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B
Man, what's happening, man? It's been forever, dude.
A
I'm so happy you're here, man.
B
I've been trying to get on here for a long time, but we always missing each other. You gotta, you gotta. You got to take this on the road when we on tour, like just do it on the bus.
A
I'm ready. I'm ready to do the tour, man. We're going to, we're talking about it. But every time I try to go do a frickin on the road tour, somebody's like, no, you got to do this before. And I'm like, yeah, but we're going to do it soon.
B
And one thing I notice about touring in studios is it never happens.
A
Yeah, like I always.
B
We bring all kind of shit on the bus. And we were like, oh man, we're going to record an album on the off days. And she, no days. You'd be like in some hotel swimming pool with a barbecue grill and like.
A
You just, you want to enjoy your days off. That's what we did when I was on tour. Just this last tour, we brought all the podcast stuff and I was like, I'm going to interview everybody on the tour. Never happen. Because I was just like, I didn't want to do hair and makeup. I didn't want to fudgeing. Like, I was just like, no, please. So I trust me, I totally feel.
B
That it don't happen.
A
I tell everybody that I meet about you, they're just like, he's such a g. He's so gangster. And I'm like, yes, he's all of that. I said, but I always say, Paul is the sweetest human you will ever meet. Like, it is so crazy to me in which we're going to get into all the 36 mafia sounds and stuff like that that you guys do such dark music. But you are such a light of a human.
B
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, I've come to find that out with a lot of people. I'm sure you have, too, that you meet, you know, your journey. Like, some people, you'll be like, I don't know if he's approachable, because they used to say the same thing about me today. Meet me.
A
Yeah.
B
And I've seen some guys, I'm like, I don't know about this. And then you come to find out they. They super, super nice.
A
Yeah. And that's how it was with you. Because I remember when you guys, we were all touring together during that time. I think it was, what, two years ago? And I was like, oh, my God, I'm so nervous. I'm so nervous because I have got to meet you, but I never got to hang out with you. And then we got to film those TikToks and stuff. And I was like, dude, Paul is so funny and so sweet. Yeah, no, it was so fun.
B
So I now, I did meet one celebrity once.
A
Who was it?
B
And he was kind of like. He was in the movies, and I was like. I said, can I take a picture with you, man? He's like, you don't take a picture of me, man. I said, yeah. I just asked that he, like, all right, man, come on and take the picture. And I'm a huge fan of this dude, so no disrespect to him, but, you know, I. I don't. You know, I don't think that he did not want to take the picture. I think he was kind of surprised that I wanted to take a picture with him.
A
Who was it? We're going to bleep the name.
B
It was Alpha Karate Kid. The bad guy. What? But this was before they brought the new season back. This was like, you know, when he hadn't did nothing in a while. So this was like. This is in 2010. 2000. Yeah, 2010.
A
Even more reason for him to be nice.
B
He was nice. I think he just. I think he. I think he probably thought that I was, like, joking with him or something. Maybe some people probably. Like, you know. You know how you never know with people these days with the pranks and all this stuff? He's like, you don't take a picture of me, man. I'm like, yeah, I actually do.
A
Like, I wouldn't have asked.
B
Like, I wouldn't have asked. Like, I'm a huge fan. Like, dude, don't make me crane kick you around this moment. But, yeah, so, yeah, he was. He. I think he kind of tripped off at. Tripped out at first, but we took the picture. It was cool. And then I had my necklace on, my Oscar necklace on. I was like, yeah, by the way, man, three six Mafia. We don't. We won an Oscar back. And he's like, really? Oh, man. He's like, man. And that's when the conversation got a little cool.
A
So he probably didn't know who you were at first.
B
No, he didn't know who I was.
A
Okay. Gotcha.
B
Yeah, for sure he didn't know who I was. Yeah.
A
Yeah.
B
But sometimes I don't know who I am. I know for a. For a fact he didn't know.
A
Do you ever get. Do you ever get imposter syndrome? Like, after you've. After everything you've accomplished in this life, all the lore that you have behind you, all the freaking awards and just all the accolades that you have behind you, do you ever just get imposter syndrome?
B
What is that?
A
So what is, like a definition of imposter syndrome? It's like, you feel like, I kind of know what. You feel like you don't belong here or like you're not supposed to be here, like you're not deserving all the time.
B
All the time. I just had this a couple of days ago. Yeah, so, like, I just had this a couple of days ago where I was like, you know, so like, I own a lot of properties. There was like, at one point in my career, I got a little nervous. Where. Where. Where I had this was probably like in 2013, 14 or somewhere, you know, like, three, six. Might have been gone for a while. Our last album was in 2009. We never made album after that, but, you know, but I was still making a lot of money. But I. I invested so much cash money into real estate that I got a little nervous. Yeah, I got a little nervous, but it worked. It worked like a motherfucker. I. I bought a house in Vegas for $550,000 in the late 2000s. It's so weird because we still in the 2000s, but then it's kind of like broke down. So around 2010ish. I bought a house for Vegas in. In Vegas for $550,000. Now their house is worth $3 million.
A
Crazy, right?
B
Yeah.
A
I tell them all the time because I'm a Vegas girl, which I heard you talking about how you lived in Vegas. I don't know how we never. We were all in the same circles. I heard you say that you loved Robin Leach, Lifestyles of Richard, Champagne Wishes and Caviar dreams, maybe. Are you kidding me? When I heard that, I was like, yes. Because nobody knows that, you know, unless you were in Vegas and experienced it and actually got to watch it on TV growing up. Like, not a lot of people know about that. So I don't know how we didn't run into each other in Vegas because we were always around the same circles.
B
Yeah. I don't know how either is crazy.
A
And Robin Leach, if you ever partied with him, he was twice, bro. He partied.
B
Yeah, he parted. And I told him the same story every time I saw him about how I was 12 years old and my whole life is because of him.
A
Yeah.
B
So back to the imposter syndrome or whatever you call.
A
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
B
I spent all this money into real estate. I got a little nervous, you know, this and that. And it got to the point where. Where I started feeling that, like, all of this, these investment properties that I bought, that if I went and bought myself a big house and I was living in a big house in Vegas, I still own this house. If I was. If I went to buy another big house for myself somewhere outside of Vegas, because I was kind of getting sick of being there all the time, I was thinking that I really. I was like, do I really deserve this? I'm like, yeah, yeah, work hard. I do. But then I of don't. But then I was like, you know, you just start thinking about, like. Like. Like, you know, yeah. Do you Do. Do you really deserve it?
A
Yeah, no, I get. I do it all the time. Like, my husband tells me all the time, Jay, because he. He deals with it better than I do. Like, I swear, Jay's built for freaking to be a politician. He remembers everybody's.
B
He will be.
A
Yeah, he remembers, please don't speak that in our life. But he literally can, like, shake hands and kiss babies all day long. And I just feel like. I don't know. Sometimes I feel like I don't belong there, you know? And he's like, baby, you have to realize, like, you've worked this hard and you have worked so hard and, like, created such a fricking legacy that if anybody deserves to buy as many houses as they want, it's you. You can never go wrong with land or real estate, dude.
B
Yeah. Yeah, you can. Yeah, you can. This is the thing. Like, I just wish more. More young celebrities, rappers, act, actors, you know, podcasts, whatever you're doing, whatever you're doing in life, just, like, put more money into real estate. I preach it enough every interview. I'VE ever did from this person to that person. I always said like this, the jury, this and that. Like I got a couple of pieces of jury, you know, I got. The jury is just for show with me. It's just for show. When I put this on for this podcast, I had to dig and find. We came over here with this in a Ziploc bag, right? I don't even have the cool stuff to put it in. Like the little watch things on the countertop that turn. The Rolex is the key, man. My Rolex is in a, a crown roll bag. Like I have traveled.
A
I have traveled. Every time we go on tour, my jewelry's in a, in a Ziploc bag or a crown royal bag. We had a crown royal bag too.
B
Yeah.
A
Swear to God.
B
Crown robot. I did a YouTube maybe three months ago about a crown royal bag and it, it, it basically went viral. People were like, holy. Have you ever seen the orange one and the special edition? I like, man, all I know is the purple one.
A
Yeah, me too.
B
Everybody start talking about all these limited edition ones. I never even knew.
A
But yeah, never.
B
I, I, I got a, I got a little jury just for, just for show, you know. I was, I was in tour in Houston. You from Houston, right? Yes, yes, touring in Houston. Went by TV Johnny, you know, and I was like, you know, the tour been good. I've been touring for three months. I guess I gave myself a little necklace and about this little, you know, Cuban link or whatever. But I don't wear this shit around this and that. I put all of my money into to, you know, real estate and investment. On the inside, everybody, I tell you I'm a gangster rapper on the outside. But on the inside, I think I'm like a 65 year old white woman. I watch HGTV in the food Network all the time. When I'm in my studio, my whole YouTube is just home decorations. Three hours of the best looking mansions and this and that. I'm just taking pictures. Like that's why when I walked in here, I'm like, hey man, what's the name of this wallpaper? I want to get some of this, man. I like those ficus trees you got outside. I'm that dude.
A
I love that. But okay, so what was your first piece of property that you ever bought?
B
It was in an area outside of Memphis called Cordova, Tennessee. And you know, now it's, you know, I heard it's all crazy as hell now. But yeah, back then we talking about 1997, man. Juicy bought two houses right next door to each other. Oh, and it was. No, it was nobody out there. It was nobody out there. That was. That was the first one.
A
That's amazing, though. And did you end up flipping it and just selling it? Yeah, I love that.
B
But I don't flip houses no more. No, I keep them and I rent them.
A
Oh, that's good, though. Yeah.
B
Because when you flip them, you got a passive income, capital gain and all that. If it's less than two years or whatever, this and that.
A
But.
B
And as you know, that's. That's money out of your pocket right there. So I was watching this infomercial one night, and this infomercial said, when you. When you. When you pass away, you can't always leave your talents to your kids. Because, you know, I don't want my kids to be rappers any way. But you can't always leave your talents to your kids, but you can't leave property to your kids. When I saw him say that, that stuck in me. I was like, man, that's the truth. Like, it's real. Yeah, no, that is real. And now I. I read. I don't know if you've seen this. I read that they trying to. They trying to turn America kind of like what it is in China, where they call it Forever Rentals.
A
No, educate me, please.
B
Forever Rentals. So, like, some. Some. Some Wall street guys just went about like 1500 homes in. In Vegas that they turned into just rentals. You can't buy them. You can only rent them.
A
Forever.
B
Forever? Yeah.
A
How? Like, so they just don't sell them?
B
Like, they won't sell them.
A
Okay, gotcha.
B
So if you want to live in them, you got to rent it for the rest of your life. You'll never have equity in. You know, it's like that, that. That dude, some dudes said this at one point. He said, in the future, you will own nothing and be happy, you know? And that's. That's what's really going on.
A
Wow.
B
This was really going on. Like, I look at some condo buildings, and some of these condo buildings you'll go to. You're like, oh, man, it's a nice condo. Like, how much of these? And they'll be like, they're not for sale. They own it for rent. And I'm like, really? I'm like, this don't look like an apartment. This look like a condo. They're like, well, it started out to be a condo, but then the owners changed, the investors changed their mind and said they wanted to be apartments.
A
So the Investors are from other countries, though. Or is it American investors also?
B
Who knows?
A
Oh, okay. Gotcha.
B
Yeah, I don't know. I'm just. I'm just saying, it's a lot of these are popping up. Like, they got a real popular building in basically Beverly Hills in la. I'm sure you've passed it a million times. It's on Santa Monica Boulevard. As soon as you turn it. As soon as Santa Monica split with big Santa Monica and little Santa Monica going into Beverly Hills. It's a big building right there called the 10,000 building. I've seen tons of celebrities in this building. And a one bedroom started. $10,000 a month all the way up to the top one with his own pool. That's $65,000 a month rent. Wow. You can't buy these.
A
Wow. I would. I could never. I would feel sick to my stomach if I was just paying somebody else's rent.
B
Yeah, it's cool for six months if you relocate and like, I want to live in Beverly Hills and I want to see how it is. I want to go to the mall and this and that. $10,000 a month. But you can afford that if you, if you moving over there. I hope you can. Yeah, you hustling backwards if you're not. So $10,000 a month to live in that area and get a feel of it before you go spend $5 million or something. That makes sense. Yeah, that makes sense. But you know, like doing that forever. No, only way that makes sense is if you got the rest of that money in the best investments in the world.
A
Yeah, but I mean, even that seems just so frivolous, though, to like, want to just. I mean, if you're blowing 65 grand a month on rent, you obviously have it.
B
Not that don't make sense in no.
A
Way, but I mean, but I mean, if you can afford it, then obviously you can. You can make it work somehow. But not forever.
B
No.
A
Like, there's no way.
B
Yeah, it's crazy.
A
No, that would. That would. I couldn't do that. So I wanted to kind of bring my listeners on a journey with you because you have so much lore to you, and I wanted to kind of, you know, take it back to your childhood in Memphis growing up, you know, tell me what that was like. I know you've told this story a million times, but I know there's a bunch of listeners that probably are just getting to know you from my podcast. I really just want to paint that picture of where you came from to where you are now growing up. In Memphis. Take me on that ride. Because it was in the 80s and 90s, right?
B
Yeah, yeah. Grew up in Memphis. Yeah. 80s and 90s and the 80s and 90s were elite. Yeah, it was the best.
A
I was born in 80, so, I mean, there's nothing that compares from 80 to the 2000s, dude.
B
Yeah, it was the best, man. You know, like, it's the best time. Like the. I was just talking about this to my friend a couple of days ago. Like, I like watching these. Watching these movies or looking at these pictures of all of the, you know, not to. And some people look at this and be like, oh, why is he glamorizing, you know, drug dealers and this and that. But it's not about.
A
That's your. That's how you grow.
B
It's not about the drug dealers. It's just about the whole swag of that.
A
Yes.
B
In the 80s, like when you watch the Paid in Full movie.
A
Yeah.
B
You see the troop jackets and the eight ball jack. You remember the eight ball jacket, dude? All jackets.
A
Yes.
B
The, you know, the Kango.
A
The ambiance of. Of that generation was just insane.
B
Yeah. And. And the old 500 Mercedes with the skirts on it.
A
Yes, yes.
B
AMG wheels. I mean, a lot of this stuff is still around and happening today. They just don't know.
A
It's modernized.
B
Modernized. So, like, you know, like these Louis Vuitton and Gucci bag. It was the same designs back then.
A
Yeah.
B
So, you know, like, I grew up in that. My brother was a big drug dealer. He went to federal prison.
A
How many brothers and sisters do you have? Because I couldn't find a. An answer on that when I googled that.
B
Yeah, I'm still looking for that answer myself, actually.
A
Okay, gotcha. I love it, though.
B
Yeah, a lot. I got 6ish. 6ish brothers because my, my mom and my dad, they had, you know, kids, you know, separately. But I got around six, six, seven brothers and, you know, four sisters. Ish.
A
Wow.
B
Ish.
A
But you're going to have a bunch of people reaching out to you after this interview. Hey, I'm your brother. I'm your sister.
B
Yeah. Yeah. Ones that I notice. No, you got this many brothers, so. You know, I grew up in that world. I grew up in that world. My brother was, you know, in that world and, you know, all his friends. So I was a kid, you know, looking at all that. I'm looking at new Mercedes pull up, new Corvettes pull up to the house and this and that. I'm just like, man. And then I went to School down the street from this house of these big drug dealers in Memphis, like the most popular drug dealers in Memphis history. Wow. The house on, on the exact street that my junior high school was at.
A
So you grew up around hustling?
B
Yeah, like you just saw it from every day. Every day I saw just a driveway full of Corvettes and Mercedes and this and that, you know, not at my parents house, but like my brother's house and the houses in the neighborhood. All these guys was in my neighborhood.
A
What's, what's one of the wildest things you saw growing up in Memphis during that time.
B
As a child that I.
A
Saw or heard about that like left an imprint on you. Something that left an imprint on you.
B
Oh, this guy, this guy got killed for 34 in a, in a, in a, in a dice game up street from my auntie house. That right there, that, that right there let me know that people would do anything for anything.
A
Wow. What a life lesson to take with you a young. As a young child.
B
Yeah, I didn't physically see it. I was there. It happened up the street. You know, my family members started running this and that and people was running all that. And I was like, what happened? They were like, you know, got this guy. But that happened a lot in the 80s, you know, people getting killed over dice games. Man, that's a lot of people dead or a dice game.
A
Yeah, no.
B
All the boys, you walk around, you could walk around these two little cubes in your pocket, that would be your meal for the day if you knew how to play.
A
Yeah, absolutely. I grew up in Vegas, so everybody had dice in their hands.
B
All the boys had dice. Man, if you ain't got nothing, yeah, you could make you a few dollars off dice.
A
Yeah.
B
So that dude that killed that dude over 34, he probably look. And man, back then a, A combo meal was like $4.
A
Yeah.
B
So he had, man, he had about a week's worth of food. He lost right there.
A
Oh, man.
B
Sad.
A
That is sad. I hate.
B
Yeah, that was. That right there said it for. That set the tone for me.
A
How close were you with your brothers and sisters growing up?
B
Super close.
A
All of them or.
B
Yeah, all of us lived in. I was, I was the youngest. When I, when I was born, it was only two brothers still living in the house, but my sister lived next door and all of us kind of lived in the same neighborhood.
A
So you're the baby.
B
Yeah.
A
I never knew that about you.
B
Yeah, I'm the baby.
A
I love that.
B
The youngest in charge.
A
Yes.
B
Special Ed.
A
What was your Relationship with your mom? Because I know you've touched base on that a couple times.
B
Yeah, it was real good. It was real good. You know, I live with my mom almost. You know, I was. I lived with my mom all the way up to the point we recorded our old three 6 Mafia albums in my mom's house.
A
Wow.
B
Yeah. Not all of them, but like. Yeah, all of the underground. All of the underground stuff was recorded in my mom's house. So everybody met my mom, even some guys who I'm not cool with, who was never even a part of our group.
A
Right.
B
Been in my house at least probably one time recording. And met my mom. Everybody met my mom. My mom was super cool. Me and my mom had a super close relationship and my dad had. When my dad passed away, I bought my mom a house.
A
How old were you when your father passed?
B
Probably like 30 something.
A
Oh, okay. So it was when you were older.
B
Yeah.
A
It wasn't when you were a child. Okay.
B
Yeah. Both of them passing. I was in my 30s now. My dad in my 20s, my mom in my 30s. Right, yeah.
A
Was mom always supportive of your choice in doing music?
B
Oh, yeah, yeah. She loved it. Used to take me to the organ lessons. I played. I took organ lessons.
A
Aw, I love that. Can you still play?
B
Yeah, of course. I still play on all. All of my music.
A
Where did your inspiration and your drive to want to do music come from?
B
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B
I so we was the only. My dad owned a company so we, even though we lived in a bad neighborhood, we was one of the people who had the better house in a bad neighborhood.
A
Right.
B
So like we was the ones when you riding through the bad neighborhood and you see, you see where they built on the back of the house? That happened all the time in the hood.
A
Yeah.
B
Like instead of buying a big house, they just built on the back of the house.
A
Yes.
B
It didn't even match. It would be a different color, different material. Front of house would be brick, the back of it would be wood, whatever.
A
Yeah.
B
I lived in one of those houses and my daddy built on like an extra few bedrooms and a whole nother den in the back for my brothers. So we had cable when cable first came out. You know we had cable. So I would be sitting on the, on the, on the floor like this close to the tv watching MTV when it first came out. I remember when MTV first came.
A
I wish they would bring MTV back. It just the nostalgia alone.
B
Yeah.
A
Like.
B
Yeah, but if they bring it back, they should just play old, not no new.
A
Yeah. I feel like there's no. We'll get to that later. But yeah, for sure. The music nowadays is just, it's not like it used to be.
B
Yeah, it's some good music out but you know, it's just, it's different. Yeah.
A
We're getting never, never going to compare.
B
But I was planted in front of the tv, watching mtv, you know, watching all these guys. I grew up on rock music, and I think that's what contribute to making the three six mafia sound. And. Excuse me, the rowdiness and the wildness, like tear the club up, hit a motherfucker and stuff like that is. It came from me growing up on rock music.
A
What was like your favorite rock band growing up? What were some.
B
Van Halen.
A
Yes. That's the first CD I ever stole. Was available and got caught. Was stealing a Van Halen cd.
B
Yeah, I just bought a Eddie van, Had EVH guitar. Oh, I got at the house. Now I gotta hang up. I got a huge guitar collection. But those, you know. Jump was one of my favorite songs. Still is one of my favorite songs of all time.
A
The guitars and that is insane.
B
Yeah, in a sense.
A
And the synthesizers.
B
Yeah, the synthesizer. Because a lot of these rock groups back in the day, they didn't have keyboard players. They just relied on guitars and drums. But I liked when they added, you know, some keys in there.
A
Yeah.
B
Because I'm a keyboard player.
A
Yeah.
B
So that was. That was dope on the end.
A
So just watching mtv, your mom, you know.
B
Oh, and I had. I'm sorry. I mean, cut, y'. All.
A
Yeah.
B
My God. My uncles had a gospel group.
A
Yes. I was just about to get to that. Did you ever get to sing with them? And what were they called?
B
They were called the Bogart Brothers.
A
The Bogard Brothers.
B
I never. No, I never even seen him perform. I was too young.
A
Oh, okay.
B
But. But my uncle taught me about publishing.
A
And at a young age.
B
Yeah.
A
That's amazing.
B
Yeah, he taught me about publishing. That's. That's. That was. Saved my life.
A
I feel like that's, like knowledge that you're going to take with you forever. I always say, like, in high school, they should treat. They should teach, like, a credit in business class because literally you'll. And, like, learn how to balance your checkbooks and stuff like that. Because little gems like that of what he taught you, you. You've carried through life.
B
Yeah, but it don't work like that because they don't want you to. They don't want you to win. Win. They.
A
Right.
B
They make more money off you losing, right?
A
Well, yeah, just like the health system, they keep you sick, you know, so. Yeah, totally.
B
Yeah. They make more money off of that, so.
A
So you never got to see the Bogard Brothers perform?
B
Nah.
A
Okay, but did you grow up listening to their music?
B
Yes. Hell, yeah. They was jamming.
A
Yeah. Love that. So you decided to start DJing when you were in 10th grade?
B
Yeah, 10th grade. So basically at 10th grade, I brought out our first. Our first EP, Me and Lord of Us. It was called the Serial Killers.
A
Yes.
B
And then I started DJing as a way just to promote our music.
A
Right.
B
So I would make mixtapes where I would be playing like, the hottest artists like nwa, El Cool j, Public Enemy, whatever, whatever. And then I would ease in one of our songs.
A
Yes.
B
And then I would come to school the next day and they'd be like, hey, man, what was that fourth song on there? I'm like, I gotta think. I don't know. That was me.
A
You like it, huh?
B
You like it?
A
Huh? Huh? It works.
B
It works. We got something. Yeah. So that was my way of promoting and it eventually turned into just our songs.
A
Yes. I love that. Can we dive into you and Lord Infamous a little bit? Because that's your half brother, correct?
B
Yeah. Yeah.
A
You guys were extremely close growing up.
B
Yeah, yeah, he.
A
And was it you or was it him that brought the horror core? Because who was the. Who was really?
B
Both of us.
A
Okay.
B
Because both of us love to watch horror movies.
A
What's your favorite one?
B
Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Original.
A
Okay, gotcha. Yeah, that's Mimi's over there.
B
Not to be bringing up Texas, because you hear. But no, even if he wasn't here, that's one of my favorite.
A
Listen, I didn't even think about it like that. I love it.
B
It's a great movie.
A
Yeah.
B
It was loosely based off a true story, which I like. True Crime.
A
Yeah.
B
I watch True Crime all day. Oh.
A
Literally, Jay and I fall asleep watching it. I'm obsessed with it. Yeah, you guys were the original people who. Who started that. Because I remember back in the day, whenever I first heard about you guys, it was like, you, brother Lynch Bone came along and started their, like, dark occultic stuff, too. And then maybe Spice One a little bit, you know, like. So, I mean, there wasn't too many people who were dabbling in that. Were you guys practicing behind the scenes or was it just something that you guys were into? Like, you know, the. The occultic themes and stuff like that?
B
Yeah, we was just into. We were just into horror movies. And, you know, growing up in Memphis, you know, you kind of live in a horror movie. Yeah, it rains a lot and it's just a dark city. And I think that's the reason why the music is so great.
A
Right.
B
Has always been great out of that city, you know, so we grew up, you know, watching horror movies. And then I had a guy a long time Ago, give me a serial killer's book. The old Time Life magazine. You remember them? Time Life, yes. And they would be running the commercials at night, like, oh, you can get this. World War II.
A
Yes.
B
They say you need to send you all these books in the mail. Where? Well, they had a collection of serial killers, serial killer books. And this. This guy I know, he. He came across one some kind of way. I was like, hey, man, ain't the collection, like, 12 books? Like, I ain't got 12. I got this one. You want it or not? I'm like, yeah, I want it. Get to it. And I. I had that one little serial killer book, and I studied it. I studied it. So. And, like, right now, I got a collection of all of the serial killers. Framed black and white photos, black frames, black and white photos of all of the serial killers in my house. And I started studying serial killers.
A
It's kind of like it just not. I don't want to say obsession, but a fixation, possibly.
B
Yeah. You know what I just got into? How. You know, obviously, they did terrible, terrible things.
A
Yeah.
B
But what I more got into was the organization of it. Right, the organization of it. You know, like, you had guys that, you know, like, I'm only gonna. You know, like the Zodiac Killer, like, yeah, only this person with this birthday, like, if I go up and this person got a different birthday, then I'll let this person live or whatever. This is all up, people. Don't get me wrong, but it was just. It was just something about the organization of it. They. They got in. They got into my head.
A
No, I. I understand it because I actually. I don't know if you saw, but I got in trouble for wanting to bring a murderer on the podcast, and that was a whole debacle that I had to learn from in this generation now. But, you know, back in the day, I. I loved to figure out what made them tick, you know, what makes you want to take somebody's life? How can you eat somebody? You know, like, if I had a chance to sit down with Jeffrey Dahmer, I would do it, you know, like, get inside his head and try to figure it out. I think it's just. It's so morbid and so taboo that people are drawn to it because we're just like, like, how did this happen? You know, like, yeah, do this.
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah.
B
What made you do this? And, like, you. What? More what I'm. What. What I'm more curious about is a lot of these dudes had full families at home.
A
Crazy, right?
B
And I'M like, where did your wife. What did you. Like, I'm not trying to.
A
How did your wife not know?
B
Yeah, like, I'm not trying to cheat on my girl or not, but what excuse was you using to be gone all night? Like, we kind of like. Yeah, imagine that. The Ted Bundy book of excuses for your wife.
A
Yes.
B
Yeah, like. Like, dude, what was you telling your wife when you was gone all night? You were sleeping with three dead bodies next to a lake. Like, when you came home. Like, I'm sure you smell like hell.
A
Yeah. Yeah. Like, and just energy. Like, how do you even. How do you go from murdering somebody in the most heinous way to going home and being a doting father and husband? Yeah, it's insane to me. Like, how do you make that switch?
B
Well, one thing about it is most serial killers, you know, not to get into racism or none, but most serial killers was white. Because black serial killers couldn't have did that. Because when you come home to a black woman, she'd be like, let me smell your dick.
A
Yeah, absolutely.
B
Ted Bundy ass would have been busted just off a dick smell. I would say. So many lives.
A
No, you're so real. You're so real. Who did that? So it Let me Smell youl dick. I forget. There was a comedian who did the Let me smell you dick, and I lost it.
B
Oh, my God. Yeah, I didn't see that. But that happens in real life with black women.
A
I'll have to send it to you. No, I believe it 100%. So taking it back to you and lord infamous, in 89, you guys dropped the serial killers together. He would rap and you would make the beats. Is that how it.
B
I wrapped on, like, one or two songs?
A
Did you not want to rap? Did you not want to rap?
B
No, I didn't. I still don't want to rap.
A
Really?
B
I hate rapping.
A
Stop it.
B
I can make beats all day. I can make a beat right here doing this interview. I love making beats. I could be, if it was up to me, you know, like, I would. I would sit up and make beats 24 hours a day if I could. I just have other businesses and stuff. But. Well, I hate writing raps. To sit down and write a rap, you got to think about, like, oh, what kind of shoes are these little wearing and what's the new sands? And, like, I don't know.
A
I would think that making a beat would be way more intricate than making a rap.
B
Well, it just depends on the person, right? You know, like, you got. You got some People that could make a rap so easy just because the, because the word play is just in them or whatever. And then you got some people that just music is in them. It's easier to make.
A
Yeah.
B
To make music. Because when it comes to music. Excuse me, you're okay. When it comes to music, what makes music more easier is because music just really. Nothing against a lyricist, but music just kind of comes from the heart and from the rhythm. And then you give it to the lyricist and you let him write about what he think the people want to hear.
A
Right.
B
Like a musician don't, don't really go in and make a beat because people want to hear this. And if they do, they probably making a mistake. You just go in, you just make what feels right. And then that's why a lot of musicians end up with a lot of beasts that never see the face of the earth because they'd be like, ah, this sounds good, but I think I'm the only person in the world who actually like this. You can't dance to this and you can't do this and do that, blah, blah, blah. But they just never know. Sometimes just a simple instrumental to be something for people to clean the house too, or do homework too or whatever. I think that's why the lo fi is so popular now, all that. But with, with songs, writing the lyrics and coming up with hooks and coming up with choruses, there's got to be something that's going to drive people in a way, you know, like you gotta drive them like, you know, like if you're a good lyricist, you can take just a simple drum beat with a kick snare and a hi hat and, and spit the right, the right vocals over the top of it and people gonna go crazy.
A
Right.
B
But if you walk in here with just a drum beat with, with nothing over the top of the people, they're gonna be like, okay, something. Is it gonna do something else or is this it?
A
So it's like the beat is a vibe and the lyrics are the energy.
B
The, the, the beat is the energy.
A
Okay.
B
And the lyrics are. The vibe is what keep them, keep their attention.
A
Gotcha.
B
And, and, and find the spot. Find the sweet spot.
A
Yeah.
B
Whether it's an emotional record or it's an energetic record.
A
Right.
B
This and that. It's only so much music. Music can give you feeling, obviously.
A
Yeah.
B
But then, you know, after a while, you kind of, kind of want to know what's, what else is going on.
A
Yeah, absolutely.
B
Sometimes, sometimes not.
A
When you explain it that way, it makes perfect sense. Bringing it back to you. And Lord Infamous, can you give me a memory with him that you've never told anyone but you still think about?
B
I don't have to think. Oh.
A
We can always circle back.
B
I probably wait to tell that one.
A
Okay.
B
I say them for the. For the Paul movie.
A
I got you. I got you. So around this time when you're. You're dropping these mixtapes and you and Lord Infamous are doing these songs together, when does Juicy J come on the scene? When do you meet juicy j?
B
About two years later. Like 92. Maybe late 91. I just said 92 to be on the safe side. Another guy who I was producing was friends with Juicy. Okay. And he told me about Juicy and he was like, hey, it's a dude. I had heard of Juicy through his mixtapes, but I didn't know him personally. And I would just see his tapes when I would go drop off my tapes at the stereo stores. And he was like this dude named name Juicy J. Want you to help him make some. Want to make some beasts with you. Because Juicy didn't really play the keyboard. I played the keyboard.
A
Right?
B
So he was like, he wants you to, you know, help him make some beats, this and that. So, you know, he started coming over my house and I would help him make some beats. And then we started finding that we had a groove that we vibed together really good on, on making beats, you know, and then it just went from there.
A
So you guys pretty much just had a love of music together and then that developed the friendship between you guys. How was you guys friendship when you guys were younger? Was it always like best friends or did you guys actually like, you know, kind of like butt heads? Because it was creative direction now.
B
We never butt heads.
A
Oh, good.
B
We never butt heads. You know, like he. I would always listen to what he had to say, and he would always listen to what. What I had to say. And we just, like, we just kind of went with the flow because we saw that it, that it, that it worked, right? You know, so if I be like, no, I don't think we should do it like this. We should do it like that. And he was like, let's go. And then, you know, vice versa, and we just. And it just like that. Because if you start putting, you know, too much disagreeing with it, then it's just. It was. It's probably not meant to be anyway, right? You know, so we never. We never had that. We never had that issue.
A
I love that it was always fluid for you guys.
B
Yeah.
A
You guys have, you know, publicly said that you guys were speaking about drugs before, like anybody else was speaking about drugs in the industry. You guys were very vocal about it. When did your drug use start?
B
Oh, God. Oh, what, like weed or the hard stuff?
A
I mean, just your journey.
B
We started in. We started in seventh grade.
A
Wow.
B
I sold weed in the seventh grade because joints.
A
You were just a product of your environment about what you saw growing up.
B
Yeah, because back in the day, we was like. It was like scraps.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, so like, my. My brothers and everybody that was in the. That was in the game, like keys and all that was. Was where the money at. Like, they would throw away. We, like, we were just like. Like here. We would just be laying around the house and like, oh, damn, we go a pound of weed.
A
Yeah.
B
They don't even see this. Nobody cared about weed back then, right? Like that.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, like, now people are making millions of dollars off weed, but back in those days, like. Like, we get out here, don't nobody want to weed. Yeah. Because the. The. The. The. The rich man's drug was cocaine.
A
Yes.
B
Yeah. I want nobody trying to go to sleep.
A
Right.
B
He was trying to stay up and. And party.
A
The 80s for sure. And like.
B
Like, like. Come on, man. You mean to tell me you want me to pay you to go to sleep? I don't need to pay to go to sleep. I can do that on my own.
A
Yeah. No, I agree. So you started smoking weed in seventh grade, and then when. When did it start progressing?
B
Start progressing? When our first album came out.
A
Okay.
B
The album right there. Mystic Styles on that football behind you.
A
Okay, so it started progressing after three six Mafia.
B
Yeah.
A
Was. Okay, so let's. Let's circle back then. So you meet just Juicy J. You guys are vibing Lord Infamous is in on this. You guys decide. What did gangsta boost up on the scene?
B
Oh, like, 93ish.
A
Okay, so she was, like, right behind. Right behind. Juicy.
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah. I. I rest in peace, boo. We. I got to meet her the one time that she came and did my podcast, and she almost beat me up.
B
Really?
A
Why? On the podcast, I was so nervous because I was still new to the podcast thing. That's why I'm glad you're here now because, you know, if I'd have interviewed you a couple years ago, I was just so nervous, and I just wanted to do perfect with her, and I forgot her first album name, and I had to look down at my notes, and she's. And she flipped out.
B
Oh, I can imagine. I can Imagine. I can imagine. I know it don't take much.
A
She flipped out. Country was there. Country got scared and thought he was going to have to break up a fight. Like it was crazy. But then by the end of the interview, she was my best friend.
B
Yeah. Yeah. She flipped like that. Yeah.
A
Yeah. No, it was crazy.
B
Yeah. She would flip like that.
A
Yeah. So how did Boo become a part of 36 6?
B
We went to school together.
A
Okay.
B
All of us went to school together except Juicy. Juicy was from the north side.
A
Okay.
B
All the rest of us was from the south side.
A
Okay.
B
Yeah. So we went. We went to school together.
A
Yay. I love that. So we got all these members now and then you guys decide to form Three Six Mafia?
B
Yeah.
A
How did you guys come up with the name Three Six Mafia? Because there's been so much speculation to you guys's name because it does have the 666 in it.
B
Yeah, it came from that.
A
Okay, tell me.
B
Basically, Lord Infamous has said Triple Six Mafia in a song that wasn't even our group name. He just said it. He just. Like a Triple Six Mafia and a silencer, you know, it said something like that. And I like that. And I was like, whoa, that's dope. And I just started sampling Triple Six Mafia Mafia and that became really popular with us. And that still wasn't our name. Right. I would just sample that. And then, you know, when it was time to form a group, I was like, hey, we should call ourselves Triple Six Mafia. And everybody liked it. And then next thing I know, white fans came like that. They flocked to us. Next thing I know, we got a call to do a show in Bartlett, Tennessee. I'm like, bartlett, Tennessee? I'm like, I don't even know black folks can go out there. And then next thing I know, we just started doing shows in number white clubs.
A
Really? After you named the group Three Six Mafia.
B
Triple Six.
A
Triple Six Mafia?
B
Yeah.
A
That's crazy. I know. Lord Infamous has gone on record to say that he dabbled in like, Satanism and all that stuff.
B
Yeah. He didn't do that. For real.
A
He didn't.
B
Hell no.
A
I just watched an interview with him last night where he was talking about how he went to hell and demons were torturing him. And, like, it was crazy. And I was.
B
Yeah, he was just happy.
A
Okay.
B
I grew up singing Amazing Grace in the church and I was playing the organ. Everybody know that church every Sunday in Mississippi. It don't get no more churchier than a Mississippi church.
A
Yeah, for sure. I love that you call him out like that, though. You're like, no, that's my brother. Nope. He grew up singing Amazing Race, so there was no real satanic reasoning behind the name. No, the lore has always just kind of like your reputation precedes you.
B
Yeah, yeah, it was just. It was just an image. It was just. Yeah, it was just something that was cool.
A
Right.
B
Like. Like I said, we did, you know, study, like, killers and stuff like that, but, yeah, we never studied Satan or any of that. I don't. I don't know nothing about all that.
A
Yeah. So from 90 to 94, you guys ended up dropping 16 mixtapes, you by yourself, and then also with three six or triple six. Correct.
B
Yeah.
A
Okay. So take me on this journey. What's like an insane. An insane story from the early days of three six Mafia that's never told. Like a fight, a robbery, a wild tour moment.
B
We got into a. We got into. Oh, my God. We had a. We had a crazy one at a skating ring in Arkansas. Man, that one right there was wild.
A
Really?
B
Yeah. It was a skating ring in Arkansas. West Memphis. West Memphis, Arkansas. They used to always have rap concerts there. And, man, we went there one day, and behind the scenes, we was. We had a little situation going on with some guys from Arkansas, but they end up getting, you know, squashed. We was all just young or whatever, but, you know, we end up getting super, super love from that part. It was just that little one part of Arkansas, but for whatever. Whatever reason, back in the day, Arkansas and Memphis, people back in the 90s, not no more. They always got into it. I don't know what it was, but. So we went to. We went to West Memphis, Arkansas, to do this concert, and next thing I know, it's like 900 people that. Next thing I know, the somebody in the crowd had threw a skate at us. It was a skating ring. Threw a skate. And I was like, okay, here we go. I knew this was gonna come, and I was like, all right, I'm. I'm not gonna pay attention to this one. Kept on rapping. Somebody threw another skate. I said, hey, y' all keep throwing these skates, man. We're gonna leave. So rapping three more songs came on. Somebody threw another skate. I was like, all right, I'm out of here. We started leaving about that. Next thing I know, these 900 people start surrounding us, following behind us. Crunchy turned around and pulled out a gun like this. Like, get back. This and that. So they sat back, we went up in the dressing room, we went up in the office. We went up in the office of the promoter. They stopped beating on, though. Boom, boom. Come out of that. Come out of that. Crunch, open the door, put a gun, and bang back like that. And we was looking at the cameras. They was surrounded outside the dough. I'm like, bro. I was like, you know, I told the dude. I was like, look, you can call the police, or we can shoot our way up out of this, whichever way you want to do it. Because we got. It's four of us, and all of us got now. It's now probably like eight of us. I said, it's eight of us, and everybody in here got a gun on.
A
Yeah.
B
So you just let me know how you want us to get up out of here.
A
A bunch of Memphis gangsters, too.
B
Yeah, yeah. Like, everybody at 3, since Michael was in some. In a. In a gang or some crazy. So I'm like, look, dude is. You know, you call the police and get us up out of here, or we get ourself up out of here. This and that. This man picked up the phone. He looked at me and said, the phones are dead. No, I said, what? I Like, what kind of preset 13 moving is that? Like, how is the phones dead? I'm like, there's no way. They climbed up on the roof and cut the fire. Like, you know, all right, we'll get ourself about. Of here. This is that. We opened the door and we just, you know, we just, like, didn't pull them out, but we just kind of like to. Just showing them with our hands up on there. We made our way to the car, man, and punched that motherfucker. Punched.
A
Were you guys, like, inside. Were you guys, like, trembling like. It's one thing to have to portray something to the outside.
B
Was we. Was we scared? Yeah, I was a little scared. I was a little scared. I wasn't scared to the point. Like, I thought I was going to get killed.
A
Right.
B
I just was scared to the point. I was like, man, it's probably going to be a massacre up in this motherfucker right now. Because I'm like. Like, you know, we gotta shoot our way to the car.
A
Yeah.
B
And then by time, then, I mean, we can't, you know, like, we can't and don't want to hurt 900 people. No. Like, somebody's gonna make it to their car. Oh, well. And we got to get all the way to the Mississippi Bridge. Then we got to get over this bridge. I was like, you know, I'm just gonna thank God that nobody get hurt.
A
Yeah.
B
Well, you know, like, they didn't have no security there.
A
What the hell? The venue didn't have security or anything.
B
We didn't have security. No. You know, you're talking about the.
A
This is the early days, early 90s. Were the crowds that you guys played for pretty rowdy? Because I would think. Yeah, I would think, like, with something.
B
Yeah, super rowdy. Yeah, super rowdy. This was back when there was no phones in the club.
A
Yeah. So people were just all focused on you guys.
B
Yeah.
A
So if somebody was in a bad mood or having a bad mood that day, they were taking it out on everybody. It was crazy. So take me on this journey with you guys. When you dropped your album, I had heard in an interview you said, I think it was the one in 2005 that you guys dropped, and you. You paid 4, $500 for it.
B
That was 95.
A
95. Sorry. 95. And you guys paid 4, 500 for it and turned it into like 45 million.
B
Yeah, over 45 million now. That's, you know, obviously over these. Yeah, it turned it to 45 million fast, you know, and it was the same album. Misty Styles, our first album. But, sorry, my notes.
A
My notes froze. That's why I didn't have the right ear.
B
Yeah, 95. Yeah. We didn't make $45 million off that album alone, obviously. But just in that movie is what started our career. And, you know, it went on to, you know, well, not three, six, Mafia and the Mafia and all that is worth, you know, hundreds of means now. But yeah, it. That's what started it all. 4, 500. Me and Juicy put. Put, you know, 22, five together each. No. Split it and made that album.
A
Is it crazy for you guys to ever just, like. Do you guys ever. You and Juicy just ever have a moment alone where you guys look at each other and just laugh because of where you guys came from and how the odds were stacked against you and how you guys scraped up 20 $200 each to put towards this goal. And it's turned into this huge, just. Just amazing, amazing legacy.
B
Yeah. Me and him never really did that, but I've done that, you know, with. With some other people. Listen that and just, you know, just thought about it. Like, I. I have this conversation a lot of times with, like, my. My best. Best friends from my neighborhood that I grew up with.
A
Yeah.
B
And they'd be like, especially my friend little Larry. He can't stop talking about it. Man, I remember when you. That's how you talk, man, I remember. You remember, man, when you used to ride around that, man. You remember when you. He, he reminds me of stuff that, that pal. You remember when you used be trying to sell them tapes? You just had a little brown bag, that. Look around your mama makeup bag, that little brown bag with them tasting you trying to sell them tapes at school? You remember that? You remember? I'd be like, yes, Larry, I remember that. He drunk. It's two in the morning, he can't stop talking about all this. I'm like, yes, Larry, I remember when I had my mama's brown makeup bag and all that. Yeah.
A
I feel like friends like that are so essential though, to kind of humble us.
B
Yeah, well, to remind us of that. We did.
A
Yeah.
B
Cuz he also remind me like, man, you remember you got drunk that time and I like, shut up, Larry. I gotta go. I gotta go to sleep.
A
I love that. So 2000, you guys dropped, sipping on some scissor and that's when I, I think late night tip, sipping on some scissor. And what there was then your album after that, 2005 is kind of like when I became a huge Three Six fan because I was on the west coast, so the southern rappers that I listened to were Outkast, 8Ball, MJG, and you guys. And I mean, you guys took the world by storm. And this was before anything was viral. How did you guys manage to do that? How did you guys manage to take this from Memphis and spread it all the way across the world?
B
Well, how it happened was it was about the timing. It was about the timing of, like, I was just talking about the cassette tapes that I sold at high school.
A
Yes.
B
Because what happened was, you know, if I wouldn't have been in school, just, just none of this would have happened. Right. If I would have been graduated and I was out, none of this wouldn't happen. The school was my distribution. Wow. And the timing of it. See, remember what you said earlier? I was in the 10th grade when I started, so 10, 11 grade, 12th grade, you graduate and you go to college. So the school was my distribution.
A
Did you go to college?
B
Hell no.
A
Okay, okay.
B
I wish I would have because I perform in colleges a lot and man, it looked like they have a lot of fun.
A
Yeah, yeah.
B
But no, I didn't go to college, but my music went to college.
A
Gotcha.
B
They took those old cassette tapes with them to college and I would get, I would get calls or running. I still today I run into. People would be like, man, I took your cassette tape to college and my roommate stole it. I was so mad that I couldn't get it back until I go back to Memphis and go to the stereo store. I would get my. My cousin to mail me one to the college, but they would take those old tapes to college with them roommates and steal them, and then they would go back to where they was from, and then they would let those people hear it, and then it would get duplic and duplicated and it just spread all over the world.
A
That's amazing. Take me to 2005, when you guys dropped the most known unknown. What were you guys doing during that era? Because you guys just didn't miss at all. Like, that was like. I don't know. That was like where it just exploded for you guys.
B
Yeah, that was. That was when we really started to. That was when. You know how we talked about earlier about not being deserving of something, feeling that way? Yeah. Well, that was at the point where I. I had just bought my first Rolls Royce and I was like. I'm like, okay, all right. Now I see what life's about. I had just built my first big house at an 8, 000 square foot house that I built, designed like a castle. And. And I was like, like, man, okay, now I'm living life. Because that was my first big house, right. I started building that in 2002, and I finished it in 2004. We recorded that album in 2004. I was making a lot of beats, you know, in that process, and I even record. I even made the beat rather to Stay Flies remix that featured. Slim Thug, Houston, a Trick Daddy and a few guys on it. I made that beat at. At that house in the theater room. That was the only thing I ever did in that theater room. Because don't ever put a theater room in your house. They. They never get used, ever. They're just for kids.
A
We've had a couple and they've never gotten.
B
Never get. Never get used. They look cool, but you never use them. I just. I always went to sleep in it. The only thing that ever came out of the room was. Was making that beat. Oh, so the Stay Fly remix beat. So that's when I started really seeing what. What life's about. I had a house in Florida. I bought a house in Destin, Florida. Did MTV Cribs at. If y' all want to watch that MTV Cribs episode.
A
Yeah.
B
And, man, we was living life, man. Juicy. I got a Maybach this and that. And, you know, everybody was. Had nice cars. Everybody grew crunchy. Had like four cars. Two houses on the Same street. Everybody was. He bought his baby mama a house on the same street as him. We was living life.
A
Yeah.
B
And, man, we just went in and I was like, man, we can't stop this. And we just went in and just made a, you know, super dope album.
A
Yeah, it was amazing. I remember popping my collar was my. Because I was working, you know, I was a. An escort back in Vegas. I was a high, high price call girl. So popping my collar was my. Who. Who had the pimp themes in the three six Mafia. Was that influence from your childhood or was that.
B
Yeah, my brother was an actual pimp.
A
Okay. Gotcha.
B
I had a brother that was an actual pimp.
A
Gotcha.
B
You know, he got. He got killed being a pimp.
A
Oh.
B
So, yeah, that. I grew up. I grew up in that, too.
A
Okay, Gotcha.
B
When I say I grew up around organized crime, I basically did all of it.
A
Well, I mean, you can't have drug dealing without hookers and blow either, you know, so it's like it all goes hand in hand. But, yeah, that was my. I was popping my collar. Popping. Popping my call. Everywhere. Everywhere I'd go, I'd drive to, like, you know, to my appointments and. And be bumping three, six.
B
It was in it. Yeah. And if you. Yeah, if you. If you was in that. In that life, then you knew that a lot of Memphis people was into pimping.
A
Yes, absolutely.
B
Memphis has so many pimps, man. That was. That was the thing back then. So maybe Gold teeth.
A
It was a different lifestyle too, you know? Like, it's not like it was. It's not like it is now. Like, people always say that I glamorized that life, but it's not that I glamorize it. It's the life that I lived, and it made me a lot of money. And, like, yeah, there are downsides to every sort of street thing that you could possibly do, but there was also some good that came out of it for me. And I always. I don't try to glamorize it, but I do try to tell the truth about it, you know, and it was a different time in life. Life.
B
Yeah. Yeah, it was.
A
It was completely different.
B
Yeah, it was. You know, like, I grew up doing a lot of crazy, too, that, you know, I wouldn't. I wouldn't glamorize or talk about. I guess I. I guess I do it with the raps.
A
Yeah.
B
But, you know, like, in a way, but, you know, I just. I just noticed that a lot of people that I know, that came from Bad things in their past. I know a lot of people that's doing the ones that survived, they're doing really, really good.
A
Absolutely.
B
Like if you look at Master P, Master P came from, you know, crazy, crazy, you know, like, you know, not a dude worth hundreds of millions. Yeah, hundreds of millions. Because what I think it is is you get a different knowledge going through in the streets that a school could never teach you.
A
Yes.
B
I know people that went to. When you asked me that I go to college, I said, hell no. Because I know some people that went to college that ain't doing nothing right now.
A
Absolutely. I always say street smarts over book smarts. Smarts.
B
Yeah.
A
Like book smarts are a necessity for if you're gonna work a regular job and if you're gonna like, you know, be a CEO of like a financial place. But like if you in life, the school of hard knocks is going to teach you the most lessons.
B
Yeah, yeah. Even in the music business, some people that I know that taught they self music or this or that, versus some people I know that went to school for music. They in two different worlds.
A
Yeah, absolutely.
B
Two. Two different worlds.
A
Just because hustle can taught our hustle can't be bought. You know. And it's like school. You're. That's you. You're essentially learning from somebody else. But like in the streets, it's hands on. You are. It's sink or swim. Nobody's out there to save you. So you're gonna have to. It's killer be killed. You have to figure it out yourself.
B
Yeah. And you learn from, from. You learn more from pain. School don't teach pain. Yeah. Pain is the quickest way to learn anything.
A
That is a beautiful like.
B
Yeah. You get hit in the mouth and you be like, God damn, I should have blocked. Next time I'm a block. Cause that was not cool.
A
Yeah, absolutely. But that's a beautiful.
B
They should have probably add that to school. Just walk around. But you know, it was in school back in the day. I got a lot of wolf.
A
Yes. I've gotten spanked by the principal before. Have you guys ever gotten spanked?
B
Hell no.
A
Oh, man.
B
They gonna call the police.
A
No. Yeah, I've gotten spanked. I had a principal who. You was able to spank kids?
B
Me too.
A
I couldn't. Mr.
B
Chambers. Mr. Chambers. Man, that motherfucker. Man, he was the coolest dude in the world. He was tall, handsome. He looked like. He looked exactly like Laurence Fishburne.
A
Oh, wow.
B
And he would walk in there, he always had a mean face. And like you had to really do something really fucked up for him to come and this and that. So like they, they pressed that button like. Mr. Chambers, Paul is acting up again. I need you to come over here. He show up to that dough come in, Bar. God. He said, you know it's gonna be trouble and I gotta make house calls. That's what he said. You know, it's trouble. I gotta make house calls. He was a comedian, boy. And he was. He will whip you in front of everybody.
A
Oh, not in front of everybody.
B
Not in the hallway. Right there. Pull them pants up in the back so it's tight. Pull them pants up, man. He'll ask you which one you want. Like the strap for the hand or the paddle with the butt.
A
Yes.
B
And this, this constructed a pedal that was worse. He put holes in it.
A
Oh, he wanted it to catch the wind.
B
Yeah. So yeah, man. And then it like it sucked in a little bit more, I think because of the holes, man. He like, which one? Bar got head on butt. Oh, God. So, man, he would be right there in front of everybody. But just the funny story.
A
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B
Owned a pest control company and one day my daddy got called to go to this dude's house. Man, we showed up to this house. I like mid century modern houses. We showed up to this house. Nice one level mid century modern house in the hood though. Yeah, but it was the nicest house on the street. Yeah, I'm like man, that's a nice house. Listen, that, that was the only reason I went with my daddy because I like to see houses. Like I told you, it's the 65 year old white woman inside of me. I'm walking over like man, it's a nice landscaping he got right here. It's a nice house man. Next thing I know, the door swing opening. It was his ass. I said, what I said, I said daddy, I said this is The I was telling you about. This is my principal. This is who be whooping me, man. We walk in there, his house is nice. Oh, pimped out. He got the big screen TV where you pull the drawer out. And it had the green, white, and not a green, red and blue lights that shined up on it.
A
The old project paid that good.
B
Yeah. I'm like, man, this probably a drug dealer. Listen, that man house was nice, big screen tv. I never seen a big screen TV in person.
A
That's crazy.
B
And, man. And you know, and it. That was just. Funny story.
A
Did your dad go in there and say anything to him or just acted like it was business as usual.
B
I. Not that I remember. I don't think he said.
A
I couldn't imagine sending my kids to school now and letting somebody spank them, though. Because you can't trust.
B
Back in the day, it was a different run. You crazy these days, but I swear it helps. Helped.
A
No, no, for sure. And all of the bus stop fights, the ditching, the. Yeah.
B
I was always bringing back.
A
Can we go back? I swear I live in nostalgia, dude. Like, I just love the 80s, 90s and 2000s. I think it was just perfect.
B
Yeah.
A
So after you guys dropped the album in 2005, it went gold in six months, correct?
B
That was the one in. In 1997.
A
Oh, that one was 1997. Okay.
B
1997. Our first. First major album. Okay, so our first major album. We got our first record deal. My first major. In the. Our major distribution deal. 97. That album would tell the club up on it with gold in six months. And that was the album that. That I made the bet. And it's like, man, I think y' all gonna go gold. And I was like, no, I don't think so. And I made a bet with one of my friends and. And six months.
A
It wasn't Larry, was it? You didn't make the better.
B
To be honest, I can't remember who it was.
A
I'm just kidding.
B
It probably was him, though, to be honest. And it went gold, and I couldn't even believe. I was like, what? And we got that gold plaque, and, man, I got one for everybody I knew.
A
Did you feel like some sort of accomplishment when you finally did that? Like you were getting recognized?
B
Yeah.
A
What did the 2005 album do if that one went gold?
B
Oh, the 2005 album. That album sold like 6 million million.
A
Okay.
B
Yeah. So that one was like, so.
A
So was that platinum? Does that equal platinum?
B
Platinum is 1 million.
A
1 million. Okay.
B
Yeah, it went 1 million immediately.
A
Wow. Okay.
B
I mean, even the singles stay flying. All the singles. And side to side, all them went platinum. That was. That was easy.
A
Yeah.
B
Yeah, it was that album. Yeah. It's all like 5 or 6 million.
A
It was during this time was whenever you guys were doing the soundtrack for Hustle and Flow, too, correct?
B
Yeah, yeah, we did that, too. So all of this came back to back. You know, we had the most now. And see, it was funny how it worked because we had made all those other albums by this point. 2005, we made our first gold album in 97. So by the time we had another album that came out and went. The 700 Sizzler album was in 2000, it went platinum.
A
Okay.
B
You know, and it ended up selling, you know, probably 2 or 3 million copies, so. And then we had another album that went gold, the Unbreakables. So by the time 2005 happened, you know, I already got, you know, five or six plaques on the wall.
A
Yeah.
B
And. But we. I was like, nobody still knew who we was. I should have kept it that way. But I was dreaming. And that's why I had to watch what I wish for, right? Yeah. I had to watch what I think about because I would really bring into. Into existence.
A
Yeah, you manifest.
B
Yeah, you manifested. And. And I named that album the Most Known Unknowns. And I was like, we know, but we not known. I said it at the beginning of the album, and I started playing all of the hits we had. Like shepherd slob on the knot. Like, I started scratching to the club of the whole intro was me scratching all of our songs, like, beating it in people's heads of all the hits we had. And then next thing I know, that album come out, and every song on that album was a hit, literally. And then after that ALB album, the next year, we win the Oscar. And now we're the most Sony, like, y' all the most Google thing in the world. And I'm like, oh, what did I do? What did I do?
A
You say that you wish that you guys would have stayed unknown. Why do you wish that?
B
Well, you know, popular, being popular, man. It's not. It's not cool.
A
It's not for the week, that's for sure.
B
Yeah, it's not cool. Like. Like, you know, back on our very first album, that album. Not to keep bringing up that football. That's very. That's right behind your head. That's for sale on360myers.com.
A
This football right here.
B
Learn how to keep bringing that up.
A
This one right here.
B
Yeah. But that album right there, we wore mask on the COVID and I. That's what I wish we would have kept doing.
A
Okay. So people hadn't seen your faces, though.
B
They had seen our faces after that album. Album.
A
Okay.
B
But on it. Well, as far as that album, they hadn't seen our faces.
A
Okay.
B
You know, and that's something I wish we would have kept doing. Like, I used to look at groups like Kiss and Insane Clown Faucet.
A
Yeah.
B
I used to be like, man, I can't imagine how nice it would be to be rich. But nobody recognized you.
A
I didn't recognize Gene Simmons. He came in the club one night and got a dance from me and my best friend Tasha, and I didn't recognize him. He kept telling me he was. Was Gene, and I didn't believe him until he licked my back with his long ass tongue. Yeah. Gene Simmons licked my back and me and Tasha, and I was like, you are like. I didn't recognize him until he stuck that long ass tongue out, dude. Because they had their faces covered all the time.
B
Yeah, man. And that's. That's. That's the. I used to live down the street from James Simmons in la. I pass his house every day. I used to see his wife and the kids up at the. The Italian restaurant that we all used to eat at. It's got to be the tallest family in the world.
A
Tall.
B
The wife is tall. The kids are tall. Like, yeah, I'll be sitting down at eating my sweet. I'm like.
A
I love it.
B
Well, yeah, I. I wish we would have kept wearing the mask because, you know, like I said to. To have money. But nobody recognized you. I can't imagine how it would be the equivalent of being an invisible person. Right. Like an invisible person walking this room right now, which I'm sure is probably a couple in here. Yeah. Visible person. It would be like that.
A
It's like Clark Kent and Superman.
B
Yeah.
A
You know, like, you get to have two Personas.
B
Yeah. Which I don't know how. Nobody never. I just watched Superman the other day, and I'm like, I did not know. He just put. He just put on glasses. That was his disguise.
A
It was the bulge. It distracted all the girls.
B
Yeah.
A
They just didn't know.
B
Yeah. Have you. Have you watched the story of him?
A
No. Of Superman or of, like, Christopher Reeves? Christopher Reeves, a little bit.
B
The new one that's out.
A
No, I have not seen.
B
It's a new one that just came out. Man, it's so good.
A
Is it good? I'll watch it.
B
It's really good to tell his whole story, his whole life, and it's really good.
A
I just hate how it ended for him. Yeah, that's like.
B
But he was, you know, he was really. He really was like a superman.
A
Yeah, no, he was a good dude.
B
He flew planes.
A
Yeah.
B
He did everything in real life. He was real active.
A
Yes.
B
No, he was really active.
A
Nobody has anything bad to say about him. Like, he was just a really good human. And I hate when bad things happen to good humans.
B
Yeah.
A
So has three six Mafia ever really officially broken up? Like, no, there's never been like an announcement of you guys, like breaking up. It's just always you guys doing your own projects or like.
B
Yeah, we just split and just started doing solo stuff.
A
Members leaving and stuff like that.
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah. What's your relationship with Juicy now? Are you guys still close?
B
Yeah, we still tour.
A
Yay.
B
We started back touring for the first time in September of 2019.
A
Okay.
B
It was the first show we had did together since 2012.
A
Right.
B
Yeah. So we've been touring ever since then. Back together. We got a tour coming up this. This summer and we got for the first time in April, we got Coachella.
A
Oh, that's gonna be. That's gonna be iconic because now the newer generation of kids are gonna get to see you and they're gonna latch on to you, dude. Because.
B
Oh yeah, they've been doing it.
A
Yeah.
B
Ever since we took Tick Tock.
A
You guys are insane on Tick Tock, dude.
B
Yeah, like, it'd be going crazy, those songs that be going viral.
A
Yeah.
B
I'm sitting up, I'm looking at Tick Tock and I see like a 19 year old white girl, like we gonna in the back of the bus and feel her nose up full of that dust. Sound like, my God damn it.
A
Yeah.
B
God damn.
A
It's crazy. How does it feel to influence just generations of kids? I mean, even like kids that are. Are kids now. You're like, it's just generation, generation, generation. And then all of these young artists too.
B
Yeah. Well, you know what it is? I read something the other day that said. Well, it wasn't the other day, it was last year, but I think I'm still living in 2024.
A
That's how you know we're getting old. When we say the other day and it was last year.
B
Yeah, the other day it was like 10. Oh. But I was last year I saw something that said that I. The kids that, like, I don't know what generation they are, but the. The age that our kids are will listen to like the music that we liked. Yeah, just like we like. Do we listen to music that our parents like?
A
Yeah.
B
So, you know, like, I'm a huge fan of, you know, the stacks musicians because I grew up in Memphis. My mama listened to a lot of stacks music music. So I like that. And you know, kids these days, like, you know, like my music because their parents was listening to, you know, my music or whatever.
A
Yeah.
B
When I saw. When. When Cardi B and. And Offset first started dating, I saw them at. I saw them at the Breakfast Club in New York. I was going on after Cardi B. Cardi B was in there doing. This was when she first came out out. Cardi B was doing her interview, and I was sitting in the lobby talking to Offset, and I'll say was like. He was like, man, how y' all come up with that triplet flow? The triplet flow? And I was like, man, that was. That was Lord Influence. Like, man, he's like, man, my mama used to listen to three six Mafia all the time. And I was like, damn. I was like, you're making me feel old now. You're making me feel.
A
Oh, but.
B
But it was. It was so funny to hear that. Yeah. He liked us because he. His mama listeners.
A
Yeah, no, it's wild. It's just. It's the. The lore with you guys, like I've said a couple times during this podcast, just runs so deep. So you guys both want. You guys all won a. An an Oscar and an Academy Award. Is that the same thing?
B
The same thing.
A
It is the same thing.
B
Okay, Academy Award is like the. Let's just say the. The event, the Oscars, the actual award.
A
Gotcha. I've always got that confused. I've never understood what that was.
B
Yeah.
A
And then so you guys ended up winning the Oscar for the Hustle and Flow song Hard out here for a pimp before winning the Grammys.
B
Yeah, we won an Oscar way before we won a Grammy.
A
Yeah.
B
Still today, Three Six Mafia never won a Grammy. I'm the only person in 360 Mafia that won a Grammy.
A
Wow. Okay, I didn't know that. Cuz you've won four Grammys though, right?
B
Yes. If you include songs that read. Read that. Re. That's remake takes of ours. Five.
A
Right.
B
Because we just won again with. With. With Chris Brown's album.
A
Yes, just. You know, I just saw you post.
B
About a week ago. Whatever. Yeah, but in. In 2020 with Cardi B. But. But the actual. To get the actual, actual trophy. Yeah, I was. I'm the only person in three, six. My opinion, you. They got one I wanted with Killer Mike.
A
Yes.
B
Or Killer Mike.
A
The year that we were there, Right. Was that.
B
Yeah, yeah, I was there.
A
Yes, I remember that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
B
That's amazing.
A
What? So tell me when you finally win that Grammy, because I know for every artist, my husband's the same way. It's like, you guys all want that Grammy. Like, it just means so much to you guys when you finally get that in your grasp and now you have five.
B
Yeah.
A
How does that feel, man?
B
It feels amazing, man. You know, like, because it's so. It's something. When I won the Oscar, I didn't even know what an Oscar was.
A
Yeah, I still don't.
B
Yeah. So. But I was, you know, I was. I'm, you know, it was a blessing, you know, so happy to have that. But when I won a Grammy, I was like, oh, my God, you know, because, you know, as musicians, we look forward to the. To the. The Grammy.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, so it was. It was great. Great. It was great getting that.
A
And it's hard. People don't realize how hard it is to win a Grammy.
B
Really hard.
A
There's some people who go their entire careers and never get a Grammy. They'll get nominations if they're lucky, but never get Grammys, and you have five. Like, that speaks volumes for your talent.
B
Thank God it happened.
A
What's one thing that you've learned about the longevity in this game? Let's talk about, like, your sobriety and stuff like that, too.
B
So you want me to mix the two together?
A
You want to talk about several separately? I'm sorry.
B
Oh, right now I am a year and three months sober.
A
Yes.
B
You know, no weed, no drugs, no. Not even vitamins. Like, you know, I'm the cleanest I've ever been in my. My whole life. I was never into vitamins and pills and all of that. Thank God. I think if I would have got into the whole pill world, I'd probably be dead.
A
Right.
B
You know, but thank God the hardest drug I ever did was cocaine. And not saying that's not a hard one. That's a pretty hard one. But now that's. That's. That's as big as it ever got for me.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, I stopped that long, long, long ago. But alcohol, year, year, and three months. But now I did take my breaks. You know, I've been off alcohol for. I was for, like four years at one point, almost four years at one point, like, 20, 19, 20, you know, this and that. All that. I Think I started back drinking in like 2021. Some part of 2021, but like about four years up to that, three and a half years up to that. I was sober too.
A
Yeah.
B
And I gotta say, man, it's the best thing I ever did in my life.
A
Yeah, sobriety is hard. I tell everybody. It's the hardest but most rewarding journey that you'll be on. Like, sobriety does suck when you're first coming off of everything. Because I got sober on the Y wolf tour in 2017 off pills and cocaine, alcohol in 2018. Been sober ever since. It's a really hard journey because you have to get to know yourself and you have to learn to cope with things that you've always numbed, you know, and it's not easy, but once you get past that hump, it is like thinking about even snorting a line makes me want to crawl in a hole like I could never anymore. Like once you get that far away from it, it. You're just like, how was I this person before?
B
Yeah, Well, I don't think like that when I think about cocaine. I kind of miss cocaine. But I would never do, like my husband, I would never do cocaine again in my life. I mean, you can't with fennel.
A
No.
B
I just read today on the way over here that Corey Feldman's drummer just died from fenol.
A
Oh, no.
B
Yeah, they just announced it today.
A
Oh, shit.
B
Yeah. So you can't do cocaine no more. Thank God we got off of it when we did because you know, that's what killed Boo.
A
Yeah.
B
Yeah.
A
So what was the pivotal moment for you wanting to get sober?
B
Man, I just. Cocaine or alcohol?
A
Both. Both.
B
Cocaine. I just got sick of waking up with headaches and stopped up noses. I hate to stopped up nose more than anything in the world.
A
The bloody boogers that come out too.
B
Yeah, I hate those. Shit, man. Blowing your nose.
A
Yeah.
B
Comment come out. Yeah, I hate that.
A
Yeah, it's gross.
B
That alone.
A
Yeah.
B
If I never got stopped up nose, I'd probably still be getting high. No, but I didn't like that. I didn't like the headaches. I didn't like feeling like. Because the thing about cocaine, you. You feel so good when you're doing it and you partying and then the next day you wake up, you're like, oh, God, man, what the happened?
A
So when I think about cocaine, I just think about people pooping their pants. Pants, okay. Because you cannot do a line of cocaine and not have to take a.
B
Yeah, you gotta take.
A
Have to.
B
You just gotta Be. You just gotta be close to a.
A
Bathroom and baby wipes.
B
Yeah. Close to a bathroom.
A
Yeah.
B
That's probably why people do so much cocaine in bathrooms, literally.
A
So they can take a dump right after. As soon as that drain hits.
B
Yeah. So the reason why I got just all the way. All the way clean is just because with, with, with, with alcohol, man, you just make so many bad decisions.
A
Yeah.
B
So many bad decisions. You know, like, there's nothing wrong with drinking alcohol. You know, I don't want people to think that, you know, just getting up is when the bad shit come in. You only have a couple of drinks, this and that, that's fine. But I never got to that point. I tried it. We've all tried it. Like, I'm just gonna go have a couple.
A
Yeah.
B
Dinner. Nah, man. Next thing you know, because what, what happened is somebody will be like, oh, man, you want to go over here? Let's go over here. We'll just. After dinner, we just had like one drink, watch the game. One drink. Then next thing you know, it's 3 in the morning. That one drink then turned into 100 drinks.
A
Well, our generation is binge drinkers.
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah, we did. There was no. We were just trained to go always, you know.
B
Yeah. So that's when the problem kick in. So, you know, like, next thing you know, somebody's calling you the next day. Like, hey, man, we're gonna be over at that same bar tonight if you want to come back. Like, who is this? I got your number last night. You remember me, man? We was hanging out and this and that. Everybody's your friend when you're drunk.
A
Yeah. Especially my husband. Yes, I know.
B
And see, I'm the type of person that I don't like making new friends.
A
Yeah.
B
I'm in the process of my life of getting rid of friends, so, like, making new ones is the last best thing that I possibly want. And like, I feel that drinking you just like, you know, made, you know, gave this person your number. Now he's calling you. He want to hang out some more and this and that. And you just, just so many to see wrong, bad decisions. And yeah, you miss stuff. You miss stuff. Like, I had, I was talking to a big, A big producer who was going to put me on the phone with an even bigger producer one day. This one that long ago. This is like two years ago about. About making a TV show based on my life. This guy actually got big TV shows on Netflix as we speak. And I missed the call because I was drunk. I said, God damn, It. And you know how Hollywood is.
A
Yeah.
B
It's like, how possible. There's no problem. We just set up another call. Never got that other call. Set up up.
A
Yeah.
B
And I was like, man, you know what? You know what? You know, that just cost me. But you know, at the same time, I don't regret it because it's a million people out here want to do that with me. So I. And they just. It just wasn't. God didn't want me to do it with. With them maybe or whatever the case was.
A
Yeah. The universe always intervenes.
B
Yeah. Nothing wrong with them. I wish I would have did it with them, but at the same time, it's like, you know, he didn't want me to do it with them.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, so I'm gonna have to do it. You know, it would just do it with somebody else or do it another time with them. Maybe he just didn't want me to do it with them at that time because I wasn't clean and I probably would just get on set and it up.
A
Yeah.
B
Or something.
A
So maybe he'll listen to this podcast and circle back. Yeah, yeah, put it in the air.
B
Yeah. So I missed that call and I was like, man, this. And I only missed it by like 30 minutes. But that's, that's too long for a big. A big producer, you know? So I was like, man, you know, you just. Just alcohol just have. You just. You just miss too much stuff.
A
My thing is, is I can't deal with the three day hangovers, dude.
B
Yeah.
A
And the older you get, too, your mental health gets affected by it. And I'm just like, I can't afford to not feel like myself for three days.
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah, I'm good.
B
Yeah. That's how it happened because somebody told me they like, man, you know, when you, when you, you. When you hit 40, hangovers are three days. And boy, I wouldn't be damned if the day on my birthday I saw that it's like three days.
A
Yeah.
B
If you're l. Lucky.
A
Yeah.
B
You're lucky.
A
No, for sure. So I want to circle back to the question that I. I lumped in with your sobriety. What's the one thing you've learned about longevity in the. In this game, in this whole genre.
B
Of life, man, it's about just. It's. It's about just teaching yourself something new. Always educating yourself on. On something new about life. Excuse me? About life. Like, I read this book that changed my life in a lot called Atomic Habits. Atomic Habits is a great book. And it teach you about just preparing yourself, you know, like it'd be like if you're, if you're the type of person that's, that's late for work because you want to eat breakfast in the morning, start preparing your stuff the night before. You know, like maybe cut up your vegetables, put them in a little, in a Tupperware container or whatever and have all that ready to go. So the next morning you just crack your eggs, throw them in there, scramble them up, make you a taco or burrito, whatever you want to make and, and keep it moving. You, you've eliminated the, the most, the most time consuming parts. Cutting the vegetables. Everybody hate cutting up vegetables.
A
Yes.
B
Wolfgang Puck don't even cut vegetables. You got a sous chef for that.
A
Yeah.
B
So you know, like. Right. And then it says like if you want to make a habit of going to the gym every day or three, four times a week or whatever, like even if you're late and you're not gonna, you're only going to be able to spend 10 minutes in the gym. That's not gonna, you know, you're not going to gain no muscle or nothing in 10 minutes. But just go do it anyway because you're building the habit.
A
Yes.
B
Of going. Retraining the consistency. So. So that book right there changed my life a lot. You know, just gotta stay consistent in whatever you do, you know, to the point it hurts me sometimes. So consistent with.
A
I feel like we're always learning though and that. And you can never stop learning when you think you know everything. That's when you're not living.
B
Yeah.
A
I feel like there's always a lesson to be learned in something I know I learned every day still.
B
I went to look at one day, I was in Beverly Hills. I was looking for this, this. I was looking at this condo that I wanted back by. And it was for sale by a doctor. And when I went in this condo, I couldn't believe my eyes. I thought, I thought it was photoshopped. This main condo was so clean. Now everybody's going to clean their house when somebody's coming to look at it. But I got a feeling that this dude lives like this.
A
Like I'm sitting up here like, man.
B
This dude is this clean. I want him to do my, my checkups. Because that dude right here is a perfectionist.
A
He's a thorough man.
B
When I went in his closet, he only had four suits. Exactly the same. Four pair of shoes, exactly the same. Five, five, four or five shirts. Exactly the same. Just hung up, organized to the Te. No extra nowhere. But this one really tripped me out. When I went in his bedroom, he didn't have a TV on the wall. Wall. The whole floor to ceiling, wall to wall was bookshelves, nothing but books. And I was like, at night, this dude read books. When he go to sleep, he don't watch tv. That's sitting up watching a. A Jeffrey Dahmer documentary. Like, I am. He's reading a book. It might be about Jeffrey Dahmer. Who knows?
A
But.
B
But he's reading the book, right? And I was like, man, yeah. I saw something that. It said that. That. That billionaire. All billionaires read a certain amount of books a year. Books is where it's at, man. Like, yeah, I was never into books. And I still don't read books. But, you know, I got the. The audible. I listen to books, you know, riding down the street. Whatever you're doing, cleaning up. I need to get back into it. Yeah. A few. A couple of years ago, I was into it like. Like a. But I fell off. It's hard just starting to get back into it.
A
It's hard reading books. Like, I. I can listen to a book all day long. I love Audible. But when I sit down and actually try to, like, look and read a book, it's like I go back to that little girl in sixth grade who just couldn't focus. And, like, it's like I can read something, but my mind won't attain it.
B
Me too.
A
Yeah. So it's like I have to listen to it.
B
I'm the same way. Some people just like that. Like. Like growing up, if I got a new keyboard and it came with, you know, an instruction manual, I didn't read that. I just had to have somebody come over my house who. Who already had that keyboard and showed me what to do, because I can read. I know how to read. I can read really good, but just can't obtain it. I'll forget in a second.
A
Yeah, same.
B
I'll forget in a second. So, like, these days, you know, all night I'm watching tutorials on YouTube, you know, about this drum machine and this turntable and this and that. We call it YouTube University. I'm always. Anything I can't. I can't figure out how to do, I just pull it up.
A
Yeah.
B
How do you work this? And it's a YouTube video on that. I'm gonna watch every one of them. And one thing I notice. One thing I notice is you'll see some. Somebody that'll have like a hundred thousand views on this, on this Keyboard or drum machine or whatever you're trying to make, you know, a grilled cheese sandwich. A hundred thousand views. And it'll be somebody that got 1,000 views. Views. That person with the 1,000 views. I have the most here, here. Have the sweet spot of what I was really looking for.
A
Yeah, no, I love that too. Yeah, I do that too. I notice people's numbers and then you go to like watch their, you know, video or whatever it is, and they always have the better information. Yeah, the bigger one.
B
Yeah. Because sometimes the guys with the. With the most information, I mean, with the most views rather have the less information because they're trying to sell it to you.
A
Right.
B
They're like, hey, and if you want to learn more, I got a link right here. Go right. They point and it ain't even popped up yet. I'm like, what are you pointing at? And then after a while, a little picture, a smaller picture of him. Upon that, I got a one that you can go here and watch if you want to see how to do this. I mean, that's the reason why I watched this one.
A
Yeah.
B
Because I want to see. So then you click on that one. Then like, if you really want to learn more, you go right here. Then you click on that one. You really want to learn more, you go to the link down below for $30 a month. I'm like, okay, here we go. I just watched 10 videos to figure this out. You should have just told me you wanted $30. I gave you $30 30 minutes ago.
A
No, I feel that. And now they do that on Tick Tock too. It drives me crazy. You have worked with so many artists. You've worked with pretty much. I. I mean, the list could go on. Everybody, everybody. Is there anybody that you haven't worked with that you want to work with?
B
It would have to be somebody outside of rap because I've worked with everybody in rap. So it will have to be.
A
Man.
B
I would just have to think, because it would be somebody in like a totally different space. Like. Yeah, it would be somebody like Tears for Fears or some.
A
Or like edm. Have you done edm?
B
Yeah, done a ton of edm. EDM was kind of, kind of made off my sound.
A
Wow.
B
In a way. I did the first EDM rap record before it was even a such thing as the word edm.
A
Really?
B
Yeah, it was called Feeding it. And I filmed a video in 2009 in Vegas.
A
Where were you at 2009? I was in Vegas.
B
Yeah, you should have came and gotten video.
A
Yeah, it was I'll go back in time and show up.
B
Yeah. It was with DJ Ties though, when nobody in America really knew who he was.
A
Yeah, yeah.
B
DJ ts, though. And Sean Kingston. Sean Kingston wasn't even old enough to get in the club to shoot the video. So I had to rent a penthouse suite upstairs and bring some girls. And we shot his scene in there.
A
Yeah.
B
Because he was a kid. And we brought out this song called Feel It. And the song went gold in Canada first. My first out of. Out of country plaque.
A
Yeah.
B
And the song didn't get no video play on nowhere but YouTube because MTV was like, we don't have have nowhere to put this. We don't even know what genre this is. You know, it wasn't a such thing as the word EDM did. Yeah, it was. And then BET wasn't going to play it 106 and park wasn't going to play it. And I'm sitting up here like, you know, if it's not a box for something, you should just create the box. And. And they didn't. So the song never got no play. But it end up starting something. Something. Because you know Little John and. And. And what's my boy's name? Little John and Party Rock. What's my boy's name? Party rockers in the house tonight.
A
Oh, lmfo. Yeah.
B
They had the vision.
A
Yes.
B
It's like, oh, I see what they're trying to do here. Okay, let's just do it. Let's do this.
A
Yeah.
B
And man, they came out with all them songs and man, blew up. And I like, was like, see, Sony, this what I was trying to tell you, motherfucker. This was it.
A
So you're pretty much the father of edm.
B
Yeah. With hip hop on. And I am.
A
I love.
B
I am. I was in Vegas one day over to Maloof's house for Halloween party.
A
Yeah.
B
I still got the pictures in my phone. And it was. I met with Afro Jack. Me and Afro Jack had did a song together, but it never came out. Now the beat came out and it blew up. Up. I heard it in the club one night. I was waiting for my verse to come on. Like.
A
Yeah.
B
I'm telling everybody. I'm like, hey, I'm on this, I'm on this, I'm on this. Like, next thing I know, you know EDM songs, they last for 20 minutes. Yeah, 15 minutes done came. I ain't heard myself yet. I'm like, oh, oh. I'm like, where is my verse? And then I saw Afro Jack one day at the Maloose house. I'm like, hey, man, what happened? I was like, you never used that verse. We did. And he. He was like, I didn't understand the hip hop own pop music at the time, but now I understand it. We should go back. I said, yeah, let's go to studio now, motherfucker. Let's do this. Like we had something going. We had something going.
A
I love it.
B
Me and you, man, we had something.
A
Going here in so many words. He said, let's run it back.
B
Yeah. And next thing I know, you know, EDM came out and it was mixed with loops and chants. Just like my stuff was back in the day. And, you know, it became huge.
A
They have mastered the art of being rich. Rich and going under the radar. Like, they're never in any trouble. They're never, like, in any.
B
Well, you know why? It's because they never get married, right?
A
Yeah.
B
They refuse to get married.
A
Literally.
B
They refuse to get married.
A
Yeah.
B
No. So I see them every Christmas because every Christmas I'm over Adrian House.
A
Yeah. Oh, I love that. Yeah. I didn't. I never got to meet Adrian. But the brothers. I definitely knew the brothers.
B
Yeah. Adrian. I love Adrian, man. She so cool. I've spent my. We spend our holidays over Asian.
A
I love that. That's really cool. Yeah, The Maloofs are great people. So let's talk about your restaurant, the Hideaway.
B
Yeah, Hideaway. It's the only restaurant on Ro. Basically, the only restaurant on Rodeo Drive. 421 Rodeo Drive. The Hideaway. Go check it out. It took us forever to make that restaurant. We started working on that restaurant in. In 2015, and we didn't open up to two years ago. Wow.
A
What took so long?
B
Just.
A
Well, licensing and permits.
B
Permits. Beverly Hills was like, you know, we would show them stuff and they'd be like, that doesn't fit the aesthetics of Beverly Hills.
A
What kind. What kind of cuisine is it?
B
It's like upscale Latin.
A
Okay.
B
Like, we got like, you know, you can go there and get a wagyu taco taco if you want to.
A
Like, we'll have to go check it out next time.
B
You gotta check it out, man. It's really good. The food is amazing. Everybody go there. Love it. All kind of celebrities be there because we got. We're in a courtyard, so paparazzi can't come in that courtyard.
A
Yeah.
B
And we got private. Private vip. You can go down underground and come up the elevator straight to our restaurant. So, like, nobody see you coming to the restaurant if you don't want them to you can go through the front off of Rodeo if you want to, or you could come around the back from underground and, you know, and it's his hid away. That's why we call it the Hideaway. And, you know, but the. The permits and all, it was a blessing in disguise because we were supposed to open up, like, February of 2020, before anybody heard of COVID during COVID pandemic. And, you know, we didn't get. We didn't get our clearances and all of that in time. So we didn't open. And that was a blessing because we wouldn't be open now. Now we end up opening after all of that.
A
Yeah. The universe always provides. Always. Would you say that the restaurant business is probably one of the hardest businesses to be in?
B
Yes. Yeah, it's super hard. Yeah, it's super hard. You know, it's a lot of work, a lot of money coming to it, you know, because I had a restaurant with. With these same guys and some other guys in 2010. You know, we was open for, like, six months, and. And it closed down. You know, like, the guys called me one day. They was like, paul, you know, we got to close down the restaurant. And they was like, unless you want to keep it going. Because they knew I. I always wanted a restaurant. Like, do you want to keep it going? I'm like, how much? How much is it? They was like, well, you know, without staff, just the rent on Sunset Boulevard is. At that time, it's $20,000 a month. I'm like, who do I get these keys to? Because we've been to close this motherfucker down.
A
Yeah.
B
Yeah. Like, no, it was. That was it. Then 15, five years later, we went back at it, and it worked.
A
I love that for you. That's awesome. I love that you always have your hands and stuff that you're not. That you're always doing something different musically, but you're also doing stuff outside of music.
B
Yeah, everything. I do everything, man.
A
Love that.
B
I spread myself too thin sometimes. A lot of times because of that.
A
I think that that stems from just. My husband does it, too. And I think it's just. You guys are just so excited to be where you're at, and I. Now you've been in it for a long time, but he does it, too, because he's just so excited and just wants to do it all and see it all and say he's done it. So.
B
Yeah. And not just that. When you come from the hood, like me and him do you know, man, man, jelly got a Lot in. In common that people don't even know about it. Like, you know, organizations and this and that, all our street and all this. But. But when you come from where we came from, you just. Just want to take as many, you know, steps as you can not to go back to that.
A
Yes.
B
You don't want to put all your eggs in one basket. I would never put all my eggs in the music business basket. Like, no, like. Like, if music. I don't even live off music, to be honest with you. Like, I have so many other forms of income. I actually learned that from a. A lady in Nashville. One day I was out here recording Yellow Wolf, producing Yellow Wolf. And I was a pescatarian at the time. This is like 2019. I was a pescatarian. And I went to. I was still eating seafood, but no meat. And I went to a seafood restaurant in Nashville on the way to the studio, and a black lady came in there. Older black lady came in there. And me and my brother Phil was sitting at the bar, and she was like, can you guys help me out with something? I'm buying my husband a laptop from Best Buy down the street, and I want to know what's the. What kind I should get? And I told her. I was like, I only use Apple, but, you know, you can get whatever you want, but that's what I use. Blah, blah. And we. My brother started talking to her because my brother got the Bell Bond business. He gave her the card and he was like, you know, like, what do you do? And she's like, no, me and my husband, we own a bunch of different companies. She said, I read a long time ago that at all times you should have have seven forms of income. It's like a room. And I was like, oh, wow. And she was like, you know, we started off supplying drink machines for a big. A big business. And then I asked them, I was like, you know, who do your. Your. Your clean? Who do you're cleaning in the business? So we end up picking up that account. And I was like, oh, who do the landscaping? So we end up picking up that account. So just in that one building, she picked up three forms of income right there. Wow. She told me about the other four she had or whatever. Whatever. And I was like, man, that's a good idea. So I just started, you know, like, seven forms of income now. I think I got 700, but I just.
A
Not a bad thing, though. It's not a bad thing, though.
B
Yeah.
A
So do you have new music coming out?
B
Yes.
A
Okay.
B
Next Friday. Well, I don't know when this will be. When y'. All.
A
We're dropping. We'll drop this on Monday. Yeah, we'll drop it Sunday.
B
Yeah. So this Friday, which would be like, the 21st or something. Okay, whatever this Friday is. I got a new single with Crazy Bone. Bone coming out from Bone Thugs.
A
Yeah.
B
Talked about that for the longest Three Six Mafia. And Bone Thugs was rivals. Long time rivals, actually.
A
When Jay and I first got together, I'm a Bone thugs girl. He's 36 guy, and he's like, don't ever talk about Bone Thugs.
B
Thank you for that, Jelly. Thank you for that.
A
His loyalty with you guys.
B
Thank you very much.
A
Like, we for real got in an argument one time because I was like, are you kidding me?
B
I was like.
A
Like, it's both that and he's like, no, you're in my house now. This is. It's 36 all day long.
B
So we was. We was into it back in the day. And I don't know if you seen our verses. We did verses. Like, yeah, two, three years ago. We got to.
A
I did. I watched it.
B
A physical fight on stage.
A
That's when him and I got into that argument, was during the verses.
B
Yeah, but, like, you know, like. And we. And us and Bone have been friends for years. We did our first. First song together with Crazy Bone on the Project Pat album back in 1997. The beat started in, like, 93, you know? So we've been, you know, cool ever since then. Bone is like my brother brothers. Like, I'm. I'm closer with. With some members of Bone than I am actual family members.
A
They're actually supposed to be coming on the podcast.
B
Yeah. I love those guys, man. So, like, even when that. When that happened, that day, day, like, some. Some of us looked at each other, like, we charged at each other, like. Like, man, I'm not gonna hit you. Like, I'm not gonna hit you. Like, no, I'm not gonna hit you. But we hugged.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, we hugged. So it's like, I feel like Busy.
A
Is the one who pops it off.
B
Yeah. He did do that business. Who did it. Because everybody else, man, I see these dudes every day. We got the same merch factory.
A
Yeah.
B
Like, we go to work together. We co workers. But I hadn't. I had never. I never really seen Busy in real life except, like, in 1996 at Atlanta Airport.
A
Yeah.
B
That was the only time I had ever seen him.
A
They say he's really elusive. I met him one time, and it was like meeting an Alien. He just was like. Like, he doesn't talk. I don't know. He's just got a very different.
B
Yeah, yeah, he don't. He don't really talk. He's real quiet, you know, he's. He's really deep, you know, he's really deep with his thoughts and all that, you know. I like him, you know, I'm a fan. He's really cool. And I like how he started it off. I like how he. He started the verses he brought. Because I started off, you know, we all friends with each other. So I started off like, oh, man. Yeah, man, we're gonna go on here for history in front of culture, you know, three six mafia and bone. We're gonna have a good time. They're gonna do some songs and we're gonna do some songs. Said that he started posting of him beating us up and shooting us and killing us. And I'm like, oh, oh, we playing prison rules now. Okay, busy. Okay, we go. So I started posting stuff back. We would take each other heads and like, put it on other little bodies from a movie or somebody get locked in a trunk or beat up or something. So he started it off. He. But it was good. Yeah, because he started really building it to be like a. A real. A real match, like a Mike Tyson, like a real versus, you know, fight or something. You know, he. He built it up. He took it. Get there. So when we walked out on stage, you know, we was walking, shaking, hugging hands, and he was still in character. Like, he was looking at me like. I'm like, okay, I thought this was just a. A publicity stunt, but I think this is serious. So he didn't even shake nobody hand. He was looking at like. I'm like, okay, this gonna be a fun night. And, you know, so I. I just got back into it. He was looking at me mad. So I'm like, okay, if that's where you want to go, we can just go there like this. I can do the mean mad all day. Day.
A
Yeah.
B
I was trying to be the nice dude, but if you want to do that, then we can just do that and this and that. So, you know, all night we was, you know, this and that. Mad, mad, mad, mad, mad with him, you know. And then next thing I know, he just hauled off and threw the bottle of water at gangster food. Now he called us ugly. First he like, man, you ugly. Listen, that. I was like, okay, a man called another man ugly. But okay, I get it. You pretty. You got long hair. I don't have long hair. I used to have long hair. I don't have long hair no more. But, you know, so he called us ugly, and then he threw the water bottle at Gangster Boo. So then I ran up to, you know, to block them and protect them, but I wasn't going to go over there and hit him. You know, I wasn't going to hit him. I wasn't going to hit nobody in that group because I'm cool with everybody in that group. So I just really just ran up just to, like, stop this dude. But then, you know, next day, I know my boys behind me kept running, running. They didn't stop because they don't hang out with them. So then they ran. And next thing I know, you know, people stopped punching this and that, and we. We broke it up.
A
Was it still all for publicity or was it real on?
B
No, that was real.
A
Wow.
B
Yeah, that was real.
A
That was probably one of the most.
B
Iconic people backstage with black eyes. Yeah, it was real.
A
Holy.
B
Yeah, it was real real. There was no, they want to start. It was real. And then they said to him backstage. He stayed backstage for a while to calm down, and we. We continued it. And then he walked back on stage. He walked straight over to me. You know, he apologized and he like, man, you know this. I was like, man, I'm not tripping, bro. You're like, we all family here. We all hugged out and then. And then it's the first of the month. We, you know, we sung the song together. The vibes was back good. And backstage, everybody was hugging and taking pictures. It was back cool. And me and Lazy Bone posted a picture backstage of us hugging each other, smiling. It was on every. It was everywhere.
A
But if you, you know, it was one of the most iconic verses, and.
B
It actually, it was the best verse.
A
Probably go down in history. So it was like, you know, whether Busy was just playing a character, we'll never know. It's. It was kind of worth it.
B
Yeah, man. It was super worth, man. Shout out to Busy, man. You gave us the best verses of all times. And I love you, brother. Let's.
A
Yeah, but.
B
Yeah, it was. It was great. You know, I was glad. I wouldn't. I wouldn't take one minute of that back.
A
Yeah.
B
But the only thing what was a little crazy about that moment is I'm looking in the audience, and the audience kind of got divided. So, like, the Bone fans was on that side of the stage, and the Three 6 Mafia fans was on this side of the stage.
A
Right.
B
So when the fight broke out, I saw little young Dudes jumping on stage right from their side and from outside, like, ready to fight.
A
Fight.
B
Oh. And I'm like, oh, like, somebody tell these young that everybody on this stage is about 50 years old. And it's not that serious. It's not that serious.
A
But I also think what's cool about you guys reconnecting at the end and, like, squashing it and being able to perform together is it shows this generation who is so quick to pull a trigger. Like, hey, you guys can have beef. It can actually turn into a physical altercation, and you guys can still hug it out and be cool because that's how it used to be back in the day.
B
Yeah.
A
With us growing up, you would fight at the bus stop, fight at school, fight wherever, and then you would hug and you guys would either be friends or you guys would just never with each other again.
B
Yeah, that's how. That's how it's supposed to be. And yeah, I love the way. And it was such a iconic night, man. It was so fun.
A
Yeah, I love that. So you're doing a song with Crazy Bunny?
B
Yeah, well, we're doing a whole album.
A
Oh, okay.
B
We got an album that'll come out the follow this year, but we got a single that drops this Friday called I Go Dumb. And it's like on some. Some 90s, you know, get Crunk, Get Crunk, Memphis, you know, old DJ Paul type. And we got a whole album that's coming out.
A
I'm kind of excited for that because.
B
I got a lot of albums coming out. So I got an album with me and Young Buck that's coming out. I've been knowing Young Buck.
A
Yeah.
B
For forever. So we got an album coming out, and then I got a solo album coming out, an album being Crazy Bone. And then just. I've been producing a lot of people, like, every day I'm doing some with different people.
A
For somebody who doesn't like rapping, you're certainly dropping a lot of projects.
B
Yeah. Yeah. Well, because I like the. Like I said, I like to make the. The music, but when I gotta sit down and write to it.
A
Yeah.
B
But the reason why I'm dropping so many projects this year is because, like I said, you know, reading. Reading. Even if I'm not reading a book, I follow. Oh, you know, listening to a book. I follow a lot of educational pages on Instagram. So, like, if I'm on Instagram, I love those. I'm not just on there looking at all of the crazy.
A
Yeah.
B
Me, I actually started unfollowing some of the page. I stopped. All the pages that were showing people fighting, I stopped following all of those.
A
Yeah, you don't want to bring that energy in.
B
Yeah, I stopped following all that.
A
Yeah.
B
But, you know, just. Just watching, you know, news in Memphis and LA is. Or bring it right back into you. But it's some. Some of it you gotta know. Like when you told me about Jelly through his phone and in the, in the river, like, I get it, but sometimes some stuff you want to hear, especially in Tennessee, because if they announce a tornado. Jelly, we probably want to start getting away from here. Yeah.
A
No, my husband. The way my husband is thinking about it, he's like, somebody on my team will tell me, like, he really is like, I don't give a fuck what's going on online. He's like, I'm living my life and nobody's going to bother me.
B
Yeah, that's the best way. Like, as long as he got a wife like you or somebody on the team, you can do that. But, like, if you don't have nobody, like, that's kind of dangerous.
A
Yeah, for sure.
B
It's kind of dangerous. So when I'm on social media, I'm looking at. I'm looking at. I got. I follow a lot of pages, own educational stuff, food, homes, whatever, whatever. And I saw. I saw some on there one day that talked about procrastinating and, you know, and just like. And I sent this to all of the artists who I knew where this guy was talking about, you know, just sitting on music. Sitting on music. I'm like, man, I'm sitting on so much music. And I'm like, you know, I'm not gonna do that this year. So I set up. It took. It took about a week.
A
Week.
B
I set up and I took all of my hard drives back all the way from 2008, and I just started pulling. Putting all these beats and songs and song ideas on one hard drive. And then I made copies of that hard drive. It came out to be thousands of files. I had to scale that down to the hundreds. Then I scaled that down to like my favorite. Maybe 10 beats for. But Buck. 10 beats for Crazy Bone and 10 beats for a Paul album and like another 10 for a Paul solo, just instrumental album. And. And that's. And now I'm just. I'm getting to it. And I told myself that starting this Friday, I will bring out a new song every two to three weeks for the rest of this year.
A
Hell, yeah. I'm also excited, though, because you said you're bringing beats from 2008. Like, that's gonna be like some OG.
B
There's stuff in there from the 90s.
A
DJ Paul Y. Yeah. That's exciting.
B
Yeah, it is.
A
Yeah. That's going to be nostalgic. I can't wait to hear these projects.
B
Yeah, so that's, that's what I'm trying to do this year, man. Just every two. Y' all subscribe to my Spotify, follow me on social media. Every two to three weeks, I'm gonna bring some out. I don't care if it's just like we talked about earlier about, about the musician bringing out just some, just some music to ride to with nothing on it, with no vocals on. I might just bring out a few of those closed. Yeah, I'm just gonna bring out something.
A
Do it. No, I do it. If anybody can do it, it's you.
B
Yeah.
A
In closing, the last question I want to ask you is, in 50 years, when people talk about DJ Paul, what do you want your legacy to be? If you could see it through your eyes and paint the picture for anybody, what do you want them to remember about you?
B
Man, just, just what I brought to the, the music industry, like the whole creating crunk music, obviously creating crunk music and, and putting that whole energy, that whole tear the club up fight music energy into, into rap music, you know, that went on to go into, into other kinds of music. Like when I listen to, when you listen to some of the drum patterns and those little draft snares that, that I started, like, you hear, you hear that in country music these days. You hear that in all kind of stuff. Like, it's, it's all over the place. Like, you hear it in so much. You hear it in edm, you hear it in funk music. You hear it in everything. So, like, this whole, like, little dirty, little distorted bass sound that I was playing around with as a kid is all over the place right now. And just, just, just that, just my contribution to, to music now.
A
Do you feel like you've gotten your flowers enough?
B
Of course.
A
Good.
B
I used to then until I made that most known unknown album. That's a little too many flowers, so. Yeah, yeah, I, I, I get it enough. You know, some people always be like, oh, man, you never get mentioned and mentioned in this and that, but they just don't know. Like, I really don't like getting mentioned. Yeah, I'm like, cool. Like, I like to fly under the radar, like, you know, give me my awards and, you know, and this and that. And, you know, you can shout me out here and there. But I don't need a. I don't want a lot of attention. I never wanted a lot of attention. I'm still the dude that go around with no security. And I'm sitting up in whole Foods reading the ingredients on the back of ketchup. Like, I don't. I don't want to be, like, known like, hey, man, man, that's you. You're the guy from three six mafia. Like, oh, God. And I'm just trying to see. Okay, I'm. I'm telling him, like, you know, if it's at the top of the ingredients, there's more of it in here than anything else. So just so you know that if it's at the bottom, then it's less of that. So, like right here it said cane sugar. That means it got. It's on the third row. That means it got a lot of cane sugar. I'm more of that dude.
A
So Paul's in his peaceful era. Just ready to. To watch HGTV decorate house is just. You're in your peaceful era and we dig it.
B
Yeah, I've been like that.
A
Yeah, I love that. Thank you so much for coming on today.
B
Thanks for having me.
A
I'm so glad we finally got to sit down.
B
Yeah, yeah. It's been a long time, but just. It's all about timing.
A
Yeah, absolutely. I truly believe in that. So you want to shout out your socials or just Google DJ Paul or if you don't know.
B
Yeah, social media. Mostly all the Media is at DJ Paul Kom like and King of Memphis. That's my YouTube. Subscribe to my YouTube. I'm always loading some stuff on there. The Instagram. I do talk back to the fans. My Twitter, all of DJ Paul Ko and Facebook. Whatever. Whatever. Yeah. Now I'm gonna start getting active on my. My twitch and my tick tock more. You told me.
A
I told you.
B
And they be always telling me to do twitch. I never touched my twitch. I went on. On. On T. Pain's Twitch one day and, you know, I automatically start getting a lot of followers just because they were like, man, this dude is funny. And they were just watching. So I gotta start getting more active on this stuff, you know?
A
You will. You'll do it. I. I feel like you've set a lot of goals for yourself this year, and I think you're gonna crush it. It's only February.
B
Yeah.
A
And you're already crushing it.
B
So it goes fast, though.
A
Yeah.
B
I don't even remember January.
A
Yeah, no. Well, I do. It was 84 days long. It was never gonna end. End.
B
Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. Yeah.
A
Thank you so much, Paul and I can't wait to have you back.
B
Yeah, for sure. Thank you.
A
Thank you guys so much for tuning in to another episode of Dumb Blonde. I'll see you guys next week. Bye.
Episode: TBT: DJ Paul - Three 6 Mafia Lore
Host: Bunnie XO
Guest: DJ Paul (Three 6 Mafia)
Release Date: February 5, 2026
This engaging episode features a deep-dive conversation between host Bunnie XO and DJ Paul, legendary producer and co-founder of Three 6 Mafia. The discussion explores DJ Paul’s journey from his Memphis upbringing, the notorious rise of Three 6 Mafia, music industry insight, the evolution of his personal life and business ventures, struggles with imposter syndrome, and the lore that’s surrounded him for decades. With genuine humor and raw honesty, DJ Paul opens up about the formative experiences, wild tour tales, creative influences, and evolution as a pioneering artist in hip-hop.
[03:36 – 04:36]
“We bring all kind of shit on the bus. And we were like, oh man, we're going to record an album on the off days. ... No days.” – DJ Paul [04:05]
[04:36 – 06:28]
“He probably thought that I was joking with him or something.” – DJ Paul [06:28]
[07:17 – 15:40]
“Sometimes I don’t know who I am ... All the time. I just had this a couple of days ago.” – DJ Paul [07:17]
“The jewelry is just for show with me.” – DJ Paul [11:09]
[17:45 – 22:58]
“You just saw it from every day. ... New Mercedes pull up, new Corvettes pull up to the house ... Memphis during that time.” – DJ Paul [20:08]
[22:58 – 30:08]
“My uncles had a gospel group... my uncle taught me about publishing—that saved my life.” – DJ Paul [29:40]
[30:30 – 33:09]
“We were just into horror movies ... growing up in Memphis, you kind of live in a horror movie.” – DJ Paul [32:31]
[40:16 – 53:00]
“I said, hey, we should call ourselves Triple Six Mafia. ... Next thing I know, white fans came like that. They flocked to us.” – DJ Paul [45:58]
[48:22 – 51:55]
[53:00 – 57:02]
[57:02 – 72:55]
“I used to look at groups like Kiss and Insane Clown Posse and think, I can't imagine how nice it would be to be rich but nobody recognized you.” – DJ Paul [73:46]
[76:06 – 78:27]
[77:32 – 80:53]
“I'm looking at TikTok and I see like a 19-year-old white girl...rapping our lyrics.” – DJ Paul [77:06]
[79:45 – 81:19]
“Still today, Three 6 Mafia never won a Grammy. I’m the only person in 3-6 Mafia that won a Grammy.” – DJ Paul [79:54]
[81:48 – 88:18]
“It's the best thing I ever did in my life.” – DJ Paul [83:03]
[89:19 – 94:29]
[94:29 – 99:19]
[106:46 – 112:27]
“We all hugged out, and then it's the first of the month. ... Backstage, everybody was hugging and taking pictures.” – DJ Paul [111:15]
[118:14 – 120:59]
“Just what I brought to the music industry... putting that whole energy, that whole tear the club up fight music energy into rap music.” – DJ Paul [118:28]
“I used to look at groups like Kiss and Insane Clown Posse and think, I can't imagine how nice it would be to be rich but nobody recognized you.”
— DJ Paul [73:46]
“I wish more young celebrities, rappers, actors—whatever you’re doing in life—just put more money into real estate.”
— DJ Paul [11:09]
“Just what I brought to the music industry... that whole tear the club up, fight music energy in rap.”
— DJ Paul [118:28]
“It’s the best thing I ever did in my life.”
— DJ Paul [83:03]
“You get a different knowledge going through in the streets that a school could never teach you... Pain is the quickest way to learn anything.”
— DJ Paul [61:44, 62:42]
This episode offers a lively and deeply personal window into hip-hop history, the mind of a true pioneer, and a testament to personal growth. DJ Paul’s stories oscillate from hilarious industry tales to sobering reflections on legacy, health, and self-worth—perfect for longtime fans and newcomers alike.