J housing just killed, wait oh.
Speaker 4:Let's get this a few minutes before we get started. Let's play a few more of hobby.
Speaker 1:Okay, yeah.
Speaker 2:He speaks.
Speaker 6:Portuguese wonderfully.
Speaker 4:All right, that's impressive. Get in here, we gotta start the show. We gotta start the show. Oh, hello everyone, and welcome to the funky panther coming from forward Texas. We have got a hell of a show for you here on episode 166. We have got the rap podcast up in this bitch you want to say, hey, boys, we've been hanging out for the last 30, 40 minutes on the first 30 on youtube, but now we get to get into the real business. So sit back, relax, enjoy, let's get into it. I'm Chad, I'm hobby.
Speaker 4:I'm ten, we are.
Speaker 6:The oh.
Speaker 4:It's weird. I know you, I know you want them.
Speaker 2:I used to hate my fucking voice and now I'm like, oh, I can't wait to hear it again. No more Portuguese, huh, no more.
Speaker 6:So yeah, if you didn't know, you can clone people's voice, right? Do you know that? Yeah yeah yeah so I have hours and hours of this man talking, and so I just took a bunch of samples, Wow and then I could just make him say whatever the fuck I want.
Speaker 4:All the things you heard was not really.
Speaker 3:Wow, that's impressive.
Speaker 7:Yeah, I need to do that Listen, listen all your audio. We got all of it, nice.
Speaker 3:All right, I'm gonna run the podcast by myself.
Speaker 2:He's gonna just tell him uh, hey, uh, read the algorithm of the episode and tell me how you say ever since they Did the funky panther, their introductions have been amazing.
Speaker 6:I mean, I've got chat on here too, yeah, so oh, let's hear that, let's see. Yeah it's not.
Speaker 4:I'm just gonna say I don't really feel like I'm family when I'm at Olive Garden. Go fuck yourself, fort worth that one didn't sound like him.
Speaker 6:I think anal is best. When I'm drunk, I typically don't feel it as much. I mean it's, it's great. Yeah, you know he hates it all.
Speaker 4:We try to get him although it would be a lot of work, like a ton of work, not on hobby or not, obviously to do a complete episode, like to do it in an entire episode of just AI. Like have AI write up the script and then have him somehow plug in the voices to the script and then just do the whole thing without us and see who even notices.
Speaker 6:Yeah, we know, I think they'll notice you're gonna have to give me a good like, give me a, give me a like like two months, like trying to figure this out.
Speaker 3:Okay, hey, I guess pretty crazy.
Speaker 6:Yeah, and it just continues to get crazy.
Speaker 4:Hey by the way, where's that? Uh whiskey. I haven't bought it yet. Okay, all right.
Speaker 6:Uh, a year ago we made a bet Um, I'm going this, uh, I'm actually going this weekend. Okay, a year ago we made a bet.
Speaker 4:It's like as soon as chat gpt drops right, it was like this new thing that just got released to the public, we, we finally got on like there was a waitlist, wasn't there, like you couldn't just jump on at the beginning.
Speaker 4:And so we jumped on and we're like man, this is insane, you're having real conversations. It seems to be like having a real conversation back, and then you know, all these different AI things are coming out and we were talking about it, about how, like, this is gonna change the world, like this is the new thing. We've been talking about technology for years and this is gonna be the thing that, like changes our life. And uh, tim's like, nah, I won't, it won't be that crazy. I'm like give it one year. In one year, there's me like a ton of shit that comes out. And that was the bet he had to buy a hundred and fifty dollar bottle whiskey, yeah, if he was wrong.
Speaker 6:Hey, did you hear, have you heard, the backlash that's going on with uh, with google, though?
Speaker 4:No, they're a high, oh yeah.
Speaker 6:So they had barred and then they changed it to jim and I, and with jim and I you could tell it to.
Speaker 2:I think you said jim and I jim and I.
Speaker 6:You could tell jim and I to make like depictions of people, so you could do whatever. However, no matter what you do, it will not make a white person.
Speaker 4:Yeah, like George Washington, black George Washington.
Speaker 3:Finally, the white people are the minorities. Oh they had this conversation already.
Speaker 6:Finally happened. Elon musk, black, black as hell like they. Yeah, it was, it was crazy.
Speaker 3:I mean, it sounds like he's an Elon musk. I don't know why they come up with that one, but it's just like anything that you could put in there.
Speaker 6:They said, said like a white person spreading mayonnaise on a piece of bread Nope, can't do it. So they got this whole backlash. They took away that feature. Now you can't do um white people you can't.
Speaker 3:You can only do white people, you can't uh.
Speaker 6:You can't tell it to make uh, make faces or any like like pictures of people anymore.
Speaker 4:And now you can't talk shit about white people. I don't make the rules, that's just the thing. There's the thing that they did. It is what it has been for a while.
Speaker 2:But uh, it's kind of like you know, the crazy with the crazy stuff with AI. You know they had that bobby, uh, all tough. Oh, yeah, that came out last week and it was all that. Shit was AI.
Speaker 6:Yeah, what's a deep fake. It was a deep fake. Still be New really.
Speaker 2:Yeah, new. And that Drake video. That Drake videos fake too. No.
Speaker 3:I could, I could tell you that.
Speaker 1:He's like zooming in, pinching like no, that's definitely him.
Speaker 3:I didn't you sink it. I didn't have to zoom in that much.
Speaker 2:Wow good drink six God, six God, six, six, six it's a two, two jay, and then it was just a video him yeah it was like this it was meant to be a valentine for you.
Speaker 4:Is that what it is?
Speaker 3:At first everybody thought it wasn't me.
Speaker 4:But All right, so we have talked about you guys a lot. We've heard.
Speaker 2:It was mostly good and first off, buck you guys, fuck you guys.
Speaker 3:You're the worst.
Speaker 4:I know you're slapping my relations on your best stuff. Oh, thank y'all, thank y'all.
Speaker 3:We actually did not expect to get it. We were just doing it for shits and well last year whenever.
Speaker 6:Yeah, ours are on the floor over there. We don't even display them, oh man.
Speaker 2:After the eighth one, you're just like how many do you need?
Speaker 3:You know it all means shit. Well, it was nice to get one. We're only one year old.
Speaker 2:That's the pinnacle, though that's uh yeah, because we got ours, our first year 2019.
Speaker 6:Yeah, talk about them.
Speaker 4:You got yours and it's fucking awesome.
Speaker 6:That is awesome.
Speaker 4:But you know, for people that have not maybe heard y'all or don't know about you, like tell us a little about yourselves for them.
Speaker 3:Okay, perfect, that's it.
Speaker 2:We learned everything we need to know. Do your, do your intro. That's what I want to hear. Do yours intro.
Speaker 3:Okay, greetings to say tash's peace and blessings. Ladies and gentlemen, I go by the name of jay this is johnny, so boy, air miss scott. We are the rhythm and poetry podcast, rap for short and on today we are on the funky panthers.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 3:I'm so glad they did that.
Speaker 6:Well, john.
Speaker 2:But, um, yeah, no thanks for being here. Um, first let's talk about how are y'all know, well, real quick. Okay, before we talk about how, short.
Speaker 4:His shorts are, though for just a moment, like I sat down next to the wrong person.
Speaker 7:I said I was gonna rub someone's leg?
Speaker 3:Yeah, I didn't know, it was tim's.
Speaker 4:Tim's got them short short. Today there's a hole in the bottom with that 90 degree Weather. We got going on for two days.
Speaker 5:They call them hoochie daddy's.
Speaker 2:Hey, can you get me one? Oh hey, give me another one too, if you don't mind anything Yo guys good, we're good no get topped off.
Speaker 7:I mean sure.
Speaker 4:Wait, not that kind of podcast, all right.
Speaker 7:Well, yeah, that works.
Speaker 2:Uh, but for first, uh, I want to get on a serious note. Um, one of our uh friends lost his brother, uh, this this past week at gris man. Um, we're thinking about you and your family and um man. It's a terrible situation, but we're all here for you. The podcast community here Um, you know we're all here for you, so he's definitely in our prayers, absolutely. It was that a go fund me in the description of this video. Yeah, so, but other than that, uh, again, let's get back to you guys. So first of all, I want to thank you for being here. I've been a great podcast community here. I've been a great podcast community here. Um, you know we're all here for you.
Speaker 6:So he's definitely in our prayers as well.
Speaker 2:It was that go fund me in the description of this video. Let's get back to you guys. Uh so, so. How did the uh rappp podcast podcast start?
Speaker 3:Oh, I love telling the story. So we actually all used to work together in the same area of a warehouse. We were. We were just order selecting. That means we're just picking up boxes and putting up my pallets and dildos just all dildos or not all dildos. There was a couple of lubricants.
Speaker 3:It did messy sometimes, especially in the summer. Okay, um, thanks for clarity. I just, I just wanted to paint that picture, um, but no, in the back of the warehouse we would. It was kind of like a getaway from the supervisors where we could all just talk for a little bit, like and I always tell the story to these guys like it's crazy how this happened.
Speaker 3:But like I I asked one question and this was like at the beginning of the day and we were working 12 hour shifts and this question was going on for debate for Demi the entire shift, and I was like man, this should have been a podcast episode. I'm like man, that would have been cool. And then that that just planted a seed in my head. I was like one day I just want to create a music podcast. And I created podcasts in the past before and One failed. One was okay, um, one of my personal favorites that we put on hiatus for a while. But then I was like you know what, when Johnny was on the workaholic podcast and his schedule Separated, I was like, hey, I had this other podcast in mind. I've been having it in the back of my head for a while. It's a music podcast. Think about it and that's how rip was born was From back in the warehouse arguing with everybody they got. It was a heated debate.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I still remember the question to this day. So that's why I was like we should have a podcast about music. You don't know understand how Much we could get into the music just by arguing with each other, and it's always meant to be a debate kind of podcast.
Speaker 7:But we do it a lot, we debate a lot more.
Speaker 3:Yeah it was. It was getting. It was cool at the beginning but I felt like it was getting a little stub because me and Johnny somehow are very alike. Um, and it's not necessarily a bad thing, but for podcast sake, when you want to hear two people give a different opinion, it's like all right, that kind of. It's kind of getting a little stale. And then that's where air miss came into the mix. He was on the workaholic podcast. I was like air miss, want you come on the rip? And that way we have. None of us can ever agree with each other, with it being three people on the podcast, but there'll be some things that we all agree on. There's be some things that we don't, but that sounds about right.
Speaker 4:Yeah, that's a trio. I'm pretty sure Trio, I think, is the perfect, like three is the perfect number for that.
Speaker 3:Oh yeah, yeah, three is a crowd. No, what is it? Three's a three's a party for the crowd there it is.
Speaker 2:So what? What are y'all strengths like? What? What do we see y'all bring to the table?
Speaker 4:Yeah, how much can you bench? How much can?
Speaker 2:you definitely To the other so, like the three of us you know we already talked about our In the past like our jobs, like Tim's, the producer Chads the brains and I'm the wild card. So what are y'all's roles when y'all think about like, uh well, I can let them explain, but I think for me I'm about to.
Speaker 3:I'll let them. I'll let them say what that is. But I air miss he's. He's very, very knowledgeable in the music. Um, it's almost a hobby to him. It's like know about the music. So having someone with that much knowledge on the podcast always helps out, especially a music podcast. Johnny is the creative freedom guy who. He runs our social medias and he edits the podcast. So having that creative and creativity when it comes to social media and editing just goes hand in hand and I don't know where I would place myself I think I guess the showrunner of it. I'm very comfortable with talking on the microphone. I've been doing public speaking since I was in high school, so I don't know if that reflects on the podcast so much we're trying to make it really just Us instead of just making it a public speaking thing. But it works out. I think it works out. Yeah, for sure, I think y'all mix really well.
Speaker 2:I mean, it's never bored whenever I have y'all on the mic. So, um, I mean it's really interesting about the subjects whenever y'all have, y'all y'all talk about music. It's I like listening to it because it's never boring and y'all y'all actually like have the music y'all talk about in the episode and y'all review albums at the end, have your songs of the week. But so music and all that stuff aside, not even aside. So what? While I ask Hermes, what's the that album, what's that one song that tuned you to rap and hip hop?
Speaker 5:Oh, that's a good question.
Speaker 3:I feel like Gucci man in 2006.
Speaker 5:I don't remember. You said like from a young age.
Speaker 2:From a young age, however far back, you can remember where even like get into, like that first album where there were no skips 50 Cent.
Speaker 5:Get Rich or Die Try.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that was a really good album, classic Classic.
Speaker 5:But that was like I remember, like when it came out, like I begged my mom like every day to get it, you know, and then when I got a chance to get it, like you said, no skips and I actually had the edited version.
Speaker 2:Which so, oh, the.
Speaker 7:Walmart version the.
Speaker 5:Walmart version. The Walmart version, the Walmart version. My mom wasn't playing, but at the same time I still enjoyed it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, of course Now even the radio edits. I mean they still. I mean that's what I listened to first and whenever I got my copy of Get Rich or Die Try, and it was Bootleg in Mexico, cause we used to just get all our albums from Mexico Cause they were cheap as fuck, and then you know there's really available.
Speaker 6:Just like one dude that's been burning like he's got a stack of CDs.
Speaker 2:He stays up all night. Man, they don't play. Man, they got like.
Speaker 6:That was me Like a week straight just burning CDs and selling them.
Speaker 2:That was the time to like. That was when downloads started.
Speaker 3:That was a side hustle.
Speaker 2:That was a side hustle, like they had mixtapes and even like later on they had like the SB. Usb drives USB drives with, like the MP3 USB drives. Yeah, I remember that. Hell yeah those were.
Speaker 3:That was my side hustle in middle school. I remember I was like one of the only kids in middle school that would have internet access, so I downloaded the line wire to destroy my PC.
Speaker 3:And in the process of that, I was able to download a whole bunch of music and I was like, hey guys, I sell CDs, make me list and everybody. At the end of the day I would have like a whole pile of like folded up pieces of paper with people's playlists and I was like, all right, I'll create these playlists for everybody and I sell them out. I made about maybe five, seven bucks every every time I sold a CD. It was a nice little side hustle in middle school.
Speaker 2:That's a good to have. Side hustles, man, those are great I never thought about doing that.
Speaker 6:Oh man, yeah, selling CDs like that.
Speaker 4:I gave them free.
Speaker 6:Yeah, me too, but like.
Speaker 4:I. At one point I got up to I think it was 147,000 songs in my iTunes, like I had so much music. Every time someone bought a CD like hey, let me borrow it and I would borrow it and you could burn it into iTunes Like you had it. So I would like download legally, you know, maybe Allegedly. Allegedly.
Speaker 7:And then like get all these.
Speaker 4:CDs and everything like that. And then I would go to those mix type websites and like download all the remixes and all that shit, but it was always free. And then, you know, apple Music came out and it was like what the fuck do I have 147,000 songs for Right, it doesn't matter.
Speaker 6:Now, yeah, but it does, because at any point, man, I've been hearing a lot of shit like this. And then the 28 days later have you all heard about that you can't get that on any. You can't get that movie on any digital realm right now.
Speaker 3:I think the guys from thanks for the invite. We're saying something along that line, so like that's the whole thing.
Speaker 6:Like iTunes can lose whatever you know, they can lose the rights to it, and then that album's gone, that song's gone, so it's like where? Did my money go, even if you pay for it like you buy the album, unless you physically download that and then save it onto a hard drive.
Speaker 4:Man, you're fucked. That's one of the things. Now just period with being in a digital age. Video games are digital, we don't really have hard copies and I know it's stupid, but people are flipping out about that whole Kim Kardashian game because she just like decided she's got some app, some game and, like you know, you go into these worlds like like people like Minecraft and animal, whatever it is Animal Crossing, animal Crossing, animal Crossing.
Speaker 6:A million times.
Speaker 4:What does it jiggle? You do all these different. You have all these different games where you like create a character, you create a world. You spend all these hours, time, money into these things and if they just stop, like we're not gonna play, we're not gonna do this game anymore, like what? If they just turned off Minecraft? People would flip the fuck out. Like how many people have created their own worlds? So you think about that? With games and movies and shows and music, we don't own anything anymore.
Speaker 6:That's why you're right. I guess you're. I mean, you are right. That's why I got everything on my Plex right now. Like I'm just like putting anything on my Plex. That way I've got. It's not physical copies, but I have the copies right.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 6:So I heard that and I'm just like fuck man, you could literally go buy something right now and then Amazon's is like sorry.
Speaker 4:Yeah, Jesus mentioned that. You're right on TFTI. He's like you could buy it and they could still say well, we don't host this anymore. And then you don't have it. So, that's why he likes the physical copies. It's smart.
Speaker 2:So, grizz, I did what Grizz did. Shut up Grizz, what up. He bought a hundred blank CDs and making mixed it. I was doing that and I was just putting like three tracks on it. Fuck it, you could go to CVS, stack it, stack it and then my delivery.
Speaker 3:I know there was other guys who were stealing the side hustle. They would try to do it too, but I had. I spent a little bit more money on the card cases so you could actually yeah, I wouldn't, put in a paper one.
Speaker 4:The colored ones are the, the colored ones, the color maker, though, like you, put your own legs on top.
Speaker 3:No, I was in middle school.
Speaker 6:I couldn't look All right. So I remember buying a. There was a guy that we worked with at Best Buy and I think his brother was an aspiring rapper and he had like like a little EP right.
Speaker 2:I think he was with immortal soldiers.
Speaker 3:Oh, okay, yeah.
Speaker 6:I think he was.
Speaker 3:Yeah, he worked with me in media.
Speaker 6:Who was this?
Speaker 2:I forgot his name, but I can't remember his name.
Speaker 6:I don't know, but I remember buying that, I bought. I bought that CD and that bitch got stuck in my fucking CD player. But she was in my car Because of that paper because of that paper label. Oh, like, no shit. Like I had to like tear that thing apart, that sucked Cause it was just like it was just like you don't even think about that, but it was just enough. Like.
Speaker 2:To get it.
Speaker 6:Elevated to get stuck yeah.
Speaker 2:Okay. So, aramis, I asked you that question about your that album. What is that guilty pleasure song that you have on your phone that nobody knows you have, that you just like listening to, you know, like you know that song that goes La, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la, la.
Speaker 1:Yeah, Minnie Remington.
Speaker 5:Root Root.
Speaker 2:Root, root, root, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that's a. What's your name is mom Maya Rudolph's mom.
Speaker 5:Really.
Speaker 2:Yeah, she actually. That song is about a Maya, huh, yeah, so what's?
Speaker 5:that song? I didn't know that. Yeah, it's a good song.
Speaker 2:But what's that song for you?
Speaker 5:Tryna think, man, we all for that what's?
Speaker 1:that name the lady's name.
Speaker 5:Her name is Betty Wright, but I can't think of this. I have to give back to you on the song.
Speaker 2:So my embarrassing song is a Spice Up your Life by Spice Girls.
Speaker 5:That's my song, that's right I know a lot of my daughter recently. I'm a Barbie girl, yeah. I'm a Barbie. I like to sing that with her. Yeah, yeah, yeah, who does it? That's good, though, man she likes that song.
Speaker 3:Yeah, yeah yeah. I have a new guilty pleasure. It's that fart song by Ice Fuck Girl. I don't know why I like it. I know I shouldn't like it, but I do.
Speaker 2:So so. So that same question for you, johnny. What was that? That song or album that got you hooked on hip hop, like what's the one that you know no skips Album.
Speaker 7:I don't know, but songs like Bala Shakala, 20 Injuries yeah. And like 36 Mafia, all that kind of stuff.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, nice I remember whenever that or was it Juvenile right? Yeah, I remember getting jumped in eighth grade and that song Get jumped in that song.
Speaker 6:That song came out.
Speaker 2:That was in eighth grade. We were in eighth grade.
Speaker 6:Like, hang on, we gotta put the song on. I thought we were gonna beat your ass.
Speaker 2:I got remember Casey brought him on the fucker. If I see him I'll kill him.
Speaker 1:But he's probably already dead.
Speaker 2:No, he's alive, he's in the Navy no, but if I, you know, I mean, I remember that stuff Song, music comes to memories, you know, whenever you remember shit like that.
Speaker 4:Why'd you get jumped? What'd you do?
Speaker 7:I don't kiss a dumb bitch ass, sister, I don't know, anyway, so, there it is, there it is Actually an album would be the Carter Three the Carter.
Speaker 2:Three.
Speaker 4:Oh, that's a good one.
Speaker 2:I mean, which one's your favorite Carter, though, is the Carter Three your favorite Carter?
Speaker 7:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Mine's the original.
Speaker 7:I like the original too, the original Carter. I like all of them, it's just the Carter. Three just doesn't stand up. Is Three's the one with fireman? No, no, that's one.
Speaker 4:That's huh One yeah.
Speaker 1:Three's, the one with Miss Officer that whole yeah.
Speaker 4:That one is good. Front to back period yeah, yeah.
Speaker 7:I remember my cousin burnt the CD for me because I didn't have money to buy a CD, so he burnt the Carter Three for me, and then I was sitting in my liver and playing Grand Theft Auto while the song's playing.
Speaker 2:Hell yeah, Nice, nice and that guilty pleasure song. What's that guilty pleasure? Embarrassing song.
Speaker 7:That's really not an embarrassing song. I listen to everything, so I really don't. I don't really know.
Speaker 2:No, what's that? One where, if I see it on your playlist, I'd be like what was this doing here? A?
Speaker 3:song that you have to explain yourself for. I was like that's on there, because I'd be like I just like this song.
Speaker 7:I don't know this song by Ella May. I can't remember the name of it, though.
Speaker 2:Was it a party rock? No, or which one.
Speaker 7:Ella May, I think.
Speaker 3:Not Ella May FAO. Oh, ok, no, not Ella May no.
Speaker 1:Party rock.
Speaker 6:It's an.
Speaker 7:R&B singer. I can't remember the name. Ok, it's like one of those girl songs, but you still.
Speaker 3:It's always like a Buddha, is it Buddha, buddha, that's what it's called. Johnny is Buddha.
Speaker 6:In the chat. We got a Bada Bootleg CD from a swap meet that had Mike Jones on a Cumbia beat.
Speaker 3:Oh, those Cumbia hip hop beats. Oh, those are fucking fun. One put Lil Jon on any fucking Mexican song. That shit was fire. I remember dancing to that. We did Lil Chris Cross whenever I came to get us.
Speaker 4:That was me Back in the mixtape days. Lil Jon and T-Pain was on every remix back then. Right, every single remix had one of those two on there.
Speaker 3:T-Pain was on every song Hell yeah, that's right. I really don't think he got the flowers he deserved.
Speaker 2:He got all the hate, he got all the hate.
Speaker 6:Yeah, he got all the hate because he kind of the autotune right. He kicked that autotune right, but have you ever heard him actually sing?
Speaker 3:He has. He's got a resurgence right now. Oh yeah, he can sing, but he also with him being able to sing. That's what made him so good at autotune. Yeah, that he was able to perfect autotune, because when Lil Wayne was doing it, he was doing it over rapping. It sounded OK. It was Wayne. I'm not going to say it sounded bad, because I'm very biased when it comes to Lil Wayne, but it was unnecessary.
Speaker 1:There's no reason to put autotune while you're rapping While he was rapping.
Speaker 4:I don't know how good it would be without it.
Speaker 3:You know what I mean? Yeah, but he was kind of singing a little bit.
Speaker 4:OK.
Speaker 6:T-Pain, though. He knew how to sing, though, and he was able to like alter the yeah, yeah, he wasn't just like fixing it, it was like he was controlling the autotune.
Speaker 4:Yeah.
Speaker 3:But everybody hated on T-Pain, but everybody used autotune. I know Con. Yes, lil Wayne.
Speaker 2:Usher. I mean, you hear the story about Usher whenever they were both on a plane and the flight attendant's like, oh, hey, usher's back there, he wants to talk to you, goes over there. He's like, hey, man, you kind of ruin music and how do you feel about that? Whenever you hear that from Usher, you're one of your idols. And you're like well, fuck, did I Like, did I fuck Did.
Speaker 6:I. He was just a pioneer in the style. Usher said it's a T-Pain, he said it's a.
Speaker 5:T-Pain. Oh God bless us. He was setting them up because he knew he was about to make this song.
Speaker 2:I'm a motherfucker. This is the son of a bitch.
Speaker 7:What's it called?
Speaker 2:Jay-Z tried to death of autotune. But that didn't help, that didn't work, no, and at first I was like, yeah, fuck autotune, but I love Jay-Z. So then after a while I'm like no, this shit's good.
Speaker 3:I'm like fuck with it. T-pain was the only one who was able to do autotune, and I do it very, very well. To the point where he didn't need it as a necessity. It was just that little bit of umph to make the song a little bit better.
Speaker 2:I think it's just a oh, go ahead.
Speaker 3:Sorry, where I think someone else who couldn't sing like a Kesha depended on it to make the song passable.
Speaker 4:So I? They used it to make him better. He used it as a tool to make his own sound. Yes, agreed, that's exactly what it is.
Speaker 5:Shout out to Kesha, though Kesha.
Speaker 3:He's a shit.
Speaker 5:She has a hit? No, she did not.
Speaker 4:She's talking about that, she's an industry plan, the song of yours Industry plan Fucking industry plan, god damn it.
Speaker 7:T-Pain. What discovered it from J-Lo? Because you know she can't really sing and so they use Auto-Tune to help her out. And that's how he discovered Auto-Tune and he fixed it his way.
Speaker 2:I heard that too. Did Joe ever download that app, that IMT-Pain app?
Speaker 3:Yes, oh my god, I was still trash. He just brought back a flood of memories. Yeah, we fucked around with that app all the time man, that shit was fucking fucking. He had a microphone toy too, that you could buy and I remember I wanted to buy that toy so fucking bad. It was always just fun to go around and changing your voice or having Auto-Tune on it, and he really did capitalize on the Auto-Tune.
Speaker 4:He owned it for sure.
Speaker 3:To the point where T-Pain, which is a setting on the garage band. Oh really yeah. So whenever we would record people when I used to do music back in the day, T-Pain was an actual setting for Auto-Tune.
Speaker 2:Well, I think it's a product of its generation. I think in that era of music that was never all that shit. All that Auto-Tune stuff started coming out and then a little after you had everybody doing like Amigos, flow type, and then I don't even know what the sound is. I don't listen to new music now, because I don't know it's all coming out so fast I don't know what to listen to and everything I hear I'm like.
Speaker 4:I want to give that to him in a minute. What the fuck I've been drinking? I want to get into that in a minute. You got to ask him. Still, though.
Speaker 2:What is that album that really hit hip hop for?
Speaker 4:you.
Speaker 2:Was that one album?
Speaker 3:Like I said, me and Johnny are very similar. It was a Carter III, I remember. I thought it was Taylor Swift.
Speaker 5:It was, it was.
Speaker 1:But for the sake of the podcast.
Speaker 3:Oh go, Chiefs Damn.
Speaker 6:No, that hurt.
Speaker 3:That didn't even sound right coming out of my mouth. But yeah, the Carter III. I remember going to it was Town Center. They had a little album store and I remember purchasing that album and I remember being crazy about it. I remember going on to I forgot what the website is now I think it was Genius and studying every lyric and getting down on Milly that way I could rehearse it in front of my friends without any errors. I was just so proud. That was like a huge moment in hip hop for me. It was the Carter III.
Speaker 2:Man, whenever those Carter albums were dropping, it was a really big deal, man, Because you wanted to be there on that Tuesday to pick up that album, Because when we worked our best by it, that's all we did Whenever we saw what was out. You know was really excited about some stuff I forgot they dropped on Tuesdays.
Speaker 7:Yeah, we used to drop on Tuesdays.
Speaker 2:Movies and music. And then there were times where we'd see albums we didn't like, and I was fresh out of high school, so I would just break the CDs, and if we broke them we had to toss them to the back. So we couldn't sell them, so that was all me. Shout out to me. That's why 50 Cent lost that battle with Kanye. Oh yeah.
Speaker 6:You were just breaking the.
Speaker 3:CD yeah, that was a legendary moment in history.
Speaker 6:It really was.
Speaker 3:I was like wow, because it always felt like Kanye was an underdog in that time. It was like wow, like right now Gangsta rap is in the prime of its of its era. And here comes his backpack kid from Chicago how, how is this gonna happen? And we had an amazing out. We had, I think I'm gonna say, two amazing albums out of this era. We I don't want to say that Curtis wasn't an amazing album, it wasn't. I Enjoyed it.
Speaker 5:But Kanye put out some history during this if you would have battled him like two albums before that, he would be with a Christian.
Speaker 2:Yeah, absolutely yeah, for sure.
Speaker 3:Sorry, saying 50 wasn't in his promise of his career.
Speaker 5:He was coming out of it, you're coming out of it.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I'll give you that so do you remember?
Speaker 2:this is for CDs. Remember whenever that G unit album came out and the first one.
Speaker 5:first one yeah.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and they're like hey, you get a chance to win the chain. You know when they had that contest going on, you get a G unit chain. Do you think anybody ever won that? I mean, I think that was just a ploy like that was never.
Speaker 3:By that, how those never change.
Speaker 2:That was never change that would have said like get a Rockefeller chain, would have been like, yes, I'm gonna open each one. That's what I was my life's goal, as a matter of fact, my first. When I saw usher in the confession store in 04, I wanted to have a Rockefeller chain made. But you know the Arab guy at the. Can I say that? I can't say that, can I?
Speaker 2:I mean at town center. I wanted him to make me the chain and he's like hey, I make it for your brother. And we went back and he's like I got these chains for you and they were like he's fucking bootleg. What are you fucking Rockefeller chains? There's fucking chains with like letters on them, like that's not what you wanted, man, what are you doing? But those that takes me back, stuff like that. Nice, I don't know, man, it's crazy. What was your?
Speaker 3:album my album.
Speaker 2:Yeah, black on both sides, most death. That was the one that got me. That was the first cuz I was playing Yu-Gi-Oh. I was playing Yu-Gi-Oh, the buddy of mine and I was like fucking nerd, I love.
Speaker 2:He was playing black on both sides and I was like, who is? This is like I was most deaf. I'm like, oh fuck, so we just listen to it all the way through. And that really got me. I really got me in hip-hop. I was really listening to more like pop and rock. You know, I really didn't listen to too much rap at the time and man, they're just like turn the tables like for everything that I listen to young, younger me really thought that our shop boys was true rock.
Speaker 3:I don't know if you remember the boys, but it was party like a rock star. Oh, I should have known better I was dumb Kid.
Speaker 2:Oh, Tim was fucking with him like hard oh.
Speaker 3:I mean they were. They were really good. I just think that they may have been just a little too early for their error. Yeah, I feel like if they would have came out more recently they would be more successful, just because now we're in an era where hip-hop is actually Crossing over a little bit and getting some inspiration from the rock, the rack rock community, yeah, and who knows where they would have been. But they made one fire song and that was it that's usually how it works out.
Speaker 2:Yeah, so Chad? Chad had a couple questions. No, no, no no, you were.
Speaker 4:You know, I wanted to finish up your little I mean.
Speaker 6:I'll tell you, Chad, do you have an album that got you into it? Oh sorry, I feel like a dick.
Speaker 2:These guys and I forgot about y'all.
Speaker 4:No you're good I've. So I feel like Carter 3 is what really got me into listening to other things. However, the very first album that I listened to that I don't even know hip-hop, rap, I don't know but country grammar was really what kind of like. Transitioned listening like rock and punk and all this shit class in middle school and shit.
Speaker 4:Listen I remember, like start to finish, I'm like this is fucking awesome, like all of it, and so I want to say that that was like my Gateway drug and to getting into it. It wasn't my favorite, but that's what got me into it.
Speaker 6:That was I was. I was into the Houston stuff man. So like wow, uh, whenever the first time I heard, the first time I heard still tipping that like got me into it. So I started like diving like I was on line wire cat a lack dude. I wish man, I want dude, I wanted to fucking folks so bad I wanted to talk so bad. But I started looking into like all the chopping screwed stuff and so I started getting kind of into that, getting heavier into the all that Houston stuff.
Speaker 3:I am a sucker for chopping, screwed even to this day like oh yeah there's this DJ on YouTube. I have no idea who he is and I forgot his name by just knowing by his little um his icon. He, he chops and screws music like coming out now which is more enjoyable to me. I feel like it's more digestible and he does a lot of chops of screw with Drake, which I feel is a great combination You're gonna have to you have to tell me that.
Speaker 6:Find out who that DJ is, let me know, because I love to get back into it, right? But so I was like listening to a lot of the Houston stuff and then I was listening to all the chopped and screwed stuff, all the remixes they were doing. That kind of got me into it and then the out the first, I think the first hip-hop album that I listened to you like front to back it was actually the first record ever bought which I've brought up on this on this podcast before Was a good kid, mad city. Oh, that was the first. That was the first. That was the first.
Speaker 1:I never, I never, I never buy.
Speaker 6:No, no, no, no. That was the first. So that was the first record I ever bought. It was starting into vinyl and I saw I bought that one and that was one like I, I like Kendrick, and I knew like a couple of the songs on there, but I hadn't listened to everything. But I was like it's gonna be good. So if I buy it, if I buy an album, if I'm buying vinyl, I'm buying something. I'm gonna listen to the whole thing, right, yeah? And so I was really meticulous, bought that one, put it on.
Speaker 2:I was like it's fucking classic Story, fucking written perfectly man a good kid is like my favorite track on that. I can that.
Speaker 6:That album, I think, got me like more into hip-hop and then I started getting some like the weird stuff. I Love Tyler, the creator, earl sweatshirt, yeah. And then I started getting into like all like suicide boys, stuff like that, just getting into that kind of Really rap yeah nice.
Speaker 3:Yeah, good kid. Mad city is a cult classic to a point where it almost ran Johnny off of social media Because I think you had it like number four on your list or something. I Still remember. This is so fucking crazy, you poor soul.
Speaker 6:I mean those. Those lists are all subjective.
Speaker 3:Yeah, they are.
Speaker 7:Opinions at the time, but they were they?
Speaker 3:they were Johnny, a new one.
Speaker 7:Mr Morrell and big seppers is number one, but it hit me more personally.
Speaker 3:That's why I made it number one one of the comments that I saw was like and they make a rap, a music podcast, he's like. He's like what they say, what they say that you should never I forgot what they do YouTube.
Speaker 7:And people talking shit is on tiktok. Was it on tiktok? I think it was on tiktok.
Speaker 3:They said it was crazy shit, but like it's all. It's all, kendrick Lamar. Like I think it's where you are in your life, where you subject to like what you like.
Speaker 7:I think it was to pivot butterfly. That's what the one that they were.
Speaker 6:Yeah, they're really upset that one didn't hit me like it didn't. It didn't hit me like I. Like that album right, but it wasn't. One of those things was like it wasn't for me, it wasn't meant for me is what I mean, like it's a good. It's a good album, but it was not meant to speak to me.
Speaker 3:But that's what I meant it's like it's a cult classic, like for some reason people get upset. Yeah you didn't get it or it wasn't meant for you.
Speaker 6:I mean I got it. I got it just fine. But like what he was saying, like I needed to hear it, right, but it wasn't. Like it was my. I'm not the target audience for that song, for that album, right?
Speaker 2:I feel like we were spoiled whenever to put the butterfly came out, because that was around the same time 2014. For forces drive came out, oh yeah, and so, like another, I mean, it's hard to not skip, skip a song on an album which both, both of those albums for me also.
Speaker 1:No.
Speaker 2:I'm 14. No skippers good kid. Mad city was another no skipper, but I mean it kind of like made that race of who's better, who's the better.
Speaker 3:It definitely put them in the top three yeah for sure, of current generations.
Speaker 2:Yeah, but you know it's. It's kind of like it's hard to pick because you can pick either camp it's. I don't think you're you're gonna pick wrong in that sense. I think that you know it's in the era we're in right now. I think that some of the best albums that have been coming out in the past 10 years it's been 10 years. It's been 10 years. It's been 10 years since those those two up, holy shit.
Speaker 7:Yeah damn, I keep on going back and forth from Jake Cole to Kendrick. I don't know. Sometimes I'm like, alright, jake Cole's number one to me, I'll never mind Kendrick's number one of me. So I Don't know.
Speaker 3:I put, I put I'm think I've really thought about this over time. I think Jake Cole is just a hair above Kendrick to me and I let her saying it out loud.
Speaker 5:But he's more consistent.
Speaker 2:I think he's doing more in hip-hop. Jake Cole is right now because he's doing a lot of stuff with Dreamville you know, he's coming out with those festivals. I think he's just being featured on more tracks and I'm sure more people would love to have Kendrick on on their, on their albums. But it's kind of like, you know, maybe 10 years ago, whenever you had an Andre 3000 feature, and it was just like Something special that you got to listen to. I think now we're we're getting more of Jake Cole.
Speaker 2:He wouldn't put wouldn't back in the day, maybe five, five years ago we weren't getting a lot and I think that we're getting a lot of that now and and I love it, and, and it's making music better, but the competition of it all makes it like the conversations make it worth it For these artists.
Speaker 3:That's why I was looking forward to after when Kendrick Lamar drop control, that we would get a lot more from those two. And I was just kind of upset with Jake Cole because he mentioned it in a song. It was just kind of gangsta a little bit because it was like I'm not really worried about this, but it's like I wanted to hear so much more from a Jake Cole. But to the point where it's like now I just want to hear a collaboration between Jake Cole and Kendrick.
Speaker 2:Lamar, friday man, you can't like.
Speaker 7:I'm still waiting on Black Friday.
Speaker 3:It's.
Speaker 2:It didn't happen this February, obviously so those two songs that they had on YouTube where you were like and I, whenever I first heard, and I'm like, oh fuck, something's gonna happen, something's coming out, and nothing came out and it was just really fucking depressing to see.
Speaker 3:But um, I don't know if they did that to to put us on edge or if Tony was really in the works and and nothing came out of it. No one I haven't heard any stories or anybody in the camp say that this happened or that happened. It's just Two people was like let's just fuck with the entire crowd for the rest of the year.
Speaker 2:Well, I'm just I'm curious to see what Kendrick's gonna do now, because he's not with Top dog anymore, so I'm curious to see what's next. You know, I think it's an album somewhere.
Speaker 2:You think so because I mean, that website has been that a PG Lang has been. That website's been out for a while and I'm I'm curious, man, because I don't know if this sounds gonna change. I think it sounds kind of like been changing with each other out every other album, kind of like with Kent, with Kanye Kanye, from college dropout all the way to now. It's just been an evolution of sound. It's just like he's upping the game. I didn't listen to vultures, so I, you know, I gotta give it a listen. What do you got thoughts on that album?
Speaker 5:It's a cool album.
Speaker 3:I like it. It took a while for me to digest it. I'm gonna be honest with you. It wasn't like an immediate love.
Speaker 5:I think I'm still dodging it, but it's cool. I Think Kanye West don't care about making nothing like graduation. I think, I think well.
Speaker 3:For sure. I think what I like about music is that eventually I'll hear the stories tied to the making of the album, which gives me a better an appreciation, like I heard, there's one song on vultures that he he tried to sample Iron man from Ozzy Osbourne.
Speaker 6:Yeah, it was a man. It wasn't Iron man, but it.
Speaker 3:Now I can't remember which one it is but the Ozzy Osbourne song but yeah, that whole story man so he yeah, so he ended up making his own kind of similar sounding thing and then sampled that instead of sampling iron man, so he wouldn't get sued.
Speaker 5:He did the same thing with the all falls down. That was a was it all for not through the wire.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, with.
Speaker 5:Chaka Khan, and then he got another singer to sing it in.
Speaker 3:But it's like little things like that that make you appreciate the song a little bit more. That's what I'm saying, like, right now. You just listen into him fresh, there's nothing tied to it. Yet that's just me. That's the way I dive. I've always been very wrong about first impressions when it comes to music. Listen to music. I don't know if everybody's the same way. I think I'm just. That's the clue. I think a little bit of that is because I used to do music, so I get to hear a lot of the bullshit at the very beginning that I'm so familiar to. It was our man, yeah.
Speaker 6:Was it our man? Yeah, I'm still up on there.
Speaker 2:I mean to your point. I was like that with my beautiful dark, twisted fantasy, Like I text chat as soon as I heard it, which is like a classic to me now. This, I'm so crazy.
Speaker 3:It's crazy because back then, when it came first came out, it was so I think it was even hated on, like I didn't like it, he hated it.
Speaker 4:I kept listening to it and I was like give another listen. We both were like forcing each other to keep listening to it. We both fucking loved it. I feel like Vultures is more like that album than any other album to me.
Speaker 1:I don't know. I felt really OK, good.
Speaker 4:Because I'm listening to some of this stuff and I'm hearing some of the beats and stuff, I'm like I'm getting vibes. It's bringing me back to that and I'm like I don't hate it, Like I didn't love it the first time and I started listening to it more and more. I actually like it and I haven't liked any fucking shit in a very long time.
Speaker 6:And, yeah, I like Vultures, though I'm not a I'm not a Kanye fan at all.
Speaker 3:No.
Speaker 6:I like two songs. What's the song? Good Morning and Can't Tell Me Nothing. That's like the two songs.
Speaker 2:Good Morning is literally him just saying good morning.
Speaker 6:I know.
Speaker 4:But that way she loves it. Everyone had that as their ring like their alarm clock in the morning.
Speaker 3:Best music video of all time.
Speaker 6:I'm just yeah, I'm just not. I've never, I have never gotten into the the Kanye live I mean, I think that he is a, despite his like he said can't tell me nothing.
Speaker 3:Is that the other one?
Speaker 6:OK, despite his craziness right, let's put that aside I think he is. I think he is a very brilliant individual when it comes to compilation and a lot of stuff. I just don't care for it. I don't care for, I don't care for his is rapping. I don't care for his sound.
Speaker 4:So I said that was my, my first album I've liked from him in a long time. And you're like, really, what is the last one that you I mean like, did you like Donda and all the other ones? I?
Speaker 3:did like Donda, you did. Yeah, I did like Donda.
Speaker 2:Hermes, would you?
Speaker 5:I don't want to shake in your head, let me, it might have had songs on it.
Speaker 3:Donda was hard to listen to because I think was Donda the one that we had to buy a special oh, the thing, the little, I just got it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, it was Donda, it was Donda.
Speaker 1:I think it was too. Yeah, donda too.
Speaker 5:You had to have like a special gadget or whatever it's like a $200 thing.
Speaker 2:That shit was fucking unique as fuck yeah.
Speaker 3:I'm very surprised that that's your technology, dad. Like that you don't ever hear about it. Like getting to separate the drums, getting to separate the vocals, like it's wild, yeah, like that is unappreciated.
Speaker 2:I'll be in 10 years.
Speaker 3:It'll be like oh yeah, it's going to be coveted as well. Like, oh shit, I need one of those.
Speaker 2:But no, but what you think about like a Donda or like the it's?
Speaker 5:good because it's conglia, so the production is going to be always awesome.
Speaker 1:But it is.
Speaker 5:It didn't connect to me like that, like like his first album.
Speaker 2:Yeah. So what was that last album for Kanye? That kind of just change it to her like, oh, listen to it later, do you like gay?
Speaker 5:I was going to say the what was the one, when it's clear.
Speaker 2:That was clear. That was the first thing I was going to do with skinhead on it, jesus.
Speaker 5:Yeah but but but later on I learned to respect the album so that was a while ago. I probably done the oh pop. Yeah, the one that album is good about. Yeah, I didn't like. Yeah, no, I love that I don't know if it might be two songs I like on there. I can't remember off top of my head, but I'm not a fan. Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 6:Coming through the chat A millionaires. Good morning, it's greater, than Kanye.
Speaker 3:I have not heard. Come in, there is good morning.
Speaker 6:I haven't either Me either.
Speaker 3:I'm going to have to check that out Now. I'm very interested in that one. Come in, there is really, really I feel like he gets his flowers here in Texas. Oh yeah, I don't know how.
Speaker 5:I said that is definitely a comedian or fan.
Speaker 3:No, I got to go check that out. Man, come in there, kill shit. Come in there, kill shit. He's doing very well for himself, oh yeah, isn't he?
Speaker 2:doing that. I saw a smooth Vega posted a music festival happening here. Shout out to the homey. He's doing a lot of big things. He's one of the. He's the only Mexican podcaster that's going to be a part of the little podcast set. I need to go back and look because he just announced it today, but I think a millionaires performing here.
Speaker 4:Lil Wayne's going to be on. It, lil Wayne's going to be on it.
Speaker 2:Derot is going to be on it.
Speaker 7:Which we've seen.
Speaker 2:Yeah, we've seen Derot for.
Speaker 7:Lou Chaw's Lou Palooza.
Speaker 2:We've seen him with Lou Palooza. I don't know why my girlfriend texts me asking if I fed everybody.
Speaker 4:Sorry, thinking about the pets again, did I fucking?
Speaker 2:she's like how do you have your name? She just text me how do you have your name? Is?
Speaker 3:I'm like you know, you know you're in trouble when you're using the last name. Yeah, God damn girl Chill out.
Speaker 2:Where were we?
Speaker 6:I'm sorry man, my mind was on the on the bill that's going to be a good bill, but you see that Lovers and Friends line up though.
Speaker 4:Oh, here we go again, I haven't seen you. It's amazing.
Speaker 2:It's like a bunch of fucking like.
Speaker 7:Think of any old school throwback usher like early 2000s little Kim, I'm sure it's because I think I know, yes, yes.
Speaker 5:Yeah, I was going to be there. I'm shanti. Yes, yeah, was John rule the one that was involved with?
Speaker 6:firefest yeah.
Speaker 2:Yes, yeah. How is he? Recovering from that shit, I mean you know, I mean ask, ask 50 cent. I don't know. He bought all the fucking most petty show.
Speaker 7:He bought his first two rows.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I show. Yeah, that's fucking, that's a good.
Speaker 3:I love how petty they are, man yeah.
Speaker 2:It's good, though I think it's healthy to have something like that. Petty beef like that, not like that shit back in the day used to be fucking people dying. I know now man, people are fucking Rappers, are fucking dying like crazy.
Speaker 3:They're dying again. Lovers, I was fucked up, but they're dying again Lovers and friends real quick.
Speaker 4:So we got Janet Jackson, alicia Keys, mary J Blythe, janet Jackson, lil Wayne, snoop Dogg, gwen Stefani, backstreet Boys, usher, noss, ludacris, nelly Aikon, neo Jarrul, ashanti, t Payne, tlc, sierra, nelly for Toto. So both Nellies MIA, and then so that's the top. And then you get down into the fine print and you got E40, timbaland, brandy, keisha Cole, robin Thicke, 98 degrees GZ, fat Joe, TI, e40. I mean, even on the bottom line, you've got.
Speaker 3:J Cole I mean J Holiday, j Cole.
Speaker 4:Lil Flip, I mean Mims Plies. Mims Damn, he brought back Mims it's like everything from the early 2000s, is going to be at this music festival.
Speaker 2:Is Chingi going to be there?
Speaker 6:That's the only way that I'm going to go. I would go to that as of Chingi.
Speaker 2:I just want to hear him sing one-to-one Call-A-Woe.
Speaker 6:No one else on that list matters to me.
Speaker 2:Fucking Chingi baby.
Speaker 6:You'll be, chingi, I'm coming over there, but Paul Wall, so you'll be there. Yeah, I'll be there for Paul Wall.
Speaker 4:Juvenile Twista Loay.
Speaker 6:I'll be there for Twista Juvenile.
Speaker 3:This has to be like a 12-hour event. There's no fucking way. It's like weekend.
Speaker 5:It's like wood stockers? Obviously yeah.
Speaker 4:Genuine Lupe Too Short.
Speaker 1:Twista oh yeah, you like that. Smooth shit Dan Shit, you like that. My whole life is Chingi.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 4:That's the fucking jam.
Speaker 2:That always got me going.
Speaker 4:All right. So in my mind, that was my favorite time for rap and hip hop and R&B, all that shit.
Speaker 4:It was from like 2000 to 2010-. Agreed, ish, right? I feel like some of the best music came out in that time, and I feel like my parents would probably say the same shit from that time in their life too, right? So what I want to know from y'all that you completely like? You know everything about hip hop and rap Way more than I do, surely, right? So what do you think about? Like current music, like where we are right now in our generation of music? Are you still listening to old shit? Are you listening to anything new?
Speaker 5:I'm listening to new and old yeah.
Speaker 3:Amherst is really good at listening to the new stuff.
Speaker 7:Yeah, same here.
Speaker 3:I'm not A lot of that. Also, I've read an article that's saying like the more older you get, it's harder, it's kind of an uphill battle for you to like newer music. But also I attribute that to like a lot of the newer music that's becoming mainstream is really because of the popularity contest. Back then to get on the radio you would have to actually have some kind of talent. It wasn't just money buying everything. Now it's like, you see, like the most popular people making songs now, Like it's hard to focus on the mainstream. But I do think, like when it comes to being more lyrical, like the lyrical people are not getting a spotlight put on them but they're just as good, if not a little bit better, than past lyricalists, because obviously they learn from from lyricals before them.
Speaker 3:But it's hard for me it's harder to get intact with a lot of the newer music.
Speaker 4:So who's good now? Who should we be listening to? That? I'm not listening to Davies.
Speaker 5:Who.
Speaker 4:Davies.
Speaker 3:Is Davies considered new?
Speaker 7:Well, I mean Davies, has been around for like five years, davies has been around for like five years.
Speaker 3:Davies is really good. Benny the Butcher, yeah, benny the Butcher.
Speaker 2:You know any from Griselda?
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Who else. What captures you, though, about that? Because, like for me, the beats good for like a good 30 seconds. Then I'm hooked Like that's got to get me.
Speaker 5:I like beats, but I'm more so focused on lyrics and bars. Like that captures me. I mean, like with the new stuff, it's more so of a feeling, like how I'm feeling, to like I might want to listen to, like little oozy or future or something like that, depending on how I feel which is more focused on the feeling and not the lyrics.
Speaker 7:What was the artist you sent me today? It's like Ray, something.
Speaker 6:Ray Charles is not new.
Speaker 1:I can't remember the dude's name but, he's like very.
Speaker 7:Is that the?
Speaker 5:blind guy Ray J. I've seen random stuff, ray J, I start I started getting into the that Mexican OT.
Speaker 6:Oh, I love it and like a big X to plug those two, like I, just to me it's, it's that, it's that so Texan?
Speaker 1:Yeah, did you see that?
Speaker 6:I get that, I get that Houston influence in there and it just brings me back.
Speaker 2:That gives me that nostalgia sway, that sway freestyle we did. That was pretty fucking fire.
Speaker 3:I was at Mexican OT. Yeah, oh yeah.
Speaker 2:It's pretty damn good he's taking me by surprise.
Speaker 6:At first I was like I don't like fucking rolling ours on things that have ours.
Speaker 3:Oh yeah, that's true, that's a town.
Speaker 6:It is, it's so good, I don't know how to say this.
Speaker 7:Dude's name is Ray V a U G H N.
Speaker 4:Ray Vaughn, ray Vaughn, yeah.
Speaker 7:Stevie Ray Vaughn. He's like very lyrical. He's been on like those radio shows where they do the freestyles and he's like really good at that.
Speaker 2:Those are. I think those are really fun for new artists. The thing I miss I don't know if they still do it, because I had checked to see if they still do it the fucking BT Cypher's Do they still do that?
Speaker 5:I don't know. I haven't looked for BT.
Speaker 3:They probably do, but I'm. It was so funny that they were comparing one of the one of the newer BTs, which maybe they do then, but it was like it was more focused on this new rapper I don't know, I don't even know who he is, but they were more focused on his dance moves and they were his lyricism. I was like, man, what is going on? That's what I'm saying. It's more. It's the mainstream. Now is like I don't know where they find in these guys.
Speaker 7:Kevin Durant.
Speaker 2:Oh, fuck, yeah, Yo who said that he's like man. Maybe he's a stop playing basketball, Just a star.
Speaker 5:I didn't know it was me, he was tripping on it.
Speaker 3:He had a career. I mean, come on, let's go, let's see where this music takes him.
Speaker 2:As soon as you said it was Kevin Durant, I was like fuck, fucking KD doing that shit.
Speaker 4:Watching the video, I don't feel like his voice matches his like face Right. Is it just me?
Speaker 5:I mean, he was in rapper mode, I guess yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah, cause you kind of changed the awful little bit.
Speaker 4:When you rap, I get that I just you watch the video and you're like that just doesn't look like in matches. I mean, y'all can go back to y'alls episode.
Speaker 2:three episodes ago I think y'all talked about Kobe and Shaq, that whenever they were, they were.
Speaker 3:They try to make their music.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 6:Shaq's pretty good. What Shaq's got going on right now is with his, with his Like uh was it house music or not house music? The uh dubstep and stuff that he's doing or whatever.
Speaker 1:Oh, DJ is DJ stuff.
Speaker 6:His DJ sets are pretty good. And then he dropped that Uh, it wasn't his whole album, but it was just like a feature where he's in that truck rapping. Oh yeah.
Speaker 5:We played that on the party. Was that the 18?
Speaker 3:Well, yeah, I was like man. I got to give credit to Shaq. I don't know if he has writers or not, he obviously has the money to do so. Did he win a Grammy?
Speaker 5:or am I tripping what I think? I'm a Grammy I don't think so.
Speaker 3:I got to Google that.
Speaker 6:If Shaq wins a Grammy man. That's a. That's crazy.
Speaker 5:Maybe I'm wrong, cause he had like a big album in the nineties. I don't remember what it was?
Speaker 2:Was it on the soundtrack of Shazam?
Speaker 6:Cause Sam, cause Sam. He was in that movie. Cause Sam was with a. He got a nomination.
Speaker 4:He did not win but he got a nomination for.
Speaker 3:Was it back Cause that.
Speaker 4:Is that for the song Stomp?
Speaker 3:Was it not?
Speaker 5:Stomp, stomp.
Speaker 6:That's a Mandela effect. There was no. There was no a Simbed movie.
Speaker 7:No, I remember watching. I do too.
Speaker 1:What no?
Speaker 6:They say that that's a Mandela effect and there was never one.
Speaker 1:No.
Speaker 6:Just like the cornucopia, a cornucopia whatever in the in the fruit of the loom.
Speaker 3:I've heard, I've heard that, which someone found out.
Speaker 6:Someone found an old shirt.
Speaker 3:On a black t-shirt. They found that cornucopia.
Speaker 4:There was a cornucopia on there. There was yeah.
Speaker 3:They've got this whole thing. Dude, you get down like a spears of that. Did you hear the new conspiracy about that?
Speaker 6:That the government's trying to like, trying to see how far they can go and see if they can actually alter Some things. Uh huh.
Speaker 3:Yeah, I swear, that was Simbed. I remember watching. I remember watching.
Speaker 6:Why would you pick that movie Like why would you pick that movie that?
Speaker 1:would be like, because they were.
Speaker 6:Shaq, but I'm talking about the Simbed movie yeah there was one that was like Shazam or whatever Kazam or Kazam, which one was the Simbed one that was.
Speaker 2:Kazam.
Speaker 6:Kazam yeah.
Speaker 4:No Kazam.
Speaker 5:I don't remember the Simbed one.
Speaker 6:Well.
Speaker 4:Shaq, hang on. I don't remember the Simbed one.
Speaker 6:There was a Shaq movie too.
Speaker 4:It was Shaq, I don't remember.
Speaker 7:Simbed I remember both of them.
Speaker 5:I remember the Shaq one. Shaq is like those Kazam All right it was.
Speaker 6:Shazam is the one that people say is Simbed.
Speaker 4:But Shazam is the Marvel thing isn't it?
Speaker 6:And then because Kazam Super hero. Kazam is a Shaq Goddamn.
Speaker 7:So there's two of them.
Speaker 6:Yeah.
Speaker 2:It's confusing.
Speaker 6:It makes sense, though, because you have all those stupid movies that come out that are like you hear about one because it got the bigger budget or whatever, and they've got two movies that are exactly the same that come out the.
Speaker 4:Simbed one was never, real?
Speaker 7:No, it's real man.
Speaker 5:No I remember watching it yeah.
Speaker 1:I watched it. No, I never First kid, yeah, first kid.
Speaker 2:I was about to say First kid First kid or house guest.
Speaker 5:Yeah, no, I remember Shazam.
Speaker 7:I remember. I remember watching it yeah. It's a Mandela thing yeah, it's on.
Speaker 6:VHS and so I'm telling you, I'm telling you what they did. The government's just trying to fuck us man.
Speaker 3:My mom has all the copies of VHS. I'm going to go look into that shit, shazam. I swear to God, I'm going to find it.
Speaker 6:You're going to find it.
Speaker 3:It's deja vu, right now.
Speaker 6:And it might not even be it. Did your mom record movies off the TV?
Speaker 3:No.
Speaker 6:My mom did, because we didn't have the money to get movies. She was over there and, man, if it was a good one, she'd actually pause between the commercials.
Speaker 1:So it was like one seamless movie, yeah.
Speaker 6:Now I swear you'll find it. It's real. The Internet's going to. Don't Google it, man. They've watched that.
Speaker 5:Is it the same character Like?
Speaker 6:he's a genie. Yeah, he's like a sin bed is a genie.
Speaker 5:I don't believe that.
Speaker 7:I've never seen that. I saw it. I saw it Me too.
Speaker 3:I remember Shazam no that introduced me to. Sinbad as a kid. That introduced me to Sinbad.
Speaker 2:What did a pair of big shoes, big fucking shag shoes, in that Shazam Kazam?
Speaker 6:Kazam, yeah, you saw.
Speaker 2:Confusing as Fuck, and I remember that movie because that kid from Shackwraps in that movie. The kid from Bronx.
Speaker 6:Hill was in that movie.
Speaker 2:Shackwraps.
Speaker 1:That's the whole.
Speaker 6:Thing where, like he rubs a shoe and everything.
Speaker 2:And he's like oh, that's me.
Speaker 6:And he does his whole rap thing, man, it's crazy they got some Reeboks called Kazams, I think yeah.
Speaker 5:Comic-Cosm, never mind.
Speaker 6:No, I got some shack attacks. Oh yeah, I used to love those.
Speaker 3:I don't even have a pair. I don't even have a pair.
Speaker 6:About the Street Fighter edition.
Speaker 2:Oh, okay, yeah.
Speaker 6:That's what it is.
Speaker 2:Nice ass, anyways. So let me talk about since we're talking about music, let me talk about the one artist that you would love to meet if you ever had the chance to meet him. I'll go first.
Speaker 6:Shut up.
Speaker 2:I've met Kanye.
Speaker 6:West.
Speaker 1:I'll mutur ass Reebok Right. So let's hear about who you would want to meet Dead or.
Speaker 2:Alive Dead or Alive, dead or Alive.
Speaker 5:I swear, if you say Pop, I'm jumping over this table. I would buy this a Pop and do it. And then I'm going to say, frankie.
Speaker 2:Lime, okay. Okay. Yeah, they had the movie about him right.
Speaker 5:Yeah, wadduf Fools Homo. Yeah, wadduf Homo Okay.
Speaker 2:That's a good one.
Speaker 7:That's a good one, mine's just, j Cole.
Speaker 6:We're talking about hip hop artists, right? You?
Speaker 2:know what it could be, any artist no no, no, no, stick with hip hop.
Speaker 7:Okay, hip hop. I feel like I can hang out with J Cole.
Speaker 2:You think so? Yeah, you're just going to shoot basketball. You can shoot around, you know.
Speaker 7:I'm just saying, talking wise. I don't know, I can probably shoot around. I mean, I'm sure he would like to.
Speaker 2:He played professionally in Africa. Right he played football.
Speaker 3:Yeah, he did For like what Two seasons.
Speaker 2:No, he played a whole season I think Did he yeah he said he wasn't the best one out there, but he was good. I mean better than me.
Speaker 6:Play a season, you play a season.
Speaker 2:yeah, that's right, how about you? J?
Speaker 3:I never thought of this.
Speaker 2:That's a hard question.
Speaker 3:That is a hard question. Ice spice.
Speaker 2:You said you'd be sorry to dance in front of me please.
Speaker 5:Miss Spice man, she's a good spy, oh Spice.
Speaker 6:Give me all Spice oh.
Speaker 3:Spice. Um shit man. I would want to hang out with that, what's it? You know who I think would be a pretty cool person to hang out with? Probably be Lil Wayne.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 3:We have the Green Bay Packers in common. We're both Green Bay Packers. Fans Trash Okay.
Speaker 7:How are your Cowboys doing?
Speaker 3:Oh man Come on how many races. I just want to try to remember why I didn't go any further.
Speaker 7:How many races? Yeah right.
Speaker 3:We got them five ring. I don't even think you were alive when y'all got the last ring.
Speaker 2:I was oh that's right Nineties Every year.
Speaker 3:No, I just he just seemed like a pretty cool person to talk to. I've seen him in interviews and he's just so down to earth. I don't know if he'd be my first one, but just off the top of the head.
Speaker 2:That's what I'm going to say. His way.
Speaker 4:I mean, I just I still want to sit down and have a conversation with Shaq and he, you know, musician, basketball player, whatever, it doesn't fucking matter. I want to hang out with Shaq a little bit. You know what I mean.
Speaker 6:So that, yeah, I mean, it's the same for me, but I'm going to do a different one. Yeah, for you ODB Okay.
Speaker 1:Hold ready.
Speaker 6:And what got me on that was that that episode of MTV Cribs that he was on, he went and cashed a fucking uh, uh. What was it? The, the welfare check.
Speaker 2:Well, fair check.
Speaker 6:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:He went and cashed a welfare check.
Speaker 6:He was scamming welfare what?
Speaker 2:the hell Now remember that. Oh yeah, it's great. I want to hear about that final, that last day he was alive because he did all this fucking crazy shit you know.
Speaker 1:And then he died.
Speaker 2:He like, oh, he like, did all these fucking drugs, went around the city and then he just fucking died. It's fucking crazy.
Speaker 4:That didn't sound like that crazy, it just sounds like true. A lot of people do exactly that.
Speaker 2:To me, the normal man, but to him the legend. I mean, it'd be like yo man, you fucking went out like that, you went out like a G, but but you're dead now, so we can't. You know, here's the sliver who's your musician, my musician.
Speaker 1:I mean.
Speaker 3:I've already met Connie. I've already met Donald Lover, not Matt, so I I've seen your shoe. He sounded like 350. Correct, oh yeah, he did yeah.
Speaker 5:How was he, by the way, he was, he was.
Speaker 2:Fuck.
Speaker 1:So he wasn't people.
Speaker 2:Whenever people look at the picture of us together, he's like like this, but he's like that in every picture but there was. There was kids there. He had a great conversation.
Speaker 4:Chad, shut the fuck, we're going to go, but he was having conversations with the kids man.
Speaker 2:He signed everything that everyone brought. There was only 10 of us out there, and so you know he was.
Speaker 3:He was chill down to earth. I've met Mike Jones before you did. Yeah, got to do a who Mike Jones, who? How was he Dude it was. It was so fucking crazy because okay. So like we used to do this music, we used to do like this little rap, click and shout outs to all homeys, but we used to call ourselves killing y'all. Click KYC. And the owners of that made the made a song with Mike Jones. So they said Mike Jones is coming. We're going to do the music video. I said Mike Jones is coming, oh my God. So when Mike Jones got out the car he looked, I couldn't even recognize him. He had lost so much fucking weight. I have never seen a skinny version of Mike Jones. This is what after he lost all the weight.
Speaker 2:So this was like after the I can't think of him without all that weight. Yeah.
Speaker 3:Yeah.
Speaker 3:And now, now that, uh, that music video is deleted off uh, youtube, so. But I remember it was called gangsta holiday and it was. It was so crazy because he was so relatable to us, like to the point where you were thought all right, mike Jones, crazy fame. He got a lot of money, he's going to bring this whole studio. He literally brought a fucking uh a light from the ceiling light, like one of those big old ceiling lights, and just a uh camera the camcorder cameras to record the music video. So so, so, minimum, like I was like.
Speaker 3:I was like I didn't even recognize him, but until he started talking, he started doing this thing in front of the camera. I was like, yeah, that's Mike Jones. And I was so like, we were so crazy. I remember meeting the back of that music video and we were dabbing up Mike Jones and giving each other hugs and we were sitting there, everybody was smoking their blunts and it was just a crazy experience we chilling with someone who I used to listen to like crazy, still tipping on fofos and stuff like that?
Speaker 7:Where did he say to y'all that he wanted y'all to sing?
Speaker 3:Oh yeah, he came up with a new saying and I was like no one's going to say that Mike Jones. But he's like it's no longer Mike Jones who is? It's going to be a where's Mike Jones? I'm like that's not going nowhere.
Speaker 7:And he didn't go nowhere.
Speaker 1:He's nobody heard about it. It's too late.
Speaker 3:He tried to come up with a new thing. I guess he was trying to stay underground and that's what his new model was going to be. Instead of who, mike Jones, they just said where's Mike Jones? So, but it was cool to hang out with him and I didn't partake in any of the drugs.
Speaker 2:Of course not Straight loose Charles. Of course no, I think.
Speaker 3:I was like 16 or so, whatever, but I was. You know, I still, I still enjoyed that moment.
Speaker 2:How long did you ride that high? For, though Like whenever you left, you're like fuck. Did that happen, like you know?
Speaker 3:dude, it, it, it didn't stop settling in, it didn't settle into like a week after. Like dude, that was fucking my dough.
Speaker 2:I made. I made Kanye laugh whenever I was before.
Speaker 1:I was like you know, I want to play cool.
Speaker 2:I'm going to play real cool. I'm not going to fangirl, I'm not going to freak out. I was like I'm at cutting us, I'm never going to fail. You know, and he laughed at that. I don't know if he thought I was stupid.
Speaker 4:He thought you were stupid. He did one of those whole like I got.
Speaker 3:I got a compliment from Joe Buttig before. I've never let that die before. He's like hey, nice penis.
Speaker 4:Joe, chill out man, Joe or R Kelly.
Speaker 3:I don't know. So I remember I used to. I used to cut hair in the day a lot more. Oh, yeah, yeah, I used to. I faded up a homeboy who was going to Joe Button show here in Dallas. Shout out to my boy, sean. I remember, sean, I would fade him up and he had a meeting greet tickets to for the Joe Button podcast and he was waiting in line to get his picture taken and sit down with him for, I guess, a minute or whatever they do. And he called me. I remember getting the call from my boy, sean. He was like man, you ain't going to believe this. You ain't going to believe this. I'm like what happened? He's like. You know, I told you I was with, I was going to do a meeting greet with Joe Button. He said yeah, I told him yeah, and he's like he. The second he saw me. He's like whoever your barber is, man, he hooked you up, fuck up, and I was like oh is that a direct quote?
Speaker 3:Can I put that on my on my Instagram? Like compliments from Joe, but I was. I was so hyped, so yeah, I know what that's like, even though I wasn't there to get my compliment.
Speaker 4:Hey, still happen.
Speaker 3:Yeah, so I'm in the industry. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 4:You know what I'm saying All right.
Speaker 2:So what do y'all's wish for music? What's y'all's wish for hip hop?
Speaker 3:But J Cole and Kendrick.
Speaker 2:Lamar album yeah, oh, and what do you expect for the future of hip hop? Like what's next? What's gonna happen? Like, is there gonna be a new trend? Y'all think it's gonna pop off of it.
Speaker 3:I'm hoping the trends die. If you learn from music, it's not just a hip hop thing. Music kind of becomes a history thing. They just repeat each other. Those trends seem to come back and I think the trendy shit was. I'm hoping it will eventually die off and then people start paying attention to lyricism once more and I really do think that true hip hop is gonna come back. But at the same time I'm looking at kind of hints of hip hop actually dying and becoming something new. Well, not dying, but branching off and becoming something new. We're seeing versions of hip hop mixed with house, hip hop mixed with hip hop mixed with rock. We're seeing different versions of music that we just categorizing their hip hop, but they're truly not true hip hop. So I'm just hoping some of that nostalgic stuff from the 90s, the true lyricism of it all, comes back.
Speaker 3:Here, here I'm gonna let y'all answer now.
Speaker 7:I don't have an answer for that? I don't.
Speaker 3:I just these guys do podcasts, by the way. No, I don't, I wanna see.
Speaker 5:I like to see more people like for people from different countries to keep making rap songs because I think that grows the rap scene. I like to see more.
Speaker 2:like you know, it was probably like 10 years ago when I first heard about Skepta and I love that style of hip hop. You know the British type. I don't know what they call it, I don't know what they what kind of I don't know what they call it Drill hatred.
Speaker 5:It's like drill.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they mostly make a lot of drill music yeah, but I'm a big fan and I wanna see more over here. I would love for sounds coming from other places and even other countries if I don't understand. Like, what was that French song that you had?
Speaker 5:Yummy yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2:So that one I mean having seen it on Instagram or TikTok. You know, I never really heard that song before, and then you talked about it and I'm like let me give it a listen.
Speaker 7:Have you heard of worldwide choppers?
Speaker 2:No.
Speaker 7:Oh, listen to that. It's all the fast rappers from all different countries. So like Tick Nine is like from the US and then Twista and then it's like all the other people from other countries Damn.
Speaker 2:Like I mean. I think now we're in a time in age where things can be easily grasped, like you can get on YouTube and find another artist.
Speaker 2:I want more of that I feel like I've been shut off, like I've listened to rap from like Japan and India and now to hear something from France and get back to like I guess it's drill, but I mean I want more of that. So that's what I feel, that's what I want. I would like that for hip hop and more shit that I wanna like, newer stuff that I can listen to now, cause I kind of feel like out of touch, cause you said once that your taste change, or they don't change after like what? 30 years.
Speaker 3:It's not that your taste change, it's just it's harder for your brain to come to a liking.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:So listening to new music comes like it's like uphill battle really.
Speaker 2:So I think I would like to like be more like open on new stuff. That's what I kind of want.
Speaker 3:You know, what I miss in hip hop is when other rappers used to get on other people's beats and just like mix tapes.
Speaker 5:Like mix tapes.
Speaker 3:I think that's. What I miss is the mix tapes.
Speaker 2:Bring back that Piff. I mean it's still. It's still available.
Speaker 7:Is it God? It is, it is. You can't even use it, though. No, you can't use it anymore.
Speaker 5:God damn it. It's been real or none of that.
Speaker 7:It's like you put it, you type it online like online like on your computer and it just shows like some random, like texts and that's it Damn.
Speaker 5:You gotta get on SoundCloud now. You gotta get on SoundCloud.
Speaker 4:Back then you could flex on someone else's beat and then just to do it Like you weren't looking for a hit, you're not looking to get on the radio or do anything crazy Like now, just like be Instagram, tiktok, famous, whatever. You were just trying to show what you're able to do, like thinking about, like Lil Wayne's dedication.
Speaker 5:Drought.
Speaker 7:Oh.
Speaker 5:The drought.
Speaker 7:Is that the one where he had the?
Speaker 1:sky is limit.
Speaker 4:Oh, the drought. Oh man sky is limit. No sealants is what I'm thinking of, like off the top of my head, wasn't that? What beat was that? Fuck Swag surfing. Was that it or no?
Speaker 5:Swag and surf that dead is on those. Yeah right Swag surfing.
Speaker 4:Yeah, I mean just like, just because you're right that shit doesn't happen anymore, like at all.
Speaker 3:Last person to do it was Joyner, but no one really is looking for Joyner Forgot about.
Speaker 7:Joyner yeah.
Speaker 3:Joyner. He did a 21 Savage 21. He's been doing that a lot. That's what I'm saying, Like I missed that. I wish I got that from somebody else. But like Joyner been doing that, just kind of it's not like he's been promoting it, it's just like under the table kind of shit.
Speaker 1:What was that I don't know, oh man.
Speaker 2:Okay, well, you know we're coming near the end of the episode Gross, so let me ask one more thing. Music scene for Worth like. Have y'all been to a lot of local hip hop shows, anything like that?
Speaker 3:I can't say that we have. I haven't, but that's just because of life I work nights. It's harder for me to get away. I truly have to make time to get away, but I've been enjoying what I've been seeing lately. Like we have so much talent in our own backyard. It's fucking insane. I'm supporting from a distance. I really wish I could be at more shows, but being a husband, being a father and being a full-time worker is just like I don't find the time to do it. So, johnny Tries.
Speaker 7:I don't try to go out but I do support, like a lot of the artists I try to like find new artists that are from like locally and then I try to, like you know, promote them. I promote on the Instagram, or am I promote them on the podcast?
Speaker 2:On the group chat. A Africa stop HIV AIDS virus says Africa stop AIDS Perfect.
Speaker 4:Yes, that's good to shout out. Thanks, I'll be here. Yes, all right.
Speaker 2:Okay, what.
Speaker 6:That was weird. I don't know People, people sometimes get in these, these live streams, and you never know what they're gonna say.
Speaker 3:That's your two. I don't know if that was an inside joke or not.
Speaker 6:No, no, no, definitely not. It's kind of weird.
Speaker 3:Where where, where can people find y'all? Well, they can find us on Instagram, they can find us on TikTok, facebook, youtube.
Speaker 7:Subscribes to our YouTube.
Speaker 3:I believe that too, really yeah, but like how much else personal, oh yeah.
Speaker 5:My IG is aramis underscore Scott.
Speaker 7:John for John G, and then everything. Rap podcast.
Speaker 3:J underscore worker Hollick. You can find me on Instagram. I'm only on Instagram.
Speaker 2:And when's workaholic's coming back?
Speaker 3:Sometime before the summer, that's all I could say.
Speaker 7:It's coming back, it's coming back, and that with other products.
Speaker 3:I don't know why Johnny's the biggest hater of all that shit.
Speaker 7:He came from the workaholic podcast. It's funny, it's funny.
Speaker 3:But not even an undercover hater, I know right, like full blown At least.
Speaker 2:I let you know, you know. You know you might have to subscribe in the backyard. This is good, oh shit. Well, thanks everyone for joining us on this episode with the boys from the RAP podcast. Again, follow us on all social medias, at the Funky Panther, on all streaming platforms. And where else can people find us? Chad, what's?
Speaker 4:our phone number 817-677-0408. Pretty soon we're going to have an episode where all we're going to do is listen to your voice emails. Have you call in? Listen like, read your texts. So we absolutely need you to call text. Leave us a voicemail 817-677-0408. All things at the Funky Panther and thefunkypanzercom.
Speaker 2:And please don't send dick pics. We're getting tired of that.
Speaker 4:If you do just make sure that they're forward straight to Javier.
Speaker 2:So stay good everybody. I'm Chad, I'm Javier.
Speaker 6:Tim.
Speaker 2:And we are the Funky Panther.
Speaker 7:That's a wrap. Thanks for watching.
Speaker 1:We'll see you next time. Bye.