The S.H.I.T.T.S Podcast

Unveiling the 'Maintenance Man' in the Heart of Chicago's Hip-Hop Scene

Monsoon Staraw/B Karrington/LIl Wish Season 9 Episode 188

Strap in for an electrifying journey with the enigmatic Blue Bands Wish, formerly known as Lil' Wish , as he dishes on his transition from the West Coast to the vibrant heart of Chicago. Amidst the backdrop of personal evolution and industry drama, our conversation traverses the rocky terrain of Nikki and Meg’s internet-rattling feud. We dissect their latest tracks and social media clashes that have left fans and foes alike captivated, while also getting personal about family ties, the power of a supportive network, and the rebranding journey from Lil' Wish to a name that resonates with his newfound aura.

The heart of the Windy City pulses through this session as we navigate the complex intersections of respect, affection, and personal boundaries within the realms of friendships and family dynamics. Blue Bands Wish offers a deep dive into the soul of Chicago's unique culture, sharing his take on authenticity in music, street cred, and lyrical prowess. With a nod to the influences that sculpt the Chicago music scene, we tackle the evolution of gender and sexuality in hip-hop and reflect on the legacies of those who've paved the way.

As we wind down, Blue Bands Wish candidly opens up about the emotional rollercoaster of fatherhood and the nuances of managing relationships in the limelight. We tease the much-anticipated 'Maintenance Man' album, promising a sound that not only bridges generational divides but also resonates with listeners from all walks of life. It's a session that encompasses the heartbeat of a city and the stories of its people, so hit play and immerse yourself in a conversation that's as real as the beats we celebrate.

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: The SHITTS Podcast. Follow us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and iHeart Radio. Subscribe and comment.

Speaker 1:

We are now back again, again, again, again. We are now back with the shit's podcast. We are either shooting the shit, starring some shit or picking up what shit left off. I'm your host, monsoons through all the coolest cats you've heard thus far.

Speaker 2:

And I'm your girl B, karen saying your girl that has all the teeth.

Speaker 3:

Damn. Hey look, and I'm finna interrupt them. I'm the special guest, lil' Wish from our West 290 Crazy, and that's how we doing it today. They ain't never did what. See how shit this work out.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, we turning it up, we ain't know.

Speaker 1:

See how shit this work out.

Speaker 3:

It's like that you know what I mean. I'm out here fresh from LA and I've been living West Coast. I've been on the West Coast like five years. And, but like it ain't take the avenue out of me.

Speaker 1:

For sure, for sure, yo, before we go any further, yo, y'all know how we do. I got to give us a mash out to the ownership club. You can check me out on the ownership club every Sunday, 9 pm to 11 pm on, so on a 6.3 fm, and then, after you do all that, if you want to come out and kick it head over to the hideaway, and that's at 1245 Burnham Avenue in Calumet City, and so that's from 10 pm to 2 am. And for all my adults out there that's doing adult things, y'all make sure you don't hit up Club Infamous at iceloungenet. There's a lot of adult things going on right there. So, yeah, y'all make sure y'all check that out. You know if all the people out there are trying to spice up their life or shit like that. So, that being said, wish Charity.

Speaker 3:

Wait, wait, wait wait wait, wait.

Speaker 1:

So am I saying wish or am I saying little wish?

Speaker 3:

You can say little wish, forever, I mean.

Speaker 1:

Sound like a gang. Little wish forever.

Speaker 3:

Little wish is like everybody gonna always know that's little wish, that's little wish. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

That's little wish.

Speaker 3:

I done been Mr Wish.

Speaker 1:

I'm Blue Bands Wish right now Because you know I've been on West Coast.

Speaker 3:

It's Blue Bands Wish now. So if they, so if you say blue, they be like oh, you talking about wish, so it's just getting on with you.

Speaker 1:

You ain't worried about the feedback, though, being Blue Bands, especially on West.

Speaker 3:

Coast Because my company is Blue Bands Enterprise.

Speaker 1:

Oh, oh, my bad, so I'm Blue.

Speaker 3:

Bands Wish and anybody that be with me on this company. You ain't even got a sign, but if you around me and we making business happen like you'll be Blue Bands star all right now.

Speaker 1:

Man, brother, I appreciate you got my last name right the first time. Everybody fucking my shit up. No, you brother, that be fucking my shit up.

Speaker 3:

I be trying to tell you ain't my big homie because you older than me, but you are a big homie.

Speaker 1:

I appreciate that. So on the podcast, bro, we like to do a check in, man, how you been. I know you been moving, oh look so I've been great.

Speaker 3:

I got grown kids and nieces and things. I'm all over the place, but I've been back in Chicago from the West Coast. I've been over that five years. I've been back up here and the energy is right again.

Speaker 1:

It's getting there.

Speaker 3:

Now, when I left last time it was bro I lost so much. You know what I'm saying. Yeah, I came back up here again. So much Fuck with. Durris, I mean it's a large piece, but I got a lot of other pieces that you could.

Speaker 1:

Man, you got a lot of people that you can fuck with too. B B Carrington. I like that. I like that that sweatshirt right there. Look how.

Speaker 2:

Now you know. I've been on my way, lost journey. I didn't lost some weight. I told you to give me an extra log.

Speaker 3:

Come on.

Speaker 2:

You gave me a large what if?

Speaker 1:

it's a big thing, See what, if it's a week, it's going to be a medium.

Speaker 3:

It needs to be a different color too.

Speaker 2:

I like, I like, I like that I'm not a pink girl.

Speaker 3:

I don't know. I'm saying be Carrington, I don't like a real gangster female. To me it could be black or pink and you can be both.

Speaker 2:

I don't like pink and I'm from the suburbs.

Speaker 1:

You from Memphis.

Speaker 2:

I'm from Memphis, but it's from the suburbs of the country, like the country is there and like I'm in the back.

Speaker 3:

Oh, look, here is the same thing. We still country. You sound like you from up here. You just your lingo is just a little more authentic. You get it, memphis they still tell us, we country everywhere we go. Yeah, but we love it.

Speaker 2:

People just read gangster.

Speaker 3:

to me, I mean, y'all like out real, real, real real gangsta. We, the cousins, though we love y'all the same way. We come to Memphis and things we be like we I like this, so be.

Speaker 1:

I know you got that T form.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so you know the T that just has stopped the internet has stopped social media. Today has been the Nikki and Meg beef. You know Meg just came out with that track how his HISSS and on her track she said that you know, these holes ain't mad at Megan, these holes mad at Megan's law and everybody knows that Nikki husband is a convicted you know sex offender.

Speaker 2:

So she took that and she said I know you talking about me. And she came back with the Bigfoot bar, which was a snippet, and she has went live to say more things.

Speaker 3:

She said she said my dog Free story Free story bro. I don't care about why.

Speaker 1:

You gotta say why Let me tell you, I got to get the why.

Speaker 3:

I was living in Minnesota from probably like 10 to like 2010 to probably like old 15. Yeah church I put everybody in Minnesota on me goes Tory, a bunch of people, young thug PW Longway, a bunch of people. Right yeah, tory is an animal bro. I never got that he loose like that type of vibe from him. He like me. You don't think he did it.

Speaker 2:

So you don't think he was messy, you don't think that he kicked it off? He?

Speaker 3:

would All right If we got to talk about it.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we got to talk about it, I'm off Ridgeway in the ad so I can't walk around. None, right, okay, keep game. He was in the pool with Kylie. Oh look, we hear this meter this wish, nigga. Right, I'm in the pool with short NEM. This me, right, niggah? I'm smoking all these joints. She mad. I'm gonna leave with y'all. So, she, I'm gonna be back short. But we got all this extra that's happening, the thumper and all that. I can't. I can't do all that. I'm from Chicago, that's different. He from Canada, that's different. You see him saying I'm just saying that I don't. Why is it?

Speaker 3:

different? I don't really. Tori is different, bro he he, he.

Speaker 1:

But why should it be free though? Why should it be free? That's what I'm saying. Why should it be free, her?

Speaker 3:

friend, her friend. But, but I think it was a loose move, man. I don't think church did that though.

Speaker 2:

But do you think I'm gonna tell you why I feel like Tori Either way, if he didn't shoot her or not, my whole take on it is is that, why didn't you get up there and say I didn't shoot her? Oh girl shot her.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it went crazy. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

And then when I have this picture, though, at aunt man. I'm not going to jail for shooting nobody. Yeah, no, no.

Speaker 3:

That's why I'm all over the place about it. So I'm not really like saying like this wrong or right. I'm just saying like damn church, I just missed tea. And then on top of it, that's all I'm saying I just missed church, right. He was nasty as hell. Out here with the music, bro. Like he was good at music, we can't take his time. I ain't talking about good Like that nigga is over. Amazing, like you got to see this shit.

Speaker 2:

But if you look at the whole thing, I gotta show you something. If you look at the whole thing, if you look at everything, it's like when he was out on bond and all that he was still doing stuff. I feel like why don't you be quiet, get your son Go ahead. You know what I'm saying? Show them family. Show the judge.

Speaker 3:

You know I'm not gonna fucking think, jim, is that serious?

Speaker 2:

Why bad.

Speaker 3:

I don't think Hold on. Sometimes you might be just in such delusion that you be like I got so much bread that I don't want to.

Speaker 1:

I don't sniff so much coke.

Speaker 3:

I don't know, I don't do that. No, not you. I'm just saying. I'm saying that I know that that could be a thing, but I'm saying that when you're being certain places and certain things, I don't think that you think certain things could touch you. I ain't never been that rich before Right Because police always want.

Speaker 1:

And that's a good thing.

Speaker 3:

I had a hundred thousand at 18. And that was like 2000. I went to high school I had a 2000 van in 2000. You remember when they changed the body vans? Yeah, I had a Dodge Caravan in 2000, and freshman year in high school I went to Curie, a smart school. You know. You got to take a test to get there. I was there, you said a smart. Rich, these rich fine girls. You said a smart school.

Speaker 1:

Okay, yeah, I'm lying. Hey, we're going to take a break real quick. I'm going to come right back. Hey, yo shout out to all the people out there that's going into smart schools and the ones that's going to the dumb schools, like, I'm not going to sit on that. This is damn. I'm fucking mad. And shit, robleson. I mean it's the shit's podcast, y'all. It's the shit.

Speaker 6:

What up y'all? It's your boy Marsoons, the rock from the ownership club and the shit's podcast. Just letting y'all know about the hottest after party going on every Sunday at the Hatterway, 1245 Burnham Avenue in Calumet City, illinois. Every Sunday, 10 pm to 2 am. It's the shit.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to back up the shit's podcast and we this ain't here with one man, wish NK8 Lil Wish. It was another one. You said Big Wish, mr Wish, mr Wish.

Speaker 3:

Blue Band's Wish. Blue Band's Wish, it's just Wish though.

Speaker 5:

And if you know me, since we were, shorties I'm Corky Corky.

Speaker 3:

You know that. Like in that movie? Yeah, you remember that name. What movie?

Speaker 2:

The Dude with the Mask she know, I know it's the movie, it's the gangsta.

Speaker 3:

What Dude had the mask. He was a gangsta.

Speaker 2:

No, it was playing chess. And all that Exactly, I forgot the name Fresh.

Speaker 1:

Corky Fresh Corky. Corky Corky played chess.

Speaker 3:

Corky played poker.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

I mean I'm a big little homie, Like I'm a big homie to a lot of people, I'm a little homie to some people.

Speaker 1:

So for the people that don't know, wish Big Wish, mr Wish, tell them where you from. Tell them where you. You can get to Actress Street. You ain't got to get the whole address.

Speaker 3:

No, we finna do it. I'm from the 700 block of Ridgeway. Ridgeway, chicago Avenue 96, crucial Conflict used to pull up on my block.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 3:

With a van, with a van, with a van. With a van Magnificent, you just saw that video today, and then they pull up on you. You like these niggas and after so long they know you when they see you. I had a verse for niggas air time. I ain't even rap, I just always knew I wanted to have their attention, because them and the big dogs you know Church. I got verses from dudes 30 years later. Right now, that's just like I feel like they-.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like I thought about that man, because I know like you go way back with it, you go way back with some motherfuckers, man, so it's like-.

Speaker 3:

I was in the club with our mama now, our mama now.

Speaker 1:

That sounded like a rap group. Our mama now.

Speaker 3:

Wow, like that should be a group Our mama now. She might be they big mama. No, I don't know. No, I would like that.

Speaker 4:

No, you ain't gotta be old, she said. Hold on.

Speaker 3:

You got the big mama no, you got a big mama spirit. No, they not. It's the spirit. You're not my big homie because you older than me.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so why I gotta be? Why you can't do something else, like an auntie or something?

Speaker 1:

That's all.

Speaker 3:

She wants an auntie spirit. Right.

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 3:

I'm saying when people like I be around, people you be like I saw Wishby, a bigger person and he still get him that respect. You know what I'm saying. I'm still and I was still raised like that. You know, we country in Chicago but we city, but we still country. You know, I still respect my. If you my big homie and you supposed to be my big homie and you act like that, I'm gonna be on that with you. If you my big sister and we got this type of that's what that is.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I ain't got no choice but to friends on myself with you, because you gonna already love boy me already. You know that's how Chicago got. You know what? What Am I? A lot.

Speaker 1:

No, you just said something and this question goes for both of y'all. How does a guy get himself out of the friend zone? You?

Speaker 3:

can't hey church once you are already there. You smoked, you just don't. So a guy can never get out the friend zone I can't even say that, because I tried to make myself in friend zones and they still don't call me bro, okay.

Speaker 2:

But that's, you was trying to make yourself. But when a woman say when she specifically calls you bro and you're a brother. It's nothing else you can do.

Speaker 1:

It's a wrap, it's a wrap. And if she?

Speaker 2:

ever give you a chance. It's awesome, I'm single then. Overseas. He been chasing me for so long.

Speaker 1:

I'm single for a minute. You know what I'm saying Might as well. Not gonna charge you the $40 like everybody else.

Speaker 3:

Yeah $40?.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So I feel like when you in a friend zone, you just in a friend zone, I feel like that's dead. I feel like that's dead, ain't no escaping.

Speaker 3:

No, no, no, Because if they look at you like that, that's just what they gonna keep depending on you.

Speaker 1:

It ain't even no crazy. They gonna tell you about all the nicks they fuck with.

Speaker 3:

It ain't even no days to play like that, no more. It used to be like that. I used to always be able to slide and not. They still give me a bunch of bread and up and still be like which. Just make sure you cool, but you cool.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

And I wasn't in friend zone in myself. It was just like.

Speaker 1:

I just put you in that shit. I wasn't on that with them, right? They changed clothes in front of you, knowing you can't fuck with them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, when we friends with you, we out Not knowing that.

Speaker 3:

Knowing I don't wanna do that. Our friends on you.

Speaker 1:

Your friends on the side.

Speaker 3:

Mm-hmm. Okay, that's commendable. I was raised by Don Juan Once.

Speaker 2:

I'm your friend, like I can I do whatever in front of you, cause I'll be like I don't even look at you like that. And then if one of my home girls be like, hey, yo friend, he so fine, I'd be like him. He fine to you.

Speaker 3:

This nigga Hell. That's great. Oh my God, Not Chicago. Yeah, I might do that in Memphis Up here. I'ma smoke 17 of y'all, and only not smoke like three.

Speaker 1:

It's gonna be cool Cause you not gonna smash the one that you friends with. That's yeah.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I'm not even gonna be friends with nobody.

Speaker 1:

But I'm gonna hit the friends, though I'm gonna hit your buddies, but I'm not even gonna be friends with nobody me myself Right, cause I've been out here so long.

Speaker 3:

I know married women do certain things. I know this that I come all over the place with that.

Speaker 4:

I don't care.

Speaker 3:

Me, I'm just focused on, like, taking care of my family. My bro, there you go. I come back to inspire and I don't be caring. Bro, my life be all over the place.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

If I could take all the pictures I could really take, you'd be like ain't no way.

Speaker 1:

Who's the first person that inspired? You?

Speaker 3:

I was like here we go, yo, here we go. I was like one of them, my mama. Buster Wams, buster Wams. Missy, I'm one of them. Short. I'm a creative shorty first. Then I start being around niggas that got real lyrics. Then I start being around gangsters, then all of this go together. So when you listen to my music, all of this is just pieces of creativity experience. You know what I'm saying? Like just all of it.

Speaker 1:

And then now you could believe it like so I heard you say you be around niggas that got lyrics and then be around gangsters.

Speaker 3:

For sure.

Speaker 1:

Have you ever encountered that real gangster that had lyrics? Hell yeah, who.

Speaker 3:

All the time G Count. I could get that to Churchie Burke. I could get that to Bump J, my big brother.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

OK.

Speaker 3:

She was doing game squad shit over here. Game squad we had, goon squad was the big churches I created. Game squad we was in little churches over here when I first met Ders.

Speaker 1:

Ders.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, this was like 03 or 02 or something. Ok, niggas won him off the porch. Won no ops outside, won no. Niggas was lambs, niggas was ass, niggas wasn't rapping. It wasn't nobody outside. I could fuck your mama right now because I'm pulling up in the BMW truck or the Benz or the all. Yeah, I'm big dog today in 02. I'm only 16, 17.

Speaker 1:

Definitely not friends on the mama.

Speaker 3:

Not your mama.

Speaker 4:

No, not my mama.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it was mamas outside to be fucked when I was outside.

Speaker 4:

Oh, wow.

Speaker 3:

Definitely Gee. They'll tell you. She said wow, Gee. I used to tell niggas that Boy, you know I could fuck your mama, right, you know that right and they knew that. But I was that respectful that I just let niggas keep their mama.

Speaker 2:

Oh, because in my generation they would get beat up.

Speaker 3:

No, no, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 2:

I'm untouchable we see them drag down the street. No, no, no.

Speaker 3:

I'm untouchable. It ain't really like that. But also it was like that's a little big church. You can't really say he old or young.

Speaker 2:

And I'm cussing my mama out. Definitely. What did you do? I was talking to these young niggas, for I'm not old, or?

Speaker 3:

young. When you see me in them days you'll be like dang, that's fine, but not my mama, that's churchy.

Speaker 2:

No, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Not my mama, but some moms outside. That's all I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Which one do you think is worse? If one of your boys fucked your mama or one of your girls fucked your daddy, which one is worse? I think, if your, which one will make you madder? I think your girl fucking your daddy If one of your girls fucked your daddy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, if one of my home girls fucked your daddy. If one of my home girls fucked my dad, I'm beating her ass. Quit playing with me.

Speaker 1:

But one of your play brothers fucked your mama.

Speaker 2:

If your mama I'm beating his ass too.

Speaker 3:

I'm folding him up out of the chair. Listen, I guess I'm too far fetched. I'm a man, because you can't even fuck my mama. Good luck to you with that.

Speaker 2:

I mean, you can't fuck my mommy, she's dead. But fucking my daddy, though I'm dead, she's the past.

Speaker 3:

I ain't going to care about you fucking my daddy, I'm going to just look at you like I knew it already, right?

Speaker 2:

I mean with my dad, though I just can't Because I know my dad come from the era of a Pimpish era.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

And his mindset is a Pimpish mind. You know what I mean, and so therefore it's like. I don't even want you to get involved with my father. You get involved with my father, then I know me and you're going to have some beef, because I know how he's going to do you. Yes, and now it's so. I, just I, now I got to beat your ass Some business issues, because now I'm this one of the Pimpish episodes.

Speaker 1:

I watched.

Speaker 3:

I watched these episodes all day.

Speaker 1:

This is a Pimpish episode. I got to say this much. I like I be care and saying going crazy, I love it Be care and I love it Be caring to do on social media and I was watching hustle and flow today. I was watching hustle and flow today and when they talked, all I could fucking hit, all I could think about was be caring to because it was like that mine, I mine when you went when we went over the dude crib like. I may? I need to turn that music down Mine.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we'll take a burger quick. I'm coming right back and we'll continue chopping up. One man Wish, big wish, mr Wish, $40 wish, blue bands wish. And it's the shit. I can't show it, it's the shit, everybody is comedian.

Speaker 4:

Stephanie Robertson with the shit. Come check it out. You can follow me on Instagram at Stephanie underscore underscore Robertson. I will see you there. Make sure to follow. We are now back at the shit's podcast.

Speaker 1:

We are talking to my man big wish, little wish, mr Wish, blue bands wish and we got my girl be caring to in the building.

Speaker 2:

I got a question for wish because you are, you know, you are, you know a rapper, you know an entertainer and everything. So what? How do you feel about the state of Chicago? Help, how.

Speaker 3:

OK, what I would say is I'll be happy about people being successful. You know we all need to get about these jams with. You know, but I've never been a supporter of the drill music. See, I make dance music. If anybody could say they know little wish, they know dance music from little wish. These days, when they get to know me when I'm older, they probably get to know me better as a grown man. But I don't still keep the dance away from today. Still even I would rather be flow rider today than young GZ.

Speaker 2:

And what?

Speaker 3:

church, check it out. They call me the young GZ of Chicago when I be outside with certain items. But they also say, nigga, you got bonkers, you got boom, boom, boom, you can. You can absolutely say forget all of that and do just dance music. No, I got a hip hop classic in Chicago. That is true. I have a whole catalog of music that that. None of that came out. And when we played that song on the radio he he to wave me that morning and say, bro, turn to the station. I turned the power 92. That joint was on the radio. I've never been stopped being who I've been since that day and I was already that person already. So I love Chicago music industry. I just hate that it don't be no real music industry business here because we so gangsta.

Speaker 3:

We. So I'm just put it out there we so gangsta that we don't be with all them extra moves, all they they got outside for us. We don't know that. I'm just put it on like Ain't nobody gonna say that we'll be on that. So if they not playing with us the real way, we be cool, I'll be dealing with. Look, church, I got about 300 songs right now. You can come get a hundred of these right now for we can figure it out. I bet you they don't even want to come here because they know we on play like that, because soon as you try to play them crack head games and seeming to a kick ass party or any of that you know I'm gonna be on the corner with I'm gonna be doing. You ain't, finna, see me loose Niggas, be outside loose. That's why we you see most people from Chicago have to go somewhere else to be somewhere else.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

So that's what. That's the real key. I ain't want to say that, but forget it. Chicago, don't be going with all the extra sweet, sexy cake, ass, shit. We not with that. I just got to say I'm sorry, I'm glad I'm sorry.

Speaker 2:

So do you feel like? Outside of outside of who you mentioned, which was crucial conflict, you know, up. It's so many people outside of people you mentioned? Yeah, do you think there are some Chicago legend? Oh, my God, and who are they to you? Who are the Chicago legends?

Speaker 3:

Um, I can only speak on the ones that I came up off of. But I promise you right now I was outside, like I moved on the West Coast like three, four years ago. I promise you. I was up here and there was like 20 females at one show. I did not even want to rap that night and I'm nasty and I'm like I ain't intimidated about that. It's women up here. That's ridiculous. And they not rapping about, they coochie these like women in Chicago going hammer time.

Speaker 3:

They talking about women everywhere in the end, with nigga, y'all forgot about Shantae. I mean the bruh Y'all forgot about like Joe we've been doing that.

Speaker 1:

Can't forget about Shana. These are my big sisters, though. Can't forget about.

Speaker 3:

Tifa, these are my big sisters, so I can't.

Speaker 2:

You're a legend.

Speaker 3:

So that's why I said these are my big sisters though.

Speaker 2:

And it's so I came up, I came up just, oh my God, nuisance.

Speaker 3:

Oh my God, you know what I'm saying. Like so, when I be figuring like I ain't with the drill music, that's just me, because I don't know so many people in that in real life. You know what I'm saying? That's the only reason. If it was good music and it was just cool and it was just cool, I wouldn't be tripping. But like we lost so many people out of, I ain't even finished.

Speaker 2:

So let me ask you another question and this is going to be last of my questions but why do you think that with the drill movement it sparked so much violence? But we have, in hip hop, we have always had competitive. It always been a competitive sport. People have always did, people have always had rap beef. That stayed rap beef. Do you think that this generation, or the generation from, I think, 2015, 2016,. Do you think they were just too sensitive?

Speaker 3:

No, what I think it is they was too vulnerable, so we ain't going to say sensitive. They was too vulnerable, like they be out here willing to be a lot of things. You know what I'm saying. We came up with real morals and principles in my day. It was like it was real morals and principles. You know what I'm saying and I still live like that to this day. That's why it'd be like that with me, okay. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying we're certain Huh. No, I was about to say so, you think so you. Would you say that you think this generation is?

Speaker 3:

we've been losing pieces.

Speaker 1:

They morally lacking.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, we've been losing pieces because you be outside thinking about just bread, right, bro? I never did music for money. We was already making bread, bro, like I met so many people being a little wish, not even talking about no money Forever. Yeah do I be talking to you about money, even to this day oh you see, I'm saying so we be passionate about what we really do. Yeah, you feel me. So that's all I'm saying. Like, I don't think that people be really passionate about stuff.

Speaker 3:

So, they be so open to whatever these days. For me, I just feel like People just need to figure out what they need to do, and you just do, that's what you do. Yeah you a manager, you just in management spaces. If you a worker, you just a pack runner. You we don't seem to the store all day. If you were one to the store today type of person yeah well, we need them. Type of people to. We need these people. That's gone. But, like everybody, just try to be the big personality.

Speaker 1:

Yeah you know, that's how I'm everybody needs a janitor, everybody needs a pilot.

Speaker 3:

Yeah it's just everybody. Just try to feel like the big person all the time these days. Think about when we was coming up. You could have been in a group and you just been back there playing the guitar. You meant so much too so, devonta swing nigga.

Speaker 1:

No, not about this way.

Speaker 3:

Dahlvin, mr Dahlvin, yeah fuck the mr Dahlvin dude. I'm just saying like, are we living like that today? Is Ders playing the beats right now making us that important? Is that making him that important on me?

Speaker 1:

Wait.

Speaker 3:

That is. He got maintenance man smacking out this bitch Saxophones going hammer time and we giving me all the credit for Having the vibrato. I got on it. Not him, right? He's a fucking musician of it. We don't give that like Chicago, that place. They they say shit, be decent and they be the raw shit that ever saw. They say it's decent right.

Speaker 1:

You really like. It's hard. It's hard to get a month of Chicago. Be like man. That's your cold.

Speaker 3:

You know like special when you first play for someone when these niggas be around me and that be like wish that shit nasty, I'll take that to heart.

Speaker 5:

I'm gonna go off and go to grave with that, because you ain't gonna get that up here.

Speaker 3:

You don't tell you that shit decent. That's the raw shit ever.

Speaker 1:

They're gonna tell you that's decent so who's the first, who's the first radio personality that the fuck would you like heavy.

Speaker 3:

It was like my glove in the diss. Okay, Okay and then I met 50 cent through them. Yeah, I meant he was fat.

Speaker 4:

I'm 98 before he got shot.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, he was fat and shit. Like we was at Jalen Rose All-Star basketball game me 50 cent Chocolate Jocks. Remember that went power 92 Church, me 50 cent chocolate Jocks at Jalen Rose basketball R-Star game. And then a year later 50 cent gets shot up. And then I saw him again after that and opened up for me he twos. Twice after that too fucking amazing. My life been crazy with music and I'm not even a fucking rapper like that.

Speaker 3:

Wow you know, I just been inspired by seeing y'all outside all the time and be like Well, I could, I could figure out something around that shit. No, not even that. No, my respect for y'all is way further than that. No, I could do that.

Speaker 2:

But when he said the creativity it does to me, anybody Can, you know, rap some words, but and that was something because people be talking about ghost writers- there was something else on to bring up people be talking about ghost writers and we, I guess we'll get back. We'll get to that cuz I got some that I want to talk about that bathroom ghost writers.

Speaker 1:

I took a brick real quick and man shot all the motherfuckers out there. Man, they'd be saying they be right in the wrong, they own wraps but they be lying and shit and they be having whack niggas right, they whack rhymes and this is just podcast message.

Speaker 4:

Zha Zha Smith 7 heaven at gmailcom. 7 heaven at Instagram. 7 heaven Facebook. Zha Zha Smith. Facebook Zha Zha Smith, 20 Instagram. I have the cupcakes that you need. I have the cupcakes that you want and all the flavors. Any flavor that you can imagine Chocolate chip cookies, any type of sweet treats. That's why seven sweet treats y'all mobile. If you want to call me, area code 872 225 2680. That's 872 225 2680.

Speaker 1:

We're now back at the shit's podcast and we're gonna hit channel with my man wish Shooting the shit. Karen, you had a question.

Speaker 2:

Yes, like so. I remember I was watching interview with JD and so Jermaine Dupree, and they was talking about ghost writers and he was like anybody can get up and rap a song. He was like but do you have the creativity to entertain? Can you capture an audience? Will they stay to listen to you? Everybody's talking about write your own rap, but the same people that write their own raps. When they get up there and rap it, people walk out the door.

Speaker 2:

But this next person right Rap, that same rap that you went up there and did. People will stay there and there cuz they're Captivated and it was like so. Being a rapper is not just being able to rap, you have to have.

Speaker 3:

I came up around Johnny P Nimm in the 90s in Chicago Church. You could not be at. You cannot be in no studio. You had to rap your verse For 70 niggas before you even went and recorded it. I Got to get back in the mic. You had to go read. You had to wrap your voice to niggas that don't even got shit to do with the studio. You had to. That nigga could have took me around to 70 niggas. You had to wrap that shit all day Because it cost so much to do it. Now it's so free to do it. That's why everybody just unlimitedly doing it, so like I'm telling you that we took it so serious that I was around. Do a diet, crucial conflict, three piece, right on time. It is so many of them.

Speaker 3:

You say some names, sir ski when I saw these people performing, I just knew that I wasn't aware. Hey bro, Did you know Danny boy was um? I love Danny boy. He dated my cousin. Tell me something.

Speaker 1:

Which cousin, honey? I see what.

Speaker 3:

I'm from off Chicago.

Speaker 1:

I said which cousin it cuz? You know, danny boy. So Boy boy next and okay, I'm lay down alone. Wait, so did you know Danny boy was yes.

Speaker 3:

Dated my cousin, but I was a little dude when I met John, okay, them and all of them hold on wrong because you're not saying was Johnny P had me around? I'm out cousin or female cousin? My female cousin, danny boy, used to be with my female cousin on Central Park in Chicago Avenue. We're gonna say that they know who I'm talking about. He was cool, he was around, he was cool Like I was church.

Speaker 1:

Did you ever think buddy was gay?

Speaker 3:

No, that wasn't a thing in them days. You got to think when we was shorty's, if you was gay, we knew even in the slightest way Even if you was a fake dyke or Tom boy, we didn't mean to say that.

Speaker 3:

I mean my bad if you was like a fake Tom boy or something in them days. We even knew that. Right, right, it was that like it was. I mean, we weren't on that, it was cool. We knew that. What the liquor ad? No, he was around and everything was everything. Everything was everything in them days.

Speaker 1:

So it was shocking to you when he came out and said that he was gay. I was grown and I was like am I? Thinking about the life is crazy, danny boy, they did, I imagine, yeah really you know that no that came out.

Speaker 3:

We overgrown by now. That's like 15 years after knowing somebody Like. Would you be that surprised after knowing somebody after 15 years not really like?

Speaker 1:

what I'd be surprised.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm saying no one knowing. Like saying you've been around church a little bit but you've been knowing other men being close to him enough 15 years. You, after 15 years, you wouldn't be like oh, that's not surprising, or something like that right, right.

Speaker 1:

I mean, I know some people that they came out. I would be like that that's not shocking to me.

Speaker 3:

Questionable why you know you didn't say some questionable shit. Like that. It would never like you, like to stick around lock room a little bit longer than that next month no the people you knew that was even fake, like that in some kind of way, even boy or woman. You know that was like that kind of whatever. Yeah, cuz the brat used to bring the baddest women around forever Huh.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

No, I picked. When I first, when she came out with the first song, I was like Cuz. I'm gonna tell you, I've always said and it's just my opinion if any man looked at the bread and said, I, I want to date her. Shit, you like boys?

Speaker 3:

No we like Tom girl, you like boys, you like boys and we was. We like Tom boys when we was little because we like a tough woman. Sometimes it wasn't labeled. You know I'm saying like in a woman that's act like a boy. Yes, you know I'm saying it was like Tom boys. Yeah, she gonna climb the tree with us. That's my girlfriend with us flipping out the tree right now. That that was fire in them days, you know. But I'm just saying that that was them days. Once you found out, I think that is so cool.

Speaker 1:

That's cool. I think that you said you knew that from the jump.

Speaker 2:

Cuz my hope. My thing is I always felt like men, boys, whatever back in the day are visual. So if you look at a girl and she got her pants sagging. She got a boy hair, like she got. You like boys, because there's no way that you like a woman, because they won't like that. Why are you telling me that you think that she is not saying she not attractive, but she looked like you? What's sexy about?

Speaker 2:

no, they wouldn't like Boys back in our day nowadays like niggas be really like because I'm saying if you ran it's, I guess she looked just like. You know I wouldn't like that.

Speaker 3:

I'm sure it right if you, if she was like it was different, and you know it was different like you would be like, act like a boy, but we it was different in them days.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, I was just like nah man, you like boys too.

Speaker 1:

I mean, I mean to her credit. She was on. She hit it on the head like Turns out that she's in that way, that's different and I way she messed with, or half of the eyes that they didn't outed in the industry.

Speaker 2:

I said, I see, I told you like boys like she's focused.

Speaker 1:

She's focused on irons, the two well, not him.

Speaker 2:

We know he, you know he right here really good, but I'm just saying, like Rashida's husband, she was the mess with Kirk and he's always gave. Wait the girl she does. The her husband Kirk Rashida. That was on love and hip-hop. Oh, oh her husband with the three earrings, yeah yeah, there, it is there, it is there it is he never gave eccentric, he'd always gave.

Speaker 3:

Okay, okay, all I'm saying is I've been around a lot of different people and I don't be judging people, Just like different things. But I know.

Speaker 3:

I like. I kind of know I'm Been around the music industry forever too. I've been in certain industry parties and I'd be like nope, they be like wish was in a industry. He was in the corner all day with a Bluntness. More issues like Maybe mad sometimes, oh ain't, do no lying. I'd be like I'm cool, I'm from Chicago, like I think that's why Chicago music industry don't be as exotic as it could be because we don't be for Looseness.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, y'all ain't with the loose, no we cool.

Speaker 3:

No, we'll do coke up here, or none?

Speaker 2:

Every like even I ain't gonna say part every been I went to. I've never caught nobody in the bathroom sniffing coke like I've never.

Speaker 3:

I never even knew what the powder room in. I thought that was like they was gonna fix. They make up and things.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 3:

I move to Vegas five years ago when I left them Right my mom. I'm out here all day with all these women that's just filling me in on all the moves and I'm like I don't grow up around this. I don't know, Do you dirty if you loose, so like I'll be, I'd be glad for people. Yeah, I mean, I didn't I.

Speaker 1:

I will say I'll say this much last year. I Want to say like, yeah, like last year, I think I've run into more people that do coke. Yeah, did I that I've run into more people that do coke, that I, that I didn't, that I didn't think, did it and like I said, like I said, I don't judge nobody, it's just not my thing.

Speaker 1:

You know, Sam, um, but yeah, last year it was a wild times. I mean, shut up all the motherfuckers out there. Man, that's experiment. And I'm waking up in the morning with a it's just my cash.

Speaker 5:

You're looking for great coffee, come visit Andy sunflower cafe, located 9920 southwestern Avenue in the Beverly neighborhood or 756 East 111 Street in the Pullman neighborhood. In Andy sunflower cafe, black owned for all your goldman coffee needs.

Speaker 1:

We are not back at the shit spot cast. We ain't here chillin with my man wish and my girl be Carrington Sarski and we just missing in talking about industry shit. The brat, danny, danny boy, johnny P Long list of people. And Okay, so we were talking before we're saying how, like you said, chicago motherfuckers feel like we don't really do coke. I Think that's changing. I really think that's changing, man. I think that you there's so much shit in this world that's becoming acceptable. Yeah, bad people just doing anything.

Speaker 1:

They doing anything they doing anything and the thing about it is it's like. But the flip side of that is I don't think people looking at you like, like you judging when you say you don't do it. They just like it's not your thing. You see what I'm saying it's like it's not true.

Speaker 2:

Just don't do it around me Like I'm not even. I'm not even that type of person. I'm like, I'm not, like I have never been a type person. You can do hard drugs around me and I'd be like, oh well, we cool. No, you do hard drugs around me. I'm like you, clucky Cause you're a steal.

Speaker 3:

No, come on. So look the Carrington from Memphis. We call them cluckers up here. And we call them junkies in Memphis. Okay, same thing. Yes, no, we call them that too, just a junkie. We don't we don't do that, no, listen.

Speaker 1:

Shorties to be over bad If she play like that.

Speaker 3:

I'm gonna call her a little clucky.

Speaker 1:

I disagree with y'all. I disagree with y'all. I feel like I don't. I don't think my fuck is gonna steal from me. I don't think my fuck is gonna steal from me, because they do.

Speaker 3:

I ain't say they're stealing. I'm saying, I'm saying what they do.

Speaker 1:

Be said, be said I think they do.

Speaker 3:

I think they do. Yeah, if you clucky, it's a lot come with that Church if you're a steal you're gonna kill you Boom. All of that shit go in the same hole.

Speaker 1:

So if you got a motherfucker, so if you got a motherfucker that that do coke around you, you think they're still from you.

Speaker 3:

Yeah they probably know yeah, they do, yeah, yeah, yeah, for sure. Come on, man Around me, cause I feel like if I spent the night at your crib and I put your son DS in my pocket in the morning, your son PS PlayStation lick in my pocket in the morning, you ain't gonna say I don't do coke. Well, no, I'm not Nigga.

Speaker 6:

I'ma say I'ma say you ask you gonna be like yeah, his coke had ass, stole my.

Speaker 3:

PlayStation move. I'ma say don't steal my son's shit. No, I'm gonna say his coke had ass. Stole my son's PlayStation live.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no, no, no, man, no, you fly bro. Come on, listen, okay, listen, and don't give me room. No, no.

Speaker 3:

Imagine, look, imagine, I brought my little cousin with me to your crib, right, Right, this was when, like, nintendo DS's came out, right, okay, I came to your crib with my little cousin. Boom, we loose. You pointed at your B, not B B. Carrington is gangsta. But look, I pop up at your crib and we leave. We had a great time, right, we leave and then your son DS missing when we move.

Speaker 4:

Am I good?

Speaker 3:

No, you know I didn't do it. But you know, my little cousin was with me, right, or whoever was with me, was he doing coke?

Speaker 2:

Junkies have Sometimes not really Someone, fuckers just.

Speaker 1:

Cokey, what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Junkies cause? I'ma tell you the.

Speaker 1:

Instacart.

Speaker 2:

I just had some groceries supposed to be delivered to me yesterday, no Wednesday.

Speaker 4:

And the.

Speaker 2:

Instacart driver stole my groceries. I called it man, so many junkies.

Speaker 1:

I got junkies.

Speaker 3:

How you know, it was a junkie though, cause they doing clucky shit why would you steal some burgers we just got? Different language, but it's same clucky shit.

Speaker 1:

Hey, man listen, it's the same clucky shit.

Speaker 3:

We don't fuck with stillers, robbers like rapey people, like none of that. We don't fuck with that.

Speaker 2:

What I'm saying is just because you a junkie.

Speaker 1:

But it's motherfuckers that listen, it's motherfuckers that steal, that don't do drugs at all.

Speaker 2:

It's not the store, that's different. It's a junkie. If I feel like you still have to steal, that's different. If you steal from people, you a junkie. No you could be a gambler.

Speaker 3:

You don't gotta be on drugs. You still doing something to make you be a junkie Church. I could be doing a lot of shit out here, I don't. I just go lay down I'm not no clucky about shit. Okay, if I could pay to see my kids. If that was a real thing. I just do that Right, if I could just pay to see my brothers, or whatever the case. So you know what I'm saying. It could be different.

Speaker 3:

You could have a girlfriend today and I can't see you today because your girlfriend feel like I shouldn't. Who knows Right. What I'm trying to say is, bro, you know rapey people outside, you know thieves outside, you know we don't play like that.

Speaker 1:

That's what we're coming from and I understand that we just be raised by real people.

Speaker 3:

We just trying to bring that back. People be stealing People by doing.

Speaker 1:

But that don't mean just because they what I'm saying is just because somebody does coke does not necessarily mean they gonna steal from you.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm not saying that, it's just that they more likely.

Speaker 1:

That's a big thing.

Speaker 3:

No, I feel like I understand what she's saying. They more likely To steal from you no to be more cluck activity-ish.

Speaker 2:

They're more likely to steal.

Speaker 3:

I ain't talking about stealing.

Speaker 2:

I mean, you're not. It's not a cluck activity.

Speaker 3:

I'm saying you don't think that it ain't just stealing Cluck activity go a long way, right yeah.

Speaker 2:

Okay, wish, don't think that I ain't saying that.

Speaker 3:

I'm saying don't think that.

Speaker 2:

Because they do coke, they steal Me. This. Be this me, and I'ma tell you I I'm speaking for myself. If you do hard drugs, if you decide that you wanna stick a needle in your arm to me, you will steal, cause ain't no way in your right mind that you sat there and said I'm finna, go tie my arm up and stick some in my yeah, and be solid. No, you a thief, you a steal.

Speaker 3:

You do everything. That's how I feel about regular things. I don't think that. I don't think you gotta do that to your arm. I just feel like how you was raised and I think in Chicago we was raised with a lot of like. I could say this. I'ma give a percentage right now 55% of us, cause I don't know these little young niggas, I could say 55% of people in Chicago from my age and beyond Church. We was really raised up on real principles and real items.

Speaker 3:

It's a lot of things that's beyond us, after us, that niggas just care not to address or fuck with or blah, blah, blah. That don't mean that make us better or nothing like that. Niggas care less. I'm telling you that ain't no bunch of whole ass shit up here like that. That's why they don't fuck with this up here. No, the music industry is in fucking LA, new York, atlanta, miami, all these Houston, chicago. They can't play with us like that, cause we don't play like that. These niggas be more extra open to the KK ass shit. We don't. But that also hinders us because we take shit so literal with the gangster shit all the time too, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

So I'm just saying that you, being as solid as you are, somebody need to learn from that. You know what I'm saying. As solid as she is and she not even from here, she get to see the difference. You know what I'm saying. And we ain't playing with no play place.

Speaker 1:

You just said something that you like being raised with principles, and I was just thinking about this man. I was just thinking like, in my opinion, I really feel like dudes talk too much nowadays.

Speaker 2:

They do.

Speaker 1:

They talk way too much nowadays and they tell a business too much, like I'm on fucking quick, like I was watching something. I was watching something and it's a rapper, luz Cannon, and he was talking about how Shani was being a sugar mama.

Speaker 3:

Oh, shit, I saw that. How was Gary embarrassed for Shani?

Speaker 1:

And I was like damn bro, you know what I'm saying. I'm talking about that. Come on, man like.

Speaker 2:

Pay him 50K. My whole position on it was now no older woman who got some money is ever gonna do anything with you and I go fuck with you, pay, pay with him, not give you no money or nothing. That was, give you 50K a WAP to bust her down. 50k a WAP yeah, why would I mess that up? Why would I say anything.

Speaker 3:

Hey look, you wouldn't even get no more.

Speaker 2:

For 50K. I tell my husband to go do it.

Speaker 3:

I'd probably been told you I'm busy with my niece and I'd been studied, just saying he was giving 50K a WAP for the dick.

Speaker 2:

Yes, cause she was paying him for that. That was he was supposed to do.

Speaker 3:

Give 50K for the dick hey church and you wouldn't raise your mouth. I'm finna. Put the price up.

Speaker 1:

You fucked up the bag for real bro hey look you fucked up the bag for real.

Speaker 3:

Wish finna put the price up. I tell my husband, go do it hey 50K.

Speaker 2:

Make sure you got him. Cologne, make sure you got some dry clothes.

Speaker 3:

Bro, you got some dry clothes.

Speaker 4:

Whoa.

Speaker 2:

We done made 100K easily cause you didn't have. Two nights.

Speaker 1:

You gave her two nights. You spent the night, got 100K.

Speaker 3:

And you went in tow. No, i'ma do that tonight, jesus. I ain't no more nights, ain't no more nights. I'm already here. It's over with you taking over. I be in Australia tomorrow it's over with this big vice lord shit. You know what I mean. No, but as far as the shits go.

Speaker 3:

I promise you, bro, I just appreciate the knowledge that we got and the shit that we got going on. Look, bro, the knowledge that spread out. Y'all just take what's going on for what we got going on, because I ain't got no women side and no female side. We gone.

Speaker 1:

Hey, man, we're gonna take a break real quick, man. Hey, shout out to all of my fucks out there, man, and as you know, they got some sugar mommas and getting the bag, getting the bag. You know what I'm saying? Hey, man, if the women can do it, man, it should be able to do it. Man, it's equal opportunity out here. Goddammit, 50k, goddammit.

Speaker 2:

It's the shit, y'all. Yeah, he was just paying him 50K and I just was like you was a goofy, it's the shit. My tune bubble ball it's the sh.

Speaker 1:

But I can't say that, you know Ha ha, ha, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And now back to the shit's podcast. We either shooting the shit, starting some shit, or picking up a shit left off. And really, man, we just picking up a shit left off right now, man, because we're trying to figure out why do people run their mouths so much, like if you got a good thing going, you probably need to shut up because you gotta think about something. Man, let me put y'all up, let me really put y'all up on game. It is somebody out there that's like getting paid and you trying to figure out why does motherfuckers stay dipped or why they stay afloat Cause they keeping their mouth closed? Well, they open it when they need to open it, all that chatty patty.

Speaker 1:

Right, you see what I'm saying, Like it really make you think about the whole concept of pillow talking. You see what I'm saying, like it's one thing, I think it's one thing that talks to the person, that you, that you, with you, know what I'm saying Like you going you right.

Speaker 3:

Can I elaborate? Two seconds. It's different in oh, we just linked together, we had a great day. We might even had a fake disagreement today and that was just that. We left that and we still had a great night, whatever. Whatever the case, we might even end it off on some man. Joe, I talk to bro tomorrow and we gotta figure it out Niggas that go home.

Speaker 3:

hey man, you know this cake ass, nigga, niggas and then boom, that's how pillow talking starts. I don't pillow talk because I go home with. I done been through so much outside Short, I went through this. I went through that I went through. That. It ain't personal to nothing or nobody. It's like short this what I went through, this what I need to challenge myself with and help me through these pieces. No, everybody ain't like that. These niggas be really pillow talk-a-wee.

Speaker 1:

I know what you're talking about. That be they going in for everything. They be like damn, you know this nigga. But I think it's a whole another thing. I think it's a whole another thing, like when it's your mate, something like with you and Don you know what I'm saying. You can come home and be like man, sit down and yell at them. This happened, woo, woo. To me that's acceptable because that's your people. But I don't, and I'ma say this I'ma tell you the reason.

Speaker 2:

why is because with him, with his friends and stuff. It's a lot of stuff that he has never told me about his friends. It'll be surface level, like if something may have transpired in front of me, then he be like let me tell you what actually happened and everything, but when it's something that they have talked about and everything he'll never tell me. I have sat there and begged him like, no, babe, come on, tell me what happened, and he'll still be like nine, for that I can't do that.

Speaker 2:

I can't do that, but when it comes to me when it comes to my friend, my best friend, my sister. I don't tell him stuff because it's like she told me. I tell him surface level, like if her and her mate got into it. Oh man, they was beefing, you know. But if it's something real that she told me.

Speaker 1:

I don't even go there. She didn't want the bag to have like two dicks. Yeah, I don't do that.

Speaker 2:

Same way with him. He just don't do that. Like I said, it's a lot, so I don't know about his friends Like at all.

Speaker 1:

So, now you said that, like you just elaborated on that it's a whole nother thing when the motherfuckers get on the podcast or radio show and start talking about some shit that motherfuckers didn't even know about, like that's a whole different level of like goof ass shit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Like straight up, bro, you know what I'm saying. Or when a nigga smash a chick and he run and tell everybody that at the job, at the school you know what I'm saying I got some. I think he ain't never, he ain't used to get no coaches. That's what I think I think he never got none.

Speaker 2:

I think he just now getting some and I think that now he feel like I gotta go tear the world. You know what I'm saying. He just want that guy. He didn't become that guy until he got some money.

Speaker 3:

I ain't a man, that's all I be saying. He like which, why you don't do this, why you don't do I be like bro, I don't what I got more I'm gonna talk about. I wanna inspire people to. I didn't already did all that. Y'all just came outside like almost 30 or almost 40 and I didn't know all that, like we cool. But also I get some people I ain't been outside like that, so I try to understand that too.

Speaker 1:

Or like B was saying some motherfuckers ain't had pussy before. You know what I'm saying. Oh, you just not start getting it.

Speaker 3:

No, it's way different than what she just said. She was being nice. These niggas get zero action, zero coach. I be turning shit down all day, all night and these niggas still don't get no coach. Why the bitches be still right here trying to get you know what I'm saying? Not the bitches, but like you know, that's just how I talk. I'm sorry.

Speaker 2:

That's why you got a lot of. I'm gonna say this that's why this internet, the internet and, well, social media and the guys that's always putting out money or showing money or doing all this that's the reason why, in their mind, they feel like oh, they that nigga. But in reality, you will lame to me when I look at you because I feel like this you want shit until you got some money. You got to leave with your money.

Speaker 2:

I don't need you. You know what I'm saying. Most guys who was already getting action from women. They don't have to leave with money.

Speaker 4:

Those are gonna go come regardless.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying it's a lot of guys that have to pay for attention From certain type of women A lot of them are used to getting bad chicks Cause if you look at some of these guys baby mamas before they got on. It's giving Rick Ross with a weed. That's cracker.

Speaker 3:

Okay, we loose. You know what I'm saying. That's good For me. I'm just telling you hey look, your baby mama know who I am. That's all I wanna say. But, your baby daddy know who I am too, cause we be outside rapping all day and I done been to jail, you know what I'm saying I been you know what, my son's 17, bro.

Speaker 2:

I mean how old are you?

Speaker 3:

I mean, you know, it's just black. Don't crack less you smoke.

Speaker 2:

I know, but that's why I'm, cause I'm 40 and my child's 12.

Speaker 3:

I'm saying like shit, Like I know how to how to-. You been fucking. Yeah, she crazy. But. I got these non for profit companies in LA and Vegas and in Chicago, like I really be around telling them I been famous since 98. We was in high school growing school. Like, that shit never changed me.

Speaker 2:

You was in high school in 98?. No growing school and I went to high school 2000. Christ.

Speaker 3:

I went to high school 2000.

Speaker 2:

So we about the same around the same place. Me, I'm 40.

Speaker 3:

Freshman I'm 37. Freshman year, you're 37. Freshman year 2000. So what I'm trying to say is when I was a grown man in high school, I was fucking the freshmen's already. So I ain't even finna, take no language from this move. I'm just saying that when I was a senior you was fucking freshman. No, I was seniors. I was a freshman already smoking your baby mama already, and she a senior.

Speaker 1:

Y'all grown I'll use a freshman fucking seniors. Yeah, okay, that's acceptable.

Speaker 3:

It's 2000. My car said 2000. It's 01. I had the 01. It's 02. I had the 02. It's 03. So every year you just kept getting-. I was something else, but I was from out west, going to school out south and it wasn't really like that.

Speaker 2:

You look young. You look young for real. You look like you about 23, 24.

Speaker 3:

It been like that forever.

Speaker 2:

You don't look like you 37. I would've never thought that. I'm still thinking you lying, but I'm a hoe, i'ma believe you right now. It been like that forever.

Speaker 3:

What it been like that forever. But guess what? I been with them niggas for 30 years, so how old can I?

Speaker 1:

be, Shout out to-.

Speaker 3:

Man Decker Derris.

Speaker 1:

Shout him out, shout him out. You said, you said that. Shout out to.

Speaker 3:

Decker Shout out to Conquest. You know what I'm saying. Like you know, we them real hip hop babies. Oh my God, I'm from out west, for real, you know what. I'm saying you can really slide out west with me for real and you will find out something you never even know about.

Speaker 2:

He's really 37.

Speaker 3:

So let's find out this Tell them what you're working on right now, oh we got the maintenance man what you work oh, this maintenance man album is like what?

Speaker 1:

a maintenance man.

Speaker 3:

Maintenance man is because I could come fix everything. You see, you might met me at a studio. You might just think I only rap, right. But you might have met me at your auntie house and I was over there fixing her toilet in that sink. But you might have saw me at your mama house and we the same age and she coming in the room to get this pipe. See what I'm saying. So I'm the maintenance man all around. See what I'm saying. Hey, look, call around Chicago, ask about a little wish. I bet you I'm the maintenance man. I bet I've spent the night at your auntie house or your little sister or your big sister house somewhere or something. I bet you, I guarantee I ain't even got to make this up.

Speaker 1:

I'm not saying you remember L-Man Company? No, I'm not saying you remember?

Speaker 3:

L-Man Company.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 3:

Channel 19?. No, yeah, he ain't holding up Channel Listen channel 19 and 1999, 01, 02, shit like, look up Elma in company. You know what I'm saying. I was like the little Bowel-. You smashing her. I was like the little Bowel in Chicago.

Speaker 1:

Who was you smashing her though?

Speaker 3:

Come on, ask about.

Speaker 1:

So listen, so the motherfuckers run them tapes back and freaking it, you gonna be on there probably with your mama right now. Not your mama, but somebody put that up.

Speaker 3:

Probably finna be with some mom for somebody, mama right now.

Speaker 1:

Hey man, we're gonna take a break real quick. Man, I mean, shut up all the motherfuckers out there. Man is getting some service done from the main, is man? Make sure you all pay up. It's the shit, y'all. It's the shit. All erotic needs an adult needs hit up called pleasure. Cole pleasurescom, that's WWW. Cole plashescom it's the shits. We are back At the shit podcast and we're here right now.

Speaker 3:

I love me some B Karen's a man.

Speaker 1:

I mean, I'm a man, wish and Wish has been breaking shit down for us. Man, like he got his hands in a lot of shit. I mean, like you know, that's your mama music, all types of street shit.

Speaker 3:

I could be your cousin, your uncle, your little brother, your big brother.

Speaker 2:

He like a uncle daddy.

Speaker 1:

Yo yo, yo yo what was the time he said earlier. Yeah him, him a hemity. I ain't never heard that before. Your cousin and your uncle and your daddy, you know your uncle brother.

Speaker 2:

Uncle daddy.

Speaker 1:

Uncle daddy.

Speaker 3:

Uncle daddy, that's nice, that's really. I mean you can really go around Chicago and that's a real thing.

Speaker 1:

That seemed like a cool turn for, like an older guy, uncle, daddy it's like uncle daddy came from.

Speaker 2:

Like when you can be an uncle, you own up to be an uncle. I am you young enough to be an uncle, but then you own up to be somebody daddy too.

Speaker 3:

Right, I'm big right first and then I'm a uncle, so like. But me being a little, wish I was like the first famous kid in Chicago and me being on tour, I was on the loop While a Romeo tour, the B2k, that shit was like offer off the rack, like coming back to high school, just fucking a lot I Don't want to do all that, yeah, yeah, come on, man yeah. Yeah, I mean, but that's what got me so celibacy.

Speaker 1:

Yo, I just thought about it, cuz you, the one that was talking to us about this. What you say, oh, seamen retention, seamen retention.

Speaker 3:

Yes, so I'm in retention is I'm a stroke, that motherfucker and that you're gonna get none about, I'm gonna get about.

Speaker 2:

I put your ass out. Get out my house right now.

Speaker 3:

But guess what? You don't even know. Until I told you about it, you didn't even know. I'm gonna show you how to you finna, be in that smokest boots. And then you got up out of that book, you go.

Speaker 1:

What's the she know if you did that, what's the benefits, though?

Speaker 3:

Not not smoking yourself, not coming up off of that energy.

Speaker 3:

You know that shit. Deplete you and do, though, don't deplete yourself About that fuck as you talking about. Don't deplete yourself. I ain't been deplete myself like a year and a half. Nigga, I'm over gorgeous, uh-huh. Hey, you've been hearing this music I've been making. You see, I've been. I've been cursing Durz out since I got back to Chicago. When I got back here, we've been just Look, the bitch should come down here right now. She probably ain't gonna get no dick from me. Boy, she finna come, I'm gonna be the little spoon tonight.

Speaker 2:

That's why I be trying to figure out. I'm a big gangster Before I this. I feel if you're, if you're not, my man, like you're not my man.

Speaker 3:

Ain't she nobody be getting that about?

Speaker 2:

you now I'm saying if you're not my man, I'm not finna spoon Maybe cuz I I don't know, I think no. Which you, I'm not gonna be, like we not gonna cuddle, we not doing.

Speaker 3:

If we?

Speaker 2:

is we fucking away? I like that.

Speaker 3:

No, but like these days people be confused about what the liquor you know. I'm saying like I could say, I'll just rock with short and she cool, boom, boom. I could let you spend a night in the most comfortable place. I sleep back here and you sleep in my bed, if you, if it had to be like that, if it was gonna know I'm saying no it's not when you've been outside so long, bro you could say why the fuck she still stand on. That's the saying, if it had to be like that.

Speaker 3:

I know how to say you could just chill and I could be over here. But if you gonna be my bae or something like, like I'm not, it is what it is.

Speaker 2:

I have to meet your mama for me to know I'm bae, like I need to.

Speaker 1:

Hold on, see me, tell me, you gotta meet the month you gotta be the mother to be the spoon.

Speaker 2:

You ain't never to be bae, to be spoon, to be spoon To cuddle with you and to be your mama.

Speaker 3:

Hey, we gotta ask the cameraman. Can you even see my mama? You've been knowing me 20 years. He saw my mama three times probably.

Speaker 1:

Four or five times in 20 question? Okay. But the question is you have Nathan, you, you gotta be bae and order the spoon. Yes, no.

Speaker 3:

I'm gonna say you got to be mature and able to say sure you could. Just, I've been in Vegas. Joe it three stripper bitches holding me right now in Vegas. I could have smoked all them.

Speaker 1:

What's the question? So you're gonna spoil me, are you gonna spoil?

Speaker 2:

them. You want to help you. You want somebody to help you. You want to be spooned, you, yes. So you want me to cuddle you.

Speaker 3:

Hey.

Speaker 2:

I needed it. I ain't cuddling no, nigga, that I ain't fucking. We ain't got to be fucking for you to hold me, I ain't fucking. No, you getting up out of here. I.

Speaker 3:

Like that mom telling you I lived in 2030 states in between there and they're love to hold. They can hold you spoon.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I wouldn't hold you, that would be my thing. That's holding no man and I'm I'm not. I just don't feel that way, like I'm not gonna lie. When I met my husband, you know I'm saying we, you know I came up here, no, I came, I came. I came to visit here in Chicago. It was my birthday weekend.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

We got back to the hotel and we hey Soon as we got there, because I want to know if that's what, because if he wasn't he wasn't on that right. I need to get back on the I don't even know.

Speaker 3:

No no, what I'm saying is I understand that the vibe, right, it don't even matter. I'm saying that I've been outside since 98, right? You know, um, and I got two boys, my son about to be eight, seventeen this year, my other son, finna, be nine. Um, it's a lot of women outside that would love for me to be at the crib with their kids. I'm on my ninth set of Uncle daddy. No, I'm on my ninth set of step kids. We was just cracking up about that the other day. I'm on my ninth set.

Speaker 3:

What is your ninth set of step kids me? No, it's because I'm a great man and they don't appreciate a real nigga. Give me some boom-boom boom. Give me Nothing for me in the great step daddy.

Speaker 2:

If you ain't gonna marry a mom, how you a great step daddy Church we was already.

Speaker 3:

I was already taking care of your kids five years before we had shorties.

Speaker 2:

You should have already already.

Speaker 3:

Great father I got. I'm on my ninth set of step kids and I can't reach back and say Yo, shorty lights, a refug with each other before something. I can't reach back and say a shorties, I could talk to them. That's she, that's terrible for my man, cuz I'm a father. You know I can't talk to your kids, no more than my kids.

Speaker 1:

I feel you yeah.

Speaker 2:

I feel you.

Speaker 1:

All right, let's get to this real quick. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

It don't exist.

Speaker 1:

Some of this is right here on the sheet exactly so wish, mr Wish, so the name of the game is called first of all man. So basically do, you got a minute, try and see how many you can answer. You just saying, you just saying what's coming, we'll come to your mind. Okay first thing, kind of mine, let me set this down right quick.

Speaker 3:

Used to watch jeopardy shit with my.

Speaker 1:

You ready? Yeah, all right. Quickest way to get robbed Flossa quick as way to go viral playing games. Quick as way to get rich. Floss. Quicks were to start a business. Be as smart, quicks were to be misunderstood. Being smart, quick way to get blocked.

Speaker 3:

Plan with somebody feelings.

Speaker 1:

Quick, quick way to get some head Be honest. Quick, quick way to get higher. Why Quick, quick way to get fired? Be honest, quick way to get good credit.

Speaker 3:

Some fake paperwork.

Speaker 1:

Quick way to get your ass book.

Speaker 3:

Playing with the wishbird Quickest way to step on target. Self-checkout my credit score decent. I got too many felonies to play with y'all he line. Nope, I just did this on. It's just a game. Yeah, that was that good was not approved of that. For that game Anywhere else. That's your ass. I'm gonna beat you up about it.

Speaker 1:

I told you, I wouldn't get your case, but I will oh.

Speaker 3:

Everybody be talking like they know what the shit is. The podcast is real, checking on the monsoon and bubble ball. This black nice shot the shits.

Speaker 1:

Haha, yeah, we are back at the shit's podcast, man and look y'all. And we just been in this motherfucker all night. We've been here chilling. One man wish a girl be Carrington man. Wish let everybody know, man, what you got coming up, cuz I a man. I heard the beats, I heard the tracks, I heard I heard the tracks that you did and I heard some of the instrumentals that you gonna fuck with compliments for a man that could dare. So let everybody know what you got in the store for me. You said the maintenance man, right, maintenance man, the album.

Speaker 3:

We don't have a definite day yet, but it's definitely within the next month and a half. It's more than your auntie, like I could be with your great auntie. I'm saying so it's different, but also you're gonna hear it and you gonna be like is is, it's relatable.

Speaker 1:

If.

Speaker 3:

I've been around you long enough and you saw me as a big dog when we was the same age. Yeah you saw me with your auntie already you wouldn't really be looking at it like that. Yeah, okay, all right. So my last girlfriend in Chicago, me and her son, the same age. No, no, no let me tell you something be Carrington.

Speaker 2:

That's cool.

Speaker 3:

No, no, no. Imagine me getting up telling a bro Did I tell you grad of garbage? He'd be all my fault, bro, but we the same age though he first. Of all he won't.

Speaker 2:

He wouldn't be living with me if y'all the same age.

Speaker 3:

How long have house?

Speaker 2:

that big.

Speaker 3:

That's a good point. How's that big that he could be here? But also, if I see him, I'm gonna put him on something I don't give a fuck if it's third 300 acres.

Speaker 2:

Your ass ain't living with me, I Mean.

Speaker 3:

I'm gonna say he stayed there and I was fresh there. But when I see him and I be like and he was on it, but we the same age, it's mama 50. No, but I'm a big dog, yo mama. Say no let my mama bring a nigga around my age. What's it gonna do with a different type of no? I'm me.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 3:

I'm me he him right no. When I come around them niggas, mama's, I've been like this.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

It ain't really no disrespect, it ain't. I've been a big little dog forever. You know that when you was in grammar school, like you knew I was already like that. Like you can't do nothing about that, it's okay, know, I'm gonna be the best step daddy you ever had. We the same age.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it is Lord be caretain what you got. Everybody know what you got coming up.

Speaker 2:

Man, you can just check out my tiktok at be that Carrington. Um, well, actually that's my Instagram, but be caretain, check out my tiktok to be Carrington and check out all the latest gossip, all the latest you know. I'm saying what's going on in the going zone and, hey, I got you any type of Memphis. Anything you want to know about Memphis, you can check out my tiktok for that. Also, if y'all want some love advice from be Carrington, I get good love about you know, yeah, we need that, hey cuz we did say, that's what we gonna the strawberry leather.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you know. So, if y'all get it, so if y'all really want, if y'all really want some really good advice from be, not from me Y'all want the good advice for be. You probably don't want it for me. Um, you know I'm saying email us or you know saying the DM.

Speaker 2:

You know saying and let us know we're Discussing it'll be totally confidential, unless you want us to actually say your name or something like that It'll be confidential and and if you, you know, happen to want me to help you get back with you, make a call. If the boss allowed, make a call on the pod. You know. The job back together.

Speaker 3:

I was in jail before and he couldn't write a read. I help him get his wife and his family back on them.

Speaker 1:

Oh, he gonna need you to be.

Speaker 3:

Nobody need no help. Happy to be with big church cuz he be having a turn. You know that you can't really help.

Speaker 1:

Yo, check it out y'all. I'm Leo with this, y'all. Good check, y'all can find me at the just podcast on tiktok, instagram, facebook, everywhere. You guys will find me at monsoons to rod as st a w and I'm a Leo with. Oh Y'all can find the shit's podcast on Apple podcast, spotify, anywhere you get Pirecast. You can find the shit's podcast also on YouTube. This channel is the shit's podcast s hi TTS podcast, and I'm a Leo with this. Make fans, not followers. Follows to get you cloud the fans to get you work. Trust the process, believe in something, be patient, have a vision, have vision period. Have vision and be patient. Like I said, and I realized that it's a process and the only thing that happens overnight is dreaming and slobbing and in babies and Amen stay silent.

Speaker 1:

I'm talking so goddamn much. No, sir, if it you get less, you get more by saying less.

Speaker 2:

that's my, that's we got we got one more thing though yes, they need to vote for us.

Speaker 1:

Oh, yeah, okay. So I gotta say this. I gotta say this the shit's podcast is nominated for podcast at the year at the 312 music award, com. I was saying awards before, 312 music award, com. 312 music award, com. 312 music award dot com go there and vote for the shit's podcast.

Speaker 1:

Hi cast a podcast of the year. Be Carrington, your boy, my sons, the rock, um, and I'm gonna say this much like really, I don't like to, I don't like to kind of like what they call it to your own horn, yeah, but I said it's much you going crazy to the bar the podcast has been consistent, whether the podcast has been consistent.

Speaker 1:

The podcast is influential, the podcast is interesting, the podcast is Informative and the podcast is in the news for us. You need that. Um, I have a great time doing a podcast. The people that we have talked to. We've had a great time with them, but I've also had a great time just talking to be, had a great time talking to wish and just having a good time just getting information out to people, encouraging dialogue, encouraging conversation and yeah. So go vote for the shit's podcast. Podcast of the year.

Speaker 3:

Hey, create three more emails just to vote again, because I did Thank you about that and yeah, cuz you.

Speaker 1:

I mean like we got games. Yes, we got games here. We we create slogans that get you through your day. Niggas need naps. Yeah, I mean with that.

Speaker 3:

I mean, it's me, now I'm grown and you don't need no nap, you playing games with.

Speaker 1:

Niggas need naps Also.

Speaker 2:

We let you know what's the going rate for Kuchy 40, but it might be like 50 if you're trying to be nice and then we had different, we interview different people, we have you know different, we just, it's just all around different, you know.

Speaker 3:

I mean, she just gave you three more.

Speaker 2:

We don't care about, you know. You know really what you're doing, your relationship, or who date who or no, what you decide where you decide to go date a man, we don't care about all that. We just want to bring you to entertainment, to talk the tea, whatever the.

Speaker 1:

Really want to get. We really want to give y'all something. We really want to give y'all something to talk about. Yes to some some that sparks a conversation, because if you don't know what the shit stand for, is some hip individuals thinking they're speaking? Some hip individuals thinking they're speaking. That's the shit's podcast, and so, with that being said, we'll see y'all. Next time, y'all make sure to check us out on all podcast streaming platforms. Vote 312 music award yeah.

Speaker 3:

I Guess I 17 emails.