Episode Transcript
[00:00:04] Speaker A: Yo, it's effective immediately. I'm DJ Head.
Gina Views is around. She's. She's not feeling well today, but we got the homie in here, man. And newly new fam member, Trap Dick.
[00:00:15] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, I like how you say that. New fan member.
[00:00:17] Speaker A: Yeah. This our first time chopping it up, but welcome, bro. I appreciate you for being here, you know what I'm saying? You one of them ones that people. I think people are like fans of yours, but they don't like to say that.
Do you feel like that?
Like they fuck with your shit, but it's like n don't like to give you your credit.
[00:00:39] Speaker B: Nah, I feel like they give it. I just feel like, you know, it's a new guy coming to the league, though. You know what I'm saying? It's a new guy coming to the league. It ain't like I'm coming in with no homeboy co sign or anything. You feel me? I'm coming in with some of the biggest people in the game. So it's like a, you know, it's like a welcome to the league moment.
[00:01:00] Speaker A: Welcome to the league moment.
[00:01:01] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:01:02] Speaker A: Have you had that moment where you was like, damn, I can't believe this shit. Have you already had. Cause you done had a few hit records, but have you already had that moment or is it just like coming to you now?
[00:01:11] Speaker B: Yeah, not gonna lie to you. I had that moment at the BET Awards when I seen Kevin Gates.
[00:01:16] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:01:17] Speaker B: And he knew who I was. It was crazy. Cause, you know, coming from the south, that's what we grew up listening to. We grew up listening to Kevin Gates. So to see him acknowledge me and already know my name and all that, man, I felt crazy. I was like, dang, somebody I really listen to.
[00:01:30] Speaker A: Gene, I heard you say before, I forgot who I was watching you on, but I heard you say before, like, North Carolina get all of the. They get all of the crop, the clout, the credit, the props, all that stuff. Right.
You being a South Carolina guy, it's a very short list of people that we can really like, point out. That is one of them staples from South Carolina.
Charlamagne is one of the people who always yell in South Carolina to endeavor him. But who are the people that I don't wanna, like, get off of your shit, but who are the people that we need to be paying attention to? From your side, when you mean pay
[00:02:07] Speaker B: attention to, you mean rappers, right?
[00:02:09] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:02:09] Speaker B: Okay, rappers. Okay.
You got Tip Teasy from South Carolina.
[00:02:13] Speaker A: Tip Teezy.
[00:02:14] Speaker B: Yeah, Tip Teezy.
[00:02:15] Speaker A: All right, let Me write these down
[00:02:16] Speaker B: when I ain't gonna say new coming. Cause he been out there for a while. But he's one of the hottest in the Carolina. South Carolina, Exactly. You got one of the guys Lil Baby just stamped, named Mazzy. Mazzy. He from Greenville, South Carolina. Mazzy is one of the hottest, youngest rappers. He's young, he real young. Lil Baby just said that he the one. It's floating around the Internet. You got Eddie Peels, you got Pete Moss. These are the Columbia. They like, that's a combination. When you see Eddie Peels, most likely you gonna see P. Moss. But they both from the Met. They both get it in.
Eddie Peels is like my right hand man though, as a rapper though. That's one of my best friends from South Carolina that's a rapper, Eddie Peels.
[00:02:55] Speaker A: Okay.
[00:02:57] Speaker B: Who else I can keep going for?
[00:02:58] Speaker A: Nah, it's cool. Like, I just wanted that out there on the record. Cause you always do mention that, like we don't have a lot of them people, but nobody ever asks you who are the people.
[00:03:07] Speaker B: Yeah, you're right.
[00:03:07] Speaker A: You know what I'm saying?
[00:03:08] Speaker B: Like, there's so many. I could keep going.
[00:03:11] Speaker A: So I think that we don't have to rehash your story, but I think your story is intriguing to a lot of people because you've been through a lot of shit.
[00:03:18] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:03:20] Speaker A: And publicly too. Like a lot of it is public. You've been through a lot of shit, but you move like somebody who has like found, has centered yourself. What was that process like? And then when did your life stop being crazy to you?
[00:03:34] Speaker B: I felt like I started getting myself all the way together mentally after 18.
Like I had lived longer than my daddy did. Yeah. So by 17, 18, I was trying to figure out what's my next obstacle, like what's the next goals, what's the next thing? And I think when I got shot when I was 21, it wasn't like a life changing thing mentally. It was a physical thing, like knowing how to move type thing. Like it taught me like certain things. You can't just be out here doing or being in certain areas. You could be in the wrong area and it can go down. So it wasn't like somebody that was trying to kill me moment. So I.
I really think when I turned 18 was the moment. It kind of got me thinking, like thinking past living just right here to this moment, like got me thinking, like, yo, I could really get old.
[00:04:26] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:04:27] Speaker B: Oh.
[00:04:27] Speaker A: So you know what I'm saying? I remember you said that I saw you Said that too. Like, you never saw yourself getting old. You saw yourself gone before 25. I think you said no.
[00:04:34] Speaker B: My mama used to always tell me, boy, you better make it to 25. So it was like a triggering thing. Like, make it to 25. I gotta make it past 17. My dad ain't make it to 17. So it was like, once I got after the age of 17, I had to really get my mentor together of knowing, like, nigga, you gonna be here forever. Why you trying to make it to 17, 18, when you can be here forever? Like, you could be here 60, 70, 80 years. So it was like, now I gotta set some goals.
[00:05:02] Speaker A: Set different goals.
[00:05:03] Speaker B: Yeah, set different goals to chase.
[00:05:07] Speaker A: I remember I forgot what song it was, by the way. You and Big X to Plug. Y' all need a project, you know, I don't know if niggas told you that before, but I like that one. But I forgot what song you mentioned that on about making it. Staying alive and being around and stuff like that. Did that perspective change when you became a father?
[00:05:25] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah, yeah, Definitely. Definitely. When I became a father, I definitely was knowing, like, I can't just be out here doing anything, being any place I gotta be up for my kids. But like I said, after I turned 18, it was already a mental or change of knowing. Like, yo, you gotta get off the mindset of making it to a certain age when you could be here for forever.
[00:05:44] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:05:44] Speaker B: Like, it went from 25 to, I know I gotta make it to seven past 17 to.
Then you try to make it to 100. You think it's too small. Like, you think it's too small. Open your mental up.
[00:05:55] Speaker A: At what point did you start embracing it as part of your life story? Okay, I'll give you an example. My name is Head, bro. You think I chose that? Nobody chooses that name. You know what I'm saying? Niggas call me Head because they made fun of me.
[00:06:08] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:06:09] Speaker A: So I remember you talking about when you got shot. It wasn't like.
It wasn't like a tra. It was bad. I'm sure it was bad for you and your family and the people that care about you. But you don't take it like this big thing in your life that has held you back.
[00:06:23] Speaker B: I didn't go to surgeries or nothing. Like, you gotta think about. I was 21. I had already lived 21 years. You feel what I'm saying?
[00:06:29] Speaker A: That's not a long time, though.
[00:06:30] Speaker B: But I'm saying, if you done live 21, everybody you grew up know what the hell you look like?
You know what I'm saying? I'm 21. My grandma know what I look like without a lazy eye. My mama know what I look like. My homeboys know what I look like. The girls I was dealing with since high school, they know what I look like. You feel so it's like, I'm not trying to impress nobody with a new you feel what I'm saying? I'm not trying to be a new face.
[00:06:54] Speaker A: When did you first get comfortable joking about the eye?
[00:06:58] Speaker B: Soon as it happened.
[00:06:59] Speaker A: Soon as it happened.
[00:06:59] Speaker B: I. I got a cousin, I ain't gonna lie to you. He grew up, he was born like this. He was born with a messed up eye. So it was like, soon as it happened, it was like, I'm talking. This is my first cousin, my mama's son. He was born and I was messed up. So it was like. As soon as it happened, it was like, damn, welcome. Welcome to the game, my boy.
He was like, welcome to the game. You feel what I'm saying?
He was around me, know it. So it took.
It took off the stress, off the real cause like n. I grew up looking at a N with a messed up eye.
[00:07:31] Speaker A: So do you remember who got the first joke off on you after you got shot?
[00:07:36] Speaker B: Oh, yeah, definitely. In the hospital. Right in the hospital.
[00:07:38] Speaker A: Right in the hospital.
[00:07:39] Speaker B: Him, him, him in the hospital. He the first one. There he come. He like, cuz, what happened?
I don't even know, bro.
[00:07:47] Speaker A: I was like, do you remember? Do you know the best eye joke that you've seen online or somebody got off on you?
[00:07:53] Speaker B: Oh, man, hell, I'm talking about one got me so good I forgot how it was. But he got me so damn good.
[00:08:00] Speaker A: You don't remember what he said?
[00:08:01] Speaker B: I'm trying to think right now. Cause it was a smooth one. It was a smooth one. I know it wasn't the way he looking at or something. It was like, oh. It was like, fuck what he talking about. This shit hard though. It was something. Oh, I see where he going with this. That what it was.
That nigga said, I see where he going with this. I said, it's bastard. You gotta think about it, man. I've been a klans clown all my life. They was like, oh, they put the fire emoji. They were like, oh, I see where
[00:08:26] Speaker A: he going with this.
[00:08:28] Speaker B: He's one dirty bastard.
For real though.
[00:08:32] Speaker A: Hey, that's hella funny, bro.
[00:08:33] Speaker B: Oh yeah, he killed me with that one.
[00:08:35] Speaker A: That's good that you have a sense of humor about It. Did you ever. Have you ever not had a sense of humor about it?
[00:08:41] Speaker B: No, I'm not.
[00:08:41] Speaker A: I'm like, okay, I'll give you an example. You know how. And like me, two years ago, I was explaining our culture to the world because people seem to fail to understand how we get down. It's like, yeah, this is my homie. I could talk shit about my homie. You can't talk shit about.
[00:08:58] Speaker B: I'm telling you, man, listen here. I'm telling you, this is my first cousin. I grew up with this nigga since birth. My mama, sister, son, if he could take it.
And I watched him take it all my life.
[00:09:11] Speaker A: Yeah, yeah.
[00:09:12] Speaker B: I'm already 20 something and I know I can do it if he can do it. And he. I watch him live. Cars, girls, homeboys. He had the best life.
[00:09:21] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:09:21] Speaker B: He was one of the populous people in my family. I'm like, this can't kill me now.
[00:09:25] Speaker A: I feel that that would made me
[00:09:26] Speaker B: not even go to surgery. I'm looking at his ass, I'm like, if he. Okay, I know I ain't got. I'm good, I'm good, I'm good.
[00:09:31] Speaker A: Do you. For you as a father, how many kids you have now?
[00:09:35] Speaker B: Six.
[00:09:35] Speaker A: Six kids, bro. I didn't know the answer to that. That's why I'm not even trying to put you up. I literally didn't know the answer because I was. I was reading when I was doing my. I was like, I know he got three for sure.
But I like, so you about you about six. So you halfway to Nick Cannon.
What's harder for you, keeping your life together or keeping your career together?
[00:09:59] Speaker B: Oh, man, when it comes down to this, man, I ain't gonna lie. I can say the life.
[00:10:03] Speaker A: The life.
[00:10:04] Speaker B: Life. It's the life.
[00:10:05] Speaker A: Your real shit.
[00:10:06] Speaker B: Yeah, the real life. Cause he's like, you. You can't take your life on the road with you everywhere you go. Cause then everybody'll know your life.
[00:10:13] Speaker A: Touche.
Do you feel like the biggest struggle in the personal life is dealing with is being a dad, being a family man? Or is it the streets or the homies? Which part of it?
[00:10:23] Speaker B: Oh, no, I ain't even gonna say. It's the kids.
And it's really the spouse. It's really your being able to take care of the family. Cause you gotta make sure she straight while she taking care of the kids at the house.
Cause it ain't about the kids. Go to grandma house.
[00:10:39] Speaker A: Facts.
[00:10:40] Speaker B: Kids go to grandma house right now. You feel what I'm saying? You feel me? But it's the point of when they with they mom and you gotta make sure she in the right space and everything is controlled at the house so the kids can still feel the presence of the father being there. You feel what I'm saying? Cause certain females know how to make sure that the kids still be in touch with their father while they on the road.
[00:11:02] Speaker A: Do you. Have you ever.
Have anybody asked you for anything crazy? Like family members come out the woodwork and be like, hell, yeah. What's the craziest thing you've been asked
[00:11:12] Speaker B: for, Man, I'mma do it, though. Even though it's crazy, I'mma still do it. But my granddaddy be asking me for a car. He like 70 something years old.
[00:11:20] Speaker A: He can't even drive right now.
[00:11:21] Speaker B: I ain't never seen him have a car in my life. I seen him have a bicycle, a scooter. I ain't never seen him have a car. Yeah, he like, yo, son, you mama give me a car. I'm like, he about 77 years old. Where you gonna be driving?
[00:11:34] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:11:35] Speaker B: Piggly Wiggly right here. Mailman right there.
What you need to do.
[00:11:41] Speaker A: What's your thoughts on the Internet as far as being somebody. Where you from? Like, shout out to the ville, too. We gonna get to that, too. But being somebody that came up in the streets.
[00:11:52] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:11:53] Speaker A: The new way of the news, streets. What they trying to rebrand it is the Internet. How do you balance not caring what the Internet is saying? Do you care? Do you pay attention to what the Internet is saying? Or do you just be like, bro, that ain't even real life.
[00:12:07] Speaker B: I see where you going with this,
[00:12:11] Speaker A: bro. These niggas are trolling.
[00:12:12] Speaker B: I see where you going with this, but nah, nah, man. I stay out. Like, I stay out the Internet. Stay off the Internet, like on some real joke. Cause like I say, like I say, I see people joke on me 24 7. So you know, it ain't. It's. It ain't never nothing serious. It's all love. The Internet is a. I think it's meant for the government to see certain things.
I don't think people realize that the news got pages too.
Like, real life. Like, if you.
We don't watch TV to watch the news no more.
[00:12:43] Speaker A: No.
[00:12:43] Speaker B: So we go to YouTube and all. So how do y' all not feel like these the police?
[00:12:47] Speaker A: I feel you. I feel you. We don't even need to go down there, that road.
So the environment that you come up in, like, the stuff you rap about is Your reality?
[00:12:59] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:13:00] Speaker A: Have you ever.
Have anybody ever came to you and be like, bro, you shouldn't have put that in the record.
[00:13:06] Speaker B: Damn right.
[00:13:07] Speaker A: How do you respond to that?
[00:13:09] Speaker B: It depends. I might listen to the gig. I might take that shit out. I might feel like I already said too. Like, for real, I'm good with listening to my homies. If somebody say I said something and they felt like it was too harsh or anything, definitely I'll take it out. If I feel like I'm standing on it or I feel like it wasn't intentional to hurt nobody's feelings, I'm definitely telling them not to take it out. You feel what I'm saying? So it be things like that.
[00:13:34] Speaker A: When you went to jail, how did that shape your mentality?
[00:13:39] Speaker B: Oh, man.
[00:13:39] Speaker A: And then what did you do, like, to sharpen your mentality?
[00:13:43] Speaker B: I had to get out of there, man. My first time going to jail, I couldn't believe it. The whole hood was in there. It was like, what the hell?
Like this. Where everybody at? And they was just like, man, I can't be here. Like, I literally walked in jail and I seen all the niggas I knew, and it was just like, damn, I can't be here. There's no way. There's no way possible.
If I'm finna go to jail and see all the hood niggas, I might as well stay on the street.
[00:14:09] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:14:10] Speaker B: And see the hood niggas on the street. Why I gotta go live?
[00:14:12] Speaker A: Ruff, did you do anything? Did you do anything to pivot your mindset? Did you, like, pray? Did you? Oh, man, I read books. What'd you do?
[00:14:20] Speaker B: I pray three times a day as of right now, like, just because I was praying when I was in there, you know? You know how niggas get in there. Oh, God, help me out, you know, same thing getting they. I ain't want to be a hill guy. He can get me out of here. You feel me? So it was like, once I got out, it was like, I'm not going to change my prayer schedule that I was doing. So I prayed three times a day still, just because I felt like it was one of the main reasons I got out of there safe. Got all my teeth, you feel me? People go to jail, get their teeth knocked out here.
[00:14:45] Speaker A: Facts.
[00:14:45] Speaker B: So I got all my teeth.
It felt good to go in there and come out and still be a man of morals.
[00:14:51] Speaker A: I feel that you speak on that a lot about being standing on principle and stuff like that.
I'm curious to know your thoughts on the adversities, right? So let's say, how do you decide what deserves Trap Dickey's attention? Somebody diss you, Somebody say something out of pocket? How do you decide? All right, this deserves my attention. This don't.
[00:15:12] Speaker B: Anytime it involves some kids, I feel that, like, if they feel. When somebody says, oh, he.
They feel like I'm leading the kids wrong or do something, I always step in. I try not to do it all the time, but I try to step in and tell him, no, that ain't my M.O. because I'm big on giving back to the kids. I do that shit a lot before rap, before anything. I made sure I took care of my community.
[00:15:36] Speaker A: I feel what I'm saying, what was the final determining factor for you signing with a td?
Like, what was the main thing to be like, all right, this is done. We finna do this.
Cause I know the story of how it came about. But what I don't know is from your perspective, what was like, all right, this is why I'm doing this.
[00:15:56] Speaker B: Keeping it real all the way. Gutter in the West Coast. Sean Cotton, man, he really sat my ass down. Say cheese. He was like, yo, do your homework. You feel me? Like, literally, do your homework. So as I'm staying at his house, on the Internet, looking it up, watching tv, looking up all the TD people. And it was crazy to me that they was there for that long.
[00:16:18] Speaker A: Facts.
[00:16:19] Speaker B: Like, they really a family. And that what made me like, oh, damn.
He was here five years and he got this on his fifth year. He was here seven years and got this as, woo, woo. He was here this third year. It made me realize they a family. Like, you feel what I'm saying? They take care of each other. They a real family. Nobody flashy. We all trying to get to the same goal. So that what made me lock in. Cause it let me know I could really build myself here too, to be bigger than what I'm already am.
[00:16:45] Speaker A: I heard you say also that you don't feel like it's the label's responsibility to do anything for you. And I think a lot of artists, when they sign a deal, they kick their feet up and be like, oh, God, got me. And it's like, I really want you to dive into that more. Because a lot of artists feel entitled, man.
[00:17:00] Speaker B: Read them down. Read the big letters first.
If you feel like you can't read, at least tell somebody to read the biggest.
The shit say partnership.
The shit say partnership. Like, literally, it's saying you partnering with somebody. So in my mind, the word partner mean you my partner, not my daddy, not my mama. I just feel like that means you my partner. Like, I feel like that means you finna do something and I gotta do something to get the one thing and that's some money.
I just feel like that's where they mess up the concept of when you sign, you signing yourself into a partnership.
Like you signing to people that you business, you're doing business with somebody. You feel what I'm saying? It's not, oh, they just gave me this money and then they gonna give me some more money.
Nah, whatever they gave you, if you did get any money, you gotta understand this is a partnership. You gotta find another way to make y' all some money and the money that they just gave you, you feel me? That's what I feel like they mistake on the signing thing. I feel that it's a partnership before they owning you unless they really do own you.
[00:18:12] Speaker A: I feel that.
I'm gonna tell you something about top, right? Cause these have been my people since 04,05.
[00:18:20] Speaker B: Okay?
[00:18:20] Speaker A: It is top. One time. One time was on the phone. We was laughing because he still got the same number he had when he was in the projects. Same 3, 10 number. I got the same number.
My big homie, G Malone, we got the same number, so we on three where we laughing. He told me something changed my life. This is like eight years ago. He said, head N S who changed their number don't know how to say no.
And I was like, damn. Blew my mind, right? I still got the same number to this day since 03.
[00:18:45] Speaker B: Yeah.
[00:18:46] Speaker A: My question to you is what's been something like that? A conversation you've had with Top where it was like, damn,
[00:18:55] Speaker B: I ain't gonna lie. It's been so many conversations where this nigga done opened my mind though, like. Cause like seeing him in a form of what I'm trying to be like, I done seen him, you know, I went to the TD Christmas, so I seen him out there.
Niggas that was convicted felons and they doing the farm to get they record sponged. I'm like, this nigga act like this nigga don't know this is some power type shit. Like, for real. For real.
[00:19:21] Speaker A: So, oh, to get they record expunged?
[00:19:23] Speaker B: Yeah, like, to get Damn. You know, like where I'm from, that's so big. Like you changing niggas lives. Like you having a convicted felon that probably got one charge, get his record sponge the way he ain't even a convicted felon. No more.
[00:19:36] Speaker A: Yeah.
[00:19:37] Speaker B: You feel me? That's, that's. That's a lifetime changing moment for the job difference. And get the job. You can go get the gun again. If you need to get the gun, you can go back to school and get in certain schools. Because certain schools ain't even taking no
[00:19:50] Speaker A: convicted fellas too sure.
[00:19:51] Speaker B: You feel what I'm saying? So it's just so much shit you can do just from going from a convicted fella.
And I feel like that's one. That's some.
That's some powerful shit.
[00:20:02] Speaker A: I feel that. Before you go, I want to talk about the new project as well. Well, first of all, down south, like I told you before we got on the air, I've been running that shit back to back up here as well as outside when I be outside.
I think you and Glock, bro, it's something special to that too.
I like you with these niggas, man. Like, pause. But like.
But like, I like you with Glock. I like you with Big X for sure. Like, it might be something there, you know what I'm saying?
[00:20:29] Speaker B: We might be bring the best out of them. I bring the best out of people.
[00:20:33] Speaker A: And your producer is crazy because I also like Blue Devils.
One thing you gonna do is you gonna do the sample justice.
I fuck with that too. Cause a lot of, you know, people get on samples and they.
[00:20:45] Speaker B: Yeah,
[00:20:48] Speaker A: but I wanna talk about the new project real quick.
The features and also the concept behind it. You said it's a ville in every. It's a ville everywhere. It's a ville in every hood.
Why do you want that to be something that people know?
[00:21:01] Speaker B: Because there's a lot of them everywhere. Like, you never notice how many villes it really is. And coming from the ville and coming from the south, we big on culture, you feel me? We big on how the Africans had to come here and the villages and all this. Like, we big on that. You feel what I'm saying? It's nothing but villes in our area in the south.
From North Carolina to South Carolina, like you said, all the way to Tennessee, Nashville, Kentucky, Louisville.
It's big down there. You feel me? J. Cole, he rep Fayetteville. Like, people seeing that he putting on for his ville. It's big. Where we from, the ville is big. It ain't just where you from, where it sounds. Cause you got all the way up to New York. They rep Brownsville. It's so many hoods.
[00:21:41] Speaker A: Brownsville, get to it.
[00:21:42] Speaker B: You know what I'm saying? It's so many hoods bro. You think about it, like, it always be one of the dangerous spots.
So I feel like in my area, knowing that it's one of the deadliest cities in South Carolina, I'm putting off of my ville. This is my area.
[00:21:55] Speaker A: I want people to know that because when they see the title and stuff, people think it's, oh, it's about me. And it's like, nah, it's actually.
It's about everybody.
[00:22:03] Speaker B: It's about everybody.
Victorville over here. You feel what I'm saying?
[00:22:07] Speaker A: Facts. How you know about Victorville?
[00:22:09] Speaker B: I was calling this shit Victoria. I had to get it right. My dog said it's Victorville, so it's Victorville over here. It's Vils everywhere, man.
[00:22:17] Speaker A: What's something that when people talk to Trap Dicky that you never get to talk about?
[00:22:23] Speaker B: Um, I never tell people, like, my family is crazy big. Like, I got a crazy big family.
[00:22:31] Speaker A: Like.
[00:22:31] Speaker B: Like, great grandma got. Like, you know, the kids be 15 kids, 20 kids, white people in the family every, everybody.
[00:22:39] Speaker A: Y' all Christmases are stupid, huh?
[00:22:41] Speaker B: Be crazy. Like, just think about Christmas, and it's 40 people.
[00:22:44] Speaker A: Nah, bro, I don't do that.
[00:22:47] Speaker B: He's crazy.
[00:22:47] Speaker A: I don't get down with that.
I don't do that shit no more. I'm too old now, bro.
Trust me, bro. You got about 20. When you turn 40, you gonna feel just like me.
[00:22:56] Speaker B: I ain't gonna lie. I be saying what you gotta think about it. So many of us, we used to go to our auntie house, grandma house. Got a cousin cutting everybody hair. Clippers get hot, he gotta rotate the clippers. Everybody getting a haircut ready for Christmas. It was so much fun. Like, everybody sleeping on the floor.
[00:23:10] Speaker A: Nah, bro.
All I see when I see 40 family members is 40 gifts.
It's like, I'm not buying all these niggas.
I'm not doing that, bro. Even now, I'm keeping it a buck with you, Tripp.
To this day, everybody don't get nothing.
You know what I'm saying? It be like five people in my core, like my mom, my brother, my sister. Like, the God sister. And then after that, it get a little murky.
[00:23:36] Speaker B: I ain't gonna lie, though.
Our family's so family orientated, though, so it's still family reunions and all that. I can't change on them folks for that. Like, my family don't be hassling me. They know I'm who I am, though. Like, gotta think about it. I came up like black house, black sheep type thing. I feel that if you get kicked out your house, you come to my house.
[00:23:56] Speaker A: Last thing Trap is, what's something that you do or eat that people would think is crazy?
I know one of the homegirls, she eat. She get the cup of noodles and she mash up the hot cheetos. The flamin hot cheetos.
[00:24:12] Speaker B: And.
[00:24:12] Speaker A: And she put it in there, and then she put cheese on top and put it in the microwave and melt the cheese on. That's crazy. It's not even big back. That's just disgusting, bro.
[00:24:22] Speaker B: What's crazy? I was gonna say they sell it at Cookout, though. It's called.
It's a walking taco. I don't know if y' all ever heard of the cookouts.
[00:24:30] Speaker A: What the fuck is a walking taco?
[00:24:31] Speaker B: Listen, listen to me.
[00:24:33] Speaker A: It's so much what y' all got going on in South Carolina.
[00:24:38] Speaker B: Nah, cookout is everywhere, though. I don't know if it's over here yet on the west coast.
[00:24:41] Speaker A: No, nigga, we ain't got no walking tacos.
[00:24:43] Speaker B: Listen, cookout, what is that? Everybody know what cookout is.
[00:24:47] Speaker A: Can you explain what a walking taco.
[00:24:48] Speaker B: Walking taco. They gonna give you a dorito bag, like, literally out the store, they give you a whole dorito bag, like, with the hamburger meat inside.
[00:24:56] Speaker A: Oh, we do that.
[00:24:57] Speaker B: Okay.
[00:24:58] Speaker A: That's not called a walking taco, though.
[00:24:59] Speaker B: What y' all call it?
[00:25:00] Speaker A: That's a spread.
You know what I'm saying? That's calling what it is. That walking taco. Y' all done branded the bullshit.
[00:25:12] Speaker B: That's what it's called, bro. It's something that I eat that I know people don't eat. Really? In the south, when I send somebody to the store, they go to cookout or something, I'd be like, yo, grab a walking taco.
[00:25:20] Speaker A: They be like, I feel that.
Do you have any weird quirks?
[00:25:24] Speaker B: Explain.
[00:25:25] Speaker A: When you say, like, do you have any weird quirks? Like, I don't like button up shirts. You'll never catch me in a button up shirt. Or also, I don't like to, you know, engage with, like, it's little things. Like, I don't like eyelash strips. When they leave the eyelash strip. Do you have anything like that that's like, I ain't fucking with?
[00:25:46] Speaker B: Oh, it's two things. Two things.
[00:25:49] Speaker A: We call them icks, okay?
[00:25:51] Speaker B: Oh, don't ash in my damn.
With the little. The little.
[00:25:55] Speaker A: The ashtray.
[00:25:56] Speaker B: No, the doe handle. Like, don't do that shit.
[00:25:59] Speaker A: Oh, they ash. They blunt on the.
[00:26:00] Speaker B: Man. Listen, when we sometimes we hit the road, nigga, quit being scared Just ask for the ashtray, Niggas just as, nigga, stop. If I kick you out the car, man, I feel that don't ask right there. That's in a couple.
[00:26:12] Speaker A: All right, album title.
[00:26:16] Speaker B: The mixtape called the ville.
[00:26:17] Speaker A: The ville. The ville is available this month.
Next month. Next month. The ville is available next month. And also, man, just congrats on all the success, bro. Like, I'm really excited to see what you got coming.
And your producer going, I don't. I don't know. I don't know the producer's name because I always.
[00:26:33] Speaker B: I mix Nation, bro.
[00:26:35] Speaker A: Crazy. Yeah, that. Bring that next time.
[00:26:38] Speaker B: Yeah, yeah. I keep nation with me. He over there in the conference room.
[00:26:41] Speaker A: Yeah, bro, I'm gonna go see that. That hard, bro. But, yeah. Thanks for coming through, Trap. I appreciate you, man. It's effective immediately, man.
[00:26:47] Speaker B: Let's do it.