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Drake discusses his name, childhood, music career, and personal life. He shares stories about his father, his connection to Snoop Dogg, and his thoughts on success and relationships. The conversation touches on his book, his tour, and his views on fame.
Published August 14, 2023
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Interviewer: Today I'm here with, can you introduce yourself? Interviewee: Drake.
Interviewer: That's not your name. Interviewee: That is my middle name. Interviewer: That's not your real name. Interviewee: That's my government name, middle name.
Interviewer: Why would you go by that? Interviewer: What's your first name? Interviewee: My first name is Aubrey.
Interviewer: I see where you go with that. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: But, yeah, I think my mom named me after a lawyer, which always kind of like rubbed me the wrong way. Interviewer: Why? Interviewee: Because like, I don't know, why would you just name me after like a random lawyer unless like there was something else going on, you know?
Interviewer: I was named after a cheerleader my dad thought was hot. Interviewee: Really? Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: Bobby? Interviewer: Yeah, it's an older name. Interviewer: My dad's old. Interviewee: Okay, but like for a fact, like you've seen the girl or that's just the story? Interviewer: Yeah, he showed me, no, he showed me the yearbook. Interviewee: Oh. Interviewee: What year? Interviewer: I don't know. Interviewee: I'm just asking. Interviewee: It's like, that sounds like a good like a good like excuse like or like a story like, oh, yeah, I named you after a really hot cheerleader. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: Bobby. Interviewer: That was a hot topic for my family's marriage. Interviewer: My mom didn't like that very much. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: No, it definitely sounds a little. Interviewer: But my other alternative name was Larry, L-A-R-I. Interviewer: He thought it's really cute. Interviewer: If he's watching this right now, he'd tell you he thinks that's a really cute name. Interviewer: He stands by it to this day. Interviewer: Do you like that name? Interviewer: Larry? Interviewee: I just think. Interviewer: For a girl. Interviewer: If I said, hi, my name is Larry, what would you say? Interviewee: I just think that there's maybe a deeper conversation to be had within the family. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewee: Like the two options were Bobby and Larry. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: And then just like slap an eye on the end and make it feminine. Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Your name is Aubrey. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: So don't. Interviewee: But like there's nothing. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewee: But my mom named me Aubrey, a guy's name. Interviewer: That's Aubrey's not a guy's name. Interviewee: Yes, it is. Interviewer: No, it's not. Interviewee: Yes, it is. Interviewer: Have you ever met a male Aubrey? Interviewee: Yeah, you're looking at him. Interviewee: So, yeah, I met myself.
Interviewer: You don't even go by that because it's such a bad name. Interviewee: No, that's not true. Interviewee: It's just like. Interviewer: Why do you go by Drake? Interviewee: Because it's shorter. Interviewee: You know, people with two syllables are way less successful than people with one. Interviewee: Sorry. Interviewee: Wary. Interviewer: I go by Bob. Interviewee: That's crazy. Interviewer: Okay, Aubrey. Interviewee: That's crazy. Interviewer: Aubrey. Interviewee: Yeah.
Interviewer: What are you looking at? Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: Don't do that. Interviewer: I have a tattoo on my hand. Interviewee: Yeah? Interviewer: I was just like thinking about it because it's just. Interviewer: Can you not drink during my interview, please? Interviewee: Why? Interviewer: Because that's inappropriate. Interviewee: It's like a nightcap. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewer: That's not like. Interviewer: That's sad. Interviewee: Why? Interviewer: Get a real nightcap. Interviewee: I'm working hard. Interviewee: I'm here. Interviewee: Like my life is stressful right now. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewer: I'm sitting here right now with sweatpants on. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: My hair ties back. Interviewer: My hair is tied back. Interviewer: Sorry. Interviewer: And I have no makeup on. Interviewee: I see. Interviewee: I get. Interviewee: I get where you went. Interviewee: I get. Interviewee: Like, I understand the journey we're trying to go on with that. Interviewee: Clearly, like you obviously. Interviewer: Does that make you feel any type of way? Interviewee: Well, I mean, you look great. Interviewee: But I feel like you're just kind of like forcing like a rap. Interviewer: Forcing a rap? Interviewee: Forcing like kind of like for us to like meet in the middle on some like rap metaphor. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewee: But because it's written on your hand.
Interviewer: Would you spin by me? Interviewee: Spin by you? Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: Would you spin? Interviewer: Could you spin by me? Interviewer: It's kind of washing off now, so I don't know what I was going to say. Interviewer: Dude, that was something you rapped once upon a time. Interviewee: Well, like, yeah. Interviewee: So I guess I don't know whoever related to you probably make a little typo. Interviewee: But would I spin about you? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: What do you think that means? Interviewer: I have no idea what. Interviewee: But like take like. Interviewer: Would you spin? Interviewer: What does spin mean? Interviewer: Why would you say that? Interviewer: Would you spin about me? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: What do you think it means? Interviewer: Would you sing a song about me maybe? Interviewer: Why is that funny? Interviewee: Because like how is that possibly. Interviewer: Would you spin? Interviewer: Like you spin a little like. Interviewee: Oh, like a record? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: Would you spin a record? Interviewee: Yeah, I guess if this was like 1954, that would be like a record. Interviewer: What else would a spin mean? Interviewee: Spinning is like, like I would like go around someone else and like do something to them for you. Interviewee: Like I'd spin there. Interviewer: Did you make that up? Interviewee: No, I didn't. Interviewer: Never heard that before. Interviewee: I mean like, yeah, I wouldn't peg you to like hang out in the trenches of like Atlanta. Interviewee: So I wouldn't. Interviewer: Did you hang out in the trenches of Atlanta? Interviewee: I do sometimes, yeah. Interviewer: Still? Interviewee: Sometimes. Interviewer: And you spin about people? Interviewee: Like if like somebody like was, I don't know, like violated you, like would I go do something to them? Interviewee: Maybe, yeah. Interviewee: Depends on how close we get. Interviewee: Would you like expect your man to like spin for you? Interviewer: No, I really don't want him to make music for me. Interviewee: No, it's not like I'm saying, would you expect him to like defend you against another man? Interviewer: Not using the term spin by me. Interviewee: Why? Interviewer: It feels like he's just going to make music for me with a record. Interviewee: So how would you want to word it? Interviewer: Would you protect me? Interviewee: Oh, okay. Interviewee: That's really like, like chivalrous and like kind of like, I feel like that's like from like some like Matthew McConaughey movie or something. Interviewee: Like would you protect me? Interviewer: Do you have something against that? Interviewee: No.
Interviewer: What type of movies do you watch? Interviewee: I'm more of like a true crime. Interviewee: I like watching like murder documentaries and stuff. Interviewer: Why? Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: I just like, like things that are true. Interviewer: Murder documentaries? Interviewee: Yeah, I don't know. Interviewer: There's other things that are true that are happy. Interviewee: You're right. Interviewee: You're right. Interviewee: You're right. Interviewee: Yeah, I don't know. Interviewee: I can't really explain it. Interviewee: I think my dad, when I was younger, used to like when I stayed at his house, he would like watch America's Most Wanted and he would like just like shake his foot, like, like kind of do this thing with his foot. Interviewee: And then now I do it too. Interviewee: Like I sit and I watch like murder documentaries and I just like kind of shake him. Interviewer: It's weirdly descriptive. Interviewer: I wasn't really looking for that. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewee: Well, it's a vivid memory for me. Interviewer: Just shaking his leg. Interviewer: I'm just letting you go. Interviewee: That's what I associate with. Interviewer: Does it come naturally to you or do you just do it on purpose? Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: I feel like it's like a visual, visual thing from my past.
Interviewee: Would you describe yourself as successful? Interviewer: What does your dad do? Interviewee: Obviously, we're keeping your dad's life a secret. Interviewee: So like what's what? Interviewee: Tell me something. Interviewee: What is your dad doing? Interviewer: He builds houses. Interviewee: Dad builds houses. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewee: And like what else? Interviewer: Like that's all he does. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: He is really, yeah. Interviewer: We don't really need to talk about him. Interviewee: Why? Interviewee: Well, you, I was just, I was like speaking on like a fond memory. Interviewee: Well, it's not a fond memory. Interviewee: I mean, he's watching like. Interviewer: I've told this story before. Interviewee: What? Interviewer: I don't want to tell it again. Interviewer: Well, he, he, he built, he did something for Snoop Dogg. Interviewer: Do you know him? Interviewee: Yeah, I do. Interviewer: Are you friends with him? Interviewee: He's my uncle. Interviewer: Really? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: For real? Interviewer: You're not kidding right now? Interviewee: I mean, yeah. Interviewee: Like, he's like my OG, like my uncle. Interviewer: Like your actual uncle. Interviewee: Well, no, it's like. Interviewer: Why'd you call him your uncle? Interviewee: Because like, that's like what like black people do. Interviewee: Like if he's, if a guy's like friends with my dad, he's like my uncle. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewee: So he's like an uncle to me. Interviewer: He's an uncle to you? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: And your dad helped him at some point or something? Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: He was working on his neighbor's house and then he worked on his house. Interviewer: And. Interviewee: So he got like a referral? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: From his neighbor? Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewer: I think he'll know. Interviewee: What year was this? Interviewee: What, what era, what Snoop era are we talking about? Interviewee: Like, are we talking about like rich Snoop Dogg or like when he was like. Interviewer: He lived in Diamond Bar. Interviewee: I don't even know what that is. Interviewer: He might still live there. Interviewee: Oh, okay. Interviewee: So like, yeah. Interviewee: So. Interviewer: It's not, it's just like inland California. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: He worked on it and then he gave my dad his closet tours. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewer: He was just throwing them away and we, I think my dad took them. Interviewer: And then we have them there. Interviewee: And like repurpose them or something? Interviewer: He just put them in our house. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: Do you want them? Interviewee: No, not really. Interviewee: I mean like, but that's a cool memento.
Interviewer: How much money do you have? Interviewee: A significant amount. Interviewer: How much? Interviewee: Guess. Interviewer: Could you buy me a Lamborghini right now? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: And like not think about it. Interviewer: It wouldn't hurt you financially if you just bought me a Lamborghini. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: Will you do that? Interviewee: And we'll see where it goes. Interviewer: I don't really want a Lamborghini. Interviewee: I know. Interviewee: I can't really. Interviewee: What's your dream car? Interviewer: Um, hmm. Interviewer: Probably like a Honda. Interviewee: What's your dream car? Interviewer: Hmm. Interviewee: Like if you had an aspirational goal. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: For yourself. Interviewer: Mm hmm. Interviewee: What's your dream car? Interviewer: Hmm. Interviewer: Like. Interviewer: Well, my dream would be to not have to drive a car. Interviewer: So someone, my dream. Interviewer: Can I have one of your drivers? Interviewee: No, but like, okay. Interviewee: But if you, like for you, like in your life. Interviewee: Oh, so you'd want a driver then. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: But what would he drive? Interviewee: Or she drive? Interviewee: Would you have a female driver? Interviewer: Probably. Interviewee: That'd be like kind of. Interviewer: Do you have any female drivers? Interviewee: I don't. Interviewee: Now it sounds really like. Interviewee: I'm not discriminating. Interviewee: I just don't. Interviewee: I don't. Interviewee: I haven't. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewee: I don't really hire. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: Who hires them for you? Interviewee: But my main driver. Interviewer: Your main driver? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: Would like then assemble kind of like a group of drivers. Interviewer: Yeah, you should tell them to assemble some females. Interviewee: I should. Interviewee: I should. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: So what would you do? Interviewee: Do an all. Interviewee: Oh. Interviewer: What is that? Interviewer: What does that sound? Interviewer: Why are you looking that way? Interviewee: With Sebastian, I think. Interviewer: Can you stop doing that? Interviewee: What? Interviewee: No, it's Sebastian. Interviewer: Stop talking about people. Interviewee: No, that's my dog. Interviewer: Stop talking about dogs. Interviewee: That's my guy though. Interviewer: You have a pet dog? Interviewee: I have two. Interviewee: Do you? Interviewer: I don't see any. Interviewee: No, they're not here. Interviewee: By the way. Interviewer: Why do you call him that? Interviewee: We're in a locker room right now. Interviewee: So obviously there's no dogs here. Interviewer: You just said that's my dog. Interviewee: Yeah, that's my boy. Interviewer: Why do you call him a dog? Interviewee: Because he's my friend. Interviewer: But you called him a dog. Interviewee: I know. Interviewee: That's like what like hip people do in like 2023. Interviewer: Call people dogs? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: Like, yo, that's my dog. Interviewee: It's not very nice. Interviewee: I'd be like, yo, you're my dog. Interviewee: If I see you out after this. Interviewer: You're going to call me a dog. Interviewee: Yeah, I would be like, yo, Bobby's my dog. Interviewer: My dog. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: I don't like that. Interviewee: What would you, okay, what would you prefer to be called if I, if I was to reference you as my friend? Interviewee: Hello. Interviewee: Feel free. Interviewee: Why? Interviewer: What's in that? Interviewee: Like passion fruit juice and watermelon juice and tequila. Interviewer: It's a really fruity drink. Interviewee: I know. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewee: Yeah, I know. Interviewee: Sounds familiar, right? Interviewee: I'm sure you probably see this a lot at home, right? Interviewer: No. Interviewee: Why do you like fruity drinks? Interviewee: They're refreshing. Interviewee: Try it. Interviewer: What side did you drink out of? Interviewee: I haven't, I haven't tasted. Interviewee: Oh, that was a lie. Interviewee: I had to take a sip. Interviewer: Yeah, what side? Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: Just look for my like lip mark or something. Interviewee: Probably this side. Interviewee: You should go same side so we can bond. Interviewer: No. Interviewee: You went same side anyway. Interviewee: I tricked you. Interviewer: No, you didn't. Interviewer: I saw it. Interviewee: No. Interviewer: And I was watching you. Interviewee: I'll go same side as you right now. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewer: I have COVID. Interviewee: Nothing you can do about it. Interviewer: I have COVID. Interviewee: Doesn't exist anymore.
Interviewer: Are you going on tour soon? Interviewee: I'm actually going on tour in like four or five days. Interviewee: That's why we're like sleeping in the middle of an arena right now in Memphis, Tennessee. Interviewer: Why do you want to do it here? Interviewee: I didn't really have a choice. Interviewee: Why? Interviewee: You kind of like really were super excited and like forceful. Interviewee: So I just tried to like make it work. Interviewee: And it's three in the morning. Interviewee: I had to go to sleep soon.
Interviewer: What time do you go to bed normally? Interviewee: About like 6.30 a.m. Interviewer: Oh. Interviewer: It's a good time. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: What time do you wake up? Interviewee: Like 2.30 p.m. Interviewer: Mm-hmm.
Interviewer: Why didn't you text me back when I text you at three o'clock and I asked you why you wouldn't film a podcast with me? Interviewee: I did. Interviewee: I always hit you back. Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewee: That's how we got here. Interviewer: No, you didn't reply to me. Interviewee: I text you when I'm going to bed and then you see it when you wake up. Interviewee: And I'm asleep. Interviewer: I text you one time at three o'clock and you didn't reply. Interviewee: At what? Interviewee: In the morning? Interviewer: Yeah.
Interviewer: Why'd you follow me on Instagram? Interviewee: Um, I don't know. Interviewee: You just remind me of people that I like. Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewee: You know?
Interviewer: Why do you follow so many people on Instagram? Interviewee: I don't really. Interviewee: I don't. Interviewer: It's a lot of people. Interviewer: Do you know 3,000 people? Interviewee: Do I have 3,000 followers? Interviewer: You follow 3,000 people. Interviewer: Go ahead. Interviewer: I won't look. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: It's kind of embarrassing. Interviewee: Well, how many people do you follow? Interviewer: 300 and something. Interviewee: Yeah, it's all relative, right? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: Wow, you have a lot of followers. Interviewer: Not really. Interviewer: Yeah, you do. Interviewee: No. Interviewee: 620,000 people, like, care what you... Interviewer: It's not a lot compared to you. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewee: Wow. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: You know, like I said, it's all relative, but 620,000 is still really good. Interviewee: That's a lot of people. Interviewee: How do you feel like, like, how do you feel about that? Interviewee: Because remember you told me that you were really jealous of somebody back in the day that had followers. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: And then, like, how do you feel now that you've obviously just crushed that person's existence? Interviewer: I feel like I wish I had the amount of followers that you had. Interviewee: Okay, but... Interviewee: You have a lot of followers. Interviewee: What about being grateful for what you have? Interviewee: Like, how do you feel about... Interviewer: I'm grateful for what I have, but my goal is to be bigger than you one day. Interviewee: Oh, okay. Interviewer: Do you think that will happen? Interviewee: Huh? Interviewer: Do you think I can be? Interviewer: How'd you get so big? Interviewee: I don't really know. Interviewer: Why do you think people like you? Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: I do not know.
Interviewer: When do you learn how to walk? Interviewee: What? Interviewer: When do you learn how to walk? Interviewer: When do you learn a wheelchair? Interviewee: Oh, oh, oh. Interviewee: Okay, you're firing off questions without answers. Interviewer: When do you learn how to walk? Interviewee: When I learned how to walk? Interviewee: Probably when I was, like, I don't know, like six months or something. Interviewer: You went from being in a wheelchair to walking. Interviewer: I saw you walking here. Interviewee: It was an acting. Interviewee: I was on TV at one point. Interviewee: On a TV show. Interviewer: You portrayed someone who sits in a wheelchair and you don't sit in a wheelchair yourself. Interviewee: Yeah, but, like... Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: But, obviously, like, it's acting, you know?
Interviewee: What else do you want to talk about? Interviewee: What? Interviewee: If you could hook me up with anyone, who would it be? Interviewee: Like, who would you see me being with? Interviewer: Who would I see you being with? Interviewee: Yeah, if you could, like, link me up with anyone, who would it be? Interviewer: Beyonce. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewee: Or someone else, because Beyonce is married. Interviewer: Why do you know that? Interviewer: You follow her closely. Interviewee: Everyone in the world knows that. Interviewee: She's married to... Interviewer: Jay-Z. Interviewee: Oh, wow. Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewee: Brushed up on your facts before this one, eh? Interviewer: Yeah, I did. Interviewee: Okay, pick someone else. Interviewee: It doesn't have to be someone famous. Interviewee: It could be, like... Interviewee: It does. Interviewee: Why? Interviewer: You're not going to marry someone that's not famous, are you? Interviewee: Of course. Interviewee: I probably will end up marrying somebody that's not famous. Interviewee: Famous people really aren't that... Interviewee: Like, aren't that anything. Interviewee: They're not that intriguing. Interviewer: They're not that... Interviewer: They're not that anything? Interviewer: Huh? Interviewer: You're not that anything or that intriguing? Interviewee: No, I'm an anomaly. Interviewer: Did you have trouble saying that word? Interviewee: I don't know why I did. Interviewer: Try it again. Interviewee: I'm an anomaly. Interviewer: Good job. Interviewee: I didn't want to overpronounce it like that, either. Interviewee: I'm an anomaly. Interviewer: I'm not going to cut out you saying that wrong many times. Interviewee: Yeah, but... Interviewee: Okay. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: Jennifer Lawrence. Interviewee: Ah. Interviewer: You can give me a drink. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: She's fire. Interviewer: Fire? Interviewee: Yeah, she's like...
Interviewer: Do you think I'm a cup holder? Interviewee: No, I was giving you something to drink. Interviewee: Like, have another sip. Interviewee: I want you to get in your bag. Interviewer: My bag? Interviewee: Get in your bag? Interviewer: What's that? Interviewee: Like, get you, like, in your zone. Interviewer: In your bag? Interviewee: In your bag, yeah. Interviewee: You can take that one with you on... Interviewee: On the road that is life. Interviewee: Just be, like, anytime you're, like... Interviewer: You say a lot of things that don't make sense. Interviewee: I guess if you... Interviewer: So, Jennifer Lawrence is fire? Interviewee: Do you, like... Interviewee: What's your situation? Interviewee: Who do you see yourself being with? Interviewee: Do someone lock away your phone? Interviewee: What? Interviewee: You're not allowed to, like, look at... Interviewee: Like, current events or something? Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: I'm saying, like, things that, like, everyone else is pretty privy to. Interviewee: Seems like you're kind of... Interviewee: Privy. Interviewer: That was a big word. Interviewee: It's not... Interviewee: It's like... Interviewee: It's a big word. Interviewee: Five letters. Interviewer: You know what I mean. Interviewee: Oh, like, it sounded big? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: Who uses that word? Interviewee: Privy? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewer: I've never heard anyone use that word before. Interviewee: That's a good point. Interviewer: Yeah, so don't use words like that. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewee: Are you going to take a seat? Interviewee: I'll just take it back. Interviewer: What... Interviewer: Thank you. Interviewer: What celebrity would you want to hook up with if you could? Interviewer: Anyone in the world? Interviewer: That you haven't already hooked up with? Interviewee: Um... Interviewee: I don't really have anybody. Interviewee: Like, I don't have anybody on my... Interviewer: Because you've hooked up with all of them? Interviewee: No, that's not why. Interviewee: Just, like, I'm not really, like, a celebrity chaser. Interviewer: Because you've hooked up with all of them already? Interviewee: I don't know why. Interviewee: I just, like... Interviewer: Been there, done that.
Interviewee: If I could hook you up with anyone, it would be my dog Smigs. Interviewer: Smigs? Interviewee: Smigs. Interviewee: Smiley. Interviewer: So the... Interviewee: I'd hook you up with Smiley. Interviewer: Can you tell me about Smiley? Interviewee: Want me to show you a picture of him? Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: Why would you hook me up with him? Interviewee: I just feel like you need a little Smigs in your life. Interviewer: Smigs? Interviewer: Is he well-known? Interviewer: Or are you just a friend of yours? Interviewee: I mean, yeah, he's pretty well-known in my city. Interviewee: And, like, pretty much, like, throughout, like, the world. Interviewee: But, like, not, like... Interviewee: Like, you wouldn't know him because, like, you obviously, like, had trouble, like, remembering who Beyoncé was married to, so... Interviewer: I didn't have trouble. Interviewee: You hesitated for a second. Interviewer: No, you were proud of me because I knew... Interviewee: Like, that's Smigs. Interviewer: That's who you want me to marry? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: And he, like... Interviewer: Does he do anything? Interviewee: He talks like, Bobby. Interviewee: Like, yo, Bobby, you have to go to... Interviewee: You have to go to Garden and get me a general towel, Bobby. Interviewee: That's how he talks. Interviewer: That's really nice. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: He's, like... Interviewee: It's, like, uh... Interviewee: You know? Interviewee: You need that in your life. Interviewee: I feel like you need to spice things up, B. Interviewer: With Smigs? Interviewee: Yeah, you and Smigs.
Interviewer: Are you covering your phone in case you get messages that you don't want to see? Interviewee: No, not really. Interviewee: I'd let the world see. Interviewee: My cousin just called me. Interviewee: It's about it. Interviewee: And my mom. Interviewer: I'm sure. Interviewee: But, yeah, you and Smigs would be a hit. Interviewer: Yeah, you would try to get over that really fast. Interviewer: So, you could hide the messages you're receiving. Interviewee: I got nothing to hide from you. Interviewer: You do? Interviewee: Have you ever gone through someone's phone? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: Yeah? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: What prompted that? Interviewer: I wanted to know what was on their phone. Interviewee: Oh. Interviewee: Well, like... Interviewer: Have you... Interviewer: You've never gone through someone's phone before? Interviewee: I think, like... Interviewee: Yeah, maybe. Interviewer: When? Interviewer: When's the last time you did it? Interviewee: Years ago. Interviewer: How long ago? Interviewee: Years ago. Interviewer: How long ago? Interviewee: Like, I don't know years ago. Interviewer: Whose was it? Interviewee: A girl that I was talking to that I knew... Interviewer: You went through her phone? Interviewer: Did you find anything? Interviewee: Kind of, yeah. Interviewer: What'd you find? Interviewee: She took a... Interviewee: She took a guy to get his car... Interviewee: To get his car cleaned. Interviewer: Did you write a song about her after? Interviewee: No. Interviewee: Not about that, but... Interviewer: Do you write songs about people? Interviewee: Yeah, I do. Interviewer: But not about her? Interviewee: No. Interviewee: It wasn't... Interviewee: It wasn't... Interviewee: That wasn't really... Interviewee: That didn't... Interviewee: I've had things hit a little harder than that, but... Interviewee: But I did think something was up, and then... Interviewee: That day, she did go with someone to get his car cleaned. Interviewer: That doesn't... Interviewer: That feels kind of innocent. Interviewee: I know. Interviewee: It sounds crazy. Interviewer: It doesn't. Interviewer: It doesn't sound too crazy. Interviewee: No, I'm saying, like, it sounds like... Interviewee: Nah, it makes me sound crazy, like... Interviewer: Yeah, you did. Interviewee: Yeah, maybe there's more to the story. Interviewee: I just don't want her to watch this and then be like, oh, and then you... Interviewee: You know? Interviewee: But, like, yeah, it started with that, you know? Interviewer: I'm on her side. Interviewee: Clearly. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: Yeah, that really did sound like I didn't find shit, so... Interviewer: She went to get her car washed. Interviewee: Like, no, she... Interviewee: She, like, went with the guy and, like, helped him, like, wash his car, you know? Interviewer: Oh. Interviewee: I know. Interviewee: This is bad, yeah. Interviewer: I'm sorry that happened to you. Interviewer: I'm really sorry. Interviewer: I hope that... Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewer: I hope that you can recover. Interviewee: What did you find? Interviewer: Oh, he was cheating on me. Interviewee: Oh, shit. Interviewer: It's a lot worse than what you went through. Interviewee: Why do you think you got cheated on? Interviewer: Um... Interviewer: I don't think he liked me. Interviewee: But, like, where do you think the void was? Interviewer: The void? Interviewee: Yeah, like, where are you laughing? Interviewer: He was just like, ew, her name is Bobby. Interviewer: Why would I be with her? Interviewer: Probably. Interviewee: No, you're, you're, you're, you're hot. Interviewee: Like, I don't, I'm not, like, like, I just mean, like, this is, like, a confidence booster. Interviewee: Like, you're, like, you're attractive. Interviewee: So, it's obviously not, like, you don't have to play shy, like, ew, Bobby. Interviewee: Like, I just mean, like, what do you think, like, what do you think, not makes men cheat, but, like, in your personal, like, situation, what do you think? Interviewee: What do you think? Interviewee: Why do you think he cheated? Interviewer: Like, uh, I don't know. Interviewer: You wrote a book?
Interviewee: I did write a book, yeah. Interviewee: Aubrey. Interviewee: One line per page. Interviewee: Quick read. Interviewer: I read it while I was waiting for you. Interviewer: Really? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: What'd you think? Interviewer: That my, my therapist told me I need to stop listening to what people tell me. Interviewee: But? Interviewer: But if, you finish it. Interviewee: But if. Interviewer: Wow. Interviewee: I, I didn't want to listen to, no, but, yeah, something about, yeah, if I, wouldn't I be listening to it? Interviewer: Did you even write this? Interviewee: I did, I did. Interviewee: I just, like, don't know my heart. Interviewer: Do you have a ghostwriter for your, this is, like, 12 words. Interviewer: You had a ghostwriter? Interviewer: Who wrote it? Interviewee: I wrote it with a friend of mine. Interviewer: Did the friend write that page? Interviewee: Uh, we wrote it together. Interviewee: Well, you don't remember how that ended up. Interviewee: Okay, I don't remember every word of the book verbatim, I'm sorry. Interviewer: Rather us. Interviewee: Than love. Interviewer: Imagine me trying to front on this free app. Interviewer: Wait, I don't like this page. Interviewee: Okay, obviously, because it has, like, urban jargon on it that, like, intimidates you. Interviewer: Imagine me trying to front on this free app. Interviewer: Um, fuck, I look like. Interviewee: And post it up feeling liked in real life. Interviewee: I remember that one. Interviewer: We all came up broke. Interviewee: I'm the only one that used my tools to fix it. Interviewee: What? Interviewer: But. Interviewee: Okay, sorry. Interviewee: Like, I forgot. Interviewee: Like, okay. Interviewee: We don't have to read every page. Interviewee: Like, some trivia. Interviewer: I wouldn't do that if I were you. Interviewee: Literally. Interviewer: Partner up. Interviewee: Settle down. Interviewer: It's greater than settling. Interviewer: Good job. Interviewee: Oh, yeah. Interviewee: Aubrey. Interviewee: Aubrey. Interviewee: Okay. Interviewee: That sounds good.
Interviewer: Why'd you get married? Interviewee: Because. Interviewer: Why not? Interviewer: Why didn't you get married? Interviewee: Why do people get married? Interviewer: Why didn't you get married? Interviewee: Um, I don't know. Interviewee: It seems like, like, not too, like, I don't know. Interviewee: It seems like a thing of, like, ancient times or something. Interviewee: Maybe. Interviewer: You're never going to get married. Interviewer: You just said that earlier. Interviewer: You said you were going to get married to someone who wasn't famous earlier. Interviewee: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Interviewee: I think I will eventually. Interviewee: You asked me why haven't I gotten married? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: The truth? Interviewer: Yeah. Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: I don't think I can offer somebody what they'd be looking for right now. Interviewee: Just consistency. Interviewee: I think my life, my work is my priority. Interviewee: So then I wouldn't want to not be able to. Interviewer: Sleep around. Interviewee: Contribute as a partner. Interviewer: Sleep around. Interviewer: Don't lie. Interviewer: We know what people do. Interviewee: Glimpse into what your relationship is like, judgy. Interviewee: Judge Larry. Interviewer: Don't call me Larry. Interviewer: So you don't want to get married because you want to sleep around? Interviewee: Well, no. Interviewee: I don't want to get married because, like, I just don't want to disappoint someone. Interviewee: And, like, I'm not, like, Amish. Interviewer: What do you have against Amish people? Interviewee: I don't. Interviewee: It's just, like, I needed something to rebuttal the fact that you're saying that I'm basically, like, a thought. Interviewer: You are. Interviewee: Oh, you know what a thought is. Interviewer: I've heard that word. Interviewee: Yeah? Interviewer: Mm-hmm. Interviewee: How do you spell it? Interviewer: T-H-O-U-D-H-T. Interviewee: That's not how you spell it. Interviewee: That's how you, like, spell. Interviewer: Thought. Interviewee: Thought. Interviewer: Thought. Interviewee: Not. Interviewee: Not, like, you a thought. Interviewee: Has anyone ever called you a thought? Interviewer: Why'd you say? Interviewer: No. Interviewee: You a thought, Bobby. Interviewer: Are you calling me that right now? Interviewee: Kind of, yeah. Interviewee: You a little thoughty, Bobby. Interviewer: What does that mean? Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: It's just fun saying it to you because, like, you don't really get offended by it because you don't even really know what it means. Interviewee: And so I can just say it to you, and, like, I've never really been able to just look at someone and say that to their face. Interviewer: Thank you for that compliment, Aubrey. Interviewee: No problem.
Interviewer: Do you like when people call you Aubrey? Interviewee: If it's, like, if it's genuine, some people will be, like, like, if you were, like, like, oh, I interviewed Drake the other day. Interviewee: And then, like, a girl that's, like, met me a few times, we're, like, oh, Aubrey, right? Interviewer: You don't like that? Interviewee: I just feel like it's, like, used to, like, be, like, oh, Aubrey. Interviewee: Or my mom also, like, has, like, a kind of, like, vocal tone to my name that reminds me of, like, being scolded, too. Interviewee: Like, Aubrey. Interviewee: Aubrey. Interviewer: Did she call you Drake? Interviewee: No. Interviewee: Obbs. Interviewer: Obbs? Interviewer: That's even more feminine. Interviewee: I don't think we should get into the whole name game again, because I feel like it's just, it's a slippery slope for you. Interviewee: I feel like it's, that's. Interviewer: I'm owning that my name is embarrassing. Interviewer: You're not owning that you're so slow. Interviewee: I don't think it's about your name. Interviewee: I just think it's about the fact that there were options. Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: It just, it gets, you know.
Interviewee: How long have you been doing this? Interviewee: Sorry, what? Interviewer: How long have you been doing this? Interviewee: What? Interviewer: Your career. Interviewer: Singing. Interviewee: Aww. Interviewer: Do you consider yourself a rapper or a singer? Interviewee: I consider myself a musician. Interviewer: Is that because you're bad at rapping? Interviewee: Do you think I'm bad at rapping? Interviewee: I've never heard. Interviewee: What's your favorite? Interviewee: What? Interviewee: You've never heard. Interviewee: What? Interviewer: Maybe on the radio, your music. Interviewee: What? Interviewer: Any of your music. Interviewee: Okay, so do, like, you've never heard, you were going to say you've never heard of Drake's song? Interviewee: Any of your music? Interviewer: No. Interviewee: Ever. Interviewer: Not that I can think of. Interviewee: You've never heard of Drake's song. Interviewer: Can you sing one? Interviewee: No, but like, I'm just asking you, like, are you going to be one of, like, those people? Interviewee: Like, I've never heard you before? Interviewer: Not that I would recognize. Interviewee: What? Interviewer: Oh, that's Drake. Interviewee: Okay, like, you've never heard, like, Kiki, Do You Love Me? Interviewer: Yeah, I've heard that. Interviewer: I wouldn't recognize that was you, though. Interviewer: What? Interviewer: Why do you think that was such a good sound? Interviewer: Like, Kiki, who's Kiki? Interviewee: It doesn't matter. Interviewee: The point is, like, you would not know who sang that song. Interviewee: You would just be like. Interviewer: Yeah, absolutely. Interviewee: You would be like, that could be like, oh, that could be like, if someone was like, oh, have you ever heard Kiki, Do You Love Me? Interviewee: by, like, Tyga? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: You would be like, you would fully be convinced. Interviewee: Absolutely. Interviewee: There's no, okay. Interviewer: There's absolutely. Interviewee: What's your favorite Tyga song? Interviewer: Is he married to Kylie Jenner? Interviewer: The other guy that dated him? Interviewer: He dated Kylie Jenner. Interviewee: I mean, like, yeah, maybe, like, before, like, the iPhone or something. Interviewee: Like, that's such ancient gossip. Interviewee: Does he sing? Interviewee: Huh? Interviewer: He raps? Interviewer: He sings? Interviewee: Yeah. Interviewee: What's your favorite Tyga song? Interviewer: I don't know who that is. Interviewee: You want me to play you some Tyga right now? Interviewer: No. Interviewee: I'm about to. Interviewer: Okay. Interviewee: You're going to sit through this. Interviewer: The whole song? Interviewee: No, just like a little snippet.
Interviewee: Rack, rack, rack, city, bitch. Interviewee: 20s on the cities, bitch. Interviewer: Uh-huh. Interviewer: Nope. Interviewer: Yup. Interviewer: Yup. Interviewee: let's get to the second hook at least no let him get to the second hook are you friends with him uh yeah yeah we're cool did he send you that to play did he send that to you oh it's out it's it's a released song never heard it before Interviewee: never i don't listen to music you've heard rack city bitch for sure
Interviewer: Who's your profile picture on Instagram? Interviewer: Is that your dad? Interviewee: What the person on your Instagram page is little wayne who's that stop this who's little wayne stop this can you play me a little wayne song there's absolutely no way i'm not i refuse if you don't know who it is i will i Interviewer: won't play it i've heard his name i've heard his name i just thought it was a picture of your dad Interviewee: that's it didn't look like a picture of you does he looks like me that guy looks like me Interviewer: the guy no he didn't that's why i thought it was your dad Interviewee: it's who that's what i don't know but you wouldn't
Interviewer: What are you doing right now? Interviewer: What are you trying to do right now? Interviewee: I don't know. Interviewee: I just Interviewee: feel like it's like my dad versus your dad and like whatever Interviewee: but like what type of music do you listen to rack city bitch that's what i listen to
Interviewer: What type of songs do you sing? Interviewer: Can you sing one please? Interviewee: like what are my songs from you i told you kiki do you love me that's the go-to song that you would tell people that you sing if people ask you that's my deepest cut your deepest cut yeah like oh that's the one that's the Interviewee: one who's kiki that really broke the mold you know is it about that's the one that really broke the mold for me is it about somebody named kiki uh it was about somebody named not not that's like a nickname what was her real name kiana did you just make that up nope i didn't you wrote a song about her yeah do you still feel sad when you think about her um it was more like it was more Interviewee: almost like a joke at the time like does she love you no i don't think so i'm sure she's like fond of me but like it was just more like i think she had made a comment like oh like you'll never like write a song about me and then i was just like watch this and then it made you a lot of money it did well do you like having a lot of money i think that it makes life easier
Interviewer: how much money means nothing to you like what's an amount that you can just hand out and you're just Interviewee: like a no biggie i don't know i feel like i'm that i don't want to be i don't want to sound Interviewer: oh my gosh that much okay whatever the number is can you give it to me sure you can yeah i'll get Interviewee: it for you right now do you keep cash on you yeah why for moments like this when's when some super Interviewee: like semi-condescending but kind of kind like how much money comes up to me and she's like can i get Interviewee: like whatever some money you're willing to part with and i'm just like yeah sure why not Interviewer: thank you that's what i keep before you don't have to make this about race i know i'm sorry i don't Interviewee: know i just didn't know what else to say right there thank you for saying that but like you're Interviewer: yeah you're yeah i don't know yeah
Interviewee: if you had to write me a song right now what would you do what would you sing what would i name it no sing the song that you wrote about me right now Interviewee: write me a song in your head right now like all right i'd say no stop stop talking and start thinking okay i'm trying stop talking and start thinking i'd be like Interviewee: um i'd be like bobby bobby people will probably think that i'm singing about a guy bobby bobby Interviewee: because you were almost also named larry and that i that's as far as i got so far keep going please Interviewee: oh okay i don't really have much past that i don't know anything else about you really Interviewer: okay once you get to know me will you write me a song i will i'm gonna dedicate a whole album to Interviewee: me please okay i'll send you a song i'll write you a song i'll actually write you a song like a sweet song a sweet song yeah yeah has any guy ever wrote you a song no what's the nicest thing a guy's ever done to you um rough life i'm trying to think okay i hope i hope it's because there's too many nice Interviewer: things yeah buy me flowers oh that's sweet yeah what's the nicest textbook yeah well you know normal people get flowers no yeah no i'm not what's the nicest thing a girl's ever done for you Interviewee: nicest thing a girl's ever done for me i had a girl that made me a really nice leather bound book Interviewee: of like memories and stuff that i probably would still have it forgotten yeah she just she made me a leather bound book can you have it yeah yeah i still have it yeah you're never gonna get rid of it i hope not unless like i lose it in fire or something that was nice of her what's the Interviewer: most amount of money you've ever been handed in what i don't know just like someone gave you money cash um for a deal or anything stop this i can't you can't answer that no not really Interviewee: for a deal or like i i guess yeah no no i can't do you want to like rephrase the question yeah Interviewer: why is my mic bouncing because you're moving yours and you're moving a lot like your dad Interviewer: what you said your dad bounces oh oh and you bounce a lot too you should learn how to stay still a little bit more like just stop moving and then it will stop moving please don't make fun of the microphones i brought are you making fun of the microphones i bought no i'm just like trying to like i'm just Interviewee: trying to like i'm in my bag yeah right yeah what are your friends gonna think when you go home and you're like guys i'm in my bag say it guys i'm in my what guys i'm in my bag right now what does that mean just say it guys i'm i'm scared too no it's not like it's not gonna get you in trouble Interviewer: say it guys i'm in my bag right now what does that mean Interviewee: what does that mean no it's nothing bad it's just say it again i will not be doing please please please say it again say it again what's how shoe are you huh what's how shoe are you Interviewer: 12. is that big or little i don't know what do guys wear and shoes i don't know what's like Interviewee: sound small okay what what's what's your favorite color i never have a rebuttal to what's your favorite color baby blue it's a bad color what's your favorite color yellow that's a good color yeah does your shirt say african canadian what do you mean african canadian what heritage association Interviewer: it was a gift from who my friend what's what's their name ashley what's wrong with that she just told me to put it on do you wrap things that get you in trouble ever do you do it on purpose Interviewee: well i try not to i try not to i don't want to offend anybody but you know sometimes you just Interviewer: gotta pop your shit you know why do you say things like that what pop your shit i mean i said it but Interviewee: like say it in a sentence say what i said i don't know what it means can you tell me what it means be like yo sometimes i gotta pop my shit i'm not gonna say that why because i'll probably get in trouble no it's not it just means like sometimes you gotta you know talk that talk how much longer do we have left it's your podcast or much longer until you what's it called we're really good it's a really good podcast the really good podcast yeah what else do you want to know are you gonna come Interviewee: see one of my shows i'll do i'll when i perform kiki do you let me i'll like i'll like think at you Interviewer: you won't even be able to see me no how about i will come to one of your shows if instead of saying kiki do you love me you'll say bobby do you love me again it's just it's pushing the Interviewee: boundaries on something that could be misinterpreted like on my end just say it during your show but then people are gonna be like like which which guy is he oh yeah i get it um maybe yeah um maybe they're not gonna be like oh it's got to be the bobby with the i yeah say bobby with an i do you Interviewer: love me say bobby with an i do you love me yeah i'll try and fit it all in then i'll come to one of your shows are you inviting me to one of your shows yeah i'd love it am i your type Interviewee: um i'd do it thank you like i yeah like i do it there's you not an it i know i just feel like Interviewer: i like you do it i asked am i your type and you said i do it it's not funny what's your type Interviewee: describe it just just somebody like that's an individual Interviewee: individual wow you really have high standards individualism like i like somebody that's like their own they're not just like a carbon copy of like a person that i've seen a bunch of times throughout my existence i like somebody with like a sense of humor you know i like i don't know like Interviewer: i'm asking you to physically what do you want them to dress up as no i no i don't need them like Interviewee: i just i like probably like will fuck with them more if they like are into cosplay not with me just like generally like i just like you know if they like you're weirder than i thought you were Interviewer: that's a fact for sure you got no idea honey honey are you like a 60 year old man honey you use that word seriously just maybe it's uh it's making you say honey you should stop saying that word Interviewee: you never know can you physically attract can you oh i would never say that out loud Interviewer: that's like really chauvinistic physically what is your favorite type of what's your type Interviewee: describe your type i i i'm i appreciate beauty in many forms you are so desperate just anyone Interviewee: i just appreciate beauty in many forms like animals too no like just like obviously i like i like women that you know all of them just every captivating every woman present themselves in a way that is intriguing and unique what's your type um my type yeah um that's a hard question Interviewer: why they can't answer it my type well what's your type just men with a lot of money that's it yeah yeah so i'm your type um no more money than you oh okay yeah a little more than you Interviewee: definitely more than you okay a lot a lot of money okay but what aside from you like yeah trying to leech someone's bank account like what what what what are you into money what what really like money Interviewer: gifts um i like jewelry i like are you looking for a list of things to buy me no i just wanted to Interviewee: know like what like what what what what i'm attracted to when you yeah when you have your eyes Interviewer: mostly what type of car they're driving okay um if they have any jewelry on how much it's worth would you ever get a bbl no why not what do you mean that's a surgery yeah are you attracted to women who get those no i'm just asking if you could get it i just i'm not gonna get that Interviewee: no no you wouldn't just like pop out with just a
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