Realer Than Most Podcast

THE GHOST OF TAHJ MOWRY FT. THE SMART GUY | RTM PODCAST | EP. 13

June 28, 2024 @Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash Season 1 Episode 13
THE GHOST OF TAHJ MOWRY FT. THE SMART GUY | RTM PODCAST | EP. 13
Realer Than Most Podcast
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Realer Than Most Podcast
THE GHOST OF TAHJ MOWRY FT. THE SMART GUY | RTM PODCAST | EP. 13
Jun 28, 2024 Season 1 Episode 13
@Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash

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Ever wondered how a former boxing champion can navigate the turbulent waters of the music industry while staying true to his principles? Join us on the Realer than Most Podcast as we sit down with a multifaceted guest who shares his journey of overcoming miscommunication and maintaining integrity amidst industry pressures. From being blackballed to mastering the business side of music, our guest offers an unfiltered look at his experiences and the lessons he’s learned about respect, patience, and authenticity.

Our conversation takes a profound turn into personal healing and mindset transformation. Our guest opens up about his tumultuous childhood, the street life, and the pivotal moments that redirected his path toward legitimate success. Highlighting the transformative power of books like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" and "Think and Grow Rich," he underscores the importance of self-love and daily mental maintenance. His practical routines for positive self-affirmation and subconscious reprogramming are invaluable for anyone seeking personal growth and resilience.

As we delve into community empowerment and financial growth, we touch on the significance of balanced gender dynamics, emotional intelligence, and collective accountability within the black community. Our guest passionately discusses strategies for monetizing creative talents and achieving economic success using digital tools. We also address systemic issues and the power of unity, culminating in a call to action for community ownership and generational wealth. Tune in for an episode brimming with wisdom, empowerment, and actionable advice for personal and communal advancement.

Support the Show.

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Send us a Text Message.

Ever wondered how a former boxing champion can navigate the turbulent waters of the music industry while staying true to his principles? Join us on the Realer than Most Podcast as we sit down with a multifaceted guest who shares his journey of overcoming miscommunication and maintaining integrity amidst industry pressures. From being blackballed to mastering the business side of music, our guest offers an unfiltered look at his experiences and the lessons he’s learned about respect, patience, and authenticity.

Our conversation takes a profound turn into personal healing and mindset transformation. Our guest opens up about his tumultuous childhood, the street life, and the pivotal moments that redirected his path toward legitimate success. Highlighting the transformative power of books like "Rich Dad, Poor Dad" and "Think and Grow Rich," he underscores the importance of self-love and daily mental maintenance. His practical routines for positive self-affirmation and subconscious reprogramming are invaluable for anyone seeking personal growth and resilience.

As we delve into community empowerment and financial growth, we touch on the significance of balanced gender dynamics, emotional intelligence, and collective accountability within the black community. Our guest passionately discusses strategies for monetizing creative talents and achieving economic success using digital tools. We also address systemic issues and the power of unity, culminating in a call to action for community ownership and generational wealth. Tune in for an episode brimming with wisdom, empowerment, and actionable advice for personal and communal advancement.

Support the Show.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to the Real of the Most Podcast. My name's Rilla.

Speaker 2:

I'm OW Cash. I'm WhiteboyD2E.

Speaker 1:

And we got a special guest in the building man Special guest.

Speaker 3:

We in they building yeah we in they building.

Speaker 1:

Do we roll out the carpet or what Like? Come on, man, you know man.

Speaker 4:

Where we at right now. We actually in their building. We in Harlem USA. Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, new York, y'all some real motherfuckers man. So shout out to Philly, shout out to y'all Appreciate you man, appreciate you Definitely, appreciate you, smart man.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, this is beautiful man. Like I said earlier, you know we had. You know we had we had miscommunication because I was supposed to go to Jersey and I just didn't feel comfortable and I think I was just judging a book by its cover. And I do so much interviews and I work with so many different people Right yeah, I got a group of individuals that their sole focus is to protect me. Right so, and a lot of times my coalition is too much, sometimes yeah.

Speaker 3:

So I don't want to. You know, it's like I've been trying to avoid conflict or whatever, and I'm like man. I don't even feel comfortable wanting to go, and I'm like man, you know. And then white boy got on the phone man, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

He like yo my man listen man, we spend this bread B what's going phone man. You know what I'm saying. He's like yo my man, listen man.

Speaker 3:

We spend this bread B what's? Going on man, I'm like man, fuck your bread.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying? Right, and they can start getting into it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and I'm like you know, but I didn't know he was Muslim. Right Because a lot of people, you know, when you make content they feel like you just a goofy. They just want to disrespect you. And I'm like yo, bro, that ain't it.

Speaker 4:

Rob Markman yeah.

Speaker 3:

But we got on the phone. I apologize. He apologized Rob Markman, for sure Rob Markman, but I went on his page, right, because I was like yo man, I'm pulling up man, fuck that we come with a jersey man, rob Markman, yeah, rob in Jersey, fuck all that you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

So I'm on the phone, I'm mad, I'm calling my man Like yo, these niggas, they're trying to play me. Where are we going, we out? So I'm like white boy, I go on your page, I'm looking, I'm trying to figure out. Okay, I'm looking at your followers. No, I'm on his page, I see him, like he said, I see, you know, I see his name, I'm like Muslim.

Speaker 6:

Then I felt bad.

Speaker 3:

I'm like I reached out to him and he gave me his number and Salisa my number, Yep, and we got on the phone and we patched things up and I think it was just so beautiful. Wasn't Muslim, it wouldn't have went that way.

Speaker 4:

I don't think so either. Yeah, man.

Speaker 3:

Right, I agree with you Because a lot of times, you know, ego is the open door that the shaitan walks through and then, you know, jumps inside you. Right, it gets controlled. So shout out to all of us for having that patience with each other.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, shout out to all of us. Let's give that a round of applause.

Speaker 2:

And we yeah, man, I just don't, you know how we do it we swing it and all that White boy walking down you then. But listen man, we got the yapping a little bit because it was a lot of shit with this date.

Speaker 2:

Everybody commute their phones real quick, y'all Real quick. I just want to get a proper introduction to bro. You feel me Roll out the carpet man Very articulate. You know one of. To bro. You feel me roll out the carpet man very articulate. You know one of the top. You know people on on the internet and in real life. You know that's talking and giving people wisdom and coming from their point of view. Former boxing.

Speaker 1:

I don't know if you still doing it oh yeah, I gotta fight boxing champion, champion, actually you feel me, yeah, heating up, it's heavy music, you still doing it, oh yeah.

Speaker 6:

Hell yeah, I got to fight Boxing champion.

Speaker 2:

Champion actually you feel me. Yeah, heating up it's heavy Music industry and Ghost Red he'd been with these people and moved like this and you actually got some family history with the music. Yeah, for sure Listen man, whatever your hands on, whatever you can name, most likely smart guy was a part of it. Man, yeah, most likely he was a part of it. Uh, he done dealt with the rappers and the music people and everything.

Speaker 3:

So let's just give a round of applause, man, we introduced this smart guy man, um, in the industry I don't think they just do, you know, um, because giving them, because giving them their flowers kind of exposes other shit, right. I think what makes me so unique is I never compromised myself, my brand, I never sold my soul, never did no gay shit, never supported none of the weird shit, and I got kind of like blackballed. When I got blackballed I had to find a way and then that kind of forced me to learn the business, to learn the business and make money and do better business. Right, because I knew I wasn't going to be allowed to be in the industry because I wasn't willing to do the things that you had to do to climb that ladder.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so to say the things that you had to do to climb that ladder, so to say all that weird shit. And I kind of made it popular to talk about the industry right, like before Cat Williams. People seen my Matt Foff interview and I spoke about the gay shit motherfuckers do. I named names right and I said I ain't. And I feel like now is the time for us to build our own industry right. This Internet, it gives us an opportunity to create reparations. One of the times that David and Goliath right Technology is the slingshot, but the rock inside the slingshot is collaboration, and the collaboration has to be horizontal, not vertical. Horizontal, meaning it has to be peer-to-peer. Like it's so important for us to bring Philly and Harlem together, Then bring Philly, Harlem and Detroit together.

Speaker 5:

Right.

Speaker 3:

It's very important for us to not just mobilize but to organize, and you can't have ownership without being organized. Okay, right, so, yeah. So I know you have some things y'all want to talk about, so I want to, you know what I mean.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, so normally. So that's how we do it.

Speaker 6:

We walk, you know we walk it down, man.

Speaker 4:

And being as though that we do our due diligence over here at the Rolling on Bulls podcast. You know, we know a few things about you, so we're going to just talk about it, okay, and so where are you from?

Speaker 3:

I'm from Harlem, 140 from Lenox.

Speaker 4:

Westside and growing up in Harlem, coming up in the 80s give us Harlem.

Speaker 3:

Growing up, man just hustle, Just getting money. Harlem, I mean Harlem has always been about, you know, getting money, Getting money family you know, Harlem is small, right, you know. You got uptown, downtown, east side, west side, so everybody knows each other, right? So I mean, growing up, my mother was an addict, so she was getting high. So at five years old I was forced to figure out how to get money. You know what I mean. I'm stealing clothes, I'm stealing food from the supermarket, reselling the steaks and shit like that.

Speaker 3:

So, everything was just hustle. I didn't have a. You know, that was hard. I'm like get money, get fly and do it again.

Speaker 6:

That's it.

Speaker 3:

Repeat that's it.

Speaker 5:

You know what?

Speaker 4:

I mean, yeah, and everything was hustle right, not just selling drugs, but everything you know what I mean, right yeah, so growing up hustling, what were some of your earlier influences coming up?

Speaker 3:

Oh man, shit, it's negative. It's negative, but it turned to a positive right so you know we, we would hear stories about um you know bumpy, johnson and frank matthews and you know um nikki born. Fuck nikki bones, yeah god fisher right like we never we never embraced the rats, so shout out to right right right matthews um rich porter.

Speaker 3:

Rich Porter AZ, but he told so he can't even Jack AZ. You know what I'm saying, but just the Old school hustlers and how they got money. Frank Matthews Was big meets Before big meets and he, the only one that made all the money, made the millions and got away and didn't tell.

Speaker 2:

Not to cut you off, who was the? So I'm heavy on the New York mob Gangsta.

Speaker 6:

Who was? Who was the?

Speaker 2:

ones before them. Remember it was Something Louie no, not him Before AZ and Rich.

Speaker 3:

Porter.

Speaker 2:

No, it was three. It was three people. Yup, la Shorty Doo-Wop.

Speaker 4:

Craig O.

Speaker 3:

That's exactly what I'm talking about. He was older. No, I said he was before Rich and them Shorty Doo-Wop, dummy and Craig O, craig O Yup, that's exactly what I'm talking about. Craig Matthews was kind of like he was older, he was before them.

Speaker 2:

No, I said that he was before Rich and them.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, he was before LA too. Yeah, he was.

Speaker 4:

Over him Frank Matthews. So he was the epitome. So this is the guy that made.

Speaker 3:

This is the guy that made 75 million and got away. Feds never found him and him, and he's the only person who crew nobody told in the crew damn nobody this crew was from philly nobody told you, that's who I was talking about.

Speaker 4:

Craig go, I know you yeah, that's, that's who I was talking about. Yeah, yeah, yeah nobody told.

Speaker 3:

So what I got from that was like you know, in order for you to create a team that powerful, you have to, you have to educate your crew, you have to educate. You know what I mean On law, on getting interrogated and stuff like that, right?

Speaker 6:

So that was my early inspiration.

Speaker 3:

Like Frank Matthews, I want to be in fuck. I want to make 30 million. I ain't never ratting, I ain't fuck all that.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying If I got to go on the run, I'm going on the run.

Speaker 3:

So that was my motivation and because I didn't have a mother in my life, because I didn't have a father in my life, it forced me to hustle early. Everything was about hustle for me. I didn't have a childhood, I wasn't thinking about going to play video games and all that. I'm trying to put a fucking M-80 in a video game, blow it up and get the quarters yeah, you know what I'm saying. My mind said everything was a way to get money for me. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

And then, as I got older and I started to become more knowledgeable and I started reading books like Rich Dad, poor Dad, by Robert Kiyosaki, dig and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill, the Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham, I realized that I had more hustle than the white boys. They just had a better product. I had a better hustle, but they had a better product. And then I had to realize that there's no wrong way to do right and it's no right way to do wrong. So there's no way that I'm gonna win because, even though my hustle is better, they have a better product and the karma associated or attached to my my product that I was selling at the time, the karma would never allow me to reach a certain level financially and be allowed to enjoy or free to spend it Right. So I had to pivot. I had to start learning about business. I had to start learning about direct to consumer. I had to start learning about how to be motivated and how to change my mindset and you know, and my mantra and stuff like that.

Speaker 1:

So like I heard you say you didn't have like your mom.

Speaker 6:

No.

Speaker 1:

Your parents so like. How did that affect you?

Speaker 3:

It made me angry, right, like it made me angry, you know, and I was extremely violent growing up, so everything you know, I was angry, I had abandonment issues and stuff like that, and you know, I think that was the biggest effect and it made me become a people pleaser, right. So I started hanging around. I never hung around nobody my age. I always hung around older people, right and shout out to Gangsta Lou, and that was one of the people I used to hang around too, shout out Gangsta Lou, I was trying to be a gangster, so I'm trying to do things to make myself known, to please these people, right, and that shit could have led to my demise, right?

Speaker 3:

Thank God it didn't, but I think that's how it affected me. The abandonment issues and searching for love Right, but not understanding that I'm never going to find the love that I was searching for because I didn't love myself.

Speaker 1:

So some of those things that affected you are still overcoming, like some of those problems you probably had no, I'm healed completely, but.

Speaker 3:

But. But there's maintenance for healing always, right. So this is why the mindset is so important, right. Like I say all the time, how you think creates how you feel. How you feel becomes an emotion, that emotion becomes a vibration, that vibration becomes a magnet that attracts things to you. So the same way every day, you wake up in the morning and you brush your teeth.

Speaker 4:

I heard you say that and ever since I heard you say that, my life been like that.

Speaker 3:

Right, right For sure.

Speaker 4:

Let me finish Right.

Speaker 3:

So there's maintenance for healing, right. I was molested by my own mother. My pops wasn't there. I grew up in a system, homeless, we doing kidnappings. We were doing all the time. I was doing different shit, bro, you heard. So I was consumed by rage, right? So once I learned to stop looking out the window and start looking in the mirror, I was able to see myself. I was able to love myself. I was able to love myself. Then I had to reinforce the love I was giving myself.

Speaker 3:

That's why I say how you think creates how you feel. How you feel becomes an emotion. That emotion becomes a vibration. That vibration becomes a magnet that attracts things to you. You have to maintain the heal right.

Speaker 3:

So, the same way you brush your teeth, you don't brush your teeth for Monday and say I'm good for 2024. The same way you brush your teeth, you don't brush your teeth for monday and say I'm good for 2024. I'm never brushing my teeth again. No, you got, you got colgate. You got a toothbrush. Every day you have to.

Speaker 3:

So I developed a routine for my mind, right, right. I developed a routine for my emotions. I developed, I developed a, a, a routine for the scars that I healed. Right, and I and I look in the mirror every morning and I say I am blessed, I am loved. Then I'll think it then and I say I am blessed, I am loved, then I'll think it, then I'll say it I am blessed, I am loved.

Speaker 3:

Then I'll say it, then I'll think it right, and the reason why I'm saying it, so when I think it, I can hear my voice. So I'm me talking to me, right? So now what I'm doing is I'm reprogramming my subconscious mind. I'm reprogramming my conscious mind, right. So if I'm saying, if I say, right now, I am blessed, I say it, I am blessed. Then I think it as I'm thinking, I can hear my voice in my head, right, and everything that you add on to I am becomes added on to you. So that was the thing, right. That was the maintenance that I had to do. So, even though I was healed, just because a scar heals doesn't mean it's not a new knife that can potentially come and cut you and open up a new scar, right, right.

Speaker 1:

So without those routines. You're pretty much saying like you can open up a new scar without those routines.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, or you can subconsciously create a vibration that pulls you back into something that can harm you. Right, you know. So you have to like when you get one negative thought, you have to replace it with 100 positive thoughts. And the reason why you might get the one negative thought is because there's so much outside influence. Okay, radio, media, tv, everybody's telling us ops, drill, fuck you, kill him, nigger, whatever, right. So it's so much. Our thought patterns are not uninterrupted. The white man got a plan for us through media and he attacks us and he makes us think these things.

Speaker 3:

So you have to insulate yourself sometimes. You have to isolate yourself sometimes. You have to really be in your mind, be in your head and talk to yourself. Okay, I'm doing this, I'm doing this. And then what I had to do was I had to make a calendar for my emotions, and I call it the reinforcement calendar. So, from Monday to Sunday, every day I'm intentional about how I want to feel. Okay, so Monday, I'm going to feel blessed. Tuesday, I'm going to feel intelligent. Wednesday, I'm going to feel loved. Thursday, I'm going to feel like the super Muslim. I'm listening to Soros, I'm going to feel like the super Muslim.

Speaker 3:

I'm listening to Soros, I'm going in right. So how you think creates how you feel. So everyday I plan the thoughts that I'm going to think so I can create how I want to feel For that day, so I can bring things into my life.

Speaker 1:

You're pretty much aligning your self conscious With your life.

Speaker 3:

A million percent right, but you got to be intentional, because they say faith without work is dead Right, but work without faith is also dead right. So if you don't develop a destination and you stick to it, you'll never reach it, and then you can never and you know, I say this all the time never let desperation change your destination, never let frustration change your destination, never let temptation change your destination, never let ignorance change your destination. Right, could have turned around today, right, so you have to, you have to, you have to, you have to. But because I had a negative thought, right, I had a negative thought, and then, and then I felt entitled, I'm me, I don't need to do this shit. Under thoughts, I got it down pat, and then, look, white boy, go on the phone, right. And then now, instead of me identifying that that's not him, it's not, I don't need to do this shit.

Speaker 3:

100 thoughts, I got it down pat, and then, look, white boy, get on the phone Right, and then now, instead of me identifying that that's not him, it's not me, it just is Right, it just is, it's an it, it's a thing, it's an innate object, right, it's just it. And then now, when I understood that I was able to recalibrate and start. Okay, I'm smart, I'm blessed. You know you got to maintain your emotions, you got to maintain your motivation right. So in this conversation, I'm going to give the information to everybody in this room on how to elevate, how to scale. This is why this content we're creating is going to be so powerful, because I'm giving up the step-by-step things right.

Speaker 4:

So the first thing we talked about and you could cut this up, what you?

Speaker 1:

saying that I want to tell them make sure they share, like, subscribe, comment.

Speaker 2:

Hit the bell for the notifications. You don't use a motherfucking hater, because it's free yeah, now they're gonna do that, they're gonna support.

Speaker 3:

So what I'm saying is the first thing is mindset right. You can't be successful until you understand how to control your mind. You control your mind With your thoughts, right. You protect your thoughts by isolating yourself From things that Create thoughts for you. Tiktok Instagram, youtube.

Speaker 3:

That's important to do that, right. And then you have to identify what motivates you, what inspires you, what gets you In that feeling of Euphoria, right. And then now, when you set a goal, every goal you set, you have to set a thought. So it's like goal, thought, deadline. So this is my goal, but I need to have this thought Because if I'm not thinking a way that's going to make me feel pumped up, I'm not going to execute how I need to, so I'm not going to meet the deadline. Right, right. So yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm going to say something, right, and then I'm going to ask a question, but I got to get this out now, right? You see us sitting here like this, in this line we're in Harlem, new York. In this line, we're in Harlem, new York. This is what it looks like and what happened when us, as black men, know how to communicate with each other, solve things, get to the resolution and become one. This is what this looked like. As Smart, smart guy said, we had a little situation earlier. Uh, we was on the phone getting things together shout out, shout out, gita smart the whole team this is.

Speaker 2:

This is what it looked like when out they feelings and not in the films. This is what it looked like. This could have turned into Philly versus Harlem. This could have turned into smart guy getting on a certain platform and saying things, or us calling him and yeah, nigga, you know what. This is what it looked like when we're not in our feelings and we know how to think like men. This is exactly what it looked like right here. It ain't no shape or form. I could say it better, I could prove it more. This is what it looks like. Not only did we come to a solution and a resolution and we resolved conflict. Not only that, we went to the heart of where this guy from and we safe and we feel the love.

Speaker 4:

You feel what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Five, six hours ago, it wasn't the same thing.

Speaker 3:

We didn't even meet each other.

Speaker 2:

We could have started beefing over phones and texts, and we didn't even meet each other, like if we was black men who had panties in a bunch, who wasn't moving like girls and not moving like men, we could have beefed with this nigga over a phone, never met each other, like we never met. We bump each other step on each other's sneaks. Fuck this nigga Girl. None of that, but this is what it looked like when people not any feelings, now going off that I want you to say something.

Speaker 4:

I want you to say something.

Speaker 3:

So the reason why is because you got to understand, right. Majority of young black men come from single-parent homes, right? And there's this misconception that a woman can raise a child. A woman can't raise a child. A woman can just maintain a child. Raising a child takes a coalition of masculine energy and feminine energy. You need mother and father in that household. So a lot of times when, when there's a man absent from the household, that little black boy wasn't raised to be a man. He was maintained until he turned of male age, right? And then he gets kicked out. And then now he's not thinking with his intelligence, he's thinking with his emotions, right, and then he's, and then he's letting his emotions supersede his intelligence. And you said something powerful, right?

Speaker 3:

because it's like if we were moving like females, we wouldn't be able to get to some type of a compromise right but because we we were being rational and not irrational, and that a man is not supposed to think with his emotions, right? Right we don't, we're not moving our emotions.

Speaker 2:

That's, that's, that's that's feminine think before you talk right, so use your brain. So now, this, this, this, this, and I wanted to ask Right? This is another point where Wait, one more thing, go ahead.

Speaker 3:

I don't want nobody in this room To take this for granted, because listen, words is powerful. Everything happens for a reason. This conversation is confirmation For everybody in this room To elevate Right, and a lot of times, I think, because we're desensitized. There's so much content, there's so much videos, there's so much fake motherfuckers pretending to say some real shit, acting like they real, you don't know the difference and then you're not applying that shit out that mantra I got how you think creates how you feel. How you feel becomes an emotion. That emotion becomes a vibration. That vibration becomes a magnet that attracts things to you. Bro, that's the blueprint to getting this shit to the next level. Like we talking about the science to get what y'all doing to a $100 million company. Y'all got all the pieces to the puzzle.

Speaker 4:

We travel on that high frequency. It's already there.

Speaker 3:

So now, when you get everybody on the same page, you get everybody on the same mantra, you get everybody in the same affirmation y'all, motherfuckers, before summer out, everybody in this room can be worth two, five, ten million dollars before the summers out. If you get focused, if you take this information and then apply it. How you applying it? You making a content calendar, when your content calendars all the content you're going to create, right? You're monopolizing the digital real estate, every social media site that's available. You guys got to oversaturate, you got to flood it. Then you get the reinforcement calendar Everybody in this room, y'all. You create accountability partners, right? So now it's like you know what motivates him, you know what motivates you, y'all got to hold each other accountable.

Speaker 3:

And then everybody motivates everybody.

Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 3:

And then now you take that motivation and apply it to a goal. Listen, this is real shit. This information is what the white people been using against us. But we taught them how to use this weapon and then they weaponize it against us we, the originals, right. So now this is our knowledge. All that secret shit. Bob Proctor bullshit. Robert Gre, robert green, sucker duck, shit. Man that came from us we taught the greeks we're the fathers of everything.

Speaker 3:

So when you understand this information and you take it serious, y'all go from this to netflix level, meaning like, y'all building your own platform, y'all making 10 million dollars off the advertisement I'm I want to break. I know somebody had asked me about like advertisement, so later don't forget that question because I want to break down the advertisement. Right, but y'all got to take this serious. I heard you flow, you got talent, right, you're an artist Phenomenal. You're an artist. You rap Phenomenal. You know what I mean. I'm not going to cap, right, but music is not just. Really music is not a. Music is the commercial for the products you sell and the services you provide. Mcdonald's has music, right.

Speaker 1:

Tell him that again, man.

Speaker 3:

I'm loving it, ba-ba-ba-ba. Music is not a product. Music is the commercial for the products you sell, the services you provide, the products you promote or the services you promote. Mcdonald's has music. I'm loving it, ba-ba-ba-ba. They have a product, though, right. What's their product? Burgers and fries. They provide a service, right. What's their service? Commercial?

Speaker 6:

real estate, because they're a franchise.

Speaker 3:

So most artists, most black artists, never make it because they don't fully understand how to leverage their music and use their music as a catalyst between the product and the consumer, and the customer and how you make money is how you make money off your shit, how you make money off your shit, you got to get your list.

Speaker 3:

Everybody that follows you I saw your followers, right so everybody that follows you. You make a list and then you, and then you figure out a utilitarian product you can sell to them. Meaning, everything you indulge in is the inspiration for the product that you're about to create and sell. So he has a hat Right, he wears hats. He has braids, he has a beard, so something made his hair grow, something makes his beard shine.

Speaker 6:

It's the reason why he has that hat.

Speaker 3:

I see a little bracelet Accessories. Right, you break down yourself, right what?

Speaker 6:

do you drink, what do you smoke, what do you?

Speaker 3:

eat. And then now you, now you got inspiration For a product list. Then, when you go Through your list, your network Because your network Is your net worth If you can convert it Into an actual transaction. And you're converting Into a transaction Based upon the products that you use, that you're selling To the people that fuck with you, and they only fuck with you Because they do things Similar to you, see. And then now you say I got a thousand people. If I get a thousand people to buy a fifty dollar product, that's fifty thousand dollars. But we're not gonna say if, because if doesn't work, people, if people to death.

Speaker 3:

So understand what I'm saying it's not if I could, because that shit don't never work right. So when I create the product, I am creating the product right. I am because everything I add to I am becomes added on to me when I am so I am creating the product Right I am Because everything I add to I am Becomes added on to me. When I am so I am creating the product, I'm reaching out, I am Reaching out To my audience, to my followers. I am going to manually DM every motherfucker and I'm gonna sell them a product that's mine, and then I'm gonna set a financial goal for every product that I create.

Speaker 2:

Let me ask you something real quick.

Speaker 3:

And that's how you get to that next level of financial freedom. The problem is we're caught in perception. Music just creates perception. Perception makes your product have perceived value. But the hustle, the solicitation, the actual marketing is what gets you to reality, which is the finances, which is the actual dollars and cents. And then now, every product you have to set a financial goal for every product on your product list. That is the revenue calendar. And then now, every product you have to set a financial goal for every product on your product list. That is the revenue calendar. And then now we have all the distribution channels in the fucking world to make the product look amazing. The problem is we're using the commercial thinking. It's the product and not even having a fucking product. So your wraps don't even fucking matter because you're not providing a product attached to it. Your raps don't matter because you're not providing a service with what you have.

Speaker 1:

Lyrically, it's the real of the most podcast. Make sure you share, like, subscribe, comment.

Speaker 2:

And don't be a motherfucking hater, because it's free.

Speaker 6:

We got a smart guy in the building. Hit that bell man.

Speaker 2:

So so, so, all right. Bet, I was talking to my homie. He like you, better not let smart guy take over. I said, bro, there's no way that can't happen. Bro, he is going to take over this shit, bro.

Speaker 3:

He could, he could, but look though, that's the problem.

Speaker 1:

When people do that, I'm saying when people do that, actually not taking over. Nah, we got to give the information.

Speaker 3:

That's what I mean. Like you got to let him cook.

Speaker 4:

But look though right.

Speaker 2:

I want to ask you this, bro. So you know like I was talking to one of my homies, because I told you you real familiar in our city, like it's not, like people don't know who you are and all that I know you for sure.

Speaker 2:

And I was talking to one of my homies or whatever, and I'm telling him like yeah, we got a smart guy. Oh, no, no, he say this. And he say that. Oh, like no, charles, don't eat. Like that. I'm like how and shit. He said this. He sent me like a video where, like you was talking about like praying. He sent me like a video where, like you was talking about like praying or something like that, like praying.

Speaker 2:

And you know, we all practice Islam, but some people don't think as much as us in yourself and some people don't get certain things. So, like in the video, you said something like like I don't, I don't, I don't pray to God, I pray to me, or something like that. Right, and I told my man, like bro, his name is literally the smart guy he probably got a whole nother. You know what I'm saying, because people hear that and they are thinking me you don't believe in the law or you not, but it can't be the case because you know we would.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I was we yeah, I say just move yeah, just move that, john, so you got nothing more tape or no shit come on, yeah, so no, all I

Speaker 2:

wanted to say bro is um, it's like when you say certain stuff cuz like, my man basically was telling me, like bro, his lot, a lot of his philosophies people don't agree with, like that was his whole thing.

Speaker 3:

Oh, let me get this. Hold on, I got you Listen, check it out, yeah, yeah, yeah. Explain that to people who don't understand.

Speaker 4:

But I want you to. I'm talking about no listen, though you can explain it all around.

Speaker 3:

I've seen it all around but the one joint that?

Speaker 2:

I want you to answer that specifically.

Speaker 3:

I got you. One thing about me is I'm direct, right, yo fam. I'm tired of going to Juma and hearing some shit that don't benefit me For me, and if I'm saying something wrong may Allah forgive me, but I'm going to speak what I'm going through. I'm tired of seeing Arab motherfuckers in the corner store Make $300,000 A fucking month. You're making $300,000 A month and you're not Helping the community. There's, there's, there's On the 135th and 8th. It's a masjid. Right there's a corner store Next to the masjid. That masjid is owned by you gotta go by Africans.

Speaker 3:

Listen, listen. That masjid is owned by Africans, right, the Arabs. They Muslim, they pray in that masjid. There's the. They're connected. Right, they made 90,000 dollar Renovations On the deli, but they didn't even Put rugs in the masjid.

Speaker 3:

I'm tired of brothers From other coaches Salaaming you, salaam them, but they don't salaam you back, right, and so, for me, I'm like yo bro, like it gotta be. Allah knows best, though, but I do know that they use religion To limit us. I do know that. You know, religion has always been used to divide us. I'm not At the end of the day.

Speaker 3:

I am Muslim. I believe in Allah, I do, but I can't sit here and be comfortable with the conditions of my people. I'm not cool with it. I look at Dubai. I want Harlem to be like Dubai. We, every six months, we generate more money than Dubai. Blacks in the ghetto were richer than Dubai, but they mass market Dubai like it's. It's Jenna, what like? So for me, this is and again, as I learn, as a law brings me new information, I'm consuming it. As Allah brings me new information, I'm consuming it. I'm not okay with black Muslims doing bad and Arab Muslims doing good, but you're not helping your brother. Nothing changes. It's 400 plus years.

Speaker 3:

Christians made the same mistake. You waited for some white man to come out the sky and he never came. It got to be. It has to be some type of a, it has to be some. I get it this, the dunya. Yeah, I believe that. But you ain't going to tell me. I got to wait till I'm dead to enjoy life, right? So I'm not going to sit here and I'll be.

Speaker 3:

You know, I'm the only Muslim in my family. I'm the only Muslim in my family, bro, I was in a group home in Staten Island, geller House, right, I'm 13 years old, and it was a white Muslim, white dude, you know. He making voodoo. I'm like is you sweating? What's going on? He's breaking down to me, right, like you know you, are you Muslim man? He's like, well, people choose to follow what their fathers followed. And he just left me with that, right, and I laid on the bed, right, I'm like, damn, I'm only Christian because my family made me be Christian.

Speaker 3:

So that same night I prayed to Allah, not even knowing I'm praying to Allah. I'm like, look, I ain't a Muslim. I Like, look, I ain't a Muslim, I'm not a Christian, I ain't shit. I want to go to heaven. Just show me. This is the way. Whatever is the way you show me, I'm following it. I got led towards Islam so I took my shahada. So when I pray, when I have come, I don't just pray, when I make salat, I get on my knees and prostrate and I talk Look man, help me, protect me. You know I'm not going to, you're not going to control my relationship with Allah and you're not going to limit where I go based upon that control. Because every and again, when we look at the, when we look at the Quran, right, bilal was the first person to call Adan, right? I don't know if you know Bilal right, he's the first person to call Adan Bilal oh, good name.

Speaker 3:

So, but he was a slave, yeah. So where were the black Muslims that were rich and powerful? Where were the black Muslims that ran shit? Right? So I look at things differently. I'm not saying it's right, I'm not trying to innovate. I'm not trying, it's right. I'm not trying to innovate. I'm not trying to remix the Koran. All I'm saying is they use religion in a way to control us and limit us. I can't do that.

Speaker 1:

For sure, come on, come on. Come on there, manny215. Come on there.

Speaker 2:

Round of applause for Manny. I already knew he was going to say something. I already knew my boy was going to say something.

Speaker 5:

Get, get Because, uh, I love it Like to bring clarification on the Bilal story because, as I'm sitting, I'm listening with my ears open. You know what I'm saying. Even when I hear stuff that I do know, I listen from a mindset as if I don't know. You know what I'm saying and I just don't want nobody to Misconstrued that's hearing from an ear Of I don't know. The story of Bilal yes, bilal was a slave, but he was a slave Up until the Prophet, sallallahu Alaihi Wasallam, sent his companion I forget which one To free Bilal. You know what I'm saying, because they was about to free Bilal, you got what I'm saying, because they was about to kill Bilal had the stone on his chest and all that.

Speaker 5:

The Arabs and we got to understand Mecca at the time, where everybody comes to pray at Mecca. At that time, their economic system was based upon idol worshiping. People were traveling from all over the world, different nations, coming to the Kaaba, which was built by Abraham upon monotheism, and it was coming from all over the world to worship fake gods, stuff that was built by man, by him. So when the Prophet Sallallahu Alaihi Wasallam, at 40 years old, got revelation and he got prophethood from Allah Subh'ahu wa ta'ala, that became dangerous to their economic system.

Speaker 5:

The, the arabs of that time was like yo, we got to do something about this boy yeah because he's saying that our economic system, what is driven by, is wrong and there's one god and he's the prophet and they need to follow him.

Speaker 5:

You know, what I'm saying. So when that happened, you know, when we talk about the story of Bilal, he was. He overheard the Quran. He just overheard Some ayats and, immediately, embracing His owner at that time, who was one of the rich Arabs, said he challenged the Muslim that was reciting the Quran and said even Bilal knows that I'm his master.

Speaker 5:

Ask him. You know what, bilal? He said who's your master, who's your guy? He said Ahud. He said Allah is one. You got what I'm saying. So now, on the board, he amongst his superiors and his slave. You got what I'm saying. Who's who? So now, on the boy, he amongst his superiors and his slave. You got, I'm saying disobeying him for this message, right. So upon that, that's when they went, tried to. They put that, they laid him out, put the stone on they, holding the idol to his face, crushing his ribs. Yeah, who's your lord? Who's your lord? He's saying one, he's saying one. And the Prophet, sallallahu alayhi wa sallam, one of his companions, went and he said what you want for him. And he gave him what seemed to be a crazy number, paid that joint.

Speaker 5:

He said if you would have asked for more. I would have gave you that. You got what I'm saying. And Bilal from there wasn't a slave, only a slave, as we all are. We all are slaves to Allah, but not slaves to man. A slave, only a slave.

Speaker 6:

As we all are. We all are slaves To Allah, to Allah.

Speaker 5:

But not slave to man.

Speaker 6:

You know what I'm saying, right?

Speaker 5:

Allah elevated him To To be the Muhaddin, the one who called the Adan, throughout their entire life For the Prophet Sallallahu alayhi wa sallam, and we know that, in our time and our belief, when we go, stand before Allah and we're all getting judged. They said, it said that the muhammad, his neck would be the longest. You know what I'm saying. He would be elevated in, in in the society. You know what I'm saying, so I just wanted to clarify this, yeah, man because, I don't want people

Speaker 4:

to hear that right for sure he was practicing sure.

Speaker 5:

Balao is one of the matter of fact. Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'ala honored Balao so much that he's one of the companions that promised Jenna. The Prophet Sallallahu Alaihi Wasallam said that when he went to Jenna, he heard Balao footstep behind him. You know what I'm saying, so I just wanted to clear that up.

Speaker 2:

We appreciate you that up we see, we're gonna let smart, we're gonna let smart guy respond, and then we're gonna move right, because we got a lot to talk about.

Speaker 3:

So look so. So basically, just in, just in a nutshell, because a lot of people watch my interviews, right, and you know I I say things, but my intention is for all of us to be in power. Black people period, right, and we have to understand that religion is perfect, but man has infiltrated religion and weaponized it against us. So for me, I say I've said certain things because I'm I don't want to go to the kubar, and just for me per se, I don't want to hear about no stories 500 years ago I don't want to I respectfully so.

Speaker 3:

That's why one of the things and I you know I'm not saying this to get clout or no shit like that, but I'm we trying to build a masjid and I want to talk about Relevant things in the kookbar, right, you got brothers that's Facing drug addiction. You got brothers that Want to get married. You got brothers that's Trying to figure out how to deal with their anger. You got brothers that we need to Like. Islam is so powerful when it's used, right. So that thing, I was frustrated. I was frustrated Because I'm going, I'm going to Juma and I'm not hearing nothing. Not hearing nothing. You ain't what you saying to me, like I can't what you saying to me. And then I went to. I went to Juma. Now check it out. I went to a masjid in Queens, right, or Bangladesh, and Allah showed me something. I was the only black motherfucker in Juma. Everybody else was Indian, whatever right.

Speaker 3:

And I'm listening to what they're saying in a kook bar, bro, like they're talking about getting this building, they talk about starting a transportation company. They talking about zakat, they talking about different things. Like we're gonna keep pouring into each other. The brother over here needs a job. They doing roll calls who's unemployed, they yo bro, they building, they using that, they using the dean and using the religion to build community, right, we're not doing that. So we gotta understand that the government Infiltrates our religion, right, and they put people strategically In position To keep us limited. So for me, what I was saying was I gotta, I gotta, talk to Allah first. Allah knows this in my heart, allah knows this in my heart. I can't, I don't do it for men, right.

Speaker 3:

You know, what I'm saying. So when I and I get things, I get like this, this whole thing is it happened, right, because on my heart, I felt that I spoke to this brother ill, you know I mean, so I, I move with that and and and you're more knowledge. You wouldn't me right? But we gotta look at where we are, our conditions. We don't own our communities. We don't have institutions, we don't have black police departments, we don't have black banks, we don't have black supermarkets. We don't even own the buildings that the masjids are. In Philly, the real estate is prime time. We're not buying up houses, we're not going crazy. Detroit real estate is so available, it's time Like. So now it's time for us To use the dean Right In a way, and that's what the UMA Was supposed to be about, right, that's what Juma's Was supposed to be about you going in, we talking, we planning Okay, this brother, we squashing beefs and we bringing things together Right, we bringing things together Right, right. So that's my, you know that's, that's my intention. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5:

But yeah, yeah, I want to add something Quick too, like Cause. I feel I feel where you coming from. Right, this is something I speak about A lot. You know what I'm saying Um the concept of Cultural preservation, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5:

I just, I just want to, um Cause you get what I'm saying. I just wanna Cause I feel, where you coming from, like we need ours. You get what I'm saying. And one thing that plague our people is we always waiting for somebody else. It's not nobody else job To take care of us but us. You get what I'm saying. But in understanding that, right, we gotta understand that it's the same for the Arabs, it's the same for the Bangladesh people, because we got to understand they coming here to America and they coming here to America and where they from, one of our dollars is worth like 21 of theirs. You get what I'm saying, right? So a lot of stuff that they talking about you know has to, because I know I got some folks that's Pakistani and shout out to Paper Chaser Aki in Atlanta. You know what I'm saying. They grinding, they going back home, sending, taking care of making their money here and taking care of what they should do.

Speaker 3:

Because, but because it's what I'm saying, right.

Speaker 5:

That's why I love what you talking about, because this is conversations in a Muslim community, as black people that we need to have. You know what I'm saying we talk about nips. I want to hear stuff that relate to us. You know what I'm saying. Right, right and see, but see Cultural preservation, but see that's why we talking about it.

Speaker 3:

That's why what I'm doing is so powerful. I don't want to put no shit on blast, but we got two farms we about to open up. I'm really building and I'm connecting with Muslims that want to build. We got to talk about dual citizenship. We got to talk about import export. We got to talk about going to Africa. We got to talk about having a relationship in Africa. We got to talk about these things and then when we go to Juma, that's what it's supposed to be about, not just on Ramadan. You know, you look at Ramadan. Brothers make us a lot.

Speaker 1:

Y'all sorry about the noise In the background. We in New York, man, we in the middle of Harlem. This is the real experience. Yeah, this is what it is. You know what?

Speaker 6:

I'm saying this is how it is, so you got 300.

Speaker 3:

You got 300 brothers Making us a lot outside and then, once it's over, it's over. See, that's why those brothers, those brothers are just Mobilizing. See, when we understand the difference between Mobilizing and organizing. It changes.

Speaker 1:

Cook bro, cook bro.

Speaker 3:

So now we gotta Now, we gotta Now, we gotta go from Mobilizing To organizing, to purchasing institutions, to really owning Our own institutions so we can cultivate the mind of a younger Muslim so when he grows up he's focused on community.

Speaker 5:

Each man, feed a man, get a game to the babies Right and then now you want For your brother what you want for yourself, and now you're using.

Speaker 3:

You're using Islam In a way that revitalizes the community. But we can't Revitalize the community that we don't own Sex Right. So when we have these opportunities to come together now, these conversations are like, in a way, mobilizing, but organizing is when the cameras turn off. We got to collaborate. What are we doing? How are we Right? Right, you know. So that's just. You know, that's what I stand for. And a lot of times, people they don't Look bro. If they times people they don't look bro, they, if they're not here, they ain't gonna get it. Yeah, listen, yeah they. The government, right, is very well invested in keeping us in the worst conditions that we could the worst position that we can be in.

Speaker 3:

Religion plays a part. Talk, okay, so yes. Ok so yes, islam is perfect, but it's not being applied to us to its maximum potential. That is the truth. Now, if we want to look, I'm not, I'm a realist, I'm not going to say I'm, I'm, I'm Muslim, I took my shahada, I believe in the law, I'm, I'm. I'm rolling like this waiting to hear something, not hearing nothing. And I'm going to different black masjids I'm hearing the same. It's just talk and nothing happening, right, nothing happening.

Speaker 3:

When COVID came, I was ready, bro, I got, listen bro, I got like 50 of my bros, we all Muslim and we patrolling the hood, we patrolling correctly, you understand. So this is the moment. Let's go. I go to the masjid. I'm like yo bro, he's like nah, we can't do that Masjid is closed. I go to the Bangladesh masjid Doing COVID time. Yo bro, they got 300 Indians. They ready, they ready, they organized. So we gotta be careful, got to be careful, we got to be careful with how we allow this dean to be utilized, so give me that Because your ideologies and your philosophies are very good, but how aggressive you be and given it, you might throw people off.

Speaker 4:

I have to.

Speaker 3:

So I went to smoke. I'm going to say what Khaled Muhammad said right, I went to smoke. Everybody keep talking this. I don't want to duck a race war, right, I'm Muslim for real, yeah, no, no, no. Listen, I'm Muslim for real.

Speaker 3:

You know what I mean to die, right now it's over. You hear me. That's why I had to get out the street, bro. Right, I could do life, I could do death row Talk. I could do that, wallahi, I could die for a crime, bro, and won't tackle, hold it down, I'm going to hold it down, me, yeah, me. I ain't going to tell I can't be in the street, bro, because if puss come to shove I got to down a cop I'm down on them, bro, and I'm not testifying, I'm not saying nothing. You caught me, you caught me. It is what it is. Suck my dick. Disclaimer. That's the energy I'm giving. You hear me. Disclaimer. So I know, like for me, I'm tired. I'm tired, bro. I know I'm better, I know we are better, I know we are stronger. I'm tired of sitting back watching some person weaker than me.

Speaker 3:

I wasn't a coward in prison, bro. I wasn't a coward in Sing Sing. I wasn't a coward in Comstock. I wasn't a coward in Attica. I wasn't a coward in Bear Hill. I wasn't a coward in Franklin. I wasn't a coward in South Point Box.

Speaker 3:

I wasn't a coward in Greenbox.

Speaker 3:

I wasn't a coward in the 4 Building, I wasn't a coward in the Beacon. I'm telling you, bro, this is why I'm him for real. So what, I look like being a coward when it comes to creating a revolution. See, we scared of the white man, we scared Police can't come. Look, this is my man, charlie, my man, this is my man. If I see Charlie getting beat up by police, charlie, what you think I'm going to do, charlie, ain't nothing to talk about. I'm jumping like it's. I'm jumping like it's, bro. I'm telling you, I'm taking a gun from the cop, breaking his jaw, and we're going to make the TMZ baby. We cowards that's the problem. We cowards, we got all the energy for each other. I don't want to spin the block, I don't want to do this, I don't want to do that, but when it comes to the white man, you tuck your tail. I lie, I lie, I lie. Let me get this straight.

Speaker 3:

When it comes to the white man, we put our gun down. When it comes to police, we put our gun down. I'll kill a cop. I will Wallahi, I'll kill a cop. We say nigga, but we don't say kike. We say nigga, but we don't say chink. We say nigga but we don't say spick. We scared because we been conditioned to be cowards. Right, we been conditioned to be cowards. They killing us everyday. Anyway, they got synthetic crystal meth in the weed. They got synthetic dope in the weed. They got synthetic uppers and downers, prescription drugs in the weed. They using the weed like they use the crack to destroy us, bro. They're using the music, they're using media, they're using everything and we sitting up just like, yeah, fuck me in the ass and put your dick in my mouth, fuck me in the ass and put your dick in my mouth.

Speaker 3:

I'm almost done.

Speaker 2:

I can't stand for that.

Speaker 3:

So for me, I'm putting this I'm working when the camera's rolling, I'm working when the camera off, but the reason why I'm working when the camera's rolling, because I know it's another smart somewhere that think and feel like me, and I'm hoping that one of these interviews motivate them. Yo, smart, what you want to do, All right, bet, let's mobilize, let's organize. We need our own militias, we need armies. Bro, we already in war bro, that was my question.

Speaker 4:

Like Ben, having the ideology that you do and being loud as you are, do you feel like you're on an island alone? Never.

Speaker 3:

Because Allah is telling me to do this. You see, this ain't me, man, this is Allah. My shit moving. I'm all over the world. It's people reposting me. This ain't me. This is a law. Because, it's time. Yeah, you see it's time and we got to show. This is why I'm so descriptive about how to change your mindset. Yeah, right, how to set goals.

Speaker 4:

You ain't just telling a nigga, you giving him the steps Right, the proper steps.

Speaker 3:

And then now we have to start building our own mosjes.

Speaker 5:

We have to start.

Speaker 3:

Right To organize.

Speaker 4:

To mobilize but also to organize.

Speaker 3:

Right. So now, why do we want a million man march? I don't want a million motherfuckers marching, I want a million man donation. So if we got a million brothers that give $2, that's $ two million, yeah, and then we can invest in real estate right then and there.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, right there.

Speaker 3:

We got to listen, bro. Look, I went to Rikers Island. Right, rikers Island is C-74. People that's watching this from New York, they're going to know, right, it's like this is juvenile jail, right? You go to Rikers Island, right, don't worry, child, you almost done, right right.

Speaker 3:

So it's called the iron horse, right, it's called the iron horse, right. So I go to jail. I don't know nothing. I just know, like you ain't going to do me like you did, boy. So I know they're going to walk up. They're going to say what size you with? And I see them taking sneakers, oh okay. So God, walk up to me. What size you with your size? I'm not with it, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I'm not with it. I'm sorry, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I'm saying, look, I'm not with it, right, I go up north. I'm young, I'm going to jail. I'm young, right. I'm scared, though, because I'm hearing stories You're not going to cut me and you're not going to rape me. Ain't no dick going in my butt, and ain't no my cheek.

Speaker 3:

Period I'm on timing, bro. So as soon as I got the population, yo, I need a gun, I need a hammer. The first motherfucker that say something to me, I'm going to stab you in your face till my arm get tired. I'm going to make an example out of you and I did. Then I go to Southport Box. I'm at Southport Box doing two years since I cut two motherfuckers. You heard Right.

Speaker 6:

So now what I'm saying is listen, bro.

Speaker 3:

If it catches, you catch it man, I got to speak. So I'm saying to myself right, I'm in this environment, I'm not going to be ran over, bro, you're not going to run over me, I'm gonna eat, commissary, I'm gonna be respected. This is the way for myself. I'm a man. So when I got out of prison, it's the same concept. When I'm conscious, it's the same concept. This Harlem, this the trenches, this the hood, don't think, because ain't nobody outside, ain't nobody outside.

Speaker 3:

You understand what I'm saying? So a motherfucker, come over here With some goofy shit. You going to make it out of here. You going to have all but 25 seconds and then it's lights out. Your post is deleted. Bro, so let me ask you so hold on.

Speaker 3:

So what I'm saying is, bro, is this it's like it's the same concept with this white motherfucker who had their foot on our necks for over 400 years. How you gonna call yourself a man and they killing babies? How you gonna call yourself a man and they murdering us every single day? How you call yourself a man and you don't own nothing? How you call yourself a man when a man that's not even a man, that's not even stronger than you, got more than you and you afraid to challenge him Out of some type of imaginary fear. But you call yourself a Muslim. You call yourself a Muslim.

Speaker 3:

I only fear law. I don't fear the shaitan, I only fear law. Nothing that piss, shit or bleed is going to ever make me submit and prostrate to him, bro. So what the fuck? I look like I want the smoke. If it's a race war, then what's up? That's shit. What are we talking about? If we go to war, let's go to war. Let's stop acting like I got to bow down to you. If it's war time, I want it, let's go.

Speaker 3:

And we too scared, bro. That's why we not in position, we's cowards, we scared to death of that motherfucker. And when you understand, when you really understand Allah, when you really understand Allah, when you really understand this deen, then that fear doesn't exist. That's why in the kookball is non-existent, because the government know, if we really talking about the dean how we supposed to be talking about the dean, you're going to have motherfucking stuff on. Oh, a white ball that look like me, not on the. The suicide bombers ain't going to look like Bin Laden, right, yeah, the suicide. Oh a white ball.

Speaker 3:

They run into the precinct, they run up and hugging a cop. Oh, wet ball, hugging the cop, blowing the cop up. What the fuck going on Palestine and this shit happening over here now? Oh, they don't want that. So they got to make you think. They got to make you think, bro. They got to make you think. I can't accept that. This is just me per se. I can't accept that, bro, and anybody that know. This is how I really am, bro. Now I don't do it for the camera. I do a lot of work in the hood. I don't do it for the camera, I'm just using the camera to attract like-minded individuals. Who's ready for war? If we got to go to war, then let's go to war. What we waiting for? Let's go to war for.

Speaker 4:

Let's go to war, I don't, let's go to war because, at the end of the day, my death date is written by law, not me, no offense.

Speaker 3:

Right, right, that did so. When you understand that, right, you could jump off a fucking building and live right. Or you could cannonball dive into a pool and die. See, when you understand that that's the law, that's Islam, you can jump off a building 100 floors up, head first and survive. You can get off this chair and die. That's, that's the deen. So when you understand that man don't control that, huh, you don't control that, you, not my. What you said, bilal said he understood the stone been on our chest For over 400 years. Huh, you don't control that, you're not my man. What you said Bilal said, he understood the stone been on our chest for over 400 years and we afraid to remove it. We afraid to remove it Because we worship man, we worship the white man, we prostrate to the white man All the time.

Speaker 2:

Round of applause.

Speaker 1:

That is crazy Round of applause for that man and I wanted to.

Speaker 3:

People follow what their parents teach on their hands. Yo bro, listen man, I don't give a fuck bro, let me say this real quick that was, it was cooking.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot of things that we can say, push us back as a culture and things we need to do to get better and stop blaming this person. And everybody got their list. Like, if you go out here and ask one of these people, they number one might be the drill rap and the rappers. If you ask another person, it might be they shutting down schools and building this and building that. But I ain't going to lie bro. Like I pay attention very, very well and being as though I do that I know Like this is my opinion, but this is facts.

Speaker 2:

I think the number one thing right now that's wrong with our culture is a fucking gender war between black men and black women. Like you go on Instagram and shit, it's always girls downing, black men biting our back out or it's them something like the Megan Turey thing and they don't need biting. So I wanted to ask you, right, since you think of things, how you think of things. Right, it is a lot of black women marrying white men and having interracial babies. There's a lot of white women dating black men. They have interracial babies.

Speaker 2:

We're still in single parent households. We're still going through a thing where, like, a black man and a black woman married is like 95% of the hood is not happening. We having babies out of wedlock and some people don't even know who their mom and father is. Like you said, your mom was shrunk out and everything like that, and I'm also sorry to hear that. So I just want to ask the question like, what do you think about this whole gender war, black men, black women thing that's going on, the interracial relationships and kids, and like, where do you put that on a level, like when it comes to our stuff and things that we need to work on, and also, why do you think that is happening? Well, you got to remember?

Speaker 3:

right so that's been a technique since slavery, with the William Lynch letters and stuff like that. Right? And in the absence of religion, there's going to be confusion, right? So you know, the white man figured out that the greatest soldier in his army is going to be the black woman. Right? So this is why it's happening, because we're not in control of nothing, right so you know, I strongly suggest everybody watching this go do your due diligence on the Willie Lynch letters and how they emasculated the black man and empowered him.

Speaker 5:

I always say it this is happening today, right.

Speaker 3:

Today. Today, today and the reason why that content can be distributed in such large quantities is because we don't own media right. So we don't own media. We don't own the things that distribute the content that destroys us.

Speaker 2:

Right.

Speaker 3:

Right, and we don't own the things that can distribute content to uplift us.

Speaker 3:

Right so, our sisters are just, you know, collateral damage and casualties of war Right so, but a man?

Speaker 3:

It's not our job to subconsciously or indirectly look for the woman, or even no, because a man would a leader Right so we're going to the woman, we're trying to hold the woman accountable when we should be going to a law, and we go to a law for provision, and through that provision we get the financial things that we need, the intelligence that we need, the emotional maturity that we need To become men, to put ourselves in a proper place. So the real problem is the Uma, the Uma's fucked up, right, and I think the solution Is we need men being men. Yeah, right, the men need to be men. Right, and in order for the men to be men, we have to go to law, we have to go to God, we have to ask for provision, we have to ask for strength, we have to ask for intelligence, we have to ask for patience, we have to ask for durability, we have to ask for thick skin right, and we have to insulate and isolate ourselves from media, because media is designed and weaponized to keep us away from being masculine.

Speaker 3:

It's actually designed to emasculate us, right? So I'm not going to pay attention to a sister who's led astray.

Speaker 3:

I'm going to focus on becoming myself, and then we lead by example. Submission and masculinity is not. Masculinity is not something that you advocate, it's something that you apply. Masculinity is application, not advocation. And so when you're applying yourself as a man to society, to the world, the women will submit. It's just a natural thing, right? So we can't worry about the woman not being submissive. We have to worry about are we being a man To Allah To lead? Right? So now that puts us in a position, our proper place, and then the women, that is for us, not the Jezebels.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, right.

Speaker 3:

The women, that is for us. They're going to follow because it's in their nature to follow Right, because it's in their nature to follow.

Speaker 2:

They want to be led.

Speaker 3:

So yeah.

Speaker 2:

Okay, okay.

Speaker 4:

White Boy, you had a question right, Not more so of a question.

Speaker 4:

He kind of answered it whenever I was just saying more so of like everything, but it's like you know being as though you know being. You know, young, black in America, with all these things that's in front of us, shaitan, and things that's in and out of our lives and stuff that we go through and we try to keep it. We try to keep it, but it be so much that, you know, weigh on us, weigh on our back. You know what I'm saying Women, drugs, music it's a lot Outside. You know what I'm saying, what we grow up in and it's a lot Outside. You know what I'm saying, what we grow up in. And having this message because, like I told you on the phone, bro, a lot of your ideologies, they're very good and if men was to apply that to them, we would be in a better world. You know what I'm saying. But it be the stuff that's outside. What encouraging words do you give to the people that always got them things in front of them but that want to live in that?

Speaker 1:

righteous way, or help them come up with a routine or something you know what?

Speaker 3:

I'm saying the things that are in front of you you actually put in front of you by the thoughts that you think Right. So how you think creates how you feel. How you feel becomes your emotion. That's that routine Vibration becomes a magnet that attracts things to you. That's that routine. Vibration becomes a magnet that attracts things to you. That's that routine. And when you get one negative thought, replace it with 100 positive thoughts and have the discipline to sit and think those 100 positive thoughts to overwhelm that one negative thought until you change your frequency and you change your vibration Right.

Speaker 3:

And the last thing I want to say is so I think we got about maybe 15 minutes left or whatever.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I was about to.

Speaker 3:

I want to say this is important, right, it's important that we're not talking in possibilities, we're talking in actuality. Yeah, right, because I'm on it, I'm doing this for real, right? So what we gotta understand is, once we have that mindset, nothing stops us. We're already at war. The white man is clever. He wants you to think that oh, nigger, if you challenge me, I'm gonna step on you. You already stepped on me. What can you say? If you kill my wife? I don't care now, it's nothing you could. What are you talking about? What are we talking about? If you drown my kids and kill my brother? The offense has already happened, right, the violation has already taken place.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, they're thinking, they're mind-fucking you to make you think that, bro, when you turn on the TV and you see a police officer murder somebody that looks like you and me, it's already up, it's lit. What are we talking about? When you go in your hood and you see the corner stores and nobody look like you, and you look at businesses and nobody look like you, it's already up. When you go to the penitentiary and you see that there's no Chinese people I've been in prison for a long time. I've only seen one Chinese person in prison. How?

Speaker 1:

long you been in prison? Ten years.

Speaker 3:

So you want to tell me that Chinese people don't commit crimes. So when you Somebody here said they from Brooklyn, crown Heights, when you go to Crown Heights and you look at the neighborhood and you look at these motherfuckers looking like you're not even in Brooklyn anymore on Eastern Parkway, that's because there's no black contractor companies. We don't own shit, we keep just talking. So for me it's like I'm working and talking at the same time. Talking because I'm talking to somebody who thinks like me, who needs to hear me, to know that there's somebody out there that's like him, which is me, and then we're going to connect.

Speaker 1:

Are we doing?

Speaker 3:

it. That's what it's about.

Speaker 5:

World of the.

Speaker 2:

Most Podcast World of the Most Podcast Charlie got kids right.

Speaker 3:

He got a daughter. Somebody murdered his daughter.

Speaker 1:

Hey, let's pull a bro on the show real quick, you smart.

Speaker 3:

You smart. That was a pivot. That was a pivot.

Speaker 2:

That was a pivot. That was a pivot, that was a pivot. That was a pivot, that fast track yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, and I also wanted to touch on like a little bit of. We play a game called fast track.

Speaker 1:

Okay okay, that was a team.

Speaker 3:

Y'all professionals. Man, I threw the alley-oop and he caught it. Yeah, man, good play. You already know Good play, young man. Good play, young man. Yeah. So this is one of my OGs, this is one of my mentors. Respects unto somebody who was, uh, um, you know, a living legend, sturdy. Um, and you know, and we and we worked out, like like two weeks ago, right, and that's the one.

Speaker 1:

I said he a boxer in the background.

Speaker 3:

I pushed him, I pushed him, I pushed him to the limit right, because I needed. I wanted to see what. What does it look like to be at that age, is it still there? And he motivated me because I was trying to make him quit, right, and he just stepped up. I said, oh shit, okay, don't think old lines, paul, still don't break shit. You know what I'm?

Speaker 1:

saying Well, well, that's funny as hell. So you know.

Speaker 3:

So what y'all?

Speaker 1:

smart. No, no, no. So you know. So what y'all smart?

Speaker 3:

No, no, no, we was just working out, like you know working out and like you know doing, like little fight drills and things that are designed to test your mental strength, to test your durability, and typically, when you get his age, you can't do this type of shit. Yeah Right.

Speaker 6:

I work out every day though.

Speaker 3:

So to see him do it, it was just like it, let me know, like I got something to look forward to as I get older, right? So yeah, so, a businessman, owner, entrepreneur, martial artist, not just boxing, you know what I mean. You hear me?

Speaker 2:

Charlie's different Shut up.

Speaker 1:

Charlie man, I wanted to ask you one question Are you thinking about boxing again, though?

Speaker 3:

Oh, yeah, hell yeah, yeah, for sure, but again, so for me, I'm doing a community work, so it's like trying to build, so my plan is to have everything owned by us. Okay, whatever we do needs to be owned by us. Okay, because you know, we talk about Crown Heights, right, the people in Crown Heights, them Jews over there, the so-called Jews, they're dominating Like they own everything, right. And so let me say this real quick before and I want you to get to Charlie, let Charlie promote some shit, right, but real quick, mindset is important, right. So we talked about the mindset, right, using your mind to attract the life that you want to live, any life that you want to live, you can live with a proper mindset. How you think creates how you feel. How you feel becomes an emotion. That emotion becomes a vibration. That vibration becomes a magnet that attracts things to you. Our bodies produce chemicals. Our brain has neuromelanin in it. So when you think a particular way, you activate that neuromelanin, your body starts to produce chemicals, endorphins that have gravitational force.

Speaker 1:

You're talking about laws of attraction, bro Right, this is real shit, though, right.

Speaker 3:

So we speak things into existence. So when we start thinking about community, when we start thinking about ownership, when we start thinking about generational wealth now we're on that frequency, so understanding mindset is important. Next thing is self-reliance. We cannot do. This is why that part of the deen is important, right, allah gives us provision. So we have to ask Allah for provision and understand the power of provision, because through that provision we provide. So there's no way in hell. When you get married, you have to take, have obligations. As Muslim men. We supposed to take care of the whole. We're the head of the household. How can we be the head of our household and we're broke? So then? So what that means is, if there's an obligation for us to take care of the household, then there's an opportunity for us to create, to acquire the finances. That puts us in a position to take care of the household, and that's provision, right? So we don't understand that. That's why I'm always talking about money and ownership, because I can't take care of my family if I don't got shit. Right? So that's self-reliance. And then monetize, talk about products, goods, services.

Speaker 3:

Right Now, you guys got a podcast, right. Advertisement is the way you. Advertisement is the way you should be making. Cpm is Cost per million. The standardized CPM Is $20 per thousand views. But you have to get An IPA, which is an Intellectual property attorney, and they're gonna make sure they're gonna advocate For you to get your Just due, to get your standardized CPM, which is $20 Per thousand views You're giving out Gain.

Speaker 3:

In spite of Watch time and all that bullshit YouTube tried to hit you with. Then you have to get a POC, which is a point of contact with Google. So now your POC Talks directly with your IPA. Poc is point of contact. Ipa is intellectual property attorney. So now your POC is talking to your lawyer and your lawyer is like yo look, my man gotta get this, my man gotta get this, my man gotta get that. That's how you advocate to get your maximum Money on the ad.

Speaker 3:

Now the next thing is stop thinking about bigger companies, think about smaller companies. So now you got a video. Your video, let's say, this interview is 45 minutes an hour. Whatever, it is right.

Speaker 3:

Think about the video you have in video advertisement, on the video advertisement, before the video advertisement and after the video advertisement. So I'm gonna reach out to a small juice bar, like simply juice, and say, hey, there's a hundred thousand people that's gonna see this video, that don't know about your juice bar in Harlem, that's from Philly and guess what? I know you guys have a website and you sell things. I'm gonna charge you $25 to promote your, your business, on this video. That's your money. That's $25. So now, if you have five ad slots for $25, right, that's $125 that you generate per video, irregardless of views. So you should be making a minimum of $125 per video. So now, every 10 videos that you put out now, you're making $1,000 minimum, no matter what the views do, because you have relationships with the smaller companies who are paying advertisement dollars to be advertising to your audience who's watching your videos, doesn't matter how big you guys are.

Speaker 3:

And then now, over time, you'll start to grow. Now I still want to play.

Speaker 1:

Now now now.

Speaker 3:

Now as your, now, as your audience grows, now you have more leverage to raise the price on your advertisement. And then now, when you build more relationships with more smaller companies, you're not going to need the bigger companies. So that's important. That's monetized. The next thing is skill acquisition. Don, you're not going to need the bigger companies, that's right. So that's important, that's monetized. The next thing is skill acquisition.

Speaker 3:

Don't be afraid to learn new skills. You can learn anything. Don't be afraid to take an online course in advertisement. Don't be afraid to take an online course in selling. Don't be afraid to take an online course in business management. We have to understand infrastructure and we can't be afraid because we learn everything. We learn what new drip is popping, we learn what new slang is popping, we know what new weed, what new strand is popping, but we don't learn what new program and code that needs to be wrote wrote is popping, right? We don't understand computer science. We don't understand, uh, how to you know how to build things. You know in terms of. You know ai and augmented reality in artificial intelligence, right? So it's important.

Speaker 3:

There's a website called Pluralsightcom P-L-U-R-A-L-S-I-G-H-Tcom, pluralsightcom. There's another site called Lyndacom, l-y-n-d-acom. There's another site called Udemy, which is U-D-E-M-Ycom, and these are sites that teach you how to write code and teach you how to learn new skills. So we have to invest time, no matter how uncomfortable it feels. We have to invest time in learning new skills because with the new skill we're able to take advantage of what our ancestors died for. Technology is the reparation. Technology is our reparations. Technology is our reparations because it gives us the power and the tools to get maximum profitability without the oppressor. Okay, last point is fundraisers Technologies are reparation, we have to.

Speaker 3:

And technologies are reparation, because we're in the times of David and Goliath. Technology is the slingshot. That's the equalizer. The rock inside the slingshot is collaboration. Okay, but it has to be peer-to-peer. Stop looking for Jay-Z, stop looking for Meek Mill. Stop looking for Jay-Z. Stop looking for Meek Mill. Stop looking for Roc Nation, stop looking for 50 Cent. Stop looking for all these people that's above you and not next to you. Look for the brother that's sitting next to you, not the brother that's above you that you're looking up to. That's the peer-to-peer shit that we got to do.

Speaker 3:

Last point is fundraisers. Don't be afraid to raise fucking money. You guys got a podcast, right? No, you got to get a satellite. A satellite is $10 to $12 million. A radio tower is $200,000. The price of a nice car is what a radio tower is. So we can be on AM radio and FM radio, and once you get on fucking radio, you get on the airways. Now you have unlimited advertisement opportunities. Okay, so I wouldn't be able to do that if it wasn't for my man right here. You know and I'm not capping yeah, so, no, no, I'm being for real.

Speaker 6:

I'm being for real because, because, if it wasn't, you know if it wasn't for, if it wasn't for, if it wasn't for if it wasn't for my OGs I am.

Speaker 3:

There's plenty of times I didn't walk the park with him and we did pull-ups and I asked him questions. I pick your brain all the time.

Speaker 2:

What did he want to advertise?

Speaker 3:

you said Whatever you want to say, man, you know what I mean. I don't fucking know.

Speaker 1:

What you want to leave our viewers with man oh he got a movie out.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I don't want to know, he a boxer no no.

Speaker 1:

Martial artist. Martial artist, let me take that back. Any box I do 52 blocks.

Speaker 6:

I teach everything. I'm a personal trainer. I have about nine businesses right now that I own. I have a seafood spot, a deli juice bar.

Speaker 1:

Keep going.

Speaker 6:

My own personal gym downstairs. I'm about to open up a nightclub right now in Harlem. I have a pharmacy, I have an event space, I have a hair salon.

Speaker 2:

so I'm working Big bro for real. You know what?

Speaker 1:

you're doing Ali, I'm working. I'm working. Give the tips out on how you're able to work with all these different companies. If you see me call somebody big, bro on camera then you know it's big bro for real. I want you to give a few tips out on how you're actually able to manage and multitask and work with others.

Speaker 2:

And after you do that, say your Instagram name. So they can.

Speaker 6:

I'm not scared to spend money, there you go. If you can't invest in yourself, who's going to invest in you? You know what I'm saying. So I give out money. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

So I just be working. Man, Tell them your.

Speaker 6:

Instagram name. What about C-W-H-T-B-O-T-U-T-C at y'allcom? You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

What's your?

Speaker 6:

Instagram name Mr Head Tap.

Speaker 2:

Mr Head Tap. Mr Head Tap Harlem. Yo, Mr Head Tap Harlem. Mr Head Tap Make sure y'all tap in with Mr Head Tap.

Speaker 6:

Harlem, make sure y'all tap in with Mr Head. Tap man. This is my fighting line right here.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. Get your head tapped After you've done what you're saying we're going to bring White Boy in to do the game we be playing.

Speaker 3:

I think what's so great about what he's able to do is he's able to bridge the gap. Everybody always asks like, like, how do you bridge the gap? Right, he bridges the gap because when I look at him, I see what I want to be right see right. So even though you know he has all these businesses, he's right, he's in shape, got respect in the hood. I'm like man, I got respect in the hood, right, but he's older so it's like he's before me Right, I'm like damn Mastermind.

Speaker 3:

Or just a mastermind? Okay, how you? I'm asking him questions, right? And those are the things that fuel me and I think a lot of times the older generation Don't know how to reach the younger generation. You can't reach the younger generation Running your mouth. Charlie's a man of few words right right, I talk him on the phone not long.

Speaker 3:

Your eye right, right and it's like he moving, so I can look to him for that I can look to him, for that motivation, because he moving and when I watch him watch, okay, watch. That's why I'm gonna check the temperature. We're gonna do let me see, let me see, let me see the physical, let me see what's going on. This motherfucker in shape too Damn. He's serious with it and that's what motivates me. So, for all the older people that watch this, stop trying to tell the youngins what to do and show them how to do it.

Speaker 2:

Amen Amen.

Speaker 1:

I say that's the best way to go about it.

Speaker 2:

Hey yo, white boy, Come do this fast track. Hey yo, Mr, I don't know about it. Hey yo, white boy, Come do this fast track.

Speaker 6:

Hey yo.

Speaker 2:

Mr Head Tech Harlem on Instagram.

Speaker 6:

Tap in right now, man we at his juice bar.

Speaker 3:

Right now, the juice bar Instagram. Make sure y'all come to the juice bar. I can't say it on camera, you know what I'm saying, but yeah, we gonna talk, we gonna talk, I mean we talking Fast track.

Speaker 4:

that's like a little game that I play. You just pick one or the other, something fast, Not really too much thinking in it.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 4:

So it is. We're going to start here.

Speaker 3:

Malcolm X or Farrakhan. Malcolm X, many percent, and see, the thing about it is it's like this, right. So you know, farrakhan made a lot of mistakes in a situation with Malcolm and Malcolm made a lot of mistakes as well, right, and what happens is when you inspire someone that has nothing, a lot of times they can surpass the student, can surpass the teacher, because the teacher has taken for granted the information and you, it's like when you're born muslim versus converting. I'm the only muslim in my family, right. Right. So you know, malcolm was so motivated right by the nation that his dedication led him to the chinks in the armor, right, and I just didn't like how Farrakhan handled that situation at that time. However, in terms of like, malcolm found out about the wives and the underage pregnant girls and stuff like that and he wanted to have a conversation first and whatever, and Farrakhan, you know kind of, you know impromptu, you know, delivered the information to Elijah. But again, farrakhan is important and the work he's done is important, but I definitely got to go with malcolm um on that one and I just wish those brothers would have had a little bit more foresight so they could have avoided, you know, malcolm losing his life and I felt like malcolm.

Speaker 3:

I was so disappointed when I seen an interview with malcolm said I'm already a dead man because he spoke death over himself. Right, and sometimes I feel like, or at times in my life I felt like Malcolm, but I would have left the nation. I would have never given the man power to cast a death spell over me by accepting death because the opposition seemed so strong. Yeah, right. So I believe that Malcolm, you know, was necessary and Farrakhan is still necessary, but we have to understand that when you have a message, you got to be the message, okay, and you have to ask Allah for the strength to actually be the message when the lights is on and when the lights is off, and Malcolm was striving for that. Malcolm was so honest and pure in his approach, right, right. So, man, I just I still feel that was a major loss for us.

Speaker 4:

Um, yeah, yeah, so yeah, all right. This, uh, this one right here. Law harlem based music um bloodshed or big l can't go against harlem man.

Speaker 3:

Harlem will go against harlem man. So that's what I'm saying. Harlem will go against harlem man. I'm saying both of them, man. So that's what I'm saying. Harlem will go against Harlem man. You know what I'm saying? Both of them man.

Speaker 4:

Both of them. Wow, double up, wow, yeah, yeah, yeah, you know what I'm saying Both legends. Both you know really living, they raps.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying. Yeah, you know what I'm saying. 4e for Lennox Danger Zone, right, I mean. So, yeah, we, not. You know, harlem don't go against Harlem man. So both of them, you know what I mean. Okay, both of them, you know what.

Speaker 4:

I mean, you know what I'm saying. They both got to get on the nose off man, all right, and. No animals coming to us right Lions and wolves.

Speaker 3:

You know what I mean. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4:

So all right, that was more new york based. Still music, okay, uh, jada kiss or styles man, that's I mean.

Speaker 3:

It's like saying salt or pepper man okay if you had to pick one man, man, it's, it's man.

Speaker 3:

You know, okay, man oof, you know kiss, kiss got the delivery. You know, jada, delivery. I mean jada, mean Jada, see Jada's like a chainsaw. Style won't talk to you Like this shit, don't? I mean it's like style's going to talk to you. Shoot him in the head. Hope you're looking forward to die. Hope you're ready for the shot to the head or the sword in your eye. You, the shit. I'm the lord of the flies. Bitch, bitch, nigga Got beef, saying now I'ma load up, come towards you with knives, I spray you and your man, the coupe and the van, the office and the studio, wherever you stand. I don't wanna be the king of the coast. Feds watch it. Gotta look a little dirty.

Speaker 3:

When you sling your dope. I sold drugs for real. Oh, no Style, no style, I mean Style. You know what I mean. Style's like they both Style. You know what I mean Style's? Like ah, they both. That's kind of like man.

Speaker 4:

You don't know, you can't pick one.

Speaker 3:

I can't pick one. It's hard, yeah, man.

Speaker 4:

I'm cooking you with the fast track.

Speaker 3:

You're cooking me with this one man. Pause. I mean man, like that's man style.

Speaker 2:

I mean because you know it's like ah man, what else you got the last one?

Speaker 3:

That's the last one right here.

Speaker 4:

Fuck Nitty or some basketball shit. All right basketball shit, damn.

Speaker 3:

Okay, basketball, I can do a little more. Ruthless man, get heads, get to it, man.

Speaker 2:

Yo, I'm going for the Boston. We got it, we got it.

Speaker 3:

I'm going for Boston, man, right now. We got it.

Speaker 4:

We got the Knicks be shitty, the Knicks be skinny and the Allen Houston.

Speaker 3:

my man Shout out to Allen Allen.

Speaker 4:

Houston crazy.

Speaker 2:

I got one more, bro. You know what I'm saying. You know what I'm saying. I need you to answer this one though, bro, All right.

Speaker 1:

Go ahead. Nah, I'm going to tell you why. I know nah.

Speaker 4:

Stack Mundo's from Far Walk Away. I'm going to tell you why, Nah listen, Listen.

Speaker 3:

Like I had a relationship with Stack. Okay, okay, and I had a relationship with um. Rest in peace, uh, lord Superb. Lord Superb used to write or ghost write or help ghost race killer. Lord Superb from Far Rock, okay. You know what I'm saying? Uh, a little suburban. Uh, ben hill, it's my bunkie and we got really cool and tight, I mean. And then he helped me with the relationship, um, uh, with stack and stack was just phenomenal, like stack, stack engineered too a lot of people know that I didn't know that he would record itself a lot of them records you're on the mixtape recorded engineer himself, right, I think?

Speaker 4:

I heard jim jones say that before that never wrote like.

Speaker 3:

wrote Like Stack was Stack man, stack Bundle was different, but Max B.

Speaker 4:

You know, before A Boogie everything you hear with Lil Baby. That's Max B, all right, no, you know what I'm saying Like that's Max All right?

Speaker 2:

no, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Everything you hear everything you hear with Lil Wayne, but then realized that Lil Wayne got all his inspiration from Harlem. Yeah, so the tree.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, from Jewels and all that.

Speaker 3:

But Jewels and all that, that shit, that's max. Yeah, I mean so you got to understand, he wavy for real, you know what I'm saying, yeah. We know, so it's like they both so-.

Speaker 4:

Instrumental.

Speaker 3:

Impactful in so many ways because then flows and shit like that is what the artist Rob Markman. He ain't going to pick. Nobody, rob Markman Like now.

Speaker 1:

Rob.

Speaker 4:

Markman, I can't. I'm saying that now, rob Markman.

Speaker 1:

We can't get you to pick not one Ferris car. Rob Markman, all right, all right.

Speaker 2:

We're going to go old school, mesa or Cam'ron.

Speaker 3:

Rob.

Speaker 1:

Markman. Damn how you do this, rob.

Speaker 6:

Mark, let me leave with this man, yeah, man Let me leave with this man.

Speaker 3:

I know you're feeling it. I'm ain't home with the Spittas man. Sometimes I feel like a motherless child. Sometimes I feel like a motherless child, no support from my mother. Sometimes I wish I would have came from a different pussy C-section. Even in birth she didn't push me. Every other week you got a new man in the house. You got the nerd to point to him like he the man of the house, and they all want me to call him dad. They all wanted me to call him dad.

Speaker 3:

I grow confused, got beat, towers, black and blue and you wonder why I'm in school acting a fool, cutting class, picking fights. Couldn't follow the rules. Free lunch won't cut it. I'm still hungry, need food, hooked up with Daryl Selling weed. Now, mama, I'm making moves. Yeah, mama, I'm making moves.

Speaker 3:

You put a pen's warming out, left me in the system. Plus, you ain't called back Dang love, what you call that. If you ain't want a son, mama shit. If you ain't want a son, mama shit. You should have left me in that bull sack.

Speaker 3:

Two sides to the story, but I ain't having it. Too many demons inside I got to battle with Fuck whoever trying to play devil's advocate. Y'all don't understand how real this is. I was just a kid. Five had to look my mama in the eye, half sleep, half high. And you wonder why I'm outside smoking weed, pistol in my pocket, throwing up gang sign. You a junkie mama? How you going to man respect? I guess you beat me because I look like the man that left a spitting image of my daddy. Huh, that's why you slap me. Can none please you? You ain't never happy. Straight a's on report cards getting ripped Christmas birthdays. I ain't get shit. Every man I see you with call you bitch. This is what I deal with. Yeah, this is what I deal with. Sometimes I feel like a motherless child. Sometimes I feel like a motherless child. It feels like God cursed me and my brothers Because all I do is suffer and the pain came from my mother. A rose won't grow from this. Concrete Roots getting poured out, pedals getting stepped on. You came home high, beat me half to death.

Speaker 3:

You said that I slept wrong. Bloody tampons, empty bottles of liquor, cracked barrels on the same bed I slept on. How the fuck could I sleep wrong? You got me laying on a bed. I could barely even sleep on. Bottles on the floor, roaches on the wall. I'm looking at the sky.

Speaker 3:

Like a law deserved more, but God gave me this talent. All I wanted was love. Father wanted to fuck mother thought it was love. I'm a king, not a nigga. Please, lord, make a misty one to trigger squeeze. Focus on becoming what I gotta be Born drunk billiard crew, cold, filled with Hennessy Dope in my mama vein.

Speaker 3:

Pass to the first seed. Lord, am I worthy? If so, then please Tell me why my mama tryna curse me. Mama gettin' high daddy, friend fuckin' her Praying she askin' God. Why that man keep touchin' her.

Speaker 3:

Forced to wear a smile when you wanna frown. Hard to go to school, look your teachers in the eyes when you wanna die. Got blood in her panties. Her period ain't come yet. Forced her mother don't see her daughter. Just another check had two abortions. Told the doctor she gon' keep the third. Kicked out the shelter with a baby. Now she on a curb, a man 35, she was only 12, going to church in search of heaven. But find that hell, cause the preacher wanna fuck too. She get molested by the ones she look up to Her mind framed in her heart it's like fuck you, cause it's hard to go to God when the preacher wanna fuck too. She get molested by the ones she look up to. Yo, it's the Realty. Most Podcast. It's the Realty. God want a preacher, want a fuck too. She get molested by the one she look up to. Yo, yo.

Speaker 1:

It's the.

Speaker 4:

Real of the Most Podcast. It's the Real of the Most Podcast. Make sure y'all share.

Speaker 1:

Like, subscribe Comment and hit the notification button Really appreciate you For bringing us to your home.

Speaker 2:

Shout out, charlie. Mr Headtack, harlem, follow. Follow the smart guy On Instagram Muleman. Go check him out On behalf of Real of the Most. Bro, you are now a part of the Real of the.

Speaker 3:

Most family man. I got to stick him off the phone man.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, man, I got to stick him off the phone.

Speaker 3:

man, that's a teacher too man Real of the Most, we Real of the Most Real of the Most podcast and we all know I appreciate you, man, take us out.

Speaker 2:

I got Cash, white Boy.

Speaker 1:

Smart guy we in Harlem right now.

Speaker 2:

Shout out the whole gang who came Lean V E Quan.

Speaker 4:

Fetty.

Speaker 2:

Manny Rue Meech.

Speaker 4:

The whole gang. I ain't missing nobody. We wouldn't be shit without the team.

Speaker 5:

Y'all already know.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to the most family man. Comment subscribe.

Speaker 1:

I'm Rilla, I'm Cash, I'm White boy d2e it's the realest podcast, simply simply juicing, oh wait wait wait, you can't exit like that simply juicing man in Harlem right now, man 1469, 5th avenue, man 1469 5th avenue. I'm cash, I'm white boy d2e and we got smart in the building and we out.

Speaker 4:

It's the Will of the.

Speaker 1:

Moose podcast we out of here.

Speaker 4:

Will of the Moose podcast.

Industry Experiences and Personal Growth
Self-Healing and Mindset Maintenance
Empowering Financial Growth and Ownership
Empowerment and Religion in the Community
Religion, Power, and Community Building
Revolutionary Action and Mobilization
Gender Dynamics in Black Community
Masculinity, Submission, and Empowerment
Empowerment Through Community Ownership
Harlem Legends and Cultural Influence
Real of the Most Podcast Jive

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