This is the FCB Podcast Network. Great when they trunk jump boot change as don duh. We don't listen to y'all this out We don't. Listen to y'all this d hotel. Make a scream out now like goa sound dun cause the. Rockets in the clown. Tune in the charge for the outdo tune in the charge for the outluk. Welcome to the Outlaws. This is Darby Oda Kingpenmorrow alongside Robin O'Malley. Make sure that you subscribe to the show and have a podcast Spotify, I Heard, or wherever you get your podcasts, and follow us. Like us on Facebook rather at facebook dot com, slash the Outlaws Radio, follow us on x and Instagram at the Outlaws Radio. We have a special interview that we're gonna get to and just a little bit. But first, miss Oman, how are you welcome back? Happy New Year? I think you think you happy New Year. I'm I'm good. I ended that year you know with things that you know that I carried things. There was a lot of up and downhill battle I went through. And it's like as soon as January first hit, immediately I just in my. Brain it was like a fresh slate, just like clean. So it's like now I feel like I'm gonna achieve. I know that I'm gonna achieve so much this year. I've stepped out of the game for such a long time, a couple of years, and I'm making I'm making me a comeback this year. So I'm great. I'm great. How are you with the you're talking about with the modeling and acting and all that good. Stuff, modeling and acting, Yes, be prepared to be sick of me. Be prepared, because I promise you I'm coming for it all. Yeah, all the ones that are listening, all you love hefa's that try to take me down and wish that my downfall, whoever, they're about to be big mad, big mad. So for for the record, hopefully you'll have something to share with the public a little bit later when everything gets finalized with that project that you were working on. That's which is awesome, that's a that's a really really big view. So hopefully at some point, you know, you'll be able to share that with the world. But in the meantime, I know about it, and y'all don't. How you bend y'all? How are you? I'm all right? Man. Oh yeah, by the way, since we're both January babies, Happy birthday, Happy belated birthday to you. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Yeah. So I'm doing good. I am. I'm feeling very similar to what you just what you just shared. I really want to hit the ground running for this year. I want to set the tone. I think sometimes people don't realize like the first couple of months can really set the tone for your year, especially in business and everything. So I've been I'm working working pretty hard NonStop and been able to meet a lot of good people and you know, have some some really important meetings and and stuff like that. And so I'm I'm I'm very very much looking forward to what the future may hold here in a little bit. I know i'm going to be this year. I'm going to be traveling quite a bit. That's already kind of starting to starting to matriculate, like it's already starting to form right now, like my schedule and stuff like that. And so I'm looking forward to that because just made a lot of making a lot of connections and building a lot of relationships that can really, you know, help go to another level. So I'm very very very much excited about that and speaking of a next level relationship. The guest that we are about to get to is someone that is a gospel and Christian R and V legend. She's done so many great things since the nineteen nineties. She has a brand new radio show called Demita Uncut that is being distribute by my company FCB. So I'm very excited to be working with her. And so we're going to get to our interview with the great Demeta right now. All right, we have a very special guest on the show today. She is the host of the brand new radio show, Demita Uncut that air Sunday mornings at seven am on WOVU, which is our flagship as well, and you can listen to it either on ninety five point nine FM in Cleveland or you can hear it anywhere on iHeartRadio app Gospel music Legend. Demita Welcome, How you doing. I'm good? How are you wol I'm. Good, I'm good. First, thank you for coming on the show, and are There's so many things to discuss, So first, people who may not be familiar, just kind of take us through a journey of your career and everything you've done to get. To this point. Well, thank you for having me on your show. I appreciate you just extending your platform to me and just for my voice and my story to be heard. I started off born and I'm born and raised Detroit, Michigan, where we deem it to be the gospel capital of the of the of the world. And and but but yeah, I started, people really started, if you heard it. I had a group called Adoration and Praise. It was a female a cappella girls group. And that's really where my my musical gospel musical journey started. We were nominated for Stellers for Double Awards years ago, and I went on from there to do uh detract in the Voices of Unity, where I was one of the lead singers as well as you know, I helped you you know, vocal arrangements and writing and so for and and and then I went on to do my I wan onted to do my solo project. But the real notoriety came, you know, with with vlu the Voices of Unity, because we were a young once then, you know, wild and really on the cutting edge. And I will say that I'm still my mindset is still there, but I'm just a little older now. But I'm still I'm still doing it. I'm still doing gospel music. I'm still you know, rooting for contemporary gospel music, even though I love it all, but still that's my favorite. One of the things that, like I was telling you before the show started, I'm actually a fan of your work, and I was a fan of your work before we started working on your show. I love the style. That you've had, like your music, some of the things that you've done with d trick, Like, where does that style? Where did that style come from? Was that something that you knew because you have like a really like an R and B kind of sound with a lot of your music, and I love that. Polutely loved that, So where was like, where was the inspiration for that? Is that something that you just wanted to do? Where did that come from? The inspiration always came from contemporary gospel music, you know, growing up in a house a PK. You know, we couldn't really listen to a lot of R and B where we were told not to, but we still did it anyway. So I had influences of that call of the culture of the day in the eighties. You know, you had Whitney Houston, you had Michael Jackson, you had earth, wind and Fire. But then on the gospel side, we had the Whinings, we had Commission, we had Witness, you had Rance Allen, you know, and those sounds you know, of that time was compatible to what was going on, you know, in the secular industry. So I've always been a contemporary fan, and through that listening to all of those different artists, you know, Vanessa Belle Armstrong and Vicky Winings, you know, it developed I developed my own sound, you know, from just listening to them and learning how to sing and learning how to hear and write and arrange, and then you know, it just it just grew into I don't know, you know, when you merge things, you know, you end up cultivating a whole brand new sound or brand new idea. And even though it still has the similarity and it has the foundational traces of that now so now when you listen back, you'll hear You'll hear the Clark Sisters and my stuff. You will hear the contemporary sounds of you know, of the Whinings or whatever, and then you may even hear a little bit of you know, what you hear in the R and B industry. It's just that it's clean, is I do. You know, I do gospel and it's clean. But you know, I listen to I love the melody and the tone of Janet Jackson, her tone, the softness when I do you know songs that have that that you know, then I have the you know, listening to Whitney Houston who came out of this church, and Aretha Franklin who came out of the church. And you know, we got to be real about, you know, people that inspired us, you know, coming up, even though we're in a gospel genre. So I took all of those those those sounds and all all of those different personalities and I was able to find my own voice and to find my own sound. But you'll always hear a trace of all of those artists that inspired me. We're talking with Demida and. Based on like your your music and your discography, let's talk a little bit about some of your your favorite songs, songs that either like part of your solo projects or other. Things that you've worked on. I told you before the before the show started that we play a lot of your music on my Christian station fc B Faith, particularly playing and Simple. Which is a dope, dope, dope dope song. So talk a little bit about what what are the standout songs in your discography, the songs they like, your solo projects, or things that you've worked on with other people. It's so many. It's so many. Every project that I did, every solo project that I did, they were they the songs were near and dear to me because I wrote I wrote them. And but but the the joints you name, Playing and Simple, I did that with Tim and Bob and those those tracks. If you listen to any of the Tim and Bob stuff that I've done on my projects, man, they were fired from Playing and Simple to uh to torn torn up to oh my God, it's just it's just it's yeah, I can't. I can't even begin to fathom we I mean, I got, I don't know. It's it's I can't. I really can't even say that all of them are my to be honest with you, all of them are my, are my are my favorites, even the ones that I did, you know, my stuff, you know with vou and stuff. All of the songs that I lid and and they like, they're just they're all apart They're all a part of me, So I don't have any anyone that stands out. Yeah, they're all my babies. And when I get on stage, you know when I think that when especially you know, when you get on stage and you think that your favorite, one of the one that you think is gonna it's gonna, it's gonna pop, and then the then it be something else to do it. So it's like you just you just never know, You just never know. Yeah, and you mentioned torn Up. We played torn Up also, and that's another one. And also Recovery, Yes, Recovery, the song I did with Freddy Jerkins on the Cancer of the Healing, the Healing Project, the cancer compilations that he did in honor of his late wife. Yeah, that Recovery. Was was was was was incredible, was absolutely is one of the you know, the the mergents and people really haven't heard what me and Freddie Jerkins, our collaboration. We got songs in the crate that the world has never heard. But whenever we come together, it's a it's another sound. I can't wait for you to hear that. I'm gonna probably try to see if we can pull something off this year out of the crates. But yeah, just it just e balls when I when I when I work with different when I work with other different people I've worked with. I've worked with people like Vanessa, Bill Armstrong, I've worked with, you know, rand Salin, I've worked with, I've sang with, I've sang you know with with Aretha Franklin and things like that. So everything, you know, it gives a different sound I've done. I've done you know, R and B the on the what is it the Waiting to Exhale soundtrack, that Waiting to Exhale? That her her the song that Aretha Franklin, did you know that's me. I'm doing all the background on on that work. And so yeah, it's just when you when you get in different places, the sound evolves it, you know, it changes. You can hear tones in some then can you hear the rock side, you can hear the gospel side. So I love I love you know, I can't wait for people to hear what else we have I have coming out next? Yeah, well let's let's talk a little bit about that. We'll get to the show in the second, but let's talk a little bit about on the music side, which what you're working on right now. Well, we dropped the single Fly, which did pretty it did. It did pretty good as an introduction, it didn't do what I what I would have wanted it to do. And I know the difference now, just been in the industry for over twenty five years, everything has changed. The way we promote things, the way we do do things. It's totally different. And so and then especially being independent, there's a difference. You know, when I worked on when I was working on my other stuff, I was signed to a label. It's different now that I'm not signed to a label. I'm independent. And we dropped the first single, Fly, and hope, prayerfully, we'll be releasing about two more singles this year. And I'm collabing with a lot of people. I'm experimenting with a lot of other young producers, producers that haven't had the opportunity and the shot to be out here. And that's what that's why I like working with a You can bypass the egos and bypass you know, the fifty thousand dollars you know, charges and stuff like that. And yeah, I mean, you know, and I'm not saying that of people aren't what do you call it worthy? Of what they're they're just doing of what they're worth. But nowadays it's just the music industry is different and people can produce. We can produce entire albums without spending that type of a budget. You can find just as create just more creative producers and artists and musicians that are out here that haven't had the opportunity and a chance to make their mark, but yet their stuff is killing, it's killing the game. And so I'm working with some with some some musicians and producers that haven't had the opportunity to be out here in the way that a lot of the other ones have. And so I've got some hot stuff that's some some stuff that that's coming out now. I do plan on, you know, doing my sound. But but then I also understand that there's a minist ministry ministry side all this ministry. But I'm talking about like you know, when when I when you go up in the church, I can't be going to play in Simbol, you know, you can't do that. So I definitely make sure that on my albums that I have that is well rounded, and I give you some stuff that I can sing before the preacher breach or or you know what I'm saying. You can go with these conferences and you can minister. On another level. I can go in there and I can worship. So I have to I make sure that I keep I be mindful of that when I'm writing music, when I'm doing music, when I'm actually talking about doing a project. I want to make sure that there's something for everybody. That there's something for everybody. We're talking with me and you mentioned earlier about how the business has changed and things like that. It's been a big topic of conversation, the state of the gospel music industry, the health of the gospel music industry. We have seen. The contemporary Christian side just explode and relevance and popularity and money and everything, but the gospel music industry has not been on the same trajectory. So talk a little bit about what you've seen, the changes you've seen in the industry, and what do you think the health of gospel music specifically is right now. It's I have mixed emotions. I have I really do. I have mixed emotions. I've been on both sides, the gospel and the CCM side, And to be honest with you, and this is no shade I promise you guys, y'all, this is no shade. But they support their artists, they support the ministry. And that's just numbers don't lie. I mean, we're looking at video and we're watching what's happening in their concerts and our and and the predominantly black gospel market. They come out in the thousands, like ten, twenty, you know, eight ten, you know, thousands, and like with one artist, and we have to pile at least four or five artists on a on a tour to pack out stadiums. And then when you do see tours, it's the same, it's the same artists. It's almost like no one is actually helping. And I know there are, but but it's not. It's not it's not being done enough where it's actually making a difference. There are a lot of artists that are out here that are that are doing amazing, that have amazing ministries that will never be heard because number one, they're not in the quote unquote the click or the end crowd of the who's who of gospel artists and gospel artists. We got to be careful of doing that. We have to be careful of clicking up and we have to be careful of blackballing or you know, getting up, especially if we're calling ourselves Christians, you know, to close doors or to only want to bring in you know, your favorites and this that the other, or it's just we we we don't, we don't, we don't find it. But over it, like you said, in the CCM market, they are supporting and people, they're doing tours, and people are coming out and and and they're they don't mind actually taking care of the business part, and they they're not intimidated by the art and their budgets and what they bring. So they're paying for the bands and for those artists to bring their bands and their singers versus in the gospel world and the black arena, the pastors feel like the artists are charging too much and they don't want to, you know, but you want them to come and tear the house down and prophesy and preach or whatever. And the budget that you're paying them is not enough to bring a band and bring singers because you have to pay the singers. You got to pay the band. So I mean, it's it's you know, it's and that's not everybody, it's not all but it's a significant amount where we're hurting. We're hurting. A lot of artists are hurting. There's only a few that's really out there eating. There's really only a few that's out there where they don't have to do a nine to five. Back in the day, we didn't have to do nine to fives. Back in the day, you know, ministry, the money, the finances was there to be able to sustain gospel artists where we could focus and travel and get the churches and minister. And do what we do now. A lot of it is it's hard, it's it's changed. The money is different. They don't have the budgets, and if they do got the budget, they're only hiring the same the same five or six that we know of that we see all the time. And so what it does is it kills the other ones that are up under that are scratching or trying to make their mark in the gospel industry. Mm hmmmm. And I know you mentioned about, you know, the how some people who do these clicks and and stuff like that, and then you know it can become a black ball situation. Have you ever personally experienced that or have you people that talk a little bit about I have. I've experienced. I experienced that when I went through my divorce, there were people that just closed doors. They shut doors, They chose, they chose sides, they picked size, they believe whatever they wanted to believe. They were not calling me to do events. I even had a promote. I had someone apologize to me. Years later, I had someone apologize to me and say to me, the one to apologize to you because we, you know, we were you know, planning, you know whatever, events and we were told not to book you and you know, and I sat there and I looked at them and I just said, okay, you know, I you know, and I accepted their apology or whatever. But you know, it's sad because I'm saying to myself, this is gospel music. This is Christian music. And no matter what artists, the gospel artists facing their personal lives. Once you see the anointing and you see the power of God on someone's life, what what what? The anointing outlives, lies, rumors, scandals. It when when someone is living right, the power of God stays on their life. And when you see that, you ought to know, you know, I just I thought it was unfair. It was. It was hurtful. It was hurtful to it. But you know, it happens, even in the gospel, in the gospel music industry, it happens. And I'm not saying that everybody does it, but some do and it hurts. Yeah. Absolutely. We're talking with the media and to switch gears a little bit to talk about the show. I was glad to see, uh, you know, we got some been getting some coverage and some major outlets. So talk a little bit about uh, the media, uncut. What what gave you the idea to do the show and and tell people a little bit about the show and what it is. Yeah, the show, it's it's freaking amazing. What's it's really? It was really God just really bringing things full circle in my life. A friend of mine, Dean Dean Reynolds. He and I had had been been years ago in Trinidad, and and from then on we had called continued to come to cultivate our relationship. And I remember a few years ago, maybe about maybe six or seven years ago, he was just like, hey, Tomitia, you ever thought about doing radio? And I was like, yeah, I've done it before. Back in Detroit. I did a little bit of radio had a show, me and a couple of other people. It was a youthful show, very spontaneous, very urban, cutting edge, and we did it for like a year in the city of Detroit and it was it was it was lit, you know. And so we did like a demo thing about seven years ago, just and and then we just, you know, I think, I don't know, I don't know. I wouldn't say anybody dropped the ball, but we just kind of just, you know, you kind of put it on the back burner and you keep moving on with your life. And and Dean came back around approached me with it and said, you know, let some people hear it. And they were interested in doing it. So one of the media, one of the amazing media companies, partnered up and you know and said, hey you I'm like, yeah. I want to do it. I love doing radio. I love because I'm a gospel artist and I love GoF of music. And I know what I want to hear on a Sunday morning, and I know what I want to hear on the radio when I'm getting up in the morning. I want I wanted to be lit, I wanted to be live. I wanted to be energetic. I wanted to be spontaneous. I wanted to be fun, I wanted to be you know, all of those things. And so I just thought this would be a great idea for to pursue. And I and I was in full agreement if they were, if they were ready to make it happen, and they said yes, and hey, we did what we needed to do, and and here and here we are. To me the uncut. Yeah, fantastic, fantastic. And Dean is a great guy. He is he is. Yeah, he's definitely a great guy. And I had become aware of the potential of the show through through Dean and also doctor T. L. Holmes, Yes, and the Nexcess Media. Yeah. Yeah. And so when we met, you know, he had just shared that with me and and played me the demo and I was like, oh, my goodness, like this it was an cridible. So I'm really glad that we've been able to to work with you all and help bring this to life. So for people who haven't heard it yet, uh, tell them what to expect when they listen to the show. I know you have great music. You also have a lot of really really good interviews as well, so just tell people what they can expect when they listen to the man. Expect, Expect power, Expect the surge of strength of joy. You know, you know, it's the first thing that you're gonna hear on a Sunday morning. And I wanted to be electrifying. I wanted to get you amp and hyped before you get to church, on your way to church, as you're getting ready for church, that when you walk into the doors of the church, that you've already you awaken your spirit, you alert in your in your in your mind. And that's what it's really about. It's about that, like like uh, David Mann said on What's that on? On Tyler Perry movie, this ain't no funeral. It's to celebrate. That's awesome. And so I want people to be in you know, celebrating life, celebrating the goodness, the goodness of the Lord, and knowing that we can hear amazing gospel music that will have you leaping that or have you dancing that, I have you moving, that, I have you getting ready, you know, for church in a hurry. So just expect, expect, expect nothing but love and enjoy in this show. Talking with Toma And as we begin to wind down here, for people who are listening, who may aspire to to accomplish the things that you've accomplished, to do the things that you've done, what would what advice would you give them? The advice that I would give someone who is looking to do anything that I have done is put the work in. Get the work, get the work. It can be done. I'm telling you that it can be done, but you gotta work. Don't wait for nobody to give you, no handouts, don't try to cut corners, don't try to try to you know, hustle, no, no, get on your grind. Don't hust so, get on your grind. Work. And even when doors are slams in your face, or even when you get the nose, or even when you get the opposition and push back because it's coming, continue to still have that have a passion on burning, Let that let that passion burn on the inside of you. That tells you that you will not be stopping. That you're gonna accomplish everything, everything that you set your mind, everything that God has given you to do, that you're gonna that You're gonna that you're gonna do it. You know, So I just say, get to work, because it's gonna take work. It's gonna take hard work, and it's gonna take partnering with people. It's gonna take people supporting. You get a support system. But I but but above all, you can get it done. Just get to work. Absolutely, And So a couple more things here before we close. One. Obviously, this thing has been trending nationwide and it's been a topic of conversation in the church. Have you seen the Drew Ski parody. I've heard about it. I haven't. I haven't seen it, but he but but anybody that knows him knows that that's what he that he's a he's he's a comedian like like he does things like it's I don't think it's for I don't think it's to be offensive, even though people people may take offense. But he does things in the I think I believe in the spirit of comedy, in the spirit of trying to get someone to laugh, and not so much to be a mockery because we see so much other stuff that's real mockery out here in the streets. Like I said, I haven't seen it. I heard about it, but I've seen a lot of other skis that he's done, and he's hilarious. He's he's he's hilarious. So I think that. So I really think that it's just an individual thing and people's perspective. We all have the right to our own opinions. But if you're not offended easily or a person that walks in the spirit of offense, which I don't. That's why I'm not offended by even just a conversation of what has happened, because I know him to be a comedian, so anything that he does, he's trying to get a laugh mm hmm. And we got to be honest to to me that like some of these some of these pastors do be doing too much. They know and no they and that's what's fun and and that's what's funny. And they do that's what's funny, some of that stuff and spinning around and the costume changes and life like like, man, come on, we know to we set up, we set up in church and laugh at these people. So we laugh at the person that's actually saying what you're thinking. Absolutely absolutely, and so thank you so much. This has been a great pleasure. And before we before we wrap things up, if you got anything on your heart of a message of word that you want to lead to the people, Go right. Ahead, man, I just say, live your life intentionally, live on, live in God on purpose, like like like, don't don't, don't shrink. This is the time for believers to stand up and live in Live in your in your in your in your faith, live in your faith out loud. Don't be ashamed to be who you are and to go forth and whatever you were supposed to be doing in life. We don't have time to wait anymore. My thing is whatever God told you to do in this season, do it. Absolutely. Let everybody know how to follow you on social media, keep up with everything you got going on and all that good stuff. Y'all can find me online at official Demetia on Ig and Demitia Chandler on Facebook, and then from there you'll see where I have my my other links to you know, to the radio show and so forth. But Official Demita and Demitia Chandler. Thank you so much for coming on the show and spend time with us. I'm excited about your show and I'm happy to be working with you and all that good stuff. Thank you so good to know you are so good to have you in my corner. I appreciate that. Thank you. Stay tuned. We have Tea Time with Roe coming up next here on the out Love, Yo, what's up bringing the noise right here? Chuck, Public Enemy number one? You are tuning the Outlaws Radio show. Welcome fo True Sir, out Law Rayo, Welcome back, Welcome back. You listen to the Outlaws. And now it's the time of the show that we like to call tea Time. We wrote turn it. Up, don't see out the competition, the latest celebrity news and gossip explanation. It's Tea Time with Row on the Outlaws Radio Shows. Welcome back to Tea Time. Welcome back. I know it's been a little while since I gave you all the tea, so let me let me go ahead and bring it to you. So first and foremost, I think I'm a start it off hot. Yeah, I think I'm gonna start it off hot. So there is something that has been going around being talked about amongst the community, the Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, whatever community. Teddy Riley, he made a post and Teddy Riley says, I'm not gonna go into who yet. He says, still the King of R and B bar None, Could you guys guess who I'm talking about by just saying that, Can you guys take the US. Can't wait for y'all to hear the new music till then teaser missiles will be dropping. It's about that time for real music. Yes, six, yes, but this is not the one we were expecting. Straight from the bars in prison, bar Kelly, I was flabbergasted when I seen this, But you know what, I guess a hustler is gonna get. That bag by any means necessary, Like, ain't nobody stopping it? I mean, I wish that he was, you know, I wish the pat you know, the history, the choices, the things that were done did not happen because oh oh, he has such a phenomenal singing voice. He makes such good music. And the music he dropped the Teddy dry Dryley Teddy Riley dropped about R. Kelly. Oh my gosh, he sounds great even from you know that phone, that little telephone. It sound a little sound a little different. But he did that. Nonetheless, he did see. He said he's in the sale for real. I'm for real, Like. All I can think of is Acon locked up. So I was. I'm glad you admitted that because I was going to admit too that. It actually sounds really good. I can't lie to the people, man, I can't. Y'all got to separate the music, the music from the artist. You have to do it. Yeah, art from the artist, Yeah, from the artist. There you go, because that sounded dope. But like, can you listen to it and like not be judged or is it like you can only listen to it in private? I mean, it depends on how much you care. Because like I remember, like not too long ago, I was in some hood bar and they were playing R Kelly. They don't care. They never stopped playing Kelly. So it just depends. Man, Like most people are probably gonna like listen to it in secret, but it just depends on how much you care. I'm just gonna I'm gonna be honest with y'all. Though the song was dope, like, and I went and looked up when we were going over show notes, I went and looked up to the Riley's account. To go see this clip. It had over four hundred thousand views. On it already, So four hundred thousand people, Like, how many of them are gonna play it loudly. Yeah, somebody probably playing it in that car right now, at this very very moment, at this at this very at this juncture, right now, somebody. So, I don't know. That's all I got to say about that. Next, Yes, yes, so next up in the music industry, listen, you guys. Okay, y'all keep talking about show us you're twenty sixteen. You know flashbacks things, you know, pictures and yourself in twenty sixteen and this, that and fourth. I don't know why y'allso hung up on twenty sixteen. I mean, and I guess it was a good year. But listen, we need to take it back all the way back, all right. I'm talking like all the generation you know, us millennial generation, the music that we grew up on. And I guess twenty sixteen counts because there is some music then. But do y'all know who TI is? If you don't know better, I mean, I don't know what to tell you. I don't know who I don't know what to tell you. So Ti is a music artist, rapper, music, et cetera. Apparently comedy now too. But TI suddenly came out and he made a promo video showing that he was getting his locks. Cut off. And years back, I don't even know what year really, his hair was short. He had the fade hat tilted to the. Sides, like early okay, so early two thousands, So that's what we're take it back to early, you know. Around there. Yeah, see y'all talk about twenty sixteen, so we need to take it back to that. So he's got his hat tilted. Now he's got the fade going. TI has announced that he is dropping his final album. Even though he has been in the shadows for some. Time musically, he is making his final debut of music. And I don't know whether to be happier. I mean, but I do know I've seen like t I, Bruno, O Mars, there has been many others from our music generation that are talking about making a comeback this year. All we need is Rihanna. To bring her butt out and make some music too, Like that's all we're missing. I'm a Rihanna fan, Like I'm I'm I'm a Rihanna fan. I've been waiting for her music to come out. But yeah, with with T, I like I'm a TI fan. TI is on like my mount rushmore of Southern rappers, no, no doubt about it, no doubt in my mind. Sad that this is gonna be his final album, but I'm glad we get some new music from him. You mentioned that Bruno Mars is getting ready to do something some of I'm I'm glad to see that too, because like these bigger artists, man need to come like some of them have been own for too long. You need to come back and put some new music out because it helps the business, It helps. The industry, the shoot and if y'all want to talk about twenty sixteen, somebody needed to go ahead and give Drake a call. Okay, it's about that time. Come back, come back. I know you had your moment of embarrassment, but come back please. And he had a hit after that, like he did No Kia after that in the middle of the Beef. Yeah that was it. So yeah, it's about that time. It's about you got anything else. I have one more thing because I need to speak on this and I need to call you out. So everybody, if you have not watched this movie, I'm gonna call you out too, because there's no way that you did not. Okay, So Sinners Sinners with Michael B. Jordans amongst other amazing actors and actresses. Sinners breaks the record for the most nominated film in Oscar history with sixteen nominations. Oh wow, that is amazing. That is amazing and honestly very much deserved and I hope that they win, each and every one of them. They deserve it. Like, first of all, Michael B. Jordan, he played he played two people, but he was one person. He played brothers and it was y'all have to watch it. I can't even y'all have to watch it. Y'all have to watch it. Like it's like kind of midwestern vampire. Y'all got to watch it. Y'all got to watch it. But shout out to them because that was a good movie. And I just want to say, real quick, Darval did not see it. You guys, Darvin say he did not watch it, And that's a problem. That's a problem. Now now for the record, Well, to my defense, there are two reasons why watch One, I'm not a big fan. I'm not a big horror fan anyway, just in general. But two, and this is the most important thing. I don't have the attention span for a lot of movies. I mean, I'm not a guy. I don't watch a lot of movies, like. You're even a big movie person either unless I'm in it. But I'm a. You know, yeah, I'm not a it's and what's crazy is like I can sit and watch a marathon of like a half an hour show all. Day, or even an hour show. I can watch that all day. But the same thing where there's no end to it until the end of the movie, Like I gotta be really interested in the movie. It's there's a lot of ends to it. There's a lot of ends to it, and it gets. It's like mysterious and action and it's. Not like and I say, I was never really like now I do like action movies, but like that kind of like the vampire stuff. My dad liked that, Like that was my dad's stuff. This is more of a reason for you to watch it. Yeah, I was. Now the movies like the movies I can watch, Like I'll sit at the house and watch the Friday movies all day. Yeah, he said, let me get she'd be watching Star Wars. Huh, oh, absolutely not. It's too long, Imber. I was just about to tell a personal story on there. I'm not gonna do that, but it involves a movie theater and the Star Wars. When I realized that Star Wars was not for me, that I was more interested in other things, I'm going going in the movie theater. But yeah, I just so I'm not really like it's something that I have to really really be interested in to go out of my way to go watch it. So, like I can't even remember the last I think the last movie that I saw in the theater, like physically in the theater was Black Panther. You know what. That's it. I'm gonna come over me, you and I'm gonna have a movie day and we're gonna watch it. Yeah, I'm gonna watch it. Is it on Netflix now? I'm assuming it might be. It might it should be. It shouldn't be in theaters anymore. Right, Yeah, because it's been on for a while, the previews and everything, like, I know what it is, but I I just I don't. I don't have an attentions fan. I just know by next I just know by next week, I just know by next week. You you, I just I just hope that you come to me telling me that you watched it. Yeah, I might have to go out of my way to watch it. But yes, so that was that was the issue America. It was the fact that I don't have I'm not a movie person. I don't have the attention spad for movies. It gotta be something either I'm really really interested in, like documentary like I watched documentaries and stuff, or I'm a comedy guy. I love comedies, so like I watch comedies. But other than that, like it's I don't really have the attention span. But we're gonna get off. But we're gonna get off of me right now. Okay, So I'll say this. So there was I'll switch it off of you. I'll switch it up. So you know, I slightly still brought. You know, I brows through comments in self control to not respond. A lot of them. But there was a particular comment that this guy made under the post you know of this movie, and he said it was okay, I rted seven out of ten, there's better movies. This movie isn't like, you know, it's not all that great, blah blah blah. I said, hmm, well, most people that went to see this movie went to see it more than one time. That right there speaks for itself. That is true, and I am one of them. Why I went to the movies twice. And I don't like to you know, I don't like to spend money, but you know I went to the movies. Twice, right, right, that is very very true. So let everybody know how to follow you. Yes, follow me on Instagram at real Robin O'Malley, or you can find me over on Facebook at Robin O'Malley. And you can follow me at D D Kingpenn everywhere that's D T H E K I N G p I N. And before we go, make sure that y'all stay safe out there this weekend. The way that the weather people is talking, it's about to be nasty, and not just up here in Cleveland, where are our base of operations is, but all throughout the like, even the South, like there's parts of the South that are about to get hit. Basically the hills that our parents said they walked up, that's what we're about to get hit. Yeah, buddy, So y'all be safe, man, make sure you go out now. Don't don't raid the store. Don't go up there and buy all the toilet paper like. I can get it during COVID. But make sure you got enough food, make sure you call got gas in it. If you ain't got to stay, if you ain't got to be on the road, don't get on the road. Like, stay safe out there, y'all because the way that they talking this is about to be biblical, so so just be careful out there, all right. One more time, I want to send a special shout out to the media for coming on the show. We really appreciate it. We are out of here. We'll see you next week. This was produced by FCV

