The Glorilla Episode

March 12, 2024 00:38:33
The Glorilla Episode
Home Grown Radio
The Glorilla Episode

Mar 12 2024 | 00:38:33

/

Hosted By

Chuck Dizzle DJ  HED

Show Notes

Glorilla Talks Women In Hip Hop, Plastic Surgery, and Ghosting Dudes

► WEBSITE: http://homegrownradio.net ► TWITTER: http://twitter.com/homegrownradio ► INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/homegrownradio ► FACEBOOK: http://facebook.com/homegrownradionet ► ITUNES: http://apple.co/2fUeaBu ► SOUNDCLOUD: http://soundcloud.com/hgrlive ► IHEARTRADIO: http://bit.ly/2fAGa0k Home Grown Radio, Live, Interviews, Performances, Hip Hop, Rap, Los Angeles, Radio, Network, Chuck Dizzle, DJ Hed,

View Full Transcript

Episode Transcript

[00:00:05] Speaker A: Yep, it's DJ heads. Homegrown man. I've been waiting to do this for a minute. The world famous, by the way. Before I introduce you, shout out to my big homie, G. Malone. Glass of Malone. He really fucked with you the long way. This is Glowrilla is in here with me right now. This LA traffic is nothing to play with. So thank you for coming me, I. [00:00:26] Speaker B: Appreciate you having me. [00:00:28] Speaker A: No, I appreciate you. I think that one of the main things I always admired about you, and I want the way to say it publicly, is the fact that you own who you are. You don't really make excuses for who you are. And I feel like a lot of artists be copping please and shit. They get on the Internet and they start explaining themselves. You're like, look, this is what it is. And only the person I've seen really do that kind of stuff is Kevin Hart. Like, I like how he'll get on the Internet and be like, hey, look, that bitch trying to exploit me. I did it. Here's my truth. You know what I'm saying? I noticed you do the same thing, so I just wanted to give you your flowers for that. Yeah, glow is like one of them things that's a phenomenon. I feel like it got that Fnf energy where it's memes. I see the mashups going crazy. I know you. I see you embracing the mashups, too. A lot of artists run from that. They'd be like, don't be fucking with my song and altering and stuff like that. Is that something that when you make the songs, do you have that in the back of your mind? Like, okay, they going to take this and run with it? [00:01:27] Speaker B: No, I really didn't know they was going to do that with this. But the matchups, they doing hard, though. [00:01:34] Speaker A: I like the man. It's a couple of them. That was hard, but I think it was still tipping. I seen one, that shit was hard. [00:01:42] Speaker B: Yeah, that was real hard. I like that one in the wood of gangster junk. [00:01:48] Speaker A: Oh, yeah, it was another one. [00:01:50] Speaker B: I can't remember. [00:01:52] Speaker A: When you make the songs, do you already know, like, okay, this one of them ones, like, you know, in the studio or are you wait till the. [00:01:57] Speaker B: People here after it's done and. Yeah, I know then. But it's a free song that I think them ones. And then when it get out, like, you don't be them ones and I don't feel like it's that one. [00:02:09] Speaker A: What song was like that for you? [00:02:12] Speaker B: I had a song called Poppy and then I did a song called Cha cha with Fabio. I really like them songs. They ain't performed. They will. [00:02:21] Speaker A: So when you was in the studio, you was like, this is one of them ones. And then people didn't react to it the way you thought? [00:02:27] Speaker B: No. [00:02:27] Speaker A: Do you ever get disappointed by that? [00:02:30] Speaker B: A little bit. Because I'm like, damn, I really like this song. I want anybody else to like, we back in the lab. [00:02:37] Speaker A: Back in the lab? Yeah, putting up shots. I want to talk to you about embracing yourself, like I talked to you earlier about it, but as far as being who you are standing on your truth, is that something that you were. You always like that, like even in school you seem like you don't switch up much. [00:02:54] Speaker B: I always been the same person. Besides, when I was young, when I was young, I was real quiet. [00:02:59] Speaker A: You were quiet? [00:03:01] Speaker B: That was before I got in school. So I didn't go to school until fifth grade. [00:03:05] Speaker A: Really? [00:03:05] Speaker B: Yeah. And so I was always quiet. I was the quiet sibling by the time I got in school. And I just adapted to everybody, to my environment then I guess it brought out the real me. [00:03:17] Speaker A: You were suppressing it. [00:03:18] Speaker B: Yeah, I was just always outspoken. [00:03:21] Speaker A: Why didn't you end up going to school till fifth grade? [00:03:23] Speaker B: I was just home school. [00:03:25] Speaker A: Okay. [00:03:25] Speaker B: It was a lot of us, it was a mom got ten kids, so it was a lot of. [00:03:31] Speaker A: Home school is something that I always argue with people about. I feel like that's something because during quarantine everybody was doing home school, like either on the Internet or their parents are schooling them stuff. Is that something that you believe in or you think that people should have a social, like being at school and being with their friends and stuff? [00:03:47] Speaker B: Yeah, I took it for granted. I hate being home schooled. [00:03:50] Speaker A: Okay. [00:03:50] Speaker B: Then when I got to school, I kind of was like, damn, I wish I could just stay home and shit. But at home I still had to wake up early too. And shit. I could be at home and sneak and play the game and shit. But yeah, I used to hate, because we lived right on the same street as school, so my house was seven houses down from school. So I used to see all my neighbors coming home from school just playing and shit. And so I just like, hell no, I want to be out there with them. They like, they having fun walking school. [00:04:17] Speaker A: Damn. So mom wasn't going for it. She had your ass up early. [00:04:22] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:04:25] Speaker A: Ten kids is a lot. My mom had three. And I think that a lot of times, women, black women specifically, don't get a lot of credit for doing it like that. Did you have a strong family structure? Like, was it everything with your brother and sister? Where do you line up? In the line? Are you the youngest, the oldest? [00:04:45] Speaker B: I'm number eight. [00:04:46] Speaker A: You're number eight? [00:04:47] Speaker B: Yeah. But I never got treated like the baby girl. I got one little sister and one little brother, and everybody's older than me, but I never got treated like I was one of the younger kids because I got a brother that's a year older than me. He autistic, so I always had to take care of him. And my mom will put us in the same grade so I can watch out for him and stuff. [00:05:06] Speaker A: I don't think that's how it works. She just put you on the same grade? [00:05:09] Speaker B: Yeah, because she didn't want people to pick on him and stuff. [00:05:12] Speaker A: So you was the security? [00:05:14] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:05:15] Speaker A: Okay, so that's where you get the. All right, that makes a lot of sense, actually. [00:05:19] Speaker B: Yeah. So I used to always have to look out after my brother, and so she has always put me in a category with the older kids. [00:05:28] Speaker A: But you were the youngest of your siblings, so why wouldn't nobody else be in the security guard? [00:05:33] Speaker B: Because we was the closest of age. Like, I'm 24 right now. He's 25. [00:05:37] Speaker A: Oh, got you. [00:05:38] Speaker B: Yes. Okay. [00:05:42] Speaker A: Something else I always thought about when I had a chance to speak to you is I talk to my homegirls, and they'd be killing me in the group chat. Killing me. Because I don't know these definite. What is a fuck nigga? What do you classify as a fuck nigga? [00:05:58] Speaker B: A nigga they don't stand on what they be talking about. A nigga that don't got no morals. You know what I'm saying? Be lying. Can't stand on ap. You feel me? [00:06:11] Speaker A: You don't like white lies either. [00:06:13] Speaker B: What's white lies? [00:06:14] Speaker A: A white lie is like, he like your nails, and he really don't. Or, like, hyping you up, making you feel like, you know what? Hey, babe, I really like this song, but he really ain't fucking with the song. [00:06:26] Speaker B: No, not even this type of line. Like, niggas be pathological, like, lying for no reason. You know what type of line? [00:06:33] Speaker A: I know what type of line, but I'm saying, is there ever a reason to lie? I'm pretty sure you've lied to one of your friends before. [00:06:39] Speaker B: I'd be lying, but my line, don't be serious. [00:06:42] Speaker A: Okay. It'd be joking. [00:06:43] Speaker B: Yeah, like, my line, never serious. [00:06:45] Speaker A: What you lie about that's not serious? [00:06:49] Speaker B: See, I just randomly be lying, but what I'm lying about is never serious to her. The point somebody be like, you lied to me. Like, oh, I'm mad. It's never that type of line. I'm always 1000 with people. I tell people what it is. So I'd be standing on my feet, niggas going to be doing it. [00:07:07] Speaker A: Okay, cool. When it came to you embracing your voice, I noticed that was something that was a topic of discussion. A lot of people had stuff to say, but I think that you handled it well and I think you doubled down. I like that you double down on shit when people say stuff you like. Yeah, this is whatever, right? When did you get comfortable like that? In music, I understand when you was a kid, but in music musically, when did you get comfortable like that? [00:07:34] Speaker B: Because people just be hating. Before I blew up, I was saying, I just learned that a lot of people be dig row, you know what I'm saying? They're going to go with the wave. And then I also know, first they love you, then they hate you, then they love you, then they hate you. Like being famous. You're going to constantly go through the love hate phase. Like, I went through the hate phase, then love phase, hate phase being love phase. It's just the moods. People just got their own moods. Then it's social media. [00:08:02] Speaker A: Social media. [00:08:03] Speaker B: Like, if social media want to hear people really be able to be, they sell, but people, they see one person make one tweet and say something about something we all want to say. That's what we think about you. This is one person tweeted about you and said that, I believe it. And this is what I think of you. I don't give a fuck. I can't give a fuck because you all don't know me at the end of the day. [00:08:22] Speaker A: So the people that can change your mood are the people who like your team, your circle, your friends. [00:08:28] Speaker B: Exactly. Nobody I don't know can't piss me off like that, okay. Unless they in my face and do something disrespectful. [00:08:37] Speaker A: I also noticed the way you do sometimes. You'll respond to comments and stuff like that, but it don't be serious. You'll shoot some shit back, but it won't be, like, serious. [00:08:47] Speaker B: I ain't never just been serious on the Internet. Never. Anytime you saw me respond to anybody, I've never been serious. It's a game. Like, okay, you say my weed fit. I'm going to say, I'm say your back beat. It ain't never none too serious. I really ain't never argued on him. I did one time, but the nigga was serious. I was just playing the whole time, but most of that I was serious, but I would troll. [00:09:13] Speaker A: I can see you being a troll. [00:09:15] Speaker B: I'm really not a troll. Once you start with me, then I'm a troll. [00:09:17] Speaker A: No, I'm saying I can see you being playing that role. Okay, you want to say I'm a troll, you back type shit. [00:09:22] Speaker B: Yeah. And then a lot of times people can't see you while you text. And so I can type some up and people be like, oh, she's mad. She said they would anger, but I'm laughing while I'm saying it. Like, I'm jokingly saying what I'm saying. But the Internet is so sensitive these days. They just taking it twisted and make it like, oh, she felt some type of way about this. And people don't know me because I play a lot facts. [00:09:45] Speaker A: I noticed that. I think when you blew up, I look at it as, like, one of the resurgence of females in rap. Plus, I want to say this for the record, you could really rap. You know what I'm saying? [00:09:56] Speaker B: Thank you. [00:09:57] Speaker A: I know you take pride in that because I compete. Like the certain stuff you'd be saying, people don't think you'd be busting. I'm not going to say no names, but they treat a couple of people like that. She ain't really say nothing in her. I'm like, no, you're not really paying attention to what she said. [00:10:14] Speaker B: Exactly. [00:10:15] Speaker A: So I'm like one of the people. I'm looking at the lyrics, I'm like, oh, no, she got this off right here. You know what I'm saying? [00:10:20] Speaker B: Exactly. [00:10:22] Speaker A: When you go in, are you writing your rhymes with that in mind or are you just filling it out? Are you going in like, I'm going to kill these niggas with this shit? Or you just. [00:10:31] Speaker B: I do it as I go. Back in the day, I used to write songs before I go to the studio, but, like, the past year has been go to the studio and write. Or like, when I first blew up, I have to write, like, in home, ride in the car, in the shower, some shit. But yeah, now I just write bars as I go. While I'm in the studio, I feel. [00:10:50] Speaker A: That I'm going to read this tweet to you. I'm going to read this to you and I want you to respond to it. I wrote every single lyric in every single song I ever put out when people be trying you. Right. Because now that we have access to all of the streaming services, we can go look at credits and so they'll see all these lyricists on your records and all these composers and producers. They don't know, like, oh, that might just be the credit from the producer or it might be a sample. They don't really know that. That's not people writing your stuff. [00:11:22] Speaker B: Right. [00:11:22] Speaker A: Do you take offense to that when people say that you don't write your stuff? [00:11:26] Speaker B: No, but at the beginning I wrote 100% of my stuff. But it's like, now, of course everybody's going to work with writers. Somebody can say, instead of saying stupid ass deep, say dumb ass ho, they got to get a writer's credit fact for it. [00:11:41] Speaker A: I respect that because a lot of people don't give people that credit. It'll be somebody in the studio, producer and say, no, say it like this. That's you being produced. That's how the music industry is supposed to work. But a lot of people think that that's like some shade or some shit like that. [00:11:57] Speaker B: But that's what I'm saying. When I first blew up, all my songs from when I first blew up was made before I blew up, like tomorrow, I made it the same day I made heaven hip. So I won't work on writers, but now I don't say shit about people working with writers. I write majority of my shit now. But I'd be working with writers now. [00:12:16] Speaker A: As you should. But you get to the big records. [00:12:18] Speaker B: Exactly. All the big artists use writers and shit. But it's just like, I don't use my song is going to be majority of somebody. What somebody wrote. Somebody probably gave me a fold I hate. [00:12:29] Speaker A: Right, okay, let me see here. Flirting, are you good at it? [00:12:35] Speaker B: Like, are you good at flirting a little bit? I don't know. [00:12:40] Speaker A: Because you seem like a DM from glow. Realistic might look crazy. It might be like, yo, what you on tonight? It's like, what? [00:12:50] Speaker B: Nah, see, I don't shoot my shot through DM. [00:12:53] Speaker A: You got to see you. [00:12:54] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:12:54] Speaker A: You ain't never shot a shot in the DM. That's cat glow. Even before the success. [00:13:03] Speaker B: I used to be so groupy back before I had to go and delete all my sheet. Once I got famous, though. Oh, God. I used to blow down. But. [00:13:15] Speaker A: How long did it take you to erase, to unsend all the message? [00:13:20] Speaker B: Not long. [00:13:26] Speaker A: Have anybody ever left you on red? Because I get left on red, so I'm trying to figure it out. [00:13:30] Speaker B: I don't shoot my shots of DM. [00:13:32] Speaker A: No, I'm talking about before, like, have anybody ever left you on red? I'm where you was back then now. [00:13:38] Speaker B: Because nobody opened it up. [00:13:40] Speaker A: Okay? [00:13:41] Speaker B: Yeah. Like I said, I don't shoot my shots and DMs. I'd be hands on. [00:13:48] Speaker A: Hands on, like in person. You'll walk up to a guy that you. [00:13:52] Speaker B: I really ain't going to do that either. He's just like, we having a conversation, then I'm flirting. I'm not just going to walk up to you and start talking to. Because I'll be talking to my friend about this. She'd be like, she can't be scared of rejection. I'm like, it ain't even net you just like. [00:14:06] Speaker A: It'S like, what? [00:14:07] Speaker B: I ain't just going to walk up to that nigga, boy, at the end of the day, if we talking, then I dig on my green light. But I ain't just going to do it like that. I don't know how to do that. I'm going to say some stupid shit. But we have a conversation then, like, yeah, I'm going to get the door. [00:14:21] Speaker A: So you shy on the low, low key. You shy. Wow. [00:14:26] Speaker B: I'm shy with niggas I like. If I don't like niggas and they be talking to me, I'd be so hard, my PB so strong. But when I be liking, if it's a nigga that I like talking to me, I get to swing. My nose is real big. My nose. How do you get my maker down my nose? Sheep. [00:14:45] Speaker A: That'S fine. How do you let somebody down? [00:14:50] Speaker B: Like in the DM, one person, both in DM, I just don't respond like, I don't even open it because I want you to feel a shit and then niggas be unseen. This will turn out like, don't unseen your shit. Stand on what you said in person. I just act like I'm going to talk to you because I'm not mean. [00:15:13] Speaker A: I don't take you as a mean person. I met you before when we did the BT awards and you was hella cool. So I don't take you as a mean person, but I could see you getting real cold if somebody keep trying. [00:15:23] Speaker B: Yeah, exactly. On a regular. I'm not just mean, I'm be nice. I don't know. I ain't gonna just say, hell, now you ugly, say or no, I'm just going to be like, okay, I'm going to see what's up and never see what's up. [00:15:37] Speaker A: I remember asking a couple of female artists I had on the air with me about being a female rapper. Are you okay with being a female or just want to be considered a rapper? [00:15:47] Speaker B: I'm a female rapper, too, but I'm a rapper at the end of the day. At the end of the day today going in. [00:15:52] Speaker A: Don't do that. You know that shit don't make sense. You know that shit do not make no sense. When I saw it, I'm like, bro, that shit, I get it. But that, no, I'm too smart for that. [00:16:05] Speaker B: A wise man once. [00:16:07] Speaker A: That's the wise man once said some bullshit. Okay, women time and rap apparently is up. According to Joe, the girl wave is over. I don't think so. I think it's way more room for women to be ushered in. What do you think? [00:16:20] Speaker B: Yeah, I think they actually expand it. [00:16:22] Speaker A: Me too. [00:16:22] Speaker B: Like, right now, women run hip hop with everybody that's out because right now, okay, we got the dudes that's been hot for a minute, but right now, we don't got a lot of males that just made it. Maybe people still only upcoming rap, but it's way more females, hotter right now and ain't never been like this before. [00:16:45] Speaker A: I don't remember a point where it was like this either. [00:16:47] Speaker B: Yeah, it never was like this. [00:16:48] Speaker A: It never was like. But do you think that that makes it congested where it's like it's only room or you think it's room for everybody? [00:16:54] Speaker B: I think it's room for everybody. Music everlasting. [00:17:01] Speaker A: I had bag on the show, shout to bag, and I had him spell music, right? And he was like, music. And I said. And I said. He was like, merzik, right? Where does that r come from? I know you get asked that, but I'm just saying for the sake of. [00:17:21] Speaker B: Because, like, it's just natural for us to say it. Like we just got the ER in our voice. [00:17:27] Speaker A: What else is said like that in Memphis, preacher? Oh, anything with a U? [00:17:32] Speaker B: Yeah, anything. Like if the U in the middle of it, we say with r. Like I said, caribbean on Cuban is really the u word. [00:17:45] Speaker A: All the u words. [00:17:46] Speaker B: Yeah. What's another u word? [00:17:47] Speaker A: Hummer. [00:17:48] Speaker B: No, not like it's a certain type. Like Hummer. Regular, like hermal. [00:17:52] Speaker A: You would say Hermer. No, you got a sense of hermit sense of hermer? [00:17:58] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:17:58] Speaker A: I don't know. That don't sound like a good diagnosis from a doctor. You have a sense of hermer? I got a what? I need some penicillin, you know? Okay. Pastor Thomas, using you in a sermon, I thought that was very interesting. I've been to some very interesting churches. My grandma from Mississippi, so I done been to some real interesting sermons in my life. Never seen that before. When you saw that, what was your initial? [00:18:33] Speaker B: Know, it's been three pastors before Danny, like Danny used tomorrow in their references and older pastors. So I'm just like, it wasn't wrong with it because you getting your point across. And in the modern days, like, he using what's going on in a real world to connect with the hottest. It ain't like he cursed or he said, oh, yeah, I said some real stuff that went in the worm. [00:19:02] Speaker A: I think that church needs to be more like hip hop. And I know I'm going to get killed on the Internet for saying that, and I have said that on the radio before, but I think it needs to be more of that, because even now, I don't know how it is at home, but out here, even church has changed, where now church has become. Come as you are, people look like they go into the club, and we take a lot of heat for that. Oh, you got your club shit on going to church. But it's like, you shouldn't be judged on that if you go on to get the word, if that makes sense. [00:19:33] Speaker B: Baba always, well, it said, come as you are at the end of the day, facts, people. That'd be too judgmental. Like, at the end of the day, you all not got it at the. [00:19:43] Speaker A: End of the day, the day going in. Okay, I missed the rich homie Quan era. Why? [00:19:55] Speaker B: When I was in middle school and, like, my freshman year or high school and my sophomore year, it was like, music was so good. It was so much good music out. And then rich homie, I was on his own. Never stopped going in tape so bad. Yeah, he made him. And thug, that was a real error. Freecha was already hot before him, but he was just in his prime around that time. Who else is out? [00:20:23] Speaker A: That was a good time, though. [00:20:24] Speaker B: Yeah, like, around that little time from, like, okay, so I was in middle school. Like, what about 2012 to 2015? I was in high school and shit. Around that little time, music was like, a one. [00:20:35] Speaker A: Yeah. Did you ever unsend a DM to rich homie? [00:20:39] Speaker B: Yeah, we don't get some shit popping. [00:20:41] Speaker A: Okay, I would like to see that. [00:20:43] Speaker B: We already get this shit popping. [00:20:46] Speaker A: My back test still ain't finished. I had four sessions. Tapped out every time. That shit hurts so damn bad. [00:20:52] Speaker B: I just posted it today. I know, because I went to the Billboard women in music awards last night. It was great, but I had wore a dress. They had my whole back out. [00:21:05] Speaker A: I know, I saw it. [00:21:06] Speaker B: Yeah. And so I had got started on my tattoo at the end of December. Man, it should hurt so bad. And I got a lot of tattoos. And I thought the back one going to hurt that bad because I'm thinking real bones, they didn't hurt because my hand hurt it real bad. Front of my legs. I got both the front of my legs tatted. This shit hurt so bad. It took so long. Like, every session was 12 hours and it were full sessions, but it was. [00:21:30] Speaker A: You just laying there for 12 hours? [00:21:31] Speaker B: Yeah, I was crying. Like, I never cried getting a tattoo. I always tell people tattoos don't hurt that bad. [00:21:36] Speaker A: How was you crying? Was it like the snot crying or just tears? [00:21:40] Speaker B: Just tears. Like, I was laughing and crying at the same time. Like, I'm telling. I'm like, hell, no. This year, I ain't going to be able to take. He's like, you, gaddy, you let me go this far. I can do this. So I'm just shaking. No, matter of fact, I'm, like, calling for everything. I'm like, shit, how can I go to sleep? I was like, I took some z quill, called somebody. I called my post, I said, fuck that. Bring me some drink. I'm trying to go to sleep. Some put me to sleep while I'm doing this shit. But I tried the Z quill, and I'm still. I'm like this. He had me. Like, the bed was like that. And I was sitting in the church and leaned on the bed, and he was just behind me tent. I'm just shaking my leg. And I just thought, like, I'm talking to him, but I'm crying. Like, I can't even help the church coming out that she hurt that bad. And I just went in telling him, I was like, we got to stop. I can't do this. [00:22:24] Speaker A: So you did twelve hour sessions? [00:22:27] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:22:27] Speaker A: Damn. [00:22:28] Speaker B: It was like three full twelve hour sessions and I'm still not doing. And I'm so scarred. Then it hurt even worse after he done. So when I go lay down the bed, I can't even lay on my back, the shit hurts so bad, and then I can't have nothing on it. So when I lay on the COVID the COVID stick to the sheet because it's so sticky. And so when you got to get up the COVID just snatching, and it's already. So. It hurts so bad, I forgot, like, I'm going to get it finished so it can be all the way turned, but I ain't been back since December. That shit hurts. [00:22:59] Speaker A: I don't have no tattoos. [00:23:02] Speaker B: If that would have been my first tattoo, I would not be tatted. But I'm tatted. Like, I got a lot of tattoos everywhere, but their back was my most. I ain't never cracking a tattoo. [00:23:11] Speaker A: So you can't sleep on your back now? Yeah, no, I'm talking when you get it done. When you're getting it done, you can. [00:23:19] Speaker B: But it just hurt. It hurt real bad. [00:23:22] Speaker A: So you in there, you like one of them girls that went overseas to get their shit done where they, like, be sitting squatting? You know what I'm talking? [00:23:29] Speaker B: I was sleeping on my back the whole time. He just hurt it. Okay. Like you wanted. I couldn't sleep on it. I could. He just hurt it bad as fuck. [00:23:37] Speaker A: Okay, I'm going to tell you song lyric, and then I'm going to ask your opinion or something. Get head from his cousin, too. I keep it in the family. I had a debate with the homegirl about this because I believe that if me and you talking and it don't work out, it's cool for you to talk to whoever it is don't work out with whether he's around or not around. You know what I'm saying? I don't see a problem with that. People see a problem with that, right? Because it's like you and if he and the crew, or if you all related, that's off limits. If that lyric is true, because you wrote all your shit, what's off limits to you? Like, what is off limits? [00:24:16] Speaker B: Like, if we was in a relationship, I ain't going. But for the most part, you had. [00:24:24] Speaker A: To think about it real quick. [00:24:25] Speaker B: Yeah, I did it before. I ain't physically do none. I just was talking to him. But I feel like if I was just talking to you, like, you just my ho, we ain't none serious. We don't go together. I can go fuck with your folks. [00:24:39] Speaker A: Is that Memphis shit? You can't refer to your men as hoes, clover. No, that's not going to be received. Well, first of all, I know that you don't like the type of men that's going to let you call him that. So the men that are around, they. [00:24:57] Speaker B: Don'T know I called him my ho. [00:24:59] Speaker A: All right. Have you made them aware that that's what he is? But have you told him that? Have you ever told a man that? [00:25:18] Speaker B: I told one of my niggas the other day, and if he watched it, I'm talking about, I guess I was drunk. And so I told him, I was like, shit, I want to be calling you because I'd be bored. So next day I woke up, I didn't even know I had called. And I looked at my call blog. I told my sister beside me, I'm like, damn. I called this nigga. She was like, yeah, you were drunk. He kept telling you you were drunk. And she, blah, blah, blah. I'm like, damn. So I text him. He was like, yeah, I ain't going to lie. You had pulled me your tone, so you made me feel like I want to work. She, I just said, my bad. I want to say, you not. [00:25:55] Speaker A: Okay. [00:25:56] Speaker B: You ain't own shit. Like, I literally do call you when I'm bull. People tell truth when they drunk for show. And if I said that when I was drunk, I was like, damn, if I said, she is, I'm telling the truth. [00:26:06] Speaker A: Damn. Well, but now you run a hard program. [00:26:14] Speaker B: I'll be transparent with niggas, though. Like, I'm super transparent because I'd be wanting to do the same shit to me. [00:26:19] Speaker A: Me too. But women tell me that's a bad thing because I'm way too honest. So girl tech asked me, do you miss me? I'm like, no, not yet. Like, ask me tomorrow. Is that too much? I agree with you. See, we okay. I fuck with you. [00:26:36] Speaker B: No, I'm super transparent. That's why I hate when they would be lying. That's where they go back to. Like, don't lie to me. And I'm going to keep shit pee with you. I'm standing on my pee. Whatever. It is what it is. You got to laugh at the good shit. I already know you fucking. [00:26:50] Speaker A: Yeah, but that's not everything. [00:26:52] Speaker B: No, niggas be fucking and then want to get around me. Act like they not. Like I already know what's up with you when I start talking to you. And I still chose to talk to you. So don't be coming around volunteering. Last ho, bitch. I know you a fucking asshole. [00:27:03] Speaker A: I do hate when people try to volunteer lives. [00:27:06] Speaker B: Yeah, like, real talk don't come around me. Like, just making like, oh, I don't give a fuck about this. I don't be giving a fuck about no niggas talking like niggas behind my holes. I know that. I feel like every nigga got holes. [00:27:18] Speaker A: Every. [00:27:18] Speaker B: I feel like every nigga got holes. [00:27:20] Speaker A: All of them. [00:27:20] Speaker B: All of them. So I go, when I talk to anybody, it just be there. I know you. It is. What is? If I'm talking to you. I'm choosing talk to you. I know you got ho, but don't come around me lying. I'll make shit out of me for life. [00:27:32] Speaker A: So what about a guy answering the phone in front of you? Would you be cool with that? If, you know he got chicks and he's like, hold on, this is my wife. Yes. [00:27:43] Speaker B: Oh, my wife. [00:27:44] Speaker A: What else is saying? [00:27:48] Speaker B: I don't do the wife sheet. [00:27:49] Speaker A: Okay. He's like, hold on, this is my girl. Hold on. I'm at the studio. You cool with that? [00:27:57] Speaker B: I mean, that ain't never happened to me before. I ain't going to lie back. Then blew up. I'll fuck with these niggas. And it did happen before, so you. [00:28:04] Speaker A: Had to pick up. Okay. [00:28:11] Speaker B: I love transparent like shit. I knew that from the jump. Well, I didn't know it from the jump. I found out about it, but at the end of the day, we already liked it. [00:28:20] Speaker A: Whatever. You know, you got to be a couple more things. Your ass is nut. I fuck with it though. Being transparent on was it on the. Anyways, life is great album. I think it's no more love. I think that's the opening. That's the first track, right? [00:28:45] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:28:46] Speaker A: So on no more love you talked about like an abortion or something like that. And I really appreciated that. Right? Because that's something I talked about on the air before and people didn't appreciate that conversation. I'm like, we need to have every conversation, right? So you putting it in the music. I felt like, I want to say it's brave because people overuse that word, but it's vulnerably honest to me. Is that something that, are you an advocate for? Do you incur. I always say it's a woman's choice, obviously. But then some men want to be fathers too. And the woman makes a decision to end it. Where do you stand on that? [00:29:24] Speaker B: I feel like it's a woman's body. A woman should be able to do whatever she want to do with her body. If you want to keep it, keep it. I'm with it. But if you don't, you don't. You ain't ready for it. You ain't ready for it. Everybody made mistake, you know what I'm saying? It happened. You got the money gone. Spending 6000. [00:29:42] Speaker A: It's 400 in California. [00:29:43] Speaker B: For real? [00:29:44] Speaker A: Well, I know from. [00:29:48] Speaker B: 1200 on my first. Damn. [00:29:52] Speaker A: Wait, 1200 in mentors? [00:29:54] Speaker B: Yeah, because why? [00:29:55] Speaker A: There's so much out there. [00:29:57] Speaker B: This was before I blew up. Yeah, but I let it get too far. And she. I was almost right before it was illegal, so I was right before. I was like, the day I got my abortion, it was one day before four months. When you turn four months, it's illegal. In the state of Tennessee. [00:30:14] Speaker A: It was one day before. Yeah. So that was a decision you had to sit with and come on, figure it out. [00:30:19] Speaker B: Yeah. Because you got to get put to sleep and you got to pay for the anesthesia medicine, and the bigger you are. [00:30:25] Speaker A: Oh, that's why it costs so much. [00:30:27] Speaker B: Yeah. [00:30:27] Speaker A: Okay. [00:30:28] Speaker B: So the bigger you are, you got to pay for it. [00:30:30] Speaker A: That makes sense. And then also, you said you got a little fill in, right? That's what you called it. A little fill in. A little fill in. But then I also remember you saying that you wasn't for, like, that. [00:30:42] Speaker B: It was that I never was for. It's just the fact that people was bullying me about it. And I'm like, I don't care about it. At the end of the day, I always was saying, if I want to do it, I'm going to do it. I'm happy with myself, though. And if I fuck around and just say, I want to feel these motherfuckers in one day, that's what I'm going to do. But I'm not against surgeries at all. It's just like, I love natural women at the same time. [00:31:06] Speaker A: Me, too. [00:31:07] Speaker B: And that goes back to say it's a woman choice, but that's going to do with your body. I feel that that's what it is. And people were trying to bully me into getting the work done. That's why I was like, like, fuck you. Really? [00:31:16] Speaker A: Really? [00:31:17] Speaker B: Yeah. Because I ain't going to lie. [00:31:18] Speaker A: You talking about, like, your friends? [00:31:19] Speaker B: No. Hell no. My friends? I'm talking about the public. Yeah, the public was coming on. Oh, yeah. You too, skinny. Get a bbl. No, I'm not doing it. That's one thing I'm not doing. But I don't got no problem with women that do it. It's just not my cup cheek, you feel me? They were trying to bully me into doing it. So I was just really standing on my PC. Like, fuck you. I don't got to shit if I want to do what this one I'm going to do. Not when you all tell me do. [00:31:45] Speaker A: Now, at this point, you didn't been all over the country, you didn't traveled and everything. I know your background in the fast food industry. Who got the best fries? Because I got my choice. Who you think got the best fries? [00:31:58] Speaker B: The best fries award goes to fast food. [00:32:03] Speaker A: You just left the studio. It's midnight. Well, you just go into the studio, it's midnight. You want some fries? Where do you get the fries from? [00:32:13] Speaker B: I ain't gonna lie. Fuck with chillin'fries. [00:32:15] Speaker A: Yeah, me too. I bought a frozen ones. The one that you buy. [00:32:20] Speaker B: Oh, God. That's where I worked. [00:32:25] Speaker A: Yeah, I know. [00:32:26] Speaker B: Yeah. That was the job I worked. So here. Yeah. Chicken fries. [00:32:29] Speaker A: Are those coming in the bag? Preseason. [00:32:34] Speaker B: We'll pour them in a little tray and then put them out on a little sheet, and then just sprinkle the salt and pep across. [00:32:43] Speaker A: So you put more seasoning on it. [00:32:45] Speaker B: Yeah, it'll just be like. Because it's a big ass little square, whatever that's called. Where the fries wait. And once we take them out the heater, it'd be like, mixed with salt and pep, I think. And we just go. [00:32:57] Speaker A: Damn. Rallies and check. Well, it's out here. Rallies, out there is checkers. [00:33:02] Speaker B: It's checkers rallies. [00:33:03] Speaker A: Okay. Yeah, I agree with you, though. We got into almost a fight because he, swear to God, Wingstop got the best fries. And I'm like, I fuck with it. But it ain't really. [00:33:13] Speaker B: I can't remember how Wingstop fries taste right now. [00:33:16] Speaker A: Okay. And then last thing for you is best quality as a woman in your personal life. What is it like to be with glow and not be on the whole list? Like, the one where you care, the one where you give a fuck. What's your best quality as a container? [00:33:38] Speaker B: I got a great vibe. I don't got no bad attitude to shit. Like, I got a great personality and a great vibe. [00:33:47] Speaker A: I'm not talking about the old. [00:33:49] Speaker B: That's what men like about me all the time. I got a great vibe and a great personality. And I ain't no boring ass bitch. [00:33:58] Speaker A: It don't take shit for me to get rubbed the wrong way. That's contradictory what you just said. I got zero tolerance for weird shit. [00:34:06] Speaker B: So how does contradictory. [00:34:07] Speaker A: Well, you said that you a chill vibe. Oh, you're talking about just in general. You're not talking about with a companion. You're not talking about what your partner, you say, period. [00:34:16] Speaker B: But with the partner. Like I said, niggas, what most men say about me is I got a good vibe. And like, I'm one of the homies type shit. But I'm saying some shit can rule me the wrong way. Like, I'm cool with you when you cool. If you rub me the wrong way because I'm such a good person. I'm such a happy person with a good vibe. So that one thing you do, that throw me off and made me feel like your vibe ain't on my sheet. Then, like is your weird contestant. [00:34:43] Speaker A: Next contestant. Damn. Okay, what's the coldest way you broken it off with somebody? The homie laughing. What you do? [00:34:57] Speaker B: Be funny. [00:34:58] Speaker A: What you do? [00:34:59] Speaker B: What did I do? [00:35:00] Speaker A: What's the coldest way you broke it off? [00:35:04] Speaker B: I just be ghosting. [00:35:06] Speaker A: Oh, you just don't pick up. [00:35:07] Speaker B: Yeah, I just ghost them. [00:35:09] Speaker A: Damn. Have you ever been ghosted? [00:35:12] Speaker B: I'm pretty sure I have. [00:35:14] Speaker A: Did you like it? Then why you do that? [00:35:16] Speaker B: I mean, people got their reasons. Nigga probably want to be faithful to his bitch or something. Had a bitch I ain't know about want to be faithful. Like, I just can't do some if I got that reason. Like, I ghost the nigga for wearing like a sleeveless shirt. Real talk like. And he probably to this day don't know why I ghosted him. The nigga pulled up on me. No tattoos on his arms and the shirt was sleeve. No. [00:35:46] Speaker A: I wear those to work out. That's not okay. [00:35:48] Speaker B: No, for like, oh, he was going. [00:35:50] Speaker A: To take you out. [00:35:52] Speaker B: He just bumped down on me, like sleeve his shirt, like, no, then I couldn't do it. [00:36:03] Speaker A: You still went out with him? [00:36:04] Speaker B: I ain't go out with him. He bumped down on me, bro. I was it. [00:36:07] Speaker A: Oh, he just pulled up and after that he was off. [00:36:10] Speaker B: Yeah. Why would you walk in here with them? What was the point? What was that about? [00:36:15] Speaker A: What if he was crazy? Like bralic mad, like yoked up. [00:36:19] Speaker B: He looked like one, though. [00:36:21] Speaker A: He was like, I'm saying, if he looked like an avenger, would it be cool? [00:36:26] Speaker B: I don't like when men wear sleeveless shirt, period. But at least, okay, if you're going to do that, like maybe a nigga that's toned up, he might be straight. A nigga. They got that shit like this. Teddy might be straight because it's just some going on right there, but it's just nothing going on. Like, you give me feminine vibes. We wear sleeve shirts. That's what we do. I can't roll with it. [00:36:48] Speaker A: I fuck with you. You crazy as hell, but I fuck with. [00:36:53] Speaker B: You. Don't have no people in this world. Why? I just go through. He's actually a straight neither. [00:36:58] Speaker A: But hey, well, we appreciate you, glove. Listen, I'm going to tell you something. My grandma, she passed two years ago. She was the realest nigga I know would tell you your breath stink in church. [00:37:10] Speaker B: That's how I am. [00:37:11] Speaker A: Yeah, she was like that. You remind me of my grandma a lot. Like, just straight up. Tell you what it is. At the funeral, one of my cousins passed at the funeral. She's like, yeah, that great big old bitch. That's how my grandma used to get out in real life. And it was not malicious. It wasn't like she didn't have ill intent, but she just kept it solid, though. And I just, like, you give me that same type of energy. I fuck with that. [00:37:35] Speaker B: Yeah. Like, I'm super blunt. Everybody around me know that I'm super blunt. I'm not mean. Some people take it as mean people that don't know me, but I'm just super blunt and transparent. [00:37:43] Speaker A: I fuck with that. Hey, you're welcome anytime, glorilla. [00:37:48] Speaker B: I fuck with you. I had a good time talking to you. [00:37:50] Speaker A: Hey, you good out here on the west coast? Anyway. Make sure you remix that. Yeah, glow, because she going to repost you and keep it going. And, oh, I like the performances too. Like, you put a lot in your performance. I saw your Coachella performance, and I was there at the bet performance with the dancers, and I can see you take it serious. I've seen your street sign. You was gang banging. I've seen all of that. But keep doing that because a lot of people don't invest in their shows. They walk around back and forth and just hold their exactly like you've got choreography. And I fuck with that. Keep that going. It's glow. Really goddamn. It's homegrown. It's DJ head. And we out.

Other Episodes

Episode

August 19, 2016 01:42:03
Episode Cover

The Bishop Lamont Episode

This one was long over due but the timing couldn't be better as Bishop Lamont discusses everything leading up to his departure from Aftermath,...

Listen

Episode

May 16, 2019 00:34:00
Episode Cover

YOU'RE GONNA GET THESE JOKES

#HOMEGROWN HIGHLIGHTS: - 213 COME UP SHOW RECAP- NIPSEY HUSSLE'S MARATHON STORE MAKING $10 MILLION SINCE HIS DEATH- RAPPERS USING THE N-WORD

Listen

Episode

March 16, 2022 00:44:36
Episode Cover

NOBODY DOES IT BETTER FT. NHALE

NHALE returns to honor his father, the legendary Nate Dogg 11 years after his passing; sharing untold stories, dropping a cannabis line, thoughts on...

Listen