The REALationship Method

How A Dishwasher Became a Headliner, Social Media Resets, & Boundaries with Clout-Chasers w/ KittyPine

Chris Lomboy Season 4 Episode 87

Send us a text

A single compliment in a dish pit changed everything. Kitty Pine walked us through the moment a chef called them the “best dishwasher” he’d ever seen—and how that flipped a switch from surviving to building a life in comedy. What followed wasn’t a straight shot to the spotlight, but a messy, hilarious path across Hawaii, Colorado, and Vegas, with brutal early bombs, a sudden first win, and the slow, stubborn craft of shaping ten minutes that work anywhere.

We dig into how “Kitty Pineapple” was born: a radio call-in bit that turned into a persona made of people Kitty loves—their fearlessness, logic, and style—stitched into something authentic. We talk about writing jokes that land with strangers on the mainland, then glide at home in Honolulu; we talk about why some Vegas rooms feel cold and why Hawaii feels like a hug. There’s a tender turn when Kitty recalls parents seeing the show for the first time in years, not fully getting the material but bursting with pride, and a random Uber clip of Dad bragging that still hits like a standing ovation.

The conversation goes deeper: boundaries with clout-chasers, listening to intuition, and moments where Spirit seemed to nudge Kitty away from danger. We unpack bodybuilding years, enhancements, and how hormone shifts unexpectedly clarified identity. The runway heels, the short dresses, the purple hair—it’s not a gimmick, it’s alignment. And there’s momentum beyond stand-up: a new romantic comedy series, Made to Shine, where Kitty plays a transgender comedic influencer, debuting on Amazon and Viva One.

If you’re chasing a reinvention, wrestling with family acceptance, or trying to write material that wins over a room that doesn’t know you yet, this one’s for you. Hit play, then share your turning point and the persona you had to build to become yourself. If you’re new here, follow and subscribe, drop a review to help others find the show, and send this to a friend who needs a nudge toward their next chapter.

• why asking for a yes still matters
• a dish pit compliment as a turning point
• early bombs, first wins, and open mic lessons
• inventing “Kitty Pineapple” from people we love
• social media resets versus keeping memories
• sensing energy, trusting Spirit, and boundaries
• moving from Hawaii to Colorado to Vegas for love and stage time
• writing material that works on the mainland and at home
• handling stares, kid questions, and staying gracious
• family acceptance, tradition, and showing up
• fashion, heels, confidence, and stage presence
• quitting competition cuts while keeping healthy training
• hormone impacts, embracing change, and identity
• new acting role: Made to Shine on Amazon and Viva One

SPEAKER_01:

Welcome back to another episode of the Relationship Method podcast. It's your boy Chris. Today I got a very special guest. I got a comedian, Hometow hero, Kitty Pine, up in this hoe. Aloha, kitty man, I do appreciate you for coming on. Yeah, thanks for having me. Hey, no, I acknowledge your uh I acknowledge. Before we um s get going, how did I get the yes from you to come on, you know, this little this little pod?

SPEAKER_03:

Uh you know.

SPEAKER_01:

Um sorry. Uh good. Is that your vibe uh is that your phone vibrating on your right booty cheek? Um, how did you get the yes?

SPEAKER_05:

Well you asked.

SPEAKER_01:

For real? Yeah, you can't. Is it that easy for like someone to, you know, like come on? Because I like I'm I'm an unknown still, right? So it's like it could be very intimidating to ask someone, like Yeah, yeah. Yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

Well, I guess what it what I what it was for me, I I kind of looked, I looked at your podcast, uh, the people you've worked with, spoken to, the production quality, and I'm like, alright, cool, let's do it. Man, short and straight to the frickin' point.

SPEAKER_01:

Hell yeah. How's your day today going?

SPEAKER_03:

So far, I am uh pretty good. I just uh had my my musubi and I'm sad for the rest of the day.

SPEAKER_01:

It's pronounced musubi. Musubi. I've been jacking that up the entire time. Musubi. No. Yeah, that's why people be looking at me all squared eye and cockeyed. No. Okay, musubi.

SPEAKER_03:

Exactly. Musubi. You look like you're from here. And for you to say that is like betrayal.

SPEAKER_01:

All the islands. Funny story, the first time I got here, right? Because I I've had these tattoos before, yeah, before Island, right? People would speak to me and I'm like, oh shit, what am I supposed to say back? So my natural instinct is, could you repeat that please? So they would have to say three times. Luckily for me, like I know a little bit of Tagalog and Ilocano to get me by with the aunties. Yeah. But when it came to the locals when I first got here, it was a really hard transition. Because especially when they're when they're moch. Because it's fast and it's I'm like, oh my god, I'm finna die here. You know. On Reverend, I'm gonna, oh god, they're gonna finna get me. But your day was going good so far. Let me tell you about my morning. I have a TV. One of my homeboys gave me this TV a while back. Pretty big TV. It's a smart TV. I'm used to putting cable, the cable line into the back of the TV, right? This is a so this is all we're Wi-Fi. And now and again, it would have to, there was an option where I have to like factory reset. And I'm like, oh my gosh, because my wife, she's the one that's putting all the passwords in, doing that. So it was my turn to do it today, because my wife had to go to work. And let me tell you, it took me 40 some odd minutes to get all these. It's a droid, by the way. It's an Android TV, and I had to get all these apps back on the TV. I had to put these passwords back in all to these apps, you know, like the streaming apps. Yeah. And that took so long. Has that ever happened to you? To where you had to like, oh my god, what is my password? Like, I don't even know.

SPEAKER_03:

Um, I I luckily for me, I like to store my passwords in a in a in a in one of my uh locked in away notebooks. And one of the cool parts I just learned just now when it comes to logging into the apps and on on your streaming devices, uh, you can just scan a QR code. As long as you're logged in on your phone, you're set. You don't have to do a lot of password stuff.

SPEAKER_01:

Ooh, rebut to that. Because I did that right. But on some of the apps, it was under my wife's name. Oh, okay. So it was like more of damn, I need to bother her to get these passwords. Because I know I know her email by heart. Yeah. But the passwords, it's it's very similar to the passwords that we use, but I would add in like a zero instead of a O, or an E, or a three instead of an E, just to make it difficult to like get passwords stolen or whatnot. But even with that, it took me 40 some odd minutes. I feel like a joke when it comes to um, I guess, electronics like that.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, well, I'm the person that's hot right now. Okay, let's get into it. This is tech support 101. Oh, snap! Okay, okay. No, I have nothing for that.

SPEAKER_00:

It's like, hell no.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, man. And then you and I was talking earlier. And uh, you a native, right? You born and raised here. Yeah. What why why the move? What made you move from the island? Because it's beautiful. Like people would always ask, dude, you're from Hawaii. Why would you move? Like, what's the move from here to LV, Las Vegas?

SPEAKER_03:

Well, I um I got into a relationship uh 20 years ago, almost like back in 2007. Uh I got a little bit more serious in 2010. Um, and then so I decided we decided to live together in Colorado Springs. Uh like the state, Colorado? The state, yeah. Lived there for for like two years, because that's where she was stationed.

SPEAKER_01:

Military. Okay, because I was finna say, isn't Colorado not to not not not to like cut you off, but isn't Colorado Colorado majority white? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. All right. Lots of it.

SPEAKER_03:

A lot of white.

SPEAKER_00:

A Caucasian type.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. And um, and then so like uh after that, um, she uh she had to deploy, so I ended up moving in with her uh parents in Vegas. And that's from Colorado to Vegas. Colorado to Vegas, yeah. Oh and one uh one thing about Colorado, bro, uh like what I wanna wanted it was because of Colorado that pushed me to become who I am. Like I'm such an ass, for real? Yeah, yeah. Okay, I was working it was my it was my I was working at a at a zoo as a dishwasher, bus boy.

SPEAKER_01:

Like a zoo restaurant? Yeah, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay.

SPEAKER_03:

And I was a bus boy and and and a dishwasher. And I just got on tour, just come back from a tour, like five cities, Nebraska, South Dakota, a couple other places. Came back feeling like I was on top of the world, like wow, I went on a tour. It was awesome. And I had to go back to my job washing dishes, right? And uh that that alone was uh was hard to face, but one of the chefs came to the dish pit where I was working, and he was like, Man, you're one of the best dishwashers I've ever seen. And I was like, Tears came down my face. I was like, this is not my life.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, so that's that's what that was like your that that breaking point. Okay.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. That was that's what pushed me.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh damn. For for a that's like super shit, because like for an average motherfucker, I'd be like, God damn, right, I'm taking pride in this dishwashing shit. You know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_03:

And he meant well, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

But because he said that you're like, dude, I'm not this is not my end state, my end goal. So that was oh snap. So prior to Colorado, you're already like doing the whole stand-up comedian thing.

SPEAKER_03:

I believe I was at least five to six years in.

SPEAKER_01:

For real? Okay.

unknown:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

And then so you started on the island as a uh comedian? How was that like? Like, if you don't mind me asking, like the whole, you know, being a rook, like an amateur, to uh, you know, go moving to Colorado and like damn, I'm getting like these five, six gigs. Like, how was that? How's like the beginning of it before you dipped out?

SPEAKER_03:

Um, working as a comedian in Hawaii. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Like in the like the very beginning. I'm talking about like ground zero as you you got up there like the very first time. Uh yeah, it was uh December December 8th, 2005.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, she got she got the date, y'all. She got the date. I remember my comedy birthday. I turned 20 this year. Oh, snap, okay. Hey, happy.

SPEAKER_01:

Happy comedian birthday. I don't even know if that's a thing, but hey. Send them the flowers, y'all.

SPEAKER_03:

It's just something we all hold to ourselves. Yeah. But like, um, what um I showed up and it was just it was just something that I've I was I was watching the audience and I was watching the comedians. I was like, oh wow, that was not good.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, of course, like you're gonna bomb, right? Yeah. So you bombed your first time, or was it like you you got a few channels?

SPEAKER_03:

I bombed. I had notes too. I don't know how you can bomb. Uh-huh. I guess the jokes was bad. So I had notes and then I threw the notes away because it was distracting me. And then I was like, you know what? I needed the notes. So I had notes on my fingers. Uh-huh. Uh, and then um, yeah, and I still bombed. It was it was not good. But the following week I came back, did something different, and it was a competition. I ended up winning the competition, and this is it. This is this is what I'm doing. Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, that's what's up. So when you bombed, do you remember your the joke that you bombed on? Or was it just your entire set was just the whole set?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah really, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Not even the folks that did you invite your friends, or do you you just wanted no bias? You just wanted to just go out there.

SPEAKER_03:

No, I told friends.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, okay. Did they show up and everything? Showed up. You thought your shit was funny or not? Uh and y'all suck.

SPEAKER_03:

You know, and then they had those, you did your thing.

SPEAKER_00:

Respect for being up there, man. Respect. You won't see me up there. Shit.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. The best one I got was like, no one could have done that the way you did. Oh, was it so was this down like at Waikiki too as well? No, this was at the Dixie Grill in IEA. Uh, it was a place called Sharky's Comedy Club.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh-huh.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, and it was right above Dixie Grill. So, yeah. Oh, it was just one comedy room every week. Uh-huh. And um, that's all I had at the time.

SPEAKER_01:

When you were uh when you first came out um doing comedy, were you already Kitty Pine?

SPEAKER_02:

No.

SPEAKER_01:

No?

SPEAKER_02:

No.

SPEAKER_01:

When did Kitty Pine like emerged? Or when did you start introducing Kitty Pine to like the comedy world?

SPEAKER_03:

Um, well, Kitty Pine started off as a uh as a radio personality character. Oh, shut up. You're on radio too. This was in San Diego. Uh my friend uh had a rad online radio station called the Sandwich Island Network, and he was like, hey, can you call in as a regular guest? And I was like, okay, but I might be on Mahu. You know, if what Mahu is, yeah. Like feminine.

SPEAKER_01:

Feminine. Mahu means feminine for y'all that don't know what it means. Yeah, so feminine.

SPEAKER_03:

And then he was like, okay, and so I I I call in. I didn't I didn't have a name yet. Like, hey, who are we talking to? How's it? And my friend, her name was Kitty. Uh she was listening on the other end. I told her, listen, because it's gonna be fun. Uh so I was like, my name is Kitty. And and uh because I'm thinking to myself, I'm never gonna use this name ever again. And then you're like, What's your what's what's should Kitty who? Like, well, okay, I'm from Hawaii. Pineapple. Kitty pineapple. And I was like, oh, okay. Uh yeah, my friend hates me uh today. Because she she didn't think it would um uh come to this point. Yeah. So sorry, kitty. Love you. Let's be friends again.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, you're not friends anymore?

unknown:

No.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, we'll get into that shit. Kitty, you done fucked up. But alright, so you cut off when did you cut off the pine apple? The apple part from pineapple?

SPEAKER_03:

Um, I only cut off on on on Instagram I only cut off the apple because kitty pineapple was taken. Shut your ass, real? Yeah, yeah. Oh, okay. I don't know who took it, but they are they're an inactive um account now.

SPEAKER_01:

So it's just kitty pine. Uh-huh. Oh, let me ask you this then, with the inactive accounts, it just jogged something. Why are people right now like deleting, going inactive, then going back on active, deleting a lot of photos to where it's only zero. Why do you think people do that?

SPEAKER_03:

I think some people just need a reset on their life. Uh-huh. Maybe they had they they lost they they had a fallout with a friend or a relationship, and like, alright, you know what? That makes lots of sense. Erase that chapter of my life.

SPEAKER_01:

Really? Oh. So, like, for me, the way the way I think, fucking demented old Chris here over here. I think it's just uh why why delete those pictures? Like, I can understand if it's like traumatic or whatever, but I mean, if you delete those pictures, those pictures are like gone forever. Like when you're like 80 or 90, you wouldn't want to look back and be like, look at this one. I remember this. I was kind of a dickweed. Or, you know what, she was a jerk, but hot damn, I had the funnest times. I mean, that's what I would be thinking. Yeah. Yeah. Cause like the whole deactivating or like going on ghosts from Instagram, I understand the whole reset part, right? But what's so hard of moving the app into like a folder to where it's just not there? Cause I've done that before. Like when I wanted to not even go off of social media, but like I needed a break, all my apps, like all my social media apps are in the folder and I just put it to where like I can't, like, I don't I don't tend to swipe that way, you know, because everything's on that first, you know, that first screen, right? Yeah, yeah. So yeah, that's how I do it. But I guess people do it differently. Are you that are you that type of way too?

SPEAKER_03:

Like, are you gonna be deleting or do you just put it aside and uh yeah, I I would love to delete the people that have wronged me, but I don't have time. And there's so much content that I've done with people that have um, you know, that I'm no longer in contact with. But but maybe, maybe years down the line I'll be able to look back at that and laugh.

SPEAKER_01:

So no, I don't, I don't want to delete. Hey, good for you, because I'm not I'm not that type of way at all.

SPEAKER_03:

Initially, though, that's the first gut feeling.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, yeah, definitely.

SPEAKER_03:

Fuck all you guys, you know? Uh-huh. And then um, and then when you cool off, it's just oh okay. I'm cool now.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, because it it's it's weird because us humans, we really act off emotion. Yeah. But then after, I'm gonna say, I don't know for how it is for a lot of people, but statistics show that after like the two to four days after, that's when you become logical again. Like everything has settled, the smoke has settled, or whatever. But it depends on how severe the falling out was, I guess. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Oh man. And then um with kitty, is it just like y'all just lost in contact, or is it just one of those things where it's just you y'all just had to separate and just do your own do your own thing without even getting into it though?

SPEAKER_03:

I I don't I didn't even know that she was that much angry at me. She just kind of stepped away and dipped. Um, but like to me, she uh you know, like Kitty Pineapple. Like the way it was cr I was this was created was I took the best parts of the people I love and became that. Like Kitty my friend liked to have like blue hair or black or something pink, and uh that was the only thing that like came with it. But the persona came from another friend of mine who uh was very like like very moch, very um, very um um standoffish, not standoffish, but like in your face, kinda like what we'll say what's on top of on her mind. So I took that quality and made it my own. Um and logical reasoning from other people, I take that. So I mean Kitty Pineapple is not just kitty. It's a combination of like so many people that I I love and adore that I wanted to become like them. So here I am.

SPEAKER_01:

Kitty, that was deep. Like I felt some type of way there. Oh. Like, hold on, hold on. Alright, cool. Um, no, but um, so do these people know that you you know you got a little piece of them with you when it comes to kitty. Really? So you you told them straight out, like, hey man, this is why I do this. You're the reason why I'm like that. Yeah. Oh, that's that's good. Some people don't know.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, well, and for and and it's just a shame that uh the person I'm named after feels uh a certain way about it because um I love her. You know, and I'm I'm always going to feel that way for my friend. Yeah, uh, despite how she feels.

SPEAKER_01:

Hypothetical, you bump into the real kitty at a Whole Foods. Tox, no talks. I'll just say hi. That's good. Cordial. Just be cordial. And then the ball would be in her court. There it is. I like that. As long as you make the first, I guess the first right move, it's okay for you to move on because now it's in now they're in the position of do I want to have this relation? Do I want to talk to, you know, him or her? Or just leave it as is, by mutual, cordial, yeah, type of type of ish.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, so for the most part, that's that's how it is. And you know, um, gotta say, it's getting hard to make friends.

SPEAKER_01:

You say it's getting hard to make friends. Well, why is that? Is it because you're having a hard time like separating, like, say, the people that genuinely want your friendship, opposed to they trying to get something out of me, type of situation?

SPEAKER_03:

That. All that, what you just said, that.

SPEAKER_01:

Hi five, Chris. I'm on it.

SPEAKER_00:

I am on it today, boy.

SPEAKER_03:

I don't think you need to ask me questions anymore. Just say the things.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I yeah, I just need you here. I'm gonna just answer everything, all right? I'm gonna tell you something.

SPEAKER_01:

Nah, but so like how is that? Like, do you get this gut feeling? Or is it one of those they do something like sideways, and you're just like, dude, not my cup of tea. I'm deucin.

SPEAKER_03:

Yes. See?

SPEAKER_00:

Again, I don't even need kitty here.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm doing this shit by myself, y'all. What are what are the examples or like a sample on like they did you wrong?

SPEAKER_03:

Like, what was like, well, I'm not here to stir up any, you know, like stir anything up, but stir it up like Panakbut, man. Well, it was it was just some things that just kind of like um like catch me off guard. Like, for example, this person I once worked with, um would would after a show, she'd be like, hey, let's go live and talk about the show. I was like, what do you mean, let's like live as in on the phone? On Instagram or something. She would say, Let's go live. I'm like, what do you mean, let's? I'll go live. Clout. Yes. Okay. She had no business. I I had no problem putting her on live, but the fact that she initiated and said let's go live, I'm like, We're not there yet, and how dare you assume? You know? So yeah, and just just small things like that, like taking liberties that aren't theirs to take. I'm like, wait a minute, what? And it's so it's like harder to it's harder to tell who's there, who's real, and who's not.

SPEAKER_01:

Mmm, okay. Yeah. Huh. Is there um like a sense in you that can detect like a real genuine person?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, I can.

SPEAKER_01:

What's what's what's an indicator?

SPEAKER_03:

It's weird to say. Okay, um, I I I dabble in energy. Okay. I I I feel energy.

SPEAKER_01:

Ain't nothing wrong with energy. Look at this. Onyx. Chakra.

SPEAKER_03:

Tiger's eye.

SPEAKER_01:

Give me that, give me that. Hey, we are woke, goddammit.

SPEAKER_03:

So yeah, I like to I I pick up on people's energies and I can s I can sense if they're like real or not. Uh sometimes I can throw energy and they can feel it too. That's the weird part.

unknown:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

What do you mean like throwing? Like when you're upset, they'll be like, oh, kitty's kinda kind kitty's kind of mad. Let's give space. That type of no? Like, can you break that down for people that like me are stupid?

SPEAKER_03:

A long time ago, not a long time ago, a while back, uh I was I I talked to Spirit. Okay, y'all are gonna think I'm crazy, I don't care. I talked to Spirit, okay? Spirit. Spirit spiritual um entities. And uh Spirit came to uh spoke to me once while I was hanging out with a friend. We were smoking weed, right? And um and uh Spirit says, create an energy a ball of put your hands together and imagine you're creating a ball of energy. And you can feel the heat of energy the heat the heat coming through, and you just let it grow, and while it grows, as it grows, you can feel it expand, and when it expands, that's what I want you to do. I want you to throw it at your friend. I threw it at my friend.

SPEAKER_01:

Literally threw the spirit like I took this ball of energy and I threw it at her.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. So this is her reaction. What was that? And I was like, I don't know.

SPEAKER_00:

Hey, I would have done the same thing too. I'd have been like, dog. Uh you thought that? Yeah, right. It's like, I just thought I was just throwing, okay.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. So um after that, I was like, that would that was weird. So I I that's when I realized I was like, there's something to this.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh-huh. Yeah. Whoa, do you this the spirit talking? Do you do that a lot? Yeah. Do you?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. Uh it was it was well, because when I was a kid, like this was like a long time ago, like when I was I I I I don't know how old I was I had a dream that I left my backpack outside of my house. Okay. It felt real to me. So I woke up to go s find my backpack outside of the house. Um, it's dark, and so I'm trying to s I'm struggling with a lock. As I open it, I'm like, okay, no more backpack. Close the door, I struggle with the lock because it's dark again. And I'm walking back to my bedroom. But before I walk to my bedroom, the spirit tells me, go to the bathroom and turn the light on. And I'm like, why? I don't have to pee. I'm arguing with his voice in my head. I'm like, alright, fine. So I go. I turn the light on. I hear my dad in the bedroom right next to mine. He's like, Oh, that's that's David. Like, hi. David's my boy name. And uh, so I go to bed. The next morning my mom's like, you know, David. If you didn't turn on the light, you're dead today. I'm like, why? Because your dad thought you were a burglar. I was like, What do you mean? He's going to stab whoever comes goes in your bedroom. I was like, What? You know, when you hear some someone tell you that, like, I could have died? Yeah. So, yeah, yeah, that that was my first instance with uh the voice.

SPEAKER_01:

Really? Um, what's your ethnicity, by the way, if you don't uh Filipino. Do you believe in that stuff? Like the the whole paranormal do you? Me too. I believe in that. Like I'm really deep into that paranormal thing. So you believe like in uh fuck it.

SPEAKER_03:

I believe entities exist.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. Cool, me too. So, like this whole spirit thing, do you think it's someone like from beyond that's just like watching over you and giving you these these little nudges and these little advices that you're getting like you're hearing?

SPEAKER_03:

I don't know. Uh actually I'm still working that part out. That is the one detail I'm still trying to figure out because I'm writing a book and I'm documenting all these moments of when spirit has intervened in my life. And because there's a lot. Oh, definitely, yeah. And I'm like, I'm wondering, like, you ever ask yourself, how am I still alive today?

SPEAKER_01:

I ask myself that all the time, especially with the hijinks that I get myself into. Yeah, oh yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

So I and I'm I I personally believe that there is an assignment that I'm supposed to complete before I die. And I can't die until that assignment is complete. So therefore, as long as I don't do that, I'm immortal, baby.

SPEAKER_00:

Hey, ain't nothing wrong with that. Unless you have a sword and cut the kitty's head off. Easy. Kitty's in a stay, son.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, don't try to end me, okay? No, this Highlander shit. Oh god. All right, so Colorado to the 702, Las Vegas. How hard or was it easy for you to like say get a gig out there? Or was your name already like popping up?

SPEAKER_03:

No, I had nothing. I I was nobody. I'm still nobody. But like, ooh, mm. You were some you were somebody in my book.

SPEAKER_01:

You know what I'm saying? You're you're a somebody to someone, and that like to me, like I'm a somebody to my kids. That that gives me that umph and that gets me like because um I'm diagnosed like the I'm a depre I got diagnosed depression depression, right? That's one of the things that like man, thankful for kids alive, boom, that gets me out. So yeah, but enough about me. Um but back to you, like you had nothing going into 702.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, yeah. Uh huh. Nothing really going on. Uh just just um a good 10 to 15 minute set uh uh that I had. And yeah, it was it was enough to get me by just to get me like to uh open getting the opening spots, uh MC and stuff. But yeah, it was it was a struggle.

SPEAKER_01:

Was it really? Yeah. What uh what cause cause it's on the mainland, right? And I I know it uh you've you've done LA, right? You've done uh is it more cutthroat in LA than Vegas?

SPEAKER_03:

I I don't know. I haven't sp experienced much enough of LA to experience that.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay, okay, okay, okay.

SPEAKER_03:

But as far as Vegas is concerned, there is tech toxicity and like there is in any in any comedy scene. Yeah. Like when you s you'll have your friends, right? But the moment you start getting to new levels, you'll find out who your true friends are. Because then some of them will start to like pull you down, like, uh, you're just doing this because of that. You're you're a grifter. Like I like some there's some people in Vegas that have called me a grifter because I became kitty pineapple.

SPEAKER_01:

What's a grifter?

SPEAKER_03:

Someone that's disingenuous, faking the f faking who they are to get ahead. Yeah. Sorry. Yeah, so they're they're telling they're saying this stuff like um um you bec you became kitty so you could become famous. And I was like, bruh, if I knew that was gonna happen, I probably would have done it a long time ago.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

But I became kitty because I fell in love with it. I fell in love with who I was becoming, the confidence that I was growing into, the person that I was the person I was growing into, you know. I wasn't I wasn't feeling like if you've seen if you've ever seen David Lee, you could see a st a stark difference between the two people. It's like day and night. Um Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

So kiddies all day and all night. Now it is. Now it is? Yeah. When did you have to turn it off?

SPEAKER_03:

When did I have to turn it off?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, like 'cause you say now it is. When I was living with my wife.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh. Okay. Not long ago. I'm not gonna go f too far into it, but like like three weeks before I got here, before today, I was kicked out of my home uh that I've lived in for I don't know the last 15 years or so. And uh nowhere to go. Uh and yeah, I was out like and it was scary for ten minutes. And uh in those ten minutes, uh I was like you ever been there? Yeah. Yeah. It's surreal. You like you just now it's like okay, it's me against the world now and then you just do it.

SPEAKER_01:

The way you explain that, it's um it I guess what was it? There's a word for it. I'm kind of be I'm blanking out, but there was a time in in my life where I had a newborn and like I was homeless and me and my newborn was living out of my whip. And then it was one of those moments where it's just like, alright. Because I mean, you know, you get you get in that mode, like after you're done crying, after you're just done getting mad, just like, okay, let's fucking do it. Yeah, yeah. It was, and you know, that was like my point, that was like that time where I was just like, alright, let's just frickin' do it and fucking just don't look back and just go. And then it was like a full sprint from there. So the way you explained that, like it brought back to where I was in that situation because I was I had no one, and I was like, man, this kind of sucks right now, you know, especially like I have another life depending on me. That put like more weight on my shoulders, and I was just like, man, I just had a little faith in a little bit of God. Well, sprinkle dinkle, you know what I'm saying? Yeah, got me that bacon and got me that cheeseburger, and I was happy.

unknown:

Oh, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Hippy Jibbus, you know what I'm saying? Hippy Jibus. Alright, so 702, what was the biggest, um, if you don't mind me asking, what was the biggest, like, say, venue that you did out there in Vegas? Or is that still to come? Ooh, I'm telling.

SPEAKER_03:

Um, the then the biggest venue that I've done in Vegas.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. Oh, that is. Like, is this surreal that you see these many people supporting you like night in and night out when you're up there?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, but you know what? I I don't Vegas is cool, but like I don't get as much support there as I do here in Hawaii.

SPEAKER_01:

For real? Yeah. Huh. Interesting, because uh, isn't there the population more there's more people, yeah, but you get more love out here. Yes. Oh, it's because you you got off the island and you're somewhat kind of made it. Yeah, yeah, you're from here. Yeah, you're also born and bred, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

And in Vegas, I'm competing with people like Shania Twain, Joe Coyd, Bruno Mars.

SPEAKER_01:

Shania Twain does comedy?

SPEAKER_03:

I mean, anybody that's an entertainer, you know.

SPEAKER_00:

I was like, ooh, girl, go ahead, man. You got like spit them notes.

SPEAKER_03:

All of them, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Vegas to compete with. Um, so it's your your the attention goes to, oh, I'm gonna see this show, I'm gonna see that show, you know, watch Circ. Uh you know. Um, but in Hawaii, like when I come back here, it's it's always special. Mm-hmm. Yeah, people come out, they show the love, and um I'm happy to be home.

SPEAKER_01:

You know what? That's some real talk because um, like you coming back home, you get a lot of love. Me originally from California, when I went home for my daughter's graduation, uh one of my, you know, one of my good friends put me on a flyer and I showed up to this event, and I've seen a lot like I should you not, I haven't seen these people since I since I graduated in high school, since I graduated from high school. And that's like I don't want to say the year that I graduated, but that was like some odd years ago. And it felt good seeing all these people like roll through just to say what's up.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

So from what you're saying, like I feel that in my core, because it's it's home, you know?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, yeah. Oh yeah, yeah, it was nice to see uh some old friends come through. The the more the more most monumental moment for me was when uh when I saw my parents in the audience.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, is this like their your first time them being there, or is it in a long time?

SPEAKER_03:

Well, in a long time and the first time. So the first time they saw me was in 2005-6-ish.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh-huh. This is when you're starting out though, right? From what you were telling me. Okay.

SPEAKER_03:

And I was, you know, presenting as male. And since then they haven't seen me perform and they haven't seen Kitty perform. So, like two years ago, they finally came uh to one of my shows at the Blue Note, and um they were they were proud. That's what's up. Yeah, they didn't know under they didn't understand any of my material. Yeah. But they were looking around like, okay, this is funny, huh?

SPEAKER_00:

It's like I'm gonna laugh too, huh?

SPEAKER_01:

That's hey, that's cool. Um and did you get a little emotional afterwards, like when mom and pop's went up, like, uh, good job, you know? I did. Freaking killed it.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. Oh man. One of my followers um sent me a video of um my dad bragging about me in an Uber. Because my dad was driving Uber, uh huh, and my followers had one of my followers happened to be in the Uber. And my dad was like talking about kitty pineapple. Uh-huh. And so they were like recording it, and then they sent it to me. I was like, oh, dad, thanks.

SPEAKER_01:

That's surreal, man. Yeah. What um question? Were they were they accepting when accepted when accepting when kitty pineapple came out? Are they well I don't they're trad are they traditional?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, they're traditional, um, but they are not very they're not the type to be confrontational. In fact, I think they still think this is a phase. Um it's been five years. Uh don't think it's a phase, mom, dad. But cool. That is what it is. So yeah, um, but there's they've been supportive and the reason why they've been so supportive was because my sister and my daughter, okay, um a few years ago, um, there was a there was a situation where my my my dad dad and my sister got in really got into it because they got in the talk the topic was about LGBT. And at the time my dad sister was dating a woman. And so was my daughter. And so she got my my sister got really defensive about it. Things got it got really heated, they haven't spent it, and they stopped speaking. And at that moment they were like, My dad came to me, uh he was like, you know, I don't have a daughter anymore. I was like, oh wait, hold on. I'm can I can I can I be the daughter now? You know? But like they started talking to each other again, my dad and my sister, and then my mom as well. And they became accepting of her, which made it more uh possible for me. Because they didn't want to lose their son either.

SPEAKER_01:

That's good. Because I'm I know like traditional parents, there's like you're marrying a Filipino, you're going to be a doctor, this and the third, and then I don't know, like parents nowadays they're they're um they're getting woke. They're they're paying more attention to what's online and they're more like understanding because my dad was that was that way too. Um my sister had a black boyfriend. None of that shit was h none of that shit was popping off until like my dad finally got to knew Kelvin. Shout out to you, Calvin. My dad started like hanging out, talking to him, and he was like, hey, he's a he's a cool guy. So that's when that wall broke down. Yeah. And then like with the whole homosexuality thing, like I do have like nieces and nephews in that realm as well. And he's like, uh, whatever, human, same, same. Like he just doesn't because of that wall breaking down of him uh like accepting my sister's boyfriend, he's just he's more like understanding now. Before it was just like one-sided argument, right? Like you can't tell him nothing. Now it's just like, okay, I'll listen.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

But I mean, I'm okay. Like, you have to be okay with my opinion respectfully and everything, too. Yeah. So yeah, and I'm glad that that happened to you, to where it's like, you know, accepting. They're are they understanding or are they still I think for the most part they are.

SPEAKER_03:

You know, uh, they still ask me questions like like a couple days ago. I went to uh went to a dinner with a friend of mine and uh all dolled up. All glammed up, yeah. And um my dad was like, You have a show? I was like, No, dad. Uh-huh. Just going out. Oh. Oh, okay. Be safe. You don't have to do it. I'm like, I do, dad.

SPEAKER_00:

It's like, yeah, kinda I do.

SPEAKER_01:

When you're going out, what are you wearing when you go out? Like, what's the what's the attire? So you went to dinner. Yeah. Are you are you wearing a dress? Are you showing the toes?

SPEAKER_03:

Uh some it depends how I feel. Like last yeah, show I was at uh um at um I was Hawaiian Bryan's and I had high knee, high knee boots and a short dress. I swear my mom was pissed when she saw me leave the house. Because she would get mad when my sister would dress like that. How much more me? Yeah. So yeah, she didn't say nothing though.

SPEAKER_01:

This is a funny question. How long did it take you to in heels to learn to walk without the clack clack? Uh I'm doing some content soon, and this person's gonna teach me how to walk on a runway. Yeah. Just for just like comedy content. Uh-huh. And I'm afraid that I'm gonna like just black. Yeah, that's that and be like, man, look at my calves, y'all. I'm finna wear this more often, but and just land implanting on my face.

SPEAKER_03:

Um, nah, I mean, you'll you'll you'll you'll get it. Yeah? Yeah, you'll get it pretty just be mindful of it. Just yeah. I think as male human species, we can adapt pretty quickly to almost any situation, I think. Hmm. This is true.

SPEAKER_01:

This is true, especially when instincts kick in.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, and especially like when you uh when you get a like a brand new electronic, you know, like instructions? Alright, cool. Yeah, fuck this.

SPEAKER_00:

YouTube, Google? No? No, fuck this. We doing this, it broke. Well, goddamn.

SPEAKER_03:

I don't know. Put it on YouTube, get it on YouTube.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh okay, another question, a book comedy, and then we'll get to these questions before um we depth. What was one, like, say one segment or one bit that everyone just died after? Like, that was the joke. Uh everyone got it, everyone understood. They hit they got the punchline. It was just uh, it was my Wai'ai bit. Okay, I don't think I've heard that one.

SPEAKER_03:

It's um say the whole bit, just give me like Schnebit. Basically, okay, so I was I was I was in Wai'anae and it's I s I was yelling at someone, person came out of the car like yelling at me. I know I speak how I said mo.

SPEAKER_02:

Alright, next time you yell at me, I'm gonna punch you in the face, I won't punch you, and I was and then her husband came out of the car.

SPEAKER_00:

I think I've heard this one. Yes, that's okay, okay, okay.

SPEAKER_03:

That's the bit. And then like like I don't you know, I don't have to explain anything about it. Yeah, people just get it. And that I did I did that and I shot it in Las Vegas and the crowd just died. You don't have to be from Hawaii to understand.

SPEAKER_01:

So the jokes that you pull off in like over here that will kill, you pull that in Las Vegas. Um, do you see people in the audience like, what the like I don't get it at all? Or you understood.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. Yeah. I know that if I if I write for the mainland. Uh-huh. So if I can write if if what I write for the mainland kills, it's gonna kill here in Hawaii. Why is that? Why do you why do you why do you think so? Uh because in the mainland, not a lot of people know who I am, so I have to earn their trust. Yeah. I have to earn their uh you know I earn the laughter. But when I come here, the people who know me and follow me and will see me, they all re you know, they already like my style of comedy. Yeah. So it's easier for me to uh to convey what I'm trying to say to them and for them to understand.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, okay. So people in the mainland, right? Um and of course, you as kitty, I'm gonna assume that you're getting stares and you know, people talk and everything. How do you handle that? Like as a person, like do you snap back? Or, you know, like let's say if it was like a little kid just staring at you and just asking, like, hey, the qu you know, the question, what are your responses? What are you responding to?

SPEAKER_03:

Well, uh, you know, it's funny you asked that. Um, I did a show in uh what is that? Uh Idaho. I was in Idaho. Idaho. Yeah. Okay. And That's all you have to say, Idaho. Yeah. After my show, I went to the bookers uh home for a barbecue, and one of the kids asked, Miss Kitty Pineapple, why is your voice so deep? And I was like, that is a great question. I don't know. I don't know why my voice changed into like a country voice just now. I reckon but yeah. I I don't know, I don't I don't snap back, I just uh take it in stride, really. Yeah? Yeah, I don't get mad because like when you give words power, people can use you.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, well, I mean, when you're walking around, you you you kind of swole too. So you could probably Yeah, too. You could probably bless some heads. Hey, let me tell you, when the first time I met Kitty, right, I told her, hey man, I thought you was a little bit taller than this. You you standing like what at a good 5'6? With heels, yeah. With heels. I'm gonna go 5'7 slash 5'8. On camera, I swear on Reverend, you look 5'9, 5'10. I'm like, dude, camera does things. Cameras does things. Are you thinking about going to um like doing any acting or anything? Or uh that ever like crossed your um, I guess your your comedy journey?

SPEAKER_03:

Um, yeah, actually, I'm a a series called Made to Shine is gonna be coming out on um Amazon and Viva One in the Philippines. It's a romantic comedy series, and my role on that show is a a transgender um comedic uh influencer. Shut up, for real? Yeah, yeah. When the when you know when the casting call came out, they were looking for that. I was like, that's perfect, right? Hey.

SPEAKER_01:

No, that's crazy because um someone reached out and at and told me, like, hey, you should submit like some type of like audition tape for my aunt. I guess her aunt works for it's either Viva or Regal Films, and they're coming out to the film, they're coming out here to film something. So I did. I didn't get a call back. I knew I messed up somewhat, but it's cool that you're like going out there because I do watch a lot of like rom coms, and I swear, like the funniest ones, I forgot his name, Roderick Pilate. Like, he's like an old school comedian that he like he play, you know, he plays, you know, feminine, but it's yeah, super funny. Like, I um was it something caballo? I forgot something, it's an old school movie, and that's like one of the first movies that I fell in love with as a kid. Like, because I used to watch a lot of Filipino movies. Yeah, Petrón Caballo. That was the movie the that was the Filipino movie that I fell in love with as a kid, and yeah, so that's that's pretty cool. And that's dropping, you know what? You don't even need to tell me when it's dropping. I'll see it on Amazon, and yeah. Speaking of Amazon, um what I don't know if it's like my settings, but I'm having a hard time finding Filipino movies on there. Is it do you do I have to be like an Amazon Filipino type of I don't know, type of app or some shit?

SPEAKER_03:

No, I don't know. I think if you just watch more of them, they start to show up on your feed.

SPEAKER_01:

Man, I'd be playing search Filipino movies and hardly none of that motherfucking shit. I see it a lot on Netflix. Yeah, yeah. Rom coms, baby. Yeah, I'll be living on that. Do you be living off Korean rom coms?

SPEAKER_03:

Uh yeah, I'm watching Bon Appetit, Your Majesty, the Korean one for real?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, a lot of people, especially in the military, they are stuck on like Korean rom-coms. What is the deal with that? Because I I I tried watching an episode, subtitles and all, and I'm like, dog, I I can't. Like, I could do Filipino rom-coms. For some reason, I could do Filipino rom-coms. Fine. Teenage, old people, uh, whatever. I'm in it. But when it comes to the Korean, like the Korean rom coms, no disrespect. I'm not throwing any shade, but I just can't get into it.

SPEAKER_03:

Well, I mean, maybe there's one you can get into. Oh, okay, okay, okay. Maybe that. Maybe that, yeah. K-pop demon hunters.

SPEAKER_01:

You know I got kids. I've been watching it. Yeah, that motherfucker is on. On the weekends, it's on. Going to school, it's on. Cause like I play it on my phone. Shower, it's on. I'm like, oh. Play it on your phone? When we're walking to school? Oh, okay. Yeah, it's like it's like a good. I mean the music. The music. So it's like, it's like I love hearing what I'm saying. So it's like, go ahead, get down. And it's like, it's nothing to me now, you know? Yeah. Before, I'm gonna say like the first four, five, six times, I'm gonna say I'm like, goddamn, what the fuck is this? You know, like I'm not into this shit. Keep on watching it, and I'm I finally had a chance to sit through the whole movie.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Because the very beginning it was only glimpses, you know, I'm getting their lunch ready, I gotta use the bathroom, I'm doing laundry. It's something that I can't sit and watch the whole. I finally sat down, I'm like, oh, this is pretty good. Like the message is good, and the singing's phenomenal. Yeah, yeah. Are you into K-pop hunters as well?

SPEAKER_03:

Uh I was watching something on social media and then and I was like, what is this? Uh huh. I played it, and then you know, you hear the first song. I was like, all right, cool. And then the second song, and you're like, oh. And then by the time you get to Golden, the song Golden, I'm like, oh man, I'm in. I'm in. Up, up, up. Our voices. Is the phenomenon big in Vegas as well? I think so. Uh huh. Yeah. I mean, I went to the did uh did you go to the K-pop Demon Hunter um sing along in the theaters?

SPEAKER_01:

No, we didn't. Um, my wife told me about it. We never got the notification on when it was gonna pop out. But my wife's a big K-pop fan too. Her favorite, well, our favorite group is XG right now.

unknown:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Like we're on that motherfucker. So but when that came out, uh K-pop, yeah, we we missed it and we're kind of like kind of bummed out.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

But go ahead, go.

SPEAKER_03:

That's awesome. That's all.

SPEAKER_01:

You you went? I went. Just up?

SPEAKER_03:

Went uh well or you just no, I mean, does my purple hair already count?

SPEAKER_01:

Because Well, I mean, the purple hair counts, but you have to have like the the actual poof design.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

I've seen that and I'm like, damn, that's hours. Is it? Is it hours of quite a bit?

SPEAKER_03:

And you have to have longer hair for that.

unknown:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

Cool. You like it, I dig it.

SPEAKER_01:

Hey man, I'm I'm open to a lot of things, especially at the age I'm at now. Like, I have to be more accepting to like say things that I'm not used to. Yeah. You know, because like um, I don't want to put my daughter's business out there, but she recently broke up with her boyfriend because of, I could tell you offline, of because of a reason, but she um she told me some stuff. I'm like, oh shit, okay. And she's like, you didn't see? I was like, well, not really, but it makes sense. So I'm like, oh, all right, cool. So yeah, and then I had a like one of my close homeboys told me something similar, but not quiet. And I'm like, cool, cool, cool, cool, cool, cool. You still my dog, you know? So it's like I'm very uh like now I'm very accepting. Back in the day, it would have been like I would have been, oh no man, like what you it's a phase, yeah. But now it's just like, man, hey, what power do you be? You like I don't care. Life is too short.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm I'm starting to get the context clues as to why they were broke, why they broke up. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

And I was like, uh, well, I mean, they're they're homies now, but then uh now my my daughter's like, oh man, I'm in my pretty girl era right now. And I'm like, hey, go ahead, play it. She's she she's in college right now, and yeah, you know, like uh college kid? I do.

SPEAKER_03:

How old?

SPEAKER_01:

She's uh she's turning 21 this year.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh wow, mine just turned 21.

SPEAKER_01:

Shut up, for real. What did you do on your her 18th birthday? Um let's see.

SPEAKER_03:

Where was she? She was 18.

SPEAKER_01:

Here or on the mainland?

SPEAKER_03:

She was living here. Okay. Yeah, so I sent her money. 21? Or here or over there? She was 21, she came to Vegas. So we hung out. Gamble? Uh I didn't get to because she came, she hung out with me on the on the when she was still 20. Uh-huh. And she spent the rest of the night, her trip with her mom. Oh, okay. I didn't get that part of the stay.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, okay. Bummer. Bummer? No bummer.

SPEAKER_03:

Uh she'll be she'll be 21 for the rest of the year and I got time.

SPEAKER_01:

I got time. I bought my daughter um 18. I bought her her first lotto ticket. Oh. Because, you know, California, you know. And then for 21, I hopefully fingers crossed, she's out here. Yeah. And uh, I don't know what to do because she's done all the 21-year-old thing. You know what I'm saying? Oh, good. She's done that. So it's like, what to do? So we just probably just chill as a fam when 21. Yeah. Probably it.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, that's great. She's got it all out of her system.

SPEAKER_01:

Hell yeah. Like, I I think when I became 21, yeah, and then some, I was, yeah, I got that shit out of myself. I was like 21. It's nothing. I just could buy beer now.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Because you know, like 18 was the designated age to get a lotto. You could buy cigarettes. Yeah. Now it's like what, 21, 25? I think so. Buy cigarettes or or whatever. Yeah. Yeah.

unknown:

No. Wow.

SPEAKER_01:

Let me ask you, Vegas, is the bunny ranch still around?

SPEAKER_03:

The who?

SPEAKER_01:

The bunny ranches? The um Oh, the bunny ranches, they exist. They're still there? Yeah, I think so. I I don't know. So my mexicanos, are they still on the street passing out flyers?

SPEAKER_03:

Yes, they're still doing it.

SPEAKER_01:

Mom man's. They hooked me up. I remember walking the strip one day, one of them hooked me up with a free buffet.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, and I was like, hey dog, I'm gonna go here. If I'm not getting a buffet, I do not want to see you no more. And then sure enough, he hooked me up with a buffet. This was like my adlessness, man. I'm like 21, 22. And then um, yeah, I saw him again on the strip. I gave that motherfucker a 40, and then I was like, hey man, thank you.

SPEAKER_00:

I'd be friends. 40 ounce? Huh?

SPEAKER_01:

Like a 40 ounce? Yeah, a Mickey. A Mickey. Yeah, you laugh because you know what a Mickey is. Kids nowadays don't know what Mickeys are. And it's sad.

SPEAKER_03:

They don't make that anymore.

SPEAKER_01:

They do make Mickeys, yeah. Yeah, the green for the green, yup. MD4040s, you remember mad dogs?

SPEAKER_03:

Oh wow. Uh no, no, I don't.

SPEAKER_01:

You never had a mad dog? No, no. It's like uh an alcoholic version of Capi Sun.

SPEAKER_03:

I know.

SPEAKER_01:

No? Never had that. You ever had an Incredible Hulk?

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, gross. Was that like the hypnotic and a Hennessy? Yeah. Ew, yeah, it was gross.

SPEAKER_00:

Really? It's terrible.

SPEAKER_03:

I love that shit.

SPEAKER_01:

California. What's your what's your uh do you do you still drink or are you like less?

SPEAKER_03:

Slowly uh tapering off.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay. What was the go-to drink then for kitty?

SPEAKER_03:

Tequila.

SPEAKER_01:

Tequila. Yeah, and that's why. That will kill you.

SPEAKER_03:

That's it will kill you?

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, tequila will kill you.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, I just I just want to stop because I I I'm tired of going back in my phone and seeing these topless videos of me.

SPEAKER_01:

So you get that drunk.

SPEAKER_03:

I get that drunk where I start to think that it's a bodybuilding competition and I pull my top off and start flexing. Uh-huh. Yeah, it's nothing sexual, it's just bodybuilding competition.

SPEAKER_01:

That's just that's just your thing. That's just your thing. When so before we dip out the whole bodybuilding thing, right?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Um, are you still doing that? I are you still like an avid hit and bench being in the gym?

SPEAKER_03:

I train to, uh huh, but I will never compete again. Why is that? Oh gosh. Have you seen have you seen competitors? Yes, I have. How lean they get? Um, that's not easy.

SPEAKER_01:

And it's not it's close to death.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, yeah, because it's not sustainable. Uh-huh. You know, you can do that for maybe one, two or three days, but you can't survive on that kind of a diet. Plus, you're tired, you're um, you're you're you're hungry, you're just not a good person. I I I think that's one of the reasons why I I became a kitty. I was such an asshole that I got tired of who I was and just completely flipped.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, okay. So you train, train, train, finally had like that realization, and just like, dude, this is not me. I don't like who I'm.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. Like I understand. I was at the peak of my masculinity, and then all of a sudden, like, nope. Femininity is where it's at.

SPEAKER_01:

Did you ever um enhance use enhancements? Yes. How was that like? Cause um, question, because I'm yeah, just just a question. How was that like the process not the process, but like being on it moody as hell? Or are you just like strong? Well, it'll depend on what type of enhancement it is.

SPEAKER_03:

Yes, yes. Like for me, I did all the things, uh, but the one thing that I wish I was more strict on was maybe not wish, but I wish I knew about more was uh estrogen blockers. Yeah. When you when you uh in when you enhance your testosterone, like you you however you enhance it, right? Your estrogen levels will naturally follow. Naturally follow. So you have synthetic synthetic testosterone, and your body's like, alright, we gotta match this. So estrogen comes up. When that happens, you gynomastia could happen. You know, is that like a chemical you start to display more feminine features, you become more feminine, and I I feel like a lot of that has attributed to who I am today as well. So mas uh testosterone, and then you know, estrogen just really did its thing on me. Oh. Okay, cool, cool. And I just embraced it.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, hell yeah. Hey, that's what's up. I wasn't mad, I was just like, oh well. Thank you, guy. Gotcha. I'll work, I'll work, I'll work it. Work it. Well shit, kitty, that was fun. Yeah, I do appreciate you coming on. Um, do you have it uh like any shout outs or anything? And where can these people find you at?

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, you can find me on Instagram at kittypine. Uh also you can follow me on Venmo. Um Kitty Pine.

SPEAKER_00:

Hey, follow me on Venmo too. I'll put them on. I got a birthday coming up. Help me out. I don't throw them up too, said Kitty throwing them up. I'm throwing them down.

SPEAKER_01:

Hey kitty, I do appreciate you for coming on. I do very humble. Thank you.

SPEAKER_02:

Thank you very much for having me.

SPEAKER_01:

With that being said, kids do those, thank you for the lovely home. Rappi bye. Always thankful for the beats, man. And with that, I'm Chris.

SPEAKER_03:

Aloha. Oh, I'm Kate Pineapple. Son of a bitch.

SPEAKER_00:

And we And we out this bitch. Peace.