Hoefessions

Siete7x Interview

November 21, 2023 Gina Views
Siete7x Interview
Hoefessions
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Hoefessions
Siete7x Interview
Nov 21, 2023
Gina Views

Welcome to the raw and unfiltered world of Siete7x! In this exclusive interview, join us as Siete7x opens up about his journey growing up in the heart of Compton, the unexpected backlash he faced from the Baby Stone Gorillas collaboration, and his personal battle with toxic relationships. 


Support the Show.

Thank you for listening to this episode. Follow @hoefessionspod on X and Instagram!

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Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Welcome to the raw and unfiltered world of Siete7x! In this exclusive interview, join us as Siete7x opens up about his journey growing up in the heart of Compton, the unexpected backlash he faced from the Baby Stone Gorillas collaboration, and his personal battle with toxic relationships. 


Support the Show.

Thank you for listening to this episode. Follow @hoefessionspod on X and Instagram!

Speaker 1:

What up world. It's your favorite homegirl, gina views, coming to you live with another episode of whole fashions, y'all know. I got my co-host with me Don't do that, though Not on camera and I got a special guest in the building. Gotta make up your mind when you calling in.

Speaker 2:

I was here. You been waiting my time.

Speaker 1:

What's up, man?

Speaker 2:

I was here, I was there Shit Boom, ha ha, ha ha. Whole fashions.

Speaker 1:

You gonna let me get all in your business.

Speaker 2:

Yes, okay, I'm gonna talk.

Speaker 1:

Okay, I know that's right. I know that's right. But before we get into all of that, I got a surprise for you. Close your eyes, take your glasses off and close your eyes.

Speaker 2:

I already can't see.

Speaker 1:

You Cause you thought you were so slick just now with the glasses on her. Sure, did Keep them eyes closed, don't be peeking up there.

Speaker 2:

I'm keeping them closed.

Speaker 1:

Don't be peeking up there, and I just want you to know I don't even really f*** like that, you know. Happy birthday, hey, ah, ah, oh, that's what I was talking about. I got you some hot fries. I've seen a video where you said you have. Like you know from the hood, I'm a hood baby too. I f*** with hot fries. I got you some fruities, cause that's some hood baby too, yes. And then I got you some smoke. Got you a little pen up in there.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to the big cheese.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to our sponsors Big Cheese, what's?

Speaker 2:

this. What's this? Got me a mask. Need some drawers.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no, no. I wouldn't even do that to you, Okay.

Speaker 2:

Let's draw, let's do this.

Speaker 1:

That's from Big Chief. I believe it's like a ski mask or something.

Speaker 2:

I'm just one of these ski masks.

Speaker 1:

So you're from Southern. Shout out, big Chief you know, you know, I got a bunch of Big Chief. You remember Little Big Chief.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, oh yeah and.

Speaker 1:

I got you a little shot, but look, I'm such a real you ain't even got to open that shot. Right now we gonna take one of these.

Speaker 2:

So let's do it. I get drunk, I like a little different, yeah. Yeah, I mean everybody be per-person, you know to drink they like when I get drunk. I don't know why, but I appreciate the chips though, cause I'm so gonna be eating these tonight in the middle of the night.

Speaker 1:

Put this right here. How was your birthday?

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, I had fun. We had karaoke, I was drunk, everybody else was drunk, I was sinking my heart away and you busted your stitches. Yeah, yeah, oh man, I felt like how you fall.

Speaker 1:

You was loaded.

Speaker 2:

No, I was playing with the homie and I jumped on the couch. You know like say if. I jumped on your couch right now. My foot had like the edge of it, like the couch, like came apart.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you jumped on my couch right now. I was gonna come apart too. Yeah, and I feel it.

Speaker 2:

It actually ain't put together out of the way I feel it inside and my hand hit like the cords on the things. Oh it's so weird, gotta take a shot for that one.

Speaker 1:

Take a shot. I'm a lightweight, so I'ma just like barely take mine.

Speaker 2:

You gonna take Crips, sips, yeah, oh yeah, some new shit.

Speaker 1:

So what's a Crips Sip?

Speaker 2:

Uh, oh man, it's kind of like X-rated, not like nasty but like violent. But Okay. So you take Crips, sips, where you just take it slow, take a little sip time to time. You know you sip your alcohol. You feel it more right, mm-hmm, when you just take big shots. It's like that's a different terminology. But you know I don't want to. Right, right, right right.

Speaker 1:

Well, well, we're actually coming out with a whole fashion's dictionary, oh, wow. So I would love to add the Crips Sip.

Speaker 2:

You got to.

Speaker 1:

I would love that.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna take you to the definition. Put the right definition in there.

Speaker 1:

Oh, move your balloon. Move your balloon. It's covering up your face, my bad Um. So what's up? C-a-tay New project out Well by the time by the time this interview dropped, the project gonna be out yes, it will Only my therapy, that shit gone. You, you, vocal therapy.

Speaker 2:

No, I need therapy though.

Speaker 1:

For what?

Speaker 2:

Um, a little bad anger probably Time to time.

Speaker 1:

Oh you crazy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was crazy.

Speaker 1:

Okay, okay.

Speaker 2:

I said that I was crazy. I'm grown now.

Speaker 1:

What's the craziest thing you ever did in a relationship?

Speaker 2:

Um like violent.

Speaker 1:

I mean, whatever you think, D-E-M is crazy.

Speaker 2:

Um, I ain't gonna probably say the crazy. I could probably say something that's crazy, though. I bought my ex's shoes right and we had got to like real, real, real bad right. To where the point we was like for the breakup, so I took the shoes and threw them all in the street, the ones you just paid for For sure, but she wore them, though she wore them.

Speaker 1:

Okay, okay, okay, okay.

Speaker 2:

But, you know, threw them, all the fuckers, in the street. But look though, it's the crazy part when I threw them in the street, a car was so happened to be coming by.

Speaker 1:

And ran.

Speaker 2:

I swear to God I was like man and ran the shoes over right, so you know how that fight.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they should, you know, give back cool.

Speaker 2:

So I was like, oh, I can't even go pick the shoes back up.

Speaker 1:

You can't undo it.

Speaker 2:

No, you can't do that.

Speaker 1:

But what did she do though?

Speaker 2:

Oh man, just she had a smart mouth. I had a person that was with me that was just very smart at the mouth, that oppressive button, Like if I was like a toy, I had like toys on the wrist, like try me, you know our kids would be pressing that button like mommy, it's not working. Boom, that mother of a bitch is like. Oh my.

Speaker 1:

God. So she like a, like a, like a bear poker. She gonna poke the bear.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, hell yeah, she gonna poke the bear.

Speaker 1:

How long y'all together?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'd say probably like on and off. I'd say probably like five, six years, seven years.

Speaker 1:

Oh sorry, pussy was good. Oh, it wasn't good. Dang. Imagine watching a whole-fetched interview and finding out you're pussy. Not good that part.

Speaker 2:

It ain't.

Speaker 1:

Are you flexing on it right now or? Was it just really not good. I swear to God Because don't do my good, since, like that, I don't even know.

Speaker 2:

I swear to God, I'm not, I'm not. I'm really being thrilled like it just wasn't. The pussy is not what kept me.

Speaker 1:

What kept you? Oh, the head crazy. Oh, she was like, wow, wow, she be f***ing it up.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the head was crazy. I ain't being stupid. Yeah, she was crazy, but it was what she was doing, for me, that's what kept me?

Speaker 1:

Oh, she was a chicken mama.

Speaker 2:

No, she just wasn't a chicken mama, she was a car bitch. She was just a chicken mama she was a fool bitch.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she was the fool bitch, okay, okay.

Speaker 2:

That would keep her in her head. She for sure was a fool.

Speaker 1:

She was a fool bitch Like a fool so wrong with you. So around tax season you start acting right.

Speaker 2:

No, I didn't have to do acting right, it was just there I got just new I don't even try to flex, or even. I just knew like she really f***ed me, like so it was like I know she from there. Yeah, see, no, I'm not from there. I'm not the type of nigga to lead no female in a blind.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm not going to do that.

Speaker 1:

But you was with her for six years and you said her pussy was trash. Yeah, but what she fat, no she had no ass. She didn't have no ass.

Speaker 2:

I'm talking about no ass, not even like like you know, it's little booties out here Like, okay, that's a good like. You know what I'm saying. Like yeah, it wasn't like, it wasn't like you were like, oh, it was just like so did you back her, did she back you? It was like. It was like one of those situations where you know you're a young nigga, you feel like you, you on your shit, you in the hood, you like. Oh, I got one of these little older bitches. She got the car, she got the bus.

Speaker 1:

Oh, she was also. Who's a sugar mama?

Speaker 2:

No, because she wasn't that older than me.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

She was probably like three years older than me.

Speaker 1:

She had a job.

Speaker 2:

That part.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

A lot of females didn't have. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying? Yeah, I'm thinking of what you put it in.

Speaker 2:

People still live with their mamas in. You know, you know how that goes.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so it was like a cool little you can duck off at her crib.

Speaker 2:

She got a car, that part you a hood, nigga. You need somewhere safe to lay your head down, Like even when I first went to jail. She built me up.

Speaker 1:

Oh okay. So why did you get rid of her? This sound like your damn bitch, Let me it was.

Speaker 2:

It was like it was. Let me find out when the movie.

Speaker 1:

when the music start moving, you cut her off.

Speaker 2:

She knows that's the problem. When the music start moving, she cut herself off.

Speaker 1:

She couldn't take it that part. She couldn't take the heat, so she got about the kitchen that part and everybody was just like that ain't for you.

Speaker 2:

Mm-hmm, give it up. Say you know for the, you know how this shit is. So it's like yeah, yeah, you gonna play your part, you gonna support your nigga, whatever it is. Well, I'm the rapper in all my relationships that part me, that's what I'm saying, but okay, so Okay, let me talk to you then, so you will want your nigga to understand, like you know, this shit, come with you.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah at the end of the day, a nigga come up to you and they can let you. Right, you got a. It gotta be some type of understanding, like it can't just be like, oh, you see a female and you just think all of a sudden I know her, even if I do know her. So what? Like I'm not worried about her, I'm here doing my job. Yeah, you got to respect that, but she wasn't ready for that and then I'm gonna keep it a honey. I'm gonna keep it a honey. I was still young, mm-hmm, so I was still doing a lot of shit. That was just like bling, like It'll make Stepping in her shoes. They don't look like, oh, this nigga, don't give a fuck.

Speaker 1:

You don't give a fuck about me, what you mean? You was still doing a lot of stuff like fucking bitches. Sure you was fucking homegirls.

Speaker 2:

Never.

Speaker 1:

Oh, they trash you saying she was the, she was the best out the bunch, but she wasn't even all that. Yeah, that part so you were settling that part.

Speaker 2:

So it was like I wouldn't even settle it. It was just, I was just young, yeah yeah because I don't don't get it fucked up. I had a bunch of beautiful females with them.

Speaker 1:

Bitches look like now.

Speaker 2:

But it's just like I should have been. I Should have been on some like, just just just doing me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, instead of trying to settle down with Somebody.

Speaker 2:

You feel me that you.

Speaker 1:

I just turned 26 cuz you talking like you 32.

Speaker 2:

No, I just been there, done that bunk shit like I'll be over you just turned 26, so you was with her when, like 1920?. Yeah, I'm not what I've been, nor is. I was like 17, 18 type shit, like you know okay so she was fucking a kid, okay, okay. I wasn't the type of the young nigga to be lying like. I ain't gonna lie was like certain time.

Speaker 1:

She was fucking a 17 year old and she was 21. Okay she take it, but I was a different.

Speaker 2:

No, but I was a different 17 year old, like I Wouldn't know, like average 17 year old.

Speaker 1:

Well, you said you know you was 13 with the 38 on your hips. So I do want to get into your upbringing. We gotta we gotta go back Well what was life? Like for siethay coming up.

Speaker 2:

Good, I was raised by my auntie. That's that's my mama right now. That's who raised me for me. That's that's my everything. You feel me? If it went for her, I wouldn't be better talking. I'm keeping honey. I'd be somewhere in a foster care somewhere. Yeah, I'm gonna tell look, you're crazy. So.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to auntie.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I should tie it right here on my face one degree, that's my mama.

Speaker 1:

I have similar family members like that who, if it wasn't for them, you know we we're born into fucked up circumstances, you know, out here and I had a grandmother who was the mother figure. I had a big sister who, you know, played the mother figure auntie as well. So I know, are you coming?

Speaker 2:

for everybody in the hood Not everybody, but most of the people, like you know, raise by the greenie Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, that's my auntie, that's my mama, I love her to death. And then, like, I just start going outside, like you know, like that's, that's she. She's a woman. So it's like she can't really Teach me everything that a man could teach me. Right, give it. I'm saying so, don't, don't get it wrong. I still have my uncles, I still have my dad, brothers, but my dad, he wasn't just like I'm not gonna just put him out there, but you know, he just you know how dad.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, you know how that shit is, so I had to figure out a lot of shit on my own. You feel me? So my mom, she just couldn't teach me a lot of shit. So I just started jumping into the streets, really like I was to play football a lot, but were you in on pop owner?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I play for captive Vikings and Chris Albears, I tear for the Vikings. My uncle was coach Howard up there For a monk. Was coach Howard up there, my uncle, with Couple of other people? I know I ain't seen him a years. But my mom, she was letting me play for a little bit but I was always getting in trouble Like I always get in trouble. So she just felt like hell, no, you gotta something.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Trouble it all that now you from the learning in these books, you think I'm, like I always raised different, like I'm on my old school, like you feel me she older right now. So I was raised different than a lot of other young ins. So it's like you know. I had to be in the house at a certain time. I got my ass whoop at a certain.

Speaker 2:

Hell yeah, we're strict, like a lot of shit I had to do. It was like let's see nowadays niggas be letting a parent see a lot of shit and be doing too much in front of their parents. See back then, like not even back then. Just when, when I was coming up Niggas, when doing like when nigga mama come around, these like oh no.

Speaker 2:

I said mama like you know, put that shit up, or you know, you gotta have respect you know I'm saying for anybody mama, it ain't just my mama, for your mama or anybody like you could just an elder period, an elder period, you supposed to have respect.

Speaker 2:

So that's how I was raised like I'm not funny. We come home pants sagging and trying to be this hard, tough nigga in front of my mama, like no, I'm still, I'm on a baby, but she know, when I get she don't got to know. But when I get in these streets I'm really him, though, for real, like I'm ready, really him for real. Like I'm not your little boy, not just no nigga getting punked in these streets. Ain't my name ain't bad, ain't none of that going on. You feel me, these females, they love me. I'm doing music.

Speaker 2:

I found the love for music. It was just like a natural Young nigga just growing up. You feel me. And I seen.

Speaker 2:

I said I see my homies going to jail. I see my homies dying like real homies, like that. I used to come pick me up every single day like Really gone. Like you feel what I'm saying. So I'm seeing this 15, 16, 14 week like we can go back from right. Like niggas gone, like niggas is doing life. Niggas is still in the four-yard right now looking at me proud. You know what I'm saying. So that shit made me feel different, like damn, I could show my young nigga right there, my young nigga g4. I could show him something different, like show him that nigga, nigga ain't got a gang bang, he ain't got to have no 30 on his hip at 13. You could just get into this music and take off, even if you only do music, something else, whatever you want to do, you can do it like you don't got it. Just fall victim to the streets like every other nigga because they should got to stop somewhere.

Speaker 1:

I know that was tricky. You don't got your earpears.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the homies is just telling me he like, bro, I'm taking you to go, get both your ears for it. I'm like, damn, that's crazy. Oh, sees to be on me, like, like.

Speaker 1:

That's some real like old school shit to the one the one ear. Yeah, that's like.

Speaker 2:

I got to a point time. All my friends, they got both the ears. So I just just never just wearing rings everybody. I'm gonna get some earrings. I'm gonna go get my other ears pierced so At some point you got into music.

Speaker 1:

How did you get into music? I?

Speaker 2:

Got no music. I always love music. Let's put it like that. I always had a filth music. Let's start from the beginning. I used to always beg my mom with the bars drum set for me, I used to play drums at the church. My god mom, she like in my god sister, they were real heavy in the church and they used to like praise dance. She used to praise dance and like sing on the church choir and I always used to love like with my god mom, sing on the church when you fit me. I used to be like just sitting there watching them rehearse.

Speaker 1:

Were you back then? Yeah for sure. What church first in?

Speaker 2:

the city of God. It was on east side LA like on 53rd and like central. It's like back in the church on 101st and central.

Speaker 1:

Oh, no, 101st and Abelon.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, we're on the corner. So yeah, I'm just watching them. You know, rehearsing all that. So when I start just knowing the song I used to sing, I used to love my god, I'm gonna sing this. I forgot who sing. It was by Kurt Franklin, though. Yeah, my god, my sister sing the song. I used to always love it and I used to always play the dress always bigger, like can I pay for jobs on Sunday? I pay that one Easter. She let me play crazy. Like just ever since then, like I just started, like when I started getting into the streets, and then like I started like just writing little rhymes and shit on my phone like the homies we used to always freestyle, you know, back then Is get high on the table.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I used to be me.

Speaker 2:

I used to always be beat on the table in middle school, elementary too. So we started just freestyle shit niggas. Oh, you are like dope, you start rapping up, but I used to be shy. I'm like hell, no, like I was only comfortable if I was around my cousins or my family or the homies Like you know. Anybody like that was I was real comfortable with. I'm like hell, no, I like I can't do the rap, is it so? The homie, um, the homie, mack Marv, more of Kelly recipes from the he, uh, he had died. This is like my first encounter like with somebody that I really really really mess with like on an everyday basis. I've to gang violence, you follow me when I happen.

Speaker 2:

I was probably like 16, I was like. Yeah, I was still going in high school, I was like.

Speaker 2:

So. So when he died I'm like, damn, like you feel me. And then I remember he used to always tell me like, well, you should start rapping, you should start rapping, like you would be hard, like you got this shit. I remember I'll show him a rap on my phone. It was the YG that Bpt be Was today and I had made a CPT version, ad Big Brother, fitty Bain, uh-huh. Um. He made a remix to it first and he we always all remember the. I forgot it now.

Speaker 2:

We used to all remember he's like man wrap that shit, wrap that shit, and then he ended up going to jail.

Speaker 1:

So I'm like they all for the make one so he went to jail back then and that's the one who I just got out.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's the one just got out Like right, right, right around the time, like, like, like, when he started, like his, he used to be like feet, used to be everywhere around Compton I try to go subject but he was everywhere. So when he started, really start hanging with the little homies me and start getting close like real, real close. He gave me my name and all that, like we'll get to that. But so, so, um, when he died, when Mack Mark died, I had made a song for the homie. I'm like damn, I'm gonna really take this shit serious. He was telling me like you really hard, like whoo from the freestyle song. Like then I took it serious. Now this shit even get more crazy. You know who riding the orange? Oh, cool, yeah, this is like old-school LA rap group, like they really like Some legendary history from LA. You should go look them up right, 90s, 80s. Yeah, like 90s 80s group, like okay, so he stayed in the neighborhood over there around the area. Yeah, he had like a recording studio in his house. So, um, I Used to just walk by his house. I used to go to the one of the older homies house. I used to always walk by him and he, just one day he just told me like a yeah, y'all rap, or whatever I gotta. I got a studio in here. I push, oh, like I'm gonna come down here one day, just like on some random. So I walked out there one day, boom, made the song.

Speaker 2:

Long story short. I started rapping with him every day. Every day he was like I went back and showed the homies they was like, bro, we should drop this, you should drop this this. Around the time when, like, soundcloud was like cracking, everybody's putting a music on soundcloud. So I'm like I'm like, fuck it, I'm gonna put it on soundcloud, uploaded on soundcloud, and everybody was playing that shit like niggas is knowing the words to us coming back like man, you should keep going, keep going. And ever since then, like it's just been up, like I just been having that real feel for music, like I just been loving it ever since and then at what point did you Meet RJ, cuz y'all are from opposite, y'all from opposite sides of content.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I met RJ this funny shit. I met RJ like around when Edie D was cracking.

Speaker 1:

Okay, all right, don't incriminate yourself.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I see what's cracking. So I got some Egyptian homies he know the same people, I know you feel me and they end up calling me like man, pull up. So I pull up, and when I pull up, he back there. I'm like, oh shit, what the fuck is this Like? Where is?

Speaker 1:

he right here, so he just chillin' his shit smokin'.

Speaker 2:

I'm like damn, I'm like damn, let me press play on it real quick. So I just I'm like it's like a little Bluetooth speaker. So I just start playing my music, like that's what we do. She wants to be playing music and we're playing each other music. So I play all music and he listen and he like he's like it's you. I'm like, yeah, he like for real. I'm like, yeah, he like damn, it's different.

Speaker 2:

Like it was just different, like when you I like not trying to like label myself as that, but I don't even try to come off as that but like certain people when they hear my music they won't think it's me Like, they won't picture it, like like, oh, like this really, you Like, you really from the hood, you really you know what.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying Definitely, like, did not match the face to the, to the, to the sound and then a lot of people didn't know my face and didn't see me, so that was that so it was.

Speaker 2:

It was like damn, this is you. I'm like, yeah, so it was just like this time went on by. You feel me. We just ended up always being around the same people and we just hopped in the lab together and then it just went up from there, like it just been up from there, like our chemistry and our, the way we, we, we vibe together in the studio. It's like it was perfect. It was there, like you feel me. Like oh yeah, we, we feel a little crazy with this shit, like it wouldn't, no doubt.

Speaker 1:

That's real dope to see him embrace you. I think the the time that I finally met you in person. I don't know if it was RJ session or Katelyn session. Well, I want to say we was at record plant, record planet.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that was RJ. Okay, that's what he did. The album Ronnie Brown Right right, right, right, right, okay.

Speaker 1:

So what is it like for? Like the hood politics, though, because a lot of people say that LA came move on and we not unified because of the hood politics, which are able to put that to the side and make great music, but that's the problem, though, cause a lot of people can, a lot of niggas can niggas just choose not to because of what another nigga was going to say. Right, fuck.

Speaker 2:

What another nigga going to say If it benefits you and it's going to benefit the community and the world. A nigga should do it, and the politics between me and RJ and our hoods is because it's like it's never been no beef for one, and then it's like it's a difference in color.

Speaker 2:

That part is just a tease of blood. And I'm a crib, you feel me, and it's like we don't even be on that type of time, like we trying to make good music you know what I'm saying, we trying to make real good music. And then it for him, for a lot of his homies I already knew, you know what I'm saying, for me it's sections, so it was just, it was just purpose, just full circle. You feel me, he knew some of my homies. He already knew AD RJ didn't been to my section before. He saw the song with AD and the video and everything. So it was like, you know, it was just perfect timing type of thing. You know, it wasn't no type of politics, came nobody. But when I got with the baby stone gorillas, you feel me, they tried to politic on that you feel me.

Speaker 2:

Because it was just they just fell away about that.

Speaker 1:

From day side or your side.

Speaker 2:

Just from the Crips period.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

You feel me Just from the Crips period, and I'm not saying that certain people understand that it's bigger than a politic. It's bigger than all that, because if I can do it, 10 other young niggas can 10 other young niggas that's some, that's that's some bloods can do it the same, the same thing, and that that's the type of shit that I did it for. I didn't do it to oh, let me get on here to look cool or let me get on here to look like a super Crip. No, I got on that song to show my talents and show that we could work with anybody. And it ain't all that blue and red shit. Like that shit is like that ain't getting a nigga. No money for real.

Speaker 1:

And I think we're slowly getting to the point of bridging that gap, because it's almost feeling like like how you just said imagine if you would have went into where you know where you were on RJ was at and you wasn't able to press play that part.

Speaker 2:

We probably wouldn't even be sitting here right now that part, we wouldn't even be here, so it was like you got to. That's another thing I want to tell the world to these young niggas Take every opportunity serious, take that shit for granted, for real. Don't just play with your opportunity or don't second guess it Like just talking to your head like, no, just do it, you see it, you got it. Do it Like you feel me, I be feeling about shit.

Speaker 1:

Now, how did you get your name? That's my hood name that's your hood name. Yeah, that's my hood name for real, for real.

Speaker 2:

But I just made it to my rap name because it was something different and I ain't never heard nobody in the industry or nobody rap name. See that thing you know, so that's why that.

Speaker 2:

But it came from AD Big Brother Cause. When I got put on the hood, you know we find out our name. Whatever I told. I'm like seven, cause seven. I was born and raised on the seven. My house sit on the corner corner house on the 750, seven San Pedro. That's where my house is up until my mom and so thousand moved on, but that was my house, that's my street. So I'm like shit, I name it. In the hood we bang the seven. So I'm like shit, my name's seven.

Speaker 1:

I'll see. I've been thinking it was like infant. Well, infant is five. How far do we go?

Speaker 2:

Yeah. Infant is five but we don't, we don't, we don't. That's like LA, we don't do that oh okay, okay. Tiny gangsters LA Crips is tiny loaves.

Speaker 1:

So we tiny gangsters School us. I'm a, I'm a LA bitch.

Speaker 2:

I'm a captain and watch.

Speaker 1:

We together.

Speaker 2:

That's hub and dud we together. And you got LA and you got West LA. You know what I'm saying. You got your neighbor, you got your brim car. You know all that, you know. So you got to break that shit down. So a lot of people seeing me dealing with the baby stones can understand from LA, certain people cause it's like he way from Compton, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Cause Compton and LA got different politics. Yeah Well to a totally different politics.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying. We don't. And there's no disrespect to LA, cause I love LA. I got a lot of family from LA, so it's like it's no disrespect to nobody. You know what I'm saying. It's just, I'm just working. I'm working with anybody that's taking their life serious.

Speaker 1:

You feel?

Speaker 2:

me.

Speaker 1:

Um, did you pull up to the? Did y'all pull up to do a session together with the baby song? Did y'all email? The first is back on.

Speaker 2:

No, I was um. I was there in the session with them.

Speaker 1:

Oh really.

Speaker 2:

Yeah Me, baby stones and RJ. I was right there with the song and um, when they was making the song it was just like Like everybody, like RJ this verse, and then P foe did his verse and then he was like RJ was like what you think about this?

Speaker 1:

You want to jump on?

Speaker 2:

it. I bounced right up. I ain't even second, I even write that verse neither. I just got up and did my thing. They was the. When I came back out of the studio they was fucking with it. Oh, it's like hard yeah. I mean like when we first walked in I knew a lot, like it was quiet, like Because everybody know them from you feel me what they, you know they. Music came up, this in the Crips or whatever.

Speaker 1:

But they burnt out? Yeah, they burnt out, but it's like you can't you, it's like you, you can't forget.

Speaker 2:

It's, sir, it's niggas out here. That's really banged out. That really like that's Crips, that really like that shit. Like nigga, this shit bang like nigga. Ain't not word about, no word like.

Speaker 1:

I mean, it's not different than with RJ or YG or Then it's like not even that you got they own enemies. They should. Yeah, I mean it's just music.

Speaker 2:

You feel me at the end of the day like I think enough in a dive for listening.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, music.

Speaker 2:

I mean you can you could. I'm saying it's not gonna hurt you.

Speaker 1:

The wrong.

Speaker 2:

Listening to his music. People like good music. Some people like that hardcore shit. Yeah, want to see the inside of the hood. Yeah people want to see that shit. That's why a lot of these real rappers are starting to get exposed, because it's like you already come from that shit and a lot of niggas that do come from that shit trying to get out this shit.

Speaker 1:

Well, remember, it was a time that the the hood niggas wasn't the rappers, it was the niggas around them. Yes was the rappers and then you automatically associated that artist to Because you know what's around them.

Speaker 2:

But now we, in a time where the niggas ass actually, like that, is making music and it's good music- that's why I kept with a honey with myself, like like I'm not gonna lie, like I didn't, I wasn't type of nigga to just sit here, like that's why I took the music so serious, because I made a decision with myself like I Was in a release thing. What in Los Angeles County Jill I'm talking to myself like walking back and forth by myself. Yeah, I'm like them. Like see they what you gonna do, bro? Like what you gonna do. You gonna go all out with this street shit. God would a bang. You gonna get life or you gonna die or you want to really rap.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And be a millionaire and turn your family up and be the man of your family and help your mom and your granny and all them. You give it. I'm saying like that's, that shit feels different about what age did you?

Speaker 1:

was you talking to yourself like that?

Speaker 2:

um 20 or 2019.

Speaker 1:

Wow.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was. 2019. One of them too, for sure. And I was really talking to myself serious fuck like what you gonna do.

Speaker 1:

Was it like a pivotal moment happening in your life that you have to sit down and have a talk with yourself?

Speaker 2:

It was real. It was shit going on in my life where I had to be like, hey, you need to slow your ass down. Yeah like don't Cuz, if I trick myself off the streets I'm gonna be another nigga Just sitting in jail when another talent gone wasted.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we've lost a lot of and I was just talking about this how we lost a lot of future legends, the people who was supposed to make it and was supposed to represent, for us look up to nip yeah, real, real, real heavy right here yeah.

Speaker 2:

I know that's what I'm saying. Like nigga, really look up to them, like they that's still my favorite rapper to this day. Like, like nip, really like Motivated the fuck out of me show like my cousin. Rest in peace, gz, he, that was his favorite rapper too. Like we know, we know, we know so much. Nip, who was little, we was rapping bullets, ain't got no name niggas, that was little. Like us was like what y'all rapping with. Like you know I'm saying like it was like niggas the understanding. We didn't understand what the hell we was rapping either. But as we got older, we like man, like this, and they give us on some. Like you can see the transition I yeah like that and that's what I felt like.

Speaker 2:

I'm like niggas, go through that super bangs out stage to turn into a grown-ass man you know what I'm saying to really bossing up. Look how he came with the suits. No, I let, like you know I'm saying braids fresh, clean, like nigga, ain't trying to look Dirty and hood all the fucking time.

Speaker 2:

They want to be looking clean, nice, cut. Make your mama smile when she see you give what I'm saying. Granny smile when she see you Not, or granny crying cuz you in jail, like that shit, ain't it? You know what I'm saying like. So I seen the transition from Nip and that should motivate a lot of niggas, and motivated me for sure. So I know, man nigga, I know a lot of niggas miss that nigga for sure.

Speaker 1:

What, um, what inspired, you to start like making music for the bitches, cuz you be talking to the pussy for sure. You a sweetheart. Birthday yesterday. What month are we in? What?

Speaker 2:

are you a?

Speaker 1:

Scorpio. Oh, okay, okay.

Speaker 2:

Freakin for that shit now. But on the real, I just that's what I was raised off of, like shawty. I need a baker like off that good orange beat shit like okay, yeah, like so tell me bro, I got a mama.

Speaker 1:

Please Tell me if these was missing. What album?

Speaker 2:

Don't get me like that. Oh nothing, everything on here.

Speaker 1:

I fuck with I really love Eric Abadou.

Speaker 2:

Shit, shut up Like come on, now you can get out of there. Lauren Hill, you know what you wanna know is crazy. I'm gonna keep it a hundred. I ain't even gonna say her in line on here. I'm just starting to get on Lauren Hill. What I'm not gonna lie, I'm not even gonna say her in line.

Speaker 1:

This might be one of the best albums ever created.

Speaker 2:

I know, I know, but I'm not gonna lie, act like I'm gonna be lying, you just be lying, you just be lying, but yeah, I'll just.

Speaker 1:

You don't really got much for you to get up on Tuta.

Speaker 2:

No, but it's just good music. It's what? I'm saying Like the creativity that she does is what I'm. I'll be on. That's what catches me with these. You know what I'm saying? Outcast, okay, okay, they got outcasts hard as fuck.

Speaker 1:

I used to be sleep on them.

Speaker 2:

Like I was real, real sleep on them, outcast, real, real sleep on them. They, different they. What makes you an artist is being creative. That's what makes you an artist and doing an excellent job at what you're doing. You get what I'm saying Everybody fuck up, but I'm saying you perfecting your craft, that's something that people should do, that if you do music for real, get deep into it, like real deep into it. That's what I've been doing lately, doing my research.

Speaker 1:

Well, this has been amazing. So before you get up out of here, I need to get in your business, because we are on whole fashions but you know, I gotta do my rap shit first.

Speaker 1:

You know me, I make niggas rap, so we gotta cover the rap shit first. But we're gonna get into these whole questions All right. So I need you to pick a card. One card says spit and one card says swallow. So if you pick swallow, that means I get to search your phone. Pause the foot, I get to search your phone for the word swallow. But if you pick spit, you got to spit. A freestyle for me right now.

Speaker 2:

Damn, let's go.

Speaker 1:

We.

Speaker 2:

Oh man Damn, I got spit. That is crazy.

Speaker 1:

I got spit.

Speaker 2:

I ain't got no beating, nothing Ain't gonna beat. Look, look, you see that thing. I'm with Gina views. We getting to the money. You old news. A lot of niggas capping. They broke his foot. I'm sipping on this, diahulu, I'm stuck. I'm sitting on her couch, me and the dog Whole face is coming in. Bitch you a dog. I was getting to the money, get it all. I was getting to the money, get it all. I was trying to get it back, trying to get it up. Fly as fuck. Oh, it's in a belly truck, lot of niggas. They be coming, they be ready. I was getting to the money, we was ready. Hey, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I love that.

Speaker 1:

That's good, all right, all right, all right, I got some whole trivia for you. So we coming up with a card game and I'm testing it out on the guess Okay. What did Jody leave? Any vets car?

Speaker 2:

What did he leave in her car?

Speaker 1:

What did he bet fine in her car.

Speaker 2:

Oh them condoms.

Speaker 1:

Okay, what was the brand?

Speaker 2:

Magnum. What was it? Yeah, it was a magnum box.

Speaker 1:

Oh, okay, okay.

Speaker 2:

Okay, she was like trolling. I would have been like this Can I get some extra dollars? How many do you want to borrow? What do you?

Speaker 1:

want to borrow? Okay, I'm gonna get it. I'm gonna borrow $1000 and I'll start weeks. What you say, babe.

Speaker 2:

Okay, what happened the first time somebody went through?

Speaker 1:

your phone.

Speaker 2:

Oh nigga. Y'all can get y'all can zoom in on this. Yeah, we sure can Look at my lip. Oh, you got to go home, hell. No, you see them, seven stitches in my lip.

Speaker 1:

Did she find your phone, baby?

Speaker 2:

Hell. No, this bitch is talking to me.

Speaker 1:

This was your six five year girl. Okay, okay, okay, so you've been in trouble a lot.

Speaker 2:

Hell yeah.

Speaker 1:

What's your least favorite position during sex and zone?

Speaker 2:

The least the bullshit one.

Speaker 1:

If you need a like a-.

Speaker 2:

No, no, I got this.

Speaker 1:

Oh, okay, I got this Cause, I got a-.

Speaker 2:

Wait, that's least mean like what I don't like.

Speaker 1:

What you don't fuck with.

Speaker 2:

Niggas when you can't, I got three. No, too, when you can't binge your back correctly, that should be cute. Like why do they be-?

Speaker 1:

Who was hurt?

Speaker 2:

Like when you fucking a bitch, Like if you If her heart if her heart yeah like why are you not like, like, bend that shit. Like you need a chiropractor or something? Like damn nigga, bend that shit. But like what the hell did, hold on too, oh okay, niggas got that boring ass side sex.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, I don't fuck with the sides, that's for old people, yeah, old turnaround.

Speaker 2:

Bend that shit over and A-O-3,. Stop getting lazy when it's time for your turn to get on top.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, oh he talking to somebody?

Speaker 2:

No, I'm not talking to the people that be lazy with demonstration when you be on top and the bitch be like this. She be like I'm tired, bitch, stop slowing down, Get on speed up, Cause right then when you slow down a nigga, be rife and it get his thing off Like it. Be like finna, get his little shit off, and then you ain't the slowing down Nigga. Be like what are you doing? Now you gotta start all over. That's some real shit, yeah, For real. So I know them niggas like he saying some real shit right now.

Speaker 1:

Have you ever hit a girl in her period?

Speaker 2:

No, fuck no.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so you not thirsty. No Cause some niggas be like. Are you on or you?

Speaker 2:

on, I go be my meek.

Speaker 1:

Okay, okay, I heard that.

Speaker 2:

Or have her do it.

Speaker 1:

Do you fuck with your socks on?

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

But I'm not even gonna lie. Now that I'm older, now I'll be taking my socks. I'll be liking the feel like the toes and shit. Like I'm the type of nigga that like skin on skin, Like I gotta feel your skin when I'm fucking like you know what I got to.

Speaker 1:

I got to Do you shave your pubes.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

Okay, do you prefer wax?

Speaker 2:

No, no girl.

Speaker 1:

Shaved or laser Wax.

Speaker 2:

That shave shit trash, cause when the niggas trying to eat some pussy I might be getting poked on my lips. It hurt, so give Brazilian wax.

Speaker 1:

Have you ever bought or sold EBT?

Speaker 2:

Both.

Speaker 1:

Okay, what the hell? I don't know. Have you ever fucked a celebrity?

Speaker 2:

Do basketball wise count?

Speaker 1:

What basketball wife you hit.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm just asking Do that count?

Speaker 1:

Do it, which one? You need to pin on which one you hit. If you hit one of the ones that's on the show, then you can count.

Speaker 2:

There you go.

Speaker 1:

If I guess it are you gonna tell us Nope, Can't do that. You still fucking here today.

Speaker 2:

No, hell no.

Speaker 1:

Did you fuck her before she was a basketball wife, or after?

Speaker 2:

Let's take a shot. Let's take a shot. Interviews, whole fashions, cata, don't forget the dog. Y'all see what's going on.

Speaker 1:

CATA, thank you so much for kicking it with me.

Speaker 2:

I really appreciate it. I appreciate you too.

Speaker 1:

Go ahead and plug all your shit on all the albums out Album drop in tomorrow. No, that motherfucker out oh yeah, it's already out.

Speaker 2:

Sorry, that was the alcohol that downed you. Album already out. Long live my therapy. Cata 7X. Man, y'all go listen to everything. Y'all give me your feedbacks, give me some videos, and I finna start getting no TikTok for y'all, so we can start doing some more videos. Yeah, i'ma do one Genevuse too, so we can get it going. Call it on me. Yeah, I love y'all, though I appreciate y'all. Man, let's go.

Speaker 1:

Thank y'all so much for tuning in to this episode. Make sure you like, share and subscribe. Tell a friend and tell a friend and tell a friend. The whole fashions just dropped, yeah.

Gina Views
Personal Upbringing and Love for Music
Hood Politics in the Music Industry
Reflections on Identity and Music
Transitioning Into Music and Whole Trivia