Mind Over Matter: Mindset Development

Do What You Love (ft. Lil Munchy )

Deja Wallace

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In this episode, we delve into the life of Atlanta's rising music sensation, Lil Munchy. We uncover Lil Munchy's growth in the music industry, highlighting the importance of a strong support system. Discover his strategies for standing out as a rapper, and we get a glimpse into Lil Munchy's daily life and his trip to NYC.

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Speaker 1:

But I have to. I don't have no choice, cause at the end of the day, I wanna make it in this shit, in the music shit, but I can't let my team down too. They sacrifice in their time, their money, shit like that, to help the whole vision as a whole. You feel me, so it's other people that I gotta you feel me. Think about cause. Time is very valuable, so I don't want to waste nobody else time, especially if they believe in my dream.

Speaker 3:

I feel like it's glamorized a lot in rap culture to get it on your own, be self made. So I'm glad that you could see that that's just an illusion. That shit is definitely an illusion.

Speaker 1:

All that. Get it on your own, man. Hey man, if somebody wanna help you, take the help. I used to be like that. I used to be like oh no, I need to do it by myself. I don't wanna. Who is that? No, like man, I'm just different. Different now, like my mindset. Gotta change my mindset, for sure.

Speaker 3:

Everything starts in the mind first.

Speaker 4:

My mind over matter is magic. I do magic. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Welcome to Mind Over Matter baby. I'm your host, Deju Wallace, and, as you can see, I have a lovely guest with me today. I have a little munchie in the building. Try to hear me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, check my phone when I wake up. Got a missed call from my baby going straight up. I don't wanna be rude, I don't wanna lay on. Got a lot of money on me and my blitz on hair.

Speaker 3:

Place your new bro so they can't fold us. Hop out my family when we pull it up Laying on my family, I provide for the family and all my niggas who are around In the building. Thank you for joining me.

Speaker 1:

Year. I got a year too. I got a cool one. Let me hear your year, year.

Speaker 3:

Where are you from?

Speaker 1:

I'm from Atlanta, Georgia.

Speaker 3:

Okay, okay, yeah, I could tell that year is not really like the authentic year.

Speaker 1:

No, she's the head on my ear. That's crazy.

Speaker 3:

How was your stay here so far?

Speaker 1:

My stay in New York has been amazing. I love New York when it's warm. Like I hate the cold so much, like I lived in Ohio for one year it was just like when it's cold I can't take it. But when it's warm, yeah, like when it's warm out here it's a vibe, 90 degrees. So see, like in Atlanta, like that's not really nothing, like we get that every day, especially during the summer, like it'd be crazy hot. So like this was cool. I love New York when it's warm.

Speaker 3:

I feel like New York hot is different, though it'd just be so hot and It'd be humid.

Speaker 1:

It was like humid for sure. Like it's humid, you just gotta stay cool.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, I see you staying cool. Then the ice out with me, yeah you know I like the fit too.

Speaker 1:

Thank you, thank you, shit on records.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah. So Lil Munchy, let's talk about that. Why Lil Munchy?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, my family gave me that name like pezzie. Oh, before Ice Vise. Yeah, before Ice Vise was born. She gave me that name before I was born, like in my mama's life. She said I was in my mama's stomach, like, and I guess I was like sucking my thumb all the time and stuff, so she just named me Munchy, like what.

Speaker 3:

Lil Munch. So, it just stuck, did you eat a lot?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so I was a little fat baby.

Speaker 3:

Okay, that's probably why, munchy, what even got you into the music?

Speaker 1:

What got me into the music? I actually been doing music for a long time, Like I started, I don't know, I just like rapping. My cousin was rapping and I, just when I was younger, I wanted to be like my big cousin. So like when I got the chance to start rapping, I just started rapping. But recently I just took it serious, probably like two, three years ago. I had a real support system behind me. My brother recently just died, you feel me.

Speaker 1:

So I feel like we just started taking it a hell of serious. So I just got something to, not something to prove, but like I just got people that I want to do it for, Like a higher purpose.

Speaker 3:

Okay, so two, three years ago. Are you progressing at the pace you want to be?

Speaker 1:

So I don't want to say like there is like a pace that I want to progress at, cause you know, of course everybody wanted this shit to happen overnight. But I'm just, I'm grateful that I'm not in the same place that I started. Like my manager tell me all the time like bro, don't trip, bro, just keep doing what you're doing, like cause I'd be tripping like damn bro, I'm supposed to be like right here, but like they just be reassuring me like don't trip, but it's good, like we moving to show. So yeah, I would say then I am moving at the pace that I would want to move at.

Speaker 3:

You know that's good. A lot of people, especially in this generation, they feel like, like you said, everything has to happen overnight. But it's really.

Speaker 1:

I like the grind, like. I'm addicted to the grind Like I'm starting to really like become addicted to the work, like just work work, work, work, work, work. That's all I want to do.

Speaker 3:

Who inspires you musically?

Speaker 1:

Who inspires me musically, like as far as, like artists, or like.

Speaker 3:

Like that's the goat to you and that's your go-to artist.

Speaker 1:

Who's my go-to artist? Man? That's crazy. I don't have a goat artist a go-to artist. The people that inspire me like are my friends in the music, like who doing it too? So like Yo Dogg Serf got, like Tony Snow or another name, two feet Bino, like it's like that, like they inspire me for it, because I'm seeing they come up like from the beginning and just saying like I already back to do the shit too and they be telling me all the time like bro, you got it.

Speaker 3:

And you say you have like that's like your support system, right there, right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like my team, other artists, like my family, like they on board with it too. So, like you know, that'd be a thing with artists too, like sometimes they own mama don't even listen to that music, like my mama tuned in with my shit.

Speaker 3:

So oh, that's fire I fuck with it.

Speaker 1:

Like I forgot the support for real.

Speaker 3:

I feel like they say like when you have that support you go way further, but when you do it alone you go faster.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it affects. So that's cool, and when everybody like we all working towards the same shit.

Speaker 3:

So yeah, did you ever like picture this for yourself?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I did. I always knew like we would be. We're going to be big, like I just always know, like as long as we just keep working and never stop, like you can never lose, like so that's the way anything in life, so not tripping.

Speaker 3:

What's like the most, the best part about your job Like, what do you enjoy most about creative music?

Speaker 1:

What's the thing that I love? I think my favorite part about doing music probably gotta be performing. I love performing. The shit is fun as hell, especially when it's a lit crowd and they're interacting with you and y'all just lit together. That's probably the funnest part. That ain't actually recording creating the song. Every time I record I be like damn, I'll make some hard shit. And they're like damn, I don't know why I don't make something better than what I just did and go back and I make something harder than that. So it's just like damn, I'm only gonna keep getting better and better with this shit. So that's probably what I like to, and I like seeing the actual process, seeing the results Well, not the results, but seeing the motion the progress yeah.

Speaker 1:

I like looking back from what we came from.

Speaker 3:

I know social media. Everywhere you look, I feel like everybody's a rapper right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 3:

Especially in the black community. Yeah, they're a ballplayer, a rapper.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so if we need more doctors and lawyers and shit like that.

Speaker 3:

How do you stand out from that? It's a lot of noise out there, especially on social media.

Speaker 1:

I like to say that in order for me to stand out, I gotta do a lot. So, as far as the music, first off, I feel like I'm good with painting the picture, storytelling, but I understand how important it is to make a good song at the same time. So I won't just have you trying to figure out what I'm saying, I'm gonna have you singing along too. It's gonna be catchy. You wanna sing to it too. It's gonna be a vibe at the same time, but it's gonna still be something that you correlate to and something that you feel.

Speaker 3:

Like you're intentional.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you feel me. Another thing I feel like a lot of artists they don't like working with artists. So I feel like another thing that sets me apart is I like to collaborate with all the new artists, all the upcoming artists. I like to work together. There's enough money out here for everybody. It shouldn't be a competition. I feel like it should be a community. It should be some sort of camaraderie. We should be together in this shit.

Speaker 1:

I work with everybody. I ain't too big for nobody. I talk to everybody. I respond. If people follow my music, I tell them thank you. I appreciate them for listening, for going to watch. All that shit means so much to me. I stay humble too. It's a big thing for me.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, because I feel like, especially a lot of the younger kids getting into the music game, they feel like they gotta go for the gunner, they gotta go for the straight headshot, you know like that straight big top dog. When I feel like you could just go talk to your men is that, you know, as a producer, work on something with them. Make a project with them. You don't have to just go straight for the big dog because it's really unrealistic. It's delusional in my eyes. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And luckily for me, like all my homies like, especially like my producers, like my producer homies, like they the best producers in my city, so like I got that luxury, like that, and I'm blessed for that, like to be able to work with them, Mm-hmm.

Speaker 3:

And have that relationship. That's another thing too.

Speaker 1:

Like when I first started doing this shit, I didn't have no beats, so I started producing and then I went back Like fuck, it's hard being an artist and a lot of artists be telling me like damn bro, like I can't, I don't got no beats, I don't got no beats. I remember I didn't have no beats. Like shit, funny as hell. Like now I have too many beats to rap on.

Speaker 3:

Inspire. How do you stay consistent? Because I know that is it like just natural to you. It doesn't even feel like work at this point.

Speaker 1:

Um, yeah, like, if you love it, it's not gonna feel like work. Of course that sounds cliche, but it's true. So, like sometimes I'll be slipping up Like, but that's that's why it's important to have a team. Like they be on my ass. Like bro, you ain't recorded in two days. Like you tripping Like, so like I have to, I don't have no choice. Like because, at the end of the day, like I want to make it in this shit, in the like music shit, but like I can't let my team down too. Like they sacrifice in their time, their money, shit like that, to help the whole vision as a whole. Like you feel me, so it's other people that I gotta you feel me Like think about, because time is time is very valuable. So I don't want to waste nobody else's time, especially if they believe in my dream, like I don't want to waste my time.

Speaker 3:

I don't want to waste my time. I feel like it's glamorized a lot in rap culture to get it on your own, be self-made. So I'm glad that you could see that that's just an illusion. Nobody did it by themselves. That's definitely an illusion.

Speaker 1:

All that. Get it on your own. Hey man, if somebody want to help you, take the help. I used to be like that. I used to be like oh no, I need to do it by myself. I don't want to. Who is that? I know, I'm just a different, different now, like my mindset. You got to change your mindset, for sure Everything starts in the mind first.

Speaker 3:

How do you nurture your ideas? When I say that, I mean at times, not everybody's going to like what you have. So how do you like stay Like, believe in yourself at the end of the day, no matter what anybody else is saying?

Speaker 1:

At the end of the day, when I go in the studio and I come out if I like this song or if I like what I made, I could care less Like what anybody else say, like okay, of course I make music for the people, for the consumer and the people that support me. So cool, I care about their feelings. But also, this is what I love to do, so I'm just expressing myself. So, really, I'm just getting out how I feel at the end of the day, so it really doesn't matter.

Speaker 3:

What's your target audience Like? Who is listening to Lil Munchy right now?

Speaker 1:

The females.

Speaker 3:

I love the females.

Speaker 1:

I'm a lover boy at heart, so that is my target audience. I felt with the dudes too. I felt with the niggas, but you know.

Speaker 3:

You see the song that I listened to. You should have showed me the other song.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I definitely showed you some shit after this so you can see like what I'm really, what I really be on. So we just dropped yesterday.

Speaker 3:

Okay. Put a time square there Is it like melodic.

Speaker 1:

Like yeah, for sure, it's like melodic, just a vibe, like I'm just you know it's.

Speaker 3:

Talk about your new project now.

Speaker 1:

So we just dropped the Deluxe Academic Probation Deluxe Project. I just added four new songs on there. Since it was doing well, we decided to drop a Deluxe About a video. Yeah, video, same day, most of it produced by track team Hardest producers in the land.

Speaker 3:

No, that was a nice video. Like I'm into video editing and I just love like the vibrant colors and stuff.

Speaker 1:

Like it was a vibe, so I appreciate it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, what specific song is your favorite song or not?

Speaker 1:

My favorite song on the project probably has to be provide. It's a tie between provide and ride slow. Provide it's like a family oriented song, just like what I do it for, what I'm going so hard for you know and just just to take care of my folks. Ride slow is more like a song for the females, just some vibe shit. Like I'll be telling all the bros like, just play this for your girl, it's going to be lit.

Speaker 3:

So like what's the feedback you get him from it so far?

Speaker 1:

I was getting some great feedback. Like I just actually posted, repost something on Instagram the other day. Somebody just hit me up Just telling me like, bro, I just listened to it from top to bottom, bro, I love the project. Like it's a really great body of work. So like I really appreciate that too. Like somebody took their time to listen to the whole project from beginning to end. Like I feel with that, because I really put, we really put it together, like for that, so I appreciate it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's always good hearing like feedback from other people that really like resonate with it and they get it. You know effects. This is confirmation. What specific moment outside of that moment, of course has someone like reacted to your music deeply and you could still remember it like and it has impacted you till today?

Speaker 1:

I don't know. It's a lot like when it's like when my friends first start singing my songs like word for word and then like random people singing it word for word, I'm like damn, I might not be ready for fans yet. Like this is kind of crazy, Like it's kind of humbling. So I asked the bros like how they embrace it like like fans and like people who are hella supportive, because sometimes it's weird Like some people don't know how to take like compliments and like take like major support. Like it's kind of like. I don't want to say it's cringy, but like it's like damn, like they really fucked with my shit.

Speaker 1:

Like I don't want to be like weird and make it seem like I'm being rude or nothing like damn I really. Sometimes it's like hard to react to it. It's like, but I really fuck, I really love that shit. Sometimes I'm just shy.

Speaker 3:

No, I get it, I get it. I get it. No, I get that from you. I feel like you just like reserved to yourself. So when people be like or like one of the girls, like, no, won't you love, won't you?

Speaker 1:

I don't like, oh chill, yeah, it'd be funny, it'd be funny, it'd be funny.

Speaker 3:

Who's like your dream collab that you would.

Speaker 1:

My dream collab. Yeah, that's crazy, I probably want to do. I probably want to do a song with a sake. We just went to the sake concert oh, that's obvious. When was that shit? Saturday, that shit was so fire Like I'm like, yeah, this is the type of shit, this is the type of songs that I would be writing.

Speaker 3:

Are you not Nigerian?

Speaker 1:

No, I'm not Nigerian. I like half the words. I don't even know what he's saying, but like that shit is so hard, that shit is a. That's what I was telling Karan, my manager, the other day. We like, bro, I don't even know what this nigga is saying.

Speaker 3:

That's how you know, this shit is good Because it just feels so good.

Speaker 1:

But even just the concert, I'm like, this shit is a vibe, this is lit.

Speaker 3:

So you be rubbing shoulders with the celebrities and whatnot. What's here Like what's here? What do you realize is the biggest misconception people have about celebrities after, like you know, seeing them and probably even like? In the same room with them.

Speaker 1:

The biggest misconception that a lot of people have about celebrities is that they think all celebrities got money and that's just not true. I learned that too. Like, and it depends on what you view as a celebrity. Like, and it depends on what you think money is, Because a lot of people think a lot of people think a lot of money is a lot of money, but it ain't a lot of money. No, I got that but a lot of people not gonna get that.

Speaker 3:

If you get it, you get it.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, like I say, it's just all in your mind, I say I don't know Because it got.

Speaker 3:

you have your assets and then you have, like, your physical money and it's a lot that goes into it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so a lot of people like see, like Instagram, and you know it's just a highlight real, so People like you can make it look real good.

Speaker 3:

How you manage your Instagram right now, cuz it could be very distracting, but it could be very helpful business wise.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, how do you?

Speaker 3:

manage that. What's the balance for you?

Speaker 1:

Um, as far as Instagram, I try to like like my team they be on my ass about posting, so like I got a post content like a lot. But as far as like scrolling and shit, I don't know like it might get a few hours out the day, but I just don't follow hella people, so why you just tired of seeing certain stuff. Yeah, like I'm not even, like I'm just trying to be focused, like Just focused on the music and putting out the content like I don't need to be.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I get it, I get it.

Speaker 1:

See, I'm scrolling right now.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I know that's, I even asked that. Yeah, it should look like it's popping. So let's see like outside of the music, right, what? What is like a day in the life for you?

Speaker 1:

a day in the life I was?

Speaker 3:

is it nothing?

Speaker 1:

outside of music, like that's all you right now. So like I'll be trying to say like every day I got to do music, music, music. But like you gotta have the like, the life balance to like you have to have some sort of balance, cuz it's not you just gonna burn out. So like what's like a every day? I Used to be like when I was younger. I used to just be freestyle and like, just wake up, do anything. But now I kind of have like a like a Set routine, routine. So you know, wake up, basics, brush my teeth, get dressed Cool, leave, go to the office, get on the computer. Maybe I do do some work. Actually, I look up Like I'll be on YouTube Academy like look enough videos and shit I'm. I don't know why I do that. I might be looking at some like how to do a cake flip weird shit. Like I just be looking at richie like, or like some productive shit like yeah.

Speaker 1:

Then, cool, leave, get some food, smoke, yes, studio, yeah. It's pretty boring, actually the same shit Everyday, but it works for you, yeah that's all that matters for sure. Shoot some content, mm-hmm, post it. Yeah, same shit every day. Damn life is born as a Up-and-coming artist, bro. It's more so that you just discipline.

Speaker 3:

It don't gotta be like it's just discipline. I guess you could call it that. You got to sacrifice that for you know.

Speaker 1:

Cuz like. Every day I have to record.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Like he don't take no exceptions.

Speaker 3:

You've been recording out here in New York.

Speaker 1:

I haven't recorded since I've been out here. I recorded the last time I came here. Okay, I'm probably gonna get in the studio tonight.

Speaker 3:

Yes, a lot going on Musically in New York. Oh, you already know how that goes. Yeah, how do you feel about this Atlanta scene right now? The rap hip-hop.

Speaker 1:

How do I feel about that Lennon scene? Oh, I mean, I feel like the Atlanta scene always will be like I'm gonna say it's gonna always be like the top scene, but I feel like it's always gonna be like one of the major Players, like in the hip-hop Culture like. I feel like a lot of people get the influence from the Atlanta scene. So I don't know but me. As far as me, like, I'm definitely branching out, though, so I'm getting out of the city to come to like New York for me, I'm Miami.

Speaker 3:

How is the energy different from Atlanta, in New York, from what you've seen so far?

Speaker 1:

Oh no, I like the energy in both places. I feel like in New York people are more open to New shit, like to newer artists, then in Atlanta, like in Atlanta, like people think it's easy to just come up in Atlanta. But I don't know, like it's not like, unless you, just for me, feel like it's easier to everybody say this is easier to go to another city and get more love. But like, I got love in my city so I'm thankful for that.

Speaker 1:

But I don't know, in New York it's. It's been a lot of love to like, like people, just they cool as fuck.

Speaker 3:

Especially when you not from here, like you said before, like they gonna show you that energy.

Speaker 1:

Thanks. Like everybody wanted to show like what's good, like it's what you need to do. You need to go here like what you do, fuck with it.

Speaker 3:

You plan to come fashion week. You knew it was good, cuz that's like the perfect time to come.

Speaker 1:

I did not know, this was fashion.

Speaker 3:

We're not gonna lie. Yeah, damn, that's just alignment right there. Because, yeah, facts, this is the perfect time. So much is going on right now.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, this had a billboard up yesterday. She was cool.

Speaker 3:

You say you seen a billboard.

Speaker 1:

I had a billboard up in Times Square.

Speaker 3:

What that's fire. What for the video that is hard, shout out to your manager or whoever got that done, cuz that's not easy, damn. How did I feel?

Speaker 1:

that was cool. I'm not a lot like a billboard in Times Square. It's crazy. I tell my mama like, yeah, man, this is crazy.

Speaker 3:

I would have been in now in front of that, like that's me, yeah, I.

Speaker 1:

Keep it cool.

Speaker 3:

I was just smug and a little bit if here's like a question I got from Twitter If you could step into the shoes of any fictional character for a day and create a song for them About their life or whatever, what song would it be, and like which character?

Speaker 1:

I would probably step into Huey from the Bullen dog.

Speaker 3:

I was watching that. I watched that every night.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy, I would definitely step in the hidden. It would and do. It got to be like one of my songs.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

What song would I make for this nigga? I'll probably make when you see all my projects. I'll probably do. I'll probably do gangster gangster.

Speaker 3:

All right, that's it. Yeah, come on, that fits it properly. Yeah, man. So how long, how much? How long are you gonna be in? How much longer you gonna be in New York?

Speaker 1:

I'll probably be in New York till Tuesday, do some more work out here, then go back home, get back to it, but I'm definitely planning on coming back to New York. I don't know. I love New York. I might get a little spot out here, you know, for when it gets warm, mm-hmm, not the cold. I'm not gonna be out here when it's cold.

Speaker 3:

You can't avoid the cold, you know you don't feel low. You never know here, you never know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like even the last time I came and it was warm, it was still cold. At the same time. I'm like nah bro.

Speaker 3:

It's confusing as hell. Like it waited until the last week of summer to start being summer. Yeah, Is there anything? Any last words you want to say?

Speaker 1:

You can follow me at all socials. Lil Munchy Baby L-I-L-M-U-N-C-H-Y Baby. New Project Out Academic Probation, the Deluxe, this Drop all DSPs. Whatever Spotify Album, music, go fuck with it.

Speaker 3:

Go fuck with it, tap in. I want you to give like one word of inspiration to somebody who's hesitant about starting their journey as a rapper.

Speaker 1:

The craziest thing like and you kind of just said it like it's nothing to it, but to do it. If you don't know what to do, just start figure everything out. Else out later, like you don't need to get everything that you need for you to start, just start that shit. Get the pieces that you missing as you go along.

Speaker 3:

I love that. Thank you so much, lil Munchy, for joining me today.

Speaker 3:

Thank you it was a good episode. We reached the end of another episode. If you listen to the end, I appreciate you Shout out to you. You're real, you're loyal, I appreciate you like for real. You listen to the end like you really listen to the end. That's crazy, like I really tapped in. Make sure you follow everything Lil Munchy tapped in with him Link in the description below and have a wonderful rest of your day. Tell a friend to tell a friend to tell a friend. Mother, that is mind over matter. Baby, yeah, yeah, let's come.

Speaker 1:

Come. Thank you, let's see. Let me roll up again.

Speaker 3:

I smelled it from when I stepped out the back and the back and all over.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we had to fly in with our own shit. It's a tricky out here in New York.

Speaker 2:

Let me go on that.

Speaker 3:

JFK, don't be scaring you, okay.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so you can see that Family shit so you can see, yeah, yeah. I need to go to silly.

Speaker 2:

Where's direction I want.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, no, this is it, yeah, nah, I think he's just singing yet? Oh no, it's not, it's just the same color grading. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm not sure they look like that.

Speaker 3:

That's good consistency. Yeah, yes, you kid Nah oh.

Speaker 1:

I ain't got no kids I love this.

Speaker 2:

I love this, I love this.

Speaker 3:

Oh, this make you wow. I don't know what I'm eating from. Don't get on that dude.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I know he's picked up at Amsterdam, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm a big fan.

Speaker 1:

OK, one more for each live.

Speaker 3:

Why is it so? So short, though it feels like it need to be longer, so this is it is longer.

Speaker 1:

This is just a visualizing.

Speaker 3:

Oh, so it's just like, you see what I mean. Oh, ok, ok, yeah, I knew like it.

Speaker 1:

It's something what's up.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

That's it. She said something like where the reds yeah, they definitely longer.

Speaker 2:

If you're a college student, keep watching. One of my least favorite things about writing papers in college was remembering the correct format.

Speaker 1:

I just do the short videos for Instagram. That's how I finesse them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

OK, oh, oh, hey, oh, hey, what's?

Speaker 1:

up OK.

Speaker 3:

Nice to finally meet you, I know Hi. Oh, this is so cool.

Speaker 2:

Hello, hi, hello.

Speaker 4:

Thank you, thank you, I'm.

Speaker 2:

Tyler, nice to meet you. Deja, deja, yeah, bye. You're doing good, I'm ready already. It's awesome. Bring me down. Yeah right, the meantime is on. How do you do?

Speaker 4:

this, is that what you are?

Speaker 2:

doing Humoine. Yeah, yep, the manager sitting our producing session. Like I said, I don't know if he was shy or he just calm.

Speaker 3:

He was a calm person.

Speaker 2:

He was a calm person. He was a calm person.

Speaker 3:

He was a calm person.

Speaker 1:

I got to thank the podcast.

Speaker 3:

Thank you.

Speaker 2:

Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you?

Speaker 3:

How often do you do the podcast? Once a week, yeah, I have some good stuff for you.

Speaker 2:

I want to show you the interview. You sure you don't want to clip it?

Speaker 3:

What?