back to indexRZA: Wu-Tang Clan, Kung Fu, Chess, God, Life, and Death | Lex Fridman Podcast #228
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The following is a conversation with RZA, the rapper,
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record producer, filmmaker, actor, writer, philosopher,
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Kung Fu scholar, and the mastermind
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of the legendary hip hop group Wu Tang Clan.
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This is the Lex Friedman podcast.
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To support it, please check out our sponsors
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in the description.
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And now, here's my conversation with RZA.
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In the Tao of Wu, you write,
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when my mother left the physical world,
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I lost one of my main links to the universe.
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They say that you have an umbilical cord
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and an aetheric cord,
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which is the invisible cord that attaches you to your soul,
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your mother's soul, and all other souls.
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When one passes away, you really lose something.
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It's physical and mental.
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What have you learned about life from your mother?
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I mean, I learned life itself from my mother.
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You know, being one of 11 children
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and seeing the sacrifice that she gave to us,
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therefore given to life,
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it's really the greatest lesson of life.
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The thing that shook me as I wrote those words
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was coming up young
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with arrogance, confidence, knowledge of myself.
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They called me the sciences.
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We was taught, you're the supreme being.
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In order to be the supreme being,
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you gotta be supreme amongst other beings.
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I understand that more now than I did then,
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because then it was so literal.
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You know, the word God derived basically
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from the Greek language, as they say,
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and it meant wisdom, strength, and beauty.
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And yeah, we could have that.
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But the power to control life and death
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is something that you would assume is a God trait.
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So now here you are saying that you're a God, right?
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And you're reading the Bible,
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how Jesus brought back glass of us.
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And you know, now here's your turn to do something.
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And when my mother was laying there in the hospital bed
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and it was no longer coming out of her lungs
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and going into her lungs,
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where's my power to bring her back to life?
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So you can't truly be God, you're powerless.
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Yeah, or God is not the definition
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that we need to use to describe it
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because it's a translation of wisdom, strength, and beauty.
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So you could be that.
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But so I'm answering your question
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whether my mother teach me about life.
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I learned that day on her physical passing,
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You know what I mean, there's a physical me.
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Do you think about her, you miss her?
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I keep my mother in my prayer every day.
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And the thing I pray the most
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beyond giving thanks is I pray that her name
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is honored and remembered by my family.
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I don't know if the world's gonna remember that, right?
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Even though if you watch my movie, Love, Beach, Rhymes,
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I named the school in that movie after my mother
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just to leave it somewhere else.
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Yeah, in physical space.
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But yeah, painful.
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The pain of my mother's passing is indescribable.
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Only until it happens to a person they know
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and then they won't describe it either.
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Only the people that lost their mother,
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they could look at each other and they got this nod.
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You know what I mean?
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But one other thing happened to me
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was the joy of life hit me differently.
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And I think it was the realization
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of my own mortality versus my immortality.
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It's a big, big thing.
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And I don't know if we'll get to expound on that,
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but there was a joy that overcame me
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because I was kind of free of a certain illusion
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about the immortality of my physical being
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versus the mortality of my physical being.
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And I was like, okay, wow, I understand.
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So that was the first or the hardest realization
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you've experienced that you're mortal?
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And I'll say mortal and what you're looking at here physically,
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I won't say my soul is mortal, right?
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I'll say it's immortal because at the end of the day,
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it's just like I could sit here
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and I could just hum, please, please, please,
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But James Brown is not going to come in here and do that.
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So in some sense, James Brown is still here
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He's sold us here.
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Well, it lives through.
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It lives through you by you singing it.
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It lives through you by you listening to it, celebrating it.
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And the hope is that the human species continues
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to celebrate the great minds and the great creations of the past.
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I would add this to that equation.
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When I say it's immortal,
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I don't think it's not just only because somebody sings it, right?
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It's like, where's the fire at right now?
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You just got to spark the spark.
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So it's always there.
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Are you afraid of death?
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No, I'm not afraid of death.
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I'm not trying to see it.
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I'm not watching that nowhere near me, right?
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Because all I know is life, right?
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My life is living.
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You know, I read a lot of ancient texts.
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People probably know about me and I love one of the great teachers
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named Bodhidharma.
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And there was a thing written in one of the books of his
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or one of the teachings of his.
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And somebody asked him a similar question.
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You know, are you scared of death or what are you going to be after you die?
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And his answer was, I don't know.
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He had answers to everything.
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But he's like, I don't know.
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He doesn't know that.
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So yeah, because I haven't died yet.
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Well, the uncertainty to some people is terrifying.
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Not knowing what's on the other side of the door.
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I mean, especially when you're young, you know, as a kid, fear permeated my life.
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You know what I mean?
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You know, I was actually watching horror movies and I believed in all type of
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supernatural things that could or can't happen.
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I thought I saw things as well.
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And, you know, whether it was being projected from my own mind or whether
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it was there visible to me, I don't know.
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But life is beautiful.
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And we have it and we should use it all the way to the last drop.
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Realizing the mortality, the gift your mother gave to you is realizing the
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immortal and in so doing, hope you realize that life is beautiful.
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On this topic, Quincy Jones, I read, said to ODB and you, when it rains, get wet.
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What do these words mean to you?
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Well, I think what Quincy was saying at that time was, you know, I think I was
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more conservative, like as a person and like, you know, had money, women wanted me.
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Anything I kind of wanted, I probably could have had.
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You know what I mean?
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And he was just saying, when it rains, get wet.
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It's raining on you.
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You know what I mean?
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Don't put up the umbrella.
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Don't go back in the house.
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Experience the moment.
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And I didn't take total heed to him at that time.
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A couple of years later, I took some heed.
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But at that time, I didn't take heed.
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And when I took heed, I think that I may have misinterpreted by looking at his
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example of getting wet versus my example of getting wet.
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And I can tell you right now, I'm getting wet right now in my way.
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In part, thanks to your mother, but overall, you just learned how to appreciate
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the rain, just like the experience of every moment.
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And I'll share this with you, because this is going to be a very open conversation.
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And I haven't had this conversation.
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So definitely in part to my mother, then in part to my wife.
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I meet my wife, it's my second wife, but I met her after my mother passed.
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And she was just a friend, you know, some girls.
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I met her because she was beautiful and actually built a friendship with her.
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But a few years later, when the relationship became like, you know, this is going to be
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It was actually when I was doing the middle of my divorce.
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And I was like, you know, do I run wild?
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And hey, you know, me and my wife already filed.
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We were separated.
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And do I run wild?
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And I didn't run wild a little bit, but not too wild, right?
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And, you know, I'm still a man.
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I'm a hip hop guy.
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I read you know how to party.
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But the funny thing is that my wife now, her name is Telani.
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My uncle said she reminds me of your mother.
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He knew my mother when, before I knew my mother.
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And he saw that and we ended up dating, got engaged, and then her mother passes.
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And so now there's a total understanding of everything.
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And we actually help build each other back up.
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So, of course, I have to thank my mother for the awareness.
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Then I thank my wife for bringing that awareness to actualization,
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like to actually feel, I don't think I'll be talking to you right now
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and talking as much as I do these days if it wasn't for the security
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and peace and harmony that I was able to gain at home, you know?
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And like you said, you now share that look of having both lost your mom.
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What have you learned from Quincy about music, about business, about life?
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Quincy Jones is a great mind, a great artist, you know, a treasure in all reality.
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He's seen it from when it was, he couldn't walk in this,
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he couldn't eat in the same place as he played his music at
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to owning places bigger than ours.
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So what a beautiful life, you know?
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He's the type of guy, if you spend one hour with him,
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you got a lifetime of information.
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And I was blessed to spend multiple hours with him and days with him.
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And, you know, there's a certain period of time where we came across each other
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and he was always there to share the knowledge.
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Like, that's another thing about him that I think is special.
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And hopefully I picked that up is that he's always willing to share,
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share with his experience, his knowledge.
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I mean, I think he'll even share his home to the right person
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if he feels that that's what they need to get back on that field.
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He's a very beautiful man.
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So just the kindness, the goodness of the man is like the thing that really rubbed off on you?
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Yeah, I mean, minimum. I mean, Quincy Jones also in his fifties
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as a producer produced one of the greatest albums of all time
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and one of the greatest selling albums of all time.
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I just great critically, economically great.
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And I mean, I think he did it at the age I am right now
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so I might have a great year coming up.
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Time and well, yeah.
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So now you got a taste of what greatness is.
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You get to see what greatness is.
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So you know what you have to do.
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Exactly, how to survive for yourself, yeah.
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You've had a few people you've worked with who are fascinating like yourself, Quentin Tarantino.
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You worked with him.
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When somebody asked you to describe him with one word, you said encyclopedia.
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What have you learned from the guy about filmmaking and about life again?
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A very generous man with his knowledge.
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And for me, he shared it.
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I think in a way that was unique in a sense of, you know, at a point in time, you know,
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we just was super duper tight, like, you know, like I'm going to his crib and watching movies
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and just having long conversations about art and about life.
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You know what I mean?
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So I learned a lot.
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I consider him, you know, especially when it comes to anything cinematic in my life,
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I consider him the godfather of that for me.
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I think, you know, I humbly asked him to mentor me, which is a very humbling thing to do,
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coming from my neighborhood, coming from who I am, coming from, I was already a multi platinum artist.
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You know, I mean, it was a year, it was past the year 2000 already.
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So like 2001, 2002 that I asked him to mentor me.
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So I was the result already, you know what I mean?
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But I humbled myself because I saw in him a craft of brainpower that to me resonated with me,
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but I was just a pattern on that.
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I was a novice at it because I was trying to make movies in my music, you know,
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trying to make videos and here was a man who was a master of it and an encyclopedia of it as well.
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Like film history.
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Film history from whether it's the actor, the director, the cinematographer, maybe even the costume designer.
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He may know 50, 60, he may know the 50 greatest costume designers in his memory.
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I mean, it's God's brain.
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Both of you have pretty good memory.
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I'd love to be a fly in the wall of that conversation and kung fu movies mostly.
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We actually started, I think we started our relationship trying to outdo each other.
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Knowledge wise or what?
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Yeah, movie knowledge wise, actually kung fu movie knowledge wise.
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And I think that cat, if it wasn't another category, I wouldn't have had a chance.
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But at least in that category, I was pretty holding my weight.
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I'll be honest and say that I may have said a few he didn't see.
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But Quinn is older than me.
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So he could go back further.
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Yeah, he could go back to 72 when I didn't see one yet, you know what I mean?
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He said master of the flying gay team that I got a chance to, that you commentate over today and I got a chance to see the screening of.
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He said that's one of his favorites.
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For you, the 36th chamber of Shaolin, the master killer is your favorite.
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Best ever, would you say that's the greatest kung fu movie ever?
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It's hard to say the greatest ever, right?
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Because somebody may make another one and it depends on your own phase of life.
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But I will put that first.
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If I want to introduce somebody to kung fu movies, that's a beautiful entry.
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You talk about knowledge, you talk about wisdom.
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What kind of wisdom do you draw from kung fu movies?
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You know what, the martial art itself and the movies.
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It's endless wisdom to be drawn and I draw it, you know?
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I draw it in a way, you know, that I could decipher it in my own life.
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So, for instance, in the movie master killer, he basically, when he does kung fu, he does really a style called the hunger technique.
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And the director of the movie is actually a hunger expert who has a lineage that traces all the way back to Shaolin Temple.
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And this director always wanted to keep his movies pure and to bring hunger to the world.
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It's like he wanted to show the world this lineage.
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In fact, you just said master of the flying gullotine is Quentin's favorite movie.
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And we mentioned in 36 chambers, it's my favorite movie.
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But the action director of master of flying gullotine is the director of 36 chambers of Shaolin.
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And some of the things that's happening in master of the flying gullotine is really the infant stage of what this action director is going to learn and then use later on in his movies.
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So that's the beauty of it.
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It's almost like, you know, Quentin is seeing him in his generation, so Quentin might have been the same age I was watching that movie.
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And then when he becomes a director, I'm at Quentin's age and I'm seeing his work.
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So some symbiont relationship there.
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And I'll end this question by saying, hunger deals with the five animal technique, the tiger, the crane, the leopard, the snake, and the dragon.
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Those are the five.
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That's the five pattern.
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Some people go seven, some go 12, but it's a stick to the five pattern fist.
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How do a man emulate a tiger?
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And you see a tiger's fist.
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He curls before he spawns on you.
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How does a man emulate a snake?
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It doesn't have to be only in the kung fu move.
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It's in the ideology of the snake.
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It's in the agility of the crane at any moment.
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Sometimes punching a person is not going to work, as they would say in leopard fist or tiger paw.
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So sometimes you may have to poke them in the eye with the crane's beak.
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So having your mind able to adapt the instinct of the animal when you are being attacked or when you are being the aggressor, that's something that you don't need to form for.
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That's the mentality.
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So kung fu, like I said, it informs me endlessly because at first I was trying to learn how to hold my, like, I can't really hit you with that and really hurt you.
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I've been banging my hand a thousand times on some bricks and made it so callous or muscles are so strong.
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But the idea that if me and you was to get into a fight and I'm going to tiger up on you and take that instinct and prance when I'm a prance or fly away like the stalk.
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You know what I mean?
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That's the mentality.
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It's much more than technical moves.
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Yeah, it's interesting.
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I mean, when I see the kung fu movies, because I love martial arts, all martial arts and competitive ones too, like the actual competitions and so on.
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It just seems like kung fu movies go much deeper than just like the techniques.
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I mean, if you see it, right?
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Even I watched a great MMA fight recently, you know, just interesting because he was on top of the guy, you know, and the way he got from Undam.
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You know, it had to be, you know, a spirit guy from Undam.
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It's some like mixture of crane and whatever.
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The slippery ill technique.
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No, I love that when people become artists in the cage or they, that's much bigger than just like winning much bigger than particular techniques.
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It's just art, especially at the highest level competition where millions of people are watching.
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Which is pressure within itself.
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That's art under pressure is even more beautiful art.
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You know, you look at some of these fights and you wonder like why somebody wins and lose.
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And sometimes the less talented guy could win because he could deal with the pressure.
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But the other guy, he could have beat them.
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There was someone else, but not in this arena.
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So you're a scholar of history, including hip hop history.
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You've, I've listened to so many of your interviews.
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You've spoken brilliantly about some of the big figures in hip hop history, Tupac, Biggie, Nas, many others.
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Maybe let's look at Tupac and Biggie.
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What made them special in the history of music?
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That's a good question.
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So I don't know if I'm the authority to answer it, but I'll just speak my piece on it.
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And maybe I could just add on because I'm sure it's a lot of people that spent a lot of time with them that could speak on it.
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But just as a fellow artist, I think not only was B.I.G. a dope lyricist, I think he had a voice that was really immaculate.
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In the sense that some rappers get on top of music and you got to get used to them when you got to vibe with them.
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But he make a record sounds like a record immediately.
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If you go back and listen to his music, you could take his voice and put it on anything.
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And for some reason, it sounds like a record.
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You mean just like the raw voice of the man?
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You could just listen to it raw and it sounds like a record.
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But if you put a beat, take his voice and put it on any beat, he just has a voice.
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So it's lyrical skills and all that was great.
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And you got to think once again, he's doing all this, he's not even 25 years old.
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Then you go to Park once again, immaculate voice.
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But what Park had, I think, was a way of touching us on all of our emotions.
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And especially on like Park had the power to infuse your emotional thought like Brenda has a baby, their mama.
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But then he had the power to arouse the rebel in you.
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And those two things, actually, he was probably more dangerous than Big, Notorious B.I.G.
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Like Notorious B.I.G., we could party with him to this day.
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But Park was probably going to a point, he was more going into the Malcolm X of things.
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And society fears that.
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Yeah, so he was really good at communicating love and at starting revolutions.
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And that's dangerous.
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And they communicated love, but he wasn't starting revolutions.
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Well, it's interesting to think about what the world would be like if they were still with us.
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But it's the way the world, Hendricks, a lot of those guys just go too soon.
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Yeah, it's a peculiar thing.
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Now, you asked me earlier, am I scared of death?
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And I asked you, no, I'm not scared of death.
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I mean, I'm not trying to see it though.
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It's like that was the block of death.
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It's like, I'm not really going right there right now.
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I'm making a left or right turn, unless it was mandatory for some greatness, greater good.
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It's like, okay, I got to drive through that.
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Yeah, but it can still happen.
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That's the meditation on death part where you could die at the end of today.
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Yeah, you could die.
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Well, dying in death, I think it's two different things, personally.
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The process, immune of death?
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Yeah, I mean, you could die.
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You could die every day.
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You could die and not be yourself, which is crazy.
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But to get to a point of no return, that's a whole other chamber.
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I mean, there's some sense in which Riza, the producer, becomes somebody else completely
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when you're making a film, becomes somebody else completely.
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When you're, I don't know, playing chess, becomes completely something different
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when you do kung fu or watch kung fu or when you're a family man.
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All of those are little deaths when you transition from one place to another.
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So it's not like you're one being, you're many things.
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Yeah, I would describe that as all life, though.
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Outside of you and anybody on Wu Tang, who's the greatest rapper from a lyric,
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like a Wortsmith perspective in hip hop history or some of the greatest, maybe some candidates?
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There's name of few.
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And you're going to have to start with Rock Kim.
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You're going to have to pick Kujirap in there.
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You know what I mean?
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You're going to have to pick up with those brothers first.
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You might have to, if you want a good technical, you might have to start with Grandmaster Cass.
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You know what I mean?
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Who you might not have even heard of.
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You know what I mean?
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But you may have sung his lyrics every time you sang Sugar Hill Rappers Delight.
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Because that's his.
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They copied his and they made it theirs.
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But point being made, but I'll name a couple more.
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I got to put Nas in that category.
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You know, we got a chessboard in front of us and one of the greatest chess players,
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the youngest Grandmaster, you know, before I think Carlson was Bobby Fisher.
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So he just used Bobby Fisher as American, one of the greatest American chess players.
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Of course, Susan Polka may have tied his record as the youngest Grandmaster.
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And she's the youngest female Grandmaster, I think, to date.
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But he was a master at what, 14?
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Yeah, something like that.
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So now, to me, I met Nas when he was 15.
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He was already a master lyricist.
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It takes about 10 years to become a master lyricist.
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By the time the world heard of Wu Tang, most of us had 10 years of rapping in us already.
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So that's why you met us at mastery level.
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The juzzer was already a master when Nas was a master, but juzzer was 21.
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Nas is like the Mozart of rap.
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Yeah, on a Bobby Fisher.
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Just a Bobby Fisher, just born something in him or maybe those early years.
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Because he's not just good at the lyrics.
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He goes deep with it, just like you.
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So he's like, there's depth.
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It's not just mastery of the words smithing.
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It's just the message you actually get sent across.
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And some information into a small phrase.
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That's the whole thing of energy.
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How do we condense all that energy into this so that it could fuel that?
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And he's definitely one of those artist MCs that does that.
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And he was doing it at 15.
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Like I said, I'm thinking five years or four or five years older than Nas.
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So I was always feeling my confidence of what I was doing.
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But I was like, this kid is only 15.
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I gotta step up my game.
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When he turned 19, then we got Illumatic.
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From you, what are the best and most memorable lyrics you've ever written?
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Well, that's a hard question for me.
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The stuff stand out?
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Like stuff you're really proud of that was like, important in your career?
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Yeah, I mean, I think I did a song called Sunshower.
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I don't know if we put it on the Wu Tank Forever double CD, but only on the international version.
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But if anybody could go get those lyrics and write those lyrics down, you could just put that in your pocket.
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And I'm sure it'll answer at least about 25% of your life's problems.
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Well, that's a good one.
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Sunshine, where you talk about religion and God, that's good.
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Timo, I think it's on A diagram.
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I'm not a record guy.
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Do you have a lyric from it?
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Yeah, the answer to all questions.
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You're talking about God.
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The spark of all suggestions, of righteousness, the pathway to the road of perfection,
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who gives you all and never asks more of you.
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The faithful companion that fights every war with you.
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Before the mortal view of the prehistorical, historical, he's the all in all you searching for the oracle.
link |
Our mission impossible is purely philosophical, but you can call on your deathbed when you're laying in the hospital.
link |
You will call them on your deathbed.
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I have a scientist friend.
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Well, my wife's best friend, Rebecca, she married a scientist.
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They're both scientists. They're both scientists, and she married Dr. Neal.
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I ain't gonna say their last names.
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But Neal and Rebecca, you know, they're my wife's best friends, so they come over.
link |
And me and Neal, we go through the longest debates of science and religion.
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We just go. We could go break day with it.
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And, you know, before he had a child, he was more adamant.
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And, you know, there's, you know, I don't believe in God, you know what I mean?
link |
After a child, he still kept his thing, but I just hit him with the question.
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If you was about to die, because now you got a child thing about, right?
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It's different when you're thinking about yourself.
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If you was about to die, you don't think you're going to make that call.
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He's like, I'll make that call.
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And it kind of inspired my lyric because it was like, yeah, who you gonna?
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And I just want to say, so you mentioned lyric.
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That is one of my favorite lyrics, but that's part two.
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To Sunshower was the prequel to Sunshine.
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So if you ever get a chance to check out Sunshower, start off with Trouble Follows a Wicked Mind.
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2020 vision of the prism of life, but still blind because you lack the inner.
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So every sinner could end up in the everlasting winter of Hellfire.
link |
With thorns and splinters, prick your eye out.
link |
Your words fly out, but you remain unheard.
link |
Suffering internal and external, along with the wicked fraternal of generals and colonels,
link |
letting off thermal nuclear heat that burns you firmly and permanently upon the journey
link |
through the Journal of the Book of Life.
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For those who took a life without justice will become just ice.
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It's been taught your worst enemy couldn't harm you as much as your own wicked thoughts.
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But people ought to be nought and listen wrought.
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So they find themselves persecuted inside their own universal court.
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So that is a long one.
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It's like a free pager.
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Wow, that is about life.
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That's like character, integrity, how to be in this world.
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And that ultimately connects to God.
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I'm glad you just asked that question.
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Because I actually, I'm going to have to make a distinguishable separation here.
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And it's funny because I heard recently, I heard a rabbi was debating with this historian,
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I can't pronounce Dr. Ben name, but there was a debate.
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And then the debate, they started going back through the etymology.
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They went way back beyond antiquity because they was debating.
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So there was, you know, some things, they was going deep.
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And they really went far, far back to kind of the first word of God.
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And it was, when they pronounced it on this particular debate, it was Allah.
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And they said for that, they got Elohim.
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I've already agreed in my heart in my life that the father of this universe, proper name is Allah.
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And of course, in Allah, I get all.
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And I don't think that God is the same as that.
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I think Allah gives birth to God.
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In fact, if you take the word Allah, A L L A H, and you take it through numerology or numbers,
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the number A being letter A being 1, L being 12.
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And you add it all up to its lowest, to, you know, the last denominator.
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You're going to get the number seven.
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And the number seven is going to bring you right back to that letter G.
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So Allah borns God, but God don't born Allah.
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How does that God, how does Allah connect to the oracle that you're going to be calling for when you're laying in the hospital?
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Well, what I was saying in that particular verse was that we're looking for the oracle.
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We're looking for somebody else or something to help us that nobody can really help you at the end of the day.
link |
And we're speaking on, so now that we, I don't want to say we're speaking on religion,
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but we're speaking on a way of life and a way of thinking.
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And I've read many books, of course.
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And I could say there's no book that my, the book that is the most strongest book I've ever read is actually the Holy Quran.
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It's stronger to me than the Bible, which I read is stronger than quantum physics, which I've read is stronger than the Bhagavad Gita.
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And I read once a British scholar said it's the most stupidest book ever written.
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And it doesn't make sense.
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And so I said, I see why he says that.
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I can understand exactly why he said that as well.
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Because the structure of the words are just, it's peculiar.
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You know what I mean?
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But it's almost like how some people's songs, you don't really know exactly what they say until years later.
link |
You have, actually with Joe Rogan, I think you talked about how a joke of Dave Chappelle hit you like a long time after.
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So this is kind of like the Quran.
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I tend to believe that we, human beings cannot possibly understand anything as big as these ideas.
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So just, I don't know, did you think that, like, are you humble in the face of just the immensity of it?
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To be honest, Jess, I'm humble in the face of the, you can say the word again, I pronounce words funny, the omnipotence, the omnessence, the magnitude.
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I'm humble in the face of Allah.
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The problem that I may have had was that I wasn't humble in the face of God because it's just a definable thing.
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And that's why I think a lot of us, and I'm saying that, you know, I know when we say God, we're trying to say Allah.
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Like people were saying that, but you're actually not saying the same thing because you're actually putting something beside Him.
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And that's the reason why you can have as many gods.
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You can find a whole bunch of them.
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You know what I mean?
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But you're not going to find many.
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There's no body beside Allah.
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So I know it's a whole thing, but that's my heart is there.
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I'm humbled by it.
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I'm at peace with it.
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And it doesn't take nothing or demerit anything from myself.
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That's the beauty of it.
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It doesn't take nothing from me, from being who with Him.
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So if I say, if somebody woke up your peace guard, I could take that because they're telling me that, yall, I'm a man of wisdom.
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I'm a man of strength.
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I'm a man of beauty or some attribute of that.
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You know what I mean?
link |
So Wu Tang, they the gods of rap.
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There's wisdom there.
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There's strength there.
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There's beauty there.
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So Wu Tang is one of the greatest musical, artistic, philosophical groups ever.
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Let's look hundreds of years from now when humans or robots or aliens or whatever that's left here, they look back.
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What do you hope they remember about Wu Tang?
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What do you hope the legacy is?
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Well, I, well, even if it's thousands of years, I hope we don't give it to the humans.
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But you know, look, whatever happens is going to happen.
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But I think that my philosophy on it is that we're going to continue to advance.
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And continue to advance things around us.
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But I don't see us becoming extinct.
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Well, I mean, the reason I bring up sort of Wu Tang in that context, and this is a special moment in human history.
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It's like a hundred years and we've created all of this music.
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Just if you think of all the richness of music that's been created over a hundred years, it's like, it's not obvious to me that that's not going to stop.
link |
Like there's a flourishing here.
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So it's funny because I could see where the book of human history is written.
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There's a chapter on this period of time.
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And one of the things we did well is like all the technological innovation with like, with the rockets and with the internet.
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But then there's also the musical innovation and film innovation.
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Just so much art that's being created.
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And Wu Tang is a huge part of that.
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So I just wonder what, like if there's a few sentences written about Wu Tang.
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It just makes me wonder how they remember.
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I would hope that people, no matter how many years are inspired by us, but I will say if I could just use Wu Tang as itself.
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So we first started off the witty, unpredictable talent and natural game, right?
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Natural gaming and natural wordplay.
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And then we went to the wisdom of the universe, the truth of a law for a nation of God, wisdom, universal, truth, a law, nation, God.
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And it's just like, so let's just go back to a nation of God.
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Let's just take the last two letters.
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A nation of wisdom, strength and beauty.
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You know, and I'm going to go a little political here, but not going political.
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As we'll say, we're the greatest country in the world.
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What makes us the greatest?
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That should be a question we act.
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Is it our strength?
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Now let's just say, off the easiest answer, you know, it's our strength.
link |
Nobody can really, you know, between America and Russia, you know, that's the argument.
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Who could beat them?
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But where's the wisdom?
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Then they can argue, well, we got the technology.
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All right, but then where's the beauty when there's so much suffering in the people?
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I mean, the hope is that the wisdom is in the founding documents and the imperfect, but why is founding the documents?
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Of that celebrated freedom, that celebrated all the ideas, sort of having a lot of nukes, having a lot of airplanes and tanks.
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That's not, that's not, that's not important.
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And the hope is whatever we're doing here with this, quote, greatest country on earth that we preserve the ideas and help them flourish.
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Well, that's what I mean.
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So we could get, so if you go back to the Wu Tang, I'm saying that's what we're striving for.
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We're striving for that.
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But you started on predictable and just like, yeah, but like, got deep pretty quick.
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I got to talk to you about Bruce Lee.
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Who's Bruce Lee to you?
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Who is he to the world?
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What ideas of his were interesting to you?
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Like what, you know, you talk about like Hendricks and music, Bruce Lee is that in martial arts.
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He just seems to have changed the game.
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You know, I went as, I guess, I don't know if the word bold is the right word to say, but I went as bold as to say that he was a minor prophet.
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And I got that concept from the Holy Quran where it says that we send prophets to every nation, every village.
link |
We don't let nobody not hear the word in some form.
link |
Because it won't be fair.
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And so if a law is merciful, even a man who's deaf has to somehow get a sign.
link |
I don't know if Moses saw a burning bush.
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There was nobody else to talk to.
link |
So they had to talk to the bush.
link |
It could have been a bush.
link |
But point being made, it says that they are minor prophets.
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And I see Bruce Lee as one of them because what he brought to the world through martial art was a whole shift in the dynamic of thinking.
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You know, and that happens when certain certain entities are born, but he didn't do it only in a physical sense.
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He was also philosophizing in the same process.
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And he was also striving to be the best of himself.
link |
So you got three things going on.
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I studied Bruce Lee multiple times.
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And first, of course, when I saw my first Kung Fu movie, it was the fake.
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It wasn't really Bruce Lee.
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It was a few green horny clips cut together.
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And then I saw Black Samurai.
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Then my following Kung Fu movies was like Fearless Fighters, The Ghostly Face, you know, the Fist of Double Kid.
link |
But basically in Fearless Fighters, the lady put the little kid on her back and flew across the ocean, across the lake.
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So Bruce wasn't doing that.
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And then I went on to five deadly Venoms and Spearman and 36 Chambers and these movies are beautiful.
link |
And yet they're all heightened.
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Bruce, they're heightened beyond doable.
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You're not going to.
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Like surreal, they play with the world that's not of this world.
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Bruce played with this world.
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So when I first saw Bruce, I honestly didn't think he was as good as these guys.
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He's not flying in the movies, right?
link |
But then when I saw, the first one I saw was The Big Boss, which they retitled Fist of Fury.
link |
But then when I saw Chinese Connection, which is The Real Fist of Fury, right?
link |
I saw something different there.
link |
And I got enamored.
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And then of course, Into the Dragon, right?
link |
Just really complete.
link |
That's why my first album was Into the Wu Tang, 36 Chambers of Shaolin.
link |
So it's Into the Dragon and 36 Put Together because those are the two epitomies.
link |
So what happened is, you know, that's young me.
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Then teenage me, studies him again.
link |
And I realized, wow, look at, look at his physicality.
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Look how he's really, he's moving for real.
link |
And then I studied him again.
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Wow, look at what he's saying.
link |
Then I studied him again.
link |
Wow, look at what he stands for.
link |
Which do you like in the realm of martial arts, the real or the surreal?
link |
Or the dance between the two?
link |
Yeah, I like the dance between the two because a movie, I mean, a movie to me is to entertain you.
link |
So I'm cool with Obi Wan Kenobi disappearing out of the cloak when Vader strikes him down.
link |
And then I'm like, yo, what happened?
link |
And he's like, run, Luke, run.
link |
I'm cool with that, right?
link |
Because that's the imagination.
link |
And the imagination gets stimulated to the point to where as things that we saw imagined by an artist,
link |
we strive to create in our real world.
link |
Thus, Star Trek to me is just a precursor to our cell phones.
link |
So for me, I like the mixture too.
link |
Yeah, it's funny how the science fiction, like pushing into the impossible actually makes it realize eventually.
link |
Yeah, we humans, like, once we see an idea on screen, no matter how wild it is, we...
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We're trying to make it.
link |
Yeah, we're trying to make it.
link |
As soon as a young kid gets inspired and wants that, I'll be like, I'm going to build that.
link |
So I don't know who's going to come with the Back to the Future time machine,
link |
but do you have any classmates that you think...
link |
I thought you were going to Back to the Future, like the hoverboard or like...
link |
Yeah, we're there at least.
link |
Somebody, they got...
link |
You seen the one on the water?
link |
No, the surf hover straight is dope.
link |
It actually, if you were Back to the Future fan, you feel like you made it there.
link |
Well, now we just got to work on the time travel.
link |
And it was cool to hear you talk about the master of the flying gear team today,
link |
that that inspired the lyric for the Wu Tang Clan and Nothing to F With.
link |
How does that go again?
link |
But the Coast Word or the lyric?
link |
I said, I'd be torsing and forcing.
link |
My style is awesome.
link |
I'm causing more family foods than Richard Dawson.
link |
And the survey said, you're dead.
link |
The fatal flying gullotine chops off your head.
link |
And it was interesting to see the guillotine in a movie today, how...
link |
That's surreal, right?
link |
It's like, it's engineering.
link |
It's both surreal.
link |
And it adds this chaos into this real world that...
link |
And then challenges everybody to think what you're going to do with that.
link |
How are you going to beat it?
link |
How are you going to beat it?
link |
And the evil and the mix of the bad guys and the good guys.
link |
And you're not sure who the bad guys are.
link |
It's the old question of good versus evil, right?
link |
Like you said, then the question of who was good, who was evil.
link |
But they all had a similar problem and the guillotine came.
link |
But in terms of the real, you mentioned The Godfather, Good and Evil.
link |
That's your favorite movie.
link |
What makes it great, do you think?
link |
The characters, the study of family, of justice, of power.
link |
What connects with you?
link |
Oh, I mean, every one of those themes connects in the real.
link |
And it connects in a cinematic way as well.
link |
The difference, I think, with me and The Godfather was, I seen it during the period of time when
link |
my father was absent.
link |
And therefore, family structure and family values was actually adopted in my family because
link |
Me and my brother, Devon, we actually took so much heed to that movie in our family life.
link |
And we kind of mimic that family in its structure of somebody has to be the leader of the family.
link |
Even if it was the younger, Michael was younger than Sonny and Fredra.
link |
But he was worthy.
link |
And my brother, Devon, is older than me.
link |
My brother, King is older than me.
link |
And it's funny, sometimes Devon calls King, Fredra, and I know King wants to.
link |
Because King was actually, he could beat our ass in my language.
link |
But you're Michael.
link |
And not by choice, just by definition of that's what I am.
link |
You know what I mean?
link |
And it's just a blessing for me to have my older sister, my older brothers and my younger
link |
brothers look to me as just as a good light in the family.
link |
And like I said, that movie helped.
link |
You know, the cool thing about my family, I don't know if I shared this a lot.
link |
It's a big, we all watch these movies together.
link |
And so the eight diagram pole fighter, master killer, five that even as my family knows
link |
these movies, it's not just I know them.
link |
And then you extended further, my friends know them, right too.
link |
So there's a language that we all can have that actually film has informed a communication.
link |
So the Godfather, you know, which also is still a fictional story of something.
link |
But since it was based in reality, based on something real, and it was human, it wasn't
link |
I think the purity of it resonates and the purity of it is something that resonates with
link |
You know, you got to be, you got to plan ahead.
link |
You know, he didn't want to deal with the drugs.
link |
But that time of business was upon them.
link |
It's like, it's almost like this is a tough one.
link |
Like sometimes when the Muslim brothers come from the Middle East to America and they open
link |
up delis, right, they would sell him.
link |
And we would go in there and complain to them and make them like they used to get mad at
link |
But, you know, and that's as a kid, but as a man, I'm like, yo, he's here to sell.
link |
Now, he stills don't have to sell to him.
link |
Like Vito Corleone didn't want to sell the drugs.
link |
He didn't have to do it.
link |
And it cost him some bullets to eventually somebody in the family ended up doing it.
link |
You see what I mean?
link |
What about this idea that it's family before everything else?
link |
So like, you know, there's different laws you live according to in this world and family
link |
That's, that's, that's mathematically correct.
link |
I don't like that.
link |
You know what I mean?
link |
I mean, there's a, there's a certain sense of, you look at powerful people, you look
link |
at Putin, there's a certain sense in which the people who are in the inner circle, that's
link |
who you take care of.
link |
That's family and anyone else that crosses you that, you know, there's a different set
link |
of ethics under which you operate for those people.
link |
Well, Jesus said the same thing, you know, when he said love that neighbor and our brother,
link |
he was talking about that community.
link |
When the other lady, it's a marathon, say, Hey, Jesus, I'm not feeling, my brother not
link |
And could you say, give not that which is holy unto the dogs.
link |
If you're going to tell a woman, I'm give not that which is holy unto the dogs.
link |
And she's a woman.
link |
You just called her a dog.
link |
I translated that in hip hop.
link |
He called her a dog.
link |
I know how that goes.
link |
But she trans, but she said to him, but even the dog is allowed to eat the crumbs that
link |
falls from the master's table.
link |
And he went and helped.
link |
Now let's go back to what you just said about Putin or Vito Colón or myself and my family.
link |
Of course the family is first, but once the family is good, it has to then spread to the
link |
community, then to the state, country, world.
link |
The problem we have sometimes is that, and this is the reason why a lot of powerful families
link |
Like why did they behead their own king with the gulleteam, right?
link |
Because that, once the family was strong, they didn't let the wealth, the opportunity
link |
Look at the gulleteam, yes, our family was made strong first, but then all the women
link |
was able to form their own corporations and they had their own subfamilies.
link |
It has to grow out.
link |
And they took over the world.
link |
You've talked about being vegan and I don't think I heard you explain this because it
link |
connects somehow about how you think about life.
link |
So you talk about when your family is good, you grow that circle of empathy, you grow
link |
Is that how you think about being vegan, that just the capacity of living beings on earth
link |
to suffer, that you just don't want to add suffering to them?
link |
I mean, you said it clear.
link |
It's like nothing in all reality.
link |
I came to a realization that nothing really has to die for me to live.
link |
The plants themselves, right?
link |
So let's just say, you know, you want a steak, which is probably the most, you know, you
link |
know, I don't know the most expensive piece of meat, but let's just say the steak is,
link |
you know, top of the line, nice steak and you eating the steak for the protein to help
link |
build your muscle.
link |
And I don't know if you got it from a cow or a bull, but whether it's the cow or the
link |
bull, they grow to about 1500 pounds and if it's a bull, it's all muscly muscle and it's
link |
only eating grass.
link |
It's possible to both as an athlete and just as a human being to perform well without
link |
There's something, especially in the way we're treating animals, to deliver that meat to
link |
I think about that a lot.
link |
So I do, I'm a robotics person, AI person, and I think a lot about, I don't know if you
link |
think about this kind of stuff, but building AI systems as they become more and more human
link |
like, you start to ask the question of, are we okay?
link |
If we give the capacity for AI systems to suffer, first to feel, but then to suffer,
link |
to hate and to love, to feel emotion, how do we deal with that?
link |
It starts asking the same question as you ask of animals, are we okay adding that suffering
link |
And I don't think we should add to suffering because it's not necessary.
link |
Like when you look, if it's necessary, right?
link |
Because we're survival or the first law of nature is self preservation.
link |
If you are in a desert and there's nothing else to eat, but that lizard.
link |
You got to do what you got to do.
link |
The lizard's got to go.
link |
You got to do what you got to do because at the end of the day, man is, when they say
link |
man has dominion over these things, his dominion is almost like a caretaker out the way we
link |
We dominate it, eat it, cook it.
link |
Like who's the first guy that looked at the lobster and was like, I'm going to eat this
link |
It's like, it's first of all, it's hard to eat it.
link |
You got to go through a process to get that, a crab, I remember we used to eat crabs when
link |
And I didn't know why I was always getting itchy throats and all that.
link |
You know, you can't, you don't know, just eat.
link |
But at the end of the day, a crab didn't provide no more than a finger worth of meat, maybe.
link |
And it's hell getting that thing, getting it out.
link |
It's like, it's not worth it in all of reality.
link |
You could have gave me a banana and did better for my body and my appetite and my being fulfilled
link |
Like, look at the blessings of life, right?
link |
If you take a seed or you get an apple and you eat it, in that apple is multiple seeds
link |
If you plant that seed, it'll give you a whole tree with a whole bunch of apples with all
link |
But if you kill a fish, it can't be produced, it's done.
link |
If you kill a cat, it's done, it's not, it's not coming back.
link |
But when you deal with the plants, even after you eat the apple and then you defecate, your
link |
defecation is what feeds the ground, the cause of apple to grow more.
link |
Yeah, it's a circle of life, and especially there's a guy named David Foster Wallace,
link |
he wrote a short story called, Consider the Lobster.
link |
If you actually think philosophically about what, from a perspective of a lobster, that's
link |
like symbolic or something because you're basically put in water, like cold water, and
link |
then it heats up slowly until it's no more.
link |
Yeah, it must have been like, they started eating lobsters in the inquisition.
link |
Yeah, they just enjoyed, they were probably enjoyed torturing animals and they realized
link |
they're also delicious after the tortures finished, that's probably how they discovered
link |
Let me ask you a question.
link |
I know you're asking me the questions, but I just want to talk a little bit about the
link |
AI, and you said something about trying to put the emotion in it, right?
link |
So are you thinking there's an algorithm for emotion?
link |
Yes, but I think emotion isn't something that there's an algorithm for a particular system,
link |
we create emotions together.
link |
So emotion is something like this conversation, it's like magic we create together.
link |
So I've worked with quite a few robots, a very simple version of that, I've had Roomba
link |
vacuum cleaners, I've had them make different sounds and one of them is like screaming in
link |
pain like lightly.
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And just having them do that when you kick them or when they run at the stuff, immediately
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I start to feel something for them.
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Right, so the emotion you're saying is imposed back on the human, but I'm asking, do you
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think there's an algorithm for the emotion to be imposed from machine to machine?
link |
Yeah, that's a really good way to ask it.
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It's difficult because I think ultimately I only know how to exist in the human world.
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So it's like, it's the question of if a tree falls in the forest and nobody's there to
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see it, does it still fall?
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I still think that ultimately machines will have to show emotion to other humans and that's
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when it becomes real.
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I've been thinking about this a lot too, and I just, okay, I'll come into with this because
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I've been thinking about this and this is just your feeling.
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Well do you think the emotion is wave?
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Like light is wave or do you think it's particle?
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So emotion is just a small, it's like a shadow of something bigger and I think that bigger
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thing is consciousness.
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So emotion is just...
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It's a wave or a particle, you haven't thought about that?
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I have thought about it, whether it's, there's something like, whether consciousness or emotion
link |
is a law of physics, like if it's that fundamental to the universe.
link |
I had a lyric, I had a lyric that said this, it comes out, they did this documentary about
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the planet and it gave, it wrote a song, it's called, The World of Confusion and I'll try
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to paraphrase the lyric but in the world of the confusion where there's so much illusions,
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we suck the blood from the planet, now it needs a transfusion and the redistribution
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of wealth, of health and wealth of self and a deeper understanding about mental health.
link |
The doctor described the physical solution, the psychiatrist wants to build a bigger institution
link |
but neither have the solution or the equation to make an instrument to measure the weight
link |
of the hate vibration.
link |
What is the weight of hate?
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Is it heavier than the weight of love?
link |
Is it heavier than the weight of lead inside of a slug with just 10 milligrams is all it
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takes to kill a man.
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But anyways, they're not going from there.
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Damn, that is good.
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But the question, you see the question there.
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Can it be measured?
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Can that be measured?
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I've just not got the estimate yet.
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Yeah, we're in the dark ages of that but I think it could be measured.
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I think there's something physical, like something that connects us all this much.
link |
We tend to think we humans are distinct entities and we move about this world but I think there's
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some deeper connection.
link |
But we're so, listen, science is in the, we just had a few breakthroughs in the past
link |
hundred years from Einstein on the theoretical physics side.
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We don't know anything about human psychology.
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We barely know much about human biology.
link |
We're trying to figure it all out.
link |
Yeah, I had another theory because you think about quantum, right?
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As long as you say that there's an uncertainty and you have me believe there's an uncertainty,
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then there's an uncertainty.
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But if there's not an uncertainty, what happens?
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So I'm only saying that, it's last, last, last, because you look at quantum computers,
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they're going to give you the O, the one, the one, the O. They're going to take two things
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and make it eight things and by the time you multiply four of those things together, it's
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like this chess board, right?
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The moves goes into the millions.
link |
But the thing that's introduced is the uncertainty, right?
link |
You're going to make a move.
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You know this already, right?
link |
Because this has been played a thousand times, but sooner or later, something uncertain is
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going to come in or make the next move.
link |
I like the weight of these.
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They add the certainty.
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I think it's just like Wu Tang, unpredictable.
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There's something about us humans that really doesn't like everything to be fully predictable.
link |
I mean, chess too is perfectly solvable.
link |
There's nothing unpredictable about chess.
link |
I agree to that because Bobby Fischer said in one of his books, which I actually love
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what he said, he said, every game of chess is a draw.
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The only way somebody wins is when one of us makes a mistake.
link |
I mean, it doesn't get any better than that.
link |
Like, how do you think about chess?
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What's at the core of your interest in chess?
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Do you see kung fu, music, film, all of it, life, all just living through chess?
link |
I see it's the most stimulating passage of time for me.
link |
That's also, it's like, it's a pastime that stimulates my mind, my music, my thoughts
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about life at the same time.
link |
So while some pastimes is like, say baseball is watched, it's a pastime.
link |
And baseball can stimulate you, depending on how you look at it, right?
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But most likely, you're not going to get this much brain activation, this much calculation,
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and this much thinking about yourself in a game of baseball.
link |
I mean, a player maybe, but not the viewer.
link |
Chess is something that I can engage in too.
link |
And even though it's a pastime, it's giving me all the stimulation of real time in my
link |
It's funny because it's also, it's a funny game because it's connected through centuries
link |
Just some of the most interesting people in the history of the world have played this
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game and have struggled with whatever, have projected their struggles onto the chessboard
link |
and thought, and then nations have fought over the chessboard.
link |
The Soviet Union versus the United States, Bobby Fisher represented the United States.
link |
The Spassky represented the Soviet Union.
link |
I got a, before I lose track of it, when we were talked about The Godfather, you were
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an American gangster, great film.
link |
You said it's one of your favorites too.
link |
What, you were in it with Denzel Washington, what makes that movie meaningful to you?
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What was the like making that movie?
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Because it's a great, great American film.
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That was a great American film.
link |
There was so many things in that film.
link |
Being a part of that film was probably a blessing, a treasure, because even if I wasn't a part
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of it, it just sets great filmmaking and to me, a really cool, great story.
link |
The thing that I love about it the most really is the process of it.
link |
Which part of the process?
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I wasn't known the process if I wasn't part of it.
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So as a film joyous, it was a great film.
link |
But even the process of making it was like high level education for me on multiple levels.
link |
I'm working with Ridley Scott, which is, and this is a bold statement if I say this here,
link |
because I got a lot of friends that's going to probably, but he's probably the best living
link |
Because watching him allowed me to understand a principle that I've coined to him, and I
link |
don't know if people use it yet, called multi vision.
link |
He seems to have the capacity to see eight things at one time.
link |
I heard on Robin Hood he had 18 cameras.
link |
I wasn't there for that.
link |
And you think he keeps them all in his mind?
link |
I've seen him do it when he went to the monitors with the video playback guy.
link |
I've seen him bring everything back to a point, but nothing was the same on the frame.
link |
He was already there, and he knew if he had what he was or not.
link |
And he placed the cameras there, and he saw it in his own way, and I peeped it.
link |
And I said, yeah, and I just humbly asked him, he was gracious enough to speak to me and
link |
talk to me and confirm what I thought I saw.
link |
And I was able to utilize it as I'm a filmmaker now, and I can at least see three or four
link |
I can't see eight yet.
link |
I'll be there though.
link |
But I could definitely, even right now, just I could go like this in the room, okay?
link |
I got like how to make this right here, which is just us all sitting.
link |
How do I make this?
link |
There's a story there.
link |
It's a story there.
link |
And I might just go off this hanging watch or this hanging wristband.
link |
You know what I mean?
link |
Because there's something else there too.
link |
And even though this is the scene.
link |
You keeping that in mind, all of this in mind.
link |
What about like, can you give an inkling of other parts of the process, like the editing?
link |
Like, where does the magic happen?
link |
I don't pronounce Pedro last name.
link |
I had a chance to play rugby with him.
link |
He was on, was he on my team?
link |
Well, we went both teams.
link |
And Pedro, the editor, who, you know, added many great films.
link |
Once again, he has, I will call, deciphering power.
link |
A good editor is a decipher, almost like breaking the enigma.
link |
Because he's dealing with thousands, or we'll call it a film, with millions of feet of film,
link |
at least a million feet of film, that's a lot of film for a feature.
link |
He's dealing with that.
link |
But he's dealing with multiple cameras.
link |
So it ain't like it's like two cameras, he got an A, B, and he could just go back, no.
link |
He may have six cameras, and he has to go back and deal with that process.
link |
And you know what?
link |
He knows how to tell the story again.
link |
And he proved it on American Gangster as me being a witness.
link |
Because it's so much information, it's even when the brothers all start getting their
link |
little business, and then he picked one of the Bronx, and he just captured every neighborhood
link |
within one minute, and you knew what would happen, you knew it all, you saw the whole
link |
He watched the Palmer and Scarface, who does it in two minutes, but it's only one character.
link |
So you see him go to the bank, he drops the money off, you see him buy the lion, you see
link |
him get his wife, or the tiger, you see him get his wife, you see all that, then it ends
link |
on the big side of him in the big house with all the TV screens.
link |
And you see him go through it, right?
link |
But in American Gangster, you're going to tell that story of rising, but you also got to
link |
include these five brothers.
link |
Yeah, that's all in the edit.
link |
But also all in the director, knowing that as well.
link |
And you got to keep track, you got to keep thinking about them, because that was a story
link |
Yeah, well I was hearing it, I don't know if they was taking pictures of him, or if they
link |
was having a little party over there.
link |
Yeah, Jess, I think, yeah, I like it.
link |
They're playing chess in the distance.
link |
You said that you were always an old soul, and see the world as if you're 200 years old,
link |
Because your creative vision allows you to see the final piece you've created, or you're
link |
creating very quickly, quicker than others.
link |
I heard that as if you've almost like lived many lives, you have this experience that
link |
allows you to see the vision.
link |
So let me ask you on creativity, where does this creativity behind RZA come from, both
link |
musically and film wise?
link |
Dad, I don't know if I have the answer to that one, right?
link |
No, for sure it's where it comes from.
link |
Only thing I could say about that is that for some reason it seems endless.
link |
And that's peculiar when I think about it myself, because I was taught a lot of things
link |
He introduced me to mathematics, he introduced me to hip hop itself, to breakdancing, I got
link |
other cousins that introduced me to graffiti, the cousins that introduced me to DJing.
link |
I realized I had a lot of introductions, but the juzza definitely, my older cousin gave
link |
me a lot of early inspirations.
link |
And not saying that he's not creative, as creative as he was then or now, I just didn't,
link |
like the wide span of creativity, I don't see him doing that, right?
link |
And I don't see my cousin, you know, the cousins that taught me how to DJ, I didn't see them
link |
move from DJing to making the beats.
link |
You know, my cousin that, you know, who actually got me into instruments, I didn't see him
link |
leave funk and rock.
link |
He didn't go, like I'm orchestra composing now.
link |
So I just said to myself, I just accept myself as an artist, as a creative artist, that's
link |
I have to accept that.
link |
And where it comes from, I don't know if I was just trying to try to say where it comes
link |
Like, give me some type of answer, I'll say from life itself.
link |
But what does it feel like?
link |
Because you mentioned during this pandemic, for example, for some reason, more came to
link |
you in terms of writing.
link |
And so do you feel like you're just receiving signals from elsewhere or like, do you feel
link |
like it's hard work or you're just waiting?
link |
It's not even waiting, nor is it hard work.
link |
It's almost like, I said in one of my other lyrics, this is for the MC part of it.
link |
I said, MCing to me is easy as breathing.
link |
So it's like breathing?
link |
Yeah, it's just like, in fact, there's actually was a scientific, scientific thing I read
link |
about that now that you said that.
link |
You heard this, I know you've had to hear this.
link |
They say that the atoms in our atmosphere, which seem to be infinite in number, are not
link |
infinite in the space they occupy, because they're in our atmosphere.
link |
And so there's a chance that at least 1 million atoms that you breathe in your life was breathed
link |
You heard this before, didn't you?
link |
It's very accurate.
link |
How does your body digest it?
link |
Well, let's start at the fact that most of the atoms that we're made of is from like
link |
So like, we're all really connected fundamentally somehow, and then the atoms that make up our
link |
body come and leave, and the same with the cells that are in our body.
link |
They die and are reborn, and we don't pay attention to any of that.
link |
That all just goes through us.
link |
That makes me feel like I'm not an individual.
link |
I'm just a finger of something much bigger, some much bigger organism.
link |
Well, because you're drinking the coffee there, right?
link |
You're going to digest that.
link |
You're going to digest those atoms, whether you're going to put them through the bowel
link |
or through the urination, it's coming out, or maybe you'll sweat it out.
link |
You might sneeze it out, but they're going to make their way out.
link |
How do you digest the atoms if you just breathe in Galileo?
link |
How do, and that's what I think an artist does.
link |
I think something in the artist, it's like some people eat things and they're going
link |
Some people ain't going to gain weight, they're going to gain muscle.
link |
I'm just giving you an analogy here.
link |
I'm thinking that the artist breathes in and translates it into the art.
link |
First they got to hear it.
link |
I think most of us don't hear that.
link |
We receive it, but it just doesn't happen.
link |
Yeah, we not have the frequency.
link |
I said this to our artists, and even we all consider ourselves artists in a certain way,
link |
but let's just say there's only one million artists in the world.
link |
If you divide that into the population, what part of the table would it be?
link |
It might be that, right?
link |
Yeah, it's that that inspires that.
link |
Ain't no so crazy about that though.
link |
There's also a chance, I'm just going numbers and I'm just hypothesizing with you, but there's
link |
also a chance that all of this is actually informing that.
link |
The artist is just watching this, all of this, all of the chaos of this.
link |
So it's hard to know where the beauty comes from.
link |
Is it the artist or the chaos from the?
link |
So I don't have the answer, but if I was to be forced to say a certain answer, you're
link |
not twisting my arm.
link |
I can if you want me to.
link |
In the Tao of Wu, you write something about confusion, which I really like.
link |
Confusion is a gift from God.
link |
Those times when you feel most desperate for a solution, sit, wait, the information will
link |
The confusion is there to guide you.
link |
Seek detachment and become the producer of your life.
link |
So I got to ask you advice.
link |
If a young person today in high school, college is looking for some advice, what advice could
link |
you give them to be a producer of a life that can be proud of?
link |
Read the Tao of Wu.
link |
Let's start with the Wu Tang Manual first.
link |
No, you can do that second.
link |
I think you could read the Tao of Wu first and then do the manual because the manual
link |
is not to put the two books against each other, but the manual is talking about things that
link |
is so deeply connected to the music and the people and the Tao of Wu goes beyond that.
link |
So I would actually start there, which is not normally how I prescribe.
link |
I always tell people to start at knowledge, then go to wisdom.
link |
But since the Tao...
link |
Skip ahead to the wisdom.
link |
Yeah, I think for a young man in high school, go to the Tao of Wu and then go back.
link |
Just like sometimes, like my son's generation, they have to watch the second round of Star
link |
Wars and then go back.
link |
This generation is watching The Force Awakens and then they go back.
link |
Because if you just look at your life as an example, that's one heck of a life.
link |
There's very few lives like it.
link |
You've created some of the most incredible things artistically in this world.
link |
You talk about that like one million right at the corner of the table.
link |
If somebody once strives dreams to become one of those, how do they do it?
link |
Well, the beautiful thing is that there are footprints left by those who've done it and
link |
the best way is to study that.
link |
To study those who've already done what you want to do.
link |
We live on the civilizations, we said this is the greatest country in the world, but
link |
our silas are pyramid with an eye on it because they did it before and they may have failed
link |
for some reason or something happens, but it was just a strong enough example to take
link |
Elon Musk is sitting here trying to do better than what the rocket builders did before.
link |
He's not the first one to build the rocket.
link |
He's not the first guy to think over the electric car.
link |
He's doing it better.
link |
He's advancing it to the point that whoever picks up after him, maybe they'll get to that
link |
So that's the beauty.
link |
There's a good verse.
link |
I love finding verses to say things, to confirm because this way people could take it verbally,
link |
physically, and then maybe even spiritually.
link |
For Christmas, he said the fastest way to heaven is by spending time or studying the
link |
wise people, meaning the wise people who was living and those who lived before you.
link |
Study the masters.
link |
Let me ask you a big, perhaps ridiculous question, but give it a shot.
link |
What is the meaning of this whole thing?
link |
What's the meaning of life?
link |
I'm not going to rush into the answer.
link |
I'm going to give you somebody else's answer first and I'll give you my answer.
link |
I remember asking this, and I don't know, I was 15, 16 years old.
link |
One of the brothers, we're studying in mathematics, and the letter I itself means I, Islam.
link |
I mean in the individual, right, being a total accord with Islam.
link |
And I mean, let's finish this.
link |
Then they took the word Islam and they defined it as Islam is an Arabic word for peace.
link |
Then they said peace is the absence of confusion, okay?
link |
So then they took, this is something that really hit me when I was, I never forgot it
link |
and I'm going to decipher it, but then they took the word Islam and they broke it down
link |
by the letter into an acronym like casual, everything around me.
link |
And they broke it down to I stimulate light and matter.
link |
Because what it means is that if you're not here, then light and matter don't exist to
link |
So you're stimulating it or it ain't here for you.
link |
So anyway, taking all that, so then I said, you know, so what's the meaning of life?
link |
And the brothers just said love Islam forever.
link |
I ain't saying the religious point of it.
link |
I'm just saying all those other elements I just spoke about in front of it.
link |
I stimulate light and matter.
link |
And let me give you my definition of life.
link |
I think life is a simple lead for each and every one of us to add on to.
link |
Build, like you said, the master's build on top.
link |
Life gave you life, give life back.
link |
I don't think there's a better way to end it than talking about the meaning of life.
link |
I'm a huge fan and such a huge honor that you spend your valuable time with me.
link |
Thank you so much.
link |
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Riza.
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To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
link |
And now let me leave you with some words from Plato.
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Poetry is nearer to vital truth than history.
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Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.