Realer Than Most Podcast

THE SOUTH GOT SUMN TO SAY FT. SOUTHSIDE TONEY | RTM PODCAST | EP. 08

May 27, 2024 @Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash Season 1 Episode 8
THE SOUTH GOT SUMN TO SAY FT. SOUTHSIDE TONEY | RTM PODCAST | EP. 08
Realer Than Most Podcast
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Realer Than Most Podcast
THE SOUTH GOT SUMN TO SAY FT. SOUTHSIDE TONEY | RTM PODCAST | EP. 08
May 27, 2024 Season 1 Episode 8
@Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash

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When Camden's streets speak, we listen; this time through the voice of South Side Tony, aka Tony G. From the gridiron at Camden High to the beat-laden tracks like "Five Minutes from Philly," Tony G takes us on a lyrical journey through the city that shaped him. He doesn't just drop bars; he drops wisdom about navigating the music industry, the importance of genuine support over shallow hype, and the hard-hitting truths of growing up amid gang culture. This episode isn't just a peek behind the curtain — it's an invitation to walk the streets of Six and Spruce with a native son who's seen the best and worst of it.

Loyalty, legacy, and the hustle — it's what binds artists in the unforgiving forge of the rap game. Tony G breaks down his alliance with Corky, the managerial maestro who helped him ink a deal with Sony Orchard, and the music publishing world's intricate dance of profits and placements. But it's not all contracts and choruses; he shares his personal manifesto for collective success, delving into the potent influence of family, therapy, and the women who've steered him right. If you've ever wondered about the tether between artistry and authenticity, Tony G lays it bare, with nothing off-limits.

Buckle up, because we're veering into the fast lane of Jersey rap — where territorial claims spark heated debates and social media morphs unknowns into overnight sensations. Tony G weighs in on Fatboy SSE's bold declaration and the pulse of the battle rap scene, questioning whether it's soaring or saturating. We even take a detour through the cultural rift dividing North and South Jersey, unpacking the idiosyncrasies that make each region unique. Strap in for a ride that's as real as the streets that raised South Side Tony — this isn't just another episode; it's a raw cut of life, music, and the relentless pursuit of artistic integrity.

Support the Show.

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When Camden's streets speak, we listen; this time through the voice of South Side Tony, aka Tony G. From the gridiron at Camden High to the beat-laden tracks like "Five Minutes from Philly," Tony G takes us on a lyrical journey through the city that shaped him. He doesn't just drop bars; he drops wisdom about navigating the music industry, the importance of genuine support over shallow hype, and the hard-hitting truths of growing up amid gang culture. This episode isn't just a peek behind the curtain — it's an invitation to walk the streets of Six and Spruce with a native son who's seen the best and worst of it.

Loyalty, legacy, and the hustle — it's what binds artists in the unforgiving forge of the rap game. Tony G breaks down his alliance with Corky, the managerial maestro who helped him ink a deal with Sony Orchard, and the music publishing world's intricate dance of profits and placements. But it's not all contracts and choruses; he shares his personal manifesto for collective success, delving into the potent influence of family, therapy, and the women who've steered him right. If you've ever wondered about the tether between artistry and authenticity, Tony G lays it bare, with nothing off-limits.

Buckle up, because we're veering into the fast lane of Jersey rap — where territorial claims spark heated debates and social media morphs unknowns into overnight sensations. Tony G weighs in on Fatboy SSE's bold declaration and the pulse of the battle rap scene, questioning whether it's soaring or saturating. We even take a detour through the cultural rift dividing North and South Jersey, unpacking the idiosyncrasies that make each region unique. Strap in for a ride that's as real as the streets that raised South Side Tony — this isn't just another episode; it's a raw cut of life, music, and the relentless pursuit of artistic integrity.

Support the Show.

Speaker 4:

Rilla the Most.

Speaker 2:

Podcast whole tri-state area. We not just sitting in philly man and I got my guy in the building. Man you want. You want to give him the old name or the new name.

Speaker 5:

We're gonna go with south side tony, if you know you know man, go by tony g, but we rebranded this man, come on south side tony south side, tony man in a building and new jersey cam.

Speaker 2:

Camden, new Jersey. Man, talk about it. You want to talk about where you from, man, camden, new.

Speaker 5:

Jersey man Got the shit tied on now from Six and Spruce downtown Camden. Hold on, hold on hold on One second.

Speaker 2:

Move that mic close to you. Tone this one's right in front of you, yup, and put it right in front of you while you talking.

Speaker 5:

So Six and spruce is six and spruce, so that's downtown, if you know anything about camden that's the poppy area right.

Speaker 1:

Only nigga on my block, so my friends with spanish is a motherfucker guys.

Speaker 5:

So I'm outside it's a little you feel me. I got friends and shit. They don't speak no motherfucking english damn, we got us.

Speaker 3:

We got a spruce too, yeah we kids, you feel me.

Speaker 5:

So you mean, niggas, don't give a fuck. You play play ball, you play ball, you play curveball. Nigga, it's a universal language.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, yeah, I'm from Six and Spruce man. I went to a school called Medis. It's like a motherfucking internship-based school, but I played ball for Camden High. That's what I was doing my whole life. I played football, basketball, ran track and shit. Yeah, yeah man, I'm from Six and Spruce man. It's like any other hood man, treacherous. You feel me? Come from the mud Like real life, not for fake. You know what I'm saying. And One of the things is, bro, when you coming from that type of area, you can either go Left or right Me. I went both ways. You feel me I went left. You feel me I got my shit right, went right went back, left, back to the streets.

Speaker 5:

You feel me because, when I when I when that shit in you it's just in you I got a question about that like yeah

Speaker 3:

oh whoa. Before that, let's play a track from tony g, so the listeners could let's do it, man, yeah I just want to yeah, we gonna go right back to it.

Speaker 2:

Let's play right back to it don't hold that thought.

Speaker 5:

We got Tony G in the building, five minutes from.

Speaker 3:

Philly is only right. We got Tony G in the building you know, representing Cam New Jersey. So we about to tune in to this Tony G, five minutes from Philly, man.

Speaker 5:

Five minutes from Philly, y'all gonna hear how he carrying it man.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, I'm like laser tag. If she suck me, good enough we can fuck and I'ma stay. I'm the youngest drug dealer in my city. Call me Gray. If it's up tonight, then it's stuck. Tonight I'm in my city, hot as shit in Camden, far away from Philly, probably worth a million. In this shit I feel like Gilly. This shit don't like the way her body built. I give it to these. It's mandatory fee. Watch your own crib, your own fee. I ain't beefing with them, niggas. I heard they drive a smoke.

Speaker 4:

No crib no, nothing, fire really lit. They say I lied Niggas, niggas, niggas gonna land with that too.

Speaker 5:

If I don't lay up with the baddest bitch, they say I lied All. They try to call my bluff Niggas cutting. But they try, I I ain't even watching shit. That's why I crack and gave a back. That's why I asked to cross a rack. That's why I trapped. I could break it down, ship it out. Tonight I'm UPS. I'm in spades with my dog ass beneath. I'm doing checks. Remember hopping off that bus? Now I'm hopping on that vet. Niggas hate to show me love. If you ever watching this, it's been been probably worth a million. In this shit I feel like Gilly. I feel like the way a body built.

Speaker 3:

I get a titties yeah, man, that was 5 minutes from Philly man, from your boy Tony G man, I ain't gonna lie, we usually don't even let. Yeah, man, that was five minutes from Philly man, me and boy Tony G. Man, I ain't gonna lie, we usually don't even let the whole song play, but I was fucking with that y'all that shit work. I was blasting it on the way here, so I want you to get right back to it though. Like, explain what you was explaining. You know, you explained your school and everything.

Speaker 5:

What else was you about to say? I didn't mean to cut you off, pass me the light up. I mean, I played ball my whole life. I I was always doing music, though, you know me, uh, but when I first stepped into music I stepped in on some like manager, you feel me trying to start a label type? Yeah, it's always been that type of I always try you feel me, get my click, you feel me and we just get rich. That's the only thing I think about when I wake up.

Speaker 3:

I don't think about shit else, getting your clique together and getting rich.

Speaker 5:

You feel me? Me and my shorty, I'm straight to the bag, bro. I don't think about no niggas. I don't think about nothing.

Speaker 3:

No, black men don't cheat. Remember that.

Speaker 5:

I'm a faithful nigga though, shout out to my shorty I'm faithful man.

Speaker 3:

Shout out to Tony G's shorty.

Speaker 5:

But she might like bitches.

Speaker 3:

So, depending on what you look like, real shit, take that a word, though, so you said so, when the first thing you wake, first thing you think about when you wake up Getting rich and getting your click on Now, on this click you talking about, like, is they sandbox? Did you meet them later? Like the person sitting next to you? Uh, we got somebody else here.

Speaker 5:

Like, it's pretty shout out to my boy hooli too, man shout out the hooli, the dude man, he wanted to. He wanted the ones when it come to that mic and bro, but uh what like rapping, yeah, rapping oh, he's an artist he's like that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, for sure yeah, all right we're gonna have him on next man.

Speaker 5:

It's crazy, man Him and that I was at the stew and I had came out To go get a lighter. It's a gas station Right next to my stew. Shout out to my boy Rue Executive 15, you feel me? That's in Cherry Hill, new Jersey.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

But um yeah, so I'm in there. I come out to go you feel me, cause I before I rap and I see this motherfucker pull up in a scat, so I'm like I know this nigga got a lighter, so I pull up. I was like bro.

Speaker 1:

I know you got a lighter.

Speaker 3:

It's a bitch yourself bro.

Speaker 1:

I go by the name of Bankroll Brew. You feel me?

Speaker 3:

All right, bankroll Brew From Jersey as well. All right man Bankroll Brew, but finish your story.

Speaker 5:

I pulled up on him. You feel me Like yo gang. I know you got a lighter in this motherfucker. He start laughing and shit. He give me the lighter. He like what you in the stew I'm like yeah yeah. He knew everything. You feel me, he knew everything about my engineer.

Speaker 1:

I went to the same stew, you feel me, I played it, so it was like, so you were an artist too. Yeah, I seen him come in the game and I was like, yeah, he the new young boy, young and tender you one of them. Yeah, man, yeah, yeah, so I just was kicking it with him. That's what's up man, it was all genuine.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, we met on some straight love shit, Like that's the niggas I surround myself with how many years ago.

Speaker 1:

Shit like two.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, like two.

Speaker 4:

Yo, you know what's crazy.

Speaker 3:

Rest in peace, pnb Rock man. But I just was watching this clip of PNB when he was like oh, that day one shit, that shit fake. Because did your day ones be the one that see you come from nothing when you was really at the lowest, and then you got something? So they going to hate it because they don't got it with you? They seen they was in that shit with you. You feel me?

Speaker 5:

I base my my friend fight, my friend foundation you feel me my shorty foundation, just everything I deal with. That blood shit Don't mean shit to me. I don't give a fuck About no sandbox shit Because at the end of the day we could go I'm 26, we could go fucking 24 years back, niggas, that I was doing whatever with you feel me, niggas, I done did a lot of shit for them. Niggas ain't even got my music in. They motherfucking shit. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Them niggas don't pop out to no stew, but.

Speaker 5:

I got a lot of day one niggas that do heavily support, but on that tip, like what I could do, stick with the niggas that give a fuck. You feel me when you wake up. The niggas that sent you a phone Stu tonight, stu tonight, stu tonight. These niggas bug me about the Stu more than you know what I'm saying, but that's because they bought into the vision, they bought into what I'm doing, and it's not even a me, because everything that I do me to tell you I bring everybody when he first met me, I had niggas with me.

Speaker 5:

I introduced everybody. You feel me, because the way I see it, if I'm allowed in the door I'm gonna get y'all niggas right so we all can walk through that, motherfucker you know what I'm saying because a lot of niggas bro, they be having a ball, but they will not pass that motherfucker right and that's how it is, kind of like in the area that I'm in, like there's a lot of artists, bro, that's popping, that's that, that, that nice, but niggas don't want to click together because niggas got

Speaker 5:

so much pride, so much other shit going on. You feel me Niggas ain't even on that type time. But me, I'm the type of nigga I welcome shit like that. You feel me, if you from my city, you want to do a song, you want to do whatever the case is, we could do it. Bro, I like actually connecting, I like the networking. You feel me, I like the showing love. I show up to niggas' video shoots, they show up to mine. You feel me Like everybody that's around me is on something, bro, the point of my life that I'm in right now. I don't want nobody around me that do not want to get rich insane.

Speaker 5:

You have to be insane to chase this bag, bro. This shit is not like niggas. See all the social media shit. That shit is a gimmick, bro, because niggas are only showing you, feel me, what they want niggas to see. They're not going to show you the fucked up shit that they're going through. They're not going to show you the fucked up deals they took. They're not going to show you none me that's trying to maybe get to where I'm at or trying to understand what I'm doing. I got kids too, you feel me, my little bro. I got 16 siblings, you feel me, and I'm the oldest. You know what I'm saying. So I got a bunch of people that's looking at me. You feel me. I take care of my fam. I got a bunch of people that's watching.

Speaker 3:

So me not being 100 transparent, 16 siblings and you 26 and you're the oldest, my dad.

Speaker 5:

Go crazy, bro, my dad, what 42.

Speaker 3:

42, 41 bro, that's crazy. That's content by itself. That's insane. I'm saying that my mom and dad the I was like three at my mom high school graduation yo, yo hold up, hold up, hold up, yo rewind bro say that shit again. Bro, what the fuck? I'ma say this nigga.

Speaker 5:

Just Go ahead, bro. I'ma send y'all, i'ma show y'all the pictures.

Speaker 3:

This nigga just said. He was three At his mom high School graduation.

Speaker 5:

Nigga before Before I actually Went to Camden High and played for Camden High, I was already going there as a kid. Bro, my mom ain't had no babysitter, so she just took me to the school and the teachers would watch me and shit. So I was already in the school that I actually went to, damn.

Speaker 4:

I've been there, bro.

Speaker 5:

They already knew who you were you ain't miss nothing, bro, basically, when you handle your belt.

Speaker 3:

I asked you know where they know each other? He said his point the first thing he think when he wake up as getting his click rich. And and I said so you click like is they day ones? Or you met him along the way. And he explained to us how he met bankroll, bro like two years ago, and he one of his biggest supporters now. And he said, bro, what artists too, who lee right? And he said both all three of them is crazy on the mic crazy they all artists.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying, so that's all with that being said, though, like y'all all from Camden, new Jersey? Nah, you're not from Camden. Yeah, I ain't from.

Speaker 1:

Camden. I'm from down the highway, that's what we call it over there. You feel me? It's like exit seven, sicklerville, yeah once you pass exit four.

Speaker 3:

I know Sick whole South.

Speaker 4:

Jersey.

Speaker 1:

That's the exit when you go down highway Like 42 is called over there.

Speaker 3:

Yo, you know what's crazy, bro. What's that? Last year, I just was in school for my CDL, right Mm-hmm, and I used to get off on exit seven, and then I used to have to drive further to get to Trenton, though. Yeah, if I'm not mistaken, trenton the opposite way bro. It's the opposite way.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, oh, alright, that's probably when I was coming home. Then, yeah, yeah, but I remember, I always used to have to.

Speaker 3:

The shit was right at Trenton.

Speaker 4:

I always used to have to like get off at 7, some shit like that.

Speaker 3:

The crazy thing about that area is like Morrisville around here and shit like.

Speaker 5:

I live down the highway now, but everything pointing towards that down the highway.

Speaker 1:

That's towards like AC. I'm like 30 minutes from AC.

Speaker 5:

Okay, I don't know why bro.

Speaker 3:

Because it's the capital. Okay, because it's the capital. That's how it is with Philly. Right, you will see the first Philadelphia sign, and you three hours away.

Speaker 4:

Like you're not getting there in no time.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, I'm screaming and shit, you should be stupid as shit.

Speaker 2:

I'd be like yeah, I you still not home, bro.

Speaker 5:

Fuck y'all tease me for it, they gonna let you know You're on route, but you ain't there yet.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but yeah, just growing up when you from, I know you was around Gang culture Like did that affect you?

Speaker 3:

Let's talk about it Any little Like Excellent question.

Speaker 5:

It affected me heavy. Nigga, I was in it, you feel me.

Speaker 3:

Okay. The crazy part about.

Speaker 5:

It is, bro, and, like I said, I'm 100% transparent. I grew up with two parents in my house, you feel me. They was home, they wasn't home. My dad is a hustler for real. You feel me that nigga went all the way to Texas to get his CDLs. He left us for like a year, so the whole time I'm really shining on the field getting. He wasn't there, but I wasn't mad about it because he's sending that bread back, you feel me. So we got a roof over our head and shit, but I had a lot of time, a lot of idle time.

Speaker 5:

I don't want to say to raise myself, but to really like how can I say it? But to really find myself because I was by myself. You know what I'm saying. We ain't had no cars or nothing like that. I'm walking a mile and a half to school. I'm walking through sets, I'm beefing with you feel me, to get to school. It was like that and you feel me it was what it was because I was on a mission. You feel me, if I had to get into that on the way to school, I got into that. Then I went to motherfucking fresh donuts.

Speaker 5:

That was the that was the spot right there it was in the middle of Parkside fresh donuts, bro. Everybody go there in the morning, no matter what school you went to. There's niggas that Went to Wilson, which is a it's basically a rival school To Cam Deha, but it's right across the bridge. Always all love and shit like that, but sports wise that's our biggest rival. There's niggas that Was going to Wilson, going to Fresh.

Speaker 3:

Donuts. So what school you went to?

Speaker 5:

I went to Cam Deha. But they're right next to each other, it's Metties and Cam Dye. You walk like fucking two minutes, you feel me. So basically everybody that went to that school. They either could play for Wilson or they could play for Cam Dye. I played for the home team, you know what I'm saying. But in the morning everybody met up there, you feel me. Turkey bacon, egg and cheese. Jelly on the bottom Every morning, every fucking morning, bro. Then when I started getting money, I was buying a lot of motherfucking turkey bacon, egg and cheese.

Speaker 4:

You get what I'm saying.

Speaker 5:

I was hustling young, you feel me, because niggas ain't have it, but I was around. I'm around the niggas, you feel me, that do got it, no matter where they was coming from, what they had going on. You feel me? I'm fucked up. The reason I wear Dickies, whole Dickie set. Yeah, dude, yeah, they fucking $20 for a set around that time, you feel me? I'm going to Uniform City. If you live downtown, you know what that is.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to Uniform City to get my fits as a young adolescent. Like Affect you At any cause For you to like Say you know what, I know how to actually get it. You know what I mean. Being fucked up at one point, you seeing people getting money. Who was that person To actually step in your life and um Help you in that direction, to get money, if y'all can, if you can even tell us you know?

Speaker 5:

what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Like get money, just period. Yeah, besides your dad.

Speaker 5:

Um, shit, to be honest, my biological pops. So my stepdad raised me, my biological pops. He was in and out of jail my whole adolescence. You feel me. But we still kept in contact, always visit him. You know what I'm saying. Like a lot of niggas when their dad's not in their life, like I'm really my own man, and by that I mean I know what's going on. You feel me.

Speaker 4:

I know certain situations.

Speaker 5:

I see it, you feel me. So I just appreciate it being able to talk to my pops. You feel me. But my pops, a street nigga, you feel me. So that's where I got all my game from when I was in the streets. I got it from my dad, as crazy as it sound, but it's real, you feel me. That shit. He kept my head above water in the streets because he done, fucked up, doing all type of shit. You get what I'm saying, yeah, so he basically they call it taught knowledge versus bought knowledge.

Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 5:

Taught knowledge is direct. You feel me A nigga. Directly teach you some shit. Bought knowledge. Is you buying this shit? You buy a book. You buy whatever the case is and you feel me and you learn. The case is and you feel me and you learn. But most of my shit in life was all taught, right, you know. I'm saying I'm face to face because I'm an approachable nigga and I'm a nigga that understands and a nigga that listens you feel me, I'm not just the regular average nigga like I'm.

Speaker 5:

I'm a smart ass, nigga, you know I'm saying and I was like that my whole life. So I'd rather take the route less travel than take the route where I know niggas about to get fucked up on. I ain't really trying to take the chance. I'd rather feel me figure that shit out by myself.

Speaker 3:

Right. So you know one thing I learned about this hip-hop shit and this rap stuff people don't know how to separate the artist from people who like personal. You feel me Like somebody who you really are. So from now on, on the Real the Most podcast any artist that I have on here, i'ma ask this question who is Southside Tony? Besides the music we hear? Who are you? What's some things that people should know about you, your upbringing, your influences, music we hear like. Who are you like? What's some things that people should know about you? Your, your upbringing, you know your influences and you know things you do, like things you don't like, like stuff like that south side.

Speaker 5:

Tony man, first and foremost I'm a provider and a protector. That's what I pride my whole life on is being able to take care of my family because, like I said we, we came from nothing and now I got. I got you.

Speaker 3:

You got kids.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, I got a daughter. She's two and a half, you feel me. So now I got shit. It's a lot of shit. To be honest with you and be transparent, it's a lot of shit that I could have did if I just kept my bread within myself. I'd be going super crazy. I go super crazy now, but nigga, I'd be going crazy crazy. But it's not fun when it's just you Right. It's not who the fuck want to sit in a penthouse by they self.

Speaker 4:

Right, it's kicked up.

Speaker 5:

If it's your crib, it's your crib. I get that. But when you going out and you having fun, who the fuck want to? I'm not trying to shine on niggas, I'm trying to shine with my niggas. I'm not trying to stun on niggas. Do with my people and people around me that you feel me, that got love for me and I got the same vision as me. That's what I want to do. You feel me so if you're asking who south side tony is.

Speaker 5:

That's what I am. I'm provider and protector, bro, and really there's nothing more, not less. You feel me. There's a lot of shit I could say about myself, but I'm a, I'm anointed nigga. I'd rather niggas speak for me, bro, because my character was worth more. Anything I could put on a watch, cartier's cars. My character is worth more than anything I could purchase at a store or anything that I could fabricate is.

Speaker 3:

I'm just me, bro I respect that man um, so I wanted to uh bring this in right. So, for for most of the people you know, a lot of people out here don't know what a label or a distribution label or whatever a publishing. They don't know what it is unless they favorite rapper signed to it and all that. So, for those of you don't know, uh, the orchard was uh founded in the 1980s by two guys you know, and in 2015, it became like public and official that the Orchard is under Sony Music. So now, it's.

Speaker 5:

Sony Orchard like music, so you know you talk to us and you huh Parent division.

Speaker 3:

Yup, yup yeah, a distribution. Yeah, hey, you explained to us. Um, you know that's who you.

Speaker 5:

You underwrite, yeah so I do my distribution for my music through Sony orchard now the situation that I got is is kind of different, and when I say kind of different compared to, like you know, I compare it to what I'm around and the shit that I see. I can't speak for all the crazy label deals. I don't know shit about that. I got a distribution deal, so basically what that is is in street terms.

Speaker 5:

That's your plug, that's the people that put your music out, you know what I'm saying they put your music out, they help with the marketing and all of that shit. You know what I'm saying. Now, with the distribution deal, I have an 80-20 split, so 80 of profit goes my way and 20% goes my way.

Speaker 3:

That's fucking excellent yeah 20% goes to them. That 21 Savage. You're seeing, that's how his shit is.

Speaker 5:

Now, within the contract, what I have is if Sony places one of my tracks in a film, it goes from 80-20 to 70-30. So if I get an actual placement in a movie and that's what they actually give a fuck about you feel me, they put your shit in the movies. Put them in the Tubi movies, because that's where you really get your bag from.

Speaker 3:

Remind me, what is that shit called when you make songs for games and basketball and movies and you don't even put music out as an artist. You just something licensing or something like that. Like it's like call y'all know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 5:

You just give it the movies and shows and and it's just when you actually don't have, like a catalog of music and you.

Speaker 3:

Just it's called something, but that mean that you're involved in both of them. Feel me, but continue. My fault continue yeah.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, so the way I got that is my manager Corky.

Speaker 3:

Shout out to Corky.

Speaker 5:

He met me probably about three years ago. The way we met is I had to buy this fucking. I think it was like a laptop. It was a specific laptop that my shorty needed for school.

Speaker 3:

Corky from Jersey too, yeah he from Willingboro.

Speaker 5:

So I went on offer up or whatever the case is. I grabbed this shit, whatever the case. I sent my shorty to go get it. Now, me and him was texting and talking, or whatever the case. He like yeah, I'm in the studio right now. I'm going to pop back out. So I'm like oh, I make music. You feel me, what you want type shit. Sent him my shit. He told my girl. He said yo, when you get back home to that nigga, tell that nigga call me. We talked and he was telling me about the situation that he was cooking up. You feel me? He like yo just rock with me, type shit, you can use me as a fucking front man, bro.

Speaker 5:

I don't really give a fuck, Because at the end of the day, one shit is on paper is on paper. When it's not, it's not. I like rapping, bro, I care about the music. All the other shit, bro, I don't really get into. I don't really give a fuck that much Now that I'm at the position where my music has to be on paper, you feel me, and I got to get licenses, BMI, all of that shit. You know what I'm saying. Now it's more kind of a business move, rather than you know me just making the music Because I used to just make the music drop my shit on DistroKid, let the people have it.

Speaker 5:

You feel me? I had my own system that I was doing. You know what I'm saying. So everything that I was watching labels do, I would bring back to the home team. You feel me I'll go. I was in DC Recording with one of the engineers for Interscope His name Crisis. Shout out to Crisis. He taught me a lot of shit while I'm in there. I took all that shit back to my motherfucking engineer back home Plugins, everything, DSers, all that shit. I took it all the way back to the gang, bro, and and that's how we kind of like turned up and changed the sound, because everything that I do is at the home base, bro.

Speaker 2:

You remember the time you first started like with music, hell yeah.

Speaker 5:

So when I was a kid, I was in the choir and shit, so I was just singing, whatever cases, because I didn't want to actually be in church, but I liked the music. You feel me? I was the nigga falling asleep in church getting smacked in the back of the head by my aunts and shit Right. Then they could fall asleep in church, get smacked in the back of the head by my aunts and shit.

Speaker 5:

You feel me. And I was like damn, I could get out of this shit if I joined the choir, because I'm going to be at motherfucking practice all Sunday. You feel me. So that's what I did Found out I could sing. I'm the fucking lead singer at motherfucking.

Speaker 3:

St John's Baptist Church. So you sing too.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, any given moment I would have fucked you in the release shit, but I know the bitches love you man, I'll be what.

Speaker 4:

That's all I do, bro. I sing my daughter to sleep.

Speaker 5:

I sing for my girl, I sing for my mom. That's what they like when I'm around them. That's Southside Tony Like this shit ain't just a rap name.

Speaker 3:

That's what I wanted.

Speaker 5:

You feel me that's what I wanted. I'm from the south side, south side of Jersey, south side of Camden. That's where that name came from. You feel me, tony G came from all the street shit. That G behind my name meant something. You got what I'm saying. So once I start seeing everybody with G behind their name G, this G that I'm like fuck Cause, it don't mean shit, no more. You know what I'm saying. Tony G meant something.

Speaker 5:

The whole time I was coming up, I was Tony G as a kid. You feel me. That name was given to me. It's not a name that I cooked up. Shout out to my boy, moody. He gave me that name. We was sitting in the house drinking motherfucking. What the fuck was we drinking? We was drinking some bullshit wine. He like yo man, tony G for real. We was fucked up back then. But you feel me, we with the guys, you know what I'm saying, we do what we do. And he gave me that name and I was like I fuck with that shit. And that's who I've been, bro. I've been Tony G since I was 12, bro, you feel me.

Speaker 5:

So you got an 80-20 split with Sony, or that's crazy the when I first got, when I first looked at the contract I'm just looking, I'm just looking. It took me like three months Because I had my attorney look over the shit, I had everybody look over the shit, I had my OGs, like my boy Rue he been in the game for a minute, he my engineer, but he part of this rock band called Pretty Poison.

Speaker 5:

You know what I'm saying. So he plaqued up. That's where I got a lot of my game from. A lot of my game I got from just listening, just sitting, just sitting. I'll sit in the studio and I'll just listen, listen, listen, listen. Write this shit down, like I write shit in my notes. You feel me? So that way I can retain it. And I got that shit for later. I'm still going off of shit in my notes from motherfucking three years ago, like this shit that I'm doing right now was already planned five years years ago. I just had to figure out how to do it. That's what I did. I figured out how to do it, I learned it, he learned it, he learned it. That's three niggas that know the same shit.

Speaker 1:

You feel me.

Speaker 5:

He could leave and go, do whatever right now. Start his own label. Hooli could do the same thing. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

That's how I wanted to be, so, being from Jersey, name us for right now, if you can Name us your top five jersey rappers right now.

Speaker 2:

Top five jerseys.

Speaker 3:

Without your homies in it.

Speaker 2:

I want to get into something after this. Go ahead, then let's go.

Speaker 5:

Shit, my boy Oso Shout out to my boy Oso, he from Salem. I was coming up learning his raps. That nigga used to drop freestyles. I'm just listening to them shits. I'm learning them. I'm going to school listening to them shits.

Speaker 4:

I'm learning them, I'm going to school, just rapping them shits.

Speaker 5:

I'm just rapping them shits. He hard bro, you tap in. You feel me? I'm just listening, listening, listening, listening to the shit and I'm just reciting it, reciting it so a lot. I don't listen to rap like that.

Speaker 1:

You feel me.

Speaker 5:

I drove here and listened to motherfucking Jodeci.

Speaker 1:

That's what I listen to all day.

Speaker 4:

I don't listen to rap like that, bro.

Speaker 5:

Oh really you feel me. I love music, but at the same time I feel like rap is so different now from when I first started rapping that I can't really, I don't want with it, but it's just like a lot of extra shit that you feel me that's going on with it, but my nigga oso uh shorty naya g, she's super hard, super duper hard, from jersey.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, she's from camden. Yeah, bro. Nah, she's from philly. Nah, naya g and the bando babies camden. Oh, that's what's up. I never knew that. Yeah, she with Garcin.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, yeah, that's Camden.

Speaker 4:

Shit, I ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 5:

There's a whole group of Parkside niggas. That's hard. Whole group of them.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to the Parkside niggas man, there's a whole group of niggas and where Parkside at.

Speaker 5:

Parkside is like. So if you look at it From like a Camden standpoint, you got downtown. That's like the capital, some motherfuckers Will argue. Whatever Downtown, that's like the capital of Camden Cause. That's where Everything going on, that's where Campbell's Suit was founded, you feel me, that's where you cross. The Ben Frank you in Camden Downtown.

Speaker 2:

City.

Speaker 5:

Hall, all of that shit. That's where Downtown is. You know what I'm saying. So as soon as you leave downtown, you get straight to Parkside. From Parkside you go to Polak. You feel me? Now, next to downtown is North Camden. So when you cross that bridge on the left side, all of that is North Camden. Right, you stay to the right. All of that is downtown.

Speaker 3:

But yeah, you leave motherfucking downtown, go to Parkside. Y'all got this liquor store that be open.

Speaker 5:

Oh yeah, the Tri-Von Bro. That shit open at 4 in the morning Bro.

Speaker 3:

That's where I just got the last bottle from Remember it was Sunday Room.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

You was in the car when we go.

Speaker 2:

Now let me tell you.

Speaker 3:

Camden on 3rd Street.

Speaker 2:

Let me tell you Always going to be open, always.

Speaker 5:

To fucking 12 and shit to my niggas at the liquor store. Y'all crazy, though, because after motherfucking 11 o'clock the price of them bottles go up. Oh yeah, yeah, nigga. That shit like a club getting the motherfucking entry fee. Oh shit, nigga, I bought a fifth of Henny Nigga. I paid like 120 for that shit Just because it was two in the morning.

Speaker 2:

That's crazy what you was about to say man, I'm like I'm about to keep going, but I seen where I could turn around and go use the.

Speaker 5:

A&M. Yeah, that's North. It's like a little poppy store over there in the corner North Camden.

Speaker 2:

I turn, hit the poppy store real quick.

Speaker 1:

looking over I'm like it's all these niggas looking at me over there.

Speaker 2:

I get right back in the wheel Like this shit. Look like the P right here.

Speaker 3:

Yo bro, Let me get out of here.

Speaker 5:

Every part of Camden Is treacherous, bro, like it's not.

Speaker 1:

No part that's like.

Speaker 5:

It's not like no part, that's like A little light, like all that shit Is just nuts Bro.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, just one time, right Bro.

Speaker 2:

But wait Before you, is it? Is it gang culture, like right there in that area?

Speaker 5:

It's gang culture as soon as you touch down. Nig Touchdown nigga. Under the Ben Frank, niggas getting active. You feel me?

Speaker 3:

It's gang culture everywhere, Literally bro, like right there when we driving, like under it, literally bro.

Speaker 5:

It's all that dumb shit Niggas flagged up in front of City Hall. That's how niggas carrying it, guys.

Speaker 3:

Because I'm about to tell you when I realized this Half of my family from Jersey, but they all like way older, way older than me, like they from Somewhere, some shit, and we used to have Family reunions During all that. But when I was like 20, 21, you know, at that age you get a job that pay like a dub An hour. That shit, some good ass.

Speaker 2:

That's how I was Working over Jersey. Why you think I was over Jersey. I be getting a check, listen, right.

Speaker 3:

So I don't know if y'all know a utility finder, but you know, when you walk outside and on a pavement you look at me like lines on a pavement. Them lines is for like when the construction people come, they mark it because that's where electric and gas shit at. So they won't hit it when they doing construction. You get what I'm saying. So the lines they be writing and shit be for that.

Speaker 3:

It's called a utility locator. So I was doing it. First I was at some job called USIC. They fired me. Then I went to this joint called Utila Quest. It was in the fucking suburbs of Jersey. There's no houses, just all these buildings, right, bro? When I started that joint, bro, I went downtown on like 5, fifth and Market somewhere to catch the bus all the way to Jersey, right? So you know, philly, niggas, we just so arrogant Like we just be thinking we know everything. Niggas, swear when you go to.

Speaker 3:

Jersey. It's going to look nice, bro. I hop on the fucking bus bro.

Speaker 2:

That shit look just like over here it's worse, way, worse bro the shit.

Speaker 3:

look just like over here. It's worse, way, worse bro. The whole Camden is Kensington. I swear to God bro.

Speaker 5:

No.

Speaker 4:

I know what you're talking about. It's crazy. It's crazy. You say that though. No, listen though, bro, I'm on the bus.

Speaker 3:

Then it's crazy because that shit start right when Camden start. It's this joint where the buses go at and it look like B&O.

Speaker 5:

Walter Rand Transportation Center.

Speaker 3:

That's the transportation center Then they drove me on a block. The block was called Broad, I think.

Speaker 5:

That shit go all the way. It was nothing but fiends Sleeping on cardboard and freaks.

Speaker 2:

The whole block Shout out to the fiends.

Speaker 5:

Shout out to the fiends sleeping on cardboard right here, bro, the whole. That's why, hey, why are you saying that? Shout out to the fiends, because them niggas damn near raised me. Shout out, the fiends.

Speaker 3:

Shout out to the fiends man y'all familiar with, uh our artists who be on uh. So we got an artist from philly named skrilli, y'all familiar with yeah skrilli, y'all be seeing his vids and shit yeah, hell yeah that's just one part of philly what do you call yourself the zombie king? The king of zombie land. He practiced all that Sacrificed.

Speaker 5:

That's.

Speaker 3:

Santeria. Yeah, bro, kensington, the number one drug ring In the world. People don't know that and we, 5 minutes from it right now, the number one in the world, and everybody who be from Kensington, they don't even be from Philly. They be from another city and then come to Kensington and just stay there.

Speaker 4:

Because, this is where all my nugs at, so they just stay there they can't leave.

Speaker 2:

They live there, bro. They can't leave Bro real shit, bro.

Speaker 3:

I ain't going to lie to you, bro, and this goes into the next question I'm gonna swing into you bro.

Speaker 2:

Nah, you got it.

Speaker 3:

Is Six and Spruce like that yes.

Speaker 5:

Yes, nigga yes.

Speaker 3:

Six and Spruce look like that.

Speaker 1:

Yes, nigga, their Six and Spruce don't look nothing like that, though.

Speaker 3:

No not ours. I'm talking about y'all's.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, nigga the whole Camden is like that it's a Six and Spruce. Right, oh yes, it's a Six and Spruce. Huh, yeah, it's a Six, and.

Speaker 3:

Spruce. Yeah, there are Six and Spruce. Like the sub-downtown, y'all's Six and Spruce look like that, yes.

Speaker 5:

What the part you're talking. Get the fuck out of here bro Bro stop it. That's the cleanest part of Camden Stop it Fuck out of here. It's the cleanest part, bro.

Speaker 3:

No.

Speaker 5:

Think about it, bro, you downtown, where City Hall and shit is at, that's the cleanest motherfucking part. Y'all out of pocket over there. You come up Broadway, it's going to get active, nigga, it's motherfucking prosties out there.

Speaker 2:

Y to Camden, but y'all out of pocket Look my grandpa.

Speaker 3:

Hey hearing a Philly nigga say that is crazy Bro no. My grandpa, all my aunts, who like 60 and over, all my cousins, they all from Camden, bro. They was like at a point in time, bro, it was literally like no exaggeration, it was only like seven cops working there.

Speaker 4:

In the city.

Speaker 3:

It's like that now, bro, they got this many cops.

Speaker 5:

They replaced actual Camden police when I was probably like what, 15, 14, and they brought in Something called Metropolitan police, so we got Camden Metro. So if you know anything about Batman and Gotham City, that's the type of cops them niggas. Is they not from there? They don't give a fuck about nothing, bro, everywhere they at no, nigga, they chilling, they not trying to get active. Nigga, niggas is outside nigga. Them niggas is not trying to get active, it's a regular job.

Speaker 5:

Niggas is outside for real, like let me branch over. I live in DC. Now, right, I live in DC.

Speaker 4:

And I still live in Jersey.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, that's what's up. Where I live at in DC, my nigga, it's like nothing like when I live at now. I live where all the rich motherfuckers live at. So Santa Bentley and the motherfucking G-Wagon.

Speaker 3:

You live in.

Speaker 5:

Washington DC.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, what made you go there?

Speaker 5:

Work. I was in the military.

Speaker 4:

Six years.

Speaker 3:

Damn.

Speaker 2:

See, we got. Let's finish where you at man.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, you feel me. So I actually was out there, what the last two, three years type shit. That's where I met my boy, hooli, from you feel me. He was in the Army too. Whatever the case is, we on base, whatever the case is, and I'm known as the nigga Like the military, don't got a lot of niggas. I'm the same nigga Like the nigga. I am right here.

Speaker 3:

I'm the same nigga Like a nigga like black, or you talking about just one of them niggas.

Speaker 5:

No, like a black nigga, oh, okay, just a nigga Like it's black people, but they not niggas Like you feel me they just he a nigga nigga. I'm the same nigga at work.

Speaker 3:

You feel me. Y'all want me to come and work.

Speaker 5:

You feel me I'm an intelligent nigga. I can do what I do. You feel me you know what I'm saying. Don't cross the line, you feel me. Don't do that, because at the end of the day, I'm a nigga that fight for what I believe in. You feel me I go to, but I respect everybody. You feel me, I respect everybody's opinion. I don't give a fuck you gay, you into some other shit? None of that. I fuck with everybody. You feel me, it just is what it is, bro. But I mean, yeah, I was in the military For what? Five, six years, whatever the case is, I was on a ship too. I came straight from the trenches For real, for real. I came straight from the trenches, my nigga and everybody was hating it, I would have fucking passed out.

Speaker 5:

Listen, though, gang. Everybody was hating it. You feel me, but when you come from nothing, everything is everything to you. You feel me? I'm in the middle of the ocean, these niggas, depressed. I'm chilling, feet kicked up, looking at the motherfucking water. I'm looking at all weird shit Whales and motherfucking dolphins flying up. I I've been in my motherfucking life cuz Until I joined the Navy.

Speaker 2:

I've still never, seen one, so you was in the Navy.

Speaker 3:

Navy bro, Like the real, like you went to war, Because I'm like you was on a ship and you was in the Army, like I'm over there thinking like hold up Real deal, real deal, navy.

Speaker 2:

So you a Navy SEAL boy.

Speaker 1:

I was saying it the same thing. He was telling me his story.

Speaker 2:

Oh, the Navy SEALs is the ones that go. So the Navy SEALs Start showing you shit.

Speaker 4:

Basically what it is.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, basically what it is. So in the military you got special operations. You know what I'm saying? The spec war and the special operations, nigga, that's the Green Berets, you feel me. The Navy SEALs, you feel me, all of those niggas. That's a whole different section in the military, but it's in the military. I was just a Navy nigga. What I did was security forces. So basically I just protected and guarded a whole bunch of shit with big-ass guns, shit like that. Then I did something called VBSS black bag, which is basically anti-piracy. So I'm in the middle of fucking ocean. We're fucking 50 Cal cuz looking at Somalians about the blo. Blow these niggas down. Like that was my job. Small black bag.

Speaker 3:

The one right there, rube, right there, in the middle of the table.

Speaker 5:

My fault bro.

Speaker 3:

No, you're good bro.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, that was my job, bro, just to protect the assets that was there. That's what I did my whole six years in the military.

Speaker 2:

D, so just bring the oh you got it 50 Cal in the middle of the war.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, 50 Cal, dead serious Cause it's crazy, so you was really like Going like. So who was y'all Going to war with, though? Anybody that ain't Supposed to be there.

Speaker 5:

They're pirates, anybody that ain't Supposed to be there.

Speaker 3:

So let me, let me, let me, let me, let me give you. I'm gonna give you a little motherfucking insight Always helping us out, shout out, rude man.

Speaker 5:

My boy. Yeah, let me give you a little insight of what that shit is, though.

Speaker 3:

That pineapple soda right there and the gas.

Speaker 2:

And the gas, bro, my guy.

Speaker 3:

Appreciate you, rude, appreciate you, bro, buddy yo.

Speaker 4:

Shout out Rude man.

Speaker 3:

I'm starting to listen more and more and more and look at you like you shout out right there you go.

Speaker 4:

How you shut up, bro, listen to this nigga life yeah, that's crazy, but uh, he grew up in the crib. And is it you 26, right? Yeah?

Speaker 2:

bro, you 26, oh, yeah, you 26 26.

Speaker 3:

Fucking life sound like he Fucking 40.

Speaker 5:

Bro niggas look at me as the old head. These niggas older than me and they look at me like the old head. I know you not gonna bring this up.

Speaker 2:

So I'ma bring it up. Where did the dollar boy shit kick in? Oh, shit.

Speaker 5:

I would say shout out to dollar boys, but they done. Did some freaky shit out there.

Speaker 3:

For those who don't know, dollar boys was created by a top dollar and uh, everybody man, yo rest in peace. My brother mookie mook man shout out the moot man.

Speaker 1:

Rest in peace, my brother that's.

Speaker 3:

It was moot, that was my brother uh me bro.

Speaker 3:

Dollar boys had the whole trust. They there were the whole del and if y'all don't know, before all the flash mobbing and it really got Dollar Boys was a you know party slash dance group and you know Top Dollar just took it to another level. You feel me Like he was out here changing how Young Bulls' whole life was and everything Like Dollar Boys touched 95% of the tri-state. So even though there's some blemish on his name right now and everybody's like he did a lot of good shit.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, he did a lot of crazy shit. I'm specifically talking about Dollar Boy's. I'm not putting top in it because if them allegations is true, we don't respect that.

Speaker 5:

We're talking about the errors. Nah, you can go, bro, where do you kick in at with Dollar Boy? So this was probably around like fucking. I want to say what? 2012, 2013?. So I was already going to parties and dancing because my cousin was a DJ. Shout out to my cousin Quay, dj Quay, and around that time it was him DJ Crazy.

Speaker 3:

DJ Pops yeah, that's my blood cousin.

Speaker 5:

You feel me, around that time it's him Pops and Crazy, you feel me? So these niggas making all the dance music and shit, and I'm dancing, fuck it, you feel me. I'm out there so Quay like yo. It's a dance group called Dollar Boys over Philly. I'm going to lock you in with them, niggas. Long story short, we locked in with the nigga Top. The nigga at Top asked where I was from. I told him I'm from Camden. He like bet, that's all I needed to hear. Next thing, you know, nigga, I'm having meetings in my crib and shit, bro, I ain't know. It's like fucking a hundred niggas in my crib, bro. My mom and dad like who the fuck is these niggas? And the nigga Top like Yo, you feel me? He explaining it to him? Cause my mom and no grown ass nigga Just going around, just going on tour, dancing and all this crazy shit.

Speaker 5:

And so I'm like, nah, it's for you, feel me. But I'm like, let him explain it to you. So he explained it to him and it was cool with it. So we having meetings At the crib, we having meetings At Spruce Street Park and shit, and it was what it was Niggas dancing, niggas coming Taking pictures. This is when the website Everybody getting pictures, you feel me. Everybody getting their little intro, the shirts drop, everybody getting shirts. We out selling the shirts, we selling motherfucking tickets.

Speaker 3:

We have parties and that was later. Yeah, that was 2012, 2013.

Speaker 1:

I already been in jail and all that.

Speaker 3:

I'm talking about, like, oh, nine, ten dollar books, like bro. I'm trying to tell you, bro, these niggas was so lit, bro, they threw a little party at the leah core center like.

Speaker 1:

It was that deep like and I was right over the bridge coming over here because he was already like high school this way.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was out of high school in 2006, bro, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I was gone, so like this Dollar Boy shit we talking about, you wasn't even a kid. I don't even know what y'all talking about. Dollar Boys Team Nike Fire Nation.

Speaker 2:

I know about Dollar Boys. I wasn't there. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 4:

Cool Kid, cool Kids Team.

Speaker 3:

HBO.

Speaker 5:

That was.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

Those was the sets For motherfucking Party music.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I was in Dollar Boys. Then I got in Fire Nation. You feel me, but when I was in Fire Nation, that's when we started Like the violent shit, like Flash mobbing downtown and taking this From these people and wrecking on them On the Walmart, going crazy you know, what. Feast was why y'all was doing, because, bro, we was young.

Speaker 2:

I didn't like that shit.

Speaker 3:

I'm about to tell you why, literally, we was doing that. Because, as a black kid teenager growing up, you just always want to be a part of something facts niggas ain't had any moms.

Speaker 3:

Some people ain't had any dads, so if y'all saw, yeah, niggas was outside right and it ain't gonna be too much dancing and fun shit all the time right it got to the point where Niggas stop feeling this and stop feeling that and then you start having groups like no Picks, who just sock the shit out Anybody who, so it start getting viral.

Speaker 2:

Was it ever at a point where it got out of hand? Y'all like yo, this shit.

Speaker 3:

Yes, bro, the reason Feast did them Six to eight years was Some flash mobbing. July 4th.

Speaker 4:

Shout out to Feast too. Shout out to Feast too, Shout out to Feast.

Speaker 3:

But that's when it got all crazy, bro. To the point, mara Nutter Said Feast's name and Moop name On TV. Mara Nutter, bro, like all them, flash mobbing.

Speaker 5:

Mara Nutter was on some nutty shit too.

Speaker 3:

It got real, real, real bad. So that some nutty shit too. They got real, real, real bad. So that's why, bro, young, young niggas, just don't got no fucking guidance bro.

Speaker 5:

It's easy to like. I said, it's easy to go left or right.

Speaker 3:

Real shit, it's worse now.

Speaker 5:

You, you wish we had had fucking niggas dancing flash mobbing and you wish we had had now Cause now Everybody say niggas, rocking their hips and rocking your block right after Shit. Crazy, though, gang.

Speaker 3:

Real shit. Now you just getting your fucking your head took off. Fuck, flash mobbing and dancing. You getting your head fucking took off, bro.

Speaker 5:

That's all social media right there too.

Speaker 3:

Yo Milk man. I wanted to ask you something, man, I know this right, so you feel me. I was tuned in, you know, and I noticed that, like, not only you have a song called 5 minutes from Philly, but you got a whole like tape yeah, a whole tape, 5 minutes from Philly so what like? Why is like people knowing that, that people knowing you, why is that like important to you when?

Speaker 2:

something you highlighted. One second real quick. I got a phone call man. My man wanted to highlight it. Yo gang, what's?

Speaker 5:

up my boy. What's good man. Yeah man, we outside.

Speaker 3:

You gotta lean 7th street. Why you talking to him? Why you talking to him In that camera?

Speaker 5:

Yeah, nah, we, we definitely got a lock. I need a motherfucking turkey bacon, egg and cheese too. On the long roll, white roll, yeah, hell, yeah, cool, getting the cameras right. Shout out, liam 7th Street.

Speaker 3:

You on the phone with Southside.

Speaker 5:

Nigga, we got to get in that stew. You got to hear this shit. Man Meech heard it already. Shit whenever. Nigga, virg, yeah, I don't give a fuck. Yeah, we set it up. We set it up, figure it out. Man, come in lock in. You feel me. Do what we do. Yeah, we can do it any day. I'm around for the next two weeks.

Speaker 3:

All right, so hold on. Oh, I'm a little out the loop. Oh, so y'all know each other already. Yeah, oh, like you know Meech and all that. Yeah, we tapped in already.

Speaker 5:

Oh shit, we tapped in I didn't know that I didn't know that Meech came and fouled me On some shit.

Speaker 3:

Oh, when you was Telling that story, you was talking about him he came.

Speaker 5:

That's why the whole five minutes From Philly tape Is based off of my Philly connection. I've already been in Philly.

Speaker 3:

That's hard bro.

Speaker 5:

And we probably like a year in.

Speaker 3:

That's hard, bro, that's hard.

Speaker 5:

Meech and Liam connected me with motherfucking Verge. We went crazy. We tapped in with Nas. It's been up since then.

Speaker 3:

Oh, that's hard, bro, that's hard.

Speaker 5:

Feel me it's been lit since then. Yo, yo, tony, that's hard, feel me it's been lit since then. Yo, yo Tony.

Speaker 1:

I feel like a lot of rappers are feeling like I connect to a lot of them niggas they don't be giving me my props, like I connect to a lot of niggas.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, that's a nigga's problem. Man Never bite the hand that feeds you.

Speaker 3:

A lot of niggas to be, killed Mm-hmm, you heard, lean he a reason for a lot of this shit.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, he is, I'm playing myself, him and Meech. I done seen them connect so many niggas. I done heard they name In so many rooms and it's it's crazy that I'm hearing it my family down there. It's crazy that I'm hearing it From other niggas Instead of the niggas. That's you mean, but that's what niggas don't do and that's cell phone. When I make my music, my motherfucking engineer, producer, you're going to think they, the motherfucking rappers At my show, them niggas is going to be front stage like they wrote the shit. That's what I want, because engineers and producers, bro, they get so disrespected in today's game and, to be honest with you, bro, a lot of these producers and engineers is the reason why these rappers is who they is.

Speaker 3:

Solid. You feel me.

Speaker 5:

You know how hard it is to engineer my nigga. Well shit, I know how to do it. That's why I don't do it no more.

Speaker 3:

To find a good one. That's the hard one To find a good engineer, because these niggas be bullshit.

Speaker 5:

And it's easy for a nigga to kind of record my shit because I don't get nothing on my shit. I like to keep my voice raw. That's what I like about my music, that it's raw. That's what the people that listen to my music like about it. I'm not putting no motherfucking reverb on my shit. I don't got reverb on none of my motherfucking songs. Virg will tell you I don't have nothing on my songs. Nigga, I walk in the booth rap.

Speaker 4:

He mix it the song's done, so you record with him, with Virg.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, round of applause for that. We got a whole tape. Man bro, when I lock in with them.

Speaker 5:

I rap for real, bro, so when I lock in with them, that's what I came to do. I came to motherfucking rap, I ain't come to bullshit. Sit around, dick jock Nigga. I came to rap, you feel me?

Speaker 3:

I came to rap.

Speaker 5:

Add to the table. A lot of niggas just come around and they just watch the plates Getting passed around. I'm trying to add to the table, I'm trying to help build this shit.

Speaker 3:

Let me out of that lean man, yeah, hey, lean man.

Speaker 2:

Ask him when we gonna get that interview man when you.

Speaker 3:

Hey yo, this is really the moves man. We got lean 7th street on the Shout out.

Speaker 2:

Let them know, what happened?

Speaker 3:

man Let them know man, let them know bro.

Speaker 2:

We had the interview.

Speaker 3:

Let them know why it's not a lean 7th street. It was our fault, man, why it's not a Liam 7th Street. But you could tell him why it's not a Liam 7th Street Interview out there. But I'ma let Liam tell y'all.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, making that bag as you should.

Speaker 3:

Say less man.

Speaker 1:

We getting a date man.

Speaker 3:

Listen, my man is responsible For connecting A lot of you niggas out here, man, Big facts. But niggas just don't be raising their hand for the attention and the you know what I mean you know what I mean.

Speaker 5:

Too real for the sucker shit.

Speaker 3:

We gonna get lean.

Speaker 5:

Real shit.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, we gonna set up. We gonna set up a date for Lean man. But, bro, we gonna holler at you After we finish this Tony G interview. Alright, love you brother. Alright, lean, 7th Street man. Shout out to Lean man.

Speaker 5:

Definitely, bro, lean and Meech. I ain't gonna lie, bro. They put me back into the real rap direction, because when you really tap into me, I got so much shit that's unreleased. For every fucking wave Afro Fusion, I got something for everything, bro.

Speaker 4:

And they all hits.

Speaker 5:

So they just sitting to the right, bitter Because I done dropped so much music and it do what it do for the music and do what it do for the hood, do it do for you, feel me, the fan base, the listeners, but now it's time to take the shit up a thousand notches let me ask you a question, bro, now.

Speaker 3:

This might seem like a off-topic question or left, but I just want to know your take on it, because you 26 like me, and then we got, bro, who you know more experience.

Speaker 4:

I said more experience we got the seasoned niggas.

Speaker 5:

I ain't say old ass man. I ain't say old ass man, it's time.

Speaker 3:

I ain't say Bill Bellamy and shit. I said we got a more experienced individual couple of them here. Shout out, Meech, why you think Experience individual couple of them here. Shout out to Meech why you think that it's better out here to just hang your little shorty or wifey and not be running around going crazy with these women.

Speaker 5:

Why you feel like that's important Shit, my shorty. Keep me grounded. And when I say grounded, bro, like I'm in therapy, you feel me. I got anger issues, I got all type of shit, bro. You know what I'm saying? Just post-trauma and just anxiety. Just you know the after effect of the street life. You know what I'm saying. And just not even the street life, just the area. You know what I'm saying Not to cut you off.

Speaker 3:

If you, a black man, go to therapy Because the shit we raised in the conditions and what we got to go through is not fucking normal, it's not regular. The motherfuckers keep walking around like therapy, some type of bid or something.

Speaker 5:

And I was in the military, the military shit is sweet compared to what we go through.

Speaker 3:

You could continue with what you were saying, though.

Speaker 5:

I feel like as a man and a nigga that's trying to win I don't know, suckers shit but you need.

Speaker 3:

The right shorty.

Speaker 5:

You need that right queen To be that king. You get what I'm saying and shout out to my shorty. She keep me grounded. You feel me, my daughter, keep me grounded. So the times I'm thinking About crashing out, or the times I'm thinking About doing some bullshit, they right here, you feel me, right, filming back of my head, front of my head, to be honest with you, right and um, that shit keeps me like the nights I won't go out and go party. She want me in the crib. It may seem like she might be nagging or she might have an attitude, but you don't know what that shit saved you from. She just know film. It's times I stayed in the crib with her instead of going out to the club. You never know what could have happened that night.

Speaker 5:

You know what I'm saying, saying so I was raised by women. You feel me. Shout out to my mom, shout out to my aunts, my grandmoms. I was raised on the love of women. You know what I'm saying. So I'm big in following that women's intuition. You feel me, and that's what really keep me in the right space and keeping me grounded. In this show. I got a lot of women in my family, you feel me, which the reason I say I'm big on being. You asked me who Southside Tony was. I'm a provider and a protector, because that's who I am for my family, that's who I am for my guys and they the same way. You know what I'm saying. I only hang around the niggas. That's on the same shit.

Speaker 3:

You feel me Is the lady, you with your baby mother.

Speaker 5:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

Mm-hmm Great.

Speaker 5:

Like I said, my dad got 16 kids. I think he got like 9 baby moms. Yeah, that nigga taught me a lot. What the fuck?

Speaker 3:

is your dad, og Slim. What the fuck. A pimp named Slipback, god damn. The craziest part about it OG Don Juan or some shit. How old do you think my youngest?

Speaker 5:

sibling is One. Yes, it gotta be G Don Juan or some shit. How old do you think my youngest sibling?

Speaker 3:

is One. Yes, it gotta be. It gotta be Cause, if you 26 and he got 16, one gotta be one my youngest sibling Like it gotta be.

Speaker 5:

Was born last year.

Speaker 3:

Your what.

Speaker 5:

My youngest sibling Was born last year.

Speaker 3:

How old is your dad?

Speaker 5:

42.

Speaker 2:

Oh he still good. Yeah, he good. And he outside Shout out to Pops, yeah, he good last year.

Speaker 5:

How old is your dad? 42. Oh, he's still good.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he good.

Speaker 5:

And he outside Shout out to Pops.

Speaker 2:

He good he outside running his movie.

Speaker 5:

Tell Pop. We said what's up?

Speaker 2:

We need his back. Tell Pop, we need an interview.

Speaker 3:

Nigga never shot a blink in his life.

Speaker 2:

Shark shooter In a court out this joint bro.

Speaker 3:

What the?

Speaker 4:

fuck when he was booked or something.

Speaker 3:

No, how he was booked, he had $16,000.

Speaker 1:

Nah, he was not. He had no time for this, bro. He had to be bro.

Speaker 2:

Because niggas that get booked they come home like fuck it, I'm having every kid.

Speaker 5:

He had half of them kids. Let's see, you know what I'm talking about. I'm talking about. That's why you're laughing. I know, yeah, he was going hold on, I'm having it Every kid, I ever get a girl. I think by the time he was my age he already had like eight or nine, all right, probably 10.

Speaker 3:

Damn. Hey yo another thing too, man Yo, wow, everybody. I'm talking to New Jersey and I'm talking to Philly. Man, stop that shit. Man, y'all on the internet Trying to make it seem like there's a problem between us and New Jersey Stop that shit, man. Stop that shit. First it's New Jersey, then it's Philly, baltimore, then it's Philly, new York.

Speaker 5:

Stop that shit man Shout out to my fucking Baltimore too, because they have me on the support, my nigga Doe. They say body more, philly, new York, stop that shit, hey shout out, shout out the motherfucking Baltimore too, because Shout out the Baltimore. They heavy, they heavy on the support my nigga Doe they say body more. Hey, nigga, you want some. You want some? Fits, tap in with my nigga Doe and motherfucking Off tour. He got that shit for you, man, yeah, stop that shit June 9th.

Speaker 5:

Black tie I got a lot of family Black Tie event man. We in Baltimore.

Speaker 3:

Y'all already know, like New Jersey Club music, what it was DJ J-Hood you know all that I mean DJ Quayle.

Speaker 5:

DJ Longman yeah, we already know Philly.

Speaker 3:

You know Top Rock Wu-Tang, we know who made who. Stop trying to start a problem just between everything about anything. Now we on the internet arguing no, we made it up, no, we made that up, no, we made that up. And then Baltimore now is like a three Listen.

Speaker 2:

At the relative most podcast Baltimore Club Music.

Speaker 3:

That shit probably was first, but when it come to all that dancing shit and all that, there's New Jersey and there's Philly bro.

Speaker 5:

Just partake and enjoy. Partake and enjoy, bro. That's all you got to do.

Speaker 3:

Plain and simple. Stop that shit, man, for real. Stop that shit, because I don't like that shit. People want to cause a problem between every little thing.

Speaker 5:

Nah, we not doing that?

Speaker 3:

That shit definitely in a way Real shit man.

Speaker 5:

They make it hard to do business. All type of shit, man.

Speaker 3:

Yo, I ain't going to hold you so you know, seeing the voice of the trenches. That's one of your joints, right.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, that was the first tape I ever dropped. When I first started rapping, I made one song. I posted that shit on the gram, I went to sleep, I did it. You found me for fun and because I was in the atmosphere.

Speaker 3:

Let's keep it real. Let's keep it real. Narcotics who are?

Speaker 2:

one of your influences.

Speaker 5:

My biggest influence, meek Mill for Shorsky oh shit For. Shorsky, and the reason I say that is because that's about right, I just never.

Speaker 2:

I wasn't never against that he 26,. He rap. He from the Tri-States I used to be on.

Speaker 5:

YouTube heavy man Just watching the nigga battle, just watching all of that shit. He was one of the first artists that I really connected with. You know what I'm saying? Because he rapping about what I'm going outside and seeing. I wasn't partaking in it yet, but he was rapping about the shit. I come outside and see, you feel me, and around that time it was a lot of club music going on when I was coming up, you feel me. So when I first started hearing rap and I'm big into battle rap too you feel me. Shout out URL, shout out all that shit, bro.

Speaker 5:

I first started hearing on rap and I'm like damn, like I don't know half the shit you're talking about, but I come outside and I see it, you feel me. I might not know the specifics, but I see it. That's the music I listen to. I listen, feel, and I make music for other people to feel. You feel me, my shit ain't just for niggas to ride around, slide to, or I got music. You feel me. You can rap to your shorty. You feel me, my niggas be in the studio, these niggas be quiet, cuz we in the studio, cuz they feel that shit.

Speaker 3:

Yo, something I wanted to ask you. I was arguing with these niggas like a week ago, two weeks ago.

Speaker 5:

I argue with him everyday that shit will make us closer. Yeah, for sure for real, bro.

Speaker 3:

but um, wouldn't you agree, right? Even if you don't feel like the rappers is the same. I was telling him battle rap is in the best spot it ever been. Right now you can get paid thousands of six figures, five figures, six figures. They on TV, they on this, they on that. It's at the best stage it ever was, bro, they saying it's watered down.

Speaker 5:

I mean I can see why they say it's watered down, because with any great thing you got bullshit that come along right. You start off with the originals. That shit's dead serious. You feel me start off with the originals the more you branch off and you got to understand social media plays a large effect and everything that goes on, because nowadays if you don't have a social media presence and I'm not even a nigga that enjoys social media because of what comes with it, but I know I have to use it as a tool for what I do you feel me for the label for my business. You feel me and my guys and all the shit we got going on.

Speaker 5:

But to be honest with you, I started taking it back from everything I learned from the motherfucking DVD area and we outside hanging up motherfucking flyers. We outside with the motherfucking speaker on the block. You feel me we pulling up the cars, we playing all our shit block. You feel we pulling up the cars, we playing all our shit. People walking by like yo, who is? Yeah, that's us. You feel me we tapping in like that. We took it back to the street because with the social media shit it's so fabricated, bro, any nigga can make a profile right now and be whoever fuck you want to be whoever he want to be, bro, the biggest drug dealer so you tapping in with niggas that you met off the internet and then you link up with these niggas and it ain't none of that.

Speaker 3:

So you think it's watered down because of shit like that.

Speaker 5:

You're trying to find somebody to agree with you, nigga.

Speaker 3:

Bro, only reason I'm asking is because I think-.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, social media definitely watered it down.

Speaker 3:

Opportunity or something.

Speaker 2:

You see how you just said you feel me All right, it's better for some.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, it's better for some.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like Once it's. Once it's A quantity of people doing it, it waters it down.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so like In that perspective, yeah, you right.

Speaker 2:

So the same way you said Anybody can just go ahead and start Rapping and all that, right, it's the same way With this battle league shit, anybody with a camera In an event space but they don't make it bro they listen, they giving these rappers hundred dollar checks, bro, that's watering the game damn bro, but look though you got like this hit me holler, he got bags and bodies they work hard to get where they at he got Lancelot TV. I respect them names.

Speaker 3:

It's like Family, god and the Cleveland Show. Bro, they are literally taking URL and all Just breaking it down. All the big names they all creating.

Speaker 2:

So that's why I said they work hard to get so high For them niggas to be fucking up them names Like that you see what I'm saying. They work so hard To get where they at as rap battle leads and rap artists and battle rappers For niggas To just start their own leads Out of nowhere. The same way I'm probably doing my podcast. Niggas probably like who the fuck?

Speaker 4:

These niggas doing they really?

Speaker 2:

the most podcast cause they got a camera and some mics but you know why that is, though we talking about we actually on pod but you know why that is, though.

Speaker 5:

Everything comes down to that bag, that dollar sign. You feel me it's just like you been on a block, right? Niggas not trying to sell 180s all day. Bro. You feel me, niggas need a 250 or whatever. Niggas need a block. They want their own block. Niggas going to leave your block to go start their own shit. That's what niggas is doing with the battle rap shit. The shit started from URL. I don't know how deep y'all is into battle rap. I was watching battle rap on demand, my nigga, I was watching it on demand.

Speaker 3:

Where they had to blur the curse words out, bro, too long for the streets here. Bro Sirius Jones ran New Jersey at a point in time On the

Speaker 1:

battle ramp tip yeah.

Speaker 3:

What? What? Sirius Jones bro. Compared to now he is, yeah, All he did was freestyle all the time After him and Mav Hoffa been beefing that shit been.

Speaker 5:

Because, everything starts from A platform. Everything starts from the ground and the platform you feel me. So what these new niggas do is they study this nigga and like, alright, how can I make this shit my own? So niggas is going off the shit. That nigga Didn't work 20 years, for 15 years. You feel me Brand and you feel me to put themselves in position now that niggas can see it. Back then in battle rap cuz, you had to go to the battles to see these niggas or hear it on. A niggas got the motherfucking phone. You heard a motherfucking phone clip, but now you can just look at everything, bro. So now that everybody can see everything, people can just do whatever they want, bro. So now niggas is taking this flow and just multiplying it.

Speaker 2:

That's all you got to do.

Speaker 5:

That's all they're doing.

Speaker 3:

Facts, facts. So I got like two or three more questions for you. Yeah, one, if you don't mind me, asking who's the guy on your chain.

Speaker 5:

It's my cousin Mare. Shout out to my cousin Mare. He got killed probably when I was like I to say 14, 15. He was that nigga in ball. He was like he, my big cousin. He was one of those bully niggas. You feel me? He be in the house, bullying me, beating me the fuck up. You feel me. But he got my hands right. And one thing he told me is like Yo, if I could fuck you up, anybody on the streets could do anything to you. And it wasn't no like I'm a bitch, or he was really getting me prepared just for outside. He only like a year or two older than me. You know what I'm saying. He was really just getting me prepared for outside. You know what I'm saying. So he was just making sure my shit sharp just in case anything went down, which shit was always going down when I was with this nigga. You know what I'm saying. And um, yeah, man shot to my cousin. Shout out to the whole bullard family man yeah, man, I put his name in real diamonds.

Speaker 5:

Man, so my nigga could shine. Man. I wear this shit everywhere.

Speaker 3:

I go cuz yeah, yeah, everywhere I'm in front, I'm in front of people, bro.

Speaker 5:

They gotta see him, bro, cuz if he was here he'd be that nigga shit probably right on the couch right next to me, me bro, I like that.

Speaker 3:

Another thing I wanted to ask if you wanted to go to you. You familiar with Fatboy from Fatboy SSE.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I got a hair dude, that's how I want it, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Like for the last couple years he been basically saying he run New Jersey. Like what you think about that? Like?

Speaker 5:

I don't think shit about it.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 5:

A lot of niggas say they run a lot of shit. Bro, he was ready for that.

Speaker 1:

I wonder what you wanna say yeah, cause it's crazy, though, cause I ain't even he was saying no Bro.

Speaker 3:

Say it bro, i'ma, I'm gonna say what I say.

Speaker 5:

I'm gonna say what I say and I'll let him go bro. A lot of niggas say a lot of shit.

Speaker 1:

I don't fucking with it. Right, you feel me and that's just like how I see it. That's my way and I understand that.

Speaker 3:

Because, like you can't go from fat boy To comedian, to bid, to making all these funny ass videos, to two, three years later you selling pounds and saying, yeah, you run Jersey. Like you can't do that, bro, we know you for this and shit like that.

Speaker 5:

Not, I don't know if that's his situation or whatever, but shit like that fucks me up, bro, because I work so hard to get away from it. You get what I'm saying and I'm watching niggas get money and then come to where I'm from and portray it. You feel me that I can't fuck with niggas like that, because if you really was in this shit, you really knew what the fuck was going on and you really went through this shit. Nigga, you're not coming back bro.

Speaker 3:

You're not he from Patterson and it's crazy Because everybody be in his comment.

Speaker 5:

And I went to.

Speaker 3:

I went to school in Patterson, I went to college in Patterson and there ain't no Shade to Fatboy, but when you know People in front of I'll be out, they xing that like something, something.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, because that was definitely about that you should understand my he, one of the other that you feel me, it ain't even about they say you do run it yeah, it ain't even about flows and none of that.

Speaker 5:

I like to listen to the music. I don't get what. I don't care how many pounds you sold. I don't care about none of that, because that is just going to take you to a place where none of that shit's going to matter when you get locked up, the drugs get checked in at the door, the guns get checked in at the door. None of that shit matters. I don't care how many bitches you fuck, how many cars you have, you can't drive none of them. I'm trying to drive every single car I got, every bad bitch. I see I'm trying to fuck you. Feel me, that's how I'm living. I don't give a fuck about none of that shit.

Speaker 3:

And when I say the run jersey thing. I don't want people thinking it's like on some gangster check. I'm just saying like when you ask niggas from Philly like who run Philly? I mean it's either going to be they either going to say three names. They either going to say three names. If you doing it on some rapper, yeah, three names, meek lil uzi or ab three names. Yeah, that's what most of the people gonna say on some rapping. Notoriety to me with y'all is sue, sue surf shout out to sue, sir everybody that's from jersey, say I'll be out.

Speaker 5:

He like I'm gonna keep it a buck with you. North Jersey and South Jersey Couldn't be different, and different ain't a word, but that's the word I gotta use. I was about to tell him there's no fucking connection Between North and South.

Speaker 3:

Yo, they was telling me that South South Jersey.

Speaker 5:

It's literally Camden and fucking North Jersey. There's no, because it ain't really shit else in South Jersey. That's why y'all be saying, y'all from Philly for real, you got Atlantic City.

Speaker 1:

Wait, wait, wait.

Speaker 3:

Say what you trying to say in another way.

Speaker 5:

No he said it.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm trying to understand.

Speaker 5:

People, when they come to South Jersey, they come to Camden. That's what they know. They know fucking Camden, not Cherry Hill, not Mount Laurel. Yeah, I went to, I went to college. I went to college in. I went to college in North Jersey. I went to William Patterson. So I was in Patterson. You feel me, them niggas don't know shit About South Jersey Besides Camden. Anywhere I go in the world, nigga, I done been to Haiti. I done been to all types of places. Everybody knows what Camden is. North Jersey Jersey is literally like its own section of anything. You feel me, you got Newark, you got Trenton, you got Patterson.

Speaker 1:

You feel me they more connected than New York up there, yeah, north.

Speaker 5:

Jersey niggas you meet. They going to be more New York. The South Jersey niggas you meet they going to be more Philly.

Speaker 3:

You feel me? So what Atlantic City?

Speaker 5:

in Atlantic City is like the fucking that's the shore, shout out the Atlantic City, because that's where Sony Orchard new home base is ACX1 Studios man.

Speaker 2:

Hey yo, before we leave, you want our listeners to know anything, man, that you got coming out, or something that you're actually marketing right now. Promoting right now, yeah, what?

Speaker 5:

I'm promoting is right now. If you knew me, or you knew anything about me, I'd go by Southside Tony now.

Speaker 2:

New name.

Speaker 5:

You call me Tony. That's my actual name but branding purposes I'm going by Southside Tony and as far as everything coming up, just watch, Just tap in, because Southside Records is about to go nuts.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 5:

That's really all I can say, bro Me getting into the specifics, is it don't even motherfucking matter, cause bombs is about to be dropped, literally.

Speaker 2:

I just wanna say this, the real of the most podcast man, jersey, philly.

Speaker 3:

Jersey Tri-state area.

Speaker 2:

Make sure y'all tap in Like Tony Southside Tony Subscribe.

Speaker 3:

Comment Share what else Like? Share Comment DM a nigga.

Speaker 2:

DM a nigga Southside.

Speaker 3:

Tony Subscribe Comment. Share what else Like Share Comment.

Speaker 5:

DM a nigga, dm a nigga. I'm that nigga that. Look at my DMs. You wanna tap, then you wanna get some work done.

Speaker 3:

Bankroll bro. His name gonna be right there. Yes, sir.

Speaker 2:

Tony, southside Tony, if there's coming up parties Anything, Concert shows Any merch, anything Merch.

Speaker 3:

Shout that shit out, let them know man Anybody you wanna give a shout out to it's?

Speaker 2:

the really the most podcast man yeah facts, man, give it a shout out.

Speaker 5:

Shout out to the whole Motherfucking New Jersey, shout out to the whole Motherfucking Philly, shout out to the whole Maryland DC, shout out to motherfucking Detroit, shout out to motherfucking Cali. The network is large, bro. So when you see niggas bro, don't be surprised if you see me in Seven Mile, don't be surprised if you see me down motherfucking Park Heights. I'm outside, bro.

Speaker 2:

Let me ask this last question. And we out of here, it's good. So who run Jersey now?

Speaker 5:

Whoever won it, I don't give a fuck who run Jersey. Nigga, when you see me.

Speaker 3:

No, and you.

Speaker 5:

You want a real answer. Yes, whoever the fucking governor is, that's who run New Jersey. No, no, no, that's who run New Jersey. Though, all right, say look.

Speaker 3:

We're going to make it specific, if you had to say somebody run Jersey Jersey musically Right Like music mixed with the sheets and the credentials.

Speaker 1:

Are you talking about North or South? Though, you got, we got he said Jersey the whole.

Speaker 2:

Jersey, the whole Jersey, bro, because there's not too many like. All right, do North then South then. Do North then South then.

Speaker 3:

Who's South?

Speaker 1:

One of us Shit we the ones, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, i'ma get into it. You wanna talk? You wanna talk South Jersey music? Tap into the Motherfucking catalog. Niggas ain't drop as many albums as me in the amount Of time that it been dropped Niggas. Niggas, gotta Niggas gotta remember I'm the same nigga that packed out no Do With no marketing Nigga, and that's all facts. Tory came to the city. He went straight to Cam to hide. Bro Went straight to Cam to hide, gave away whatever he gave away.

Speaker 3:

Where's that? Noto, the same motherfucking night. So that's South or North. Then who North In y'all opinion?

Speaker 1:

I ain't gonna lie. I'm fucking with Surf heavy. I'm fucking with Surf.

Speaker 5:

Super heavy my nigga. So if we talking Jersey and we talking rabbit, if a nigga told me yo put a gun to your head or pick a nigga, I'm going with surf bro.

Speaker 3:

He gonna provide every motherfucking time.

Speaker 2:

Ooli, sir, All right man All right, y'all heard it from Jersey Natives.

Speaker 1:

And then down, down, ac down. In sure you got the boy Shot oh yeah, shout out to who. My boy.

Speaker 5:

Shot Tap in. I'm gonna send y'all.

Speaker 3:

You know what nigga I keep hearing about from Jersey right now Young Bando, young.

Speaker 1:

Bando, young Bando. What'd he say? I got to do my research.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, some nigga.

Speaker 5:

Hey, I'm not familiar.

Speaker 3:

Or something like that.

Speaker 5:

But shout out to Young Bando, let's get some work on that. Tap in bro. Hey, listen man. This the Real of the Most podcast.

Speaker 2:

We got Southside Tony in the building.

Speaker 3:

Bankroll Brew Got Hooli my man.

Speaker 2:

Cash Hold it down you already know man, listen. If y'all still want Content like this, make sure y'all Share, like, subscribe, comment and follow us. Hit the notification bell.

Speaker 3:

We appreciate y'all man.

Speaker 2:

Man, we out this bitch man. It's the really the most podcast, really the most podcast.

Speaker 1:

Really the most podcast.

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Importance of Family and Influence
Battle Rap and Social Media Evolution
Debating Fatboy SSE's Influence in Jersey
Contrasting North and South Jersey

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