Seasonable Clout With Thaddeous Shade

DJ FRESHMAKER: ENTREPRENEUR/COMMUNITY CONNECTOR

Thaddeous Shade Episode 76

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DJ Freshmaker (ENTREPRENEUR/COMMUNITY CONNECTOR) and Thadd talk about the visit that Food Critic Keith Lee had to Phoenix, Arizona, and the effect it had on the city. We also dive into how Fresh became a Community Connector, his love for music, and when he started DJing, along with his thoughts on the current dating scene.

Thank you for listening now please go back and check out some of my previous episodes.


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Speaker 1:

I'm with that shade you got cloud. Let me hear what it's about that shade. Said you really different, took a different route? That shade If you're crooked or up, can we taste it? Now that shade, without a doubt, is that season of a cloud, that shade you got cloud. Let me hear what it's about that shade you got cloud. Let me hear what it's about that shade you got cloud. Let me hear what it's about that shade, without a doubt, is that season of a cloud, that shade.

Speaker 2:

Woo-hoo-hoo-hoo. Ladies and gentlemen, I am Faddy and shade, this is Seasonable Cloud and it is we're inside of World Season in Scottsdale and I am sitting in Scottsdale, arizona. I'm sitting up here with my friend and a famous DJ, dj Freshmaker. I've known him for a very long time. Freshmaker, how are you?

Speaker 3:

doing, brother, I'm doing great man. I am very, very proud of this production you got going on, brother. This is looking good man.

Speaker 2:

This is looking good, it looks a little wild, the cord's on the place.

Speaker 3:

They ain't got it.

Speaker 1:

They don't know you.

Speaker 2:

I appreciate you, man, I know you're into all of this man I know, you're into the streaming and I know I've seen a lot of your videos that you posted, the music blends. You know what I'm saying. What's the latest music blend? You just did one.

Speaker 3:

We're working on right now A blend with Quincy Jones and Four Bats. They did eight. And what's the name of that? Quincy Jones song.

Speaker 2:

What the? I was just singing with you. I felt good to say.

Speaker 3:

But Instagram keep blocking it Because UMG took all that music.

Speaker 1:

Off of social media.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so Ain't nothing going down right now? I don't feel safe about playing no music online Really right now. Really, yeah, I review, I release Back to the Future blends Every week and they get blocked every week. Did you do the thing I showed you? Yes, and it was like you ain't fooling us. Bullshit, I do it all the time. I did it for the Four Bats one and I tried it. I even put sound effects in the beginning, really, and it was like Did you try?

Speaker 2:

a different song, just like a completely different song, but turn it down.

Speaker 3:

Uh, yeah, yeah, and you do the music when you turn it up just a little bit, yeah, yeah. No, really I tried again this week.

Speaker 2:

Damn. Yeah, man, if you have some trouble, let's talk about it. I try to figure that shit out, okay.

Speaker 3:

I also see you.

Speaker 2:

I'm not the wizard. I also see you be doing your videos. Where you have one side is the clip that you and you're also. What is that? How did that start? What is that about? What do you do with that?

Speaker 3:

On my page. I'm talking about modern dating, cause it's rather fascinating. We come from the 80s and 90s days of classic R&B, so you expect one day when you grow up You're gonna get that kind of love and affection. And so when you get out here and you realize, too late, nigga, it's rather fascinating, so you just got to talk about it.

Speaker 2:

What is something that's sparked you recently as far as dating? Is there something going on On social media that you've seen, or any video clip that you've seen that's going on? That's got you like oh yeah, I gotta talk about this, or I did talk about this man.

Speaker 3:

Recently I've seen a lot of you know, if you make 50k, you're too broke to date, kind of thing. Really, 50k, 50k, yeah, damn, you can't date.

Speaker 2:

A 50k, a guy making 50k a year that's not something they're going for right now.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean that's what they're saying. I don't believe it.

Speaker 2:

What's the response in your comments when the women get in there, or the DMs that you may get about Some of the stuff that you post? Are they agreeing with what the woman is saying or are they disagreeing?

Speaker 3:

Lately I've gotten a lot more agreeableness In my comment section because I've toned down Some things a little bit, but I don't know how long that's gonna last, but I've gotten a lot more agreeableness. Folks are you know, they're like you know. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Sometimes you say something and you animate it and you're emotional about it and you're like, if you're broke, you better get what a negative got 50k, you know and somebody get mad about it. But if you actually say, you know, did your last boyfriend make 50k? The father of your children, you know, I like the way you brought it down.

Speaker 2:

You got it that's what they like. You got to. You got to. I was showing a video. The young ladies out here too Damn, my throat is killing me the young ladies out here too. I need to find, oh, I need to ask my lady to send it to me. It was a video, david. You was asked to be on it. My boy, gq Jones, is in it. The red pop balloon the red pop balloon. Yes, so did you see? The one with the young lady Was here and she told dude, because he was from Chicago.

Speaker 1:

Yes, she was in the club. I got a video of her in the club. I do too. I saw her in the club.

Speaker 2:

I was the most ridiculous shit I ever seen in my life. I seen her. Can you talk about that A little bit, please, man.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, listen.

Speaker 2:

Describe that video. I'll put it in the video and when we get done cutting I'll put it in there.

Speaker 3:

I think a lot of times Some of this stuff when folks get on camera, they become so not genuine. That's true, you know, and they understand that things can go viral, so they want to do it too. And it's like so you actually cheating the marketplace? You're not really in it To find somebody, you just fucking around. So you really need to, like, sit your ass down somewhere Because you're being a fraud right now. That chick, you know, hey, I don't know her Young lady, you know, maybe you nice In the back, I don't know. But she had the nerve to tell a young man, you know he sounds like her little brother and she wants somebody with a better Vocabulary In their day to day speech. That's not even how you say the phrase you would actually say I would want somebody with maybe More of a vernacular, something like that. She was trying too hard To dumb him down To make herself look big.

Speaker 2:

I'm going over to Instagram.

Speaker 3:

Keep going. She was trying too hard To make herself look big and I got to give it up to the ladies. They got into the comments and they would like listen. You got on a sheen dress In a bad ponytail, did they really? Oh yeah, they was going in on her Because they knew, you know, the brother was being real genuine, he was being cool. He wasn't being emotional In his response, he was just like listen. You know, this is the way I talk. I talk this way because I'm from where I'm from. You're from the same place. I sound like your brother Because he's from the same place. We're just putting two and two together. Let's not be ridiculous, but in the clips that you see of the show I don't know if that's the whole show, but in the clips that you see of the show Most of the clips that we're seeing you see that a lot of these folks Are not actually being serious about Finding someone to date.

Speaker 1:

They're being serious about.

Speaker 3:

Being seen on camera, which is like listen, hey, get your ass about it, these people.

Speaker 2:

These dudes looking for somebody to date, but in today's society, though, like how do you find someone genuine when we all reach to the digital way? You know what I'm saying. There's not an old school way Of going to the mall or going to Target or going to the Walmart and I'm about to go up there and get a number right now.

Speaker 2:

I'm about to go and do my thing, man. I mean, it's all through. Everybody's got their shields up. When you get the messages in the DM or from any dating app, how do you find?

Speaker 3:

somebody genuine. It's kind of crazy the more technology we got, the further away we got. Feels like that right. It feels like that I'm not going to act like I'm an expert. I really got the answer. I mean. What I would think is that you just be more intentional About actually getting with somebody you know, like if you do want to talk to them for real, be intentional about calling them up on the phone, being in their face. One thing I actually like to watch is A gentleman on TikTok by the name of Calvin.

Speaker 2:

I like, when you do this, you always put me on some shit. Go ahead, you always put me on some shit.

Speaker 3:

He just goes up to people in the grocery store. And just starts talking to them Really, and a lot of times sometimes they just put a wig on their head. Ask them if they like wigs or something. Like just be a real personable and I think folks need to get more. I actually watch that kind of stuff so I can be more confident Just going up and talking to people Just whenever you feel like you've lost that.

Speaker 2:

You feel like you had it as a kid right, or as a teenager. You feel like you had that confidence.

Speaker 3:

I feel like you lose a piece of it when you get so connected on the phone, right, you so used to doing stuff on the phone. Like sometimes I feel like you know, if I call a woman too early they might be like damn nigga, text me for a week first. You feel like the phone call is gone now, no, no, I mean not completely, I just. I just definitely feel like folks are kind of used to the text message.

Speaker 3:

But I think, slowly but surely, folks are gonna get back into the more genuine phase of having fun and getting to know people, because that's what's lost. You know folks won't. What's the? What's the they want to win in Whitley? Oh yeah, different Folks definitely want that.

Speaker 2:

They want to win we can't say, we can't say Dr Hustable, and oh yeah, I'm and Mrs.

Speaker 3:

I think that's just a later on in life. But yeah, let's A goals right. She shot out the Dr Hustable. I don't believe what the white folks said about you going on with the text, me and the visions.

Speaker 2:

We were listening to smart list. I don't know if you're listening to smart list podcast. That's Will Arnett, jason Bateman and what's the last one, sean Hayes, and that's my guy from Will and Grace, my mom, oh, ok.

Speaker 3:

My mom, she love that show.

Speaker 2:

And they were on there talking about they. They now text and they don't know when the transition happened to where they were having phone calls and then it went into text.

Speaker 3:

They're friends that just text each other, they're just text.

Speaker 2:

Now they don't even talk on the phone. They used to talk on the phone and then he said I never got that text messages about when we moved in the text message and you know what I'm saying. So now everybody text. So I completely understand that. Where you lose the level of not necessary, maybe the confidence of the guy approaching the woman, you know there is like being we work in nightlife. Yeah, how long you worked in nightlife. What's wrong? It's OK. You forty seven man, it's cool.

Speaker 2:

Like 15 years, like 15 years, 15 queen man. So you know, you never know this. Like the liquor, we know the liquor is going to give courage, yeah, yeah, but that right. So so when the club is bright, people get a little bit more steel, right, but when that light, when that light is dark, you see that confidence rise, man. I think that's a level of we lost that confidence because I know, when I was a kid man, we like I told you we's in the mall, man, I'm about to go with being, get her know, oh, shoot.

Speaker 1:

We used to copy from Cross Street yeah, yeah, yeah, all that yeah.

Speaker 2:

So you so I know you talked about the relationship side of things captivating or catching everybody. Yeah, right now, is that where you could you tell the folks that you know you got your stuff, that you do, you got your podcast?

Speaker 3:

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, Make it make sense podcast on YouTube and we talk about, you know, modern dating and getting folks together. But primarily, I mean a lot of my stuff has to do with my purpose and that's, you know, making sure the community does business with one another and gets into relationships with one another so we can be a stronger community, you know you're the source.

Speaker 2:

So you remember, when Neil you know, I think that was was that two visions he's looking for? The source he's looking for was that two? When he found them it was the second one in matrix he's looking for the source. And when he finally got to the source was old white guy. But you know, you know, you know white guy, but you, black, you are the source.

Speaker 1:

I had a. There was a young lady.

Speaker 2:

Remember I'm Andrew. Choutour name was I think her Instagram is like mad, I'm a whatever she had just moved out in. I was like listen, you want to know anything in this city of importance? Coming black African American, you want to meet Greek shake by? That's the guy. You are the source. How did you build yourself up like that man? How did you get? How did you just come in and take over Phoenix? I really do feel like you're the guy. I don't know if you got props you want to get somebody else, but I feel like you're that guy. I know you forever.

Speaker 3:

Appreciate it. Man, to be honest with you, I just felt like there was there was a need for, you know, more togetherness. Obviously, where we at folks live more spread out, so they need something to do to come together. Obviously, we work in nightlife, folks are going to do that and come together. But you want to be able to see black people on more than just you know midnight. You know you want to be able to actually have cook out vibes and just enjoy folks and get familiar, being familiar. Oftentimes folks will say you know, out here we may not have you know culture, and my response will be you know, well, you got to step in to be a part of building it Right, and so I've been blessed to. Actually, it's not just me. I got a tribe of folks that are doing amazing work, and that's Acres, who runs the Archwood Exchange, nice Archer and Greenwood being the main intersection of Tulsa, oklahoma's Black Wall Street.

Speaker 2:

So I'm going to pause you just for a hot second. Ok, did you hear the clip of? I sent it to you. Didn't I send it to you? Possibly the Tom Hanks clip Visions? I sent you the Tom Hanks clip, him talking about yes bro, can you, can you do me a favor, can you send it to Fresh Police? But everybody, just you. I want Fresh to watch the clip and this is why Tom Hanks is my favorite actor. Now, I know I catch bullets because I am black, eddie Black but Tom Hanks is my guy.

Speaker 3:

The man is more than a fan, become. Your guy Was it. My guy Was it. Was it when he was alone?

Speaker 2:

Wait, wait.

Speaker 3:

Oh.

Speaker 2:

Castway, Um no, uh, quite as kept. Forrest Gump is my favorite movie. I think it's the most complete movie.

Speaker 3:

Jenny was a motherfucker.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. I think it's the you remember the Tom Hanks clip from Forrest Gump? Oh my God, you don't want to show him that. Send him the Tom Hanks one first, and then we can send him the other one too, because that that Tom Hanks clip is funny. You just that's amazing. That happened. I just seen it today and I sent it to the divisions. I thought I said you could. Sometimes he's on a hundred years survivor of the Tulsa massacre.

Speaker 4:

And my question was this what's the Tulsa massacre? How is it that it wasn't until two years ago that I heard about the Tulsa massacre? How is that possible? I've heard about Guster's uh, the little big horn. I heard about the Alamo, you know. I heard about the triangle shirt waste fire, you know. I heard about all kinds of disasters in which people died, but I had never heard about this thing.

Speaker 4:

That happened at 1921, only three years before my dad was born, one of the most successful black communities in America, black Wall Street which everybody was not only burned out of their homes and their businesses but then driven out of the city limits by an angry mob of I'm sorry white people. How is it that this was not taught to me? Because, I tell you, at the age of 10, when I was in fifth grade, living in Oakland, california, that would have been a moment of enlightenment for me and it made me mad. It made me mad that somebody had somehow made an editorial process of what was appropriate for us to learn about our own American history. It made me angry and it took me. It took me 64, it took me 54 years and I'm going to find this out. It's not right. It's not right and it's doing a disservice to all of America.

Speaker 3:

You know who? You know who's the blame for that? Talk to me. They are called the Sisters of the Confederacy, oh shit.

Speaker 2:

This is going to be. This is going to go ahead. Let me know the.

Speaker 3:

Sisters of the Confederacy. They are actually the ones that are responsible for what books get fed to your children below the Mason Dixon line. Wow and so. And so I imagine that some of that probably heated over to California. You know in fifties and sixties, right, they're responsible for keeping certain things out of you know American history books that children learn, right. So just the way this, some kids may grow up or let's say, some boomers may grow up thinking that there's nothing wrong with the way that they behave, or their history is absolutely great, or you know slavery wasn't really that bad, or they don't know anything about. You know the devil's punch bowl.

Speaker 2:

You know the devil's punch bowl yeah.

Speaker 3:

They don't know anything about mass grave, just black folks. Or Lake Lanier, where you just is a great black town and then you just a whole bunch of water on it and drown them and now you got a lake and then around that you got a white town. Like they don't know nothing about that, because this is a confederacy, just basically, keep it out of the books, keep it out of the books. So yeah, that would be why he just now which is crazy, right?

Speaker 2:

Doesn't that seem crazy? It blew me away and I swear I could have swented sent it to you, but I sent the divisions and it just blew me away.

Speaker 3:

But you were talking about those, I'm assuming the streets, and if you continue, butchering Greenwood is the main cross streets of Black Wall Street and Tulsa, oklahoma, and that's basically what we're trying to recreate out here in Phoenix, you know, through the Acres Foundation. It's a collaboration of multiple businesses and they have their own website that kind of shows, you know, all the black businesses of the city, so when folks come to visit here they know what to go, they know what to do and they just know what to find. You know us. What has that?

Speaker 2:

process been like Challenging, easy, rewarding, rewarding, OK yeah, rewarding.

Speaker 3:

It's. I mean anything that's worth doing, that's going to be easy, but I mean, even if it's, you know, just a couple of minutes, that somebody gets to come to a particular event, or even just a daytime event, that's actually meant for us to, you know, act crazy. But they get to see, you know, black folks all in one spot, right, you know, even if it's white folks there too, whatever you know. But us being in control of the vibe instead of, you know you rarely seeing us at all, yeah, and then just being able to get familiar with being familiar again, yeah, right. Whereas, like, let's say, in Tulsa probably, you know, everybody knew everybody, right, right, everybody was going to the same church. Yeah, now everybody doesn't go to the same church, but maybe your church is down the street, my church is over here, but we all going to see each other over here and we know where to go. Now you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

So just creating community again, yeah, I always admire because you all You're extremely intelligent. Thank you, brother. Always, always, always active, always making sure somebody we over here, we over here, we over here. And at the same time I still get a little bit of enjoyment because you'll cook us. You know what I'm saying In a good, fun way. You know what I'm saying. That's why I enjoy watching your videos. You'll go ahead and set flame when it needs flame to be set. Is there somebody out there that you like outside of I forgot the guy's name you said goes into the Walmart's and stuff, and but is there somebody out there that you that puts you on game, that set you on the path that you are on right now, because I want to get an outside of your family like pops and stuff like that, but I want to get to that later on in Chicago and stuff like that but anybody that puts you on to the path that you are currently on and blazing right now.

Speaker 3:

Well, a lot of this comes from when I moved out here. I was in a completely white neighborhood, yeah, and so I know what it feels like to just kind of be isolated and not really be able to move around, right, so in knowing that feeling, I want to make sure other folks know that they have options. They just got to sit at the house, right, you know, or just you know, go shoot baskets at the hoop and your driveway, like you can actually try to see folks. But I got to give a lot of props to, you know, my tribe that started the Archwood Exchange. They own the strong war hat company. They own pretty much three businesses on Roosevelt.

Speaker 3:

Oh, wow, yeah, and they just constantly encourage other folks to keep their businesses thriving. Shout out to Matt or brother Ali Henry and his lovely wife Havana. You know they are very, very huge as far as the community is concerned with getting folks together and actually putting work behind it, not just saying we need to do this. Man, you know like if they see a void, they immediately are trying to figure out how to solve the problem, to where not only folks are able to get together but they're able to, you know, make some money and be able to create a network. You know not just be able to just come and shake hands and slap ass and go home.

Speaker 2:

You know, what do you think the perception of Phoenix is when it comes to African Americans down here, or what people think on the outside black folks?

Speaker 3:

When outside I'm pretty sure folks have an idea that you know it's a smaller community compared to where they're coming from, but they know that it's got to be something here, right More than it was 20 years ago, I got an interesting question for you on that.

Speaker 2:

Do you feel like we helped out a lot in nightlife? Absolutely, you've there. I was telling GQ Jones. I was telling them, I was like that run international right and the artists that we had come through even even your time in Revolver and before that the Revolver I felt like was on the cusp of social media and I felt like international had the fool blown. We had the Graham cracking off, you had the Snapchat crack and I felt like people were really able to see and I was telling them.

Speaker 2:

I was like, bro, I think we are responsible for a lot of folks moving down here, even though I know the weather.

Speaker 3:

You should definitely take credit because you got to look at all the viral moments. Yeah, remember, at one point you all were thinking about doing a reality show. Yeah, right.

Speaker 2:

Because it was that big of a deal, you know you was involved in that. Yeah, yeah, for sure.

Speaker 3:

So I would definitely give yourselves a pat on the back, because when people come here just to visit even if it's March Madden, the Super Bowl or whatever they look in where they need to go, right, right and they know, they know what to do and March Madden is coming to yeah. Absolutely.

Speaker 2:

Do you feel like? What do you feel like is missing in the city when it comes to bringing black folks together? What's the is there? Is it something else that needs to be sprinkled in? Is it, is it more effort, energy? Is it more businesses? What is it that you think we're missing?

Speaker 3:

Seriousness and intention when it comes to building a power base. Not just it's one thing to start a business because you want to.

Speaker 2:

It's dude. What Scales on here talking about cap. Yeah, shit, dude, just do that. You got this shit out. Serious, I'm going to switch it up.

Speaker 3:

Seriousness, and more serious and intention when it comes to building a power base.

Speaker 3:

Because I mean we, we, we build and open up businesses, businesses for the purpose of, yes, cp3 going off. We build up these businesses so, like you know, our family can be good, right, right. But I look at it in an idea, really holy, as if these businesses do well and they thrive, they give an opportunity to hire some other people or to start scholarship funds or to fund politicians, right, or to buy subdivisions. And you buy any subdivisions or you're living in these subdivisions and you build up these great families and now you all have children and these children probably get together with each other and do the same thing all over again. You know what I'm saying. So it's not just like, hey, you know, we got a building and we going to make fifty thousand a day and we floss.

Speaker 3:

No, I got you.

Speaker 1:

It's about.

Speaker 3:

this is about, you know, creating the kind of communities that we say we want to live in.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know you ever just thought about maybe running for counsel? No, no, I'm going to be a counselor.

Speaker 3:

You know I'll be like a good brother to just past Mr.

Speaker 2:

Mays oh, got you, got you, got you. So you tell me, so you're telling me. You've never set back, do you feel like? Because you know there's going to be some, some, some TMZ drops somewhere they go by. Oh, we got fresh ass naked in the shower With three of the best. You know what I'm saying Pretty much.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I thought about teaching and maybe an attorney would kill. Yeah, teaching, and maybe being an attorney.

Speaker 2:

I can't have you in turn. You're too funny, I can't have you. No, you ain't getting me out of jail. Y'all think I can't play around with y'all? God damn it, I'm not. Oh, your journey in the nightlife? Yeah right, you want you. You're a DJ, you host for us, you mix out just like a mix out, just you know. I'm saying be putting the music together.

Speaker 1:

Oh, yeah sure.

Speaker 3:

Sure Sure.

Speaker 2:

When did you get started man? When did you get started DJ? And how did you get started DJ? And how did it? How did it all open up?

Speaker 3:

Man I shoot, you say, like you know, college, I went down to Tallahassee and a friend of mine, just you know, they kind of encouraged me to come down there to check out FAMU and I did. I went down there for homecoming, I fell in love with it and so I end up staying down there in the city and getting a Internship down there, down there, and I was always, you know, working the club scene and just the style of of music and and MCing really, really, you know, kind of captivated me, and I also knew that this flavor was definitely not in Phoenix, right, right, Right. So you know, all of these, all of these dope songs and everything I got to put folks on to this, and so I just started, you know, actually burning one CD at a time on a computer and you remember burning.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, had to sit there.

Speaker 3:

Boy, hey, hey, anything good ain't easy, you know, anything good ain't easy, so I would burn them one at a time.

Speaker 2:

I probably broke that computer doing that shit. You're writing markers. I think I told you, definitely with the Sharpie, yeah definitely with the Sharpie, and I would.

Speaker 3:

just in the middle of the night I would see like the repo cars coming out in the Department complex and I just leave them on top of people's, are you?

Speaker 2:

serious, that's a real thing.

Speaker 3:

I would just leave them on top of people's cars and shit.

Speaker 3:

That's cool man. And then you know, I got here and thanks to my homeboy, dj Q, I said to him I said, hey, man, I got a lot of music I want. I want folks to, you know, check it out. He was a DJ. I said, hey, can you mix this for me? And I'm going to put him on CDs and put some graphics on them and you know, you know, I'm going to just pass them out anywhere I can. And he thought about it and he was like I don't know that shit, you're going to do that shit. So he taught me how to DJ and you know pretty much I just got heavy into the mix tape game.

Speaker 2:

How long was that process learning to DJ? It was a difficult. Yeah, man, you're using records at the time, right? Yeah, it was.

Speaker 3:

I mean it was still Serato. But OK, turn tables.

Speaker 2:

Ok, I try to put you back in the seventh my bad.

Speaker 3:

No, you good, you good, it was 59.

Speaker 2:

59, you 59, right.

Speaker 3:

I turn 74 tomorrow, just basically go ahead. But now getting to, because you automatically, you know, think you know, hey, I got rhythm nigger, right, because you know, yeah, so you don't think you know it's going to be difficult at all, but it's, you know. It's kind of like learning. You know how to write, yeah, you know. And then you have to take into consideration, you know music, note, key, speed, yeah. And once you get outside of your bedroom mixing, now you need to read this crowd of people, right, figure out where they from, how old they are, what kind of music they like. Are they twerkers, are they head bobbers? You know that kind of thing. So, which is really? That's really the, the, the quantum physics of it is reading people, yes, like after you do all the stuff in the bedroom. That's just kind of like the training wheel stuff, right, but as far as learning, you never stop, and if you do, then you may not be working no more. You got to try it.

Speaker 3:

It's innovate or die, but definitely getting comfortable.

Speaker 2:

Do you, do you remember your first gig?

Speaker 3:

First paying gig. First paying gig. It was a wedding. This dude didn't want to do it. He called me and my roommate to come do it. Yeah, he got there. I heard that wedding money is all right, man. It's incredible because it's a once in a lifetime thing.

Speaker 2:

But let me ask you something, OK. How did you do at the wedding and did you feel the pressure of providing the soundtrack for somebody's eternal love?

Speaker 3:

OK, so I didn't actually have to do too much of the DJ and just a little bit and I was. I was the host of the event, but immediately once we got there we saw why the dude left. He lied to us and told us that his wife was having a baby Wow. But we got there and we just realized it was a bride's zilla wedding, oh wow. And he didn't want no parts of it. The lady was me. The whole family was crazy. It was like they was like all from Turkey or something. Oh yeah, and they were not crazy, but they was just real animated about this is their day, Right. And bro was like yo, yeah, my lady's having a having a baby.

Speaker 3:

I got to go and and we got there and we was like your wife, even though God damn baby wanted to get out, and it was like, oh, think about a think about a room maybe just a little bit deeper than this, right, and we up against the wall. Yeah, it almost looks like an ASU auditorium.

Speaker 1:

OK.

Speaker 2:

OK.

Speaker 3:

And, but just much smaller than that. Yeah, right, and we up against the wall Just trying to figure it out, right, but the crazy thing was rock, that bitch jammed it. My man Q, he rocked it. Yeah, I'm hosting and they loved us, man. They hugging us on out the door. They, like you ain't got to leave, you can stay all night.

Speaker 2:

We was like that's what's up man.

Speaker 3:

You know, but no, it was after that. It was like oh man, right you, you came through the fire, you can do whatever now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, for sure, you can play a bridezilla you good Straight.

Speaker 2:

What do you think when it comes to nightlife out here and you, you're, you're in the, I see, I'll see you Friday, I'll see you Saturday. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, there is a new move, a new thing of people just being inside the club and they just kind of chillin and they just standing around and I know, like I said, we've you, we have at least worked together now 13 same as GQ about 13 good ones. And what do you think is changed from when you started middle until now?

Speaker 3:

I think social media has a big deal to do with it, because if you talk to me, if you think about it, everybody now has access to what you look like, what you do and your lifestyle. So it's almost this kind of pressure to make it look perfect. Hmm, right, so when you get out in the real world you gotta kind of keep up the facade. You can't get extra goofy and sweat. You know, whereas before nobody knew your name, you didn't give a damn.

Speaker 3:

You're coming there to enjoy the music. The music also has something to do with it, is it all right?

Speaker 2:

You said the music. If I could jump in. You said the music has something to do with it. Is it okay for me to ask, is it, if you're comfortable? I'll cut it out of me, you could? I don't know if this is like the they call it the woman wave of music.

Speaker 3:

Oh, I think that actually as much as you know as just a person, some of those songs kind of you know, get on my nerves, but at the same time, as a DJ in a club, those songs actually get people active. Yeah Right, it's the other songs where you know it's like most of us ain't trapping yeah for sure.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying For sure.

Speaker 3:

So. But if we constantly got that being drilled in, then you know there's not much to do on a song like that. That'll make you sweat. Now you could still get hyped to it, but if it's a heavy dose of it, you know you got to mix it up, you know as it.

Speaker 2:

When we do R&B night, man, you could just see. You can see folks singing. The energy is high. People are having a good time, they dancing, the sweat is there. What is I mean? Our mixing's better now. Our mastering's better now. The mics are better now. Everything hits harder, the vocals are more crisp. How is it that the late 80s and 90s and early 2000s just continues it, just 90s in general, just continue to make these people so happy on an R&B night. What do you think that is?

Speaker 3:

I mean you got to. It goes back to what we were talking about before more technology we got, the further we got apart, because the more we kept doing was focusing on this. But, you know, when we didn't have it, all we had was each other, you know, and so it's actual real joy and folks want to feel genuine and music is a big contributor to that. So if folks, you know, actually you know get an opportunity to feel emotion, the music is going to be one of the things that allows them to do it. R&b music, especially 90s, yeah, I mean definitely before. That gives you the opportunity to do it without really caring about what people think about you. You know, other stuff is kind of too cool for school and I get it, you know, because I like just about you know everything, okay, find something good in everything, but the R&B music is really what it allows folks to be, whatever they want to be.

Speaker 3:

Like a short story, when I first started DJing in a brunch, I really didn't know, you know, what was acceptable, but I didn't want folks to be bored and so I started to see folks dancing and I didn't stop them. This young lady came up to me. She told me. She said I want you to know. All you had to do was give them permission. Right, what you mean and what she meant was all you had to do was give them permission to act the way they want to act and feel how they want to feel. You ain't got to have them be uptight and just sit in their seats. All you had to do was give them permission to be able to dance and do what it is that they already wanted to do, and they'll do it.

Speaker 2:

I'mma fuck what you hear. Okay, we gonna stick on that. What is one song from the 80s that you could play right now in any environment? Late 80s, we ain't got to go deeper. I know you're a music kind of sewer so you know your shit. What is one song from the 80s you feel like you could play right now? People gonna enjoy. People are gonna enjoy, like Even today. Yeah, today's Youngston's Gen Z. The 80s we going 90s next too.

Speaker 3:

Oh, my God.

Speaker 2:

I got one, but I'm gonna wait, I'm gonna. It's on you. You're the DJ.

Speaker 3:

You know what? Oh, that was the 80s. Bobby Brown, Okay, every little step. Nice man, what you?

Speaker 2:

know about that. You remember House Party, remember kids. Dad come in he said you ain't going to no party. Every little step you gonna be around this room tonight.

Speaker 4:

That was classic. That was classic.

Speaker 2:

He said you ain't going to no damn party. Every little step you take is gonna be around this room tonight. What is? Give me one song from the 90s man.

Speaker 3:

Let me see. I mean anything SWV, but definitely I mean Tevin Campbell. Can we talk Okay?

Speaker 2:

got you. Okay, not bad, Give me two early 2000s. You can go. 2000, up to 2010.

Speaker 3:

Everybody's gonna vibe with. Okay, jagged Edge where the party at Damn not bad bro. And let me see we got to go with, I mean, you know, Shouse House to Big wait. No, that wasn't early 2000s. There it is. I was, ooh, I heard it. No, no, no, no, sometimes at 98, 2000. Yeah, you can get real blurry.

Speaker 4:

You can get real blurry, you can get mixed in that.

Speaker 3:

No, you don't have to call usher.

Speaker 2:

Oh, there you go. Okay, all right, I'm not mad at you. Now I'm gonna ask you to pick a song from today's music that you absolutely hate. But you know it's gonna go over the top, it's gonna be a hit, it's gonna get the crowd moving Okay, but you absolutely hate, absolutely hate.

Speaker 3:

Oh, hold on, hold on, hold on, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, the new sexy red one.

Speaker 2:

Which one's the new sexy red one? A bow, bow, bow. Have we heard, do I?

Speaker 3:

hear we play it we play it.

Speaker 2:

we play it, I don't. I mean sometimes I, you know me I build a fort in the corner and then I hide. Man, I know you're not there.

Speaker 3:

I don't hear a bunch of stuff.

Speaker 2:

I mean it says fuck my baby, dad Got you man, oh yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, okay, oh, you're from Chicago, right, yeah? Are you from you? Know you from you from Chicago? Are you from you? Know what I'm saying? I don't know what they're doing.

Speaker 3:

I mean you, you, you, you, you, you, you, you, you, you. I mean I spent some time in there and then, on the way out, I spent some time out of there, you know.

Speaker 2:

Got you your biggest influences in your life. Man, that's a broad no I mean. Okay, well, I mean, I know you, you and your pops are your butts Like you, tight right, Mm-hmm, you know, is that like you're growing up? Was that your? That's, your, the person, you looked up to you, you, you emulated, you wanted to be like, or you had a lot of his qualities and my dad is like kind of an osmosis kind of thing.

Speaker 2:

you know, like Watch the words watch the words when you get to throwing them at me and I got to think in my box. I got to think about Will Smith in the damn movie and I got to remember it Because I, I got, I got a dad my stepdad, they, they both are very influential.

Speaker 3:

Oh, yeah, yeah, my, my dad, just mannerisms, being more outspoken and not really, you know, given a damn about. You know being embarrassed, you know being a life of the party but still being able to be a gentleman, that kind of thing. And and drawing a line in the sand on respect, right, my stepdad influenced me on, you know, how to move in rooms and Be perceived properly, yeah, right, and a lot of those, a lot of those things are just through osmosis, it wasn't like, yeah, and by osmosis I mean, like you know, you learn through seeing or being around it. Right, right, it wasn't like all the time where they just take you aside and say you do this, this, this, this, yeah, and sometimes they'll, they'll, they'll say to me, you know, I remember my stepdad when talking to me about finding a wife.

Speaker 3:

He was like, you know, just make sure you find somebody who's, you know, graceful and generous, right, yeah, and my dad, as far as dealing with women, I remember you know him telling me say, don't ever let nobody put you on front street, right, yeah, and those are both extremely valuable, right, you know things to say to a young man, you know, so he's not going out into the world wide-eyed and bushy tailed and not understanding. You know how to handle himself out there.

Speaker 2:

Is there a question that you've always wanted to ask your pops, but you've never asked him before?

Speaker 2:

Oh man, I always say this that's what I say, man, if you have an opportunity, these, the dumb, silly questions you may ask your friends, the dumb silly questions you may ask your girl or your boyfriend, whatever the case may be. Um, you know you're not going to be able to handle it and you, the same way, you get to know. Uh, it's similar, kind of similar. You get to wait to know your friends, to know your, your, your partner. Um, I feel like, if you get the opportunity, you should ask your parents some of these questions. Man, a lot of times you just see them and you meet them and you talk to them, y'all.

Speaker 2:

I'm back, you know what I'm saying. I'm visiting back home or whatever. But to dig into what was your listening to at prom when you was dancing you know, you know what I'm saying. What was some of you enjoy? What was a? What was a place you went to go eat back in the? You know what I'm saying. What was the question you would ask? You know, like your pops or your moms, that you've never asked.

Speaker 3:

Um, let me see, a lot of times I like to pick my dad's brain about his experience, uh, militarily, right, he was a Vietnam vet. So, um, a lot of uh for a lot of those guys. A lot of those things still affect them today.

Speaker 2:

He's a high-side down to San Antonio. You know I couldn't help it. Cause he knows.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm talking about. Yeah, I'm the dude playing the dude. This guy's the dude, me and the dude yeah.

Speaker 2:

My bad, y'all Go ahead.

Speaker 3:

I would just, uh, you know, ask him about, uh, how he was able to adapt coming back home after that, you know, and um, that was that was a vicious time.

Speaker 2:

That was a tough time, yeah.

Speaker 3:

So, and then for my, for my stepdad, I would really ask him you know what in particular happened, in order for us to actually move out here, because a lot of people don't know? My stepdad was actually. He was a chief of police in a town called Evanston that was on the north side of Chicago, and he was exceptionally good at his job, so much so they had like one homicide, wow Right, but Chicago is not a not an easy town to work in Right.

Speaker 3:

So, after doing such a great job, all of a sudden we was about it there and for somebody that was so good, it was easy.

Speaker 2:

That means that he was willing to stand on the shield If somebody doing wrong that's what you kind of feel like, if somebody was doing wrong. I came in and told somebody was doing wrong and they was like oh motherfucker, you know what I'm saying, it's cops for life. You know what I'm saying? Is that something you feel, or you feel like it's something you I feel like?

Speaker 3:

it's definitely got to be something that.

Speaker 2:

I can't wait for you to ask and then I can get an answer for this. I really don't know.

Speaker 3:

You know, somebody has some dirty hands. You know what I'm saying. I got you, so I feel like he was too good of a guy in order to, you know, maybe play ball or something like that, but it's a long time ago now so I imagine you know wouldn't be a big deal. Yeah, hopefully you know. But I'm very proud of both of them, you know, and what they were able to come through in that city at that time you know what I'm saying and to be able to make something of themselves, you know you're, like I told you earlier, man, extremely intelligent.

Speaker 2:

Thank you, man. Super smart, well kept boy. You be, you be on it Did we talk about the hairline last week, the interview GQ talk about the hairline. Is that what he said to you? Yeah, yeah, it was clean man, the motherfuckers cold. Now listen why you ain't got no kids man. Oh man, Are you in a big brother program or something? I mean you could be, you know, say you got no kids, man. You be a fantastic father. Why are you what's going?

Speaker 3:

on. Yeah, you're playing on having kids, absolutely that is. You know, that's something I'm playing on doing, right, but I just got to you know I got there.

Speaker 2:

Why has that not happened?

Speaker 3:

Uh, because I like to be married, right, you know why, you sure.

Speaker 2:

You know, it's a little time for a little spice. I'm going to go left, I'm going to go right. You know what I'm saying. You, I can, I can I. Yeah, I've heard you talk about the poly world.

Speaker 1:

Oh, ok, all right.

Speaker 2:

So that means, when you say get married, does that mean you got four of them? You got four wives. I mean I'm in a man with seven wives Remember that from a diehard three days on the phone. I'm in a man from seven wives. Do we have seven? Ok, ok, cool, all right, go ahead. Yes, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean I would, I would love to have that, you know, but I'm not against you know. Monography, I'm not against it, but I would definitely love to you know, have you know do you OK?

Speaker 2:

do you feel like you can find your, your one or your two here in Phoenix's, or is it something you feel like you got to? You got to step out of town to do that?

Speaker 3:

I think it's, it's possible. I think it's, I think, since social media has become much more difficult.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, to me, I think that it's become difficult. But if you know you in a space, right, you know you there. Yeah, and this is the way it is now. This is how we operate. You get sharper in there, it's like anybody, sharp and dire.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there is. You take they talk about LeBron couldn't play in the 90s and 80s. I feel like if you put LeBron in that era, he has to learn how to play in that era and I think he would do the same thing that he was doing now, that he's doing now, you know, saying, of course you're dealing with some more physicality, we can get all that. You know, I don't want to fuck up the brand or how much. You probably got some LeBron boxes on right now. I don't want to do that to you, I don't want to get involved in all that. But what I'm saying is I think if you know the space that you in and what you're working with, I feel like people can, you know, be able to thrive. And what if? For what do you say? Oh, he said you scale, said you just started circulating the bag.

Speaker 3:

She talking about it.

Speaker 2:

I love it. I love it, I love it. But so you really feel that social media is.

Speaker 3:

is that something that stopped you personally, or you feel like you're not ready yet I'm you're you're the no, I mean for me what I'm thankful I can, you know, consistently garner some attention. But I also understand that I'm in a very visible space, right, right, Right. So, and I mean, even if I wasn't, I kind of got a Outgoing of enough personality where it's not a big deal, right. But I do recognize that the kind of things that, like Dave Young was talking about just, you know, having a good time, chilling, museum, mountain workout, simple fun stuff, right Can sometimes, you know, be Met with a little bit more resistance than normal, right, Um, for me, normally I don't have a problem getting, you know, a gym date, you know, or something like that, don't?

Speaker 3:

have a problem. No, I mean, I will find some resistance, but I can just find somebody else that will go Resistance.

Speaker 2:

I like how you use such a such.

Speaker 3:

I told you, I got to, I got to. They've been going at my head for years man. So I got to figure out. You know certain words.

Speaker 2:

You could find the women that want to hop on the mountain, that are going to mountain with you, that are, that are hit the gym with you, and I know we've had a lot of discussions on the side about that, do you feel, do you?

Speaker 1:

Just do it man.

Speaker 2:

You know, do you see a lot more black women getting in the gym? They getting in there? I know you are. Listen, freshest talk. You've talked about this before.

Speaker 3:

I have Cool boy.

Speaker 2:

Dave Young looked at me, had me sweating. I said, damn, I said something bad Shit. I know fresh and talked about it before. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you know. Do you feel like that's something that as a guy, you got yourself together? You're rich, motherfucker, tesla driving summer, bitch and business on the motherfucker influence, motherfucker. Do you feel like that's something that you look for? The woman they got to, they got to be somebody that's in the gym. It's no way. Come on, oozman is on this fucking live right now, bro.

Speaker 3:

Are you?

Speaker 2:

serious Oozman. Hey bro, this thing is on the live right now. Put them up. Put them up, I don't know In the camera nigga In the camera. This thing of Oozman is on the. Oh shit, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, my bad man. The champ, the champ, the champ, oozman, the champ. Oh my God, bro, that's insane. Hey, all right, cool, what was we saying? I got a little, I got a little happy. The champ, the champ.

Speaker 3:

Do white women need to go to the gym or something?

Speaker 2:

I'm all fucked up right now, bro. That's the most cool shit ever. Bro. That was something about you know black women getting in the gym working. I know that's what you into.

Speaker 3:

You gotta find somebody that's doing that too, like I said, everything that I talk about has to do with our community being better. If our community is more physically active, our community is better, healthier, more likely to be in relationships and to have babies and be larger and have more political and financial power. But, yes, anybody that I would date, definitely I would want them to, if not be, you know, used to going to the gym, at least be willing to adapt that as a normal part of their. You know, day to day, yeah, I mean when you anybody would, man or woman when you work out, even when you don't want to work out, that's some self-discipline, right, right, 1000%. That's self-love.

Speaker 3:

Self-love is like, you know, that's, that's like God inside you. You know, I want to see the God inside you. If I'm laying there, you know, and you wake up and go work out at five o'clock in the morning, I'm like, damn, that's just fucking admirable. You know, when you get back, wash that thing out. You know, wash that. Look at that. And you know, appreciate the work you put in. You know, and I would imagine, I don't even imagine I know that women appreciate when dudes go to the gym, regardless.

Speaker 2:

You like the you can always talk, I ain't.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, for sure they can feel it, they can smell it, they, they, they like you know the, the masculinity you know, so give them more of that you know. So, yeah, by all means, I absolutely love you. Know, when I got you, I mean I used to only date, I mean I ran tracks, I used to only date women. That ran track, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, we had one in here Tuesday. She was. We were talking about there. Was you ever seen the Carisha game? She's a city girl. She got a board game and it's called the fuck Carisha. Damn, I can't think of it. Carisha something. She got like a board game. She got to act like a card game. It's a drinking game, okay, and one of the cards on there I was saving for last. They was over in the corner. They was getting cooked up. They was hitting, hitting the Donny Donny be taking over people's lives. I don't call them. Who the hell call them? Donny Donny was hitting them back. They was chugging, they was having a grand, fantastic time and I had a card that I took out of there and the card says you got to, you got to race the person next to you or you got to take like three shots or something like that. Yeah, it was, it was, it was brutal and I actually had a reason where I was going with that.

Speaker 3:

And you had. You had somebody in here that was a track person or something. Oh, yeah, yeah, there it is. She was ready to race.

Speaker 2:

She was showing me the tattoo that she had. You know what I'm saying. She said she was, she was 33 or something like that, but she said she ran track you know what I'm saying. Still prime. Yeah, brother starving, I love that.

Speaker 3:

Yo, that's one of the most classic clips.

Speaker 2:

Fucking fantastic man. Well, listen, man, like I, like I, we got huh. Okay, let's get we. Yeah, we, I was just about to. I just want to play the game with my guy. Okay, but real quick, tell the folks what you got coming up. You got anything special? I know you'd be out of town doing all types of DJ events and stuff like that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we will be in in in Denver with Squizzy Taylor tomorrow for his R&B night, so just tune into the live. By all means, follow Squizzy Taylor, thank you for having me out there. And, of course, of course, always Friday through Sunday Got one of the best brunches in the state at Sugar Jam, so by all means, come up there and visit us.

Speaker 2:

You're my friend right now. You're my friend right now. Yeah, yeah, I got the Sunday party. You're my friend, you good no.

Speaker 4:

I'm sorry.

Speaker 2:

You know, of course, join us at a lot of sugar jams is fucking legendary.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, Friday through Sunday we up there at Sugar Jam vibing. It's like, it's like you know, it's like a cookout for real, for real, you know.

Speaker 2:

And Gabrielle Union came up in that joint.

Speaker 3:

Gabrielle Union went to the other spot.

Speaker 4:

Brunch House, which is down in.

Speaker 3:

Levine yeah, my bad, but Black folks is building up a bunch of things. We got one that's coming down. That's what I wanted to ask you to keep going. Go ahead, how much time we got. We got a brother building one down in Chandler. Shoot, they gonna have. Huh, no, no, no, lush, lush.

Speaker 2:

I didn't see that. Okay, I didn't see that.

Speaker 3:

There's, there's Tempe. Okay, okay, okay.

Speaker 2:

But black fuck, we get information, right guys, we get this stuff up all over the place, you know.

Speaker 3:

So a little bit longer, we're almost done. But yeah, yeah, yeah, Keith Leif.

Speaker 2:

Keith Leif.

Speaker 4:

I'm sorry about that. I said Keith Leif Nick. Is this Chief? Keith Keith Leif?

Speaker 1:

I'll make it as fast as possible for the camera, Keith Leif yes.

Speaker 2:

Came through, turned our city upside down Down. I have never seen, and I don't even spend that much time on Facebook. I'd rather sit in a tub full of water and drop a toaster in there than spend my time on Facebook. That's how you know what I'm saying. I don't be on there, you know what I'm saying?

Speaker 3:

A lot of great LeBron debates.

Speaker 2:

And that's why I'm not on there. Man, I know that when. I get on there, the first thing I'm going to see is fresh with this goddamn hand shooting. You know what I'm saying? I'm talking about LeBron, still dead. He got eaten goat so no way right. But he came to the sea, turned it upside down. What happened?

Speaker 3:

A lot of beautiful things, man, lots of folks got some some well needed pub for the businesses and we got to see some folks actually a little bit rude against you know businesses.

Speaker 3:

Hope it was dark Folks hoping that he got. They got bad reviews and it's like come on, man, you know, at the end of the day, these if you put it like this, keeping it real quick if you don't like a black business and you black, half of your responsibility is to tell them that and to say what it is that they can work on. You know, instead of just saying I wish this business would just stop. That's a whole lot of work, man. They got to go through paperwork building this brick and mortar and, look, just tell them what it is that you don't like about it and what you think that they can improve. They can take it. They can take it. If they don't, they don't.

Speaker 3:

But anyway, keith Lee came through, went to the young brother ace of wings spot and he likes some, some wings. He didn't like some wings and folks went crazy and it was like listen, man, hey, I just had to tell people like, listen, don't go off the handle, because at the end of the day, we only 4% of the population. We need every single piece of good business that we got and we need to keep on building it so that way folks can continue to do it when they move here and we don't stop. One of the things that inspired me the most when it comes to this is I saw a documentary where they have folks coming across the border and it would be, you know, some Latin folks on the border with brochures telling folks who to vote for, where to go to church, where to get a job, where to send your kids to school. I feel like there's no reason that we shouldn't be able to do that when folks come here, you know, to Arizona, from where they moving from, you know what.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying so yeah, we me and me and Visions looked at your video. We watched it. You know what I'm saying. And you was quick. You got on that real quick. You wanted people to stand up, support, you know. And you also said something that was interesting to me. I know I'm not supposed to be talking longer, but you said something that was interesting. People don't understand Arizona. Sometimes people come to the city they don't understand or how it is. What did you? What did you? You know?

Speaker 3:

That it's not like where you just came from, right, like we trying to Build up. We trying to build it up, but a lie can get around the world. You know, before the truth, put the shoes on. Be careful, bro.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

If you start normalizing, talking bad, then folks just going to take that as okay. Yeah, we, that's what we do out here. I got you and that's not what we do. We build things up. You, the man, motherfucker.

Speaker 2:

Appreciate it, man, you, the motherfucking man. And now we about to play this game. All right, man, it's called Heads Up. Man, you get to choose something. Heads Up, can you come help, please? No, fuck that he getting off that phone. You just choose your category. You can go scroll down, or you can scroll left, or whatever. Them mosquitoes gnats in here, acting a fool, oh okay, oh, blockbuster movies going to probably hurt me. Let's do it, motherfucker All right man.

Speaker 2:

Two, one. Oh man, this is easy, man. It's a Disney movie, right? It involves two dogs and he was eating spaghetti. All dogs go to heaven. No, come on now, Lady in the Tramp. There it is, go ahead.

Speaker 3:

Yes, it is Damn.

Speaker 2:

I can't believe I got that oh, this movie, you're not going to get it, but we won a lot of awards. The word opposite of yes is no. We live the United States as a what country? What comes after?

Speaker 3:

the no country for old men Boy. That boy knew what.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm talking about. Oh wow, this is a serial Ice-teas light. Oh yeah, cocoa Pebbles. Yeah, this movie takes place in-. What about the movie?

Speaker 4:

after my birthday.

Speaker 2:

Hangover, hangover. Say it, hangover. What's in front of it?

Speaker 3:

The hangover.

Speaker 2:

There it is, let's do one more.

Speaker 1:

Let's do one more.

Speaker 2:

God damn it Shit.

Speaker 3:

You actually did really good on that shit. He actually did really good on that. No, y'all don't take my my plan. Okay, we all can't do trivia night nigga.

Speaker 2:

Oh shit, dude. Oh, what is oh yeah, and it's also it's also a clothing line in the last the last part of his boss. The first part is what, hugo? Oh, where did the movie the Hangover take place? Los Angeles, los Angeles. Oh, where did the movie the Hangover take place?

Speaker 3:

Las Vegas, but uh Loading in Las Vegas.

Speaker 2:

First, yeah, if you're not first, you last. And then, where did the Hangover take over? Las Vegas. Say it one more time Las Vegas.

Speaker 3:

That is shit.

Speaker 2:

All right, um shit, uh, paul, who plays for the Clippers. His first name is what? Chris Uh for the Clippers. He plays for the Clippers. Oh shit, paul, george, Okay, so, uh, then, where do animals hang out? Georgia, the Jungle Bam. That boy, good boy, you gonna do one more, you, good oh shit he did that again.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 4:

I've been told he credit me that-.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they think I was struggling, boy.

Speaker 3:

They think you know him the bad. Oh shit, I picked the wrong one on accident, but oh shit, here we go.

Speaker 2:

They gonna be like. I seen you playing that game. Oh shit, I don't even know how to do this one. I don't even know what you picked bro.

Speaker 3:

Superstar is what it is.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, you got to pass on that one, cause I asked oh man, she got, she got fucked, she, she make chicken and she said some racer shit, she white she says Paula, White, it's you close, though.

Speaker 2:

Paula Shit, oh, you close as hell. She said just raised chicken, fried chicken. Paula Dean, there it is. Wow, I didn't say it. Paula Dean, okay, oh, this is simple man. You don't say um, oh shit, uh, yeah, lady Gaga, there it is. Yeah, that was good man. You didn't even sung it and shit oh, um, oh, uh-. Harry Potter, yeah, uh Harry Potter. Now Come on Harry Potter, hogwarts with the glasses. The actors, the actors.

Speaker 1:

The actors, the white boys.

Speaker 2:

Come on man, god damn man, toby, I don't know, it's Daniel. Daniel Radcliffe, shit, yeah right, all right, man, I said she, I am Daniel Radcliffe, I'm gonna call his ass Toby. Oh shit, freshman, tell him where they can find you, your platforms, oh man.

Speaker 3:

Y'all can, uh, y'all can find me on any any uh social media under the DJ fresh maker. Uh, that's Twitter, that's YouTube, it's Instagram, it's TikTok, the DJ fresh maker. Uh, if you want to get in line with uh, the podcast or any of the apparel, just check out yo freshtv and uh, like I said, by all means, if you want to catch me in action, I'm at 1111 Friday and Saturday nights and, of course, legendary sugar jam Friday through Sunday mornings, uh, nine to three pm. Nice.

Speaker 2:

And I am Fadir shade. Uh, this is seasonable cloud. I appreciate everybody for listening. You can find me on Instagram at faddiestshade. You can find me on Facebook. I don't be on there at faddiest shade, I'm on uh Twitter. We don't call it Twitter no more, but uh we. I still call it Twitter at faddiest shade, and the same on TikTok. Um, I want to say thank you fresh for hopping on Um, amazing brother. I appreciate you, man, thanks for having me. Man Um, and I know, I know that one day man, me and you, me and you brother will come together and meet Steph Curry's the goat.

Speaker 1:

All right, ladies and gentlemen, it's been nice. It's been nice.

Speaker 2:

And I got your business accepted. Try.