Realer Than Most Podcast

CATALOG CLASH CHRONICLES | RTM PODCAST | EP. 19

July 22, 2024 @Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash Season 1 Episode 19
CATALOG CLASH CHRONICLES | RTM PODCAST | EP. 19
Realer Than Most Podcast
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Realer Than Most Podcast
CATALOG CLASH CHRONICLES | RTM PODCAST | EP. 19
Jul 22, 2024 Season 1 Episode 19
@Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash

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WHAT'S THE CATEGORY ?  | RTM PODCAST EP.18Is the U.S. government just a gang with better branding? We kick things off by weighing in on the sweltering summer heat and our jam-packed schedules, including some exciting trips to New York. Shoutouts to the Boston Celtics for their epic championship win. But we quickly get serious, diving deep into the arrest of Remy Ma's 23-year-old son on a homicide charge. We discuss the impact of family dynamics and societal pressures, exploring how environment and circumstances play a role in shaping the actions of those close to celebrities. The conversation touches on the value of perseverance, hard work, and the personal growth that comes from stepping outside your comfort zone.

How do you compare musical legends when the criteria are so subjective? Join us as we get heated debating the catalogs of Beanie Sigel and Meek Mill. We weigh the timeless street anthems of Beanie Sigel against the extensive mixtapes and albums of Meek Mill, delving into tracks like "Fill it In the Air" and "Dreams and Nightmares." This spirited debate underscores how personal and varied the criteria for musical impact can be. We also examine the importance of considering an artist's entire body of work and how their music resonates emotionally and culturally.

Ever made a chipotle wrap using Ritz crackers and tuna? We share inventive prison food hacks and how these culinary creations symbolize resourcefulness and camaraderie in challenging environments. The episode wraps up with some hard-hitting discussions about community empowerment and economic change. We question the integrity of the U.S. government and judicial system, ponder the potential impact of presidential actions like prison reform and reparations, and emphasize breaking the cycle of poverty. Through transformative personal stories and shoutouts to local events, young entrepreneurs, and inspiring community members, we highlight the importance of growth, change, and staying engaged with our audience.

Support the Show.

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WHAT'S THE CATEGORY ?  | RTM PODCAST EP.18Is the U.S. government just a gang with better branding? We kick things off by weighing in on the sweltering summer heat and our jam-packed schedules, including some exciting trips to New York. Shoutouts to the Boston Celtics for their epic championship win. But we quickly get serious, diving deep into the arrest of Remy Ma's 23-year-old son on a homicide charge. We discuss the impact of family dynamics and societal pressures, exploring how environment and circumstances play a role in shaping the actions of those close to celebrities. The conversation touches on the value of perseverance, hard work, and the personal growth that comes from stepping outside your comfort zone.

How do you compare musical legends when the criteria are so subjective? Join us as we get heated debating the catalogs of Beanie Sigel and Meek Mill. We weigh the timeless street anthems of Beanie Sigel against the extensive mixtapes and albums of Meek Mill, delving into tracks like "Fill it In the Air" and "Dreams and Nightmares." This spirited debate underscores how personal and varied the criteria for musical impact can be. We also examine the importance of considering an artist's entire body of work and how their music resonates emotionally and culturally.

Ever made a chipotle wrap using Ritz crackers and tuna? We share inventive prison food hacks and how these culinary creations symbolize resourcefulness and camaraderie in challenging environments. The episode wraps up with some hard-hitting discussions about community empowerment and economic change. We question the integrity of the U.S. government and judicial system, ponder the potential impact of presidential actions like prison reform and reparations, and emphasize breaking the cycle of poverty. Through transformative personal stories and shoutouts to local events, young entrepreneurs, and inspiring community members, we highlight the importance of growth, change, and staying engaged with our audience.

Support the Show.

Speaker 1:

I'm your host.

Speaker 2:

Rilla, I'm Outta World Cash.

Speaker 3:

I'm White Boy D2A and this is the Rilla the Most Podcast.

Speaker 2:

Let's get it man.

Speaker 3:

One more time, y'all.

Speaker 2:

He be sleeping.

Speaker 3:

I'm your host, rillailla.

Speaker 2:

I'm Outta World Cash. I'm.

Speaker 1:

White.

Speaker 2:

Boy D2A.

Speaker 3:

And this the Rilla, the Most Podcast. What's up, man?

Speaker 2:

How you feeling, man, let's go around. How you feeling.

Speaker 3:

Man, I feel good man. It was what 95 today, man 97 out there Got a hoodie cause it's cold as shit in here. But you know like.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we had a good day today, man, in Philly.

Speaker 2:

I was mad. It was so fucking hot. I was mad as shit. I left my jug of water in the house. I was about to make a U-ey on the fucking E-way because of that shit. You can't even make no UEs. We're a wreck. But no, I'm feeling good, man. Like I said, man, you know, can't cry out of blues when you lose, don't grin if you win type energy. That's what I'm on. It's just all hard work, all dedication, and I'm feeling good that I'm uncomfortable because that shows growth. Rob Markman. Yeah, I'm feeling good that I'm uncomfortable because that shows growth.

Speaker 1:

Yep.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying and it shows I'm trying to change, but I feel good though, man.

Speaker 3:

All right, man, I feel good. So Treat, yeah, hell, yeah, yeah, what, what, what, what, what? Yesterday we had a good pod yesterday. That was something to start off. Yeah, get our week poppin', but New York tomorrow.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3:

We got New York. Anybody out New York? We an hour away Really the most we be in New York like Like two times a week.

Speaker 2:

Hit us up, man Right, no doubt, never want to work, even if it's New Jersey, philly, new York, even if you from a county Out one of these states, man like we, just looking, we just looking for work and we and we want to be beneficial To y'all While y'all be beneficial to us. You know what I'm saying, so Actually we'll go anywhere.

Speaker 3:

Yo hit us up, we sliding to atlanta, la whatever, just tell us, just hit us up. If it makes sense, we'll be there, man yeah, man.

Speaker 2:

Uh, I forgot to say it yesterday, but boston celtics, they finally got that ring man, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, shout out to the Boston. Celtics man J-Lan Brown was MVP. That's what's up. Yeah, they finally got that ring man. So shout out to them dudes, but we about to get into it, man.

Speaker 3:

Y'all get a light white boy.

Speaker 2:

We about to get into it, man, we about to get into it. So basically it's some news, man, like, uh, unfortunately, you know I'm saying, and we don't know the ins and outs, we don't know what happened, whatever, the story ain't really developed yet. But, um, remi, my son like 23, right right, remy, my 23-year-old son just got arrested for a homicide charge and I ain't going to fool you how y'all feel about that before I talk.

Speaker 1:

On what basis?

Speaker 2:

Like all right, since you said that, I'm going to just say mine, right?

Speaker 3:

Go ahead. Because I know where you're about to go at with it.

Speaker 2:

No, like. So it's like this right, I remember like some years or months ago, something like that, nicki Minaj a brother, brother something got arrested for a murder. I'm not sure, I'm not too sure, but I'm gonna keep it real with you. I'll be really thinking that. I I'll be thinking that like the families be like going like crazy, like that thing in the same position, like they, it's just so much depression and it's like they go through certain stuff knowing that like they sibling or they they family relative like a star or a millionaire or whatever.

Speaker 2:

But with that being said, when I always see stuff like that, all I think is is a reason why you in the hood and you not around her or him. You feel me and that shows you feel me Everybody looking at it, like Remy Ma she the millionaire.

Speaker 3:

She this, she this, she that, before you go there, how old is this guy?

Speaker 2:

23.

Speaker 3:

He's a grown-ass man bro.

Speaker 2:

No, I know, I'm just saying he a grown-ass man.

Speaker 3:

I see, in this situation, like mother, like son, you know, I'm saying remi, my shoe shit up, her son shot shit up, that's oh, allegedly bro. I'm just saying, if y'all saying he, he accused, he locked up for murder, allegedly my fault. I take that back. I mean, know what I mean.

Speaker 2:

But no, I'm just saying like, even without the allegedly like.

Speaker 3:

We talking, we going to talk.

Speaker 2:

No, we is, bro, but with the allegedly shit, it's just like like it'd be reasons why, bro, that like these celebrities with siblings, it'd be reasons why they Always in trouble. Like it gotta be a certain reason. So that's the angle I was hitting on, like what is it about Remy Ma? You know she hood as hell and all. Do y'all be thinking how I be thinking? And I be thinking like there's certain reasons why these celebrities Is where they at and they're a sibling or cousin or whatever, not?

Speaker 1:

around. I look at it in a sense of people, places and things.

Speaker 3:

Right, that's how I look at it. But let's really think about it, though, because we was talking to Justin, right, and I said, damn, you ain't grow up like that. And he said, no, I had a regular fucking life, so like, all right, oh, I'm talking about Emory's son, justin, justin.

Speaker 1:

Murray.

Speaker 3:

So now let's think about it while we talking right, remy Ma, how long was she arrested for? 8 years, I think he's 23 years old Mom, 8 years out of his life. Where was he? What you think he know? Yeah, but mom eight years out of his life, where was he?

Speaker 2:

What you think he know, yeah, but when he was raised at. But yeah, like I understand that and that's valid, but like it's just wild, that like because these celebrities and these people, the whole foundation for them, doing what they doing is for them and their family member to not be exactly, so do like do we put blame on celebrities?

Speaker 1:

that's why I'm like simply that's why I be, simply that's why I simply just said what I said, like people, places and things because like we don't know, we don't. We don't really know the story, we don't really know the story, we don't really know what happened. But, like, we just going to say, like, things happen when you're around certain individuals, things happen when you're in certain places, things happen when you're around certain things Right so that's how I just got to put it in the journal like that, right.

Speaker 3:

You know what I mean. Right, one plus one is two Facts.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, man. So what's your take on it? Same thing.

Speaker 3:

Man, my take on it pretty much what I was saying. Like she been out of his life. He's probably grew up where she grew up. You know what I'm saying. Probably know the same people she knew.

Speaker 1:

Places.

Speaker 3:

Family members. You know what I mean. Of course they do work so hard to get to a certain status in life to be able to have their kids. Away from that, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3:

But also when your kid gets to a certain age and you working on your career, you can't fight that, the fact of them being who they are or who they becoming, you know what I'm saying. Or try to make them change who they becoming, especially if you've been out of their life eight to seven years out of their life, you feel me? Yeah, no doubt that's going to be kind of hard to change somebody. So do you put the blame on Remy for that? I mean all in all, if you think about it, the whole all-in-all situation.

Speaker 1:

I mean well, okay so okay, okay, so yeah, okay, okay, so yeah. Will Do he Maybe go through things Because Of his mother being absent For Eight, seven years of his life? Maybe, so you know what I'm saying. But, like, being 23 years old, that's a grown ass man, you know what?

Speaker 3:

I'm saying so like he gotta. He gotta be held accountable.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. We can't be like pointing a finger at Remy and he fucking grown and he know right from wrong. Like it go past Remy, it go past Remy. At that point you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, All right, so look right.

Speaker 1:

Where's my letter, though? Alright, so look right, Where's my letter, though.

Speaker 2:

Oh shit. So look right. Y'all said the word is held accountable, right, mm-hmm? That's what you said Held accountable, right, white boy.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

Alright, so. Speaking of held accountable right, Niggas ain't going to play with me. We in front of the cameras now Explain how Beanie Segal catalog better than me.

Speaker 1:

Why are we in front of the cameras?

Speaker 2:

All right, so like Explain why I don't care about the time what was popping. Explain why his catalog't care about the time what was popping. Explain why his catalog Is better than me. So.

Speaker 3:

Can I, can I, can I elaborate?

Speaker 2:

No, let him first.

Speaker 3:

That big ass U-turn though. Let him Like the people, don't know when we going at with this.

Speaker 2:

Bro, we talked about, we talked about.

Speaker 1:

But you can. You can give him the back story that was a hot, that was a hot. Give him the back story. That was a hot, that was a hot, give him the back story, and and and.

Speaker 2:

Allegedly we said you feel me, we hope everything work out If he innocent. We hope it work out All types of things, man, if his victims in there. Uh, condolences to the victims. That's not a subject that I really need need to like keep talking about it.

Speaker 3:

You feel me. So we pretty much moving on from the Remy Ma situation onto the catalog of Beanie Siegel and Meek Mill.

Speaker 2:

I just want y'all to explain that Like since we on camera we had a conversation.

Speaker 3:

We was at White Boy Family event Over the weekend right, father's Day.

Speaker 1:

What day was?

Speaker 3:

that Father's Day? Father's Day, yeah, yeah, what day was that father's day? Father's day? All right, he's our father's day. That's crazy, I don't remember that. But yeah, it was father's day and it went from tequila popping to to some whole debate. You know, I'm saying we was drinking what? The 1942?

Speaker 3:

uh, it was, uh, uh, the age the age bottle yep, and it had us talking and we wind up going. We had, uh, beans bruv out there in our news, yeah, and we was out there debating a little bit and cash was pretty much saying, uh, the fill it in the air was Beanie Siegel's top single ever, song ever, on both ends, street-wise and industry-wise. And that was a debate we had out there. We went all the way into it and then it went into Meek Mill Catalog versus Beanie Siegel. So we're here now with White Boy and we gotta continue, because actually that day everybody walked off while Cash was talking. So let's get into it, alright?

Speaker 1:

So the conversation started there Boom. Now my take on it is that. So I'm going to say the truth, the reason, the becoming State Property 1, State Property 2. Records on those five albums, the ones from Mac or the ones that's future in Mac. I just wanted to include that because I think that it's the feeling, so like that's where the basis of the conversation probably got lost. My whole thing was Matt got a better catalog to me because of the filling of the records that he got on the album.

Speaker 3:

What do you mean by that, bro?

Speaker 1:

So the records like die what's your life? Like records like get down nothing like it. Records like street anthems is go, uh, uh. I can't go on this way so yeah, so hold on.

Speaker 2:

When you just named this catalog, you said state property state property one and two ain't that's a joint. Yeah, that's it. That's, that's the compilation, so I can see something with me, right? I mean, yeah, you can add that as well, I wouldn't have a problem with that yeah.

Speaker 1:

so I was saying, like, when it comes to like catalog and the filling of records, matt got them classic records that still can be played 30 years, 40 years from now, timeless. I'm saying timeless timeless records. I don't think Meek has as many as Matt got and I also was saying as well that um that met like the only person that got the um, the street records that become singles right like the records that that, that's that's met, like known singles normally be street records. That was my take. What's your take All?

Speaker 3:

right. So Beans versus Meek Mill catalog you got Meek Mill Dream Chasers. What Dreams and Nightmares you got. The Truth Can't lie. Dreams, nightmare, the Truth. Dreams and Nightmares, the Truth. I ain't even gonna play with both of them. The Truth was crazy. Was remember them days on, the truth crazy. What was on dreams and nightmares? Uh, was I'm a boss on dreams and nightmares? No, was, uh, I know that's the intro is on there. Yeah, all right, bet, bet, bet, bet. Oh yeah, damn, but, but, but, but, but, oh, yeah, damn, yeah, meat catalog crazy.

Speaker 2:

Bro, all right End the song with Mary Mary Mary. Who you around, who you around I?

Speaker 1:

want some bullshit, because y'all not in pussy foot.

Speaker 2:

All right, look, no, I'm not pussy footed.

Speaker 1:

Yes, you is, Bro this shit is crazy, bro I stood CC. That's what I be saying. Bro, this, bro, this shit crazy.

Speaker 2:

You want some bullshit. I'm saying give him his, take Hold on let me get my take, bro.

Speaker 1:

It's crazy that take that day was meek.

Speaker 3:

It was meek. I stood with bro. Y'all walked off. His catalog is immaculate.

Speaker 1:

You ain't going Skate. You ain't going cuz that day Skate. I went with me cuz. I went with me cuz. All right, look you tripping bro you tripping bro so.

Speaker 3:

All right now. I'm about to go in now. I bro bro cuz catalog is like quadruple pass, bro, play with me with all right, look right, any rapper in the city right now.

Speaker 2:

this is, this is when this is what it get to like right, when I'll be saying like, when niggas say shit, when people say shit, right, and they get to the point where you say something like if I call somebody a rat, what's next when the paperwork? If I call somebody this name or that name, there's a reason, I got to call them it and it just got to be backed up and all that. So this is one of them situations where a person just like a rapper, so they in denial, and I'm about to tell you how right the truth, the becoming the reason, the public enemy, what else fire, all fire, all right, that was the discussion that day.

Speaker 2:

Okay, now man, listen how I kick, it right I'm waiting for you.

Speaker 1:

I hear a lot of filler.

Speaker 2:

Bro, you cutting me off. You talk the whole time. I didn't talk, bro. I'm going to tell you right now. This is how niggas just be talking. Like I said, you got the best of meat meal. You got the real meat Meek Mill, you got the real me. Two of them, three of them. Flamers, one through three. Flamers one through three Like don't even Gotta be quiet.

Speaker 1:

That wasn't the conversation. We wasn't.

Speaker 2:

I let you talk, I let you talk. Albums, bro, you talking about.

Speaker 1:

We Bro you talking about?

Speaker 2:

No, we never was talking about. Yes, we was bro Public Enemy album. Yes, we was bro Public Enemy album I never.

Speaker 1:

That was the. That was the one mixtape.

Speaker 3:

That we talked. That was that day. I didn't mention the mixtape right now. I said, I said I said what did I just say?

Speaker 1:

What did I just say? So we talking about albums. You just brought up every mixtape Meek Mill had before he even had an album that catalog.

Speaker 2:

You talked the whole time I was quiet. We got to be real about the conversation.

Speaker 3:

I did that all real quick bro, we not doing all that yelling shit, bro.

Speaker 2:

Best of Meek Mill, like I said, the Real Me all the way up to three Flamers, all the way up to three Flamers, all the way up to three, including 2.5. Fuck. Is you talking about Dream chasers? One, two, three and four Dreams and nightmares, dreams worth more than money, wins and losses, expensive pain. What are you talking about? It's not no.

Speaker 1:

Bro, you named next tape bro. Bro, we were talking about dreams and nightmares, bro dollars were, uh uh, dreams worth more than money we talk about.

Speaker 2:

Bro, you just give me, bro, give me the same respect, bro. Bro, you just tried to.

Speaker 1:

You tried to use all. You used all the mixtapes To prove a point. That's not right, bro. That's not what we talked about that day, on Father's Day. So to do that on camera Is not fair.

Speaker 2:

So you done talking this time. Alright. When the fuck was catalog On the albums? Let me know that. When was catalog On the albums? When that happened, bro? He know that. When was catalog only albums? When that happened? When did that happen? Just answer the question, bro.

Speaker 1:

When we when we talking, when we putting people catalogs against catalogs, bro, we, we wasn't talking about mixtapes no, you know, you wasn't talking about mixtapes you know that that's a conversation.

Speaker 3:

The conversation was about the album bro before you're gonna bring up, you're gonna bring up 10 mixtapes that was crazy, bro. That wasn't the conversation. Listen, because every time I talk, bro.

Speaker 2:

You just start yelling, bro, listen, listen to what I'm saying bro, yes, it was the whole conversation all right can we stop talking?

Speaker 3:

bro, like I keep saying one mic and y'all just talk Bro.

Speaker 2:

I let him talk, I let you talk. You talk about, bro, catalogs. Never, ever said, yeah, that's, it's albums. You only got his name as albums. And I'm about to prove to you. I don't just be yapping like niggas. Before news left right, I said, bro, you could put Beans and his albums up against dream chasers and flamers by itself. Did I not say that? Did I not say that? That's when news walked off. I said, bro, just dream chasers and flamer series itself can go against beans, whole catalog and news walked off. Well, all he, I said that, bro. So, like I said, bro, best bro, best of Meek Mill, all the Real Me's, all the DC's, all the Flamers, dreams and Nightmares, dreams Earn More Than Money. Dc4. You talking about state property too, self-made one through three, fuck is you talking about? It's no comparison, bro. What are you talking about? I know you like Mech so much, bro. It's no comparison bro.

Speaker 1:

What are you talking? About Because you're naming the amount of albums. That doesn't mean that the rapping is superior.

Speaker 2:

How the fuck you got a better catalog. You know what?

Speaker 1:

I'm saying, bro, Like that's what I'm saying Just because you just sat there.

Speaker 2:

No, you popping it, my nigga.

Speaker 1:

You be popping it, bro, no you be popping it, bro, because you just Sat there, bro, and changed the whole, now mixtapes Wasn't in it.

Speaker 2:

When did that? When was that ever a thing? Now mixtapes Can't be in it. What? What are you talking about? Nobody never said that. Remember this too, though.

Speaker 3:

Remember this too, though Mac wasn't no real Rapper, rapper nigga though.

Speaker 2:

Like what bro Me Born to do? That shit, he wasn't a rapper.

Speaker 3:

He wasn't a rapper when he got into the game. He got into the game With like 10 raps.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying. Talk about mixtapes, bro. It never was a rule. Yeah, when you, when you debate catalogs, it gotta be albums. I'ma keep it real.

Speaker 1:

That's a rule, see, like we could've had, alright then what are you? Talking about.

Speaker 3:

You brought the conversation up like we was going to get into a real conversation and then you brought no no, you brought the conversation up and you brought it up on camera like, and then you changed the dynamic of the conversation on camera.

Speaker 1:

That's not right core.

Speaker 2:

You said mac on that day and got I did not bro, yes, you did I walked with bro to the car while you walked off with news, bro on Wallahi bro, Wallahi bro, On my mean grief, bro, Before news walked off, bro, Before bro, we got too many songs. If a nigga say something, something bro, you just try to add Public Enemy, which is a mixtape. No, you added Public Enemy, bro. You keep Because you're a liar. You're making fun of me On camera.

Speaker 1:

Bro, I'm sitting here telling the truth and you just changed the whole dynamic Of the conversation, bro. You just said that I added in public enemy and you added in public enemy. What are you talking? About bro, I never said public enemy On camera. Did I say public enemy? This is the thing. Remember how I started off.

Speaker 2:

This is exactly what I said. Y'all just witnessed it, bro. This is called when a motherfucker believe in that and like that, so much they just and deny you from best of meat meal all the way to fucking. 5 am in philly is immaculate the reason to become, in the truth, public enemy. All classics, classics, right, immaculate Right. All classics, yes, dreams and nightmares.

Speaker 2:

Classic Flamers 1. Classic Flamers 2. Classic Dream Chasers 1. Classic Dream Chasers 2 is the most downloaded mixtape ever. How you're going to take him out Like? No, bro, lean, I'm cooking this shit way over. Listen, right, this is the type, this is the shit, right. When niggas be like best of Meek Mill, real. No, you ain't changed that. No, I didn't. When we was on that block I said Meek Mill catalog is amazing. I didn't say yeah, meek album to album with Beans. No, we said catalog, bro, I don't give a Meek album, the album with Beans. No, we said catalog, bro, I don't give a fuck if y'all name Beans Sunkissed like a soda, it's his catalog. You can't just pick and choose what you want in the catalog. So, like I said, bro, you say the truth Meek got something versus that. You say the becoming Meek got something versus that you say the reason Meek got something to that. What else is Meek got something versus that. You see the reason Meek got something of that. What else? What else is Meek? What is Meek going to lose after that?

Speaker 1:

Even if he not winning that, what is he going to lose?

Speaker 2:

He got Tom Street a catalog and never put out a corny album ever bro.

Speaker 1:

That's what I be meanin', Tom Street. Nobody never said that, bro. You know I love Meek.

Speaker 3:

He like one of my favorites at this time, so I don't want to. I don't want.

Speaker 2:

No, you did I said catalog, bro, I said catalog, I didn't say not dream chasers not flamers and all. Yeah, bro, you just start yelling. I said catalog. What are you talking about?

Speaker 1:

Alright, here we go.

Speaker 2:

Prove to me how his catalog better. You keep trying to say all this other shit. Prove how it's better. Well, meek catalog and Beans, prove you. Trying to, bro. This is what I said. No, fuck all that, we passed that. Prove how it's better, bro, prove it.

Speaker 1:

All you doing is naming, naming albums. Meek has a illustrious uh catalog of albums and mixtapes. I'm not talking about that, nigga, when we said we was putting catalogs against catalog. Nigga, we talk about albums and what I'm saying and what we was making this shit up and what we was talking about. He keeps.

Speaker 3:

He keeps saying nigga and moving on.

Speaker 2:

He just making shit up now.

Speaker 1:

Yo white boy crazy. And just because you name an album against album, I'm talking about the actual rapping, the actual rapping, the skill, the actual skill of rapping. That's when you play catalog against catalog.

Speaker 2:

Still what we talking about, meek Mill here, sir, what are?

Speaker 3:

you talking about.

Speaker 2:

We talking about Meek Mill, sir. What the fuck is you talking about? We talking about the same thing bro, you talking about rapping Still.

Speaker 2:

What the fuck is you talking about? More flows than beans, more hits than beans. What are you talking about? More pla flows than beans, more flows than beans, more hits than beans. What are you talking about? More plaques than beans? Let's get to it. Nigga fuck is you talking about that? Nigga, not fucking with me, bro. You tripping all that legend, shit and all that's cool. I love me, I met him, all that he said he liked me and all mac. Your shit not better than me. That's just what it is me. You know, mac your not better than me.

Speaker 2:

That's just what it is all right, bro, you done no, you're done, you lost.

Speaker 1:

You talking about it's not, it's a battle for you and your head.

Speaker 2:

It's not a battle for me, because I'm I'm gonna stand up, go ahead, it's not about being thorough.

Speaker 1:

My it's about, like I said when I first started you keep trying to go over here and over there and yell about putting this album in. I just told you, bro, he don't got songs. He don't got them. What your Life Likes, he don't got them Daz, he don't got them. Ride For my Homies it's like they don't have them type of records.

Speaker 3:

Nothing like it.

Speaker 1:

Nothing like it.

Speaker 3:

Nothing like it, get down Nothing like it, nothing like it, nothing like it Get down.

Speaker 1:

Nothing like it. Get down.

Speaker 3:

Nothing like it. I'm just saying, bro, it's just certain records, it's just certain records. That I get from.

Speaker 1:

The feeling that I get from that, that I don't get from Meek, and I love.

Speaker 2:

Meek to death, that's just how I feel. Everybody who watching this In the comments, all that.

Speaker 1:

You name it A mixtape against an album, or that don't mean nothing about the rap.

Speaker 2:

I'm talking about the rapping, the actual rapping, everybody who out there, the actual definition of catalog. That's what I'm going by. I'm not saying yo, he don't feel like this and these songs right here, I'm going off catalog. I'm not going off he rap and it make me feel. No, I'm talking about.

Speaker 3:

Catalog. So everybody out there, that was Exactly.

Speaker 1:

But I'm lying Everybody out there.

Speaker 2:

Meek Mill Next to Beans. Meek Mill Next to Beans. I do agree with him, though Meek Mill next to Beans.

Speaker 1:

Catalog.

Speaker 2:

Meek Mill next to Beans. I was there. Catalog, bro, I was right there I was right there.

Speaker 3:

Mack ain't, his reach ain't long enough.

Speaker 2:

Beans catalog. Is this, bro? It's okay, bro, this Beans catalog. What I'm saying is though what.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying is I know what you said that day and I know what the conversation was that day.

Speaker 2:

You sat down on camera and changed the whole dynamic Of the conversation, bro, like I said, beans catalog Legendary.

Speaker 3:

Never dropped a corny album Ever and he did a legendary status In a time that he was on.

Speaker 2:

Catalog is Crazy, time's three. On top of that you got all these classics, not even mentioning the self-made and the whole MMG era and all that. We could leave that alone. We could leave that alone. That's, bro. Catalog, bro, that's like me, right? I'm really the most we sitting here or something, something and then we get signed or something happening. No, that was before they you gotta go out. No, he worked to get that. If we sit here and talking about core Gwine, I'm not gonna say, yeah, he signed with E1, and that's when he dropped 180. So that did it. No, he dropped all tapes. He dropped tapes from here to here. Future what is he to go off His tapes? Thug? What is he to go off His tapes? D-block what is they to go for? Tapes, what are you talking about? They gotta be Wayne Dedications, the drought, that's what made him who he is.

Speaker 1:

You can't take out tapes.

Speaker 2:

For your benefit, bro.

Speaker 1:

It's not no benefit of me, bro.

Speaker 2:

That's a catalog, bro, that day on Father's Day, bro.

Speaker 1:

We was talking about albums, bro it was not.

Speaker 3:

I keep telling you.

Speaker 1:

It was not Alright, so let's go.

Speaker 2:

You can call dudes right now. I never said albums, I said catalog. Can I say something? White boy, white boy. Can I say something? White?

Speaker 3:

Boy. What's Bean's top song? What's Bean's top song?

Speaker 1:

We discussed that that day.

Speaker 2:

Lawy bro On my man bro, I never said albums. I never said that. I said whole catalogs with.

Speaker 3:

Lawy bro His top song. Right, his top song Fill it In the Air. Right. That's Bean's top song and he got a feature on the hook. Name me top song dreams and nightmares probably right all I'm trying to say he don't be having no help. I'm talking about the right.

Speaker 1:

No help, I'm not talking about he got, he got better he got, better he got we all know story, you know, I'll say it, he got better his records than uh, than matt. I'm talking about you you heard me from the from this from the start of the conversation. I never changed my jaw, bro, I them. I'm filling records, bro, that we grew up off of. Bro Cuz don't have those type of records, that's what I was saying.

Speaker 2:

That's where you losing your mind. That's where you losing your mind and what is he talking? About he got more of them.

Speaker 3:

Type records.

Speaker 2:

Than Hicks. I could really name the whole fucking Dream Chasers 2, except for the commercial Jones. The whole Flamers 1, the whole Flamers 1, that's what.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying, bro, I wasn't adding them, so them Flamers, them Flamers and Dream Chasers, and all of them joints. They wasn't on my brain, so I'm not thinking of the records that's on those joints, cause I'm only thinking about His albums.

Speaker 2:

Let's move my brain, so I'm not thinking of the records that's on those joints, because I'm only thinking about his albums. You can't do that, bro. You can't choose what your catalog is on father's day you won't keep lying in front of the camera, bro.

Speaker 1:

You are, you are you are, you are, you are cutting bro and you said Mac on Father's.

Speaker 2:

Day you lying bro. I never said no albums, bro, I'm not about to. Keep saying Well, all he you gonna keep saying I said that bro, I never said albums bro.

Speaker 3:

White boy, white boy, this gonna play back and you gonna be mad At yourself.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm not bro. I'm telling you and I know the conversation that we're having. Look, look, look.

Speaker 3:

Moving forward. Man, let's talk about something else. Look, I got a question for y'all right. This is a question I'm going to ask y'all. If somebody become the president the day of tomorrow, y'all think they should be able to like not be arrested. Y'all think it should be like no laws for them. Fuck, no, no. So that's what like.

Speaker 2:

That's what Donald Trump is.

Speaker 3:

That's what he kind of fight for once he become president.

Speaker 1:

So you saying like if you become the president, boom, you become the president and you just commit any crime. We just going to say any crime.

Speaker 3:

Whatever I do as a president, and you saying like I can commit any crime and not be booked. Yeah, no, that ain't right. None of the rest of the presidents get booked when they do that shit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, I don't think that.

Speaker 3:

That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I be telling people, I think all that voting stuff. I be thinking they more gangs than GDs and BDs, bro, the government and the judicial system and the commonwealth and all that. I be thinking they more gangs than anybody bro, for real but they move.

Speaker 1:

I think they move like that, though I think more than 80% of the presidents was dirty, but they're the president so, donald trump, he trying to basically, uh, not become the president, to not get booked, or become the president again, to not be locked up.

Speaker 3:

You know like, yeah, I mean some of the laws, some of the laws he trying to pass, you know, uh, you know, is not like the norm of America. So people are like kind of nervous.

Speaker 1:

Cuz just passed some crazy laws.

Speaker 3:

I'm cool with Donald Trump being a rock star right now, but what's your thoughts on that white boy?

Speaker 1:

I don't know thoughts on that white boy, I don't know. I just think that like that whole, like Presidential shit, bro. So, like I always say it, like that shit just don't be for us.

Speaker 3:

So what if you was the president?

Speaker 1:

What you think about the laws.

Speaker 3:

What would you change as president?

Speaker 2:

I ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna free the whole jail.

Speaker 2:

Real quick.

Speaker 1:

Like real quick, Free the whole jail.

Speaker 3:

No, no, no no.

Speaker 1:

You can't free the whole jails, like that's weird. No, not the freaks. No not the freaks.

Speaker 2:

No, not the Sugar tax done. Sugar tax done.

Speaker 3:

What you doing if you was the president.

Speaker 2:

Sugar tax done.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to make sure black people get reparations.

Speaker 2:

This nigga is crazy Sugar tax done.

Speaker 1:

We need our reparations. Everybody could get reparations, but we can't get reparations.

Speaker 2:

No probation or parole for real, and that's something I was going to bring up too Like how us, as like black men, like we just don't get no second chance, like once you get in that courtroom and you lose a case and they throw that F on you, you could be 20, 21. Yeah, this is what you feel Get a little probation and you lose a case and they throw that F on you. You could be 20, 21,. Get a little probation.

Speaker 2:

You played or you did a year, whatever, Like you, just never ever, ever forgave him for that, like you, could be 40 years old and the job's still not high because you caught a get case in 1985 or some shit.

Speaker 3:

And it's crazy bro.

Speaker 1:

It's crazy bro.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's crazy, it's crazy. And and another thing like I know people like 15 years for aggravated assaults, 15 to 18 years for some drugs, like they giving out them jaws, like they caught a body or something yo it's crazy.

Speaker 1:

Our laws is just twisted bro I just think that just think that these laws that we got our bye-bye was made back when they had slavery. Yeah, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

These laws are made up by slave masters.

Speaker 3:

Most of the laws are made for the African-American community. Yeah, to keep us in check. All that Keep us in check.

Speaker 2:

All that, jim Crow, I told man when we first, when Lil Mook was around, we was having that convo when we was with Shoebox and Munna and I was on some like.

Speaker 1:

What are you talking about? The Jim Crow, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Like look we in 2024, right, it's two or three generations ahead of us. Ebt, section 8, all type of. So some of these well, most of us that's growing up is getting taught food stamps and Section 8.

Speaker 1:

Subsidized housing, welfare and projects.

Speaker 2:

And all that to the point. The 20, 21 year old on a block in the middle of the prop, like it's litter, is literally in your, in your bloodstream, your grandma, I'm headed, then your mom and you were you feel me, you feel me all the daughters, all the kids, babies that's why I like that's they taught the same thing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, right like, and it's crazy like because you know, back then it was the little. No, he played basketball, he football, he nice, keep him out the street. Ain't none of that, no more. Ain't none of that, no more. Man. Like, like I told them, it's just, it's a lack of guidance. I'm not trying to people be thinking that's like blaming on older people thing, but it ain't, it's just what it is it's lack of guidance. Out here starting a house and and and it's showing, and it's it keep getting worse and worse and worse. Starting to house, you feel me so like, so like, like you say, you a person who don't like to talk about Shit, you like to get shit done.

Speaker 3:

You feel me so.

Speaker 2:

What's something that you would like Say if you had a certain position and you could pick one thing, just one thing, and you think it would make it better in our community as black men and women? And you could pick one thing, just one thing, and you think it would make it better in our community as black men and women?

Speaker 3:

what would you do, shit, if it would make it better in our community?

Speaker 2:

One thing, though, one thing Damn, Not no superpower, shit like something you could really do as a person. Yeah.

Speaker 3:

I'm trying to think, I'm going to be honest, I would probably pick more like Damn.

Speaker 2:

This, the stuff that people don't know. No, because you really got to.

Speaker 1:

I would probably do like, probably like, as I'm saying, because that was a great question bro, that was a great question.

Speaker 3:

Bro, that was a great question.

Speaker 1:

You got me thinking and, as I'm sitting here thinking I'm like we probably need like more resource programs, like more resource facilities.

Speaker 2:

Like trades and trades when you can learn trades, trades.

Speaker 1:

You got the computers, you can learn.

Speaker 3:

I'm thinking more like things.

Speaker 1:

It's just like places you can learn getting a job, you can go apply for jobs or you know, what I'm saying, just resource facilities and shit like that.

Speaker 2:

I already know what I'm going to say, but I want you to say yours yeah, I was thinking more like yeah, like trade and learning centers and stuff like that.

Speaker 3:

For people to pick up on different trades that we need to know. Rather it's from law carpentry, electricity plumbing, whatever, whatever, electricity plumbing, whatever, um, whatever. I think like nowadays kids is really staying in the house thinking they're gonna go viral or play a video game. I mean not to say it can't happen. You know, I'm saying because people get paid off for video games yeah, how many people gonna do that.

Speaker 1:

You know what?

Speaker 3:

I'm saying right, right, right, but um, or music, even a rapper, or playing ball, you know, I mean, how many people make it through that? You know a lot of people ain't even make it through our era playing ball. So hell yeah, even, let alone this era, like he said, it ain't that no more. You know what I mean. You can't go to the playgrounds and just go play ball five on five and run ball and thinking everything's going to be sweet, everybody's going to go home.

Speaker 2:

You know what? All right, beck. So you know what I'll do If I could change one thing about the community and I think it'll make a drastic change. All the Puerto Rican stores, all the delis, all the Puerto Rican stores, all the delis, chinese stores, bodegas, everywhere, everywhere where you see like you walk in A-Rabs, own all the 7-Elevens you walk in certain established all the smoke shops. All black owned Each and every one of them.

Speaker 2:

It should be like that, because it's in our communities and I'll even, I'll even take it further that'll be fire even all Americans, not even black, all Americans all the community all the look, imagine if all the factories that made Nikes and Adidas and Yeezys and all, imagine if all black people worked in them.

Speaker 2:

Imagine if we owned the Duncans or the 7-Elevens, or imagine if you know you like. Look, let me say something right. Go out any suburb, any, john. It is even this way In some nice neighborhoods in Philly. For real, go in these suburbs and go in these nice towns. Ain't no delis With no cigarettes and beer. Ain't no Chinese store, so you won't eat unhealthy shit. Ain't no, none of that. When you go to these suburbs, it'd be walmart shop rights and probably some baseball card whole foods that they. They do that on purpose. Noodles cost 50 on purpose because you eat it, all that fucking sodium and you adding more stuff. Then it's beer, it's black and mild, it's cigarettes. They don't got that shit in the suburbs, bro. Everything that kill you, we can all walk out this house, go to the corner and buy it Everything. They do not have that in them other neighborhoods bro.

Speaker 3:

Real red bro.

Speaker 2:

Like that's really like, bro, that's really like. That's really like the prominent thing that people don't be seeing the same way as me. You know what I mean.

Speaker 1:

So, like the foreigners, they come over to America, they see opportunity, they take advantage. It's really not their fault, it's really. It start with us, bro, because we got to be smarter, we got to be healthier, we got to be, uh, doing more. We got to work more, we got to be able to do all these things to obtain the health, the wealth, the shit that we can't get to, or the things that's not in our neighborhood or they push in our neighborhood. We gotta push it out. See, we embrace it, we don't push it out.

Speaker 1:

We embrace it. The poppy store, the Chinese store, the smoke shops, we the reason why the lights on in the motherfuckers Yo it's the real of the most podcast.

Speaker 2:

Make sure you like, subscribe, comment, share If you don't use a fucking hater because it's free.

Speaker 1:

Uh-huh.

Speaker 3:

I wanted to ask you about since you was talking about the food and all that, I want to talk about some of the food you made in jail. Speaking on jail Cash been in and out of jail. His whole life. It's not even like Wild old shit.

Speaker 1:

Or no glorification shit, it's not even like no wild old shit, like yeah or no, like Glorification shit, it's just you know Telling the old tale, or like how I used to get down. I just want him to just give up.

Speaker 3:

Some of the food Recipes, because we was talking About an hour ago Before the show and he was telling me All this Boy, you could tell him better, man.

Speaker 2:

Shit Um.

Speaker 3:

He said everything that's out here he can make in there Like bro, I be telling people, man People think you need all these ingredients and you need to buy this, that.

Speaker 2:

And the third man? Let me tell you something man Ritz crackers.

Speaker 1:

Tortillas.

Speaker 2:

Oatmeal, hot water, roll it out, let it sit, wrap. Take the tuna. You take the noodles. Cheese whiz, mix it up. Feel me, add your little Summer sausage, chop it up. Feel me we don't got knives in jail, we gotta cut it from the back of the spoon. Feel me, cut it up. Yeah, this is some this. And then a stick of ketchup. We don't got knives in jail, we got to cut it from the back of the spoon. You feel me Cut it up? Yeah, this is some this. And then a sticker cake too. This is going to make my night Real rap. Cut him up. Cut him up. Put the, put the Pick the jalapeno in there. Wrap that shit up. Let it sit. Got a fucking chipotle wrap, damn Alright. So you got the potato balls. So, boom, you take a bag of chips. It's moon lodge.

Speaker 2:

You feel me jalapeno favorite that was my jam. You crush the chips all up, you feel me, cut some sausage, you could do mackerel tuna, whatever. That was my jawn. You crush the chips all up, feel me Right. Cut some sausage, you could do mackerel tuna, whatever. Whatever you feel me, put the cheese in there, put the hot water in there, ball it up, flip the jawn, put a towel over it. You get that jawn in like 10 minutes. You got to cut the bag. Big potato ball it's called potato because the chips, feel me, you got the hot sausage. I used to add cheese whiz and honey right on top. Boom chi cheese. I had plenty of them, but everybody, everybody's favorite Jones was the Flamin' Hot Cheeto Jones. You used to cook for everybody. Hell yeah, two honey buns and a nutty bar. I cooked for you, feel me.

Speaker 3:

But you was doing with the honey buns, bro All right.

Speaker 2:

So boom the honey buns, boom right.

Speaker 3:

Tell them how you used to make your cake and all that.

Speaker 2:

So boom, uh, somehow you used to make a cake and all that. So boom, you put two honey buns, or four to make it big, but two. You get all these cookies. You just crush the cookies up. Crush the cookies up, put some milk in peanut butter. Now that like kick battery, feel me. Yeah, put the honey bun right there, bro get like a circle, john, put all that in there.

Speaker 2:

You know how? You about to bake a cake and you, boom, you put all that in there. Add peanut butter on top, boom, let it sit. All the stickiness, cookies, milk, that's all sticky shit. You feel me stick right up. Take a slice of that, john, all sticky shit. You feel me Stick right up, take a slice of that jam. You don't need nothing else for the whole day. And there's another one, right, this is the last jam. If you really gel, you don't eat Chi-Chis, like if you really gel.

Speaker 3:

For real, for real, you don't eat them, and this is not for y'all to like go chill.

Speaker 2:

No, this ain't no shit.

Speaker 3:

This for the people that probably already been inside.

Speaker 2:

No, this for the young boys who got a fucking heritage. That's how you going to be eating if you keep acting crazy.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, real shit. Yeah, the chi-chis Going in there. Boom, that's how you going to eat.

Speaker 2:

So I worked in like from white boy all the way to the real and most kitchen bags. Feel me you cut them. Boom, now you got the best cheat ever. Feel me you cut the bag. The secret to the cheese say if you use three noodles, you use two packs.

Speaker 2:

You never put the amount of noodles you put, you never. You three johns, four johns, two packs. Put the noodles in there, put the joint in there. Now, with the cheese, you just do whatever Macro, yellow, fin, clams, you do whatever, boom Ball, that shit up, always cheese. You got to put the cheese, cheese and rice and chi-chis, because that's what make it puff and stick. Feel me, put that shit in there, squeeze it up. Now, bro, you literally going to people, bulls like this. What was that?

Speaker 3:

Dumping it cause it's lumpy. You gotta really grab it and Dump it. What's the fish? You said that people was actually in there fighting over Yo we a piece.

Speaker 2:

You the fuck up For some yellow fans. That's just what it was. See yo bitch Yo he getting on my nerves when he get out the shower fuck him up. Give me two yellow fans, fuck him right up.

Speaker 1:

Damn Point blank. You put a hit on a nigga for two yellow fans Two yellow fans, bro, damn, it's that.

Speaker 2:

And honey buns, that's what people go crazy over, but Not to glorify None of that shit. But I'm just saying man Like in that joint.

Speaker 3:

These are recipes From Cash and yeah yeah.

Speaker 2:

And uh, oh, y'all ain't let me Say the joint. So I put that shit in there. Right, the best joints to me Was when you put the cheese curl and the cheese whiz in it. You let that joint sit, you put it in the bowl. You got to spread it in the bowl because they're going to be big lumps. So you got to spread it in the bowl and shit. After that you take the ranch cheese and crush all these Flamin' Hot Cheetos on there, dump it right on there. Shit amazing. I called it the Flamin' Hot Cheet. Flamin' Hot Cheet. Shit amazing. I called it the flaming hot cheat. Flaming hot cheat. The whole block used to be like Yo Cash, I got two drums, you ain't got more than two ingredients. You can't get in the cypher.

Speaker 3:

It's over the broke niggas.

Speaker 2:

Yo, I got a pack of tomato salt. The fuck out of here. We need real deal shit. I tell everybody, like I was in there, I caught colvin. They was treating us like we was puppies. After I survived that, bro, ain't nothing in this I can't survive. You hear me, I had covet my social worker in there died.

Speaker 2:

I seen somebody it split, but I seen somebody hang it up in that jaw. Wow, all that, bro, it was covet time b-side. Okay, anybody ask them about covet the pandemic b-side probably shut it here, bro. No, it was real crazy in that jaw, man, because you know when corona first hit, people ain't know what it was. So all the COs were scared bro, they stuffing our like our shit this big.

Speaker 2:

Our bottom of our door this big they hitting our trees under it because they don't even want to open the door. Real rad Shit was crazy. I caught that shit twice in there. Feel me Rest in peace to everybody who passed away from that shit too, man, cause I ain't gonna hold you. That was a real traumatizing point in my life, bro. Real rat. Alright, get out, open the door, phone or shower. If you get on the phone, it's three minutes, if you shower it's one. Shit couldn't wash nothing. None of that water was brown coming out the sink.

Speaker 2:

Oh, god bro but it's all about how you, how you, how you get over that. You mean, I'm telling you that that that situation that I'm talking about right now really made me who I am right now, bro, like that's when I knew, like something something, gotta get it, stop playing yeah, before this, be you permanent.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, something got to change.

Speaker 2:

Yes you feel me no doubt uh, shout out to the school of gifted man um, they got a show june 25th find us a day before my birthdayth.

Speaker 1:

That's something that I like.

Speaker 2:

Wanna do. Shout out Ka from Jerome July 5th. Hello, kaim, are you there? You feel me? I actually met the hook to the Roadcaster and played his new shit. Ka sent me, yeah, he sent me.

Speaker 1:

I miss my dog and he sent me a dance and take John at the John. Yes, I sure was look at his page.

Speaker 2:

That shit look crazy bro um, which I enjoyed about the Chat Chew series.

Speaker 3:

Man the Chat Chew series. It was something new for us because us as a pod, you know, we in one space and we able to like sit back and talk, but the Chat and Chew series, we was able to shake hands and meet new people Females for real.

Speaker 3:

For real, it was mostly females in there, young entrepreneurs doing different things in the city, and it feels good to just know that we're a part of something like that. Now, okay, you know what I mean. Like three months ago we was just trying to figure the podcast business out. You know what I'm saying? The whole part of being a part of the pod, right, but now we, like, actually pod and you feel me. So I always say that because it took a long time to even. So I always say that because it took a long time to even us to even be able to sit down on these microphones and get shit together.

Speaker 3:

Let alone go to another location. Let alone be in another location talking on a microphone.

Speaker 1:

I love to see White boy was injured that day.

Speaker 2:

People don't know white boy was sick when he showed up.

Speaker 1:

I love to see black. I love to see young black people organizing important things like that together, bringing different entities together and having successful venue situations like that because, like we just be, like, a lot of people be lost and don't be knowing, like, what to do, where to start and how to do it you know what I'm saying, and and that and and and in that room. That was a a lot of ways you could start a lot of things if you just talked to a lot of people in that room.

Speaker 1:

So it was just good to see that you know what I'm saying, to see that we got that in our area.

Speaker 3:

You're dealing with something you can start a lot of things. He's talking about business. There's definitely a lot of options in there.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I definitely enjoyed it. I finally got the content and I'm going to put it out tomorrow. So by the time y'all see this interview, y'all are going to already know Just beautiful man, like beautiful, like how I just see, like. So because, like the men I'm around my team, we all stand up dudes who making sure we doing what we got to do. So I see that all the time. But just to see so much women in there on some ball shit with the same skin color as us is just dope, like it was dope, like how, how they laid the whole thing out was dope organized.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like I know, like I I be, I be laughing and joking a lot and all that. But like that's that's one of them, jones. Where, like that, but like that's that's one of them. Joins, where, like when I went there, I was on some stuff like oh, like it's really all business now.

Speaker 1:

Like me, there's no time to joke and you feel good about the transition, like like, okay, I'm gonna be doing things like this. Yeah, I could get with this yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

It put a real like. It put a real like tight feeling in my heart like, damn, like I could really probably really do this entertainment shit for a living. Like, feel me, we walked in there, we set up. I be telling people every time, really, the most step in somewhere, we light it up. We, we, the, we, the, uh, life of the party. Uh, speaking of things like that, uh, shout out, the guai core um triple wawa cut video shoot was the other day. Yeah, he had, he had the city out there. We made some lot of connections. So shout out, gwaii man, much, much love.

Speaker 2:

Much love for that success of your newest John Theroux and all that I'm trying to see. Is it any music we missed?

Speaker 3:

No, drake took some music down though.

Speaker 2:

He did.

Speaker 3:

Took all his diss songs down.

Speaker 2:

I thought he took them from the Gram, not Apple.

Speaker 1:

Nah, he took them down. I heard.

Speaker 2:

Like off Apple Off.

Speaker 1:

Apple. Yeah, I was already saying he lost but he definitely lost now.

Speaker 3:

Nah, I don't know if he took them off Apple.

Speaker 1:

I know he took them down. Then Kendrick had that show.

Speaker 2:

We did Diamond Street King yesterday. How y'all feel about King?

Speaker 3:

He killed that interview.

Speaker 1:

I'm glad we got to sit down with him. Because that's one of them, like Ikeemuna, joints in me. Like you know the internet, it'll have you, uh, it'll have you like thinking things or like you see things, and it'll just be like you'll think certain things and then these kids be intelligent man?

Speaker 1:

yeah, they don't be with the internet, depict them to be man. Yeah, these kids be like great gentlemen. They be. They be young men that's trying to get out of poverty and they be talented and they be up against a lot and they just be working towards success.

Speaker 2:

That's another thing about this media shit like that. I had to just like realize, like, like this media shit and everybody in it is looking for the most views, the most likes how they look to the masses, they next kind scheme type of to the top behavior.

Speaker 2:

Gimmicky shit we really be caring about these dudes. Man like it ain't no artist that came up here yet they can't say yo like before door and after the interview with them. I ain't gonna laugh like we real life get Texas every time we were alive get calls. It ain't nobody that we interview here yet that didn't call our phone after. And it be like At all.

Speaker 1:

Once we meet them or like we interview them, they be like family. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's a creepy thing. That's a thing, and I'm gonna. And I'm gonna address something too, bro, that's why I like that.

Speaker 3:

We're the most family shit. That shit for real.

Speaker 2:

That's why I started seeing it For real and I ain't gonna lie, I want to address something too. Man, like I had put up a video you know what I'm saying and I pinned that joint to our profile, like basically saying, like we already living in society for us times too, in pennsylvania, that commonwealth and all that we already in a society where you can make a mistake at 18 years old and then, you're 40 and they still judging you as a criminal, paying for it you could have been conspiracy all that.

Speaker 2:

We already live in a society like that and we're already the ethnicity where that get done to us the most.

Speaker 2:

So what we not going to do is do that with really the most. That's what we not going to do. Like all that street block, he beefing cousin, grandmom sock stole. I don't give a fuck about none of that. We RTM Real of the most, real of the most out of the world, real of the most.

Speaker 2:

D2e, ywo, real of the most. You feel me. Real of the most Big, real of the most. You feel me that's what we is, nothing else. Really the most big, really the most. You feel me that's what we is, nothing else. We not tied to none of these street activities and because there's a lot of things, like when I be trying to make calls and all that, and then it's like I'm the youngest, so certain situations be happening with me because I'm closer to these dudes and and like an age that's warren out here, but that's for everybody. I don't care if I lose friends because of this shit. Like, yes, the person that you don't like or you're getting in trouble with, yes, he's going to be on his couch he's going to be on his couch.

Speaker 1:

I don't want no phone calls. I don't want to explain myself none of that. I double, I double down. At all I double down, I agree with you, I'm with you.

Speaker 2:

with that, we're all right.

Speaker 1:

I'm with you with that Like real shit. Now, if it's us.

Speaker 2:

Somebody harmed us, that's a different story. If somebody approaching us, that's a different story. But we. Rtm, these hosts and everybody who rock with us. Man, y'all see how we carrying it.

Speaker 3:

If you in.

Speaker 2:

Philadelphia. Right now, you can't say you don't see this, and that's just what it is.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's just what it is.

Speaker 3:

It's the Relative Most Podcast. Make sure you share, like, subscribe comment.

Speaker 1:

hit that notification bell Yo before we end it, let's do a quick fast track and we can wrap it up. You want me to start?

Speaker 3:

or you want to shoot. I'm going to start because I like fucking with cash and shit. What's your favorite cake?

Speaker 2:

Red Velvet, I meant cheesecake. I'm tripping cheesecake.

Speaker 3:

Alright. So Let me see you fuck with donuts. Alright, cheesecake. I meant cheesecake. You said cheesecake Cheesecake or Glazed donuts, cheese Cheesecake.

Speaker 2:

Cheesecake.

Speaker 3:

That glazed donuts Cheesecake.

Speaker 2:

Cheesecake, that shit good as fuck.

Speaker 3:

All right, I think I asked you this before, but I'm going to ask again, collard greens or string beans, string beans. All right, you took a vote. Carry your jerk curry.

Speaker 2:

Everybody don't know how to make, jerk, you can't go wrong with curry, though all you gotta do is put that shit in there. You right about that. Yeah, jerk, you gotta you gotta do is put that in there, yeah you write about that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you gotta do that, make sure. Um damn, that's good, go ahead, you got me all right.

Speaker 2:

So my fast track right um ceo wise, ceo-wise CEO-wise Irv Gotti Irv Gotti.

Speaker 3:

Or Chris Lighty.

Speaker 2:

Chris Lighty, chris Lighty. You don't know who that is. I said Chris Lighty. Oh, you said Chris Lighty. Oh, all right, all right.

Speaker 3:

You know the one that got Fat Joe 50 cents. Violator. Violator Busta Rhymes lady. You don't know that. I said chris. Oh, you said chris lady. Oh, all right, all right, I got fat joe 50 50, oh yeah yeah, violator buster all right, all right as well, yeah um, okay, okay, all right.

Speaker 2:

Q QCP or Dame Dash.

Speaker 1:

Hmm.

Speaker 3:

I got to go with.

Speaker 1:

Dame, man. Yeah, I will go with Dame. Yeah, I will go with Dame too.

Speaker 2:

Rihanna or Beyonce Dame.

Speaker 3:

I'm going with Rihanna.

Speaker 2:

Me too.

Speaker 3:

I'd rather play with.

Speaker 2:

A$AP Rocky, than said rocky that whole me too. I just died you funny go ahead.

Speaker 3:

It's like oh, I gotta ask you all right, let me see, let me see I a rocky home before that's big. Meet your g prince.

Speaker 2:

Big Meech or G Prince Meech Meech. Alright bet, that's some fucked up shit.

Speaker 3:

Scarface or Bumby Scarface. Alright, easy, or Snoop Sno, but all right um I got you too white boy um matt dreya e40 matt dre um. Um, I'm a fuck white boy C.

Speaker 1:

CEOs Um Damn CEOs Kevin Lyles.

Speaker 2:

Russell Simmons.

Speaker 1:

Kevin Lyles.

Speaker 2:

Jermaine Dupri, a baby face Jermaine Dupri.

Speaker 3:

All right, white boy, you ready? Sprite or Faygo's. Faygo All right Balenciaga Stocked Up.

Speaker 1:

Damn, you gonna do me like that. I'm gonna go with Stocked Up.

Speaker 3:

Shout out to Nah Stocked Up.

Speaker 1:

We sponsored by Stocked Up. We always gonna go Stocked Up, always gonna go Stocked Up. You better know it.

Speaker 2:

Creefork or Bricks.

Speaker 3:

Brick or Raw. I'm going Cree Forge what, what you mean, what? Now let's go.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to go Forge, let's go. This is my combo Over Bricks.

Speaker 3:

Yes, all right, what I got to man, that's the Forge man. Don't send it to me, forge 500. Shout out to Cree Forge man.

Speaker 2:

Y'all still ain't send it to me Cree. Forge, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

It's the deal, Gorilla. You know what I mean. It's the Real of the Most podcast. I'm your host, Rilla.

Speaker 2:

I'm Outta World Cash.

Speaker 3:

I'm White Boy D2E and look, if y'all want us to keep on bringing content like this, y'all gotta share, like and subscribe man.

Speaker 2:

Comment, share, like. Hit that bell, subscribe. If you don't Use a heater, use a motherfucking heater Because it's free bro, because it's free man.

Speaker 3:

We out here man.

Speaker 2:

We out man.

Speaker 1:

We Really the Moose Podcast.

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