The Heavyweight Podcast

Talk Yo Shit "Yung Miss"

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When you step into your power and start standing on business, not everyone can handle it. Yung Miss, the multifaceted IE legend, joins The Heavyweight Podcast for a raw and inspiring conversation about creative evolution, setting boundaries, and musical longevity.

Born into music with a piano prodigy mother and a gospel-rich upbringing, Yung Miss shares how these influences, combined with her brothers’ hip-hop collections, shaped her unique artistic vision. From Jay-Z to Lauryn Hill, her sound is a fusion of authenticity and deep musical roots.

She dives into the inspiration behind her latest album Maybe It's Me, revealing how learning to say "no" has transformed her relationships and creativity. "That's why I'm still here," she says, crediting her ability to switch lanes between being an artist, DJ, and promoter as the key to her staying power.

With insights on what's missing in today's music—soul and emotional connection—and exciting news about her Coachella performance with Q+, where she mentors LGBTQ+ youth, this episode is a must-listen for anyone navigating the creative world. Stream Maybe It's Me now and follow Yung Miss @YungMiss on all platforms!

Speaker 1:

Just getting into it with a lot of people.

Speaker 2:

I think the older I get, the more I get into it with people, which is weird, but maybe it's because you know I'm standing on business now. Yeah, I've learned how to say no. I've learned how to say what I don't like.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And not everybody can take that I'm big boned.

Speaker 3:

I'm heavy structured. I'm hung low.

Speaker 2:

If I pull my shit out this whole room, get darkitation. What's up everybody? This is Des the Diva and the Heavyweight Podcast. We are here today with Young Miss. Yeah, what's going?

Speaker 3:

on everybody, welcome welcome thank you.

Speaker 2:

She's an artist promoter, dj ie legend if you will I'll take you take it Definitely she's a what IE legend.

Speaker 3:

Boom.

Speaker 2:

Period, period Tell them Period Top 25 in IE in 2013 with our boy.

Speaker 1:

McFly down there.

Speaker 2:

So it's greatness all at the table today. Definitely, that's facts how you doing, I'm doing great Good.

Speaker 1:

I'm doing great.

Speaker 2:

Well rested up early. I'm good, we in here, it's early and you in here with us, so we definitely appreciate that oh no problem, I'm used to getting up early, so I'm good. Definitely, definitely. Let the people out there know how long you've been an artist man. I started recording in 2005 life so back when I was in high school, um, off a tape recorder, figured it out, um, and I haven't stopped since, you know, been all the way through technology with it.

Speaker 2:

you are definitely a household name I appreciate that yeah definitely I was very excited to interview you because everybody was like, whoa, you got young, miss older, and I was like I don't know how, but but thank you, god, hey, that's that's that time. You know, shoot, it's been 20. So it's putting in that time, trying to, trying to get in the household to make sure everybody, at least you know, has heard of me.

Speaker 1:

Definitely.

Speaker 2:

Tell me about the music for you. When did you fall in love with the music? My mom is a musician, oh wow. So she, she was like a prodigy. So she's been playing piano since too. So she grew up in the church. Um, so when I was born, I was already in the studio with her. She's, you know, laying down piano for different artists on their you know their tracks and and playing at church every Sunday, wednesday, monday, thursday, prayer circle, all of that. So I grew up around it. You know it's, and it's in my blood. I was gonna say it's in the DNA at this point.

Speaker 2:

Definitely, definitely my whole family, or her side at least. You know they sing, play organ, even my, you know. My grandma rest in peace. She was on the organ, wow. So whereas most people's influences are like people they see on TV, yours come from the family dynamic, definitely.

Speaker 4:

Awesome.

Speaker 2:

Awesome, that's awesome to hear. What are some of your other influences that kind of pour into your music? Yeah, hip hop, of course my brother. He couldn't sing so he listened to a lot of hip hop, you know. So his room was next to mine, both my brothers. I'm hearing Jay-Z coming out the room all the time Like what's he listening to? You know so when he wasn't there, I had his CDs, put them in a Walkman, like oh, this is hard, you know. She said Walkman hey, I'm not young, I know I'm young, miss, but you feel me.

Speaker 3:

You're taking us back with the Walkman. Yeah, yeah, I can relate to all that shit.

Speaker 2:

Exactly exactly.

Speaker 3:

You know that shit's in a museum. Now, right, shut up, kevin.

Speaker 4:

I saw that in a museum.

Speaker 3:

This ain't about us. This is just about youngness.

Speaker 2:

This ain't about us. Yeah, so definitely my brother's taste in music influenced me to go the hip hop route, because before that it was just gospel, that's all I knew. Awesome, well, I definitely listened to your new album, your latest album. What was the influence behind that album? Um, just getting into it with a lot of people. I think the older I get, the more I get into it with people, which is weird, but maybe it's because you know I'm standing on business now. Yeah, I've learned how to say no. I've learned how to say what I don't like. Yeah, and um, not everybody could can take that oh yeah it definitely.

Speaker 2:

We speak about that a lot here on the podcast how, when you start to stand on business, the crowd changes around you because people can't take that, that reality of you it's fine what it is, it's fact so, um, I started writing based on that.

Speaker 2:

I had some fallings out. Um, I have a song on there called trust. It's like can I trust you? So it started off of that. Um song on there called maybe it's me, because I'm trying to take an introspective look. Am I the problem? And then that's the overall vibe of it Maybe it's me, I'm trying to make sure. Am I doing something wrong? Definitely, dreams is the one I keep on repeat.

Speaker 1:

Dreams yeah with Rizkin and Rick Rock. Rick Rock, yeah, definitely love it.

Speaker 2:

Appreciate it. That's definitely dope. What's your favorite hip-hop album Of all time? Of all time? The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. And that's so crazy because I was speaking to a friend of mine about, you know, interviewing you, and he literally said she's gonna love Lauryn Hill, and I know it.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, I feel like baby Lauryn. Like you know, you can feel the vibe in your music and just kind of your aura and how you are. You definitely kind of get a little Lauryn Hill vibe, so definitely, we know you're not because you showed up on time.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you was here, right.

Speaker 2:

Showed up completely because Lauren hey.

Speaker 1:

If you cut you out because she late.

Speaker 2:

Hey, I'll be late sometimes too.

Speaker 3:

She'd be four hours late.

Speaker 2:

She'd be four hours late.

Speaker 3:

She'd be next Saturday late.

Speaker 2:

I'd be like do you know who I am?

Speaker 3:

I'm here. People would be in the stadium and then she'd cancel.

Speaker 2:

Not next Saturday late, I mean when you're the headliner. You got to get a headliner. Some grace she going to get there. Four hours, I mean Come on now, right four hours when she there. You need a whole opening show, Just a whole, completely different show Put the city on Right Exactly.

Speaker 3:

Exactly, I do feel like the Miseducation is kind of like I don't. I don't really count as a hip hop album because I feel like there's multi.

Speaker 2:

It starts off with lost ones.

Speaker 3:

But she does a lot on there. She does. She got she getting her singing back. She raps on time.

Speaker 2:

I don't. It's multifaceted.

Speaker 3:

It does fit in multiple different. I rock with Lori. I love Lori, you got doo-wop on there.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's half and half. You know, that's what I'm saying. It's kind of like.

Speaker 3:

So you think it's R&B Bruno's rapping now, so we don't know what's happening. He is.

Speaker 4:

That's what we're calling that Is he.

Speaker 2:

I don't consider Bruno Mars R&B, but maybe that's me I don't know no he's kind of more pop to me.

Speaker 3:

He's pop yeah.

Speaker 2:

I didn't know he was rapping.

Speaker 3:

On the Sexy Red song. So, oh, okay, Well, I mean she's not rapping right now I've, you're not missing nothing yeah no.

Speaker 2:

As soon as.

Speaker 3:

I find out it was a Sexy Red song. I'm going to say it ain't for me.

Speaker 2:

You're like a money grab. I like Sexy Red though.

Speaker 3:

What do I mean To each his own?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she's entertaining in that you know she finna say something I'm finna tell you, in that you know she's about to do and say something shocking, catchy. Go ahead.

Speaker 1:

I mean it's catchy, it's catchy.

Speaker 2:

It's for the club.

Speaker 3:

I'm not gonna lie. As much as I hate that song, every once in a while I'll be in Stata.

Speaker 1:

Brothers like fat, juicy and wet.

Speaker 3:

And he's facing judgment. I hope you're saying that quite enough. No more hip hop talks with this guy.

Speaker 2:

So I would assume that, with Lauryn Hill being like one of your favorites, that the 90s would be your favorite hip-hop era.

Speaker 1:

Oh, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

The music was definitely different then. It was R&B heavy. Yeah definitely I do love R&B. You know, maybe that's why that's my favorite hip-hop album, because you know it does have hip-hop album, because you know it kind of gave you a little taste of both. Yeah, how do you feel about this new generation of music? It is missing soul.

Speaker 2:

Yes, oh dang, I see, I thought I was the only one that thought that no, it's true, it's definitely missing soul because growing up in that you know you need that sun where you might get away with those chords in church. You know you know so now it's like yeah, it's too poppy for me. It's missing, it's missing those chords?

Speaker 3:

that's because I think there's no emotional connection to the music they make you look for that stuff it's out there. You just have to find it. They don't wear mainstream where I'm not gonna play. Where's waldo with the music I?

Speaker 2:

mean that's what it's gonna be yeah, I know, that's what it's gonna be.

Speaker 3:

I just pop on good old old faithful, get me there every time what's that?

Speaker 2:

something that he already you still?

Speaker 4:

what is that you just said, old faithful?

Speaker 3:

I can go as far back as Bobby okay, okay, not Carl Wood, I can go back as far as sometimes I get my tank back that's funny.

Speaker 2:

I struggle with the new hip hop because half the time I don't know what they're saying, because they're using new lingo. So I have to go Google what they're even talking about to know if I'm messing with the song or not. And I'm a DJ, so I be feeling old because you know. But it's always something about those old songs that kind of get the party going. So you can always still kind of spin what we're used to, yeah, and even the newer generation of vibe with it.

Speaker 4:

Here's a question.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

When you DJ and someone says throwing an oldie.

Speaker 2:

What am I playing and?

Speaker 4:

then you hit the realization that the oldie is from your generation.

Speaker 2:

How does?

Speaker 4:

that make you feel, Because that yeah.

Speaker 2:

I feel old already. Like I feel old. You know cause I'll be. You know I'm still in the club.

Speaker 4:

I think that you know right. You made me think about that. It was like what is considered an oldie? Yeah, 87. Oh, one is old. Yeah, I saw a clip 87.01 is old.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, god damn it, and it's still worse than Confessions.

Speaker 1:

Here we go with that again. What do?

Speaker 3:

you think?

Speaker 2:

87.01 or Confessions, oh Confessions.

Speaker 3:

Hands down, you guys are wrong.

Speaker 2:

What was on 87.01? Nothing I listened to that shit, because he was talking I said Skip, Skip, yeah, I'm like I can't even name a song.

Speaker 3:

No, you didn't confessions, the whole confessions. Yeah, because that was the the one that came after I will bring up.

Speaker 2:

I will bring up the track list. It's always like that the one that's hot we got, we got a dj right here.

Speaker 3:

You're right I will bring up the track list hey, what the fuck does that mean to me?

Speaker 2:

she's no better just say you like 8701.

Speaker 3:

That means it's better. It's definitely not better. Everybody has their own. Just say you like 8701.

Speaker 2:

That means it's better, it's definitely not better. Everybody has their own opinion, you know. You like it, mine is right.

Speaker 3:

You're just collectively wrong.

Speaker 2:

Bullshit.

Speaker 3:

Playboy Cardi's hot, that's what they say.

Speaker 2:

So, they're collectively wrong, like y'all. Anyway, anyways, anyways, I'm sorry, Go ahead babe. I'm sorry, go ahead with you having your hand in so many different pots how do you find the balance?

Speaker 2:

um, well, I'm a gemini. Gemini. Maybe it's me, you feel me, maybe it's the gemini in me, but, um, right, there I'm already have to balance, you know, just like I'm quiet but then I balance. You know it's like I'm quiet but then I'm outside, you know. So, like I like to switch lanes, I always tell people because I've had people I've had, like I've had like little labels, try and sign me, like, oh, you're just going to sing. And I'm like, oh, that's not what I want to do, right, because I like to switch lanes, like sometimes I want to do this, sometimes I want to DJ, sometimes I'm tired of DJing, I want to go and promote. So I like that. That's balance to me. I'm able to do different things instead of just stay and do one thing and get tired of it. And I think that's why I'm still here, because I'm able to switch it up. I can do whatever I want.

Speaker 2:

Definitely Artists like yourself, like McFly a Do whatever I want. Definitely Artists like yourself, like McFly. A few others that we've had on you guys have stood the test of time. So even when music is changing, all y'all stuff is still hot, you know, out there, and it probably is because you're not just stuck in one lane.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 2:

You're multiple different places. So I can see that being something else, yeah, and you can pull influence from each lane, absolutely. How do you feel being in such a male dominant space?

Speaker 2:

well, I guess now more women are getting into the different spaces that you're in, but it's still kind of male dominant. How does that feel for you? Um, I feel like a chameleon, you know, like you see me, like it's not hard for me because, like, I'll be hanging with the fellas, you feel me, so it's not that tough, they see me, most of them show respect. Yeah, you know, because they already know. Like you know, I'm able to vibe, I'm able to understand, you know, and I don't have to go in there like how some of my home girls do. They have to go in already on guard. Yeah, you know, because they don't know the intentions of these guys. Like to me, me, it's like I wish I knew, I wish I knew you feel me. So it's like that makes it a little easier on me.

Speaker 2:

I still, I still have my guard up, yeah, you still, you still kind of got to hang your guard up? Yeah, but I'm able to. I'm able to move a little bit freer.

Speaker 3:

That makes sense.

Speaker 2:

You know, I can call the hobbies you feel me? Yeah, that definitely makes sense. And you're on an all-female podcast, right, is that correct?

Speaker 2:

Yeah it's the Dope Podcast. That's awesome. Yeah, we're on a little break right now, but shout out to my OG Big Keela, you feel me. Yeah, yeah, yeah, awesome. Okay, tell us a little bit about your podcast. Yeah, it's just about the culture. Culture, we talk about things that are happening. A lot of our episodes we talk about diddy, because every every week he was into some stuff. You feel me, literally. Yeah, no, I'm stupid. You get on my nerve. Oh god, I swear you do well, am I wrong.

Speaker 2:

No perfect timing, as always he was in it yeah, that's me's me. Oh my gosh hey.

Speaker 4:

Have you been able to look at baby oil the same way?

Speaker 2:

Hell. No, I haven't seen baby oil on the show since that drive. Johnson Johnson had to duck off for a second. They said it's the last damn straw for Johnson Johnson.

Speaker 1:

Let's just go ahead and smash this thing up.

Speaker 2:

They had a sponsorship with Diddy or something I ain't seen them since.

Speaker 2:

Give some advice to any female that wants to be in your shoes and kind of work in all those different areas. Yeah, it's Nike, just do it. You know, you never know until you do it, until you get some experience, you know. Then you can say I don't like this, I don't like doing this. Or you can say like, oh, I want to do this more. Yeah, you know. Or this is hard, I need some help. You know, like it, it takes doing it to really figure it out. Yeah, okay, yeah, definitely, that's great advice, okay. So I have a famous question we ask here Okay, okay.

Speaker 3:

Uh oh, you're fine, you're fine. The problem is that it's going to determine how you and I proceed Okay.

Speaker 4:

Do I get to act like you? If I don't, yes, you do Turn up. It determines how you and I proceed.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I'm going to turn up and I'm going to ask you this question two different ways. Normally we ask one way. I'm going to ask you the first traditional way.

Speaker 3:

Okay, first traditional way okay and then I'm going to ask you just a specific way because, um, I didn't mention it before, but you are our first female guest. Yeah, give it up for the lady, I'll get up for the ladies. I'm not getting up for no hot girls period.

Speaker 2:

Hot girl slumber. Okay, it's coming, so tell me your top five rappers, dead or alive. Oh, I don't know if y'all gonna like my list, but okay, let's see, it's your list. Yeah, wait, I already said jay-z and lauren. Okay, are you giving the order?

Speaker 3:

are you?

Speaker 2:

in order.

Speaker 3:

I'm not going in order that's tough, so you so you got jay-z and lauren, jay-z and Lauren, jay-z and Lauren.

Speaker 2:

Okay. Big L Okay, because that's where I learned bar structure and punchlines. So I got to give it up to Big L. That's tough Dead or Alive man I've. We thinking bars. I'm gonna throw a random one in there that people they don't like me for, but I'm gonna say Beyonce, you feel me, it's okay it's okay, go back, go back.

Speaker 1:

Go back and listen to Beyonce's tracks. Rapper.

Speaker 3:

I said what I said.

Speaker 2:

Beyonce, beyonce.

Speaker 3:

I'm in 8701, like I said yeah, we said what I said Beyonce, beyonce. Hey, I'm in 87.01.

Speaker 2:

Like I said, yeah, we like the next you had that, you had that that's okay, if you ever try and do a Beyonce song at karaoke, you'll understand she got bars and it's tough. I can't sing, so I wouldn't even touch it most of the time she rapping, most of the time she rapping. So I'm going to throw that in there. Fifth, that's tough. I'm going to throw an IE artist out there. I'm going to say Stevie Crooks. Look at her.

Speaker 3:

I knew this was going that way, okay.

Speaker 2:

So now.

Speaker 3:

Just let her, she'll tell you.

Speaker 2:

Please tell me why you didn't pick Tupac Shashmik Floyd. I respect Tupac Shashmik Floyd. I respect Tupac another Gemini. I respect his grind because you know that's something. He stayed in the studio. I liked how he was, like whatever beat y'all giving me, I'm writing on, I'm going to do this many tracks, but I don't know if it's one of my favorites. You feel me?

Speaker 4:

I knew this was going that way too, and she's like she started with it.

Speaker 3:

And she got to Big L and I was like ooh. Baby when we talked to me.

Speaker 2:

I say I knew Pac wasn't in there. I don't think Pac's going to be on this list?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and if.

Speaker 2:

I didn't say Stevie Crooks, I would have said Kendrick Lamar, but he's getting his shine right now, actually happy. When she said big girl, yeah, that was a cool. I was like she actually listens to rap. Yeah, a lot of these niggas now don't listen to rap, they just rap. And I agree, yeah, I don't like that new york sound. So you feel me, I like that sound from the east coast.

Speaker 4:

Um, all of that you look so uh deterred, but I'm in shock.

Speaker 2:

She is still, y'all don't have to have a shock moment anytime somebody don't say tupac, I'll be like are you kidding?

Speaker 4:

you're gonna be mad at a lot of people in the world yes, are y'all okay?

Speaker 3:

I mean the desert. If I'm honest, pac's not in my top five. Oh god, yeah, I kind of like, I kind of like Biggie over Pac, literally bar wise.

Speaker 2:

But I know from the west you're not supposed to say that, but like oh yeah.

Speaker 3:

Oh, Bars is. He's not in my top five either.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Bars was man, but they breaking my heart.

Speaker 2:

Pac is he's different for me but that's not on the we love Pac.

Speaker 3:

He's in my top ten just on my top five.

Speaker 2:

I'll take that he has passion, thank you. He's at my top passion, for sure for sure he can write a beat.

Speaker 4:

I'll give him that.

Speaker 2:

So you added Beyonce, yeah, beyonce and Lauren to this one, but I want to know I'm going to let you. I'll tell you the next two questions so you can think about them. I want to know your top five IE artists and and I want to know your top five female artists, top five IE. I said, stevie, oh, you trying to get me in trouble, I'll put you on the spot, but to be fair, I'm only giving her five. I'm sure she got a list, yeah.

Speaker 4:

I definitely have a list that you love.

Speaker 3:

It doesn't matter about the list. You're not in the five, you're not in the five.

Speaker 2:

I'm only giving you five.

Speaker 3:

Everybody got less. It's like the top eight in MySpace. It could rotate oh yeah, yeah, definitely Okay.

Speaker 2:

do your top five. Currently your current top five the Walkman.

Speaker 3:

now you're talking about MySpace. Come on, You're taking this back today.

Speaker 2:

MySpace was popping. I missed that. I missed coding.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you're taking this back today.

Speaker 2:

Stevie Cam Archer T Spokes. I'm going to throw me in there, for the hell of it, for sure, and let's throw Stata on there, because I'm not trying to be disrespectful.

Speaker 1:

We on the.

Speaker 2:

Herbway podcast. He got bars. He definitely definitely has bars. Hell yeah, top five females. Oh, tough, tough, tough, tough, tough. I'm going to throw Lotto on there because she's been spitting for a minute and I respect that, lauren, of course.

Speaker 3:

What, what were you going to say? I didn't know. Lotto was from that damn show. My wife told me that, yeah, she was the coldest one on the show. That, whatever was it, jd, that show with JD, yeah, with JD.

Speaker 2:

But she was the coldest one on the show like she was eating them kids up, oh baby all I say was. She grew up nicely, it was weird for me to even you know, look her like that.

Speaker 4:

You know what I mean? Yeah, she did. She definitely grew up.

Speaker 1:

It took me a minute.

Speaker 3:

You seen her and she was a child first and then you seen her as an adult and you was like hold on Lotto, yeah, like wait a minute, there she go. I didn't associate that at all. Oh, we know, you didn't.

Speaker 2:

I just said God damn you.

Speaker 3:

Can I get to the? Yes, my bad though. So you said Lotto and Lauren Lotto and Lauren L, starting off strong, big L Lotto.

Speaker 2:

Lauren. Yeah, man, I want to say Missy, okay, missy Elliott, just because her style is so different. Yeah, lady Luck, okay. Uh, lady luck, okay. Um, hmm, and me, come on what we doing. Yeah, right, yeah, boom right. Well, I can fuck with the female list. You got okay, not the IE list. I like the IE list too.

Speaker 3:

um, she just mad about Tupac. She should have said lady puck, not the IE list. I like the IE list too. She's just mad about Tupac. It's that Tupac that. I got.

Speaker 2:

She should have said Lady Puck. Lady Puck.

Speaker 3:

She always get twisted up when it's about Tupac.

Speaker 2:

I do because I understand.

Speaker 3:

You don't understand. People have purposes.

Speaker 4:

What's your takes on Dochi?

Speaker 2:

You know what? I listened to Dochi's album all the way through for the first time yesterday. Um, I feel like they're doing an amazing marketing job with her right now. I'm I'm like when did she sleep? Because she perished, will smith? Yeah, I'm about the grammys. I'm after this.

Speaker 3:

I'm here, you know, like, wow, like did you listen to the extended or the original? The extended because it just dropped yesterday yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

So it took me a minute, but there are some songs I was like, okay, I respect it, like and it has that hip-hop, you know, it has that hip-hop sound, it's not just all pop and tiktok, you know so I respect that. She kind of has a bit of the 90s hip-hop sound yeah, it's definitely.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, she's pretty baby. So so where did Top find her?

Speaker 4:

On the internet. Was it TikTok? I don't know. Did they find her on TikTok? She went viral on TikTok.

Speaker 2:

I believe I don't be knowing people's backstories, but they found her before that because she had that song with Isaiah Rashad. That was before TikTok days.

Speaker 4:

I don't know. I'm new to TikTok. I don't know how to work it Me, neither she's talented, she's a good stage presence too which I really really like.

Speaker 2:

I think you have to still be a good stage presence as well as the music.

Speaker 3:

Definitely. I know she made me want an alligator. I said damn alligator, cold. That motherfucker in my house Ain't making a damn alligator, you always want nigga shit.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy, I don't know if I could do that I like my toes Right.

Speaker 2:

I don't want no alligator unless we done fried that bad boy up.

Speaker 3:

Oh see, that's crazy. No, I bet you, I do that too. I'm a vegetarian. Okay, you can't eat none. Yeah, I ain't eat none. I've had alligator before you vegetarian yes, I am eat grass, so you eat grass when you eat the cow. You got to be, I got to show my cow. Show my cow. No, I'm saying you can eat the cow, because he ate the grass.

Speaker 2:

so it's still, it's transformed. I just I don't like consuming flesh blood and I'm good off that. That makes sense. Yeah, I don't want to eat flesh and I don't even. First of all, I ended up being vegan because Not vegan.

Speaker 3:

She's a vegan. I love my favorite food is cheese, okay, so vegetarian.

Speaker 1:

And bread, and that's why I'm a little healthy right now. So that's how you still eat the cheese and the bread.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, you just don't deal with the meat. How was that? Transitioning Tough? I still I crave my mom's meatloaf. You feel me, you know, but I just I'm not interested. And it used to hurt my stomach. I'm like man, my stomach hurt, stopped eating meat, no issues, fine you feel better overall health. Oh yeah that's interesting yeah well, tell the people what's next for you. What's coming? Do you have any shows coming um? You know what I don't have? Oh, that's not true. I have Coachella coming up, that's not true I?

Speaker 2:

have Coachella coming up. That's what's up. I DJed at Coachella last year. Hold on, say that again. You got what coming up? I got Coachella coming up. Wow, wow. You see me. You see me. I'm with an organization called Q+, so I mentor LGBT youth. Yes, let them know you can be authentically yourself. We at Coachella Wear what you want. Let's turn up and you good cause you with me. We about to go around and have fun. You feel me? We backstage with the artists, we doing our shit.

Speaker 2:

So shout out to Q Plus, shout out to Coachella Golden Voice, all that awesome well plug all of your social media so that people can know where to find you follow me at Young Miss pretty much on everything. Um, maybe it's me is out now. I'm mad at distro kid because they ain't put it in all the stores. I'm about to curse somebody out this morning once I leave here. You feel me, um, but yeah, just look for me. I'll you follow me. I'll follow back if instagram lets me. Awesome, I highly recommend maybe it's me awesome album definitely I listen to it through and through so I definitely highly recommend it.

Speaker 2:

This has been another episode of Talk your Shit, probably my favorite, and I just can't even believe that I'm sitting next to a legend.

Speaker 3:

We ain't here. Thank you once again. It's your favorite and she didn't have Tupac on the list. Yeah, that's gross.

Speaker 2:

Hey, shout out to.

Speaker 3:

Tupac, hold on, maybe you have been healing a little bit A little bit.

Speaker 2:

The rest of her day be fucked up, Because normally I'd be ready to fall out the chair. Baby, that's okay. A smidgen I'd heal through this. She's doing it in a fight.

Speaker 4:

Pac nigga. I have a random young miss memory.

Speaker 3:

Oh, go ahead, let's hear it.

Speaker 4:

So I was doing an album release party, right, and I brought you out to do Glasshouse and I remember I freestyled because I forgot the lyrics. I freestyled and I remember looking at you and you looked at me like what the fuck is he doing? And I remember the look on your face was like and then you still hit the mark on the singing but you just looked at me like what the fuck is he doing. But I never brought that up to you because I believe you ended up taking off like right after. But I thought that was so dope because you looked at me like hey, but that was, but that was between us because we knew everybody else probably didn't my my release party.

Speaker 2:

I just had. I forgot all the lyrics. I was like man, I should have played the track and did my shit on top of it, but I don't, I don't do that so I get it You're a consummate professionalist.

Speaker 4:

You're dope.

Speaker 3:

Thank you.

Speaker 4:

And I appreciate that moment because that's a memory I always keep with me. So thank you. Oh yeah, I appreciate you.

Speaker 2:

Right, well, thank you Thank you guys.

Speaker 3:

Thank you for having me. It's been a pleasure yeah this was fun. Appreciate it, much appreciated.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to y. So once again, this has been the episode of Talk your Shit for this week with Young Miss. We thank you guys for watching, so like, subscribe and share.

Speaker 3:

All that shit.

Speaker 2:

We'll talk to you next time. Peace, peace. This has been another episode of the Heavyweight Podcast. Talk your shit. One thing about me, baby I'm showing up every week to see who coming to talk their shit Y'all better show up with me.

Speaker 1:

See you there, bye.

People on this episode