No Jumper

Lil Weirdo on San Diego vs Adam22, AirBNB Shot Up, Peysoh, Lefty Gunplay & More

75 min
May 19, 202611 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Adam22 and Lil Weirdo discuss San Diego's underrepresented rap scene, addressing Adam's controversial comments about the city lacking motion. They explore systemic challenges including past blackballing of artists like J.O and Rob Stone, territorial gang dynamics, and the geographic disadvantage of being overshadowed by LA and the Bay Area. Weirdo highlights emerging talent and the importance of respecting the city's Chicano rap legacy.

Insights
  • San Diego's rap scene struggles not from lack of talent but from structural disadvantages: proximity to LA dominance, past artist blackballing, and internal gang politics that prevent cross-neighborhood collaboration
  • Emerging artists are finding success through organic social media growth and direct networking rather than traditional A&R discovery, but still face reduced opportunities compared to LA counterparts
  • Respect for elder artists and community history is critical to building sustainable scenes; younger artists benefit from mentorship and genuine relationships over transactional label deals
  • Tour logistics and safety concerns create barriers for emerging artists; venues cancel shows when gang affiliations create perceived risk, limiting exposure opportunities
  • The narrative around 'opportunity' has shifted: modern artists must create their own momentum online, but geographic and political factors still create unequal playing fields
Trends
Decentralization of artist development away from traditional label structures toward manager-led mentorship and organic social media growthGeographic disadvantage becoming more pronounced in hip-hop as LA and Bay Area networks consolidate industry access and opportunitySafety concerns and gang politics directly impacting touring economics and venue availability for emerging regional artistsYounger artists leveraging TikTok and short-form video for viral growth independent of traditional music industry gatekeepersMentorship-based artist development replacing formal label signings, reducing financial risk but increasing personal responsibilityChicano rap as undervalued market segment despite sustained touring revenue and dedicated fanbaseCross-city collaboration becoming strategic tool to break regional isolation and access larger networksPodcast platforms becoming primary discovery and narrative-setting mechanism for regional hip-hop scenes
Topics
Companies
Airbnb
Mentioned in context of rental property incident in Fresno during tour planning
YouTube
Referenced as primary platform for music video distribution and view metrics
TikTok
Discussed as platform where Young Active's songs went viral without video content
Xbox
Gaming console mentioned in context of video game cheating allegations
PlayStation
Gaming platform referenced in 2K sports game discussion
Def Jam
Record label mentioned in context of J.O's career and East Coast label dynamics
Instagram
Social media platform where clips of Adam's comments were shared and amplified
People
Lil Weirdo
San Diego rapper defending city's music scene and discussing emerging talent development
Adam22
Host of No Jumper podcast; made controversial comments about San Diego lacking music motion
Peysoh
Emerging Mexican rapper from LA; collaborator with Lil Weirdo and Young Active
Young Active
Emerging San Diego artist managed by Lil Weirdo; viral success with garage recordings
Lil Maru
San Diego artist with touring success and millions of streams
Munchie B
Co-host who previously discussed San Diego music scene on podcast
Mitchie Slick
San Diego elder artist who responded to Adam's comments on podcast
J.O
San Diego artist from 2000s who was blackballed after beefing with Jay-Z
Rob Stone
San Diego artist whose career was damaged after incident with XXXTentacion
XXXTentacion
Artist involved in altercation with Rob Stone that impacted San Diego artist's career
Lil Rob
Chicano rap legend from San Diego still touring and generating revenue
Shadow
Chicano rap artist from San Diego with international touring success
Kendrick Lamar
Referenced as example of LA-centric artist who doesn't feature San Diego artists
Blueface
LA rapper referenced for boxing matches and maintaining street credibility
Lefty Gunplay
Northern California rapper discussed for personal struggles and comeback
Fat Guapo
Lil Weirdo's manager and mentor who helped launch his career
Sean Cotton
Music industry figure who discussed San Diego music scene on podcast
Lil Tricky
IE artist managed and promoted by Lil Weirdo
Lil Chino
Indio artist managed and promoted by Lil Weirdo
No Love Menace
San Diego artist being promoted by Lil Weirdo
Quotes
"I said, not really a music city quote unquote the same thing you said. No, but you're moving the goalposts."
Lil WeirdoEarly in interview
"If I had been in PR mode and build relationship mode and let's keep everybody happy, let's respect everybody, let's make everybody feel special and important and shit, then I wouldn't have said that."
Adam22Mid-interview
"The next big rapper to come out of San Diego will be a son of Adam 22 because this whole controversy is going... you know what this is like? This is like when America bombs Afghanistan."
Lil WeirdoMid-interview
"We from the streets, we calling the handshake. Like, you know, I hope we'll get a pop out."
Lil WeirdoLate interview
"San Diego was the city where rappers think they just going to come and get their money... Nowadays we got this motherf***ing jump into where rappers, they'll come to a show and sh**, but they just, they locking in like, Hey bro, pull up, come f*** with us."
Lil WeirdoClosing remarks
Full Transcript
Listen up. That means you. Yes, you. We know you're pointing at yourself. When it comes to party power games, we've got a place made for all sorts. From the experts to the drama queens. It's me, the JC. The finance bros. Look at those stocks, lads. We'll stick with slots. It's what we're good at. And not forgetting you. Yes, you, the one listening. Because at party power games, we've got all sorts of games for all sorts of trickles. Eligibility rules and terms and conditions apply. Please come by responsibly. 18plus, CameroAware.org. Insane. All right, yo, no Jumper. Coolest podcast in the world. We recording? Nice. I'm in here today with the pride of San Diego. Lil' Weirdo in the building. What's up with it? How you feeling, man? Chillin. What's up with you, man? Why you playing with the city, bro? OK. Am I playing with the city? Yeah, you are, though. You did some lame ass shit, bro. You want to know something? What? I was watching our first ever interview. Yeah. Listen to this. Actually, I'll just play it. I recorded it. Your career, basically. It just hasn't been that many artists that have really popped up. Yeah, we got a music city like that. Right. We got a music city. Yeah. Literally the exact same thing that I said that I've been getting attacked about. I said, not really a music city quote unquote the same thing you said. No, but listen, though. You're moving the goalposts. That's what you first said at first. And that's what Mitchie called me up for. No, but you're moving the goalposts. What you said was there's no motion down there. And that's where you're wrong yet. OK. You said there was no motion down there. OK. No, but I actually didn't say that. I didn't say that in the first one. You did it. I said that last year. But then you got your feelings. I don't know about it. Bro, I see you screaming on a podcast about this. Screaming? I see you screaming, bro. I think screaming might be a little easier. I didn't have anybody to scream out about it. You were right there screaming like, San Diego is delusional. OK, that's true. Yeah, you're screaming. But look, look, hold on. That's my reaction to the reaction. Hold on, though. What you did that was lame in that first clip. What you did that was lame, bro, is you got Sean Cotten up here. Right? So that's a guy who signs artists. He has a big platform like yourself. Right? And he says, oh, yeah, I just left San Diego, best city in California. The first thing you go to is, yeah, you're not going to find nobody to sign there. Because I was selling him that from the perspective of what he's essentially made most of his money off of, it is true that San Diego has a really broken up big star. But why is that the first thing you tell him, though? Listen, if he just told you that's a beautiful city, and he did some lame shit too, bro, because as soon as you said that, he said, oh, no. Like he agreed with you. I don't know why nobody gave him no backlash. Right, yeah. Because he doesn't have a dog in the fight. He's from Texas, so nobody expects him to get the shit about San Diego. And if he's already like you, you know? True. And also, I live out in California for many years. Built my whole platform here. Obviously interviewed plenty of people in San Diego. Did a lot of bullshit out here. Got a lot of people. Did a lot of dirt, a lot of work. Smuggled some bricks and whatnot, caught a few bodies. But that was the lame shit you did. Instead of like, oh, you didn't even have to say nothing about music. You were like, yeah, it's a beautiful city. Right. Or A, if you fucking, because you said you have people down there, like, A, you might want to look for some artists down there. The first thing you said was not a music city. You're not going to find no artists this hard. OK, if I had been in PR mode and build relationship mode and let's keep everybody happy, let's respect everybody, let's make everybody feel special and important and shit, then I wouldn't have said that. But instead, I was sitting there having, and from what I recall, it was the very beginning of the podcast where I don't even know if we were really. It's like first 20 seconds. Exactly. I don't think we were even thinking about the fact that it was being recorded. So that is what Adam 22 would have said. If he didn't even plan on being recorded at all, that's what the wiretap would have captured. You've been missing for years, bro. I know, I know. And I don't think that I said anything wrong. But I mean, did I leave the door open? Should I have said? And look, I even added the caveat. I was like, look, holler at Lil Weirdo. Lil Weirdo got motion. Hey, the people didn't like that. The one name that I brought up happens to the person sitting across the way. Look, when I first seen it, I was like, hey, I don't have that bad, bro. Ha ha ha. That was weird. Bro, you don't think that was lame with you? I oversimplified for sure. Because reality is that there's plenty of people that have motion coming out of Sena Diego on a bit of a smaller level, for sure. And I've certainly heard and seen a lot of them, because many of them are making Instagram reels attacking me over the last couple of weeks. Which, so there's definitely a lot of smaller movements. And then I have been made aware of more and more people. Like, obviously I mentioned you, but there's a bunch of artists who have motion out of there. I'm gonna say names, because look at, like I said, we're not a music city, but we're on the come up, though. So we have, my whole thing was when I said, you said we don't have motion. You were like, oh, there's not people hitting hundreds of thousands, fool, there's people, there's us hitting millions of views. True, you got like 10 million on some of your songs, right? So you said there's no views, and then you said there's nobody going on tour. Lil Maru goes on tour once a year selling out Dan Ver Saleg. Like the same cities, these LA artists are hitting. Lil Maru's going and he's taking 22 G-Fa with him and selling out these cities, bro. Right. So that's real motion right there. I don't think I said anything about touring. But for sure, like he's Lil Maru, I'm gonna put him in the category of you and other people that have real movements coming out of there. And look at Sena Diego, you cannot get mad when I shout out, when shit like this happens and we're supposed to shout out names, you can't shout out your favorite rapper who's not doing numbers or shit like that, you know? Because then when you have a chance to lick that person up and he might be dope, but he doesn't have no real motion there, that's not good because we're supposed to push the people as motion. So Sena Diego, I know you are, you're gonna get mad if I don't say your name, bro. But in reality, the real motion is shit, they gang Yabbi, shit they name Keek, myself, Lil Maru, 22 G-Fa, Memo the Mafioso going crazy. Even up north like Bishop Snow, my artist right here, Young Active. Shut up Bishop. Yeah, Young Active going crazy right now. Shit, I don't wanna miss no about KT Foren. And then even like other ones on the come up to the TC Brothers, B3, 22 G-Fa, like shit like that. Like that's real motion, bro. People making real connections coming to LA, mingling all this shit, hitting numbers. So to say we don't have motion, bro, that's just false. No, for sure. I mean, I guess like the way in which people might argue that Sena Diego doesn't have motion is just because it is a very big city, it's a well-known city, there's a lot of different things that come from there, culturally, generally speaking, but then it does feel like from a rap side of things, it's kind of been underrepresented over the years. And that's why I don't get why you would even do that because, bro, why wouldn't you wanna be the one to be like, I had a part of putting Sena Diego on instead of going immediately downplaying this. The next big rapper to come out of Sena Diego will be a son of Adam 22 because this whole controversy is going, you know what this is like? This is like when America bombs Afghanistan and then all the kids who lose their fathers from the bombing, they become Taliban soldiers, right? They were basically like created by the US. And I just have to say that like the next high rapper who comes out of Sena Diego is going to be someone who has part of this whole controversy as part of their lineage. Adam, if you don't go down there and put in no footwork, we're not letting you claim that. Okay, I'm gonna claim it either way, I'm sorry. But, and then also, I'm gonna put the footwork in. I'm gonna touch the streets. The thing that you do, bro, you're like, and I kinda respect it is whatever you say, even if you know you're wrong, you stand on it, bro. That's part of being a broadcaster, yeah, you gotta stand on it. But look it, you should wanna go, look it. I do. People, you should wanna go down there, where the second big, people, we get out shorn by the Bay in LA, but we're the second biggest city in California. You know, so of course LA, that's the hub of this shit. And then the Bay area, that's like three big ass cities in one area, you know, and they claim that one area is a couple different counties and shit. San Diego though, as a city, is the second biggest city in California. You know, so you should wanna go down there and help put the footwork in. And that way we can be like, you might say it, but we're not gonna claim it, but you go down and push the footwork, we might be like, hey, we out of them now. He came to help get some more emotion around there. I'm gonna do that. Should I tap in with the Bloods, the Crips, or the Mexicans? And tap in with whoever the fuck you want. A little bit of each? Yeah, a little bit of everybody. All right, yeah, yeah, yeah. A little bit of everybody. We could do that. But I mean, all right, so how do you feel about the narrative that has been put out there, which is kinda like, San Diego has so much talent, and Michi was kinda saying stuff along these lines, but San Diego has so much talent, it's just that they haven't really been given the opportunity, which to me, I kinda feel like, you can't really get away with that excuse in this day and age because everybody's making their own opportunity. In the 90s, for sure, A&R needed to come to your city and sign your band or sign your rapper or whatever, but in this day and age, it does feel like everybody who gets poppin' kinda gets poppin' on their own and then becomes part of a label or a machine or whatnot. Nah, I give you six, I watch the Slickers, so you're talking about how he said, oh, in LA, yo, you're homie from your neighborhood, your big homie might be a security for this person, and that's how you get connection like that? I mean, I get what you're saying because nowadays, you could pop over the internet and make three viral ass songs, and instead of somebody you know tapping you in with the label, now the label's tapping in with you, because they see the motion. I mean, I guess, bro, but you gotta understand so. We from San Diego, right? Two hours off of LA. LA already got its own motion going on, right? In the Bay Area, they got their own thing going on, they doing their thing, they independent route. It's just, we're not gonna get, even if we pop, like I just seen it in my eyes, like even when we get some motion, we're still not gonna get the same opportunities that LA artists are gonna get are the Bay Area artists, because like for instance, like, there was no way Kendrick was gonna put anybody from San Diego on the Kendrick album, which I'm not complaining about it, that was a dope album. I'm just using that as an example. Very LA-centric album. And then you gotta think, so Southern California, right? San Diego is like its own thing, bro. Like we're- Too South. We're South, South, so like us in San Diego, and Shout to Orange County and IE homies, like this ain't like to put no shade on you guys, but like we kinda look at IE and Orange County as damn near LA too, because they're so close, they're in their mingle. Whereas they feel like outsiders, when you talk to someone like Drex the Joint, he probably feels like he does get love from some LA rap fans, but then he also probably doesn't feel like he's necessarily as invited to the cookout as some people. Which he's not wrong for that, because he might see something we don't, but I'm just saying from our experience coming in, like foods from LA, if gentrification hits their neighborhood, nine times out of 10, they move to IE. And then Orange County is right south of LA, so it's like, it's easier in mingle. In San Diego, we don't even know what the fuck going on up here. We feel like they're more mingling than we are, you know? So, like I said, if a San Diego artist could pop and still not get the same opportunities that LA artists are gonna get, like we've been out there doing our thing for a while now and there's still other opportunities getting thrown to people who still, we probably surpassed, but they're from LA, you know? Well, okay, here's my question is, one of the main narratives around LA is like, there's all these artists who are talented and have motion and things seem like they could happen to them, but then at the end of the day, LA is so territorial, so gang ridden, that the city doesn't come together very often and like there's just, side's not getting along holds LA back. Is that less true of San Diego, or would you say that that's a real issue out there as well? It's the same shit. There's dope artists from this side and that side that's just not gonna work together, you know? That could probably come with, me, I got serious backlash for going different neighborhoods and fucking with them when I had the city popping, you know? Like I got backlash for just staying in my own lane, staying out of food's politics and going and off, cause at that time when I was like one of the hottest, like at the time, like when I was really rapping and rapping like that, I felt like it was my job to go like, all right, go to this neighborhood, who's the pop and rapper, all right, come on, let's do a song, go to this neighborhood, do a song, and I was getting backlash for that, so like it's the same thing as LA. Interesting, yeah, but do you feel like you're not rapping, rapping now? Like what's the change in your career? Nah, I just, I take like long ass breaks. If you, like, all my supporters know like, I'll take like an eight month break, come back, hit like three songs with a million views, take another year break, come back. It's crazy cause every time I come back, I be like, damn, I might not bounce back from this one. And then I'll hit some crazy shit, you know, do a couple songs, go crazy, and then take another break. Right. That's just life, life and though. What's the break though? Is it because you're really going through shit, because you feel like you need to just be able to chill and like enjoy your life before you can really make good music. Both, both, going through shit, and sometimes I just want to chill out, you know? Yeah. Kick back. But when you're saying you're going to all these different neighborhoods, are you talking about like actual neighborhoods that your area might have issues with, or more like just people who aren't really involved with your politics and just want to show love and help put a light on people? Basically like him and him beef, I just did a song with somebody, with him and him and shot the video and all this shit, and they're like, foods are looking like what the fuck. Right. But that got your shit got nothing to do with me though, bro, you know? I'm just here trying to help the city out. Because that's interesting, because that's kind of like you saying like, yo, I'm bigger than all this shit. Like I don't give a fuck about all this politics or whatever, like I want to be such a representative of our city that I feel like I can fuck with everybody. And if you really are that guy, then it's just going to go, but then there's always going to be people that want to drag you back into the muck and just be like, no, you have to be on your side and you can't go outside that box. Like we see that constantly. Yeah. I guess, I'm not going to say I'm bigger than the program, but I was just doing what was right for the city. I got backlash for it though, but I mean, it wasn't that serious though. But was it backlash like, oh, a bunch of people talking shit online, or was it backlash like people that you actually respect, feel a way about it and are maybe losing respect for you? Couple foods I really, you know what I mean? Like they felt a little way, but it's still all love though, you know? Because I'm going to let them know too, like bro, at the end of the day, like that, yo, that shit got nothing to do with me, my boy. I got my own shit going on over here. Like whatever you guys got going on, got nothing. It's like I went over here, it was block hanging and gang banging and dissing your guys, it's something I'll brah. We made a song, shot the video, kept it pushing, you know? Right. Yeah. No, definitely. But okay, do you feel like you're someone who's always like got enough love from the rest of California though, that it made you feel like you weren't just a San Diego artist? Uh... Or do you feel like San Diego is like so part of your image that you can't ever really separate that from who you are? Not really, but I mean, I never felt like, like what do you mean by that? Like I don't know, like I feel like, okay, if you're somebody like Kendrick, it's like he's so big at a certain point, he means so much to California that when he does the pop out, or when he does his album, it's like he's not really thinking like, oh, I gotta put on just people from my section or whatever. He's like putting on people from all over LA and it would look kind of crazy if he was just like only showing love to people from his neighborhood and not just embracing like a bunch of people across the board. Nah, nah, nah. I feel like all California. I got artists that's not from San Diego. Shout out a little tricky from the IE, shout out a little Chino from India. You know, those are my artists right there. So yeah, nah, I did features for hella, hella, hella fools on the cover. Right, so... Cause I look at myself like I made it to enough where I live comfortable now, but I'm not no crazy ass artist like that, you know? From my city, yeah, I'm one of the popular words, but I don't look at myself like, I'm not like, like I'm humble basically, you know what I'm saying? But so you're really signing artists like that? Like is that... Nah, I would even say like signing artists that they just, that's the movement and that's my artist. That's who I'm pushing, giving them features. I'm helping them maneuver, showing them how to do this shit. So you don't give a fuck about somebody signing on the dotted line, it's more just about like if you rock with me, then I'm gonna get behind you and support you. Yeah, at one point we were gonna do it that way, but I'm just like, man, like, I don't wanna... I don't wanna, like I don't really need to do that. You know, I'd rather just put a homie on and rock out my way, you know? Right, cause if you get somebody to sign with you, it's like add such an additional layer of responsibility to the whole thing. Bro, I'll tell you, shout out to my artist right here, Young Active. Like I don't have him under paperwork or nothing, but even when he, when I first started, cause he already were viral of just audios. Right. That's some shit he made in the garage with the homies. It kind of sound like ref, but it went viral. I'm talking about millions of views, no video, nothing. So when I started fucking with him, I was during one of my breaks and I'm taking him everywhere. I'm getting him in these rooms. He's getting features from artists and all this shit to where like, I remember at one point, we were driving once a week to Indian, California and staying the night for two days in a row, just to be in the studio all day. Cause we had a free studio out there. And it just felt like a responsibility to where I'm like, man, imagine it was under the dotted line to where I'm in, I'm invested in him, but like investing crazy money to where I have to see it back. That's a lot of responsibility, bro. Whereas like you can just help somebody and then whatever happens happens. And you know, like there's a rapper from Bounty Hunter Watts out here named Shy Belligerent, who is a super talented lyricist. I personally feel like he might be one of the best rappers out of LA. And I was thinking that like, what would me sign in him look like? And then I ended up just being like, bro, I don't really want that level of responsibility. And I just told him like anything you need, career wise, look wise, whatever it is, just let me know. And I'll do whatever I can to like help you out. But I don't necessarily like want the responsibility of like feeling like, oh, if he doesn't make it, then it's on me. And if you, you know, and if somebody else comes along and signs them and they make a million dollars together, like whatever, I'll be fucking happy that I, you know, helped them along the way. It is what it is. We from the streets, we calling the handshake. Like, you know, I hope we'll get a pop out. Told them, hey, what you gonna do when you sign your first million dollar deal? He said, I'm gonna give you half of it. Oh, shit. I like, you all gotta give you half of it, my boys. Half is crazy, but I mean, that's when you really realized like, what this relationship is really made out of. See, that ain't, that was 10% How you tripping? That's my boy, I already met him. But hold on, let's get back to this said, there goes shit, because I can't go back to this city well, let me give you my some shit. You said, and shout out to that song, the gang gang song. Gang gang. But what's the song called? It's by a chef boy. You said that song was the biggest one in Camargo San Diego, and Mitchie Slick were front of you about it. Wait, no, then I said that song was bigger than any song that came out of San Diego. That's not bigger than the Chilbill song. And shout out my boy, Jay Davis, he was supposed to be here with me. He's on that song. He's a second. He's a two sale far, was Mr. Brother fucker that. It's supposed to be it. So look, you check the numbers, go ahead. Gangbangers at 17 million. Yeah, 18 million at this moment, just from the YouTube video. And 10 years you think it's gonna be a half a billion? No, probably definitely not. Especially because like music videos don't do numbers like they used to, for sure. No, don't try to. Don't try to. Well, I'm just saying, it's not like, like you look at Lyrical Lemonade from five, six years ago, like these numbers are like, it's a different world now because everybody's on short form media. Okay, but so you think that song in 10 years is gonna go down as a bigger song than Chilbill? You Chilbill at the time? And Collie Jenner was on the story. I don't wanna hurt Rob Stone's feelings and all like that, but do I feel like Gang Gang in the long run will probably be a more iconic song than Chilbill probably, yeah. No. To me, Chilbill was big because it had a sample at a time where people just weren't really like doing samples to the same extent. I don't know, I think Gang Gang, I'm gonna go with Chef Boy. No, you trippin'. Really? You hella trippin'. I mean, the only time we'll tell, because that song is only like a year old and Chilbill been out for 10 years. But no, that song is dope though. But we don't talk about Chilbill unless we're talking about San Diego, right? What do you mean? Hell no. I feel like Gang Gang. Chilbill is still getting played. He realized how big Gang Gang was, was me being in Miami in the club with Blueface and seeing Blueface perform that song like it was his in the middle of his set and we're in Miami and everybody's singing along and all these white people in the club are just Gang Gang throwing up made up Gang sign. Chilbill could have been even bigger than what it was if what happened when Rob Stone didn't happen with the whole. Look at it, all right, that's another thing I gotta bring up, man. One of the big reasons my city is still trying to catch up with this rap shit is because we had two major black ballings that happened in our shit. So before J.O.K., we had artists like Gagster, I think Big June was already, y'all, stuff like that. It was local level, you know? But when J.O. got on, he signed to Jam Master J. And I think he had some connection with Def Jam or whatever, anyways, J.O. got on. He was on the radio, he had Take a Ride, he had What You Gonna Do With It, Nitty Gritty. He was going crazy, bro. The whole thing was he was signed to an East Coast label though, Jam Master J. So he was a West Coast artist signed to East Coast label and started beefing with Jay-Z. So when he started beefing with Jay-Z and you signed to East Coast label, bro, you know, you're gonna end up getting a little shelved. And then he kind of had the thing going on with Snoop Dogg. Oh, okay. So his whole momentum, he still was going crazy, but he basically got black balled out the game until he got good back with Snoop. And at that point, it was kind of like the damage already done. And then later down the road was when Rob Stone takes off. And that's when he got, my homie J. Davis told me a little story, like they got into his ski mask, is that his name? Yeah. So basically they were on the same tour. Rob Stone was like above ski mask on the tour. He told me ski mask wanted to come before. Ski mask felt like it was wrong. And he was on it. And I'm gonna be real, ski mask has always had a drug problem. So he was probably tweaking tweaking. And ski mask ends up like going on stage and like coming with Rob Stone, kind of disrespecting him. And then X finds out, X starts talking hell of shit about Rob Stone on Twitter and whatnot. And so then the next show is in LA. I actually went to that show and I'm thinking like, it's kind of weird like I'm backstage. And it's like, it's Rob Stone and it's Mitchie. And it's like a bunch of, I didn't really know, but San Diego Bloods who are in the building at the time. And then I'm watching the screen and I'm seeing ski mask perform. And all of a sudden I see just a mob of people just rush them on stage and beat the fuck out of him. That is bad. Yes. Like he was on the ground like knocked out at one point outside the club. And I filmed everything and I didn't put any of it out. Cause I knew even at that time, like, yo, this is big snitching. If I put this out, I'm showing like in the footage you saw. You see that the video? Deep in my iCloud probably. We'll find you guys soon. Y'all, it'll be burnt out cause it doesn't look good. Bro, a bunch of the dudes who jumped them, like you see them running away from jumping them and they all just, they hurtle over this huge fence, bro, the fence that it's like one of those double fences and they're just climbing the fence. Like it's, we're fucking grade school kids just rushing out of there to go get in their cars and probably dip back to San Diego. I'm like, and I'm filming all of it. And like at that moment I'm realizing like, oh no, I ain't putting this out. So that made the homie look crazy too. So that was the Rob Stone shit. They beat up Ski and then the shit happened with XXX on stage and that was my boy, Knockout. Knockout was the one, my boy Knockout was the one doing all the knocking out for Rob Stone. Wait, that's the one who punched him? Yeah, that's my boy. Oh, I didn't know that the puncher had ever been named. That's insane. We're not giving his real name, we call him Knockout. Cause he's the same person, man, I don't wanna put it out there. He's already said it's good. He's the same one when the first video Rob Stone had at the beach, when they first were viral and the Mexican dude got slapped. Yeah. How's that dude? He's over there knocking everybody out. That's crazy, the war right there. Shout out to Knockout, man. Yeah, I'll be punched right there with him, J Davis, man. So yeah, it's the same dude. But like I said, so J-O had that big black baller. When we had emotion, we had finally out of artists from our city, sorry. And then Rob Stone came, had the big song. You know, X got a cult fan base, bro. Like they said, like even in San Diego, foods were booing Rob Stone saying Rob Stone. That's what they're saying, yeah. So like that the whole momentum up. So we're like, we're still trying to build back from that shit, you know? Yeah. So it's like, that's a big reason like our cities where we're at right now is cause the two times we had a chance to get on, you know, we kind of blew it in a way, you know what I'm saying? Beef it with people and shit. It's kind of wild though, because like that's one of the narratives that was previously litigated on the jumper was like the whole is San Diego gangster narrative? I'm not even gonna get into that. But then when you look at that situation, it's like, oh, San Diego might have been a little too gangster because that was a situation that ended up kind of alienating them because they chose to handle the situation the way they did. Although a lot of people would have handled it that way, but the way it was handled like on stage during the show. And I don't really, I don't remember if that video scheme has been jumped ever like, I don't remember it going viral. Is it out? It might be on YouTube somewhere, but I don't remember ever seeing it, even though I saw it in real life. Yeah, not though, are too black. Like even when J.O. got blackboard, like, he told the story, bro, he put up on Snoop and then Trippin. Like he put up over there, Tripp. I think there was like a movie, there should, it might have been the baby boy movie or something. I might be wrong. I don't want to be incorrect. It might be a music video, but J.O.F.E.L.F.E.L.D. he put up Trippin, bro, you know? Yeah, wow, that's some lore right there though. Yeah, so like, yeah, we got blackboard twice, man. So we still built him back from that. Am I tweaking by disrespecting J.O.F.E.L.F.E.L.D. on here? Super, bro. Mm, okay. He don't care about security, man. The F was a gangster, you know? The only thing I gave him- No, no, no, no, what you said was, Squatter. Right, well- I talked to him, and shout out to Hoodie from the hood, man. Yeah? He's the one who brought that shit up to me, like, man, F would call him a Squatter, or something. Well, but that's like, undeniable, because he was on the news for Squat. Man, but he wasn't, so imagine somebody, I don't know the details from what he looked like on the outside, he didn't, he paid to move in. Like, as he squatted. Whatever, whatever. Maybe he was renting- Maybe he got wrong information. He was renting from a Squatter, potentially. Hey, how is he at fault for that? Oh, he seemed pretty agitated when the news pulled up. I would be too. Man, when you just paid all these bands, and you got the flyer pad, and news pulling up to him, are you squatting? But if you really didn't know that you were illegally renting a room or whatever, then- No, he had the house. Your feeling wouldn't be like, oh, I'm mad as fuck at the news, you would be more like, hey, I'm just renting this, I don't know. From a health food perspective, what the fuck you putting up with these cameras and shit? From what I know, J.L. Fellany, though, he's a mastermind, he probably cooked that whole idea up. I don't think he was just like an unwilling participant in this. Hey, man, don't play with J.L. up here. Nah, but I was supposed to interview him, and then a day in advance, I got opportunity to go vlog a blue-faced music video, so I basically was like, yo, I'm gonna have to postpone, and he had already postponed on me at that time, so I didn't think it was gonna be a big deal, and then he got mad, and he made a diss song about me and Munchie B. What was this? Oh, no, no, no, no. He just threw you in there. Probably wouldn't do, he was really dissing Munchie B. See, I would have been real cool about the whole squatting thing, because I actually do think squatting's kind of tight. I always looked up to squatters growing up, but I mean, I feel like that moment kind of made me feel like, all right, shit, if you wanna talk shit, then we gonna talk about this squatting thing. I'll give you that. I know J.L. gangsta, though. For sure, but do you think that squatting is kind of gangsta? Like, is it a heist? Yeah, it's a squatting. Bro, if you squat and you save 10 grand a month on rent, I mean, you just do that for six months, you just rob the mother for 60K. That's pretty hard. I guess. Oh, no. Look, this is another, so look at this thing, though, like, cause you bringing up J.L. like you disrespecting J.L. It's not like real disrespect. Nah, I know, but still though, like, so like, you know how like, when the shit first hit the fan, when you talking about the city, and then people pop up and be like, oh, what do you mean? We got Munchie Slit, we got J.L. Family. And your thing was, oh, well, they're past their prime. Which is understandable, I get it. Like, yeah, their prime was probably 20 years ago. But you gotta understand us not being a music city like that on a major platform, this is who's represent, this is our Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg's, you know what I'm saying? And shout out to DaMove, Luciaes, Isayuno, Big June, like that's like our dog pair and then all the other shit that LA got that we didn't have. So like, we love Slick, we love J.L. Felony, bro. Like we grew up off them, you know? So of course, every time they bring up artists, they wasn't like, what do you mean? We got them, that's cause we love them, bro. We look at it like they are them, like we are them, they are us. Like they represent us, bro, they put it on for us. Like even me, when I first took off, I ran into an artist that I used to bump with as a kid, I probably made it past them already because they were only popping in the city. But I immediately go up and show love, bro. And tell them like, man, I'm a big fan, bro. Because we really grew up off these people and really was bumping them growing up. When they bring their names up on like, Hot Artists in San Diego and you look at it like, oh yeah, they're past their prime. I could get there, but the only reason that they're bringing them up is cause we really love them, you know? Those are the artists we grew up on. Like I said, we didn't have Dr. Dre Snoop Dogg, that was them to us. No, and I feel that, and that's kind of the benefit of a more tight knit, smaller community. Because if you look at like LA, I mean like the next generation of LA coming out, like I don't know if they give a shit about showing respect to their elders necessarily to the same level. You got to. It is good to do so. And I'm sure like they will pay lip service to it. And nobody gonna disrespect Snoop Dogg, you know? Like he's on another level where nobody can say shit about Snoop. But you know, it's like paying respect to your elders is important. And sometimes I feel like that does get lost, especially when it comes to like street music and shit. Cause that's like a world where, you know, how active you are is like a big part of how people respect you. And obviously you ain't supposed to be 45 and still doing fuck shit. It kind of hurts me, bro. Like some of my peers, my age, don't really know who these people are. Like we'll go to a festival or something or show in the city and there'd be like an older San Diego artist who was popping at one point in the city. And they don't even know that. And I'll be like, damn man, like this was a legend down here. You know, to where I'll school them. Like bro, you got to know your history basically. And speaking of elders, like for us to say, when you say we have no motion or we never had artists, you're not even looking at the Chicano Rap part of things. Hmm, okay. The little Rob name comes up a lot. So the product was talking the other day and she's like, I'm half from San Diego. Yeah, yeah, yeah. She really claimed like the Bae though I think. Yeah, cause she's from San Jose. She said actually that she's from two cities that don't get the respect that they deserve in hip hop, which was San Jose and San Diego. She needed to represent San Diego harder than she. I also know the off for her. I met her a couple of times. No, she's dope. But yeah, man. So the Chicano Rap part of things, bro, like at one point we had the hottest Chicano rappers. Like we had the hottest words. Lil Rob still tours this day to this day, bro, off of his music he made 20 years ago or whatever. Like we have Mr. Lil one, Shadow, Night Owl, Aztec tribe, like you ain't sick. Like we got legendary people in the Chicano rap game. So, but you looking at it, you're like, oh, that's just some basically rap shit. But that was a whole market at one point, like a huge market. Like you might not like jazz, right? But there's a whole market for it though. People selling their shows and shit. Like you got to give them credit too. My boy like Lil Rob and Shadow and all that. They're doing their thing on a major level, bro. Like selling out shows and shit, you know, going to Lil Rob and then Shadow and them, they were overseas going crazy. Like you got to give it to you. You're a good historian slash like face of the entirety of the history of San Diego. Cause like a lot of... You didn't expect all these. I mean, not a lot of people necessarily like would prepare themselves to be able to speak as well about it as, you know, cause you're on the younger side of things that you like, you know, probably a lot of people wouldn't necessarily expect that. So I respect them. Yeah, yeah. I mean, honestly, when you, when you hit me to come, when the shit first hit the fan, I'm gonna be honest, Adam, I didn't give a fuck. But that's not just, I don't give a fuck about somebody playing with the city. I just don't give a fuck about them nowadays. Like even a person speaking on me, if it's not in my face, it's where I can handle it. I don't give a fuck, bro. So when you said this shit, it's just, I mean, I'm like, that's Adam being Adam, bro. Like, what the fuck? And it was out for a few months before Mitchie clipped it and put it on Instagram. Yeah, I know. I've seen it when it first, I damn did it posting it myself cause you shouted me out. I'm like, hey, I don't make that bad, but. Duh, but yeah. So like, I didn't give a fuck when the shit first hit the fan, you know, just to where like, I wasn't even tripping. It's just the fact that when you hit me, I kind of like, all right, I knew that, I know the history of this shit. I know where we're at. I know the dope artists in the city who's doing numbers and shit. And then, cause after the first video, I was even like, man, should I even go? You hit me? How should I even go? And then you sit, you kept going food, playing with the city, my boy. You know, and then I seen Slick come up. So I'm like, all right, let me watch the Slick thing. And shout out to Slick, bro. He did this thing. He spoke, he spoke, you know what I mean? Slick's gonna always represent the city well. I just felt like there was a couple of points that, he kind of missed out on that I was like, all right. I feel like the people are gonna appreciate all the details that you've filled in a little bit more than on his appearance a week or two ago. He definitely like spoke about San Diego, very positive via everything, but it ain't going to like detail as much, you know? And I feel like you had to, I feel like you gotta shout out to artists that's hot. Cause that's the, like if there's a time to do it, it was right now when we have this whole fucking eyes on us about this shit. So you gotta shout out the city, you gotta mention why we're at where we're at. You gotta show love to the ones that came before us and everything, man. But shout out to Slick, man. He shout out Slick, bro. He's a legend, bro. We love that guy. He has an album up there too, yeah. See, perfect. You're not gonna move that already. Smoking his weed for the last few days, huh? You gonna end up moving there? You gonna keep it there? He definitely got at least a couple of weeks, maybe a couple of months on there. We tend to just sort of switch things out here. Like look, Barnard was on a couple of months ago. His book is still here. Okay, you have your for sure. Stuff gets moving around like the the whoops, J-Main serial that kind of got demoted to over here as time went on. We got Charleston White's eye right here in this jar. That's kinda... What the fuck? Sean Cotton actually, he brought that through. That seems real eye. Well, Sean Cotton I think was trolling, but he said that he actually paid the mafia to go and like steal the eyeball out of Charleston White's head. I know. Right, man. Yeah. But yo, so do you think part of the problem with San Diego is that even though, like even the people who are having emotion, it becomes a little bit too heavy with the rivalries and everything. Because I seen that little Grifo was on the food community and he actually has some words for you, including the B word, which seems pretty serious. Yeah, I mean, look, I damn near want to give you the whole rundown on these guys because there's a million things I can say, but that's- He said some street shit happened. Yeah, no. No? Hell no, that dude is fucking crap. Long story short, I'm not gonna, me talking about him right now is what he wants. You know how when an artist kind of gets some emotion, their opp comes up with him a little bit? Always. He's portraying that he's my opp. Okay. To get some more, like he's almost 40 years old and he has the most emotion he's ever had. And the last three podcasts he's talking about me, you know? So like, I never mentioned him in the interview. Every time I bring him up, I just brush it off. So I know you're gonna clip this and everybody watching it off the clip, I'm not portraying myself as no tough guy or nothing like that, man. I'm cool, chill, you know what I'm saying? But you know, I'm not gonna just get into the guy because that just gives him fuel to talk about me. Like he said, he jumps on these podcasts and says a whole bunch of lies. Like there's no street shit going on with this guy. All that, we're supposed to link him in a fight. Never happened. When this podcast ends, I'm gonna show you multiple messages of me sending my address to link up and it don't happen. Okay. And all this shit, man, just, I'm not gonna, like this guy's almost 40 and he's still playing these little lame ass games, bro. I'm not gonna do that with him. Cause he was kind of like saying that you turned it down and he was also kind of making it sound like people were like setting him up or trying to do some sort of setup. I don't know what he's talking about. All that is like insurance to me. Like for when, make this clear, there's never a time where him and my people are talking, we're supposed to link up and get down. That's never happened. For two, you keep, if we did have some beef, why are you jumping on these podcasts and talking about beef and this and the dead? Cause if something happens to you tomorrow, like who they gonna come looking at? And I'm not saying I'm gonna do anything to that guy. I don't give a fuck about the guy. But I'm just saying like that's more like insurance. But he was throwing your dead loved ones in the mix? Yeah. I mean, people know, I'm not gonna say too much, but people know what's going on. But yeah, that guy is just a clown, man. He's almost 40 years old still playing these little lame ass games and I'm not even gonna get into that guy. All I gotta say is look, like I said, there's never been a time where you're supposed to link up none of that. All that shit is crap. All you gotta do is lick up dead in his face and ask him what happened when we ran into each other at the smoke shop. What happened when we ran into each other at the smoke shop? And that's it, bro. That's all I'm gonna say, you know? So what, you were expecting him to make a move and he wasn't trying to do this thing? Nah, I was in the smoke shop. Look at Adam, I'm not gonna say too much cause I'm definitely not gonna give you the... I want whatever I can get and if you don't wanna serve it up I'll just have to respect that, you know? I'm only gonna say a little bit because he keeps jumping on Park Gays Street on me. But we ran into each other at the smoke shop, words were said, I told him wait for me right outside the smoke shop, I'll pay for my items. As soon as I walked out, he was nowhere to be found. So all that talking about we supposed to link up and fight and scared like, you know? I don't get how he's the one to be scared of and you just lost like 10 fights in a row on YouTube. You know what I'm saying? So, but that said, we're not gonna talk about this guy no more, you know? I gotta do my homework, I didn't know about 10 else. He's like almost 40, bro, still on the bullshit. They're nodding. They said, where's this chain? Oh, what? I'm gonna ask him that. Fat Guapo, shout out my boy, man. Fat Guapo. How'd you guys get locked in? So, Fat Guapo, man. So when I first started, Fat Guapo, shout out my boy, man. He put me, he got me like in the game, bro. Like when I first started coming up, Guapo already been in the game. He been in LA mingling around all the type of famous people or shit. So when I first was coming up, my mom hit me one day and was like, hey, my little hum, because my mom's from the same neighborhood as him, they're from the same area. My mom hit me like, hey, my little hum, he's in the music game, he wants to fuck with you. And I'm like, okay, introduce me to Guapo. And then ever since then, we've been rocking my boy. He's been putting me, he became my manager, because at the time he was rapping, but then he ended up just becoming manager of me role. Okay. And yeah, we just been rocking like that to where like, that's my brother now, you know? For sure. And like I say, he's from the same hood as my mom. So it's like, it was just already like kind of easy to lock in with him, you know? Right. Do you feel like, have you had to make like a conscious decision between sort of trying to appeal to a more purely Mexican crowd versus making music that's just sort of more overall rap that could appeal to all races? Like you think about that? No, I just make music I like. Okay. Yeah, I just make music I like. Because I mean, it feels like if you just make music for the Mexican crowd, maybe you're keeping yourself in a little bit of a box, whereas if you look at people like Shoreline, they're kind of like the biggest California Mexican rappers of maybe the last 10 years. And they for sure make music that does not really sound distinctly Spanish. What I can say is, like I say, I just make music I like bro. So like, but I do like, I do shit for my people that I know they're gonna like, like I don't say the N word in my raps. I'm not a senior saint, I don't say it, you know? Like coming from San Diego, you know, we with the black and brown movement, but like I don't say the N word in my raps, shit like that, you know? Shit like that basically, yeah. No, I respect that. Yeah, cause I did see that you banged on Moose Man when he came in here. No, I didn't bang on him, honestly. I didn't bang on him. No, you trolled him for a second though, you're like, hey, I heard you from Norte and he's like, nah, that was hella funny. That's my boy. I was dying, cause that's actually Moose Man's nightmare is to come in here one day and have somebody like see a clip online and think that he's really like a gang member and have to deal with it. Yeah, yeah, Moose Man, y'all Moose Man. Moose Man's a good dude though. He ain't trying to be involved with all that, you know? You ever seen his raps though? Never. Oh no, I think I did see a clip. I think I did see a clip. He was kind of hard though. He was crazy with the haircut though. Oh yeah, he had the whole Northern Cali haircut man. Yeah, that haircut man, he looked at him a little bit different. I'm like, oh okay, you were one of them for a little bit there, okay, got it, got it. Respect it. But okay, the other one I want or okay, so sorry about that. You did, you hit the notes ready. I know Les is supposed to be here to help this shit. He was supposed to be. Shout out to Les, man, he got me canceled on my interview. Yo, that is crazy bro. Lush is letting drugs and alcohol and women getting the way of doing important interviews like this, that is crazy. We gotta get on his ass about that. Yeah, yeah. Damn, Lush you a dirty boy. It'd be like that when you on some Rockstar shit though. Right, yeah, well Rockstar shit is one way to put it. J-Cat would kind of be the other way that we would put it. So how would you describe your feelings on Northern California? Because there is a song out there that's kind of been labeled like a diss song towards the North days. Is that something you involve yourself in? I didn't make no diss song to the North days. You want me to pull it up? Nah, I know something I'm talking about. I just one artist that diss me. Oh okay, who was that up North? Who the son of a fucking guy. Oh okay. Nah, why, like I ain't diss the North though. Oh okay, I wasn't just in general. Yeah, my name got thrown in the song and shit. My face got thrown in the song so I just responded. Definitely, but it's not, do you ever tour up there? Has that ever happened? Nah, not yet. Okay. We were supposed to have one show in Airwater, California but it was just so many homies on the flyer. So many homies from down south. The day of the show, the venue canceled on us. Really? Yeah, they canceled on us. That's interesting. They must be like hearing about shit in the streets about people planning on popping up or doing God knows what in the environment. Oh no, we're just up there to go perform. We're up there, the tickets were shelling too. Definitely. I don't mind doing a show up there though. I'll do a show up there. How do you feel about Tommy Gunn's like really kind of antagonizing the North? I mean, obviously he's from closer to up there. It's more of like a real thing from his perspective. Shut up, boy, man. Mike check, Mike check. Yo, that song got taken down. Isn't that crazy? I didn't realize that. I didn't even know that. Yeah, they took it down cause of the sample. Damn. Like that. That's a bad friend, bro. Like he should have just gave them all the money and just left it up just so that it could be like a big hit. At least you got that up there. You know, like Juice WRLD, Lucid Dreams, that was the sample. Like he gets 5% of the money or did get 5% of the money. He's still just let it rock, you know? But like, I don't know. Like, cause that's one thing. The other day I was on stream playing music and stuff and like a lot of Northern rappers were like basically having me play their songs. And I was kind of realizing like, damn, everybody dissing lefty and Tommy. They're the two people that go out right now. That's why I'm telling you, brought up the homie. Like you can't get mad at these dissing because like, all they're doing up there is talking about the homies. Like Tommy Guns, Lefty, Cheeto, like them threes in their rotation up there. Like foods jump on podcasts, talking about them, food every song. Like I get used to them, I'm not, but foods could be from like, I didn't see like foods from a city hours away from Tommy and dissing Tommy. So like, you know what I'm saying? And all their biggest songs is like, dissing the homies, bro. So you can't get mad at the foods start dissing back. Shout to Lefty man, cause I see Lefty finally just over it. Like he understands that foods are still, saying foods still dissing them on songs that he's just kind of like, you know? Yo, like real talk with Lefty, like he grew up a lot in the course of a couple of years because he just like got famous as like, really I think like the drug stuff like kind of caught up with him and it feels like he's been kind of off the scene for like maybe six months, eight months, something like that. Like kind of getting his life together and just sort of figuring out how to move around. Cause for a while it was like crazy shit about Lefty, like every other week, like he's in the parking lot, like just asking people to use their phone and then he gets into the crazy car accident like a week after that. It kind of felt like for a minute, and this is all due respect that it was just, it wasn't going in a good direction. Like something bad might happen cause he was just living so wild. But he, he against it, you know? And he, he got on that was his dream, bro. So he was just living his dream. Yeah, exactly. You doing it up. You relate to that? Did you have a little bit of a crashing out phase in the beginning of your career or not really? No, no, really. I mean, I was doing rock star shit, but I wasn't like crashing out. I wouldn't even say Lefty was crashing out. But we, we just living rockin', you know? You finally, you know, like me, like we was, we was, we was off there and then, you know, I always been a little, little fly cute fool. So always it was like knocking bitches, but then, you know, in the rap shit, you start knocking shit like, man, I would have never thought I cracked it, I cracked this bitch. So you know, I was all right with it. Like, really? So you had some like high quality moments in there? Like big names and shit? Not necessarily big names, couple of names, but I did my thing though. You know, I had fun with this shit. I still have fun. Damn. Who do you think's the most prized Mexican babe in the game? From like a California food community type level? Shit. I don't know. What's up man, it's Jenny. Jenny, Jenny, Jenny, she a bad word. Despite some of her bad controversies that she might have had. You mean like just name wise or like who's the baddest? Baddest slash like name. Like it can't just be a random girl, it's gotta be a girl of some kind of status, you know? I don't know them because I like all the little, the little low rider model ones, but they only got like 20, 30, 40,000. If I like, they got some bad ones. Oh, they're like low rider chicks? Damn, that's a community I need to tap in with. The little females that take pictures in front of low riders and shit. Yeah. Yeah, they ain't, they. Damn, see I don't know about that one. That's what they have with right there for sure. I can imagine. I used to like the Asian girls who would be sitting on the Hondas on the magazine covers at Barnes and Noble and shit, the Honda tuner girls. I'd be feeling them. Asian girls don't give me play like that. They don't? Asian and white girls give me no play. Really? Yeah, black girls love me. I love them too. Damn. Yeah, black girls love me for sure. See I remember when I used to be on dating sites and shit at a certain point I realized like black women and like to a certain extent Hispanic women so don't give a fuck about me that I might as well just not even bark up those trees. That's all I am. Just the white girls like me enough that it's like I might as well just focus on that. You're a real white boy, you're a real wood. Yeah, nah, for real though. I don't know. Hey, so look, back to San Diego. Hey, look, what's up? What do you think about, you had somebody up here, you wouldn't ever hire nobody from San Diego up here or what? I know you had the homie Mike Yeo. Yeah. What happened with that? Oh, shout out to Mike Yeo, the Brandon Slayer. The Brandon Slayer, shot down Brandon. He was fucking socket shit in the nose ever. I was one of the few people he might have had gloves on. That's what I'm saying, you can play with the city like one fucking San Diego. I think it's because you had a falling out with Sharp, bro. So okay, how much of a San Diego representative do you consider Sharp? Sharp for San Diego, like I don't know, he gets some backlash and shit, but I told Sharp every time like, hey, you call me, we pulling out with you. I don't give a fuck who's going against you. Like we'll figure it out, you know what I'm saying? San Diego is not a big city, so how me it's a big city? It sounds like you don't really know him that well, because if you knew how fucking annoying he is, then you'd feel a little bit of a problem. But I know people who know him. Right. Like yeah, now he's swimming around the way, he's been out here for a while and shit, like you know? I guess I think it's Sharp less as like a San Diego representative and more as just a dusty, dirty sex trafficker. Man, stop playing with Sharp. Just a real drunk grimy fucking, nah, Sharp is a weirdo, but I mean, he, he, that all, hey, hey, Sharp, he got you fucked up, my boy. Come back up here and give out him a cold squabble, man, you got you fucked up. I don't think he got a squabble. You don't think he got a squabble? No. I think he give you a two though, I seen you squabble. Yeah, yeah. Now he might have a squabble for me, but I mean like for the average person. I see you squabble though, I think he give you a squabble. Yeah, no, I don't know, you be surprised. I'll be, yeah, yeah, yeah. I got some moves. That was a bad day for you? Yeah, it was just the wrong opponent. That was a big motherfucker. It turns out I should not be fighting a gigantic black dude, yeah. Yeah, that was a big, but what happened was is the first punch just got you. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Sometimes that happens, like the first, oh. Like the biggest thing I was learning that whole time was like defense and like using your arms to like protect against punches. Would you be too, man? But then the first punch, my arms, if you watch it, my arms go like that. But look at my thing is you didn't even getting it off. You supposed to at least get some off though. That's how overwhelmed I was, yeah. Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah. I get it though, he's a big old strong dude. Who you gonna box? I'm gonna box it, nobody. No? It'll not. Just not worth it? I mean a bag for sure, you know, if it's the right bag, you know. Blueface doing it? Yeah, that's what I said, that's Blueface though. But he's the only like real rapper with like actual emotion that we've really seen fight. And he took it out. No, he won that fight, I watched that shit. Okay, you believe it. Blueface got squabble, fool. He does, no for sure. But even just him losing one fight, I feel like he just kind of, he seems over it. They got him fucked up though. You think? He won that fight. Yeah, I mean, I've heard a lot of people say that. For me personally, when I watch that, I feel like cheapy one, but I do feel like Blueface might have like had this realization of like, ah, shit, if I lose a bunch of fights in a row, it's not gonna be good. It might be really bad. It's not like you can knock the fuck out of him. True, true, yeah. You're in their thunder. No, if he got knocked out, that's a whole different conversation. Yeah, yeah, he's in their thunder. Cause even his L was still like an extremely competitive fight that a lot of people felt like he won. So it's not like a real L. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. For sure. Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on. You scared, you would have hired nobody from, I would, I, you would have hired. I don't care where anybody's from. So. How at all? Why don't you look into that thing? Why don't that be the start you focus in there? Why don't you get somebody to send it up here? Well, my whole problem is, my problem is I don't care where anybody's from. So now as a result, we got a podcast that has like a Roland 40s member at Englewood Family Blood and an 8 train member all in the same podcast. And Lush, he was from sort of, some sort of mystery Mexican hood that we're not allowed to talk about. He's not allowed, he got banned from banging the set. Never heard of that, but he's not allowed to bang He don't want to talk about it. But like that, people try to accuse me of being some sort of neighborhood plan. I only want to look out for Roland 60s. It doesn't have to be a gang member though. Yeah. We got, we got, we got foods like, like Musty Marcos, bro. He streams every week. He's going up on his streams, bro. He clapped with some big streamers. I like that name Musty Marcos. Yeah, shout out Musty Marcos, man. He's in downtown San Diego every week at getting good content. Oh, you're a high-end streamer? Yeah, good content. He doing all the funny shit. There's a, there's somebody, I'll, I'll, he'd fit perfect, but he don't like you. And you don't like him. I don't want to be a hoodie hood. Shout out hoodie hood with a big all-in, man. Yeah, yeah. What's wrong with hoodie, bro? Um, I want to be honest. He's not even important enough for me to remember why we got issues, but we, we definitely had issues at one point. I think I, I think he said something about me and I just messaged him and told him shut the fuck up. And that was about it. I get it. Yeah. He be called, he, he don't like you. So I get it. Yeah, but he's a car streamer. I try to tell like, hey, he brought that up to me too. I know, yeah, this is like, he's a car vlogger. That's his lane though. Yeah. But he gonna make it up out the whip one day. Yeah, but he not streaming and then going to, I mean, he's not just walking from his house to car. He's at work when he does it. That's like a part-time thing though. Right. A hoodie hood would fit perfect up here if he didn't like you and you didn't like him. Yeah. I don't even know what his issue is. He be calling you like a pilgrim and shit. A pilgrim? He called you pilgrim, yeah. Shit, that was the first. That's my boy though. I was first. He right, I was first. Hey, hoodie hood is a real one though. He real shout hoodie hood. I was on the Nina, the Pita and the Central. Nobody gonna shout hoodie on this platform and be the one to shout him out, man. Yeah? No, I mean, the first time I heard of him was because of Flocko Distem and the first cipher that we did. Yeah, he would beat the shit out of Flocko. Yeah, well, I don't even know what he looked like, but yeah, probably Flocko, I don't think I ever had a fade before, but I don't know. I feel like... With several Flockos, he fired? He's not fired. He said he's coming back to do an interview in like a week or two. Oh, okay. So I don't even know. That guy's dangerous, man. Flocko? That guy is dangerous. He knows where all the bodies are at, man. Sock on people, fight the shit out. You don't approve of that? Solving unsolved murders. That's LA shit. Hip hop history. Hip hop history, man. That's... I mean... For you to be on this platform, you got a bunch of gang members up here, that's dangerous. Yeah, when he did that move, I was glad that he was not on the platform consistently and that he was living in another state because I felt like, bro, you can't have us looking like we cosigned this sort of behavior. Yeah. Even though I mean... I mean, you did though. How? T-Rail, the one who do a podcast one every week. You guys promoted it. Nah, we talked about it, but we didn't like... We didn't make... What? We reported on the news. Exactly. Honestly, though, that felt like a nothing burger because he said who he thinks killed Drago and nobody really cared because it's kind of like, all right, well, if they don't arrest him, then whatever. I was wondering who could wait for the video job to see if he really did it. Like, if he really said who did it. Like, I'm not saying that's who really did it, but I wanted to see what he did. I was excited for that video too, and then it's like, oh, it's this blood and you don't know who he is, but he's saying he did it, and it's like, okay, well, I can't really do anything with that unless they arrest him or whatever. Like, I didn't know about dude before this video, so I mean, shit. Rest in peace, Drago, but at the end of the day. Hey, but look at the musty Marcos, man. He's a cool young kid, man. I think he'd do double up here. Yeah, yeah, no, definitely. I got him saved. I'm gonna check out some of his content. But what's your relationship with Peso like at this point? Because I've seen you guys got some big videos out there and everything, I feel like you guys seem like you have a special connection. That's my brother. Yeah? Yeah, like, industry-wise, I don't, like, food is homies, but that's my brother. Like, he'll tell you to him, he's brother, like. I said it last time on Sharp, I'll just give it real quick, like, when, before he was even rapping, like, he was coming to San Diego because I had the relationship with Swade, you know, and then Swade went to jail, so all Swades homies was coming to San Diego every weekend. We had this big-ass trap house, bro, it was a two-story trap house in the southeast of San Diego, bro. Namba Hoodlums in there, me and my brother, the other homie, we even had the barb homie in there, so foods, homies from LA, Indio, everybody was coming, spent a night in this two-story trap house, and we would just get fucked up, bring bitches. This one I first took off, too. So we were like, bitches is coming over all this shit, and then Peso started rapping a little after that, and we did, you know, that was already my little brother, so it's like, yeah, that's my brother, man. Nah, definitely. That's our relationship. So when he exposed you for cheating in what was it called, a duty? Food's cap. That's cap, you don't really cheat? Nah. I heard you were modding. Nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah, nah. So I played PS5, if you look at the video, because that video went viral. If you look at the video, that was connected to Xbox One, that's my nephew, I'm gonna put my nephew out there after we cheated. Oh, damn, that's crazy. But Peso got his in. He does. I played 2K with him, Peso don't play video games like that, right? Right. We played 2K with him, and everybody knows on 2K, if you do that fade and shoot the fade, and it's green every time, you zen him. Okay. And Peso is doing that the whole game, bro. Wow, really? I like this food, got a zen, if you show it. Yo, how much do you look down on somebody who does that? I don't care. I feel like that is grimy. You're ruining the whole game. I didn't even wanna go buy one. Right. Why not? But doesn't it ruin the integrity of the game? Or I guess there's so many people doing it that you can't really hate on it that hard? Bro, I ain't no fucking gamer. Okay, yeah. So I might as well make it easier for me, so it's for me. Because, bro, in the poker world, if you cheat at poker, you are like exed out. That's family. Yeah, that's for real money, but it's like you are exed out of the community forever. Like nobody will ever fuck with you again. If you ever win a tournament again, everybody's gonna post it and say, this dude's a cheater, this dude's a cheater, they're gonna make you go viral for being a cheater. So when I hear about people doing it in video games, and it's not that big a deal, I'm like, oh, damn, this is way different culturally. Yeah, I don't care, honestly. I damn near might go buy one. Okay, interesting. So did P-Face really get kicked off your tour for catching too many fades? P-Face, wow, boy, man. You seen that video with him the other day? He out here. I don't know. He had the tongue on, I can't. I don't know. Nah, he ain't get kicked off. It was just, and he wasn't the only one who got released from the tour. It was just, you know, it was too many, too many, basically too many gangsters on the lineup, and we kept getting shut down too. So it's like, you know, it was too, like we got shut down in Phoenix and shit, got shut down in Alwater. So it was like, the promoter was like, look, we're just gonna shut it down, keep it just you and the other artists. And then I threw my art, the only reason my artist came with me is because they're my artists. I was funding the whole tour. So I just put their names small. I didn't put their picture or nothing. And after that, we was able to do shows. I wanted P-Face on the rest of the tour because that shit, my tour, I'm like, we're going to cities where they're like, bro, where's P-Face? Where's Mr. Keeper Hood? Where's Lil Nate? And we're like, man, like, you know, it just didn't work out, you know? Yeah. Yeah. Damn, that's crazy. Yeah, yeah, yeah. All right, so do you feel like it's wild or it's just almost like, almost like a mission impossible to be doing a tour of all Mexican gang bangers going, not gang bangers, but gang members, people with that background going around California, playing in all these different cities. And as you play in all these different cities, it's almost like an invitation for burnt out people with a grudge to just pull up and try to do some shit. And obviously, even if they don't do it, maybe they're threatening on social media, the promoter gets scared. I mean, it just feels like it's a precarious situation. A lot of bad stuff can come with it. I don't know. Because I know back then they used to do it like, I know like the high-powered fools and shit like that. They were doing tours and shit, but we don't know what happened on their tours that affected us, you know, for us to do tours and shit. But from my experience, yeah, like it's kind of, it was impossible. So that was my only time trying to book, because usually on tours, I'll try to book like another like established artist who could get them ticket sales. Okay. Cause I've been funding my tours the last couple of tours. So I'll try to get another artist who's gonna get some ticket sales. So that way it's me and him. And then we go from there. But that tour, I try to bring all the up and coming cause I'm like, shit, they all doing their thing. It'll be good for them to come on tour. And if he could sell 10 tickets, he could sell 20, he could sell 15, that's cool. It's gonna add up, you know what I'm saying? So, but yeah, I don't know. From my experience that first time, yeah, it didn't work out, but I might try it again. It to give homies on the come up opportunity to go see what that tour is like. It was tours for it. Yeah. Tour is fun. It sucks to so much bullshit comes up with it. But I mean, it is kind of the same thing when I think about a lot of the artists that I fuck with if I was to do a tour with them, even on like the black LA artists side of things. It's like, yeah, there's a lot of different cities that you would go to where probably somebody would be looking at that as an opportunity to do some bullshit. I think black artists done that already, right? Like, I think it's more like a Mexican artist thing. I feel like the Mexican people from different cities are probably like maybe more likely to do something whereas like the black people from different cities are maybe just like used to it more. Like it doesn't stand out as much. Whereas like, if you hear about a tour of all Mexican gang related rappers, I don't know, I do feel like that's like a big bat signal going up for different people in different communities to maybe fuck around. Yeah, I'll get it for sure. So your Airbnb and Fresno got shut up? Cause that sounds crazy. Oh no, man, oh no. Yeah. That's what they say. See, you weren't there? We had to return the rental early. So that's why I said the ad water show got canceled. But we was already out there. So we had to leave that night regardless. So yeah, we had to leave early, man, for the rental to get back. Damn. That's what they say, they say, they say they be me, gosh, I love it. Damn, well, if there was anyone there, prayers up for them. I mean, that was a while ago. And to clear the air on that, man, real quick, cause I don't want to talk too much about that, but we didn't go out there to tour Fresno, bro. You know, like that, that wasn't the whole motive, bro. We were out there to go do the ad water show. Cause that was like a big thing there saying like, I would be a hypocrite, like, because, you know, I had an ex from Fresno, I was with for a while, you know, like her, her family was all damn over there, you know, like mom, dad, cousins and shit, you know? So where it's like out of it. So that's why I like, when we went there, we went there to taunt, you know what I'm saying? Like, like you're not going to see a video of me just blatantly disrespecting for like Fresno or Wooty Woot, like, cause that's not what we were there for. Now I'm with the Hummies, whatever the Hummies said, I'm rocking with them regardless. That's the Hummies. And there was already shit going on. So, but yeah, that's just to clear the air on that. Like we weren't there to taunt Fresno. And then like the, I would be a hypocrite. Like I said, like I said, my ex was from there. I remember like, I done been around them, not plenty, but I've been around one though, you know, like my ex's mom, she's beautiful for age, you know? So she had a, you remember, she had a, she was with a young fool. Like if I was 22 at the time, he was probably like 29. And he came there, I guess he was from, from their side. You know, like we didn't shake hands and everything. But we were like, what's up bro? And I kept in cordial with him, you know? So like I would be a hypocrite to be cool like that. And then go up there and start dissing Fresno. That's not what we were there for my boy. We were there to get money on some business shit. But when you were dating this girl from Fresno, would you be spending time with Fresno? And it was all good. You want to be tripping thinking about it? I've been out there, yeah, I was out there plenty of times with her. I wasn't out there tripping, you know what I'm saying? Yeah, even like one of the artists hit me to like work before and I respectfully declined it. Just on a political level? Just, you know, just declined it. Mm, yeah. Definitely. Yeah, for sure. So where do you feel like you're at in your career at this point? Cause you've been out for, what would you say, seven years that you've been pretty recognized? Man, yeah, I've been out for a while now. Yeah. I'm like, I'm like, uh. Which on one hand you still like a new artist and probably like a lot of people's minds are if you have a big song, they're gonna, they're gonna put you on the freshman cover and talk about you like a brand new artist. But then meanwhile we known about you for a while and you probably got to feel like you're a little bit of a. On 27, so it's like, I only got a couple more years of being the young artist, you know? I like, actually, when I pull the chair up, now, nowadays I'm pushing my artist. Shout out to No Love Menace and Lil Tricky, Lil Chino. And that's what I'm pushing right now. But right now I'm pushing my artist. Shout out to Young Actor here right now, one of the hottest, young hottest Homie rappers out right now. Set the California bro going crazy doing numbers. He was on tour going crazy. And yeah, man, you said you looked up your shit. No, yeah, when I was watching your videos, I was seeing you. They no active out here for sure. It was dope. It was dope. Get closer, Lil. Oh yeah, I fucked with it. How'd you guys get connected from your perspective? How'd you get close? Yeah. Well, it's a funny story. Really is, he's already cool with the Homie Menace, you know? And I grew up with a brother with freestyling and Motel 6 and shit, you know? You know, on the block and shit. And I was doing a little tournament, Juvenile Hall. I was doing like a year, a year, some change. Some little bullshit, like a tentative. But it went down to a salt. So it was good. They gave me a year and a half while you went over there. I was calling bro, like, hey, what's up? What you doing? And he said, I'm rapping with the Homie right here. Like, I'm like, oh, shit, like bro, pretty big. At this point, I don't know too many rappers, but I listen to bro. So it was like, oh, that's cool. It's fucking cool. Like, that's what's up. And I think eventually from there, I just keep calling him. He's just like, yeah, I've been kicking it with bro. He's doing this shit. Like, I'm going to bring it around when you get out. So like he said, his homie from the same city, Nola Menace, he was already like becoming my artist. Like I said, not under paperwork, but just he was my artist. And he showed me his shit. Like I told you, he was already going viral just for songs with no video. Shit, he recorded in the garage with. That's crazy. That's hard to do on this day and age. Bro, and he hit millions. So I was like, there he's going crazy. So then we had a big studio session one day. It was LA, Homie, Indio, Homie, San Diego, Homie. It was a gang of us. And I told him, I was like, I tell your boy, pull up. And he pulled up. And the first song we did was a song called Flow So Crazy. It's going viral on TikTok right now. And bro went in there gassing. That was our first song we ever made. And then I give it to him. You know, give him that one feature. Yeah, well, he featured in my shit. And then he ran with it, bro. He's been going crazy ever since. No, that's hard. For sure. He's on the new Peso album by the drop. All this shit, bro. That's for sure. Hell yeah. Yeah, it's a Peso on the set. How that ended up happening? You calling the favor? Be like, look, would you be down to get my artist look? No, so it's genuine love. So like, like I said, Peso's my brother. So like we come to LA, we mingle in with Peso and his people. When he comes to San Diego, he's mingling with us. You know, so him being around me, it was at a point where he was with Peso for like two weeks straight without me there. You know, he got plenty of songs with Peso. Yeah. He got like, what, like five songs with him, huh? Four or five. Yeah, he got Peso on his tape too, by the drop. When you look at LA, you feel like Peso's kind of like the number one Mexican rapper? Yeah, him and Lefty for sure. Hell yeah. No, for sure, yeah. Hell yeah, no debate. Definitely. Wait, but geographically, are you guys from like nearby each other? So, no. So he's from, I'll let him tell you. He's from North County. So North County is like our like SGV. So it's like, it's like the Al Scurdy city. I'm from West San Diego. Okay, definitely. And so when you met though, it was like all love, like very similar culturally. Like you guys just fit in perfectly. Hell yeah, it's still San Diego County, you know? It's still San Diego. They claim their city, but they know they're San Diego County though. When you guys get on a song together though, like, how do you feel, like, how do your styles complement each other? Like, is it just a natural fit or like, do you feel like you wrap differently to the point where like, goes together well? Yeah, it's different, but it fits. Bro goes crazy, like, he be up there saying some shit that blow my mind like, what the f***, like, he be having some shit. So when he first came, he kind of like, that's when I was in one of my breaks. So when he first came around, it kind of motivated me to like, okay, like, because I was always looking for young artists. You know, like, because me coming up, I didn't have that order. Like me on the come up, I had to like do it myself, you know, to where like, I was always looking for that Mr. Lil One or Shadow to come grab me, which later later down the road, they showed love when when I was at a point where you couldn't ignore me. Yeah. To where like, I always. So now, like, he'll tell you, like, for the younger homies, like, I always just look out, you know, whatever they need. I'm always looking to help them, so. So now that you're having emotion with the rap stuff, are you like having to try to stay away from the streets and everything? Or is that harder than it sounds? One for them, one for that. No, I can't forget where I came from. He's right. So yeah, the homies to be right there. And most of the times I don't really go nowhere alone. Cause I know, you know, yeah, the last time I'm a family. So are you learning how to move around from being around weirdo and it shit? Yeah. Having him kind of, you know, he's been through all this stuff. Yeah, I'm getting clutched a little, you know, and what are the the Asian characters? This is for my Nina. I got it recently. He's from my, yeah, my Nina. Okay. Play a big part of my life. He just got there. That's what's up. What's your like ethnicity? ethnicity. I'm pretty sure. Well, I'm Mexican. Okay. My mom's, you know, my past from my hot guy, from my mom's is from, I'm pretty sure it's from around the same, same little spot. Okay. But I think she might have another ethnicity. Yeah. What's that other tattoo that they can see on the side of your face? Which one? The one? Yeah, that one. Oh, that's my name, bro. Oh, I got this as soon as flow. So crazy. I'm like, oh yeah, I'm gonna run with this. Like, it's me. I see that the time we do it now. Do we rap it? He got the eye buzzing. That's hard. Yeah. Wait, so let me see the other side. So what's the Nike swoosh? Yeah. What's that symbolize for you? Just like just do it. I'm like an overthinker, you know, so I got it. I'm like, I need to start doing shit without thinking, you know, I'll do it, you know, just do it. Just do it like like no question. It's not like a street meaning or anything. Uh, not really. Okay. It's more like a just, just do it, you know, okay. Hop out, do it. Oh, hop out and do it. Do it. Like Nike. No, because like I always thought one of the hardest like gang tattoos symbols is the fact that a Greedo had like the upside down Michael Jordan on his face. Because he's from the Jordan down. So he got the upside down Jordan. Yeah, that's hard. I thought that was so hard. And I remember asking like, yo, can we do merch with that? And they were like, no, not a good idea. No. Copyrighted. No, just like from a gang perspective, you don't really want to be putting a gang symbol on a shirt. And when he said no, I was like, okay, yeah, that makes sense. Yeah, people might feel way about that. That might be a little too much attention. Yeah. Um, all right. So what do you guys got planned? Like you got like a project you're working on? I got a tape from my first ever project, you know, I got a bro in there, Peso, a few of the artists from my city. I think a little Chino from North side, Indio. Hell yeah. Yeah. That's fire. Hell yeah. Um, all right. So like what else you want to tell the world out there? Like as far as the San Diego topic or just in general, what they need to look out for from the little weirdo? Man, just not just me, like my whole team. Shout out to the team too. Man, shout out for that. Guapo. Shout out Goldie, DJ Playboy, Jacob Jire, like, be nasty. Like, Jared, I appreciate you guys, man, because the other ones helping us get this shit going, you know, like, be taking a break, having to come back into the game, you know, making it real easy for me and my team. So really just mean the whole team, bro. Just mean, mean my whole team with my artists and shit. It's definitely working right now. I realized the value of your rap name today because my daughter is five and we're messing around this morning and she called me a weirdo. And I actually said, I'm like, Hey, you know, I'm interviewing a rapper named Lil Weirdo today and her face just lit up. And she's like, what? Like it was so clear that she like didn't really understand the concept of somebody with like a rap name that would kind of be an insult, but you're making it your own thing. Like she was like, why? She like kept making me repeat it like, why is it a little weirdo? But she, she has a new thing too, like a new little game where she'll ask me. So go, what's Cryptmack's name? What's Brig Baby's name? Like she wants to know all my like rappers slash street friends, like real names, what's wax name? Like she thinks it's hilarious. Like here everybody's real names. I don't know. But nah, man, it was good to tap in. You actually, you, you were on at the end of the day. You did a full interview with me and Duna once. You did an interview with Sharp once. So this is actually number four, which very few people can say that. So that's kind of dope. That's crazy. Yeah. Hey, hey, hey, San Diego man, you know, I love you guys, man, but y'all can't be letting like Adam get you out of character, bro. You know, just keep pushing, keep working, man. We, we on the come right now. Back then, San Diego was the city where like, and still, still, still it kind of is cause some people be f***ing the game up a little bit, but San Diego was the city where rappers think they just going to come and get their money. Like they're going to come, they're going to do a show. They're going to be booked at the after party and they're going to sell like four or five features because you know, we, my f***ing down there buying features. Like nowadays we got this motherf***ing jump into where rappers, they'll come to a show and sh**, but they just, they locking in like, Hey bro, pull up, come f*** with us. You know, like now, like if, just, just, just do your thing, man, and network, bro. That's what it's all about. Like if you're going to pay for a feature, either make sure it's a hit song that's going to take off or make sure you go really locking with that person genuinely. You know, make sure that person is really f***ing with you. Other than that, man, change the narrative around this motherf***er, man. Don't let people like Adam get you out of character and just keep working, bro. I'm trying to inspire y'all. Nah, Adam, I'm doing this for y'all. I'm trying to inspire the city. Adam, go come do something for us, bro, cause you know it's that man. We popping out. We going to hop out and do it. Adam going to come f*** with us, bro. Either he going to hire somebody up here or he going to come down and f*** with us, man. We can't know what y'all can't come try whoop his ass, bro. Y'all can't do him like that. Nah, nah. He going to do right. You got defense on 99. Can't do that. Your defense on 99. Sh** on 99.9, yeah. You know how it happens in San Diego, bro? Yeah. What f*** is going to late the f*** out? Dudes like him, they hop out and doesn't do it. Real shit, though. Real shit. I can see it in his eyes, man. He's seen some shit. I know why you like him. That's my boy right here. For sure. Shout out to Lil Weirdo and tell him what your Instagram is and everything like that so they can go tell him. Official Young Active, my little one got deleted so I'm an Official Young Active. And keep an eye out for Mr. Certified GT, my first-ever project. But it's crazy. I heard almost all of it. I heard almost the whole tape and she's going crazy. For sure. And if you go pull up, if you just search Lil Weirdo on YouTube, you got features with him and stuff so you can get in the algorithm like that. Check his shit out. I appreciate y'all pulling up and politicking these issues with me, man. Yeah, I appreciate it. I f*** with you. Very nice. Hey, man, stop playing with the city. Bro, if I leave right now, don't go tomorrow. Start poppin' about the city, bro. Come on. What will next week's narrative be? Maybe I'll pick a new city to inspire and motivate. Might have to do it. Alright. Shout out Lil Weirdo, Lil Jonberg, Coolest Park Gaston World, like, comment, and subscribe, Instagram, TikTok, etc. And shout out to our members who got to watch this live. Appreciate you. Hell yeah, appreciate you.