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

Harmony & Fame: Inside Chicago's Vibrant Music Scene and the 312 Music Awards

Monsoon Staraw/ B Karrington/ Chicago Cultural Arts Organization Board/ Season 9 Episode 189

Ever wondered what it takes to knit a community together through the power of music and arts? That's exactly what we're exploring as the Chicago Cultural Arts Organization Board joins me to unpack the electrifying 312 Music Awards and its monumental role in our local scene. From historical ceremonies to the latest buzz involving celebrity Monique's family drama, we're pulling back the curtain on the delicate balance of public persona and personal life, and how it all plays out under the bright lights of fame.

This episode is your all-access pass to the heartwarming tales and grassroots activism that define the Chicago music community. You'll hear about Aaron's impromptu styling rescue, TooOficial passionate local music protest, and the ripple effects of encouragement that transcend the stage. As we stroll down memory lane to last year's awards show, we underscore the change-making power of artists and fans coming together for the greater glory of our city's creative pulse.

Finally, we suit up for a fashion-forward discussion, debating the fine line between personal branding and making a statement at high-profile galas. But it's not all serious business; get ready for a few laughs as we tackle the four-word texting challenge and share exclusive shoutouts for the upcoming 312 Music Awards. Join us for this love letter to Chicago, where we celebrate the individuality and collective success that make our city's soul unstoppable.

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Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. We are now back at the shit's podcast of we do the shooting shit, starting some shit or picking up a shit left off. I'm your host, monson the Rota Cool, this cat you heard thus far.

Speaker 2:

And this sugar. I be cancelling without a celebrity guys, so fancy.

Speaker 1:

And this week on the podcast, I always tell you we got a very special guest, but this week is no exception. This week we got very special guest. This is like that's plural to the plural. You know what I'm saying. And these individuals are doing some phenomenal things for the city of Chicago, especially on the art side, on the music side. I want y'all to put y'all hands together and show some love for the one the own Chicago cultural arts organization board presents, the 312 musical ward. Y'all, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, hey, y'all, let me tell y'all something I be feeling like what y'all do make March is like, it's like March Madness for Chicago Entertainment. You know what I'm saying? Right, right, right, exactly, because it be so many advances that y'all do.

Speaker 1:

You know what, though? I gotta keep it moving. I want to get some shots out real quick to the ownership club catchment ownership club 9 pm to 11 pm every Sunday on Soul Warner 6.3. And when you get done checking this out on Soul Warner 6.3, head up to the hideaway for the after party. So I had to put that in there. Also, shout out to Club Infamous. All my adults out there, that's doing adult things. Y'all make sure you hit up Clubinfamousnetcom and just go from there. So, with that being said, this week y'all are the phenomenal guests to the podcast, so I would like to do a check in. So I'm going to start with my man right here. Let me know what your name is. Let me know what your height week meant, bro.

Speaker 3:

Man, what up, what up. It's too official and you know what I'm saying. I've been having a phenomenal week. You know what I'm saying. We're having a great day. I'm blessed to have the people here today and talk about you know what I'm saying the 312 Music Awards and how we hoping to bring it and bring unity to the city.

Speaker 4:

Yes, sir, how y'all doing. Good evening. It's your girl, erin Joy, checking in one time, checking in feeling good and great, and I'm blessed to be a blessing to the city.

Speaker 5:

For sure, for sure. What's popping? It's your boy, Lucia Spokesman. You know what I'm saying. Ccao, live in the building. Man man bless to be here.

Speaker 1:

For sure. We appreciate y'all coming For sure. B. What's up with you?

Speaker 2:

Nothing pretty usual.

Speaker 4:

You talking about nothing.

Speaker 2:

Nothing.

Speaker 4:

Nothing I ain't got nothing.

Speaker 2:

I ain't got nothing.

Speaker 1:

B got all the tea, All the tea, what you got for him B.

Speaker 2:

It's been kind of dry this week. Erin says Monique did close Shay Shay and said that she didn't care about being a mother. It's kind of like they been the frenzy about that. Then a song went live about that and, you know, said that his mama pretty much was telling the truth and that they don't have a relationship, and so you know, then Monique turned around and dropped the text messages from 2020 and I was like Monique, you can take them text message and ride straight to here Because that was like straight.

Speaker 2:

It was from 2020, 2021, it's 2024. So you ain't talked to your son since then.

Speaker 1:

Right, yeah, that's hard, that's tough. You definitely don't get mothered yet. If it was here like that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so that's what I said.

Speaker 1:

She is that cryin' about her career.

Speaker 2:

I said your career ain't going right, baby, because you ain't do right by your kids.

Speaker 1:

That's a damn good point. That's a damn good point. You know, I thought about that because it's people that have you know what I'm saying in the pursuit of their career and their dreams, they kind of put their kids and family on the foot. You can put your family in the back of your mind, you can't put your kids on the back of your mind. What I mean by family is like not immediate family, but you know, like right, untied and cuss and shit Anyway, so all right. So, like I was saying, the three, one, two music awards started. The first one was last year. Am I correct? Correct? Okay, what was the straw that broke the cameras back and said and made y'all feel like we need to do this, like it needs?

Speaker 5:

to happen.

Speaker 3:

It was just about us regaining and bringing unity back to the city. Okay, because, like a lot of people know, like this ain't our first round at the war ceremonies. It was also a part of major war ceremonies for the city previous A couple of wars. I'll let Lutri explain.

Speaker 5:

We used to have a lot of war ceremonies. We had a lot of war ceremonies, yeah. So this is basically like a revamp and a revamp of, like, the Midwest Earth Music Awards and Rappers Balls that we did years ago. Okay, like six in a row.

Speaker 6:

Okay.

Speaker 5:

Same thing. You know what I'm saying. The same object is just bringing you know unity and love back to the city.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

And back then it was more. You know we had more of that. Then you know what I'm saying and you know, me and the team was talking and like it's been like maybe like six, seven years ago. So that gap you know what I'm saying Almost 10 years ago, that gap we was trying to bring that back and feel that gap for the city.

Speaker 1:

Okay, okay, you all being in a position that you're in and the way you're looking at the city of Chicago, what is it that you really feel like is lacking at this point?

Speaker 5:

Well, I mean, like I said, the main thing is unity and love.

Speaker 6:

Okay.

Speaker 5:

I mean we gotta support each other.

Speaker 6:

Right.

Speaker 5:

Hands down. That's one thing we don't get a lot of. You know what I'm saying. We don't support each other a lot. That's why we're doing the different situations with the awards you know what I'm saying Like having a nomination party, so all the nominees and just network.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and last year Brian went even live to eat. Man, like that nomination party was off the chain.

Speaker 4:

Everybody always talk about the wings.

Speaker 5:

And it shuts out the Holly Flake of Chicago. We'll be running back this year. They're gonna do the awards ceremony for us. Yes sir, yes sir.

Speaker 1:

Like I felt, like what I really appreciated about it, like I said, was the wings. Y'all had drinks, y'all had the music going and it's just like to me, it really made people feel invested, like it made you feel good to be appreciated and not just appreciated. But to be a creative motherfucker at the time you see what I'm saying and to be around people that was on the same shit that you was on.

Speaker 5:

And the reason why I feel like that is because we are invested. Okay, we didn't just start doing music or being an entertainment business or the arts right now. You know what I'm saying. This thing going on for years. I've been knowing that brother for years.

Speaker 6:

We've been knowing each other for years.

Speaker 5:

You know what I'm saying. Started off being an artist doing the marketing. You know what I'm saying. He had beats with the marketing. You know what I'm saying. So it's like we bring it all together and go for the city.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean y'all doing a hell of a job, bro. Like I said last year, that nomination party was though. The event within itself was though, and I was like man, I was just, you know, I think it. To me it felt like it lit a fire under some yeah, it lit a fire in the motherhood A lot of people were like man, if I go hard, maybe I can be nominated.

Speaker 3:

Maybe I can be getting a trophy, or maybe I can be getting a plaque on that stage.

Speaker 1:

Yes sir, yes sir.

Speaker 5:

And I say a little fire in. It's a stain fight that was already lit. So the people seeing okay, man, the people really penitentiating what I'm doing, you know what? I'm saying it's not going in vain. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 4:

Yeah, it's definitely the people. It's definitely about the people. The people chose you, the people invested in you. It was the people that nominated you.

Speaker 1:

Exactly.

Speaker 4:

That To me. I think that's the biggest compliment that your peers see your work, right?

Speaker 6:

Yes.

Speaker 4:

Because, let's be perfectly transparent, a lot of the people that have been nominated have not been on mainstream radio in Chicago. Right. So for it to be Chicago of Chicago, and for your peers to see you and recognize you. I think that is just as an artist. If I were on the other side I'd be like that's super dope that my peers nominated me Right. Because it was open. Let's put that out there.

Speaker 6:

It was open nomination.

Speaker 4:

So if your peers thought enough of you to put it on there, that means that you are recognized. Not that anybody needs any validation at all in life. Not saying that. But, it's definitely in our industry. Good to feel appreciated.

Speaker 1:

Oh, definitely, definitely.

Speaker 1:

I think you hit it on the head that it's not like you go out there and that's the only thing you do it for. But it does feel good to know that damn somebody is saying that I'm out here you know what I'm saying and then also like to officials, saying it made people feel like I want to be on that ballot next year myself. You know what I'm saying. So it's like I just think that it was good. It was something that's definitely needed, especially in this city, because this city has so much talent and it's like you always ask the question for a city that has so much talent, why is it that we not necessarily behind the eight ball? But it's like so to speak.

Speaker 4:

No, why is it a music scene and not a music club? At the end of the day, right, that's it Right, that's it.

Speaker 1:

Hey, we got to take a break real quick and man shut up, talk about what was out there. Man, they can't read and didn't even know their name was on the nomination. That's just podcast.

Speaker 4:

What up, ladies?

Speaker 6:

and gentlemen, it's the Milk and Dream, the milk and nightmare, the heartbreak and young Barker. And when I come to Chicago I check in, I get on the radio with the shits podcast. One more time man give a big shout out to his shits podcast. Young Barker Productions. Man Hollis, we out here, yeah yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

We are now back at the shits podcast and we are in him. We're in here with history makers. Right now, the Chicago Cultural Arts Organization, the Lord, presents the three, one, two music awards. So what was the first thing that got the ball rolling for the three, one, two music awards?

Speaker 5:

I mean really. I mean it was just the conversation between us, because we I mean we all here in Chicago know how the industry is here. So we just stepped up and said you know, we're going to put our best foot forward and do it, so we're not waiting on nobody else to have to come in and do it for us.

Speaker 3:

Right, and it was just like we also look at the climate and what's going on and it was needed. It's like why don't we do it for the city instead of, like the radio station, trying to do it for the city Trying? To beat us to the punch. They don't even include us in anywhere, Right Right, right, right.

Speaker 1:

So it's like, instead of instead of trying to, instead of trying to put your place, you can play at somebody else's table you make your own table.

Speaker 4:

Absolutely.

Speaker 1:

But what's your thoughts on? How do you feel about the awards coming up?

Speaker 2:

I think it's a great thing, like I'm from Memphis, we have an award showing Memphis as well, and I feel like getting recognition from your city to me means more than anything, because that means that your whole city really recognizes you. You know, like you can get awards from anywhere else but your city though, you know, when you respect it in your city, it's just it's feel different. You know, it just really feels different. And I wanted to say that last year I went to the award show and I want to say Aaron, because I'm a newcomer to Chicago, I've only been here like four years so me being a newcomer, I'm going to say Aaron has really embraced me, like she even tried to like help me, you know, get, you know styling with her and you know stuff like that, even though I got to the award show a little late, so I wasn't able to do what I needed.

Speaker 4:

That's all right. That's all right. I was together. I was together. I asked you enough questions she has really embraced me.

Speaker 2:

She didn't know me, she didn't know me from a can of paint, you know, and she really just always been so nice and just embracing me, you know. So I just feel like coming from you know people like this panel right here I just think that it's just, it's just some wholesome and it just makes me smile because they really just they really are embraced. People like seriously, oh, don't make a thug cry.

Speaker 4:

I didn't know you were going to say that. I didn't know that nobody knew. I knew you. I didn't know you were going to say that, okay, okay, thank you for that. But at the end of the day, and as we've been able to take our baby around on tour, that really has been the core of the movement, is genuine love and unity. Like that really wasn't rehearsed. Like I'm always about that, I used to. A lot of times in my whole music career has been a lot behind the scenes and a lot of really pushing for a Chicago music. I remember when Spain got fired for playing Chicago music. Shout out to Span Luda, he locked himself in.

Speaker 4:

Yeah he locked himself in and NJ Allen. But anyway always been grass roots. Shout out to Shani Archaeologist from WKKC, Like it's just always. Rest in peace, brother. It's always been grass roots with me and from the heart and for the people. It has been a lot of either you happy or you sad about the 312 Music Awards, but I hope the happy definitely wins and definitely outweighs the sad, because if you heard from the sister, you know our heart, you know us.

Speaker 4:

I mean sure you know it's about the heart and at the end of the day, like Jame, we love going to show.

Speaker 3:

Oh, definitely, definitely. So it's show and that's why we always successful, that's why we win and that's why the city stand behind us and that's why, as a whole, we the biggest. So we scream that and we say that. We mean that, as a whole, everybody is a whole, and that ain't just us on this board, we talking about everybody in this room. That's we need unity, we all do. You know what I'm saying and that's what we about showing that love and embracing everybody and everything, just like how she embraced her and didn't know her. That's how we do with several business. That's how we do with platforms. We are a platform, so we embrace everybody to our platform. Let's help each other, because if we can't help each other, then what are we doing for?

Speaker 6:

us.

Speaker 3:

What our platform is built off of. The 312 music award is a war ceremony for the people by Chicago in yeah, we the people choice award. The people decide this Exactly, and let the people talk, and the people talk, and they show up, and they show up.

Speaker 2:

And it was very encouraging for me. Like I said, I keep on bringing up Aaron because at one point I was going to stop doing what I was doing because I was like I don't know nobody here, I don't know nobody here, you know. And I was like I, you know, I didn't have any friends. I was like how am I going to get myself out here? And I remember her telling me you know, girl, keep going. Like you got it, you know, like she just, she just used to encourage me anytime she saw me or anything, and that's what I, that's why I, I, I, I would fail to embrace her like seriously, because I was going to stop, because I was like I don't know anyone, you know, and I'm from Memphis and Chicago is like too friendly.

Speaker 4:

It's a little different. The words are diddy.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm not about to fuck you. I ain't touching that one. But I'm going to say I'll remember.

Speaker 1:

I mean, last year I had a fucking ball and I got to get some shots out to. I got to get some shots out to my nigga book. I got to get shots out to a day day, south Side Mermaid, dd Licious. I mean we was up at the atrium at the atrium and I don't know who was smoking all that weed up there, but it was people smoke. It was people smoke weed up there. I don't know who it was, but I was up there, but I wasn't. I don't know who started it.

Speaker 3:

I think you started it. It sounded like it sounded like it sounded like you started it. It was a. I don't know who did it, but I didn't. But.

Speaker 1:

I said as much it was a fucking blast up there.

Speaker 3:

It was, y'all had the the.

Speaker 5:

Vandals my fuckers making Apache dinners and shit. I was like God damn.

Speaker 2:

It was so. It was so packed like I'm shy anyway, so I really didn't get up and move around too much, but it was literally packed like seriously, and I got to really see like your car, because you know I don't even okay, it's going to just sum it up and know I don't like house music. So because I'm from the South Side, I don't like house music. You don't have a second. Don't say that I don't. I mean I did it at first, nope, okay.

Speaker 1:

Let's take it back. You like house music now?

Speaker 2:

It's wearing on it's growing up Okay. But, let's step forward and then people start dancing and cutting up and doing whatever dances y'all?

Speaker 6:

was doing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, footwork and everything I got to see the real, like Chicago that's what I have been wanting to see the real Chicago. I didn't want to see downtown.

Speaker 1:

Well, sometimes you don't want to see what downtown is. Be careful. What you ask for it's just straight up. We'll bring it to you. What have been some of the challenges that you all have faced getting this award show together not just this year, but also the last year?

Speaker 4:

Control, people control, people control, crowd control, time, and I mean it's definitely tighter this year, because I'm on everybody's channel, that's what she said oh, they don't. You know, I walk right into that. It's all good, it's fine.

Speaker 6:

He can't walk right into it.

Speaker 4:

No, I'm just saying. I'm just saying, but it's definitely, those types of things have been a challenge, like hey, y'all, you're nominated, go ahead and RSVP, because undoubtedly somebody's going to try to come. So, just in my opinion, as the project manager of these particular projects, it's just the response of elevation from the public because we wanted to take it to another level. So you don't, you're not late, rsvp. And for the Grammys, you're not late, rsvp. And for the BET awards, you know, you go into the essence, especially not missing a plane. So just I would say that that's one, that's. That was a big challenge. I think that's one of the things that we're trying to do is to get the audience to understand that we're trying to raise the level. We are not trying, we're raising the level to a level of excellence that Chicago deserves.

Speaker 4:

So respond in that manner, not just because because we know a lot of y'all, we know y'all Right.

Speaker 1:

But just please you know because we're raising it respond like that, cause we all deserve that. Yes, yes, we all deserve that, and I was out there that did not RSVP because the internet was down and they didn't have to send it to me.

Speaker 4:

Right yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

It's the shit, it's the shit.

Speaker 1:

Five days.

Speaker 4:

I don't get it.

Speaker 1:

They still yell on my chart. We are back at the shit's podcast and we ain't here, man. And, like I told y'all, it's awesome night man because we have some very what's what I'm looking for phenomenal, influential people up in the building the gatekeepers I would like to say you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5:

And sometimes Foss.

Speaker 3:

You don't like that. No Cause it's too much. It's too much of a bad thing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah and okay, so that's all about the same.

Speaker 5:

See, see, see. We're more so like the people that's at the opening, that's keeping it open you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 5:

We ain't. We're not closing the gate.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so I'm glad you said that. Yeah, I'm glad you said that you cut, go ahead.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like Mount.

Speaker 5:

Rushmore, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Hey, hey, hey, hey, Just a family, yeah, just some family, people, family, father, but it's my little gatekeeper.

Speaker 5:

That's why we working towards not having no gatekeepers and having some where you know you put in work and you get what you deserve. Okay.

Speaker 3:

It's more of that. You know what I'm saying, because it's like with gatekeepers they kind of control the climate. Yeah, we control the climate, but the people control the climate that we control, we control about it Right. It's different for us, so we can't really be gatekeepers.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so I'm actually-.

Speaker 3:

We like the spokesman for the people there you go. It's like we the ones going to bat, and against the gatekeepers like yo this is who y'all need to be paying attention. Right, this is a whole other world right here yeah.

Speaker 1:

I'm glad I got that response because I know, as artists, as artists, sometimes artists they don't like that time Gatekeepers Because, like you said, sometimes it's a negative vibe to it. And so, with that being said, why do you think it's more of a negative vibe when people say gatekeepers?

Speaker 5:

I mean truthfully. It just seems like you know, whenever that came up, whenever that was made or whatever that phrase, it was because people were showing favoritism or things of that nature. So it's not like okay, man, you put the work in, you hide, come on, whatever. It's like this, you know come on, you know what. I'm saying we not paying attention to who really put the work in, to doing whatever. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

I'm glad you said that. I'm glad you said that because I know that I've heard that said numerous times about the favoritism part to it, and I think that a lot of artists whether you are a rapper, whether you are a singer, whether you are a producer, a comedian, whatever I think at some point in time everybody has made that comment or heard someone make that comment. Do you think that? Do y'all think that that is one of the things that has kind of put a obstacle for people really really getting together and saying, oh, remember, it was the first obstacle of the segregation.

Speaker 3:

I was like starting.

Speaker 3:

Second gate the people, the people now I'm only rocking with him because this is my people. It's too much of that's my circle. It ain't enough of us coming together to create a big circle. I love that. I love it. You know what I'm saying? I love it, bro. Okay, I got five people. He got five people. He got 20 people. We all in the room just looking at each other having a dick hole contest. Oh, and that's what they be doing instead of coming together like yo. How can we make this bigger? Second, we take our 40 people that we bring out show 20 people. We bring out show 20 people. We gotta throw a show and pack it out. How can we capitalize on what we doing? Let's jump talk about it.

Speaker 5:

Instead of being the squad, Chicago is the squad you know what I'm saying. That's too sure, just like you know. Shouts out to my man boom, you know what I'm saying. Boom, too funny. We was out in Texas and it was like that. It's like you know some stuff happening. You know what I'm saying and we was in the crowd, like me from Chicago.

Speaker 1:

You with us. You know what I'm saying. We together. You know what I'm saying? There it is.

Speaker 3:

You know going against whatever you feel me yeah, and that's how I need to be here, that's how I need to be here. That's how I need to be here. That's how I need to be here. You know, when we hear you see something that's going on, that's, you know, not right, you should step up and speak for it. Speak up about it If there's too much people pulling out their camera and want a video want a view, then a like it's too much of that. It's too much, I'll chase it.

Speaker 1:

You got to leave. No, I'm speaking on it.

Speaker 5:

Make it, do it real. I'm so different, though it's different now, bro, so A whole different era.

Speaker 3:

That's what it's like. We're trying to unite a chain, so we're trying to show a different way, and it all started with getting everybody attention with the musical world.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 3:

Like that's only a small fraction of what we're trying to control our civilization.

Speaker 3:

So it's just we use that to bait everyone in, to make the kids pay attention, to get a, collect us a database. So now we can market to these kids, now I can reach out to you like, yeah, bro, we got a class coming up in June for four weeks. I want you to come in and tell them, teach them about what you do, teach them about radio, teach them the ins and outs. Let's show them that it's a career in this. Yes, it is, and it'll always take you having to go to school. You might get it at a program messing with us, you might get it at your community center, but we're trying to show y'all, to give you an outlet and have a safe haven or a safe place to go instead of going to the streets, because we know how it is going there.

Speaker 6:

We all know that.

Speaker 3:

Definitely, definitely. We all feel different than that.

Speaker 5:

And it's showing them you don't have to be just a rapper or singer. It's a whole lot of different parts to this part. It is bro, it is, it is.

Speaker 1:

And I've experienced that myself, being an MC but then also going over to podcast and then radio and then just getting into a whole different lane in a whole different environment of people, but also seeing how they coincide. You know what I'm saying. Like, you can't be, in my opinion. You can't be a rapper or a singer and not network with the DJs and not network with the radio.

Speaker 3:

You have to be a singer and don't network.

Speaker 1:

Right, it doesn't make sense.

Speaker 5:

It's a lot of that going on, though, because there's a lot of stepskipping.

Speaker 3:

It's no artist development.

Speaker 4:

That far I'm going to say that it's a lot of artists and not a lot of paperwork. Knowledge Right, it's a do it and not teaching business.

Speaker 3:

I got this before you two.

Speaker 6:

He ain't not going to have time.

Speaker 4:

What you want to say? Yeah, because they don't know this.

Speaker 2:

But also artist development, because you have artists that don't know how to do interviews. You have artists that don't know how to be on time. You got artists that don't know how to work a stage. You have artists that get up there and you're a rapper or whatever and you just standing in one spot. I'm bored and I'm going to go to sleep and boo you know what I'm saying? Yeah, I'm throwing tomatoes.

Speaker 3:

And you got rappers that's getting on stage performing over their songs.

Speaker 6:

Oh, come on man, I'm just sad.

Speaker 3:

Who allows this?

Speaker 1:

Right. Who raised you Right?

Speaker 6:

And how much?

Speaker 4:

studio time. Did you pay and did not walk away? With how many?

Speaker 2:

bars of your songs like your TV track, your song is not mixed and mastered correctly, it's just not there. And then you have artists that you know. The whole it does not come together Like from the styling, the music plus the styling, because, yes, you can be a great singer, you can be a great rapper, writer, whatever, but if it does not match with the styling, it's not a total package. You might as well go write for someone else and let them deliver your lyrics or whatever, because they come with a whole package.

Speaker 1:

See, that's why I appreciate this type of form, because we ain't here sounding like how Motown sounded. You know what I'm saying? Very good, got it together. You know, what I'm saying I want to consider myself not the very no.

Speaker 6:

Except it's a very good, very good.

Speaker 4:

Anyway, you're Tito what.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I'm not, tito, tito's one of the Jackson Right.

Speaker 2:

That's the point. I'm Michael.

Speaker 4:

I'm Michael, but you're Tito.

Speaker 1:

See what happens people get dressed up. This is what happens. This is what happens when people get dressed up. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 3:

She's the stylist. She's the stylist.

Speaker 1:

So y'all had spoke earlier and you brought up BTWars and the Grammy Awards and y'all are paying. Why isn't the BTWars as important as the Grammy's?

Speaker 3:

It comes. At the end of the day, it's urban.

Speaker 1:

Anything is urban as important as when everybody else touches. So the interesting thing about that answer that you gave is that you said it's urban and the crazy part about that is everyone steals from urban, urban. It's crazy. Everyone takes from us. Everyone takes from what we create.

Speaker 2:

But then it's kind of like when you judge it like being too perfect.

Speaker 1:

You criticize it.

Speaker 3:

Talk down on what you want, just so you can get it at a lower price.

Speaker 4:

Yes, Amen, that's why he's a marketing beast, just.

Speaker 5:

FYI, you gotta start teaching. You gotta teach them classes, man that's what you do.

Speaker 1:

You gotta teach them, because, even with what B was saying about artist development and what she's saying about the marketing, that's stuff that, in my opinion, people need to know about, especially living here. Because the thing is, I think that's what I've always told people, that's what I think we're missing the talent is definitely there, but it's that thing of you don't know how to speak in front of people. You know what I'm saying, so you come off as ignorant as fuck. Okay, we gotta take a break real quick. Man, shout out to all the motherfuckers out there. Man that's trying to be real like professional, but you dumb as shit. It's Shit Podcast. It's the shits.

Speaker 4:

This comedian, Marnie Peake, checking in from the Shit Podcast.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. We are now back at the Shit Podcast and we are in here tonight with the Chicago Cultural Arts Organization for presents the 312 Music Awards. So I'm kind of go off. I'm kind of go off topic real quick, man, because I like to ask, I like to ask real serious questions too, you know. So for all y'all. So here's the question Just say, like you on a date, right so you on a date. And like you on a date with a person like you, really like, really happy to get this person back to your house, right so you got plans, whether you know you were the woman or you were the man, whatever and over your date shoulder the left shoulder it's a roach, but listen, but on the right shoulder it's a mouse. Which one are you gonna try to distract it from, the roach or the mouse?

Speaker 4:

Neither I'm out.

Speaker 1:

Hold on, get said to the mic what you know, what you got to know. They ain't your house. They ain't your house. The date is in your house.

Speaker 4:

Well, they not in my house.

Speaker 1:

Well, I'm just just, they're not in my house.

Speaker 4:

This story's about to say it anyway, Hypothetic no Hypothetic hypothetic.

Speaker 1:

There ain't no hypothetic in my world.

Speaker 4:

That was in 1982.

Speaker 5:

I feel the same way, but just for the sake of answering the question, I would distract her from the roach. Okay, and why? Because the roach is, like, more nasty. You know what I'm saying, you know a mouse is a man. I know. But a mouse, she gonna be scared and jump up on the couch or something. But a roach though, that's like. You know it's filth, that's like ugh, what you about to say. Go ahead and do it, they ain't wanting to say it bro.

Speaker 3:

No, you see I got neither one.

Speaker 2:

I'ma just say, hey look, my landlord got to come spray and it's a hole somewhere around here, and you know we live in Chicago and some mouse I mean I don't want to tell you baby you better also say it in New.

Speaker 4:

York. It's a mouse, it's a mouse. It's a mouse.

Speaker 5:

It's easy to get a mouse in your house dawg but it's from roaches, but I'ma say by the animal they ain't trying shit the neighbors don't say it, they might be nasty.

Speaker 2:

It is easy for a mouse to get in your house it is. Even if you have a big, big house on acres Like on some real houses Roaches.

Speaker 5:

You don't necessarily just get a mouse, but even if you get a roach.

Speaker 2:

You may not be nasty, because you may have a neighbor Because you can have a neighbor upstairs or next door or whatever, and you know, because we don't have mouses Did you say mouses. Mouses, whatever. We don't have those, but we do. You know, you, a mice of the cockroach. You know what I'm saying and if you see, a cockroach.

Speaker 1:

It's close to.

Speaker 2:

Spanish. If you see one of those, you might get scared, but I'm going to just tell you baby, it's a water bug. We're in a country. Let it go, move on with your life, baby it's a water bug.

Speaker 5:

It looks like a roach, y'all.

Speaker 2:

It's a roach. We call it a water bug. It's a cockroach because it's a bee, but it's normal in the. South, because you know we're in the South. It's like I may see a mouse in somebody's house here. I don't care, it's like a roach. It may happen. It's a Chicago.

Speaker 1:

I don't see what you keep saying in Chicago, I mean because it's y'all have.

Speaker 2:

It's a city. This is a y'all. This is a city, y'all, this is a city. Like it's a city. It's not the country we don't live in. Y'all don't really have Y'all country is really far out Like this is the city. So of course y'all have alleys. We don't even have alleys. Like I was scared when my husband took me down to alley one time. I was like hey, for real, this too creepy for me. I don't know what's really going on.

Speaker 3:

That's a country I don't know. Check it out, man Check it out.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm like an alley life Anybody else coming to alleys no.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, I was about to check it out. Talk to me out.

Speaker 4:

Hold on, thank you, I'm like an alley life.

Speaker 1:

I ain't talking to nobody back there bro at all. So besides the three of y'all who was like, besides the three of y'all, who was the first person to get on board with this when y'all presented it.

Speaker 5:

Official.

Speaker 1:

I was saying besides not y'all three, but some of us.

Speaker 3:

The first person to get on board with this when we presented it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. Probably shouldn't ask that question.

Speaker 5:

It's a board of us, it's not just us.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no. What I'm saying is Besides the board. Besides the board, like when y'all threw it out there, the first thing out there, it was like All right, oh, I got you One of the first people that still that we're a partnership with still to this day.

Speaker 3:

Holly Flavor.

Speaker 7:

Okay, I understand. It was one of the first people to see the vision.

Speaker 3:

That's why we all know it's Mark, we're the help of them. After that, I mean more people see the vision. Later on, like from this year, you can say hold on, more people see the vision. Yeah, we got some big eyes right now. There's no future coming. We got some real big things coming. I don't want to spoil none because we got to get these paper-marked size in. Oh, definitely, that's right. Yeah, no, it's a big name in Dorisville that's coming real soon.

Speaker 1:

Oh, and I look at that here. You say that it makes you feel like you know we're from Chicago, Like, but we're still keeping in Chicago.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and what I'm going to say is that, like, from my opinion, for us it's kind of like you know, we, if we really fuck with you, we fuck with you, but sometimes, sometimes to a fault, is when you get the outside co-sign. That's when people really fuck with you.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying. It's an added value to it. Right Right, it looks like when you think about partnership, you only want to partner with people. That brands. That means something.

Speaker 1:

That's true.

Speaker 3:

Or you gotta follow in order. Community impact Right. All right, and that's the time for people that we look in the community impact Right so, like, when y'all CDE sponsors come out in the future, you'll know that these are real community impact sponsors. Yeah, that C division are what we're doing. Okay, so it's a major step on the way. You just can't let it all out of the bag, man. No, I think, get to this thing, man.

Speaker 1:

I think Can y'all speak on, as you said a lot about it when I'm here. You said the importance of brand building. Like, if people really focus on that as individuals, how much good, how much more would that help what y'all trying to do?

Speaker 3:

Your whole life is good on brand. That's all it's good for sure. Think about it. Yes, you can only identify. When you first found out what McDonald's was, he told you You're there, right, yeah. You have to identify because you see it. So when you're thinking about branding, you gotta think about those things. You gotta think about sight. You gotta think about here. You gotta make people feel it. Yeah, same way you learn, dang, teach the people.

Speaker 4:

Teach the people. This is learning our vision.

Speaker 3:

Some people can learn all the read.

Speaker 6:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Some people can learn all the memory watching you play. Yeah, Some people can learn all the listening to, the feeling that you get from listening to you Listening to yeah. But it's all in physics, it all creates the feeling, it all takes with the senses. So in marketing you gotta hit the senses. Y'all watch that movie, whether it's show job, how they brain-trick that man to win that money. What happened? The point of the Nothing?

Speaker 4:

Oh, you know what? No, no, no, no. I'm just gonna say right back to you Right here, we're right here.

Speaker 3:

It's a movie out where they make the man see a number, the same number every time. Oh, focus, focus, but Will Smith, will Smith's voice like, so you gotta understand how to brain-work, yeah. So as you understand how to brain-work, you gotta understand how to human when we act with them.

Speaker 1:

Bro, that's what I thought. What's the most famous song you've ever played in the movie Like?

Speaker 6:

if you think about it like this.

Speaker 2:

Let me put it in terms like this Alright, like you have influencers like Jada, okay, remember how they start People stop wearing true religion jeans. Nobody was wearing them anymore. So Lotto, jada and I, they'll start back wearing them Now guess what people doing Back with their true religion?

Speaker 2:

They're back wearing true religion. You know what I'm saying? Ice Spikes just had on the baby fat outfit. Now she was at the Grammy. She had on the baby fat outfit. Guess what? Now people trying to buy baby fat. Somebody else just had on a cool jee sweater dress.

Speaker 7:

Another influencer, guess what.

Speaker 2:

Everybody's trying to find a cool jee sweater dress from back in the 80s One of my guys up there was just saying about the order of the cool jee sweater.

Speaker 3:

That's part of the brand. That thing recons, comes full circle and people were popping before going to pop again. For sure, we got to kind of judge the timing of it.

Speaker 5:

And part of that too, is like it just goes to show you how, what clout. Do you know what I'm saying? When you clout it up, you know what I'm saying? You could wear jee-z-sweaters with the hose in them. People would still go buy them for thousands of dollars.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5:

That's the power of the brand, that's the power of the brand.

Speaker 1:

I feel like this. I mean, it is like history month. Most folks start wearing those sweaters that James Evans used to wear. It was like a velour, like a whole brand Bring it back you know what I'm saying Because it was powerful. You know what I'm saying. Like it was powerful.

Speaker 5:

Just see James Evans wear this jee. You want for the awards, I want for the awards With the corduroy with the corduroy.

Speaker 6:

Amen, I'm telling you.

Speaker 1:

Hey y'all, we'll take a break for a quick man Shut up you motherfuckers out there. Man, this is my corduroy and the summit, and y'all just passed the fuck out. Cut the fist off, it's just podcast right.

Speaker 7:

It's the shit.

Speaker 1:

For all of Roddy Needs and Fantasy Needs, please contact coldpleasurecom. We are now back with the shit's podcast and we out here, amen. Let me tell y'all something. I got to turn the music off of this. That's how you know shit. Be serious when people turn the music off.

Speaker 3:

Hold on Amen.

Speaker 1:

It's in here, all three of these, all four, including B we're going to talk about that Tito comment later Schooling y'all on so many things, on so many levels, and I feel like it's all like coming together because people are getting ready for the 312 musical awards. It's going to be a big light shone on Chicago Shone.

Speaker 7:

That's the right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I said the right. That is the right. I went to Hubbard Shone on Chicago and what I'm getting from this conversation is the importance of having your brand together, having being professional, having your style together, um, and just love and unity, trying to bring one of these homes. You know what I'm saying? Um, was it anything like the fashion from last year? What, what, what did y'all see? What did y'all see more of and what would y'all like to see less of this year?

Speaker 4:

We saw a lot of people stepping. We saw a lot of people stepping it up. I'm like we said, I was definitely in a year, like what I'm aware, what I'm aware, what I'm aware because I'm a Timeboy by heart like if I could rock it at the Lord Adidas.

Speaker 1:

Hello.

Speaker 4:

But people say get put on some sequins and some stuff and some slips and some eyelashes, because I Didn't, she gonna make my face up, I'm. So it was a lot of that. I don't think anybody stepped it down, but we definitely, again, in the spirit of excellence, in let's keep that in mind the spirit of excellence, the spirit of excellence, we want to make sure that everybody comes suited and booted. I mean you definitely can wear rocket jumpers with your suit, though. Yeah please no white and no shade to the white tee.

Speaker 4:

But you're not performing and don't have none to change into. I'm just saying we would like to step it up. Do you go to the? I mean again, let's speak and let's make the comparative analysis. The Grammys, the BET awards even if somebody is on the worst list, it was their best foot forward. There you go. So that's that level of excellence.

Speaker 2:

We would like to continue the range and Let me say this piggyback on what she said about the bees here, boys, um, even if, like, it's about fashion, if you're not a suit person cool.

Speaker 2:

But you still got to bring that fashion. Like not, I just jumped out of bed, even, like she said, even if you're on the worst, most of the people, some of us, on the worst dress list. However, that was alone with their brand. Like little Oosey had on you know something that looked like he came straight out the trash can, but that was on brand for him, that rockstar grunge, yeah, you know I'm saying, and that was his look. So for some people who are his fans, they loved it because that's his brand. So if that's your brand, bring your brand, bring that fashion. You know, I mean, I love fashion. I'm a. I love 90s and 80s and 90s fashion. But if that's you, bring the fashion. Chicago, y'all have always been fashion-y, so why not just bring that fashion like I didn't. For me, I didn't see enough fashion Like I seen some, but I know that Chicago got it.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I feel like my ass is set. The time to let people know what the dress code is, so they don't like this shit. I gotta step it up on the whole other notch because a lot of people that walks and the people that was under dress.

Speaker 1:

They don't want to feel like that. No, I got these speed lines on the way.

Speaker 2:

To be honest, I really want to find me some baby fat or like a Pelly Pelly. You know I'm saying cuz you know.

Speaker 6:

I told y'all, like the 80s, 90s and I want the dude Pelly, pelly outfit. You know what I mean.

Speaker 2:

Like the big baggy Pelly Pelly outfit.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, what about?

Speaker 2:

I.

Speaker 4:

See that, I can see that. I can see that that's on brand for you, though for you. Everybody go to see a third of you to pay late. Pay late, yeah, please.

Speaker 6:

You tell shut down.

Speaker 4:

People gotta go out right in Belassie.

Speaker 5:

Everybody.

Speaker 2:

I say the Pelly, Pelly code and I was like oh my god, I gotta have it like I did it. But it was like I couldn't get it but.

Speaker 6:

I was like it was so it was fire.

Speaker 4:

I'm good for good pay late pay late, not saying that.

Speaker 2:

That's me. Yeah, I always see you in the bucket.

Speaker 1:

I would see you in the bucket.

Speaker 3:

No, I'm a.

Speaker 1:

All right, so Performances. So I'm missing. I'm missing a list of some of the people that's already slated to perform. Is it anything? Well, you can't say, like the special guests, and. Um but it's A lot of bands, so this is gonna be enough love back.

Speaker 3:

Yes, yes, I love that.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 5:

Three DJs, my bad.

Speaker 1:

I see the I want to sit on that. One of the names that I do want to throw out there that I actually excited about, that should be real nice.

Speaker 2:

Every time you always ask me you know three P's, you know that's, that's like Chicago legends and you know Everything. I'm like okay, and he ain't like I didn't know. I'm like we used to do we solicited in Memphis.

Speaker 6:

I'm like why you think that people didn't know.

Speaker 3:

My family is in Memphis, so it's like that music travel very fast. Yes, somebody's on Chicago definitely got family members.

Speaker 1:

So speak about the venue.

Speaker 3:

That's what the grandies do, that's what all the big shows do. So that's the field we want to start, the train we want to set. We want to be high, long jump. You like the Grammys and those type of war ceremonies.

Speaker 1:

So Y'all going and y'all taking the right steps. I feel like I want this shit to look like prom.

Speaker 5:

You know what she's saying, though. She, she. It's like when you, when you look at the Grammys and man they come through that may have all type of fashionable pieces on and it'd be crazy. You know, I'm saying yeah. Some stuff might not be your cup of tea, but you know, like she said, that's they brand, they bring in it. You know what I mean. Yeah and I feel you on that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, I love, like I just be fashionable.

Speaker 5:

They don't have to necessarily be a suit or whatever like, but just you know, bring it, bring, bring your style get creative.

Speaker 4:

He put it on he got that.

Speaker 5:

He got that rocket suit he.

Speaker 1:

Hey, I'm looking forward to. Hey, I will take a break real quick and I was gonna wrap up this interview. Hey, check it out. Y'all shout out to everybody out there. That's gonna shit together right now and they online on rainbow and she and uh, what's that? This fun?

Speaker 4:

Fashion over hey, if you can put, you can put it together, you can put it together.

Speaker 2:

It ain't what's your way is how you're way.

Speaker 1:

It's the shit.

Speaker 7:

Hey, I know how. Jaja Smith 7 heaven at gmailcom. 7 heaven at instagram. 7 heaven facebook. Jaja smith facebook. Jaja 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 um mobile. If you want to call me, area code 872 225 2680. That's 872 225 2680.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's just part of cares and it's been awesome. Um, very informative, in my opinion. Um, I learned a lot about, uh, fashion Brandy, what else I was talking about? Pimps and plaids and shit like that. But be even talking about that, because Chicago got all that Got all of you.

Speaker 2:

I got everything, including the food, except for soul food, so we're going to try that, come on, that's a whole block right there B.

Speaker 5:

Hey man, y'all didn't turn this into the right spots man, what's going on, man?

Speaker 2:

The soul food. Is it be like lacking? I was like that's okay, I just click it at home. B are you?

Speaker 1:

serious man, I ain't even able to find no okra.

Speaker 2:

I ain't even able to find no okra, no okra, yet I'm talking about bull okra.

Speaker 5:

Where you been. I'm talking about bull okra.

Speaker 2:

And I'm talking about bull okra with the tomatoes in it.

Speaker 4:

Damn.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. Ain't nobody making no hot water cool and bread around here. What?

Speaker 4:

What are you doing here? I'm talking about my friend and the okra. Alright, come here and enjoy the joy of the click hit girl Alright.

Speaker 1:

Public service announcement. B Carrington feels like I can't even say this shit. Like Chicago is lacking on soul food.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

So she needs suggestions. Y'all hit up. Hit us up on social media, it's just by our cast. Tell them to find you on TikTok so they can tell you.

Speaker 2:

You can find me at B Carrington and it's the B Carrington but it says the shit's podcast, so you can find me at the shit's podcast. You can type in B Carrington either way. But yeah, I need some soul food spots, cause it's like the soul food we buy.

Speaker 6:

I'm saying no.

Speaker 2:

Oh, hell, no, Really Hell no.

Speaker 3:

See, you gotta remember she got the soul food you better be better off going to McArthur's.

Speaker 5:

You better go to McArthur's. You better go to McArthur's. Send me to somebody at Granny House.

Speaker 2:

That's what I need to do, though, to somebody at Granny House and do you spot right there on 79th, right here by by 4 and Mills.

Speaker 1:

No, absolutely not.

Speaker 4:

Oh that new spot. I know you talking Morrison's, morrison's.

Speaker 1:

No, y'all not about to do that.

Speaker 2:

Y'all not about to do that. Y'all got. The other food y'all have is great. It's just that y'all soul food is not. It's just not it.

Speaker 6:

And I get it.

Speaker 4:

I get it Bow, bow.

Speaker 2:

Bow, bow. How about Y'all got everything else, but it's just like that.

Speaker 1:

Can.

Speaker 2:

I get a pork chop sandwich.

Speaker 1:

Damn, you gotta get a poo right there. Can I get?

Speaker 2:

a pork chop sandwich.

Speaker 1:

You think she got a good point Can I get? A fry. No, I'm saying she got a good point, because I want a pork chop sandwich.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, can I get a pork chop sandwich? Y'all come and start with sale. Pork chop sandwiches no.

Speaker 1:

Who come and start selling pork?

Speaker 2:

chop sandwiches yeah, with gravy on it too, yes. The orange man yes, and an orange who? Orange man, yeah. Oh because you seen the scene, baby. Yes, they sell pork chop sandwiches. You can get some chicken at the gas station.

Speaker 5:

Chicken at the gas station Chicken at the gas station. Chicken at the gas station. You should tell me the truth I don't even do chicken no more but you ain't lying though.

Speaker 4:

You'll go back to the bird.

Speaker 5:

No, I ain't going back to the bird. I know you're not on, I don't even know me. I ain't fish, that's it Okay.

Speaker 2:

I go to the barbecue place. Dang, I know barbecue below on the sandwiches here.

Speaker 1:

Oh hell no. They're not selling it at home Keep out of that.

Speaker 4:

That ain't some weird saying yeah.

Speaker 2:

When I asked for hot wings, y'all put my, y'all put my sheet in flower Baby. I didn't say I wanted fried chicken.

Speaker 6:

I said I wanted some hot wings.

Speaker 2:

I was like I want to get fried in the grease. I'm talking up baby At this point. We got to take your food. Some naked buffalo wings At this point we got to take your food, I'm a man and the next person to refer to me the buffalo wild wings, to get some damn hot wings. I'm going to be like hey. I ain't no cop, no more block.

Speaker 3:

I can go out. Please sit up on the tiktok and have some food, just please.

Speaker 4:

Please, please, be Carrington, the shit's podcast.

Speaker 1:

And send us some good house music to listen to.

Speaker 6:

Play.

Speaker 4:

Yes.

Speaker 6:

All right.

Speaker 1:

Hold on, all right, y'all. This is the game portion of the show, and the game this week is called what you Texting For, and the participant in this game is the Chicago Cultural Arts Organization Board. It's the new show. It's y'all.

Speaker 4:

It's y'all.

Speaker 1:

So take a look at this hey y'all listen, hey man. It's real easy to do.

Speaker 6:

No you don't.

Speaker 3:

Wait a minute, I got you, so check it, it's real easy.

Speaker 1:

Y'all check it out. So one thing I'm doing is getting y'all a scenario right, Okay, and you got to say how you will respond to that, how you will send this text message in four words. You can only, you can only use four words.

Speaker 4:

We all have to respond no, no, no.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to get all y'all one. Oh yeah, I'm going to get all y'all one, right, and you only can respond and you text, and you literally text it in four words, all right, so I'm going to give you the situation To a fishery. You're the first one, right? All right, you see your boy's girlfriend or wife out with another motherfucker. How you going to send them the text? You can only send them four words.

Speaker 3:

I'm minding my business. I ain't got nothing to do with that.

Speaker 1:

Okay, okay, that ain't going to help him though.

Speaker 3:

All right, I ain't got nothing to do with that, because I can be completely wrong.

Speaker 6:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I can be completely right, but I can be completely wrong, but at the end of the day that ain't my business.

Speaker 1:

I'm minding my business. Okay, cool. Okay, luke, it's on you.

Speaker 5:

Hold on. Well, you texting him, man. What the hell you talking about?

Speaker 1:

Now it's your business.

Speaker 3:

I'm not. That's what I'm saying. I'm not sending no text. I'm not no, what's up?

Speaker 4:

I'm minding my business, that's my text.

Speaker 3:

I'm texting myself, I'm minding my business.

Speaker 1:

What's up, bro, all right. You slid out of that one.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

You need a ride to the airport. Oh here From your ex.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, yeah, of course, sheesh, see I don't want to be cliche man, I'm not going to send no text to her because I got a wife.

Speaker 1:

Okay, okay, so all right, let me send a text to you. A better one. You just got jumped and you sending it to your boys. Group text to the guys Four words.

Speaker 5:

Four words. I'll ask more four words. I just got fucked up.

Speaker 1:

I just got fucked up, I just got walked, I just got walked.

Speaker 5:

I just got walked.

Speaker 1:

What are you waiting for? That's all All right.

Speaker 6:

It's on you.

Speaker 1:

So here's the scenario.

Speaker 4:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

You breaking up with somebody.

Speaker 6:

Like that one.

Speaker 3:

Four words bro.

Speaker 5:

That's beautiful.

Speaker 1:

That's what. That's the way, that's your scenario.

Speaker 4:

That's my scenario Breaking up.

Speaker 5:

Only four words, though.

Speaker 4:

Fuck you, paint me, Fuck my mother fucking time.

Speaker 1:

My heart aches, my worries oh hey, y'all will only hear that game on the shit's podcast which is nominated for podcast of the year at the 312 musical awards. And we're going to give this past to shout out to anybody involved in awards and we're going to come back and interview up with Chicago cultural arts organization for the 312 musical awards. And remember y'all, make sure you all get your tickets, get your suits, get your pelis, towel, coats, what else? Get your shit. It's just podcast.

Speaker 6:

What up, ladies and gentlemen? It's the American Dream, the American Nightmare of the Heartbreak at Young Barker. And when I come to Chicago I check in, I get on the radio with the shit's podcast. One more time man Give a big shout out to the shit's podcast Young Barker Productions. Man, hollis, we out here.

Speaker 1:

All right, y'all, we are back with the shit's podcast man.

Speaker 6:

And, like I said, it has been a wonderful night.

Speaker 1:

I got to throw this out there Y'all. Make sure you all get your tickets for the 312 musical awards. It's on Sunday, March 10. Doors open at one time. Four Doors open at six. Doors open up at four. Awards start at six.

Speaker 4:

On time, on time, on time.

Speaker 1:

So listen, I just thought about something. It's on a Sunday, so really y'all can wear the same suit. Y'all Wear the same suit.

Speaker 7:

Y'all wear the same suit Y'all wear the shirt.

Speaker 3:

They just come right over. Come on, wear the same suit Straight up.

Speaker 1:

If you wore the Pelley de Church, you still wear it over to the award show too. There you go people, there it is, press your Pelley. Y'all want to hit them. Let them know what to find out there and any information.

Speaker 3:

Man, just go to 312musicalwardcom for all your information, get your tickets. Get your tickets, you can go to your soul at the door and we have about 75% sold out. So go get them right now, or watch it on Instagram.

Speaker 4:

It's your girl, Erin Joy. You can follow me on Instagram. Official underscore Erin Joy E-R-I-N-J-O-I. If you are nominated and have not RSVP for the party, I don't know what to tell you. Don't inbox me again after another show I love you Jeeson my heart and make sure you follow the 312musicalwardscom. 312musicalwardscom. Get your tickets and make sure you follow us for all the upcoming events.

Speaker 5:

Get right into it. What is it so? Instagram is a cover culture arts organization. We out Get your tickets. Be what you're here with.

Speaker 2:

Oh, y'all know where to find me at Tiktok. Yeah, tiktok, it's the shit's podcast. You know slash slash. Be Kerrie saying. I mean you can also find me on Facebook. A lot of people don't know my real name, but it is Brandon, like a guy. Yeah, it's Brandon Gary, so you can find me on Facebook as well.

Speaker 3:

You should have said like Brandon, like Brandon, not Brandon.

Speaker 2:

It's like it's spelled B-R-A-N-D-O-N. I feel you.

Speaker 4:

Make a different one Everybody just quiet.

Speaker 3:

Everybody, everybody, don't catch things to say.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you know. My parents looked at me and said Brandon, cool.

Speaker 5:

That's what they said. But I swear you, the first female. I know that name.

Speaker 1:

And it works for you. That shit works for you.

Speaker 3:

That's what I definitely ain't gonna forget.

Speaker 1:

It's like you don't know how to forget your name, life, yeah, it's like we can't forget the shit that you said about house music or the shit you said about social Damn that ain't so cool. I ain't gonna know where, sorry. You know what I'm saying, but you know what I'm saying, I appreciate what you bring you got your way of thinking.

Speaker 2:

Don't have your offslide on me, you can listen to that and go along with that.

Speaker 4:

Everybody say, let's go on, you know what you talking about. On that, you can find me at the shit's podcast Instagram shit TikTok.

Speaker 1:

You can also find me at my songs to rock. That's S-T-A-R-A-W. Like I say, people murdered my last name. I don't even say it. I don't even say it, but it's my songs to rock. Facebook also find us on Spotify. I don't podcast Anywhere you podcast. You can find the shit's podcast. Find us on YouTube. The shit's podcast is the channel. And yeah, we are out of here. How's it y'all Next week? Good, y'all, some soul food. And listen to some nice music. Don't get me, so lose y'all. We out y'all. Thanks y'all.