THE RYL TALK PODCAST ™

Good Times With Goody Mo

Darryl Blastoff & Prez Season 1 Episode 8

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Comedian and actor "Goody Mo" joins Blastoff and The Prez on Mars for a conversation of the ages. Definitely our most entertaining guest to date; Raw unfiltered, and hilarious, "Goody Mo Da Comedian" doesn't hold back when it comes to his opinions on life, how he got his start in the comedic/acting world, and even drops bombs on the audience near the end on those who he thinks are industry pawns, frauds and clowns in the social media realm. Big blows are thrown that will have your jaw dropping by the end of the show... Trust us this is the episode for the ages, and one you most definitely don't want to miss!!!!  Be sure to tune in as we keep it all the way real here on The Ryl Talk Podcast!! "Broadcasting Live From a Secret Location on Mars!"

To all the listeners aka “The Ryl Ones” We know we are nothing without your continued support please be sure to provide feed back leave a comment, voice your opinions good or bad, because your opinions matter most!! Thanks again and enjoy this episode as we continue Broadcasting Live from a Secret Location on Mars!!
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Broadcasting live from a secret location on Mars.


Speaker 1:

Yo, what's up? It's your boy, blastoff, here dropping in to give a thank you to all of the subscribers, all of the commenters and all of the likes that we get on our social medias. Keep on tapping into the Real Talk podcast on all of your streaming apps and follow us on YouTube at BlastoffNTCO and on IG at Blastoff underscore entertainment. Y'all just keep coming in. We're going to keep coming. With this heat, we got special guests lined up left and right. Y'all just go ahead and tap in and please, please, by all means, leave a comment. Let us know how we're doing so we can keep doing what we're doing. Thank you again. This is your boy BlastOff man Once again broadcasting live from a secret location on Mars. Let's do it, what's up, man? Welcome back, welcome back, welcome back.

Speaker 2:

What's up world we back again.

Speaker 1:

Man, live in effect, we live in effect. You know who. It is, no introductions needed. Man, your boy in the press, we live, baby, and we got a special special guest here. We're getting the date. We told you we gonna start putting this motherfucking out. Yeah, you know, we told you we gonna start putting this motherfucking out. We told you we gonna start pushing this shit out, man, and we got my boy here, let him know. Man, I'm gonna let you introduce yourself so everybody knows you.

Speaker 3:

Man appreciate y'all inviting me here, Goodie.

Speaker 1:

Mo.

Speaker 3:

Man, this is your boy, goodie Mo the comedian man. I'm back at it once again. You know it's a pleasure and honor being here. And hey, man, like I tell people, let's make history, baby.

Speaker 1:

Making history yet again. Bro, hey, we appreciate you for blasting off to the red planet. Come fuck with your boy. Hey, don't tell nobody this location.

Speaker 3:

It's a secret location. It's a location on Mars, gotcha. We appreciate you. Real talk, real talk.

Speaker 1:

Real talk, real talk, real talk, real talk how you doing Priz.

Speaker 2:

Let them know, bro, what's up baby man it's another day, another blessing, another great time to be alive and another time to listen to some of that cosmic choir, that celestial gospel we call the Real Talk Podcast. Thank you for tuning in and listening to some of us. Some of us just talk about some of the shit that we're going to keep real on this show, so let's get to it.

Speaker 1:

Say goody Mo man, we appreciate you falling through bro.

Speaker 3:

Oh, no doubt it's a blessing to have you Bless us with your presence, man, no doubt Let us know what's going on down on Earth, because sometimes we watch it on this satellite.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's always good to have a guest another human being to touch bases. Good to have a guest another human being to touch bases. And now you're officially going to get your Martian license, bro. Oh yeah, I'm down, man we're going to send you back home with a Martian's license.

Speaker 3:

Okay, man, no doubt, no doubt.

Speaker 1:

So let's talk, man. What's going on with you lately, man? You're involved in a lot of things, bro. You got these little movies going on, you got going on, you're, you're, you're a funny comedian bro. And let's start off with getting into. How did you even get into all of this, bro? What led you to, to, to, to jump into the being a comedian, bro, man?

Speaker 3:

blast off prez. It's a funny story. Let me tell you how it happened, man. It happened was I'm from a country town. I moved to houston probably my sophomore year. But let me tell you what happened. I I got into comedy. So I was a kid I used to get picked on. Niggas used to just roast me like some fucking roasted peanuts, man and shit. I would come home every day rest in peace to my mom and I would cry Like Mom, the kids they making fun of me. You know I had the Buck Teef, steve Urkel, all this. You know how kids back was in the back of the day. They was fucking ruthless.

Speaker 1:

First fifth I seen a post that said cause I'm a dark skinned dude. Yeah, it was like being dark skinned in first fifth grade. Back then was like being in the 1920s. Yeah, you was like Blue Blacks.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, all kind of names yeah all kind of names I got called. They were brutal. Yeah, so, man. So what happened was the same group of kids. They would just tee off on me. I'm talking about calling me Mr Ed, everything that is possibly in the book, bro. So I would come home crying to my mom every day, man, like boo-hoo tears, and she said well, look here, If you come back home crying, I'm going to whoop your ass. I'm going to whoop your ass. She said you know what? Say something back.

Speaker 1:

That's right.

Speaker 3:

So I was like, okay. So you know, I went, same people there Same day I went back and shit, the same people there, you know, make the jokes about me and shit bro.

Speaker 3:

I just like I'm saying, like your nickname but I just blasted, took off on their ass, man, and then everybody was like, oh, uh, this shit right here, yeah, and I was thinking like, damn, I may be good at this shit, maybe I should make these. No, I'm saying make this shit a niche. And you know, the rest is the rest is history. But the real backstory how I got into comedy is it's. It's crazy. It goes back to 2000, 2015. Uh, when the panthers played, uh, peyton manning, when peyton manning got his, uh, when they were one day super bowl. So my mom was like, hey, she was throwing a super bowl party and she called me one day. You know how your mama is. Even though I'm grown, she still you know.

Speaker 1:

My mom like my best friend. Yeah, she still babying you.

Speaker 3:

Your mama call you. Sometimes your mama call you and you don't say nothing. She say, hey, what's wrong? I'm like mom, what you talking about? You got women problems. She had intuition. You got women problems. She even shared intuition. So she calls me one day and she was like hey, torian, you know my this is my government name. She was like hey, torian, I have a vision of you being in, being in movie, being in TV. So I'm not y'all, I'm not paying no attention at all, bro, I'm not paying attention. Okay, mom, this is just you talking. And she was like no, god gave you a God-given talent to make people laugh.

Speaker 2:

Real talk.

Speaker 3:

So this is where the shit gets real deep and I know God working shit. This has met my destiny. She called me on a Sunday. That was on a Sunday. Two days later, unfortunately, she passed away. Oh man, so that was my last conversation with her, was that? So remember the date, Remember 2015. So fast forward to 2020. My guy everybody knows I fuck with Shout out to Neek Sacrifice for self. He called me one day and he was like hey, hey, T, I got this movie, I got this scene for you. I want you to do you the funny guy, Cause I worked for the man who worked at the airport together and he was shooting his first film. He's like hey, man, I need you you know what I'm saying to do you, but you gonna be on camera and you don't get one shot. So you know me, I got M&M. All I'm like, oh shit, I got one shot and one chance.

Speaker 1:

So he told me he was like hey, so wait, I ain't mean to cut you off, but this guy Sacrifice for Self. Yeah, that's the name of the company.

Speaker 3:

Yeah. Sacrifice for Self, yeah. Alright, that's the name of the company I do my moves with.

Speaker 1:

Okay, and yeah, nice man, nice Shout out to those guys, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Shaka Fighters Self Neat 90s. Yeah, that's his. You know he got two Instagrams. I'm not niggas be having two Instagrams and stuff.

Speaker 1:

You know what that led you, so you contacted him.

Speaker 3:

No, he know. He contacted me and so I'm no, I was. I'm a nigga. I'm at the house chilling. I'm blown. I'm playing Madden. You know what I'm saying. I'm at the house playing Madden. So he gave me that call. I said okay. So I took the opportunity and I and uh, and I and uh, I did it. So I okay. So it got time to uh the film. I had thinking, okay, it's my homeboy. You know how you support your homeboy with stuff. That's your partner. You know. You support him no matter what. I'm not taking nothing of it. I'm not taking him in the career because this is before I had. You know what I'm saying. I had a nine to five, I got kids. So the next day he put it out. The next day my phone just starts bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, bing so I'm like what the fuck?

Speaker 3:

I'm like what the fuck what they say.

Speaker 1:

You only get one shot.

Speaker 3:

Do not miss your chance to blow the opportunity comes once in a lifetime, so I let it go. But going back with my mom, that shit, that shit led me to a career. She knew it. See what I'm saying. You see what I'm saying. She knew it. This was 2015 when my mom said this. It's 2020. So she had a premonition of me being in there. So I took the. I had one role. My one role was Everybody Knows my Lines. One role was everybody knows my lines. When I was Kel's big, that fucking one role and one scene got me right here right now, right, right, right. It got me. It got me right here. So, after that one scene, it took off yeah, every, every I started.

Speaker 3:

You know that I got movie offers and everything and you know what, bro?

Speaker 1:

that's how it tends to work out.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

You know you have to see your opportunities because they only come far few in between.

Speaker 3:

Correct. A lot of people Correct, correct, correct.

Speaker 1:

Especially if you wasn't born with privilege or born with a civil status.

Speaker 3:

No, I wasn't. No, your dad played in the NFL.

Speaker 1:

Your dad was an actor or your mom was an actress or your mom's a musician or something. You got to get it out the mud and you got to take chances and take opportunities. When you see A lot of us, you know I heard a statement that says there is a lot of dead dreams in the graveyard, a lot of unrealized potential, because they never took that chance and they took a different path than they would have been. How many people you knew was you can hear the stories of man. He was cold at basketball.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, all the time in the hood, yeah, but they never make it out to yeah, she was cold at track.

Speaker 1:

She could have been an Olympian, yeah, but she got pregnant and had, instead of just not being protective of herself, of herself as a young lady and you know whatever she chose to go that route of becoming a young parent, and she was the fastest person in the state.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's somebody that the fastest person in the world probably never got realized because they never made it Correct. It's probably the third or fourth fastest person in the world right now because they took it serious. Yeah, the fastest person in the world right now because they took it serious. Yeah, the fastest person in the world never got that chance because they took a different path correct, correct, correct. So it's a lot of unrealized potential out there, bro. That's why I say you know, you see something, you see an opportunity. You have to take it yeah, I took it, man.

Speaker 3:

That's why I I people know I got backlash. Ah, nigga, get it. Mo. You got one scene, this and that you got a cameo. I'm like, yeah, I got that one scene, but that one scene I made a career out of that shit, that's right bro I made a fucking career. I'm on fucking Amazon Prime. I got a movie on Tubi, I got stand-up. I'm on podcasts.

Speaker 1:

I'm fucking with y'all. Name your movies, man. How many movies have you starred in or been present?

Speaker 3:

in Ooh man. My first movie was One More Stop. I did that.

Speaker 1:

Y'all check that out. Yeah, One More Stop. Where can?

Speaker 3:

they find this movie. You can find One More.

Speaker 1:

Stop on YouTube, it's on YouTube, or YouTube, or they're going to be able to find that easily. Youtube. We're going to put that up. Youtube and Amazon Prime. Hey I like that, that movie there. That was crazy, bro, because you walk through H-Town, y'all know, by Greenspoint Mall.

Speaker 2:

Y'all know, by Greenspoint Mall.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that was the thing.

Speaker 1:

It's recently gone, not even two months ago, yeah yeah, you can check, and those from H-Town, especially the north side, and other people you know about Greens Point Mall.

Speaker 3:

It's gone. It's gone. Yeah, the movie. That's one more stop. Let me tell you how many movies I did. Because I did so much shit? Let me go back and track man, because I did Day to Day. Then, after I did Day to Day, that led me to dude, actually shout out to my boy Scrap Business Media. I actually had a scripted role on Cinco Lane, and Cinco Lane that's on Amazon. We had a premiere downtown at the Match Theater. Sold out that shit. It was sold out. Motherfuckers was begging to sit on the floor. We had a premiere. I did Cinco Lane, then I did Cinco lane. Then, after I did Cinco lane, I did, uh, the color green. I got a movie called color green. All these are on, uh, on YouTube Color green.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they trust me, they gonna know. Yeah, color green. I've seen. It's a weed smoking movie. I did.

Speaker 3:

Trial and Error, part 2, so Color Green something like Friday and the last recent movie I just did is One More Stop where you talking about in Greens Point. It's out on Tubi right now.

Speaker 1:

It's out on Tubi so are you working on tubi right now?

Speaker 3:

nice it's, it's, it's, it's out on tubi man it's.

Speaker 1:

Are you working on anything currently, right now?

Speaker 3:

um, currently, right now, I'm working on some more stand-up and um, okay, nice and I'm gonna be in another movie that my boy um. You go to the link sacrifice for self on youtube. It's out right now.

Speaker 1:

It's called sacrifice for self. Yeah, we're gonna put the link up, man, the number four, number four, yeah, the number four we're all about networking, yeah number four.

Speaker 3:

Sacrifice for Self is the number four. It's on YouTube right now and it's doing crazy. Number basically played the plays about this guy.

Speaker 1:

He's an out-of-towner and he comes from New York and he ends up with this chick and she ends up jigging them and robbing them and people, now they, now she got a bounty on the head, not a whole city, it's the soul hit is looking for, so I got oh, that sounds crazy, I got that coming, yeah it's real good, I got that whoever setting that up, the more you get into that filmmaking and stuff. Yeah, you come up. That's a crazy story, but it's the truth. One more time it's called pay to play and what's the premise? One more.

Speaker 3:

It's a premise about repeat that, repeat that one more time. It's called pay to play and what's the premise?

Speaker 1:

one more time, it's a premise about this chick.

Speaker 3:

She meet a dude and she end up jiggin' him, end up robbin' him and takin' his money. And she didn't know that he was a heavy hitter out here and he had connections here and she, she scared men and tried vibe and try to make it for you know, because people got prices on the head. It's a lot of plot twisting. You think this person is good, but they got something with her and it's it's, it's all it's, it's some real life shit, bro, it's it's, it's some, it's, it's some real life shit that people do. But we put it to the cinematic, put it to the cinematic screen man, that shit's gonna. Man, that shit's gonna be dope. I'm gonna be on the uh, be dope, I'm going to be in that right there. Then I got another movie where I play a serious role with my boy, pa. Shout out to my boy PA Chase, money man. We got a movie coming out.

Speaker 3:

It's called. What's the name of this? I forgot the name, but I'm going to play a cop. We're going to put it up.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we're going to put the movie up play a cop.

Speaker 3:

We're going to put it up. We're going to put the movie up. It's still in production. It's going to be my first serious role while I play. Pain and Pleasure. It's going to be the name of the movie Pain and Pleasure. We're going to probably start filming, probably around January, probably next year, 2025. It's a serious role. It ain't going to be nothing wrong. Y'all see me as the funny guy. Ain't going to be another role. Y'all see me as you know, the funny guy. I can't be gone. There's some hoes in this. No, it's a whole serious role where I play a cop. Serious, nothing funny.

Speaker 1:

I play a serious guy Because you're multi-talented and you're multi-dimensional.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, multi-dimensional, yeah, multi-dimensional. You digest.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but you know what? I'm going to be honest with you.

Speaker 3:

Shout out to my girl. You see the cut?

Speaker 1:

yeah, shout out to my. I met you through my nigga, tony man yeah man, I'll go holla at the school, premier barber school. Yeah, man, you know uh, that's one hustling motherfucker oh yeah that's one hustling person, bro. Ever since I know I known Tony Tony been getting it man.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, no doubt man, that's my cousin. Smart, I mean one of the smartest people I know, and that's why we click. That's my dog man.

Speaker 1:

We are always looking for the next opportunity man yeah, that's my dog. Man T Will going to be on the show soon, soon. Yeah, that's my dog man. That's my dog man.

Speaker 3:

My thing is, man, somebody gave me an opportunity and I just took it and I ran to the floor with it, bro.

Speaker 1:

I pushed the pedal. And this is genuine y'all, because I know this brother personally. Yeah, and this brother has always got a good spirit, humble spirit, but the guy is funny man, he going to crack jokes.

Speaker 3:

He gonna throw outrageous takes. Yeah, man, the thing about it is I took it to the max. It's kind of like if you give something, put it like this If I was a rapper and somebody gave me an opportunity and they gave me the time to go in the studio, but I don't fulfill it because I'm smoking weed, I got bitches in there.

Speaker 1:

You ain't focused on your craft.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you got to be focused on your craft, you got to be focused.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you can't get mad at that person. You know what I'm saying For us. That person give you that opportunity you got to take because in this industry this wicked we're going to get let in the interview with the podcast, the stories I can tell you is wicked. If somebody give you an opportunity, you have to fucking take that shit. Every opportunity I got, I took it to the fucking max, bro. I took it because I put it. This is my mentality. Like Big Sean, I live my life like it's my last, so I pour everything into it. Like people know, when I do my character, I research it. So when I played the homeless guy on Seacole Lane, I went and I watched above the rim. Well, you know, bernie Mac played flipped and above the rim. So I did every homeless. I get into character. But you have to take, bro. You got to take every opportunity, bro. You can't take no opportunity for granted. Then you can't get mad if somebody gives you an opportunity and you don't take it.

Speaker 1:

Man look, a lot of people miss that Nothing to hear.

Speaker 3:

Freaking tans bro.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because they don't want to take an opportunity.

Speaker 2:

There's that saying you miss every shot you don't take.

Speaker 3:

Yes, because they don't want to take an opportunity. There's that saying you miss every shot you don't take. Yes, you miss every. The worst shot that you miss is the one you didn't take, the ones that you don't take, the ones that you don't take. The ones that you don't take. And people, people are scared of fucking failure, man.

Speaker 1:

They scared of failure.

Speaker 3:

A lot of guys. Let me tell you something A lot of guys missed their wife because they were scared of rejection.

Speaker 1:

A lot of women missed their husband because they were scared of rejection.

Speaker 2:

Not understanding that that's how you meet that person, that that's how you get that career, that that's how you get that goal, that that's how you meet that benchmark. You have to take the risk. You have to take the risk.

Speaker 3:

That's the only way. It's the only way.

Speaker 2:

Like Blasthoff was saying, the person who fastest in the world probably is at home with their kids. They never ran in the Olympics. They never did any of that. Whether it was their choice or something happened to them or something like that, they missed that shot. This is how life works, bro.

Speaker 3:

You have to take that chance, man. You have to. Now the people that see, oh you done, do it for a cameo Now they're my biggest fan. I say now, don't try to jump on the bandwagon Now. You didn't see the vision. I seen the vision. I told. I told sacrifice for self. I'm about to make the best opportunity. Now it gots me here. It just takes one single, took me one single cameo to get me where I was.

Speaker 3:

Then the crazy part about it that shit wasn't scripted, that shit was all off the top of my head. That was all improvised. The scene that you see in the movies, all that shit like Improvised, really it's improvised. He'll give me a premise like, hey, we're going to do this, this and that, and then I'll take that. Then the idea comes in my head and then I run with it Right on. So my shit is improv, my shit's natural. Those jokes and shit when I say there's some hoes in this house. I was inside and that's when that Megan Thee Stallion and Cardi B song came out. That wet ass pussy song came out and I was listening to it and I'm getting robbed. So I used that to.

Speaker 1:

Hold on a sec. You say you was getting what?

Speaker 3:

Huh, you say you was getting robbed. Oh yeah, I was getting robbed on the movie. On the movie. No, no, I was getting robbed. No, I was saying like before I started filming, that video had just came out.

Speaker 1:

So I remember and you reached in. Is that the one when you reached in the car and grabbed?

Speaker 3:

the money. Yes, that's with the money.

Speaker 1:

You was the most cool getting robbed.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I took that, I took that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, man, Fuck this nigga. You think I ain't got it?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you think I ain't got no money yeah. All that shit is improvised, bro, but it but it sounds like you were able to take experiences that you had in your life and I've seen and mix them up and make them into something right, got you so let's, let's talk about like, like.

Speaker 2:

So you said we were talking before the show started. You said you was in, like the military. Yeah, correct, yeah, I was broke. Hey, why don't you tell us a little bit about?

Speaker 1:

salute you for that, you for that because Big time, big time. Hey man, without you America wouldn't be better yeah man. Every single one of you that has served has made America better. The ultimate sacrifice.

Speaker 2:

The ultimate sacrifice.

Speaker 1:

I respect you because that's the ultimate selfless decision. It's not about self, no, I do, and sometimes it could people thinking about it's still an ultimate, because you can't go into the military and say, well, I need to do this and do this, I want to, just without it's still serving the greater good.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so salute you brother. Yeah, man, I did. No, I did four years in the military. It's a brotherhood. It's a brotherhood. It's kind of like it's a brotherhood. Man, shout out to my boy you know what I'm saying Ann Atkins, my dog. He left yesterday from South Carolina. He came out here.

Speaker 3:

I ain't seen my dog in like 19 years, but we still had that brotherhood. We met in like 19 years but we still had that brotherhood. We met in Right, that's brotherhood. We met like it's a fraternity. It's a fraternity. We met in 03, and we still rocking this 2024.

Speaker 3:

That's 21 years of solid you know what I'm saying solid friendship. It's like a fraternity. That's like my dog. You know what I'm saying? Because, fuck all this you know entertainment, shit. Like I tell y'all I'm a real nigga off the fucking camera man. So like it's, it's a, it's a real solid brotherhood. It taught me structure, it taught me loyalty and it told me to never leave nobody behind man. It, it, it, it, it. Never leave nobody behind man. Yeah, it taught me all that. But once again, man, shout out to my boy, shout out to my, that's like my brother. Man Shout out to my boy, ann Atkins. Shout out to my boy Keezy. They came out here, brad President. They had the time of their life. Yeah, they had the time of their fucking life, man, life is about, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Life. So fucking life, man. Life is about life. So we make decisions sometimes, and sometimes we're born into situations, but life is meant to be enjoyed. Yeah, correct, you're also meant to build a legacy and build a foundation and be serious about life, but life is not supposed to be pure pain and suffering and whatnot, no, so you do your time and you serve and you come back and you be celebrated, bro.

Speaker 3:

And here today we celebrate you for and you come back and you be celebrated, bro, and here today we celebrate you for what you did. Oh, I appreciate y'all man, I appreciate that Absolutely Big time.

Speaker 1:

I'm sorry, bro, go ahead and let me cut you out. One of my biggest regrets is that I and nobody knows this about me, but the ones that know me I was talking to Goody Mo earlier today before we started shooting man. Before we started shooting man, I was sworn into the military, bro.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you told me, the United States, the Navy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the Navy, yeah, and I had my ship out date and whatnot, but I had a son.

Speaker 3:

Had a son, you know. Yeah, that's understandable man.

Speaker 1:

And well still, because tell me this if I'm wrong Goody Moe, I could have married his mom.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And brought her on base with me once I got through boot camp right, Boot camp, yeah, I could have had my family with me right? Yeah, you could have. Is that true?

Speaker 3:

or not? Yeah, once you get through boot camp and get your basic training and then you go to your duty station, they'll give you BHAs, called BHAs, basic housing and housing, and you'll have a family-owned base.

Speaker 1:

That's one of my regrets, but I don't regret the way my life is turning out so far Bro.

Speaker 3:

Brad, tell me some real stuff. I'm not trying to cut you off, bro. Yeah, go ahead. There's no such thing as regretting it. You shouldn't regret stuff in life, because God put it how.

Speaker 1:

That's right, hey man, hey man.

Speaker 3:

These brothers, god put it. How that's right, how God, hey man, hey man, god put it. This brother's speaking real talk, real talk, god put it. It was your destiny. That wasn't for you to go, even though you wanted to go, friends, and you wanted to go, yeah.

Speaker 1:

God, that wasn't On live. Here I go, here I go, y'all watching this, your journey.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that wasn't. That wasn't, that wasn't your journey.

Speaker 1:

Thank you. Your purpose and I say that all the time- that wasn't your purpose.

Speaker 3:

I could have ended up drowned or dead.

Speaker 1:

I could have ended up no telling yeah, and God going to walk your path the way he going to walk your path.

Speaker 1:

So I don't you know what on live right now. This is the real talk. Y'all seeing somebody not trying to put on a persona or portray a fucking image, and I'm telling y'all right now that the shit that he's saying is my reasoning of what. Maybe that's why I didn't land in the military, because it probably wasn't going to go right for me. Correct, because let me keep it real with you and my life wasn't perfect but it still could have been worse.

Speaker 3:

I get what you're saying, but you know I wanted to do 20 years but it wasn't for me.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you wanted that retirement. Yeah, I wanted that retirement, you wanted that retirement.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I wanted that bag. I still got the bag now but. What age did you go in? I came in 20, and I turned.

Speaker 1:

You wanted to get out. You wanted to go out there, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so yeah, I actually turned 21 in boot camp, so that shit was crazy.

Speaker 1:

But duh, a lot of niggas either in military or they in prison. Yeah, at 19, 20.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so me getting out. That was a chapter in my life. Every press blast off real talk Back then, Every, every.

Speaker 3:

That was like a chapter in my life. That was like a chapter in my life. But once you my thing is, I don't like getting too comfortable you got to elevate with the stocks. Your stocks ascend, you want them to ascend, you don't want them to descend. So once I got out and I started meeting different people, it ascended. That was just that chapter in my life. But that wasn't for me. This is me, my natural, making it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it it, it, it it it it it it it it it it it it. This is what I was meant to do. I was meant to entertain people. The Navy was just a stepping stone to meet people. That got in my life. It was just a chapter in my life.

Speaker 2:

Now do you find that the saying that, like you guys happened to go through the mud together and training and combat and everything like that that that really made your friendships whole. Yeah, it really yeah, 20 years.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it really yeah, it really made it solid because we went through some shit together, Like we went through some shit Y'all. Everybody thinks the military's all glitz and glamour. But yeah, it's glitz and glamour, but there's also some shit. That's. It's a hard life. It's a hard life, just like I was telling you, brad, remember the story I'm telling. I told you I ain't told Perez being in the military is like being in college. It's like being in college.

Speaker 1:

And I yeah, we talked about it.

Speaker 3:

And I told him this story. This shit's going to trip you all out. This is like a true story. I had this, this. I'm not going to say his name, but people that were stationed in my duty station they know who I'm talking about. My second duty station. He ended up he met a chick right Right on and he thought the chick was. He thought the chick was you know of age and he ended up going to Applebee's with this young. He ended up going to Applebee's with this young lady and she had an ID. She getting drained to come to find out that she was underage. His whole life got fucked up. Now he got kicked out. He's kicked out the military. He's went to jail and he's on a registry. See, that's the side of see, that's the side of the military that they don't tell you about. Yeah, there's always the good side, like the movie, the John Wayne movie the good, the bad and the ugly.

Speaker 1:

That was one of my favorite movies, so you got to be careful man.

Speaker 3:

So, like I'm saying, everything is a life lesson, man, you have to be careful. Military was cool, but it also has its side. It has its good and it has its bad. So I took the bad with the good and I made everything. You know what I'm saying. I made everything about it, bro, but I don't regret me being in the military. That was probably one of those. Those was one of probably the best five years of my life man Best five years of my life.

Speaker 1:

No doubt. And you know what, bro Nice, it seems as though, again, we're going to revisit the topic before we started all this. Well, we're going to revisit the main part of people miss their opportunities. Yeah, man, they'll have an opportunity and they don't seize it. So a lot of people will be missed on their opportunities, bro, you know what I'm saying A lot of people will be missed on their opportunities. You know, a lot of people will be missed on their opportunities, man, they'll have an opportunity, a chance or whatever, and they won't seize it. You know they won't seize it. You know they'll sit there and look and have something that showed up in their face and they never took the chance to come through and take advantage.

Speaker 1:

Because, they want to see a drill. They got pregnant or he got a baby or whatever. It's a lot of lost opportunity on that as well.

Speaker 3:

Like I told you off the camera. I'm not a what if guy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

I'm not what if I'm the type of guy Perez? I'm going to take that chance If I fuck up and don't deal, hey. I tried this shit. It wasn't meant for me, like I was telling you before we got on camera. Everybody got that niche bro.

Speaker 2:

There's a saying that my friend had One of my best friends, everybody has a niche.

Speaker 3:

Everybody Shout out to my boy.

Speaker 1:

God gave everybody.

Speaker 3:

God gives everybody a talent and my talent has to be an entertainer. And like my mama said rest in peace, mom Like she said, if you don't use it, you'll lose it bro, yep, you'll fucking lose it. So just imagine if I never took that chance with that movie. How my it, bro. Yep, you'll fucking lose it. So just imagine if I never took that chance with that movie, how my life would be, yep.

Speaker 2:

So I took that chance Big shout out to my boy, qsa, getting married this week.

Speaker 1:

Shout out. Qsa man, what's up? Qsa, shout out bro.

Speaker 2:

He had a saying that I love. He said failure is nothing more than a delayed success. Correct, that's all it is. And your life, the experiences that you've gone through, has been success after success after success after success.

Speaker 1:

But everything ain't gonna go that way, so it's delayed sometimes. Oh, it's delayed. Oh yeah, and you gotta keep going, don't give up.

Speaker 3:

Oh, I never gave up, because now y'all see me here now, but the people they didn't see, they don't know what it took for me to get here. It was a fucking journey, bro. I know I'm not tooting my horn, but I know I'm funnier than a motherfucker no, diddy, I know I'm funnier than a motherfucker man, but you know how many times I got turned to oh, we're not going this direction. Oh well, you don't fit this image right here. We're not. Oh well, you don't fit this image right here. Or we want you to do this shit or we want you to do that, I told myself I'm not supposed to sell my soul, bro.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, hey, I I'm not supposed to sell my soul to because you wanted me to be. Do you want me to be this type of person? No, I'm gonna be who I am. Yeah, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm gonna, I'm gonna. I'm gonna be me, perez, I'm gonna. I'm gonna be me at the I going to be me at the end of the day. Man, that's me, that's how I am, brad, I'm going to be me. Hate it or love it, perez check this out.

Speaker 1:

What this brother is talking about is what a lot of us miss. You know, we miss our opportunities and we give up or we don't think about just because I'm in see, my whole life, no matter what I've been in and I've been in some shit. I've been in shit that I knew was gonna last me a year, two years. I knew it was gonna be a mud hog. It's gonna take me a year, two, three. But I didn't tell myself, well, fuck it, let me try to go another route. I know, I know what can get me out of this hole. It's just gonna take me to some. See, we said this on the. You know the visitor episode where mike brad came on.

Speaker 1:

The tortoise some, most, a lot of times, does win the race. Sometimes you got a race where you gotta win by speed. You can't try to to be a tortoise winning a track fucking race, a real track racing day. But we're talking about in life, trying to reach goals Big time. You're trying to take a shortcut because you want to sell this brick and then you're going to make about $50,000 on selling this. Whatever you're going to make off of it, that's the rabbit. If you say I'm going to go to school, get this degree, get this education, stay committed to this, this, this, this. The booming market right now is real estate. I'm going to try to get into being a real estate advisor. I'm going to try to be an engineer or whatever. That's the tortoise race that you're going to win in the long term who you think yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you got 50 kids in college going for a degree to be a cyber tech security, cyber security analyst. You got 50 other guys that investing in dope selling. Who you think out of this 50 set and this 50 set, how many is the dope selling side of 50 going to have more success than the 50 that say look, I'm going to go to community college and get this free grant and then use this for my positivity? We ain't talking about the ones because it don't take your parents to have money to send you to college, to go to college and get that degree, you can go to a community college or whatever.

Speaker 1:

If you smart enough to get your scholarship and you're going to take these 50 people I'm banking on. I'm putting my money on the 50 that did it the right way. Yeah, the ones that took the chance At least a third or half of those 50 that was trying to do the investing in the game, which you got to do what you got to do. Sometimes I don't knock nobody but we just talking since now yeah.

Speaker 1:

I don't knock if you had to do that and you had to go that route, because you really didn't have to go that route. Nobody has to go that route.

Speaker 3:

You just choose it. You don't want to be a part of a good environment.

Speaker 1:

I could easily do that. You don't have to do that. But if you chose, I'm not knocking because I came up in there so I can commit I can relate to that. So a lot of people just don people knock shit just because they grew up with a silver spoon in their mouth or they grew up in a middle-class family and their family grew up eating. You know, they never had a chance to eat raviolis, they never had a chance to eat beans and wieners and cereal that you had to pour the sugar in. They grew up with a silver spoon. It's a lot of people that did that. But for those that didn't, I can relate to you. So I know that. So, but my thing is, there's still a chance to go ahead and sit there and go another route.

Speaker 3:

Bro, you always have other avenues, you have another route to go, bro. But this is the thing. You see, it's a real talk podcast. I'm going to talk some real with you, I'm going to keep it real. I'm going to keep it real with you.

Speaker 1:

That's what we want. I'm going to keep it real.

Speaker 3:

That's what we need.

Speaker 1:

That's what we want, I'm going to keep it real.

Speaker 3:

That's what we need. That's what we need. Everybody is not going to be LeBron James or Kobe Bryant or Michael Jordan. Everybody's not going to be the football player, that's right. Everybody's not going to be a rapper. That shit is. You have a fucking better chance of winning the lottery to be that shit. But see, this is where and that's if you're good, if you're good. But see, here's the thing, and this is where my hometown I'm from, willis Texas, my hometown, a little country town.

Speaker 1:

Willis Texas. Shout out Willis Texas.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, willis Texas, shout out, Willis Texas man.

Speaker 1:

Up north, going towards Huntsville yeah, going towards Huntsville. Grew around, I'm keeping real.

Speaker 3:

My mother was a crack addict. My daddy, that nigga. He was there. I give him a D plus if I rank it for being a parent. He didn't fail, but he wasn't always. You know what I'm saying. He wasn't always. You know what I'm saying. He wasn't always. He wasn't always there with me All this, but I still.

Speaker 3:

I could have been a product of environment like my other cousins and sold drugs, but I choose not to do that shit. I chose not to because I seen the other side of it. You know what I'm saying. I seen the other side of it. You know what I'm saying. I seen the other side of you know what I'm saying Take off of selling drugs. I, that wasn't me. I was around it, but it was not. But it wasn't me. So when I come back home and they see what I'm doing now, they got respect for me, cause they were like hey, I'm proud of what you're doing. You're not like everybody else out here. Still stuck, bro. Thank you, still stuck. Thank you, still stuck in high school. Shit that you did in high school.

Speaker 3:

That's one thing 20 years ago and you focus on that Bro, that shit, bro, that time to pass by, yeah, that time, bro. That time is gone. And, to keep it real, I've been around niggas that sold major weight nine times out of ten times out of ten. Either you're gonna get caught, cause I mean you can't be gonna do it for so long You're gonna get it's gonna be about a female gonna get you caught up, or it's gonna be a nigga that's jealous, or pure fucking hate. So once that money is gone, you're gonna see who your true friends is, bro, you're gonna see who your true friends is.

Speaker 1:

But here go the thing. You're right, but this is one thing that a lot of other people, cultures and stuff don't realize about the black community. We can't. You got to understand a lot of them knock us and say I was saying this earlier about. You may have grew up a lot of people don't have sympathy and don't have sympathize for. You have to breed that out, the slave mentality, the victim mentality. Yeah, that, oh, they put the. The man got the advantage. You have to breathe that out and start living in the world you're in now and this is going to take time, but we're on the right track. That's all it is. So, while some people are, bro, we got handed the short end of the stick. Yeah, a very short end of the stick.

Speaker 1:

Those that came and were dealt through slavery in this country that's not sugar-coated. They want to block it out and act like it. Yes, they want to censor it, bro. The fact of the matter is a lot of the black community in America came here through disadvantaged means. So the generations of disadvantaged means and it's coming. It's coming rapidly. Y'all don't realize it's actually coming rapidly. It's some things that need to change, but the disadvantage is coming. Came rap, getting out of the disadvantage is coming rapidly, you have to.

Speaker 1:

That's why there's no more victim. It is no more victim mentality. Oh, you can't use that no more, it's too many resources. It's on you now. Yep, I don't give a damn if you were born in a two, two, uh, two square inch shed, you still there's people that there's too many resources out here to get you out of that shed and let me say this one we got it we, we got it.

Speaker 1:

We got a situation set up to where we don't recognize. We want to victim blame. We use our environment as an excuse bro.

Speaker 2:

You can't use that. And let me say this you can't use that nowadays, bro. I think we would all agree in this room that the delayed victory is the sweetest victory.

Speaker 3:

Oh, that's so sweet.

Speaker 2:

That's some wine that has been fermenting for a long time.

Speaker 1:

Correct, that's a fact bro, just because your victory is harder to achieve, don't mean you still can't achieve.

Speaker 2:

It's the sweetest victory. It's just going to make you stronger than the next man. It's the sweetest victory there is.

Speaker 1:

It's going to make you stronger than the next man.

Speaker 1:

It's the sweetest victory there is If you had to win a race that say you have to do 10 sit-ups, but you weigh 250 and this guy weigh 110, you weigh more than him. You started out working harder than him. You've been 250. Your push-ups have been hard but you can still do them because you've been doing them. Yeah, you've been doing more than this person. That's 110. They ain't been doing it, they ain't been taking life easy. Oh, I can do 10 now, but now you've been doing them though. So now your timing picked up. Now it might take that you an hour to do it the first time because you're 250. But you've been doing them so much at 250 that now you can do 10 in 10 seconds. That's the fight that a lot of the black community didn't realize they had.

Speaker 3:

You had a short end of the stick, but at the end of the day, don't nobody owe you shit, bro. Nobody owe you shit Nobody doesn't owe, especially not today.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, don't nobody owe you nothing, bro, if they gonna give other people reparations in other communities and stuff like that. You know they owe you something, but whatever they owe you, let them. You know the people in power. That's the problem. The people in power don't want to realize, man, you did the people wrong.

Speaker 2:

There's a lot of people who owe you but they ain't going to pay you, and you have to make peace with the fact that there are a lot of people who owe you but they're never going to pay you.

Speaker 1:

You have to make peace with that, so don't worry about it. So don't worry about it?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but see, go, push through.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but my that weight on your back.

Speaker 3:

Like the thing is, though, we come products of our environment because it starts with the black people. I'm just going to keep it real With the black people. It starts with the generation. It starts with generation. Curse friends.

Speaker 1:

Generational curse.

Speaker 3:

That's why I say you got to breathe that out. So check this out. So say, the grandma was out there and she was used to men talking to her, crazy, doing this woofty woo, probably jumping on her and jumping on her. Then at a young age she has a kid and they see that. So now the daughter sees that shit. I don't want that and she may be, she may be see yo so used to her mama doing that and she don't know her self worth. Now she gets a nigga and he doing the same thing, she do it. She gets a child, her child see it. So you got to, bro, you have to break.

Speaker 1:

That's her child see it.

Speaker 3:

So you got to bro, you have to break, you have to, you have to break, you have to break the generational curse. And nowadays, with these females, it's all about sex.

Speaker 1:

The sexy reds, the Cardi B's the gorillas, but those are because they're influenced by that.

Speaker 3:

They influence they've been. They see that shit and they think that shit is cool. Don't get me wrong, I'm at the club, I'll jam them, but that's something that I don't play with my daughter. Yeah, I'm not playing no Cardi B, no sexy red, no, fucking none of that stuff with my daughter, because she'll see that and she'll try to emulate it.

Speaker 1:

You know, there's a time and a place.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, there's a time and there's a time and a place where these young girls now, like I tell them, and an age, A time and a place and an age. I tell these young girls now, that shit that you see on Love and Hip Hop, that shit's TV. That's TV. That's not real life. You can't base your life off of that shit right there.

Speaker 1:

Because that is TV, and so that's why I say because you got to be aware of your situation. A lot of people say well, you just have to be patient. The tortoise be a tortoise caught in a community, we're going to win a race if you just be a tortoise.

Speaker 3:

It took this long to get here.

Speaker 1:

Correct. It took 200 or 300 years to get here yeah. And we on the right track. Yeah, people want to live their lifetime and see shit corrected. Right then, bro, life is long. The universe is millions and billions and trillions of years long. You have to live based off of that. So just all you got to do is do your part to better your child. It starts in the home, first of all.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it starts in the home, so you already know what we've been through.

Speaker 1:

So you try to make your life a little bit better. You saw your mom get beat on, jumped on. Well, you got to say you know what, I'm not going to accept that. So at least my least, if I see this man hit me one time or whatever, I'm out of there and let my child see that. So then that way your child be like I ain't accepting that. You know what I ain't gonna be like that. I'm gonna be better than that. I'm gonna improve off of what I saw coming up. I'm gonna be better than what I saw coming up.

Speaker 1:

You have to take control and responsibility for your life. You cannot blame what's happening now on the past, because the past is the past. You stay stuck in the past and using the past as an excuse. Hey, the people in the past didn't have lights, they had to use fire. The people in the past, they didn't have vehicles, they had to use their feet. They had to use horse-drawn carriages.

Speaker 1:

Correct, you have to use your brain and get yourself out of what you came from. You know, invent a new way to be successful. They didn't work for them and it might not be a new invention, but in your family it's a new invention. In your bloodline it's a new invention to go to college In your bloodline it's a new invention to go ahead and stay in school and graduate. Y'all didn't do that before, correct. So now you have to use the tools and the knowledge at hand, the people that invented true inventions. They didn't have a wheel, they had a stone or they had wood and they shaped it into the shape of a wood and they put two onto a box and they was able to get pulled by a horse and they made them more transportation when they got to use their feet. So you have to use the tools and shit that you have and now it's all laid out for you, most of it In today's world, unless you're trying to evolve, it's all about you.

Speaker 3:

I sent a call from Michael Jordan. Michael Jordan said missed.

Speaker 1:

He made more than he missed, but he took those shots.

Speaker 3:

You see what I'm saying y'all. He took again. It's the shots you don't. Yeah, he took the like you said. He took those shots. We all know jordan, the greatest of all time, he, he took those shots. It does. He took him even though he missed him. He took him but he still, at the end of the day, he still took that shot. So that's like with me I'm a, I'm, I'm gonna take that, I'm, I'm gonna take that shot.

Speaker 2:

Man that's, that's that's that's.

Speaker 3:

That's that's me. I'm that guy that I'm not scared of failure, and that's what's wrong with most people today. Most people are scared to. Most people are scared to fail. If I feel, okay, this didn't work, I'm gonna do it, I'm gonna try this or I do something else. I'm gonna.

Speaker 2:

At least I tried yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's real talk. And uh, one of my favorite uh motivational speakers not a motivational speaker, just somebody motivational bruce lee. He said I don't fear the man who tried to, who tried uh 10 different, 10 000 different times the kicks. I fear the man who tried the same kick 10 000 different times. He tried the same kick 10,000 times.

Speaker 3:

You're going to perfect it, you're going to get it right over and over and over and over again. It's all about man, it's all about procrastinating, it's all about excuse my words your craft. It's all about practicing your craft and perfecting your craft and doing it every day. People don't realize. It does not say you have to be in front of the camera or you know doing stuff. It can be done easily by studying the history. I studied the history of comedy. I started all the way back in the oh really.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I started all the way back in, like the 1920s with the Three Stooges and stuff like that.

Speaker 2:

Was that the 20s? Was that the 20s?

Speaker 3:

20s, 30s, 40s you know back in the day I studied that this is something that I eat live breathe and shit. I eat live breathe and shit comedy. If I'm not on stage or not shooting, no movies. So not only are you personally naturally funny, you studied some of the beginners and pioneers of comedy in America, the Moms, the Moms Mableys, going back to even Albert and Costello, the three students I studied, all of them.

Speaker 2:

Lucille Ball and all that. Yeah, lucille Ball, charlie.

Speaker 3:

Chairman, I studied that Even right now I'm watching Malcolm and Eddie. I'm not going to take their style, but I can kind of take what they did and get their premise.

Speaker 1:

The premise. It's all about the premise.

Speaker 3:

I take their premise and do it and put it in a twist of my way. You have to study, you know what Us being on camera.

Speaker 1:

I feel like I give away ideas, because when you said you studied the premise and the setup of how it takes to be a comedian, what's the jokes? What are the? Topics they touch on family life, they touch on personal life, they touch on politics and they take comedy and find the comical things in those situations. It's just like a movie I think I went and seen. We went and seen the alien the new alien movie yeah, I gotta see it.

Speaker 1:

It was pretty good, it's good. Yeah, I'm gonna give y'all the toast though, the toast of the movie theater right now, to me, for adults, only now. Don't bring your kids to that because you're gonna introduce them into degeneracy, if you do that it's the Deadpool Wolverine movie, that movie's bomb.

Speaker 1:

But I will say, on the Romulus, the premise is somebody and the ones that step outside of that to still create a great horror movie are the ones that's going to win Because the premise is good. But if I watch movies to critique them, I watch movies to say because a scary movie ain't going to scare me unless that damn situation seems uncanny, unparalleled. The costume looks good. You know it's not a costume, you know it's not strings pulling up. You gotta look at it like man. How realistic is this? So so. So I say that to say that it was the same old premise. You got an antagonist, a protagonist, you got the guy that's gonna be the pessimistic guy, the guy that's gonna be oh man, I don't like you because of you, some old, stupid pessimistic guy, that's going to cause the problem.

Speaker 1:

And that's going to cause the problem, that's going to balloon the problem and then you got the people. That's not going to use common sense. Use something like I'm going to tell you some of these great movies. I seen a post one time. I'm going to let you get on yours, go ahead but I seen a post hey, somebody tell me a movie where the villain wins and then those do something. And those movies tend to be good because you didn't expect that outcome and people were naming all kind of movies and the one I chose I don't know if y'all have saw this was the first collector. I don't know if y'all remember that movie.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I've been the first collector. Yeah, that movie was good bro, because it didn't end seem good. Then they came out with part two the Collection, the Collection, the Collection was one of my favorite movies.

Speaker 1:

No, no, the Collector was a precedent. It was an uncommon precedent. Oh yeah, uncommon.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I got you Do something that doesn't. Yeah, I said part two was my favorite. I didn't like the first one.

Speaker 1:

I liked the second one, the collection yeah was good, no, it was good. But, the first one set the tone.

Speaker 3:

Oh, yeah, it set the tone. Yeah, the bad guy won. But see, take off, Pray and see. Everybody comes to me. I get this all the time, man, I'm going to let y'all know now If you ever see me in public. This shit fucking pisses me off. I'm keeping it real. I'm on real top podcast. Y'all fucking subscribe to this channel right now. Y'all subscribe. This is the stuff that pisses me off. People come to me and say, hey, man, I want to be in movies. Okay, that's cool, you want to be in movies, but you have to fit the character. It has to make sense. So every movies we do, every characters I do, I can relate to that character and I'm making it makes sense. It has to be realistic. I'm not going to do nothing, that I know damn well. That's not going to make sense. So that's what you get with people today. People want to like people, for instance. It's what's the word? Let me say it it's quantity over quality.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I don't like that I don't like that.

Speaker 3:

I don't like that. I appreciate that. Remember when we had this conversation. It's all about quantity.

Speaker 1:

Quality over quantity. It's the quantity right, it's the quality right, it's the quality over quantity.

Speaker 3:

Like I was telling my little brother, for instance, shout out to my brother, gray Dane, the president, you've seen my brother. You met him when we went to the club. He bigger than me, my little big brother. You know what I'm saying. I was telling him that he likes to put out stuff. I said, bro, it's okay to put out stuff you putting out this stuff but the thing is you had to have quality when you put it out. You're putting out this stuff, but the thing is you had to have quality when you put it down. You can't just be putting out something just to say, hey, man, I'm putting out this stuff. That's when you're going to get some bullshit and people don't want that. It's about the quality.

Speaker 3:

Man, like, when I do moves, I may put out, put out maybe one, two, maybe three moves a year, maybe some skits or maybe some stuff like that, but it's like it's the quality of it. Break it down in his terms, break it down and break it down present in in rapper's term. Yeah, you may have that one guy that put out two records, but you have this other guy that puts out four records. His two records may be better than that because it's about the quantity people just, you can't just put out content just to put out content. That's where people get the game messed up. The game don't work like that.

Speaker 3:

Oh, oh, I put this out. No, who gives a fuck, you put that shit out. You may put out four albums and three of them is trash and one's good. People gonna remember those three trash albums over the one get album. You see what I'm saying, perez. So when I do stuff, when we do stuff, we make sure it's right. We're not putting out stuff just to put out stuff. That's, that's the main thing people get. I want to put out something. Just to put out something. Nah, you're not, you're, you're not gonna, you're not gonna go nowhere with that. Yeah, just to be putting out, just to be sitting up, put it out. Yeah, you put it out and say you got a catalog, but at the end of the day, like I said, that dude that put out, that, put out those two albums or maybe put out a single, might get more traction than you because you're putting out all this stuff. You can't.

Speaker 2:

It's about quality, bro, so let me ask who were some of your top three favorite comedians, because you talked about how you studied all these guys in the past and quality over quantity. Who are the real qualitative great people you're going to remember from the world of comedy.

Speaker 3:

That's a good question, I would say. I would say Richard Pryor. Okay, why Richard Pryor's?

Speaker 1:

the goat. Let me stop you there. Do you remember that movie, the Toy? Yeah, I remember the Toy. All right, then you a real one. Yeah, you can't say Richard Pryor, if you don't remember, folks don't know about the Toy. Yeah, I remember that was one of my movies growing up as a child.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I go back. You remember Bruce's Because?

Speaker 1:

Richard Pryor gonna cut out. Yeah, here you go.

Speaker 3:

You remember Bruce's Millions.

Speaker 1:

I don't remember that one.

Speaker 3:

It's. I think I don't know if I said to it's the movie where he had to spend so much money in a day. He had to spend like a million something.

Speaker 1:

So is that a premise? So we get a lot of times. So is that a premise? So we get a lot of times. I'm sorry to cut you off.

Speaker 2:

No problem.

Speaker 1:

But you know, a lot of times we don't get credited for ideas that we have sparked. Like they say, elvis Presley was sparked off of Little Richard. Yeah, and all of that. Do you think the Brewster's, what is it called? Brewster's Minions? Brewster's Minions was the start of Richie Rich. Remember that movie?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, Richie, rich it was. Yeah, I think it was. You think that was?

Speaker 1:

like the idea that helped spark that movie.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I think it was the idea that. I think it was the idea that sparked that that sounds like the GOAT, I think number two. My number two guy that I studied a lot was Bernie Mac.

Speaker 2:

Bernie Mac was a. He's a true.

Speaker 3:

Bernie Mac is a true. What's the word? I'm gonna break you off something. I'm gonna give you off some real stuff. There's different type of comedian. There's your. You know, you got people that do silly stuff, like dc yum, fly, um, but those are new wave. Those are, yeah, those are not the new way comedians.

Speaker 1:

They're not stand-up comedians, I mean, they're not skit, skit.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and you're desi banks, but then you got your skit yes, yeah, yeah, yeah, then you got wayne, wayne yeah, yeah, country wayne, no, no, no, no country ain't got to standup and it was good.

Speaker 1:

Well, okay, but I know okay.

Speaker 3:

I know.

Speaker 1:

Country Wayne, and no disrespect to.

Speaker 3:

Country Wayne. He got good movies and Country.

Speaker 1:

Wayne is in the media a big time. But I know Country Wayne from his skits. It was always funny.

Speaker 3:

You know, you got your Cameron Hart. Cameron Hart is, like how you say it, one of your guys. He's silly retarded. It's silly retarded but you laugh at it. It's funny, but it's silly retarded. This motherfucker did some retarded shit. And then you got your natural. You got your natural picture like Richard Pryor, bernie Mac Cedric, entertainer Steve Harvey, chris Rock.

Speaker 1:

DL Hughley, you know what the new guys gonna say to you. They gonna come at it. You for that boy I don't give a fuck, because they gonna say you named all the old schools. Are there any new new school people that you find to be that naturally funny type of person?

Speaker 3:

I said that's naturally funny to me. New school like new, like how new Like new new right now in the generation.

Speaker 1:

See, we're going to try to label everybody as a skit.

Speaker 3:

I would say my. I would say Desi Banks. I'm a big Desi.

Speaker 1:

Banks fan. Yeah, desi Banks is funny man, desi Banks. He come and do a lot of shows out here in Houston. Yeah, desi Banks. To me I think Desi Banks show.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I think Desi Banks Shout out to you. Desi Banks, I would love to work with you. Desi Banks is a natural funny guy, but I'm going to be controversial because it's a real tough podcast. Did y'all see? I'm going to get back to the last question who wants? You to start shit on here. No, I don. I'm 10 toes down, but I'm going to get back to my third one that I like studying. Did y'all guys see they had the top internet, top 100 internet comedians.

Speaker 2:

Y'all saw that I didn't see that who were the top ones?

Speaker 3:

The top. Well, dazzy Banks was like number six, but they put who was number?

Speaker 2:

one.

Speaker 3:

They put Drewski. Drewski's not funny to me, bro, drewski. I'm sorry, drewski. I'm sorry. Drewski is not funny to me, bro, I'm sorry. I know a lot of people are getting mad. I'm going to give some slack, but I don't give a fuck.

Speaker 2:

But he's popular that gets votes, he's popular.

Speaker 3:

This is what I tell people Me personally. I think I'm funnier than this nigga. That's just me personally. That's just my personal opinion. And that's just my personal opinion. And that's just me. But I tell people oh, he's funny, his skits and stuff. I said, yeah, I could be like him if I had his resources. See, it's about his resources and connections, but to me you know what?

Speaker 1:

I think he's not he's not funny.

Speaker 3:

If you put me in Drewski in a roast, in a roast battle in front of a crowd, I would eat his ass. I would eat his ass alive, bro. You know what? What I think people like Drewski In a roast battle in front of a crowd.

Speaker 1:

I would eat his ass alive, bro. You know what? Why I think people like Drewski is because he's new wave, funny and he's going to do shit that people scared to do. He's going to play characters that people scared to play and he's going to make like. I seen the skit when he was, you know, acting like he was with the Roll Tide.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the Roll Tide yeah.

Speaker 1:

He does skits. That's funny, that's relatable. He's going to touch every avenue. He's going to touch the women, he's going to touch the men. He's going to touch the LGBTQ community. He's going to tap into all communities. So he's a universally like. You gonna find something. Everybody can find something funny. That Drewski did.

Speaker 3:

Drew's not funny bro.

Speaker 1:

But if you're looking for pure comedian, you may be right Like maybe I don't know, I don't know, don't get me wrong, don't get me wrong.

Speaker 3:

He does relatable stuff, but he's not funny to me. That's my personal opinion, that stuff he's not funny. I feel like he try to do too much. That's what I feel like.

Speaker 3:

I feel like he don't get me wrong there may be times when he in the social media world there may be times when he may not try to do too much. Yeah, I feel like you know what I'm saying, Perez. I feel like he tries to do. Don't get me wrong, he's talented. I've seen some of the stuff. I might smirk at it, but to our right saying he's the number one internet comedian. I think they should have gave that shit to Desi Desi or DC Young Flock Desi got some shit. Or Ha Ha Davis or Ha Ha Davis Him. That type of guy, what you think about what's his name?

Speaker 1:

Tr Him, that type of guy. What you think about what's his name, trash.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, Bubba, he's one of those guys that I fuck because he's naturally funny. He's more funny than Drewski. To me, Drewski does it because I think Drewski got it because he light-skinned. That's what I said. He got it because he light-skinned. The Steph Curry effect Light-skinned niggas in man.

Speaker 2:

That's what I said.

Speaker 3:

He got it because he light-skinned the Steph Curry effect. Light-skinned niggas in man Drug niggas. Light-skinned niggas. Light-skinned niggas are in.

Speaker 2:

But we will spit real talk on this show. Light-skinned dudes are in now.

Speaker 1:

We not going to be a bunch of niggas on here stepping on light-skinned niggas. No, no, no. Steph Curry got that shot. No, he got that shot. Steph Curry's a sniper. He's a sniper. I'm not being entertained I can't attain that.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm just saying, though, I can't attain that. I'm saying to me yeah yeah, yeah, but Drewski's not funny, bro. I guarantee you, I'll put the fucking.

Speaker 1:

Bro have you seen that skit.

Speaker 2:

You saying Drewski, you saying it's the comedy with Drake, it's the rap.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

Thank you, okay, thank you.

Speaker 1:

Thank you. I don't I ain't delved that deep into it, but will you say that you remember that skit where Drewski walked up into all them cats and he was like one against 50, one against 50. I'm staying on business. One against 50. They all like that was funny to me.

Speaker 3:

That shit was not funny. That shit's not funny to me. I'm just sorry.

Speaker 1:

I mean it wasn't hilarious, but I mean you had to like I had this nigga stealing.

Speaker 3:

What's the name of this podcast? Again the Real.

Speaker 1:

Hey, keep it real. This is what this is about. Y'all live in the fact With the Real Talk podcast. Y'all see what's going on. The fuck going on.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the Real. I guarantee you, if you get me, don't, this is what I will give him his props. I said in the skit world he may get me with the skits cause he, you know, I've did skits too and my skits been funny too. But I'm saying, if you put me and Drewski, you put us head to head in a fucking roast battle, I put my fucking on my kids and I put the pink slip to the house and everything I earn. I will roast the fuck out that nigga hey we don't start this.

Speaker 3:

I will eat his ass fucking a lot.

Speaker 1:

Man, y'all live on the Real Talk podcast. Man y'all here to hear first man, we got a comedy call out. Is this going to be one of the? I've seen and heard it done before. Y'all heard it here first. Man, we got a comedy call-out. Is this going to be one of the? I've seen and heard it done before. We've heard it plenty of times Cat Williams and Ricky Smiley, whatever the case, hey, y'all heard it here first you got a comedy. What's the boy that you just got through listening to? What's his name? Corey Moe and Cat Williams. They was all going. Hey, you heard it here live in the first Drewski, you got a cow.

Speaker 1:

like Goody Moe Drewski, I will eat your ass alive.

Speaker 3:

You can put whatever you want to Get your people, get my people. You can fly me out. Y'all can come out there. We can do it in the middle. We can do it in the middle of the mall. We can do it outside. We can do it in the snow, we can do it in the rain. Bro, I promise you on my life I will fuck Drewski, I will.

Speaker 1:

Drewski, you're standing on business on the real time podcast.

Speaker 3:

I stand on business, I will fuck Drewski up. When it come to roasting, I will roast this nigga for 20 minutes fucking straight, without no fucking hesitation. Man, damn, hey, we're going to have to set this up, man. Set it up. Whoever know, drewski, I'm calling you out, could have been records. You could have been a roaster. I'm going to roast you like some fucking marshmallows at a, fucking, at a, at a, at a, at a, at a what you call it At a bonfire.

Speaker 1:

Good emote.

Speaker 3:

Drewski, Drewskiee, Juice Kee, you don't want none of this, bro. You don't want none of this. Ain't no Hollywood behind me, Ain't no white man behind me telling me you should do this and you should do that. It's just me, Juice Kee. You think you funny and you think you the man.

Speaker 1:

He might think he too big for you to say that. But he might say man, I ain't real about that little nigga. He might say that you calling him out, we're going to see where he's standing on that.

Speaker 3:

If he feels that way and he knows he's that talented come to my town, Set it up. We can make it a big event. We can sell tickets.

Speaker 1:

I'll come to him when you stand in front of a circle of all the Drewski dudes and you by yourself, or, matter of fact, a neutral crowd, yeah, and you and him going at it.

Speaker 3:

I'll stand ten toes down in one fucking barge. I will end that boy. You ever seen 8 Mile? You saw Eminem did Papa Doc at the end of 8 Mile. That's what I'll do to him when I stand on business.

Speaker 1:

Well, there you go, man. So okay, we here live in effect. Man, hey, y'all share this, make this go get this boy attention, get Drewski attention. Man, this dude called him out live. I called him out Online. You can find me at Good Emotion Comedian on my Instagram page. We're going to see how he stand up to it On my IG page.

Speaker 3:

whoever I know, some of the people know Drewski, drewski, you're not that funny.

Speaker 2:

I'm coming at you, drewski, he saying he don't think you funny bro, you think you that dude?

Speaker 3:

He say you Come at me. I guarantee you give me he talking that shit. If you give me your resources, I will fucking end. I will end Drewski's career. I will do the Drewski like TI did Lil' Flip Whoa, I don't give a damn.

Speaker 1:

All right, I don't care.

Speaker 3:

He's not that funny. He has a Hollywood machine by him, the white man. Tell him what to do. Nigga, you a fucking puppet. Nigga you fucking suck. Come at me, nigga, and I stand on it.

Speaker 1:

Man, I'm fighting words, that boy read it. Man. He say he wanted it, he wanted it. And we going hey, you know, hey do I need to be the Don King of comedy you can be the Don King. We can set. You can bring the. I need the Don King you can bring the real talk, like the versus rap battle, locks versus Dipset.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know, this is A.

Speaker 1:

You can bring the podcast.

Speaker 3:

You can bring the podcast right there. You can bring the podcast real talk podcast and have it right there, and I'll stand toe-to-toe with this nigga. I will destroy this dude. I came off of fucking capping. You can ask T Will. You can ask Tony. That's all we did all day, from the time we woke up to the time we went to sleep. We roasted each other. I would have Drewski waking up 3, 4 o'clock in the morning thinking about the jokes I said to him.

Speaker 2:

Damn.

Speaker 3:

I'm that serious Damn, I'll take my glasses off, come on with it.

Speaker 2:

I will look. Come on with it.

Speaker 3:

Drewski, I look you in the eye, bro. Look at me. I will look, come on with it. I will juice you. I will look you in the eye, bro. You don't want, bro, you the bro, you, the bro. You don't want this smoke boy. This ain't no Ruby Rose, no fake relationship that you had. This ain't no motherfucking Ruby Rose. Nigga, I'm a real ass, fucking nigga that got out the mud. Nigga, you're not that funny. So come at me. I got views without you, buddy. You can check my page. I got millions of views without trying to come up. I'll be trying to make a name. You can check my shit out, nigga. I've been solidified. You just happened to come up at the right time, dude, but you don't want this smoke dude.

Speaker 1:

All right, y'all heard it here Live. In effect, man, he shot what he shot, he felt how he chest man and hey, shots fired, man, Shots fired, Shots fired. We appreciate you, Goody Moe, for pulling up man, and I mean, you know, whatever you do, you know you make sure that you keep it real, bro. And that's what you did when you came on this show Holmes. Yeah, I kept it real. You told what was on your chest.

Speaker 3:

It was real. It's real, authentic. And some people are going to say it's hate. No, it's not hate, it's just the way I feel about everybody. Everybody don't agree with that. Everything you eat, don't make me shit. You see what I'm saying. So that's how I genuinely feel about the subject. There's no hate towards the man. I'm not taking no personal shots at him or nothing like that.

Speaker 1:

You just feel like I dust dust away In that field. I dust, dust, dust dust, he ain't fucking with you.

Speaker 3:

Dust, dust away. He's not fucking with me, man, like the Meek Mill and Tory Lanez song. He ain't fucking with me, bro, not on his best day, on a Sunday. He's not not even my worst day. He can fuck with me, man. If I had his production and had Hollywood behind, I would be way better than him. It ain't that, drewski? Look at his eyes, boy. You see this right here. Drewski, you're not ready for me, bro. Let me move the mic so I can see it. Drewski, you're not ready for me, boy. I'm about this shit for real, boy. You don't want this. We can do a comedy versus you can get your little celebrity booty buddy friends. I know about you, boy. I know you rode that white horse. I know, yeah, yeah, yeah. You think I don't know what goes on in Hollywood. I know what you did, bro. I know what's the white horse.

Speaker 3:

I know what you did. You don't know about the white horse. Nah, put us on it bro, what's the white? Horse Holmes Bro. It's a thing. You remember that dude. What's his name? Frankie Ocean. You remember him. Right on and he came out that song Nova Cane, Right right on. Remember Nova Cane? That fucking smash hit song, yeah, Ride the right horse means he had to fuck a white man to get where he wanted to, to ride the right horse.

Speaker 1:

You went in, bro, it's true, you feel like he did what he had to do to get to where he had to get to. He did the Illuminati story.

Speaker 3:

Come on, bro, because the dude's not funny. Perez, God, I keep on calling him Perez. I just gave black people names. Black people give people names, man. I'm sorry about that. The president didn't. I show you Drewski's. I showed you some of Drewski's skits. Right, yeah, Off the camera. I showed you some skimmy ticker. I showed you some of his stuff. I showed you the skit I did.

Speaker 2:

Can you please, can you please tell the people what happened? Oh, it was night and day. You were way funnier.

Speaker 1:

Well, that's all that matter, bro. You know, at the end of the day.

Speaker 2:

What is?

Speaker 1:

comedy about you see competition and you go on. That Ain't nothing wrong with that bro. It's all friendly on this show, you know it's real talk. But the brother just say he wants to go at your neck, bro, he feel like he can go blow.

Speaker 2:

Hey, that's how it is.

Speaker 3:

When you got the title it's always somebody coming for your bill.

Speaker 3:

It's comedy. Comedy in me is I feel like Drewski does stuff that's relatable, but my comedy is what people fuck with me is I do real life situations of shit that happened to me and people can relate to it. He doesn't relate, but I do realize the stuff I be saying and my jokes I do on stage and skits and stuff. I said it be movies, it be real life situations that I've been in it or I've seen it or I've been around it. So that's that. And then I'm the type to cap on myself. I get on stage and say I'm retarded, I'm ugly, I'm not all the way there. I cap on my own self.

Speaker 2:

See, he's scared to do that.

Speaker 3:

He's scared. I'm good with my own self. I don't need a whole bunch of celebrity friends just to make me feel like I'm somebody. That's what I feel like he got all these celebrity people to make him feel like he's good. I tell you what though you know.

Speaker 1:

Hey, you feel how you feel? Shots have been fired yet again and we're going to leave it at that. Man, you know you got any again. Can you please shoot your socials out so they can come and find you man?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you can find me on Instagram and TikTok at G-O-O. Goody Moe the comedian. Once again.

Speaker 1:

Goody Moe, we're going to put it up for y'all. Y'all can catch it.

Speaker 3:

Once again, goody Moe the comedian. So for all y'all Instagram, I know all your internet surfers and internet detectives and y'all going to see him. I'm on cap about the numbers I'm saying go to sacrifice for self. The number four. Go to his page. It's going to be up on it.

Speaker 3:

It's an honest page. It's going to say all the views on all, all the views on there, all all the views. I started off in the game getting 3.5 million views off a fucking cameo. I did one scene that got me on a cameo. Drewski, let's get this roast battle, bro, if you're about that life and say, you the funny man, you feel like you funny, let's get this rolling. Let's get this rolling, because what I truly said, boy, that's what I really feel about you.

Speaker 1:

He's standing on that. He's standing on business. He's got his shades off. Looking at you in your eyes.

Speaker 3:

It's off camera, on camera Hollywood Acres, home, gulf Bank, katy, texas. We can go to Sioux Falls. We can go to Sioux Falls, idaho. We can go to the goddamn Alaska in the snow and do a damn battle. Boy, you don't want these problems, boy, I'm a real live hungry, a real live hungry competitor boy.

Speaker 1:

And there it is, y'all. We heard my boy. He came on. We blessed us with his presence. It was a real conversation, bro. And hey you looking at, hey man, you mugging that screen. Bro, I'm for real. This is for playing. I act boy.

Speaker 3:

Hold on. I tried to cut y'all, Tried to y'all take off. Yeah, I act. I can, you know, put on my acting skills. It's good. I got a long way to go but I'm good acting. This is no act right here, boy. This for real boy. I'm serious about mine.

Speaker 1:

This, what this about I'm?

Speaker 3:

going to show you boy. You think you the champ, you think you the internet's top finance. Comedian boy, Come on.

Speaker 1:

Hey, I tell you what. Let's see. Y'all go follow my boy, goody Mo, the comedian man. He came on, he saw, he blessed us with his game. He put a lot of knowledge do here. We want you, whoever comes on, to say what's on your mind. Don't hold back.

Speaker 3:

We're not going to censor you, we're not. Oh shit, fuck, charleston White, you pepper-nosed, cock-eyed Boy, I'd knock your ass fucking straight. Hey, I'm a Cowboys fan, so I'm going to be at the Cowboys-Texas game. Hey, boy, I fuck with Boosie. He's an OG. I fuck with Wack 100. I salute him. He's a real gangster, double OG dude. But hey, boy, I ain't none of them. Charleston White, we can go tick for tat, all that you got that tactics and stuff and doing all your character. Boy, this ain't no character for me. Boy, this is me, charleston White, you pimp or no, I'll fucking knock your ass, fucking straight. Boy, I'll knock your ass to the goddamn future. Boy, yeah, boy.

Speaker 1:

He's talking about knocking Charleston out.

Speaker 3:

I'll knock him to the Uranians boy.

Speaker 1:

Let me ask you this before we go what did Charleston White do to you, bro?

Speaker 3:

I think Charleston White is a type of nigga that talks shit but he protected, he throw a glass, he type of throw the rock and run and go hide. See. I'm going to throw the rock out there. I'm going to stand front line, ten toes down by what I said I done seen Charleston.

Speaker 1:

I done seen him get down. I done seen niggas come at him sideways and he clucked his butt. He keep a little pole, a little stick. A nigga beat on him.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, he's an Uncle Ruckus type of nigga.

Speaker 1:

He keep a nigga beat on for niggas, but I'm quick, I'm quick, already. Uncle Ruckus type. Yeah, he's an Uncle Ruckus man.

Speaker 3:

He's an Uncle Ruckus type ass. He's an Uncle Ruckus type ass nigga man. He picks on people that he know that's not going to say nothing back. He's going to say some shit that people ain't going to say because they're in a higher position, which is smart. Don't get me wrong, he's a smart-ass dude. But hey, charleston, this ain't no politics boy, this ain't no shit you doing. Boy, you come to my city, nigga, talking that shit. Yeah, I know what happened when you came to the live nation shit and they didn't want you to get on stage. Boy, this my city boy. This is it. So it's my city. So if you come in with some bullshit, what the fucking Slim Thug and Zero said in that song Welcome to Houston. Some come here and some don't come back, boy.

Speaker 1:

Well, there it is. This ain't what you want, boy. There it is. This ain't what you want, boy. Like you know, this ain't what you want boy. There it is, man, and we went live. In effect. Man, Real Talk, Podcast, man, your boy Blast Off. We thank you again, Goody Moe, for blessing us man, no doubt man.

Speaker 1:

The Prez live in effect, man. We can't make it happen without the dynamic duo, man, and you know what praise you got. Any closing statements, bro, before we wrap this motherfucker up, bro, because that is, you know, hey, this was crazy, wasn't it today? This shit was crazy, right, bro?

Speaker 2:

we are so blessed to have had you come on to this show, spit some of your wisdom, spit some of your truth and you know really, just like you said, staying 10 toes down to what's real, because that's what this show is about. It's's about that real talk, that real talk podcast. Ladies and gentlemen, you know where to find us.

Speaker 3:

I'm.

Speaker 2:

Presidential on X. This is Blast.

Speaker 1:

Off. Yeah, you already know the socials. They're going to be put up. You know, by this point in time we ain't got to repeat it. You know. Blast Off underscore entertainment on IG. Blast Off underscore ENT on X Twitter. We do giveaways. We just gave away some tickets to the ones out there in H-Town. Somebody just won some tickets to the Texans game. Shout out to her. You know what I'm saying. Somebody just won some tickets to the Texans game. We're giving away tickets. Yes, might get online tonight. If you get on you know what I'm saying and you tap in, you know you'll be able to win. Just like and subscribe to the channel at BlastOffENTCO BlastOffENTCO. It's on the screen. Y'all ain't got to worry about none of this shit ever being ingenuine. This is all real. We keep it real here on the Real Talk Podcast broadcasting live from a secret location on Mars everybody, we out baby, we out baby, we out baby Peace.

Speaker 1:

Outro Music.