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Chapter 1: What is discussed at the start of this section?
This is an iHeart Podcast. Guaranteed human. It's that time to put on your jersey and wave your flag, whoever you root for.
Why do I watch the World Cup? That's like asking me, why do I breathe? and it's beautiful.
The guys are young and cute and fit.
It's not just a game. It's your culture.
I like watching it with my dad.
It's a connecting force.
From Futuro Studios, I'm Fernanda Echavarri, and this is American Football, a show about soccer culture in the U.S. and its underdog roots. Listen to American Football on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Joy is essential and it's also elusive. But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence. Joy 101. It's a new podcast hosted by me, Hoda Kotb. If you're craving inspiration to maximize your joy, tune into these candid, uplifting, and moving on-air chats. Open your free iHeartRadio app, search Joy 101, and listen now.
Joy 101 with Hoda Kotb is presented by CVS.
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Chapter 2: What are the challenges faced by lifelong Knicks fans?
Landry Shamit, Landry Fields. Remember Landry Fields?
I was close, yes. Best hand on the league. Who? Who? Fields. You crazy. I had some bad teams. Yo, listen, I had bad teams. I had bad teams for a long time. So much so that Kobe is my favorite player. I couldn't even like, it was like. Kobe gotta be your favorite player. Even if you're a dog, Nick fan, you can't. Kobe and Mike. No, he's not my favorite.
Mike, not my favorite nigga.
Mike, I'm too young for like. No, you're not. We're the same age. What are you talking about? But I was like, not really fucking with basketball like that. When Mike, for Mike last chip in nine, eight, I was fighting a gun child. I didn't give a fuck about what Mike was doing. I was trying to get a one and three. You was a shooting guard, right? I was a shooting guard when shit got hot.
I'm trying to get a one and three for this shit, man. I thought he was about to say something about the lockouts. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I was fighting. Yeah, I got a one and a half to three. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Never mind, Mike. I didn't care about that shit. I learned it. I started fucking with basketball after that. That's when I, now I'm locked in. I'm here. Yeah, I'm here now.
I gotta watch something.
You know what Mike did before? Right. Oh, he went that many? You know what I'm saying? Like that. That makes sense. I'm got his priorities there. Holy shit. That's fucking hilarious. And speaking of priorities, like, if you in jail, was Terry Crews in jail? Sports run jail. Can you, with the new tablets, can you get porn in jail? Nah.
Nah.
Really? You can get your little joint. Maybe a video come through her doing the little dance to a song or something and all that. And that's sufficient.
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Chapter 3: Why did Key Glock choose the title 'Project X' for his album?
Yeah, I think he brought 21 out.
Sony Hall, March 6, 2020. Why Project X as the title?
They're just the mood I was in. I'd say like the end of last year, beginning of this year, it was just a lot of hard partying and drugging going on. Being honest.
Okay. Cause I remember when he was on poor mind, I think it was poor minds. You had said that it was like one of your first times drinking it.
Chapter 4: How did partying influence Key Glock's music?
Like you understood why people drink, but you didn't drink like that. And that was maybe like a year ago. So, all right. So we just took a whole turn to ecstasy. that ain't liquor that ain't got weed that ain't got nothing to do with that yeah now how much of the time how much of the time do you spend are you like a studio rat would you consider yourself a studio rat are you in the studio a lot
studio junkie not a rat studio okay yeah i think it's never one of you i like that i like i like that yeah yeah studio junk so you stay in the studio a lot yeah sure so that means glock's sitting on a lot of music then because you can't be in the studio you can't be a studio junkie and not be recording all the time right you're right so uh the the party bender that happened you think that affected how the sound was on this
Yeah, for sure.
Because I was rapping about what was going on. Yeah, I was rapping about literally what was going on. Yeah. What was jumping into the Project X world at this age, too? Because usually people do that at like 21 years old.
Chapter 5: What is Key Glock's perspective on collaborating with other artists?
Nah, it's been like that. I just never talk about it with discipline. It's just a side that I want to let the fans and people see because I'm not a fun guy or a fun person to the people. So it's like, just let me show y'all something else right quick.
What city gave you the most inspiration outside of Memphis when it came to that type of content? Uh, Miami. That checks out, yeah. Yeah, Miami.
Project X checks out with Miami.
Project X, Miami, that definitely goes together. I was going to guess Miami or Houston would have been my one and two. Yeah. In that regard. Outside of Tay Keith, who's some of the producers you worked with on this Project X?
Uh, Kia Hazel, Honorable C-Note, Bankroll got it.
Okay. Uh, Who did 50 Hoes? Because that's my shit. My homeboy, Manny.
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Chapter 6: What are Key Glock's thoughts on the future of hip hop?
Manny? Yeah. Yeah, tell Manny he got one. That 50 holes is hard. You know. You think you could achieve that? No, Glock is popular. Can you achieve that? What, 50 holes? No, no, no. I don't have the bandwidth to entertain 50 different ones. You hit 50 in the summer, though. But that was 19, 20 years old. That was many moves ago. Today, no, no, I can't entertain.
What's the state you think you couldn't... You get to what, maybe 40? No. Four. Like the Pacific Northeast? No, no, I'm down to four and five. That's where I stop at. Four different women maybe at a time, but 50, God, no, that gives me nightmares thinking about that. You don't deal with Riley one time. At 28, 29, you supposed to be doing that.
At my age, 44, you can't be doing no shit like that, man. We sleep by 8 o'clock. You ain't old, though. I ain't old, but I've been outside a lot of summers, man. Me too. I've been outside a lot of summers, man. I had a summer one time, like Rory was talking about. Thinking back, I got... I don't know. I was just a lost child running wild. Like, I was just doing... Trying to find yourself.
Yeah, it was just unnecessary shit I was doing, man. But, you know, we here. It's all good. Now... With you specifically not working with a lot of different artists, you're saying you tried it, turned you off from it. How do you view the landscape of hip hop, of rap today? Do you just stay in your circle with your sound, with your crew? Or do you look at other dudes and get some inspiration?
Like, I like what they're doing. I like that. I like where this region is headed, what they sound. Or is it just, I'm all in on Glock. Is it just you or you like to listen to other artists? You like to study what they're doing and kind of draw some inspiration from it?
Like, I'm all about Glock for sure. But, like, as far as, like, other rappers, like, and they sound and stuff, like, it's cool. I might listen to it, but I'm not going to, like, take a piece of their style and you know what I'm saying?
No, not take their style, but like just the sound and see where the energy is going. Do you say, okay, like this, this is what a lot of people are turning up to right now. This is the energy outside. This is what people want to kind of get into.
It's like, it's really hard to say cause it's like the, the internet, the internet are tricky.
The internet, the internet are tricky. Yeah.
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