Ryan Coogler’s Untold Chadwick Memories, Collaborating with Kendrick & Ranking MJ, Kobe & LeBron - podcast episode cover

Ryan Coogler’s Untold Chadwick Memories, Collaborating with Kendrick & Ranking MJ, Kobe & LeBron

Apr 16, 20251 hr 7 min
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Episode description

Ryan Coogler opens up about his journey from D1 football to becoming one of Hollywood’s most visionary directors. He shares untold stories about his bond with Michael B. Jordan, working with Chadwick Boseman, and collaborating with Kendrick Lamar and Childish Gambino. Plus, he reflects on the impact of Fruitvale Station, building all-star casts, and whether a football film is in his future.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

M mm hmmm.

Speaker 2

Mm hmmm. Welcome back all the smoke man. This one is a long time coming. All this kind of transpired from sports first and foremost. Welcome to the show. Ryan cooler Man, thank you for your time, bro having Yeah, but we go back a little deeper than wrap. You know what I mean. You were you You went to junior college with my little brother.

Speaker 3

I was in It was in big boy college stage.

Speaker 2

He went to college with my brother. And it was funny. I hit him this morning because he was just at the house yesterday, but he had to bounce shen't even many. Yeah, but he's good. He's in DC doing some some some business stuff there with his family. It's like, you got these funny stories of Ryan and anything. I could just pop on him and he's like, he's like, Bro, to be honest with you. He's like, Ryan was the dude

that set the bar. He said, if Ryan didn't have the hand injury, you couldn't tell me that he wasn't going pro. And he's like, you were the one that was always first in the weight room before practice, after practice. You just did all the right shit. You were locked into your books. He's like, Ryan didn't really start kicking it till after college. Like Ryan during college was really locked in. So it kind of makes sense now he's like I've never seen he's like the most insane work

ethic I've ever seen. Because my brother talking about you. So it's just like you've been able to transfer, you know what. It sparked something in my mind because our last conversation with Kobe, he just like, you know, we're built for this business shit, Like we take our athlete mentality and plug it into this world. Yeah, and it's a go. I think you're a perfect example of that.

Speaker 3

Bro. I appreciate you. Giant man, Jason bron He was such an incredible player man and a good dude. You know what I'm saying. I met you with your older brother.

Speaker 2

That's how we met.

Speaker 3

And I'm a big brother myself. I got two little brothers, and just as a representative of you, you know what I'm saying, he held that down for sure. And we met at your house. Like I'll never forget, Bro.

Speaker 2

I didn't even know my brother James, Like you know that's bro, Like he's been at the house.

Speaker 3

I'm like, oh, this is the thing. This was crazy because I came in here I just sat down on your college because I like furniture and I always have. And I remember, I remember Jason used to used to look out for your brother, Bro. He used to be iced out and and had the nice young you know what I'm saying. And his locker was next to mine, and I never wanted to be in his. I never wanted to be in his in his business, you know.

You know what I'm saying. Because we met, we met that season because he was like he was like a mill yard transfer, you know what I'm saying. He was an incredible player, bro. You know, he had all he had all of the intangibles to go with his size and leave an ability, you know what I'm saying. And people because because y'all from Sack, we have a lot

of sacked people around there. The celth which Man's big brother, you for me out of the Yeah, I was just impressed with him on the field, you know what I'm saying. Enjoy having somebody here I can up my game, you know, because I'm I'm just under five team, you know, so I couldn't get that I could jump with say a corner was with six one six two. You know what I'm saying I had to put him down to that. So it was nice having somebody with that work, with

that leaping ability. I can come underneath you feel me. So we got to know each other just from from the ball. And then one day he's like, hey, bro, leta taking We're gonna go to my brother house. Man. He gave me, he gave me to go ahead. I can take a few of y'all. You know what I'm saying. So I'm like, I'm like, back, we get to your house. Bread Earlier, I couldn't I couldn't believe what was what you had in there. Bro. I squared a guy.

Speaker 2

Bro.

Speaker 3

We pull up and it's and it's a bobcat digging off where your basketball courtter is gonna go. And as Jackson, I said, bro to y'all, like did the construction team leave this year? My brothers we're doing that. I say, your brother moved brought a bock cat and he's like, man, yeah, Like like I'm just like mind blowing. So niggas get that hooping and I'm like, I'm trying to get inside. Broke. I'm tired, you know, I' saying like I want to

lay down, you know, you know, what I'm saying. So you let me in and I see the fire train of couch. I'm like, bron, can I can I take a nap on this? He's like, man, yeah, you good. You had the barber the Barbara ad cheering there, you know what I'm saying. Like, I'm like, I'm like, look, I'm like, man, this goes, Bro. I'm looking around to see what I'm gonna do when I get on, you know, and I lay down, Bro, I never forget I lay down.

Speaker 2

Bro.

Speaker 3

Just when I get comfortable, I hear the door open up and it's you. And I'm in there like Goldie locks. You know what I'm saying, and like you know and uh and you come in and you're looking and I'm like, what's uping?

Speaker 2

Man?

Speaker 3

You're like, man, who is you? I'm like, I'm like, I'm Jason for me? They outside hoop and he's like okay, okay, and You're like, man, where you from brom chopping. I'm telling you about the front of the band everything, And I remember, Bro, you were so you were so kind. Bro. You know you need anything to eat? Man, know how it is, you know on scholarship and this before the n I ls yeah, you know, bro, we ate good, but we hooped all day. You came on and watched this.

Watch this hoop one of my finest memories, bro. You know, for for for real and and just seeing it, you know, like you don't get the she somebody who made it? You know, you know what I'm saying. Who was cautial to our age? You feel me like coming up, we'll go to the Brian Shaw camp or you know what I'm saying, she Gary or you know what I'm saying.

But like and you you as you you look like us, you know what I'm saying, And you s you do it and do it right there and shot and that she was one of my She was one of my finest movies. I can't thank you enough for that.

Speaker 2

Now that's dope because I mean, obviously I remember as my brothers tell me, then as you tell me. Now you know, it becomes more clear. But it's just like when when your success started hitting. My brother's like like he's dope now, Like you don't even play football no more. He does production and one day you guys need to work. He's he was already trying to plug you on the other side. When I was still playing and then he hit me one day. It's like Fruitvale Station. You got

to see it. So I seen. I was like, oh, sh was dope.

Speaker 3

Who is it?

Speaker 2

That's the home you met? It's like what And from there it just kind of it took off. So you were able to take again that that that focused, that mindset from sports and apply it in this field. And obviously we've seen the finished product. But what was what was the beginning transition?

Speaker 3

Like for you? Such a good question, bro it was It was difficult, man. Like It's funny, brou I had. I had a homie who uh, who I played football with, who was from l A. Was a lot of La catch on that team. And I remember when I when I realized I wanted to apply that as she you know, I went down with him, uh to LA just to see it because it's hard for me to It's hard for me to jump to something if I can't see it first, you know what I'm saying. And I've always

been like that, man, I had to. I don't know if it was like that for you. You was at UCLA. It was a history of people going to the lead from there. You see it, but it's tough to like say, I want to be a filmmaker. I want to go to this school, but I ain't never really been in LA like that, you know, I never seen the campus

or nothing. So I had homies that that uh that that you know from Los Angeles that let me come down there for for a few weeks and stay with their family, go visit the campus, and making that decision to leave football alone and go you know, full time with filmmaking. Bro. It came as a result of an injury, you know what I'm saying, Like I tore my hand up that last year, so I didn't get to finished with Jason. But I came back the next year and we were doing seven on seven in the summer and Brough.

I'm not gonna lie to you, but I was having like that. I was having like the off season of my life. Bro. I was healthy, getting faster, stronger, you know what I'm saying, Like like, we had a great offense and I'm off there with a cat that's trying to walk on and he hit me on a post

on a post route over eager. You know, I'm say, I don't think it was his fault, but he but he connected with you know, elbow, my my, my, my face here, and I broke my cheek bomb and it sat me down for like I want to say, two months. I couldn't do no football activities. I ended up playing that that season, but it was it was two much or I couldn't do nothing. I couldn't do anything but support the teammates from the sideline. And that was when

I did my application for film school. That was when I was when I didn't have nothing, no excuse, you know what I'm saying, not to this age twenty one. Okay, yeah, I'm twenty one. Let's change my life. One of the inergy. It was like injury that was like a good thing to happened to me. Ended up having a good season, h but my mind was on that. It was on that filmmaking. Bro, you know what I'm saying Like that, like that, like that bug had hit and got accepted.

I think right after we play you see Davis, I got the news and then decided I'm going and moved to La and Bro, it was hard, man like being away from the family, being away from my team, and the biggest thing, which which you know, I'm so pleased to see you and all the other athletes I admire navigate. It was like the loss of my identity navigating that because because people are asking me, who are you? What you do it? I would always sound a football player

player that's gone. Now you know, I'm in LA and I'm in film school, Like that doesn't translate. You know what I'm saying, and nobody knows me. You know, you know what I'm saying, Like like when you know you play sports, bro, it's like that's also yeah, yeah, even if they don't know you, they know you. You know,

you know what I'm saying. Now what's gone? And it left me feeling feeling pretty empty, Bro, I'm not gonna cap like uh so, so I had to you know, find a new way of making relationships and working on set and realized it was kind of a team structure.

And that also realized my experience as an athlete and that with me to be able to out work anybody who I'm mean question you know what I'm saying, Like people would complain about about twelve hour days and like, you know for us, bro to life, yeah, you're never off, you know, you know what I mean? Like I did appreciate that aspect of you, you know, and and I just I just kind of looked at everything from an athletic perspective, like people would talk about, oh man, that

would bring me in classes. This is the most competitive environment you're ever gonna be in. Like I was just like, like, what, ain't nobody trying to hit me? Hurt me? You know what I'm saying. You know, you know the vibe with somebody, you know, when you're playing sports, somebody actively trying to stop you coming on physically physically. You know what I'm saying. You was enforced, bro, So you know you playing games with a target on your back, you know, you know

what I'm saying. And you got to go earn money for your family. Well that's another version of you that that that that would earn stripes if they knock Matt Barnes out the game. Let me sit Matt Barnes on his ass. That's that's me doing my job right. It's none of that in this, you feel me. It's really just the time and money, you know what I'm saying. So I was looking around like I could really I could, you know, I could really do something here, you know.

And it was helpful for me to go straight from from from from sports to film once I was able to navigate the mental you know what I'm saying. And then there's so many like filmmakers, we're athletes, bro Like, not all of them talk about it, but when you when you really when I get with him, I realized, Yeah, I realized, all yeah, like Ramel Ross was just the Nickel Boys, and he played at Georgetown. You know I'm saying,

he hooked that Georgetown to Barry Jenkins. You know it was a football player in Miami, you know what I'm saying. And Terrence Nash play played football in college. You realize that there's a lot of crossovers. And I admire y'allro because because I'm watching y'all like make this like the damn you're a seamless transition. H to the point where you know, like Drake got podcast while you're right, it's different, like it's it's.

Speaker 2

It's a new time. You know, it's a new time because again, you know you came up in there. I'm only what four or five years older than you, Like, stick to your stick to your job, shut up and dribble play for whatever you do, do it and it's a time and age now obviously that that doesn't apply. I feel like as athletes like it clicks like Okay, I can do this as a filmmaker. At what point for you did you feel like, Okay, I can make this. This this could be my career.

Speaker 3

Man, keep it a hunted bro. It was people. It was people shaying it to me.

Speaker 2

Like outside people.

Speaker 3

Yeah, people will watch something that I made and and and they would shay, oh man, like man, you got something. This is really good because to me, what I was making was not good. You know, I'm comparing it to what I'm saying when I go to the movies. You feel me. But it was also like my football teammates, bro, like that was in my first movies, you know, and they would get fired up like that was in on it,

like like your success. Yeah, when I put my application in, they was all like, hey man, you hurt back yet you know what I'm saying that actually say anything yet like when you get your you know, like and then when I got in, bro, and I'll never forget. But they celebrated like we want a championship, you know what I'm saying. Like like because your brother was it was it was a year after your brother had graduated but I remember where his locker was. Bro like like like this,

he's just fine. You know these people become your family, you know, you know what I'm saying. And and Bro, that the day I got in, Bro, when I told everybody, man, you you would have thought, you know, it was it was champions. You thought we want everything. And still to this day, like I'm finna have a screen in the night and it's showing, I'm gonna pull up, you know, you know what I mean. They got families now, and babies and and and the kids watch my movies. You know.

You know what I mean. All that to say, man like to see y'all bro navigate that she could because because I was not a big time player, but it was one double a school. You know what I'm saying, Bro, for for for for NBA player to retire, you know what I'm saying. The identity crisis that that much, that that much caused because I had it when I was

you know, I was small potatoes compared. You know what I'm saying to she, y'all like garbage lane, Bro, like straight in the media, and how the impact that y'all haven't you feel me?

Speaker 2

I was lucky with that to be honest with you and just personally speaking. I got to a point where we had won a championship in Golden State in seventeen and I still had two years.

Speaker 3

Yeah, that's the that's the I'm just real quick, real quick.

Speaker 2

That's the first thing he pointed out of here.

Speaker 1

Yeah, yes, sir, I don't know about that. Yeah, it's different. I don't legendary team.

Speaker 3

Hey, I don't know about that.

Speaker 2

They would think that team won a championship. We didn't do shit with when the first.

Speaker 3

Hey, we knocked off Darkness it.

Speaker 2

Yeah, but I mean, you know, to my point, I mean I still had two years left on my deal, but I think I was ready for what was next. You know, I had fifteen years behind me. I wanted to be more present in my kids' lives, and I was ready to make that jump. So when I made that decision to retire, it was like, Okay, what am I going to do? I've made some investments that I

was solid with. I was a big cannabis advocate, so I'm going back and forth to the league talking about the league, you know, reevaluating their policies, and a friend of mine, I was like, you should do media you know your world so well spoken, you should try media. I was like, no, I don't really fuck with the media, Like will change that, change that tone? You know, although this to you a girlfriend of mine, a girlfriend of mine, you should say, you're so well spoken, you should try it.

I was like nah, nah nah, And I tried and I loved it, and I think the authenticity I played with I traveled, you know, I brought that to this and I caught lighting in a bottle and was able to, you know, thankfully get my hard knocks on ESPN. I'm on the Yeah. So I'm transitioning from the league. And I was a role player, no mistake, and I wasn't no star, didn't try to claim to be a star. I was a role player. But I transitioned right to like the media giant of ESPN, you know what I mean.

It From there, I'm just like, okay, I can start doing this.

Speaker 3

And I remember she bro, because for me, I know that that teleor Procter is there. It was different, like that teleor Procter is no joke. And then she and you shan you handle that, bro. I remember. I'm like, I'm like, DN, there you go, look at you.

Speaker 2

Yea, was just that transition, Like you said, some people get lost in it and and and to be confident and and go for what I went for. And you know, ship five years later, now you know, I'm proud. It's a little one where we got our first building and we got our own set, little company, and it's moving you come out the gates. Although I know it wasn't your first project, it's the first project that the world

really got to see in Fruitville Station. Why was it important for you to base your first project where you came from?

Speaker 3

It's a great question, bro. Like I pitched Forrest Whittaker three projects, was one of them, and I was the one I believed in the most. I was still in film school, man. I was literally left class to go sit down with his producer, and then left left class

again and go sit down with him. And I was blessed that that, like one of the projects that I made while I was in film school, which nobody would ever see, it impressed the teacher there, who then remembered me years later when when when somebody from Forest Whiticker's production company reached out and said, hey, man, is it any young filmmakers we should need.

Speaker 2

To know, really, this is after you had already get left.

Speaker 3

I was still It was with the guy he made rest in Peach where he passed during the pandemic. His name is Jed Dunnenbaum. He taught me my first semester when I was at that first semester when I left football and went to film school in LA He was my directing teacher. And one of the first projects that I made in that class, he pulled me to the side and was like, hey, man, you got something. He was like, how did you think come up with this idea?

You know? And he and I got close, you know, he made a recommendation for me to Forest Whiticker's production company. Forest Whicker's production company was run by the woman named Nina Yang bon Jovi. She married to one of the bon Jovi's. She shat me down and and and you know kind of said, hey, well, movies you're trying to make, you know, And Frewville was one of the ones that I was I was working on, and they they said, hey,

let's make that one. I had a homie, uh named Ephraim Walker, who's a filmmaker now, but he was he was a law student as she at the time. He went to James Logan in Union City High School, wrestled there, went to Howard. I think he wrestled out of Howard.

Speaker 2

Is he fun with Deon Taylor now from Yeah?

Speaker 3

Yeah bro, yeah so so. So Ephraim was working on that case. He was he was interning with John Burst and then he started he was working full time for them and a guy named Dante Poynter.

Speaker 2

You know.

Speaker 3

They all in the office in East Oakland, not far from my wife was working at the time, and so I was, you know, going back and forth from there and and you know, getting getting to know John Bursch and then got to know the family, and then you know, we made made the film. And I think the film's impact because it was it was a very low budget independent film. But I was able to be very potent with that with that money because I knew the world, you know what I'm saying. I didn't have to spend

time researching the world. I was just researching the people, you know what I'm saying, And we were able to we're able to execute that, uh. And I think that knowledge of the Bay Area helped me to make a better film about it. You fast forward to Creed, which is my next project. You know, I was making a movie about a place I didn't know in Philly, So I had to do that work to get to know it, to get to know the sport of boxing, and to get to know that city, you know what I'm saying.

And it was important to me because you know, I'll be I'll be uh, I'll be crushed if we put a movie out about a place you know and people say, hey, y'all got it wrong that that that would that would kill me because you know, people getting good and cali wrong. You know what I'm saying, I get us twisted all the time. And and a lot of that is is media produced. That that's that's that's being done by people who know who don't know it from there and you know,

gott to be from there. But but if you're not, you do have to take the time to get to know you know, you know what I mean. It was a lesson in It was a lesson in like really really doing the doing the research.

Speaker 2

Inticity of it. Yeah, your partner in crime, Michael B. Yeah, he's been by your side since the beginning. How did you guys come together as friends and brothers and then how did that chemistry translate into Yeah, I mean.

Speaker 3

We met through the work. You know, I was looking for an actor to Portrayosky Grant Russian. He was the guy I thought you could do it. You know. Uh, he kind of looked had the appearance, had that had the at the age and tangibles. But then when I met with him, I saw something special in the man,

like in mis a former athlete. You know, he grew up as a child actor, but he also grew up hooping and running track and been jumping he you know, So he and I had that had that had that athletic shorthand immediately, and I recognized him somebody who was who is trying to push himself, pushed the medium, that that healthy kind of ambition. You know what I'm saying, That that you that you need petitive side. Yeah, bro, it's necessary, you know what I'm saying. And he had

all those things. And then when we started to work together, it was a great great chemistry there, bro like and in our business brought if I broke you know what I'm saying, you don't fix you.

Speaker 2

I remember vividly when you invited me up to the Disney lot, when you were working on Black Panther, and we walked around and we just, you know, we keep it what we said we talked about, we can keep to us. But just looking around, Bro, that was a whole nother monster. Yeah, and you're young black man from Oakland on Disney's campus, running from building the building, creating one of the biggest movies ever. Like when you kind of look back. Obviously, as athletes, we don't really look back.

Speaker 3

Until we're trained to keep it going.

Speaker 2

But at the same time, I just know, I mean, obviously with the success of that and as you continue to grow each project in each film, take us back through that time when you were making that in your first time on that campus and moving from big room to sound stage to this to that. You look at this and I'm just like in awe. Like I'm a former professional athlete, been around, everyone's seeing the world and I'm walking on Disney campus. But you just looking around and we're both kind of in awe.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I mean it was a special time, bro, Like you can't you can't really recreate at that time. It's interesting, bro, because I was talking with I was talking with James Shamuel and and Hole and they was talking about the quality of magic being in the air at certain times, you know, and you knowing all he was talking about when he when he made a reasonable doubt and the fact that Niles was making something like Ellmatic, what was doing, what they was doing, Big was making Ready to Die.

You know, it was it was in the air, That's how it was. And Frankly and Los Angeles at that time, you know what I'm saying, Jordan has has just made Get Out. Ava was on campus, she was making Wrinkle, but she was coming off and making making Selma and launching that, launching a whole television show. And Dot was doing his thing. But with Nip also, you know, you got my victory lap dropped right around that time that that came out. Crazy Rich Asians came right behind, right

behind our you know, our film. You know. It was it was a time where it kind of felt like anything was possible, you know. And yeah, I didn't I didn't think much of the fact that we were doing what we were doing. Man, I had that cash Man with Chaldick and Mike and Lupete and Forrest and Daniel. You know what I'm saying. It was, it was It was a bunch of people who could, who could, who could lead their own movie? That was that was that

we was kind of bursting at the scene. You know, you know what I'm saying, starting Ink, you know, starting k Brown in two scenes that movie. You know, you know what I'm saying in lou with Luvig my composit was doing with Childish Gambino. You know what I'm saying. That was that was that was going crazy. It was all and like I didn't have time to observe exactly what was happening because I had so much work to do,

you know what. But but but it also was like a feeling that I was bringing the homies to the I was bringing because don't know when I'll imagine it might not work and I might not get it again, Like look at this, you know.

Speaker 2

Yeah that it was done.

Speaker 3

No.

Speaker 2

Yeah, With that being said, in the outstanding cast and the people you work with, what was your I mean, you're fairly still fairly new at this point. Yeah, Like what was your kind of mindset in leadership and how did you kind of navigate and move pieces to make such a special project.

Speaker 3

I don't get that movie without doing Creed and Creed had his own element of that, you know, like like SEVESTERI Stallan, like who's a legend classic, Yeah, it was a legend. And having to earn his respect and the producers behind him, you know, Erwin Winkler and Robert Chardoff Russian Piece. Uh, you know, these are people who are making movies before all will before all was born. Right, And I'm talking to Stallone about writing he wrote? He wrote every word of every Rocky mogue?

Speaker 2

Did he really?

Speaker 3

I didn't know that every word.

Speaker 2

Really, no co writer.

Speaker 3

Say he wrote them. He wrote them. That's how. That's how he wrote. So so so for him that for him to give me his blessing, you know what I'm saying. And he the type of dude he's not He's not giving me his blessing in public. I'm lets me at his house when he's saying, all right, man, we're gonna

you know, we're gonna do this. You know. That was his own kind of kind of kind of wait to bear and having you know, coming off of that, you know, I just got married and uh in sixteen and then we was off to go to go to go make this movie, bro, and it was it was it was hard. I would oftentimes had these moments where people would would say, okay, man. It was like it was like with what I had was Salon with Kevin Fight he saying, all right, man,

we're making this. I would meet with Alan Horne, Alan Bergman, who was who's over there at the time, and it was often I would sit down with agre Bro, who you know, a big, big boss. Yeah, like he ran everything, like like like, uh, Marl was just like a part of it was it was it was like it was like a it was like a small line in his whole portfolio, you know, you know what I'm saying. Like he also ran ESPN and also ran ABC, you know, and the meeting with him and him saying, and I

think y'all got something here. So it would be the checkpoints, you know, and the biggest woman.

Speaker 2

Just kind of validations along the way.

Speaker 3

And the biggest woman's child with Childwood was convinced we was making the next Star Wars. He would say this, you know what I mean, Like he was like, man, this thing is this is He'll say on set like man, it's huge, man, this is big. It's you know, because we had like, you know, aircrafts, and he was surprised that You're like, man, you got the aircraft. Look at

this message we're doing. We're doing man, We're doing Star Wars, you know, like like so I'm like, man, Chattie tripping, but I hear I'm like, man, ship are we?

Speaker 2

You know?

Speaker 3

You know what I mean? And that confidence being spoken into me was helpful and just like the reaction from from from people like you know, Broad didn't have been there, you know, I didn't been a championship basketball game and watch you played roll you feel me and then you for you to come up there and sit around. I'm proud of you. This big like I'm hearing it. I'm

all right, I could keep I could keep going. It helps you, helps you kind of run, you know what I'm saying, to until you get to the to the end zone. You know, you know what I'm saying. But that time was a special time. We didn't know how good we had it bro to be honest, we didn't know how good I could have. You know, hit Kendrick up and he already boom and top. All right, we're doing the whole album, you know, you know, I mean, like crazy bright hit not for a song. I'm like,

maybe maybe he'll do a song. He just dropped down. I know you're tired on tour. Man, we got a whole album for you. Come pull up complition like it was. It was just a different time.

Speaker 2

But that speaks to your character. People are willing to go out of their way or just really lend. I mean, I think it spoke to your character early when you said, like when I told the homies it happened like they celebrated like we want. I think it speaks to the person and the man you are. What was that like with Kendrick Obviously he's still front page news for other reasons. Yeah, someone like him to be, someone like him to be able to be like fuck the song, Yeah, take this whole.

Speaker 3

I mean it was it was. It was incredible. Man. And you get used to as as a as a filmmaker. You know, we we we music industry adjacent, you know. You know what I'm saying, Like there's crossover there, but it's it's completely different things. And you know, sometimes the

relationship can be symbiotic, you know what I'm saying. Every once in a while you get the uh the Bodyguard album or you know what I'm saying, like or you get you know, where you can, yeah Friday or Above the Rim or you know, every once in a while you get that kind of synergy where where it doesn't feel fake.

Speaker 2

Yeah, it both makes sense.

Speaker 3

Yeah, it makes sense, you know what I'm saying. But for me Bro like like like I'm looking for like a song generally, you know what I'm saying, Like something for that, you know, something for the for the end credits, that that we can you know what i mean, you know, if the artists can have that moment. You know, I'm always thinking about James Bond, you know. You know what I'm saying, like where you know it's gonna be a

super impactful song. But the Pie in the Sky for for me and Louvie always was ever since we first started working as it always was like a full blown album, you know what I'm saying, Like we've been trying to do that since Freuveville. The idea of being able to do that with td E Bro and for and for Doc at that point to shape I want to do. I want to you know, executive produce a whole album. You know, That's what that was his appetite at the time,

you know what I'm saying. He was once again that ambition you know, you know what I mean and him and him seeing some of the footage, you're saying, yeah, this is it. I can I can bring my full self to this. You know. It was amazing, bro, But it had some complicated conversations because it was a Disney movie. Still you feel I.

Speaker 2

Had to go to walk that line.

Speaker 3

But I had to go up in the offices, bro and explain you know what I'm saying, like while like like you know, while certain languages being.

Speaker 2

But that's important. It's important because they don't have it. I mean, that's not their specialty. No, it's not being able to you know frids, those gaps. I mean to this day, nine times platinum that I went not platin nine times and one of his largest streaming songs ever two billion streams with the all stars, all the stars, excuse me, all the stars.

Speaker 3

I mean, I'll never forget the first time the demo that like how big and Shindy none of us do things in the vacuum.

Speaker 2

Bro.

Speaker 3

You know what I'm saying, like and and and you know I believe in that like now when error like like you know what I'm saying like like like you know, I'm listening to music. Bro, my wife to Shaid, I can tell you what I can tell you where I was when you pick the artist. I can tell you where I was when the album drop, when and how I used it? You know, you know what I'm saying. Four I am. I don't feel like getting up off the bell with my wife. You feel me like I

get the shot at six I am? And what song am I putting on? You know what I mean? They get me to get me, to get me pumped up and get me going. Man, you don't want championship working on to it when you want to?

Speaker 2

Yeah, you know your hand absolutely Park now, Yeah, you know what I mean. It's just absolutely. I mean there's always songs and energy that puts you right in the position.

Speaker 3

Yeah, to be able to acknowledge the synergy and put it together for the audience. You know what I'm saying here, he got a movie coming up. Hear that soundtrack before. It's just the prime for what were on before you go to the theater. I mean, it's it's It was an incredible gift.

Speaker 2

Bro, tell us, tell us a little bit more about the genius of your composer.

Speaker 3

Love with he is that, but more than anything. He's my friend, bro, you know what I'm saying. We met right at that time when I was I have to leave football behind come find a new filmmaking family. He was one of the first people that I met at in film school. He had just moved from Sweden. Funny enough, he was living in It was a It was a fraternity on frat row that they had been kicked off campus for selas the bullshit and doing something crazy. You

know what I'm saying. If you know she history brother fresh, they do all types of shit, you know what I'm saying. It was, bro. It was one year a cat got called on the roof doing some wild ship was at school. But the fact I kicked off off cambus and they and they opened up the fry house to students, specifically graduate students for that can rent cheap houses. And one of my film uh uh school homies was in the class. I mean it was. It was was living there and I went over to go to go to go visit

his place. And Louvig was another guy that was living there with another composer student. That's how we met. And I didn't he didn't have none of his music there. And then I just met him as a guy, you know, and and and we were talking and and I discovered how how incredible he was, you know, letter on and he started scoring my projects, my projects. But the thing about him, Bro, he went pro first, like before anybody

like we looked up. He had graduated and he had a job, bro where he was assistant a composer on a television show. He got his he got his green card, Bro, and he was cracking like he was the first one to buy a house. He was, he was, he was on it because he was that good, you know. And then he got he was assisting his composer who was working for the Russo brothers Bron. This is before they did the Marvel thing. They was doing. It was doing television shows. And then they got a show about a

community college called Community. And they went to Louvig's boss and he was too busy because he was he was working with Ben Steel doing Tropic Thunder and all that. And he said, hey, man, hire my assistant. You know, he's incredible to hire him, saying Louvic got his got his first show, which is Community, right, So look who's in Community, Donald Glover. He's one of he's one of

the one of the actors in the show. Donald Glover meets Louvig tells Louvig, he, bro, I'm a I'm a I'm a musician too, you know what I'm saying, Like, you know, you make music. They formed Charlage gambin On. Really yeah, they formed Chlarge gambin On. You know what I'm saying. Movie, making it, making it, making beach, Donald rapping on him. Donald links up with another cat named fam My Nigeria Homye from South Central you know, you know,

Fan becomes Donalds, becomes Donald's manager. You know, the whole thing blows up, you know, essentially, Like like while right around the time that I'm getting ready to make Proveville, He's composing television shows, does does it? Does hiss? You know, as far as major feature film with me on his on his own with Fruville and in Charlege game, you know, blows up, you know what I'm saying. So he becomes

his producer too. Like all at the same time, there's not many people like that, dude, bro when it comes to when it comes to music.

Speaker 2

From organic regular ship, that's.

Speaker 3

Like yeah, yeah, he asked, that's who he is. As a person man, like a real uh incredible individual.

Speaker 2

Bro. What did you learn most and what did you enjoy most about Chadwick?

Speaker 3

Yeah? Man, I mean look, I learned most most from Childwick, bro patience. I talked about this a lot, man, But he was he he was a person who moved at his own pace. You know. He was from the South, Uh, he was. He was. He was quite older than me and Mike, you know, so when we worked with him, he had he had not an advanced maturity to him. He was also dealing with with with life or death circumstances that we did not know, you know what I'm saying,

So it was heightened. But he changed my life, bro, like like like like you know, he was the most He was a meditator and then a martial artist, you know, and and he was he was extremely in control of his ability to focus. You know what I'm saying. When you were with him, he wouldn't the type of dude to be checking his phone and and to be distracted. You know. He was the single most focused person I

ever met, you know what I'm saying. Like like it was looking back on it, it was incredible and it's something I aspired to Bro, to be honest, like to be able to be that present with people. You know, you know what I mean. He would take deep breaths if you gave him some information, you could I could see him. I could see him locking in like like you know what I know, you know what I mean? And again like a serious, serious martial artist, like he was a

hooper coming up the athletic mindset. Bro. You know you know what I mean? Like you know you know that you know that game? Bro? Like like it's a clip, Bro, The closest thing I seen in Chad, Bro, Like this, this is gonna crack you up. The closest thing I've seen in Chad is a clip of Cam Newton, Bro, Like you know, he got his, he got his, he got his whole thing on online, his networking, and and it's a clip going around and him breaking down a play call, and and and and you see him listening

in on another play call, Bro. And you see for a split second like he's listening to the play call, and he and you seem change, like he becomes unblinking you know you know what I'm saying. While he's listening to all the plays and he snaps out of Okay, So what this is is that like that was chat at all times, Bro, like he at all times he was he had that he had that focus of like a quarterback getting a play call in like the fourth quarter. You know, you know what I'm saying. It didn't matter

who it was. Bro. I got seen him with children, Bro, when he was doing charity we're doing charity events. The kid will come up to him like, mister bas can't get your autograph, you know what I'm saying, And you'll see that same level of focus he had that ship for everybody, you know what I'm saying. To see a guy who was close to our age, who was able, who was able to manipulate that you know. You know what I mean was that was the biggest thing I took from.

Speaker 2

Him, Broe. Deep rest in peace man for sure. Centers different, Yeah different. I didn't know what to expect, you know what I mean. When we got we got a chance to see it a couple of weeks ago, we couldn't stop talking the whole way home. I mean, we're where did that the idea of centers come from? Obviously out April eighteenth. Yeah, make sure you check it out. Robert Johnson. We did a little studying on him. We dug in

on that there's some urban legend in him. Yeah, but talk to me about the thought processing and you're putting that project together.

Speaker 3

It came from from from a lot of different angles, man, but the most focused angle level was my relationship with my uncle James, uncle James Edmonston. So like, so like, bro, where I came up. You know I'm from. I'm from essentially two places in the Bay, which is like it's like sacrilegious to say where we're from, but it's my reality,

you know what I'm saying. Like, my whole family's from Oakland, and I was born and raised there up up until I was about once my wife forget me, and my wife is here, but I think I was either ten or eleven years old. But in the nineties Oakland was getting expensive and they couldn't afford to buy a house that was from So right around time I was ten or eleven, they bought a house in a city car Richmond, which which is you know, give or take ten ten

fifteen minutes from North Aukland. I was where I was living at before, and they and they bought the house

and they we basically had been there since. You know, some my little brothers barely remember Oakland, you know what I'm saying, But for me, it was home, and it actually kind of saved me, bro when the funks kicked up, when the beefs kicked up, Like my Ouaklean hummies knew knew me as having moved to Richmond, and then my Richmond homies to this day they considered me from Oakland, you know what I mean, you know what I'm saying.

So it kind of saved me from a lot of you know, from a lot of from a lot of how bad it got, but a lot of my formative years, like my like I would say, my humility, you know what I'm saying, I learned from Richmond. You know what I'm saying. Oaklands many things that ain't a humble place, you know, you know what I'm saying, Like, uh, but

Richmond is you know, you know what I mean. It's a little it's a little like a slightly slower lifestyle, but it's also like it's also like arguably more dangerous, you know what i mean. Like and my uncle after we moved to Richmond, my uncle bought a house like like maybe a ten minute walk in Richmond from from where he was from. So that was my only other family. I was in Richmond, So I used to be out there. My parents was cool with me walking to his house.

And that was when I got old enough to have a little bit of independence for me. Like I would walk and walk down there to his house to sit up under him, you know, just to get off from under the under the house and in his thing when he was off work, you know. And he was a World War two ved and he worked in the steel meal and all type of you know, but you know he had he had a more chill job in that era. And when he got off work, he liked to uh either watch or listen to on the radio the San

Franscot Giants. He would spend blues records on vinyl, and he would drink all Taylor whiskey, you know what I'm saying, And if the wishy was cold enough and the song was good enough, I might get a story about Mississippi,

you know what I mean. And each one of them stories was crazy, Like like I thought that my uncle was g you know what I mean, from the from these stories and like like he had to he had to he came to California on the run, you know, you know what I'm saying, because he had got into it with his with his white boss or something, you know, you know what I'm saying, and had to had to flee in the middle of the night. And that was kind of like my introduction to blues music. I didn't

think of it as my own. I thought I was just my belonging to something that belonged to my uncle, you know what I'm saying. And you know, fast forward to me getting a football scholarship and then deciding to go to film school. You know, these decisions, they took me away from my family, you know what I'm saying. You know how it is.

Speaker 2

But you're missing a lot of things.

Speaker 3

You know, you're on the road. You miss your birthday, you miss a wedding, you know, you know, you missing funerals, right, you know what I'm saying. I was in La working on Creed especially all the twenty fifteen is with my uncle's health took a time for the worst when he got diagnosed with turning of cancer and and I'm in Philly away from him, and I'm in La finished up the movie. When I get to the call that he died,

you know what I'm saying. And man, bro, it brought me down because I felt guilty, you know what I'm saying, Like like it's like, man, what is this what is this job?

Speaker 2

Bro?

Speaker 3

That's that I'm you know, I'm fucking around with an editing software in a computer.

Speaker 2

Bro.

Speaker 3

My uncle is don I'm not even able to be there with him, you know what I'm saying, And that guilt associated with that, Bro, I missed so much from that house, bro, Like like basically everybody from that house passed away. Man. Like the only Ogre's left is my is my auntie, Auntie Wendy, you know. And I missed.

I missed all all of the last moments with the people because I was because I was pursuing my dream, you know what I'm saying, Right, And I would find myself playing all blues records when I thought about my mom, and I was listening to him in a different ear

like now that he was gone. Like I'm studying the music and getting into it heavy and and sometimes I'm listening to it in the dark, and I feel like he right there, he right there listening with me, telling me about the records and you know you got a game, bro. We talked about Nick twenty twenty one. I'm listening to a lot of Dolf, you know, he gets murdered, and I'm in the South working on at the two. I'm seeing cotton farms for the first time in my life

because I'm in Byron, Georgia. You know what I'm saying, uh, And I'm thinking about this thing that happens to us as gangster rap fans, that we sadly become a cousom to of an artist being monumental and influencing our lives and rapping about navigating the same things he navigating, and they succumb to it right like like you said, you got Park right here on your hand up there. Before Park got married, it was a dude named Seagram from from the six nine Ville in Oakland. Who's Who's who

was like the first gangster rapper. You know, Hammry was gangster, but he wasn't making gangster rap, right, you know what I'm saying. But Segrim was making that you feel me like you put you put Seagram on And he got signed with Jay Prince to rap a lot and he got married, you know, basically right when he was getting on and then you and then he got part you know, and then you got mac dre, you got Johnny Cash, you know, you got the Jacker, you got countless young dudes.

You know you know what I mean. Rest and peace, Kenny Cherry, can he clutch the hood? Reci peace? Tightway from the ridge? You know what I'm saying. This is constant like this, this flood of bodies. You know what I'm saying, that's lost and with Nip and doff. It hurts so much because it was my age and I thought that they made it out, you know what I'm saying, Like I thought that beat, you know, twenty five, twenty seven, you know, they rapping luxury rap now about their businesses

and their kids and then boom boom. You know what I'm saying, Back to back. It put me in a mode of of of studying the musician, you know what I'm saying, And and and the type of music that was coming out that my uncle listened to. You know, I interrogated it, you know what I'm saying. And that was really where you know, where the idea came from for the movie. It was all of those things and coming off of spending so much time making you know, two comic book movies in a boxing movie, and you know,

I wanted to make something original. You know. I was really from my soul, you know, and about what I'm interested in before it was too late.

Speaker 2

That's interesting because hearing you break it down, you can feel it.

Speaker 3

Yeah, the movie one hundred definitely in Louvig Bro his father, you know, he from Sweden. Bro His father went to name him Albert for Albert King. His father was that heavy of adulta blues fan, you know what. You know what I'm saying, And when I researched the music and I was like, I really got into like, well, my uncle loved it so much, you know what I'm saying. I realized that this was this was maybe our country's greatest contribution to the arts. You know what I'm saying.

Delta blues music. This music became it became rock and roll, it became R and B.

Speaker 2

It became him a different genre.

Speaker 3

It became you know everything that's that's that's cool now and has been cool for the last you know, sixty years. You know, it started right here with these with these people. You know, you know what I mean that concept I said this is a massive concept. I gotta shoot this on the big cameras. I gotta bring all my homies that that that that really are really good at this filmmaking thing. I got to bring him to the South so we could we could spend six month making this,

you know what I'm saying. And that's what we did.

Speaker 2

Where did the vampire twists come from?

Speaker 3

I love horror movies. People didn't know that about me, you know what I'm saying. I was actually it was actually like it was actually your point of shy is man when I realized, like I've been making movies over ten years and people still don't really know.

Speaker 2

Me, you know what I'm saying. But that's your fault not to cut you off. You don't like you don't like this. This is not your thing. I mean before it wasn't like you don't like that. You like you like being behind the.

Speaker 3

Scene like year, like God, God bless you, bro. I can feel right right right right.

Speaker 2

That's one thing I always expect, Like you never because this is the first like I've been asking you ship since I started this ship to sit down, you know what I mean. And that's just and you're like, it's not not right, it's not really It's never really been your thing. And I like that you are giving the world an opportunity to see this, you know what I mean, because I got a chance to, you know, get a

little snapshot of it. And like your mind is like the way you think and the way you carry yourself is dope. And I'm glad you're opening up to people.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I mean this project, this project is definitely worthy of you, Bro, from my standpoint, like you know, and it needs the context, you know what I'm saying. Like without without the context, I think it still works, you know, you know what I mean. But but I think the context can deepen it, you know what I mean. I'm thankful, Bro.

It's you know, look, Bro, I'm a in Frouville. You know, I was twenty twenty five, twenty six something like that, and Bro was being thrown right through me on Pierce Morgan, Bron. You know what I'm saying, Like I'm twenty you know what I mean. I had my media training, Bro, I'm fresh. I'm fresh at the film school.

Speaker 2

But straight from us, straight from the Bay.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I'm on seeing it. He asked me about gun violence. You know what I'm saying in America, you feel me, and there was no all the smoke yeah me for me to come shit down. And you know what I'm saying with somebody who really uh understands me. You know what I'm saying, I understand understands my situation when I'm navigating right, you know, somebody who understands part more than just just the songs he made. You know I'm talking about like understand when I say Oakland or Richmond, brom

not you know that. You know I'm not talking about Virginia. You know what I'm saying, like, no, disrespected to Richmond, Virginia. You know what I'm saying, like like salute to them, but it means something. I I have media outleased like this. You know who get it? You know? Following that, yeah, you know you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2

Definitely proud ourselves on that talked to us about was it stacking.

Speaker 3

Smoke your smoking stack? Yeah?

Speaker 2

You was able to to clone Michael b What was that ship? Was that first? Because I was in that I'm not gonna lie I was in that bitch high I'm.

Speaker 4

Like, yeah you check, yeah my own So what did I loved the idea because again, I'm a dad of twins similarities but also huge differences.

Speaker 2

So talk to me about identical identical twins.

Speaker 3

Okay, So it's beautiful, bro. Yeah, Auntie Maryland and Auntie Curlying, that's my aunties, my mom's older sisters. And they was notorious and our neighborhood, you know, identical twins, identical twins with the ship and they whipped ash like so so so it was it was you know, it was, it was you know, I came up under them. So I was born into a world that had identical twins. And you know what I'm saying. My mom's sisters, one of them was my godmother, you know what I mean. And

to this day, that house she came to visit. So the yellow houses where my Auntie Maryland live right next door to the Blue house. When my Auntie Curly leaves, they live side by side, Bro, and they're seven years old, best friends and worst enemies. Yeah, at the same time. Nobody will talk more ship about the other one than

the No one else can say nothing, Bro. My wife, Bro, my wife's first one of her first meetings with them, like we was in high school and they drove her to uh, they picked her up from my high school graduation because we got back together right before we finished up high school, right and man, she got off the off the car b her ay as big as fifty

cent pieces. Like, Bro, these two women hate each other, you know what I'm saying, because because they argue the whole the whole way, but they can't be with all each other, you know, you know what I'm saying. So I was born into knowing that dynamic. And I've always been, always been sensitative to to to twins. Man, I always loved them. But the crazy part about me is I also have a phobia of doppelgangers, you know what I'm saying, Like, like you actually call it a little bit of it.

Because I walked in here today and one of your one of your one of your crew.

Speaker 2

Members was was in that room to different space first.

Speaker 3

And and I introduced myself to her. And I came in this room and she introduced herself to me again. So I was like, I was like, man, stop everything, Bro, did I did I? Did I just meet you just now or did I not? You know what I'm saying. And she was like, oh yeah, I was me and I was in the room I'm like, all right, cool, you know because my because my worst nightmare is is experience.

And you know what I'm saying, that doppel ganger so so so just I got that on like like comomy with them myself and me so so me putting twins into the movie was a part of that. You know, you know, every neighborhood I come up in, they got a set of twins. Everybody knows, you know. And I wanted to play on a lot of like the mythology you know, you know, what it means to be African American.

It's also when I was doing my research on the subject matter West Africans, like you know, our our lineage as African Americans has an interesting relationship with the concept of twins. It's a europe but deity to Europe with deities that are that are that are identical twins, and you know, we over indexing the birth of fraternal twins, you know. So it's it's it's it's a real uh uh thing, you know what I mean. And I wanted to I want to put in there.

Speaker 2

That was what do you hope people take from this project? Then?

Speaker 3

Number one, bro, all people just have a good time at the movies like I hope people go. I hope people go with their friends and their families, man, take dates, you know, you know what I mean, Like like I want for me, I want to bring back that that cinematic experience, man like, like for everybody, that feeling of you know, talking to the screen and yelling and don't do it, Yeah, go outside exactly exactly, We're not back, you know, you know what I mean. And a lot

of movies that that that do that. Man. I think I think Jordan's there's a phenomenal job of that, you know, each time you put something together. But it was for me, it was it was it was about making a movie that can be experienced with the big audience. And at the heart of it, you know, like I said, Bro, it's about these people you know who are us? Man?

They us just just just in the thirties, you know, and and and then them you know, through the act of them affirming that humanity at a time and when when society wasn't trying to let them do that, they created this incredible art form and it's culture around you, you know what I'm saying. Anytime you go into a night club today, still that that's the core. You know that started here.

Speaker 2

That's the core.

Speaker 3

You know I started there.

Speaker 2

You know what I'm saying real quick, I want to backput it real quick because you too. So that was your auntie's house you took me to. Yeah, so there's a big tie to the Black Panthers. Free lunch at the school was right across the street.

Speaker 3

Yeah, Shanta Fe Elementary. You first stop sign the first stop signing to.

Speaker 2

Briefly briefly running through like what what you showed me that? Yeah?

Speaker 3

So where I'm from and where my family is from. Man and my uh my granddaddy who was born in Mississippi and moved to Auckland. You know where he built the second story of my family's house. It is in it's in the Herd North Talk and I'm gonna give

you the exact crosstreets my family. Yeah there, but but it's in the fifties and around Market and on fifty fifth in Market, there was an intersection, uh, in the in the in the late sixties where a lot of a lot of young black children were being hit by cars because the traffic situation wasn't set up right and they were going to the city to try to get them to fix it because there was so many accidents in the city. Didn't care, you know, because it was black,

it was black kids. I was that was across the street getting hit. And one of the first major moves that the the Finch Minister and UH uh Hu p Newton and UH and Chairman Bobby Shield did as found the members of the Black Party was they they made their own stop sign and they put it up right there on fifty fifth and Market. To stop sign still stands. There's traffic right there as well now. But that my

family is from that block. My uncle h Buzz, you know, was one of the original Panthers and folks a lot of folks don't know that that that western North Oakland was kind of like where they you know, the original the original stomping grounds in the school that my whole family went to. Uh that's essentially you know, across the street from that from that called Santa Fe Middle School, and I was where you know, you know, we're one of the first free lunch programs was carried out for

children in the community. You know, that's I grew up in.

Speaker 2

No, I appreciate you showing me that was there was some history Uh.

Speaker 3

It's heavy over there.

Speaker 2

I enjoy.

Speaker 3

Yeah you can still you can still Finery, Yeah you still you can still Philly.

Speaker 2

Man, it's definitely a live Yeah. The depth you go for each film and and how you embrace yourself, whether it's a community or whatever the situation. The topic is football is natural to you. Will we ever see a football film?

Speaker 3

Man, God willing bro Absolutely, we need something, absolutely bro Like like you know, the time ain't got to be right, but yeah, not like the first script I ever put the paper was that.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and let me be like an assistant coach or something.

Speaker 3

Man, if you're with it, I'm with it. Man. I love the link like like it's it's you know, like football is so so cinematic, but it's also such a regional sport, you know what I'm saying, Like like I used to always be jealous of Who because like, you know, you got the Olympics, you know, you know what I'm saying, like worldwide spork it the spork and travel, man, football takes so much equipment and coordination and you know, you know it's it's it's it's just starting to travel a

little bit. But but you know, I don't know if it'll ever be like like soccer or who you know, it's more like hockey that way, you know. So, but you have a lot it. I love to make a a football movie. Man tart my hand at.

Speaker 2

It before we get you added, what do you judge? What do you base success on it? As far as your project.

Speaker 3

Film is an art form and it's a business. You know, it's both things at once. Uh. And unfortunately, you know, you know, we live in a in a in a capitalist system, you know what I'm saying, globally, you know, and the business drives you for film, having success in that category will will be the most direct dictator of whether or not you get to do another one, you know. So so obviously you know. And then and those metrics are very clearly defined, you know what I'm saying. Uh,

you know so, so there's that aspect of you. Uh. It's also an art form, you know, and I believe it's a language, you know, and I like, like many languages, you can be conversational any you know what I'm saying. Like you meet people who say, yah, I'm I'm conversational in Spanish, you know, you know what I'm saying, They

might not be able to speak with themselves. But that can maybe uh speak a little bit and that can that can then you meet other people can say I can understand it, I can't speak it.

Speaker 2

Right.

Speaker 3

That that's the global population. The global population can understand cinematic language, you know what I'm saying. They might not be able to speak it, but they can. They can watch a video or watch a movie and take it there, take it in and feel the emotions when it's done. Will uh I'm I can say myself fluent in it like I can. I can speak it, I understand it,

I can write it, you know what I mean? And the judge for me is, can I make a movie that entertains people, but they also feel the emotions that I'm feeling while I made it? You know what I'm saying. If I was sad when I was when I was writing writing something about characters, if they watch this in their eyes choke up, you know, their eyes tear up. I mean, they say, they get a lump in, they

throat all right, man, That's that's that's success. If if I tell a story and after the film roll you know, you know, you know, you know, rolls, and they walk out, are they still thinking about it. You know what I'm saying, Like, do they find themselves wanting to maybe find a song that they heard or find or deeper into subject matter

and that's that's a form of success. But then the pinnacle brot Like, in my opinion, the pinnacle is if when I'm when I'm gone from here, it's still with it, They're still like that that shit, I'll never know that, you know, you know what I'm saying, But you on pace? Yeah, Pa, right, quick hitters.

Speaker 2

First thing to come to your mind. Let us know outside of you and Mike b who are some other famous duos that you respect? And the actor director.

Speaker 3

Was about to trip to the sports p Yeah, yeah, my bad, you said actor actor and director Paul Thomas Anderson and Dane Day, Lewis Fike and and then Jil Tony Scott and Denzil Derek She and France and Ryan Goslin. I'm gonna I'm gonna fucking butcher her name Greta Gerwig and Sorr she wrote how you say her Irish net Huh, Sorsha Roll Rowland, Chris Nolan and Killian Murphy, Marty and Leo Marty and Bob the Nero Edgar Edgar writing and Simon Pegg needed the Costant test to Thom Sheen.

Speaker 2

I don't know if you're superstitious, but if you want to put the Who's one actor you'd like to work with? Still?

Speaker 3

Yeah?

Speaker 2

One album you could listen.

Speaker 3

To our repeat Me against the World.

Speaker 2

Mm hmmm. Your fondest sports memory maybe your top two or three favorite sports sports memories.

Speaker 3

One is j v who hitting the game winner against San le Andro kicked our eyes like five games in a row. Yeah, yeah, yeah, shout out to my hommy, Sam Cheetah. Second favorite memory is catching my first touchdown in college on u C. Davis on sophomore year. I was I was at Davis. Called it in the kind of route its post corner, Yeah, the cost corner. It was good coverage too. At the top of Homie threaded my homie, my homie O. This Amy was on the other side. He ran on the other side. This came O.

This came and met me, celebrated with me. We got a picture of that. I think he got that somewhere. But that was a good I was a good catch, good throw while Ryan letting him. I can't remember the corner back. He was buff as fucked though it was. It was hard to block the whole game. I can't believe I beat him. My last greatest memory was uh,

I called it well, I tipped. I tipped a hail Mary against Northern Colorado my senior year, and my homie Tony Washington caught it, uh on the on the back line of that he was down five take it back to score for It was a hell Mary zero I think probably like forty eight yards out. And I was, I was the I was the hell of married guy. And you know I'm five nine, bro, so like, and it was a dB that was I was. That was maybe Jason side is like sixty three trimming me the

whole game, bro. And uh. And we had practiced that the hell Mary the day before we got on the plane. Bro. And I'll never forget this because I think about this all the time. We we we ran to play and and and and how that hell mary worked. It's three receivers run to the same spot and the quarterback thought it was basically we had a jump ball in that spot and and that damn practice, Bro. We we all got there at the same time because it was on air,

and it dropped it in front of the three. It's nobody caught it because I thought my homie Tony was finna get it. He thought I was gonna get it, you know what I'm saying. And the other thought that thought that one of us was gonna get it. And it dropped and we was like damn. And and our college bro ripped this bro like he ran in Marshall Spurback was his name. He ran in, Bro, and he was like, hey, it's just like it same, the same for joking around. He's like, look, man, Tony, you go here,

and he put Tony up front. Ill homie, I can't rule it. Might have been, might be mohammie Philip Perry from door shey high Uh Like, Peroy, you go here, And he said, coogar, you catch it. And he says, man, and if you can't, if you can't get two hands on it. And Tippy Bro twenty four hours later, Bro, he game on the line, Game on the line, Bro, And you know it's loud in northern Colorado was cold, and they say, man, we running the hell of married Bro.

And I'm like, all right, And he sat in a quarterback, young dude, Bro, it's freshman, he said, Bro. I think I can. I think I can get it there in the end one man and uh. And then Tony look at me. He said, Bro, if you can't catch that motherfucker, tippy, Bro, tippy you know what I'm saying. Alrighty bet, and they thow that ship up, brought that big giant ass corner was shitting right there, Bro, and I jumped and he

trying to jump smooth too. I got up, Bro, and I realized, Bro, I couldn't get two hands on it, because you know you can. You know you can always jump hard. And I'm a one foot jumper, Bro, so you know you always go higher if you jump, if you jumping here and here man, Bro, I tipped that ship, Bro, and I thought I was finna get it like I tipped it, and I'm like, oh, I got to play on this, and the big fuck fell on me, Bro,

you know what I'm saying. So so I'm going down, Bro, and I'm watching the ball drop, BRO and my nigga Tony slid in bro Brand basket right and he didn't know he was in, but looked at him. Bro, and I looked up at the ref and the reference looking at me dead in the eye. He nodded, like, yeah, Bro'm just what you're thinking. Bro, lift their hands up bright and I don't remember else. Pandemonium.

Speaker 2

Let's gonna be a part of the movie. Part of guarantee that.

Speaker 3

Your part of the pandemonium. Bro. Yeah, last question, yeah, m J Kobe Bron.

Speaker 2

What's your order me? Yeah, m J Kobe Bron?

Speaker 3

Am I taking bias of it?

Speaker 2

Take out and put up whatever you want to?

Speaker 3

I mean, look, bro, what am I ranking? Like? What in your opinion? Brian? Okay, I'll tell you why. Because he did it with social media and it's just the devil. Bro, It's just the devil, like cameras everywhere and and and him being on the cover of Sports Illustrated when he was a teenager. Bro. Like Jordan had to deal with that. Kobe had to deal with that too. But but but it wasn't as advanced as it is now for him

to have navigated it. And bruh, none of them had to play Steph Bro like like like like like they're like, you know, the closest, the closest, The closest inj had to Steph was was was Reggie. You know what I'm saying. The closest Cob had to deal with Steph was was Ray You know what I'm saying, Like like the fact that Bron like gott got got you know, got full rings in a in the Super Team era. You know what I'm saying, when Cash is clicking up, you know,

you know what I mean. And even though he participated in that, you know what I'm saying, but still and in that Steph in that in that Steph like three point shot era, you know what I mean, change the game, like the fact that he the fact that he was able to and also you know, be a be a be the be, the story, that heat that he is with all this, with all of the mind fuck that is the Internet. You know what I'm saying. Mike, we just saw Mike when he was playing. You know what

I'm saying. I was was it like he can know he could go be, he could go be, he could go be who he was off off off camera, and you know what I'm saying, So I got I got. You know, it pains me to shay that bro because I love I love Mike and I saw that I saw the second three people Mike. I didn't see the first three p Mike. I was before my time that that's just crazy dominating, you know what I'm saying. But

but I caught him like post retirement basically. But in terms of like who is a better player, you know what? You know what I'm saying, Like, that's that's impossible to different also just like different body types, you know, you know what I mean, Like like like like Brian is a is an unfair type of specially you guarded, you guarded to it to a three, So like you could you could tell me who was more who's more difficult to guard.

Speaker 2

Difficult for me to guard? Was? I mean, I don't get me wrong, Brian is great, but difficult guard code because there's more reaction to your mistakes. Yeah, bron is fast, strong, and if you're there, it don't matter. He can go through you or over you.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 2

But Kobe was more like attacking the foot, attacking a hand, attacking.

Speaker 3

An angle tactician and then once if you.

Speaker 2

Caught up to him, here was shot blew.

Speaker 3

My mind meeting him was how big he was? How big he was six six? Yeah, big fucking dude, like like like like you know, to be as quick an as so Koby was more more tactical. Yeah, absolutely, Yeah, that's that's that's that's what's that feel like? Bro have it's the best?

Speaker 2

Like I said, I mean my job every night was to guard the best.

Speaker 3

Like did you ever guard Ai?

Speaker 1

No?

Speaker 2

I didn't have to guard. I don't want them problems.

Speaker 3

Problem brow I think about I think about that, I think about cold, I think I think about getting the rings. Yeah in the AI.

Speaker 2

Era, Yeah yeah, that was a problem. Have you met him? He's little.

Speaker 3

Just over over zoomed. Okay, so person, I seen even person. I was in the nose bleed at the All Star Game in two thousand and two, two thousand and three when it was no nice two thousand two in Oakland with the dunk Vins bench stuck in the arm in there. That's my scene. And because because because what happened with Ai. It was was when Vince was going through the he

he had his last attempts. People don't people don't talk about this, but his last attempt was a free throw dunk, and Ai was the first one to walk to the He walked, he went on the baseline and walked to the free throw line and laid down on his stomach to see to see if he could if he could if he could witness where his foot was when he jump, and when he did that, everybody did it, Like every everybody went, everybody went laid down next to him. So that was my only time seeing Ai in person. You

feel me. He that, But that game one he had against.

Speaker 2

Crazy, that was the only game the Lakers lost the whole playoffs.

Speaker 3

That's my top sports performance I've ever seen. Bro along in there like forty two mom two eyes Bro, when he stepped over, when he stepped over to Bro. Oh yeah, I.

Speaker 2

Want to thank you. Bro. It's been dope watching your journey and your humility and humbleness and willingness to help and still find a time for people and just being cold man making great projects. Right, it's dope to see you kind of leading away, and we wish you continued success and love and blessings. Bro. Appreciate you, man, no doubt.

Speaker 3

Man speaks to the planet.

Speaker 5

I go by the name of Charlamagne to God, and guess what. I can't wait to see y'all at the third annual Black Effect Podcast Festival.

Speaker 3

That's right with coming back to Atlanta.

Speaker 5

Georgia, Saturday, April twenty sixth at Poeman Yards and it's hosted by none other than Decisions, Decisions Man, d B and Wheezy.

Speaker 3

Okay, we got the.

Speaker 5

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