Love Tough ft. Nile Evans (pt 1) - podcast episode cover

Love Tough ft. Nile Evans (pt 1)

May 03, 202240 min
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Episode description

B. Simone and Justina Valentine get their chance to turn the tables on Nile Evans, Executive Producer of Wild N’ Out (you were missed, Vee!). Nile recalls the first time he met our hosts during their auditions for Wild N’ Out, and shares why he swears by “love tough” while working. Then, Nile shares his own Wild N’ Out origin story, and why he trusts Nick Cannon no matter what.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to the women. While in our podcast, you got baby Girl, Bobby Body should girl be? What y'all go? Pretty? What's up? Yo? We're back your girl Justina Be with Pretty D and D Somebone, what'sbody kill you? Show? Hello, ladies and Ja. Tonight we're gonna have the women a while and I'm podcasts on the cars, Baby gel in the baby buds that listen. It is the Women a while in our podcast, it's your girl be Simone and I have my beautiful rap freestylet killer co host Justina

Valence sin Be. What's up baby? You know? The queen of Manifest Station. Okay, across your radio stations, this how's your going? Didn't refreshed over there? Y'all. Y'all ca I have on a robe, robe number one, and she had on her a little under eye. What are those things? You know when you wear a lot of makeup, they like deep puff you and I will be. I had what a week um by accident, I um, you know, working on my movie and I come home one night and sitting on the couch, it's a clear jar of

the watermelon candies and I love those. Those are like my favorites. So you know, I'm I'm tired. I'm not looking where the pat came from. I just opened the jar. Yeah, I start popping them in. I started chewing them. All of a sudden, my man says, you know you're not eating those? Oh my god, they were edible, edible, And it wasn't incredible because I felt like a vegetable. Just a cloud of dread, a drape of dread came over me.

And when I tell you, he was tripping, I was tripping my goals off the entire night, shaking, teeth chattering. It was for I don't know about y'all out there, but I hate edibles. At your boyfriend trying to help you, girl. He tried lines to me, which I get why he did it. He tried telling me, oh, it's just CBD. You're bugging woke up in the morning read The first thing he said is this is not CBD. It wash all right. And he probably just trying to calm you down.

He was, because it was like the anxiety on top of knowing what I ate. But I was definitely tripping. I got no sleep on a week where I already wasn't getting sleep, so I was not happy. And then you know, I went through oh yesterday on no sleep, but I got through it. And you know, here we are women a while and out podcast and that's what we do, like we're resilient women. We get through it, get do it, get up. And it's the movie. I've never done it, edible. I can't. I be gone regular weed.

I would do it. It's terrible, you would hate it, like you just have no control over it. I wanted to tell you what saw my v a boo oh yes, what happened for me? So good? He came to Atlanta. I stayed with him for two nights at his home house and Telly, we did not have sex, but did you You showed him but it wasn't from he was coughing, but it wasn't from COVID. I get it. Um is he a good kisser? He is like kisser. Oh my god.

I just him so much. He's supposed to be coming back next weekend and he's just you don't probally value in men um something that I really value in him self control and discipline. A man to me a man without discipline, and so it's just lost. Like if you don't have any discipline in structure and like you know, self control. It's like you're just frivolous with every kids, to the job, to sex, to whatever mean money, you know.

So I love that he is just so disciplined and self control because I wanted to do it and he was like, you said you were celibate, and you said we were taking Yep, he was like, you said you were celibate. We said we were taking this slow. So, you know, like anytime we you know, as adults, we both know as a girl and a guy, when you rushed into ships sometimes it can be bad. So wait to see. You know, we're still dating and seeing how

we like each other. We obviously like each other a lot, but you know, just trying to get to know the heart before we get to know. I'm so happy for you. You're all smiley and excited. Well, it sounds like the vibes are good. And speaking of good vibe, Justina, are you excited about our guests today? You already know this is my favorite guest of the season, you know what

I mean? Like, I don't know if we have enough time to run down all the credits, but like executive producer Day one, Nick Cannon's right hand man, Mr. How you play we're making cuts. Mr. Who wants these episodes? Oh my god, what is it called? Navy seal? Whatever you go through when you're going through that training, That's how I feel. I was about to be in the military, right. The one, the only is my second dad. I literally

call him dad. I'll be texting him my dad. It's like, I'm like, I got scammed, Like help me, I need lawyer, help me. Somebody trying to sue me. I need I need help? Like what do you think about this? He's like any time I call this man Texas man, I get an instant response no matter what it is. And mind you, I do check on him, but nine of the time is because I'm in a fucking bond. Like I texted more than I text my real father about emergencies, you know. But this has turned into my you know,

industry dad, and I just love him so much. Our producer for a while and out you guys, Nile Evans is him literally, So it's crazy. It's crazy now like to have you in the hot seat because it's like you executive produced, while now you executive produced the podcast, so you're always the one like giving us a rundown on what we should be doing. But now it's like today we get to pick your brain. So your brain it's a very cool thing. Yeah, I love it. I love I love having the opportunity to to be on

the other side of it for for a change. So you know, this is how do you feel being interviewed your celebrity today? Being interviewed. I'm always the one writing interview questions or or you know, setting up the interviews, but never on the other side of it, you know.

And so it's it's always a different feel when someone's asking you stuff, and then you're vulnerable, so you go, oh, man, I don't know what they're gonna ask me, and I didn't prepare any prepare any questions for myself, so I don't know what you guys are gonna ask and I know what I put both of you through, right, So now we know who you are obviously, But how did you start your career in TV? Like tell us the beginning,

how you met Nick? You know, well, the history, because I don't even think these new kids like obviously we we we it's a generation. I grew up watching Wild and Out. But these younger kids that are you know, preteens, are younger than us. They don't know the history. We want to hear, like when you were an intern ile, Like what's up? Bring us back? Tell us how you met Nick and how you started in TV in the beginning of Wild and Out. Don't know, that's kind of

a three part question, but tell it's the beginning. So I started off underneath my uncle who was His name is Bentley Kyle Evans, and he created the Jamie Foxx Show. He was the executive producer at the end of Martin and so he was shown and he ran. He ran that show. He was the youngest black executive producer to run two shows at the same time at the age of seven. Yeah. Yeah, My aunt was She was a producer on The Parkers and a bunch of other shows.

So it was in our family. And I grew up in l A, so you know, it was it was around and so when I was twelve, my uncle took me to see do the right thing and I was like, oh, this is what I want to do. I want to be Spike Lead. And so later on when he started working in the industry, I wouldn't be like you can. I read the script for for the Martin Show and I would read it, and I was like, this is what I want to do. And so I was in college and he said, and I couldn't go back to school.

I had a hardship. My dad didn't pay the tuition. So, uh, you know, I was playing basketball. I wasn't playing basketball anymore, so he had to take care of the tuition. He didn't take care of the tuition. So my uncle said, I'm gonna give you a choice. I'm doing well, so I could either pay for school or you could come start working. He says, you gotta make a choice. Call me back. Called me back within twenty four hours. And uh, and I said, I need a tire from my car.

I said, I'm gonna come back down, and I'm gonna come down and start working. And he sent me a couple of dollars for the from my tire. And I was sleeping on this floor at at his house. And I became a production assistant on the Jamie Fox Show. So yeah, so, um, you know I'm now I'm now I'm in the Hollywood shuffle. Um no degree um, and so uh, Will Smith comes to my uncle and says, yo, man, I got this kid man who's dope, and he reminds me of me, and I want to do a show

for him. You want to collab on the show. And so I'm like, oh, snap, Will Smith coming you about? You know, some some little kid. And so we went to go to the company. We we we went to the improv improv on on on in Melrow on Milorrows and he says, uh with Will Smith. No, Will wasn't there that day. That was so right, there wasn't. So uh. So we go to the improv and we see this young kid on stage killing and he's murdering. He's sixteen years old and we meet him and uh, and my

uncle's like, yeah, let's do this project. And so, um, you know, we started the writing process and I'm kind of a fly on the wall and the whole thing. But Nick's wasn't Nick Cannon. It was Nick and so I forgot that part up. Yeah, so so it's a young Nick Cannon and and so, uh, you know, we started the writing problem, says and I'm kind of a fly on the wall, but Nick is Nick is young. I'm young. I'm twenty years old. Nick's six team about

to be seventeen or something like that. And so I'm like, big brother to him because he's like, oh, a young voice who understands me, you know, and so we kind of vibed on that and Nick, you know, Nick was like, man, give me your number. And Nick was like a super persistent kid, right, and so he'd be like he'd called me, he be like, yeah, man, what are you doing. Let's go to lunch and did it. I'd be like Nick

And then Nick, that's just who he was. And and he lived with Keenan at the time, Keenan Thompson, and they had crazy I mean, this kid had Remember I remember, I'll never forget my uncle had a range Rover and this was like when range rovers wearing like a new thing in LF and Nick was like, yeah, I'm getting a range Rover and I was like yeah, okay, And two days later he had a black range Rover and I was it was like that's right, fine, blow right and this you know, and so um, you know, he

was really doing it. He started off doing warm up over at Nickelodeon, and he was he was a budding guy. And so my uncleland Will Smith ended up party ways over there about the show. Um, they just had differences of opinion and but Nick and I stayed uh in contact, so you know, I was I was working on other

pilots and stuff. And then there was a writers strike and the industry kind of shut down, and so I was working at an insurance company and I was working there for about a year and one day Nick calls me and says, Yo, man, I got to stand called drumline's about to drop and I just got a record deal. He's like, man, what are you doing. Like, I'm working at this insurance company. I'm doing little pilots here and they're still working in the industry. He says, Yo, man,

why don't you come on the road with me? And you know, kind of like you could be my assistant slash security. Slash road managers say, you're a big, scary looking dude. Yeah. He was like. He was like, I just need somebody to come over something and just look after me while I'm out. And he's like, I trust you. And so I was like, man, I want to be a writer, bro, I just I don't. I don't want to be that. Ain't security. Yeah, I don't want to do that. And so he was like he's like, look, man,

we'll write stuff together while we're on the road. He says, I promise you will end up doing something big. I promise you that. So the next day, the job calls me in and they're like, we're laying people off. And so Nick calls me the next day and he's like, yo, Di, did my manager call you. I was like, I was like, no, nobody called me. You know. Sometimes it's just Hollywood stuff. Oh, man, don't want to do this thing, and then it never

really happened, and it never happens. So it's literally the day I get laid off the next day and he's like, man, manager didn't call you. I'm gonna put him on three way. I can't get ahold of the manager. So I'm like, now I'm packing up my stuff leaving that night. Literally that night the manager calls. He's like, yo, man, you gotta flight to Denver tomorrow to meet Nick. You're gonna be on the road, so pack a bag. And I

was gone for a month. Wow, I've never made like I probably made twenty six thousand dollars that year, And in that first month I ended up making forty grand And I became a stylist. I did all these different things for him everything. Yeah, and and then um. And then I was on the road for a couple of years and uh, and then you know, we ended up

writing a couple of movies together. We sold to Overbrook to Wills Company, and then you know, Nick was doing a lot of TRL stuff and MTV was like, oh man, we gotta do something with you and Nick and Nick. The next day we went back to l A and Nick said, this is what we're gonna do. We're gonna do an improv comedy game show. We're gonna do Whose Life? Whose line is it? Anyway? But black our version of it. And I was like, oh man, I thought we was gonna do a sitcom. He was like, no, Like, this

is what we're gonna do with trust. And that was when I learned you gotta trust Nick at all times. What year did our drop? Two thousand? We did the original pilot in two thousand and four. Wow. Yeah, and I came off the road. Yeah. Yeah. My son the first season we did the show, my son was born, so I always know how old the show was. Son of the same year, like my son at sixteen. Yeah, So you know what that that story reminded me of the Kanye West documentary. That's one. Yeah, I envisioned like

that ship is just crazy. Like y'all had a vision, y'all had a plan, y'all were literally manifesting thirty years ago. Is the biggest manifesto in the world, Nick is, I mean, in the world. Nick told me he was gonna before he had ever met Mariah Carey. He says, if I he told me this verbatim, if I ever get in a room with Mariah Carey, I'm going to marry her. And I laughed, insane, You're like left. And then two years later, I'm the best man watching this man Mary

Mariah Carey. We used to exchange books on the road all the time. We just do a lot of reading. And so he gave me this book called Name It, Claim It, and it's now right now, and it's all about manifesting. It's all about if you name it, you can claim it. And Nick believes in this and every time he says, when you say it, you will bring it to fruition. Everything that man has said he wanted to do, he did. I believe it. I believe everything

it happens. Everything, I'm manifested, my wife, I'm manifested all kinds of things in my life. I'm manifested my house. Yeah literally, Yeah, that's just it. It's crazy, like twenty years ago, you guys started this idea and it's still going strong and honestly arguably bigger than it's ever been, Bigger than it's it's ever been left came back. It's

like what insane? Insane? You know, my first time going to the Wild and outour, I didn't understand the capacity of I don't think I understood the impact it has on culture until I went to the tour. I didn't understand it until I'm sitting in the Staples Center where Kobe the house that Kobe made, and I see all the way up to the top sold the Staples Center, and I'm sitting in the audience like a fan, like I don't believe that I sing, I helped be a part of this thing, and it was. It was from

the ground up, from from the ground up. And what's crazy is like with Wilding Out, what's so different I feel than like most other shows are just brands. It's like our age range of fans is really from like four years old to like a hundred and four you're great granny and like the kids, like the young young kids. How do you how do you create a show that goes through like so many generations generation? How do you do that? Like, I can't even name another show that

has that impact on all the generations. Yeah, it's nuts that it it's you know, it's one of those shows that is like, you know, to me, it's a it's an urban version of SNL. You know, it's like our hour Saturday Night Live. It's approving ground for people to come on and be stars and showcase their talent and you know, you know SNL they what they were there

thirty some years or something like that. Like, I feel like this is the same type of show that's a legacy show that could keep going on and on and on and on. Yeah. So since you've known Nick for so long, what do you think it's the biggest lesson you've not learned from Nick? Trust him? Trust him, even if you don't believe it. You just gotta go. Like I've learned, I go, all right, man, if that's what you want to do now, I will tell him. I'm one of the only people that will tell him a

real opinion. I'll be like, no, you shouldn't do that, but but I will really trust him. I will all the time. I'll be like, Na, this is not what we're doing. But if I if he believes in it, I go, all right, I'll take the ride with you. I will take thee There's always something there because because it's not about the money, it's because I know he has a great vision and he's a visionary. That dude.

It's gonna he's gonna go out there and get it, and he can see something and when he sees it, Alright, y'all, it's getting good. We gotta take a break. We'll be back with the women while now podcast with our producer now Evans. All right, we're back from our break and it's your Girl j V with my baby be Simone

and we got now Evans in the building. I'm gonna just say right now, this is one of my favorite episodes because we get to hear from the Boss, a man himself who started the show with Nick Cannon like twenty years ago. And it's been so cool rocking out and hearing all the details of your life. Now you raised us, and it's cool now we get to hear about you. So before we get into the Juicy staff, I, me and Justina are gonna share our first memories of you, and then I would love for you to share your

first memories of us. So my first memory, my first memory of Nile was auditioning for a while and out, um well, after the audition, my first memory was the workshops. So my first year workshops, y'all, let me tell y'all something. Workshops were not um easy. It was like a boot camp. It was very serious. It was very militant, and I respect that to this day. But when you're in that moment, your first season, it wasn't like it was my THURSD season,

my second season, my first chance at this ship. That first season of workshops was very stressful for me. I cried, I laughed, but Nile pushed me to my limit. And now, looking back in hindsight, of course I respected. I value it. It really made me, you know, the comedian I am today. I think that workshop prepared me for stand up. But y'all, I was scared of this dying gonna line like yo, like when I say sweating walking in there, like, don't

talk to me. I'm focused, I'm practicing. Nile was not, y'all. Now, he's like a little you know, a little Teddy Bear before he was like a greatly be right that first My first memory of Nile is him being like very militant, didn't take any bullshit, but it was because he was pulling the best out of you. And I truly believe that is why that workshop that year, and wild and Out in general helped me become the comedian I am today. That workshop was very intimidating. I'm not going to you know,

the workshops are tough. It's it's one of those things where it's approving around. It's it's we're trying to see you're going to be able to stand up to the rigors of this show, and you know, and a couple of you know, I think you had a couple of goals at it, and it was yeah, yeah, and I'm really um. You know, I love comedy, but I want people to get it right. And most people don't or have to, you know, they just they work on their

stand up set and they're just naturally funny. But when you have to be funny on a team, it's a little different. And so I have to kind of coach and kind of help you out and help you understand the games and how the show works. And so, and then you're dealing with a bunch of comedians and rappers and everybody wants to be funny and you gotta be like, let's listen, let me explain this game to you so that you could play it the right way. So you know it's it's tough, but you know you made it

through and you you are. It really is like the workshops really are a war zone. And like even to this day, there are certain vets conceded who like literally will do anything, um and everything to avoid a workshop because yeah, that really is a place where Now I was like, I don't care how many seasons you've been on. I don't care. How do you care, I don't care how good you are, Like you know, this workshop is determining your episode. Um you know how many you get.

But for me, when I first met now, I'll never forget it was when I auditioned. It was Nile and Shelby and it was just me and them in the room, and yeah, they had me do like a certain number of games, like they had me do like um, let me holla um. And then now I was like, okay, well I know you could you know freestyle. We saw the video so I want you to freestyle right now about so he was not, yeah, something weird something, So

he said that. I was like, okay, So I came, I sang a hook, made a hook, and then I made a whole song with a whole story, like whole storytelling. I was on my nas ish and I just knew you could from the second I met Now, Like I knew he was like the guy in charge, like he just has like he's just a big dude with a powerful voice. I'm like, okay, he's the one who's about to make the decision if I'm gonna be on the show. But I knew at my UM audition, I just knew

I smashed it. And then he was like, I don't know if you remember this. Now you were like, okay, now, I want you to do a wild style go against Nick Cannon. I was like, and I asked you, I said, Nick's gonna see this, right He said yeah, I said, give me someone else, So he gave me Um. He gave me Meek Mill. So I did a wild style against Meek Mill. And you know, that was the very first time I met now, and he definitely, like you said, but he definitely has that that coach vibe. He's running

the place. He's very authority, authoritative and or have you said the word authority out of love? It's out of love. It's out of love because he truly, truly believes in you. Yes he does. And I've always been on teams, so I I love having a culture. I worked well having a coach and someone given directions. So I've always loved that about Nile. Don't get me wrong, he is scary at times, but I love how he's that very strict, stern like bring you in, gonna give you the tough love,

but but get you right. Tough love is the way I kind of give everything, and it's all out of love. It's the first it should be love tough because it's always starting with love. But you know, a lot of times in the industry, people will tell you, oh yeah, you're you're doing fine. Oh yeah, okay, no, that was great, that was great, and they'll tell you that was great, and then you go out on stage and then you

realize it wasn't great. And so anybody to go out there and me not be honest with them and me say that didn't make me laugh. You know, you'll hear in the room. If it makes people laugh, and it does, let's try it again. And what you know a lot of comedians never really have is a coach or anybody to say that didn't work. They go on stage and they find out if it worked or not, and hopefully they figure it out and go let me retool, rewrite

that joke it up. But you realize that a lot of people stay in the same place because there's nobody pushing them. And so I just always want to push you, guys, to the fullest of your potential, because I know what it is. If I'm on you, that means that I see something inside of you that I know it's great, and I just have to I just got to help pull it out of you. And I'm gonna tell it down. I'm just gonna challenge you at every level. I'm gonna be like, just oh, if you don't want to get money,

that's fine. You know I don't want to If you don't want to be great, If you don't want to get money, that's fine, you can have a seat. I'd be like, I have you know what it is people are used to yes men, and you're like the furthest thing from that so people are not always used to that. It could be a bit abrasive. When you're used to people just telling you you're great, then you get an Evans telling you you're good, but you could be better.

Because at the end of the day, if you're in front of Nile, you have something, you get some saying. So if you're there, you have something. If you're there, you are great, you have talent, you have something. But now it's like this ain't enough. It's twenty of y'all here,

we only need eight. But who want to say? And if you don't create a competitive environment, then people just think that I could just walk into comfortable, you know what I mean, And I go, when you're a starter, when you come in every time and we know you're gonna play all the time, then you can kind of rest a little bit. But until then, yeah, you're fighting for the spot. And so it just makes people step up.

And when I see people step up, and I've seen both of you step up to the fullest of the capacities, and I go, oh, look at that look with that little bit of okay, yeah you had to cry a little bit, Yeah you had to be talked to in a way that you didn't. You're not used to because see you shot up here, you're a star. But in that workshop, I go, I don't care about any of that, all of what you're doing now, be like I don't give a funk about your YouTube view. You're not baby.

I'd be like, oh my goodness, audition process for for for for the phone, everybody on the phone and and do something. But TV is a different thing. It's a different beast. And even like the season now where like you guys brought in like a lot of influencers. You know, basically what you said was proven, like you can be great when you have your phone and you could do fifty takes, but you were like, can you be great once in front of an audience not being able to

chop it up? How you like, can be great the first take? And that's real. You could, you could, you could shoot you know, you're when you're in the room by yourself or with one of your friends and you can do it over and over again. Yeah, it should be great. It should be the funniest ever should be you know, if you're putting it out, but if you are, you know, if you're in a room with ten other people who are just as talented as you, and you know, you have to show that you're a cut above. You know,

you have something different. You are not running the mill. And I think that's where people get caught up as they go. I could just be average, and I go, well, the stars usually stand out, you know, some people were being average, you know, like you know when you see a d C on the fly, I was like, oh, that's that's Lebron James coming into the league. For I saw Justina, I was like, oh man, what's some coaching. I was like, because she's a rapper. It was she's

gonna be fine. And you know, Justina, Justina went through it a few times and we used to what we used to talk to you about all the time. Oh, that I wouldn't shut the funk up. You just keep wrapping, keep wrapping. Remember that one workshop where they twisted my head to kill me and I was dead on the floor, and that I just keep wrapping. They're like, may not.

That moment was when I knew you got I understand. Yeah, I understood because I was like, you're wrapped because you know how but I know, and I feel like that's what you do now, Like with all of us, like you're kind of your hone, our craft and what we're good at and just show us like can you have it? But you need to be polished, like you find us a little like you know what I mean, a little diamond and the rough and then you clean us up and then you know, we just people that get it.

Take the ball. Yeah, we take the ball on with it after you give us the playsure some people. Some people need more. Yeah, we gotta take a break. Stay tuned for more of the women. While our podcasts don't go nowhere. We got more questions for now. We're back about it. It's your girl. Just seen a balance on here with my sister be Smelling And we have a very special guest with us this week, the executive producer

boss Man The Wilding Out Dad not Levins. Okay, so wa'ts your first memory my first memory of O I'll go he wants to be first, be nice. So I remember seeing b Simone and I remember I remember I can't see how your hair was. Your hair was actually down the first time I saw it, and I was like, oh, she's she's cute. Um, she's kind of funny. Was this in New York? Now? I think this was in New York, and I was like, there's something there, and Nick was like,

there's really no you know what. Nick at first was like I don't see it. He didn't believe. And you know, Dolly was the one that was like, nah, there's really

something there. And I was like, all right, Polo. You know, we didn't have a we didn't have a lot of you know, it was hard to find a really funny female at the time, and not that there aren't funny females, but we weren't getting them, and so that that fit, you know, and so it was like, you know, you were buzzing a little bit online and it wasn't I remember,

because I remember you were. You were buzzing a little bit, but you when you came back another season, we were like when the be Simone tone came, it was that was it. That was why, that was it? And so I remember you had you. I think we we we we gave you a few episodes and then I don't know if we let did we let you go? And then you came back and let me go? And then you came back, and then when you came back, it

was you were different. You came back with and then when I saw the stuff online, I said, because I was like getting cut again, Like y'all got me said, you said, you were like, I've done this too many times. I'm not getting cut again. And I was like that that was the energy that I wanted. That's the point. That was at the point. That's the energy that I want. And you were like, I've been here too many times. I'm coming in and you smashed the workshop. You smashed

Who was that in Brooklyn? I was scared. Yeah, he came in and you smashed the workshop, and I was just like, oh, next level that Still Nick was still like Nick was like Nick was like for a while, he was he was he was on the fence for a while. He was like, I don't know if I see it. I like her. I don't see it though, And then and then you just had that breakout season and it was just like okay. And then sometimes it takes a while, because you know, I'm the same way

with some of Nick's picks. I'll be like, oh, then't cool, and they're like, okay, what you're saying. Once they get on stage and deliver and have fun and you know, yeah, and once you got it was just it was. It was out of here. It was like oh and then almost by that time, you were like I'm ready to leave. She was like, she was like, she was like might his worldwide? She's like, baby girl, use me or down,

I don't care. You know what it is, No, wilding out is always family, Like you never get enough scenes now you always want to come back always. But what it is is I think, um, when I started doing stand up, I fell in love with that ship. But while didn't not prepared me for that, Yeah, it really did. It prepared me for stand up comedy that is a

different fucking world. Like getting in front of thirty thou people like, you're either going to hear a roaring wave of laughs in an arena or you're gonna hear that fucking cricket and be like what the fuck you know that?

And you get to prove yourself on stage and know a lot of people, you know a lot of a lot of comedians are like, oh, these influences, influencers come in and then and then they start doing stand up and it's like, well, if you've been on the wound out stage and dealt with the either the booze or the you ain't mother the buzz the mother, you know, dealing with laughing at you because you had a bad joke. Trust me, going on stage, It's gonna be easy after that, right,

You're fine? Fine, It just like sharpens your swords. Like even like you know when I did the Five Things of Death on Sway and I was the first check to really spit of real freestyle. I just came off a season a while now. I was like, you were doing this two weeks straight. What you want to talk about? I don't need nothing rain, Come on, give me. You're just gonna free style. This is what I do. Like, I just came off a season one, like I just can't from like what you want to hear about. Remember

that first the first season that that we had. You just see and I was just like and and that first audition I can almost remember exactly what you had on because you had your hair was back. Bun always tells me to wear it. I love it, And I remember I remember you came in and I was like, oh, she's got it. We're fine, We're fine. I remember being like, no,

you're good. She she wrapped because I was like, I'm a toast strewd election and then you killed it coast shrewd and then you killed and I was like, okay, you're good. And then we got to the workshop. I was like, okay, you can wrap, I get it. And then I was like, all you could wrapt, I get it. You gotta get to a joke. And that was the thing that I knew. I was like, you have this amazing skill. If we just work on this getting to a joke part, we're gonna be fine. And you know

something you did. I don't know if you remember of this, So you gave me the toaster shoal right when it was the audition, just you, me and Shelby. So then the next audition we did was because my first audition was single, I don't know how years was be but the second audition was a group of us, like thirty. Yeah, so Nick was at that one. So we did a bunch of stuff and then you gave us a topic and then you gave everyone like a minute to make

something up. So everyone's in their phones. So you went around the room and when you came to me, you gave me toaster shrewdle again. And I didn't want it because I wanted some new and I didn't even remember I said. I was like, oh, I was like, I think you might have gave you that my first one. So you looked at me, You're like, oh, this bitch is really about this action. So then you gave me

like a whole new topic. And then you know, that's what I did was I was like, I saw what you did with toaster shrewd and yeah, and so I was like, in my mind, I was like, you got it. Yeah, It's just it's here for you to lose, and I don't want you to lose this so again, and then I think she was like him, yeah, and then I think you had did I give you something else? Who

gave me? You gave me a name brand. I think it was like Gucci or Fendi or something and I and of course I did a long free style about and the rest of the room was like when I was done, they started clapping like is it on iTunes? Because you know, I went crazy and then us and it was just like, oh just sold. Me and Nick were already sold, and it was just like okay, well there it is like. But then it came to wild style and everyone was scared, so I let a few

people go then I went be someone. I did the machine gun just across the whole line. On the other team, nobody wanted that smoke. I was like, let me go, and I remember Nick went down the line gave everyone dash, but I was the only one. He sits unto. He's like, where are you from? I was like Jersey. He was like, wow, Wow, it was. It was a done deal. It's been so dope getting to know the boy man now Evans even more. But you know what, it's a lot more things that

we gotta get into. So we're gonna be back next week with a part two. Make sure y'all tune in to hear more about the executive producer of Wilding Out and the women of Wilding Now podcast now Levins. We'll see'll next week

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