Domani, Deante’ Kyle & Terrell Carter Speak on Toxic Childhoods & Breaking Cycles | For The Fellas
BETNetworks
0:00 Excuse me.
0:01 Yeah, my guy.
0:02 Man.
0:03 Yeah.
0:03 To hear the stories that other other people deal with is it
0:06 it it it reminds you of what you you dealt with [music] yourself.
0:12 Today we're celebrating the women who raised [music] us,
0:15 shaped us, and held it all together, like mothers.
0:18 The ones who care so much, give so much,
0:21 and still show up with love every single day.
0:23 I'm your host Brian McIntosh, and joining me on the couch,
0:26 I've got the right black men to have this conversation.
0:33 First up, we got a brother who really built his lane off being himself.
0:36 No filter, no gimmicks.
0:38 Whether he's making you laugh or making you think,
0:40 his content hits because it's real.
0:42 And with his hit podcast Grits& Eggs,
0:44 he's creating space for conversations that actually matter.
0:47 Fellas, it's an honor to welcome the one and only De'Aunte Carroll.
0:50 Thanks for having me, man.
0:51 Nah, I appreciate you being here, black man, for sure.
0:53 You're having an amazing year, bro.
0:54 Congrats on everything.
0:56 Thank you.
0:56 Next, we got an artist who's not just making music.
0:58 [music] He's telling his story in real time.
1:00 Navigating identity, growth, pressure, all of it.
1:03 And doing it with intention, he's carved out his own voice while
1:06 carrying a name that people already recognize.
1:09 And he's proven every day that he's his own man,
1:11 while proving Atlanta ain't never scared with his new project Hot Seat.
1:14 ATL's very own, Don Mon.
1:16 My guy.
1:17 My guy, man.
1:18 It's a pleasure having you, man.
1:19 Congrats on all the new success.
1:20 Appreciate it, man.
1:21 for sure.
1:22 And last but not least,
1:23 we got a man who's been showing us
1:24 what it looks like to bring depth, vulnerability, and presence to the screen,
1:28 while playing our guy Attorney Bonnie
1:29 on the number one show on Netflix right now, Beauty and the Black.
1:32 He's an actor, singer, author.
1:34 Let's give it up for our guy, Terrell Carter.
1:36 Thank you.
1:37 Thank you.
1:43 I think I speak on behalf of the brand
1:45 when I say we appreciate you guys being here.
1:46 I couldn't think of a better group of guys to have
1:49 as we honor Mother's Day and talk about mental health.
1:51 We're very intentional about who we have on this show,
1:53 and I think the way you guys speak positivity and show up for black women,
1:57 I think it speaks volumes to your character and I
1:59 think it shows up in how the black women, man, they love y'all right now, man.
2:01 Y'all are doing y'all thing, so again, appreciate you guys being here.
2:04 Man, thank you for having Nah, for sure, for sure, man.
2:06 Now, we hear all the time that, you know,
2:08 black mothers are always, you know, the strongest person in the household,
2:11 but I think I I think I speak for all black women
2:13 I say they tired of being they tired of being the strongest.
2:16 Black women black mothers black women they
2:18 tired of always being the strongest person, you know what I'm saying?
2:20 And it's a study show that a high
2:22 percentage of black single mothers experience depression.
2:25 And you know, with that so much weight on one person that naturally
2:28 impacts the environment and household in which kids are brought up in.
2:31 And Terrell, I want to come to you cuz, you know,
2:32 you shared your story in your book, The Problem Child,
2:35 about your journey with your mom and just, you know, your mom having you at 11,
2:39 you know what I'm saying, dealing with abuse at a young age.
2:41 Just share, you know, how does one even,
2:44 you know, come out of a situation like that?
2:46 I see you here, bro, you having this amazing career with longevity,
2:49 man, you've done so many amazing things.
2:51 How does one rise out of that and come out on the other side?
2:54 Well, for me, my mom was 11 years old when she had me.
2:56 She was 11 years old, special needs, one leg amputated at birth.
3:00 She was uh molested by my dad.
3:02 He was from the same family and she was 20 6.
3:05 Now, that was a story that I didn't want to tell.
3:07 It was a story that I kept hidden for years,
3:09 you know, I mean, nobody wants to talk about that.
3:11 You know, especially black families.
3:12 Black families, everything that you do,
3:14 you you can do this, but don't go down the street and tell nobody, you know.
3:17 And I realized how important it was for me
3:20 to tell my story because we all got our story.
3:22 We all got our stuff, you know.
3:24 And yeah, black women uh have always been the backbone of our families.
3:27 You know, they have always been been
3:29 the back backbone when I was growing up especially.
3:31 I'm not, you know, there were a lot
3:33 of families that that that the fathers weren't there,
3:36 you know, and and that my moms and grandmoms had to be who they were.
3:39 So, you know, my mom and my grandmother is who
3:43 was there for me and coming out of that, you know,
3:45 I had someone ask me, you know, in an interview before, you know,
3:48 God was the only thing that that that that I
3:50 can actually attest to being the the link
3:54 for me being who I am today because I very well could have been like my mom,
3:58 you know, but to be able to walk the earth and go
4:00 out and and and and bless the people as this man,
4:03 you know, I'm grateful for that.
4:04 But I'm also the voice that that you know,
4:07 my mom was molested like I said and she
4:10 nobody wanted to hear from this special needs 11-year-old baby.
4:14 And ironically here I am the voice that speaks to millions of people,
4:18 you know, that she she was they never wanted to hear from her.
4:21 So, Yeah.
4:22 You even just sharing that story,
4:24 it happens a lot in black families and you know, our grandmas, our grandpas,
4:28 we know, we try to put it in the back
4:30 of our mind and just act like it never happened.
4:32 You know what I'm saying?
4:33 We're just carrying this trauma and it
4:34 gets passed down from generation to generation.
4:36 And Deontay, I know you used to always you
4:37 spoken out about this multiple times on your platform where
4:40 it's like a lot of people we think it's okay
4:41 if we don't talk about it and that's not true.
4:43 Yeah, no.
4:44 I think um that was probably one of the most freeing opportunities for me um
4:51 when I talked about my my like being molested as a young man by older woman.
4:56 I was a kid.
4:57 I don't even want to say young man.
4:58 I was kid.
4:58 I was 8 years old.
4:59 But that vulnerability of being like able to talk around like how,
5:06 you know, like in adolescence sex was weird to me.
5:09 Like I didn't want to deal with that cuz it
5:11 was like my introduction to it was off-putting as hell.
5:15 And so, it didn't make me resent like women at all because as I got older I come
5:22 to find out like the the girl that did
5:23 it to me something somebody did that to her.
5:26 And um you know, that's something that that happened
5:29 in my family a few times that get swept under the rug.
5:32 So, usually you hear about this happening to women and they speak on it.
5:36 Um but they actually support each other
5:39 in those times like that especially like through lived experience.
5:43 But it was beautiful to see a lot of men come out and share their stories, too,
5:46 and be able to be vulnerable like I think sometimes they don't look
5:49 at it like that and we kind of like subvert it to like
5:52 some badge of honor like yeah I lost my virginity at eight
5:55 it's like no that's not no that's not what that was and even
6:00 with my my like I same situation my mother passed in 2019 um
6:05 but you know she had a lot of issues with her womb and things
6:09 like that and having stillborns and miscarriages so she adopted me at two
6:13 days old and like so I don't know my birth mother I never met
6:18 these people and I grew up with she had me since I was
6:20 like a newborn and it's like man that woman saved my life and I
6:24 saved hers cuz she wanted a baby you know what I mean so
6:28 I think her ability to kind of maneuver through her traumas yeah we
6:32 seen it in the house like we seen it especially like when
6:34 her and my dad split up you see stuff like that in the house that's
6:37 just like this tension is always present or and you know they come
6:43 from a different my mom from like she from the city of Atlanta like
6:47 she come up like we don't talk about our feelings we don't talk
6:49 about them everything come off as fighting you know what I'm saying so
6:53 I think feeling that tension on her and then seeing as she got
6:56 older and got sicker being a little bit more vulnerable it wasn't easy
6:59 for her you know what I mean to have to depend on other
7:02 people like she lost her vision um 2014 and like those those things like
7:08 that where she was having strokes it's like her keeping everything in and then
7:13 it's going to eventually like erode you from the inside out and that's
7:16 what what happened with her not to mention you know black people deal
7:19 with sickle cell she had sickle cell anemia so it's like these these layered
7:23 situations that's going on in this house that nobody speaking about you
7:27 know like she if her leg lock up and she got to go
7:29 to the hospital she not talking through like where this come from and what
7:34 causes it and things it's like oh it's just stress it's just stress
7:38 and so it's like when I'm outside acting a fool it's like well you
7:41 stressing your mom out and you know if she gets stressed out it's like,
7:44 but that's not the Don't put it on the kid.
7:46 Like, let's talk about the deeper conversation there and what other
7:50 things she might be stressed over that she may not be discussing,
7:53 but unfortunately, you know, upon her passing, um it was it wasn't like sudden.
8:00 It was like, you know, the stroke she you kept having strokes so
8:04 eventually your quality of life get worse and worse,
8:07 but the fortunate part is like a a couple of years before
8:10 that we really got to sit down and have like a real conversation.
8:13 Mhm.
8:13 Um I was kind of I was I was getting my stuff together,
8:16 you know, I had two kids at the time.
8:18 I was living in Florida.
8:19 I was working I was stable.
8:20 I was working a great job.
8:22 And we was able to like kind of go through all our Like, you know,
8:27 I I was a very apologetic for you know, the stress that I may have caused.
8:31 You know, it's not easy to watch talk to your son in uh jail
8:35 visitations and like that or see him in court facing 10 years and like that.
8:39 And I think a big part of me changing my life where
8:41 I was seeing like how much stress I was causing her, too.
8:44 Mhm.
8:44 But, um I think when it comes to just like sexual assault and things
8:48 like that, these things have been passed down and over so many generations Yep.
8:53 and kept quiet over so many generations.
8:55 Like, even a situation like that, it's like uh w- s- I you know,
9:01 if I could be frank like she be dead, bro.
9:03 Like, you know what I'm saying?
9:04 Like, that's just how I feel.
9:06 You know what I'm saying?
9:07 Like, that this that that's because Yep.
9:10 you you he coming to the world into trauma.
9:14 You know what I'm saying?
9:15 She got to live with this the rest of her life,
9:16 but not to mention all the people around that's affected.
9:19 You know what I'm saying?
9:19 Like, it's just like drug addiction.
9:21 It's just like everything else.
9:22 Like, one person being extremely traumatized
9:24 in the household affect everybody in the household.
9:27 And you carry that out into the world with you, too.
9:29 Nah.
9:30 Nah, that's real, bro.
9:31 And you know, it it hurts the family unit for black people.
9:33 You know what I mean?
9:34 It's like we it takes us a step back, you know what I mean?
9:36 So, that's why I think I appreciate, you know,
9:39 what you and your family, bro, you know,
9:40 the positive image you guys have always portrayed as a black family unit,
9:44 you know, what I'm saying?
9:44 Even being a blended family, you know, what I mean?
9:46 I think people need to see that.
9:48 And that that has been something that we can
9:50 all kind of gravitate to to and appreciate that.
9:52 And I know even though you grew up, you know,
9:53 you grew up with a you know, a great life, but you dealt with things as well.
9:56 People don't realize like when TI got locked up, you were in like kindergarten,
9:59 first grade, and you're dealing with like teachers making comments,
10:02 kids making comments.
10:03 You're having to deal with this national
10:04 spotlight while I was just trying to navigate.
10:06 You're just trying to learn your ABCs, bro, do your colors,
10:08 and you got to deal with things like that.
10:10 And it was your mother, you know, what I'm saying?
10:11 And your stepmom with Tiny that were there
10:13 for you holding things down while TI was away, man.
10:15 So, I think, you know, to see, you know,
10:17 two women come together and to, you know,
10:19 hold everything down, like that needs to be talked about more.
10:22 So, just share kind of like, you know, what your mom has meant to you or how
10:24 she just kind of helps you get through your days.
10:27 Yeah, definitely a a blended fam- blended family.
10:32 And um it never really felt like that.
10:34 Like even um even even this the stuff that you you listed out,
10:39 like the stuff uh my father being arrested,
10:42 locked up, going through stuff in court,
10:44 it never really affected me like that I could think back at and cuz
10:49 we were so I I went we were so active doing other stuff,
10:54 some would say distracted, but we we had that at our disposal.
10:58 We was in sports.
11:00 We was uh we had all the toys, you know, what I mean?
11:02 We had all the different houses to to to jump over.
11:06 Grandma house, mom house, dad house.
11:09 So, um it never really seemed like it it affected me like that.
11:14 So, I'm still figuring that stuff out.
11:16 And I hate to hear what y'all saying, man.
11:19 I'm I'm truly sorry that about that.
11:21 And that but that's real, though.
11:23 So, so that's why I like conversations like
11:25 this because people really be going through stuff like that.
11:29 And it's a real thing.
11:30 And then like like y'all saying, people don't know how to speak about that.
11:34 Don't know if it's normal,
11:35 like if other people going through it cuz they may see a family like
11:40 mine's on TV or social media or just down the road across the street.
11:45 Maybe a friend may have that family that looks just perfect and it's like damn,
11:50 my family nothing like this.
11:51 Look at them like that.
11:53 I must be weird or my family must be weird.
11:55 I'mma just try to sweep it under the rug.
11:58 I don't think that's realistic at all.
12:00 Like everyone got their everyone got their things and everyone we all
12:04 working through it and figuring it out every step of the way.
12:07 But so so when I hear stuff like that, man, it's a blessing.
12:11 But I also think like I also think about how
12:15 other people may feel seeing such a quote-unquote perfect image.
12:19 Now I only say quote-unquote perfect,
12:21 it's not like I'm trying to say it's some bad stuff, but nothing's perfect.
12:24 No one's perfect, you know what I'm saying?
12:26 So um when I think about that, I love it,
12:30 but I don't want people to get a misunderstanding about it like nah,
12:35 bro, this is um people really go through stuff and it's okay to talk about it.
12:39 So that's why I'm glad I'm here.
12:40 I know that I'm able to provide for my kids.
12:43 Me and my wife provide for our kids like something we didn't have growing up,
12:46 which is two parents in the house.
12:48 Um I would say like my mom dealt when I was like 11,
12:52 and so I lived with my dad through our middle school when they split.
12:55 And like but leading up to that, I
12:58 would say probably like fourth or fifth grade,
13:00 it was just so much tension in the house
13:01 like when they told us we were getting divorced, we were kind of relieved like
13:05 [snorts]
13:05 Yeah.
13:05 But thank you because like [clears throat and cough]
13:08 don't nobody want to be around we love y'all.
13:09 We don't want to be around y'all fighting all the time.
13:11 And then you know, things get a little wicked where it's like
13:16 your parents can only hide it from you for so long till
13:19 the point where it's like now you kind of feel like you
13:21 got to choose sides cuz like I'm like pops might be at work,
13:24 mom and her talking about him like okay, I'm of see where my mom is coming from.
13:29 But then pops come and he pop his part.
13:30 I'm like, Nah, I kind of you know what I'm saying?
13:33 And I don't feel like I got to pick between
13:35 and it's like well I don't want to do that.
13:36 I'd rather y'all just go y'all separate ways.
13:39 Wow.
13:39 And like when I'm with you, let's just focus on our relationship and then
13:43 when I'm with her, let's focus on that relationship.
13:45 But that's not like that's just idealistic.
13:47 That's not realistic.
13:48 Like these folk is hurt.
13:50 They their relationship didn't work out.
13:51 Yeah.
13:52 For whatever reason, you know what I mean?
13:53 I won't y'all deep folk business, but I know.
13:56 And seeing seeing seeing like your family on TV is
13:59 it's the same for me is when I was younger,
14:01 my family was as crazy.
14:03 However, seeing a family like that was like seeing the Cosby show.
14:06 You know, I I I had never seen a family
14:08 like the Cosby show or family like your family.
14:11 But it also reminded me that it must be somewhere out there.
14:14 Like that the that I'm dealing with, I don't have to stay here.
14:17 That there is something out there, you know?
14:18 And anybody that's looking at it saying, you know,
14:20 oh they think they all that then them.
14:22 Excuse me, but that's just that's the difference.
14:24 I was going to answer that.
14:25 It's it's it's a blessing to have what you have.
14:28 And then have a blended family and y'all like,
14:30 you know, it don't matter who blended,
14:31 we going to do this and make it like this and be public about it?
14:35 Man, that's such a blessing.
14:36 And and it and it's something that I'm like I I'm
14:38 honored to like look to to look at that, you know?
14:41 I watched I did I worked with Felicia Rashad on on the on the on Empire.
14:46 She played my aunt and I remember watching her on the Cosby show Yeah.
14:49 thinking, you know, I've never seen a mother that was this or a black
14:53 family that had had generational wealth or anything like that where I come from.
14:58 But it was something that was more inspirational.
15:01 So so so so to see your family and to see how y'all
15:03 are now and Tameka Scott from Xscape is one of my best friends.
15:06 So I know Tiny from that, you know?
15:08 And to just know that that y'all putting that out into the world,
15:11 man, ain't ain't nothing to to be nothing but happy about.
15:15 Yeah.
15:16 I'm glad [clears throat] it's coming across the right way, man,
15:18 cuz I didn't want people to to to see it and and think,
15:22 oh well, this is what I supposed to be in my life,
15:24 nothing like this, so I don't need to talk about it." Yeah.
15:28 Now, I think I think that we need like especially in our community,
15:30 it's like there can't be like gross representation in one extreme or the other.
15:36 I think we always operate in these extremes where
15:38 it's like either things is perfect or they're completely dysfunctional.
15:41 And it's like everything in life kind of exist in the middle.
15:44 You have your moments where like y'all knocking this out the park.
15:47 Yeah.
15:47 But then these areas it's like we need to work on this a little bit.
15:50 And that's just like in individuals and family units and everything else.
15:54 And I think to the first like premise is just say discussing
15:58 these things and like being open about it even if it's uncomfortable like Yeah.
16:02 Yep.
16:02 The thing is is like even in your discomfort the truth is
16:06 what matters more than anything else like as long as we being honest
16:10 about what's going on and as long as the people have the freedom
16:13 to express how things make them feel it's like it's out there.
16:17 Yeah.
16:17 You know what I mean?
16:18 Holding it close to your chest or holding
16:19 it in and it's like that's destroying people.
16:21 Especially the stuff that makes you uncomfortable.
16:23 That's the stuff that we never talk about.
16:25 Like even being here today it's great that we can like open a door for us
16:29 to be able to say say some things that we don't like to talk about.
16:31 Yeah, for sure.
16:32 Yeah, and that's where the growth come from.
16:34 Absolutely.
16:34 [clears throat] But I had a question, man.
16:36 Now that we're talking about showing the importance of just like
16:42 telling like it is not hiding stuff and we're talking about kids.
16:45 How do you feel like it is when you and your girl
16:49 or the mother of your child have like a disagreement,
16:51 how should that be handled?
16:52 Should the should it be like we go in another
16:54 room and we talk and the kids don't see it or like the kids see it or like how
16:59 should we cuz if cuz if it's too perfect, right?
17:02 The kid may grow up and have
17:04 their own relationship and feel like, "Damn, we arguing.
17:06 I never seen my parents argue.
17:09 I feel like we doing something wrong.
17:10 I'm not supposed to be like how do you how do you feel you should handle that?"
17:13 That's a great question.
17:14 So, I'mma to two things can be true.
17:17 A wise woman once told me that.
17:19 When it comes to argue in front of a child, my son is eight.
17:23 I never forget my son was 3 years old
17:27 and we're out to eat with some mutual friends at time.
17:30 And they was like, "More, you know, how how was your day today?
17:33 You did this." He like, "It wasn't that good.
17:35 Mommy and Daddy was arguing all day." And he three.
17:40 [laughter] Number one, that's embarrassing, right?
17:42 We had a we had this nice restaurant.
17:43 We were mutual friends and family and my 3-year-old like,
17:46 "Yo, my mom and dad they can't get it together.
17:48 They was They was arguing this morning.
17:49 They was arguing in the car.
17:50 They was arguing the whole way to the restaurant." Right.
17:53 Um for a 3-year-old to see something like that, right?
17:55 Like they're not young enough to process like when I was
17:58 16 I saw my parents arguing but I was also 16.
18:01 Right?
18:01 I can I can process it differently and I also know like,
18:03 all right, people people are going
18:04 to disagree but a 3-year-old isn't that mentally,
18:07 you know, formed yet to understand
18:09 the difference and understand like, okay, like yo,
18:11 like mom and dad like arguing all day that's like are they okay?
18:14 And it's like, now he's coming to the side like, "Dad,
18:16 are you okay?" He going with mom, "Mama, are you okay?
18:18 Like is something wrong?" So that I will say when the younger stages I
18:23 think parents should try You should try
18:25 to keep the child's innocence a little bit.
18:27 Even if y'all not even if y'all not together,
18:29 whatever I think it should always be a unified front in front of a young child.
18:33 I'm a big advocate for that.
18:34 Haven't always been perfect at doing that but I I
18:36 feel like I've done a good enough job with my son.
18:38 He's eight.
18:39 He's a happy ass kid.
18:40 He he he has a great personality.
18:42 He loves both his parents, you know what I'm saying?
18:44 But you know, when you get older I do
18:46 think it's okay to kind of show some vulnerability, right?
18:49 Cuz to your point, you don't want your son he never saw his parents argue
18:52 and then he getting one argument with his with his with his with his fiance.
18:56 He like, "Oh, you ain't the one." Cuz my parents never did this, right?
18:59 It's not really realistic.
19:00 So I think understanding that I think it help more men.
19:03 I think that can help help men be more faithful, you know what I'm saying?
19:05 And being and locking in with family and not thinking that every time like,
19:08 all right, bro, we didn't have the kid.
19:10 We not doing what we used to do every night.
19:11 And it's like, bro, my she just had a baby, bro.
19:13 Like, that's not So, you need to see that.
19:15 That was a long answer, but hope I answered it.
19:17 Like what to your point earlier, maneuvering through discomfort.
19:19 Like, understanding Yeah.
19:21 Even when I was young, when she you know,
19:23 the most excited is like when she call you and like, my water broke.
19:27 It's like, boy, it's game time.
19:30 Yeah.
19:30 Only thing you care about is like this this we have a successful birth,
19:33 you know what I mean?
19:34 And we don't think about the body changes they go through.
19:38 Their hormones out of whack.
19:39 Postpartum is a real thing.
19:41 This probably one of the most vulnerable situations.
19:42 Like, she spread eagle in front of strangers and you know,
19:46 all these different complications can happen.
19:48 Like, you know, when my second son when he came out,
19:50 he still had fluid in his lungs.
19:52 They had to pump his lungs like we holding our breath in there
19:55 like And and of course your mind going to go to the worst like,
19:58 is my son going to die?
19:59 Like Yeah.
20:00 All this stuff, you know what I mean?
20:01 And luckily like, you know, doctors they came in and do their thing.
20:04 The way the doctor walked in the room, I was like, now he's straight.
20:07 Yeah.
20:07 He was too confident.
20:08 Like, I'm I got this,
20:10 bro.
20:10 You know what I'm saying?
20:11 But I I I think we don't think about beauty standards
20:15 that exist in the world where they don't feel pretty and they don't,
20:18 you know, like all these ideas like unrealistic ideas of like,
20:21 you got to snatch it back.
20:22 You got to drop this baby weight.
20:23 So, like now it's a lot of pressure like,
20:25 even before their body fully heal that they they
20:27 feel like they need to work out and they
20:28 need to get in the gym and lose the baby
20:30 weight and keep up with all these different things.
20:32 And dedicate my entire life to this new human.
20:37 And try to get this dude on board while he just like cuz he
20:41 don't have to deal with none of the like physical pain that come with it.
20:44 Yeah.
20:44 So, Wow.
20:46 I think like when I was younger,
20:48 I was undermining the seriousness of it because it's like,
20:50 man, I got to work, you know, I I'm trying to provide.
20:53 You know what I'm saying?
20:54 You at home, you ain't got to work, you know.
20:55 And I'm thinking about the the the societal
20:59 part of it of like just being provisionary,
21:01 but I'm not thinking about the emotional part.
21:03 I'm not thinking about her emotional labor.
21:05 I'm not thinking about the fact that she
21:06 don't consider what she can't do anymore
21:10 cuz this baby's so young and dependent on while I get to like just you know,
21:13 under the guise of being a man, I get to still just go go go.
21:16 You know what I mean?
21:17 Her life is on pause, so it's like a lot of these things carry
21:20 over and like sometimes sometimes they come up later.
21:23 Yeah.
21:23 You know what I mean?
21:24 And it's like the mature part is just to be understanding not be defensive.
21:29 Yeah.
21:29 And I used to have a big issue with that.
21:31 Like anything she would say to me, I'm getting defensive.
21:33 Why you coming to me?
21:33 Like I'm doing every I'm trying to do everything You're right.
21:35 Right.
21:35 It's not about doing everything right.
21:37 It's about the fact that like she's feeling these things that she
21:39 may not have expressed in a moment to keep the peace,
21:42 but now it's like she don't got no peace within herself.
21:44 Yeah.
21:45 So it's like well, We finna break all the peace off in here.
21:48 Even yours.
21:49 Yeah.
21:49 You know what I'm saying?
21:50 You're like you're having a good day, guess what?
21:52 I'm finna ruin that.
21:53 You know what I mean?
21:53 You got to deal with it, but it's like it's real.
21:56 Yeah.
21:56 And I think repressing it it's only going to make the situation worse.
21:59 So like even to the point of like you know,
22:01 at a certain point when the baby's young,
22:03 it's like let's let's keep the baby out of it.
22:06 You know what I'm saying?
22:07 But we deal with this from a mature
22:09 perspective of understanding each other's emotions.
22:12 As long as it's like being expressed in that way.
22:17 Yeah.
22:16 Sometimes, you know, facts ain't feelings, but like feelings feel so real, bro.
22:20 Yeah.
22:20 They're like it can distort your reality.
22:23 And that goes for both.
22:24 I think a lot of times we like to Yep.
22:26 donate a lot of emotional to women.
22:28 Like women is so emotional.
22:29 Like men are emotional as hell, bro.
22:31 That's fact.
22:31 We just are taught not to be overt about our expression.
22:36 Like we supposed to keep everything straight to the chest.
22:39 Like ain't nothing bothering me.
22:40 Don't nothing bother me.
22:41 And then you die at 48 cuz you ain't never cry.
22:43 Right.
22:44 Yeah.
22:44 You know what I'm saying?
22:45 Like it's just real.
22:46 Like we got to be a little bit more honest about
22:49 how we feeling about things and and be able to be vulnerable.
22:51 What's like if you can lay down and make a life with somebody,
22:54 why can't you be vulnerable with them emotionally?
22:56 Yep.
22:58 You know what I'm saying?
22:58 Like that's as vulnerable as it gets.
23:00 I agree.
23:01 Creating life.
23:02 Yeah.
23:02 You know what I'm saying?
23:03 Yeah, no, no.
23:04 I'm curious, man.
23:05 My dad had me at 60.
23:06 So, I'm curious, man.
23:08 You know what I'm saying?
23:08 I know you know we're close to 60, you know what I'm saying?
23:10 But, you're a OG in the game.
23:11 Is kids something that you still want in life?
23:13 because of the way I was born,
23:15 I I I I had to, you know, even doing deep therapy, you know,
23:18 which took me a little sometime to get to because,
23:21 as I said, you know, I I just, you know,
23:23 it wasn't that I didn't think things were wrong or things were could be fixed,
23:26 but, you know, just growing up in the way that we grew up,
23:28 especially I was, you know,
23:29 my generation is a little bit before y'alls is that we didn't talk about it.
23:33 So, it took a long time before I just said,
23:35 "It's time for me to break down and go to therapy to get rid
23:39 of some of this that I I didn't have anything to do with." You know,
23:42 I can't just sit around and say the trauma that I dealt with, you know,
23:45 and my mom you know, my dad did this and my dad did that, you know,
23:48 even though these were things that I had nothing to do with, you know,
23:51 you were carrying those things around.
23:52 So, you weren't able to, you know, my sense of love was warped.
23:56 My sense of relationship was warped.
23:58 I mean, how could I even figure out I I what I grew
24:01 up watching was what I what I took out into the world, you know?
24:05 So, I had to figure that out.
24:07 And what I just decided was it wasn't that I said I I didn't want children,
24:10 but I didn't want children in a life that wouldn't be able
24:14 to be the dad that you be you guys being right now.
24:17 And I didn't want to bring a child into this world that would
24:20 go through the things that I went through wanting to have that manly,
24:24 masculine figure there, you know,
24:27 where my grandmother was a wonderful grandmother,
24:30 but she was a you know, she wasn't a good father.
24:31 She wasn't supposed to be.
24:33 You know, you're not you're not held accountable by a grandmother.
24:36 You know, and and that sounds really great crazy, but as a man,
24:40 there were things that someone asked, they said, "You came out still good.
24:42 I mean, you you're like this and you won all over the world." Yeah, I did,
24:45 but there were things that just sitting down
24:47 with with y'all is like I feel like I'm I'm
24:49 like seven excited because I got guys just talking
24:53 about that I've never I've seen men do usually.
24:57 And I'm this at this point in my life.
24:58 So, you know, having children for me, you know,
25:01 it was so many things that I wanted to work
25:02 through in my own life along with being an entertainer
25:05 where I'm all over the all over the place
25:07 and and and just as maybe the time would have come, you know, here we are again.
25:12 I'm at you know, the show is no more.
25:13 I'm running around again.
25:14 So, no, I don't want to bring any any child
25:16 into the world that I can't give the child what I didn't have.
25:19 your stepmom, Tameka, on the Tameka Hall Show and she spoke about you know,
25:23 you know, the record that you released in In Her Defense.
25:26 We don't have to get into the antics,
25:27 but the record that you're releasing in In Her Defense and how surprised
25:30 and how much she appreciated that for you to kind of you know,
25:33 speak out and do that.
25:34 And we usually don't see people do that especially you know, you know,
25:37 it's a stepmom and you you know,
25:38 you you going you going to war like it's your own mama, man.
25:41 Just speak to like the dynamics you guys have,
25:43 but also I'm curious what's the dynamic between you know,
25:45 your mom and your stepmom, Tameka.
25:48 Right.
25:49 It really was simple cuz it bothered us all.
25:53 It bothered us all.
25:54 Um And I know she said she didn't really care too much about it,
25:58 but we were bothered.
26:01 We were for sure bothered.
26:02 And um I'm an artist, so I'm speaking on the record.
26:06 I'm an artist, so I I allow things to move my pen.
26:10 I I don't really speak much like like
26:13 in personal like my day-to-day life about my emotions,
26:17 how I really feel about stuff.
26:19 And I so I use music as that.
26:22 Music and it's been working for me.
26:23 Music is like my therapy, so why would I not speak how I feel in my music?
26:28 And I I think it came across like you know what I mean,
26:30 we were really all bothered by by the situation.
26:34 But but that's that, but my parents and Tameka
26:39 really the whole family has a like I said before,
26:41 it really didn't feel like a blended family.
26:43 Like everyone was friends, cordial.
26:46 We we done went out together.
26:47 We done um Nothing was weird.
26:49 Nothing It like there was just like a separation.
26:52 You know what I mean?
26:53 That that I could think of.
26:54 So and that's that's um respectable.
26:59 Now that I'm older and I got my child,
27:00 I'm like I see how easy and then I got friends
27:02 that got kids and they co-parent and they got their problem.
27:05 I see how easy it is to for it to go all
27:08 the way left and to see my family just always chose to stick together.
27:12 Whether they may have problems or not, like we never seen it.
27:15 So it's like to to see them always choose to stick together
27:18 and be cool when it could have went and left so easily.
27:21 I commend them for that.
27:22 Yeah, nah nah and I saw the interview with your dad and you know
27:25 y'all were going through this conversation talking
27:27 about life and you was like yo, dad you really a good dude.
27:31 And this and this tipped the king now like I saw him
27:33 I don't know if he was expecting you to say that and you
27:35 could see him pause for a second and take it
27:36 to the back and it's kind of like papa the grandpa that went
27:38 his whole life without saying like I love you or hearing I
27:41 love you and then to hear his grandson say that, you can
27:43 kind of see that in his face in that moment how much
27:45 he appreciated his son that he raised for you to say that.
27:48 You know what I'm saying?
27:48 So that was hard.
27:50 Hard.
27:50 Yo yo you like you we like y'all having a mid conversation you was like yo,
27:53 like you really actually like a good dude.
27:55 Like you a good dad, you know what I mean?
27:57 Bro I know that like meant a lot to him.
27:59 Yeah.
28:00 That was man I think I I I ain't telling
28:02 him this but I think that's one of my best interviews.
28:04 Not to just think about it from that standpoint but because
28:07 that was my first situation where I could really be like comfortable.
28:11 I feel like people not really trying to pick apart and trying
28:14 to clip and clip some stuff like this my dad right here.
28:18 And we could really like um I think in that interview we broke
28:22 down different walls and we had
28:24 the opportunity to uh explore different relationships.
28:28 You know what I'm saying?
28:28 We cracking jokes, laughing and stuff.
28:31 But um that that was a dope time for real.
28:34 Um shoot we need to do it again.
28:36 He need to do it with the whole family for real.
28:38 Yeah, nah nah.
28:39 Speaking of the whole family man like listen man that show
28:41 man we grew up watching you guys grow up man
28:43 and it's like it's beautiful to see and like I remember
28:45 like baby may maybe Major was like always a star growing up,
28:49 you know what I'm saying?
28:50 Like he was just always getting into something.
28:52 Now now on TikTok it's like he 18 now.
28:54 Grown man, bro.
28:55 How is Major doing?
28:56 I feel like he's like one where he's
28:58 not really out in public like that like y'all.
28:59 Like how is Major doing?
29:00 Like what what he got cooking up at 18, man?
29:02 Yeah, he always been that way, too.
29:04 Like he even filming the show like we had to chase Major down, put on the mic.
29:10 And then one time they was lit cuz they was listening to see
29:13 where the kids at in the house based on uh where the mic at.
29:17 They said, "Damn, sounds like some running water wherever Major at." Yeah.
29:20 Major put his mic in the toilet.
29:22 He put his mic in the toilet, flushed it.
29:24 He said, "I ain't filming no more." But no
29:27 But we when we film we always have a good time.
29:30 Yeah.
29:30 But um he's always chose to like not be in the light.
29:35 But that's him.
29:37 But right now he's actually doing plays.
29:39 He's he's doing plays at his school and um he's he's acting in the theaters.
29:44 That's what he loves to do and he's great at it.
29:47 Yeah.
29:47 But man, yeah, he stays to himself.
29:50 He he loves that though.
29:51 He he loves like choose the the choice that he has to not be in the light.
29:56 Cuz like you said, man,
29:57 he's Baby Major and to the world's eyes like he is the star
30:01 and it's like people he he know how how loved he is to the world.
30:05 But he also like he loves his peace, you know?
30:08 Nah, nah, it's hard.
30:09 Nah, I love that answer, man.
30:10 I love that answer.
30:11 What I also appreciate about the interview
30:12 with your dad is where he shared the story.
30:14 It was like you 18 and you decided you was going to move out.
30:17 And he wasn't going to give you no money.
30:19 And at the time they were still doing the reality show.
30:21 And yo, they offered you like a six-figure deal.
30:24 They was like, "All right, bro, you don't even got to be in every episode.
30:26 You could just pop in, pop out how you
30:28 please." And he was like you was like, "Nah,
30:30 I don't want to do that no more." He was like,
30:32 "I want I want to be respected for my artistry.
30:34 I don't want people to see me as a reality
30:35 TV star anymore." And he was like uh he's like,
30:38 "You know what what caused you to have the delusion?" I thought that's
30:41 a good word cuz when it comes to our career and what we do,
30:43 you really have to be delusional about this You have to believe,
30:47 yo, whether it's plan A, B, or C, it's me every outcome.
30:51 You know what I mean?
30:52 You really got to believe that.
30:53 So, I just I'm curious to mindset at 18
30:55 where it's like you're turning down a six-figure bag, you know what I mean?
30:58 To go pursue what you did.
31:00 You still on business cuz here you are now dropping a new project,
31:02 you're going on tour, sold-out tours.
31:04 Just speak to the mindset.
31:06 Yeah, man.
31:08 Like I said, delusion cuz any any sane person,
31:13 for real for real, would say I'm going to do both.
31:15 Just like he said, he said, "I'm going to get the bag and I'm still going
31:17 to do me at the same time." I just said,
31:20 "Nah." Something told me, bro, I It's my time is up with this.
31:23 Like I don't need to do this no more.
31:24 And if I do do it, it's going to work against what I really
31:27 want to do." And me feeling that, knowing that, it wasn't a hard decision.
31:32 Like I know I'm going to be okay.
31:33 I'm going to work out.
31:34 I know my love for for music is going is going
31:38 to take me wherever I need to go want to go in life.
31:41 So, it wasn't a hard decision.
31:44 But a sane person, from looking from the outside in, would say, "Yeah, man,
31:48 I'm going to take the money and I'm going to do this on the side as well." So,
31:52 yeah, it was it was delusion, for sure.
31:54 Yeah, nah, nah, man.
31:55 Determination, delusion, all the D words.
31:58 [laughter] But you're doing it though, man.
31:59 You're doing it.
31:59 And you know what I'm saying?
32:00 To come to you, I think that's a good segue, bro, like,
32:02 you know, a year ago, you were still driving trucks and doing this part-time.
32:06 It was like, you know,
32:06 you got your stability and the podcasting was a passion project.
32:10 You took a leap of faith, rolled the dice, and was like, "Nah,
32:12 like I'm quitting the job and I'm going
32:14 all in on this, bro." And this past year,
32:16 bro, you you have one of the biggest podcasts out.
32:18 You know what I mean?
32:19 Like this is one of the biggest podcasts out.
32:21 Whether you're white, black, Chinese, it don't matter.
32:23 Like, yo, Rickey Smiley is one of the ones.
32:26 Yeah.
32:26 Sold out.
32:27 Sold out.
32:27 Sold out.
32:28 Sold out tours, [laughter] by the way.
32:29 You know what I'm saying?
32:30 You know what I'm Nah, really sold out, bro.
32:34 [laughter] Nah, man.
32:35 money been on the show.
32:35 His dad pops been on the show.
32:38 Um I would say this, too, what's real uh is that how y'all
32:43 embrace people when y'all really rock with them.
32:45 Like, I never felt uneasy when I come around.
32:48 You know, it's like you know, I grew up listening to this man.
32:51 One of my favorite albums just made 20 years today,
32:53 like like this past week, King album.
32:56 So, naturally, I'm ner- I got nerves,
32:59 but it was like shut down immediately, like, "Nah, bro.
33:01 Like, you over here for a reason.
33:03 You know what I'm saying?
33:04 You you welcome in here." So, you going to kill all that.
33:07 And then the whole family's like that.
33:08 So, that's been a beautiful thing for me, bro.
33:11 Especially like transitioning,
33:13 I come from blue-collar work to like media full-time,
33:17 like owning a media company,
33:18 operating a media company independently, doing my thing.
33:21 So, it's like been like a 180 for me.
33:24 But, um you know, I had a plan, bro.
33:27 I had a I was like, "I this number, I'mma hit this number,
33:31 and then I'mma transition out the job, and I'mma do it,
33:33 and it's going to be smooth,
33:34 and it's going to be and that ain't just how that just not how it work.
33:37 Like, life just forced my hand,
33:39 where it was like I was at this gig, and um of course,
33:43 like, shout-out to all my patrons, subscribers,
33:45 all my folks out there, you know what I'm saying?
33:47 Hold me down.
33:48 But, I was like, "Okay, this is a monthly income that it can come in like a job,
33:54 and I can make it bi-weekly, so I can formulate I'm I'm I'm still
33:57 trying to implement these structures I'm used to.
34:00 And the gig I was at, it was like we had six truck drivers.
34:04 I'm one of six.
34:05 Everything runs smooth with six.
34:06 One dude got fired.
34:09 One dude quit.
34:11 Another dude put in his 2 weeks.
34:12 This all happened in the course of 3 weeks.
34:15 Wow.
34:15 And so, I'm like 2 months away from like I like scaling-wise,
34:19 I'm like, "I'm 2 months away from being able to quit this job.
34:22 I'm not comfortable if I walk away right now." And they was like,
34:27 "Yeah, man, you know, it's going to it's going to be summertime,
34:31 you know, business going to kick back up.
34:32 We down to three drivers.
34:34 We really going to depend on you.
34:35 It's going to be some long days.
34:37 And I had to make a decision about whether I'm going to go do
34:40 what I want to do or I'm going to dedicate my time to this job,
34:44 which if I leave, they can replace me.
34:46 But if I don't leave, I don't know what my future going to play out.
34:50 So I had to take that leap like, okay,
34:51 I'm not comfortable, but I don't want to be working long days.
34:55 Like I want to do this.
34:56 So like I was like, it.
34:58 I was like, look, y'all not going to depend on me.
35:01 Y'all going to depend on somebody else cuz I quit.
35:04 Yeah, no 2 weeks, no nothing.
35:05 And I felt bad because this go against all
35:07 my like uh bringing like always leave a job,
35:10 don't burn a bridge, woo woo woo.
35:11 But I'm like, y'all burning my bridge with myself.
35:14 Depending on me, I'm going to work from 6:00 a.m.
35:16 to 7:00 p.m.
35:17 every day.
35:18 I ain't going to want to do no podcast no more.
35:20 And every job will replace you two 2 minutes before after you done it.
35:24 And that's it.
35:24 It ain't going to be no 2 weeks.
35:25 It's going to be 2 minutes.
35:26 Get the out of here.
35:27 So You'll have somebody in your desk and in your seat at your driver's seat.
35:31 I jump when I jumped out the window, I'll be telling folks like,
35:35 I ain't even build a parachute on the way down, bro.
35:37 I just started flying.
35:38 I ain't even know I could fly.
35:39 Jumped out the like, oh I got wings, It's lit.
35:43 And it's been it's been up ever since.
35:45 But it also just let me dedicate my full time to it,
35:49 which allows you to enhance the quality of the product,
35:53 be a lot more efficient and hands-on with the thing,
35:56 even doing live shows and getting out and touching
35:58 people and doing meet and greets and like
36:00 really taking these numbers that you see online
36:03 and analytics and actually putting faces to them.
36:05 It's like that changed the whole experience for me.
36:09 Like we on tour right now.
36:11 It's like I feel so at home on stage.
36:13 It's just like, man, bro, I'm doing exactly what I'm supposed to be doing.
36:17 It's one of It's beautiful, bro.
36:18 I would think like there is some delusion in there, but I don't even know.
36:22 Like bro, I just I believed it even before I seen it.
36:25 I believed it.
36:26 You know what I'm saying?
36:27 So when other people When other people didn't understand what was going on like
36:32 Yeah.
36:32 You know, like even with this turning down the money it's like bro,
36:34 I've done turned down so much money Yep.
36:36 on my to stand on my morals.
36:38 It's like but it's me.
36:40 I don't work you know, I think it's the most important thing is that you know,
36:45 I could tell my kids I got it honest bro.
36:47 I don't talk to myself more than I don't talk to anybody else bro.
36:50 You see what I'm saying?
36:51 Like it's been times where I was homeless in a real way.
36:54 Yeah.
36:55 Like I it was I was it was this apartment
36:58 complex I knew I could get in a pool house.
37:01 So, I'd go in a pool house and then
37:02 I'd just go like they got dressing rooms in there.
37:04 I'd go in there lock the door.
37:06 I'd just go in there sleep.
37:07 Like sometimes I'd bring like one of the pool chairs in there
37:10 like one of them patio joints that lay out just sleep on it.
37:13 And it's like bro, and I used to tell myself like man, I'm 19 years old bro.
37:17 I should not be homeless.
37:18 But I made the decision to be here.
37:21 Like I I didn't want to hear what my mom was talking about at the house.
37:24 So, it's like she's like well, you can't do this in my house.
37:26 I was like I guess I'm not going to be here then.
37:28 You know, what I'm saying?
37:28 This is a decision I'm making.
37:30 And so I was like bro, this is just part of my story bro.
37:32 I'm not going to be homeless forever.
37:34 This is just part of my story.
37:35 And it's like that's the only way I could sleep.
37:37 Cuz other than that I'm just like depressed.
37:40 You know, what I'm saying?
37:40 And a lot of people that I know are depressed and be homeless they rely
37:44 on drugs to put them to sleep or or alcohol to put them to sleep.
37:47 It was just like bro, I'm not going to be here forever.
37:49 Like I know I'm not bro.
37:51 It's just a part of the story bro.
37:53 And it's like man, one day I'll be able to look
37:55 back on this like Like look look look where I came from.
37:58 Yeah.
37:58 You know, what I'm saying?
37:59 But now I can actually do that.
38:01 Yeah, right now.
38:01 Which is crazy.
38:02 You know, what I'm saying?
38:03 I want to circle back because I remember in the iconic scene of Diary
38:06 of a Mad Black Woman where you're singing it's about to skin you hear me.
38:09 And I saw an interview where it's like yo,
38:11 you like that's first of all that's a classic moment in like cinema history.
38:14 Like I think everybody can remember where they were at when they first saw
38:17 that film but specifically that scene is probably
38:19 the most memorable scene from that movie, right?
38:22 And it's like "Yo, you were you were
38:23 really like singing to your father right there." Yeah.
38:25 Cuz you know, you cuz he he wasn't there.
38:27 Can you just speak straight to that moment?
38:29 Well, you know, first of all,
38:30 it's funny because I was doing the Tyler Perry plays at the time.
38:32 I wasn't even sure I did the demo for another
38:34 singer that was supposed to do the do the thing
38:36 and I was just on set while they were
38:38 doing it and whatever happened didn't work out, you know,
38:40 with them and he and and Tyler came to me and was like,
38:42 "Look, I had long cornrows at the time." He said,
38:45 "Look, you going to have to play this pastor role that can you do it?" Yeah.
38:48 And it was like 5 minutes before the whole thing happened and I was like,
38:51 "I don't want to cut my hair.
38:52 I don't want to I don't think this is going to work out for me." And you know,
38:54 the movie became number one, the song became number one and it it changed
38:57 the whole course of everything that I dealt with, you know,
39:00 thank God that I I went along with it.
39:02 But it was it was bigger than anything that I I thought.
39:05 Not just to say, "Oh,
39:06 I was in this movie." But it it it changed how I thought about myself, you know,
39:10 the the the it changed the it it was the the the opening point of, "Damn,
39:16 I I really did leave and what I I said
39:19 I wanted from God really starting to happen." You know, I really started to see,
39:24 "I left these people that were doing absolutely nothing, a crazy situation,
39:28 my mom being molested, me being all of this and walked out the door and said,
39:32 'I'm getting ready to go out and be on TV and go
39:34 out and be an entertainer.'" And it really is starting to Like,
39:37 you don't understand that that situation.
39:39 It you know, it was a different situation than than you had where I didn't have,
39:44 you know, there was nothing there positive.
39:47 Nothing positive.
39:48 So, to walk out and see the positivity in just
39:51 what it was that I walked out and did, that's what that was to me.
39:55 You know, that's what Father, Can You Hear Me?
39:56 was to me.
39:57 And it was me really singing to uh you know,
40:01 God saying, "You know, I know you hear me." Yeah.
40:04 You know, I know I I I know you hear me and at that point,
40:07 I think I was maybe 20 years old at the time and I had thought to myself,
40:12 "There is nothing I can't do.
40:14 There's nothing I can't Man, after sleeping Excuse me.
40:19 No, no, you good.
40:20 Man, Yeah.
40:21 to hear the stories that you know that that that other other people deal
40:24 with is it it it it reminds you of what you you dealt with yourself.
40:29 So, to hear that and then to hear how you think now and to hear how,
40:32 you know, we we we able to share here, man, it it is just a blessing to me,
40:35 but but to to say I can walk out and I could do
40:40 this, so the hell with the fact that I had to sleep in the shed.
40:44 Yeah.
40:45 You know, when you when you come out of that shed,
40:49 you come out of that shed with the the thought of Oh,
40:52 wait, that was the first night.
40:53 That was the second night.
40:55 I can walk across this Earth.
40:57 Ain't nothing I can't handle now.
40:59 Yeah.
40:59 There's nothing I can't You can put me anywhere.
41:01 It ain't about just the glitz and glam and the shiny ass suit.
41:05 It's like this is where I am today, but if all of this left me tomorrow,
41:09 I can walk out of here and be like, "Okay,
41:10 I'm going to build this up and give me 1 week.
41:12 Give me 2 weeks." Yeah.
41:13 Because there's nothing that I can't handle because of what, you know,
41:16 that I know that you have dealt with as well, you know?
41:18 And it's just different than what you dealt with.
41:21 It ain't better and it ain't worse cuz there's no scales of pain.
41:24 We always deal with what we deal with where we are,
41:27 and it's just as important no matter what life you in.
41:30 Nah, man, I love that.
41:31 We three different generations on this couch
41:32 like three different generations of men, bro.
41:34 Yes.
41:35 Then our brothers no matter what life experience was, Yeah.
41:38 it all led us being right here, bro.
41:40 Yes.
41:40 This is real thing.
41:41 But the man I want to come to you, too, bro, and what you doing with the music,
41:44 bro, like, you know, again, you know, it's it's a different time we living in.
41:47 Hip hop has changed a lot,
41:48 and we're seeing a lot of theatrics in hip hop right now.
41:51 A lot of acts.
41:52 So, for you to come humble, well-spoken, well-mannered,
41:56 um you don't got to be the loudest person in the room.
41:58 Most rappers coming in, they're the loudest person in the room.
42:00 They got the same bling.
42:02 It's like, "Bro, you you worth a million dollars, bro.
42:03 You coming in here super chill, bro,
42:05 and will rap your ass off with the best of them." I think, you know,
42:09 it's good for the younger generation right now to see
42:11 that cuz we're not seeing that right now in hip-hop,
42:13 especially with a lot of the new the new artists that are coming in, right?
42:15 It's a lot of theatrics with it, man.
42:17 So, for you and what you represent for the community,
42:19 my son could look up to you and be like, "Oh, all right.
42:22 He He's rapping.
42:23 He's going He's taking care of his kids.
42:24 He's doing this." Cuz there's there's a stereotype
42:26 with hip-hop that's not what you what you're portraying.
42:30 Um just speak to like was that always the mindset when
42:32 you wanted to kind of carve your own lane in this industry?
42:35 100%.
42:36 It always Maybe I wasn't thinking about it like to that extent
42:39 like seeing it like that, but I always just ask questions and just
42:43 ask myself questions and and what you're saying like not the loudest
42:48 one in the room or not not a bunch of jewelry, not flashy.
42:51 Like I I was looking at my father and he he just has that loud personality.
42:57 That's just him.
42:58 That's not a rapper gimmick.
42:59 That's That's just him.
43:01 like that.
43:01 Yeah, he really I see you Rollie Pollie.
43:03 He really like that real life.
43:04 Off the Off the record, yeah.
43:06 Yeah, but so I grew up seeing that and seeing all the expensive clothes,
43:10 the jewelry, the watches, the chains.
43:13 And I'm like I had to ask myself certain
43:15 questions like do I feel weird not having that?
43:19 Or do I me wanting to be a artist, do I picture it looking like that?
43:24 Why?
43:25 Okay, I figured that out.
43:26 So, now I'm like will I make other kids feel the same way?
43:30 So, now I'm like I don't want to do that.
43:33 I don't want to do that cuz I seen that's not that's not what it actually is.
43:38 Yeah.
43:38 It's not um What I mean by that is like I'm saying that's not what it's about.
43:42 Yeah.
43:43 It's about the message you putting out,
43:44 the impact you got on the community, the world.
43:47 And I and I learned that from him, but I me thinking about it made me realize,
43:52 you know what I mean, other kids was going to think about it.
43:55 So, that it wasn't a hard decision for real for real.
43:58 And that's dope at 25 you even got that mindset to think about that, right?
44:01 Like when you think about it, y'all,
44:02 the reason I wanted to have Gucci and this and that, bro, cuz I seen Hov.
44:05 I seen Hov and and whoever else y'all y'all they they had it on on the yacht.
44:09 I'm like, "Yo, I need that Gucci.
44:10 I want the yacht." Cuz we we the people that we're idolizing had that.
44:13 So, it's going to be a younger generation who
44:15 already my cu- my my little cousins love you, bro.
44:17 Like, you know what I'm saying?
44:18 Like, they they tripping out right now that she watched the show.
44:20 So, like, you it's a younger generation that's
44:22 going to grow up on you and they're
44:23 going to have the minds that you have cuz you were who they idolized, bro.
44:26 So, like, when you a lot of times we're not thinking about that.
44:28 You know what I'm saying?
44:29 It's like, you know, if you're artist,
44:30 you're a rapper, you you're doing these things like,
44:32 bro, it's a million people about to they'll crash out about you, bro.
44:35 And they going to follow whatever you do.
44:37 You know what I'm saying?
44:37 A lot of times we're not taking
44:38 that into consideration with how we walk in public, man.
44:41 So, I think I think it's commendable what you do, man.
44:43 And the relationship you got with your pops is amazing, man.
44:45 But also I want to touch on I saw the interview and you know with the industry
44:49 that we're working in, a lot of times
44:50 we have to spend away from our children, right?
44:52 And I think that's been something for me
44:53 that I have that I battle with a lot is,
44:55 you know, me and my son's mom, we have a great co-parenting relationship.
44:58 We switch every week.
44:59 So, I get one week, she gets one week.
45:00 We have a great schedule.
45:02 Um but I'd be lying if I say like I still I always wish I was kind of with him,
45:05 having him around, especially your boy.
45:07 You know what I'm saying?
45:08 But as a man, we got to we got to leave and provide.
45:10 Like, that's the heavy is the head that wears the crown.
45:12 How are you navigating that as a new father, you know, pursuing your career,
45:15 you're having this amazing run right now,
45:17 but still making sure you're taking care of home with your little one?
45:20 Yeah, I mean, I hate having to leave the house.
45:22 100 I hate having to leave the house and then my my daughter,
45:25 she's at the age where it's like she know that I'm about to leave.
45:29 Like, okay, he didn't took it he came home from the gym and took a shower.
45:32 He didn't ate some food.
45:33 He know we know he about to leave.
45:35 And now she's like she's starting to say,
45:38 "No." And she's starting to realize she she like
45:41 asking for help cuz she know I'mma come help instead
45:44 of instead of having to leave or get on the phone
45:46 or take a she she know how to do it.
45:48 Yeah.
45:49 She like, "Help.
45:50 Help." Cuz she just want me to come help and just be there.
45:52 So, I'm starting to realize that she's trying to keep me there.
45:56 And so, I I hate having to leave,
45:57 but I'm understanding and I'm I'm every day I'm
46:01 understanding that they going to know when they get older.
46:04 Like my my kids they going they going to know.
46:07 And cuz they going to get in their own relationships and they going to have
46:10 their own kids and they going to see that this is what we got to do.
46:14 Like dad or however I don't know how how people
46:18 like to do it but dad got to leave to provide.
46:21 And it's just like that.
46:23 So instead of me thinking about it negative man like I said
46:27 at the beginning I just try to be present when I'm there.
46:30 Yeah.
46:31 Like I'm I'm more I'm more zoned in on being present more than anything.
46:36 Yeah.
46:36 And it taught me to cherish them moments and and it also taught
46:40 me not to play around when I'm when I'm supposed to be working.
46:43 Like a lot of people could just [sighs and gasps]
46:46 I'm outside the house let me have a good
46:47 time while I'm look like I'm supposed to be working.
46:50 But nah the quicker I could complete these missions that I
46:53 got in front of me reach these goals the more
46:55 time I could spend in the house the sooner we could
46:58 maybe maybe I won't have to leave the house as much.
47:00 But yeah all that stuff man and it taught me to to love
47:05 my child and just my family in general while I'm there.
47:08 Yeah.
47:08 Cuz I'm gone so much.
47:10 Damn.
47:10 Nah I love that answer man that's a great answer man.
47:12 I do want to circle back on your mom I want
47:14 to give you congratulations man I know after the beast she's cancer
47:16 free I know she was dealing with that man so just
47:18 want to say man we're praying for the family bro and that's [clears throat]
47:21 that's a beautiful my mom has dealt with breast cancer twice and beat
47:23 it through man so just happy to see that bro and everything.
47:26 Yeah and now everything that you represent.
47:27 Deontay I know you spoken out about how like now your your kids like
47:31 what he's old enough he know where it's like all right I know daddy gone
47:35 but he working and see he even got your back where he's telling your little
47:37 one like don't you like this Hello Kitty like let's get ready for the podcast.
47:41 So just just sharing now you're in this new area of your life
47:43 and your career and how you showing up for your loved one and your kids.
47:46 I think it's it's beautiful that how things come full circle.
47:51 When I was over the road trucking Mhm.
47:54 they had already had this concept that I had to leave to provide.
47:57 Yeah.
47:57 So, it's a different thing now.
48:00 I I used to be so depressed having to leave them, bro,
48:04 because it's like, "Damn, yo, like but I know what it's worth.
48:07 I always think about the bigger picture." And we
48:10 would FaceTime and we'd talk all the time.
48:12 Like, they was old enough to have phones and things like that.
48:14 My baby wasn't, but my two oldest boys, they was.
48:17 So, it was like, you know, one after a while, you know, with kids,
48:20 once you check in a few times, they're like, "Bro, I'm playing a game.
48:23 I'm chilling.
48:24 Yeah.
48:24 I know you good.
48:25 I'm good.
48:26 I'll let you in a minute." Yeah.
48:27 And it's like, they got their friend circles and stuff.
48:29 But like, even now that they're older, it'd be cool.
48:31 Like, my son, he'll come to the studio with me.
48:33 Um you know, my daughter My daughter done been
48:36 to a couple different shows with me and so forth.
48:37 They actually coming to my show tonight.
48:39 Um so, it's like finding ways to get them involved
48:42 or at least make sure that they can be there.
48:44 Yeah.
48:44 But then also, it's a different thing
48:45 now where they understand how visible I am.
48:48 Like, their teachers know me and like that.
48:50 So, it'd be cool.
48:52 They're excited that like to them, it's like,
48:55 "Man, my pops is living his dream." Yeah.
48:57 "That mean I can live my dream." Mhm.
49:00 And like, um and I'd be telling them all the time like,
49:02 "You can do whatever you want.
49:04 And if I can assist you in that, I will.
49:07 You know what I mean?
49:07 Like, I'm I'm all for some nepotism, bro.
49:10 But like, you got to be good at what you do.
49:12 You know what I mean?
49:12 But I think [clears throat] another thing is is that they know when I leave,
49:16 I'm going to do something I love.
49:18 Yeah.
49:18 And I'm coming right back.
49:19 Yeah.
49:20 I'm not mandated to be out 3 weeks.
49:22 I'm going to go 2 3 days, knock this out.
49:24 I'm coming right back.
49:25 We're going to go skating.
49:26 Yeah.
49:27 You know, I [laughter] I get to cook again.
49:28 You know what I'm saying?
49:29 Like, that was another thing like, cooking is such a like That's therapeutic,
49:33 but it's also like such a familiar practice just to sit
49:35 around the table and eat together and things like that.
49:38 I get to do that a lot more.
49:39 So, it's like the it's a necessary part of it.
49:43 Like, you know, especially in entertainment, you know, y'all you know,
49:47 even without you having kids, it's it's your own home, having to leave it.
49:51 Just the place where you're are the most comfortable,
49:53 not sleeping in your own bed, not showering in your own shower.
49:55 Those are just things that we do as a sacrifice for the things we love.
49:59 Like we do what we love and we do it for the people we love.
50:02 So it's like a whole different thing, you know what I mean?
50:05 But I I'm grateful as hell, you know what I mean?
50:07 Yeah, no, no.
50:08 And you made a good point.
50:09 Like spending the time with your child with intention, you know what I mean?
50:12 Not sitting there being on the phone when your little one right beside you.
50:15 It's like, "Yo, that's not actually spending time." You there,
50:18 but you ain't there, you know what I'm saying?
50:19 You know what I'm saying?
50:20 You ever see somebody be like, "Yeah, my pops was there, but he won't there.
50:22 He was always on the phone, doing this." You not really mentally checked in.
50:26 Kids can notice the difference.
50:27 So I think it's doing it with intention, man.
50:29 And you know, Terrence, the amazing year that you're having,
50:32 I know you got You said you got like 10 nieces and nephews, man.
50:34 I know it's been amazing for your family
50:35 and friends to see you having this amazing one.
50:38 You already had an amazing career,
50:40 but now you having this conglomerate moment, dog.
50:42 Like you know what one of the biggest
50:44 shows on television right now with this character, man.
50:46 Just share like what the what the conversations with your loved ones have been.
50:50 Oh, man, you know, it's like I I just didn't I got when I got I
50:54 I I did a show Empire before I did this and I thought that that was like,
50:57 you know, I was like, "I'm on Empire, you know,
50:58 this is it." But they were already in the third season and everything.
51:01 There has never been a show that I've done that's been, you know,
51:04 and working with Tyler Perry has always been that number one-ish stuff,
51:07 but it was always more like, you know,
51:09 the things that he's done or you still were in a different way.
51:12 But to play a character on Netflix that was that that they're
51:15 just pumping out like this and it's been number one,
51:18 you know, on Netflix, but then it was number one in the world.
51:20 You know, the show was to watch it in other languages and other things.
51:23 So that to talk about it, you know, people you know,
51:27 I've never like I said, I've never been called Barney.
51:29 I've never been called the character name, you know, outside of my name.
51:32 But you know, it's amazing, man.
51:34 It's again that that full circle moment of me being of sleeping in the shed.
51:39 I'm saying, "Wow, I walked out of you Are you sleeping
51:42 in a shed and you on tour doing this?" So I'm I'm, you know, at that point.
51:45 And so to be able to say is I honestly,
51:47 there's a lot of of conversation that's that's unsaid because it's kind of like,
51:52 you know, a lot of, you know, even back with my family,
51:54 I don't really have many many many many family members.
51:57 But when I left, it was a lot of them telling me not to go.
52:00 You know, so, to be able to do this and to be able to be here,
52:03 there's really a lot There's nothing else to say.
52:05 Yeah.
52:06 You know, so, you know, it's more with the people and and and loving the people
52:09 that have loved me and supported me throughout the years.
52:12 You know, and my mom, you know,
52:13 all all of my my my my immediate family members are deceased.
52:16 So, it's kind of me just kind of enjoying
52:18 that that the presence of all of that, you know.
52:20 Nah, nah, nah.
52:21 We've had Julian on the show.
52:23 Uh you know, he's talked about his role as Roy on the show,
52:25 you know what I mean?
52:25 It's like, what you guys have been able to build in the community,
52:27 man, it's it's amazing to see, man.
52:29 That show That show is one of the ones, man.
52:31 It's going crazy, man.
52:32 I appreciate that.
52:32 I know we're at time, so I'll just kind of quickly go around the room.
52:35 Just share one thing that you're doing moving forward just to help,
52:40 you know, the younger generation to help heal unheal that traumas.
52:43 Uh you know, me, it's just telling the story that I I like I said,
52:46 I I I hit I told my I wrote my book.
52:48 I brought copies for all y'all that I love
52:51 I love to share with y'all my book Problems Child.
52:53 Need that.
52:53 Need that, brother.
52:55 With the fellas and everybody.
52:56 I got I have one for you as well.
52:57 Come on now.
52:57 I appreciate that, my boy.
52:58 Absolutely.
52:59 Yes.
52:59 So, you know, sharing my story and telling the story of what I went through,
53:05 which which which opens the door for everybody
53:07 to deal with what they're going through,
53:08 you know, wherever you are in life, whatever your family situation is.
53:11 It's to not keep that a secret and to realizing that nobody has walked
53:15 the path that I've walked and to show a younger generation that, you know,
53:19 I can Yeah, people can give you advice.
53:20 Yeah, people can say, you know, what what they've been through.
53:24 But every your your your your your walk is delusional.
53:27 It needs to be delusional and your walk is your walk.
53:30 And to be an example,
53:31 not because I I want to leave this wonderful legacy of Terrence Carter.
53:35 You know, I don't even think that that is that important.
53:38 I don't think my name has to be that that important.
53:40 A hundred years, they may or may not even talk about any of us sitting here.
53:43 However, you know, I'd love to be somebody who's just enough light
53:47 to open a door for generations that that that are talking about me.
53:50 And if they are talking about me later on, to say, you know, wow,
53:54 I can now walk through and do this because I
53:56 saw this guy who came from this and ended up here.
54:01 Mhm.
54:01 Nah, nah, nah, I love that.
54:02 Deion, so I come to you.
54:03 Um I think more than anything it's just
54:08 it's cool to be intelligent and informed and smart
54:11 and it's also [clears throat] it's also kind
54:15 of cool not to be understood all the time.
54:17 As long as you understand yourself.
54:19 I think more than anything is to open up
54:22 people to challenging things that are being presented to them,
54:26 examining things, researching things,
54:28 breaking things down into the root of things and figure out root causes.
54:32 I'm really big on cause and effect, so I want to know like where things started.
54:36 Um and I think that the young dudes that come after me it's like yeah,
54:41 man, you know, I don't I don't been to jail, I don't sold the drugs,
54:44 I don't did all the street but I
54:46 I still landed here where I'm advocating for trades,
54:49 I'm advocating for people to find the things that they good at.
54:52 You could skip all the and just go straight to the trade,
54:54 go straight to the thing that is good at that you
54:56 good at and like find the things that you passionate about.
54:59 Yeah.
54:59 I would have been having these conversations whether I had a podcast or not.
55:02 Yeah.
55:02 I'd have been interested in these things either way.
55:05 And I think with my the thing with my kids
55:06 is that there's just an understanding that one,
55:10 I want to understand what role I'm playing in their behavior.
55:12 Yeah.
55:13 You know what I mean?
55:13 I think when kids are acting out or whatever,
55:15 they being defiant, you play a role in that as a parent.
55:18 I also just give myself grace as a parent
55:20 that like I'm going to get some things wrong.
55:22 You know what I'm saying?
55:23 But I need to be able to account for those things
55:26 and not look back with rose colored glasses like,
55:28 no, I ain't never did no like that.
55:29 Like, you did.
55:31 And it's okay.
55:33 [laughter] You was imperfect as a parent, but they,
55:34 you know, you imperfect as a human, too.
55:35 And it's like, you know,
55:36 as long as your kids can mature to the place where they can
55:39 have those conversations with you about where they felt like you fell short.
55:43 Like me and my wife do this thing
55:44 where we do like monthly check-ins with them like,
55:47 "What would you grade me as a parent this month?" I don't got a few F's.
55:50 Really?
55:50 Wow.
55:51 I don't got an F before.
55:52 Wow.
55:53 And it's like, I got an F cuz you was messing up, though.
55:56 You You was messing up in school.
55:58 You can't use a computer.
56:00 I get the L.
56:00 Okay, that's fine.
56:01 You know what I'm saying?
56:02 But I also examine those things.
56:04 It's like, what could I have done better in that situation?
56:06 Was I too short-tempered?
56:08 Did I not give him or her enough time
56:10 to explain themselves and what they was going through?
56:12 You know, you play a role, so you just want to It's just about improving.
56:15 You know what I mean?
56:15 And I think for the people that come behind me,
56:17 it's like Yeah, man, anything is possible.
56:20 Like when you start when you turn that belief into yourself,
56:23 when you start believing in yourself, you start loving yourself in a real way,
56:26 um then you find out what self really wants, and then you just go for that.
56:31 Yeah.
56:31 No, man, I love that answer, man.
56:33 I love that answer.
56:33 Same.
56:34 I love What I What I was going to say was asking questions.
56:37 I'm an advocate of asking questions,
56:40 and I feel like it it it helps uh me personally,
56:43 but I feel like it would help anyone like [gasps] [sighs]
56:47 realize I mean, perspective.
56:48 Realize uh does this really affect me?
56:51 And I like the um the F situation.
56:54 Really, that F is not a a literal F,
56:56 but that led you to asking yourself them questions.
56:59 Yeah.
56:59 Um and and whether you do therapy or not or whatever,
57:03 I feel like if we ask ourselves enough honest questions,
57:07 we could we could get to the root of the problem.
57:10 You know what I'm saying?
57:10 If we willing to be honest.
57:12 And um I like uh my father was the same way.
57:17 He would sit and explain.
57:19 I probably only got like two whoopings from him because I didn't really need it.
57:22 The fact of him saying he was disappointed and we seeing that, that was enough.
57:26 But the the two whoopings that I got, he would sit and have a like a hour,
57:32 hour and a half discussion,
57:33 make sure we know what we did and why it wasn't right.
57:38 And um he would make sure that we understood that.
57:41 And but but then he would say he'll tell us how
57:44 many how many times he going to he going to hit us.
57:46 Like, all right, give me give me 10.
57:48 But it's like it's not nothing crazy.
57:50 We could see that he really don't want to do this.
57:52 Yeah.
57:52 And that's what hurt the most.
57:54 That's what hurt us the most.
57:55 Like, damn, pops don't even want to do this.
57:56 Pops cool.
57:57 Yeah.
57:58 But um I think it's important to to understand what's going on.
58:03 And I feel like we get a lot of understanding from asking questions.
58:06 Yeah.
58:06 So I would I think that's that's my answer.
58:08 Nah, nah, I love that.
58:09 Also love too like, you know, it's T.I.
58:11 too.
58:11 That's the king, you know what I mean?
58:12 Like he's showing you know what I'm saying outside
58:14 he with somebody else he giving a whole different energy,
58:17 but at home it's like he got that patience and that grace.
58:19 I just think that's that's a dope fun fact to know about your pops,
58:22 you know what I mean?
58:22 So nah, man, man, this is dope, man.
58:24 I I appreciate you guys being here, man.
58:26 This is what For the Fellas is about, man.
58:27 It's bringing black men together just to have real dialogue,
58:30 man, and conversations, man.
58:31 I think a lot of people watching
58:32 this that follow you guys will appreciate this dialogue.
58:35 And it's going to help somebody get through them days, man.
58:36 Absolutely.
58:37 That's the point of this, man.
58:38 It's just we really just trying to have conversations that somebody
58:40 can get insight and motivation to help get through their day, bro.
58:43 We seen that and what we seen with you guys,
58:45 the millions of fans that you guys have,
58:47 people love y'all and they follow y'all, man.
58:48 Appreciate you guys being here celebrating a special episode
58:51 for all our mothers out there, our black mothers.
58:53 Heavy on the black mothers, Mama Mac.
58:55 We love you.
58:55 All the mothers out there in the world, we love you guys.
58:57 We appreciate you guys and everything that you do for black men.
59:00 We would literally be nothing without you guys.
59:02 I think that's safe to say.
59:04 Absolutely.
59:04 Absolutely.
59:05 And to all the mothers out there Happy Mother's Day.
59:08 I'm Deionte Kyle.
59:09 I'm Demani.
59:10 I'm Terrell Carter and this is For the Fellas.
59:19 How you doing?
59:19 This is Terrell Carter and you are watching For the Fellas on BET.
59:24 Soldier.
59:28 [laughter] Bro season is easy.
59:30 That's the problem.
59:32 [laughter]