- Ladies and gentlemen, and all who may
fall in between, we are back.
Yes, if you're seeing me on your screen, BT,
thank you, and keep letting this shit happen.
'Cause I would've pulled the plug on me
a long time ago, but y'all are invested.
I appreciate you.
So, I'm your host Mouse Jones, this is I'll Apologize Later.
Shoutout to my guest last week, DreamDoll.
Great episode.
Dream, I gave you my number for a reason.
Call me.
Hit me, you feel what I'm saying?
But, moving on with the moving on,
we got another great guest,
but before we get into him,
I gotta let y'all know what we're getting into.
This week we're talking about Serena.
Is she the best athlete ever?
Ben Simmons, can he cheat 'cause he got money,
allegedly, relax.
And last but not least, Spotify.
They gotta pull that rewind.
Also, somewhere down here or around here
or over there, they're gonna put this disclaimer.
But you already know how I feel,
I don't give a (bleep) about the disclaimer. Why?
Because if I say anything that gets under your skin,
if I say anything to make you feel any sorta kinda way,
I'll apologize later.
(upbeat music)
Something pissed me off.
You know, it's festival weekend.
- Okay.
- The weather, it breaks every now and then
so we could get a good sneaky cookout going.
- Yes.
- And what's really pissing me off in
the culture is that women keep wearing
these goddamn heels to the cookout.
Wearing heels to the festival.
- Alright, well lemme tell you. I like that.
- You like that.
- I like, yeah, real heels, that's right.
I wanna see you
- [Mouse] To the cookout.
- Yes, I wanna see you perky,
'cause when a woman put the heels on,
that make they backside stick out.
So you aint even figured that out.
- I knew that, but also I don't want you
to be walking with the flip flop.
Need to put on some sneakers.
- Mmmm.
- [Mouse] Even if you don't like Jordans,
I know how y'all do.
- Yeah, but girls look better, more sexy, in heels, though.
- Alright, so Self wants to objectify you ladies.
I just want you to be comfortable and not look stupid.
- No, you look stupid in sneakers,
that's what you look stupid.
You're like a little kid in sneakers.
- Wow, you're sneaker shaming.
- Yeah, grow up, that's for high schoolers.
- Now, like I said, we've got a great guest in the building.
Shout out to The Gwinin God.
- That's right.
- Prince of New York.
We got DJ Self.
From Love and Hip Hop, Power 105.1.
- That's right.
Well we're just callin' me The Gwinin God.
There's no more Prince of New York.
- But uh let's jump into these topics.
- Let's do it.
- All right so first up,
Serena is she the best athlete of all time.
Now, before we get into this,
Serena announced that she is stepping down.
She has an injury so Maria Sharapova,
who ass she whips all the time,
she got lucky, she moved up one spot.
Serena's out due to her injury.
But before the injury.
- Injury, injury.
She was winning as usual,
after the baby.
Grand slam champ, is Serena the best athlete of all time.
- I say no.
The first person that comes to mind, to me,
as a young black man, would be Michael Jordan.
- Okay.
- Michael Jordan has done things
that woo'd a lot of people, male and female.
I don't see too many people say,
if I could be like Serena,
but a lot of people wanted to be like Mike.
- Well that's cause it's more syllables
so it wasn't as marketable.
- Allegedly.
(laughter)
cause we could figure that out.
- In the end I do think Serena will be
the greatest athlete of all time.
Second-
- Why you say that?
- Well because number one, she inspires young girls.
She inspires young black girls.
We haven't had that in like the way Serena does it, right.
- But does that credit her to be the greatest athlete?
- Yeah-
- There's a difference between being the greatest,
and a good one.
- She did all this winning, had a baby,
went back to winning. Men can't do that.
- Men can't have babies.
If Jordan could have a baby he coulda done the same thing.
He told me.
- He told-, okay fair enough.
- He tweeted me back there.
- Well, you are foul for
not tellin' him to wear better jeans.
(laughter)
But uh, let's move on.
BET posted this article this past week
about Ben Simmons,
and his access to women.
You know him and Tinashe,
they recently just broke up.
- That's the singer.
- That's the sing-, she's singish.
(laughter)
Well yeah so Tinashe and Ben Simmons,
they recently just broke up.
Basically the article question,
can men remain faithful even if
they're making a lot of money.
- You might have grown up and not have the access
to do things that you always wanted to do.
So now you have the money to do these type of things.
So it kind of like messes up your mind set.
And I feel like some people with new money,
they may cheat or get certain women-
- Right, because-
because it make it feel like they made it.
- I'm not gonna hold you to that,
that's a great way to put it
because I be thinkin' like that.
- Okay.
- We got two shows on BET Bernie,
just in case you're watchin', two of em'.
- What that got to do with the money though?
That wasn't the question.
- It is the question because see,
this what you be missing out on my brother.
- Aight go ahead.
- Because once you remove the money,
you can now deal with who the person really is.
- Yeah, but that wasn't the question-
- What I'm sayin' is-
- Question is the money can't be removed
because the money is there.
- That's not true, the money can be removed.
Anything could happen, guy could rob you, scammers.
- But we're not talking about
when you cheatin' when the money gone.
We're talkin' about cheatin' when the money there.
I don't cheat, I'm in the creep squad, like come on god.
What are you talkin' about, I don't cheat.
- Okay man, some nights cheatin' you do man.
- Eh, I don't cheat, who cheats.
- I don't know I just be watchin', I be watchin the show.
- Cheatin' is wack.
- Yeah, cheatin' is wack.
- Like crack is wack.
- Oh, come on Whitney, come on man.
(laughter)
Come on.
- Cheatin' is wack, who would do that,
why would you ever cheat?
- So the Love and Hip Hop check,
it was that good that it made you cheat.
- Yeah, who cheats, why would you cheat, cheatin' is wrong.
- Mouse doesn't cheat, I'm a faithful black man.
But I do know when-
I know black men don't cheat.
But I do know that sometimes when black men
get a lot of money we tend to do white people shit.
- Black people get money they still
do black people stuff too.
They go buy chains, that's the first thing you do.
- I'll buy chains before I cheat on my woman.
- Well, last but not least,
Spotify.
Spotify has taken some of R. Kelly's music
and and some other artists,
but I don't give a (bleep) about them,
we're talking about R. Kelly,
get his bullshit out of here.
Anybody that abuses women and is a pedophile,
take their music off of the whole streaming service.
But they just took it off the playlist.
- Mmhmm
- So once they took it off the playlist
there was some kickback.
Top Dawg, which is the label that Kendrick signed to,
ScHoolboy Q, SZA, they threatened to actually remove their
music from the streaming service all together
if they didn't reverse the decision.
What do you think about that?
- I think, Top Dawg made that statement because I think they
were targeting, I think, urban music.
- Okay.
Because they only did it to these black artists
- Okay.
and they excluded some of the known white artists.
I do think it's unfair that you target one
group and not the other group.
I think that's kind of unfair and fowl.
But, you know, that's where any particular group,
whether it's urban, whether it's white, Jew, whatever.
You boss up and own your own stuff.
- If DJ Self had, like, the going in streaming service,
would you put R. Kelly's music on it?
- Yes, uh huh, I'm here to make money.
- Okay
- You know what I'm saying?
Aside from the video from back in the days
- Uh oh. Here we go.
- I think that he may have changed his ways.
He may have, I don't know.
- We know for a fact he has not changed his ways.
Any other time we stand on CNN,
we stand in these protests and we say
white people, the system, the institution
is not built for us, right?
We all agree for that.
So then when we begin to do things within us that protect us
from those that look like us, then we start to say
well what about the white...
We can't have it both ways
you're either gonna take a side or your not.
That's not my people.
- So then what you do is, instead of taking his music,
you force him to get help.
You understand?
- Self feels how he feels,
I feel how I feel.
If you feel how you feel,
let us know below in the comments.
Make sure you follow us @BET, on all social media platforms.
Make sure you follow us on YouTube
and subscribe @betnetworks.
Don't tag me though.
- Track or Trash is a segment where
number one, we talk about music.
We get to play one song that came out this week
that caught my eye, caught my ear,
play a few seconds of it,
and me and you get to deliberate
whether this track or trash and why.
You cool with that? - Got you.
- Don't be nice, I need, I need.
- Well I'm trained to be nice.
- Oh my God, who is you?
Come on, man.
- [DJ Self] All right, you know.
- Fort Green's finest, what are you doing right now?
- I'll give you my honest opinion,
I got you. - Thank you.
Now, this week, I love this group, The Internet.
They dropped a new song, Come Over.
You know, it's that alternative R&B, the smooth vibes.
Let's just jump into it, Come Over, The Internet.
♪ You're beautiful babe ♪
♪ You're really something ♪
♪ Stylin' I gotta say ♪
♪ T-Shirt, designer jeans ♪
♪ You got me open ♪
♪ Filled with emotion ♪
♪ Living in ecstacy ♪
- That was 15 seconds, goddamn!
- [Woman] That was enough.
- That was a rude 15 seconds.
What'd you think about it, Self?
That was Come Over, The Internet.
- I like it.
I like the way R&B is,
the direction R&B is going in.
To me, it's going back to what I used to call chicken wrap.
And when I say chicken rap,
you know how a chicken wrap looks?
- [Mouse] Yes.
- And remember the girls, they used to wear they hair
with the wraps and they used to go to
(laughs)
but instead of the chicken wrap being sideways,
the chicken wrap is. (Mouse laughs)
- Shout out to all the natural hair mamas.
- [Man] No, I love that natural hair, don't get it twisted.
- Self hates natural hair women, clearly.
- But I call it the chicken wrap.
- [Mouse] Yeah, right, right.
- The chicken wrap type of vibe.
- Okay, real Neo Soul-ish.
- Yeah, the Neo, I call it chicken wrap.
You gonna call it Neo Soul-ish.
- [Mouse] I think that's the actual name is Neo Soul.
- I call it chicken wrap.
- So Erykah Badu used to wear a chicken wrap.
- Chicken wrap, yeah. - Yeah, that's Neo Soul.
Just wanna make sure.
- Well what would you consider that on her head?
- Not a chicken wrap.
Auntie Erykah, I did not call it a chicken wrap.
He called it. - That's a chicken wrap, man.
- But I like the record.
And I agree, I like that R&B
that somebody's taking a stand in R&B and The Internet,
they had a great album, Ego Death.
The new album Hive Mind comes out, I think this month.
They're tourin', they tearin' everything up.
They, I love they music.
- I heard it, but they on my radar.
- Super smooth.
Super smooth, you can't, like, I love smooth music.
- Chicken wrap.
- [Mouse] Okay.
Chicken, chicken wrap music. - Mmhmm.
- If you guys agree with me and Self,
if you feelin' this record, let us know below.
If you hate it, let us know.
Just don't let me know personally.
Follow below @BET on all socials,
@BETNetwork, subscribe to us on YouTube.
And that was Track or Trash.
- Now gettin' into another one of my favorites,
this is, keep that same energy.
Keep that same energy is a segment
where I go through your social media.
Whether it be your Twitter, your Instagram,
I ain't good on Snapchat, Facebook,
whatever you said to your Aunt, don't matter.
It's catchin' my eye and I wanna see
if you can keep that same energy.
- Got you, cool.
- On your Instagram,
On your Instagram you put,
"Women that play hard to get, don't get got",
and you put four exclamation marks.
D.J. Self, are you keeping that same energy?
- I think some girls play too much hard to get
'cause they think that they're so higher up.
Or they used to so many men trying to approach them
that they feel like,
what the classic term is that they shit don't stink.
And a lot of times they wind up being
that old lad with cats.
(meow)
You know, like oh yeah, when I was young, you know.
- Oh, oh, oh, ohh.
We need all the,
listen production, we need all the gunshots.
(gunshots)
We need all the shots fired.
(gunshots)
We need all of that shit, we need all of that
'cause I don't think anybody
has kept that same energy to this extent.
Yo, I, the crazy part is
I tend to agree with that to an extent.
I do think we play some mental games.
I do think we try to get women to bring their standards down
sometimes when we feel we can't meet.
So, that's not always the same,
and then we mask as, oh she playin' hard to get.
We'll never say anybody's standards are unrealistic
unless you are asking for pretty girl shit, and you ugly.
That's the only time I will say that.
Like, you can't ask for ...
- Well, you can't say somebody's ugly,
- Shit!
- it's only a matter of opinion
- No, it is not.
- You know what, because let me be honest,
I don't know the girl name,
but the first person to come to mind
is she's a little attractive.
The black lady on Saturday Night Live.
- Leslie. - Leslie.
- Leslie is beautiful.
- See, but some people may say uh.
- Leslie is a beautiful person
and she knows it.
Leslie don't look in the fucking mirror,
and be like um, girl, bitch, no she don't do that.
- No, she's beautiful man, she's beautiful.
- [Host] She's a beautiful black woman.
- She's beautiful, she's beautiful.
She's single, I wanna date you.
- You'd date Leslie?
- I'd date, yes I would.
- You think, you must've checked her net worth.
(laughs)
- [Man] I'm about to google it now, yo Google.
- Julia, what's her net worth?
Pull up here net worth, Julian.
- Five?
- [Man] Five.
- Leslie, let me tell you this.
Beautiful queen, nubian goddess.
I appreciate all the light you bring
to this earth and if you should ever want to take
me on a date, I'm here, I'd love you.
- How you still in my live?
- Pssh, like that, I definitely think there is a place for,
like I said your real life and your standards to me.
I don't always think that women should be always so quick
to be the one to lower their expectations
or lower their standards.
To meet, the level of a guy.
I think common sense should come into play.
Like hey, if you're low on your standards
and this (beeps) is a bum.
You have nobody to blame but yourself.
- [Man] Okay.
- Shout out to the women who are living with the cats.
I respect you and your standards.
- Yeah, say that now. (laughs)
- [Man] No, no that is to them and their character.
Ain't got nothing to do with me.
- [Man] I hear you.
- Somebody did on my standards.
(laughs)
Moving on let's talk about DJ Self.
- Let's do it, the Gwinin God. - DJ Self, the Gwinin God.
- Yes, uh-huh. - Power 105.1
- Yes.
- The one thing that I always thought was dope,
is where you come from, right.
- [DJ Self] Mm-hmm.
- Because you used to DJ for Most Def
during his Black Jack Johnson tour.
- Yeah, and the funny thing.
Like I said, this may be not TMI,
I used to be around Mos Def, T.Y. Lin,
just a whole bunch of. - Whole black star team.
- The quotable underground cats and they used to
listen to Jay-Z and the guys,
we used to call them champagne gods.
You understand what I'm saying?
Then, the funny thing was I hung around the champagne gods
and they wanted to be like the underground.
Each people wanted to be like each other.
- The grass is always greener.
- Yeah, it was just funny to me.
Everybody wanted to be each other, it was funny to me.
- So is it weird to see where you started, right.
Where you started with the underground guys
and then now be like so mainstream?
- No, because I don't think there's that
many underground guys now.
It was more love for the music.
And I think now, I think is more love for the fame.
A lot of people I think, are being artist because
they think that it's the new hustle.
- Mm.
- You know, when I first got into music,
the hustle was being a drug dealer.
Then it went to being a scammer, and now I think it's.
- A drug user. - A rapper.
I mean the new hustle.
- Oh, the new hustle. - You can't.
- I thought. - Using the drugs.
- Being a fien is cool now. - Yeah.
- But I mean the new hustle, so I think
the new hustle is for males, you know,
and it's starting to become the new hustle for females now.
Whereas, you know, with females,
the hustle was dating the drug dealer.
Then it was being the stripper,
then it became being the bartender,
and now it's being the rapper.
- You have two female artists.
- I have two artists in total.
Lou Got Cash is my artist, and DreamDoll is my artist.
- No more Mariah Lynn?
- Mariah Lynn is signed to my management company.
- Got you.
- I think the majority of people don't understand
a production company and a management company.
You know, so--
- Well I don't think it's ever
been like broken down like that,
'cause just on the show, you just see (mumbles).
- Yeah.
- Then you see social media (mumbles),
and you're like so nobody knew.
- With DreamDoll, you know, she came to me
and wanted to, not pursue, but to continue
her career on television and she told me briefly
that she wanted to pursue her career as an artist.
At the particular time, I said okay.
I think that within herself, she said,
"you know what, he said okay, but I don't think
"that he understands what I'm talking about."
And maybe two, three days later,
she came with the song "Everything Nice"
like huh, I'm not playing, boom, and put it on my desk.
And I'm like oh, okay, you know,
and then ever since then, I see her going to studios,
staying up late, you know, sittin' writin' different things.
I may shoot some ideas, and you know,
she come back with the song done, like huh.
You know, so I look at it like okay,
even if it started out as a hustle,
she's taking it seriously.
- You do have a history with legendary female artists,
like you used to be--
- Legendary?
- Charli Baltimore was legendary.
We're not going to call Charli legendary now?
Now, Charli not legendary.
Now, we gonna forget about her down ass chick verse.
- That was after me, but I will say this,
Charli Baltimore, when I DJ'd for her,
that was my first paid industry gig,
so I always have love and respect for her entertainment,
you know, 'cause that was my first paid industry gig.
I think I was gettin' like four or five hundred
dollars a show, or something like that.
Which was great for me 'cause some people
still gettin' that (mumbles), right?
- Ah, Jesus Christ.
- We had Lya Lee on,
and we got into the discussion
of old school versus new school.
- Okay.
- When referring to famous DJ's,
the big DJ's in New York City.
- Okay.
- Specifically, the topic of Funk Flex and Ebro came out.
Now me, I am a nigga,
I strongly believe in (beep) these ol' (beep)
and they new deals.
Especially when it's comin' at the expense
of younger talent,
bringing up younger talent.
How would,
who's side, where do you sit on that?
Where do you weigh on that?
- Alright, I think people
forget about the big word that,
you know,
playing music also you have,
or in this thing we call show business,
there's two things,
it's show and business.
And I think that some of the younger generation
don't take heed to that bigger word
called business.
- Mm hmm.
- And so, when I say that meanin'
the younger DJ's,
or even younger artists,
they just feel like,
okay I made a song,
you're supposed to play it.
And when I say that meanin'
there's different types of DJ's.
There's some DJ's that break records.
There's some DJ's that play records.
There's some--
- Who are the record breakers now?
Cause with the internet I feel like that--
- I mean I don't,
I feel like I'm a record breaker.
I'll just say me. - Okay.
- But there's some DJ's that are influencers
and there's some that are not.
And I think that the problem is
a lot of artists feels like,
oh, I made a song,
you're supposed to play it.
No.
What happened to,
you know,
even with the Eminem thing,
what happened to the battle,
you know the fight clubs?
What happened to,
you know performing in the parks?
You know, what happened to those things?
They just wanna go straight to Summer Jam.
- Right.
- I'm supposed to be on Summer Jam.
No, you know,
you have to build up a fan base.
I think it's primarily in New York
that you know,
I think a lot of New York artists think
that it's owed to them.
Oh, you're not supporting cause you didn't,
you're not playing it.
- If we look at it,
New York is the mecca of hip-hop.
- Mm hmm.
- And L.A. for all star.
Heard a whole bunch of music I'd never heard before.
I'm in Atlanta,
I hear a whole shit-ton of Atlanta music,
that and I don't hear,
and I don't hear,
any New York music
or any other music like that.
But when we come to New York,
- Mm hmm.
- We don't hear any New York music.
So where,
so the New York DJ's don't feel
inclined to want to--
- No I think--
- What happened?
- I think also,
the relationship between artist and DJ
isn't there in New York.
- So, when I say that-- - But, why is that?
- I'm a DJ, so I'm more one sided.
So, naturally I will point the finger--
- At the artist?
- At the artist.
There's sometimes, you can come mess with somebody.
It don't always have to be business.
You know, I think-- - A relationship.
- Yeah, you build relationships.
Hey, what's up? - Networking.
- Hey, what's up?
How you feeling, today?
Yo, let's go get something to eat.
Oh, what you doing?
I'm gonna pop up on you.
It's just relationships.
Now, some artists may feel like, well why I gotta do that?
But, I think that the mistake of New York artists
is they feel like, it's your job
to promote and to pop their music.
As a DJ, it's not my job, and I could just speak for me,
to promote your music.
If your music is good, and people want to hear it,
I don't have no problem playing it.
Also, I'm a person that if I feel like it's good,
people should hear it.
- Yeah.
- But, there's sometimes that some music is just not good.
- That's a big factor.
- You know, and-
- Most, 98 percent is SoundCloud links, really bad.
- It's not good.
You understand? - Really bad.
- I feel sad being from New York, you know, like that,
but, we also don't praise our, the people that's winning.
We do have A Boogie's.
- We got A Boogie-- - We had, at the time,
Nicki Minaj and French.
They was like, "Oh, that don't count."
That does count! You hear what I'm saying?
- Do it really count? - You see?
We don't praise our people.
- I mean, praise, when they get, they winning.
But, I don't know if that's a win for New York,
because they went out of New York to win.
- They still winning.
If they're from New York, it doesn't make a difference.
Most of the people that's from Atlanta is not from Atlanta.
Like, Young Jeezy's not from Atlanta.
He's from Macon, you know what I'm saying?
- Well that's still Georgia.
- Nah, he's not from Atlanta though.
You got to see what I'm saying.
- But they bring other stuff (beep) that's what I'm saying.
For instance, where's the art that's from French,
where's the art that's from Nicki?
- Well French was trying to Chinx, he had Chinx.
- You're right, rest in peace, Chinx.
- Don't do that (laughs).
- Rest in peace, Chinx. - Don't do that.
- Damn, rest in peace, Chinx.
- You know, I mean, it's just,
I just think that, you know, with New York,
we need the older, I think that's another thing too.
The older generation didn't reach out their hands.
- Not going to do that they was competing.
- Yes, I think that Fab sometimes
do a great job at that but he can't--
- Fab does an amazing job.
- Yeah Fab and Jadakiss.
- Shout out to DJ Self for coming out.
Winning god. - Yes, yes sir.
- Before we get out of here, we have
to find out who held that L.
Now, yourself, Hold That L is a segment
before I get out of here,
I make sure everybody - Drake?
- No, that's not who held the L.
You gonna be very surprised when
you find out who held this L.
- Okay. - But it's who
took the L this week, who lost,
who just out here looking bad.
Looking bad, made the wrong decision, (beep) the money up.
Who held the L?
DJ Self it was you.
- I held the L? - You held the L this week.
- Okay, c'mon, tell me why. - It's not just this week,
because you didn't do it this week.
- Alright, tell me why.
- But I got you here and I said,
oh, DJ Self gotta hold that L.
- Tell me why.
- Cardi B.
- Alright, let me say this.
- We watched you have it in your hand, man.
- Alright, let me tell you this, right.
- You had it.
- Are you gonna listen to me? - I'm listening.
- I think the mistake that people make
is they watch TV and then they think
that everything is accurate.
When I met Cardi B. - Yes.
- She wasn't rapping. - Okay.
I didn't have a entertainment company.
I want to DJ, I want to do this, you know.
Imma get on TV, Imma be the best DJ.
- Are you the best DJ in New York City?
- I feel like it, yes. - Okay.
I always knew Cardi so at the time,
I approached her and said yo, I think you
should do Love & Hip Hop with me.
Nobody would have known of her in that fast of time
if I didn't bring her along to do television.
- Okay, got you.
- But I formed the company two years later because I said,
damn, you know, I'm chasing being the greatest DJ
of them all and I'm also letting a shit load of money
of being a record executive,
you know, fall away. - Yeah, yeah.
- So if I'm gonna take a L on something,
I would take a L on, you should
have started a company years ago.
- To make sure you could have incubated that.
- Years ago.
At the time I think that, I think what people misconstrued
is I could have signed Cardi or anything like that.
It wasn't even in the cards.
- Do you have things in place now where you are sure
that that doesn't or a situation like
that doesn't even arise again?
- Absolutely. - Okay.
- You know, paperwork is the greatest thing on earth.
Before you even jump in to any transaction with anyone,
do paperwork, because sometimes, just because me and you
are friends, that doesn't mean that we on the same page.
I'm happy for everyone's success and I'm cool.
I'm not a person that be like, oh no I didn't do this,
you know, people want to call it a L, I'm cool.
- DJ Self, let me tell you something.
I wasn't sure about, because obviously
all I see is the Love & Hip Hop.
You walked in here with the good gold,
who am I, I said alright (beep).
You got the good gold, it might be alright.
You are A1 spin master, let me tell you that.
You're made for this shit, (DJ Self laughing)
because you were supposed to hold this L, man.
You got to spit that shit, now I'm sitting here looking
at me like, maybe I held the L.
I got to put some paperwork on (beep) Self.
I appreciate you really (beep) (beep),
really appreciate you coming out.
Y'all heard him, own your shit.
Real world, what kind of knowledge we dropped here,
y'all better pay attention, ownership.
I gotta to go buy mine and see how much that shit is, but--
- Before I buy it, I sell it to you, hello.
- Just change my name.
- I am the real (laughing).
- I am the real Mouse Jones,
(laughing) that's my new name, @IamtherealMouseJones.
I'll put a real life underscore on my shit.
But, DJ Self, we appreciate him coming out.
If you guys enjoyed this episode,
if you think that DJ Self held the L
or you fell for the spin like I did,
you don't think he held the L,
let us know on BET social media @BET.
But you could also subscribe to us @BETNETWORKS on YouTube.
And let us know below, now what I'm gonna tell you is,
I appreciate y'all for watching, but I still do not give
a (beep) how you feel about anything I said.
Because if I made you feel any sort of kind of way,
I promise I'll apologize later.
(upbeat hip hop music)
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