Amin Joseph | Ep 147 | ALL THE SMOKE Full Episode | SHOWTIME Basketball

Published Aug 4, 2022, 3:55 PM

The final episode of ALL THE SMOKE season 3 is HERE and the boys are ending with a fun one. They sit down with actor Amin Joseph to discuss his role in Snowfall, his relationship with Deion Sanders, his budding career, and some New York Sports talk. Plus, he gets into character for some epic improv with Stak and Matt.

Welcome back to another edition to All the Smoke, Day two in l A with a very special guest. Uh Man, Jack, I gotta give you the credit because you put me on the show and I love it. Man, one of the best shows on TV. Rest in peace, star brother John Singleton. But welcome to the showmen. Amen, Amen, Amen, Amen, like you giving that praise. Man, appreciate you, man, Thank you for coming in today. You know, yeah, let's get let's get that right. Let's get that right type room. That's name. First of all, congratulations. Snowfall has just picked up for season six. The Yard Father Father Jamon Jerome speaker. Man, how did I mean talk to us about that? It feels good man. You know, to know that this started with a vision from John Singleton. The rest of the producers effects of they forceed that relationship with us. You know, we started off slow. Everybody knows that, and we built up to where now we're one of the more popular shows on television. Show. So that's that means a lot to me. Six seasons means that we get to see a beginning middling into the story. So I'm just ecstatic to see how this all ends. You know, as the show continues to grow. Obviously, your character has continued to grow in a major way. Um, talk to us about that process. Get you some squad on nick put. Yeah, you gotta squabble to get you to get your character development, right, you gotta squabble as a black man to get some character development. No, I'm just I'm just happy that the that the writers have chosen to keep me around as long. You know, we're talking about stuff that really affected our communities for really honestly, so, even though there's this part of me that's kind of fun and charismatic, part of it this is this is indicative of what we know from the neighborhoods that we come from. Um where you not promised tomorrow. So the fact that I'm still around, the fact that there's something about this character that still gives some sort of something to the story. Whether it's a poetic justice to it, we'll see, you know how how it ends with your own whether he you know, but more likely this is a tragedy. And as much as you feel the charisma and all of the things and you get connected to the character, there's also the price that's paid for the life that you live in. UM, so I always think about that and we'll we'll see how it ends. You know, have you guys started shooting season six yet we're not on season six to probably end up this fall. The one thing I love about your characters be speaking about it. I think it's easy for guys to come up and our different demographic to relate because it was always one guy that you knew it was actually putting in work, but he had a herder goal, you know what I'm saying. He cared about the neighborhood, He cared about the people to ride even though he was in that life, he still had the heart enough to know you know what he was doing, but cared about people and still gave game to the youth and that those guys and the neighbor who have more respect than anybody, than the mayor, than anybody growing up in those neighborhoods. So a lot of people can relate to to Uncle Jerome just from being from the areas we come from. Yeah, and I also think that like the character wasn't trying to make his nephew be him. He real lots. Sometimes sometimes if you really got to o G they know that, like Bro, you got a different path, like I just sent my nephew real life off to a college tour that he was able to go to like three four H b c U S like, that's a little different than you feel me, and we want to see people that have potentially be able to actualize that. So I feel like this uncle on't. He's like, look, nephew, you didn't have to do it like this, but now, wow, you show me that you can make money in a total different way. You flipped the game, and I feel like I got a little intoxicated with that. You know that he was able to be like, Okay, I can get off my sports squares and turn this into something else. So I think we always got to remember that part too, that that just because the o G is there, that doesn't mean you need to follow. Sometimes the o G is trying to give you a leg up on on on a whole different reality a lot of times, trying out to let you make them the same mistakes today. Mate, uh harlem. Yeah, let's talk about the bringing in hallm was that. I mean, come on, that's I'm a product of a hall of I grew up in the world famous Apollo Theater that was like my theater home. I worked there throughout some of youth, a little program in New York. I went to Rice High School y'all probably you know Rice from Phelippe Lopez MBA went there. Um, I wasn't shipping balled. Truthfully, what happened. What happened was I was you know, I was on that I was making jokes and ship because I couldn't get I couldn't get no playing time. So the coach at the time, I remember lou de Mello, the coach, he was like, um, you're not gonna make the team King, So you know, but there's the agent that I have that he works with sports athletes. Um so that was like my first foray into into entertainment. It was like going to sports auditions, basketball and you know, all type of sports. And at the time, I was like, you know, I booked a couple of old saw some money. I'm like, it's okay that I'm not on the team winning. In another way, maybe I could take this and expand on it and and learn the craft, because at the time I was just getting it based off of you know, you're a little precocious kid, you got a certain look or whatnot. Um, So that's how you know. That was kind of my growing up in Hallum. I started in the arts, the National Black Theater, Hall of I went to the neighborhoodood Playhouse down to nothing at you off, what age did you start finding all this? I started finding all of this. I mean I came up in plays and stuff and all throughout elementary and all that. But but yeah, but it wasn't a thing. It wasn't like you were supposed to do this, you know what I mean. It's like, oh, commercial dude, I was. People would see me in the neighborhood be like, oh commercial dude. You know, like you concion you know you're commercial dude, you know what I mean. Like it wasn't taking serious. It was like I but um, but you know, you're coming out of school and you're you're watching some of your people know exactly what they want to do. It's nothing like this for all young men and all women. It's nothing like finding what you your passion early. You know what I mean, because it gives you a loan. It gives you a long road to be able to say, you know what, I can fail. I can I can get successes, but I know where I'm going and I know what my intention is, you know what I'm saying. So I kind of really early kind of realized like, Okay, that ain't ball, that ain't a whole bunch of other stuff. What could it be? And I like this, So can I put myself? Can I discipline myself? And can I really learn the craft? Because at the time I ain't learned the craft. I thought, you know, like put me up for finding for us to put me up for like the biggest and best things. But I really didn't have the skills. So I had to go to school to get that skill. I went to Howard University. Like I said, I went to a lot of um theater homes in Harlem and also in Greater New York, you know what I mean, Like, like I said, neighborhood playhouse and stuff like that, learning mine and uh so that I could feel like, all right, I got a weapon. Now I'm a I'm a beast. Now now you gotta deal with it. And look, this is this is five years later that I'm able to show just a glimpse of what that is. You know, God, keep us good, keep the dan good. You know, black gonna crack. But there's a lot in here. So yeah, this magnet is strong. Now it's a problem. It started way back there, so he said you didn't play well, It's gonna get deep here too. It's gonna get of those Yep, you gotta keep the ding strong. I want my young people to know that, like we could, we could focus on something for a long time and build a diamond out of that cold. You know that that that's what makes you know the journey? Sweet? You know what I mean? Able to We always talked about being able to joy the good and the bad time the same way you say you weren't good and hoop any other sports let you rock with. I played baseball. Speaking of baseball, I actually have a biopick that I want to talk about. Can we get into it now? I have a baseball bio pick. It's called The Royal. It's coming out. I'm actually being able to premier that. Um the show at I'm sorry the film at Howard University, which is my alma mater um, and it's about a baseball player about the name of Willie Mays aikens Um. He ended up going to the World Series and a few a few years afterwards, he actually ended up um getting the largest mandatory minimum drug sentence and for any professional sports player end up getting about twenty four years, which he was. He end up serving about twelve to fourteen years of that sentence because he had a crack cocaine um and really he was a user, but he cooked up something for undercover officer, ended up getting pinched and gotten the drag, honey and drug sentences that we saw, you know, happening throughout everybody about the US. UM. So the name of that film is The Royal. I play that character. That lead character, Willie Mays Aikins is also a film that I produced, and oh that's coming out this summer. Yes, nice, yeah, nice, Make sure make sure y'all go check out. I mean, since we're in the space now, you spoke on it. Um. You know, not only do you act, you have a passion for producing anything else you're working on right now. Yeah, I also have an amazing podcast series right now. UM's produced by Shonda Land. It's called Hashtag Matter. Just really pick up on a lot of stuff that you do, Jack, because it's about a father that his son ends up getting killed at a routine traffic stop and the when he gets stopped, the officers end up killing the son, and in the officer mistakenly kills his own partner as well. Well. The father that I played, Gerald Hayes ends up kidnapping the officer on the scene, put the put the hammers on them, put the squabbles on them, and ends up taking him inside um a sports lounge, and he video records this whole interaction on his cell phone, goes live and he basically tells the public that he's gonna try that officer in real time. It's called hashtag Matter, like I said, It's produced by by Shonda Land. You can find it on my Heart radio wherever you um, wherever you listen to your podcast so that's Apple or you know anything Spotify whatnot. But um, it's an eight part series. When I talk about electrifying and you know, a lot of these things we went through, and as you know, people get a little like, okay, I've done with I'm we dealt with UM. You know, police violence, We've with UM, the iniquity that happens in the country. You don't want to deal with it right now. I understand that. But as we know, as long as if you don't keep that conversation going it's gonna die and we don't learn the lessons and we repeat the same things over and over. So yeah, I would employ everybody to check out hashtag mat. I'm really proud of that particular pieces as well produced. And there's no way you can't, you know, if you if you're scared to have this conversation out loud, maybe it's something that you can listen to it into your car. Maybe you can hear different perspectives and it and it shows everyone's perspective. It shows the police officers, it shows the press, it shows the family members involved. It shows the young man, a little young, precocious young man that had a whole bunch of talent and the future and his life snuffed out. It shows his point of view. It shows everyone's point of view. Beautiful HBCU, come over, you graduated Howard University. You speak highly about HBCUs. We see what Dion is doing at HBC using sports. We see where more Williams just got a head coaching job of Jackson State as well. Um, let's talk about your passion and and how and how you feel about HBCUs. I'm gonna send a young man or the young woman to an HBCU. You know, I'm not gonna lie and act like if the kid doesn't if the kid gets in the Ivy League school, that we're not going to take advantage of some of the of just that act that type of access. But I feel like sometimes like I knew coming up where I was coming up in hall of I knew like college wasn't for everybody. College wasn't for everyone, And it wasn't about how smart somebody was, you know, but it just didn't fit the lifestyle. It just didn't fit that person. That's that spirit, honestly. Um. But for me, when you go to HBCU, not only are you educated, you also in almost infected with a knowledge of yourself. You see a faculty that looks like you. You see even if you grew up with other mother or without a father, You see people that are nourishing and supporting their children that can be surrogates to you. So you pick up a big brother, you pick up a father figure, you pick up another mother figure to help some of the broken homes that we've come from, in communities that we've come from, so that then you can put that same that same pupil back into a community that's whole, and now they have a network of people that were you know, so don't get it t usted. I understand a lot of politics that go on with h B c U S. And I understand that a lot of people can be um, can be hesitant to and their children there, or can look at the business model of it. Understand all of that, but for what it was intended to be and what it still is because people like myself come out of it and can give back and create a community of people, I think it's still important. What is the knock us? Because I don't I don't talk about the knock think, don't even give it. I but on the outside looking at it, I can't see one because just like Deans said, we offer the same thing any other school could offer. You don't want to be coached by Dion saying that's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. But he's saying that what's the knock on us? We offer everything else. There is no knock. It's just that, let's just be real. There's been a hierarchy that's been there's been you know, and and we've always been dominant. It's just the talent has left. So if the talent goes there, then the facilities get better. That's what Deon is bringing bringing. Deon's bringing way more than just his name. He's bringing resources, He's bringing eyeballs, He's bringing accountability. He's going that these kids deserve as much. They deserve the same type of training, they deserve the same everything you know across the board and um and watch it flourish. Watch it flourish, and other places will will take note and take heed as well. What makes Howard homecoming one of the most premium events. I've never been but you've never been to home coming and we want to start talking. Want to take all the stuff to definitely need to take home coming tour. I'm gonna lose myself. That's fine. I know ahead of time, Jack, I don't need you to lose yourself. I'm trying not to listen. I'm trying not to shill. Jack gonna be in the yard like I just I go ahead. But what I'm saying is home coming first of all HBCU homecomings period because I feel like my Hogward gets gets to love because it's one of the bigger HBCUs. But man, I haven't been a homecomings as some of the smaller schools. And that's another thing. A lot of the smaller HBCUs that's what makes up the historical Black colleges. So when we focus on the ones that we know like the Spellman's or the more Houses, the Hamptons, the Howard Universities, UM, we we must not forget that there are a lot of other schools that make up the historical Black colleges. That makes up that network of a premier type of of um college experience for black people. I put every I put the smallest from when it was Lincoln's to to my Jackson's. You don't want to go into it, you know. But what I'm saying is each historical Black college matters, you know. So we can get into like, oh and now I went to this one. I went to a small one or a big one. But at the end of the day, it's the network of those schools because we got to remember through history, these were places that people could go into these regions, in these different regions. There's historical Black colleges here in California, in l A. People don't even know, you know, So we just got to be cognizant of that. It's not just these bigger ones that we've always heard of, you know, So as much as I'm gonna give love to Howard with you know, the home coming at Howard, Yeah, it's crazy, it's gonna you're gonna have a good time. Yes, I believe all the smoke definitely needs to be at Howard on Howard y'ard um come on and Mecca. Yeah, but I wanted to send love to to all the of all of those two. Yeah. But since we're talking about what makes it, what makes Howard do Mecca, It's probably starts with d C Bro, d C DC different. Oh yeah, we know. I'm from New York, Yo. D C took it took me a minute. I was like, I thought I was going over, Like Nah, you're gonna you're gonna feel this, You're gonna sit down onto this. This DC. This ain't New York Bro. This is different. And d C has its own culture, has its own music, its own vibe, its own and Howard is a part of d C. You don't get Howard without getting DC first. Come get come get this culture of d C. Come get these black people that represent a district that can't vote nationally. It's a lot of a lot of a lot of legacy, a lot of power, a lot of disenfranchised voices in d C. It's funny I look at the U that January six right insurrection, whatever, but I never see that juxtaposed to what's going on really in d C, Like, how do people feel the real people that make up DC the Chocolate City. I saw a whole bunch of people whiling out, But was my people willing or was they like all the people that were employed, whether it's DC Police or Capitol Police or you know anybody that you know, contractors, whatever, how are they feeling during that time? Did we get that on camera? We got they we got they pressed? Uh no, right, we hear nothing from that. All those are people that lived there, right, So yeah, it's still a lot of iniquity going on. There's still a lot of misrepresentation going on. And like I said, when I moved to d C, I realized that, Wow, here's a different culture, and I need to learn this culture and appreciate it. And Howard is a part of this car and and that was a great experience. Our home coming. You're coming, said how Warld home comes with my man Capone drumming. I ain't gonna finish it, but you know what I'm saying, I'm going my way. What was You're kind of entry into the real world of acting? Uh, the real world? That's interesting if you say the real world of acting. I'm gonna take something that ain't got nothing to do with the real world, you know, because I'm listening. I'm gonna take how you learn. I did a non union film maybe in coming all right, out of college, I did a non union film that the director told me as boxers versus gangsters. It's like all I used to amateur box at the time. I was like, all right, cool. One of my man's Joe Super, hooked me up hall M. Dude. Right, It's like, Yo, we got this dude, a young kid, he from n y U. He got a bag from Hollywood to make a movie in HALLM boxers versus gangsters. All Right, I'm game, right man? When I talk about like steal in shots in New York City in HALLM, that's crazy. So I could mention, you know, the first Whoop, the Whoop movie that I did that had star names in it, and but that was the first that was the genesis of Wow, you could have a you can have an outlook of being able to make a movie. I still feel like we are under appreciated for the type of films that we make. You know, I'm I'm I'm blessed to be in Snowfall where it's a heightened um narrative of the films that we love, the entertainment that we love that a wider audience can accept. But there's still the stuff that we love that isn't accepted. It's undervalued and can be made in the hood near you, and it don't need no names. Dames was just on here in prestess. He knows literally just broke. When we have athletes on, we normally asked what you're welcome to the NBA NFL moment? What was your welcome to? So we got your intro right there with the acting, what was your welcome to kind of Hollywood? Uh moment you feel like welcome to Hollywood moment? Probably the movie that Expendables I did with us in Us to stallone and and Terry Crews was was was a big help for me. So let me see a lot of things that I'm actualizing right now. Um, but yeah, it has Wartzenega. You know Dorf, Loundering, Mickey Roy, Jason Stathum, and it's just packed. And I was able to work with them and be a villain against them, and that gave that definitely put a battery in my back to recognize that, yo, I could, I can own my space. Um. It definitely was a coming out for me um as far as knowing that this is where I belong and I'm gonna end up doing huge films and you know, whether I want to play the villain of the protagonists or whether I wanted it to be loving or whether I wanted to be insidious, you know that I can play those different beats and have fun doing it and work with other professionals and learn, um, you know, really important. Were there any I guess you could say earlier, but really just in general, have there been any actors or actress as you were kind of in awe of when you got a chance to either meet with them or work with them mm hmm or all of when I work with them, I met them. Let's make this real clear too, Actors, actresses, any anyone that has done anything of importance. I think it's really important that we reach back to the people that are coming up, um, anyone that reaches out to you. We can't get in touch with everybody that reaches out. But when we do have that impactful moment, that we don't blow them off, that we don't um make them feel less than that, we don't make it seem harder than it is. We already know it's hard. They know it's hard when it came up to you. It's hard enough coming up to you to talk to you. So for me, there's a circle of truth around my head to make sure that, UM, that I always give something, you know, give give my real, true life experience to someone in a little moment. We can do that. That's what we've been doing our whole lives. You feel me. It takes a little longer. Sometimes people come up a little more rude than others, but we get that. UM. So I'm answering that question saying that you know, I don't. I've never walked really on a set and been like, oh, I'm ah, now I came here to to get bodies. But it helps when the people that you meet are open and and if you're willing to learn, they're willing to teach. And if you're willing to teach they're willing to learn, it really helps. So I'll say that you worked on big films and in movies and projects and in different types of people. But what particularly made John Singleton in your eyes different, that's a big bro. He was always enchanted with the filmmaking process. That's one of the first things when I say enchanted, like like the wizard, like like he good. Um. I even til now say like I could never tell you what John really thought about something, because every time I asked him about something, his answer would be so all from what I asked them. It would be like like I'd be like, oh, that's what you think, Okay, Damn I didn't think that. But he was such a renaissance man. He was such a ahead of his time, and he was um. He was infatuated with the filmmaking process. He was he was uh inspired by seeing creatives by you know, like um collaborating with creators. He was he was so inspired by by seeing you reach your full potential. It was a talent hale. He loved talented people, you know. He loved to collaborate and entertain and to break down script and story and it was beautiful to see that. Um and to work with him for three years like that, you know, And and I really do miss him. I missed his point of view. I missed the charisma. I missed the family atmosphere that he gave. I missed that, you know, I missed that. You know, he has a son that big shout off the young little seven that just had a birthday. Um, you know my daughter. He had a son a few weeks before I had my first daughter, And I remember going shortly before he died, because he died around the time that my daughter was having her birthday and his son had just had his birthday. So we went to the party and all that and the way that he loved his children. Um. John Singleton cannot be commemorated enough period. He is an institution. He's a foundation of telling our stories unapologetically. Let's never forget that. And that's my big bro. We got It says a lot. It's about him. For for y'all to be able to continue on with the show and make the show what it is without him being here, that says a lot to what the person he was that everybody still cares enough to make this show in to steve to see his vision and continue it on. You know after he's gone. That says a lot about y'all too. Definitely being from Harlem, who how did you prepare to be a o g to be up in South Central just a whole another coach. Yeah, come on, now, some you have some practice off what I mean, thank you for giving me my thing? You know what I mean? Because the uncle. Yeah, I feel like listen, I feel like I don't care if you're from Memphis, you're from Nashville, you're from Birmingham, from Detroit, you're from halland you're from the Bronx, you're from Watts wherever you from, Eve from Gary. Let's get deep. Let's go man. This America being some ship and time, there are all these these rebels, these people that didn't fit in these uncs. There wasn't gonna take no ship that wasn't gonna suffer this either. Like I'm gonna excuse my language, I'm gonna fuck, I'm gonna sin, I'm gonna live my life unapologetically, on my level, whatever my fucking education is. But don't get it twisted. I'm smarter than the most of them. I'm gone, I'm unc mm hmm. I might have done some time, I might have figured some things out. I might know the important things to me, my woman mm hmm, my community. And when I say community, I mean motherfucker's I fun my family. That ship universal to us. Without knowing your last name m hm, given last name, we know that. So the rest is why you paid me the money. You know, it's because I'm gonna do that. I'm gonna make that. I'm I'm gonna give you the region now, I'm gonna make it south central, I'm gonna make it whatever region. I'm gonna put whatever on it. I'm gonna put the sauce of season. And but but that's the core, the core I had because that was given to me from the experience that I lived. And to be able to give that to an audience that I no, that feels good, That feels good because some of that stuff was just pain. Some of that stuff was just pain. So to be able to transmute that and be able to be like, no, I can give that as art. I can give that as entertain ament. That feels good. You know. Yeah, stop to say we in that time in the eight is, how is it? How important are the people around like the people that get the wardrobes and all, and in the scenery like scenery too back to the eighties, Like how how important to those people? You got the curl, you know, just the whole outfits, the jacket they had you with, the speaker that, yeah, all that your hold on ship? Excuse me, I ain't no putting a brak on that? Well, I say, hold, look, hold, look, it's not happening right now? Is it that happened right now? Is it? I didn't know? I feels uh, I knew it. I knew it. I knew it. I'll be sucking with them, goddamn acting niggers. Whatever wrong to roll? You know, you need a little bit of this ship and ship he's here? Now, what's up? What's up? Ain't that much? What are you talking about? Y'all? Say, y'all up in the smoke? Who won't smoke all the smoke? You want all smoke? All the smoke got cracked? Got creep with which one smoke? We don't talk about that on camera. Okay, we're talking that. I do you do? Well, let's talk about let's talk about Franklin who nephew, nephew, real quick. When we talk about Franklin, we had Dean Sanders, and he said this curl was look wet, but it was dry. You shouldn't just a dry what's your ship? What you talking about? Your ship? Look dry? Talking about my ship? Little dry? You want we can start this ship up, not that ship, quick hitters. Yeah, you mean we're talking a wrong Wayne talking. You know what we're talking about. We're talking to wrong. Dream co star in a movie and director for drone not ain't got it? Say it again, dream coach someone you would like to work with as an actor, actress or and God damn ma, God want that. God damn mom. Pam grim Box Brown, That Pam Grimm. I think she fun with a nigger like me. Yeah, no question, Yeah she's like she's like real Pam grab y'all. Damn. Let me talk directly to your heart. My fucking face hurts. Talk directly to you. Let me talk directly to you. You need a man like me. Now, I got a woman when we come into it's a package deal. Me and my old lady take anything that you need to be thinking. Louis like, we don't like women. No more about to St. Louis. That's what she Loui, You Louis Pam. That's nice. You're lucky man. Wait wait a caman, that's your singer right there. You're looking in her eyes right now. That was so damn good. Send that. How are you doing that? Cut y'all? Cut the ship? Yeah, pack that up. What's your own? Top five? Top five movies of all time? Chelf, car wash, car wash, mac hey, that's it, Nick, rest in peace. Mac Julian. He just passed recently. Oh, penitentiary, oh man, midnight one of two? Yeah, five penatentiary midnight thu yeah, midnight thub ship penitential. That was it? Come on too sweet? Too sweet? Oh yeah, that's good. Ship refulled you too, if you need it. Top five New York New York athletes of all times. Huh, we'll go with what conpration m that's stress him and the Earl of the Pearl. Last time. We gotta goddamn championship. Yeah yeah, all right, let me get huh, let me get with that. Little Opie boy, little Obie boy on the Giants be winning the championship. That motherfucker wins some ship. I don't know how they got him. That motherfucker got damn football ship doing like that. Mother touch down Tom Brady krypton Nite that mom him let me get uh can't win nothing, but I like it. I like a passion the Trump freeway. That's mother fucker. Yeah, slap shot out of the coach, slapped the ship out of the Put me in the game, coach. That's put me in the game. Yeah, put me in the game, coach. I like him. Patrick Ewing fucking Knees, Patrick Ewing Knees put that in there, and he was. He was a hell of a center bad knees. One quite type ship. One quote to live by. I know one that you that you really stand on, though, and it might not be the quote you live by, but I know when you stand on and I get to you, come on, get you some squamp Come on, Jack, you're gonna have to work better on that. Now, Dragons, I'll try that again. Now, I ain't say it like that. Come on, now, it's goddamn acting class. Now all right here we go. M hmm, come on, no, no, no, I'm not. I'm the motherfucker Tray say he needs these keys. I don't give a fuck what trade sake, but get you some squamp on Nickla casting. I saw some of that talents brawl in and there saw something that real ship. She got real for him. Ant. Yeah, that's the moment I was. I wanted the show. I've been telling him where I was. I'm glad you came and that's the moment I wanted. Thanks for giving me that moment, my brother. I love y'all. Man, appreciate you know what it appreciate that man closer out with the last question, Jack, if you can have one guest on All the Smoke, O G. Jerome, who would it be? But before you answer that question, you have to help us get your answer on the show. Goddamn, Hey, uncle wouldn't be here without this, goddamn nephew. Ain't nothing come on, old goddamn Oh yes, sir, yes, sir, we need you before we get you out of here, we got something for you. I can't not let you leave without having you with some All the Smoke, gil my brother, just some merch. That's at least we can do the show. I appreciate you for having you on. O G. You got a lot going on. I know, I know you and Louis still trying to work this plug thing. I would read. So just the fact that you took the time out to get off the streets and come in and give us an interview. We highly appreciate it. Ain't no goddamn dreaming of me right here, got new cameras and when that ship we gotta talund right now. Good, I said, we got a talent there too. So you don't drip up the collar of the sweatshirt. So you mean and you get on stage, we goddamn jump suits on it and be good. You don't like it, that's crazy, You're gonna be all right, that's crazy. That's a new ship. Hey man, congratulations on season six. Again. We appreciate your time today here. Uh man, that's a wrap. You can catch all the smoke on Showtime Basketball YouTube and the Heart platform Black Effects. That's your solo taking side. What you got ended on the camera, ended on the camera. Jack, put that ship on. Jack. I've been waiting for you. Yeah, yeah, Mr Sun goddamner player. We're gonna get the plug or else. Fun with Louis talking about let's go

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All The Smoke

ALL THE SMOKE pairs two of the most outspoken and controversial players of their time. Known as fier 
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