Ashanti (Unreleased Full Interview)

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I was talking to Scarface the other day and you know we were talking about you know what's been happening Ferguson and the Eric Garner situation and everything and the first thing he said was that he feels like he's back in the 60s absolutely it is so scary and it's funny because I've been wanting to post something ever since it happened and I Haven it because I'm like I don't know if I'm too emot you know I'm trying to like be levelheaded when I post what I really want to post but I'm going to post it and it's it's it's so sad because we are going backwards you know in it's a reality and it was funny I was talking to one of my friends last night and it's like our generation we have so much power to touch so many people but who who is the leader that's going to really get a bunch of people together to take action on what's Happening and what's going on you know what I mean so it's like is who's going to call who you know like is it Jay is it Nas is it like who game who's going to call who and say listen we all need to have a big huge meeting you know what I'm saying and somebody needs to do something you know the protesting I feel like it's amazing and it's causing awareness but it keeps happening you know what I'm saying like you hear another black male getting shot or murdered it's like it feels like it's happening every week now you know what I mean so it's it's it's scary because we don't have a Martin we don't have a Malcolm we don't have the Black Panthers you know what I mean so it's like where do we go now we have the power who's going to be the one to strategically put everything together or the two or the three or whoever just to unite it and and you know cause some action I mean do you think that Tupac was the last leader in the black community I definitely think in the generation of Music hip-hop not only hip-hop music you know as a whole I feel like he definitely was the last one to kind of just have that impact you know that that to be able to articulate and touch someone and be smart and and passionate and and everything that you know he was saying it just he was so far ahead of his time you know if he was here today I think things would be really different really really different so I kind of do think he was the last one to kind of really have that power you know and to want to go out there and make a change and be able to make a change I mean why why do you think that is and you know I mean Tupac uh passed I mean what what year was this this was 90 like 96 was it somewhere around 96 I think I think so yeah something like that I mean you're talking about 20 years ago with all all the success that hip-hop has made no one's even really stepped close to that Arena maybe Kanye to a certain degree that's probably the only person I could think of but why do you think that no one really touches this I think sometimes people get scared of politics I think our generation has become very laxed and very comfortable with the way things are I think um our generation is selfish if it's not directly affecting me you know what I mean um what do I do about it you know what I'm saying um it's hard people you know people are more into jewelry and Instagram and you know whose wraith has the most the most stars in the ceiling you know what I'm saying like it it's it's it's kind of sad it's kind of sad um I don't know it it it it I again I just feel like if it doesn't directly touch you you're not going to do anything you know to execute you have a new project uh that's already released the Christmas album yes a wonderful Christmas with a Shanti okay so tell me how that came together um it's crazy because I shot a movie last year with lifetime um called Christmas in the City and they actually when we wrapped the movie they were like oh we want to use some of your Christmas music to put in the film so I was like okay cool that'll be great and my Christmas album which I released in ' 04 was under murdering Death Jam so we went to get approval to use the Christmas records and approval was denied so I was like what and I said all right I'mma go in and I'm going to make five new records and we're going to put those new records in the Christmas movie so that's what we did and um it ended up being a really good thing it ended up being a really good play for me you know and it helped me create my relationship with Lifetime and that turned into the EP for the album the Christmas album so it all kind of made sense we did the new Christmas music put it in the movie and I said it doesn't make sense to have these Christmas records and not have them available let's make an EP so that's how it happened and now you also do a lot of charity work yes I do a lot of charity work okay tell me about that um I actually just did the Today Show today and we you know collected the toys and uh it gets donated to toys is it toys fats I think it's toys F tats you know all over I work obviously with the Boys and Girls Club of America I work with domestic violence and um I mean I just feel like it's really important to always give back you know especially when you're in a position to help other people out um I think it's it's part of you know having that power quote unquote to use it in a positive fashion now you actually come from a family you know that that's been involved in in your community I mean your father was like a civil rights activist my grandfather actually oh that's funny you be doing your research yeah my grandfather um he was the best man he ran for mayor in my town um he was head of the NAACP he integrated the firehouse the police station um he oh yeah he made a daycare center uh uh for the underprivileged I actually used to work there when I was in high school um yeah I I come from a an amazing family of like powerful leaders uh he actually marched with Martin Luther King um and that you know it was a blessing to kind of have him as my grandfather you know so yeah that that's a very significant thing I mean what did he tell you about marching with with MLK well I was obviously very young and I just remember there's articles about it in my house my mom my aunt they have and he was holding up his shoes and you could tell that they were like really beat up and worn down and you know he got spat on and you know pushed around and they were throwing rocks and all kind of things but from what I was told you know it just meant a lot because he knew that he would would be making a difference for his children and me and even my children to come you know what I'm saying so he felt like it was something that was was so strong and and and obviously would help change everything so last year there there was a rumor that you were going to go to YMCMB I heard [Laughter] that um any truth in that there was a lot of um there were a lot of conversations um I spoke to baby a lot and we were we were working on some stuff um I spoke to Wayne a lot I'm speaking to Wayne now actually um and I think I think that um I think it's really important to be very careful with your business you know what I mean um especially nowadays and uh timing plays a lot into making moves and strategically just aligning everything um so we yeah we we had a lot of conversations you know uh Chief Keef tweeted about you not too long ago uh oh what did he say Chief Keef said I need a Shanti and she need a young N word I do remember that he is crazy oh my gosh yeah I remember remember that I took it as a compliment thank you any possibility of this ever happening probably not you know I'm I'm so not on that path right now I'm I'm Braveheart blinders you you and chief Keefe would be a real interesting couple I mean you know I know if you if you're if you're in need of publicity of any sort coupling up with Chief Keef will get you all the publicity you ever need for the rest of your life I I can guarantee you that I'm sure he has quite a few to choose from he's all set at the time of of murder inks you know at the very height when you had singles all over the charts ja Ru had songs all over the charts like what was that time really like for you um some of the most amazing times in my life you know and it's funny because I kind of appreciate it now more than I did when it was happening because now I completely understand it just growing and understanding the Merit of the music industry um man we had some amazing times it was oh this is funny I was again I was talking to somebody last night and I was like remember you know you used to get in the car with the driver and then used to have the hits magazine in the back you know and you flip through and it was Shanti J you know one and two one one one and two you know what I mean and um mhm it was and it was like you could see it's number one in Switzerland and number one in Hong Kong and you know what I'm and um it it was just it was it was historic it was classic you know um and it was a time where music just felt good you know it it was different it was a whole different feeling it was it felt like it was more love you know um it was fun it was it was a lot of fun you and J Rule always seem to have just this great chemistry together you know when you guys work you know um you know I'm not always there when you call just a very very Timeless song and so forth what do you think establish that kind of chemistry um it's weird I think when the very first murder ink video I did was P City and that was with Cadillac Tai so it it's me Vita um caddy blackchild obviously and J and at the end of the video we were all just sitting on a block and me and J were just we just clicked we just were talking like cuz I'm I'm cool I'm cool in the gang you know like I was always with the boys I always ended up being the only girl kicking it with the boys and um we just clicked it was just I don't know I I don't know what it was and it was so organic and it was so natural you know and once we started doing records together you know it's funny they used to think that I I had a ghost riter no one believed that I was writing my records so they used to make me come into the studio and write in front of them because I used to like to take my stuff home and write in my little basement and um once he found a respect for me like yo she wrote that bon bon wrote that it was like Wow and then we kind of would just always feed off of each other you know and was again it was always just organic now you're really big on Instagram mhm um would you consider yourself a thirst trap I mean listen some of the some of the pictures kind of kind of I have to say cuz you know there's a lot of Ashanti articles that end up on Vlad TV based on just Instagram photos and let me tell you there's a lot of thirsty dudes in the comments look I I would hope that's a good thing no just um I mean I don't I'm I'm not trying to trap anyone I'm not trying I guess that's the key word here you know when you just you know you're chilling and you're posting your little pics it's a difference you know than looking thirsty and looking like you're [Laughter] trying I mean you know you do know that certain pictures get a whole lot more likes than other pictures whole lot more comments yes this is true it's no surprise what those pictures are this is true now you know I mean the one thing is obvious is that you're in great shape you know how do you stay in shape you know as you get older you know what I'm going to keep it all the way 100 I have to give a lot of credit to my parents my jeans because I K you not I haven't been in the gym in like 2 years yo I swear the last time I was in a gym I think it was like before I started shooting Army Wives and um I was I just been saying like I got to get back in the gym but honestly I eat I eat pretty well like I don't really eat fried food I don't eat red meat I don't eat pork um and I do a lot of juicing you know like kale and spinach and fruit and all of that stuff um but I plan this is my New Year's res resolution I plan on getting back in the gym next year who do you think is a is a better twerker you or your sister oh my sister let me tell you about my sister and the dimes they get rat [ __ ] n they definitely they definitely get their twerk but see no one's ever really seen me twerk for real and no that's not an invitation I'm not about to turn around and do it all right one of these days I'm show I'mma show a real twerk so your sister so your sister definitely out twerks you though in private behind you know no cameras let me see behind the scene we may almost be even almost I think she's still got it though I still she still got it over me a little bit once the hate was coming in and and everyone saw the beef with 50 it was like everyone you know people become fickle and they start swapping sides so regardless of how fire a record may be if if if the fans are not into you at the moment they're not going to buy into your brand they're not going to buy into your music you know what I mean and and it's it's like a fad it's crazy you know and that hey that Karma don't play as we see you know what I mean like it it happens to everyone so I feel like for me personally I feel like I've always tried my best to put out Quality Music and music that makes sense for me like staying in my lane and and doing things that yo that's that's an aany record you know at the same time as trying other things that's different a little bit out of the box but not anything too crazy and I feel like the same with Y you know I feel like the quality of music that we put out and we put together I don't think that we it's not we didn't stop doing that I think the people swayed to the other side at that time you know what I mean and and and that's what happened have you and 50 ever run into each other after all that yes we have a few times we R to each other a few few times I'll never forget we did a um a show in 106 in park and it was I don't know why bet would schedule us on the same day to perform so it was Murder Inc and gunit and it was like 30 of us and 30 of them and we were so busy trying to avoid each other like you know we had our escorts in security and they had their escorts in security and I guess we were both trying to go the back way to avoid each other and ended up in the same spot backstage and that was one of the most tense moments I was just like oh my gosh what's going to happen I have on heels I kind of want to do this it was really crazy but surprisingly enough nothing popped off it was like we were walking like this down the hall and it was only one way to go and we kind of met up it went like that and um I'm just very grateful that it was peaceful and nobody moved nobody got shot I ran into him um it was very rare back then that I was without the boys you know um very rare and maybe the one or two times that I wasn't with them um I'll never forget we were in La doing a Christian Dior event it was myself Whitney Houston Bobby Brown they were like here I was sitting at a table here and 50 was here and one of my attorneys was here we had security whatever and he had like tapped my attorney and was like yo tell Shanti is nothing personal it's no beef you know I respect her I respect her music and you know this has nothing to do with her you know what I mean and he told me and I was like I didn't know what to say you know we we didn't directly have that conversation he said it to my attorney my attorney said it to me obviously he didn't know that was my attorney but it was like okay thanks you know what I mean I don't know and then the next time I ran into him um we were at the VMAs in Vegas and I think this was like 0 6 s somewhere around that whatever time oh it was the one that um oh gosh what's Pamela Anderson's guy Tommy Lee and Kid Rock had the fight because I was sitting right behind uh Kid Rock when he cocked his fist back he almost hit me with his rhinestones in his jacket but it was that time and Nelly made 50 apologize to me in front of the entire audience and it was it was really it was funny and at and at that time it was like okay cool you know no beef no harm no foul we're all good nothing water under the bridge and that was it wait so 50 apologized in front of the whole audience what did he say exactly he said Ashanti I'm sorry I'm sorry Ashanti all right I'm sorry and everybody started laughing what do you think kind of caused the decline of Murder Inc I mean I think it was pretty obvious you know um being federally indicted I'd say but but they beat that case though the damage was done you know what I mean like that went on for a long time obviously the beef with 50 and J you know what I mean um it was it was a lot and when you think about it me and Jos were the most successful ones on the record label so when everybody was making their disc records or whatever it's not like me and J was going to make a disc record together you know what I mean everyone else they were doing you know whatever they were doing on the other side and it was a whole lot of darts being thrown so it's kind of like him being the the big star you know caddy and black child but again it was kind of like me and him so it didn't make a lot of sense for me and him to collectively do something together towards someone else so you know Joe and Jada and you know other people but it it it was it was it was a really crazy time you know again I don't I don't want to get too much into the politics of it all but again envy and and jealousy is is a is is a mean trait being bitter is really me it's it's not a good characteristic so what's coming up next what can we look forward to from Asante H obviously working on music um actually one of my my my good family members is here ELC Hut and he's he just rolled up somewhere and um we're going to be working on the Tupac film we're going to be working on that um and hopefully we'll be shooting my next record scars off the Braveheart album which has been heavily requested from the fan um I don't know I just feel like it's it's important to still continue to keep visual visuals out there and content out there you know it's very different obviously than it was years ago so you have to like keep putting stuff out and it's people accuse me a little bit of being a hoarder you know I have like 60 records 65 records that I recorded for Braveheart and obviously we only put those was it 13 12 13 on there and um I'm kind of getting to to a point where it's like we should throw I have enough music to throw out at least four mixtapes at least so um yeah is that part is that part a little weird for you you know what I mean like you know I I remember you know not to bring him up but I remember when I talked to Nelly you know he said look back in the day I would give my label a hit record and then everything else was done and I'd have a Hit album and I'd make a ton of money and then go on to the next thing but these days it doesn't quite work that way even with a with a hit song The Hit album doesn't necessarily go with it and now you have to do mixtapes you got to throw out free music and Etc which you never had to do when you first started right absolutely I I definitely agree I feel like you you have to work four to five times harder and it's like you get less in some situations it's less money less appreciation less recognition whatever you want to call it you know less um publicity you know platform whatever you want to call it um you have to do so much more to just maintain you know whereas again like like you just said whereas before it was simple you know it was simple you put some money behind this you put little visual to this throw it out there and you know and and but now it's it's a lot more work it's a lot more work yeah I mean you also see independent labels going to number one like for example mamore did it that hasn't happened really In Our Lifetime up until now it's it and it's it's it's crazy because you know when when I was put in the position to choose when I left not left but when we put out our last album um on universal back in 2008 after that deal was over from 2009 to like 2011 2012 I was offered seven record deals from majors and it was one of the most one of the hardest things that I've ever done to turn away and walk away from each deal and I just couldn't stomach the 360 you know what I mean so ah so that that's what it was it was all 360 deals during that time absolutely abolutely they were 360 deals and I just felt like you know not to say I just felt like for what we have created and what we built with my brand and Foundation I'm I just didn't feel like for the label to take x amount of percentage and not bringing things to the table it just it insulted my Integrity you know what I mean so I was like oh n we're going to do this on our own and we're going to make it work we're going to make it happen and I was was so scared and so nervous and now people kind of want to jump on the Indie bandwagon you know what I mean because what's happening is you're working the same amount you're still receiving less money um the the radio people are the same the pr firms are the same you know what I mean and and you have less control and even if someone sells a 100,000 on a major and someone else sells 20,000 on an indie that ,000 is probably going to get you more money off those sales you know what I mean because it's a it's a very different percentage and for me right I was just very very blessed and very grateful to have a number one Indie album you know my first time out on my own record label you know being distributed with E1 and everything but we we definitely as a team we worked so hard you know and and it was a lot you know being a female it's very expensive hair makeup glam clothes shoes jewelry cars is it's a lot you know a rapper could throw on a t-shirt a chain a watch and and some Jordans and he's cool with the album coming out under your own label um are you planning on developing and having multiple artists and so forth you know what I I definitely have been thinking about it um I think what's most important is to make sure that my stuff is correct so that I'm in a position to really do the right thing for another artist I've been shelved before and it's the worst feeling ever um but I do have a couple of ideas as far as signing different kind of artists you know not your regular R&B singer rapper whatever but something just a little bit different out of the box and um I feel like if it works it'll be amazing so we'll see well you know I heard that uh V Gotti needs a our job heard herb has a great ear you know hey I don't know how good it is now I know I know it was amazing you know back when we were all uh when Murder Inc was popping um well I mean even Beyond Murder Inc I mean IR Irv was really instrumental in in Death Jam absolutely he was cuz remember there was a super group that was supposed to happen called Murder Inc which was J Ru Jay-Z and DMX yep absolutely were you around during during that that time no that was before me I was still a fan of everything but that was definitely before me but yeah I mean Irv and that whole era that whole movement was so huge for hip-hop you know just the music and the three of them alone and how they have implemented and and and struck a cord with our culture you know it was it was phenomenal you know what I mean and um you can't do anything but respect that was VV just completely involved in all your projects on murdering um first second and third album definitely definitely like we we had a great chemistry just bouncing ideas off of each other um he definitely pushed me the hardest you know and I think it was because again I was like the only girl amongst all the boys and he used to like make me battle for Beats like if I like to beat and J like to beat or if I like to beat and a black child like to beat he' be like all right whoever writes the hottest hook can have it you know and I what but um it it it only Made Me Stronger you know he used to make me write over hard hard beats and it's crazy because that's what I loved you know when I was coming up I appreciated hip-hop you know and I loved what Mary did because it feel to me she put the marriage together between hip hop and R&B she was able to sing and melodically create records over hard beats and that's like that's my joy my love like that's what I absolutely love so for me to end up with Murder Inc it was just a blessing it was like it was supposed to it was supposed to be you know acting wise what's going on with you um I shot a film called stuck this summer it'll be out uh I think Summer 2015 um and it had Oscar winning Amy Madigan in it and Jean Carlo espacito and it was an amazing experience you know kind of just to be with such amazing actors you know I was kind of like a sponge soaking everything up from them um the story is it's very relevant today it it actually it takes place in a New York Subway and it's six people from different ethnicities being stuck in a subway car in the summertime in New York city so your obvious stereotypes you know tension and arguing uh comes out and um it it kind of puts it kind of puts it on Front Street that we've a long way but we have so far to go and it's crazy because with everything that we were just talking about earlier you know with all of the murders that have been happening recently that's another thing you know it just throws it back into your face like we have a long way to go you know um it was really cool though it was adapted from a musical and um it's different it's it's kind of like a musical combined with uh a regular feature film and um it was good I think people are going to enjoy it I mean how how similar you know in terms of you know artistically is it you know to go from singing to acting cuz you've seen you've seen a lot of you know a lot of female singers make a make that transition you know like um um Whitney Houston for example you know made a an incredible transition and and excelled in both MH you know do do you feel it's a similar Craft um I feel for me um I love it I have a passion for it I feel like to be able to be a different character but bring yourself to that character and what you who you really are and to bring you know talent and and spice and Pizzaz to create something else under the direction of someone is is really cool um and I feel like it's important to pick projects that um that put you in a light that shows your talent you know um and that you're able to take the responsibility of whatever it is that you're doing like I wouldn't necessarily when I first came out like you know movies and scripts and things came I wouldn't necessarily want to be the only star to have the whole entire film on my shoulders you know what I mean like I kind of took steps in and picking roles and characters and things like that because it's weird people sometimes people do not differentiate between the character and who you are you know like you'll see somebody and I can't stand him he killed such and such and such in that movie and you know it's it's a film you know that's not really who I am so um you know I think it's important um and and I think you just really have to put your heart and soul into whatever it is that you do you know you know it seems like you've been very picky with your roles you know I mean because you you only see a Shanti come out every so often and it's usually a good role like you know I mean it doesn't seem like you're just taking every role that kind of comes across your way and just work nonstop in Hollywood like that absolutely um I definitely take pride you know in in how I'm represented and trust me we've we've turned down some stuff the checks were great but you know it it wasn't a great representation so you know that's a decision that you have to make you know as as a boss as a CEO as a person that you know is kind of in charge you kind of have to be like take responsibility for you know these kind of decisions and I think it's really important also to Branch out and do things different you know you don't want to always be the same character you know I did a sci-fi film uh for the Sci-Fi Network this year year also and that was completely different for me um but it was cool you know and it was great to add to the resume you know and um it opens up a lot of doors and it gives a chance for Hollywood to kind of see your your other sides are there any roles that you turned down that kind of became big roles by someone else doing it you know like for example like I I was told by someone that um before Tupac died he was actually supposed to have Will Smith's role in Independence Day this again this is funny I was talking about this when I did that serious uh when I did that serious radio program the other day I was supposed to do honey the the first one that Jessica Alba did mhm but I feel like I feel like it was amazing for her you know I don't know if it would have turned out like that for me that was super early in my career I don't think I don't remember if that was my first or second album somewhere around then you you mentioned that you're working with LT uh LT hunting on the Tupac project are you producing or are you going to be acting in it or what's the what's the story with that we're doing music together he's here I mean do you want to speak to him can he come say hi yeah let him come say hi what's going on with this Tupac project oh man you know we pushing full steam ahead you know this is going to be a Tupac movie oh yeah it's it's the actual biopic you know what I mean um those documentaries all that stuff was that but uh this the actual ual you know theatrical version $40 million scenario okay okay is there is there anyone locked in director actors anything yeah uh oh we got that's that's question yeah it was a director locked in man but uh you know it's a lot of breaking news going on that's happening with that scenario uh so you know we changing a few pieces of the puzzle around you know I mean it's it's like like I tell people you know about the timing and the patience of it you know it's not a no disrespect a lifetime but you know I don't I don't want to make them type of mistakes I wouldn't do it I and I I got explain to people i' never be known that first of all I respect the culture too much and I tell people you know we only get once you know one time to tell these type of stories and it's so important culturally to get it correct you know that if it took me another 10 years I would do that you know what I mean just to make sure everything is right you know so it's it's it's more passion it's not a rush to gain monetary gain it's really a slow pace to make sure that we do it justice you know sure you know I mean cuz cuz the biggie movie it wasn't a bad movie but once it was gone it was gone like you you know what I mean it didn't carry on like a juice or a menace of society or something like that like it came it went it was cool but you don't even think about it anymore to be honest and and that's the problem that I had with the film you know it wasn't epic and and I feel like you know when you do uh different stories it should be epic it should be able to carry on because that's someone's Legacy you're dealing with and when you're dealing with somebody Legacy like you know these these artists they work their whole lives to be remembered for a certain reason you know what I mean and to have somebody come up behind them and just turn their legacy into something n or something that's almost irrelevant you know it it's it's not cool and like I said with the characters in The Notorious film some of the portrayals you know that they had you know just weren't true to form you know what I'm saying like people can say what they want to say about Diddy and this and that Diddy is a cultural icon though you know he's a taste maker you know he was he wasn't Derek Luke you follow what I'm saying in that film so you know it's it's it's a it's a hard task and it takes a long time but you know you got to get it correct you ow we ow it to history to get it correct you know what I mean in in every sense of the word from the engineers to the um the day players to you know everybody that walked in you know this thing is a look into the the window of our culture you know what I'm saying so you know I just want to make sure that we represent it correctly so that's what we doing man and and like I said this one I want you to watch it over and over and over again and say okay that was it how did the song Fool foolish come together and and how did the whole like biggy verse idea and so forth kind of assemble itself all right foolish came together one night we were all in a crack house not a real crack house that's the name of the studio was murdering Studio was called the crack house um right and Erv was talking about I don't know some chicks that he was dealing with or some girl whatever and he was just like man we could you got to write something about like a girl like you know like just she's not doing the right thing and you know she keeps dealing with this dude and I think he was like in hindsight talking about himself being a dude that was kind of messed up and dealing with the girl and she keeps dealing with him knowing that he's messed up and um he was always good for like throwing out topics and ideas and stuff like that and him and seven pulled up the dear beat and it's funny cuz puff and Irv had this argument for years you know didd he would be like those are my shakers that's one more chance and 's like nah that's the barge but um they pulled the beat up and um he gave me the idea he left I wrote the whole record he came back and completely lost his mind like I don't know if you know IR personally but he's super animated like he's running across the floor screaming yo yo she wrote this you know it was it was it was a good moment it was a good moment and before the record was completed that bridge wasn't on there and he was originally he reached out to Jay to do a verse instead of that bridge and he called him he sent Jay the record and Jay was like I'm in he said I want to get on the record and I think I don't know if he came up to the office or what but Earth changed his mind and he was like you know what that's typical I'm not going to do the typical R&B record and get the big rap of the cosign it he said I'mma make her write a ill verse and I wrote see when it get Str to leave you you know and that's how that came about now and you guys used a biggie verse on that record yes that was UN foolish that was the remix ah okay oh my gosh that night we went up to to um Diddy's studio and we sat with no Diddy puff was there we sat with puff and Harve and we were like come on puff we need the first he loved the record and we were sitting up there like please give us the verse it's just it's so perfect you know what I mean and he gave us the verse har got everything and that that time it was DS remember like the little uh yeah yeah it was it tapes yeah exactly and um I think Irv ran out the office like he stole something
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Channel: djvlad
Views: 12,841
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: VladTV, DJ Vlad, Interview, Hip-Hop, Rap, News, Gossip, Rumors, Drama
Id: WJlbz2Rz41E
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Length: 42min 3sec (2523 seconds)
Published: Tue Apr 30 2024
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