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Greg Rosenthal
What's up, everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, and I'm teaming up with the king of spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs, mock drafts to my top 101, free agents will have it covered for you with all new episodes every Thursday, keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents starting on March 6th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Stephen A. Smith
What's up, everyone?
Snoop Dogg
Julie Swerbinks here, along with former NHL player Nate Thompson. We're doing a new podcast together.
Dr. Dre
Here we go.
Snoop Dogg
The name Energy Line with Nate and jsb. Each week, we'll get together and talk about hockey life. All topics are fair game, right? Exactly. And you'll never know who will drop by to join us. Julia's pretty well connected. She has text threads going that you wouldn't believe.
Stephen A. Smith
Listen to Energy Line with Nate and jsb on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts.
Snoop Dogg
Or wherever you get your podcasts.
Stephen A. Smith
Let's talk a little business for a second here, because still, Jen, Dre, and Snoop, talk about this for a second. What this project is, how y'all collaborated on this, talk about this, and what y'all, what you want to go about.
Daniel Jeremiah
It's your world, Dr. Dre, because you the one all basically what this process is when it comes to this gin shit. Dr. Dre is the psychologist, the scientist, the drinker, the tester. I'm the marketing, the branding, the push and promote. But he's the one that got that taste.
Snoop Dogg
Yeah, I got this.
Daniel Jeremiah
And the look.
Snoop Dogg
Yeah, I got this. It's like, Jimmy can step back, Snoop can step back. I got this. I know what it's supposed to taste like. I know what it's supposed to feel like. So, yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, there you go.
Stephen A. Smith
You know what? Excuse me. Can I have a glass? Let me get a little juice.
Snoop Dogg
You don't smoke, but you drink.
Daniel Jeremiah
Oh, you already mixed it.
Stephen A. Smith
I'm gonna touch it. I'm gonna touch a little bit.
Daniel Jeremiah
Put some ice a little bit.
Stephen A. Smith
I mean, ain't nothing wrong with little gin.
Daniel Jeremiah
Damn, I ain't that much of a drunk.
Snoop Dogg
I just want my on ice.
Daniel Jeremiah
She gave me a Dr. Dre Glass.
Stephen A. Smith
There you go.
Daniel Jeremiah
I'm Snoop Dogg.
Snoop Dogg
Y'all been to the laboratory. We developed this from ground up, so it has our official taste.
Daniel Jeremiah
And this is just us, so that's our gentleman.
Snoop Dogg
This is us. Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
So that's our gin. That's not a gin that we borrowed from somebody.
Snoop Dogg
Magnificent group of people that's around and these scientists and all these taste tests and all of that. And it was.
Daniel Jeremiah
So you put on that white jacket and the gloves and the hat and all that.
Snoop Dogg
All of that.
Stephen A. Smith
Yeah.
Daniel Jeremiah
Where was I at?
Stephen A. Smith
I. I was getting ready.
Snoop Dogg
That was my next question.
Stephen A. Smith
That's my next question.
Snoop Dogg
This was probably somewhere smoking.
Stephen A. Smith
Listen, he gonna show up when it's time, though.
Daniel Jeremiah
He show up when it's time, show out.
Snoop Dogg
No question about it.
Stephen A. Smith
You're not just a musician. You're not just an artist. Both of you are businessmen. But, Dre, obviously, when people talk about you, we see this. We see we. Because we see him so much everywhere. The man's trying to take my job.
Snoop Dogg
I'm a hermit, man. I like staying at home.
Stephen A. Smith
Right.
Snoop Dogg
I came outside for you, man.
Stephen A. Smith
I appreciate that. Thank you so much.
Daniel Jeremiah
I'm surprised a. To make you do the interview in his living room.
Stephen A. Smith
And I would have come if that's what he. If that's what it took to get this interview. Absolutely. But, Dr. Dre, I gotta say something, man.
Snoop Dogg
What's up?
Stephen A. Smith
I ain't getting in your pockets. It's your business. I just want. I just want to be clear.
Snoop Dogg
Give it to me.
Stephen A. Smith
I do know this. Beats by Dre.
Snoop Dogg
Yeah.
Stephen A. Smith
Everybody got one, Yo. Everybody got one. You collaborated with Apple to launch the streaming service Apple Music.
Snoop Dogg
Absolutely.
Stephen A. Smith
That's Apple, bro. I just want you to know that I looked at that market cap. You know, Ching Ching. People like ESPN and Warner Brothers and Fox, you collaborate them, they worth a few hundred billion. I looked at Apple. Their market cap was, like, at 3 trillion. That's a lot of money, Dre. And the way I look at it is that there ain't no way they could be that successful if it were not for you. Could you talk to us about how life.
Snoop Dogg
You know what, Steven? I'm not going there.
Stephen A. Smith
I'm just saying. Can you talk about how.
Snoop Dogg
Let's just say life is good, and I'm very comfortable right now.
Stephen A. Smith
It's very comfortable. But could you elaborate on the entrepreneurial spirit and how all of this came about? Could you tell.
Snoop Dogg
Well, it came about. I have to give Jimmy, Ivan, and a lot of other people credit for that. It's just like, I'm just a creative man, you know?
Stephen A. Smith
Just a creative.
Snoop Dogg
I'm a creative person. I'm a creative person. I'm. Yeah, I'm an innovator. In all of that. And I get in and I play my position. I say what I have to say to make things move around, and everybody else does their thing and we collaborate. And to be honest with you, man, there's nothing that I've ever done in my entire life that wasn't a collaboration. I love collaborating. As a matter of fact, I don't even want to do anything alone.
Stephen A. Smith
Wow. Wow.
Snoop Dogg
That sounds boring as fuck.
Daniel Jeremiah
No, that sounds dope.
Stephen A. Smith
Nah, I think it sounds dope.
Snoop Dogg
I think it's small. It's a big collaboration with everything that I've done from Beats by Dre, from the music, the films and everything, everything is a collaboration.
Stephen A. Smith
I remember you acting a little bit in Train today in a couple other spots.
Snoop Dogg
Well, I don't know if I want.
Stephen A. Smith
To talk about that. I'm just asking.
Snoop Dogg
I mean, you know, that's not my proudest moment, the acting, you know, I tried it.
Stephen A. Smith
My.
Snoop Dogg
Well, you weren't bad. I'll try.
Stephen A. Smith
As a wannabe thespian, I'll try.
Snoop Dogg
I'll try anything. I was all right, but I'd rather be on the other side of the camera.
Stephen A. Smith
I feel you. But when you think about who you are and what you've done, particularly from an entrepreneurial position, what advice would you give to the youngsters out there who have similar aspirations? Because, you know, everybody looking at.
Snoop Dogg
It's about collaboration. Casting is important. And what I mean about casting is finding the right people to collaborate with, finding a partner, finding your Snoop Dogg. You know what I mean? Finding your Eminem, finding your Jimmy Iovine, finding somebody that's really great to collaborate with, but how do you do it?
Stephen A. Smith
Well, I'm not being you, but I'm saying how do you know when the person is right?
Snoop Dogg
Well, it's just as difficult as anything else, okay? You know, finding the right person to collaborate with, finding the right business venture or whatever, you know, finding that person that is like minded that you can collaborate with, that you guys are thinking the same and you're on the same mission. That's what it is. Which is a really difficult thing to find because you'll find a friend, somebody that may be janky or something like that, that may be greedy or narcissistic or whatever the fuck. It's really important to. To find the right people to collaborate with. How the hell have you.
Stephen A. Smith
How the hell have you done it? You collaborate with everybody.
Daniel Jeremiah
Real is rare. You know, I'm. I'm the people's champ. You are with everybody. Like, that's how it's so easy for me to do it because I just. With everybody, and it's like, if you. If you of my spirit and you my light and I get down like, you get down. I give it a try. Like, I don't have no problem with trying. I don't mind living on the edge.
Stephen A. Smith
But when you do that again, I'll ask you the same question I just asked Dr. Dre. Finding the right mix, finding the right person to collab with. How do you determine what is right and what is wrong for you?
Daniel Jeremiah
The spirit got to be right first and foremost. Our spirit's gotta match. Like, we gotta. Damn it, be the same people. Like, when I work with Pharrell, Wiz Khalifa, whoever I work with other than Dr. Dre, it's the spirit thing. It's like, we brothers, we friends, we family. It's not just an opportunity to work with each other. It's like I get a chance to embody you and your team and your spirit, and you get a chance to do the same thing with me. So when we collaborate, it feel like it's family rather than just a moment.
Snoop Dogg
Let me tell you something. People tell you who they are. You just have to listen. Everybody tells you exactly if you're supposed to be fucking with them or not. They tell you. You just have to listen. Their body language. Their body language. Certain shit that they say, they let you know. They let you know, listen, don't fuck with me. I'm bad for you.
Daniel Jeremiah
Wow.
Snoop Dogg
You just have to listen to that shit. You have to pay attention to that.
Daniel Jeremiah
Doc and James, nigga say, hey, Stephen A, don't fuck with me.
Snoop Dogg
Don't fuck with me. I'm bad for you.
Stephen A. Smith
Have you ever found yourself in a situation where you didn't listen?
Snoop Dogg
Absolutely.
Daniel Jeremiah
Many times.
Snoop Dogg
Absolutely. And every time, what you do is you give people the benefit of the doubt. You try to believe that they're gonna be a good person, and you try to believe that this motherfucker has your best interest at heart.
Stephen A. Smith
And then they burn you.
Snoop Dogg
Fails every time they tell you off top. They tell you with the body language or with their words or whatever the fuck if you should fuck with them or not. And it's your fault if you keep pushing with that certain motherfucker.
Stephen A. Smith
Is the definition of somebody who's not like that. Somebody that's got your spirit, right? Somebody that you think is the right person to collab with. Somebody simply or as simple as somebody who's rooting for your success as much as they're rooting for their Own.
Daniel Jeremiah
That is a key component. It has to be somebody that genuinely loves you. You don't want to work with nobody who hates on you behind closed doors. Like, you want somebody that champions you, that speaks on you, that really represents you. So that way, when you're together, you know, it's the same feeling when you're not together.
Snoop Dogg
That's it. You ask the question, how do you know? They tell you. You just have to pay attention to what they're saying and what they're doing. They let you know if you should fuck with them or not.
Stephen A. Smith
Do you know more now at the age of 59, 52?
Daniel Jeremiah
I know so much more.
Stephen A. Smith
A decade ago, two decades ago.
Snoop Dogg
I mean, it goes back.
Stephen A. Smith
What's the difference? What's the difference?
Snoop Dogg
It goes back to that whole generic fucking saying, like, I wish I knew then what I know now. I mean, I wish. Whatever the fuck, I wish I knew then what I know now. It's that same thing. You have to pay attention to the signs. That's all it is. People, like I said, they tell you exactly if you should be fucking with them or not. They tell you. They, they, they. They speak it or they move it. That's all it is.
Stephen A. Smith
Snoop, let me dissect you a little bit here. Outside of your music. I mean, let me bring up. I mean, now you on the Voice. You're on the Voice. I mean, it doesn't stop with you, man. It doesn't stop. I. I'm just saying, do you ever find they're gonna start calling you Shaq? You know that, right? They're gonna start calling you Shaq, they're gonna start calling you mad. They'll be like, can somebody else have a job? I mean, you doing it all, brother. You doing it. I'm telling you right now. Dream. This brother can walk into sports commentary now. Now. And I'm not just talking about this box office. I'm talking about talking sports, breaking that shit down. This brother's better than most right now. Right now. I'm looking at you like that. It doesn't stop with you. It really, really doesn't. Talk to me about the Voice right now and that. And that new project that you are. You are a part of right now.
Daniel Jeremiah
I took that deal with the Voice and didn't know what I was getting into, but I'm glad I did because it gives me a chance to coach a lot of artists that are young, just, like, I was rough around the edges. So I give them information, tool list knowledge, and then at the same time, it's a fun experience for me because I get a chance to just sit back and be a real person rather than be a superstar and get on a one on one with these artists and inspire them. So it's a great look for me and it's a great feeling. I didn't know it would feel like that, but I'm having a great time with the whole cast over there.
Stephen A. Smith
What about the Olympics? You did the Olympics too? I mean, I don't know if we'll ever get over listening to you call boxing. You know, you call boxing and Jake, Paul and oh, Lord, oh, Lord.
Snoop Dogg
Who does not like listening to Snoop commentators?
Stephen A. Smith
Snoop, it's wild. It's off the charts, but it's big time. I'm like this, he's right. He's right. And he says shit that a lot of us wish we could say, but we don't have. We can't say it on certain platforms. So that's what you bring to the table. And I don't know if you. If you realize this. Snoop has actually opened up opportunities for people who were already in the sports world before him because they let you know, you do what you do.
Daniel Jeremiah
Like this Marsh. He getting it right now.
Stephen A. Smith
He getting it in. He getting it Beast. But I'm loving it because, listen, there's got to be a pioneer. They got to be somebody that sets the stage. The hell with.
Daniel Jeremiah
But it was people that I was aspired to be. So it's not. I'm not the pioneer. I'm just the one that took the flagship to run with it when somebody passed the baton to me. So naturally I gotta pass it to somebody else. You know what I'm saying? So it's about when you get that opportunity, what do you do with it? Are you professional Snoop Dogg? Are you gonna be high on set? Are your lines gonna be dragging? Are you gonna know what you're talking about? Every opportunity that I get, I always outwork the contract, always make sure to study, to be on deck, to make sure that I know, information wise, what I'm supposed to be talking about. So if anything comes to me, I have an answer for it. If I don't have an answer, I can freestyle my way up out of it, but it sounds professional enough to know that he's qualified for the job.
Stephen A. Smith
Is that why you feel you've ultimately not only have been exceptional at what you're doing, but you've evolved to being that mentor kind of individual? Is that the kind of advice that you give to a lot of cats on the come up who look to you, wanting you to espouse your words to them. Is that what you tell them?
Daniel Jeremiah
It's crazy, Stephen, that they look at me as Uncle Snoop and as somebody to get information from when I was just a young, wild individual that had none of this wisdom. And now that I have it, I love giving it away. I love talking to athletes, entertainers. I love when it's an issue in the hip hop industry or any industry where someone needs me to step in and be the resolution to it all. I feel like that's my mission. That's my journey. That's part of the carrying the torch. When they gave me that torch, that lady said, the only people that get to touch this torch are peace bearers, people who are peace messengers. And you are a peace messenger.
Snoop Dogg
And that's what makes Snoop Dogg undeniable and forever.
Stephen A. Smith
People say that about you too, though, Dre. A lot of people that talk, I'm.
Daniel Jeremiah
Telling you, people who talk about you speak on it.
Stephen A. Smith
They love you, they revere you. They talk about how you give them words of wisdom, how you espouse a lot of the same stuff that Snoop said. Snoop has told me this on many occasions. I'm just letting him tell me, tell it to my audience. But he's told me this personally, the kind of information that he just finished articulating. And he always talked about how you say the same exact things. He's open about it, though. You're not why.
Snoop Dogg
I am open about it. It's just, you know, they know, right?
Daniel Jeremiah
We know.
Snoop Dogg
You know what I mean? It's just like, it's not for the cameras and all this shit, you know, My thing is, they know what it is with me. They know what love is. And my definition of love is so much deeper than most.
Stephen A. Smith
And why do you say that?
Snoop Dogg
I don't. Well, my definition of love is just like, it's family. It's so, you know, it's, I can.
Stephen A. Smith
Fuck with you, but anybody else try that, it's gonna be a problem. That kind of thing.
Snoop Dogg
It's a really deep definition for me.
Daniel Jeremiah
And Dr. Dre don't mind sharing the ball. Like, you know, you got a lot of people that like to hot dog and just keep shooting or keep trying to score. Dr. Dre want to make sure everybody get the ball.
Snoop Dogg
I want to make sure everybody's eating and everybody's happy.
Daniel Jeremiah
He makes sure everybody get the ball. That's one thing I don't.
Snoop Dogg
Yeah, we don't. We never talk about money. We never talk about credits or none of that shit.
Daniel Jeremiah
Nope.
Snoop Dogg
It's just all love and respect. That's how we operate.
Stephen A. Smith
Dr. Dre, how do you react when if you see somebody that you love, that's a brother that, you know, his heart's in the right place, but they're getting in their own way? What's that like? What's a conversation at that moment, that's.
Snoop Dogg
When the big brother comes out.
Daniel Jeremiah
Okay.
Snoop Dogg
You know, I'm. I'm talk. You know, I'm gonna say what I. I. I'm gonna say what the fuck I have to say. Like, nigga, you fucking up.
Daniel Jeremiah
He gonna say it just like that, too.
Snoop Dogg
Nigga, you fucking up. We need to pull back. What the fuck are you doing?
Daniel Jeremiah
I'm laughing, but I'm serious. This nigga.
Stephen A. Smith
I see your face, he.
Daniel Jeremiah
Talk to you like he want to punch you. Like, let's be that serious.
Snoop Dogg
But that's my face. Like, nigga, what the fuck is wrong with you? Fuck is wrong. What the fuck are you doing, man?
Daniel Jeremiah
Especially if you're in his living room, you feel cornered when he starts saying that kind of shit, you like, I don't know what I was thinking.
Snoop Dogg
Because you see the face, though. Like, what the fuck is wrong with you?
Stephen A. Smith
Cause you're mad about them getting in their own way.
Daniel Jeremiah
When he went to his high voice, nigga, what the.
Snoop Dogg
That's a problem.
Daniel Jeremiah
Nigga went to his high voice.
Snoop Dogg
N. Yeah, my Porcetta was a motherfucker. Stevens. Yes.
Stephen A. Smith
What could possibly get in your way at this stage and point in time in your career?
Snoop Dogg
Only me. The only thing that can get in my way is me making a fucking.
Daniel Jeremiah
That was a great fucking answer, Dr. Dre. That was a great fucking answer.
Stephen A. Smith
And how does that feel?
Snoop Dogg
And I'm asking, hey, Steve, that could never happen. I stay to myself. I'm a fucking hermit, man. I stay to myself. I stay in my house. I don't even like leaving my house. Like I said, I came out here to do this shit with Chewing Stoop. That's it. I'm on. You know, I like staying at home. Everything that I need is in my house. I like staying at home, and I'm comfortable and I enjoy my solitude.
Stephen A. Smith
But what I was asking was to know that the only to reach a point in time in life where you know that the only thing that can get in your way is you. Nobody else can fuck with your life but you. That is a level of freedom most human beings on this planet don't feel they have.
Snoop Dogg
That's exactly what it is a certain level of freedom that I have. It's freedom and it's bliss.
Daniel Jeremiah
That's the level that every woman and man should try to get to in life. That's called mastering yourself. When you master yourself, you understand, you don't require nobody but yourself. And it's only you that can make it better or make it worse.
Stephen A. Smith
You know, people talk about the power of music and the influence it breeds. And I'm thinking about you, Jimmy Ivey, and what you're doing at USC and the millions y'all gave the aspiring students. I want you to talk about that for a quick second. I want you to talk about some of the stuff you do, and I'm gonna get in that flag football joint as well. Yeah. But I want you to talk about what you and Jimmy Iovine doing over at USC and how that's been panning out.
Snoop Dogg
The USC thing is like the education system has been just the same curriculum year after year after year after year. And what I feel. And what we feel they're doing is training kids to be employees instead of leaders. You know, that's the same curriculum that's been happening year after year after year. You're training kids to be employees, you know, so why not train kids to be leaders? You know, that's what our academy is doing at usc. And everything that we're doing with these high schools that we're trying to build changed the way that the education system is operating for these kids.
Stephen A. Smith
How's that coming along?
Snoop Dogg
It's coming along great. We're at the beginning stages of it, and it's going great. You know, we have kids coming out of our academy that, you know, Google are hiring and Apple, they're. They're hiring as well. It's like kids that are brilliant, that are leaders, you know, the edge. Like I said, the education system for this time, from the beginning of the education system, has been training kids to be employees, Right?
Stephen A. Smith
Oh, I'm guilty.
Snoop Dogg
That's all it's about.
Stephen A. Smith
I'm guilty of that. I stepped out like shit. I ain't step out and try to be an entrepreneur till my 50s. Crying out loud, I'm late. I'm late as hell to the party.
Daniel Jeremiah
Because as long as you in the.
Snoop Dogg
You have to get up. If you have to be at school at 8 or 9 o'clock and you get out at 4, 3 or 4 o'clock, it's like you're training kids to be employees.
Stephen A. Smith
Snoop, what about you? I'm looking at Snoop. Youth football. Go ahead. What about Me, ain't nobody stopping him. I know. I already got a contact high.
Daniel Jeremiah
We understand.
Stephen A. Smith
I'm good, though. I mean, with everything that you've been doing, this new youth football league, right? Flag football, and obviously this album is going to take off. You know, I'm going to be talking about it. It's just going to elevate your impact, right? How does that make you feel? How much differently do you feel about yourself when you think and imagine the impact that you're going to have moving forward? Because it's only growing. I don't know if you've known if you noticed the or not, but the Snoop impact has only grown. It hasn't lessened.
Daniel Jeremiah
I like that. I like the fact that the demographic of it all like, it's little babies all the way up to senior citizens. Shay, when we was on your show today, she was telling me about how her daughter listens to my music. Doggieland. Then we was at another function the other night, and somebody was telling me and Dre how they listen to my kid music. Doggyland. This is music that I made for my grandkids that's becoming a big hit for me on the low. And it's not publicized because I don't want it publicized. It's something that I'm doing for the kids, to give them education, like Dre said, to change the system. Like, I'm not changing the curriculum, but I'm changing that toddler age from toddlers to five. What type of music are you listening to? What inspiration are you getting before you start learning about education in school? So that's the things that I'm most proud of. Then I got the Snoop Youth Special Stars, where we deal with kids with autism and special needs. And that's been going on for, like, six, seven years. And we show parents how to take those kids that they've been hiding and bring them out and have a good time. We've been doing great functions with them. Like, these are the moments that mean the most to me. Like, that's my accolade to be able to give back to a kid that has no opportunity. Because I was that same kid. Dre was that same kid. We had to make the most of whatever we had. But now that we have so much, it's only right to give back so they can work with more than we have.
Stephen A. Smith
And how do you feel, both of y'all? Where y'all come from? Cali.
Daniel Jeremiah
I mean, you know, we feel good, man. Compton and Long Beach.
Stephen A. Smith
I mean, come on, now.
Snoop Dogg
Come on.
Stephen A. Smith
I'M just looking at.
Snoop Dogg
Come on, man.
Stephen A. Smith
It's a special thing when you consider to me, it's the road travel. It's not where you at. It's what you had to go through to get there that counts most, man.
Daniel Jeremiah
We made our cities proud. We made our cities worldwide. Like Compton is loved and respected around the whole globe, just like Long beach is. And it's a beautiful thing that we could take something that you looked at in a negative manner and we can make something positive out of it. And now it's an honor to be from those cities.
Snoop Dogg
Imagine what we've been able to accomplish. You know, Compton is only 9.9square miles. It sounds big as, right? You know, it's. Yeah, it's. Imagine what we've been able to accomplish over the last 30 years, what we've been able to build, you know, us as a duo, all the things that fall with us and under us and what we've been able to accomplish. And not only that, how many people and kids and families we've been able.
Daniel Jeremiah
To help and how much gang violence that we stopped from coming together. That's the ultimate like. And before me and Dre got together, Compton and Long beach didn't see eye to eye. So when we got together, we forced the issue because our music was so good, and it connected both of us to where we realized, man, what we tripping with them for, man, they my homeboys. And it established a relationship to where gang violence dropped between those two cities. And that's something that I'm proud of because I so many people that was gang bangers became rappers.
Snoop Dogg
Look at what we've been able to do and what we've been able to accomplish and how many people we've been able to touch in a positive way. That's what people need to look at, you know.
Daniel Jeremiah
Geico's motorcycle expertise gives me.
Snoop Dogg
The coverage I need. Like 24. 7 claims I'm on cloud nine.
Dr. Dre
Clouds are wholly unable to support the weight of an adult human.
Snoop Dogg
What's happening?
Dr. Dre
Furthermore, clouds are not numbered. Even if you procured a jetpack and searched, you'd find no cloud numbered nine. However, at that altitude, you'd likely befriend a flock of migrating snow geese. Geese who would encourage you to leave your 24.7geico motorcycle claims insurance behind, as they would take you in and even share their dinner of crickets and clovers with you. GEICO assumes no liability for any indigestion that may occur from a clover cricket dinner. GEICO expertise for your motorcycle.
Greg Rosenthal
What's up, everyone? It's Greg Rosenthal, and I'm teaming up with the King of Spring, Daniel Jeremiah. He requires me to say that we're going to be bringing you 40s and free agents, the only podcast you'll need this NFL draft season. From DJs mock drafts to my top 101, free agents will have it covered for you, with all new episodes every Thursday, keeping you up to date as we head to the NFL Draft. Listen to 40s and free agents starting on March 6th on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Summary of "Interview Only: Money Talk – Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg Launch Their Own Gin, STILL G.I.N."
Podcast Information:
In this episode of The Stephen A. Smith Show, host Stephen A. Smith engages in an insightful conversation with hip-hop legends Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg. The primary focus revolves around their collaborative venture, STILL G.I.N., a premium gin brand they have meticulously developed together.
Collaboration Dynamics: Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg delve into the intricacies of launching their gin, highlighting their distinct roles within the project. Dr. Dre emphasizes his role as the "psychologist, the scientist, the drinker, the tester," ensuring the gin's quality and unique taste (01:18). Snoop Dogg complements this by overseeing the branding and presentation aspects, asserting, "I know what it's supposed to taste like. I know what it's supposed to feel like" (01:33).
Notable Quotes:
The Power of Collaboration: A significant portion of the discussion revolves around the essence of collaboration in entrepreneurship. Snoop Dogg shares his philosophy, stating, "There ain't nothing that I've ever done in my entire life that wasn't a collaboration" (04:24). He underscores the importance of finding the right partners who share a similar mission and spirit.
Choosing the Right Partners: Stephen A. Smith probes into how Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg identify suitable collaborators. Snoop Dogg advises, "You just have to pay attention to what they're saying and what they're doing. They let you know if you should fuck with them or not" (09:35), emphasizing the need to observe both words and actions.
Notable Quotes:
Television and Commentary: Snoop Dogg discusses his role on The Voice and his foray into sports commentary. He appreciates the platform for allowing him to mentor young artists and share his experiences, stating, "It's a great look for me and it's a great feeling" (10:53).
Balancing Creativity and Business: Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg highlight the balance between creative pursuits and business responsibilities. Snoop Dogg reflects on his acting attempts, admitting, "That's not my proudest moment... I'd rather be on the other side of the camera" (05:18), showcasing his preference for behind-the-scenes roles.
USC Partnership and Youth Programs: The discussion shifts to their collaborative efforts in education. Snoop Dogg criticizes the traditional education system for training "kids to be employees instead of leaders" (18:22) and introduces their academy at USC aimed at fostering leadership and innovation among students.
Youth Football League and Special Needs Support: Snoop Dogg elaborates on their youth football league and special programs for children with autism and special needs. He expresses pride in initiatives like "Doggyland" music for children and programs supporting kids with special needs, highlighting, "These are the moments that mean the most to me" (20:03).
Community Transformation: Both artists reflect on their roots in Compton and Long Beach, celebrating how their success has positively impacted these communities. Dr. Dre notes, "Before me and Dre got together, Compton and Long Beach didn't see eye to eye" (22:25), emphasizing the role of their music in bridging community divides.
Notable Quotes:
Self-Mastery and Personal Growth: The conversation touches on the concept of self-mastery. Snoop Dogg shares his belief that "the only thing that can get in my way is me making a [fucking]" (16:49), highlighting the importance of personal responsibility and inner freedom.
Advice to the Younger Generation: Both Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg impart wisdom to aspiring entrepreneurs and artists. Snoop Dogg emphasizes the necessity of "mastering yourself" to achieve true freedom and success, aligning with their mission to inspire and mentor the next generation.
Notable Quotes:
Stephen A. Smith wraps up the episode by acknowledging the immense impact Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg have had beyond their music careers. Their ventures into entrepreneurship, education, and community development underscore their commitment to leveraging their success for broader societal benefits. The episode concludes with a light-hearted exchange, reinforcing the camaraderie and mutual respect between the hosts and guests.
Key Takeaways:
This episode provides a comprehensive look into the entrepreneurial minds of Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg, offering inspiration and actionable insights for anyone interested in business, collaboration, and community impact.