Noadvisory Podcast
Welcome to Charlotte's 4x Award Winning "Noadvisory Podcast" the Number 1 podcast movement in the Queen city! We like to keep it real, local, and with NO FILTER! Make sure to tune in!
Noadvisory Podcast
Rap Tales and the Music Journey w/ Special Guest Ridikulaz
Brace yourself for a whirlwind of laughter and insight as we kick off with some birthday cheer and a tribute to iconic athletes like Sue Bird and Naomi Osaka. With Taris taking a sick day, we keep the vibes lighthearted, poking fun at the realities of unpaid sick days while the crew bounce around with inside jokes and unique nicknames. As we celebrate milestones, we also turn a reflective eye on the late Wanda Smith, honoring her legacy in comedy and radio.
Our exploration takes a serious turn with a deep dive into DJ Mustard's divorce saga, dissecting the asset division and the quirks of California's child support laws. The unsettling Kentucky murder mystery grips our attention next, leaving us pondering the chilling motives behind Tori's horrifying actions. Adding a touch of mystery and intrigue, we recount a nighttime subway scenario and question the fine line between humor and societal tensions.
Our special guest, Ridikulaz, graces the stage with his unique rap style and anecdotes that trace his evolution from cringe-worthy stage names to becoming a celebrated performer. With influences from hip-hop legends, Ridiculous embodies the spirit of creativity and resilience, making his segment both inspiring and entertaining. We wrap up with reflections on the music industry's shifting landscape, celebrating the dedication needed to forge a successful path and the authenticity that keeps the industry's heart beating strong.
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Oh, they put me on the beat. Traps hit on the beat, but y'all know I ain't no rapper though. Yeah, let's get it. Me and my gang we up and yeah.
Speaker 2:Cheers y'all. This is the most dangerous crew in the whole of Ozzy Podcast. Your boy, co McLean. It's your girl. Traps Hit. Shout out girl Tyrus Cheers. Girl CO McLean, it's your girl. Trap C. Shout out, girl Tyrus. Jeez girl TO what she say. Jeez girl TO McLean. Shout out to Tyrus. Man, she out. She took a sick day today. She ain't going to be paid. We give non-paid sick days here you know what I'm saying. I can't giving nobody union, fuck that.
Speaker 4:I was just about to say that I was like Now what Denied you know what?
Speaker 3:I'm saying Shout out to T.
Speaker 2:You know what I mean. She out sick. You know, get well, girl. You know what I mean. Shout out to my main DJ Polo on the buttocks. Hey, alright, you see the plaques. It's Polo here.
Speaker 6:I like that.
Speaker 2:Stop playing. Shout out my nigga Michael Blackson over there, real name, no gimmicks see the shirt.
Speaker 4:Play with him with a glove. I know I saw one right cause I would like his latex.
Speaker 2:Shout out to my man Fleet street wars. Bitch heavy on it. You know how it is. Shout out my man. Sleaze, what up. Sleaze. Sleaze with the up. Sleaze With the knees. Already Sleaze with the knees. Oh, I forgot about that shit. You know what I'm saying. Shout out Kim, what up Kim. And we got bros in the building too, when the brothers at hey, shout out to Brother 1, what's your name, brother 1. Tj, tj, man.
Speaker 3:TJ. He's like TJ man.
Speaker 1:Oh, you got to be literal with him.
Speaker 2:No, you know what I thought he said? I thought he said TJ Maxx. I was like what? Tj man? Tj man, brother number 2. Dope, you got TJ man.
Speaker 1:No, just TJ.
Speaker 2:His name is TJ. No, he like it Fuck that shit oh wait, wait. So he was like saying TJ man, like man, okay, man, I got it man.
Speaker 4:There it is.
Speaker 2:My man All right there it is Problem solved. Shout out to my nigga TJ.
Speaker 4:Brotherhood.
Speaker 2:Hey dog, what up? Shout out to my man. Big Dog, that's my nigga man. Shout out to Big Dog Easy man, One of the smoothest R&B singers in Charlotte.
Speaker 1:That's a fact.
Speaker 5:That's a fact.
Speaker 4:Don't play with him.
Speaker 2:That is a fact Shout out to Big Dog over there.
Speaker 4:What's his name? Oh, that's my cuz Cuz Security, sketch Security.
Speaker 2:Hey cuz Security sketch With your security. Black shirt.
Speaker 4:You don't need it. That's a target when you wear shirts that say staff Like. That's stupid.
Speaker 2:Oh shit, he's gonna beat your ass for you. He's just like no, you thought he was just hanging with me, or something he's gonna beat your ass. Hey babe, we got a very special guest. You know he's right here, he's here, but he's not here yet. But he's here, ridiculous.
Speaker 5:We're going to bring you in.
Speaker 6:Oh yeah, just wait for the cue.
Speaker 1:He's just a ghost figure right now. Okay.
Speaker 2:With a mask on Okay.
Speaker 1:Just wait for the cue, but feel free to contribute. Yeah, I mean contribute.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we got to go through the whole spiel and shit.
Speaker 1:Yes, sir, no, we got birthdays first.
Speaker 2:We don't never do birthdays.
Speaker 1:We do birthdays every week. No, I'm saying we don't have a.
Speaker 2:A slang for the birthdays.
Speaker 1:Okay, birthdays.
Speaker 5:Right.
Speaker 1:Birthdays.
Speaker 3:Happy.
Speaker 2:Okay, that works, fuck Okay.
Speaker 1:Okay, do y'all know who Sue Bird is?
Speaker 2:Yeah, Sue Bird for the Liberty right. She used to play for the Liberty, yes.
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 4:Okay she turned 44. Oh, shout out to Sue Burke. Okay, yeah, that's a Hall of Famer too. Yeah, sue Burke and Hooper.
Speaker 6:Shout out to Sue Burke.
Speaker 1:And both of these birthdays today are athletes Naomi Osaka, oh the tennis player.
Speaker 2:Yeah, she turned 27.
Speaker 1:She still go with the dude with the light-skinned nigga.
Speaker 2:They had a baby. They had a baby. What's his name?
Speaker 4:Corey Cordae oh, she's pregnant Aw.
Speaker 2:The rapper yeah, yeah, cordae, he play tennis too.
Speaker 4:He nice too, man, cordae can rap. Yeah, cordae can rap his ass off.
Speaker 2:He's a rapper that play tennis, ball niggas that play golf. Yeah, yeah, I like that. Huh, right, it's ball niggas that play golf. And then rapper niggas play tennis.
Speaker 4:It's gotta be multi-talented out here right, he could play.
Speaker 2:That could be on his off time, he could play. Right, shout out to corday and um, what's the name?
Speaker 6:naomi osaka naomi osaka shout to them who he's trash they say he's a good rapper, bad ball player. Immediately went to a hoot.
Speaker 3:It's the trash for me, it's the trash, bro, I know.
Speaker 2:Trash, nigga trash. It was birthdays.
Speaker 1:That's it. It was all two. I didn't know nobody else. There's billions of people in the world. We only got three birthdays today. Nigga, when I do the people I know, you never know them, and I'm'm telling you these are other people that I don't know. So I know you for sure don't know them.
Speaker 2:I know all them three motherfuckers that you named, I named two.
Speaker 4:Well, two.
Speaker 6:I named them all just now.
Speaker 1:I'm gonna say names.
Speaker 2:Nisama Okawaka and Sue Bird Hi nigga, what Wick Cordae? That's the actual bonus points.
Speaker 1:Baya Ha ha Try to an extra bonus point.
Speaker 2:Bang Ha ha. Try to fucking play with me, Polo. Try to play with me.
Speaker 1:Shut me up All right. Okay, now we can go to Hot Topics.
Speaker 2:Okay, okay, I like when you say that.
Speaker 1:All right, so number one, y'all know who Wanda Smith is, the Atlanta comedian and radio host that got into it with Cat Williams, oh man. Yeah, yeah. She passed away in Atlanta, yep, at the age of 59. Hold on Crazy.
Speaker 2:T is like right in front of our fucking feed, yeah.
Speaker 1:Uh-huh in front of our Facebook feed Our Facebook feed. All they see is torso.
Speaker 2:Sorry, that was the nigga. Crazy T Arms. His arms is Crazy T Huh.
Speaker 3:Huh, who yeah.
Speaker 1:Yeah, huh, huh oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, you said no that was years ago.
Speaker 4:That was years ago. Williams interview was like years. Yeah, that was a long time ago, dude. It just resurfaced because of the whole the other shit that he did this year, but that's that would have sucked, that would have sucked, yeah, damn so.
Speaker 1:Um, for those of you who don't know who wanda smith is, she was actually the host of the frank and wanda show in the morning.
Speaker 1:That was like a popular atlanta morning radio show on v103. She was also a writer for a deaf comedy jam and bts comic view and she also had a weekly set at atlanta's um comedy theater. And if y'all didn't know, she was also in two Tyler Perry movies Medea Goes to Jail and Medea Witness Protection Medea's Witness Protection. She was in that movie. No, they don't know how she passed. They said the cause of death is still unknown right now. Nah, oh, no, he killed her and then put me on blast.
Speaker 4:It might be, it might not. It's like I hope so right, it shouldn't be. I'm a very, I'm a very nice guy okay, there we go okay the next one.
Speaker 1:y'all know the saying it's cheaper to keep her it damn sure is Not in this case. It was cheaper to get rid of this hoe.
Speaker 2:Oh.
Speaker 1:DJ Musta and his ex-wife, chanel Theory, have finalized their divorce. Yes, run it, run it, run it, run it, run it, run it, run it, run it you got all. You know, California is a state that has no maximum on child support. Okay, oh shit they can charge you however much they want to charge you.
Speaker 4:Run it up. Run it up Now with that in mind, keep this.
Speaker 1:So this is what DJ Mustard got to keep in this divorce settlement His 2022 Maybach Benz. His 2018 Lamborghini Aventador. His 2022 Cadillac Escalade. His 2022 Rolls.
Speaker 5:I can't say it Rolls Royce Cullinan.
Speaker 1:The rest of the vehicles, motorcycles and jet skis, the residential properties In California, properties like multiple in California, access to the mansion In Chatsworth. And he got to keep all of his rights to his music catalog Because, if you remember, a few months ago he was trying to get rights to that as well.
Speaker 2:I remember that.
Speaker 4:Well, I feel like he got everything that belonged to him. I don't understand, you know.
Speaker 2:So what does she get?
Speaker 1:So let me read what she got.
Speaker 2:Okay.
Speaker 1:So they got joint legal custody of the kids.
Speaker 4:That's good.
Speaker 1:She gets $24,500 a month in child support.
Speaker 5:That's really cheap, because I think she has three kids, that's $8,000 a month for them kids.
Speaker 1:That's cheap as hell, especially in a state where there is no maximum. They could have told this nigga pay $100,000 a month.
Speaker 2:Well, that goes. Maybe his bread is.
Speaker 1:You know what I mean he has a good lawyer, though she also gets a one-time payment of $315,000 in spousal support. She gets to keep all of the rights to her loungewear business Because once again, if you don't remember when she tried to get rights to his music catalog. He said you do that and I'm getting it, yeah. Loungewear business.
Speaker 4:That's kind of where the swap businesses.
Speaker 1:She has her own car that she bought, which was a Tesla Model X. She gets to keep that. Okay, and then she gets a one time payment of two hundred and seventy five thousand dollars, and this is what they call an equalization for the cars that are kept and this is what they call an equalization for the cars that are kept.
Speaker 2:So all of the vehicles that he got to keep equal up to like 625 total when you break that in half, it's 275.
Speaker 1:Maybe my math is wrong.
Speaker 5:Maybe it's like five and some change or whatever. Yeah, 550.
Speaker 2:But when you break it down, she gets half of the value as a one-time payment, I mean yo listen, man, he got off, though I don't think he got off, I think he got off. I just think it was fair, I think it was fair, it was fair, it was fair.
Speaker 1:Y'all don't understand. It could have been worse. That's what she said, exactly.
Speaker 2:It could have been worse for him.
Speaker 1:It could have been worse, for you're gonna pay a hundred thousand dollars a month for each of your children, but that's why I said it's fair. Three, that's why I said it's fair, that's what I'm saying. So to only pay eight thousand a month for these kids, when they expect a certain lifestyle and a certain standard. They're probably enrolled in private schools, probably have tutors, you know so that's not enough.
Speaker 2:You don't think that's enough. I think it's enough. I think literally, she literally got exactly enough to cover what is needed for them and if she's smart, she will invest, get some properties and flip it 50, 50. Yeah, she got a business and she got two lump sum, so that that equal what? Because she got the lump sum for the cars and she got a lump sum cash, so what those two amounts equal to.
Speaker 1:About a half a mil, probably right no, $339,500. In total, yeah, okay, in a one time Joint custody 50-50.
Speaker 2:He heard $24,000 a month, and then he got to spend half the month too. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 5:Yeah, yeah, that's how it works, that's normally how it goes.
Speaker 2:So don't never get on child support, bro. They're gonna fuck you up. You're gonna be like, hold on, judge, I gotta give a plus, aw, shit. And you're gonna think back on this shit. You'll be like, god damn, they think it's good to say that. No, I don't wish that on you, bro, but no, no more shout out on your brother.
Speaker 1:But yeah, I think that's fair. That's fair yeah that's what I'm saying, I think literally his divorce lawyer, whoever it was shout out to them.
Speaker 2:Yeah, shout out.
Speaker 1:Literally to be able to provide for their kids at the level and care that they expect to be provided.
Speaker 2:I mean, let's be real. Sometimes we see these settlements and it be astronomical numbers. They be asking these guys to pay Like twice what they generally make, like how, how? I think this is very, very legitimately fair. What more do you need? You got two lump sum payments, you got joint custody. Kept your businesses there, kept your car there. What more do you want? Probably, probably.
Speaker 1:Probably. Probably Because she wanted rights. She wanted rights to his music. That was the thing.
Speaker 4:And that's the stupid shit.
Speaker 1:As part of the divorce settlement.
Speaker 4:She wanted 50% rights of his music Right.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that that does, but that's not how it works though.
Speaker 4:Right, but allegedly it's attached to that. It didn't fucking happen.
Speaker 2:Uh-huh, that's not how it works All right. Oh.
Speaker 4:Okay, she got a finder's fee. Right the fuck. Right the first show, Right the first show.
Speaker 2:Fuck out of here.
Speaker 1:All right, what do we got next? Alright, this is the last one, and I had to include this. See, this is just how crazy the story is.
Speaker 2:That's just how crazy the story is Nigga got slimmer, cause he used to fit in this bitch Nigga did. He got locked up. Nigga got lost some weight.
Speaker 4:Oh my god, why are you doing this man? Leave him alone, damn Nigga. Diddy got locked up. Nigga got lost some weight.
Speaker 2:Oh, my God, why are you doing this man? Leave him alone. Leave him alone.
Speaker 1:I ain't leaving him man. Shit. So a Kentucky woman was arrested after her mother's dismembered body was discovered, and let me get into the details, because I don't want to get too much into the title. Okay, so there is a 31 year old lady named Tori Lena Mayfield, also known as Tori, in Kentucky. She is known as a country girl In California. She is known as an actress that goes by a whole nother name it's like Nevaeh Navarro or some shit like that, whatever. She is also on instagram.
Speaker 1:She's famous for being a fitness model she's famous for being like doing exercises and stuff like that on instagram. So apparently her mom they lived on his farm her mom had some time ago hired this groundskeeper to kind of come and do things around the house. He came every day at the same time. He came on this particular day last thursday and he said that this girl, tori, was casting spells on him she was out of her mind casting spells.
Speaker 1:He said he never seen the mom that whole day. So he called the police over there. The police get over there. They are in a standoff with this girl for 12 hours as she hides in the house. When she finally comes out she is covered in blood. They arrest her on the scene. They check the house, the scene. They checked the house and they found body parts in a mattress, but inside I'm sorry behind the house and they also found the head hands, feet and forearm of the mother in a stainless steel pot.
Speaker 1:That was still warm to the touch she's cooking, right?
Speaker 2:I was like, well, that's just straight up wait wait, I want you to back up for a minute, because you said she went in the house and then it was like a pause, so she did she dismember her during that time. It was a standoff.
Speaker 1:No, apparently the groundskeeper is saying. I don't know how true this is, but the groundskeeper said he thinks that she killed the mom before this before they came and like he thinks that, like she had a mental break and something like inside of her was saying, killer eli.
Speaker 1:It was like ritualistic almost oh shit, because she was cooking her to eat her like it's just it's a very weird case that's gonna be made a movie it is right, yeah so get this. So let me tell you what she was charged with, and then let me tell you some background information, because I told you the girl is faint, is like an actor in Hollywood and she's also this fitness model, that's her other personality Right. So she was charged with obstructing governmental operations, tampering with evidence, abusing a corpse, murder and torture of a dog or cat.
Speaker 1:Now murder and torture of a dog or cat now for the life of me. I could not find why they charged her with torture of a dog or cat. Yeah, but if you look her up she is charged with torture of a dog or cat. So I don't know where the fuck they came in.
Speaker 2:I don't know if they found maybe a dog or cat was in the pot I don't know there you go no, it was, it was kentucky I mean what well?
Speaker 4:well, well, here's the thing. Here's the thing, the first of all. First of all is kentucky, that's one, because stupid shit happens in kentucky. This is where documentaries are made, and then fucking uh with the animal abuse thing. You don't even have to be into like serial killers to know that's the fucking next step. You abuse animals. You about to murder people, that's just what it is.
Speaker 1:I'm not surprised that's on the list, okay, so get this, though Wait so are Asian people murderers?
Speaker 4:Yeah, she tortured animals, yeah, and then she murdered that nigga. Are they murderers, asian?
Speaker 2:people Because they kill cats and dogs.
Speaker 4:Are they serial killers?
Speaker 1:No, Are they TikTok? Let me know, are Asian people serial killers? I'm so sick of clearing these violations.
Speaker 2:They're going to get banned. We're not going to get banned.
Speaker 3:Yeah, that's hate speech Discrimination Listen.
Speaker 2:I don't mean no harm. I don't mean no harm. Let us know TikTok.
Speaker 4:Are we racist or not? Right, much love. What did you ask?
Speaker 2:me Listen, this shit is no advisor. Don't take it by the label from her. All right, okay, so get this.
Speaker 1:So remember I told y'all the girl is a country girl. She was raised on the farm in Kentucky. She's never, ever been a mean person, been a violent person. She doesn't have a violent history. She's never gotten to in a fight so this was her record is clean, so this is very unusual get this a couple months ago in california remember I told you she used to be this actress.
Speaker 1:She got into a very bad motorcycle accident where she had a tbi, a traumatic brain. It was so bad that when she was discharged from the hospital she didn't know where she was, who she, what her name was. They said they oftentimes found her wandering around California because she had no idea where the fuck she was in the world. She didn't know who she was, and it got so bad that her friends every time were like come on, like we're friends, I got you. And she would keep doing the same thing.
Speaker 2:It got so bad that the same mama that she killed came from kentucky to california to get the girl, and that's the only reason. The girl was back in kentucky, oh shit.
Speaker 1:So I I'm gonna keep y'all definitely a movie it's interesting.
Speaker 2:Wait before you go, move on. What was that first charge again um obstructing governmental operations what was that for the standoff? Oh, okay, yeah, all right. So who came there? Was it Homeland Security?
Speaker 1:No, it was the police.
Speaker 2:So how did that involve government operations? I'm trying to figure that out.
Speaker 1:Police are governmental business.
Speaker 2:Wait, wait, wait. What are you doing? Turned it off. He was dancing.
Speaker 3:Okay, okay, I guess.
Speaker 2:So, oh, my God okay, okay, I guess, so oh my god, biggie, all right, biggie, biggie, set your ass right here, biggie I think a biggie slim.
Speaker 1:Now, all right, go ahead. So it's just interesting because I want to see if, like was the tbi, did it do so much damage that it she truly had a mental break? Because even like all the neighbors said, like you know, she was never like she's never practiced like satanism, like she's never. This is so out of the norm for the girl, right. So I'm keep y'all dated because I like shit like this. Y'all know I like murder yeah, yeah, and why trappy?
Speaker 2:she said, I said too much, too much. I go to sleep to the Menendez Brothers If I'm not here next week tell my mom I loved her and she did it. Ah, you such a snitch. Six, nine.
Speaker 1:Right, Like why would you say that?
Speaker 2:That was it.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:God damn, I'm short as fuck. Usually I have like 35 pages and shit. Well, I knew we had a guest here. No diddy shit.
Speaker 1:No, diddy shit.
Speaker 3:I'm sick of.
Speaker 1:Diddy, but in other news they have finally confirmed that, yes, it was GHB that was in all those thousand bottles of baby oil found at Diddy's house, and that he was using the drug laced baby oil to help ease the effects of his affairs. So that's your Diddy for the day.
Speaker 2:The dealer. Alright, I was shocked, sid, with Hot Topics and Birthdays.
Speaker 4:What would?
Speaker 2:you do.
Speaker 2:What would you do? This gets worse and worse. So, yeah, nomar, what would you do's are normally accounts of what I go through or accounts that somebody else went through and I tell you guys. So this account. I just recently went back to the hotel in Brooklyn, picked up this hat. Shout out to Caps USA in Brooklyn on Fulton Street. Y'all got an ill selection of caps. Thank you for the deal. So what would you do? I just went back home.
Speaker 2:So I was like yo, back on the subway, took the subway ride and I thought about a shit that happened to me on the subway. I was like, ooh I, you're on a train, late night, late night. You're on the train and you have, you know, a homeless person in one of the seats and it's you like you know, you, you by yourself, and it's like another, um, patron pedestrian rider in there just chilling, just kind of like, right next to the homeless person. Whatever, just y'all three in the car, just y'all three. And you're on a train, and the homeless nigga gets up, gets up, just like, and just start looking at you. What the fuck on a train? What would you do at that particular moment if the homeless nigga just got up and staring directly at you. Now, mind you, it wasn't me, it was the white lady that was sitting next to them. So what would you do if you was that white lady and the homeless nigga just got up and just turned around and just staring?
Speaker 1:directly at you.
Speaker 2:What would you do?
Speaker 1:So in this scenario, I have to be a white woman. Right, that's the first question it sounds like we have to be a white woman.
Speaker 4:You have to be the Caucasian Right.
Speaker 1:I'm going to do the white woman shit, so if we was the white woman, what would you do?
Speaker 2:Let me get you two perspective. If you was the white woman? And if it was you, what would you do? And this is where the mic comes in at for the studio audience interaction pass the mic, we won't get out. What would you do?
Speaker 1:first, if I was the white lady, I would probably just put my head down like no that's not what you're doing to me. Not today, lord, not today if. I was me, I would probably be like what the fuck is you looking at? And you know whatever happens after that happens ridiculous.
Speaker 4:What would you do I think I'll probably be like fuck is you looking at Right and you know whatever happens after that happens Ridiculous. What would you do? I think I would just say don't eat me.
Speaker 4:That's it Wait that was the white woman response. That was me. Like the white woman, I would just do white woman shit, Like I would just have a heart attack. I would pass out and call the cops at the same time. You on a train, it doesn't matter that shit ain't going to go through, Right? No, like I'll get white help Because white help is always on the way.
Speaker 2:White help is nasty.
Speaker 4:Right and that's why I love that beat scene. Black help happened and I was like I love that. It was a masterpiece. It black people helped that brother. They went over there. You saw a nigga swimming towards shore like I'm about to scrap these bitches, so that was beautiful.
Speaker 2:So, yeah, I would have got white help, what would you do? What would you do, big dog?
Speaker 5:What I'd do.
Speaker 2:It's all.
Speaker 5:If I was the white lady, I'd just mind my business, probably get up and move somewhere. But if it was me, my son, what the fuck you got going on? Hey, dog Right, come here, sit down real quick. Let me talk to you.
Speaker 4:Stop looking at me and shit Go ahead, brother.
Speaker 6:If I was the white woman, I'd probably ask the man does he live on this line?
Speaker 1:Right.
Speaker 6:That sounds like the white woman thing to do, right, right.
Speaker 1:Do you live here?
Speaker 6:This is my first time seeing you here. I don't know you, right?
Speaker 2:I don't recognize you If it was White? People normally try to have conversations and shit Right. They want to know, they want to get the facts, right, Scooby doing shit.
Speaker 6:So if it was me personally, I would take this knife that's in my back pocket and move it to my front pocket. There you go and just wait on whatever's going to happen. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 4:Because you got to remember he got up and stared at you and didn't say a word. That's terrifying. So it's like yeah, have something.
Speaker 2:Do something you ain't going to say that I ain't here. He ain there, you go. He ain't here, okay, oh, go ahead well, I thought he was saying.
Speaker 3:I thought he said he ain't hearing.
Speaker 5:He didn't hear it.
Speaker 3:Oh okay, if I'm a white woman, I'm probably uh, shit, I'm probably get up and walk the fuck off or be scared. Just say fuck it like I don't know. Try to move to. I'll try to move next to your ass. Hey what's up, bro yeah.
Speaker 1:Oh God.
Speaker 3:If it was, uh, if it was me, I'm gonna do like yeah he gonna see what's on. He gonna see what's on the hill. There you go. So, however it's gonna go, just know that's right, I'm going to make it out of this little train caught alive. Oh yeah, caught alive. I'm going to look at you and say this ain't for you, cuz this ain't got shit to do with you, or else I'd have been got your ass. Yeah, I'd have been got you. He would sleep, I'd have been got you.
Speaker 4:Right, you good.
Speaker 5:You safe too. That's what I do on West Sugar Creek when I got to get gas.
Speaker 3:Them niggas be out there around that little corner, isn't it Go ahead?
Speaker 2:and sit in the right here, get out and cut you up. Go on yeah.
Speaker 3:Nice day.
Speaker 5:Hold my door open.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 4:Thank you, thank you, you got slick niggas on one industry Sugar Creek and down Right across.
Speaker 2:We got you, what would you do? All right so let me tell you the end story. So, big dog, I like that. You said that. You said that if you was a white woman, you would have got up and walked away right Sleaze. You said you were going to try to get my ass right. No, did he. Both of them shits happened. So this is what happened. So this white bitch- Great start.
Speaker 4:I'm not chilling.
Speaker 2:I'm minding my business, I'm just like yo. So the nigga gets up. I'm like, oh shit, I'm just down there looking like the fuck about to happen, right. So the white lady's like just looking like so she's trying to get something to say circuit bitch, I ain't got nothing to do with that shit going on over there. Fuck that shit. I was like don't call me. We don't jump into the Don't call me, she's trying to break me. So she gets up and starts walking towards me.
Speaker 5:And this crazy nigga just walking right behind her just looking at her.
Speaker 2:I'm like, oh, this nigga coming down here, the fuck.
Speaker 2:I'm like lady stay down there. I'm like yo stay down there. I ain't got nothing to do with this lady. Go down there. That nigga crazy. So you know, in the cars they got you could go through the cars, right, you could go through the car shit. So my ass getting up. I'm like I'm going to the next car. It's like sir, please don't leave me, sir, please don't leave me. She crying and shit hysterically, so I go in the next car. It's like four, right bye. It's like, yeah, he's crazy, he's following his white women. He's about to come over here, right? So guess what she do? She comes to the door with this freaking crazy.
Speaker 2:And the nigga just staring at her like I'm like yo, why this nigga keep looking at her? What did she do to this nigga that he keep looking? So then, the nigga said something. He said something.
Speaker 3:She's like oh my.
Speaker 2:God help me, he'll kill me, he'll kill me, he'll kill me. Then I guess he went to the train. He's like next stop is so the niggas start going crazy Like, oh, bitch, bitch, I fucking hate white people. I was like, oh yes, he hates white people. We good niggas, we good, he hates white people. That's good. So I'm sitting there laughing, that's a great ending. He hate white people.
Speaker 4:That's a great ending.
Speaker 2:So she's riding on a train, she's crying and shit and the story. The train came, opened the door and he just jumped out the car and ran and just left.
Speaker 4:He ran, he took off running he just took off, he just took off.
Speaker 1:She got no white help.
Speaker 4:Yep, because that's the train in New York, bro.
Speaker 2:That's the train Soon as we went in that car soon as that nigga said I hate white people. Nigga all niggas like oh shit. We all was like oh shit, yeah, baby, we good.
Speaker 3:We all right.
Speaker 2:Was it other white?
Speaker 3:people.
Speaker 2:No, there we good All right, we all right, we all right. Was it other white people?
Speaker 4:No, she was the only white lady.
Speaker 2:Ironically she was the only white lady in that car when I went there. It was like an older lady, two dudes and I think it was like two, three girls, one girl, but it was all black. It was all black. I told him like yo, this white bitch is crazy. Come to the car I don't know what's going to happen to y'all, so you know what I mean. So as soon as he said that, all the black folks was like oh shit. I looked at her and was like, ha ha, we good, we good.
Speaker 1:And that right, there is her KKK villain story. Right, because she hates niggas. Now, Yo. Yeah, y'all did nothing.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I ain't got nothing to do with that, bro. My life is valuable too, bro. I know I ain't got nothing to do with that, bro. I ain't got nothing Cause he got up and started just looking at her. He started looking at her, something like that. Shit ain't got nothing to do with me. Huh, yeah, I'm telling you. Man Shout out to New York City Subways.
Speaker 3:Man Shout out to Right, we don't jump in people's business like they do, yeah, but what would you do if you was in that situation?
Speaker 2:You're on a train, a homeless man got Just looking straight at you following your ass on a train. What would you do if you were that person the white person? Or if he was you, what would you do? Bang? All right, taris, she's not here to do her segment, so we're going to give her.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I ain't going to do that.
Speaker 4:I ain't going to do that. Yeah, I ain't going to do that.
Speaker 1:What's happening?
Speaker 2:That's what she's doing. She's the great value imitation of me.
Speaker 1:I give it to her. We should FaceTime her right now. Facetime her ass.
Speaker 2:She probably asleep. Leave your tires alone she asleep. You guys better be special guests in the building. Bring them in Norvaji style.
Speaker 1:Hey how you doing.
Speaker 4:Hey, I thought y'all were doing like some intro. Hey, how you doing. Hey, that's it. I thought y'all were doing like some intro?
Speaker 1:Yeah, we are, but you know, that's normally how I start.
Speaker 4:I feel like all sweet. No, I had a slow moment.
Speaker 1:You got to bring the energy.
Speaker 4:What up Sid?
Speaker 1:So here, at no Advice, we like to bring our guests in a very special way and ask them three simple questions, just three, you ready.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Okay, who you are, who you are, where you from, where you from.
Speaker 2:And what the fuck you do.
Speaker 4:Oh, so my name is Ridiculous. How you doing? Hey, I usually like kind of like before my shows I would tap the mic like this and just say hello, and I pretty much got a cool response from that. Your damn show does I like? So Hello, but yeah, hip hop artist, just being different and just going as hard as I possibly can, but you still got to push more. And where I'm from, uh, pretty much all over because I move a lot and uh, what was the last one? What the fuck am I?
Speaker 4:all about right, what do I do? I do music. Talk my shit. I do music, man. Uh, I've been doing this for for hot minute and I'm very happy that you know successes came from it. But you know you just got to keep going Like you can't be satisfied. So I was like just got to get out the shadows, man, because you know I'm happy that this was presented to me because you came to my shows and shit. So it's just like. You know I got eyewitnesses, thanks, because it's the music's there and like and I love it. But like you really really have to put on a show. You cannot karaoke this thing.
Speaker 2:You can't, and let me tell you how dedicated this motherfucker is. Right, so we do a weekly open mic or training day, clt, yeah, um yeah, we was at gastonia, uh, shot the raw several four weeks out there. I'm hosting open mic, say, I believe, on thursdays, right?
Speaker 2:fridays, fridays in the mall after the mall after the mall closed, open mic so this motherfucker comes right Ridiculous, does what he does. If you have never seen this man perform, then you're doing yourself a disservice, because this man is a great, great fucker. He actually won the award right For best stage presence right.
Speaker 6:I did.
Speaker 5:Yeah, so that's how.
Speaker 2:This shit is crazy. So I'm going to tell you how crazy his stage presence is and how dedicated this motherfucker is right. So he on the stage doing his thing. I'm going to get right to it. Boom, nigga falls, falls off the stage. Oh God Fuck break.
Speaker 1:are you broken? No, no, no. He got back up. He got back up. He kept the shit going Kept the shit going Fell again.
Speaker 4:That's the part I try to leave out.
Speaker 2:I fell twice. Don't leave it out. Don't leave it out. It's part of history. Twice Part of history In the same spot.
Speaker 1:He literally dropped off the stage.
Speaker 4:Look.
Speaker 2:I'm going to give y'all Hold on. Before you go, before you go, I'm going to give you your props. Go ahead, Go ahead To the dedication part. So the nigga fell off twice. I did Broke his wrist. This motherfucker was back I think the next week. This shit was bloody and shit Saw little blood spots in there Performing.
Speaker 2:I'm like yo, this ain't gonna go With a cast on, with a cast on Bloody and shit. Nothing stops him. Yo, I get it. I got to applaud for this motherfucker. I did, I did. He's dedicated, I did. There ain't no lie. He ain't fabricate that shit, thank you.
Speaker 4:Gotta give you your flowers for that part. Thank you, man. Look, if I can give y'all like a visual in my defense, that shit was. That stage was shaped like a T-Tetris piece.
Speaker 5:It was so there was no left or right.
Speaker 4:It was. You had to be center and balanced, so I took a step to the left, I fell into the depths of hell and then I got up. I was like, oh fuck, I gotta get up quick, cool it was the screams in the background. Yeah everybody freaked the fuck out. And then I got up, I got back on stage and then I was like the second time it literally went in slow motion. I was like I can't believe this shit.
Speaker 4:And then, like I tried to stop my fall like this, and then bam, and I got up quick again, got on stage, and then I saw everyone's facial expression change. They were just like you know, they just looked grossed out. I didn't, I didn't see, I didn't feel it at the time like adrenaline and shit. And then, uh, all of a sudden, uh, I looked over and my brother was there and he was just like dude, your arm, your arm, and it didn't. And you know, like when you see it it registers. And then I saw it and my arm was shaped like a fucking question mark. And then I was like, oh my god I'm about to die like, get me the fuck out of here.
Speaker 4:Like I was like and I immediately stopped the show and I went to the hospital like oh was like oh my God, I never broke. I never got so much as, like you know, scrape me or paper cut. I broke a bone, dude. I always wonder what that would feel like. It's not as cool as it look in the movies. No, let me tell you. That shit hurts like holy hell.
Speaker 1:Let me tell you, I remember, after that he walked up to me, he me.
Speaker 4:He was like well, I'm gonna go to the hospital now I was like I'm just gonna go you probably better, you know.
Speaker 2:I know I promised the show, but I literally broke my arm, I feel I feel like that's an excuse.
Speaker 4:Yeah, what I didn't say, it was raining. I broke my arm and people saw it. He had a whole live whole bunch of witnesses that's it.
Speaker 2:But nah, that just goes to your dedication. Bro, when you said dedication and shit and had that story popped up, I was like yo, I got to tell that story Because you know that's dedication to your craft man Shout out to you.
Speaker 4:I am so happy it's not on.
Speaker 2:YouTube the mask right Because we know you, we know you, you may come into training day.
Speaker 5:You may come in popping out.
Speaker 2:People know Ridiculous from the mask. What's the origin of the mask?
Speaker 4:I think my, my main thing is to you know, it doesn't really matter what I look like, like I want you to listen to the music because a lot of appeal is by you know looks, and there's nothing wrong with that at all. Use it to your advantage. But for all you know, I could be fucking quasimodo under here. It doesn't matter, like, but I want you to listen to music. So you know. But at the same time, you know what's funny. Uh, when I first started, when I first met you guys, I had a totally different thing for like a week. It literally lasted one week and then I didn't have that and people had.
Speaker 4:That's how you let. That lets you know when people aren't, when, when you perform, if you are not consistent, people will have amnesia in a hot fucking flash. So I was like, well, that's going to work in my advantage, because I was just like, well, I just made a decision. I was like, well, I'll just change my shit up and and and. Really it was supposed to be for one show, but I called it like a happy mistake, because people was like treating me like they never seen me perform before and I was just like, oh well, just keep it on, fuck it. And then it evolved because it looked different earlier on, like a few years ago.
Speaker 1:So just like going across, hell yeah, you have some elite man. So I have like like a few years ago you had the words going across Hell yeah, you had some elite masks.
Speaker 4:So I have like over like a hundred variations of that shit. And you know, I was just like yeah, I don't think there's nothing wrong with a gimmick, as long as your music isn't a gimmick. That's facts. You know what I mean. As long as you're not a clown, with your music, you got a gimmick. You know what I mean? Like, separate yourself, goddammit. Like, because if there's I'll put it this way People wear hats, and if there's 30 rappers that's wearing hats in that building, and then you got your hat on too, okay. But if it's someone where it's like everybody has on their hats, you know regular, you know regular, regular shit. And then, like, you see this dude in like a bloody bunny costume, Right, what would you say?
Speaker 2:I'm going to the bloody castle. I'm like what? The this nigga crazy. Get this nigga out of here. Bloody costume.
Speaker 4:It's not even Halloween, it's January and that's what people don't understand it's just like I hate when people meet me in October because they think this is October shit. I was like, yeah, and this is July, january, february and everything else Right. It's just but nice to meet you, though. But you know it's like, oh, it's Halloween, come on in, and then some venues would be like February. It was like nigga man, nah, you can't do that.
Speaker 5:You can't do that you can't do that.
Speaker 4:And I was just like well you let Pooh Shiesties come in. Facts, facts.
Speaker 3:Facts.
Speaker 2:I'm scared of those niggas.
Speaker 4:Listen, you know, biggie, keep losing weight bro, you keep Damn like ghetto, new sidebots in that bitch and I was like all right, yeah. And I was like all right, you're good.
Speaker 1:So I kind of want to take it back for the people that may be watching this interview.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 1:You know now or later, or you know years to come, when you all famous and you all off in your big world and you forgot about the little people like us. I'm just saying don't forget about us.
Speaker 4:I know you will.
Speaker 1:The name Ridiculous. Can you kind of tell the audience how you came up with naming yourself? Ridiculous for your stage name because it's very unique and you spell it a very unique way as well. What is?
Speaker 4:you know the choice behind it. Oh uh, oh shit. This is funny because I had two different rap names prior to that and they sucked.
Speaker 6:They were ass so it was like when it first.
Speaker 4:at first it was so stupid it was just like now. I'll paint a picture. This was wearing your jersey backwards days. Okay, Two headbands, a do-rag and a hat. I should have had a heat stroke. It's 90 degrees outside, so you can't talk shit about the little niggas wearing hoodies in the summer. It's like well, we wore eight leathers of clothing and a nightgown with the sticker on. Maybe wore eight leathers of clothing and a nightgown with the sticker on. Maybe you know like there wasa, but so the first one I called myself deuce, right and I was like all right, I know, I know, yeah, deuce, I say you know, what I'm gonna do you know what I'm gonna do.
Speaker 4:I'm gonna have two of everything, and I was like this is stupid. Oh, wait, wait, so you're kidding. I'm gonna have two phones and two watches and two chains, and I was like this is yeah. You was just deuced. Yeah, and I'm just like dude like this is going nowhere, absolutely nowhere.
Speaker 2:You had two glasses on too.
Speaker 4:I should have like. I might as well, had Maze goggles at the top.
Speaker 2:That was stupid, bro. Yeah, it was stupid as fuck. Yeah, it was stupid as fuck. Yeah, that was stupid as fuck.
Speaker 4:I fell into the 2000s hard.
Speaker 2:So how you did the sneakers? You put on two pairs of sneakers and shit.
Speaker 4:I had slout socks. The whole nine Like slout socks.
Speaker 2:I mean shit, what the fuck is a slout sock? What's that? Huh, what's that? That?
Speaker 4:That's when you have the thick NBA slout socks and you tuck them in your jeans.
Speaker 1:Huh, yeah, slout socks is the shit they scrunch up at the bottom. Yeah, it's like baby socks. Do you remember back in the day when we used to wear the leggings?
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, they got socks like that. Ain't that for women, though? No?
Speaker 4:Nigga leg warm.
Speaker 1:Men can wear them too. So yeah, you had women and men slouch socks.
Speaker 4:I had the men slouch socks.
Speaker 6:They had the men's.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 6:It was a time, it was a time yeah.
Speaker 4:So then I was just like okay, this is a fucking train wreck. It was a fucking train wreck. And I was like uh, it was a fucking train wreck. And I was like, okay, we'll be ourselves. And then I was like, well, you're, you're, you're a smart guy, you're you're intelligent, I'm, you know. And so I was like I'll call myself prophecy, because, right, it's so stupid. And then I was just like well, you know, because I'm into like just be a total dick about it.
Speaker 4:You know I'm smart, you're stupid and I have a degree that's what you're giving behind prophecy. Yeah well, I still dress the same, which didn't make sense, like not the two of everything, but I still wore like what was like current fashion. So this was like, like, it was like 06, 07. And so then I was just like fuck it, man, I'm not going to call myself anything.
Speaker 2:And then I was just like you was like you're going to do midnight back prices man.
Speaker 4:Yeah, so I'm not going to call myself anything. Anybody ask me anything. You know, I might as well be a fucking symbol, oh, that's a good one.
Speaker 6:And then so.
Speaker 4:I was so I said, all right, use that. They had the cypher when I was in college, so I attend the St Augs Shout out to HBCU, all right, but homecoming's next week I will be there to be a complete slut. So absolutely, he can say what he can say. I'm single. Now, nigga, he's single. If anybody knew me in my earlier shows, who did I show up with?
Speaker 2:My wife. We already know. But now I'm going to homecoming you fucking him with the mask on.
Speaker 4:You fucking him with the mask on right.
Speaker 2:Shit is final you fucking him with the mask on.
Speaker 4:I get requests for that, but I think that's weird. I didn't get requests for that. It's been in the DMs before, but I was just like I'm going to suffocate, you know, I'm going to die, you know, and plus, like I like eating pussy, so it has to come off at some point.
Speaker 1:You should get a mask that you can eat pussy through. Huh, you should get a mask that you can eat pussy through. That would take it left, left, left Do not answer that it's going to go left. I'm trying to keep you right, bro Try to keep it straight path, try to keep it straight path. Yeah.
Speaker 5:Oh right.
Speaker 2:Thank you, I was about to get to that Right.
Speaker 4:I'm speaking from experience. Yeah, thank you, sir.
Speaker 2:Because I'm like, yeah, I tried that shit Because people asked.
Speaker 4:Someone asked me to do that and I was just like all right, whatever, fuck it Right.
Speaker 2:We go left before we get back on the roadway right, so we're about to go real left right
Speaker 5:now, let's do it.
Speaker 4:All right, all right.
Speaker 2:How many broads you fuck with the mask on sir.
Speaker 4:I've only done that shit twice Because, like I said, it's dangerous, it's like you will die, like you have no idea, because people sweat without it.
Speaker 2:So it's like just imagine, you got the mask, you got the hoodie, you got the whole ensemble on Right.
Speaker 4:Some people want the whole shebang and I'm like I'm not doing that. It's 3,000 degrees under here, and then, like you've seen the bunny shit that I did, oh, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:And that shit is 1,000 pounds. No, no, no.
Speaker 4:No one's requested that, but it's just like.
Speaker 1:Now, they will that you can say that.
Speaker 4:I know, I know, because it's out there.
Speaker 2:It's out there, it's on there, all right, so run us through it.
Speaker 4:Run us through it. What is happening?
Speaker 2:Hello.
Speaker 1:He pretending to be the bride.
Speaker 2:You got to pick up the phone, hey yo, I got a request, baby, I need that mask and hoodie on. I need that ridiculous you said I need that I need the ridiculous Pull up.
Speaker 4:I want the ridiculous special. As long as your neighborhood don't end in heights, I'll be over there yo that's not what I'm saying go through it.
Speaker 2:How did that like? Can you say, somebody requested? Oh so how do a woman request a ridiculous special? So?
Speaker 4:how it goes that like it's never a phone call or nothing, it's like some stupid shit, like after a show okay so it's like you know, oh it's like some stupid shit, like after a show. Okay, so it was like you know. Oh, it's easy. You're so mysterious I'm just playing. I was like dude, like nice to meet you.
Speaker 3:Yo say that shit again Right, because I always.
Speaker 4:You sound like you're so fed up Right, because I always extend, like you know, I always extend my hand out to shake your hand, like I don't do the hugging you shit, I just don't like. It was like hey, nice to meet you, you know, I'm glad you came out, you know I'm glad you, like you know, and you enjoyed the show. And then he was like so have you ever fucked anybody with the mask on? About here we go. I'm like jesus fucking christ. I was like all right man, like damn it, man, I don't want to talk to you anymore. All right.
Speaker 2:So let's get back straight for a minute. So ridiculous, like you know, we know you as an mc. Now we say there's a difference between a rapper and an mc is a distinct difference. Motherfucker, a lot of y'all niggas is trash rappers. I don't even rappers, I just doodle rappers. Then you got the mcs. That's the elite. You can't touch these niggas. You know so, ridiculouss that's the elite. You can't touch these niggas. You know so ridiculous is part of the elite MC. You can't touch this nigga, right. So how do you feel, knowing that you are an elite MC and the state of hip hop now that they push and kind of, I don't even, it's not even in mumble rap, no more, like mumble rap era was happened Then I think mumble rap evolved into what's happening now. So like, how do you feel being an emcee that you have to navigate through the era of music now to get to where you got to get?
Speaker 4:First of all, thank you for the compliment. Oh absolutely, you know that's cool man, thank you, thank you, thank you, absolutely. You know that's cool man, thank you, thank you, thank you. Uh, how I feel about it. Like I, I I never. And here's the thing, this is why I like I kind of like agree to this shit. I never like really express myself about stuff, like I do my shows and then I kind of like you know, you're kind of like you know, yeah, like I don't.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and I was. You know a mystery? Yeah, like I don't yeah.
Speaker 4:And I was like you know what man Fuck it, man Like it's. I like, I like this. This new chapter that I'm in, you know what I mean? It's really cool, it's really refreshing. So I was like fuck it man, it's that post-divorce shit, I'll be there soon, brother.
Speaker 4:It's, and yeah it's a and it's a journey, man. You're gonna, you're gonna go through the stages like that's just what it is, whether the fuck you like it or not. But once you're making them, the fucking other side is beautiful. But anyway, oh shit, I had a brain fart. What was the question? I smoke weed and shit.
Speaker 1:How do you feel about the state of hip-hop? Oh yeah, okay, okay okay okay.
Speaker 4:So all I can do is just be myself, because my style of music is pretty much what I'm influenced by. But also I feel like what the rules are, you know what I mean, or feel like you know, do you? Don't mimic shit, because, oh my God, who doesn't have the same trap? Beat dude. It is exhausting. Yes, it's like learning three chords on a fucking guitar. It's like you can learn three chords and come up with a thousand songs. I was like dude, like nigga.
Speaker 4:I was like dude, like nigga. I was like every beat is the same and I was just like well, you're making it easy for me, because my songs don't sound like your songs ever. You know what I'm saying. Like when it comes on, it was just like okay, what is this? It's not a. I guarantee you like I didn't use the hi-hats you use or that triple clap shit. Like dude, like no man, I you know damn. And it's weird. I showed up on like a fucking full moon, right. Oh Damn. I noticed that while I was driving. I was like alright niggas don't Sorry.
Speaker 1:What you mean. Our hair start coming out.
Speaker 2:Because it's a full moon, y'all turn hairy and shit.
Speaker 1:Oh, my God.
Speaker 2:You implied that I didn't say that at all. That didn't come out of my mouth. I just said the hair come out.
Speaker 1:That's very specific to say, on a full moon, our hair comes out.
Speaker 2:It sounds like you're calling us fucking werewolves. Okay, that is what you're applying. I never said that. That never came out of my mouth. I just said hair, come out, you could be a chichi pet so ridiculous yep
Speaker 1:I got kind of like a two-part question for you.
Speaker 4:Yes, ma'am.
Speaker 1:The first one is are there parts of Ridiculous that are similar to your real self, like your personal day-to-day self?
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 1:Oh sorry, no, no, you're fine, let's answer that one first.
Speaker 4:Oh yeah, Parts of me. That's a part of my music.
Speaker 2:Mm-hmm, yeah, apparently it, yeah, apparently can be fucking out with the mask on both ends.
Speaker 4:I'm just like dude, like yeah, that that's, that's, that's the, that's the diary, if you are, you know it's. A lot of people would describe it as that, because, you know, when I get it out like that, I I feel relieved and uh, yeah, all of me is like, like everything I say, uh, music wise is the absolute goddamn truth, and it's like what I love about it is that, like telling the truth doesn't always have to be like the menace of society story. He was like my truth is like silly shit happens to me, or like, or like I just I just see music differently. You know what I'm saying. Or I just have this idea or concept or whatever. You know whether it's a show or a video or whatever the fuck. You know what I mean. So that's like a part of me, like that creative side, because I've always, I could always draw, I've been a tattoo artist for 17 fucking years.
Speaker 2:And my right hand. Man's been in there longer than me.
Speaker 4:So you know like we've been. You know we killed the game quietly, so you know why are you assaulting me? I'm just fucking with you.
Speaker 2:I'm just like you're a tattoo artist. I never knew that.
Speaker 4:People immediately want to undress you when you say shit like let me see your tats, and you're like, raise it up.
Speaker 2:I'm just like Prove it, Prove it. You got tats and then you're like did you do those? Did you do?
Speaker 4:them yourself. I'd be like no man.
Speaker 2:Bruh, I never knew this shit. All I knew is I knew you.
Speaker 1:I never knew you All.
Speaker 4:I just really oh, you know what's funny. This is how I got there. Nick hit me up because we used to work together. Really we used to work in the same tattoo shop on North Cheyenne and then he opened up his own, like I left because I moved and then. So you know. But yeah, nick, we was straight. You know like I had to check him one time, like not physically, but he said nigga, he got comfortable. And I was like don't do that, nigga.
Speaker 2:Whoa, whoa, whoa whoa. You just said this. Nigga just said the N-word, he did.
Speaker 1:He said he had to check him.
Speaker 4:I said not physically, I was just like Nick don't do that, man. Yeah, yeah, yeah Fair warning Like just don't do that, man, like we've been cool this whole time and now you're fucking it up.
Speaker 2:I don't know, I don't know, no matter what context it is, y'all niggas can't do what we do okay.
Speaker 4:In all fairness, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not. Here's the thing. Here's the thing, though I'm not, I'm not, I'm not absolving this cat, but that it was a long fucking time ago.
Speaker 1:That's cool.
Speaker 4:It wasn't recent it wasn't yesterday, it wasn't last year, that was like over a decade ago it don't matter. He said it Right. But he said that was the only riff we had, but other than that, nah shout out, yeah, shout out to King Cole. That nigga evolved. He opened up that shop, he did, he hosted training.
Speaker 2:You know yes.
Speaker 4:So you know.
Speaker 2:So he's a cool nigga.
Speaker 4:Right, uh-huh. That's why I thought he said that that right.
Speaker 1:there is exactly what he said.
Speaker 2:Stop being too cool. We can't do what we do. You're right as soon as we say you cool, then you go there.
Speaker 5:That's it. You know what?
Speaker 1:I mean, god damn, chill out, all right. So the second like being an artist with your personal life, your day to day.
Speaker 4:Oh man, it's it's. It's very easy when you're dedicated. It's very easy because you it's not work, it's never work. It's it's like yo, you know how could you complain about this shit? You picked it right like this is, then you want to, then you want to like what you do. I don't understand. It was like don't come, don't complain, and it's just like, or compare when it's just like dude, but I, you don't, you don't do enough. So, uh, and it's not about like being, like having like hundreds and hundreds of content, rapidly having hundreds and hundreds of content rapidly.
Speaker 4:It's just sharpen your tool, man. Keep practicing. You don't sharpen your craft, don't just rap when you want to do a project. It's like do rap, practice by yourself. Nobody's looking, no shit like that. That's where 100% of my songs come from. I'm just sitting there eating Cinnamon Toast Crunch, thinking about stupid shit.
Speaker 2:So I know you had you was promoting at one point in time. You had an intro with Shout Out to the Redman man. I just found out he's coming out with Muddy Waters 2. That's going to be crazy. Young niggas don't know about Redman. Get up on your hip-hop history. But you had the job with Redman. I want to know who rap style-wise Right.
Speaker 4:Because Reggie Noble aka.
Speaker 2:Redman is one of those guys who's he's an abstract kind of MC, right, he just does what he want to do. If y'all noticed the infamous MTV Cribs, the nigga was in the hood.
Speaker 4:He MC right, he just do what he want to do. If y'all notice the infamous MTV Cribs. The nigga was in the hood, he picked some random apartment.
Speaker 2:The best episode ever. The best episode ever. Ever, and it was the hood episode. Shout out to the fuck. If y'all know, go Google Redman MTV Cribs.
Speaker 4:Hilarious as far as I'm concerned. He was rich because he had a two-story house, a dollar box and he had a fucking room and a dreamcast.
Speaker 2:Did you know?
Speaker 4:a nigga with a dream an adult with a dreamcast in their room.
Speaker 2:Nope all right? Nope, because my mama took mine from me that's where 2k came from. Young folks dreamcast dreamcast, shout out to dreamcast.
Speaker 4:I still got my shit, you know I was telling niggas like because I know live was a thing, but if you were lucky enough to get a dreamcast, you knew and you was going to school like there's this game called nba 2k right no one. It's going to take over the NFL 2K is better than Madden.
Speaker 2:You know why that one was so good. Niggas had Randy Moss and fucking Chris Carter on the same team on a Dreamcast shit, nigga. When I played with that team they said I cheat why they catch every ball.
Speaker 4:Don't do that. It was just better than Madden hands down and they did that pussy ass move getting that exclusive right because they didn't want competition, that was such a. Vince.
Speaker 2:McMahon, move you bitch.
Speaker 4:Like just get competition, dude. That's what makes you elegant.
Speaker 2:But anyway, back to the question. So you know again, Reggie Noah was one of those abstract artists. You know, you being an abstract artist, being different, yeah, who would you notably compare your rap style to?
Speaker 4:My top five.
Speaker 2:Whoa, whoa, whoa. That's one of my other questions, but we ain't gonna get to the top five.
Speaker 4:That's why I would compare my rap style to it's a combination of that. That's the recipe. To me, it's a combination of Method man Redman, ll Cool J, biggie Smalls and Busta Rhymes and myself, and then you just blend it up.
Speaker 2:And then you get stupid shit. No, that's the way. You gotta say it again slowly. Yeah, you said um method man, red man, biggie, yes ll. And bust around yes sir.
Speaker 4:Okay, you gotta break that down, okay yeah, yeah, you gotta break that down, okay. So I'll start with bust around, okay, yeah, one thing that I was appalled about is like and the song is fire, we all know but like the collabo he did with Chris Brown, it was just like yo, oh, with the do do do, let's do it.
Speaker 2:Ba-da-ba-da-ba-da-ba-da-ba-da-ba-da-ba-da.
Speaker 4:Yes, because the response literally pissed me off. I was just like dude, you got people just astounded. They're like nigga Busta Rhymes can rap. I'm like where the fuck have you been? Where have you been Like Busta Rhymes?
Speaker 2:has been murdering everything forever, Generations. You got to understand.
Speaker 4:You can't rap his songs. Try to do uh uh. Which one? Bang your Head? Come on, try to rap that. Break your Neck, break your Neck. Come on, that dude was just. And that was over 20 fucking years ago. I was like where have you been? Oh, he did one with Chris Bale. I was like yo did you bust right that nigga, Like, Like my man from Come to Me, like that boy, good, I was like nigga.
Speaker 5:Where have you been?
Speaker 2:That boy can rap.
Speaker 4:I just never thought he slowed down. So what was the reminder? Like it was just consistency. It was just like every verse was like that, oh, okay.
Speaker 2:Yeah, okay.
Speaker 4:Shout out shout out.
Speaker 2:Shout out to Chris Brown for adapting old school to the new school. Yeah, he definitely merged that. This is what happened.
Speaker 4:They helped merge that bridge because they got to know. They got to know, yeah, and then it's like that is direct inspiration for my music videos.
Speaker 5:It's like his music videos are just so unique and so dope.
Speaker 4:It's like jesus yeah right, like just try to come up with dope, like something different, like you know for your videos, man, like let your imagination come to life, because everybody has one, especially if you're an artist. Like that'd be a fucking contradiction. You don't have an imagination, so I was like what the hell? But uh, now ll cool, jay, that comes from straight, like out of respect.
Speaker 2:Don't lick your mask, and shit, don't lick your mask. You say what? Don't lick your mask. No, diddy.
Speaker 4:I don't even know how to what.
Speaker 2:Lick your mask and shit. I can't do that you said LL Niggas don't L for licking his lips and shit oh.
Speaker 4:I no, it didn't happen inside of here at all. It didn't end up.
Speaker 2:I just said LL, my name is ridiculous in your face, right what you doing under there?
Speaker 4:People have asked me that before they were just like yo. The advantage you have is when you hear stupid shit.
Speaker 6:Nobody sees the facial expression.
Speaker 4:I was like exactly, because sometimes if he's looking dead at you you're like this motherfucker's stupid. But anyway, ll, like just straight out of respect because he has done you, I like how he can get played for being, like you know, the ladies man. As soon as you try and for be the ladies man, he will rip you apart yeah lyrically.
Speaker 4:It was like people have to remember that I was like dude, you have the best of both worlds, you know what I mean. So it's just like the ladies by right and and those and those records are legit. He's not pandering to anything, right? You know what I'm saying. So it's like he stays in his lane since day one, you know, since rick rubin, and so, and then when you get to the like, oh uh, 99 fastidio fans wear high heels and I can also beat you in any rap battle ever, any day, whatever the fuck, pick a universe bitch. So that's it.
Speaker 4:That's it like you said you ain't gonna out rap me though, so fuck you and it's like. It's like the prince effect. Okay, you called me gay and I can fuck your wife also so with a mask pick a lane with the mask with the prince man. Nasty work. You fuck somebody with the, fuck somebody wait for the bad score with a prince mask.
Speaker 2:I'm not doing that shit, oh you gotta record that shit. I'm not, that's epic shit right there.
Speaker 4:But so so we got method man yes, that's the one method, man, is the one that influenced me to rap in the first fucking place.
Speaker 2:You know they did a concert on the ferry right. Yeah, yeah, I saw that shit but doggone.
Speaker 4:I just lied just now, man. I didn't see that shit. I wish I did I miss it. I saw the ad, I saw the ad, but I didn't see that shit man.
Speaker 2:That is great. That is great. I don't want a lot.
Speaker 4:I don't want a lot of people like my conscience, my like my shit immediately kicked in. I was like matt, you said another chapter, like just you are so honest, stick, stick to your word, dude.
Speaker 2:You know you didn't see that shit, I hope not we've been on for an hour hold on hold on hold, on hold on.
Speaker 1:No, you got to just slide the arrow to the other arrow to make it it's like a puzzle. Oh, okay, okay, you missed it.
Speaker 5:That shit said no. No, sir, okay, that shit said yes.
Speaker 4:Okay, that's funny, but yeah so but he got me rapping in the first place because I was. I remember I was about like 11 years old rapping in the first place because I was. I remember I was about like 11 years old and the bring the pain video came out.
Speaker 2:I came to bring the pain, yeah, and I was just like what is, and I was like that that because I've seen what came before.
Speaker 4:That right, yeah and it was like yeah, yeah, people don't know about, like method man, when he was just in the grind, the grind yeah and shout out to him for being like like the most healthiest veteran.
Speaker 6:Right.
Speaker 4:Because shout out to Takao Athletics for sure. Like the dude works out, he can fuck anybody's mom in here.
Speaker 6:He dead so good.
Speaker 4:Period Like my mom fond over Method man and I was just like I don't. I was like, mom, I don't want you around me if I meet this nigga at all. That's a very awkward greeting. I was like hey, what's going on?
Speaker 2:yeah, like he was conceived to your rap song like what.
Speaker 4:But I was like yeah, but I saw, I saw that and so in between that and like mary j blige and the blackout, I was just like, oh shit, like dude, like this, this is flawless every time, like I, you made me want to take a crack at it, like you know, starting with like I, like that he would just, you know, and I love Eminem and we give him a lot of credit for being like his subject matter is to the left.
Speaker 4:But I also thought Method Man's was too. It was. You know what I'm saying. It was. I love that shit. When he he said niggas is decaf, I stick them for the cream what I was like that was cool, that was cool. You know what I'm saying? He's like I'm not gonna drink absolute straight, it burns I'd rather get my chest hair as a perm it's like well, that hurts too nigga yo y'all gotta go back.
Speaker 2:He hurt. He's talking about bringing the pain. I gotta go listen to bring the pain lyrics, Method man. Then the other one was Cash Rules. Everything Around Me Kringle, Listen to that my top favorite, yeah, like Wu-Tang bruh Music now sonically, lyrically, visually, is just not the same how it was when our era started and I don't want to be stuck back there.
Speaker 4:That's the problem. I don't want to be stuck back there. That's the problem. You don't want to be stuck back there. You want to evolve. You want to evolve, you know because the time before our era it was dope there, but our era evolved it. You know what I'm saying and the people before them will say that it took it to another level evolve.
Speaker 2:uh, is evolution that means is getting better, right, right, this shit, is it regressed?
Speaker 4:it regressed it regressed it regressed retract that. No, not, not, not today but, see, here's the thing I don't. I don't want to hate on the younger generation, because here's the thing you have to. No, no, like.
Speaker 4:Here's the thing if you ask me a question if you, if you ask me a question, my honest opinion about it. I'm gonna tell you the truth because, right, it's all over my goddamn albums, okay, I mean goddamn, like I. I make it very clear, it's easy, because I rap and you don't like jesus. Like that competition would be cool, like that would be nice. You know, like, or another rapper or something like that, I would want to collab with him. Who doesn't want like bar after bar? Like who doesn't want a lyrical collab?
Speaker 2:that'd be amazing oh, speaking of which y'all to um eo dub. Man, eo dub is crazy. I just reconnected with them. Eo Dub been around for years. When training camp was in New York City at Club Pyramid on, I believe, tuesdays EO Dub is called. Eo Dub ended a week. They used to do open mics every Sundays and it's not until recently when somebody presented me an Instagram post. It was like yo, I'm just promoting. I was like EO Dub, that shit sound familiar. So I hit them up. Lo and behold, that's the niggas. That was in New York. They open mic was running for 20 plus years, the longest tenured open mic in New York City at that time.
Speaker 2:Big 20 plus years that they are now out here. They call EO Dub South. Shout out to y'all MCs gotta. They don't touch nothing but MCs. They don't do no rap they gotta unite.
Speaker 2:He hit me up because, well, I hit him up because I was like yo, whatever. But we had a conversation and it was like you know, in like niggas wasn't receptive to their movement and I was like yo, bro, I know, I know how you, I know what you're going through. You know because you a dude that's not from Charlotte and you have a great movement that, for one, these niggas didn't think about and, for two, you are opening a new path, a new way for niggas that can really spit to come in and do they thing. So I just want to say shout out to EO Dub, because we was on that subject.
Speaker 4:That's what's up, man. So we got, and then, last but not least, we got Biggie.
Speaker 2:Wait, you didn't say Redman. Yeah, I did, you did, redman was first.
Speaker 5:No, no no, buster was first.
Speaker 6:Oh we talked about Redman prior no but you talked about him prior.
Speaker 4:That's my fault. You ain't mentioned Redman. You say what you ain't mentioned. Redman, yet no, I didn't not in the clarifying thing you right you also act like I didn't like smoke a lot of pot, nah.
Speaker 5:I'm playing but so with.
Speaker 4:Redman. I like that, uh, with red man he, he's so unorthodox to me lyrically it's addictive because, uh, he doesn't even, he doesn't even follow the protocol to like a visual. But it's well-welcome, kind of like an ODB, because it was just like yo, you know the song. What's the name? One, two, three, four, five with the big collab right, no one told Redman to dress up like Edgar Allan Poe. Nobody did, and no one told Matt, the man, to dress up like a mummy.
Speaker 2:Right.
Speaker 4:But both of them did that but, everybody else was just a street rap, nigga.
Speaker 6:But I was like, I like those guys.
Speaker 4:I like that shit. So I was like I don't know why I magnetized to that, but I was just like if I rap like that, I feel like then you know it'll satisfy me to the point where it's just like I don't look like nobody else there's no way.
Speaker 4:There's two of me, right, you know. So, yeah, so with all that combined, I'm just like dude you, this is, this is like it's rap. I don't get it like, why don't you practice? You know, if you hoop, you know you alone in the gym. You know I'm saying like if you really dedicate it facts, you know. I'm saying whatever your craft is, you do it alone. You do it when nobody's watching. But, like you know, nowadays, unfortunately, I see it as just like you only like perform your songs when you have a I don't know a fucking showcase or something, like you didn't practice it at home, there was no rehearsal, there was no nothing. So so again, you just karaoke this shit. Because how many niggas have show tracks, ceo? How many?
Speaker 2:Hold on, I'm looking around. Niggas is high right now. B.
Speaker 4:Like yeah, that's why I said give me grace, nigga. I was just like yeah, Everybody's been smoking weed Yo A lot.
Speaker 5:I'm looking around the room.
Speaker 2:Everybody got a brain fart right now. This nigga like.
Speaker 4:I'm looking at this nigga. I'm looking at y'all like best episode ever.
Speaker 2:I'm looking back there, niggas is, like you, the only soul you the only one with a name my man yes, sir, security. Hey, so we had mentioned earlier you said those top those five rappers combined makes ridiculous right? Yes, so out of those top five rappers, who are your top three hip-hop artists of all time? Biggie methaman and red man that that was the quickest I mean somebody ever said that.
Speaker 4:I made that.
Speaker 2:I made my mind up with that over 20 years ago oh, okay, yeah, because some for some that's a hard fucking question come back, but I think if you come for, I think if it's a some for, some.
Speaker 1:That's a hard fucking question.
Speaker 4:I'll come back. But I think if you come, for I think if it's a, I think if it's a different generation, you had over 20 years to like think about that. How do you not know that shit is weird? I don't care who you pick. How did you not make your mind about the 25 fucking years?
Speaker 2:because a lot of them don't listen to the old school and those are the guys that pioneered and that's a big misconception.
Speaker 4:And that's a big misconception about me. People assume I don't listen to new shit. How could you not listen to new shit? You're in the fucking music game and the difference is you have to look at this as competition. I look at it as competition. If I rap and you rap, I'm going to be very nice to you in person. I'm pretty sure you're a very nice guy, so am I?
Speaker 2:But we also rap Shout out to the women rappers out there. Yeah, exactly, or gal.
Speaker 4:See, now you make me look like a dick. See, he didn't mention women.
Speaker 1:Goddamn, it's the man. You gotta give it up for the female and as a matter of fact, since, since we over there, since, since we're right
Speaker 2:there you got a mask.
Speaker 4:Uh challenge my man so I'm just like no, if anything, that's the person I feel safe with. Yeah, that guy, but so I'm like and my man's of course.
Speaker 2:Security Right.
Speaker 4:But yeah, man, that's pretty much it. Facts, facts, go ahead.
Speaker 1:Jack, okay, so a little birdie told me you had some stuff you wanted to get off your chest. Oh, yeah, yeah, and this is no advisory, nigga Turn around.
Speaker 5:Yeah, you match our colors. Turn around. What'd that say?
Speaker 3:Oh, no advisory, no advisory. So I'm glad to be here finally, we ain't advising y'all niggas on shit.
Speaker 1:Maybe like two or three minutes to just kind of address anything that you want to address at this time?
Speaker 4:Yes, I don't even know where to face because right here, I'm, right here, and then right here, whatever, it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter. This segment is called Non-Advised. So my thing is like I have been like I don't talk to people and that's not to be like the mysterious dude or whatever, but like I'm very, I was very particular and professional about like how my music is structured and my shows and shit. But I was just like dude, man, man, you got to come out the shadows more and the thing is it's just like. You remember when I came out I think it was like two months ago, and the only thing I said was like I just want to see the new class. He was like hey, are you performing? I was like no, no, no, I just want to see what's going on because I have to see who just got drafted. I want to see the freshman class.
Speaker 4:And then I was just like I didn't miss a goddamn thing. I haven't missed anything, you didn't, because I was just like trash, trash, trash, trash, trash, trash. I was just like y'all don't even do show tracks and it's like, and it's not up to me, but if you got, if you got people winning, well, I'm not even gonna say winning earning, they earned it. They still got up there and fucking perform yes, facts. But y'all have said don't do that shit. You know, I'm saying like it's not, like it wasn't a rule, right, so it was just like how do you?
Speaker 4:get that, this generation now, bro, is how do you still get the training of the night? It's so like, and I don't even want it no more, because at this point it's just like I came, I saw I did every fucking thing I was supposed to do a part of the platform, right? So, and it's time, let me tell you why. Go ahead.
Speaker 2:Because if you look when training day and it's crazy, in a matter in a span of say, two years, how music changed. When we first came into the fray, we had a lot of artists you Koso, Shout out. We had Guap. We had a lot of, like I would say, artists. You, Koso, Shout out. We had Guap. We had Fresh. We had what's his name? Zai Zai. We had.
Speaker 1:Big Dog, big Dog.
Speaker 2:No, what's the nigga name that we always with?
Speaker 5:Shout out to Big Dog.
Speaker 2:Zai, papi Zai. Like we had niggas, like we used to have a deaf lineup, like we knew like six to eight niggas going to give us some shits and it was good music, yo, when.
Speaker 4:I showed up you remember how good of a sport I was, Like the award show, like I got nominated for four things. I won nothing, uh-huh. But the next day I, I you know, and I'm not even much like, I'm not even much of a poster which is like so criminal yeah, he was upset as shit no I wasn't. Yes, you were. Oh my god, you complimented me for being a good sport, nigga wait.
Speaker 2:Oh, maybe I'm thinking about the wrong post exactly.
Speaker 4:I am like you was mad. I was just about to be like. So you remember how I was like such a good sport about it and I was just like yo. I got nominated for four, I won zero. But here's the thing I showed up in the middle yes, did I not? Yes, you did. You just named a lot of people. You named a lot of talented people and I was just like yeah, there's certain people that are fans of mine and I'm fans of theirs, and but my whole thing was I was so caught up in like y'all don't, y'all don't, I don't. Half of it is rap music I don't understand, but at the same, that's just my opinion, right, and I had. You know, you got to grow up and you can't be stuck in your fucking era, right, and it's just like nigga, like you can't diss this young generation of artists. When you say the lean and the drug addicts, I was like name one great. Even in our parents' era, them niggas was on heroin Crack grade even in our parents, era them niggas was on heroin crack.
Speaker 4:Now can you imagine seeing like yeah, man, this singer very talented, but he's like on the doozy you're on the horse nigga. He got the needle and it was just like he did that before a show ray was jacked which form of drug is that heroin?
Speaker 2:heroin, that's doozy, yeah, doozy how y'all know, how y'all know about that shit. That's his drug slaying. Yeah, we like 20, I mean like you was here before nigga yeah, you was here before doing that doogie?
Speaker 4:yeah, that's what you was doing before I was like dude man, like right, I was just like no man, fuck that shit man. And and uh, it's a flashback. His own self came back. Right, I was just like no man, fuck that shit man. But with me I was just like dude, but I was just sitting there, like now. There's certain artists where I was just like yo. I see so much effort, that's why I'm a fan, that's why I'm a big fan of Big Dog, that dude is a quadruple threat.
Speaker 4:You understand me. Yes, like they don't. They don't like they be like yo. I don't think ridiculous likes people because, like when he raps, it's just so competitive and I was just like when have I ever like been addicted people?
Speaker 2:though well to this generation, right? Because I was saying in the first half of the training day list and then the two years, and then it's like this generation, this generation, yes, they're very sensitive this generation of music. They stick to what they know. They're not adaptive to learn anything. They're not adaptive to get any constructive criticism. They just want to do what they do smoke, weed and make their videos because the studio sessions bug me out.
Speaker 4:Man, the game, the games change. Man. Like that's why I record privately. And it's just like you know. It's like if you've been in, and I don't give a fuck if you're rapping now, everybody's been in this stupid ass situation where they're in the studio and there's a hundred niggas in the studio that have absolutely nothing to do with the goddamn song. They're just there Either to roll up, drink whatever or look like a jackass. So I'm just like, okay, why are you here? So it's just like, when I record, it's like it's just me, me, that's it. That's why you barely have recording footage of me. It's like, no, I'm in the goddamn woods no, niggas got recorded footage of you.
Speaker 4:Yes, have you ever heard of g spot studios? No, g spot studios. No, no, it's very professional.
Speaker 2:Shout out all right, no right we don't want it to be that in the first place god Right that nigga may want to change that name with all that shit going on.
Speaker 4:Yeah, follow, it's dope, but goddamn it's in what's the name Indian Trail? So I'll take that trip and it's just like in the cut, but it's so beautiful in there and we recorded together in G-Spot.
Speaker 2:You know what I'm saying? I brought him down there. No diddy, no diddy.
Speaker 4:See, that's like saying no homo. If you don't think about it, shut up Like it's not gay.
Speaker 2:Listen, you can't say fucking nothing.
Speaker 4:You can't say nothing.
Speaker 6:You know what man Just start saying the studio.
Speaker 2:Well, you can say G-Spot, but just be mindful how you say G-Spot I think the problem is people think about gay shit too much. No, that's not even being gay.
Speaker 4:You said no Diddy, and he's gay as shit Diddy's not gay. What do you call it? He's Diddy. He has a handful of balls.
Speaker 1:Diddy's not gay, he be diddling an ass full of balls, that's allegedly you know we will, we will.
Speaker 4:I hate him, but like you know. But yeah, but you know how I feel, how I feel music wise. You know if you're, if your shit is not my cup of tea, but I see you hustling. Respect, respect, that's how I feel about it, man. You don't have to insult the man or the woman, thank you. You don't have to do that because you see their hustle or find something to compliment them about. It's like, well, I saw them have hella crowd control. They were definitely fucking with him or her, so it's just like I respect that. They got a wave going.
Speaker 4:Man, how can you hate on that shit? Because if you're consistent about this shit, you also had a point where nobody didn't say a goddamn thing or jump or clap or nothing. You better just get over your goddamn feelings and keep fucking performing. That's it. Don't let that discourage you. Shut up, you're new. They don't know you. You expect them to wave their hands at Ed like they just so can, and it's your first show. Stop it, I don't get that shit. Alright, holler at me. After your 100th show, I promise you you'll have a different opinion about yourself.
Speaker 2:After your 100th show.
Speaker 4:After your 100th show After your 100th or 50th show. I'll say 50. Because 25 to me just says like you just do weekends.
Speaker 2:It's like nah man, Seven days in a week, Right.
Speaker 4:Travel, like when I had that trap. When I had that show in Atlanta, I had to work the next day. Do your show, get back on 85 and go to fucking work dedication. So listen, man, let them know, what you got coming up.
Speaker 2:Let them know where they can find you on social media platforms. Let them know ridiculous where they can find you it's just ridiculous.
Speaker 4:R-i-d-i-k-u-l-a-z. That's it like with the at in the front right. And then they said where to find me right hold on ridiculous something's funny and shit.
Speaker 2:I like the laugh.
Speaker 1:He said it he was like where can you find me? He was like it's just ridiculous with the at in in front of it.
Speaker 2:I was trying to figure out. I missed it, bro, you missed the whole joke. It did, I missed it, so I was trying to catch up. All right, say it again. It's just ridiculous, that's it.
Speaker 4:Yeah, don't count the just part, but it's R-I-D-I-K-U-L-A-Z. Oh, and I didn't even answer your question when you asked me how did I even come up with the fucking rap name? I only went through the lame names that I had. The bullshit.
Speaker 6:Like so right.
Speaker 2:I didn't even land on ridiculous, I just cut the shit off, bro, go ahead, finish that up.
Speaker 4:I had a deuce, I had a prophecy, and I sucked. I was like, talk about something else, ceo, but no well, ridiculous. So now fast forward. That's why I stopped the shit. I was just like, yeah, when I was in college, hbcu, and then I had a brain fart, that's what it was. So yeah, so they had this cypher out there and I'm minding my business, just listening, and it was literally like a B-Rabbit moment, because it was like I always just minding my business. You know Like, even if I saw a rap battle or whatever, I was just like whatever, they don't know, I don't care.
Speaker 4:Like, you know what I'm saying I just rap to myself and I was like fuck it man, whatever. And what's happening?
Speaker 2:Niggas is fucked up in here bro.
Speaker 4:Oh Welch, that's right, you Niggas asleep. That's my dude, though, man. You know what? No, fuck this shit. Before I land on the whole ridiculous shit, me and Welch put up with a lot of bullshit on a weekday basis. I mean, like you don't know.
Speaker 6:You don't know. We're not talking about the airport, shit. I am talking about the airport.
Speaker 4:Like. I'm not about to act like.
Speaker 5:I don't have a 9 to 5, nigga Like.
Speaker 4:I was like, no, like. I work at the airport and I deal with eight hours of airport people, how do you not smoke weed? Are you kidding?
Speaker 2:I don't know what he's talking about.
Speaker 4:Like flying, brings out the worst in people Allegedly Allegedly Right.
Speaker 2:Yeah, hey, cut this shit out, nigga. Right, I just got a new position we can't do this shit.
Speaker 4:I can, I can. You don't have to talk about it. No, you don't have to talk about your shit.
Speaker 2:I ain't got no shit. What are about your shit? But why I ain't got no?
Speaker 4:shit what you talking about. Oh, my bad, I thought you, yeah, yeah, yeah, all right, but no, okay. So the ridiculous thing man saw the cipher, whatever, whatever I was like and and one of my uh buddies, like he just kind of like snitched on me like I was just like, he was like yo, man, he can rep. I was like why did you do that the fuck? I'm just trying to go to the calf and god damn. And then so they're like no man. So I come over there, I rap, whatever I, I uh join the cypher, I spit and I lied to you, not like two different people, like you know, within a minute apart of each other. Like yeah, that dude man, that dude's bar is ridiculous. I was like, okay, that sticks, that's fine. Like, I'll do that.
Speaker 2:But that sounds cool. That's how all these names come about. Yeah, Like I didn't name myself somebody.
Speaker 2:Somebody else did so shout out to whoever that was Don't try to get money from that, though I know you you're gonna copyright, you'll be right, because I didn't even have like an official spelling yet at the time, but now it's trademarked. Nigga, I can't do that. I'm a very jewish lawyer. Hey, shout out to jewish lawyers, shout out to jewish man. We want to get a round of applause to our very special guest that came in the building tonight. Ridiculous, if I can find a round of applause and a round of applause in three, two, one.
Speaker 2:And listen, man, before we sign off, man, we got a new segment called the Red Mike Cipher, right. So we're gonna have my man Ridiculous come on here. He gonna touch that red mic in the back of us and he gonna let us know why they call this nigga Ridiculous. So it's your boy, seal McLean, it's your girl Trap. See ya, my bossy podcast in the back of us ain't gonna let us know why they call this nigga ridiculous. So it's your boy, steel McLean, it's your girl Trap. See ya, my bossy podcast. Shout out to my girl T. Yeah, she's your girl T, you'll be clean. We sign off my bossy Bang, bang, bang, bang bang.