Realer Than Most Podcast

WHAT'S THE CATEGORY ? | RTM PODCAST EP.18

July 21, 2024 @Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash
WHAT'S THE CATEGORY ? | RTM PODCAST EP.18
Realer Than Most Podcast
More Info
Realer Than Most Podcast
WHAT'S THE CATEGORY ? | RTM PODCAST EP.18
Jul 21, 2024
@Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash

Send us a Text Message.

Have you ever thought about the real impact of fame on young artists? Join us on this gripping episode of "Realer than Most" as we recount our unforgettable experiences at the Roots Picnic Festival. From rubbing elbows with our favorite rappers to OG Meach stepping into the spotlight, this episode is packed with personal stories and shout-outs to our loyal fans and influential figures like Leem 7th Street. We even showcase our latest musical project with Shady Black and celebrate the powerful panels at the festival, featuring voices like Mont Brown and Beans.

But it’s not all celebration and music. We tackle the tough realities behind the glitzy façade of fame, focusing on the recent arrest of Sean Kingston. We dissect his career from his early hit "Beautiful Girls" to the pressures that come with maintaining a lavish lifestyle. This leads us to a broader discussion on authenticity in the music industry and the pitfalls of achieving fame without a typical upbringing. We also confront the harsh truths of the justice system and the media's role in sensationalizing stories while ignoring the deeper issues, exemplified by the controversies surrounding figures like Diddy.

As we navigate these intense topics, we also share our emotional journeys and the transformative impact of our podcast. We reflect on the lessons we've learned and our commitment to guiding the youth away from negative influences. With heartfelt gratitude, we thank our listeners for their unwavering support, which has inspired us to stay true to ourselves and use our platform for positive change. Tune in for a compelling mix of personal stories, industry insights, and a deep dive into the complex world of fame and authenticity.

Support the Show.

Realer Than Most Podcast
Exclusive access to premium content!
Starting at $3/month Subscribe
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Send us a Text Message.

Have you ever thought about the real impact of fame on young artists? Join us on this gripping episode of "Realer than Most" as we recount our unforgettable experiences at the Roots Picnic Festival. From rubbing elbows with our favorite rappers to OG Meach stepping into the spotlight, this episode is packed with personal stories and shout-outs to our loyal fans and influential figures like Leem 7th Street. We even showcase our latest musical project with Shady Black and celebrate the powerful panels at the festival, featuring voices like Mont Brown and Beans.

But it’s not all celebration and music. We tackle the tough realities behind the glitzy façade of fame, focusing on the recent arrest of Sean Kingston. We dissect his career from his early hit "Beautiful Girls" to the pressures that come with maintaining a lavish lifestyle. This leads us to a broader discussion on authenticity in the music industry and the pitfalls of achieving fame without a typical upbringing. We also confront the harsh truths of the justice system and the media's role in sensationalizing stories while ignoring the deeper issues, exemplified by the controversies surrounding figures like Diddy.

As we navigate these intense topics, we also share our emotional journeys and the transformative impact of our podcast. We reflect on the lessons we've learned and our commitment to guiding the youth away from negative influences. With heartfelt gratitude, we thank our listeners for their unwavering support, which has inspired us to stay true to ourselves and use our platform for positive change. Tune in for a compelling mix of personal stories, industry insights, and a deep dive into the complex world of fame and authenticity.

Support the Show.

Speaker 2:

my name is Rilla.

Speaker 3:

I'm Cash.

Speaker 2:

I'm white boy D2A. Welcome to the Rilla the most podcast shout out, shout out got OG Meeks in the building actually uh co-host with us today you know what I mean? Yep because, we can't call them no guests. Man, we really got like family here harry potter he'd be helping us he'd be

Speaker 3:

on the board I'll be seeing a lot of you older cats under view saying all that. We got an old head with us today, so maybe he could battle for y'all. Fight for y'all, you feel me, Since we all you know, I'm after the pagers and shit he ain't.

Speaker 6:

What's up?

Speaker 3:

with my boys. Man, I'm chilling man.

Speaker 6:

How you feeling, bro? I'm feeling good yo. I ain't going to lie the pie. It feel good yo. If I could really be honest. It's feeling like we picking up. Tell me about it we getting more guests, right, I'm kind of like yeah, notice them streets and shit, so that shit. Like you know what I'm saying, yeah, shit changing a little bit.

Speaker 2:

Fake celebrity.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, fake celebrity type shit, oh my.

Speaker 2:

God that shit crazy.

Speaker 3:

I ain't going gonna hold you. I wanted to go around before I start really talking. But I actually got stories and all that on how I know the pot picking up, bro, like same thing. White Boy said we be with each other a lot. And then there's certain things that I like been through on my own out here, like my favorite rapper of all time, philly, walking up to me like Cash, what's up, like shit. Like that, bro, like it's like. But I got a couple stories, but I want to go around the room, man.

Speaker 2:

I mean man from studio sessions to doing this pod to being out at events. Man, the dates is getting tight, man.

Speaker 4:

Real tight.

Speaker 6:

We need more hours in a day.

Speaker 2:

Oh man, it's not enough.

Speaker 4:

It ain't enough.

Speaker 2:

It's not enough, man. Hey Meek, how you feeling right now?

Speaker 7:

It's 2 o'clock in real time right now I'm feeling good, vibibing with my guys.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, right.

Speaker 7:

On the podcast.

Speaker 4:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 7:

I'm always here behind the scenes, but Facts it's different. Yeah, it's different.

Speaker 3:

In front I ain't going to lie, man. Og Meek said he been getting all types of words about the pod Shout out to Liam 7th Street. He's been saying people have been in me as well, hitting him up, and all that. I'm just glad that we're here, man, hey man.

Speaker 2:

What you want to talk about, man.

Speaker 3:

We're about 10 or 11 episodes in, if I'm not mistaken, another round of applause for that man For real.

Speaker 6:

Might be a little more than that. Might be like 13, 14. We might be up there bro, right now I ain't going to lie.

Speaker 2:

I stopped counting for real Rob Markman, 3'4" man, it's a couple in a tuck man we still ain't even put out. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Rob Markman 3'all. We've been grinding so much I got the same shirts on for like three, four episodes.

Speaker 1:

I'm just changing.

Speaker 3:

I'm changing my shirt Keeping the shirts on. We working, bro. It's like you on the block bro.

Speaker 2:

Networking and working man, it's quick as long as you making this thing count. Man, yeah, man, yeah man.

Speaker 3:

I ain't going to lie, let's just Get straight to it. No, let's play him the real of the moment. You feel me? My man manifested this man.

Speaker 2:

He got a song where he real of the moment, he too humble.

Speaker 3:

He not going to tell y'all.

Speaker 2:

It's a song with Shady Black. Shout out, shady Black. Shout out Trish.

Speaker 3:

Shout out Trish, shout out Trish. Shady Black. Shout out Shady Black. Shout out Trish of the Shady. Shout out Trish of the Shady.

Speaker 7:

I got the song Fire too.

Speaker 4:

Fire.

Speaker 2:

I feel like I want to play partial Shady part and then play partial my part.

Speaker 4:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

I don't really want to do Shady like that.

Speaker 3:

Okay, all right.

Speaker 2:

Bet, bet, but then you can go straight to that part of the song on my side.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Champagne vibes man Corolla Shady Black, let's get it, man.

Speaker 1:

We going to give y'all some of this man Watch. It wasn't sure. Got way more back in the check and bought more, and that's really how you stand on a suckin keep him. So I ain't really down for you. For real, they keep his school. That's everything I built in my life. Even the store got caught up being shady without being some boys.

Speaker 5:

I don't dub shit. That's what I say. I ain't cool, I ain't mean it yeah.

Speaker 2:

Facts. I be playing them close Wow.

Speaker 1:

Now go, now go, now go.

Speaker 2:

Better know it. Better know it, you broke. You know that's the rich side 300 for the bow.

Speaker 4:

you know that's the rich side 13 for the runners.

Speaker 2:

grab two on my best side. All my niggas on, go they waiting on standby when I'm from it ain't safe to talk on that landline, all that talking online. They spawning. Your man died Nigga walking through the hood he stepped on the landmine.

Speaker 6:

You better know it. Oh man, it's the realtor most podcast man. I want to give a shout out to the roots picnic for killing this weekend, man crazy weekend.

Speaker 2:

I ain't gonna.

Speaker 6:

Let's get right into it it was a um the roots con. It was at the, the Fillmore. They had a panel. Mont Brown spoke, beans had spoke. It was good, bro, I really liked it. I really liked that. I like Philadelphia getting noticed. I like that we getting noticed, the Roots Picnic being one of the biggest festivals in the world. You know what I'm saying so like just being um, just being in that mix. Man, it felt good. It felt good. Cash, you was in the mix too, man.

Speaker 2:

What's up, man?

Speaker 4:

yo man how was your experience?

Speaker 2:

was that your first time?

Speaker 3:

Yes, yes, and I ain't gonna hold you, man. Y'all remember the Eagles Winning chip.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, imagine that.

Speaker 3:

Times five. Yeah.

Speaker 6:

I know, I know what you mean Like bro that was on me crazy.

Speaker 3:

If you from Philly, you know, like when you on like 42nd and then you take Parkside and it's that park, people don't know that shit go from west all the way to north. The whole thing was packed 30,000, 40,000 people.

Speaker 4:

Yes, sir.

Speaker 3:

They had all these different stages, they had podcast stages, they had music. The biggest artist, the artist in the middle, the older artists, like Cam Robbins, was on a different stage than Gunna and Lil Wayne was on a different stage. You feel me, but, man, I ain't never been around that much people in my life. Man, for real, I want to give a big shout out to Manny 205 because Shout out to Manny man Shout out to Manny.

Speaker 2:

We shout Manny out every show because that's crazy. Brother Manny is a brother to us.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And he really a big part of really the most. Yeah, to be honest with y'all.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's facts. He taking me out my Element I.

Speaker 3:

Don't Do this bubble. And they got me networking and all that so not to spend all along on this shit, but shit was jumping out of control. We paid our little fees to get in the VIP section and all that and I met so many. I met Scarface the rapper. I met Anne-Marie. I met shout out, don't call me white girl Mona, shout out her. Tom Fowl, shout out her. I met Charlie Mack, fresh out the limo, feel me, shout out Charlie Mack. I met Wayne, you feel me. I met Mina, mina, say what. I met fucking so many tom fowles, young barbecue. Uh, kill sing, I think her name is that's tiara whack dj. I met so many fucking people there, bro and shout out you me. And r&b, shout out the person. Crew love that made the man. It was lit man and I ain't going to lie.

Speaker 2:

Was there any advice from any of those people?

Speaker 3:

Hell yeah, shout out Mona. Rocky too, shout out Rocky. Yeah, I asked Mona some real shit and we look at y'all's family, so I'm going to say shit like this, like I basically asked her, like yo, like, when you like bumping heads with your co-host with some advice, cause you know we men, so we gonna bump heads like we brothers, and then we going but, I basically asked her like is it like a certain method we could like start doing to be you know what I mean as co-host?

Speaker 3:

and she just said like look as long as y'all all headed to the same direction.

Speaker 1:

She said I don't do co-hosts.

Speaker 3:

But Tom Files was telling me and she was telling me as long as y'all do it the right way and keep it coming like y'all- good. Because Philadelphia is loved.

Speaker 2:

I can be honest, like doing the pod, like just to speak on that, like making the pod doing the pod, I feel like things is getting a little bit easier and easier every time we do our set.

Speaker 3:

The chemistry man, the chemistry, the chemistry, but shout out, man the Roots. Picnic was excellent. Black Thought. Questlove Shout out to Hoosie. Gotta shout them out.

Speaker 1:

Yeah they do these.

Speaker 6:

That's so sick, like I. I'm talking about us in this room right now Because, like we transitioning Right and that's like they give us an outlet To transition, To help further Our transition. You know, what I'm saying, so we gotta shout them out.

Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 6:

Because that's big bro, that festival man Like this is my third year.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 6:

You know, what I'm saying. Like the first year I went, it blew my mind you know, what I mean. So I've been back ever since, yeah. So, I know that feeling.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you know what I'm saying. And I also met Wayne. You look this way. That was crazy. You look this way.

Speaker 6:

It's somebody you look this way. It's somebody else who look in front of you. It's somebody coming towards you Like this, so it's just like yeah, it's the place to be.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you know what?

Speaker 6:

I mean For sure.

Speaker 3:

Yeah man, yeah man. Y'all got any takes on it?

Speaker 2:

I mean, I really, I really don't have too much to say.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

The Roots, I know.

Speaker 3:

Explain it to her.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's the Roots, it's the.

Speaker 3:

Roots, it's the Picnic man.

Speaker 2:

It was real. If this is one of those things Like if you missed it, then you missed it.

Speaker 7:

You know, I be missing it every year, every year, I say I'm going to the Roots Picnic. Never go, damn, I'm dragging you. Next year, I got you, I'm dragging you next year Shut up the Roots picnic man.

Speaker 6:

I said this to somebody there. I said I said, if we keep working Like we working, we going to be on the bill Next year. Oh, hell yeah so like hell yeah yeah, man, I just like want to keep pushing in the right direction bro wait and cash.

Speaker 2:

I don't want to fly past that. You met little wayne, right? Yes, I'm like how was it? Like I ain't gonna matter of fact how do you even feel about little wayne as an artist, do you like uh?

Speaker 3:

uh, top five theater alive. But so when you sure, was wayne, like the that you thought he was yeah, yeah, like he, really like wayne, got his own weird way of being wayne and I knew that just from being a fan of rap from him. Like you could tell, his mindset is like all the way out this world he don't think like everybody, don't talk like everybody, he don't dress like everybody, he don't look like everybody and it's.

Speaker 6:

It's crazy because, like, I didn't start like fully respecting that until, like, I start fully being myself, exactly like that.

Speaker 3:

That is really a flex that Exactly Like that shit is really a flex that Wayne can really be who he want to be Wait, wait, wait what you mean being yourself.

Speaker 6:

Nah, bro, we just come from like. We come from the environments where, like, everybody do the same thing and just make it cool.

Speaker 6:

So, like certain things that I used to do back then it wasn't cool to do but I used to still do them. But it's just not cool to do, like how I used to dress. Like I was wearing vans and oh six and chain belts and and oh five and shit like that. When it wasn't cool, everybody was wearing rockerwear to a state property, like we was on a tail end of that bro, my jeans was from the get and shit like that right and like until I started like fully embracing, like who I was and the things that I fully liked.

Speaker 6:

Then that's when I start like understanding like fully who Wayne is and shit, and start like, okay, like he's so unique that like you know what I'm saying he really like ushered in a sound that people was frowned upon. Like they called it. They called it gibberish.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you know what I mean.

Speaker 6:

So the more I start respecting my individuality, I respect his.

Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 3:

Oh, that's real, that's real. Because a lot of people don't even think like that. But he was the first rapper. I think that made it cool to be yourself no no real, real rap man like this buster rhymes and all that, but he the one who took it like and all that, but he, the one who took it out, the Fucking Fleever Fleave.

Speaker 7:

He was different. Nobody was being like him. That's what I'm about to say he's not really a real rapper, but he got songs with people.

Speaker 3:

He was one of the biggest rap groups ever too.

Speaker 7:

He had to come up on the stage and rap Especially with a big-ass clock.

Speaker 2:

Yeah no, you killed that man. What y'all want to, Especially with a big ass clock, yeah, yeah no, white bro, you killed that man. Yeah, but um.

Speaker 3:

What y'all wanna get into man.

Speaker 2:

Oh man, we could go this way, that way, like I ain't gonna talk, you wanna speak on the fraud shit?

Speaker 4:

No.

Speaker 6:

I mean we could. I look at it like let's just talk, yeah, let's just talk.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I like to speak on what's going on With Sean Kingston. You know what's up with that.

Speaker 3:

Um he got arrested right For. For all Stuff and everything.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, well, it's when cap and catch up to you. That's what I call it, mmm.

Speaker 3:

Mmm, when cap and catch up to you, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Mmm, he's got his mom in there.

Speaker 7:

That shit too right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, his mom in there.

Speaker 6:

All right, sean Kingston, you my guy, so I know you probably might know, maybe not. His last hit was when we're going to say like 2000. I was going to say 10. I was gonna say 10. I was gonna give him 10.

Speaker 3:

No 9 9.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, okay, cool. So for like the last 14, 15 years, bro, he just been capping, trying to keep up with his Trying to keep up with his Trying to keep up with the Joneses, bro. I'm telling you, bro, you go city to city, bro, burning niggas for pints and shit like that, bro. You just be capping bro. You know what I'm saying, bro.

Speaker 2:

And it's just come to a point where you know when you're running over and you, like you don't want to let it go.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, like when capping catch up to you, bro. It's just when capping catch up to you. But, what happened to him Poppin', then I ain't hear Nothing else, no more.

Speaker 3:

That's when you like. They say you start.

Speaker 6:

Trying to be gangsta. Not even that, though. Like you start, you start to Indulge In too many, in too many Personal leisures. You know what I'm saying? Whereas though it take you off your game and you look up and you ain't had a hit In 14 years and you still Trying to roll around in the latest car, with the latest and the latest watch and not mean when you do that you got to make your payments on time you know what I'm saying?

Speaker 4:

that's just what happens?

Speaker 2:

yeah, I mean so yeah that's what happened, I feel we call, we call that, we call that we call that that was one of the best songs ever.

Speaker 3:

We call that the CCU.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, I mean the CCU.

Speaker 2:

I ain't going to lie bro. Have you seen the song I?

Speaker 3:

always. I'm not going to say I give them slack, but whenever a person was like a teenager or like under 21 and make it. There's a lot of pressure bro.

Speaker 6:

It is.

Speaker 3:

And he probably had that type of pressure. You feel what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

I don't know when he made Beautiful Girls, but he had a couple hits after that, but all I know is I started seeing them around.

Speaker 6:

the Caucasian pop type of they went from Justin Bieber From them all the way to fucking.

Speaker 3:

2012 and 13, when Chief Keef dropped foreign cars featuring Soulja Boy, sean Kingston was in it. That's what they said. Sean Kingston started hanging with and got like that with Soulja Boy.

Speaker 6:

Nah man.

Speaker 3:

That's what they said.

Speaker 6:

Nah bro. Nah bro, you can't.

Speaker 3:

That's what they said.

Speaker 6:

It ain't come out until what, when Chief Keef came out.

Speaker 3:

No, I said that's they said. When Sean Kingston started acting like that, he was hanging with Soulja Boy.

Speaker 6:

That's what I said oh, soulja Boy, yeah, oh, okay, yeah, soulja.

Speaker 3:

Boy, that's who.

Speaker 6:

I.

Speaker 3:

I thought you said Chief Keef no, I'm about to say no, no, no. But yeah, I started seeing sean kingston with like it could like soldier boy and all types of like that, and then he got to like the other side.

Speaker 3:

To me, like when he came out, beautiful girls was a pop record right then three, four years later you're seeing him in chief keith videos and soldier boy videos like that look like. To me is like the crowds were around, type shit, you feel me, but I remember like I don't know if y'all know what fake watch busters is but I remember he just kept he just kicked, he just kept getting caught on that but that's what I'm saying, that's thank you. No, that's why, when you said that and I meant what I get, what you were saying- right right but man, I ain't gonna hold you.

Speaker 3:

I'm pretty, I'm not sure when Sean Kingston popped off With Beautiful Girls, but I ain't gonna lie, bro. Like when you Got on as a kid, bro, and you never went through that Like graduating High school, then Seeing if you gonna go to college, if you went to college, you struggled and that, like have you never been through that regular American lifestyle, john? And as time go on, you get popping or you doing this, that and the third, but you never went through them responsibilities and all that. I feel as though you're going to crash, bro. That I feel as though you're gonna crash, bro. I feel, I feel it. I feel as though you're gonna crash because, like you ain't, you ain't, your life wasn't as the normal person.

Speaker 6:

You feel what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

You never really went through anything yeah, yeah, like I think I think that's, I think that's was would be making all the people like act a certain way. Who was child actors. But yeah, man, I ain't gonna hold you bro. Like, like I, bro, it's like this is the shit that I be saying like really really need to get talked about, bro. Like for real, for real, bro. It seem like everybody who really got more and this ain't going to the conversation we just was talking about this, some whole other shit I'm talking about.

Speaker 4:

Appreciate you, my boy.

Speaker 6:

You always making me look good.

Speaker 3:

You already know. You already know I ain't gonna lie bro when they be like all the real niggas, like Deirdre, in jail. How? Y'all feel about that when they say that Not to just go to another subject like this, but we got so many guests that we never get to talk about shit like this.

Speaker 2:

That's pertaining to people like lifestyles and certain people lives, because you know that saying right there come from people like that been through a lot.

Speaker 1:

You know, like.

Speaker 2:

So it'd be a person that lost a brother, a person who friend in jail you know what I'm saying and they the realest people in their lives. You know what? I mean. Their dad probably in jail. You know what I mean. So they might say, man, the realest niggas either dead or in jail man.

Speaker 3:

I don't know who the fuck with. You know why I asked that. You know what I'm saying. You know why I asked that, bro, when you say something like like motherfuckers, be like taking care of your mama, moving her out the hood family, I don't know. That's gangster, right. That's being real, right. So how's the people in jail real?

Speaker 6:

are you? Get what I'm saying that's why I was sitting here quiet. I'm gonna be honest, bro, that's why I was sitting here quiet, because, like remember, when I was saying about like we gotta uh, deprogram ourselves to reprogram ourselves, all that that we was taught, bro, that was bro, yeah, we can't cash none of that yeah, that's why you can't follow nobody, like you know what I'm nobody.

Speaker 2:

You gotta make your own path.

Speaker 6:

No bullshit bro. All that shit we was taught bro, all that shit I was taught bro, that shit had me waste 20 years of my life on the corner, bro, like hugging a block. I thought you was gonna say a jail bro.

Speaker 2:

I thought you did top like wild love I might as well.

Speaker 6:

I might as well, cause I've been, he's at it. I might as well because I've been in block for 20 fucking years.

Speaker 4:

You see what I'm saying, bro.

Speaker 6:

Or the mentality. Yeah, Like you know what I'm saying bro Could have lost your life.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 6:

So that's why I be like man. That shit be bullshit, bro. Like I wish I was able a little earlier so I could have transitioned a little earlier. But you know, it's all a cut of love, Like everything happened for a reason.

Speaker 3:

Now Meech, what you was gonna say, meech.

Speaker 7:

I mean like how they say like you know the real niggas dead or in jail, because just think about it, how many people you know that's dead or in jail that If you never went to jail you wouldn't know you go to jail. You meet motherfuckers right, and they had 20 years in they. Be so thorough, you be like dang Rob Markman.

Speaker 6:

Why you even here, how you in here, Rob Markman?

Speaker 7:

How you in here, Rob Markman.

Speaker 6:

They be smart as shit, rob.

Speaker 7:

Markman Muppets been locked up for so much different shit Besides drugs and guns and shit like that, Rob.

Speaker 2:

Markman, who I? Who I was talking to. We just talking to somebody. It's like somebody could just get you locked up by calling the cops you did something, you get arrested. You get a warrant for your name, right, get arrested. They come and get you and you gotta fight that you gotta prove, you ain't do whatever they say.

Speaker 7:

Here's something here. See it's crazy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because I ain going to lie bro, that's a whole other conversation what you think about hair style. You getting booked? No, that's bullshit, I ain't going to lie.

Speaker 3:

That's not even nothing to explain.

Speaker 6:

That's super bullshit. You know how they tell you you innocent until you prove it guilty?

Speaker 3:

No, you guilty until you prove it innocent. You know what?

Speaker 6:

I'm saying bro.

Speaker 3:

Real shit.

Speaker 6:

This whole shit designeded to fuck us.

Speaker 4:

Real shit.

Speaker 3:

The whole place, but yeah man, I don't wanna really Stay too long On that topic, but I just wanted to ask that Because you know like there's a lot of little quotes People live by and everybody don't agree To the same things. You feel what I'm saying? Like, if you come to me and say the real niggas dead or in jail, I'm going to really take it as that. You think everybody that you see on a daily basis who's not a dead person or in jail, and us three right here will consider ourselves as real men.

Speaker 3:

So how they all dead or in jail.

Speaker 2:

You just got to watch the company you keep.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 6:

And stop looking up to certain people. Yeah, because they be like bad people to look up to.

Speaker 3:

Speaking of bad people, man, what's up with Diddy man? Diddy out of pocket. Yo, I'm going to keep it real.

Speaker 6:

He got a tape out, he out of pocket.

Speaker 3:

Bro, I'm going to keep it real. He got a tape out, he got a fucking pocket. Bro, I'm gonna keep it real.

Speaker 6:

He got a tape out, did he got a pocket?

Speaker 3:

I'm gonna keep it real With you, bro. He got a tape out. He gotta leave that the joint with him.

Speaker 2:

Running down the hall.

Speaker 3:

Yo, I'm not gonna lie to you, bro, he gotta leave that Booger sugar alone, bro. Real rap he gotta leave that, and then the niggas Are Bro.

Speaker 6:

when I'm looking at the John, when I'm looking at the John, all I can see is oh yeah, he just snorted a line Like where that dollar bill with the residue on it. That's all I was thinking, like yo he is hot. Like where that rage come from the coke.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm just. You know what I mean. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, I feel you Like yeah.

Speaker 4:

And you can't run from.

Speaker 3:

I'm going to keep it real, though I'm going to say something, though. Right, let me say something real quick.

Speaker 2:

I need to.

Speaker 3:

Fuck that nigga. Listen, right. I'm going to say this right. Y'all can take it however y'all want to take it. Bro y'all, nah, real shit, y'all can take it, however y'all want to take it, bro y'all, nah, real shit Y'all. Tmz Did he? He's torturing Cassie. She hiding under the sheet. All that right. Y'all interviewing Cam'ron About it. Y'all trying to no, no listen. They trying to figure out, bro. None of y'all don't even care about.

Speaker 1:

Cassie, like y'all that shit ain't even funny bro, because it's the media bro, no, but bro we

Speaker 6:

be being bamboozled, Bro, listen bro.

Speaker 2:

Y'all talking about every y'all talking about Diddy his sons.

Speaker 3:

Y'all talking about Diddy his sons. Y'all talking about his businesses. None of y'all is talking about the domestic violence part. I'm not understanding that, bro, like how none of y'all care about how Cassie doing. There's no excuse, bro.

Speaker 2:

Do you want to know why?

Speaker 6:

There's no excuse, bro. You want to go?

Speaker 2:

and then I could go no, you can go all right, I think they're not talking about it because she got what she wanted already and that was the check. She never said she wanted diddy to go to jail. She never filed criminal charges on him. She wanted a silver suit on him. She wanted the money.

Speaker 6:

She got bro, I agree over with. So look, so hold on. I'm sorry.

Speaker 2:

Do you know that Cassie was also Around when he was cheating on Kim Porter and beating her up and she was Standing Sitting in cars With Puffy Like come on, you ready, bae. I heard about that. Like shit, like that. Like that's why Nobody give a fuck For real, bro Hold on What'd you? Say Hold on what you say. Yeah, you put crickets on there. I like that.

Speaker 3:

So so all that he said.

Speaker 1:

So, Just don't justify the fact.

Speaker 3:

They're not bringing awareness and talking about.

Speaker 1:

The domestic violence part.

Speaker 4:

She was a part of it.

Speaker 2:

That's fucking crazy, y'all thinking that, anything else.

Speaker 6:

I think, because this girl just got beat up on camera and drugged by her.

Speaker 4:

I think I think because this girl just got beat up on camera and drugged by her, I think, because it's all propaganda.

Speaker 6:

I think it's all propaganda and I think that she got what she wanted bro. She got what she wanted and he can't get charged. He can't get charged, he cannot get charged for the hotel doing nothing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so that's why I think like you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6:

That's why I think, like you know what I'm saying, it's like she got what she wanted and I mean we gonna go ahead and continue on with life, he trying to get back To take that. But, like.

Speaker 6:

The coach are gonna cancel him. So is it over? So I mean, like it's been over for real, so Like the video just dropped, that's all. Like you know what I'm saying. He been cashed her out. You know what I'm saying. He been knew about the video. He just didn't know it was going to leak and when it was going to come out he been paid $25,000, $30,000 for them to tuck the video.

Speaker 7:

It's just bad for business that video it can't be over. They came to this house after that.

Speaker 2:

The only thing they said, they said all right, yeah, that's what it sound like and they want to. You know you got to crush your opponent when you're going against an opposition and that was the total checkmate move of whoever he's going at, or whoever?

Speaker 4:

going at him.

Speaker 2:

You feel me, I feel like that was checkmate, you know what I'm saying. And I feel like they got another one in their pocket if he can get out of pocket again, but he kind of checkmate right now.

Speaker 3:

Did he need to fall back? And?

Speaker 2:

disappear For like a couple years, maybe a little three or four year piece.

Speaker 3:

I'm going to say this right. Since nobody's shedding light on the domestic violence part. We going to do it. So this girl Get Beaten up on and harassed. We heard about it for years. We seen all type of signs. Then the shit happens and that now do I think every single person that's saying did he did something? No, they seen him settle in the cassie lawsuit. That mean we got him right where we want him money is getting took away and all that he sold. He sold his liquor company. Everybody talked about that so the shares of

Speaker 3:

revolt. Everybody talked about that. But when that video came out, bro people, all people talked about was yo, diddy this and diddy that, and diddy gel and diddy. Why is nobody talking about yo? We gotta raise our sons like this and our daughters like that to prevent them to be women beaters or a victim of it. Or are you let us check into this, this, this hollywood type of whatever shit more? Because if the biggest, biggest mogul doing it, the ones under him or he gotta have some type. You feel what I'm saying?

Speaker 3:

yeah, no doubt, like it's like I don't know how motherfuckers ain't shedding light on that and that's what type of world you think? That's the type of world that we live in now. Y'all rather be on diddy dick because he's so famous and da da, da, da, da. Instead of saying fuck diddy, he a scumbag, let's care for cassie. Saying fuck Diddy, he a scumbag, let's care for Cassie. That's the part I'm not getting Feel what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

But since Diddy a mogul and he bad boy and Biggie and all type of shit and this, that and the third, like, for instance, cam'ron on CNN, they asking him to Diddy Bro, I don't fucking know why y'all asking me about Diddy. I don't know. That's crazy. Fucking know why y'all asking me about diddy. I don't know. Like, if he, if y'all would have been like yo, cassie, such as he, probably would have talked, because it's like I'm talking about domestic violence and and the importance of being aware of that, you feel what I'm saying. But like, hey, cassie, I hope you heal your trauma and and with everything that else that come with it.

Speaker 3:

I'm glad you got a settlement that probably can't Repair None of the scabs on you From that shit, but you feel me. But that's all I. That's all I wanna do Now. I ain't gonna hold you. I'm not gonna lie. After I realized the definition of sex trafficking, that shit happened every day in our neighborhood. He 100% Did that Like after I seen the, but they trying to see his shit Like a little more extreme. Now, that's what I think bro Like they had girls in there.

Speaker 3:

And I think the same thing with R Kelly and I think the same thing is Bill Cosby. It could be somebody you really did something with, right, like say if you really did a sex trafficking To drop the pill and whatever, and you're famous and rich millions of dollars. Say if Me and white boy, we go over a female, famous, rich female, and she do some out-of-pocket shit to me and he was there, but then years later, not even me or him another person come out like that lady did something. He had tried to make up a lie, just because he was there that day. You feel me? So, just with bill bill cosby, he was about to buy nbc and mike jackson when he owned fucking sony and all that. Now bill cosby, do this. Now mike j touch little boy. You feel what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

So I think, in my personal opinion, bro, probably 60 of what people saying did he did, he did, the other 40 is bullshit, bro, I'll. And and the reason I don't think that's the case, bro, because if you really, really, really think about it, bro, all it is is word of mouth. Only thing that you could say he did for effect was the Cassie shit. That's the only thing he settled with All that. I don't think that all these women saying Diddy did this to me and Young Miami. I don't believe that the whole Lil Rock shit you got meek and your paperwork is gay, you're done. I don't believe it already. Fuck, is we talking about here? Like so the shit just made up, I think. But the shit with cassie is the one. He was like yo, I really did this hunt. Take this five. You feel what I'm saying. That's what I think about it.

Speaker 6:

So what you think about it I think, I think the same for real. It just be like when they, when you get to a certain point, like they're definitely gonna.

Speaker 6:

Uh, you know, do anything and they got to, to make you look or like they got to to diminish you order, to uh tear your name down, but, um, like what we actually saw is what he should be uh crucified for, like are we seeing him? Yeah, put his hands on that girl. Yeah, like you know, I'm saying, but like all the hearsay shit, like that should be hearsay, yeah, yeah, so like how about the listening part? The proof is the proof Yup. Nah, man, all that sex traffic and all that shit Like you know what I'm saying Ain't no proof of that.

Speaker 7:

So Y'all think he got Got a chance to come back.

Speaker 3:

Come back from what.

Speaker 7:

Music Period.

Speaker 3:

Fuck, no. So he done, and I ain't gonna lie bro he done, I ain't gonna lie bro.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, he done.

Speaker 3:

If Diddy get filmed On one. It's that video, yo that video no, look If Diddy get filmed Like he throw.

Speaker 2:

Across the room. Y'all know why. I think he could Diddy double back and kick them. I think he could make a comeback Yo.

Speaker 6:

On what Music?

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

On what terms?

Speaker 6:

Explain to me how, like a?

Speaker 2:

full term. Comeback Like bad boy. You out your fucking mind bro.

Speaker 6:

Alright, so look, we gonna talk about.

Speaker 3:

Cause you are.

Speaker 6:

Alright, look Cause we gonna talk about Before he, who else did that?

Speaker 3:

And came back, bro, chris Brown.

Speaker 1:

Bro, that was that's way different. It was a legend, it was a legend.

Speaker 6:

That's way different. That shit was a legend, it was different. It's proof that.

Speaker 3:

Rihanna Was hitting him first, squeezed on his balls and it Bro no.

Speaker 4:

Listen, bro, you're not listening.

Speaker 3:

It's proof that Rihanna Was starting it.

Speaker 2:

I say they let it go Cause he was young. That's what I Like. I was about to finish.

Speaker 3:

Let's just say that he's them niggas. They Bro. He was fucking what 16, 17 when he did that shit, they cooked him too.

Speaker 2:

They was beating each other up, he still made a comeback.

Speaker 3:

Then you talk him out.

Speaker 2:

You talk him out, he cooked Chris Brown to this day. He still made his money back.

Speaker 3:

And that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 6:

You have to be honest, it took a lot for him to come back. He didn't just come back.

Speaker 3:

He didn't even fully back to everybody, he didn't just come back and snap.

Speaker 6:

He ain't even fully back to everybody, he didn't just come back and snap I didn't say that either.

Speaker 3:

No, you ain't. He just didn't Like it was easy for him. I'm saying he made his comeback, bro. No, you ain't let me finish, bro. Rihanna.

Speaker 6:

It took a while for him to win them fans back over.

Speaker 3:

Meek and Rihanna was a couple. She whooped on him, they whooped on each other, they got into an altercation. Chris and Rihanna my fault.

Speaker 2:

I'm tripping.

Speaker 3:

Chris and Rihanna was a. I don't know nothing about that, chris and Rihanna. Chris and Rihanna Got into an altercation and whatever. Whatever they was doing this to each other, chris Brown never had no fucking Sex trafficking type of oh, these young girls. He wasn't on video doing like this, yeah bro, that shit ain't nowhere near the same he just had a picture. No, bro, that shit still Nowhere near the same. Chris Brown, shit was literally Domestic violence and he was fucking teens for real. Diddy, shit is sex trafficking, fucking the drug joint.

Speaker 6:

Just even the situation, the fucking. He got a thick ass, little rod, she was running away from him. He come flashing out the room with a towel. It ain't nothing like Chris Brown. It's the whole situation. She trying to get away from him. That's a whole get like getaway zone.

Speaker 3:

Definitely trying to get away from him Like bro. This ain't no Ike Turner. Shit Like bitch.

Speaker 2:

I don't think Rihanna wasn't trying to get away from Chris Brown Beating her ass.

Speaker 6:

He might have been trying to get away from that crazy bitch.

Speaker 2:

You didn't hear the story. Yeah, bro, I know that whole.

Speaker 3:

Bro, he got a documentary Saying the whole Story, bro, and that's the thing about Mike. I mean, that's the thing about Chris Chris Brown, bro, he took accountability, bro, did he still Saying he didn't do it?

Speaker 2:

No, he didn't. Didn't he make an apology For the?

Speaker 3:

Cassie, shit, I'm talking about the sex trafficking. Bro, until.

Speaker 2:

That's why I said Chris, he might really ain't?

Speaker 6:

I mean? It took Chris about six, seven years to get back to where he is.

Speaker 2:

We talking about the physical part.

Speaker 3:

No, but With his girl. No, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I ain't talking about the Because the drug dealer, like the boy, took the case. No, they already sentenced him. You said Diddy Could come back.

Speaker 3:

A full career. And then I said Something. I said why you said Chris Brown, chris Brown was Domestic violence. Yes, diddy is domestic violence. That's the main thing?

Speaker 2:

No, it's not. What else?

Speaker 3:

Sex traffic in the main thing.

Speaker 2:

They gonna throw that out. Come on, what the Everybody don't think Diddy thing. They gonna throw that out. Come on everybody you tripping.

Speaker 3:

You're tripping 20 girls saying it and they just gonna throw it out. You don't know what you're talking about, bro. He is not throwing that shit out. They're looking for more proof.

Speaker 2:

He's going to do that I said that he did it on the first show.

Speaker 3:

He gonna do and I ain't gonna lie bro, but no, he probably do jail time too. He probably do it like I don't it.

Speaker 2:

Let them get some proof, bro. I think this shit's some media shit for real and it's getting on my nerves.

Speaker 6:

No, a lot of it is Most definitely propaganda.

Speaker 3:

That's what I'm saying Right there. That's what world we live in. Like for motherfuckers To blame somebody for something and say they did something, then a month later actually get proof of one of the things, and then niggas just be like, yeah, he beat the bitch up, but everything else nah bro.

Speaker 3:

That's why shit happening to people now. Everybody always turning the side eye the fuck. That's why shit happening to people now. Everybody be always giving niggas the benefit of the doubt. Like, bro, that nigga been fucking on top since the 90s, Like what, but I don't know. Though, bro, Like I think he actually might be able to do some.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, you fucking crazy dog.

Speaker 3:

I think he might actually do some gel time and all that, bro, he grew up with Diddy.

Speaker 2:

Better hide these dogs from him.

Speaker 6:

Oh my God, man, I don't know any girl in love with Diddy?

Speaker 2:

no matter how deep you thought about it. Oh my God man.

Speaker 6:

Diddy fucking crazy. He fucked his whole career up with this dumb ass shit.

Speaker 3:

Real shit. Yeah, man, I ain't going to lie to you though, bro. Like I said, man, they always going to try to tear the black successful man down, whether it be singing, whether it be like. That's why I understand now why denzel and jay-z and beyonce. That's why I understand why they life's so private, bro, because it's like this like diddy was the most, if you think about it. Nobody was outside like diddy who was in his. Nobody was outside like Diddy who was in his position.

Speaker 2:

Dr Dre, jay-z, all M, they all played a cut Eminem, diddy be like out here partying, throwing events, doing all that there's always a good side and a bad side to that coin, though, because now when somebody like I bet say you real private, somebody that got control of the media could really dress you up or betray you to make you look like something.

Speaker 6:

Even if you don't do it. That's why they tell you to get in front of it.

Speaker 2:

And even if, even if now.

Speaker 6:

now, so they won't control the narrative. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 2:

That too, so like now, like these days, you gotta have a response to shit bro.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, no, that's what we saying. Like you got to step in front of it. You have to, so that way you can control the narrative, but when you respond.

Speaker 2:

It can be in a timely fashion, but it also got to be in a great manner to where, as though you're carrying it. Yeah, no, for sure you feel me.

Speaker 3:

Hold on real quick. This is not marijuana. This is not weed in any type of way at all and we do not contain like we don't recommend any kids. Yeah, no drugs, no nothing. This is not marijuana you two this is not marijuana, let it be known.

Speaker 7:

Let it be known.

Speaker 3:

This is a fucking, not marijuana stick.

Speaker 4:

No it's a Al Capone. Yeah, yeah, shout out, al Capone, we need a sponsor, now we Capone. Yeah, yeah, shout out, al Capone, we need a sponsor now we need sponsors from them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, let's get that.

Speaker 7:

Like subscribe comment share.

Speaker 3:

If you don't, why? If you don't you what?

Speaker 6:

I fucking hate it. Why? Because it's free.

Speaker 2:

Because, it's free man. It's the realest of most podcasts.

Speaker 3:

It's the real of the most podcast. It's the real of the most podcast. So listen Better fucking know it. And yeah, I ain't going to lie, man Like so Another thing, wait, we could get past the.

Speaker 2:

you still was on that, Diddy.

Speaker 6:

No we're off that.

Speaker 2:

All right, I want to really go ahead and talk about what Cashman doing this tour man oh, yeah, like we really ain't get to chop it up, like you know, like the dates was kinda tight for all our schedules. Yeah, you know what I'm saying. White boy made it to a few of them. Jones, um, shout out to Manny215 once again shout out, manny215.

Speaker 3:

Shout out what I wish I knew what I wish. I knew yeah uh low copy shoebox Shout out all of them, man.

Speaker 6:

The School of the.

Speaker 3:

Gifted Lil Cobb from Jerome, ym Name, 7th Street Family. I'm Mary Ali. Shout out Shante too, man Shout out Sh Ali Shout out Shante too. Man Shout out Shante.

Speaker 6:

Shout out Shante two times.

Speaker 3:

We'll be at Chat and Chew. We will be there June 9th, am I correct?

Speaker 6:

And we will be at it's.

Speaker 3:

June 9th. Right yeah, june 9th. June 9th, and we also We'll be there. Relative Moose is the podcast.

Speaker 6:

Make Make sure y'all there, man, we also will be at Dialogue on June 21st. I host Fresh event there on June 21st.

Speaker 2:

Fresh my boy Follow.

Speaker 6:

Fresh. We'll also be in the building there as well, Yo man, we shaking the streets up, yeah, man.

Speaker 3:

So what else you was saying?

Speaker 2:

I pretty much want to see how you feel about, about, like that tour, because, you know, like us, starting the podcast, like you know, open up our minds to like a little bit, like to start talking about things that's going on around the world and you get to speak, speak to the youth now like and be able to tell them like things you've been through. You could probably look in the crowd and spot some of them that's on the route where you like yo, let me holler at you the two cool ones.

Speaker 2:

You know what I mean?

Speaker 3:

The shiesty man's going all the way in the back, in the fucking corner somewhere.

Speaker 2:

Yeah when. I'm at so like I know, like you expressed it a few times on the show, but I really, really want to talk about what was the best one that you think.

Speaker 3:

I appreciate that, bro, you feel like you, connected to the crowd. I appreciate that, bro, for real.

Speaker 2:

That was major bro.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah man.

Speaker 2:

Y'all wasn't even on the like. You wasn't there to rap.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

You was there to conversate and on the panel and talk to you.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's how it happened, man.

Speaker 3:

So for those of you who are going to be new for this episode, shout out Manny 205 and shout out what I Wish I Knew Foundation. The Don't Get Tricked Out, your Spot Tour was this month on four weeks four four wednesdays and one thursday we did all together. We did, uh, five. We did five schools all together, I think five or six. And uh, manny um hired me as the host to the audience to interview him and also host for the last hour and a half for the show.

Speaker 3:

Um, I ain't gonna lie bro, I'm really not gonna lie to you, bro, one of them joints. I was about to really cry up that joint because, yeah, because, because, like, the reason I was about to really cry, bro, is because me just sitting there doing that shit and I'm looking into the audience, bro, and I used to skip school, bro. I never had a high school locker, I never went on a prom, I never went to no high schools, bro. So you missed out on all that. I missed out on all that. I was in Glen Mills, summit and George Jr.

Speaker 3:

So while all your friends was going on prom, you yeah, while all of them well, when all of them losing their virginity, I was a virgin in placement like 11 12 years old, losing their virginity, living the fruits of life and growing up and you might speak you don't like what we actually got you there yeah, yeah, so, uh. So, george Jr, I committed a robbery and he threw truancy on there too. Glenn Mills was a handgun. I got booked with a handgun.

Speaker 2:

Why was you robbing at this time? What made you do it? Was it like something to do? Was it like I needed this money? What was it?

Speaker 3:

I never did needed that money because I ain't even gonna lie. At the time I was too young to even be me and money, so I was just doing that for the like. Bro, I was the from the hood see and be, like it's about to be some trouble, like hey yo.

Speaker 6:

So I need, I need all the kids out there to pay attention so yeah y'all like remember when I was saying earlier about being myself and like that, yeah, like so, like that, ain't you?

Speaker 2:

that's what we talking about right now.

Speaker 6:

That ain't be yourself that ain't really you as a person. That ain't the type of person you is to be like just taking for people, yeah just because, like you, bigger or you know you can yeah so that's what I mean.

Speaker 6:

But like I'm saying, like we got to be embracing, like these kids being they self, because a lot of these niggas, a lot of them kids we looking at and talking to at these schools and the ones that's always in the back with the push, actually they really don't even want to be like that right. They just doing that shit because they think it's the cool thing to do and they don't feel really comfortable being they self.

Speaker 3:

Let me say this before I forget, I'm going to answer your question. So the reason it meant so much to me, no, you good, the reason it meant so much to me, and I was about to cry, because I'm like yo. I'm so mad that Allah create us like he, make us learn shit and realize shit so late, like I be wishing like 13, 14 was the age as I'm looking down to that. I'm like yo. School was probably the best shit that ever happened in life and I was skipping it. I wasn't going to school, I was committing robberies and getting sent to Boone and getting sent to Glenn Mills. So that's why I was about to really like break down.

Speaker 3:

Because I'm like yo, I really remember when there and all of them used to come to the schools and I used to be in assemblies not paying attention None of that. Like I can make the excuse and be like man. We had it hard and all my family wasn't poor as shit and all that. Like I can make the excuse and be like man. We had it hard. No, my family wasn't poor as shit and all that. So it was just me doing that, but not to go all the way off track man. Like you know, I'm 26, so I'm not too far from them. You feel what I'm saying and like it just meant so much to me because I knew Manny when he was in the streets. Manny know me when I was in the streets.

Speaker 2:

I know this, so wait you 26, bro.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

You missed your whole high school, the whole thing, my whole high school, joe, I never went to high school, so what?

Speaker 2:

year did you actually go to jail? What?

Speaker 3:

year was this I went to jail 2011. That's when I was 11.

Speaker 6:

damn, damn, yeah, you ain't even really start enjoying your life till like this year?

Speaker 3:

no, that's when I was 13. Yeah, like I ain't really. I told everybody like may of 2024, probably the best month I ever had in my life.

Speaker 3:

You grew up in jail. Yeah, I grew up in jail, bro, like George Jr. Glenn Mills Summit, that was all before 17, and then right after that, cscf, dc, dc, all that. So when I'm up there, bro, and seeing Manny or Kai be talking and people don't pay attention, I straight get up. Yo, yo, no, y'all going to be salty as shit later in life because pay attention, because this the type of shit I used to be and I've really seen young boys paying attention and I ain't going to lie. Manny said that's why he put me on that joint, because he know that I'm trying to get the message more out there to people and there's no one better than the kids.

Speaker 6:

I need all the kids to pay attention, because I ain't started living my life until late in life. So I resonate with you on that and and you got it a little earlier than me, so um don't wait till you 26 to start living your lives yo right, I'm saying because all that time and is tom that real, that shit real time.

Speaker 6:

Don't wait until 26 to start listening and it ain't never too late. You know what I'm saying, because you sitting here right now and you doing great things with your life and I'm watching you. I see you Appreciate it, so it's like you know what I'm saying. It ain't never too late, it's up to you. You know what I mean. I just had put that on my, on my story, like last week, like it's up to you, it's really up to you, what you want to do with yourself, what you want to apply your, your time to what you want to put your energy into is really up to you.

Speaker 3:

And, like I said, bro, I appreciate y'all, bro, I appreciate all three, y'allall V you everybody. Because I'm not going to lie bro. Like everybody for a minute was telling me I should start doing some type of talking stuff and I always was too cool to do it or was focused on how good I was at rapping and I was like, yeah, I know I need to put it all and I ain't going to lie bro.

Speaker 4:

Like if it wasn't for y'all bro.

Speaker 3:

I don't know what I'd be doing. I'd probably be back in jail, bro. To be honest, I'd probably be back in jail. I'd probably be in the middle of North Philly somewhere or in a corner of Germantown somewhere, some shit like that. But I just need people to know. I'm 26 years old, bro, and I can honestly say I ain't start living my life till I was like 26,. Bro, real rap, like November of last year to now. It's probably the first time.

Speaker 3:

I was like stable and could really live my life for real was like stable and could really live my life for real, for real, and all of that playing to what just asked me? Because all of this shit I just said that's all the stuff that's running through my mind while I'm talking to these kids. You feel what I'm saying. Like all that shit important, even down to the last detail, like exercise and change your diet all the way down to that, bro, like it's real important. So yeah, man, I appreciate you highlighting that. Don't get tricked out your spot, tori, it's just good. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I keep that in mind. All right, bro, you here to stay. You ain't going nowhere.

Speaker 6:

Facts.

Speaker 2:

Man, and I'm really like proud of how you're moving. I just want to say this is the new voice for the youth right here. I'm stamping it Right here on the Real of the Most podcast. Everybody. That's part of the youth in this hip-hop shit and y'all watching this. This is really the most podcast. Make sure y'all tap in with Cash and that's what it is. That's what it is so.

Speaker 3:

I wanted the eggs to meet something man.

Speaker 3:

I wanted the eggs to meet something so like you know I be on my podcast, join a lot, we getting a couple of comments and whatever, but it's just like you could tell when a like complain about everything that's going on right now. And just because they older, like nothing in this generation is how it's supposed to be. So I want your take on that Like. I want you to tell me, like, what makes older people like look down on his generation or the way people move in the day so much like that's easy, like you know how you, how the older people always talk to you like don't do this, don't do that.

Speaker 7:

It's like I've seen everything right and I've seen it flip like from like my era to the younger era. I've seen how everything get worse and worse and worse. Kids can't come out really play no more. You don't see nobody playing king ball, curve ball, tennis the girls playing double dutch. Yeah, I said tennis bump time like yeah, what's it called? Catch a girl, freak a girl.

Speaker 2:

No with the little mop stick Like the little uh.

Speaker 4:

That was it. Handball, Handball too.

Speaker 2:

Cash, like that's the last thing I did before I went in. You don't care if they're high, go see Jill break None of that.

Speaker 6:

None of that exists. They really like GTA out there yeah. Freaking girl. They skip all that. They don't even know what that is.

Speaker 3:

Hot, red and butter.

Speaker 6:

They go to the.

Speaker 7:

They go right to the pistol With the long clip. One, two, three red light and all that shit. They skip all that.

Speaker 3:

That's why when niggas be I'm 26, people be thinking I'm so young. All them same games.

Speaker 4:

No, kia phone, razor, all them same games, y'all Nokia phone.

Speaker 3:

Razer Boost Mobile. I'm the middle child. I'm 26. I'm between y'all and the new generation. I'm the middle child. I've been around for all that shit. I had a Game Boy.

Speaker 1:

Color I had a.

Speaker 3:

Dreamcast. I had all that. Dipset was the hottest when I was young. Jeezy Soul Survive. I ain't no fucking kid bro. I be really dealing with people who was born in the 2000s. I look at them so fucking young bro. 2000s what that's crazy bro. That's crazy, but I ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 6:

It get different when you seeing Eric Error, definitely when you got money in them Errors too. So it's like it dull your joint, it dull your eyes Because you saw it all. You know what I'm saying. You was popping in 02 when Meek and them niggas was here.

Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 6:

You just showed us a picture in 02. You got the fucking the Jeff Hamilton on in 02. Yeah, that was fire, mm-hmm. So like it's just being different, it's just different man who could kill him. Hey yo, let me ask you a question.

Speaker 3:

What y'all think about the streaming game.

Speaker 6:

I think that streaming game is bamboozled. I think nobody knew. So they say 1,500 streams is one album sale. How, who made?

Speaker 4:

that number up no no, what?

Speaker 3:

No? Not that streaming. What the fuck are you talking about? I'm talking about streaming Kasa Nat.

Speaker 6:

Oh, that streaming, yeah that streaming. I like that streaming. What the fuck you talking?

Speaker 3:

about talk about streaming casa net. Oh, is that true?

Speaker 6:

yeah, that's true I think I, I like, I I like that like he started going in.

Speaker 3:

No, that is, though, no streaming like that's the truth.

Speaker 6:

But I like, I like, I like streaming. I like the uh thought of that. I like how streaming is making young black entrepreneurs. I like that. Rod G's Casa Net I like that.

Speaker 3:

Okay, okay, what y'all thinking about it. Y'all got nothing on that cool.

Speaker 2:

Uh, what Like streaming for like.

Speaker 3:

Casa Like the way Casa Net your rage. All of them To be honest.

Speaker 2:

I'm ready to start doing it In the morning times. I feel you bro, you thinking like me Real of the most.

Speaker 3:

Y'all heard that first.

Speaker 2:

I actually want our team to actually start streaming more, even going live, with other podcasters. I actually want to collaborate with you know, different people. That's actually working in our field. So hey, if y'all watching the Real of the Most podcast, right?

Speaker 6:

now collaborate.

Speaker 2:

Y'all want to collaborate, y'all looking to collaborate? Y'all want to work with us? Just go ahead and hit us in the DM. Y'all either get a response from me or Cash White Boy in the Mix. Y'all already know y'all can run in the home. Listen we out here Real of the Most podcast. Listen we out here Real of the Most podcast. And I just want to make sure y'all know it's open arms over here. Come on over. Not for no bullshit though, but if you got a podcast and you on your way up, man, you working and you consistent, come and tap in with us. It's the Real of the Most podcast.

Speaker 6:

Before we get out of here, I want to talk about something real quick. All right, most podcasts. Before we get out of here, I want to talk about something real quick. Alright, so like being as though that we like we new in this shit, we all making transitions, all this shit new to everybody in this room. Yeah, how y'all feel being rookies in this space?

Speaker 2:

That was a good question.

Speaker 6:

Let's end it. Yeah, we can end this off with this.

Speaker 2:

Let's go around the room.

Speaker 6:

I'll start. So, like you said not too long ago, I always wanted to do something in this space.

Speaker 4:

Right.

Speaker 6:

Because my knowledge of the music game Me as well.

Speaker 6:

So that thrived me, to want to communicate with the world. And then I also want to talk to the kids because, like, I think they be needing more guidance, because if I had somebody like me coming up, I'd have probably made a lot of decisions different. This space right here is opening up a lot of doors for me. So I like what's happening right now with this shit. So, being a rookie and this shit, I just only want to learn and I want to be like more sufficient. You know what I'm saying. Talk about more things, more life shit. Talk more to the people. And I want to help Philly as much as possible, because now we got a platform. Our voices is getting big bro, that's what I'm noticing. So I just want to do right by this mic and the people and my family and shit.

Speaker 4:

I feel that man.

Speaker 3:

I feel that I'm going to go now. I've been watching Pion since before it even came big. I tell people all the time it's people that got 300 episodes, 700, and I've been watching them since just the double digits. So I feel like being rookies in this space. I tell y'all all the time, from you being somebody, to you to to me, to me, to everybody else, Like people don't even know our editor what the fuck, how legendary he is. I feel like we kind of skipped a couple notches. So Us being rookies is like being like the best rookies. I can't explain it.

Speaker 6:

I kind of understand what you're saying. Our rookie is not the average rookie. I get that. Yeah so we like LeBron a little bit.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah and I feel like, bro, no bullshit. I told y'all the Walmart story, I told y'all the Susquehanna story and my DMs and the realest and most DMs. I'm not going to fucking lie. We rookies, we rookies of the fucking year, bro, I'm not going to lie. The way we pushing we got 11, 12 episodes. We got Y in 1000 Lil Ka from Jerome Street, mana Aiki Shoebox, baby Southside, tony, oh my gosh.

Speaker 2:

Right there Just start, yeah, like Before it's like Rizzy on the beat.

Speaker 6:

Rizzy on the beat Before Cora go though. So like Because of 7th Street, rick too.

Speaker 3:

Because, sum it up, if we rookies, we rookies of the year, go ahead.

Speaker 6:

Because of, I think, the reason why we feel how we feel about the rookie shit and us like skipping a couple notches, like I just got to do this on camera and give kudos to my boy Rilla, like you know what I'm saying Like because he Thank you my boy really like you know what I'm saying Like because he works so hard, hey Off camera. I'm talking, I praise him a lot. I want to do it on camera and shit because he get this shit to how we need it to be. Know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6:

He built this shit from the ground up and he got the production and everything going and I just got to say that on camera. That's why I feel like I'm saying he ain't kiss ass for help.

Speaker 3:

He dicky he did everything. He didn't go behind people back and talk to get cool with somebody ever and me he do none of that. He started this, made a couple calls to some people he trusted and that's what it looked like. Now it's really the most man real that was that, was that, was that was real.

Speaker 2:

To like, sum up everything. But the real way, man, the real way I feel, man, I feel like we only could go up from here. You know what I'm saying. We had our spot where we could get ourselves to you, feel me I feel like everything else is going to be come coming from hard work, yeah, and dedication, us really putting our feet down and and and digging in the mud. I, I don't think we there yet, no, even though you know, I mean we could celebrate that we able to upload yeah and kill youtube and and go crazy with our content.

Speaker 2:

But to be honest, I don't think we there yet.

Speaker 3:

No, we ain't we sent those down? Yeah, we ain't we know.

Speaker 6:

We know where we want to go yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

So I mean we just gonna keep our foot on the gas and keep on delivering content. But for us to even keep doing that, we need them. To what?

Speaker 4:

Like comment. Subscribe share.

Speaker 6:

If you don't, you're a hater.

Speaker 3:

You're a motherfucking hater because it's free.

Speaker 6:

It's free. Yo my name Rulla.

Speaker 3:

My name. Ho ho, ho, let's do me real quick. Yeah, just so you've been in the background, but I wanted to hear what you said.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, no-transcript yeah yeah, yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, you want to know why he say we not rookies.

Speaker 2:

Because listen, man, to be honest. Alright, let's just clear up a few things. I've been running around the city of Philadelphia Probably for the last 15 years On the music scene. Now I would supposedly be a rapper, you know what I mean. I would never drop music. That's shit Wildo be talking about. I make hot songs. I would never drop music. That shit Wild Lil B talking about. I make hot songs, but I never drop them. I'm not an entertainer, but I know I'm a performer. Like I could write some shit out.

Speaker 6:

I could go ahead and record it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so like, but I'm not an entertainer.

Speaker 4:

You feel me.

Speaker 2:

Well, that's how I looked at myself as a rapper Right. So that's why my? Looked at myself as a rapper, so that's why my career really ain't worked out Probably too fast with rapping. But I still rap and me and V connected, so V actually edit videos. So for this pod to come together, like me connecting with V. V already a sound engineer.

Speaker 2:

He already a video editor make a phone call to V and this a go, man, we got the pod, you know what I mean. We got several locations to record if we need be, but we got our own location. You know what I'm saying, right, uh, man, we here because I've been running around 15 years meeting people, collaborating with people, networking managing people going around managing people so things like that give you the business mind to do certain things. You feel me Right? No, doubt.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, it's steps to get to where you finally like comfortable. You know what I mean. And this right here.

Speaker 3:

I feel comfortable with yeah man, round of applause for that man. I want you to ask all three of us Different fast track questions. There's one, though, and then I'm going to ask you yours.

Speaker 6:

Alright, we need all separate ones, starting with Meech. Alright Rolex or Cartier Rolex Alright Core I want to do a fast track.

Speaker 2:

All right, code on card. You want to answer?

Speaker 6:

it no, I want I want x1 all right, um, um core, um um these don't be hard.

Speaker 2:

Can't get it like that.

Speaker 6:

Jambalaya or Poison Ivy.

Speaker 2:

Poison Ivy. I don't know why, but yeah, poison Ivy.

Speaker 6:

We talk about gumbo y'all. I don't know why, but yeah, Poison Ivy.

Speaker 3:

We talk about gumbo y'all. I ain't know that. Y'all just lost me like a motherfucker yeah.

Speaker 2:

Poison Ivy is actually the CEO. Wife brand you that shit always good Rock Marciano or Bodie James. I got one for both of y'all though.

Speaker 3:

Rock Marciano, Rock Marciano. Nobody in the game ever had his flow, ever Like ever. Bodie neither though. Bodie, neither though. But I think Rock Marciano got a better catalog, damn. I love both of them niggas, so I just gotta just say that yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, shout out both Bodie James, the Marat Marciano 38 special, the whole surf school fucking ran all them niggas man. But all right, so you got a fair shake for everybody. All right, so I'm an ex white boy, is all right, so Balenciaga or gallery department.

Speaker 6:

I'm going Balenciaga.

Speaker 3:

Balenciaga. Okay, okay, now what's yours?

Speaker 2:

Alright, fast track, I'm gonna start with cash, then I'm gonna hit show, then go around. Alright, cash, cabbage or collard greens.

Speaker 3:

I ain't gonna hold you Cabbage.

Speaker 4:

Cabbage, that was a good one though Cabbage, especially my grandma Ice and cabbage is no better.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I love cabbage too For white boy, I, I want to go music with you. So I'm going to say Pharrell or Kanye.

Speaker 6:

Damn, I ain't going to lie. That's a hard one for me, bro, because I like, I really like hard, I really love fucking. Damn bro.

Speaker 3:

I mean, we know who the one is, but you could do that because you like both of them, but we know who.

Speaker 6:

I love Pharrell's style, though.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we know who's the one, though.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, I love Pharrell's style. I love Pharrell's style. But I like Kanye too. I like everything he did musically, but I think I'm going to go with Pharrell. Pharrell style. But I like Kanye too. I like everything he did musically, but I think I'm going to go with Pharrell.

Speaker 2:

Pharrell, yeah, oh shit and Meek for you. I'm going to go movies, gangsta movies.

Speaker 6:

I think I'm going to go with Ye.

Speaker 2:

You going with Ye. I got to go with Ye. Better fix that shit. I got to go with Ye. I gotta go with Ye. I gotta go with Ye. I'm saying everything.

Speaker 6:

No, cause I'm Look Pharrell. Pharrell Impacted me a lot, bro, like that nerd shit that ice cream shit, that ice cream shit. No, but I'm just, I'm talking about me. He asked me.

Speaker 4:

But I had to think I had to really think.

Speaker 3:

But I ain't gonna lie though I really, I really Nah, bro like Pharre, but I had to think. I had to really think. That's why I fucked him up, because, look bro, I ain't going to lie, though. Look at his head, look at everything he's done, man Bro like Pharrell. That's where I get my hole.

Speaker 6:

But Pharrell, his chromosomes is in me for sure.

Speaker 2:

Meek, I'm going to go against the movies with you, man. I'm going to say Peter Fool or South Central, of course. What is it? South Central, yeah, south Central, yeah, why, why, yeah, why pay them for?

Speaker 7:

Facts yeah of course. Damn facts Right.

Speaker 4:

Yo before.

Speaker 2:

What was that D-Boy?

Speaker 3:

That's Boys in the Hood Young.

Speaker 2:

Bull got Shined his back.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's South.

Speaker 2:

Central J-Rock when he took Young Bull's son from him.

Speaker 3:

Oh all right Yo.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to say this real quick.

Speaker 3:

I'm going to say this real quick before Cole take us out. Bro, the love y'all showing us is not unnoticed, yeah real sure we fuck with y'all. Y'all family. We appreciate the shit out y'all. Y'all family, we appreciate the shit out y'all To the max. So when we be saying that like comment, subscribe, share thing, I see y'all be really listening and we love that man.

Speaker 3:

I just want to say this because I never was a part of something that wasn't about doing something illegal that worked Like that worked Like till now For real, like then this shit making me wanna really like always stay away from trouble, always stay out the streets, stay away from certain individuals, like I be ignoring calls from niggas now just because I'm in this space, like I don't even come around the same people and people places, yeah, like so. So I really just want to say that's because of y'all, that's because of y'all, because if y'all wasn't like I'm subscribing and we ain't see no, no, no I mean we probably would yeah we'd be, right back to the other but we wanna.

Speaker 3:

we want y'all to know we appreciate that Y'all can leave comments. Give us feedback, good or bad, because that's good, because nobody's perfect, we know we need to fix things. More of an audience and stuff Telling us what to do and telling us. You know, some people be nitpicking, but majority of the time.

Speaker 2:

Time Speak on them, niggas. That got our name too, man.

Speaker 3:

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So let me say something real quick. Let me say something. We just had another fucking comment the other day when somebody said Y'all, need. No, no, no, no, no, no no listen.

Speaker 4:

Nah bro.

Speaker 6:

Look, look.

Speaker 2:

Man, fuck all y'all niggas. That ain't the real. Real of the most, that's it, that's it, that's it, that's it. It's the real of the most podcast.

Speaker 6:

We out man, my name Rula.

Speaker 3:

My name Cash.

Speaker 6:

I'm white boy D2A.

Speaker 2:

And we out this bitch man. You already know Real of the most podcast.

Speaker 1:

Really the Moose Podcast.

Roots Picnic Festival Recap and Networking
Exploring Influence and Realness
Uncovering Truths and Media Manipulation
The Diddy Dilemma
Life Lessons and Personal Growth
Navigating Youth Culture and Emerging Platforms
Fast-Track Questions and Influential Figures
Real of the Most Podcast Appreciation

Podcasts we love