk in the name of the song.
Just clarifying.
Hey, luxury, I have an interesting problem.
I am listening to your problem.
Listen, I used to have all these different bank accounts, one from when I was in college,
one from when I first moved to the West Coast.
When I moved to New York, I started having all these different accounts, financial accounts.
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You want to invest in stuff.
And that just, it left me with a lack of awareness of how much money I had in each account.
You're not telling me the problem is you have too many bank accounts with too much money in there.
Oh, God, no.
That's not the problem.
No, my problem is that.
there's just too many accounts and some have like $20 and after you put in fees and stuff,
that just,
it means that that money is not working for me.
You just forgot about them.
Right.
I totally forgot about them.
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Welcome back. Lacey, for those who haven't heard scam goddess, tell us about the podcast.
SkaM goddess is a comedy podcast that I used as a scam because five years ago, I wanted to do.
I was listening.
What a meta scam?
When I get scammed out of?
I was just listening in my car.
What did I lose?
Listen, I'm going to get things from you.
Don't worry about it.
I get them.
But no, five years ago, when I started the podcast, I had originally pitched
something else. It was like a
current events comedy podcast. They were like,
we have too many of those. The market is saturated.
And Miles Gray, who I love so much,
I would be on the day with that guy's a lot.
And he would be like, you're always researching scams.
Like, are you the scam goddess? And I was like, bam,
that's my Trojan horse. I was like,
y'all heard about true crime. Let's talk about
true con. So we go through scams
because they're inherently funny most of the time.
And we warn people about scams.
I'm trying to help y'all keep y'all's
grandpappy and grandmama's retirement
so that they don't leave you with nothing when they go on
glory.
And like, because you're not calling them enough.
But like, you know, so we warn people about scams.
We also talk about just like the biggest true crime scams and historic hoodwings.
Y'all has been on the show multiple times.
Like, sure you have to pull up.
I want to come on.
Look, sure you have to come on.
I'm such a fan.
And the fact that you have been on three times worries me.
Like, what has happened?
Why three?
I feel like I don't understand the criminal mind.
So every time I go on there, I learn something new.
Like, because my mind is just like the rules say.
and I don't do stuff.
No, but for real, like, I love your show so much.
And it's such a pleasure to listen to it.
The episode with you in particular, I was enjoying because, like, I'm so used to, he's
my friend in various contexts, and then we have this show together.
But when you hear someone you know, like, on someone else's podcast, like you, it's like
you're seeing another side to them.
So I was just, like, hearing all these cool aspects of you that I didn't know,
especially the part where you get scammed a lot.
So that really helped me understand your psychology.
Yeah, Dallel is big bro.
And also, like, we don't punch down on the show.
So if you're a victim of a scam or whatever, because I always say, like, look, you can look at a scam and be like, oh, that would never happen to me.
I would never do that.
But baby, if you catch the right scammer, there's bait.
Maybe that wasn't your bait.
But don't find the right fisherman, okay?
Because they will get you.
I think it's just something that's impervious.
It's prevalent.
And obviously it's grown to this bubbling point in the zeitgeist because we know America is a scam.
So we don't punch down on the victims, but we do laugh at the scammers.
And it's a good time.
It's like a public service, too.
Like there really is a lot to be wary of.
It's only every day AI, this, that, and the other thing,
there's a million things to be wary of.
And now there's AI phone calls.
So, though, like, because we all are so online,
like, people can copy your voice and then put that in AI.
They just outlawed that in theory,
but how are you going to stop it?
Like, it's illegal, but it's not going to be right.
You told me that.
Don't tag your family on your Facebook because scammers look at that.
And then they call your grandpa using your voice saying you in jail and they,
you know, you do bail.
If you, if it's like, you're, if it's like, you know,
it was definitely a weird phone call because my grandma.
because my grandfather's dead and he called me.
If there's a number that says possible scam or whatever it is
and you just pick up accidentally,
like you're supposed to not even say anything
because they can just take a little phoneme
and turn that into like a full AI of you saying,
give me, put all your money in this bank account, right?
Yeah, but at the same time it's the phone,
so it's like you can always hang up.
I say those are my two favorite tactics.
Hang up or just start screaming.
You'd be surprised at just like somebody at the gas station
like, hey, can I get $20?
And you're just like, ah!
That's crazy than crazy.
It's very weird and people will leave you alone.
Crazy people are afraid of crazy air people.
I just be like, do something a little weird and it works.
But yeah, no, I mean, that's what we do on the show.
And we, I hope that it's a public service.
I say we because I try to skirt myself out of, like, legal liability, but it is me.
Yeah, it's a good time.
Speaking of legal liability, I learned something on the episode with you.
I did not come, I did not put two and two together that Sherman showcase with the Emmy.
And, like, the people associated with Sherman's showcase, season two, might have some connection to that Emmy.
So, in theory, I might not also an Emmy winner.
since I was also a music maker
You can say that you supplied music to the Emmy Award winning show show.
Luxury, Lacey, I feel is the we won the game.
Yeah, no, Lux and Lacey, this feels like a whole other thing.
It's a luxury, paint the town red, makes heavy use of a sample.
Talk us through that wonderful sample and how Doja and her producers make it their own.
All right, well, I'm excited to talk about this track because what's cool about it,
one of the many things that's cool about it, is the way that Doja interacts with the sample.
So the sample is in the background, but the voice of Dionne Warwick on the track on her famous song Walk On By from 1964 kind of acts. There's a little bit of a call-and-response going on between. So I really love the interaction. It's like a dialogue between 1964 and present-day. Between Doja and Dion, Auntie Dion. It's exactly 60 years ago. Right. To me, it's so weird that like a song that resonated with like listeners' ears in 1964, you think about what the cars look like, how everything's
smelled like smoke, you know, like, oh, if you want to see a movie, you had to wait until
it was back in theaters.
And the use of the sample evokes all of that, right?
Yes.
Just a little bit of the sonic.
60 years later, it's still resonating with people.
It's beautiful.
It's crazy.
Those are some of my favorite moments, like, in that time and era when, you know, the
women's was still smoking and drinking when they was pregnant, okay?
You know, the government hadn't warned us yet.
Very thin cigarette holder, right?
So fancy and long.
And also, like, I know we're going to get more into this, but I also feel like the lyrics in Doja's song
kind of like
the sentiment of it is still
like, I don't think it's just a sample that they chose
because it sounded good.
It's also the message, you know, like,
if you see me walking down the street
and I start to cry
each time we meet,
walk on by.
And it's like, in her song, she's like,
bitch, I said what I said.
Walk on by.
Walk on by because this is what we're doing.
It is absolutely.
The connection,
there are connections,
between the songs and whether she like felt it from just the sample,
which I, my theory would be actually that that's baked in.
Part of the beauty of sampling is that that sentiment gets kind of baked into the sound.
She just got, I'll get into the specifics in a minute,
but from the loop, from that two bar loop, all of that is still there.
Even though the song is three minutes long with many twists and turns
and beautiful chord changes and such, without further ado, we're going to get into this.
Yeah, let's talk about, let's talk about how this sample was made.
Let's do it.
Today we are talking on one song about Doja Cat.
paint the town red, but we're actually talking about two songs. This is a two-song episode of
of one song, I think. So the second song is the sample source. Walk on by, such a prominent part
of what we hear when we hear Paint the Town Red, that it deserves its own little backstory.
So let's talk a little bit about Walk On By. This is a song composed by Bert Baccarac and Hal David,
two songwriters who are massively important in American music history. In the 60s, actually they meet in
the 50s at the Brill Building, which is a famous building in New York with a lot of songwriting teams
got together and wrote some of the
classic songs of the 50s and 60s.
They met there. They formed a bond as Baccarac is the music composer,
and Hal David is the lyricist.
So as a team, they would literally their job at the Brill Building is to crank out songs.
Every day, they would just song, song, song, song, song.
Their connection was incredible, and they wrote a bunch of hits that we have all heard a million times.
I'll just name a few. This is only scratching the surface.
They wrote, rain drops keep falling on my head from Bushcasting the Sundance Kid.
Do you know the way the San Jose?
What the world needs now is love.
which you may know from Austin Powers,
where Bert Backrack actually makes a cameo appearance singing this song.
Some other songs are always something there to remind me.
You 80s kids would know the naked eyes remake of that song.
What's New Pussy Cat, which is Tom Jones's famous song,
which I always think of John Mullaney now because he has a joke about What's New Pussy Cat?
I could go on and on.
Well, you left out one of my favorites, which is you're just too good to be true.
I mean, let's name a few more.
Which was covered by Lauren Hill famous.
You're just a good to be good.
Can't keep my eyes off of you.
That's right.
They longed to be close to you, the look of love.
So in 1961...
Look of love is fantastic.
It's so good.
There's not a lot of bad songs in this catalog.
No.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, there you go.
Yeah.
So in 1961, Bachrack and David meet Dionne Warwick.
She is a background singer on a track they're working on.
And they, quote, unquote, discover her, as one would say at the time.
They worked together for about 20 years.
12 million records sold in their collaborations.
38 singles that make the charts.
22 our top 40s.
Walk on by is one of them.
But also, anyone who had a heart, I say a little prayer.
I'll never fall in love again.
Do you know the way to San Jose?
And Dionne Warwick herself deserves a little bit of shine.
She deserves all the time.
All the shine. That's Twitter on T.
And I love her niece Brittany Warwick.
That's who got her on Twitter.
And like that became iconic and then SNL.
So she's mommy's still relevant to this day.
But I also love that the Whitney Houston family,
all of them.
them were background singers, a very famous background singers.
The connection to Whitney Houston is their first cousins.
Yes.
Which is because Deon Warwick and Whitney Houston's mother, Sissy, were sisters.
So they're first cousins right there.
Wonderful.
Like these three musicians are so much wonderful music has come out of this collaboration.
Can I just say, it's just a side note.
One of my favorite Dionne Warwick songs of all time is the song, you're going to need me,
which was famously sampled by.
Jay Della. Here's just a small piece of that real quick.
And listen, shout out to my exes.
And I'm not coming back.
I mean, I can listen to that song all right.
I can too. Oh my goodness.
Yeah.
Beautiful stuff. So let's just take a minute.
They're a dream team. They capture a sound from the 60s that doesn't always get
mentioned when you hear all the Phil Specter talk and all that stuff.
But to me, like this is a part of that like just glossy, clean.
big sound. I imagine
like a day of Capitol Records,
you know, that iconic building and like,
you've got these instrumentalists.
And you've got, you know, just this
amazing voice and these amazing
arrangements and lyrics. Like,
they're a dreamt. They all bring such talents
to the pool, too. I mean, Bacharach, just to spend
one more moment on him because he's such an important
iconic composer in American history. What he's
bringing into pop music is a lot of jazz
like chord changes. Yeah. Interesting
choices for like bars that kind of
he'll add like half a bar or maybe out an
entire bar, rather than having the four bar, eight bar kind of phrasing and looping, all these little
innovations that make the music special because it kind of hesitates or pauses or does something
unexpected. And he's putting it in pop music in the 60s. It's so good. And that's how you know that it
has longevity. I feel like, you know, interpolation and samples get too much shade. Like,
Michael Jackson loved to interpolate music. Oh, yeah. Not on this show. We love that stuff.
But like, I also love the juxtaposition of the sounds in a lot of these songs, especially Dionne Warwick's
where you're hearing these, like, thick, bassy,
like you want to move your body,
kind of like streets, like when that beat drops is like,
you know, it's something,
it evokes an emotion of feeling in your body.
Your body can't help itself, yeah.
It's juxtaposed with, like, you know,
Dion being in her higher register or, you know, whatever.
So it's like this lightness to it too.
So it's like, you can listen over and over again.
And then I love hearing it in other music.
And I think the real testament is if black people want to step up with your music,
if we want to sample your music,
then, you know what I mean?
That's just the way it is.
Tupac being like, let me get that country song.
Like, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
That's how you know it's bussing.
Especially 60 years later when it's got something to contribute to the modern day,
to the modern conversation, which is what happened in this song.
So I'm going to play for a minute.
We're going to look at Doja's Paint the Town's use of the sample.
But first, a real quick breakdown about the actual song itself.
You can throw ass to this.
You know what I was thinking.
That was what I was thinking.
I was like, kind of want to throw some ass to this.
Yeah, you know how they took Sam cooking?
It was like, I was born by the river, river, river.
I was born by the river.
I was shaking that ass, spin it over.
Pussy, I was speaking the cat.
Lacey, you're giving it away.
Save this for the studio after we record the episode.
I love it.
I'm surprised nobody sampled that piano.
I mean, I'm sure they have.
Right now I hear the internet firing up.
Oh, man.
but you know I haven't heard a prominent thing
like there's so many wonderful parts there
yeah and by the way I love a song that can put you in a setting
it's almost like its own time machine like as she's singing
I can see how she's dressed I can see like a crowded
bus in Manhattan in 1964
like the texture on the clothes like it really plants you
firmly in that year yeah I feel it's so evocative of exactly what you're
describing it's very cinematic visual about it yeah so cut to present
day and the story of how that song that we just heard walk on by got incorporated into the doja cat song
paint the town red i'm going to tell you that story now it begins with earl on the beat the producer
um he's out of Atlanta he done a lot of work with quality control artists like lilyotti a little baby
some city girls work and um he basically ran into or met doja cat at i think a Grammy party
and shot his shot basically sent her a beat the next day that he'd been working on so he had just
discovered, or he had recently discovered
a couple years ago, the Dionne Warwick catalog
and he'd heard it, actually, perfect connection,
because he had heard
the Usher sample.
Which Samples the song,
you're going to want me back. We actually know that
song. That's a throwback featuring
Jada because it goes like this.
Yeah, I mean, that song just gives you chills.
I need the beat drop. How dare you?
I know. What a tease.
You know, we have a thing where we can only play a couple
of seconds of every song before we get sued.
But this story just perfectly just perfectly.
Shout out to Asked.
It's perfectly just, that story just perfectly illustrates, though, like the beauty of sampling
and its reuse and the discovery aspect.
Because literally Earl on the beat discovered Dionne Warwick because of that song.
Yeah.
Right?
Which meant that that song is Dion Warwick's.
You're going to need me.
He heard it on the Usher track and decided, his quote is, that's a good-ass voice.
Who is this?
And he went through her discography and just found things to chop.
and one of them was Walk On By.
And when he met Doja Cat at this Grammy party,
he's like, that's what he sent her the next day.
She hopped on the beat.
And this is the story of,
this is the story of Paint the Town Red.
That's right from that discovery.
Thanks to Usher.
And actually, it should be noted, by the way.
We've just talked about Bert Backrack, Hal David,
the writers of Walk on By,
Ndio, and Warwick, who was a singer.
Kind of funny story about how she learned of the Doja Cat use
because she is not technically cut in financially.
unfortunately to the walk on. Come on.
Come on. Burt and Hal Estates. She's not a song writer on the track, so she only learned about it when her granddaughter told her that the song existed.
She's like, Grandma, I think I heard your voice.
Oh, that's hilarious. So then that's when she jumped on Twitter?
That's when she jumped on Twitter.
I love that video.
Went on the Kelly Clarkson show and said, you know, I love it. I just love Daugat bringing my song to a new generation.
You know, but the flip side of it is like not having been cut in. Like she just didn't know it existed until someone.
told her, which is one of the stories that
happen in samples that I'm not crazy about,
unfortunately, when, like, the performer
didn't, I don't know that Dionne Warwick's making a lot of
money from this, is my point. Maybe from a few
more streams on Spotify, but for the
most part, it's the back rack
and David Estates that are earning the coin,
because they're both dead.
That's a sad note to end things.
Everyone just got really excited.
Yeah, I was like super, I was just like
super enthralled. I think Dion's doing okay.
But you know what? She's driving.
Bird and Hal, relatives. Cut her in.
That's the weirdest thing
I mean like you saw that with like
When Renaissance first came out and Calice was speaking about how
She didn't get paid either on not shake
And she wasn't making any money off of it
Right but then it's also like Beyonce just like snatched it off
And it's like it's not that big a deal
Yeah
But at the same time I I
It's interesting because sometimes you have to think of singers
As actors
Where it's like I don't get points on the back end
On movies that I'm in like I didn't write those scripts
I do a lot of improv and a lot of
them. Like, I've been flown out to shoot. I won't say which movies, but just, like, no script.
And ended up with lines very much. It's the way it is. But it's the way it is kind of a little
bit. Every movie's done a little differently. Every song's crafted a little bit differently.
Absolutely. The number of times on this show, though, that will we go down these deep dives
and you really end up touching the edges of like, okay, we're talking about politics and
power and economics. Like, we're trying to be a music show and we're trying to be funny.
But, like, it's hard. We, all these stories kind of end up scraping along the edges of like,
okay, there's some bigger power structure and power dynamics and racial and
all of these things come into these stories in ways that are really tricky.
The two white guys, their estates make a lot of money.
And Dionne Warwick, you know, she's on Kelly Clarkson.
And I don't know how much coin she's actually making from it.
Not from this one.
That is unfortunate.
Again, with the silence and I apologize.
No, no, not at all.
It's not even awkward.
It's just like, also music is the Wild Wild West.
I thank God that we have unions.
But like, I don't know what they'd be doing over here.
They don't have no kind of protection.
Absolutely.
The songwriters, I mean, like, yeah.
It's absolutely, it is the Wild Wild West.
All right, so I'm going to walk you through just a little bit of how the sample was used.
It's really interesting because in the first place, I'm going to play for you, Walk on by,
the portion of Walk on By, which is sampled.
And actually the loop that was used and how it was integrated in Doja Cats,
paint the town is really interesting.
So just a really quick walk through.
What's interesting, though, is that the actual loop is a little bit, like, kind of awkward,
like the brackets of the beginning and end of the loop.
I'll play it for you.
It's kind of in the middle of all of that.
So it starts in the middle of one piece and ends in the middle.
Here is the actual loop.
And here's the...
It's like the earlier by.
Yeah.
It's noticeable.
It's noticeable.
And there's also a little thing that they add.
And I'm going to play...
I'm going to now move from...
That was the original Walk on By.
Now I'll move to the use of it in the song.
So here's the instrumental, the Doja Cat instrumental.
And you can hear that loop is a little different already.
Bye.
And then the second time around, here's where things get really...
Yeah, they double it up a little bit almost to make it fit.
Here's where things get really interesting.
In this second version, there's also like a slight variation on that loop.
That was the intro that you heard.
The second time around and through most of the song, it has a few parts that were added to it.
They're very subtle, but I'll play it for you now.
You hear like in the background?
Yeah.
Sort of back-up trumpets.
So I went through the entire original sample multiple times.
That's not in the original.
that was baked in by the producer by Earl on the beat
to make it sound like it was in the original sample.
Really subtle production tricks
to kind of EQ it to make it sound like an AM radio.
But he was adding, he's adding two parts there.
He's adding two little melodic,
and there's like a keyboard there.
There's really, really cool, subtle things.
I love it.
This is sampling as an art form, is what I'm saying.
This happens a few times throughout the track.
I'll play you one more version of that
because, yes, there is a loop,
but these subtle variations, the subtle enhancement,
make it's running through the whole song what makes the song sort of sing and vibrate
and have motion to it, have some emotion to it.
Emotion and motion.
So that's sort of bridge section.
He's added another kind of layer of synths and melodies that are, again, very subtle,
but they add a little lift.
Melody that goes up, the scale.
Yes, I can hear
Oh, that's beautiful
Now again, that is not
From the original sample
But it really feels like it is
It feels like he's trying to give it like a coating
He's like, this is an old song, y'all
You know how like you take a, when you're in grade school
And they'd be like make an old-timey project
And you put your little paper in the oven
And be like, listen, this is going to be old
If I put tea bags all over, it's going to look hell old
Parchment, you want to make it look like parchment
So I feel like that's him being like, y'all, it's real old, y'all.
It's old.
Some film grain, right?
Some kind of quality of 8mmy.
Kind of like a black and white, like that filter with the like the grainy screen.
What was that thing for Instagram?
It was called like, oh, God.
Oh.
You remember that app?
And it made everything look like sepia tone.
Yes, like hella old.
I know exactly what you're talking about.
It's like flip a gram.
Yeah, something like that.
But like, yeah, it's that.
And you can even still use those filters, like the Fuji filter where it makes it look like it's taken from a Polaroid.
It's like that old in time.
He put that on the song.
So in addition to the sample and the.
and the loop and all those little variations, Earl, Earl on the beat,
added a bass and kick that are the same thing.
In other words, this is an 808 kick drum that gives it the base content.
Anyone who's ever used in 808 knows that there are...
One of the best instruments of all times.
You can tune the kick drum,
and it can be simultaneously fulfilling the goal of what your kick does, boom, boom,
but also giving it like a bass note.
So that's what we're hearing.
It's one thing doing two things.
And then he added some snaps as well.
Yep, that's it.
That's all I need.
And you could use that combination to create like 95% of your pop hip hop song.
Truly.
Like all I heard yeah by Usher.
Yeah.
I heard Freakalik.
Oh, yeah.
Well, Freakleek was supposed to be.
I know.
That was the big news that came out around the time of the Super Bowl.
That was really interesting.
That Freakalik by Peti Pablo was actually the original beat for yeah.
And when he took that beat, they somehow made the beat even better for Usher, which is insane.
I think it worked out perfectly because someone put, yeah, over Freakleek, and I was like,
it's still best, but it's just not quite the same.
When Ludacris first comes out, it's Freakalink, and that's what a couple of people pointed out.
So when you put all that together with the sample, it sounds like this.
Actually, let me just back up because I was playing with some new stemming technology.
So I was able to separate in the sample the instrument from the vocal.
So let's hear that.
We're all playing with some new stimming technology.
Yeah, me too.
We're all doing that.
It's not just dion isolated.
There's the full sample.
There's the 808.
Okay.
And here we go with the snaps and hi-hats.
So that is the musical track.
We've got 1964 in there.
We've got 808s from like the history of hip-hop in there.
Right?
Because when you use an 808, you kind of invoke four.
40 years of 808 based hip hop.
And last but not least, we've got Doja.
So let's talk about Doja's vocal on top.
Let's talk about those Doja vocals.
You know, again, one thing I really liked about the album,
Scarlet in general, is it's like, I am putting to rest to anybody's, you know,
critique that, oh, she's a pop singer, she's not a rapper.
You know, I think that this song, you know, she's got good rhymes in here.
I love, I believe it's the second verse in this song, like a lot.
Maybe we can hear a little bit of those vocals.
Ugh.
Ain't no sign I can't smoke hair.
Ugh.
Give me the chance.
And I'm going there.
Bitch, I said what I said.
I mean, I love that.
The ux are such a hook.
Such a hook.
Like, it's just like it brings them out of your body.
Bitch, I look better with no hair.
Ugh.
And like, I love the leg.
They say, I can't smoke here.
Ugh.
And that's a reference to the Met Gala.
Yes.
Where she was vaping.
And they were like, bitch,
oh, you mad?
I love it.
Everything she says in that little section.
A lot of it is referencing the controversies,
the things that we've caught on social media.
Yeah.
You're going to catch me sleeping at courtside.
What about it?
And then also with, you know, walk on by.
It's like, walk on by.
Y'all talking about my bald hair, walk on by, girl, I don't know here.
You know, one thing I really like about this song,
I like how she's duetting with the sample.
You know, and you mentioned it earlier.
I mean, I love them when she's duetting with Dionne Warwick.
Um, there's the Nicki Minaj song, everybody, which samples junior, seniors, uh, move your feet,
which is one of my favorites. Um, I love it when hip hop. When there's the whole songs where
ghost face doesn't even take the lyrics out. It literally sounds like he's rapping while the singer
singing. And it reminds me of this old fat Joe song that I used to love. Um, there was a great
Tony Tony Tony song called, That's All I Ask of You. Here's just a snippet of it. That's all I ask you. Great
track and then Fat Joe came along and he duets with it like this.
Microphone check one two one two shafts to the east and the west coast crew. Whatever you do
keep this hip-pop shit dress. It's so satisfied. I love that. I love it when people do stuff
like it's and it's evocative. So the first thing that pop into my head is like the origin of that
like in recorded music being used as a dialogue is Jamaica. You know I'm going to bring it up almost every episode.
But like one of the first instances recorded, because the history of Jamaican, it's done live in the 50s and 60s with the sound systems.
And it's not really recorded until the early 70s.
So Uroy, one of the first like rappers basically where it's a recorded backing track and someone talking over the song.
One of the first examples of using the recording and something on top of it that's responding to it, which is itself its own recording, which is itself a new song.
I love that.
Thank you for taking us to Jamaica on a...
journey to Jamaica. And I appreciate you guys for taking us on this journey of this song. This song
itself, Walk on By, has been on a journey. Shout out to the Isaac Hayes version, which is
truly amazing and transcendent. In the introduction, we speculated that Pay the Town Red is going to
go down as a classic. It could. Do you think this song will stand the test of time?
I do. I think that there's so much musical technicality in it. It's so fun. And also,
when you're sampling a song that has stood the test of time,
like from the 60s, like, you know what I mean?
It's still bustling.
I mean, it's still standing on business.
The song is standing on business.
And, you know, I'm going to be standing and sometimes bent over twerking to it.
You know, what can I say?
I said what I said.
You know, speaking of that line, I said what I said,
that seems to go directly towards her fan base.
And, you know, we're here to give Doja flowers.
She deserves them.
But I do want to talk about this thing, her relationship with her fans.
What do you think, and I'm going to throw this to you, Lacey, what do you think, what do you make of the way I should say about how she kind of comes at her own fan base?
Like when they're like, we're going to call ourselves a kittens.
And she's like, I didn't come up with the kittens.
Y'all came up with that.
Like, you don't shut your ass.
Tadio.
I mean, I think that she has entered the realm, which I really try to dance around.
It's a very thin line of like when you are an artist and you do have a fan base and you engage with them in a paris social way, you are allowing them to.
project their fantasies, their image of you,
their wants their needs onto you.
And as an artist, that can be,
it's a double-edged sword. Like, yeah, they'll
follow you into hell. But at the same
time, like, they feel entitled
to you. Your photos, your memories,
your relationships, how you purport,
how you dress, how you act, because you have
made them feel like they are a part
of your real life. Now, you did that
because you wanted to gain their loyalty and their coins,
but then you have to take the negative side of that too,
which is that they have an entitlement over you and everything that you
do. And I think that she got very
frustrated because she'd be online online online okay i'm like when do you sleep i mean you forget this is a
woman in her mid-20s like to this day she might be like 28 or something like that like she you know like
i always say like if if luxury and i should ever happen to have like a huge online file like we'll just
be like thank you so much you know i mean but like she's the age of those people who are on and she's a
woman and she's a woman of color like there's so much going on that she's attracting so much going
enter the job that had a very online fan base.
It can become very real.
Like, when I was working on I Carly, like, I had to move the first time.
And I'm not even joking.
Like, my address was on the internet.
I was docs.
My phone number was out.
People would call me breathing at 5 a.m.
Wait, wait, wait.
Why were they coming up you for being on Icarly?
Because I was black and they didn't want me there.
I was just a black person who got a job.
But, like, their fan base is so strong and, like, so, like, if you go to my tag photos on any of my
profiles, you're just going to see mostly I carly stuff to this day. And like, I love the fans who
are not weird. I love y'all. But, but like when it starts to threaten your physical safety and like,
here's the LAPD like celebrity hotline, which I was like, oh, they got a, so this one I'm going
because I'm black, if I call them. Like, but it becomes taxing on your mental health. Like, you
have to like kind of limit your interactions of you going to the comments. Have you like, you got to
prepare yourself mentally like, okay, I'm ready to see whatever's there. But if you come up like
Doja, I feel like before you're famous, you were already on.
the internet so heavily in a way that we weren't.
I'm a little bit older than her.
So I had a little bit more precaution.
And even then, I'm not victim blaming.
It still happened to me.
But, like, I know that I joke about parosocial relationships on scam guys all the time.
Like, I start the podcast with like, what am I excited?
And I know people are saying it back, you know, in their homes or whatever.
But I joke about it being a scam because I'm like, not too much.
So I feel like she went too far into it and then realized, like, she didn't want it to affect her art.
Because there are some artists.
I will not name them because some of them have crazy fan bases.
but who have allowed their fans to influence them so much
that it's now taking a toll on their art.
So Dojo wants to do what she wants to do
and she doesn't want her fans being like,
we want this. She's like, you don't, you get what I give you.
Yeah, that's actually what I meant.
It's sort of like she's of the age
where she understands this online back and forth
more than someone like me who like made it out of my teens
without ever seeing, you know, YouTube, you know,
without ever seeing.
It's just a different.
relationship that they have. You were touching grass, diallo, wow.
I said you were touching grass, diallo, wow.
What it feel like with the do-wanted and whatnot?
I feel like she's playing a dangerous game and sometimes it feels like she's mastering it.
And sometimes I worry for her, again, with that sort of older brother kind of, like, I recognize
what she's doing is very fraught.
On the screen for that video for that first single, attention, it says in bright, big,
giant letters, love me, right?
It's sort of like a theme of what she's going through right now.
She recognizes the push pull.
She wants the fame.
She wants the attention.
she recognizes as a like thoughtful, vulnerable human
that she wants, it's love that she is after,
but the price of that kind of love,
of parissocial relationship love that is,
not just like human like vulnerable, actual flesh and blood
relationship love is its own different thing.
You are playing with fire.
It is a dangerous game.
And the edge lordiness of it all,
like when we're starting to teeter into the race of t-shirts
and the trolling.
That I'm like, I get that you're trying to count,
be counterculture in your,
very young.
Causible deniability about the Nazi stuff.
Yeah, and I just wish that people understood how much words mean things and how much words
become physical and violence.
She's like on 4chan and 8chan stuff.
Like all that stuff is really dangerous.
Okay.
So we should talk about that because there have been some controversies.
You know, Doja has at times, you know, seemingly flirted with the alt-right.
You know, there was the chat room video that I think a lot of people have seen.
If you haven't seen it.
She was in a chat room.
She did the song, Didn't Do Nothing, which, you know, she's like.
I didn't know that that was a thing, you know, in, you know, right-wing channels that sort of minimizes the, you know, police brutality that the black communities face.
You know, it's also interesting to me because her father was in Serafina.
Her father is the South African actor and dancer.
I'm going to try not to butcher it.
Dumisani Jalamini.
He is Zulu.
she's never met him
he was on tour
in the mid-90s
and met her mom
who was a fashion designer
in New York
long story short is that
you know
she is both you know
mixed and you know
people
I guess what I'm trying to say is
you know
is it her responsibility
to be you know
Doja this black woman
or mixed woman
or however you want to classify her
like
and do the politics of an artist
matter. I know that for my purposes, when I saw some of that early stuff, I was like,
oh, this is not for me. You know, like, I'm not trying to go there. I have a, you know, I was the
biggest Kanye fan for about 14 years of my life. And you only get so many 14 year periods in a life.
But now I don't really listen to Kanye anymore. I throw the question to you, Lacey. It's a bigger
question, but do the politics of an artist matter? I think that it's a two-folded question.
One, like, yes, you are entitled to identify however you want.
And, like, as a biracial woman, Dojika can align herself with whatever, you know, race or identity that she sees fit.
Like, I'm not her mama.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, live your life.
However, you know, too much is given, much is required.
And if you are given a platform that large, you know, you have to be responsible with it.
You can choose not to be, but then you are making a very detrimental impact on the world.
Like I always like to bring up that SpongeBob episode
where SpongeBob started doing stand-up comedy
and he was telling these squirrel jokes about Sandy
and then like you know Sandy was like
I really don't like these squirrel jokes like this is terrible
like please stop and he was like they're just jokes
so he gets up he tries to do a set
he doesn't do the squirrel jokes and they're like
we want to hear the squirrel jokes
and he's bombing so he starts telling the squirrel jokes
and then the next day Sandy goes to the supermarket
and people are like oh get away from that squirrel baby girl
you don't want to catch her stupid and it's like
Yeah, art is words, and people like to say words don't mean things, but words mean things.
They influence people and then they create real life consequences.
So I just think if you want to be a good global citizen, then you'll be careful.
And there's two ways to do that.
You could either be a champion for people who are oppressed and don't have voices, or you can be quiet.
That is a choice.
You know what I mean?
Like people would be like, why did this celebrity not speak up about this?
And I'm like, look, we don't know what they read.
Maybe this is good that they're not talking.
You know what I mean?
So you got two choices.
You can do right and educate yourself or you can be quiet.
And I'm supportive of both of those choices.
Now, the other one.
But pick one.
Yeah, but pick one of those, the good ones.
You know what I mean?
For the record, I do think the Doja Cat does see herself as a black woman.
And I do hope she does because...
I feel like she teetered because right now she back over on the...
But she's also trolling.
Like, we gotta remember she's young.
She's doing the, like, emo.
All I was going to say was, you know, like, she sees herself as a black woman.
I would hope so because a lot of N-words.
A lot of N-words on these records.
So if you're going to use the N-word, I did.
with us.
Listen, she was like, technically I can
because look at my Twitter and me, okay?
Nika, niki, nike.
But, I don't know.
Oh, God, sorry, I don't know.
But, yeah, yeah, we would hope so.
Listen, we're coming to the end of the show, Lacey.
Doja has been through a lot of stages in her career
and has tried a lot of things.
What would you like to see her do next?
Honestly, whatever the hell she wants,
and that's what I love about Doja is, like,
she doesn't seem, like, to me,
at least an artist who's been tampered by
like what people want to see
and I feel like that is the death of creativity
and in the capitalist machine
like I get sucked into it a lot to where I'm like
I'm working constantly and I'm like, why am I not
engaged with this? And it's because sometimes
art just comes to you. Like I've written a whole TV
show based on leaving boxing class and was like
bop, you know what I mean? So it's like you
have to have natural like stimulation
in real life. It can't just be a machine.
So I hope that Doja keeps being weird
and doing whatever she wants to do because like all
the iterations of Doja I've absolutely loved.
I'm on board with that.
Well put, no, perfectly put. I got nothing to contribute.
It hasn't already been said more articulate than I could say it.
Lacey, thank you so much for coming here today.
Where can the one song listeners follow you and find more of your work?
Yes, y'all. Y'all, y'all can follow me at D-I-V-A-L-C-C-I-D-L-L-A-C-D on all platforms.
And if you want to listen to Scams and my scam comedy, Scam Goddess pod on everywhere you get your podcast, honey.
I love that.
And by the way- Oh, my book. Scam Goddess, you can pre-order right now.
Oh, right on. When does that come out?
That comes out September.
of this year.
Congratulations. That's a big deal. I understand.
Thank you. Lacey, thank you for
taking the time out of your busy schedule
to come and talk some music with us.
I loved it. That was fantastic. That was fun. It was fun.
So fun and funny. So fun and funny.
My two favorite funds. You guys are so
brilliant. You know so much about music and it wasn't until
I sat down with you that I was like, oh, wow.
I'm so fascinated by all of this. And I was also surprised
that I knew anything. So I'm like
We all rode together. I'm going to be listening to once
a long. Thank you. Thank you. We
listen to your podcast.
I'll be watching a video.
I'll be podcast friends.
Okay, we're going to get to one more song in just a second.
But first, I wanted to point out that Doja's Pate the Town Red was not the first hip-hop song
to throw 808 underneath Dionne Warwick's vocals.
My man.
Right.
Well, actually, I don't think this is Deion Warwick's vocals, but it's her line as interpolated,
or should I say, interpolation?
Oh, beautiful.
There we go.
This is Slick Rick and Mona Lisa, 1988.
Love that track.
Hey, question.
Who plays the trumpet?
Who plays the trumpet?
The trumpet is so big.
Yeah, the trumpet is such a big part of the song.
Who played that trumpet?
Well, there's two trumpets credited on Walk On By,
and the names of the trumpet players are Erwin Markowitz,
who goes by Marky Markowitz, by the original Marky Markowitz.
Not sure how many nipples he has.
He didn't go by Erwee Er.
He could have done that.
He could have.
But he chose Marky Mark.
He chose Marky Mark. This is the original Marky Mark and Ernie
and Ernie played the horns.
Burton and Ernie on the horns.
Ernie, I don't know what I call him Royale.
It's probably just Ernie Royal.
That is crazy.
Marky Mark and Ernie Royal on trumpets there.
Such a great classic soulful song from Irwin and Ernie.
All right. It's time for the one more song segment of one song.
This is the part of the show where we share a new song with you,
the One Song Nation, and with each other.
What's your one more song?
So Dionne Warwick in 1964, she wrote this song called Walk On By.
It's been sampled by Doja Cat and Paint the Town,
but it was also covered and a very famous cover by Isaac Hayes.
A few years later, 1969,
it's actually a 12-minute-long extended cover.
It's extraordinarily transformed.
It's really just the lyrics that are the same.
It's not your typical cover where it keeps melodies and chords and everything.
So I'm going to play a little bit of that for you.
Isaac Hay's version of the DeYoung Warwick original as you can hear completely transformed such a great version
very popular like sample source as well there's at least there's actually a hundred and 22
songs that have sampled this among which are the following that you may have heard including this
by the notorious big 1994
who the fuck is this page of me your 546 in the morning crack of dawning now I'm yon it just
sped up, yeah, right? It's just like, he's got a little more boom and a little boom and a little boom
bit, is what I'm hearing as well. Some booms. Some boom, some bit. We also got Tupac with
Dramacidal. This is me against the world. And then this is actually the first place I ever heard
it because I was a big like, I guess, trip hop fan. There was this kind of one hit wonderish band
called Hoover Phonic and they used it in this track, Twikie from 1996. So a lot of people
love that sample. And it's interesting to hear how like the minimal transformations that were done to
actually. Just that beat is so sick and that like
one chord that just hangs in time.
People just love to use that and reuse that.
Absolutely. What about you, Diyah? What's your one
more song this week? Thanks, man.
For my one more song this week,
I'm choosing Robert Glasper's
Black Radio. It features
Yazine Bay, aka Most Deaf,
and it's just a really cool
jazz hip-hop fusion of
wonderfulness.
Dick old blood and warm gum money.
The chiefs rock up fuel and check the Zulo Horse
Papa dog, Boogie. Bay,
babe, babe, babe, bay, bay, bay, bay, bay, bay, bay, bay, bay, bay,
It just doesn't get any cooler than that.
I feel like you listen to a song like that,
and you feel like you're hearing an MC,
you're hearing amazing instrumentation,
the jazz influences there.
And also the bass was really grabbing me.
I was really noticing how filtered it is,
so it's like just the sub-lowest of the low of the bass.
I was really feeling that in my body, you know.
No high-end at all, just completely EQ'd at the top.
I love that. Yeah, totally.
And I just think just think that Robert Glasper, you know, he gets it.
He's really making exciting music in the jazz space.
Living legend, genius alive among us.
As always, if you have an idea for one more song, you can find us on Twitter, or X if you
really want to call it that, really find us on Instagram and TikTok.
On Instagram, I'm at Diallo, D-I-A-L-O.
On TikTok, I'm at Diallo Riddle.
Luxury.
I am luxury on L-U-X-Y, I should say.
Those are two X's.
That's right.
L-U-X-X-Y on Instagram.
I'm also on Spotify.
I always forget to point this out.
on Spotify, we have a playlist of all the episodes of one song with every song we mentioned,
including their samples and interpolations and all that there.
And just the wonderful songs that reminded us of the song.
That's right.
That's right.
We put everything on these episodes.
So go to Spotify, search on luxury, L-U-X-X-U-R-Y.
You'll see it right there.
It's one of my playlists.
Or search on one song interpolation.
Anyway, that's how you can find me on the internet.
Luxury help me in this thing.
Well, I've been producer, DJ, musicologist, and songwriter luxury.
And I'm actor, writer, director, and sometimes DJ, D'All Orororo.
riddle. This is one song and we will see you next time.
