Nightly Strange Podcast

Nightly Stange Podcast - JxPhreeze

DMac Uno, K-StanLee, Ra-z, Kilo Keyz On The Track

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0:00 | 53:33
SPEAKER_00

You're welcome to the Nighty Strange, Range, Range, Range.

SPEAKER_02

Welcome everybody to the Nightly Strange. My name is D Makuno.

SPEAKER_01

Alright, thank you.

SPEAKER_02

Special guest in the building. Jake Praise, everybody.

SPEAKER_01

Let's add him, let's add it, let's add them, let's add it.

SPEAKER_02

No man, what you eating?

SPEAKER_01

I just ordered some lemon pepper wings and some honey, uh, some hot honey wings.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, okay. Yeah, I had some hot honey the other day. That shit was delicious.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, man, I'm at the spot and take on the uh little hideaway. Yeah, man, you look like you're sweating. It's hot today. I ain't sweating, that's just a coconut or my face. How you how you been since the last time we had you on the show? Man, I've been great, bruh. For real. I've been uh living life, leveling out, uh enjoying my blessings, and uh yeah, just living to that, man. Living life.

SPEAKER_02

Oh yeah, man. I've been trying to do the same. You know what I'm saying? I got my health together. I couldn't be drinking and eating cupcakes off girls' asses for the rest of my life. So yeah, man, you gotta check that out. Yeah, it was fun. It was fun, it was fun. So Freeze, I want to get right into it, right? So we have the first ever Bremerton hip hop festival, and you won it.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, uh deserved. I should be on it, honestly. Yeah, yeah, I feel that.

SPEAKER_02

I feel that you've been in work for a long time. Long time.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, man. I'm excited about it. Uh Bremerton first hip hop festival, Quincy Square, August 23rd, uh from 1230 to 4:30, I believe. 12 to 430. Bring your kids, bring your families, come enjoy some good Brim City artists, some Brim City love, Brim City energy. Um, I'm excited about it, man. Uh, stuff like this don't happen in Bram. So don't uh I'm excited to be a part of the first one for real. Uh shout out Doc. Yeah, shout out my guy Direct, shout out Doc uh putting this together. Uh I'm just happy to be a part of it.

SPEAKER_02

Hell yeah, man. It is well deserved for you, bro. Like I remember because I remember when I first heard of you, this was back in the Kids Hap County days. Kids Hap County Uncut. You know what I'm saying? Um ain't no limits, baby. You know what I'm saying? Like how you you've been rapping for so long, bro. Like, how does how do you feel having to switch from selling CDs to going digital?

SPEAKER_01

Well, um I think selling the CDs you you would make more money back in the day if you slow CDs compared to streaming now. Uh a lot of artists make their money off shows and merch really these days. So it's it's a completely different.

SPEAKER_02

I got a whole box of um like rappers, uh, old rapper CDs that I used to collect when I used you know I was active and stuff. I go through them like, damn. Man, we put in a lot of work back then. Yeah, a lot of work.

SPEAKER_01

Everything's digital, so it's like, yeah, they gotta go get it online, or you gotta create some type of way for them to just and get your music from you direct, yeah, direct to consumer pretty much, but other than that, it's streaming.

SPEAKER_02

And so I want you to kind of break down for everybody. Um, how how have you been able to have such longevity in music?

SPEAKER_01

Um, because I don't make first of all, I I am an uh an artist. Uh music is just what I do regardless of what's going on in life. That's because I'm gonna always write music. Uh I'm an artist. Like when you're an artist, artists is music is my life. Like, no matter what, I'm always gonna write music, I'm always going to have something to do with me being in a studio or being around beats or writing or anything curious. So it's it's it's deeper with me because I'm not just trying to rap to get a check, and I'm an artist. So no matter what, I'm gonna always make music, I'm gonna always create. I'm a creator, I'm gonna always create. So um I think that's why I'm still holding it down, still pushing. And it takes, you know, they say it to blow up overnight, it takes 20 years, it takes 15 years. You know, but they don't see the uh the background, they just see you blow up. Oh, he came out of nowhere. No, he's been probably putting it down for 10, 20, you know, 10, 15, 20 years before he even got the that that song or whatever recognition to take him off, uh take it off.

SPEAKER_02

Well, I mean, like I think that's why a lot of people quit, you know, they expect it just to be overnight, you know. Like I like, I mean, you you've been around for long enough, about as long as I have, bro. It's like these dudes will start rapping six months later, they're like, Oh, it didn't blow. Because they I guess people don't know how to deal with that first drop of adversity, you know? At first you're hot, right? And everyone's fucking with you, and then it kind of drops down a little bit. You know what I'm saying? You get you're like they don't know what to do and they just quit. You know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_01

Like, yeah, and see a part of that is too, like when you first start out as an artist, you're not even you don't even know yourself or your craft chair.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

So it's like it takes time for you to learn and build yourself, build your craft, and uh figure out who you are as an artist. So if you start out and you give up in six months, you didn't even really see your full potential in it, honestly. Now this is totally not for you.

SPEAKER_02

You know what I'm saying? Like I can see a lot of people upset. There are a lot of other people upset when Drake fell. You know what I'm saying? Because they were they were copying his style for so long and they got you know they got off on it. It worked out for him, and then you know, he went down. I mean, he's still who he is, but you know, he went down and then they kind of quit rapping too. Like, um, and so I know Freeze, you're from you you're from Bremerton, right? But you stay in Tacoma and then you fly out to Georgia because you have family out there, correct?

SPEAKER_01

No, so okay, so originally I was born in Seattle. Um I moved to Bremerton when I was young, like 11, 10, something like that, for like maybe four or five, six years, maybe longer, a little bit longer.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, baby.

SPEAKER_01

Uh moved to Bremerton. My mom moved us to Bremerton, we moved into West Park probably like late 90s, 98, 99. Uh I grew up in Bram until I was about 15, 16, right before I was gonna go to the uh, I went to the I went to West Hills, I went to uh the junior high before they tore it down, and then uh I went to Mountain View Middle School, then I went to the junior high before before they tore it down, excuse me. And then I was about to go to the high school, but then we ended up moving back to Seattle uh right after eighth grade, and um I ended up going to Raynard Beach. And then I didn't actually that's when I was young and bad and did, you know, was doing my thing. Young, bad and didn't give a fuck, pretty much. And I didn't go to school. I went through I went back to Seattle, and Seattle was a whole different environment than you know, Brennan and West Park. West Park was good as fuck, don't get me wrong, but uh West Park was more community-based because we everybody knew each other. I mean uh but when I went out to the when I went back to Seattle, it was different, you know, and it really threw me off as far as uh what was going on out there and what I was used to. I'm I'm coming from Brim. I left Seattle, I left the Central District when I was like 11 years old, something like that, 10 years old. I went to Brim and was out in Brim for like five, six years, and then grew up in a in it. West Park was a it was a ghetto, and it was all families, but there were everybody only had moms. Like there was no dads there. It was rare you've seen a dad. Maybe a couple of homies had a had a dad, but it was so everybody, all the kids there kind of bonded. Everybody kicked it, everybody played basketball, softball, rode bikes, like uh had a real childhood, forts in the forts in the woods, like I mean, it was it was a whole different type of environment. Then I get transferred to Seattle, it's straight to Gang Bang, Central District, South NGD, Blood, Crip, like it's all type of, you know, just you know, it's all type, it's a whole different environment pretty much. So it's like in Brim, too, of course, but where I was at when I got dropped off, I was a kid, and it was a it was a whole different environment. Uh and it'll wake your ass up fast, and you have to adapt. So, and I adapted fast. That's why I didn't go to front of the fucking screw. So I went to I went to I went to beach, yeah, I went to the first, second, and third period, eat my lunch, and I'm selling dope and selling uh weed downtown Seattle custom back downtown and selling dope and selling weed downtown and shit. Like I didn't go to shit for real. That's what me and the homies were doing. Doing dumb shit. Like back then they used to uh Starbucks used to leave their tips out on the uh on the like the drive-thru or whatever. We would come through and snap their tips out.

SPEAKER_02

Like we used to we just used to do dumb shit for like Yeah, no, the homeboy used to do that at the um the Mexican restaurant outside the old Albertons, which is SARS now. They had their tip box right there, but like you couldn't, it was sitting there, but you couldn't see it. Like the people would order over here in the tip box would be here, and he would like take a pencil and start digging in there, taking their money out. Because they never emptied it out. So, you know, he's coming, he's coming out with like hundreds. Like, I'm like, damn.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, uh originally I'm from Seattle, but raised between Seattle and Bremerton, and then I've been in Tacoma for the past 12, 13 years, you know what I'm saying? Uh my daughter's mom's from Tacoma. My daughter's was born in actually born in Bremerton, but raised out here in Tacoma. So I had to call myself a Northwesthead, man. I got roots everywhere. I got family and roots everywhere pretty much.

SPEAKER_02

Do you think that's that kind of helps you from like like continuing music? Because I I feel like do you feel like if you were just stuck in Bremerton, like you'd probably be done by now, correct?

SPEAKER_01

Oh, 100%. No, that's exactly why I branched out and I moved around because as an artist in Bremerton, it ain't there's not too many pubs, there's not too many uh outlets out there for you to really get your name out there to really uh expand. So if you're an artist in Bremerton, you gotta move around. Because a lot of people don't even know where Bremerton is. It's it's I mean, it sounds like, yeah, right, but no, a lot of people don't even know where Bremerton is. Like, especially if you go out of the state, you're not gonna say, uh, I'm gonna say Bremerton, but I'm gonna say Seattle. It's a little city across from Bremerton. So because people know where Seattle is. And uh and even Tacoma these days, Tacoma uh is is on the map for real.

SPEAKER_02

Uh the chick chicken makes it right here. Yo, ask her if I can get a Shirley Temple. Hey, can he get a Shirley Temple?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02

I'll be there in an hour and ten minutes. You know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, we got I got you. I got you.

SPEAKER_02

So what you like? I know we were supposed to do the show last weekend, but you had a show, right? And what what was that show?

SPEAKER_01

Man, that was uh my shout out my guy D Mac uh from Tacoma from the Hill. Uh he had a uh a such a good vibe too, man, where he um had this spot out there in Tacoma, right across the street from the Temple Theater, uh called The Poet. And it's like a nice uh stage and nice little area, uh dance floor, nice ambience, nice aesthetic, and then in the back is a restaurant bar and stuff. And uh he just had a bunch of dope melodic RB artists really uh come up in there and uh do their thing. And they had it, it was real dim light, candles, and good music, good vibes, good melodic energy. Like it was dope. It was real dope. Shout out my guy D Mac. Um D Mac? No, Mac Drees. My Mac Drees. I mean, my bad.

SPEAKER_02

It's all good. You know, it's crazy. It's like I I look I Google my name or I I check I check my name on Spotify to see if anyone else has it. You know what I'm saying? Like that's that's the first thing I do. Like an artist will hit me up. I don't think I don't think I've seen D Mac before, I'm gonna say. No, there's there's there's a lot of D Macs. Um D Mac Uno. Oh yeah, out here I mean out here, I mean why would anybody have that name? That's a that's an old scheme. Oh yeah, totally. Like my name, it was Macadosia One, and I went D Mac. It's still an old school name, but like that's what like what sometimes artists will like send me, they'll be like, Yeah, this is my rap name, and I'll go look them up on Spotify, and there's like 50 of them. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, it'd be crazy. It'd be crazy, man. Like, I just be trying to listen to music all the time. So how do you feel about the hip hop scene in uh Kidsap?

SPEAKER_01

Um honestly lately, like there's a lot of artists in Kidsap for real. Yeah, that are pushing, that are trying to, you know, do their thing, that are not trying to, that are doing their thing, that are uh putting their name out there, that's moving around. I see them branching out, I see them, you know, working. A lot of artists I didn't know that was out there. Um but yeah, you know, I I support anything that comes out of Brim City. I'm probably the only nigga that you'll see me like some shit, share some shit. Like I'm not on no hater shit. Like, and that's what and that's what happened back in the day with with the Brim City artists, everybody trying to compete with each other, and uh and that's what really fucks shit up for real, bro. Because it's like you'll get further reunity than uh everybody trying to, oh, we're we're the best and we're better than them, or it's like we're already Brim already a small city, and it's right, we already compete with Diploma and Seattle, so it's like us, and we got dope, dope artists, we got real talent in the room, and they got real talented roots from the brim, like you know, Quincy Jones, and uh I used to talk to the Toys Topless. Remember Toys Topless? The strip club Bram City used to have, and a lot of people don't know Brim City used to have a strip club called Toys Topless. But I I was talking to the owner one day and he said Jimmy used to come over there, catch a fairy over there, and sit in the corners and play his guitar like Toys Topless and Brent. I went there once just little gyms like that. Like Brem got a lot of little history, you know, to it. You know what I mean? Bremelo, Stephen Sir Minstalot was out there in Bremelo, like yeah, you know what I mean? Uh a lot of jazz players back in the day when you know Seattle was a hub for you know jazz and blues back in the day. You know what I mean? I got a crazy Sir Mixeloty.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I got a crazy Sir Mixelot story. Wait, did you give this link to this Negro? Huh? Did you give the link to this Negro? Who is this man? I don't know. I can't even see what's going on. It says Elf. Self? Who you get a link to? I don't know. I just sent it to a bunch of people. No, I meant the the the link I sent to you. I didn't give it to nobody. Oh, okay. How this n anyways he's gonna stay there. I don't know this nigga. Um I hate hold on hold on.

SPEAKER_01

What's up, man? Who's you? Oh, I sent I sent them I sent everybody a link to uh link.

SPEAKER_00

What's up, Freeze?

SPEAKER_02

What's happening, Catherine? Hey man, yeah, that's what's up, man. Thanks for watching the show, but you gotta watch it on the other end. You can't come in this way, though. But I love you.

SPEAKER_01

Thank you.

SPEAKER_02

You gave everybody the wrong link. Now everybody's gonna be like, I want to be on the show.

SPEAKER_01

Everybody's trying to come on, like, hey man, let me say something, man. I gotta say something for free.

SPEAKER_02

One time we was uh we I used to live in Utah for a little bit, right? And Sir Mixelot came down there, and I was down there with my my partner, my homies from Washington, and my homeboy was like, Yeah, my mom knows Sir Mixelot and them guys. They used to hang out in park place, you know what I'm saying? On Central Valley, and so he's like, Yeah, I'm gonna get them to sign my CDs. And so we get into the hotel room, we're hanging out with Hello Women, and he's like starts getting the CDs to sign, and he's like, Yeah, man, um my mom said she knew you, and he was like, Who's your mom? And he said the name, and they're like, Huh? He's like, her last name used to be something, something. And he was they were like, Oh, yeah, we remember her, yeah. We all remember her. Yeah, sure, yeah, yeah, yeah. She used to kick him all the time. But he sat there the whole night, like, I was like, damn, they was running trains on your mama in the apartment. It was bad. I was like, damn it, the flip. She was getting flat. She was getting sad. Oh boy. And you were talking about some artists that are out here. Um, has there if there's anyone that kind of sticks out to you that you kind of want to work with? Um, I've already probably started working with them.

SPEAKER_01

Uh Jameer, my guy Jameer, me and him got a track. Uh Jameer. Shout out Jameer, um, his sister, Jay Nichelle. Shout out Jay Nashelle. Uh Jay Nichel. Uh, I've been seeing YB moving around. I even said his name a bunch of times. That's how I heard a YB was through you for real. I've been seeing him. I don't even know the number what he's trying to bring. I still be liking this year and reposting this shit. Just off the strength of the that he's trying to bring for real. Um what other artists are in Bram That you that you see out here uh actually moving and serious about the crowd.

SPEAKER_02

I like Sin man. He's not he's not as serious as I'd like him to be, but he's dope. Um, exotic breezy. And then who else is out here? That's that's that's about it, bro. Like, I mean, most of them already, you know, they already quit rapping. You know what I'm saying? Like they vibes quit rapping.

SPEAKER_01

Direct, so go pick up Pinot Grigio. You know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_02

That album was actually pretty dope. I listened to it, you know what I'm saying? I was like, I was like, you know, Eve's on here. Shout out direct too, bro. Like, I was I was sitting here wasn't even doing the strange, you know what I'm saying? I'm over here doing uh doing uh the news, you know what I'm saying? Because that's popping right now. I mean I'm getting the fact Mason Cut got a track that just dropped recently too.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, uh you played it on the podcast. I played it on here, yeah. Hey, they they they revamped that joint though. That shit yeah, yeah, that's pretty that was clean. That was clean. I was bumping it the other day. Go check that out. Y'all in the brim. I'll go check out cut and mace's new single, bro. Yeah, so can't I don't want to flatter it. I'm I can't remember exactly what it's called, but I want to say something, you know.

SPEAKER_02

This phone's called Up.

SPEAKER_01

It's called Up. Okay, so go check that out. That's just dope. That's just yeah, just drops, just drops.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, when you were talking about like competing and stuff, like I'm not gonna lie, I was one of the people competing, you know what I'm saying? I felt like we're gonna be able to do it. Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

I was younger, we was all young ones, so that's what it's just it's just young and being in ego, really, you know. But once you get to a certain level as far as maturity, it's kind of like you look at things a little differently.

SPEAKER_02

It did, I did. I I remember I remember what I was like, I stopped being a hater, basically. It was like when Big Sean came out, I was like, This nigga's terrible. How is he better than me? Then I was like, he is dope, he is dope. At the time I first heard him, I thought he was terrible. Then I'm just like, Look, he's probably just you know being out because like you'll see the one dude, like you may think he's a terrible rapper, right? But every time you go somewhere, he's there, you know what I'm saying? He he's in everybody's face, yeah, just putting in work, you know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_01

You can't sit at home and expect to do anything. No, exactly. You gotta get up and move around, and I and that's the main thing, too, especially being a Pram Cedar artist. You gotta be in Tacoma, you gotta be in Seattle. Those are the closest things to you. You better you better uh catch a ferry or ride the bridge.

SPEAKER_02

Shout out YB. You know what I'm saying? And it's so easy to get around, like there's so many hip-hop shows going on. There is always stuff going on get all every weekend, like all throughout the week, all the time. And it's just like you can't sit in the city because I know everybody wants to be a hometown hero. That's the whole thing. You want to walk into places and people recognize you and everyone stabbed you up and taking photos. That is only gonna last so long.

SPEAKER_01

But I mean you you got it, it depends on what you want out of it, man. Yeah, uh you you did you want to just be famous for people just to know that you music, or you want to make some bread off this, like which one is which one is your choice? And everybody got their own agenda, but some people are okay with that, just being a hometown here. I'm not yeah, me either. Me either. I'm trying to know that's why you gotta move around. That's why me, you know, I got family everywhere. Alabama, Atlanta, Florida, you know, Texas. I got family everywhere. So that that that definitely helped me, you know, expand my music, you know, knowledge to grow too. You know, I mean jumping around different different places, messing with different artists and doing different things and just moving around for real, because that's what you really gotta do. You do, you gotta keep moving around.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, that's that's the only thing that's gonna help you. You know what I'm saying? Like that's one thing I had to learn too. Like, I kind of hung up, like I still rap, like it's because like you said, like when you make music, you gotta love the craft you're doing. You know what I'm saying? Like, you shouldn't if you're in it for the wrong reasons, it's never gonna work for you. It's not, you know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_01

You're just chasing money. You just gotta worry about the music, worry about your craft. And the more as time goes on and time goes by, the more you write, the more you create, you will evolve, you will get better and better and better and better. And it's that's that's just what it is. You have to put that time in, and then and if you're a real artist, if you just focus on your craft and creating, everything else will just fall into place.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, and your your music has got a lot, a lot crispier, bro. Like, I remember you meant the one song, like she she wanted to get fucked in a foreign in Colorado. I was like, bruh. Wow, some yeah, it was, it was. You know me, I'm on CD. I'll be out drunk. I see you. I'm like, Freeze, make a song for the ladies. Make it for the ladies, like and that shit works though.

SPEAKER_01

You know what I mean? I just slowly over time, like and and niggas would be like, Freeze, you can rap though. Like, Freeze, you need to rap, rap. And I'd be like, bruh, I can't rap. And you might see some rap records here and there, but like I've just really been, excuse me, I've just really been uh Evolving, bro. Just taking I'm just going where the music takes me for real, bruh. Like, yeah. You know, I'm just going where the music takes me. I can rap, rap, but I just, I just over time, I just I slowly created my own sound for real. Yeah. Doing what I do, and I don't sound like nobody but myself.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, remember we used rap, you had that rap song. It was uh you and Young and C, right? Yeah, that's my guy.

SPEAKER_01

Shout out Young and C.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, shout out Young and C. Man, like because every time I see you, bro, it reminds me of the time we were doing Kids App County Uncut. And the movement in the city was crazy back then. Yes, yes, crazy.

SPEAKER_01

It was, it was. We was doing ciphers, everybody was shooting videos. But you know why? Because heyday, I brought heyday to brand, bro. Yeah. I bro I freeze it. A lot of people don't know that, man. Freeze brought heyday to brand, bro.

unknown

Freeze.

SPEAKER_01

Shout out heyday. Hey, shout out heyday. He shot my first, well, I he said it was his first, but I think it was his first or second or whatever music video. And then um, once people start seeing that's called Hit Me Up. It's F-R-E-E-T-E. This is when I was, you know, Lil Freezer, which is original freeze. Freeze hit me up, he shot my original video, and and people, the artists of Bram, people from Bram. I was like who you know, who shot it? Who shot it? Heyday. I brought Heyday to Bram, to Mario. Shy baby, shout out Mario, shout out Shy Baby. Um, and he he started messing with videos with him, and then it went from Mario, and then it just spread like wildfire throughout all Bram. And he still works for Bram artists uh to this day. Yeah, no, heyday is solid.

SPEAKER_02

I've been feeling I be feeling for him. I think about Heyday every time I see an AI picture, you know what I'm saying? Like a thumbnail. Because I ain't gonna lie, I use AI just to make thumbnails. It's the only thing I use it for. And then, like last, and I tried to use it for something else, and they took my Facebook.

SPEAKER_01

But yeah, I'm the one who really got the the videography popping in Brim as far as my era of what we was doing. Hey, they was doing all the shots out there around that time. But Shy Baby, Hustle Style, shout out Shy Baby, Ganja Love, uh Degree, Axe, uh, Axe, Atlas. Um, who else was going on? Who else was who else was rapping back then? Oh, back then you had uh Dre 360, Dre 360, shout out Dre 360, shout out uh Lil Kwan, uh uh Lil Kwan, shout out um I'm forgetting not Dre 360, my guy Fred D's, my guy Fred D's, my guy Marquise Wright. Shout out to homie Sun. Yeah, my guy down south. He'd be he be getting off too. My guy Marquise Wright. He he's a uh he's been in Brim for a hot minute, a Brim original too. Uh he's down south. Now I think he's in South Carolina or North Carolina, but uh he's he he's uh a Brim City uh cat that's still rapping out there too. We support and show up. There's a lot of people back then that was rapping. Lou was back then, Jordy. Yeah, shout out young Lou, Jordy Sam, young Lou had a you know Young Lou's one of the original Brim City, killed the city, had a big run, and you know, had everybody had had Bram City turned up. You know, everybody had everybody in Bram had a nice but Brim City is dope, man. That's why I fuck with everybody, that's why I try to support everybody, that's why I try to share everybody because it's like we're different. We we are completely different than Seattle and Tacoma, and we don't have a standard, and that's why I try to set it, that's why I try to show love and get everybody on that same page. Like we're gonna we're gonna set the standard, we're gonna we're gonna be on some Unity shit, we're gonna share our shit, we're gonna support each other, we're gonna be on some whole different shit, and that's what I'm pushing, and that's what you see me doing it too.

SPEAKER_02

I just confident so yeah, no, that's what uh I interviewed Henny Z, the rapper out in Seattle. Shout out to Henny Z. And she said the same thing. It's it's and I tell everybody this, it's like just when it comes to Washington or the Northwest, we're the last tapped potential in hip hop.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, we the last part of the West Coast that gotta be connected to complete the West Coast. We are the West Coast, you just the upper left, bro. We are the West Coast, it's just the Northwest.

SPEAKER_02

If you get enough rapper, like say you say you get 10 rappers just to put their differences aside and be like, like you're saying, like, hey, we're gonna form a team and we're gonna just build. Think about it, you got 10 people just pushing crazy just all the time. Like it'd you it'd be it'd be over, you'd be good in about two months. You know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_01

Easy, yeah. But everybody, I mean, it's I think it's these days I think it's possible or it's becoming possible. You just gotta find the right people. You but but what it is is what I've learned is you don't gotta find the right people. Your team finds you, yeah. Your people find you, you know what I mean. That's what I've learned over time, and and my team has slowly been finding me. Like, you're gonna see a lot of content, promo content blazing out from here on out. Uh, I'm working with a marketing company um that believes in me, that um sees the potential in the music that uh especially you know do uh brand me and find find my audience and find my niche and shit like that, which I know we all know, but uh it's really just you're just gonna see a lot of stuff coming out from me. You're just gonna see. Just gonna see. I don't want to say too much, but I got I've been I got three videos in the chamber right now.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I saw you got the one where Jay, you in the you in the cave with the tiki torches.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, shout out my guy Jake Hill. Jake Hill is dope as fuck, okay. That's my guy, that's what I fuck with. He's pricey, but he's the type of see because I'm an artist, okay, and I care about my craft and how I construct my music and the time and stuff I put into my music. And he speaks the same way when it comes to his his videos and his editing process. He's a he's an actual videographer. He's just not a nigga with a camera that's just pointing it at you in certain locations and okay. You know what I mean? It's a big difference between a nigga with a camera pointing at you and an actual videographer that knows how to edit and knows what he's doing.

SPEAKER_02

And you guys come up with your uh you guys come up with your own, do you come up with the storyboard with him? Do you do it yourself? Yeah, we kind of do it together.

SPEAKER_01

I'll get kind of give him uh an idea and he'll run with it. But he comes up with a lot of stuff I come up with, but for the most part, we come up with stuff together. Uh he's very creative. I'll put your idea to him and then we'll kind of go from there. You know what I mean? But uh Jake Ford, Jake Hill. Shout out to Jake Hill. Jake Hill is super dope. We got Blamey about to drop here soon. You wanna see promo rolling out for that? Uh my shout out my guy Tim and telefocal out of Bellingham. We shot Coobreese last year. I have a single called Cool Breeze out that I dropped last year. Uh, we shot a video too about life and stuff that he had going on. I had going on. It just wasn't able to balance out to get the video out. But the shots are so exotic that we are not about to just not put it out. So yeah, watch out for Cool Brees coming soon. Watch out for uh Real Love, a video coming soon. Blamey is next. Um, I was about to drop a project. I've been screaming project, project, project, but I don't think I'm gonna drop a project. I think I'm just gonna uh keep dropping these singles in these videos until me and this marketing figure out and read these analytics and this data the proper way to move on to the next step and how we should market and do things with me correctly and uh from here on out. So I think I don't think I'm dropping a project yet. You're just gonna see a lot of promo uh footage, short film footage. You're gonna see a lot of videos, you're gonna see a lot of shows, you're gonna see a lot of just different things from me. Uh but you're gonna see a lot of it just from that.

SPEAKER_02

That's what I like about the uh the new the internet now, bro. It's like the analytics is crazy because you can actually see where they're listening to your music at, how long they're listening to it, what area. Because I know what's his name, Brent Fire did that. That's how they find where they go to on tours at. You know, things would be like, okay, cool, we're we're vibing over here, we're gonna go over here. Um, and Jay Freeze, let me ask you a personal question. How many times have you plotted quitting hip-hop?

SPEAKER_01

Um, I I I've never I've been saying this, it goes back to what I was saying earlier. Like, yeah, it's not a quitting, it's not a quitting thing with me because like even if I wasn't to put music out, I'd still be making music. Yeah, because I'm okay. Let me reframe that.

SPEAKER_02

Like, how many times have you like trying to like like thought about you ever contemplating thought stopping trying to put it out to the the public and stuff? Because music, music is a venting of your soul, basically.

SPEAKER_01

No, because no, no, no, I'm never I never thought about not putting it out because uh people love my music. My music is relatable, I get really good feedback from my songs, and that is uh is a good feeling as far as an artist to get real good feedback on something you put time, emotion, and attention to. Uh and that's what I do it for, besides just me being an artist and me liking to hear myself, and like, damn, that was so I've heard songs I've made before and damn near cured up. Yeah, damn there's a lot of people. That's what it is that's what it does. The whole thing is like for real, like it's a soundtrack to your life, right? Yeah, that's a real exact one it is. And I'm not just talking about dumb dumb shit. Like, I'm talking about real life shit that I go through, people around me go through. Like, this is real life relatable situations. Like, I'm not just talking about no shooting my bang bang. I'm not talking about no random ass shit. This is my life. This is this is real music.

SPEAKER_02

So it's and that's the only music that really sells, you know what I'm saying? Like, if you if you just talking about because right now they have a um like a basic norm of what people can rap about and they use the same words, you know what I'm saying? And it does it used to have a cool beat. But like the music that really sells is the people talking about their their life experiences and what they're going through because you can relate to it.

SPEAKER_01

And I feel like we went through a time period with music where everybody wanted to sound like everybody, and everybody did that. And I feel like we're coming to a time period now where now real music is about to really start to transition and turn over because that era's over with. That hardest era is done. So, what's the next era? What's the next big thing to happen? It's it's going back to hip hop, it's going back to real hip hop, it's going back to real music, bro. And I see that happening. So um I'm excited for the future of music at this point because the uh the bullshit is has died down. It has and you see a lot of real artists and real songwriters and uh coming out and uh being successful, not even on neighbors, just by yourself, just TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, you know, Twitter, like just really having the money to market your stuff, really shooting promo videos, really, really marketing, like just really being out there doing shows, just staying pushing. But really, it's marketing. It really is marketing. It's just like any other business, you are a walking business, and I learned that over time too myself. Like uh the music business is what 90%, 80% or 90% business, 10% talent. Yeah. So it's like you gotta market yourself like Amazon or any Burger King, anybody else you see online during them commercials. So you gotta market yourself because if you don't market yourself, who's gonna know that you're doing music? The people that already know you, people that are in your region, like people are people, strangers to support you more than your friends or family. Yeah, they sure will. 100% strangers will get you rich before your friends and family.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, that's what you want. That's what I tell people. I'm like, you need strangers, like your friends and family, they'll show up at the beginning, you know what I'm saying? They'll be like, but hey, you're you're still doing a show over here, you're still doing nah, bro. Like, yeah, shout out to Ryan.

SPEAKER_01

People uh that grow up with you or been around you for years and know you, they just know you and know that version of you. They can't see another version of you. So it's hard for them to see you as this person, this celebrity, or this artist because they only know you from this version, from you growing up with them or the relationship that you have with them.

SPEAKER_02

So it's hard for them to see that too, is what I'm uh yeah, and then a lot of people like in your city and stuff, like they'll they'll they'll still they'll mess with you enough, right? But until they they gotta, and some people won't, like for me, I have people that wouldn't even talk to me. Then they start seeing me. I was in Seattle doing whatever. I'm coming back to town, and people, hey man, how you doing? I'm like, the fuck? Bro, you you wouldn't spend on me if I was on fire, like yeah, yeah, too, for real. But yeah, like you were saying about the promotion and stuff, dude. Like, and I tell people that all the time like you can't just post a song one time and hope for the best. You know what I'm saying? Like, like I've done that before. I'm not gonna lie, that's how I learned. You post a song, you leave for a couple hours, you're like, Yeah, that shit's probably blowing up. Motherfuckers is loving it. You come back, you got six plays.

SPEAKER_01

Nah, you gotta you gotta market it, you gotta get this shit on a playlist, you gotta shoot videos, you gotta shoot promo, you gotta do, you gotta do a bunch of stuff. It's not just post it and keep going, because that who's gonna who are your friends? Who's gonna see it? The people that know you. Yeah, like yeah, who else is gonna, you know, you gotta you gotta really put some real marketing behind everything you do. Like, if you got a hot song, you think it's a hot song, you need to drop it, you need to shoot a video, you need to put promo behind it, you need to put it on playlist, you need to, you know, you need to do drive, you can do whatever you can to try to do.

SPEAKER_02

You gotta get it everywhere. That's one thing I always would try to do. When I was actively rapping, bro, I'm trying to get my music everywhere I can get it. You know what I'm saying? Oh, there's this is a new social media that started up, I'm gonna put it here. Oh, they got a little competition over here, I'm gonna put it here.

SPEAKER_01

You know, and another thing is too, you gotta collaborate with different artists, and you gotta collaborate with Tacoma artists, you gotta collaborate with Seattle artists, you gotta collaborate with Yakima, Portland, Olympio, all the all these, there's artists everywhere, and we're all the Northwest, we're all Washington. So it's like you gotta collaborate with these people because you're opening your doors up, you're opening your networking up, you'll be able to do shows in all these areas, you'll you know what I mean? Like you're opening your your your fan base to different fan bases when you're working with different artists too. You know, you're you're exposing your name to different areas. So I think people like being a Bremen artist, Bremerton artists, you have to do that being a Bremerton artist.

SPEAKER_02

You have to I think people like you like you said before, and uh you know it's the same thing. Um most of the artists have said the same thing all everyone I interview. We have to get the competition out of our minds. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, on the track, yeah. On the track, we can compete all day. You know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_01

So if you want to go in there and you you do your best, you you you you you finesse however you go in that studio, you're gonna do your best every time, regardless of on the track. But as far as everything else, it's like okay, we're Brim City artists, we run out on our dungeon, but we support each other, okay? That's what I'm pushing. Like, no, at the end of the day, we support each other. That's what that's what we do on this side of the water, and we support each other.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, and I want everybody to know I put that on on Freeze told. He was like, nah, man, don't put king of the city. I was like, no, Freeze, I'm gonna do it. You the king of the city.

SPEAKER_01

No, I mean, titles is corny. That's no, that's how that's how you create controversy, that's how you create hate, that's how you create motherfuckers wanting to say shit or say, you know what I mean? It just creates problems. Like, I'm not I'm not a king of shit. I'm just freeze from Brim. Freeze from the Brim, that's it. That's what I'm saying.

SPEAKER_02

I'm letting everybody know I put that on there. Freeze wasn't like, yo, put that on there, you know. Yeah, I was like, nah, nah.

SPEAKER_01

I said, nah, I don't do that. I said uh people know who I am. Like, I don't need to call you on title, bro.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, and then Freeze, if if artists wants to, you know, connect with you, network with you, any kind of way, how can they get a hold of you?

SPEAKER_01

Uh you can hit me up on my Facebook, you can hit me up on my Instagram, uh, you can em me email me at jxfreeze at gmail.com. Uh just hit me up. I'm I'm just a regular nigga with talent. That's it.

SPEAKER_02

I love that, I love that. And Freeze, you got you got you said you got three videos dropping this year, right? Well, I got way more than that.

SPEAKER_01

Those are just three in the chamber. Uh I'm shooting as we speak. Uh so yeah. I blame me's coming, blamey's coming, and then you're gonna see uh Real Love, which I haven't even started promoting enough yet coming. Cool Breeze is definitely coming. Shout out to Telefopile in Bellingham. Uh I gotta go back out there and shoot and edit, finish editing that video. That video, like I was saying earlier, we shot last year, but time and schedules just it just didn't come out. But the shots are exotic. Okay. And I'm gonna go out there and we're gonna edit that thing and get that thing pushed out. Uh, things about you, I just dropped out on the 26th. Uh on our major platforms. I'm about to shoot the video to that next. And uh, I got a bunch of I just I just got a bunch of stuff I'm about to just shoot and just start laying it on y'all.

SPEAKER_02

And let me ask you this. So let's just say last year, right? And I because I I want people that are gonna come across this video that are artists, they need to I need them to understand kind of how how this works. How much have you you spent on promotions, video, studio time? Everything to home your crap just from last year, just from last year.

SPEAKER_01

Last year, thousands of dollars. And because everything I like to do, if you watch my videos, you see my videos are quality.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And I like to have a standard of of the way that I do things. So, and plus when people see that too, like you can't go from this standard and drop back down to this standard because it's like, what are you doing? You're going backwards now at this point. So, everything I do I have to keep at this standard. So, for a good videographer to shoot your video, you're gonna pay anywhere from 15 to a couple thousand dollars of video. Um plus you're no, your wardrobe or your time, your gas, whatever you whatever the aesthetic or whatever type of video you're shooting, uh, you're gonna pay for marketing when you're marketing your video on YouTube, Google ads, you're gonna pay for playlisting bookers, you're gonna play for playlists to get your songs on playlists, you're gonna pay. Sometimes you gotta pay to get on shows. I ain't I ain't too proud to pay to get on show because sometimes it's just about the right person hearing your music. Um shit, merge printing up printing a merch for certain shows to get to to you know, to get some money off your merch. Like, it's a full circle. Uh I I've been spent thousands, thousands, and thousands of dollars just in videos. I probably spent 10 grand, 15 grand last year, just in videos, like promotion, you know, three, four hundred dollars a week, you know, like for months on it, like it all depends. Like, but that's that's what it that's what it costs. Like you have to invest in yourself. You have to invest in yourself, and you gotta believe in yourself at the end of the day because I know for a fact it took me a while to get where I'm at, and I never stopped writing, I never stopped making music, and I believe I'm supposed to be here because of the time that I really put in to master my craft and the money I invested and the time I invested, and the places I went and the people I met. I feel like now, just now, I think I got, you know, I think I got my hands around, I think I got my hands around what I've been trying to accomplish. I didn't figure it out what I needed to figure out. Um, but it takes a lot of time, money, and real belief and hope to really become who you want to be in this as an artist. You know what I mean? Like you gotta really believe that you're an artist, you gotta really believe, you gotta really put that time, you gotta really be writing, no matter what you do in life, because I've been I've had ups and downs. I've been broke, I've been kicked out, I've been living on the streets, I've been I'd have been through all types of stuff, but no matter what I was going through, though, I always was writing music. And that's why I say I'm one of the best out of Bremerton or the best out of Bremerton because I don't sound like nobody but myself because I stuck to it and I never gave up. Yeah. And God gave me the gift that I have to prove it to everybody, like, okay, well, look, check this out. Real for real. And that's just how I feel. That's just my opinion. Uh I'm just getting I'm just getting started for it. I've been doing this a long time, but I'm just now getting started because I feel like I'm master of my craft. I have a sound, and uh we just go and explore it from here on out and see what happens for real. But you know, at the end of the day, I'm an artist. Uh my my goal as an artist is just to make money, which I make money. I get paid shows. Uh I get paid shows now. Uh you know, I get thousands and thousands of views and besides marketing. Like, I people know if you mention Bram City or Bremerton, you've got to mention Jay Freeze. If you don't, you a motherfucking lie. You was on all the lists they made. Come on. Regardless, and I don't even give a fuck about the list. The list is a list. That's that first of all, it's rage bait and it's opinion based. Everybody likes who they like. It's just to get comments and to get attention, to get likes, get people talking shit, get people pissed off. That's all that is.

SPEAKER_02

That list I like the chat GPT. The chat GPT one was I like that one because he was like, yo, we we went off because he's had chat GPT looking up and it was talking about.

SPEAKER_01

Only base it off who's doing stuff right now. If you're not doing nothing, you can't doing shit, then they won't put you in there.

SPEAKER_02

Well, the chat GPT, it was it was based off like internet presence, um, plays, and it's like it was basically like internet presence and plays, right? And you remember because Like back in like we transitioned from you know CDs and posters to having to go online and post the fuck out that shit. So for me, it it should it had my old rap name on there. I was like, Oh damn, yeah, I was like Macintosh the one. I was like, I was like, yeah, motherfucker, like that shit. Like I was hitting it.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, but now I know what though do other stuff. Uh a lot of people forget about uh Sean Nelson and Kazzy B. Yeah, no, I thought I brought that no good and yeah, Little No Good and I Gang. You know what I mean? Like those Liquid City, Liquid City, those are all city people. Yeah, these are all Bram City people, and those are everybody in Bram that really made some type of impact or did their thing always always need to be you know recognized because references oh, people don't know who's who, or people don't know you know the artists out here. So that's that's why I do what I do, and that's why I'm going to continue to do what I do, and that's why you see me posting Bram City artists, that's why you see me liking and sharing that shit because at the end of the day, love sharing and liking a post is love and it's support and it's free, bro. And it don't hurt nobody to do it. That's what I do. Everybody got their own fan base. Everybody, there's money in this shit for everybody straight up. Like the people that listen to you might not like my shit, and vice versa. Yep. So it's like like, come on, there's money in this shit for everybody. Every and that ego and that damn shit is not what I'm pushing. I'm pushing Unity, I'm pushing everybody in front of break, support each other, push each other, whatever way you can for real, because it's possible to get bread out of this shit. Everybody got their own fanbase, everybody can get their bread in this shit. Yeah, oh yeah.

SPEAKER_02

And Freeze, I I want to appreciate you for coming on to the Nightly Strange again. Freeze has been here before. I think you came to the house last time, right? Yeah, I came to the crib. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You came to the crib last time. You know, it's crazy. You know what I'm saying? I do this out, I do this at my house, and then you know I take care of my mom, and she's like, You can't be having all these people at the house. I'm like, nah, nah, nah, you good, you good. Most have been here already, you know what I'm saying? She'll even know. But yeah, Free Man, I appreciate you for coming back on. I want to get you back on again a little bit, like a couple months. You know what I'm saying? Like we're gonna sit down. I went down to Boom House when you were doing uh your thing down there, but I had issues with the nigga on the board. We cool now, but I didn't see you in there, so I left.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, no, I had just left for a little bit, but man, that was a dope event. I met I met some uh artists out there that I didn't know was out there. I met a photographer from Bram. I didn't know that was in Brim. I met a another dude that has a studio. I met I met some some some some solid artists I didn't even know was in Bram. That was there. That was uh uh a dope event. We had some food, we had champagne, we hit together some beats, we listened to some music. I showed him some stuff I was working on. I I collab with a couple of me and Cut got some shit. I said cut it beat. Matter of fact, I need to hit cut up and see uh he got to that beat. But yeah, man, we just we just was like really like an event to see, okay, this is what's going on, this is what I'm trying to do. What was with it? Like what's up? Let's let's get some shit pushing for real because I'm sure it's a good thing.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, no, I like that. That's why I popped in there. I was like, yo, I saw what you was doing. I was like, yo, I'm with this a hundred percent.

SPEAKER_01

You know what I'm saying? Yeah, I mean, Jinx actually we're supposed to we're we're working on doing something like that similar on the 25th of July. So I'm gonna start um posting some for that here real soon. But yeah, man, we're just uh out here, J JX Freeze, man. I say JX Freeze, everybody understand JX Freeze, but it's just J Freeze. J the X is just a dot. It's just a dot, I know. I don't know. That's it. But everybody's doing it. That's old school hip hop stuff though, bro.

SPEAKER_02

You put a Z in there and stuff. Yeah, they don't they don't get it. They don't get it.

SPEAKER_01

So it's just like if people be like JX Freeze, JX Freeze, I was like, fuck it, I'm running with it. It is what it is, but uh man, I'm just I'm out here clicking on the music. Shout out young Louis music. You know, uh I'm I'm I'm keeping it a hundred percent authentic, bruh. Uh I'm just a real artist from the brand, man. Just trying to just trying to make some bread off my craft, man. Whether I get it big or not, I just want to travel the world and make money off my craft and live my life, bro. I don't gotta be the biggest artist in the world. I just want to get paid off of God, off God's gift that he gave me. That's it, bruh. And uh and everybody around me uh it's good. And that's my goal for real. Other than that, uh, man, I'm gonna live my life, take care of my daughter, and uh explore the explore the world and get this money and stay out the way, bro. For real, for real.

SPEAKER_02

Hell yeah, hell yeah. I find I love that for you, Freeze. I'm so proud of you. I want to say that, man. Like, thank you. See you that you still go in and you just get stronger and better for you, you know what I'm saying? Like, that's why I was like, man, let me get you back on the show. You know what I'm saying? Like, because I fuck with you heavy, bro, and I appreciate what you're doing, um, you know what I'm saying. Anytime, and just like for everybody else, man, I like um shout out to Lou. Lou's supposed to come down here. He ain't even gonna talk. We ain't gonna talk music, we're gonna be in here talking shit. Um, but that's that's for everybody else, man. It's the nightly strange. If you got music, if you gotta play, you're making some art, you're uh you you got a food truck, you got a restaurant, send it to us. You know what I'm saying? We like it, we're gonna post it up here. You guys are. I want to be the Washington State podcast, the Northwest. Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

That's the goal, but right, but you basically gram now.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I'm the only I'm the only one doing it.

SPEAKER_01

Like, yeah. Land of the strange kids say Kidnap County is land of the right. I'm on vacation. In a barrel somewhere. Right.

SPEAKER_02

Exactly. Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

You already know.

SPEAKER_02

Well, everybody, thank you for tuning into Nightly Strange. Uh, shout out to my guest Jay Freeze, or my guest host Jay Freeze. Freeze, you got any shout outs you want to send up?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, man. Uh, shout out my guy D-Ban for having me on the Nightly Strange. And I mean, I appreciate you. Uh you you helping me just as much as I'm helping you, bro. We getting each other out there. Shout out all the Brim City artists, man. Shout out uh Dot and my guy Direct for putting together this first Brim City Hip Hop Festival. That's big. People don't even know how big that is because it's hard to do things like that in Brim, especially for hip-hop. Um August 23rd, from 12 to 4:30, I believe. It's a family event. You can bring your kids, you can bring your aunties, you can bring your grandmas and your grandpas, you can bring your baby mom, you can bring your bra that been calling you, cussing you up, but she had a crew the next day. You can bring whoever you want to bring. And but we're gonna have fun at the end of the day. We're gonna have vendors, we're gonna have burns, we're gonna have good music, and we'll have good fun. You know what I mean? Uh, shout out all the Brim City artists. I'm not gonna name all of them because I don't want to slot our names, I don't want to forget nobody or leave nobody out. But like, why don't you say my name, Freeze?

SPEAKER_02

It's full that's fucked up, man.

SPEAKER_01

Shout out all the Brim City artists, shout out all the people in Brim that's doing something that's trying to put Brim on the Mac, whether it's fundraising, whether it's political, whether it's artistry. You know what I'm saying? Shout out everything Brim City, man. Straight up. Straight like that.

SPEAKER_02

Shout out, and and also I want to throw this on there. They're doing the Bremerton Music uh music festival, right? And so the DJ put on here, I want to let everybody know this. He said, Bremerton artists, please send in your songs, clean mixes to play through the festival and send them to the Bremerton Hip Hop Festival at gmail.com.

SPEAKER_01

That's dope. Shout out, shout out, oh boy, because see stuff like that helps Bremerton artists. Yeah. And artists that are serious from Bremerton, y'all can go get your engineer like internet, like y'all, even if you gotta throw them a couple dollars, ain't shit free. Come on now. Hey, can I can I throw you a couple of dollars to edit some three, four of my songs real quick and send it to them, and then you can get some spins. You know what I'm saying?

SPEAKER_02

Like, why not? Yeah, I stand up for some songs with something about like 20. Because I don't cuss in my music. I I do, but I try not to.

SPEAKER_01

I got some where I don't.

SPEAKER_02

I have some where I don't, right? I I've made not to these days too.

SPEAKER_01

Like certain times they were like, okay, I'm gonna try to. But sometimes we're that sometimes that fuck, that or that, or that bitch, it sounds too good. Like it's hard to replace some good bitches and them good. It's hard to replace some good bitches and some good all and that good shit. You know what I'm talking about?

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, yeah, no, it worked out. It does, it does. I'll go back and listen to it. I'll be like, ooh, I did that. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, for real. Yeah, for sure. So, man, Freeze, thanks for coming on to the show. Everybody, thank you for watching. I be strange. If you can, do me a favor, follow my page, DMACUNO, uh, Tree Ranger Uno. Yeah. Facebook took my old pages. I have a start all over. Follow me, um, connect with me on here, connect with freeze. You'll see all this information down here.

SPEAKER_01

At J X P H R E E Z E everywhere. At J X P H R E E Z E everywhere. Yeah. Macaroni with the neat what I used to say. Macaroni with the cheese on it. You can get a hit to put a freeze on it.

SPEAKER_02

All right, ladies and gentlemen, this is the nightly strange. Uh, we'll see you guys next time. Okay.

SPEAKER_00

You're welcome to the nightly strange, range, range, range.