Realer Than Most Podcast

UNDERSTANDING ERA’s FT. @7stRick | RTM PODCAST | EP. 02

April 30, 2024 @Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash Season 1 Episode 2
UNDERSTANDING ERA’s FT. @7stRick | RTM PODCAST | EP. 02
Realer Than Most Podcast
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Realer Than Most Podcast
UNDERSTANDING ERA’s FT. @7stRick | RTM PODCAST | EP. 02
Apr 30, 2024 Season 1 Episode 2
@Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash

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As the electric beats of South Philly pulse through your speakers, we've got a front-row seat to the life and lyrical journey of 7th Street Rick, the neighborhood's rising rap sensation. He sits down with Whyte Boi D2e and Kash to share his story, one that began amidst the adversity of his father's incarceration and found solace in the art of rhyme. Rick's candid recount of the tragic loss that pushed him into the rap scene is a testament to the transformative power of music, serving as a beacon of hope and expression for many who walk the same streets.

Discover the strategic mind behind Rick's tracks like "Dog Shit" and "GTA," as he pulls back the curtain on the joys and challenges of his craft. We're talking muscle memory in music, the value of rigorous practice, and the critical role of community feedback in refining one's skills. Rick's collaboration stories highlight his journey from early schoolyard recognition to navigating the complex web of street affiliations and partnerships, showcasing his evolution as an artist. His vision for his music business and his approach to releasing singles to gain traction offer an intriguing glimpse into the rap game's inner workings.

Wrapping up our session, we delve into the profound issues facing our urban communities, pondering the possibility of ending the cycle of violence and the crucial role of financial stability in fostering peace. The hot topic of ghostwriting ignites a debate on authenticity versus commercial success, while we rank Philly's hip-hop collectives, tipping our hats to State Property's reign. As we tease the latest tracks from Philly's finest, it's clear that the city is not just about brotherly love but also about sharing the raw, unadulterated talent that thrives within its borders. Join us on Realer Than Most Podcast for a journey into the heart of Philadelphia's vibrant rap culture with 7th Street Rick.

Support the Show.

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As the electric beats of South Philly pulse through your speakers, we've got a front-row seat to the life and lyrical journey of 7th Street Rick, the neighborhood's rising rap sensation. He sits down with Whyte Boi D2e and Kash to share his story, one that began amidst the adversity of his father's incarceration and found solace in the art of rhyme. Rick's candid recount of the tragic loss that pushed him into the rap scene is a testament to the transformative power of music, serving as a beacon of hope and expression for many who walk the same streets.

Discover the strategic mind behind Rick's tracks like "Dog Shit" and "GTA," as he pulls back the curtain on the joys and challenges of his craft. We're talking muscle memory in music, the value of rigorous practice, and the critical role of community feedback in refining one's skills. Rick's collaboration stories highlight his journey from early schoolyard recognition to navigating the complex web of street affiliations and partnerships, showcasing his evolution as an artist. His vision for his music business and his approach to releasing singles to gain traction offer an intriguing glimpse into the rap game's inner workings.

Wrapping up our session, we delve into the profound issues facing our urban communities, pondering the possibility of ending the cycle of violence and the crucial role of financial stability in fostering peace. The hot topic of ghostwriting ignites a debate on authenticity versus commercial success, while we rank Philly's hip-hop collectives, tipping our hats to State Property's reign. As we tease the latest tracks from Philly's finest, it's clear that the city is not just about brotherly love but also about sharing the raw, unadulterated talent that thrives within its borders. Join us on Realer Than Most Podcast for a journey into the heart of Philadelphia's vibrant rap culture with 7th Street Rick.

Support the Show.

realla:

you now tuned into the real of the most podcast. I'm really I'm white boy d2a I'm cash man out of world cash make sure you share, like and subscribe and hit the notification bell. Right now.

kash:

We have a special guest in the building man special man introduce yourself come up man hold on oh before you wait bro. South philly ain't feeling, even though seven street they. They own world, and but seven talk about it philly young and coming up man. He got features from the G1000s to the NSU Sheetos and all these other people. You feel me, If you familiar with the Philadelphia scene and the youngins coming up, you definitely familiar with 7th Street Rick man. Let's give 7th Street Rick a round of applause. Talk about it. What's up, man, what's?

guest:

up.

kash:

What up, rick? Introduce yourself. It's Rick, my name's Rick.

7st Rick:

Hold, what's up man, what's up man, what's up man. What's up man, what's up man, what's up man, what's up man, what's up man?

kash:

What's up man? What's up man? What's up man? What's up man? What's up?

7st Rick:

man, what's up man, what's up man?

realla:

What's up, Rick man, Talk about it, man.

7st Rick:

What's up, Rick we're?

realla:

chilling in here.

7st Rick:

I'm here with Neef Ka.

kash:

Yeah, yeah, he brought the members man.

guest:

He brought his folks.

kash:

And we all on 7th Street.

7st Rick:

Everybody. 7th Street in this joint 7th Street, only All originals. All originals, strictly 7th Okay okay.

realla:

We fucking with.

kash:

We gonna start with some tunes. Man, we gonna play what Dog shit?

realla:

Yeah, let's play dog shit. That's his most viewed y'all. I'm fucking with dog shit.

7st Rick:

That's actually the first one, right, that's the first one.

kash:

I know what your most viewed is.

Whyte boi:

Go ahead, play dog, shit we gonna get into that.

kash:

We gonna get into that, just play dog shit.

Whyte boi:

Let me hear that.

7st Rick:

Hey yo Flame, how you made this one man that's for me. Oh, mary Pride, I got two peas, then I ran me up some dog shit.

Speaker 7:

Brody on his way. Please don't think he lost it. He don't need to talk, he just up and toss it. If I call Brody for a play, I bet he take my ass to the back.

7st Rick:

Honey. This a different type of movie. She don't need to act different. It's a different type of coochie Obed hit me up. She the racks. I'm acting bougie, I don't need to follow her. I love her friends. She my movie, married jeans and married show you Dragging in my caption. Baby boy got it. She know I'ma make it happen.

7st Rick:

I'm really outside all the time. I'm a different type of rapper. Reach for the chain. I bet a nigga take a soul. Last one survive back, next one go. We ain't shooting from outside, we coming straight to your door. I know some niggas act tough, but niggas better play their roles. I got two P's, then I ring me up some dog.

Speaker 7:

Shit Brody on his way. Please don't think he lost it, he don't need to talk, he just up and toss it. If I can't vote, he full play. I bet he take my outfit.

7st Rick:

Honey in this clip. It's a different type of movie. She don't need to act different. It's a different type of coochie Old bitch. Hit me up. She the racks. I'm acting bougie, I don't need to follow her, I let her friends see my move.

realla:

Rapper or trapper Bitch, I'm the same y'all and that's dog by 7th street, right sir yeah man, I'm really like proud of you, like real right man, let's get down to business man.

kash:

So listen, man, we got seventh street people right here, three members. We got the youngest right here, then we got a 7th street old ass man. So Like, is y'all like related? Like, do y'all all call each other Cousins or brothers or some shit, or is this like a? You know what I mean? I just wanted to know that, cause they, they say South Philly so small, y'all all be related, feel what I'm saying. He black as shit. You light skin, so I gotta figure out.

realla:

What's going on? I'm an old ass man.

kash:

My fault, bro, my fault, but I just wanted to know that, though Like.

Whyte boi:

Do y'all be fully?

realla:

knowing.

kash:

Each other's families.

Whyte boi:

Like that. I know him Since he was born. Yes, listen, wait, tell him I could break down.

realla:

No kidding, I could break down. I know his whole family too. Who Rick?

kash:

Yeah, alright, all right. So for those who don't know, rick, we going a little too fast.

guest:

Tell the audience about yourself, man. Tell them your background. Who are you?

kash:

Rick, I mean, what makes you you my fault? I started off too fast.

7st Rick:

Hey, my name is Rick. We grew up down in South Philly, an environment you feel me I just be getting money bro. No, I feel that.

guest:

That's like some 7th Street shit To the Met.

kash:

I was about to ask you how was it growing up? What was the moment that made you know you wanted to get this money out here, like who you was influenced by there?

Whyte boi:

ain't water down there, bro, it's automatic there. Ain you water down there, my pop, it's automatic. Water down there, bro, it's like automatic my pop he was, he was, he was booked.

7st Rick:

Like most of my life, you feel me, but like I'm in the junior, so like every time I go like around the neighborhood. Yo little ricky rolex, yo, you feel me, so I'm hearing all this about it, but I'm like I'm young, I ain't really like, really like, to get to understand it. You feel me? So I'm hearing all this about it, but I'm like I'm young, I ain't really like, really like, to get to understand it you feel me, but like it was like Yo, your pop was one of them.

kash:

You feel me, so it's like.

7st Rick:

Nepotism.

kash:

Yeah, nepotism, yeah, nah man.

7st Rick:

It be like your pop still around, or yeah, yeah, no, no, yeah, bro, he no for real.

Whyte boi:

So, uh, what you? What got you into music? Like, what got you like, like, what's some of your, your first Like you know what I'm saying Of you coming in Like not even coming into music, just like Getting into Liking music.

7st Rick:

I think I always Liked music bro. Like it was, like you grew up with it In the household Type shit Like yeah, like I was listening Like mixtapes, you feel me Growing up?

Whyte boi:

everybody like so what's some of the first music you took money out your pocket and went and bought. I ain't buying no music, I'm pretty much.

realla:

I'm pretty much.

Whyte boi:

Who was your influence cuz.

realla:

Who influenced you to make music, everything digital with them.

7st Rick:

I forgot. I like bro.

Whyte boi:

Who influenced you, so like coming up who influenced you Like.

7st Rick:

Kanye yeah, like Drake, okay, like Jay-Z, like.

Speaker 7:

I probably caught him on it.

7st Rick:

I probably caught him like on the back end, on the antenna.

Whyte boi:

You feel me, but like, how old is you though? How old is you though? I'm Okay, okay. Okay, he was born in 04?. So you did a little research on home. Yeah, that's cool. I remember over 30. 20.

kash:

You doing your thing.

Speaker 7:

shorty though, yeah, because I ain't going to lie. I ain't going to lie.

kash:

I ain't going to lie, man. Like. The reason I'm asking you about your childhood so much, man, is because I understand why, like people, your age, like my age, and down the way the way it is.

kash:

Yeah, and like other people don't realize like the shit we go through. Like y'all might have had some hardships in areas too, but like if you was born in 03, 04, and like 99 and 98 and shit People don't realize. Like how in Cali and Chicago, you know how they born into gangs? Yeah, we was born into the Blocks, block beefs and shit like that. You feel me no for sure, so that's why I always ask about you know Childhood coming up in the beginning yeah, yeah, exactly, right, right, exactly, yeah, yeah.

kash:

Childhood coming up. Yeah yeah, exactly Right, exactly, yeah yeah.

Whyte boi:

So you know, you said Kanye and Hove and Drake. They were some of your First influences. So, like what? What made you Put the pen to the pad? Like you know what I'm saying, what gave you that feel To start like man? Let me try this shit.

7st Rick:

Bro, like to be real with you, like I ain't even like bro, I ain't never want to rap Right. Like that was like my man, like he died, like we was. Like I went to like middle school with him, like first, like eighth grade, like he always used to like rap, you feel me. Shout him out. Yeah, my man, my man Suh.

kash:

Ron S Suhl. Ron is Suhl, that's some P Suhl man.

7st Rick:

But, like you feel me, he got caught in the wrong mix and shit. You feel me. So once he died, I'm like you feel me, Let me do something. My two homies and shit they had went to the studio.

guest:

Right.

7st Rick:

You feel me. They first booked the studio and shit. I think I was in there, I think I was smoking and shit, you feel me. So once we did that, they went to booth. I think I just went there, tried that shit out. You feel me. You went off original beat or you did somebody else's beat. No, this was like I was about to say this too, when I feel like everybody now I feel like it's a lot more like I ain't going to say original because everybody be using sample beats and shit like that.

Whyte boi:

YouTube Meek Mill J Herbo type beats.

7st Rick:

But I feel like back then everybody was remix heavy. You feel me? Rob Markman Jr Okay, rob Markman Jr, on SoundCloud you could be people was recording verses with people on the song. Sometimes Rob Markman- Jr Right right.

realla:

Rob.

7st Rick:

Markman Jr. Real rap Rob Markman Jr. Oh yeah, okay, that cell call Error, I remember.

Speaker 7:

Okay, okay.

7st Rick:

You feel me. That's when I like, really like Start. Then I like Probably like Up to last year, probably like two years ago, when I, when I, when I come to the studio.

realla:

That was yeah About a year ago.

7st Rick:

Yeah, so like I was talking with bro, like he, like he really gave me, like he really gave me like a breakdown Of this shit, like you feel me.

Whyte boi:

Cora, do that for you.

guest:

Yeah, he will.

7st Rick:

Yeah, like you feel me and I ain't really one of them, that's just going like, like, listen to you and not listen, like, not listen.

guest:

You feel me.

7st Rick:

I'm one of them that's going like. Really like take what you saying. I think I called him like. I think I called him like two months Asking him about something you feel me Like just awful conversation.

Whyte boi:

I think I think that's dope. Yeah, I think that's dope Because, like I was saying when we had the episode the other night About when we was talking about meatball Not to go off subject real quick but it's just like I be liking when the youngins got older guys the go-to and that's gonna guide them the right way. It's needed, man, it's very needed. You know what I'm saying. It's needed Because A lot of niggas Take this pack and go in that corner or take this pack and go take this phone In that rental. You know what I'm saying.

Whyte boi:

Yeah, man, you know what I mean, but motherfuckers Giving you points To go chase something that you love to dope the crazy part about it the crazy part about it is.

kash:

It's usually me that's getting because they age. I could do that for you because I'm 26 and you 20 and I done been through a whole bunch of shit, so I could give you that game and it could give you that game and it's like now, you way ahead of your time. You feel me like way, way, way ahead of your time, to the point you could move around and shit around. You mean like just little shit, like it ain't pussy to have security, or you gotta move this way. My fault, y'all, I'm saying mutual. Like you gotta move this way, it ain't pussy. You feel me, you get to a certain point. You feel me right, uh, bulletproof, the whatever, like any, anything, whatever.

Whyte boi:

That's what desperate measures to take. This protect your life yeah and to make it home at night.

kash:

That's what's important, bro that's what it is like. I I, if I'm speaking to you, a rapper who get to his sheet I ain't going to be talking to you about me. I see you nice and rapping. I ain't going to be talking to you about. I'm going to talk to you about how to survive out here, because we from Philly, bro Right, that's the main thing I'm going to be on I ain't going.

kash:

Yeah, what you see, this is how you do it. You sell it like this, that shit over. Like you already a dub, you already a grown ass man Out here. I didn't even think you was 20, bro, cause of how you move, but I'm definitely Going to like speak on a. I done got shot at, shot Been through South West and all that. And I'm still here. For reasons, though, because the way I move, you feel what I'm saying, so that's something that I would definitely like. Somebody who 20 and under, I would talk to them about and all that, and the ones coming up that's 16, that's listening to 7th Street Rick and other rappers, then that mean you could get them some game. You feel me, you could tell them the way to go.

Whyte boi:

But so, so, as you was In the studio, you know Just freestyling With the homies and shit like that, what you know just freestyling with the homies and shit like that what gave you the spark that was like all right, I might be all right at this shit. What was that? Give me that, tom.

7st Rick:

Tom, it be like fucking me up If I go back and go to my shit. I'd be like what are we talking about? Because it was just like bro, it wasn't like Rob Markman Jr Structured. Yeah, it wasn't like. You get better over time with anything you do, rob Markman.

kash:

Jr.

7st Rick:

Anything, fast Anything.

guest:

That's just like you shoot a jump shot.

Whyte boi:

Rob Markman Jr.

7st Rick:

That's a fact. It's muscle memory.

Whyte boi:

So that's how.

7st Rick:

So I was going through school and shit, I really ain't had a.

Whyte boi:

Was you popping in school Like on the rap tip?

7st Rick:

I wasn't shit like popping, but people knew I rapped and shit.

Whyte boi:

You feel me Okay, you had videos out and shit at that time.

7st Rick:

Yeah, I had like. No, I did one video, I did one video.

guest:

Who's the Nah, that shit ass. Like bro, you my pop Real shit.

Whyte boi:

But you got to respect that though, because like think of it this way, though Like you know what I'm saying, you thinking, because you always going to think what you laying down is hot, yeah, Especially you in the hood. Nah, that shit fire Skate, Even if they like telling you the truth, like they really think that shit fire. But an older nigga like your pop, he gonna always keep it real and he might got a certain choir taste about music because he older. So he like now, because you could go a little harder than that. So it make you still sharp and still, and make you sharp, sharp in your joint political now.

realla:

So like yeah, sir, like sir, he ain't trying to hear that, he not trying to hear that.

Speaker 7:

I respect it though I respect it, though I can't, I can't. You got to.

7st Rick:

You got to. He see it now.

kash:

I tell you that that's what's up. He see it now. So, us being from Philly right, what's up, man, us being from Philly. I noticed like there's a pattern of A lot of rappers can't, you know, make music with certain rappers because stuff that's going on in the streets or whatever. But I noticed that you do got a lot of features. You feel I'm saying like like a lot. So, out of all the features, who was, who is the one you would work with again and who is the best one to work with? You got Leaf, you got Kyle from Jerome. Who would the one you would work with again, and why?

7st Rick:

I would work with all of them. You feel me, but it's like I seen all the different recording processes. You feel me. I seen Kai Jerome. He was sick. He did the song with me.

guest:

Right.

7st Rick:

Come up, I'm coughing and shit. He go in there coughing, go in there. He run through it. Boom, I see Leaf Hear the beat. He go All right back. Come on, go in there. You think you can fuck with me? I think these niggas could you feel me? I seen Shito, you feel me, we vibing and shit. Still he going there off the top. He like, yeah, that shit hot. I'm like, yeah, bro, keep going, you feel me. So I really work with all of them for real, for real.

kash:

Rob Markman what's your best song with a feature In your opinion?

7st Rick:

I'm gonna go with me and Shido and we got some shit and that's you?

kash:

Yeah, I'm gonna go with.

7st Rick:

Shido, shout out. And that's you.

kash:

Shido, shout out and that's you, shido. What's up? You feel me? He definitely.

guest:

So he definitely one of the ones.

Whyte boi:

He definitely one of the ones. So what would you say? What would you say that moment when it's like, alright, you got the, you got the creative part Out the way, like so far. It's like, how you wanna put it down? Know what I'm saying? Where? Give me that moment when it's like, oh shit, this shit's starting to pop, yeah.

kash:

You can answer it bro.

7st Rick:

Yeah, I did a song With, uh Like when you at what you think, what you think, I really don't, I really don't know, bro, like, I just like.

guest:

I love it. I feel like that was like a yeah. I feel like yeah, let me see.

guest:

I feel, like.

guest:

It was. I don't even think it was a feature Like I think like dog shit.

kash:

Like when he dropped dog shit. Yeah, I was going to ask him what was his favorite joint with a feature. Then by himself, oh, the feature.

guest:

All right, go ahead, huh.

7st Rick:

All right, ask me again, bro. My fault y'all. No, you good you good.

kash:

Uh, what's your favorite feature song?

7st Rick:

You said the Shido drum right, and what that song called that drum, gta, gta. And what's your favorite? Solo I like dog shit. Everybody fuck with dog shit.

guest:

Dog shit that work. Yeah, I fuck with dog shit.

Whyte boi:

Give me the moment where you felt this dough, your shit started to like all right, I got this guy X Y Z views. All you all right, I got all right. This got XYZ views. All right, this John.

7st Rick:

I got this stream. It's like I did the no look, look, look. I think it was like feel the same.

realla:

Now I'm going to talk on the mic, let me share.

guest:

Like me personally, I think it was rapping again. Feel the scene. That's the song yeah. Feel the Scene. He just started rapping again. But, that joint blew up too. That got like 10 plus on there or something.

realla:

What year was?

guest:

that that's like 2020, 2021 or something he just started rapping again. He really started taking it serious, but that was like a single just straight bars. That joint hot. He just started rapping again.

Whyte boi:

Do you work with a certain producer or do you?

7st Rick:

Yeah, Sean, my man, Ryan Xyde. I'm locked in with him, Okay. But I don't really need to just be him, but I'm locked in with him.

realla:

That's who you fucking with happy. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Whyte boi:

Okay.

realla:

Is there any features that you got coming up that you're working with?

7st Rick:

somebody you're working with, somebody you're working with now Me and Shido. We got some shit that we're going to cook up and shit. We told you we was going to lock in again, so we got Shido I'm trying to go OT with some shit, my Louisiana nigga and shit.

realla:

So we getting something in 2024.

Speaker 7:

Yeah.

kash:

I noticed that we played recent songs from you on YouTube, but I noticed your last project, rookie of the Year, was in 2023 on a streaming platform. So is you using a different strategy, like you dropping all singles on YouTube videos, or you just ain't get to a project yet again?

7st Rick:

It was like bro, like I got like the music, like To make another project, but I was like I don't really wanna like Give another project.

Speaker 7:

I feel like I got Until you.

guest:

Structure it up.

7st Rick:

You feel what I'm saying I feel like bro Y'all got like I got me in your face. More you feel what I mean. Structure it, that's what I'm. You roll it out better.

Whyte boi:

You single single single Record record record. Single single single Record record record. Drop, drop, drop, all them singles Record record record Structure. Now you got all this record and structure, all them recorded songs. That's your album or your tape right there, but you still loading them and heating them up with all your single shit you've been dropping. You feel me Loading them up with all your single shit you've been dropping.

kash:

You feel me? Loading them up on it only takes structure and you know, just paying attention to the climate of the game, yeah, I mean so. Do your homies, uh, got a role in your in your little.

7st Rick:

You mean yeah, yeah, we all, we all artists over here, man I'm trying. Oh yeah, I'm trying, I'm trying I'm trying to get them on there. Yeah, we are artists man we go, yo look at that, yo look at that, quiet, look, look, look. We all artists. Man we going.

Neef:

You feel me, we going to have this like me and my man like me and my man, kyrie, we be like I don't know, we playing with this shit, don't play with this shit. I got some shit coming.

Whyte boi:

I'm about to pop out with some shit. I got some more.

guest:

I got a lot of shit in the tuck but, like bro said, I be playing with this shit. I'm playing with it. I'm Rick artist. He's my artist but I'm his artist too. He about to try to push me out there and all that. We going to have some shit dropping soon and all that.

guest:

He about to try to push me out there and all that, we gonna have some shit dropping soon and all that Rob. Markman.

Neef:

Yeah, rob Markman Talk about that video. We got a video on release. It's gonna come real soon yeah.

Whyte boi:

So when you start popping, getting your views up, your streams up, you go outside, people start to recognize you a lot better and make you feel good, right? So like if I was the record label, me, and I wanted to put a contract in front of your face. What would you want that number to be Like? What you want in it, where you want to go with it, where you see yourself in that?

7st Rick:

Like me personally, bro, I really like, I really like, Like. With the music shit, bro, I see more than just music. You feel me, I'm looking at it as like this, going to open other doors for other stuff. You feel me, Because some of these rappers they dying out fast. That's a fact you feel me Nobody be trying here after too much like a while you feel me, yeah right. I like, even just like, not even just me rapping. If I grab some artists, you feel me. If I like, do.

Whyte boi:

Rob Markman. So you basically you thinking of after the rap you playing in a business I'm going to be a businessman have something else going on beyond the music.

7st Rick:

Yeah, I want to be all that, bro, I'm trying, I'm like really trying, I'm trying to be rich bro Rob Markman.

kash:

I want to say something to you, though, and this for you, but this for two, both of y'all and all y'all other niggas. Y'all go back to y'all niggas. Y'all can see this shit, Bro, you really 20 with chains on your neck, bro. That shit ain't regular bro.

Whyte boi:

That's a fact, and I hope you be moving like that.

kash:

You have to know that you could do this, rap, shit and all that. That's cool. You could do that. Be from the block, bro, you a dud with four or five chains on your neck bro.

7st Rick:

In.

kash:

Philadelphia bro. Yeah that's dangerous Niggas bro, I'm telling you bro.

guest:

That's dangerous, I don't know, if you know where I'm getting at but my way of saying that is.

Whyte boi:

Sharp and on point at all times. You gotta be pad sharp Head on the floor.

kash:

You gotta act like you, kevin Hart, around this bitch. Like you, will Smith. You gotta act like you already got a fucking Five million dollar deal with Epic. That's cause we just living as well.

Whyte boi:

Real shit bro.

7st Rick:

This shit crazy out here, bro this shit crazy out here, bro, bro yeah. This shit crazy. Out here, bro, I be sitting there, I talk to people and shit, bro, because it got like the way this shit structure right now. It got way deeper than really should be. You feel me. So when I be looking at a certain thing, I be like, damn, we all. You feel me.

Speaker 7:

Yeah.

7st Rick:

Just years ago, we all playing ball, we all was doing this.

Speaker 7:

We all was doing that.

7st Rick:

You feel me and niggas branch into different lanes and shit. So I appreciate what you're saying and stuff. I already do that though.

guest:

Y'all moving shit, and we out here you feel me.

7st Rick:

Y'all protect what's yours.

kash:

Even when we got here I peaked Like you. They hopped out. It was like a little line, bro. We had a little line for him for him to come out. It was them two than us. Because we already on protect our shit and your homies already moving right, because that's just how we move. You feel what I'm saying? So we um. But yeah, man like definitely.

Whyte boi:

Like go ahead, bro. I be wanting y'all, little niggas man, to really understand like man. Make sure y'all execute and capitalize off these opportunities that be put in front of y'all, because we only be getting that shot. It's almost like 10-0-1 out. This motherfucker on making it, bro, like literally bro, you know what I'm saying, bro. And and certain motherfuckers Having Four of these or one of these, or two or three of these, is making it. You know what I'm saying, bro. That ain't shit. I need y'all to dream as big as possible so y'all can obtain A lot of shit and see a lot of shit Past Philadelphia, obtain a lot of shit and see a lot of shit past philadelphia. Because if I was, like, if I had the information at your age, bro, I'd be a lot sharper. But you know it's the cut of a law. So we ain't, we ain't tripping over like what ain't?

guest:

happening.

Whyte boi:

You know what I'm saying but I'll be just wanting y'all to be focused and share, understand, like being, like you know, sometimes we like the time passed so much. You know, live in that moment and make sure you capitalize off the opportunities that's put in front of you.

7st Rick:

I cut you off. Me and my man just was having that conversation in the car.

Neef:

What conversation? No, like we just I was just saying like, look just on something, like you having some money, like, say, if you hustling every day, you doing whatever you doing, going to work, and you just you save up 30,000, 20,000. You feel me, you got a little paper, that's a little paper, you feel me. But if you don't do nothing. What are you running around? You hustling or something. They come get you tomorrow and you just you just did all that for nothing.

guest:

You feel me, you ain't live, you ain't take no trip.

7st Rick:

You feel me.

Neef:

You ain't go buy, no.

kash:

It's crazy.

Neef:

It's like you got to live your life in the moment when you got some money, go do something, go have your fun. You got to live Every day. You know everybody dying, these niggas dying every day.

kash:

Every day ain't promised, bro, and it's crazy Y'all so much a thorough youngins man. Y'all just put something in my head because I just hustle. I ain't getting no watch, no chain, I didn't bro.

Neef:

Fuck, like all that watch and chain shit. I'ma keep it to being like I could've like went and got chain. I'm probably gonna do that because that's what I wanna do. I wanna shine. You feel me? I probably grab a chain Like everybody dying down here. Ain't really nothing going on. You feel what I'm saying? This shit cool it's for the moment. But all this shit Going to die, so right, you got to live your life While you got it.

Whyte boi:

I know you all, your life.

Neef:

A round of applause for that.

guest:

What I used to tell you what I used to tell you and your brother. I used to tell y'all, like this shit ain't.

Whyte boi:

This shit out here, this shit skill. It's so much in the world that you could do and so much we could obtain and get. It's like, at the end of the day, we run around chasing this low-ass shit and then get jammed up chasing this low-ass shit. I spend all that shit away anyway and you don't get to see none of this shit that's out here.

7st Rick:

It's the weirdest shit in the world. There's only two things in Philly. That's crazy. The two B's Bullets and bitches.

realla:

You feel me so like.

7st Rick:

It ain't Like. It ain't really like. You feel me Like. That's how I be looking at it, like it ain't Like. I'm on the way I move. I'm A to B, bro Like you feel me I don't know.

Whyte boi:

That's what's up, bro. That's what's up. I just, I just be wanting to Steal that and my youngins man, because it's just.

realla:

It's deep out here, bro. The best advice To give the youngest right now Is Just don't get in nothing. You know what I'm saying. Make sure you go ahead and focus on what you got to focus on To get to the next level In life man Get this money man, you feel me.

kash:

I want to ask y'all Get this money, man, I want to ask you a question.

realla:

There you go, get this money. I want to ask you a question rip.

kash:

So uh, pip the fat g's man, first and foremost pip but to make a long story short, he has said something on the interview about not being able to squash beef because certain people died, and then my brother, manny, responded to him and then I responded to him. It was a whole big thing, but the moral of the thing was fat G's stating that you can't squash beef because it's already far and people have died and and, and my man disagreed with that. I'm not even saying I disagreed with that, he just said some other things that made it other things. But is y'all on fat side or my brother's side?

kash:

Do y'all think like we know where you from? We ain't even gotta say it. You feel me we know where you from. We ain't gotta say it. You feel me like. But do y'all think ever like, ever like before you in the grave or you in the grave? Do you think that people could be thorough enough to like end shit or not? That I just want to know that, because we talked about all the other shit, but now we gotta talk about this shit because this nigga's livelihood. You feel me? Niggas got to go outside and hop in them. Cars, bro.

Neef:

I'm going to keep it to being like and your honest answer, bro, it's too much. It's a mix because it's like nobody really like. Let's keep it to being who really thorough enough and who really going to put their pride aside Young boys out here drilling and doing stuff now because they trying to get an image for another man or somebody else. You feel what I'm saying? Like E-Purr, you feel?

guest:

what I'm saying.

Neef:

So I don't think it's ever going to stop for real.

kash:

Right.

Neef:

Because it's just like so many people, like you said, so many people lost their lives. And then the young boys, they just they getting into it now like they, not the young boys getting into it already. They 14, I heard you mean. So how could you say it's gonna stop if the, the next generation, are already on it? So y'all, how could? It's too many people you got. That's like the whole whole philly, all these blocks. You all be united.

Whyte boi:

It could never be the young guys that that will uh, put forward and and put people together. It got to be the older generation, bro it got to be, bro it got to be.

realla:

But but it has to be though but, but it's still got to be the it's no age bro, the age before us, they slipped.

Speaker 7:

I'm going to be real.

7st Rick:

I'm like hold on.

Whyte boi:

The age before us slipped.

guest:

I don't think it's no age.

Whyte boi:

And we like the age that actually reached down to your age.

7st Rick:

Can I be real with you, though?

kash:

You know what I'm saying Can I be real with you, though there's no age group.

7st Rick:

bro, can I be real with you, though? Real with you, though I'll be real with you, though, go ahead.

kash:

I'll be real with you though cause I think you about to see what I'm thinking.

7st Rick:

All of us, bro, bro, it ain't no like, not this shit. How old are you, bro?

Whyte boi:

I'm 36, 36, we ain't even that young?

realla:

alright, look, I do, bro, how old are you, the fuck?

guest:

how old I be, you right there you call my mom and shit he's 37.

7st Rick:

Yeah, 37.

Whyte boi:

All right, 37. He's not 37.

7st Rick:

37. Yeah 37. My bad, you're 37, right, you got like. This nigga 37, he crazy. Yeah, my bad, bro, it's like a. It's a way of thinking, bro, it is. It's like a, A mindset. Yeah, it's a mindset, because it wasn't like so, as though, like when I was growing up, it wasn't so, like it wasn't no beef. Yeah, you feel me, it wasn't no such thing, it wasn't no beef.

Whyte boi:

It was beef going on, but it was certain like it wasn't innocent people getting hit. It wasn't reckless, it was like it was what needed to be done.

realla:

I don't necessarily mean it's not what needed to be done, but probably people handling what they're handling.

7st Rick:

And it got nothing to do with everybody else. You get what I'm saying. That's how it was back then.

Whyte boi:

When I was growing up, or the grandmom that was walking to the store.

7st Rick:

I tell you I had conversations with other people and try to you feel me, but everybody move as a unit. It take everybody bro it's going to take everybody. It's going to take everybody bro, you feel me, it's not going to be, oh, me and you, because everybody not trying to hear that you feel me, but I feel as though it got to be like. That's what I was saying, bro. That's why I said really get some money bro.

Speaker 7:

Because if you're getting some money, bro, I ain't got time to go to the club. You ain't focused about killing nobody. You feel me, I'm not worried about that.

7st Rick:

You ain't focused on that I'm in a whole other city, bro, I'm not around. You feel me? It's so hot outside, bro, Like for real.

realla:

It was never like that it was never like that.

7st Rick:

You feel me Like my brothers and them. When I watched them I used to run around with them all type of stuff.

realla:

It was never they could be at this party. It stopped the money.

7st Rick:

It stopped the money in the neighborhood.

realla:

I feel like they giving the switches out.

Whyte boi:

But I'm older though.

realla:

So you know, I mean like the stuff that's going on, I feel like. I feel like when people get a chance to take a sit back, like later in life, they gonna be ashamed of they self. You feel me.

7st Rick:

It's going Bro, it really. It just needs, it's just gonna be some people. It's like bro, you feel me, rob Markman, it's going bro, it really it just needs it's just going to be some people.

7st Rick:

Rob Markman. It's going, bro, we just need another, we just need an answer. That's my whole thing. We get an answer, whereas though, like me, I be watching all the old gangster movies. You feel me so. I really like certain stuff, even though it's fake and shit like that. But like certain situations, it really turn out like that. You feel me so like.

7st Rick:

Like. I feel like it need to be one thing for like For this block, this block To like Probably Cause everybody not gonna stop, but to like Cool it down. You feel me and you sound like a.

realla:

Some type of Helen bro?

7st Rick:

Yeah, some type like Somebody gotta get some money to go.

Whyte boi:

So let's get back to the music, Because I just like to talk about the music bro.

realla:

Pretty much To wrap that up. That stuff that's neither here nor there. You know what I mean. It's bigger than us. You know what I'm saying. And, to be honest, man, you got to just pray for our city. You know what I'm saying and, to be honest, man, you gotta just pray for Our city, you know what I mean, and pray for healing For everybody, on whatever Street, corner, block, neighborhood, wherever you from, man. I just I mean, get some healing, man, and um. You know so uh.

Whyte boi:

Like.

realla:

What you uh.

Whyte boi:

This year, we all, we down there, we all way in. So like what you uh, like who you think you would wanna Like. What's a dream feature For you? What's like a dream feature In the industry for you? Not Philly, yeah, white boy. How about that? How about that? Like, like.

7st Rick:

Probably like, probably like, like dirt, dirt, like like for you, not Philly. Yeah, white boy, how about that? How about that? Like, like, probably, like, probably like like Dirk, dirk, like man.

Whyte boi:

Dirk cooked some shit up. Future, you look like a young Dirk, a little bit Future, future on fire, right now, yeah, future.

7st Rick:

You got nigga like like no cat, Nigga like no cat.

Whyte boi:

Okay.

7st Rick:

Okay, okay, yeah, okay. That's fire Rollo. It's a couple, bro. I go on Like baby Lil Papa, like it's a couple. You feel me?

Speaker 7:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Whyte boi:

So like you got a project Coming this year Like 2024 yeah, we might.

7st Rick:

We might drop Project probably End of the summer.

realla:

I just got one question for you.

7st Rick:

What's up bro?

realla:

You gonna answer it straight up.

7st Rick:

I'm gonna answer it bro.

realla:

Cause this really the most Like. You gotta be straight up If you was to get on A day or tomorrow. Alright, you ready for this, yo niggas.

kash:

Cracking up. Are you us to get on it day or tomorrow? Alright.

realla:

You ready for this? Are you letting somebody write verses for you, For you to continue your bangers and collect that bag and keep going getting your money?

7st Rick:

Bro, I feel like everybody get their verses wrote anyway Right now. What boy, everybody.

realla:

So you cool with somebody writing your shit?

7st Rick:

I'm not cool with it, but that's just how it go Once you get signed.

guest:

What the fuck I say, what I say, bro, it's consistent, it's real rap though.

realla:

I was arguing with this nigga yesterday. I'm the biggest bro. I don't like that, though I'm going to it, bro.

guest:

It's not, it's not. I don't like it though bro, it's not the artist.

7st Rick:

Bro, you got to hold your weight, bro, it's not the artist.

realla:

bro, it's okay to have a writer to make the song for your mood, but a nigga writing your verses is different. Like you, can't write my life.

kash:

What you not understanding is when the label sign you, why you think when niggas be dropping from labels, they change, they fucking wreck. When the label sign you, they own your name, they own what you record, they own all that. So the fact they own you.

Whyte boi:

They trying to hurry up and get as much hits out of you as much as you can you can't write no hit, but get in that room with the writers and get that fucking hit out.

7st Rick:

That's it. That's exactly what they do.

kash:

Let me hear that shit, they got money to spend, if Rick can't make it.

realla:

You just saying that made me like Bro. I had a meeting.

7st Rick:

Bro, I had a meeting, bro, I had a meeting. I'm going in there, they talking to me and stuff. He like yeah, you make your own music. I'm like yeah.

kash:

He's like alright, yeah, oh but we got some writers too. Told you bro, told you, I'm like the same. I'm like, told you bro, really there, really like White boy, he not saying Everything I said.

Whyte boi:

Same as I said.

kash:

Like I told you, Bro, you could be Jay-Z himself. If you can't write a rap. That could go on. They gonna put you with some fucking writers. What's a hit?

7st Rick:

from what's a hit back in the day what's?

guest:

a hit.

7st Rick:

A hit probably like 2006, 2008, around that time. What's a hit Stronger?

Whyte boi:

Kanye West. Kanye West Stronger Power.

realla:

I know somebody wrote that Go to Apple Music Go all the way up there I.

kash:

I told him that. Just like Bro. I was telling him and this is the thing, that's why I mentioned the still Dre shit, you was like Dr Dre, but that's not the point I was making.

guest:

The point I was making is that came out in the 90's.

Whyte boi:

To be high as shit.

kash:

So why the fuck you? No but Dr Dre.

realla:

Pussy them type niggas producers.

kash:

Like they taking writers all day, everybody, everybody taking writers. He not a rapper you gotta really pay attention.

realla:

Like he's a drunk, like he was a bull he never was a rapper everybody always wrote for him he takes

7st Rick:

care of every rapper. Every rapper got their own but they still.

Whyte boi:

I feel like when you a rapper though, yeah, somebody always wrote the EDOC.

realla:

Every rapper got their own lifestyle too, but they still turn into a rapper. I feel like when you a rapper right and just to get all right, probably when you get on, all right, I can take that, but when you telling your, you got to tell your story to get out there.

Whyte boi:

No see you talking that old school. That's the old school language you know what I mean.

7st Rick:

I mean, that's just, I'm nervous.

Whyte boi:

If these niggas Now like man, you gonna write that hit, oh it's a hit, or we gonna put Girls Brown on the hook. Man, bring that shit.

realla:

I see that you, being a professional artist, you feel me Like a future or a drape. You know what I'm saying.

7st Rick:

If you getting people To write this story for you, I'm not.

guest:

That's crazy to me Cause like everything.

7st Rick:

That's crazy to me, because everything I say, you feel me, this coming from my experience, this coming from everything you feel me.

realla:

Hold on real quick. Who that in the back when I'm talking?

kash:

Just tell him to shut the door.

Speaker 7:

Okay.

realla:

Some of these mics I ain't going to lie though Care everything.

kash:

Like, even like they said, PNB Rock was over Atlantic Pinning everybody's shit.

Whyte boi:

He just ain't want niggas to Pin for him. You would be one of them, niggas.

kash:

You would be one of them, niggas, who get with a record label and won't last Six months.

realla:

I get there and start Writing for the whole label. That's not what I'm talking about.

kash:

That's not what I'm talking about. If you get signed, if I'm hot, if you get signed as an artist, you can't just choose To write, for they gotta like your writing, in fact.

realla:

Of course they're gonna like it, yeah, but I'm saying it's like how the fuck you know that.

kash:

You don't.

guest:

Let me say something real quick.

kash:

Let me say something real quick, I'm hot bro, the reason I said that about you and a whole bunch of other Philly niggas that's why we can never stay lit is because I say this they don't go get the writers? No, no not that I say this to him every time, bro. Every time we ever argue about anything we could be arguing about anything and he think his preference is facts. You feel?

guest:

what I'm saying. It might be facts to me, though.

kash:

That's cool.

7st Rick:

You gotta leave it like that you might be going to the label like if you a rapper, rapper you can't get your dumb ass out, why would you go in there? Like that.

Speaker 7:

Why would you go in there like that? You just have the option. They not worth.

guest:

Listen bro the actual people, now y'all putting words in my mouth, bro. Fuck all that though.

7st Rick:

You got the option To take writers and not take writers bro the actual people In the labels Don't care about the music bro Bro look the actual people that's in them labels, in them builders.

Whyte boi:

They don't actually care About the music.

realla:

They care about the numbers. They care about the money. If that shit going up, then how much is it making them? So all that working to get hot and be a hot?

kash:

ass rapper. You might as well just chill. And then why you think people get on and be like Sam man? This shit ain't fucked up with it, but it is.

guest:

I wish I'd have never signed.

Whyte boi:

I wish I'd have never signed my deal. I can't wait to get out my deal, cause I don't even make songs like this.

realla:

I can't put out no music.

Whyte boi:

They holding me back from putting out music.

kash:

You just brought up Dangerous I did. That song went from Fucking Fab.

guest:

Yeah, to fucking Joke.

kash:

That shit went to Fab the Joey Badass the Post Malone Tameek that shit got broke for four different people.

7st Rick:

Before it reached me. That's where y'all go, though. That's how we go, and that's right you're gonna be in there talking about how we sell.

kash:

They're gonna be like we need something on the radio right now uh eric bellinger going up with him right here, going to the room with uh white boy, that yeah, the ghostwriter boy, yeah you said it's right there.

7st Rick:

That's why I like when they were there the first time about Ghostwriting, that wasn't like a flex. You know what I mean.

guest:

Rappers what do?

7st Rick:

they do that, bro. I was the biggest Lil Durk fan. I went to there. I just scrolled through his song, went through his lyrics, I went to the end it said, written by Lil Durk, somebody else somebody else Rob.

kash:

Markman, all these credits Rob Weave. Rob Weave, I'm like yo, Even Jay-Z, but you got to get there though.

realla:

You got to be hot to get there. That's where I bet you can't be. I know I ain't wrong about that part. Yeah, you got to be hot to get there.

guest:

They still going off of you and your voice and your image and all that.

realla:

They telling your story.

guest:

They fine with it.

kash:

That's all they want. Yeah, bro, the rapper rappers you be talking about, they get broke for no, they don't, because some niggas can't even write like Styles P bro.

realla:

Like Styles P, I'm not talking about niggas like him bro. Come on, we got a good.

Whyte boi:

We not doing.

kash:

We ain't doing that Like don't nobody Need to write for Styles P and Kiss and Sheik Luch and shit like that. You can't Like, why would people Write for them? I'm talking about the people who Rap and rap the mainstream and you think they are never Tripping bro. Like Rick Ross response that was too quick For a writer to do that, bro it's Rick Ross, though, he write for niggas.

Whyte boi:

You feel me Fuck that. So what you got coming next bro?

7st Rick:

I got some shit. I just dropped some shit. A couple of them do, though.

Whyte boi:

How long ago you dropped it Like four days ago. Four days ago, what it's called Give it to the tele people.

guest:

Yeah, drop it.

7st Rick:

Yeah we just dropped that shit.

kash:

My type Get that joint on platforms real soon. We're trying to get some cover art. Once we get the cover art, we rock, and enroll and I also um one wait, wait before you get seen.

realla:

Uh, this is the real of the most podcast. Make sure you share, like, subscribe. Hit the notification bell too.

kash:

The hater because it's free. This is free to follow what you need to hear, not what you want to hear and that's, and that's just what it is. I want to say one more thing I really commend bro. I really commend bro because he always going to be a special VIP guest in the show, because Brody reached out to me and I reached out to him and we ain't even had episodes out yet.

Whyte boi:

So that means he just believed in us for no reason.

kash:

Fuck that. He just hit me up and started talking. We didn't even have an episode out. Brody, like yo after Ramadan, I'm on that joint.

realla:

But he ain't even see us.

kash:

He just probably knew us from. So other motherfuckers that see you. Oh, they got this person on there and that person. Now I want to go up the realest.

Neef:

only that's actually what we be going through man, realest only.

realla:

But yeah, Appreciate that, bro VIP pass. Definitely man VIP pass.

kash:

Even if you just want to come kick another guest come, you might want to lock in with him. Yo, he here, y'all do that business. Whatever bro, whatever you want to do, bro, feel me and, like I said, bro, for you to be man, in fact, give other the ages between like 15, 16 and like 22 that want to be artists, give them advice on how to be an artist and how to stay afloat in the city like being that age.

realla:

In this city.

kash:

In this city.

7st Rick:

yes, you got to be consistent. That's one that nigga, not niggas, but my bad. No, you good People got. Like it's more than just rap. Yeah, that's what I had to realize. You feel me like it's more than just rap. Yeah, that's what, like I had to Like, really like, realize. You feel me, like it's your image, it's what you post. You feel me it's it's how, when people Will look you up on your page Will pop up.

Whyte boi:

You feel me.

7st Rick:

It's all that Like. It's what you say sometimes.

Whyte boi:

Having your business in order.

guest:

You feel me, you got to treat it like a business you can't treat it Like I had learned.

7st Rick:

You got to post every day. Engage with your fans. Engage with your fans, you feel me. You got to get go live.

Whyte boi:

You in here go live.

guest:

Go do this, go do that.

7st Rick:

So like it really took like me like some time to like all right, let me really like all right, what else I got to so like yeah, that's what's up?

kash:

That's everything you really ought to do. That's what's up, and just Any last questions for him.

Whyte boi:

Uh, let's do that, let's do fast tracks.

kash:

Fast tracks. Let's get it so like Fast tracks is like I just throw like, maybe.

Whyte boi:

Like Sometimes we pick categories, sometimes we just pick Artists and it's like One of the other artists, it's just like Fast Track, we just go through it. So Lil Baby or Lil Dirt.

realla:

Fast Track Dirt.

Whyte boi:

Rod Wave or Kevin Gates.

kash:

Rod Wave or Kevin Gates.

7st Rick:

I don't listen Neither one Rod Wave though.

kash:

But who would you pick, though, if you had to Rod? Kevin, kevin, kevin.

7st Rick:

Hot, though, if you had to Raw Kevin Kevin hot though, like Kevin, I feel like Kevin had his, kevin had his weed Right. I ain't listening to Kevin now.

Whyte boi:

Leaf or OT Sabakwani Leaf Leaf.

realla:

Sure.

Whyte boi:

What's that? What's that? Um, um, what's the young boy? Uh, uh. Is the Uh Migos, or, or YSL.

7st Rick:

They a group Uh.

Whyte boi:

YSL is Thugger and them and the Migos is Quavo, that's a good ass.

7st Rick:

And John Takeoff. I'm a go, I may take off and I'm all set. Dang Migos is Quavo, that's a good answer.

Whyte boi:

And John Take off, I'm going to go, I may take off and offset.

7st Rick:

Damn, Migos got some hits, bro Like they got some hits. That's what I'm saying that's what I'm saying.

Whyte boi:

I mean YSL is the YSL, the main characters in YSL.

kash:

To me it's YSL. Just pick the top three.

7st Rick:

No, I'm going to go. Ysl Young Thug. They got some hits.

Whyte boi:

Alright, so for the last one, let's go. Y'all want to do like a history draw, see how far his history go back Like, see if he.

kash:

Yeah, just test him out.

Whyte boi:

Alright Test him out.

guest:

Alright.

Whyte boi:

Beanie Siegel Major figures. No, let me do this over State property Major figures Philly's most wanted.

kash:

State property no rank them for worst to least or best to least.

Whyte boi:

Yeah.

kash:

So you're saying rank them the best to least yeah.

Whyte boi:

Major figures state property Philly's most wanted Philly's most wanted.

kash:

You don't know who Philly's most wanted is. I was about to say, bro you don't know who Philly's most wanted is.

7st Rick:

I was about to say, bro you don't know, that, so I'ma go with.

guest:

State property. Okay, that's it, yeah, that's it, that's it.

7st Rick:

Major figures. I know, I know. Yeah, that's us. Yeah, I know Okay.

Speaker 7:

Okay.

Whyte boi:

Alright, that's what's up man, I ain't gonna lie bro. I appreciate you coming through.

guest:

I appreciate you.

Whyte boi:

And I ain't gonna lie, whenever you drop your next single project, whatever, come on, bring that shit back on up here man Promote that shit. We here anytime you wanna sit down and talk to the people, or come kick it with us, bro. It's an open door policy, bro. I'm saying that's like my son right there, man.

kash:

Yeah, yeah, take that salt, man, we gonna let you In the salt.

realla:

Man, it's the Real of the Moose podcast. Got Rick in the building.

kash:

We got 7th Street Rick in the building Special guest. We got.

Whyte boi:

Lil' Cotty, lil' Cotty in here.

realla:

Neef, neef, we got White white boy in here Mr Pop Shout out to Rube On the On the.

7st Rick:

On the. You do yeah, stop playing. Talk to the song though.

Neef:

I do got a song, that shit called who Neef Pop it. Who Neef Pop it. He can really pop his shit.

7st Rick:

We all can pop our shit. That's what we do. You already know, man, it's the Really the Moose Podcast.

Whyte boi:

Really the Moose Podcast.

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