Xposure Podcast

Episode 15: Unraveling the Unstoppable: Haitian Fresh's Epic Journey from Haiti to Music Stardom

October 18, 2023 Xposure Episode 15
Episode 15: Unraveling the Unstoppable: Haitian Fresh's Epic Journey from Haiti to Music Stardom
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Xposure Podcast
Episode 15: Unraveling the Unstoppable: Haitian Fresh's Epic Journey from Haiti to Music Stardom
Oct 18, 2023 Episode 15
Xposure

© 2023 Raw Material Entertainment
Hosted by: The Global Zoe, Eric Biddines & Drego Mill

Hold onto your headphones, folks! We're hitting the ultimate crescendo as we sit down with the unstoppable force that is Haitian Fresh. We're going to navigate the labyrinth of his journey - from the raw streets of Haiti to the spotlights of America, all the way to the top of the music industry charts. It's a tale of courage, resilience, and a relentless pursuit of dreams that will leave you reeling and inspired.

Haitian Fresh folds back the layers of his life, revealing the intricate details of his migration. We learn about his mother's relentless resilience and the trials that came with transitioning from the rough edges of Belle Glade to the alien world of the Mary Helper Christian School. Discover how he turned setbacks into stepping stones on his path to success. Then, get ready to lift your spirits with his pyrrhic victory over writer's block which led to the creation of the biggest song in Florida and his eventual signing with Wyclef. His story is a testament to talent, tenacity, hustle, and the audacity of dreams.

Finally, we ground ourselves back to his roots in Haiti. Haitian Fresh speaks passionately about his undying love for his homeland, his zeal to uplift Haitian artists, and his commitment to giving back. We learn about the push and pull of the music industry, and how Haitian Fresh has used his platform to promote respect and appreciation for Haitian culture. Tune in for an unforgettable symphony of courage, resilience and the relentless pursuit of dreams.

⏰ Chapter Markers ⏰
0:00 - Life in Haiti, Adjusting to America
10:33 - Apologies and Forgiveness for Past Mistreatment
20:06 - A Journey to a New School
23:07 - From High School Dreams to Disappointment
29:50 - Journey to College and Music Success
40:33 - From Rapper's Block to Haitian Fresh
46:49 - Music Industry Struggles and Success
50:30 - Music Industry Experiences
59:43 - Politics, Music, and Personal Feuds
1:05:12 - Representing Haiti Through Music
1:15:45 - Ross and Fresh Collaboration and Success
1:28:14 - Respect and Support in Music Industry
1:38:20 - Motivation and Support in Music Industry
1:51:12 - Haiti's Current Troubles and Giving Back
1:54:44 - Supporting Haitian Artists and Unity

⭐ Support: Help us continue making great content for listeners everywhere ➣ https://www.buzzsprout.com/2082493/support

More than just a Podcast, It’s a Movement”❗️

➣ Watch "Xposure Podcast" on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkY1...
➣ Follow "Xposure Podcast" on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/xposurepodc...
➣ Like "Xposure Podcast" on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?...
➣ For Guest Appearances, Sponsorship & Bookings: xposurethepodcast@gmail.com
➣ Visit our official website: https://www.XposurePodcast.com

Luc Belaire
America's #1 sparkling wine or Champagne brand, Luc Belaire exemplifies quality, heritage & style.

Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Support the Show.

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Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

© 2023 Raw Material Entertainment
Hosted by: The Global Zoe, Eric Biddines & Drego Mill

Hold onto your headphones, folks! We're hitting the ultimate crescendo as we sit down with the unstoppable force that is Haitian Fresh. We're going to navigate the labyrinth of his journey - from the raw streets of Haiti to the spotlights of America, all the way to the top of the music industry charts. It's a tale of courage, resilience, and a relentless pursuit of dreams that will leave you reeling and inspired.

Haitian Fresh folds back the layers of his life, revealing the intricate details of his migration. We learn about his mother's relentless resilience and the trials that came with transitioning from the rough edges of Belle Glade to the alien world of the Mary Helper Christian School. Discover how he turned setbacks into stepping stones on his path to success. Then, get ready to lift your spirits with his pyrrhic victory over writer's block which led to the creation of the biggest song in Florida and his eventual signing with Wyclef. His story is a testament to talent, tenacity, hustle, and the audacity of dreams.

Finally, we ground ourselves back to his roots in Haiti. Haitian Fresh speaks passionately about his undying love for his homeland, his zeal to uplift Haitian artists, and his commitment to giving back. We learn about the push and pull of the music industry, and how Haitian Fresh has used his platform to promote respect and appreciation for Haitian culture. Tune in for an unforgettable symphony of courage, resilience and the relentless pursuit of dreams.

⏰ Chapter Markers ⏰
0:00 - Life in Haiti, Adjusting to America
10:33 - Apologies and Forgiveness for Past Mistreatment
20:06 - A Journey to a New School
23:07 - From High School Dreams to Disappointment
29:50 - Journey to College and Music Success
40:33 - From Rapper's Block to Haitian Fresh
46:49 - Music Industry Struggles and Success
50:30 - Music Industry Experiences
59:43 - Politics, Music, and Personal Feuds
1:05:12 - Representing Haiti Through Music
1:15:45 - Ross and Fresh Collaboration and Success
1:28:14 - Respect and Support in Music Industry
1:38:20 - Motivation and Support in Music Industry
1:51:12 - Haiti's Current Troubles and Giving Back
1:54:44 - Supporting Haitian Artists and Unity

⭐ Support: Help us continue making great content for listeners everywhere ➣ https://www.buzzsprout.com/2082493/support

More than just a Podcast, It’s a Movement”❗️

➣ Watch "Xposure Podcast" on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkY1...
➣ Follow "Xposure Podcast" on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/xposurepodc...
➣ Like "Xposure Podcast" on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?...
➣ For Guest Appearances, Sponsorship & Bookings: xposurethepodcast@gmail.com
➣ Visit our official website: https://www.XposurePodcast.com

Luc Belaire
America's #1 sparkling wine or Champagne brand, Luc Belaire exemplifies quality, heritage & style.

Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.

Support the Show.

Speaker 1:

What's going on? Y'all Y'all tuned to exposure and I'll be your boy, the global zoe, and I'm with the gang, bidens and Drago mill out there grinding get into a different kind of bag. So we holding it down today and today, man, we got a special invited guest Talk about exposure.

Speaker 2:

We need the exposure. You gotta touch the streets, need that street credibility, need that promotion, and that's where exposure Provides for the peace.

Speaker 3:

Welcome me. That makes him sign out here in my a corner, like I always do Watching exposure getting hit in the head with that exposure.

Speaker 2:

Know what it is. Them down dollars. Relo Number one djs, number one promoters for show from Palm Beach. It's exposed.

Speaker 3:

That's why it opened up, y'all check it out. You know what I'm saying. Keep it locked all over the floor and you are watching exposure.

Speaker 1:

Some of y'all know him because he had the whole world jockeying. Some of y'all might know him from calling himself mr Haiti, reporting live All the way from Florida to Haiti. The one and only hey shit Fresh. What's up, man, I'm with all that's good, that's good.

Speaker 2:

That's good, bro, we blessed. Hey, not much man, we appreciate it. It's good, bro, we blessed.

Speaker 1:

Hey, not much man. We see you, man, you're looking good, looking like money.

Speaker 2:

Hey man, we feeling like money, looking like money. We're just blessed man. You know what I'm saying. You can't never have enough money, but as long as you're happy.

Speaker 1:

That's all that matters. Hey, that's what's up. Man, we definitely appreciate you taking the time out to bless us with this interview, and we got a lot to talk about.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, let's get to it, bro. I haven't I've done a lot of interviews, bro, but I just I used to just do it just to get this shit over with. But this time, this time, we're gonna get straight to it and we're gonna keep it one thousand, how I always do and some people, you know what I'm saying. We're just gonna talk about everything that need to be said.

Speaker 1:

Hey, let's do it, let's do it, man. So I want to get into the beginning first, before we really get into the music side. But born, born in Haiti, born and raised in Haiti, portal Prince born in Haiti, portal Prince Um.

Speaker 2:

It's more probably the other big costume. That's why I was born shot, you know. So that's, that's why that's where everything started at.

Speaker 1:

Yes, sir. So at what? What do you remember, like what age before you came to the States? What age were you? And what do you remember about the up, your upbringing in Haiti? I?

Speaker 2:

mean it was, it wasn't too bad. I mean it wasn't too good, but it wasn't too bad. My mom did the best she could. You know I'm saying we went, she put us at a private school and Haiti, and we had a chauffeur and all that. You know, the house didn't look all that, but at the end of the day and Haiti that's that's probably was good at that time and I left that one. It was like eight years old. You don't remember. I remember a lot, you know. I remember how, how you know how, the settings of the houses, um, you know, you could me and you could build like 10 houses and Haiti. Back then, we just need some them, how you call that stuff? Um, cement, uh-huh, yeah, yeah, that's the look. You just let people know that's your little spot and we build, we build a hole in the back so we can shit and that's our house.

Speaker 3:

We y'all had a chauffeur.

Speaker 2:

My mom had somebody in the neighborhood that she paid every month to take us to school. You know what I'm saying, so so she did the best she could. Bro, it was it was how you call it ghetto, ghetto, family.

Speaker 1:

It was ghetto families in Haiti. Yes, sir, yes, sir. So you grew up with both parents, though, in Haiti, or is it just Just my mom?

Speaker 2:

my dad died when I was five. Oh man, he died early, so I really need to know him like that.

Speaker 1:

So I'm basically my mom. Well, that's what's shot out the zoo. Lady man, I, I know I met her a few times, man, Awesome, always smiling, big personality. Very much like you, man.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's my baby bro, she, she, she, she put a lot of stuff. She is still a lot of stuff in me and the the number one thing I can tell my mom every day. I think of her. She was a winner, bro, and she was uh, she was a hustler. She was a winner. She came to America with no money. You know what I'm saying. She got her papers, she started selling stuff going to different venezuela, canada, selling like clothes, shoes and and, and she got all of us. I got five brothers, so it's six of us. So she got us till America one by one.

Speaker 1:

So that's my hero, yeah. Yeah, that's what's up, super one, yes she's definitely my super woman, bro. Yes, uh, so talk about it, man. So we, now you, come to the states. Eight years old, you figuring things out. I know, back in the day, man, was it rough just being a zoo coming up down here. Man, what did you go through? The being picked on for being Haitian, what you call?

Speaker 2:

All that right there started like after, after, like my first year, but the first couple of months, you know, I'm saying I think she took us to. We landed in Miami Airport and she and one of my uncles you know, I'm thinking we about to go in the mansion, like I'm in america. So I'm like mom, we rich, I'm thinking we about to go to a big ass house. Man, we went and stayed with my motherfucking uncle man, and it was like four of us in the room. I'm like man, this ain't better than Haiti now. And she was like no, we just trying to save our money so we get our own spot. You know what I'm saying. So we went there and it was, you know, she took us to calf C.

Speaker 2:

The first meal, my first meal in america, was calf C. I was like 10 pieces of chicken, bro. I put my mama this shit's already alive, like they already cooked, and I remember I couldn't stop eating, bro. Everybody at the place was looking at us like we, you know, like we were aliens, bro, you know. But I, I ain't never had a chicken before like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I ate that shit. And I told my mama please don't send me back. Hey, you know, haitians, when you first get to america, haitian family, bro, your mom and dad, they, they threaten you every time you do something wrong. Yeah, so you do something wrong to do it again. I bet you, I see you as back there. You know, I was the best kid for about two years. Then, when I knew she wasn't gonna send me back, then it was like fuck it, nigga. Yeah, you know. But yeah, I went through a lot of that Haitian shit. I guess it was already bad over here, but I I didn't know how bad it was.

Speaker 2:

So I remember my first day, my first day out, you know, I'm saying, because we was in bed late, we moved to bed late. So, yeah, we moved to bed late. So my first day walking out, you know, I'm saying, and I saw like three american niggas walking up and they walked up to me and a nigga said what's up? My nigga. So I'm thinking what's up? My nigga is like what's up, how you doing? So I said what's up my nigga back.

Speaker 2:

But you know me, I always look like I'm mad with a mean face. I guess them niggas thought I was asking for beef. Yeah, the shit out of me, bro. Oh damn. I say what's up my nigga. I ain't know what that shit meant. Yeah, you know. So that was the first time I got jumped. You know I'm saying I went home, told my mom and, and, and she said and my brother, of course he can't fight better than me but he was like what am I gonna do? We both have to get fucked up. You know what I'm saying. But yeah, so that's how I was. That was my first, my first week in America, bro.

Speaker 1:

Damn. So this is how.

Speaker 2:

Now, first week in America Damn the first week I got jumped, so we stayed, we stayed. We stayed in this little place where it was like Two bedroom but it was like 10 of us stand up and they had them Arabians downstairs. It's a place in bed late where everybody go and buy. They call it the uh. Well, when the Jamaicans come, everybody go down town. That's like they look downtown. Um, it was like four Arabians and they saw me and they knew I was Haitian, so I guess they had like Haitian on the what the fuck going on. So there was like this race, so me being real competitive, I said okay, so I left. I said let's race. It was eight of them and one of me, so we raced and I beat the ass and then mother fuckers jumped me too. So I got jumped twice in the first two weeks in America, bro.

Speaker 3:

You can. You got jumped for winning? Oh yeah, because I beat them?

Speaker 2:

We were. We were just in there late motherfuckers. You know what I'm saying? People race, so I didn't know. I just wasn't gonna let five motherfuckers beat me. That's not Haitian, you know what I'm saying. So I beat them and they jumped me and I got. You know, motherfuckers punch you. I had a little blackout, but all that shit I went home. I ain't tell my mom that shit made you stronger, bro.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying Well, that's definitely um an accomplishment to beat somebody in there late running. Now these were the niggas, though.

Speaker 1:

These was the Arabians.

Speaker 2:

Oh, oh, I know, yeah, yeah the Arabians beat me because I they. They jumped me because I beat them in racing. But the niggas beat me because I said what's up, my nigga. But I said it in a way thinking like that's like saying what's up, but in the in belgley he's like. Back then it was like what's up, my nigga. That means like you want beef, like what's up. I know that, so I never say that shit again. Hmm, mm-hmm. So. So the um.

Speaker 2:

So that the two weeks later was time to go to school. You know I went to Lakeview, it's on, it's on avenue e, you know. So I went to the school and, um, I said motherfucking the first day in class Because I know what that meant. So I said motherfucking, got kicked out for about a week. This is friendly, oh, but it was laughing at a nigga man. The people was laughing at me, but I thought they was laughing with me, bro, because how, how is dressed? I had some church shoes on an army mug. I don't know what my mom was thinking, bro. I had his church shoes on an army motherfucking pants and some orange shirt. Oh, you remember that outfit.

Speaker 2:

There was laughing at me soon as I walked in. I was like I'm thinking motherfuckers, like me Then. But there was laughing at me, bro. So one dude say when the teacher come, he said uh, say this, you know you, you at least know Somebody say something and probably say say motherfucker. So I say motherfucker. Right, when the teacher, I thought it was man, how you doing. And that bitch, I went to the. They kicked me out, man for the. I got suspended for four days and you know what jack the? Why is it? When we teaching somebody a new?

Speaker 1:

language, or start off with the bad words, the cuss word, yeah, and we be finding that shit so funny. It's like when you teach somebody kriya, you teaching all the bad shit to say and I know a lot of bad shit in Spanish right now Chingata Mardi.

Speaker 2:

Latuya Pendejo, like. Those are the worst words you can say in Spanish, but I learned them. You see what I'm saying. That's who you are. Yeah, dawg.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy. All right, cool, cool, cool.

Speaker 3:

So, um, before we go into the next chapter, on behalf of all the black American Americans, I want to apologize to you, all the other Haitians, because I've been doing my own studies on these stories because I lived, I was, I was born in Central Florida, but when I came to south Florida, that's when we was really introduced to Haitians and it did feel like Haitians was aliens. I didn't understand the difference of why Black people was treating another group of black people so different and it didn't make sense to me. But it wasn't until I got an adult that I said what happened, that this was going on and nobody really had an explanation. But we still also never publicly Apologize.

Speaker 3:

We usually await, if it's outside of our race, we looking for white people to apologize for certain things from Something else, but we we won't never apologize for the things we did For those who was looking at us like brothers and sisters, no different. You really, for a long time you really couldn't tell, but it was like this, very Evil. It was not beautiful and I don't I mean if that would know. I've been doing my research asking certain people and people have some very traumatic stories and you would be like we are so thankful that Haiti just ain't Turning back on us and be like a Not y'all are enemy based on certain things, so it is. So I I want to send those Apologize. We don't get to that stage we did go to that stage.

Speaker 2:

But Apology, bro, you don't say for that day today.

Speaker 2:

That's like God apologizing to everybody for having killers, for having you had shit to do with it, man. So they go appreciate it your apology, but at the end of the day it was real fucked up. People died. You know I lost a lot of soldiers, bro. A lot of people died, a lot of niggas doing double life right now because of that situation.

Speaker 2:

So we're gonna get to that point where you say, turn our back. We turn our back on nobody. But at the end of the day, we just had to survive and we had to represent us and we had to let people know. You know I'm saying we black too, because basically we was getting treated how how white people treat black people In America. But we just did it. They just did it to us.

Speaker 2:

You know I'm saying but at the end of day, you can only punch somebody so many times before they gonna punch your ass right back and that's what the fuck happened. You know I'm saying because I remember I had to. I was scared to go into school every day, bro, because I only thing that saved me my nigga Is because I was a little light skin. You know I'm saying like sometimes I know, if a nigga was Dominican Republic, they didn't know what the fucking nigga was. But at the end of the day, I went rapping Haiti back then. You know I'm saying like I I was trying to just be part of America.

Speaker 2:

You know I'm saying I was just trying to survive, bro, because at the end of the day, haitians at this sitting back in the bus, you know I'm saying, and when you got to school, we try to, we try to hang together. You know I'm saying, but at the end of the day, shit, that was fucked up too, because you didn't want to. You didn't want to hang with the other Haitians because motherfuckers gonna know. So all y'all get your ass whooped. So you had to stay the fuck away from the other Haitians. Try to hide. You know I'm saying like so that you from Haiti no, I'm from France, bitch I tell this day I'll be stepping myself for saying that shit.

Speaker 2:

I just don't, motherfuckers. I'm from France, bitch quick, so I don't get fucked up, damn. I just didn't want to get beat up dawg because I thought nigga got beat up. He's eyeball came out one of the Haitians, bro and I was just about to go check on him and he was like 10 niggas on him and I'll just, you know, till this day by, till this day. I swear to God that shit hurt me, bro, because I, because I should have took the ass whoopin with him, but I was so young, I was like 11 years old, and I walk, I walk like right by it. It's like I wanted to do some, but it was like 10 niggas Against him and every and no other Haitians was fighting. If other Haitians fight, I probably fuck, but I'm like God damn, you see somebody eyeball, hands Hangin out, bro, like you gotta be. You know I'm saying me not knowing why the fuck they beat them, yeah. So I had to ask myself like, did he still some, did he they?

Speaker 2:

come to find out. It was just cuz he Haitian bro, that's it Damn. You know I'm saying till this day I can't forgive myself, dawg. That's why I went so hard Wrapping Haiti, cuz shit like that gay, I had nightmares, bro, about that shit, cuz I felt like a traitor, bro. You know I'm saying because because I didn't know I was a traitor, bro. You know I'm saying because because I didn't know I was 11. So I gotta keep telling myself nigga, you was 11 years old. Yeah, no knife, no gun or nothing. Yeah, I just walking away, but but the person that I am now I would have got that ass.

Speaker 1:

Whoopin with him. Damn, I'm with you. I feel like we ain't having this bad. I feel like that generation before Definitely paved the way, because when we was you know, my, my generation it was kind of dying out and we was almost embracing one another. It was cool to have a? No, it was never embraced motherfucker.

Speaker 2:

It's not even that, bro. You gotta understand. Nowadays, every big dope dealer in every city got a Haitian as a best friend. You gotta understand Haitians are the most loyal motherfucker you can have as a friend. So, yeah, you have a lot of good Americans, bro. So you can't be stupid and turn this shit into a Haitian against American cuz. It's gonna be innocent people. That's gonna get hurt.

Speaker 2:

But at the end of the day, a lot of motherfuckers didn't like us, bro, until this day. Well, motherfuckers won't say it out and open, how they used to say it, but they'll crack jokes. When they were, they were to chug about themselves. Man, they're Haitians, be staying. Man, they're Haitians. Eat cat. Man, they're Haitians.

Speaker 2:

You know people feel it. It's just like white people, bro, like a white person might don't like niggas, but they're not gonna say it at work. They're gonna be your best friends. They're gonna act like yeah, I listen to young GZ, I listen to rap music, but when they go home, it's all different ball game. So you got Americans like that now.

Speaker 2:

But at the end of the day, how you know the shit, the things that we fought for, we got it's a lot better. But I'm not gonna sit here and say you know, shit is a hundred percent, it's just a lot better from back in the days. It's like racism, bruh, it's still here. It's just you. It's just you finding a certain place, certain you know certain areas, just like in Miami, bro, you know you might see a motherfucker man y'all Haitians be, because Haitians still do what they do. But it's like so many gangsters, haitians down to the point where if you say that shit, the wrong place, you might get fucked up. So people ain't gonna say that shit. Just like Montgomery with the black people, the white people try to black people and look what happened. That don't happen everywhere, that just happened in that place. Yeah, you feel me.

Speaker 2:

So so they, they learn not to do that shit in that area. You know you can't go to promise County and talk about some fuck Haitians nigga. Half of the click the gains is is controlled and it's Haitians that's part of it. You know what I'm saying. So Haitian Americans, the street niggas I'm talking about street niggas, a lot of street niggas fuck with Haitians now because Haitians, we had all the dope and I don't know if we still do a no incrimination in this and it's um, we're gonna criminalize ourselves on these muscles but at the end of the day, haitians, boy, we, we, we run everything. And I know if a nigga from Palm Beach, they gonna understand what I'm saying. You say, you say 23rd Street, they gonna know, because that's where I said haven't you niggas got that dope? That's where a pleasant city niggas got that dope. If a nigga wanted to plug Haitians, would they plug Back then you know, when I was growing up, yeah, yeah, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, 100, none of us can speak English, but shit, everybody had money. You know what I'm saying. And the niggas, the biggest dope dealer be a Haitian. That's about 60 years old. The nigga got one eye. He wear a dress. He wear motherfucking church clothes. You, you would never know that's that nigga, but that's that nigga. You know what I'm saying. So, but it's like this, though, I think and I for everything that I went through, you know what I'm saying because, like I said, I got a lot of cool ass American friends that I love. So I never switched that shit.

Speaker 2:

Haitians vs Americans. We just want our respect, my nigga. We just want our respect and that's what I fought for for 20 years, bro, I just want a nigga. When you see a Haitian, you know we fresh. That's how. That's why I call myself Haitian fresh, because I was thinking like them, I can't rap. What the fuck? How am I getting this motherfucking game? I can't do what Drake Wayne, a motherfucking global zoo, do a motherfucking. I can't rap like that. So I was like man, let me, let me give myself a name that everybody go motherfucking. Remember, after they hear it, one time I was like shit, I'm Haitian, I'm fresh, fuck it, haitian, fresh, motherfucking. That's it, damn, and that's that's how I got the name, and my goal is to make sure everybody know that name. You might not like what I do, you might not fuck with me, but you're gonna respect Haitian fresh.

Speaker 1:

That's what's up, not that's what's up. So what you grew growing up in Belgrade, so when did music become a thing for you?

Speaker 2:

Well, let me, let me just so. We grew up in Belgrade and when I was like 12, 12 years old, I used to go to this little. All the black people in Belgrade, all the Haitians, the young niggas we used to go to this little after school place and we had a sister named sister Pat. So, sister Pat, one day she just called me. She said I have to have a meeting with you and three other kids Because he was out of like 200 kids, because we was the ones that stood out to her. You know, I'm saying thank God, thank you, sister Pat. I don't know if she's alive or whatever, but I still pray for her and I thank her every day, man. So she took us in the room. She said I'm taking y'all somewhere next month. So we like shit, we don't give a fuck anywhere, but our house will go anywhere.

Speaker 2:

So sister Pat got us in the van and we got on the highway and we went towards Tampa. I didn't know. I just knew we was on the highway. Now I know it was Tampa. So we went over there, dog, and we went to the school that looked like motherfucking the White House. I'll never forget that shit and it's called Mary Helper Christian School and I, and because she thought we was going on summer camp and that ended up being a lie, because she took us to where I would be for the next three years, which was my middle school. It's called Mary Helper Christian School and she said y'all not going back home, y'all staying here, because she already talked to our family and everything, signed all the papers. So that was um, that's why that's where I left Belgrade and went to that school and the only thing you had to do is keep your grades up and you don't get kicked out. So, me not wanting to go home because household was fucked up.

Speaker 2:

Bro Niggas was getting shot, going to jail every day. He was a fucked up environment. So I was like man, I do anything instead at this school. But my English wasn't that good so it's a private school dog. The school is like $15,000 a year so I don't know if I'm going to be, if I'm going to be able to get my money, if I'm going to be able to get my grades because my English wasn't good. So I told myself I said look, if you want to stay at this school, you're going to do whatever the fuck you got to do. So what I did? I just started reading.

Speaker 2:

I started going to after school, computer classes, you know, and all that shit, and um, and I stayed where and I I tried out for soccer. That's when they love me. I tried out for soccer and I ended up being the best soccer player on the team. So they was like, oh shit, you know, white people, you good at sports, nigga, you good, you know what I'm saying. So they covered me since then, once they knew I was good at soccer and basketball, oh man, that was it.

Speaker 2:

The other niggas got kicked out three weeks later because there was no girls at that school. It was a Catholic school. We go to church 10 times a day, bro, so them niggas got kicked out because they couldn't handle it. It's like going to jail you're going to lose it or you're going to learn how to adapt. So I learned how to adapt and I just, you know, I stayed there for three years and graduated, and graduated. Then I went back to Palm Beach for high school. And just to make a long story short before we get to the next step, my first week at motherfucking Palm Beach Lakes High School.

Speaker 2:

Bro, I'm talking like a cracker. Bro, I'm talking like a white person. I'm like hey, buddy. So I've noticed my brother don't want to hang with me. I'm like you're the fucking man, don't fuck with me. Man don't be talking like that around my motherfucking friends. I got cussed out from all my brothers. All the girls thought I was cute but they wouldn't fuck with me because the way I talk to them I've been like hey buddy, hey guy, like cause that's all I was used to.

Speaker 2:

So I was like shit, I gotta get used to how Palm Beach County do it. I gotta get back to my hood shit. So the first six months at the school I was like okay, they did their little laughing shit. Then after that I had a brother. He was a big time dope boy. You know what I'm saying? That nigga have a lot of jewelry, a lot of a lot of a lot of motherfucking money and clothes and we wore the same size. So I used to pray that nigga go to jail, cause he go to jail all the time. So I used to be like, damn, he ain't going to jail yet. So that nigga fuck around and got a four month deal.

Speaker 2:

First I went to school with the jewelry with the motherfucking bitch. I got the best girl. Her name was Flora. She was a junior. She was the hottest, she was the Beyonce of Palm Beach Ladies and she talked to me. She thought I was that nigga bro. Then she found out. She asked me to come pick up. I had no motherfucking car. So she found out I was broke. That bitch done me boy lunch after I was dead. You know how I used to meet the motherfucking at the fucking um, at the locker in high school. You just go. If you in love bitch, you go to you, meet everybody at the locker room. So we go to the locker and that bitch just looked at me. She ain't say nothing else. She was like we can't do this no more. I want to break up with you, bitch. I started crying cause I know that's not my clothes, that's not my motherfucking necklace. You know I'm saying I ain't a dope boy. She thought I was and she left me. You know I'm saying I never forget that shit. Her name was Flora.

Speaker 1:

Damn. Shout out to Flora. Shout out to Flora, man, she made me better, though, bro cause I went.

Speaker 2:

You know I made varsity as a freshman, so I was that nigga. You know I'm saying I became one of the biggest athletes in Palm Beach County. Ask everybody, look up the name, they'll tell you. I broke all that record. I broke all that records in Palm Beach on the news, on the newspaper every day, the news every day. So she came back later on. But I ain't want to fuck with it, cause now I'm a star. You know I'm saying yes sir, yes sir, my image is different and I ain't talking. I'm like what's up my nigga, what they doing? You feel me? You good?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm good, I'm Palm Beach. I love it, I love it, I love it. So, man, we went to Palm Beach lakes, you had your trials there, and then you end up going to college. I went to college.

Speaker 2:

I know I gotta keep it, we gonna keep it one thousand. So me being um, I was like our state. You know I'm saying we be lakes, dwyer, suncoats, all that shit. But at the end of that I had one problem, bro, one problem that kept me from going to D1. I couldn't pass that SAT test and I wasn't good enough where they could do me like they did for a tailor. Well, I ain't gonna put allegedly Cause I don't want to.

Speaker 1:

That's my nigga.

Speaker 2:

That's my nigga, cause I don't want to say nothing that way. That's not true. But I wasn't. No, mr Football and all that, cause I heard not for a tailor, this is other people. I'm gonna take your test, bro, and they'll get you. They'll get you to D1 if they want to. But I was just, I was good, but I wasn't like you know what I'm saying the number one in the country, shit like that. So I end up, I flunked. I flunked the SAT, life man. I'm gonna tell you how to choose. Well, I took that bitch like 15 times, bro, and I got close. I got close by two points, but it wasn't enough. By that time it was a coach from Oklahoma, ada, ada, oklahoma. He came to the school in Gena, leonard. That's where I did my senior, you know Cause, by that time I'm like damn, I don't want to go, no damn Oklahoma.

Speaker 2:

But at the end of the day, when you from that environment, bro, in Palm Beach County, and you was a little known. You don't want to not go to school. Well, that's like a failure. So I was like, man, I'll go anywhere just to get the fuck away from here. So you know, the coach came, he came and saw me. We worked out for him, I worked out for him and I got the scholarship. You know what I'm saying? The nigga bought me my ticket and he bought me my returning ticket too.

Speaker 2:

He forgot to get that shit from me. So when I got over there, bro, I'm all excited. The shit in the newspaper, oh, he going to Oklahoma. But you know niggas be lying. So I lied, I said I was going to the Sooners. Like that's a D1 school bitch, I ain't going to a D3. But at the end of the day I had so much pride, bro, I could tell a nigga I'm going to D3. So I was like, yeah, I'm going to Oklahoma, the Sooners, blah, blah, blah, Knowing that I'm going to have to deal with that shit later on, Cause when you come home ain't, nigga, I ain't see you on that team cause they play on TV.

Speaker 2:

You know, what I'm saying. So so I went to Oklahoma and got out the airport, this nigga with a big ass, motherfucking hat, Kimmy, picked me up with some cowboy shoes. I'm like, bro, what are we doing? And that nigga say we going to the to on campus. I was like cool. So we got in this truck, this motherfucking pickup truck. Every road was like up and down. So my vibe already like man, I'm missing. Palm Beach County, I'm missing.

Speaker 3:

Club Hennessy I'm missing everybody bro, that's the club. It's a Hennessy.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that was the club, bro. I went to the club seven times a week in Palm Beach. Like 16 years old, 15 years old, I was in the club every day. That was the shit. That's what. That's what we did. We went to the club every motherfucking day cause all my brothers and cousins and people they were, they were, they were made niggas, you know what I'm saying. So they were old, but I hung with them, so I had to go everywhere they went, you know what I'm saying. So, so, bottom line, I went to that school and I ain't like it, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

And I don't know what happened, bro, and I'm going to tell y'all, cause I'm trying not to leave nothing out. But my stomach, bro, it was something happened to me dawg where, where I couldn't, I couldn't stop shitin' bro, I don't know what it was. If it was nervousness, I was like then I gotta see a doctor. Like I didn't know what it was. I ain't know what it was, bro, like God, I don't know what it was till this day, bro, cause I got, I went and got tested about everything. Nothing was wrong. So I kept going to the bathroom, bro, like every day for like five days and I'm like man, if I keep using the restroom like this, I can't go to class. How I'm going to play basketball. You know what I'm saying? Cause this is some person that you dealing with. Nobody knew that I was dealing with that, so I was like. I was like cause that shit never happened when I was in Palm Beach I don't know if it was they water, I don't know what it was dawg so I, so I, I saved man, they, I'm finna get embarrassed like that. So I met the basketball team and, and I say so, so how, what do we do for workout? They say, oh yeah, we run four miles at four in the morning. Dude, I was like, oh hell, no, bitch, I gotta go back home. You know what I'm saying. So as soon as they started explaining me what they do and I'm using the restroom every two hours, bro so I finally saw this dude I don't remember his name and I said my nigga, look, I got $200 in my pocket, bro, I'm gonna give this money. Man, take me to the airport, please Take me to the airport. He was like, oh shit, okay cool. He took my money and we got on a highway and that nigga Tyre blew out. You know what I'm saying. Thank God, somebody help. I'm like. I'm like what the fuck going on? So he fixed his tire, I made it to the airport and I I flew back home. Bruh, till this day, I never called them back. They don't know what happened to me or nothing, till this day. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I left and came back to Palm Beach and knocked on the door and I'll never forget this, bruh and my mother, just she just started crying, dawg. She started crying for like because I was the first one out my family to made it to college. So I felt like I let her down, bruh. So I knocked on the door and I said she said what the Haitian's don't even ask you, no question. She just started rolling on the floor, yelling and cause. She gave me every, every dollar. She had to go to school. So I felt like I cried, I went in the room, locked myself in the room. I didn't want to get out the room.

Speaker 2:

For about three weeks, bruh, ain't.

Speaker 2:

Nobody talked to me.

Speaker 2:

I didn't want to talk to nobody. I was suicidal cause I was like man, I can't do this to my mom, man, it'd be best if I'm not even here. So I'm like you know what I'm finna, just pray, you know what I'm saying. But I'm finna, sell dope, you know. So I did that for about I was selling like little ounces and shit, small shit, and all my brothers used to tell people don't fuck with me, cause they didn't, they didn't want me in the streets doing that. So I kept on praying and I don't know how this happened.

Speaker 2:

I was in my couch watching television and I saw the tune and fam you. But when I saw the tune colors, I was like you know what? That's why I belong there. You say that shit to yourself, but me in my life, everything I ever say I'm gonna do, I do. It's weird, bruh, y'all niggas. I don't expect y'all to understand, but everything I put in my head, bruh, always happens. So I fell in love with the maroon and gold. So I said man, let me call this school. So I call. I called Bethune Coopman and told him my name and the guy. His name was Rod Z. He's a comedian. He went to Bethune so he said let me call you back. So he went and talked to the coach and they did their research on me. They called me back and say come. So I'm like what the fuck Is that easy to go to Bethune? So I borrowed some money, I gave my brother some gas money. He took my ass to Daytona and that nigga gangsta man, that nigga dropped me off. Right when that bitch say welcome to Daytona.

Speaker 3:

That bitch dropped me off.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying. I had one little ugly ass suitcase from the flea market with tape on it, you know what I'm saying. And I just I just walked to the school. It took me like three, like I guess, 30, 40 minutes. I walked to the school and I went to the dorm and I was like my name's Jimmy, I play sports, I'm supposed to be here for football and basketball, and then motherfuckers gave me a key to a dorm. Bro, I was like I'm saying bro, god, god is doing this, bro, because I want the food to come back and say, damn, we go through most shit in there, you can't just go. But for me that's how it happened. So they gave my key to my dorm and I went in.

Speaker 2:

That motherfucking, I had a little bed. That shit was like jail beds, that shit was like a little mat, and it was like you in jail, bro, because the walls had niggas from 18, 1986. Everybody left eight. So I'm like man, they ain't playing this bitchin' 30 years. But I'm happy though, because I got my own little space. So I end up staying at Bethune and I end up staying at Bethune and I graduated from there. I did my thing, but when y'all asked me how the music started. That's where it started at.

Speaker 1:

Now congratulations on that man. That's a big accomplishment, man. So, you were the first to graduate from college in the family.

Speaker 2:

You were the first one in my whole generation.

Speaker 1:

Damn, that's what's up, bro. No, that's huge, that's huge.

Speaker 3:

Congratulations.

Speaker 1:

Yes, uh, all right, man. That's what's up. That's a good backstory to a lot of people. I don't know if it's a good story. I'm taking it from the beginning to the college.

Speaker 2:

So now we're finishing how Haitian Fresh came when y'all asked, I'm going to answer All right, let's get it, let's get it.

Speaker 2:

So I'm going to my sophomore year. Bitch, when I say sophomore, it was my fourth year, because I flunked every year. So it was my real sophomore year. So it took me four years to become a motherfucking sophomore. Ain't no shame in my game, it ain't how long it takes, it's the fact that you do it because my degree don't say eight years, my shit say psychology and business motherfucker that's what I'm talking about.

Speaker 2:

Yes. So it was these three niggas man, these three niggas that back then I thought they could rap. I ain't going to lie. I started making money, I started grinding, doing it big. So I was like damn, I got to find something to do with my money. So I became friends with these niggas man, these niggas was rapping. So to me y'all probably thought they were suck, but to me I was like shit, the niggas could rap, because everybody think they could rap. So I say so we got together.

Speaker 2:

It was a group called I forgot I named the group VIP, vip boys. So I called them VIP. So I started making shirts, I started getting them a little buzz, but we don't got no motherfucking song because I guess the niggas can rap how I thought they could. You feel me? So we'll go to the studio, my nigga and I'll take like three grand with me you know what I'm saying and it will be there for 12 hours and do like one verse, two song. I'm like what the fuck? So that shit went on for about six months. Dawg, we got like four songs in six months but I spent like at least $40,000, my nigga on clothes and CDs and all that. So one day the niggas ain't show up, because I guess they was at wherever they was. So I'm sitting there.

Speaker 2:

So it was a white boy. He was the engineer. He was like man, why the fuck you wasting your money like that? I said what you mean. He said, man, them boys, they ain't taking this shit seriously. And, to be honest with you, you got the voice. You know I don't know. I said, bro, I can't rap Nigga. I don't even know what a bar is Like. You know what I'm saying. So the cracker was like man, fuck that shit. I like your voice, bro, you could do what they do.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying Go?

Speaker 2:

out there. So I went in the booth I'm feeling good as fuck, because I ain't ever wanted to be no rapper, I want to be the nigga behind the scene. So I didn't even know how to record or nothing. You kept saying, when I hit this butt, when I do like this, just start talking. So that motherfucker. So I'm like, damn, what the fuck am I going to talk about? What?

Speaker 2:

I'm going to do Because I can't. You know what I'm saying. So the first day I was trying to get my voice right, he was like man, fuck it, Stop it, come out here, come out here. He said go write your shit. You know what I'm saying, go write your shit. So make a long story short, bro.

Speaker 2:

After like two, three months I started going in that motherfucker, I made a couple of stupid ass songs. Put your leg up, yeah, put your leg up. So I'm making songs. I'm like shit. Motherfucker's not saying I'm sorry they ain't saying you suck, but ain't nobody trying to get my autograph either. You know what I'm saying. I'm like god damn, bro. So I said you know what, me being a genius, I'm a genius in marketing. So I was like you know what the fuck I'm going to do? I'm going to do some shit. Ain't nobody ever done in this motherfucking game, bro. I'm going to get on every motherfucking cover in Florida, every cover.

Speaker 2:

Back then you had ozone, you had a little magazine you had. So I call all the motherfuckers, bro and gave everybody. I gave this one 5,000. I gave this one three. I gave this one. I spent like at least $30,000. So I knew Memorial Day was coming up Just on cover. Yeah, memorial Day, because these motherfuckers, they got to promote the cover, but I'm going to turn different motherfucking covers. So now I go to Memorial Day.

Speaker 2:

Bitch, I got a helicopter. I had motherfucking 10 rap vans oh that bitch. I don't got no songs though. So I'm walking around Memorial Day bitch. Everybody's like damn, that's that nigga. So now people taking pictures, muffuckers. Like bitch, I'm a celebrity bro. I was like what the fuck? What's going to happen when they find out I don't know how to rap and I don't have no songs Because I already got them as they think I'm a star. So I'm like I'm on every cover, bitch. Yeah, standing up coming out All that shit, bitch, I'm flexing like a motherfucker, but the shit just don't work. Like flow the wire, bitch.

Speaker 2:

Everybody know me Trey Ross, trina, everybody that's a star. They know who the fuck I am. But they're like what do this nigga do? So I'm like I'm like fuck bro. So my buzz is everywhere.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to Orlando. Everybody, girls, everybody, like can I take a picture with you? You that dude, you that, you that. But there ain't nobody talking about no music, damn. So I go to the club in Orlando and now I'm famous, now I'm popular, but I don't have no song. But I say, nah, these niggas ain't finna catch me like that. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

So I go to Orlando Boussy was at the same club with me. So when a Boussy niggas came up to me and said yo, boussy, saying what's up, so I like Boussy, boussy was a star. So I didn't know what I'm going to say to this nigga. So I went over there. The nigga basically said something to me because he saw me on every magazine. He said what's up? I said what's up. Then he was like let's do a song. I was like let's do a song. And that nigga was like, ok, cool Me not knowing Boussy, the top nigga here going to the studio and do 10 songs with all his niggas in there. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

So I got a beat from a nigga named MGZ in a hook Gone, jock, gone, jock, gone, jock. So I'm like, yeah, that's it, that's the hit. As soon as I heard that I didn't know what was a hit, but I was like bitch, I'm for the turn this into a hit, because I figured I could do the same thing I did with the magazine with the music, because the number one song in the country, bro, is not being played in the club. The number one song in the country is being played on the radio over and over. It makes y'all like it. You know what I'm saying? Because it's all about money. It's not about the hottest song in the city, for real, you know what I'm saying. So Bruno Mars could have the same song, but it ain't in no fucking club in my hand, me or they don't know. But that's the part that I never understood. So I call Booster.

Speaker 2:

The next day I got the beat. I got everything. Nigga, we go to a MetaMeta hotel. We went to the studio Gone jock, gone jock. So the nigga think I'm a big celebrity. So the nigga like me Haitian Fresh. If you listen to the song, nigga gave me the biggest shout out. The nigga went in that bitch. When I fall off the bed bitch. I ain't never seen this shit like that in my life. But I started, I started sweating like a motherfucker. That nigga went in there and killed that verse with one like one take. He killed that shit His niggas like they used to that shit Me. I'm not.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying. So. So it was like fresh, it's your turn, nigga. Fresh, kill that shit. So, Booster, think I'm a real rapper.

Speaker 2:

So, booster, like nigga, my whole shit out, bro. You gotta hit it in your head. So I go to the studio, nigga, I'm trying to text my motherfucking engineer to act like the shit fucked up. You know what I'm saying. So I'm gonna do my verse. There's about 30 niggas in there, dawg, yeah, I'm like, and you know niggas staring at me, nigga rolling this shit. Booster looking. So I'm like dawg, you know what? I'm caught, bro. My life is over. I'm done. My rap career is over. I'm finna. Go on. That bitch Booster gonna be so mad he gonna walk out. So I'm going that bitch dawg. And my engineer didn't even check his phone. So the nigga playing the beat. So you know how you be in that bitch. Y'all. A good rapper have writer's blocker. Whatever block the bitch has got Bitch. I had Haitian block, writer's block, rapper's block, every block. You could fucking take her. So I'm like, what the fuck? So?

Speaker 2:

I'm like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I played against her about 10 minutes, bro. I went in the back act like I had to pee, bro, and I say, Lord, I don't know how I'm gonna bring rap and God together. But I went to the bathroom I say, lord, please help me. Lord, this is it, man. I put too much money in this shit and this is a good song. Lord, just help me know what to say. Y'all ain't gonna believe this shit, but fuck y'all if y'all don't believe me. I went outside. I went back to the booth I said nigga, I'm finna, just talk about me, man, I'm finna, talk about my life and I got in that bitch.

Speaker 2:

I got in that bitch. I said bitch, I talk like I'm a, I'm 6'3". I had a hat on and I got back on I said I'm 6'3", fitted cap as black C. Why you niggas, jocke? Because I'm fresh from IUC Bump status, miss they. I wish they tried to check me. And I had a necklace on blue and white. You know what I'm saying? Blue I. You know what I'm saying. Y'all know the rest, bro. I'm like C, let's go Blue red like cap C. You know what I'm saying? 6'3" fitted cap C. Little blue red like cap C. Y'all know the rest, bro. So after that shit, boo C. Right, my nigga, that bitch, I ain't bro. You got one, we got one bitch. I remember, bro, after everybody left nigga, I prayed and prayed and prayed, bro, I said God, you got this shit. You know what I'm saying. You got this shit out of me, bro. So that verse was me. I wrote that motherfucker in the boot.

Speaker 1:

I ain't even writing on paper or nothing, bro. Okay, okay, that's what's up.

Speaker 2:

It became a biggest song in motherfucking Florida. Bitch can't hate no more. Now I'm walking different. You know what I'm saying. Now I'm a real artist. Bitch can't fuck with me, because every Haitian love that shit because I represent Haiti. I killed it, boocey, and kill me on the verse. And the shit the hook is you know. So it was his trap for that dawg. After that I said okay, I'm a true artist, dawg. Bitch just can't do no freestyle and all that. But at the end of the day, anybody can be an artist, dawg. Anybody can get lucky and get a good verse. Then I went crazy, dawg. Y'all know the rest of the story.

Speaker 2:

After that, nigga did the Rick Ross shit, got shows everywhere. I didn't even know how to do shows, bro. I didn't even know how to hold a mic. I just had to learn that shit. Just me being me dawg, I learned everything, I studied everything and I said if you're gonna be a good artist, my nigga, you gotta at least learn your craft. You know what I'm saying. But at the end of the day, I stopped trying to be a rapper. I became Haitian Fresh. I started rapping to the Haitian and that's when shit went up there, because I know I couldn't rap. So if you try to be a rapper and float up back, then you had to represent for something. So I said I'm gonna be the nigga that keep Haitians and represent that flag. I'm gonna keep that word Haiti in everybody's mouth. They're gonna have to respect our flag. And I went 100% and nigga got signed by Rock Left three years later. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

And I remember my first time on BET Like these are shit that I dreamed about, bro. You know what I'm saying. And it really happened because I looked up to Rock Left. You know what I'm saying. I used to be like man, I know I'm gonna meet this nigga. I know I'm gonna meet it because I know me. I'm gonna go so hard. And when the nigga met me, the nigga just told me straight up like man, I heard your name from everybody Everywhere I went. It was Haitian Fresh. I had to sign you. So I was like thank you, thank you, but me not knowing the industry and what he was gonna do, because I was told a lot of promise. You know what I'm saying. We're gonna be like Big Y and PDD.

Speaker 2:

I was like you know what I'm saying the first day I met the nigga and I'm not gonna say nothing bad about him because, like I said, he did a lot for me you know he didn't do what you do for artists because I don't feel like he believed in me, like he would have believed in Jesus, you know what I'm saying. So the nigga just believed in me, just enough to keep me with him. But at the end of the day I know me, if I would have gotten the chance to be like on 106 and Park every day, shit like that, he would have threw me in the industry and gave me that backup. I needed verbally, not money. I already have money. I was going 100%. I came in the game with millions, bro.

Speaker 2:

I had money. You know what I'm saying. Money, money, you know so. But I got lazy. So sometimes artists gotta blame themselves, dawg. You can't expect everybody to put you on, you can't expect that. So once I got signed with him, I got lazy. I forgot who the fuck I was, cause the nigga took me on BET. Three days later, I think he signed me, dawg.

Speaker 2:

I'm sitting next to motherfucking Beyonce, jay-z, motherfucking a fabulous. That's when these niggas was hot and I don't remember. I'm on front row. I did the red carpet and shit. I'm like man, I made it. Nigga, you know what I'm saying. I remember Al Koo Jay cause you know everybody I need. Love was the shit, you know. I know Al Koo Jay's the icon, so I don't remember this nigga saw me with cleft and shit, so I guess he thought I was the next Jay-Z. So the nigga the nigga looked at me. He was on fifth row. That nigga said yo, my man, when your album come out, bitch, I lie to that nigga too. I told that nigga in July, bitch, I said July. I had no album. We had shit, shit going on. But I could lie to him. I had to say something to Al Koo Jay, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

I'm with you. You didn't get my joke. I said July to him.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I had to. I told that nigga in July, you know, but he gave me that two pictures and all that shit. You know, I remember one Sunday she should co-set right behind me on the second row and she was behind me and I turned around and I said the dumbest shit, bro, cause shit happening too fast. My nigga. I was like I turned around. Instead of saying you pretty or something, I was like yo mama crazy, some shit like that. I don't look at me and say what I was like. I said something just to cause I ain't no witness. Say to her dog.

Speaker 2:

Cause you saw the biggest people in the game, cause, you know, cleft always had that respect in the industry. So everybody fuck with him. So we got the best seats, the best you know, so you know. So that shit didn't work out. But at the end of the day I wrapped them you know what I'm saying Cause Cleft wasn't the Fuji Cleft when I signed with him. But I wrapped that nigga so hard to the point where I brought him you know what I'm saying I brought him back out in the streets, like Miami, florida, shit like that I brought, you know cause he's a legend man.

Speaker 2:

He's like the black Elvis Presley nigga. So so what I accomplished is like a. It's like my new to what he's done. You know what I'm saying? I never I looked at him like a big brother. But at the end of the day, you know, I might be wrong, I might be right, but I don't think the nigga had faith in me, man. I don't think he believed in me like cause. See me, I'm like a C rapper, but I'm an A-list nigga. I knew if he brought, if he, if he would've put me in front of that camera, bro, and just came out with one single add another star to it and we and we had a hit we would have a hit single and I would've you know, we would've made billions together dawg, cause I'm that type of nigga I'm not going to lose, I'm going to turn a dollar into.

Speaker 2:

but I don't think he knew that. He knew, he just knew I was a hustler. But at the end of the day, sometimes, bro, a nigga never want to see you. Like a nigga might be with you, but they don't want to see you. Blue, like get bigger than them, some shit like that. But I got to this day. I'm like why, nigga, like, we rappers are hated together? Cause I class on a lot of Haitian rappers and nothing ever happened. So people was telling me, don't sound with him.

Speaker 2:

They was telling me don't sound with him and I was, and I'm a royal nigga dawg, I don't play for. I don't play for two teams. So I was cussing everybody out, my family, man, fuck y'all, man, y'all, y'all y'all just hating what I class gonna do, right Cause when the nigga look at you and your eyes and say we're going to do this, we're going to take over the world, we're going to do this, he flew me to New York, you know what I'm saying. And the nigga jumped on going to job. That's when I put him on the song I was about to say and the song went crazy. So now these street niggas loving what I class, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

So you know, all we had to do was drop one right behind that shit, like drop another one, and this nigga take me to one of six to introduce it. I ended up making the one of six on my own, bro, on my own, like years later, that performance you did was on your own, on my own.

Speaker 2:

I just I was. It was the director was named, his name was Pat Charles. He was like over, like he was a nigga, that's over talent. And one of six in part he was a big fan of me and his kids was a big fan of me. So somehow, you know, bet, he got. He said man, this one of the biggest besides my class, this the next biggest nigga. So they had me on that bitch, they I got an email that says one of six in part want to invite you. So I'm like, man, I ain't, I ain't, no, I haven't done no freestyle Friday. No, I can't do shit like that. He was like, nah, this is for like new artists of the other month, like the next nigga. So I was like, oh shit, okay, I'm in.

Speaker 2:

So I flew, my daughter went with me and we flew to New York, bro, and and, and I cause I dreamed about that shit for about six years dog meeting Terrence and Roxy. Dog, like I, I replayed that shit on my head. That's why I keep telling y'all boys, wherever the fuck I want to do, I'm going to do it Just like anybody else. Dog, if you believe in God and you work and you believe in it, nobody going to see your dreams, bro, Cause cause around when I'm in Florida, ain't no, but a lot of niggas just knew me for going job. So they treated me like a celebrity. But niggas knew I wasn't going to be the, the next Jay-Z. They just like, okay, niggas treat you like that, and it was niggas that could rap in my city that I look up to so but nobody ever gave me that, that, that respect. So when I went to 106 in park, my nigga, you know cause, if you, if you do your math, bro, out of like 30,000 rappers, nigga, you might find like like maybe I say 2000 that did what I did out of 30 million rappers.

Speaker 2:

So so I remember walking in that bitch doll, I was nervous as fuck. I'm in the green room, I see my fucking name, I'm in the room by myself, the motherfuckers giving me like drinks and peanuts and pizza and rocks. He walked by Cause I had a dream that should happen. Just like that. She walked by. She was like, hey, friends, how you doing Bitch, I ain't. I can say none, because I was like God, this is how they call that shit. Like when it happened again, I guess it was like a.

Speaker 1:

But deja vu, yeah, deja vu, you know so.

Speaker 2:

I said rocks, you just walk up to me and do my name, and Terrence came in. That bitch shook my hands and all that. But I'm nervous as fuck because I'm like New York don't play, bro. They don't play, they don't know my songs in New York, they don't know. So I'm like and this is, if one of the whole world is saying like this, one of six in part. You know I'm saying this ain't freestyle Friday. So they introduced me, my nigga, like, once again, I pray, because I always pray.

Speaker 2:

I went out there, bro, I had my mask out to two mascots and I went out there. I like this, I, your bro, my mind bitch. I'm a platinum artist. I don't give a fuck how you looked at me back then because my confidence, bro, it's through the roof. So I add you know, I represent me, I was. It's like I'm platinum, I'm good, fuck if I'm platinum to y'all, but I'm a platinum nigga. So I look at it. I had the whole, the whole motherfucking 106 in part, hands up and down, yelling and I kill that shit, you know saying.

Speaker 2:

I found out later on everybody was watching me, dog, young, jock, gz, every big celebrity saw me down and there was like, yeah, nigga next, cuz the way I came out, it wouldn't nobody coming out like that. That's when class should have been like yeah, we're about to take over the world with the Haitian shit, you know, yeah, haitian flag behind us. And that's because, though, now I got a name, the bigger your name get broke, the harder you got a fight to keep it there. You know I'm saying cuz if you don't got, if you don't got, connects, bro, and every artist that's watching this interview, bro. The reason I'm doing this interview? Because I've never done an interview like this before. I've always done interviews and just Go with the flow and get the fuck on. I want to do it, shit for my brother, for my brother global zone, because that's the nigga that I Like.

Speaker 2:

Like when shit was hot, like that nigga came out and I remember I remember when he came out, you know I'm saying I was like, okay, you know I'm saying this nigga could rap, but this nigga don't have a team. Yeah, I remember saying that shit. You know I was like this nigga could rap his ass off, but this nigga, he can't, he can't come out and rap Haiti because that's my lane. You know everything he gonna do. People are man, you trying to be like Haitian friends, blah, blah, blah. But the nigga could rap, so I'm like he gonna make it. It's like Billy blue. I'm gonna throw Billy blue name on that. Billy blue fucking rap. Yeah, he's like an American rapper, but he loves Haiti.

Speaker 2:

So that nigga had my hustling shit back then I probably would have been like the next motherfucking. You know I would have been Jay-Z bro. I ain't gonna lie, cuz I knew once I got up there, once you get up that dog, you could. You could manifest your way and stay on top, cuz once you up there, if you got money, bro, and you wouldn't spend money like Pete Diddy and Drake and all that nigga, you never gonna go away. You just gotta fuck with everybody that's hot. Go get a hit song with them. So go ahead and pay that little 250,000, so that way the shit gonna go through. You're gonna be the hot 20 hot, you gonna get the hot 100 and you gonna keep on being hot. Look at those. Listen, y'all niggas not dumb. Look at how Drake stay on top. Look at how Pete Diddy stay on top. Look at how cheesy niggas always go back and find the hottest young nigga and do a song with him. So that way you always gonna be. You know I'm saying their fans gonna love your fans and as long as you got money for the radio, nigga, you ain't going nowhere. Cuz ready, like, okay.

Speaker 2:

Niggas think I don't like DJ Khaled. Right, it's not that I don't like DJ Khaled, I'm. I like a successful person, bro, I support successful motherfuckers. But I just never fuck with DJ Khaled cuz I knew I knew him personally. You know, I'm saying, and I and I was in the room with him a bunch of times and he's making look at me in my eye and say I'm gonna look out for you, you're my brother, I'm gonna look out for you, he's your fresh, we brothers.

Speaker 2:

But niggas are saying anything when they're funny, or he never did that. You know I'm saying and I was looking for him to put me on. Well, like I don't get it misunderstood, it's too type of niggas. It's a nigga that'll come and say, global, hey, man, put a nigga on. Then it's the nigga like me that'll come and say bro, I just need your support. You know, I just need you to put my gold jackets on every club in the city, though it's the hottest song in Florida, what a fuck. I'm not on 99 jam.

Speaker 2:

I know y'all niggas look at this shit and you thinking and you like, damn, he right, how the fucking nigga just come out and he all on not, not jams and the shit blew up. You know I'm saying like the, the plies, the, you know what's other niggas over there that did that, that rap in Miami. You know I'm saying the news come out with a song that bitch blow up the G's, the, the, the, the um, bob Griesi's, the, whoever. You know I'm saying back then the news because the niggas could work. Dj Callie and I think a lot of them niggas scared that nigga. You know I'm saying they didn't damn Miami. You know I'm not in Miami but all my niggas in Miami and I wanted to put the right way.

Speaker 2:

So I want to extort those niggas. I want to Pull up in front of the family and say, nigga, turn this song into a hit, or your mama die or your brother die. I want to do that. You know I'm saying cut. I've done that. Yes, I would have had a million hits if I did that, but something told me fresh. You got to do it the right way, bro. I ain't even want to pay for features, though I mean because I had all the money in the world, I could have got anybody to do features, bro, the first video I was on was John Legend with with DJ Kelly. He told me to sit right there when the horses was coming around me and gunplay and motherfucking, you know, rick Ross.

Speaker 2:

So I'm thinking, okay, this nigga fuck with me. He put, you know, but at the end of day, I Never got love, bro, because a nigga could thank you. You suck at rap, but at the end of day, if you see my movement going somewhere, nigga show some love, but a nigga never show no love. Though Niggas show love behind closed doors, then once you left, he probably like man. I think it can't rap man, but people talk about you, but at the end of day, my name was a hit song. You couldn't. You can deny, you know saying but the nigga, the nigga could have helped more than he did. That's why I can't fuck with DJ Kelly. Cuz, cuz. Dj Kelly hosted the BET Awards and in Miami and show love to everybody, but he. But he ain't show love to Mackazo, he ain't show love to love Haiti, he ain't show love to me, he ain't show love to nobody.

Speaker 2:

But at the end of day, these are the same niggas that was protecting you, yeah he's right here, males, a Haitian brother for a long time and that's why we nobody wanted to do nothing to him down, cuz we, like you know what, you know I'm saying fuck you. You know I'm saying the nigga just just. The nigga just flaw, he faked. He gonna tell you love you and I and I got proof. So nigga ain't gonna go back and say fresh, you hate me. You know how. You gonna know I'm telling the truth cuz I do nothing to him. I just let it be the ideas and I just kept on working hard. I'm like fuck it. Sometimes you gotta go around a block, bro. Like if you have, if you have a block, some that's blocking you, sometimes you gotta go around it. Think that person gonna get the fuck out the way. So I figured, you know I'm gonna keep working hard. I'm gonna give me a hit song where, where I didn't need DJ Kelly, I didn't need None of these DJs in Miami at that time that could put a nigga on, cuz it's not hard.

Speaker 2:

Well, you could get a song that get a little buzz once that shit get on not not James and they start playing it all the time. Now you didn't show money. Now your shit blow up. You know, I'm sorry, flow, rather blow up. How plies blow up. Then they just had a ladies. They have machines behind them. Some of them is had niggas that that was waiting outside, one or two. 99 James, that means like DJ Kelly, don't play this shit, don't turn this shit to the hit nigga. You fucked up, you done Niggas had it like that.

Speaker 2:

I never say no names, I never say none of that. But the niggas know I'm telling the truth. You know I'm saying but I I want to go that route because he would have been bad cuz niggas fuck with us behind closed doors. They fuck with every nigga that I fuck with. You know saying we had the streets, we had everything, but a nigga didn't really fuck with us. You know I said they'll fuck with you but they don't want to fuck with you because they know the business part go wrong. Okay, fresh guy, so town fresh got these niggas behind them. So niggas ain't show me real love, they just show me a nigga to jump on a song and do a song with a nigga, but at the end of day you can't find them for the video, you can't find them for niggas made excuses, bruh, cuz they ain't wanna. You know I'm saying they don't want to fuck with us like that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah so.

Speaker 2:

So that's the story behind that my nigga cuz. I could have did it the wrong way, bro. I could have extort niggas. I could have did it, you know, like, like the BMF way, you know I could have did it like that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. So I just said you know I'm gonna keep grinding, I'm gonna keep grinding and that's what really I'm proud of that, that I try to do it the right way. I ain't gonna lie to you, I'm proud of that. But at the end of day, just so my fans could know what happened, it's a politics side that y'all don't understand Behind this game. It's a politics side, bro. You know I'm saying cuz that day, at the end of day, you gotta understand bro, it's like not everybody people pick who they want to blow up. You know I'm saying you gotta pay to play. You gotta pay to play, bro. Cuz no, niggas, even if I would have tried to give niggas money, they probably want a ticket, cuz they know if this shit don't go the way they said they would have had to deal with my niggas. You know I'm saying I had to street. Niggas knew I had this tree. I never had that single, that big-ass single.

Speaker 1:

You know, like when you was running through these clubs in Florida, you was always like 50 deep, bro you know, Reputation.

Speaker 2:

Nigga, don't book fresh, because if you book fresh, you book in 200 Haitians. Yeah, cuz, when I come, when I come to a club, I have 50. I had a hundred Haitians with me, everybody got gun, everybody got flags and God forbid, you don't let one of them in, cuz I'm not going into there. They get in, right so that. So we was like, though. You know I was running the streets, you know, be as you that the niggas had a name before me. You know I'm saying, and they became my family brought, the niggas gave me my second hit, which is the season of the zone. Yeah, yeah, I mean that shit. And I was like, damn, soon as I heard that hook, nigga, this is me right there, cuz, don't jokers, just to get in the game.

Speaker 2:

But sooner as those was to stamp my name Haitian fresh.

Speaker 2:

Yeah so when it went, when money sent me that song, now I ain't got a man, I'm a soul, I nigga and gang of man, the niggas could wrap bro, so yeah, so that time I got, I got emotion. I got Zosha. I call it, that's my name, so don't still it Zosha. I said it first here, so y'all niggas don't steal my Goat going on. So you send me the song, I did my verse, killed it. The song became another hit, just like don't drop. You know, I'm saying, and we did a bunch of shows, made a bunch of money, but nobody wanted to push that shit cuz it's representing Haiti. They wasn't ready for that. Yeah, we was ahead of our time.

Speaker 2:

Yeah they got. I'm a zoo by Right, you know, but black daughter shit came at the perfect time, you know, saying so, that nigga, that nigga did his shit. He had a crew behind him, he had people dropping that money. He in Miami, he got not, not James, he got. You feel me so cuz, cuz I had a manager and I didn't go live.

Speaker 2:

People don't know this story, but the reason I'm talking my nigga, so I don't forget nothing. I'm a child mother to think a nigga talk a lot, but it's different levels to this shit and I don't want to miss nothing. So you good, my manager's calling me and say it's this ugly ass nigga, named black daughter, that want you on his song. I'm like damn. The nigga already said so I'm like man. So the little fuck that shit dog is nigga. I told that nigga email it to you. So so, a month go by, two months go by, all I hear on the streets is tell him I just, yes, I must. I said because I Said I checked my email. The niggas send me that shit bro. I never jumped on it bro. No, I never jumped on it. He sent it to me bro.

Speaker 2:

But that fuck that nigga there was my manager at the time told me yeah, a little ass, nigga or no name nigga, just send you a song. But cuz he thought you know the nigga, like me I work with anybody, at least let me listen to the song. I know I would jump on it if I heard it. You know I'm saying, oh, come to find out that song became a hit, big hit. So he went y'all remember he went to one of six that. So I'm like you know what I just knew.

Speaker 2:

You know, till that day, till this day, this nigga still Can't forgive me. Like he still heard about that shit. I can tell, because the nigga, we cool, you know it ain't no beef like that. I will fight. But at the end of that I can tell the niggas still Still mad, like he's still like fresh. You know you can't wrap my nigga like you.

Speaker 2:

You just you, just the biggest promoter, you just the biggest hustle. Like the nigga. Never give my credit. Like nigga, I had more hits than you. You know same. But at the end of the day you probably had one of the biggest song that represent Haiti that went worldwide. Yeah, I get his credit. I still do till this day. But I did it. Hey, bitch.

Speaker 2:

Don't say I really I'm pre-hits and in, so don't say niggas, cuz you, you, you just a nigga, you just got money and you know how to promote, because my shit was on the radio before before people knew your name. You don't say, but at the end of day he a zoo, so I show him love till this day. You know I'm saying but, but because when a nigga describe you there, say yeah, pick the top five Haitians, it was me, him and trick daddy, on, on on the clubhouse. This happened like two years ago, last year, whatever. So the nigga people was like Name top five Haitians.

Speaker 2:

Man, and in a rap game, trick daddy, I'm gonna beat your ass when I see you, my nigga, I love you, I'm gonna fight you cuz, trick daddy. That nigga said five people, bro, and he ain't say my name, but everybody else say my name. Everybody else that was in that club was like Haitian friends. Oh, hell, yeah, that nigga gotta be the trick, say nah, nah, billy blue. You know what I'm saying, which is cool, cuz I love you, the blue. So, but nigga don't, don't take me out, the top five, like, like, nigga don't take me out, ain't nobody ever represent Haiti.

Speaker 1:

I'm number one. Who's the top five? So who do you remember who? I stay safe fresh.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they said. They said me, um. They said Billy blue. Trick daddy said Billy blue. They said what's in there? Papa duck, okay, papa duck, rap Haiti. And they said another nigga name from Miami. They used to rap Haiti a long time ago. You know I'm saying code a black, you know shit like that. Niggas had like seven, but but everybody was arguing in that it was like dog, I ain't. I know none of our Haitians to Haitian fresh game Like ain't. Nobody rap Haiti more than Haitian fresh. I'm not talking about who the best rapper. I'm not talking about who the who the most famous.

Speaker 2:

The nigga who kept that flag and people face every year on BET, on the nigga who rap hated the most. Nobody could fuck with me, nobody.

Speaker 1:

I'm first your mask. I'm a mask. I'm a Haiti.

Speaker 2:

Come on right, ain't nobody ever rap this, rap shit with Haitian more than me? I'm not talking about like you got like Kodak is a is a nationwide artist, like a big time. On another level, why Clef is? Why Clef, it was a Fuji walk left I took. I went through the trenches bigger so people could say they hate you. Now ain't nobody went through the trenches like me? Who you know saying cuz like, like you, gotta stand out. That's why I represent Maca so, so hard.

Speaker 2:

I represent all the Haitians back then, the red eyes, the blinds, the, the niggas that they were in the streets. You know I'm saying rapping Haiti yeah, I came in and took it. You know, took it to a whole nother level. Yeah, I took it to the BET, I took it to shit like that with no backup. Who you know made it to be two with no backup. I wait, cuz you gonna need like ten years to answer that shit. Nobody, you know I'm saying who you know from Florida that went, that went to that stage where I went. Who you know from Florida? That's on, that's some motherfucking madden. What Haitian you know? That's on that, bro, I wait. Only me that's. You know that ever took mascots to the red carpet and have Beyonce taking pictures with what Haitians you know that made it to be T106 and fuck all that shit with no hits on. I'm waiting, bro, jason the ruler don't count Niggas, only Haitian. When it's a earthquake in Haiti, bro, I'm a Haitian every day and that's a.

Speaker 1:

That's something I don't think you get enough credit for. Fresh like, since you came in the door, it was always representing you, always mingle with everybody. But I think when we really think about Haitian culture and we think about music, fresh kept that flag. That flag was BT. That flag was in the back pocket. The flag was in the right pocket. You have flash for people, but it was rep and Haiti till I die. Man it was. It was a big thing.

Speaker 2:

All I want is my credit, bro. I don't want to be known as, like the niggas, the Haitian JZ, haitian Lil Wayne yeah, but at the end of the day, the niggas could never be me either. I can't be them, they can't be me. I went through the trenches, bro, I took the long route. You know, I'm saying cuz I, like I told you before, I could have took the other way. If I would have took the other way, he would have, we would have been a bunch, we would have had a bunch of nationwide hit. Because if I would have, if I would have kidnapped motherfuckers, moms and and you know, and do what, what some niggas do, hey, cuz a lot of niggas made it, bro, y'all don't know about that. They make it because they, they talent, they made it cuz who they know? Yeah, cuz get, cuz. Listen, bro, listen, I'm gonna get y'all gang dog Back in the days like, like, like trick daddy.

Speaker 2:

Know this, everybody. Know this. Ross, no it everybody. You gotta understand, bro. Dj Khaled had like 50 DJs with him. These DJs work at all the best radio stations in Florida.

Speaker 1:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

You get what I'm saying. So if this nigga took a song from Jay Z or or or Fat Joe because he was with them, niggas or T pain or plies, that shit was emailed to like 40 DJs these are the top DJs. Nigga, your job is to play this bitch 50 times a day. Nigga, 50 times a day, 50 times an hour. So now these niggas got hit songs left to right, you know. But when a nigga like DJ Khaled not showing you love back then, and that's when you had a motion going, you know, cuz my motion was street, it was like a street boost. That's what I was a nigga, the one a nigga didn't want to give me that political that that radio station love Because it's gonna drop with a minute to the radio. Nigga, you don't think I would have to hit in the world like a world I hit.

Speaker 1:

No, it had the right sound. You got this prime. Yeah, that would have been yeah.

Speaker 2:

I made, I made hundreds of, I made millions of that song, our features and club and shows. A bitch can't tell me To this day that's always gonna be one of the biggest songs. If you, if you got a top thousand songs in Florida, don't jock is one of them. You know, I mean every club, every show, every club, everywhere, my shit was playing. I was getting booked every day. So but what I'm saying is, bro, it's like well, you have people like that. He fucked up a lot of people career. Bro, you know, I'm saying cuz he had, he had, he had the power back then to make a nigga stop. He did and I'll say that shit on the show, this nigga had a power. Cuz all you gotta do is sing your shit to them. Other 40 DJs, you know I'm saying okay, okay, that black had no flocking right, yeah, okay, did you see DJ Kelly show him love? No, no.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that game booked everywhere. Blah, blah, blah this nigga and show him love. Then, when Kodak black got the coast off from Drake and who that black started blowing up, who did he go back in and try to and try to show love to? Hmm, I can't hear you. Okay, I'm trying to explain you, dog, what I'm trying to. Plenty you dog, sometimes, when you, when you skip a nigga that won't show you love and you, you get on, you get, you pass their level and you get up there with other rich niggas, other platinum artists, showing you love. Guess what? This nigga don't have no choice to do. Hmm, show you love, show you love, even though the love ain't real, cuz we saw that shit. Nigga, you want me to use all the examples? I'm too smart for this. These are shit that I studied to have receipts and facts, nigga. And show Kodak. No motherfucking love to code that.

Speaker 2:

Got Hit songs after hit songs after hits, tunnel visions and, next thing, you know, code that why? Because the industry let them in. You know, I'm saying so, cali, when you call, it's like a drink, like when you get up, when you get so famous Nigga, like that, gotta come get you I. Why do you think every album he's made is off other people versus. It's not from a bitch ever gonna go back. This is DJ Khaled, we the best. That's not why people buy it. They buy it cuz it's other artists on that motherfucking, and he made his money off other others. I'm not taking his credit from him, from his little work that he put in, but at the end of day, really is real.

Speaker 2:

He blew up off other artists, bro, and off his hard work, cuz I'm not gonna take that shit out, cuz he met them, niggas, and and he worked at a radio station, you know so. So if I meet a star, if I meet young GZ and I work at the radio station and I met him at the beach here, we're gonna extend numbers. Nigga, let's go. And you don't know what type of deal that that was put behind closed doors with the labor. If a label called his nigga and said, man, I got a million dollars for you to blow this nigga, what you think don't happen, bro. Y'all niggas don't know. Regular, a regular nigga don't know about shit like that, yeah, but a motherfucker that, that that know that study that shit like I did, cuz I had to look at myself and be like yo. Your fans don't know why you never blew up. You know I'm saying part of that shit is my fault, but half of that shit is political, bro.

Speaker 1:

Political, you know we're talking about blow up, I'm gonna say you, you got regional, you got regional, you got success throughout Florida. I'm sure it bled outside, but we say in Florida, we talk about.

Speaker 2:

When I met Ross had like like Ross had every day I'm hustling. That's when he was. He had a buzz. So this nigga, I always like Ross, I always supported Ross. So me and Ross finally got on the phone. Pucci was his manager, so we talked and he was like okay, I got a song. You know I'm saying, and the nigga probably give a fuck about my song, you know. So I got the price that they wanted, whatever. So I ain't tripping the price they gave me. Nigga, that's like what I throw out the club every night.

Speaker 2:

So I pull up on Ross, you know I'm saying, at the magic city in Orlando that was the first of my met him you know I pulled up with like 30 niggas. He pulled up with on the May back and other niggas. So the nigga knew he wouldn't fuck it with a regulation. So you know, I gave the money up and I said my name I'm just fuck with you because I want to support you. I ain't gonna fuck about having a hit song or or just I'm gonna song with Ross. That wasn't the. The motive was I fuck with you, I want to help you by supporting you, by giving you, you know, the money I gave him, which was 20 grand cash. You know I'm saying to just to do a song.

Speaker 2:

So we went to the studio, my nigga, and we did this song. He was like what's that the song? You know what's going on. You know, cuz sometimes niggas will give you a fuck, as you know how you got dummy bricks, a nigga to get your dummy verse, cuz if you, if you just got the money and you just doing it, they're gonna do it cuz they got paid. So I want this nigga to do that. So I played this song and it was like that's just, I'm an international boss. Shawty does what it is. So the nigga on the hook sound like T pain, but the song is called international boss.

Speaker 2:

So the niggas like fresh. Hmm, you know I need to start giving you that. Look like what this is one bro, cuz you already knew who I was. We just never met. So he knew that song, right there, would have got me inside. You know I'm saying so, yeah, I am bro, like, like raw fuck with this. Or the nigga went inside a booth, gave me the best intro you ever got in the world rough. So I knew the nigga fuck with me and I fuck with him Haitian fresh. You got next. Blah, blah, blah. So the whole world about the head is shit. That's when I knew God. Every day I'm hustling, he blowing up. You know I'm saying so. When he did that, he killed at first, you know, the nigga. First he wanted some weed. He was like. So I told one of my niggas, one of my good niggas.

Speaker 2:

I said, man, go get that nigga like a pound, whatever. Niggas came back and get that nigga rough, took a smell of that shit. It was like a bitch gonna eat salad, like real salad, it was like just some good shit, you know. So sometimes you got a, you got a former a relationship, so I was. I said nigga, your money ain't good with me, bro, like you good. So that nigga smoke. You know I'm saying he did his verse, you know I'm saying. And after that he was like fresh man, like like this is your single. I was like, yeah, this my single.

Speaker 2:

He said who, who else is on this bitch? I said I'm gonna put T pain on that motherfucker. At that time I just knew if T pain and I knew if I get, if I, you know, if I talk to his manager I'm gonna put the nigga on the song. That's gonna be a hit. I know that. You know I'm saying. So Russia's like, yeah, that's a good, yeah, that's a good nigga to put on that shit. So he left. I left the studio. Three months later I'm listening to the radio, nigga, I hear I'm the biggest boss that you see. Does I'm the biggest boss that? Did I hear T pain on that bitch. Now you just don't pay me. Just gonna say what they want to say, but a real nigga gonna say, that's too much coincidence yeah

Speaker 2:

that's the lane I was gonna take, but how I'm gonna fight a damn nigga with the number one song in the country named Rick Ross. They got every day. I'm hustling so I don't have some, I don't have the machine. He got the machine. So every that was. His next biggest hit was I'm the biggest boss that you seen does far and T pain on it and go listen to my shit and go listen to his shit. So that way you could, you, you would. You would not call me a hater and you would not call me cuz. Think about it. He's on my song. The shit sound like T pain international boss. His song is every biggest boss, t pain. And listen to the beat. I'm saying it now because my fans need to know, but I did all those years, brian. Oh fuck nigga. And I'm not gonna say a nigga stole this, a nigga stole that cuz. How many people gonna believe that I can't rap like Ross, bro? I don't have money like Ross, ross. Ross did his thing like.

Speaker 2:

I did a brother that's a hustler he a boss, you know I'm saying he did his thing, you know he. So I support nigga. Success, bro. So I never wanted to say shit like that's for crab ass, lame ass, nigga, when they're gonna steal my shit. But at the end of the day, the fans gotta know what happened you know whether he admitted or not, that's up to him, but me, I'm just letting y'all know.

Speaker 2:

Then you go look at the facts, then you can say okay, fresh, goddamn dog, you was right, you know. I'm saying cuz I can't come out behind, behind, I'm the biggest boss. Why you think y'all never heard that song? I never dropped it, I just dropped it on YouTube. I never dropped it as my single because I didn't want to compete with him. I want anybody think I'm trying to take that route. I ain't want. I just kept on representing the Haitian flag, but I wanted to come as the biggest boss. Haitian nigga, you know, I'm saying I would have been him, but Haitian got you know which would have been major.

Speaker 2:

I still did it. I'm still that nigga. I'm still the biggest boss Haitian in the street, but not in the world, like yeah yeah you know I'm saying and I and, like I said, dog, that's one of niggas, like like niggas.

Speaker 2:

Cuz. See, when you talk about Ross, if I talk about Ross, I gotta tell people I fuck with Ross. I listen, that's one of niggas, that's on my shit. I watched the nigga success. I love it. You'll fuck me if you hate Ross. You know saying but but Ross ain't the nigga you gotta worry about. It's the nigga that's around him, like like niggas that carry his suit, them type of niggas. I'm gonna be a nigga. Where you talking about my nigga, I'm saying something, true, you know, like I said, I want to kill the nigga. Oh yeah, are you gonna? He'll fuck nigga. I'm not coming out like that yeah.

Speaker 2:

I spent money with Ross showing him love when he was wearing white t-shirts, bro. You know I'm saying when he had. He was hustling. You can't count niggas pockets. I don't know how much money you had, but he had the number one song in the country. When I fuck with him because I want to show him love, I want to add on to whatever you doing, let me, let me do me. But I got a verse from him. You know I'm saying so. So that's what it is with Ross. But at the end of the day, all that shit is behind me, bro. I just want my fans to know what happened, cuz niggas be like niggas. One bitch nigga like you don't. You only fell when you stop trying my nigga. There's so many of your favorite rappers, bro, that that was part of my history, that was part of me. They went through me. Look there to me. You know I'm saying rich the kid to me. Ask them niggas who told them they was gonna be the nigga? They is now who's?

Speaker 3:

one of the niggas.

Speaker 2:

I don't know other niggas ever said it, but when it was at my house at the club. Wherever I call him, I phone every fucking day, I'm talking to him. I believe in the niggas, bro, and I told him that you're gonna be the nigga you is today.

Speaker 2:

Guess what? That's what happened every I don't know what it is with me. My soul, my spirit is so connected, bro, so good. Every nigga that's about to blow up, go through me and Florida. That's how I was. You know I'm saying, yeah, you know. So those are those of the niggas that's winning today. You know it's Bob Green's. You know he could tell you the story.

Speaker 2:

You know I'm saying and the nigga, the nigga probably gonna give, gonna go on these little Instagram and tell niggas a man fresh, that nigga, bro, fresh, that nigga, fresh, looked out for me when nobody was nigga, ain't gonna say that shit. Why, I don't know. But at the end of day, my nigga, I don't want, I don't want your money, but you can say you know that was a real nigga that looked out for me. You have plenty chances to say it. You have plenty interviews. You perform at the BET Awards, hip-hop awards, nigga, and I'm in front row. You know I'm saying you, you, you act like you forgot who I am. And and eight months before then, I'm the nigga that took out 50 grand bro and fucking put on my dog. Because I believe on him, because I told him he had a talent that nobody got. But you want him. Niggas in Florida that went up and down. Nigga, show him love yeah niggas stop.

Speaker 2:

But me I'm the type of nigga dog if I believe in you I'm gonna drop that. I'm gonna drop that bag on you back then I don't do that shit, no more appreciate when it. When it's free, niggas don't appreciate it. I ain't ever told Bargreeze to sign nothing. I just say my nigga, I believe in you dog. I know you're gonna blow up, so let me show you I believe in you, cuz some niggas that say they believe in you but they won't show you. I showed him I believe in him. You know I'm saying stand with me. I say nigga, come over here, you stay with me.

Speaker 2:

For two, three months I got I made like 10,000, 10,000 Bargreeze shirts. You know I'm saying I had shows with Wayne and motherfucking your Godie, and big shows and and stadiums, nigga and Tampa, and guess who took my spot Bargreeze. I told Bargreeze nigga, you doing it, cuz you could wrap better, you that you. I believe in you. Fuck me, that shit, don't excite me. I got money, bro here. Bro, here's my, here's my necklace, my nigga, here's my, here's the mic. Go kill these niggas. Then after that show, that nigga looked at me, mine say fresh boy, I love you. My nigga.

Speaker 1:

I ain't never seen, I never did no shit like this before so that was his first biggest, you know, I'm saying like that's a lot of people, fresh, 20,000 to change we're in a way in the back.

Speaker 2:

We're in the back in the green room with, with black youngster, with all these niggas. You know I'm saying, and I was determined right, never put none on paper, cuz, cuz, once I give a nigga, my word, you could, you could repay me how you want to repay me if you're really you just don't show me love.

Speaker 2:

You know I'm saying yeah a nigga can't call you a year after they spent racks on you. For you know, like a my nigga was something I got this person I want to do a song with a call my manager. Niggas change. Rough money change niggas, bro. Money can't change a real nigga like me because I could always make money. That's why I'm an a-list nigga. Ain't too many a-list niggas out here, bro. You got a-list rappers, then you got a-list nigga. I'm a a-list nigga.

Speaker 2:

So where I go, these niggas can't go. You know, I'm saying I could go where they go. They can't go where I go. I could go to to the Grammys, I could go be with that politics shit, with all the niggas in the room and all that, but they can't go where I go. I witness that shit. I witness that shit where everybody call each other brothers and niggas. When the niggas see you after the BT awards, shaking hands and hugging you, you're my brother, but a nigga a nigga never call you to do a feature to help you when you're in front of a nigga, but they act different.

Speaker 1:

Brah, I'm telling you listen, I believe you my nigga.

Speaker 2:

You got my number, nigga, so nigga can act. So much the theater. Be so real. Nigga, black global put my number, your phone. My nigga put that bitch on your phone, bro, make sure, hey, give me up right now. So I know you. So you like, damn, that's the happy with future man, that's the happy with future nigga. We was doing red carpet. It was Nicki Minaj and that nigga and me I did the red carpet with him. That nigga gave me his number and I didn't want it because I ain't even like future, like I. It was cool, you know. But yeah, that's on Montana. He was hot, so we did be to us.

Speaker 2:

Or the nigga text me while we was in the, while we was at the BT awards. I say, yeah, this fresh, I'm gonna lock you in. So I'm thinking, you know, I'm saying, okay, the nigga, the nigga showing love, he cool, I'm in Atlanta. I ain't never heard from future dogs after that day, after that day, because I ain't the nigga that's gonna call you either.

Speaker 2:

But what my point is when a nigga see you is different Understood. You know, that is the kind of Miami and I hear you know, cuz you know niggas got they soldiers, they know where everybody at and they like fresh man, I'm looking at anything right now. What you want to do, I say, nah, nothing, let that nigga have fun, man, so you can go back to his family. See me, I fucking need the head up cuz I smile when I'm in and I have fun. I'm that nigga that you know the rap and Haitian friends, but I blah, you know the ones who know, no, but the ones who don't know don't know.

Speaker 2:

But I'm that nigga, this, you know I was the nigga that front that press buttons, bro, you know I'm saying, but at the end of there, niggas would know that and I love it like that. I Love it like that cuz, cuz, I'm a boss, boss. You feel me, I'm not a boss, I'm a boss, boss. But niggas, niggas don't know how close they came from, you know, from shicka happen.

Speaker 2:

But me, me being a nigga with a good heart, you know say, cuz, if I love my niggas, I'm not gonna tell him to kill a nigga. You know, say, if you love your nigga, you know you got a killer with you. Bro, if you love that nigga, your goal is still to help that nigga make money and get out that life. Your goal is not to make that nigga gonna kill a nigga for you and when it's time he go to, he go to prison forever and you still are you making money? I Wasn't that. I'm not that type of nigga. I'm the type of nigga that open up a business that about his nigga a car, you know I'm saying and make sure he stay out of fucking jail. That's what a world boss is.

Speaker 1:

Yes, sir, yes, sir, and it's funny how you say how you know, how you. The love you was looking for for people to believe in fresh. You did it for everybody else that was around you. The situation, because you don't find too many well individuals, whether we're talking about a friend or homie. It would be like I like how you're. Goddy, for example, look like his camp. It seemed like, although he are balls, he also know how to play the role of these people bro, like bogey Goddy, the way he doing it right.

Speaker 2:

You know I don't know his camp, I don't know what's. You know me like me your God is sorry to that the spring bling backstage. We talked for like five minutes, bro. One time in our life, you know, the nigga knew who I was. He wasn't your God that he is now. But the nigga always had the ambition and he did what he did. But but at the end of day, the way he's treating his artists right now, that's how you supposed to treat your artist. You supposed to put them up front. You know I'm saying you supposed to make sure they straight, make sure they good, no matter what. And that's your God.

Speaker 2:

And that's exactly why he winning right you don't think, as you got a lot of niggas who who just afraid, right, they just don't want to nigga. They don't want to put that bag behind you, though, but your God did it, and he's recouping, he's recouping, he's recouping from the prophet right now. You know, I'm saying yes, and you can't take shit from from what they doing and Fresh.

Speaker 1:

I want to listen, I want people to know what we talk about, the people you collab with. I must say some names, and you probably could add on, but I know French Montana you using a record with him. Friends Montana, go ahead. Travis Porter Go ahead. All right, we talked about Rick Ross.

Speaker 2:

Definitely we got like 304 in the house. Zoe dollars.

Speaker 1:

Fuck Zoe dollar man. Oh, I wasn't looking for that.

Speaker 2:

Dollars. My, he's my Haitian brother but I ain't like I. He promoted son's RV. You know I'm saying that's my. I don't hate him in those street beef, nothing like that. But at the end of the day Zoe dollar did me wrong, you know. So I put him in my hit single. That was my, my comeback.

Speaker 2:

The song made it to be tea and all that the nigga. You know. I see you guys understand, bro. A nigga could like you all they wanted. They could respect you. I mean, they could like you all they want. But if a nigga don't respect you, dog, and you can't fuck with him. You know I'm saying if I don't have respect for you, I won't fuck with you. You gotta understand all the same love. You show future. You show other niggas you supposed to show me. I'll put you on my single nigga. I spent like two hundred thousand dollars on that song. That's all. Made it to be tea, one of the hottest song out son's RV. Nigga. Wouldn't even nigga post that shit on these page after the shit got on be tea, maybe one or two times up, but but it's not like I'm looking at Zoe dollar. He could have changed my life Like that wasn't that type of future feature.

Speaker 2:

I put him on that bitch because at that time he a Haitian. I fuck with him. You know I'm saying so. I was like, okay, you know I'm saying this, do it because I wasn't trying to. I wasn't trying to go get the bird man on the son's RV song like they did. I'm a zone. You can't do shit like that. You know, because at the end of the day, the Haitian is gonna be like man, that's the money move, that's not a culture move. The culture move was me going to get him and put him on the song, but the nigga ain't show me no love. I was the. I brought nigga. I get a nigga shine. I put.

Speaker 2:

That nigga was everywhere with son's RV song. You know I'm saying, but the nigga never show love. He had a bunch of shows. You supposed to call me and be like Haitian press, come do that son's RV. You know I'm saying because Zoe dollar, my nigga is like, yeah, he in Miami, you know a lot like he got he. Just it was supposed to be bigger than that, bro. Yeah, it's like he did a song with a nigga Just cuz he liked the song, but at the end of day, the respect he was supposed to give me. I didn't get that shit. So that's why I'm like fuck that shit. I put the wrong nigga on the song. I could have just kept me on it. You know I'm sick of. I didn't do it thinking that ship and they go platinum because he got Zoe dollar on it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah but at the end of day, if we would work together and push it and go on BT and do all that shit, you know cuz you got niggas, bro, take pictures with celebrities. Celebrities ask me to take pictures. If you ever seen me in pictures with a nigga, trust me. Haitian presents a nigga, let's take a picture. You know I'm saying, but, but niggas, the way social media is, bro, niggas keep, they, keep, they shit up by taking pictures with niggas. So now a little average nigga and the last average, whole average bitch you don't know how to game go. Gonna be like, oh, he'll hear in a picture with Jay Z here, in a picture with with so-and-so Bitch. After that picture, what you got? But a little about a little comments. You got comments, yeah, but niggas talking about that picture because of that nigga, not cuz of you. Yeah, when the niggas see my picture, they talking about me, haitian, fresh, cuz I'm the nigga, I'm the light. You know I just show niggas respect by posting a pictures, but at the end of day I'm posting a picture so it could take me to another level, because if anybody gonna take me to no level, it's me, cuz I believe in me. I know I'm that nigga and really know. You know I'm saying but, but, but, but with him we never had that. You know I'm saying that close shit because, nigga, and show me that love a nigga.

Speaker 2:

Take a picture of motherfucking the weekend. You see that bitch a million time on a motherfucking page and that's what's wrong with niggas. Dog. You got to show real niggas love bro. You got to show niggas, that's there for you way before you. You know I'm saying you gotta show niggas love brother. Same love Cuz the weekend.

Speaker 2:

You think the weekend give a fuck a nigga, post this picture. You think Jay Z give a fuck if you post a picture with you and him, he's probably hoping you don't post that bitch. He ain't gonna go on that bitch and leave a message under your shit a global man. Thank you for that man. I fuck with you now. Have for the niggas, have for the niggas in the game. These niggas be sucking a nut sack. Don't even give a fuck about them. Why the fuck they never post you and they pay. But you got a million pictures with the whole industry and I'm talking about every nigga. I'm talking about a lot of niggas. I'm not just talking about him, I'm talking about a lot of niggas, dog niggas don't respect you dog.

Speaker 2:

You got to make sure niggas respect you, bro, and that's what it is a nigga gonna respect me till I die, no matter what you know. I'm saying cuz I you could say what you say, how you feel, but at the end of day, nigga, I could touch you just like you could touch me, cuz we both got money. We both got some nigga that'll take a dirt ass gun that's broke that that you give you. You could give him five grand, I can give him ten, I can give him ten, you could give him 30. How's that? We both can do whatever the fuck we want.

Speaker 2:

Yeah you know saying but we don't want to take it. Them, my nigga, like ain't nobody need to die over that shit. I wasn't trying to kill nobody over music, bro. Hopes to blow up. That's why I'm still here. That's why my name is still buzzing with no songs. I ain't drop a hit it since 2019. That was so. I've a. You know I'm saying Everywhere I go, let's take a picture. Niggas still fuck with me bro. Imagine if I had the music Bro. Like it'll be a whole different bargain. A bitch, a bitch. Put a nigga like me on TV. It's over with bro.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I never gonna have nobody like me, for that camera Is there, is there? No help? I blew up with no machine Make it worldwide, but I'm happy with the fuck I did. That's my granny.

Speaker 3:

You know I'm saying is there anything other than music?

Speaker 2:

No, no, don't forget what you should ask me. Keep going on the features, nigga oh.

Speaker 3:

Oh, what other piece after Zoe dollars.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I was trying to make sure I get it. Who us? We already got. The boost is already established.

Speaker 2:

Buster rhymes, but the rhymes.

Speaker 3:

I know you did bust the rhymes black out these yeah.

Speaker 2:

I mean. Which one is that she dancing with no Say. Didn't I do good in the clubs? Yeah, it was all over the club, all over the radio same shit. But you never had that machine to take us to the next level, though. Look him, jackie, oh Jackie, oh, look him Boosie. Of course, little dirt. We got like six songs.

Speaker 1:

You and blood rival did anything blood wrong.

Speaker 2:

We did like two, three songs. I'm a bad. I need a bad One of this.

Speaker 3:

No, no, papa duck, no triple J I'm here, me and Papa duck.

Speaker 2:

We did songs. Triple J is a is a Palm Beach legend, so we never did anything. I did shit with our. What's the other nigga from Palm Beach? That's the killer With the voice with us, high voice, swarmy, swarmy, smooth moves. I like him, I fuck with him. He sure a lot of love at that time. Okay.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, kim, um, yeah, I got an America record.

Speaker 2:

Killer Kim, but I'm talking about look him. You know what I'm saying? Well, I class had a song that threw me on that bitch. Oh, that came out. That's like out it's. It didn't come out because we had to get papers and all that, but I did that. Um BoB shit. Bob was yeah, I mean, we could keep going, bro.

Speaker 1:

I mean we already name like 15 stars.

Speaker 2:

I mean shit right, you know Walker, flock you get. You know, of course we got 30 songs with Walker and um, you know it was. It was pretty much a main note Got black daughter.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean you and black daughter got some new shit.

Speaker 2:

I haven't put it out because when you're making money, dog, and you're like this good bitch, you don't got shit to say, my nigga, like I'm not, I'm not motivated to go to the studio and drop another hit. And if I drop a hit, this now it's like you got to fight me to come to these Fuck ass club, risk in my motherfucking life for five thousand dollars, ten thousand dollars. I make that shit every day. So it's like you know I'm not motivated. But we got some shit because I'm gonna drop a last arm, zosin, it's called zo motion. I'm gonna drop another mixtape just for the hell of it, just for the zone, because I look around, bro, I see like ain't nobody rapping us. Like that dog you got, you got.

Speaker 2:

You got niggas that from other cities dog, like niggas, that's hot. They come into Miami and they and it's a, it's some of the Haitians, you know that's city, niggas street niggas they get caught up on that fame shit. They get caught up on a vip Bottles and shit. So niggas forgot what max started, what what these niggas long time ago started, where niggas respected us. So now it's like if a nigga go to Miami and he rich and he's a star he'll fuck with like Couple of Haitians. It's not the whole Miami, he's just. He'll fuck with like three or four Haitians, but these niggas, they the niggas for real. They street niggas, but these niggas, it'll just be them. You know what I'm saying. So they'll eat with that crew.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying. It's not like everybody eat, it's like these niggas just fuck with these niggas, but what they what? What they'll do? They'll take advantage of these niggas. Man, as long as we show these niggas love, put them a couple of videos, do couple of videos and put these niggas in vip and make sure they pocket fat, we don't gotta worry about all the 200 other Haitians. That's them niggas in Miami. You feel me? So now you got all the, all the hitters, all the gangsters against each other, because, because the way it was supposed to be, you're supposed to be a group like where it's us against everybody else. It's not like that. You know what I'm saying. You can't stop a nigga from feeding his family either.

Speaker 2:

Yeah you know what I'm saying, because if a nigga knew if, if pd'd go to Miami and he got to give this nigga $10,000 and this nigga gotta share with like six other Haitians Shit, he a gangster. He don't feel like he gotta share that money. Nigga, fuck everybody. Hey, he did it. When you come down here, nigga, you only fuck with me. Nigga, I'm that nigga. Ain't nobody fuck with you and nobody really fuck with him. You know I'm saying so and you and pd thinking that's the nigga in Miami when it's like 20 other niggas, you know I'm saying that's bigger than him.

Speaker 2:

Gotcha yeah yeah, yes, but if you buddy, long time ago the shit used to be a group, it used to be like everybody go to one person, bro, so that way everybody eat. You know what I?

Speaker 1:

have. No, I'm with you. I'm question though you? You perform at the Haitian festivals before right in Miami. Yeah, I did that shit.

Speaker 2:

I did that shit like twice, twice, but it's hard. It's hard getting booked by them type of Haitians man, the festival, because they feel like they're gonna try to work out deals with you. You know, I'm saying like a nigga asked why Clef to do a show for like $4,000 and he was like at that time we was gonna do it, but he felt he was disrespected. You know what I'm saying. Like Haitians disrespect you, dog. Haitians are calling you in black.

Speaker 2:

Hey, man, do it, for the people Felt boom on your. Come on, haitian, fresh, we love you, man. Here's $2,000. Man, if I, if I, have a good night, I give you another $3,000, man. So now you. So now you do you go and after the show, the shit is packed. Nigga, like man, you brought about 300 people fresh. I can't you gotta argue. That should be the hardest shit. You know American niggas giving you 15, 20 grand, but Haitians, bro, you, you better, have a good negotiator, oh you better, oh you better have the number one song in America and there's still motherfucking negotiate. So I Bitch, you ain't bringing the hundred Haitians in this not to cope our face.

Speaker 1:

So my next thing would be like how's the love there? Because I could have sworn one year. It seemed like everybody was taking a picture with fresh like do you feel? Oh no, no, when I go to that motherfucker, I don't.

Speaker 2:

I don't hang around wet behind Um Vip's and shit, I go walk around bro. I'll be so tired, bro, after three hours of taking a number of pictures bro, I'll be like god damn. And Haitians crazy. They don't just take pictures with you, they motherfuckers. Give you headlocks Like. They motherfucking jump on you like because they can relate to me. You know, I'm saying motherfucking women just come and start kissing you and hug you. Bitch. I smell like Bro, I have everybody sending me after that because I'm a cool ass nigga. If a nigga wanted to put some voodoo on me, bro, you got me at the Haitian fest because I'm gonna hug you, I'm gonna talk to you, I'm gonna. I never felt like I was so big for my people, bro.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so I give everybody hugs Because my, my niggas, you be like man fresh, don't let everybody touch you like that man, everybody. I'm like bro. I believe in god boy. This is what it is. If it's supposed to happen, it's gonna happen.

Speaker 2:

But I gotta hug my people, bro, and I would hug like 5,000 people at the Kompah fest, so I miss that part. I love it, but at the end of the day they're right too. A bitch could have just got through picking their fucking nose at fresh. I ain't give a fuck, bro, I just love. I just love my people, my nigga, and that's what. That's why it made me who I am. You know, because if I get a hit song, think about it, bro. Let's say boost to get a hit song. I get a hit song, that's worldwide. I'm gonna make a million times more than him because he's gonna go through all the hoods. But I'm gonna go through all the hoods in the country and Like brazil, all the hastens over there, chili, canada I keep Bahamas like boost ain't gonna get them type of shows. You feel me. So when you are hasten, it's like a worldwide artist. So your money gonna be bigger if you have a hit song I'm with you.

Speaker 1:

I'm with you. Yeah, yes, sir, so are we. Is you working on an album from fresh level, or is it just gonna be? I know, I mean it's just gonna be like a it's just gonna be like a so motion bro.

Speaker 2:

It's just gonna be all the classics gonna be on that bitch and I'm gonna add like a few more songs and that's gonna be it, bro, like, like, because I want to see other niggas Blow, I want to see other niggas make it. I look at talents now you know what I'm saying. But but from what I went through, I don't care how good you are, how good you could rap, I'm not gonna put 300 000 niggas no more. You know what I'm saying. But at the end of the day, um, at the end of the day, you can't, we can't, do it like that, no more. Like I could just support a nigga from from within, like from a distance.

Speaker 1:

Understood, understood. Yes, sir, yes sir. Well, I know I can't wait to hear, that's for sure.

Speaker 2:

I know I got the, I got the um, I found my niche like it's, it's, it's, it's not like back then. Back then I was trying hard. You know I'm saying because because another thing too dark, these new artists, my nigga, don't be trying so hard, bro. If it's for you, it's gonna be for you. Just go. Just, you gotta have a team, you know. So you gotta promote your shit like like it's.

Speaker 2:

You gotta believe in you, bro, because motherfuckers Believe in you based on how you believe in yourself. Like if a motherfucker, if a person see that you believe in yourself, it's like okay, every city got a ugly ass nigga, that's fucking all these old. Every city they got a other ass dope boy, but that nigga when he dressed Well, his car, his cologne, that nigga gonna fuck be unsafe. She live in that city Because it's confidence, bro. So when you, as an artist, you gotta have confidence. You gotta know that you're a platinum nigga, you know, even though people might not treat you like that, but treat yourself like that.

Speaker 2:

And you gotta go hard and you gotta be willing to spend every dollar you make on yourself. Stop waiting for other niggas to put you on, because no, niggas don't, you ain't gonna find a lot of Haitian fresh that's gonna meet you and put 50 grand on you with no paperwork. Usually niggas end up killing you for that. You know what I'm saying? Because we, because you always end up being an enemy with a nigga that you help, because once you stop, if you're not doing enough for this nigga and in three years he fucked with you he find out that he's not in on tv, he's not on this because you don't got that type of power. Guess what he gonna do. He gonna find another nigga that got more money than you and he gonna talk bad about you with that nigga. Yeah, man, I was sour that nigga, but that nigga man, he ain't do. Damn that nigga. If a nigga spent a dollar on you, my nigga, you need to thank him and love that nigga for life.

Speaker 2:

Yes, uh you know what I'm saying. You need to show that nigga love for life, because at least he believed in you when a million other niggas didn't. You know I'm saying be a man and grab your balls and be like my nigga. You know I'm saying thank you for everything, bro. You know I'm saying but I'm gonna keep you with me, you know, through my journey, but we we or me gotta find something that's gonna take us to the next level.

Speaker 2:

If you come at a nigga like that, he gonna respect you dog. He gonna be like yeah, we gotta find. You know what I'm saying. So I'll go to a nigga like, like snoop dog and be like snoop dog. I got an artist named global my nigga. I can't take him where he needs to go, but I invested in them and got him a little buzz. Could you do the rest? And a nigga like that might say yes or no, and they, you know. But at least that nigga You're gonna trip. You don't check his gangsta, because if he blew up, most of the niggas don't come back and say who helped them, because they went through so many niggas who helped them and everybody became enemies. Bro, you see what's going on with booze and blue, whatever his name is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, I guess it's a bunch of shit like that. It's real messy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's a bunch of. That's just a couple of examples, but I'm just telling you, bro, it takes a real nigga to go back and say you know what? That nigga right there gave me a give me some shoes. That nigga gave me some money. That nigga believed in me a little bit. It takes a real nigga to say that to come back and help.

Speaker 2:

You know I'm saying because a real nigga not gonna put you out there, dog, this nigga is Is Like one of your top five niggas out there right now and use it. I'll pay that nigga child support for eight months, bro, so he don't go to jail. And the nigga multi millionaires right now, you think he ever say fresh, here's your money back. Or say my name at the awards, or or cut me a check? Hell, no, niggas don't remember who was there for them. 99% of niggas don't. Because you gotta understand, though. That's why people that be quick to say I'll never change nigga talk for yourself. Nigga, don't lie, stop lying. Money will change you. Bitch. I'm not gonna get 30 million dollars tomorrow and still go to the same club. Still hang with. You know what I'm saying. I'm gonna do. I'm gonna do my good deeds.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but that damn the motherfucking day.

Speaker 2:

I'm not gonna be the same nigga. Right, I'm gonna have the same vibe. I'm not gonna stay in the hood Just so niggas can see how real I am. So one of them fuck niggas could grab a dirty gun and shoot me over 100, over $2,000. The goal is supposed to be to elevate nigga. Elevate with everything, with your lifestyle, with money, with everything, bro.

Speaker 1:

That's the goal. It almost seemed like you, you, you might. I could see you. You're doing a label soon. Man, in the future man, you'll be the perfect label executive man. You know, if I had a, label everybody.

Speaker 2:

My label would be eaten, bro. That's what everybody would be rich, everybody will be eating and everybody would be a star. And, and it's like anything, it'll keep going, going, going going. Even if I was an A and R, I will, because because I I'm no talents, bro, you know, sometimes God is cool if you play, because it's some niggas that played. They were real good, but they played in Europe, they played in. They just never got that chance in. And that fellow NBA, but once they got the chance and they didn't be able to play Like a Patrick Beverly, my nigga, you know I'm saying, once he got a chance to get in the game, he showed what he got a germy limb.

Speaker 2:

You know I'm saying people like that, people didn't fuck with them, they played g-league but they got that one chance you get yeah, you supposed to. You show what you got. The next thing, you know, bro, you give people respect, but nobody loved you before. You just got that chance. It's a bunch of niggas in a rap game that just never got that chance. Hmm, you feel what I'm saying? The best rapper, mean you still haven't found the best rapper, because that nigga probably somewhere motherfucking Chicago, new York, somewhere chilling.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy. That's crazy. And I guess my next question have you been a Haiti recently? Since everything I know, the gang violence is crazy, but have you?

Speaker 2:

been Not.

Speaker 1:

Haiti ain't been in.

Speaker 2:

Haiti lately nigga, like, like, I want to, what? At the end of day, my mom told me if I want to, if I want her to Die, go to. You. Can't go there right now, brother, matter who you is, it's, it's, it's, it's um. All you can do is pray. You know, I'm saying for Haiti. It's a lot going on right now, bro. I people could check and see what's going on, but it's, the street ain't safe for nobody to go right now. But at the end of day, I pray that end soon, because it's a lot of people that have family in Haiti.

Speaker 2:

They have a lot of stuff in Haiti that they need to do. You know saying you want, you love your country dog, you want to go on vacation there. We have the most beautiful beach and Haiti, we have a bunch of beautiful places in Haiti. So I pray everything stop so all the cuz remember a country like Haiti. We need also our people visitors. We need our tourists to make money. We need the people coming from the boat Lobby D other places so that way they could that. That should keep jobs. So when nobody's doing, everybody suffer, bro. So that's no. That's number one reason. I hope they fix everything so people can go to Haiti.

Speaker 1:

That's what's up, and I know you saying you give back. Often you shoot the videos in Haiti, so what was been inspiring you giving back? I seen you put a bunch of shoes together. You put your old clothes that you're not wearing.

Speaker 2:

You always I'm a, I'm a. Dress this, bro, like I never did the focus, I never had to. So, okay, so you know, one of my cool friends is um is Tracy McGregor. Okay, that's like one of my best friends, that's so. So me and Tracy McGregor, we came up with idea. You know I'm saying like like us, tracy McGregor got a lifetime contract with Adidas, okay, so he basically do what he wanted to do. So we spoke like after months, after months, and me and him we got real cool.

Speaker 2:

So the niggas say you know what? I'm a, i'ma bring you in. You know, I'm gonna bring you in with Adidas. You know, so, so, so, because what you doing is for good cause. So the nigga talk to the, the head person who did this and you know it was never like I'm about to get a shoe deal. You know I'm saying what it's supposed to be is like he gonna support me. Then, if that work, then we're gonna talk about a shoe deal. You know, I'm saying because he was on tape. He was on tape Sign everything. You know I'm saying and the niggas send me like like 3000 shoes from Adidas. I posted on my shit, I gave it everybody. I sent all that shit to Haiti, bro. It was like a bunch of shoes, shirts, um, you know I fits a bunch of shit, bro. They didn't even fit me because I'm a six, three nigga like I can't fit half of that shit couldn't fit me.

Speaker 2:

I said everything. I said everything to Haiti. I gave friends, I, I did everything, bro. So you know, I gave a lot of stuff in Haiti, bro, I spent a lot of money in Haiti. But uh, the problem is, when you spend money in Haiti, other Haitians watching you. You know what I'm saying, because you're never gonna send enough and the people you send it to, 90% of those people gonna keep your money. It's not gonna make it where you're trying to send it at. So you got to be real careful. If you can't just send money to Haiti, you know you gotta have a family there, like like me. I send $2,000 to my uncle, you know what I'm saying. Then I have him Get accrued and go to these, to these um areas and feed everybody. You know what I'm saying. But I never put all that shit on videos, because if I put everything on videos, haitian gonna say why are you doing that? You're showing up, You're trying to get clouds and if you don't show it, nigga, you ain't done shit. So you can't win for losing, bro.

Speaker 2:

Yeah so you know what I do because I want to do it, because I love to do it, I like to feed my people, I want to help my people. But you got a bunch of people who want to go in the media and say, man, he ain't do shit, he only gave $1,000. He only gave this, he only did that when they don't know what you done. And the most people that's talking shit about you not given, never gave a dollar. So our people got to get our shit together, dog. We got to support each other, you know. So we we've been supposed to have our own Davido. Look how Davido, every year, every year, davido win national artists of the fucking year, damn.

Speaker 3:

Haiti don't have artists.

Speaker 2:

All I see is Jamaicans, africans and other places. You never see Haiti dog. You know what I'm saying? Because the other Haitian artists got a mother fucker stick together and stop hating on each other, and all the Haitian people got to pick a motherfucker man. If that's the motherfucker we gonna put up, that's gonna be our, our wins, kids. And let's pick that motherfucker and I help push that nigga so we could get in. So next year, be chicken, give us our fucking love.

Speaker 1:

Hmm, I hope they hear that man. We got that crap.

Speaker 2:

I'm tired of that shit. I want us to win international artists of the year. That's why I'm still In this music shit, because I'm not gonna stop till we win it.

Speaker 1:

That's what I'm talking about. That's what I'm talking about.

Speaker 2:

It's bias, bro, it's bias and it's fucked up.

Speaker 3:

You know what I'm saying, like you can't Like, like, like.

Speaker 2:

We got artists, we got artists. But the thing is, some of them, when they become an artist and they get a lot of followers and they get, and now they start sucking American artists, nutsack. You know. I'm saying like no, stay where you is. You got you got two million followers and you getting a thousand comments. Let the motherfuckers come to you. Don't go under Nicki Minaj shit, and when she just talking shit about something, you post your little shit hoping that she click on your shit. Nicki Minaj, don't give a fuck about no Haitian artists. We got to make our own motherfucker big bro people made.

Speaker 2:

I would have never knew who Bob Marley was If Jamaicans then then get this nigga, his, his flowers and that's our nigga. You know I'm saying Africa, they veto whiskers and burn a boy. How would I know these niggas? Because Africans love them, but Haitians, they'll tell your ass down, bro. Haitians to tell your ass down, you come as an artist, tell my son, you feel, you feel to put lights in Haiti, you feel to buy 10 airplanes. Nigga, don't do that shit. If you want to Say that shit and don't do it. See if your ass be as soon as you get on live. You're gonna see 10,000 Haitians under your shit. Get my mom, god God, little fat shit.

Speaker 1:

This doesn't fuck you up. I'm sure getting off on you, you're done.

Speaker 2:

Like, don't say shit, you're not gonna do to Haitian people, bro, and some of them not gonna like you. Just they gonna find something you don't think because because Haitian People treat american artists better than Haitian artists, like, let's say, a motherfucker booked me to go to Haiti, right? Or they booked, like they booked black dollar. They booked and somebody else booked on. Let's see who. Can I say Lotto? They don't even know what the fuck Lotto song is, but Lotto gonna get picked up by 15 motherfucking Rolls Royce and you know what I'm saying and G wagon and two motherfuckers gonna pick me up and a motherfucking four-runner, oh man.

Speaker 1:

That's what the fuck be going on.

Speaker 2:

I be like god damn, what the fuck, bro. Listen though you I don't know if you have, if y'all ever been through this, but let's say, let's say it's a niggard that hang with a lot of niggas in the club and these, your niggas in vippy and they are dirty, but you look good. All the hoes looking at you, but, but a real bitch gonna be like this nigga ain't no real boss. He the only one who's shining, while his niggas don't have nice shit. See, I'm the top of the all. My niggas had to shine, not just me. That's how Haitian artists gotta get. You know. I'm saying Haitian top artists gotta do songs with each other and we gotta treat this nigga like he jz you know, and take him to the next level. That's how we gotta do it, because americans gonna show you love.

Speaker 2:

You know, cuz some people think they celebrities by how many followers they got, bro, and not, and 80% of followers not real. Every, every big star that you know got fake followers bro. Every big star I don't go fuck if it's Fucking Justin Bieber, nigga. Justin Bieber got 300 million motherfuckers. He'll be dropping the album every day. You got 300 millions. Bitch. You draw a picture on your shit. You better have not have less than 150,000 comments, then bitches be having like 3,000 comments, but you got 300 million people. Come on dawg, the whole game is is everybody, ever everybody, just just. You know what I'm saying, right, motherfuckers acting, bro, yeah cuz the average person don't.

Speaker 2:

Don't get it. I understood. They don't understand how to game go. You know what I'm saying. You want to be rich, you want to hang with rich people. You got to act like you're rich, even if you got a borrow motherfucker rush rush for 10 weeks and your ass don't even have a house to go to. But other rich motherfuckers gonna be like, oh that nigga rich, you got a rush rush, so you'll be a temporary rich motherfucker, but they're gonna respect you For that for that period of time. Then when you go back, bro, hey, man, lose my number, dawg you out this, click you out this circle. But people that respect you're gonna respect you forever.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

You know I'm saying money can't buy respect, bro. Money could buy fake respect, it could buy fake smiles. It could buy, you know, like hey, you know I'm saying because you can have a putt putt and I got a. I got a A Bentley, all right, but you got more money than me. You pull up in front of the club with your shit. Man, get this shit out of here. Man, get this nigga out of here. All the holes like this, get your car out of here. I'll pull up in the Bentley truck. I'm gonna get more than you, because people go by what they see now, not by what they know.

Speaker 2:

Right right you know I'm saying like, right now I'm doing this interview with you. Right, let's just say, tomorrow I get rihanna jay-z to do an interview with you. Guess what your your podcast name? I'm gonna go through the roof Because of this nigga. Yeah, you know, I'm saying that like, like, but, but. But y'all the same two niggas that's been doing this shit for months. Why people didn't show you the same love? Oh, okay, because you got money.

Speaker 2:

Now you get out of a list of celebrity and my father's gonna show you love now. So the love is fake, bro. As long as you up, you get love. Once you down, you done. But me I always stay, stay like medium. Like like yeah, bitch, I pass algebra. Yeah, medium, you gotta know what the fuck your pie is. Yo, you know, bitch, I went to school, bitch, medium, I'm blessed, and that's all you need to know. If I'm a multi-millionaire, I'm, I'm blessed.

Speaker 1:

Oh, man, that's it, man, you don't. You. You're doing your thing, man, that's a, it's a beautiful thing, man, you're doing your thing and it's a beautiful thing. And, um, like I say, I want to give you your flowers now too, because you, you paid the way, definitely for anybody, the younger generation zoes. I say it one more time you definitely paved the way. You've always invited me to shows when you was in the city. You looked out for countless artists, friends, homies I already know from from what we're talking about, even behind the city, behind the scene, fresh was that dude, always been that dude and always looked out for Anybody who was around them. And you always took care of cats. And I just want to say definitely Thank you for that. You know I'm saying I want to make sure the world how do you want to be saying?

Speaker 2:

Is there a nigga, undisputed King of the zoes? My nigga, and every patient should feel like you, the king of the zoes.

Speaker 1:

Yes, sir.

Speaker 2:

You know, hey, man, I appreciate y'all keep doing, keep doing y'all shit. You know, I'm gonna try, I'm gonna support this this um y'all podcast as much as I can. If y'all need some, I'm wide open. Yes, we're gonna take it to another level. We're gonna, we're gonna elevate. It's all about elevate dog. The goal is to to get a Chevy, then get a motherfucking Bentley, then get a motherfucking. You know you got. You can't stay still.

Speaker 1:

You can't take everybody with you.

Speaker 3:

You can't take everybody with you, don't?

Speaker 2:

y'all never get a third nigga that's gonna come in there. Act like he helped you start it when you was building that shit. You know the countless hours and sleepless nights. Don't get a nigga that's gonna try to own that shit, because you're gonna get a nigga that's gonna look at both of y'all niggas. Man, I could do the shit better than both of these fuck niggas. Watch out, hey, make sure you keep y'all grow together. You know what I'm saying Because I see what's the nigga's name Walo and Billy. What is that? Gilly, gilly, walo and gilly. Y'all the motherfucking. Y'all gonna be the motherfucking floater Walo and gilly, but it's y'all name. So that's what we're gonna do, man.

Speaker 1:

I love y'all boys, man, I love appreciate that shit fresh. Give the people your handles, man. How can they follow you and get at you it's.

Speaker 2:

Haitian fresh. It's the same shit everywhere. It's RTS Haitian fresh bro on twitter, or everything's verified and y'all go, y'all fuck with me. I'm a fucking child, so everybody fuck with me. We are chill, it's so wait, I ain't gonna lose. Shut up for my zones, man, everywhere, everywhere, all my, all my people, man, everybody feel a good person, I'll rock with you. You know what I'm saying. If you're not, it's fuck you and that's it.

Speaker 1:

Ha ha, ha, ha ha haa, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha ha ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha ha ha ha ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha ha. I love you.

Speaker 2:

I love you. I love you I love you, bro.

Speaker 1:

That's it, we're good. Yeah, we're good man. Have a wonderful night. Thank you once again, brother.

Speaker 2:

Y'all tune in to exposure ぞ에 Manu, but all kinks us out vei king hadie nigger.

Speaker 1:

Love y'all boys, love you two bro, it's more than just a parkas cask, it's exposure.

Life in Haiti, Adjusting to America
Apologies and Forgiveness for Past Mistreatment
A Journey to a New School
From High School Dreams to Disappointment
Journey to College and Music Success
From Rapper's Block to Haitian Fresh
Music Industry Struggles and Success
Music Industry Experiences
Politics, Music, and Personal Feuds
Representing Haiti Through Music
Ross and Fresh Collaboration and Success
Respect and Support in Music Industry
Motivation and Support in Music Industry
Haiti's Current Troubles and Giving Back
Supporting Haitian Artists and Unity