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#150 Pale Garbage Rappers: ill Midas, KS290 and Spirit
September 07, 2023
#150 Pale Garbage Rappers: ill Midas, KS290 and Spirit
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Step into the vibrant world of this Wilson King Podcast episode featuring Pale Garbage Rappers'  ill Midas, KS290 and Spirit, where the lines between music, gaming, art, and even international politics blur into a captivating symphony of insights. Follow our journey through the wildly different life paths of KS290 and Spirit, as we unfold the story of their battle against the odds, their breakthrough into the music industry, and their upcoming projects. Along this rollercoaster ride, we explore the impact of a cleaning service contractor on their career trajectory, the emerging superhero in Nerdy, our previous guest, and Pale Garbage Rappers’ innovative series two cards.

The conversation doesn't stop at music; it takes several engaging detours. Buckle up as we dive headfirst into the intricacies of gaming, the pros, and cons of downloadable content, and the role of platforms like Twitch. Then, we shift gears to navigate the fascinating realm of international relations, analyzing the U.S.'s role in NATO, the economic rise of China, and how these global power dynamics shape our world. We also compare the might of fighter jets and discuss how the lack of middle-class jobs in the U.S. has impacted its economy.

Finally, we wrap up this exhilarating discussion highlighting the power of authenticity in music and life, the complex relationship between fans and haters, and - for a dash of intrigue - aliens in public discourse. We also delve into the world of anime and gaming, sharing our favorite titles and reminiscing about the evolution of classic game series like Call of Duty. As we conclude, we stress the significance of reviews and feedback, keeping a pulse on current trends, and maintaining your true self, no matter where your journey takes you. Join us for this riveting episode that is as much about hooking beats as it is about life's compelling twists and turns.

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Transcript
Speaker 1:

You're now listening to the Wilson King Podcast, this episode of the Wilson King.

Speaker 2:

Podcast is brought to you by BrightLive.

Speaker 3:

Contact BrightLive for all your wedding entertainment, band and DJ needs BrightLiveEventscom. Brightliveevents at gmailcom or visit us on Facebook at BrightLive what the fuck is up? Everybody. I brought in one of my favorite guests to constantly bring back to the show. I brought Ilminus what's up? And he brought two of the newer newest members of Pale Garbage Rappers going to do some introductions.

Speaker 1:

We got KS290, King Savage, King Sensei. He's out of Mobile, Alabama. He came to the label about three months ago, dropped Nuclear Detonation and now we're working on getting reels and stuff out for that. Check him in the skits, check him in everything. And we got Spirit. He opened the show at Rappomania. So much I can say about this man. He's an MC. Mc. That's a rapper right there. That's a motherfucker with the bars. That's a guy who can really sit you down and tell you a story. I know he just dropped Tardy Pass, let the kids play, and he's here with us today. What's up, fellas?

Speaker 2:

How's it going?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I think we just had to be here.

Speaker 3:

Dude, I'm so stoked to have you all. I always love bringing in people from Pale Garbage Rappers to be on the show because it's never a dull time. Hell yeah, dude. Speaking of that, I still talked to Deb about the first time we had Nerdy on here. He didn't really say much, and then the last time he came on he couldn't give him to shut the fuck up, and I loved it, and I fucking loved it.

Speaker 1:

Nerdy has blossomed to this whole superhero now and it's just amazing. I love it. He has so much fun with it and he's embraced, just going into public and being that persona.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, Nerdy has no doubt a national treasure.

Speaker 2:

He is my little brother, that man right there, man, no matter what we be doing, everything that he does, he excels in it. And working with him these past months, since I've been with the family, it's magical man. He's definitely my little brother. I got his back.

Speaker 3:

Now I liked your little bit of a backstory from you. How did you come and find Pale Garbage Rappers? Being from Alabama, that threw me for a little whirl, Because I'm like being from Alabama hello fuck, did you find this up here in the little West, little Winchester Virginia, west Virginia area?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, mcgurray is different. Basically, the saying that comes from down there is if you end up in McGurray, you're going to be stuck in McGurray, and that's the truth. So, me coming up here, I had been up here for a month or two and my dad had found somebody from, I think, pale Garbage Rappers who was friends with my man Eel, and so he picked them up and he said hey son, hey son, I think I found something for you. I think I got something. I'm like what you mean. He showed me his YouTube channel. He showed me his YouTube channel Apparently they had been talking before, and so he said they pale garbage rappers, you should check them out. I'm talking with the man Eel right now trying to see if we could set up a meeting or something like that. Right, and so, come some days later, we actually met and I'm gonna say that was the best day of my life, best choice of my life, because he took a chance on me when he didn't have to, so he didn't seen it out with me. That's my man.

Speaker 4:

So real quick, your dad's tapped into the scene like that.

Speaker 1:

Well, I would, I'm a my man, jeremy Gilbert, shout out Gilbert, cleaning services. If anyone needs cleaning, go holler at Jeremy. He is a monster at the cleaning game but he has cleaning contracts for lust and his dad worked with lust and it's part of that situation. And Jeremy, basically he was in contact with Jeremy and Jeremy hit me up and, like Jeremy was my first supporter, his good friend of mine loving the death, he was like yo, I got this kid for you to look at and then I went and met him in the rest kind of history.

Speaker 2:

Yo, that's super ill. It is for, like past, destined to meet, type type stuff yeah.

Speaker 1:

And also Jeremy is where I went and shot that tired of being alone, real in his guitar room.

Speaker 4:

Okay, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

He's the one with the beautiful Lakers guitar that I'm absolutely obsessed with, since I got to it.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I was really fly. It's funny how all that kind of like full circles, you know, you know who you're going to meet.

Speaker 2:

So hey, for instance, let's go around in threes. That's what I know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Never burn bridges and always keep your options open. Man and people will look out when it's time.

Speaker 3:

Dude, honestly, the world's just full circle, like, if you think about it, and this is how I look at it and how and it helps me watch how I talk to people you know, watch my demeanor around people, you know make sure that I'm like being a halfway decent human being, of course, is because you never know when the next person you talk to is going to be the person that helps you get where you want to go.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I try to always remain a humble, good human being, if I can, because at the end of the day I'm a fuck up, just like everybody else and no offense to anybody Like, and you know what? Everybody, human, everybody. But I think on the surface everybody's just trying to push to a better purpose and always try to remember that, because that's why everybody's collected together in the first place, Like dude 100%.

Speaker 3:

But dude like in, like the world's just full of connections like you never know, like just having a random conversation with someone who they are.

Speaker 1:

Nobody supports you better than a motherfucker. You met for three minutes at a denny's that liked your idea. I mean, like I mean, we all know it ain't going to be your best friends that support you. It ain't going to be your homeboys to show up for you. It's going to be the fans.

Speaker 2:

And like that's unfortunately like.

Speaker 1:

that's just the realism of the scene, Like like, for instance, at Rap-O-Mania. You know, a couple of our homeboys showed up a piece, but mostly it was people we showed, we bought tickets to our idea, and I mean big shout out to everyone who came to Rap-O-Mania, like every single person in attendance.

Speaker 2:

Because y'all made that yeah.

Speaker 1:

And, like some of our homeboys did, come out and support and buy tickets and shout out to them, shout out to Hapties, shout out to Ween, shout out to Throck and Milton, shout out to, I know, spirit had a couple of people come through- yeah. And just it was good.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, free cartel for them.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, always free cartel. Yeah, and we built into the second one, basically, Dude.

Speaker 3:

So what was that experience like? Like getting into the Alamo, being in there and just like the experience of that whole event planning to execution.

Speaker 1:

Well, it was hard because, you know, dealing with the corporate place, there were some rules and let me get this straight Alamo was great to deal with. They were easy to deal with, they were loving, they gave us a good contract, they really like, they went above and beyond. But for us to get the date we have from the time we have when we got it, it was a consistent cram every day to just make the content that. Have it done, get all the skits done, get all the videos to them, because you know they got to process the videos to their system, make sure everything clears, make sure everything checks. You know make sure we sell the right amount of tickets and food and everything to be able to continue these. There was a lot to it and it was stressful but at the end of the day it was a. For me it was a good event. Like it was a, it was a building block and I think it was something good. How y'all feel about it?

Speaker 4:

I think, I think the feelings is all mutual, man, it's something you know, just having conversations with people and saying oh yeah, by the way, bring Mike just a little bit closer, Like you said that.

Speaker 3:

you said back, just bring a little bit closer to you, so that better.

Speaker 4:

Perfect, sweet, just having conversations with people and saying like, hey, you know, I'm going to have a video playing at the Alamo theater or we're going to be performing at the Alamo. You know, that's the feelings that they had in terms of like being shocked and like you know what the heck is this? What is going on? It's pretty much kind of like you know at least I can speak for myself what I had on my end it's it's unheard of, it's almost like a like a fever dream. You know it still feels kind of surreal that we did that, but nonetheless, you know we have the evidence to prove so that we did it and it's pretty fucking awesome.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it was definitely a like I don't know man like watching it all I was like in all kind of. I was just like holy fuck, it worked, yeah, like that's how, like I swear, like that's all I can think for most of that time was like holy fuck. This all came together and people like it.

Speaker 4:

This is actually happening.

Speaker 2:

Because, like for me, that like there was a like being, ever since I've been with it on PGR, it's like it's been like there's a first for everything, Everything has been a first for everything. And so when we did, when we did the um, the Alamo, like how I thought about it, like I was, like I was beyond excited because, as being like a man of where I'm from, my background, stuff like that don't happen you feel what I'm saying, Like you work hard, you work like a small nine to five, you work like a small nine to five job, make at least about $9 and some change, or how you feel what I'm saying. And then you like try to scrap what you can for the rent and so like, from coming from that, from them humble beginnings, them humble but crazy beginnings, and coming up here and then within I don't know, the next three to six, the next three to six months, like actually like acting like something like that, like making rills and skits and like seeing myself like on the big screen. That was more of like a, a dream come true and, like I said, like it this wouldn't be possible if it was not for ill. Ill is basically he would move us forward the backbone, like, basically, he, the, he, the iron that keeps us together solid. I appreciate that, yeah, Like none of this would be would be possible without him. He did that so for real, it's like all credit to him for that Cause let's see Dynasties work so hard Russ works so hard.

Speaker 1:

Spirit works so hard, vince works so hard, everybody works so hard Like I can't take credit for that, like all that I was, I was just literally like the center of the tentacles while the tentacles were moving. I was just telling what the tentacles were doing.

Speaker 2:

Like glue that keep, like yeah, like I was like all right, we're on this step.

Speaker 1:

Right and like I mean cause, honestly the whole event was uncharted territory Like I had from the process of just getting like converting the movies to get them on the video screen was a whole process to learn and how to transfer and everything to their system. Like you know, just sometimes the technical issues take a while to even out, man, and I can't wait till the next one it's going to be lit. Oh yeah, that's right. Like first one was lit, second one going to be lit, third one going to be lit.

Speaker 3:

Like I really.

Speaker 1:

I'm really like, I really look forward to. I think this is like really something that we can do, that you know other people may emulate or duplicate, but like I think this is something we can really make our own kind of like.

Speaker 3:

We did the cards just like something that like, like yo that's, that's a PGR thing right there and like well, I mean, everything y'all are doing is stuff that you're not seeing any of the rest of the rap community, metal community, what, whatever community you're involved in, like this is the first time I've ever seen music video premiere go down in a movie theater.

Speaker 1:

What about six of them?

Speaker 3:

Six of them going down in a movie theater Period, like that's phenomenal. And I mean, dude, honestly, ever since you and I've known each other, I've believed in what PGR is doing, because y'all are giving artists a platform that they would normally have to either never get in their musical career or pay into getting, or or have to sell their fucking soul pretty much to like we were in a really old school philosophy, like if you show up and you do the work, I'm gonna do my best to get your work out there.

Speaker 1:

Like I'm not always the best communicator, I'm not always the most friendliest, but I'll tell you what, when it comes to working the projects and trying to get my fuckers places, that's what I do every day of my life and I could say that firmly. Like I ain't always perfect with it, but I'll tell you what. I wake up every day and try to figure out how to get a bigger bag for artists. You're not bringing that mic just a little bit closer out to you, yeah my bad, You're good man. I done, laid back, hit the panel a couple of times and these are nice chairs too, I feel like. I really want to game in these joints.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm just like man, like I probably fall asleep in one of these joints.

Speaker 3:

Final fancy up in this joint I'm gonna be honest with you, these chairs in here, I catch myself like not even needing to be in here doing anything. I just come in here and sit down and watch TikToks.

Speaker 1:

Like I mean, I don't blame you, really yeah. It's really cool, yeah, they got nice lean back to them yeah everybody's pretty snug right now, but so let's talk about what we got coming up a little bit. Like we got serious, I want to give away a couple of the cards that's going to be in series two.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

So I mean you know you're in series two. Yeah, you were actually going to be the end of series one, but we moved on to series two for reasons that we won't discuss here. But 100%, yeah, but so Spirit has his card coming out. Yeah, I got a spirit card, it's gonna, if you look at he does ill minds every week or ill thoughts excuse me.

Speaker 4:

I don't know why I always say ill minds, but ill thoughts every week. That's minds, you know, that's anonymous.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, but and I'm not going to give his card away but he's already got his own cartoon character. We're going to take his character and mess it with our character and make some whole new spirit mojo.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, it's like a crossover, it's like the equivalent of like watching some old cartoon networks and it's like Billy and Mandy meets. You know, fucking, you know.

Speaker 1:

so, yeah, and we got yeah, I'm very excited for it. We got K's card coming up, of course. We got Bulwep, we got Twin Loops, we got Demented, got Cartel's Roadrunner coming. That's going to be the box art for this series, like Rektor was for the last series. I feel like. I feel like that's a little. That's a little. Couple giveaways, right now.

Speaker 4:

So as far as the quality of the series two cards, can we expect it to be similar, if not the exact same as the first one?

Speaker 1:

They they'll be. These will be formatted exactly like series one. The only difference is, I think I'm going to print the first hundred with purple borders, and so the first hundred people that buy them will get the purple border set and everyone else will get the black border set, to kind of add that extra layer of exclusivity into series two. I think that's what we're working with.

Speaker 4:

That's awesome. I know I'm going to have a purple set, so that's dope.

Speaker 1:

Like, and I will say, as he said, he will have a purple set, but make sure y'all pre-order because the purples will go. They will go day one. It's like we told people with the Alamo, like this thing's gonna sell out, and people waited the last minute. And then I had people sitting there like can you get me in? I'm like bro, there's only so many seats and tickets. Like there's you know. I'm saying like yeah, so people definitely got to get on the series too. Um, you see, what else do we got coming up? What do you got coming up spirit?

Speaker 4:

Uh, at least at this moment, the most you can expect from me is, you know, ill thoughts episodes. I'm on season two of ill thoughts or people who aren't familiar with ill thoughts and what that is? Essentially, it's me doing anything from 16 to 32 bars and, layman's terms, long ass verses, wrapping over some of my favorite beats, some iconic hip-hop beats. Um, so we're on season two right now. Episode five drops in august. I drop an episode every single month. A huge shout out to my friend de maryse, who actually mixes everything. Ill thoughts is pretty much all in house. I film everything, I edit everything, so ill thoughts is something to definitely expect from me on a monthly basis. Um, in terms of music, I mean, I guess we just had to keep our ears glued to the speakers because I just dropped tardy pass about three, four months ago. Uh, and then, maybe eight months before that drop, let the kids play. Um, which I produce, and my fingers are sore from just in them drum pads. so, um, at least at this moment, yeah, oh, and dichotomy I dropped the music video for dichotomy. That's, uh, that shit is very fire. Thank you, good sir. That's off my last project, tardy pass. Um, so, uh, yeah, I mean, I guess just stay tuned.

Speaker 1:

Oh, yeah, okay, you want to tell them what all you got coming up.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, um, for me, what I have coming out is like like two projects. One project is um Sagittarius vent session, which, with the label, we're gonna be getting that Um off the road with the visuals and everything. So y'all stay tuned for the visuals. Um, I do have my second, my second album, two sides coming out, coming out soon, soon. Just got to get the, just got to get a little bit more done to it, but it will be coming out. Um other than that, I ain't really got much going on for.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, anyone who needs the reels or like small video content type reels. Quick stuff for instagram. What quick turnaround time. Man hit that pale garbage rappers inbox. You know I've been doing a lot of that right lately and they've been moving, but I need To know from you.

Speaker 4:

Okay.

Speaker 3:

How is it Producing yourself like? Because, like I know some buddies who do their own self production, but it's on the metal side.

Speaker 4:

Okay, cool.

Speaker 3:

So how is that experience for you being like on the hip hop side?

Speaker 4:

so Well, first I'd have to say how I got into producing. So I dropped the project, probably in 2016, called they don't like me. Uh, I was like fresh out of high school. Um, I was, you know a lot of those records. I was purchasing those records. I was getting exclusive rights, because when you buy beats uh, I'm sure this is probably for everything, but I can mostly speak on the hip hop side when you buy beats, whether it's like dude you see on youtube or maybe like someone you actually know, there's a thing called exclusive rights and leasing rights, and I mean it's kind of self-explanatory in the terminology itself. You lease a beat, which means you get to use it, but it's not technically yours, and then there's exclusive rights, where you actually had the full rights to it, um, and you have the ownership. So my first project I had, like, let's say, 10, 12 tracks. I, when I got done and I released it, I spent over a thousand and something dollars just on beats. That's not like recording time and all that shit, and so pretty much I was like yo, I'm broke as hell. I can't afford to like keep going out and purchasing these beats, plus A lot of these beats I got were from youtube. So even if I had the exclusive rights, who's to say that somebody else didn't have that from youtube, mp3 rips or stuff?

Speaker 1:

like that.

Speaker 4:

You know what I'm saying, and I'm not not getting anybody does that, because obviously I did it, um. But just Just putting all those factors and variables, I was like yo, I can't afford this and I really Want to have full creative control on what I'm making. So, let's say, mid 2016 to like beginning of 2017, for like a few years I think, I was just consistently crunching, like trying to make beats on a ableton. I know a lot of people make ableton, um, or use ableton, I should say um and it was a super tedious process. At first there was a lot of trash beats, but eventually I got to a good place and um Overall, just how it feels producing your own records. Well, it just feels more personal. You know, um, there's already a personal layer to writing your own songs and expressing yourself. You know, um, but to be able to create the soundscape around that record, it's just, you know. Let's take, for example, rapomania one. I not only had dichotomy, which that record was produced by my friend, sue from the wet snare club collective. I love you, bro, um, I got to perform at rapomania. I did a few records from let the kids play ep. I think all of them were let the kids play ep and um, all the new records were beats that I produced in my bedroom, like kids running around and shit, and that's. It's dope enough to say One. I'm performing in a, in a movie theater, you know, but it's a whole nother layer of like fulfillment to be like. These are the beats that I made in my bedroom, on, you know, headphones on, to staying up late night coming out of these speakers like so it's, yeah, it's a really good feeling man can.

Speaker 1:

I tell you a crazy story about that kind of links into how spirit that came into the fold. That album he made in 2016 is when I was bouncing at malanos and right across the road was valley cat and you know, bull whip was over there, yellow child was over there. Spirit, like their whole class, that was their hip hop spot.

Speaker 4:

You know what I'm saying and they were all mad cool.

Speaker 1:

They were a call come over and show love. And you know, we didn't really know each other. We spoke on like a what's up dog, like we. We saw each other's face. But he gave me the cd and he's like y'all, i'ma give you this to you and I want you listen to it. And I actually did. And I kept that joint through many, many cars and cd players and then when I came back to music, that cd he's talking about is the reason I hit him up because he gave it to me. I'm like I wonder what this dude is doing. Hey, and it's, and that's kind of how he came on for the interview and we linked back up. Just a tired piece of history.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, and it's kind of like a full circle moment to the conversation we're having earlier about you know, you never know who you're gonna meet. You know who that person's gonna end up being, Um, and that's like I don't even know how many years removed, like that's super crazy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean Like seven at this point. Yeah, probably just about, and I mean probably five when I hit you up for the first interview type joint time flies yeah like, but that's.

Speaker 4:

That is the story of how he like spirit and pgr More yeah, closer like yeah might as well on his Charles Xavier stuff Just recruiting all the local hip hop mutants that he could, you know, bring into the school. I mean that, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I think that, like, and I don't know man.

Speaker 2:

It seems to be working, like we got a lot of good artists now no doubt Like coming like a whole empire for all, like the.

Speaker 1:

Collective and we're taking that whole collective to comic con and fairfax on the 26 and 27 too. Like whoever From the squad wants to roll, we're gonna roll up there and just go in costume and Take cards and I don't really know what we're doing, but it's gonna be hype.

Speaker 3:

So did you all get a table there? Are you all just going as like?

Speaker 1:

spectators. We're bum rushing the crowd Because we we want to see what it's like to have a table there. But in my brain, if we all got like, just Got our shit on and we got book bags full of cards and merchant shit, it's the same as having a table like, because then people can actually mean it. So like oh man, this card's him. You know I'm saying because I learned in public Like people when they attach the card to the person, they like freak out. They're like oh my god, will you sign the card? I love the card. Like this is really you. And then they like get into the artist, like it actually They've been digging it and gives it more of like a personal feeling. Yeah, and like I've always wanted to go do some wild shit at Comic Con, so it just kind of fits and nerdy hit me up and he's like yo, we're going to comic con and we're gonna shoot a documentary about it. I was like best playing after yeah.

Speaker 4:

I can't wait to see nerdy geek out. No pun intended, oh yeah.

Speaker 2:

I know he's gonna definitely geek out when he gets to comic con. He's gonna be in his element, bro, he's gonna walk out with like 10 slab comics like Just feeling it.

Speaker 4:

Yeah and um.

Speaker 1:

I know Hafty and twin loops have been working on his black roses project for like the last three, four months, been hidden away. I know they got a bunch of songs and they sound really good. He got this one joint kamikaze. That's really hot. Um yeah, twin been in there. Finesse in that dynasty has a whole album in the bag that he recorded when we're out in hollywood. Like I know it's like 90% done. I don't know if it's fully mixed in master yet, but like he changed the flow up entirely on that joint. Like we got a lot of stuff coming this year Like dude dynasties.

Speaker 3:

Last album was killer. I loved listening to it. Oh yeah, Bro, it's a monster with it and I'm excited to hear his new one. I'm excited to hear hefty's.

Speaker 1:

Yo project. I've heard some of it is fire like him and twin have really been in there like locked in doing their thing. And bachardi, uh, he got a new song called a okay out. That's just really good. Twin produced that joint too.

Speaker 3:

Like, definitely check that out, check that out bro, it's so amazing seeing the production coming out of winchester man, people around here tired of being forgotten about.

Speaker 1:

They're tired of being slept on like there's a lot of a lot of ill talent.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there's a lot of talent here like basically the central of what I would say underground rap in here like the underground got to come out somewhere.

Speaker 1:

Maybe it comes out here.

Speaker 3:

Bro, you've got. You know, you got twin, twin loopstone, his thing. And then, on the metal side, you got big j and winchester, and then you got stefan burns from uh, stefan and tyler from future to claim Doing their thing in berkeley. And then you got a my boy, sam silver, who's doing his thing in berkeley as well. Which they're? They're all three metal producers. And then you got frank white doing his producing, you got curfew doing his producing.

Speaker 1:

Shout out frank and quarry, always to the end of time. I love them guys. Yo zombie man. I know he got an album coming up. He's dropped a couple things off of and he hit me up for some cover art. I did some cover art for him. Like I can't wait to get bro back around here, like that's my fucking boy. Like I want to do a track with zombie. Really bad, just don't something drive me like we're gonna tear shit up, like tear the fucking club up shit.

Speaker 3:

I was supposed to see him last weekend but uh, deb and I left virginia beach a little bit later than what we were expecting, so there was really no time for stopping like you know what I mean. So I was gonna swing through and go see old zombie. But man, I love that guy too. That's one thing I love about the music culture in this area is the people that are in it. They are supportive of that community. 110. Now, what we really need I'm talking about the people that are in it, that are involved in it, like there are definitely A higher percentage of supportive people than the unsupported.

Speaker 4:

I feel like that's the only way you're gonna thrive, you know you know, like everybody got pumped, everybody.

Speaker 1:

Man, we aren't new york, like we don't have. We can't just post a billboard for a million people to see we got a. You know, like share, send people shit, like, like, really be like yo, I got this homeboy you might like and actually play a song. You know I'm saying like that's how our area's got to get out there.

Speaker 2:

But usually you have to like, remember like, when it comes with fans and haters. Sometimes you, your haters, is what bring people closer to you. Because you see Long that movie on netflix. Uh, dola might, if you, if you heard about it when he made his first movie and he put it out, and so what they said about it in the papers how trash it was. What he said is that's what's gonna make people come to you there, because if people are saying, like your trash, your shit, you're not good, that's, that's what people are gonna want to see, what's so bad about it, and they might end up liking it. So, for real, my haters is like my, they like my fans. For real, they like fans. For real.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I gotta rephrase this because there is some publicity that's pretty bad, but, um, there's almost like no bad publicity, right, like you know. Now, if you're you know, getting caught up in like rape charges and shit that's a little bit different, yeah, like that's bad. Yeah, that's bad publicity. But, like you know, if you throw out an album that a critic says is shit, it's still getting your album in front of people Then people are they gonna be like what's so bad about it? Go listen to it. And then they're gonna make their own opinion. And then you know, nine times out of ten People are actually. You know, people are gonna like it and think the critics just a fucking cocksucker and then it's, you know word of mouth at that point.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean Because I'm selective, it ain't for everybody.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, everything's great because you can't expect everybody to like what you, what you like, because not everybody's gonna like you. Know what I'm saying? Like Go on, be on the same type of time you are. What's far to you is going to be trashed to the probably next three people until you get to the fourth 100.

Speaker 3:

I mean I've got a boy in berkeley that's. He's uh pushing a new project and uh, I don't know where he's at with it because I haven't really talked to him a whole lot, but he's been putting up a lot of reels of newer songs, right bro, he's like doing that like Over you know your normal hip hop beats, but he's doing like semi-country hip hop. But he's talking about being from berkeley springs, west virginia, like that's all this next project's about.

Speaker 1:

I mean that's what's authentic to him, Bro, yes, no dude, it is so he he's um so so.

Speaker 3:

So he's a guy that I've known for Shit almost 10 years now and he's been ever since I've known him he's been freestyle and rap, like you know what I mean. The man's good, but his music isn't for everybody. I love it, but that's also because a lot of his music's about my hometown, so it's dope and like he's got a weird flow, like like his flow is super weird but it's very enjoyable. Oh, chas canary. Yeah, yeah you shout out to chas canary.

Speaker 1:

I wasn't saying you turned me on the hand last time I was here. Yeah or actually Three times ago, I was, yeah, like they all kind of run together that's what's up, man?

Speaker 3:

Shout out to chas. Shout out to chas canary. There's some, there's some. There's a lot of dope projects going down here, but we're gonna segue to aliens away from talking shop to Just chilling.

Speaker 1:

Well, what? Go ahead I want to talk about aliens.

Speaker 3:

You want to talk about aliens? Yo, like I'll just decide.

Speaker 1:

There was just a government hearing for the first time on, like, the disclosure of aliens, and I mean they didn't produce any evidence. But like what do you?

Speaker 3:

say, um, I mean, they literally just said what people who have Believed in aliens for the you know last 50, 60 years. They literally just said what everyone's been saying for the you know last, you know eight, nine, deck, you know since 1947, whenever the roswell crash happened.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so like just out here, everybody in this room pretty much believes there's aliens.

Speaker 4:

If not aliens at the very least. The universe is too vast for us to be the only living organism here, Fair that's that's. That's. That's been my perspective. Like I don't know if it's aliens, but we are not the only motherfuckers on this place. Like please, if the?

Speaker 2:

government is listening to this. Don't try to contact them.

Speaker 1:

I mean please. It depends like.

Speaker 3:

What if they're contacting us?

Speaker 1:

Answer the phone. And if we've known since the 30s, what are we hiding right now? Like what is bigger than aliens, let that marinate he cooked, he's cooking.

Speaker 3:

Honestly dude. Part of me believes that the reason so. So I believe what they're saying. Because I have been a believer in aliens my whole life. I Got them tatted on me so can, I can.

Speaker 4:

I ask has everybody seen the full press, that the whole sit down?

Speaker 1:

Hours worth of clips.

Speaker 4:

I didn't get to watch all of it, I'll be honest. I fell into a weed coma, but I do plan to sit down and listen to all of it, but I just, I didn't know.

Speaker 2:

Tell me about it. What was it? I didn't, I didn't say okay.

Speaker 1:

so there was a government hearing where this dude I think his name is David Grouse, he's an ex-air force he went in front of the Congress committee hearing and he gave all the evidence, quote-unquote, that they have for aliens and he was saying that they they have physical, non-human DNA, but all so like they don't have the actual evidence. They're saying the government does and and no evidence was presented. But what it was was the first time that, in a public form, they've been like we're gonna address this, we're just still majorly huge and like if aliens are real. I gotta. That completely breaks down the world economy in five seconds, because that means they got here from another galaxy. That means whatever technology they have, we don't need fossil fuels in the.

Speaker 3:

The whole world's economy changes in a second, I mean well, yeah, well, you, you had the guy who has been the whistleblower on the tic-tac ships, the UAPs, over in California, like around San Diego, around that Naval base. You had him there. You had a guy who was prior Intelligence. You had one other guy there that I don't remember exactly who he was.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there was one. Um Nobody was an actual witness, they were all witnesses speaking for witnesses. That's another thing like.

Speaker 2:

Now.

Speaker 3:

Yeah well, so there's a theory right now that the only reason they're coming out about this is Because they're trying to prepare us for an alien invasion, and then that alien and hang on, hang on, if this has been something that's been theorized for a very long long everment.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I wanna hear. I do want to hear this one so.

Speaker 3:

So the theory is is they're trying to De-sensitize us to it so that, whenever it does happen, that's not mass panic, but it's. The theory is it's gonna be a staged alien invasion. That then is going to promote the one world government, the NWO, agenda 23, whatever you want to call it which also Was attempted already.

Speaker 1:

Maybe either that or is a real invasion. If you look up the battle of LA, it happened in like the 20s or 30s and on the beaches of LA, like, there's literally Pictures of crafts having a fight with our fucking army, like, and then they just swept that shit under the rug.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that really yeah that's that?

Speaker 1:

that, well, okay, the evidence exists, it says it happens. Who knows what actually happened?

Speaker 2:

I wouldn't allow the government are really keepers, their keepers of secrets, and never yeah cuz I mean. It's weird that something that's supposed to be for the people by the people that just keep secrets from the people for their own good, that's seem like bullshit to me, you see the difference between, the difference between our country, usa, is a great country, but at the same time we are keepers of secrets.

Speaker 1:

There's a lot of shady, shady shit.

Speaker 2:

I'm about to blow your minds right, quick, speak. Y'all remember 9, 11, right, everybody remembers very clearly set up. Set up. No, who talk? Who talks about WTC 6? That was building 6 in the world trades?

Speaker 1:

is building 7. Building 7, the one that's the one that claps off site yeah no, but he's seven.

Speaker 2:

Nobody talks about it and that's, and you wonder why they don't talk about it. It was controlled demolition. It blew up from the bay. If there was a bomb right in the basement. It blew up before the towers collapsed. So honestly I would have thought the towers pretty much would have been fine If that building that was right by it hadn't of exploding no, so you had.

Speaker 3:

Okay, they even got evidence of so there was a third plane that was supposed to hit building 7.

Speaker 2:

That's the reason, so is that the one that credit that they that they took control of the pilot. They took control of the cockpit. They didn't know how to fly it, and so they decided that they were gonna crash, crash landing into the ground.

Speaker 3:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

That was.

Speaker 3:

United 93. But um, but if you look at the support beams in the basements, they are cut at a perfect 45 degree angle and the only thing that would do that is Thermite but they were sabotaging it even before.

Speaker 2:

They were sabotaging the World Trade Center even before 9-11. Even kicked off, there were I don't know if you saw, you saw videos of this on YouTube they had reports of people trying to bomb, having car bombs in the basement. They were bond, they were car bombing inside the basement. So even before 9-11 took place which is crazy which, because we betrayed us on my midline, let's basically keep it a buck we basically betrayed him and then, once he got tired of our lives, he decided that he was gonna take the fight to us. Big mistake, but happens. And then they he went, sent people. He sent basically how Russia, how Russia would do us. We have spies in every country, all this propaganda. So basically how it went is he has sent people to the United States. They were already preparing the groundwork for what was gonna go down, but they had, you know, you got starter work before you do the actual mission. So they were making car bombs and they were sending them into the basement. They were blowing up they were messing up the structure before it was even time. So before that bomb went off, they were already started.

Speaker 1:

So I mean the guy who in the World Trade Center is, two weeks before it happened took out terror Terrorism insurance on the buildings and the day before that shit happened they announced the 2.3 trillion dollars was missing, when that was still a lot of money to be missing. Now, don't that sound?

Speaker 3:

Do you know who George W Bush was having breakfast with that morning whenever that went down?

Speaker 1:

Oh, he was reading in a elementary school. Oh no, that was young Bush, not old Bush.

Speaker 3:

No Bush that morning before reading in the elementary school had breakfast with bin Laden's parents.

Speaker 1:

Ain't that shady.

Speaker 2:

Ain't that shady? And don't surprise me. And surprisingly surprising, oh, I'm. So. Someone been Aladdin's family had a home in California. They had a home in. California, which still nobody has bought yet, due to what is like one point something million dollars for that house and still nobody's bought it. As soon as they found out, oh yep, that's been laden's home. We're not gonna test that. I mean. Like for real. That's crazy, is it not?

Speaker 1:

there's a lot to be said.

Speaker 2:

It just sounds like a whole setup.

Speaker 4:

So I guess we say all that to say what can you really believe at the end exactly?

Speaker 2:

your government is not they gonna tell you what they want you to hear honestly, the 9-11 is not the first time that the government has lied.

Speaker 3:

Bay of pigs, jfk assassination, mk ultra.

Speaker 1:

Yep, but like the Bay of pigs, they literally did the same thing to get us into a fucking war. Yeah, like this, it's all about keeping the war machine going, man, because that's what funds all the black every? Because we make money off of that. Like this is what's so crazy.

Speaker 2:

We make money off of that. Drugs, weapons, all types of stuff. You, you really think that we're like, like we're helping Ukraine to help Ukraine? No, you see, the problem with that is what Russia did was wrong in a sense. They invaded Crimea I think 2011, 2014 annexed it off and then basically invaded, invaded Ukraine, without further notice, what the Kremlin calls Basically an attack on aggression, which they're not even being aggressive. They just want their land back. So, basically, we see a dollar sign in an amount or basically, how do you say it? A lap, basically a testing, a testing, like a testing facility. We're basically sending them our weapons to see how they would do in certain situations. That that's why we're sending them all this stuff. We're not sending them because we care. We're sending them because we want to see how our weapons would do against the enemy if there was to be a big war.

Speaker 3:

That goes, I mean, honestly, most most of the plans that they've gotten from the US. I mean shit. They just got f-22 Raptors from Australia. Right has never been in dogfights never, because we haven't been in a conventional war.

Speaker 2:

They're talking about like ever since, ever since we start the start of the war for Um. What was his name? What was his name? He was a dictator. He was a week.

Speaker 3:

We haven't been in a conventional war since World War two.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well, actually everything else has been a police action.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, korea, or a corporation Korea, vietnam.

Speaker 2:

Vietnam was just a loss on all sides. They 100%. Yeah they didn't have any idea of what they were doing, them boys, them vietcong boys, they, they knew exactly what they were doing.

Speaker 3:

Well, if you want to get technical, desert Storm was technically a Conventional that was it.

Speaker 2:

That was it. But we won that shit in a hundred hours 73 Easting was the last great tank battle in history, besides the one that's going on in Ukraine right now. 73 Easting was basically the last greatest tank battle. The only loss that you can really claim that was claimed out of that was a Bradley vehicle that got hit by a BMP that had a hole in it, that basically had a hole in it. Bmps are basically designed so they're like a shell. You shoot through the side. You basically, unless you disable the engine, if it's a straight hole through it, you can still use it. You have to shoot them twice. You have to shoot them twice in order for them to explode. I Know, I know a lot, I know a lot.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, dude, I mean honestly, I'm just sick and tired. By the way, these are strictly my opinions. These are not the opinions of the US government or anything. Public disclaimer, right. I am tired of seeing the US be the strong arm of NATO.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah, because why do we have business in Europe? Like, what is our business in Europe? What's our business in the Middle East? What's our fucking business in China? What's our business in fucking Korea? Like we have none. We have no business.

Speaker 1:

We have our own fucking land. And if it's really, and if it's really like human rights violations, why?

Speaker 2:

are we not stopping.

Speaker 1:

The fucking Holocaust has happened in the Muslims in northern China right now and the last ten years Like so it's not human rights. Well, they can. They can quit that, but I'm like cuz there there's an actual problem happening. Yeah, nobody's doing a fucking thing about, but we're worried, nobody knows but we're worried, we're scared Basically.

Speaker 2:

Here's the rundown of what's been really going on. We've just started making nuclear nuclear bombs again. We're making nuclear bombs again because we're trying. We're basically scared of China. In a way, the only thing that separate us from the only reason that we're not warring with China right now is cuz. Basically. Aircraft carriers is not even that is more important.

Speaker 1:

It's like I can't transport all those people anywhere. They have to fight a war on mainland China. That's where we stole the advantage everywhere in American strategy would be as soon as they built, as soon as they get to like their third or fourth care aircraft carrier, we suck them but we lead.

Speaker 2:

But we lead by export important and exports. That's why that's how the US stays afloat. We basically we out pour, we outsource all our stuff. We don't make most of our stuff anymore, we outsource it. So China makes basically a fraction, like 50%, of what we make and that's import. So we basically make money. We're basically making money from them and while they're making our shit and we're paying it little by little at a time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but what we traded was our Economic stability in this country right say we know we have no jobs, like there's no middle-class jobs. Yeah, do you either a computer person or a food worker?

Speaker 2:

and we lose China or a blue or blue collar.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean a lot. There's a lot of trade jobs, but I mean, yeah, we don't have manufacturing jobs anymore and that was a lot of how this country survived like, because back in the day that's what we were doing, we were making our own stuff. We were making all our own stuff. And I mean it could just be, I don't know.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, do you know who the biggest steel producing country is currently in the world? I'm not gonna say us deal.

Speaker 2:

I'm not gonna say us deal, because they closed down their meal. They closed down their mill in Chicago, I'm sure, and they moved it somewhere else huh US steel mills in Chicago are still open.

Speaker 3:

I thought, they closed it. No, no, you got like three US steel facilities in Pittsburgh. You saw the US steel facilities in Chicago.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I thought they were closing one of their mills in there to move it somewhere else. That's from what I heard.

Speaker 3:

But the biggest steel producer is China. They hold 50% 57% of the world steel steel production as of 2020 and we order from them.

Speaker 2:

We order most of what we get from them, yeah but I mean shit, man.

Speaker 3:

You still got companies like SDI in this country. You have Cleveland Cliffs Arceler and the tall, which is a German company that has mills in the US. Well spun I. I used to work in the steel industry, so, and we?

Speaker 2:

still have US, still yeah, you which.

Speaker 3:

US steel. At one point, pittsburgh was where the most steel got made in this country, right, but now it's transitioning to the south, like Alabama, like Mobile Birmingham, like we're not finding.

Speaker 2:

We're not like our resources, we Taken as much as we can, as much as she can supply, and like nowadays, with them changing up the demands of how steel will be made, because Basically, if I can recall correct me if I'm wrong still still stays strong when they were using coal, like when they were using coal, because coal is kind of like a little bit of a part of the process of making steel, if I'm not mistaken. If I'm not mistaken, correct me on this. I'm just trying to make sure I got it right. And so, with us cutting back coal shipments, with us basically cutting back on Coal shipments, it's not really much in the way of coal deliveries, of coal deliveries. That's really going down in the country now that they're shutting down coal fired power plants. They're shutting down a bunch of them and most of them supposed to be shut down within either this year, next year, sometime you're, unless you find a, a Material that can burn as hot as coal, like I mean.

Speaker 3:

Granted, you have the coke ovens at steel mills, but, uh, the highest Producer in the US of a of steel is the state of Indiana, because you have US steel portage right. For I mean the steel industry still alive in the US. The US is the third largest producer in the world Of steel, behind India and China. India is really big on stainless steel.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they do that out there like they basically, but I mean what we do is our business are microchips, Then that's what actually.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, that's shorted.

Speaker 2:

That shortage we had when we didn't have shit, they had GM had trucks sitting right outside for I don't know how long because they had a shortage of chips, of microchips. Oh I, yeah, that's. That's crazy, man, that's crazy. What do y'all think about the balloon that they caught flying over the US? What was it?

Speaker 3:

I don't know why.

Speaker 2:

It was a balloon that was flying over that came from China. They basically you has basically accused China of spying, I mean.

Speaker 3:

I mean, you want to talk about that one or you want to talk about the three other ones they found flying over the US.

Speaker 1:

Get on and like. Here's the thing, though why would you still be spying from balloon? We have that satellites the consumer on an ant. Like I mean like that seriously, like it just seems like if they're spying by balloon, we're already winning.

Speaker 3:

So I doubt that's what was happening, yeah yeah, dude, honestly, I think it was a test to see how long it would take the US to realize something was in their airspace.

Speaker 2:

It took them a minute because by the time it got, by the time they shot it down, it was basically About to leave what South Carolina at the time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well, they tracked it from like Montana. Yeah, mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

F-22 shot it. The first combat that a F-22 has ever gotten ever gotten in the first and the only thing it got to shoot down Was the goddamn baby was still ciced as fuck he's like.

Speaker 3:

Bro you like finally acts not been what has the F-22 been around for 30 some years?

Speaker 2:

Because F-22 is a fifth gen it is, but they're talking about retiring them though.

Speaker 3:

So they're not retiring them, they just stopped production of them, right, because you have the F-35, but the F-35 doesn't have the wet weapon capabilities of the F-22.

Speaker 2:

I thought I thought they said the F-22 didn't have the capability.

Speaker 3:

The fight. It doesn't have the stealth capabilities of the F-35.

Speaker 2:

We got B2 Bob for a shoot. What do we got? B2? We got a secret B2 bombers flying around. What do we need F-22s for? Basically undetectable like the body of a hawk?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but so what F-22s are there? Just a fifth gen fighter jet. So they're the ones that are going to be escorting the B2s. They are the ones who's going to be escorting the bomb runs but we still have one F1, so we got.

Speaker 2:

We still have F1 17s in service.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but F1 17s are a fourth gen. We are the only. We as a country have the most fifth gen fighters out of any other country out there. China is catching up, yeah, but their engines are shit. Their engines are unreliable. That's the same problem Russia's having with their Sue.

Speaker 2:

Let's see Sue 47. I think they're Sue 47 flankers.

Speaker 3:

I'm thinking it's either Sue 47 or Sue 57.

Speaker 2:

I think it might be 47 flankers If I get this right.

Speaker 3:

That's a point, that's a point on the knowledge fighter. It is, you want to give me a fucking name. What is? Fifth gen fighter? Have 22, it's the sue 57, damn, I mean you were close. And then, and then you got China, who has the Come on? And uh, the F 22 was introduced in 2005.

Speaker 2:

That was crazy. When they introduced that, I was like a kid. I was like a like about a kid.

Speaker 3:

When they do. They have vector flying, like, like they can literally like just comes just straight down.

Speaker 2:

You talking about those Russian those? Are you talking about those Russian issues? Because I've seen them do that. They keep their nose at a dive and they hold it and then they fought. They let gravity do the word.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we'll do the US I F 22 and F 35 and do the same thing. The China's J 20 stealth fighter can do the same thing. That's like what? And like the stealth capabilities Mm-hmm of an F 35 and an F 22 and the Sioux 57. Granted, the Sioux 57 Isn't as good as the US is, so they've been shooting them things.

Speaker 2:

They've been shooting them things down in droves over Ukraine, mm-hmm. Yeah, then they basically that proved that our, our harm, our system or our anti aircraft missiles, they can basically do the work and do the work. Yeah, they've been shooting them down Like non-stop, their Gator helicopter, like Gator helicopter, those twin prop helicopters that they got. They've been shooting those down. They like they're scared to enter the air. They're scared to enter the air because they're scared of our aircraft. Their answer our anti aircraft systems.

Speaker 3:

So I follow this account on tiktok. His name is habitual line crosser and he does a bunch of skits like he does, like the green screen skits, where it's just his eyes and mouth and it'll be over, like the US, the UK, russia did that F 22 skit and yeah, yeah, he didn't have 22 skit where the F 22 is all cracked out like come on, let me at him. Come on, you said I'd be the next one to go.

Speaker 2:

He's like no, do you feel like catching me? Feel like chasing me? I feel like chasing me. I.

Speaker 3:

So, funny.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they even did a skit on that Incident where a Russian aircraft collided with the drone, with the arm drone, and like, when that Russian aircraft showed up, he said father, he says stay on your course and do a repractice. And that's what he showed up and I'm like hey yeah wrong.

Speaker 3:

Dude, some of these skits that are coming out of like people like talking shit to Russia are just so hilarious.

Speaker 2:

They just like stop, like, stop it.

Speaker 1:

I'm not gonna lie, I don't get much political tiktok time.

Speaker 3:

I wouldn't say it's political tiktok. It's more along the lines of people are just like making fun of Russia, like fucking crazy and it is so Funny.

Speaker 1:

I don't give much tiktok time man.

Speaker 4:

Do you feel like it adds, like some comical relief, to the intensity of everything that's going on?

Speaker 3:

for you always have to have comical Relief.

Speaker 2:

Yeah cuz, it's nothing like being in a in a Def Con one type situation but a.

Speaker 1:

The world's definitely like these Aliens. The nuclear war. When's game of thrones coming along?

Speaker 2:

I'm not worried about a bomb being delivered to my doorstep. I just want to know when this waffle is gonna get done so I can eat it.

Speaker 3:

Well, I mean do honestly, I'm the type person that I make jokes about my shitty situations, and Because I mean that that's my coping mechanism in life. It's just make jokes about dark shit.

Speaker 4:

Being able to laugh at your pain.

Speaker 1:

That's pretty much what Gen X worked off of. No one cares that we're gonna make jokes about our pain.

Speaker 3:

Which I don't know if that's the healthiest coping mechanism.

Speaker 2:

But if it's stupid, but it works, it's not so stupid.

Speaker 3:

Now I got one more question for the both of y'all and then we'll start rapping this old girl up and get you on Back to having a good old Saturday Outside of music. Do you have any other hobbies?

Speaker 2:

Yes, I do. Um, I do be on Twitch. I do. I do be on Twitch. I record our court, like gaming stuff. Like gaming stuff or more like, how do I say it? It's like just any game I play. I just I just play like RPGs or games and stuff like that, and I have my own podcast it's called the kids to. Now you podcast, and so I end up like talking about stuff that's going on and like you know, the rap world and basically things to expect with me more likely, that's basically what it is. Or just like a platform like somebody just talked to, just talked to, just somebody talked to, cuz it's a lonely world out there. What's your go-to game? My go-to game, war Thunder, what you don't know. What thunder is basically a war one thunder is basically it's a war game. It's basically like world of tanks, but world tanks sucks. It's what I'm just better. It gives you a whole lot of realism. It gives you tanks from basically the 20s and 30s all the way up to the mid 90s and 2000s.

Speaker 4:

That's kind of cool. Now Is this strictly tanks. Oh no, no, no, no, no it's, it's aircraft.

Speaker 2:

You can fly bombers, you can fly aircraft. They even got submarines and battleships in the game now, so it's like it's it's fun, bro. It's definitely fun.

Speaker 4:

See, I've been playing a lot of red dead redemption too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I hear that. I just want to remake for that they're doing a remaster for the first one.

Speaker 4:

Yeah yeah, and I heard that's gonna. Yeah, I'm a big fan of rockstar games, so anything that that they see the teaser for GTA 6.

Speaker 3:

I saw some is that convert is an official.

Speaker 4:

It's official.

Speaker 1:

Oh see, I've. That's crazy. Go back to my city.

Speaker 4:

Liberty.

Speaker 3:

it's like to protagonists now right, yeah, well, they're getting ready, Uh cuz I got some boys who still play GTA 5 pretty regularly. I still and and they said like Within the next couple months are shutting down all the servers.

Speaker 4:

Oh, so it's official. They're gonna move their focus on that.

Speaker 2:

They're really gonna do all of that.

Speaker 1:

That's why they shut GTA 5 down for a long fucking time, like they shut down the Xbox servers yet for 360.

Speaker 2:

Too many cheaters.

Speaker 4:

Well, I mean I'm cheap as a nice thing's been released since maybe 2013.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I sold a billion copies in less than I was like a junior senior in high school.

Speaker 3:

Never that shit came out. And next year is my 10 year reunion. Oh, I've been playing that since 360.

Speaker 2:

I was playing that since 360, like when they, when GTA came out, like it sold a billion copies and less than 24 hours people were that height, because it's like Billion copies are a billion dollars, a billion like a billion, like a billion copies or whatever. I think it's a bill. They made a billion dollars or a billion.

Speaker 4:

Rockstar's got their hands on GTA's others and they're just like.

Speaker 2:

Much milk as they can get.

Speaker 4:

You want a new car. It's DLC five dollars five dollars, bro.

Speaker 2:

Five dollars is it's wild now, because I'm like man I can't believe they're shutting the servers down, because that's like why they shut down Xbox servers. And now they're doing Xbox one and Xbox like Xbox one s and Xbox x series, like they're shutting the server Can.

Speaker 4:

I can I get something off my chest in regards to why we're still in the video game topic? Um, dlcs. I Am not a fan of DLCs. Oh boy, I know, I really listen. Here's my thing. Um, I Remember a time where you could just buy a video game for a significantly you know cheaper price at that. But, um, you could play the game and actually unlock content, you know, and it kind of like engaged you, it made you want to play the game because you knew if you did this thing 10 times or whatever, you would unlock something. But um, nowadays it feels like we get half a game and so like they sell us half the game and then the other half of the game will come out a month later, but it's DLC.

Speaker 2:

Well, the warcraft really changed that one up for everybody for real, I mean honestly.

Speaker 3:

I I play a lot of Call of Duty. I'm a Call of Duty in a sports game kind of guy.

Speaker 2:

You're not the you're not the one that driving the ATV around running people over and say so I didn't see you, buddy.

Speaker 3:

No, no, but um the thing that I like the Call of Duty does is they give you the full game and but they release it in segments. Right yeah, you don't have to pay for it. The only thing you really got to pay for is like your skins, or like you know like how fortnite doesn't yeah.

Speaker 4:

So essentially it's just like free updates gradually.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah, that's cool. Well, I think that's that's a good way of going about it. It makes you about 2k too.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because I might as play 2k. That's what I play.

Speaker 2:

Like no, no, y'all need to pre-order that. Jane, they got cross play coming, cross play coming. So I wouldn't say don't be, don't be scared, because I know I'm gonna be Maybe. Pre-order a mouse.

Speaker 3:

Pre-order my sir, we still gotta do our charity stream for 2k.

Speaker 1:

Let's go Whenever you're ready for I stay ready. I got the PS5 at the crib. You can come up. We can set up a camera and go. I guess that's simple, so we gotta do that. It's not gonna end like you think it's going to end, but at least it's for charity dog.

Speaker 4:

We'll see what teams do you guys be using on 2k, I use whatever I played my team but I can run any like.

Speaker 1:

I've been playing 2k since the day it came out every day, about 12 hours a day. Like I really thump on 2k.

Speaker 4:

Oh, so this is like in your bloodstream, yeah, like.

Speaker 1:

It's like mc, and it's just part of what I do.

Speaker 2:

We can't even front, like we do not see him wearing a Lakers jersey right over there, like what team did you guys pick? I'm like, hey, it's right over there.

Speaker 3:

So I played 2k like I played mad. Oh no, no random and go no did you just say madden?

Speaker 2:

you said madden, I will not touch madden, I'm not gonna. I do not have the strength to hear what they got to say my ass, no, no, once they get me, I can't touch madden. Why not? Hey, I'm not good at madden. I say I'm a little good at 2k, but I'm not good at madden.

Speaker 3:

I got madden out there right now, let's run it, no.

Speaker 2:

I'm already mad, but I ain't like that at madden I'm not I'm I'm trash at madden bro, I'm trash, all right, don't trash.

Speaker 3:

Give me a college one.

Speaker 2:

Give me a college one, and yeah.

Speaker 3:

I'm gonna drop in next year.

Speaker 2:

All right, the Auburn Tigers are gonna be on that train. Huh, auburn Tigers, probably. I would hope so. I'm not a roll. I might be from Alabama, but that don't mean I'm a roll type fan.

Speaker 3:

I'm a water fan. Hey, man, that's cool.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you're in a House of Bleeds, blue and gold, so you said, you said what college team do you got, do you choose?

Speaker 3:

The Mountain Ears, baby the Mountain Ears.

Speaker 2:

WB you, my boy.

Speaker 4:

I got tatted on me.

Speaker 1:

In case you forgot, I'm also playing Final Fantasy 16 right now. How's that man? Honestly, like Y'all know I be every Final Fantasy 100 complete, like I've really run through these joints. I think 16 is one of the worst because it's so much dialogue and cutscene and so little action. Like it's the. It's an action game that actually fell asleep during twice. Like that should not happen. Like and it's just, and I'm 40 hours into this thing and it's still not moving. I'm just like damn and I mean I'ma finish it just for continuity's sake, because I didn't finish the other ones, did not finish this one, but like I ain't really feeling it.

Speaker 4:

Like, so overall pretty underwhelming.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like they've got like a great shell there. If they would have put some game in the game they just forgot to put the game in the game like the story and the cutscenes and every it looks beautiful. The story is amazing, but there's like no fucking game that crucial part called game. Yeah, it's like play like little mini games in between cutscenes. Basically is how it feels and it's just like.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's, that's, that's real, right there, that's, that's, that's real. That's real because you, you play a game you expect, you expect to like, you get that, get that thing that you were looking for once. You play like cyberpunk 2077 when it came out, okay. So everybody said it was trashed, which they said the same thing about Call of Duty, infinite warfare. I call bs on that. Infinite warfare was basically a good game. In my opinion. It basically taught us that he's like no, it was to think about it if we was actually doing.

Speaker 4:

The podcast just off that I forgot you that shit.

Speaker 2:

It was a good game to me. It basically taught me the lesson of If we were, if we were able to actually make ships like that we would be. How many galaxies do you think we would have taken over by now if we had that type, if we had the ability to actually have?

Speaker 1:

air. I know we dare share what need fossil fuels no.

Speaker 3:

I mean? I mean, if I want to play a game that's based off of futuristic technology, I'm just going to go play mass effect.

Speaker 2:

Oh come on? Yeah, I don't hear nobody saying that about advanced warfare, and that's the advanced warfare, infinite warfare, fucking advanced warfare.

Speaker 1:

Fuck black ops for shit. Just got extreme. Oh my goodness, listen, listen what didn't you like about infinite warfare?

Speaker 2:

that was let's get to that. Let's get to that. This is the heat of the big baby.

Speaker 3:

I didn't like any of the gameplay. I didn't like the gameplay. I didn't the same reason I didn't like advanced warfare. I didn't like the movement, I didn't like the mechanics of it.

Speaker 2:

Like the sacrifice, because that's really what it was. There were no winners. There were no winners in that game for real. Everybody died, almost everybody died in that the sacrifice when the good god doesn't end up getting, we're getting ahead like a bad man beat the Joker and he can just go back to his crib, like I like. Infinite warfare because of the sacrifice is basically telling you you're not gonna get out unscathed. Every single time You're gonna have to bite the, you're gonna have to bite the bullet at some point. That's what I liked about it, and basically it showed the issue. It basically showed it which the unsa is, but the however they say. It Say, though, is basically nato, and it's basically all. This is just the us navy, us navy funding all this other stuff, and so it basically showed. It basically showed us, when we're down and on our ass, we still keep fighting. We still keep fighting.

Speaker 4:

That's the lesson I got from out that game, the last, the last call of duty I really tapped into was black ops 2. Oh yeah, so gold that one was really fun.

Speaker 2:

So here's my opinion.

Speaker 3:

I'll call duty Okay. You had black ops 2 come out and then didn't have another good game until modern warfare came out. True.

Speaker 2:

Do you agree on that? I'll I'll agree on that. I'll agree on that because, like like I said, well, I'm talking like the newer modern warfare.

Speaker 4:

I'm not talking like the new you're not talking about modern warfare Like back in the day, because you know that was no, no modern warfare.

Speaker 3:

That series came out before black ops and black ops 2 came out. Oh yeah, that's true. That's true but it was good in a sense, it basically sold you what it would look like if the rest is actually no, I'm talking from black ops 2 because I came out after the modern warfare series started From black ops 2 all the way to the 2019 modern warfare. The is my gap and call of duty, activision, ravenscarles Try it Trey Ark any of them putting out a halfway decent game. Because look at the games that came in between modern warfare and modern warfare, too cold war fucking sucked. Yeah, it did suck. Fuck. What was the other one that came out in between it?

Speaker 2:

you had cold war to you had World War two.

Speaker 3:

World War two fucking sucked.

Speaker 2:

That was a good one. Wait a minute, the train scene and it was lit. I mean, come on the train scene. In the way you can't say you didn't want to see that that damn train crash and blow up. I mean I mean that was the lit scene from on that I got from it.

Speaker 3:

But now modern warfare series, especially the new one. They just tease that they're gonna have the airport scene in the next game. Oh my god.

Speaker 4:

See, I'm not. I'm not the loop on that.

Speaker 2:

Like that was a way. There was a way page in my brain for a minute after. He said bro, you all know what airport scene.

Speaker 3:

I'm talking about oh Lee, for real. Yeah, oh, you're talking about the oh.

Speaker 4:

That's different. Yes, they are bringing it back?

Speaker 3:

because, then? Because the next antagonist in the next game is that Russian.

Speaker 4:

That's crazy, you're talking about?

Speaker 2:

you're talking about macro. Macro. That scene was disrespectful, bro, to anybody who watched that. I, they say they banned it in Russia.

Speaker 3:

You know? Did you know that you could have ended that level very easily? Yeah, just by killing them right, then yeah. Like if you would have shot them up front, I mean, granted, you would have went through the level with no one there right. But you would have walked to the end and it would have been the same cut scene, like where the guy gets killed at the end. But like you could have like just walked through the level and had no issues.

Speaker 2:

I love Easter eggs like that yeah they even show what it would be like if you had to just sprayed them on. It would have been it. Would they show what it would have looked like if you had a sprayed them all in the game. Nothing, basically nothing. You just, you just killed them all. Yeah, the elevator scene, the elevator scene, remember? No?

Speaker 4:

Russian, no Russian. I'm surprised they're bringing that back if, after all the controversy, controversy show.

Speaker 3:

Microsoft, don't give off Really don't evidently they.

Speaker 2:

Activision, disrespect their Russia in the worst way by showing them get their asses what use their own, so against their own fleet. That sounds like something that we would do as soon as we push the lines back.

Speaker 1:

So the merger went through for Microsoft by.

Speaker 4:

So that means Sony can't drop like they don't have the right set, no more they can drop it, but they have to have it under Microsoft's permission.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean they already said like they even said at the very beginning and I, microsoft's not trying to buy up an exclusivity, yeah, like they're just trying to buy up publishers and they've been doing it.

Speaker 2:

They bought Beth. They bought Beth said up that make fallout the fallout games. They bought them out. They messed up, but that's it. That's it, thank you, it was built as that. They bought them out. Fallout 76 trash as fuck.

Speaker 3:

Hey, the only cool thing about fallout 76 is where I live at in that game.

Speaker 4:

It was trash, I was gonna say cuz to my knowledge. There was a battle between Sony and Microsoft in regards to, you know.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, they had certain games and yeah they they hate each other, but both of them are trash because Microsoft would be dumb to make cod a Microsoft exclusive game but the crazy part about it is both of them are trash PC is the dominant.

Speaker 4:

Yeah cuz people see that guy PlayStation, you the PC guy, hey that 3090 go a long way.

Speaker 2:

That 3090 go a long way. It gives you better graphics than you could ever expect to get on a console, and you can do more 600 bucks for a console, 1500 bucks for a pretty nice PC build quality. Quality is quality.

Speaker 3:

Pete, everyone I know that owns a Series X and a PS 5 seem to not be complaining about the quality of that game, and they won't.

Speaker 1:

And I think PS 5 is better. Yeah just straight, flat Down kills it.

Speaker 4:

Well, I like my alien work, what you have, a PC too, I.

Speaker 1:

Have a PC, I have a Mac, I have a PS 5 and I have a series X and like if I would prefer to game on PS 5 because I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna lie to.

Speaker 4:

PC looks super enticing, but pretty much what he just said 600 here, 1500 over there, yeah, that's what you pay for for parts.

Speaker 2:

That's like. That's what you pay for for like quality parts. You don't pay for cheap, right?

Speaker 1:

But like in in my homeboy geek who he plays the war Thunder game. You play very this text him asking. But um, I Play my PS 5 and I see him stream on his like high-dollar computer and don't get me wrong, it should is good, like you should, it's good, but like it seems like you have to do a lot.

Speaker 2:

Instead, just hit the button on the controller and pop the game on Real skill, somebody who like, who like didn't really have that many advantages that have that many advantages that everybody else had. I didn't have the latest Xbox. I had like a small DS, but like it's easy on a controller, it's easy, it's very easy on a controller. You can just easily do what you got to do on a controller drive left right on a point right on a PC. On a PC it takes actual, true skill. Why?

Speaker 1:

do you want that controller now? They just use them knock off Xbox controllers to play with on PC.

Speaker 2:

I use the keyboard. I use the keyboard because like Fingermos finger movement. Finger movement is skill, is skill, it's like skill in it.

Speaker 3:

I mean honestly like, if like it, if you know we're you know comparing controller playing to. Mousing keyboard playing. If you're playing a first-person shooter, yes, aiming with a mouse is 10 times easier. Then aiming with a controller right, because you have the precise movements and like if you want to do a 180, it's just that right. Right, it's just a quick flick of it and you're turned right around.

Speaker 2:

I play like Eve online and war Thunder and that that involves you to actually have to turn your mouse and like fires. Like like, turn your mouse, go forward, fire, kill a target. Eve is even.

Speaker 1:

Line is different, it's different in a way yeah, see, I'm playing a shooter, so I can't really call it. I just know 2k is way better than PS5.

Speaker 2:

Even something different is basically anything for anybody. I don't know if you've heard of Eve. I'm proud, I'm have you, have you, it's called. The name sounds familiar. It's called Eve online. It's basically a space MMO, so it's like millions of players play that game and so it's like a player-based community For real, like basically like factions, like factions wars and stuff like that, and so it's like interesting, you can do anything there.

Speaker 1:

I'll tell you what I did play For like four and a half years was elder scrolls on.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah elder scrolls.

Speaker 1:

Elder scrolls online was fucking lit. I'm not gonna lie, like, honestly, if I didn't cuz, but what sucked about that game is like to get like the high, high-end content done, you had to get like a guild and then you had to get with like the sweatiest of the sweaties and like and like eventually I just got up into the groups of playing content that I just could not stand. Any group by God. I'm like y'all are just awful. Like I wish I would have had like 12 good friends who were good at that game to just run through all the content with cuz. I'd still play it if I did. I can't, but like I just I don't know I felt I went the wrong crowd man.

Speaker 4:

Shoot, speaking of skill level between you know, using a controller, door shock and the keyboard. I seen somebody use a beat Elden Ring on a fucking like a dance dance revolution, matt. To me that that I mean that's insane. To me that's the.

Speaker 1:

Ellis cuz real elder man fucked me up.

Speaker 4:

I haven't made it past the introduction level.

Speaker 1:

Same good at video games. I've been playing these things my whole life.

Speaker 4:

I thought I was, but I don't know man.

Speaker 1:

Humble then humiliated me.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I feel a lot better knowing I'm not doing Somebody play. That's crazy.

Speaker 1:

That's right it was crazy.

Speaker 2:

You die so many times in that game. It's like yeah and so fast. Yeah, I'm not even.

Speaker 1:

It make you want to raise quit? For me, it's kind of the same reason I don't play Call of Duty cuz. When I started playing Call of Duty online, I basically spawn, headshot spawn hatch and I'm like. Moving like three hours.

Speaker 2:

I'm just gonna go where I'm wanted Street trash in the mic of the crowd to their mom, mom.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, y'all can ask you as talking shit to me like you're terrible.

Speaker 4:

I mean, you got a fucking kill ratio of nothing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Well, I might kill it. And when I fell? So now, what's your hobbies?

Speaker 4:

outside of music? Um, outside of music. So I think we established we all play video games here.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

I? That's a really good question. I know I'm a big fan of anime. I watch a lot of anime. Does anybody watch anime? Let's go. I mean, it's essentially just cartoons.

Speaker 2:

I mean wait, wait, wait wait wait, that's not a cartoon. That was a disdainful, disrespectful. That's not a cartoon, it's an art form.

Speaker 4:

That was deep.

Speaker 3:

There's only two anima's I've watched in my life.

Speaker 4:

What are they?

Speaker 3:

Did you probably guess one of them right off the?

Speaker 2:

road.

Speaker 3:

No.

Speaker 4:

I Really get dragon ball. See dragon ball. All of them, all of them.

Speaker 3:

GT dragon ball. Dragon ball Z dragon ball super.

Speaker 4:

Okay, so are you like completely caught up on super?

Speaker 3:

now? No, because I got to the Goku black saga and I like binge watched it and you know like whenever you binge watch something you're like cam sick and tired of these filler episodes. But I don't want to like jump ahead in the series.

Speaker 2:

It's like one piece. It's like one piece.

Speaker 3:

Yeah. So like I'm trying to like Bring myself back to watching it so I can finally finish it and get called up, but I Can't bring my interest point back cuz like I just remembered like how bored I was in some of those filler episodes and then. And then a death note's the other one, and then in you, yasha.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, those are some of like the the classic anime. Yeah like in you watchers like early 90s or something like that. Sailor Moon, sailor Moon, holy shit yeah.

Speaker 2:

There was an anime About these bikers. It was about this bikers. I watched it, my favorite movie. I forgot the name of the avicina solo. One of the bikers caught something, caught some type of power, something he ends up like, turned into a whole monster. Oh, I know, you know, akira. Yes, that's it.

Speaker 4:

That is it.

Speaker 2:

I love Akira that movie. It basically showed me how like that was anime at his finest peak when they did that movie. That movie is a legend in my book. It showed us 3d. If it made 2d, feel like 3d, 4d actually.

Speaker 4:

The hardest thing with anime at least trying to introduce it to people was finding that anime that they like, cuz there's a lot of the cliche, cringy anime you know with like the the girl and the guy dynamic and the weird sexualization and shit, and it's just like you know so Wait, I don't think that's anime, I think that's Hintar. There's a lot of sexual tension and a lot of these anime Like in you, asher, for example, there's like cringy elements to it. So my, my man trying to put me on blasts. I had the sidestep, that one, you know. But that's been the toughest part for me is like when people ask me you'll put me onto an anime, and I'm just like, well, like it's like you know, some people like horror, some people like action, so that's always been the toughest part for me. But my girlfriend, I've been trying to get her to watch anime and you know she kind of just likes pretty much anything where there's high tense. You know Action is fast-paced. If, like, guts are coming out, then she's totally engaged into it. So like for yeah, yeah. So like we've been watching like, um, Like chainsaw man I don't know if you guys ever heard chainsaw man.

Speaker 2:

He got a chainsaw.

Speaker 1:

Okay so man so good.

Speaker 4:

It's pretty cool. I'm trying to think of the best way to describe it, but essentially the protagonist is named denji. He's pretty much homeless. His parents are dead, they have like a debt that he has to inherit and he has the mafia is pretty much on his ass, using them as a, as a henchman, to pretty much Inherit this debt and pay in full. But he's he's a kid and you know he is pretty much virtually impossible. So Essentially he's trying to pay that shit off while it just grow up and be a kid, and in this world there's nothing but demons that are coming after him and everyone that's in it. So pretty much he Experiences the world of demons, learns how to cope in it yeah, how to combat them. He ends up becoming a demon. So it's it's pretty cool, it's it does, and it's not shy of showing anything or revealing anything.

Speaker 2:

So did you ever read the subway? See? I'm not sure there was a subway scene that was in the show. He faced basically a tough opponent, got so I got a couple of good cuts on, but he's still prevailed in the end. You know, he called he lost a couple of limbs, he lost some limbs. That sounds about right. Yeah, he lost some limbs trying to face off. But he beat him though. He cut him point blank in half.

Speaker 4:

I don't doubt it. I don't doubt in that show one of my favorite animates is called you you hockey show and and Actually ended up naming myself spirit off of that show. The protagonist is like a young kid, he's like 15 years old. It's kind of a delinquent and he ends up dying within. Like the first episode, he gets hit by a car trying to save a little kid, which is probably the only nicest thing he's ever done in his like 13, 15 years of life. Pretty much. He gets a second chance at life and they're like listen, we'll take you to the spirit world and you know well, let me say this will bring you back to life. Right, if there's people that want you to live and you have a good nature, heart and so fast forward, he gets brought back to life. I from him being revived. The deal that they make with him is like look, since we brought you back to life and obviously people want you to live, you know you're going to have to inherit this role as the spirit detective, which is, you know again, another theme of that seems to be consistent in anime, demons and other worldly, you know creatures. So he pretty much plays a role of being the spirit detective that goes against demons and tries to protect the world from all the fuckery that could you know and having it and mess it up. So I was so like infactuated with that anime, probably when I was in like ninth, 10th grade and I also underwent a big MF Doom phase and I loved how MF Doom had all these different aliases. Who's a you know? Rest in peace. I'm a dooms dope underground hip hop artist and I, just, being really infactuated with the anime, went by calling myself spirit detective but it just seemed like too big of a name, like are you a spirit detective on the mic? That didn't think that was going to work. So, eventually, after many records and many attempts of trying to make that work, I was like you know what, why don't I just drop the detective and just be spirit? And that's kind of like how that came together. So shout out to anime for helping me. You know, make that old full circle, Fuck yeah.

Speaker 3:

All right. So we are at the segment of this podcast where you all get to do your selfless plugs. Where can people find you? Where people find your music, so on and so forth.

Speaker 4:

So the best way to find my music you could just Google me at spirit is dope, all one word have. Instagram spirit is dope. Facebook spirit is dope. Everything, everything I think, except Twitter. At this point I just can't get Twitter. It's just such a. I haven't figured it out, yet they call it. X, now what.

Speaker 2:

X. Yeah, elon must remember he bought it. They changed it to X. It's not Twitter anymore, it's X now.

Speaker 4:

Well, I'm not sure if I'll migrate to there. No pun intended, but pretty much all social media spirit is dope. Youtube, you name. It's the best way to really get a hold of me and my content.

Speaker 2:

It's still Twitter.

Speaker 4:

It's still Twitter. It's still Twitter.

Speaker 2:

They put out a news reel. They put out a reel on the news. They said that he was playing on change in the name to X instead of Twitter. Hey, there's the proof right there.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, I heard exactly what he talked about there, like they changed next week's that.

Speaker 1:

Like, yeah, he's changing it real life to X and it's like it's, I'm still not going to use it. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm not going to get on that.

Speaker 1:

any time I've seen something recently where there's only a certain amount of like posts that you can see on your news feed a day before.

Speaker 4:

It's pretty much like you have to pay, or am I wrong? Oh, I don't know, I don't use it enough.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I know there's been dramatic change.

Speaker 2:

There's nothing good on there like that. This is all adult Bro.

Speaker 3:

I jump on for the EDM drama UFC drama.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's about it, but so all socials are the same. Spirit is dope.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, every Instagram, facebook, all socials is spirit is dope and I drop content every week, especially every month. At least once a month I drop new episodes of ill thoughts, so I'm consistently putting out material. If there's not music coming out, there's some sort of material being curated on the, on the social medias.

Speaker 3:

And then where can people listen to your music at?

Speaker 4:

So I have music on Apple music. That's spirit is dope as well. Spotify music spirit is dope. Even the YouTube channel I post a lot of records there. Even you know videos just like the new dichotomy music video I just dropped on. Spirit is dope. I know some people like using bandcamp especially. I have some homies in the metalhead scene. They really love bandcamp. They kind of put me on to that. So bandcamp spirit is dope and I think that's pretty much all areas to look for music.

Speaker 3:

Soundcloud Not really.

Speaker 4:

I don't really use Soundcloud, no.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

What about you, big guy?

Speaker 2:

Me. You can find me on Instagram at KS290, the Don that's T-H-A-D-O-E Okay.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

That's where you can find me at. My music is on Spotify, art, heart Radio, apple Music, kk Box. It's everywhere you can find it. It's KDollarsign290. You can't mistake it. My YouTube channel. I'm trying to get that up and running. Get that up and running, so like yeah, and you can also peep out my gaming channel. It's called Red Skull Gaming, of course, so you can peep that out. Just posted an episode.

Speaker 1:

Now to you Il All right. So we got a Dynasty's album dropping this year. Hepti's Project Black Girls is dropping this year. Rap of Mania 2 coming in November, december, that'll be Hepti and Cartel Free, cartel Headline and KOB Openin'. We got this deal worked out with us, so we're gonna have some shows coming up there. You know, ketch's a hippy fest. Look for the pop-ups. Find us on Instagram. Find us anywhere at Pale Garbage Rappers. You can personally find me, but only my music. I don't have social media at Il Mitis. My social media is Pale Garbage Rappers, so basically, find me there. Oh, never forget palegarbagerapperscom.

Speaker 3:

What all here you find at palegarbagerapperscom.

Speaker 1:

Man. You can find trading cards, videos, music tickets, nfts. They're still a thing, they're real. I left them on there, I don't know why. And you know merch every single thing you would ever want from a palegarbage wrapper you can find on palegarbagerapperscom, or you can at least find the link to it.

Speaker 3:

Well, thank you all for tuning in. If this is your first time tuning in, thank you. And if you want to find more of our stuff, you can find all of our episodes on all major streaming platforms Spotify, apple podcasts, google Podcasts, our heart radio, pandora, amazon Music, so on, so forth. You can find us on all socials at the Wilson King Podcast. You can also check out our website at thewilsonkingpodcastcom. We have a merch store on there now. Whoop, whoop. We got backpacks, we got beanies, we got snapbacks, we got coffee mugs, we got men's tank tops, women's tank tops, t-shirts and about to start dropping a digital line for phone cases, mouse pads, so on, so forth.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, and series two will be ready for your Christmas stockings.

Speaker 3:

See, I knew you forgot something, but um, thank you all for tuning in. If you liked this episode, go. Leave us a review wherever you listened. If you didn't like this episode, leave us a review and let us know. We're fucking ass, I don't give a shit.

Speaker 1:

Let me know how we're doing.

Speaker 3:

Thank you all for tuning in. Have a great rest of your week. Be safe, be responsible, don't drink and drive Peace Bye.