Let’s Talk Music “Karmageddon” w/ Iyah May |EP458
The Big Mig ShowJanuary 11, 2025
458
01:08:2962.7 MB

Let’s Talk Music “Karmageddon” w/ Iyah May |EP458

THE BIG MIG SHOW 

JANUARY 10, 2025 

EPISODE 458 – 7PM

 

Iyah May Raised in a tiny rainforest village in Far North Queensland, Australia, by her mother and older sisters, Iyah’s journey to music began as a broke medical student researching HIV in New York. A chance ride in an NYPD car to rapper Shaggy’s house, where she performed a cover song and ate his hummus, marked the start of her solo career.

At its core, Karmageddon is a call to confront societal divides and unite to rebuild and heal. This track is the first from an exciting upcoming EP, with Iyah May continuing to push boundaries and speak truth in a world that needs it more than ever.

YouTube: https://youtu.be/ZuPYtf0XGRw?si=veKg-EIdl-NdpzKK***

Spotify Track Link: https://open.spotify.com/album/44qJ2QKMS7EqkmwNzt8L2Z?si=mdf7NAGFT-6Fel_YGNfpeA***

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iyahmayhem/

GENOCIDE, BIG PHARMA and POP CULTURE

“Karmageddon” slices through the clamor of modern life, exposing the stark realities of political and social division, media manipulation, corporate greed and public apathy.

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00:00:00
All men are. Created equal that they are

00:00:02
endowed by their Creator. With certain unalienable rights

00:00:08
by liberty. If liberty means anything at

00:00:15
all, it means right to tell people what they do not want to

00:00:19
hear. Well welcome back to the big big

00:00:56
Show. I'm your host Lance Miliaccio

00:00:58
with my Co host George Valentin. It's rise and grind doom will

00:01:01
do. And of course on this show it's

00:01:03
tip of the spear because if liberty means anything at all,

00:01:05
it means the right to tell people what they do not want to

00:01:07
hear. And you know you can count on

00:01:09
this show to do it each and every episode.

00:01:11
The facts, the sauce, the receipts, the evidence, what you

00:01:14
call it and the right guess Tonight will not be any

00:01:17
different. Let me just briefly thank our

00:01:19
sponsors. I just want to thank Genesis

00:01:22
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They ran out through the holidays, but they have

00:01:40
restocked. So you're all set to go.

00:01:42
And, of course, want to thank those guys over to sat123.com.

00:01:45
That's SAT 123.com. Looking for a satellite phone,

00:01:48
looking for a Bibby stick Faraday bag.

00:01:50
You never know what's going to happen here in the United States

00:01:52
with the political environment the way it is.

00:01:54
So, George Ballantine, what's going?

00:01:58
On brother nothing nothing. I'm just excited for this

00:02:00
interview, especially when I after where we just found out

00:02:02
backstage Shaggy wasn't me. Love that song, love that dude.

00:02:08
But I, I, we just found out she's a doctor.

00:02:11
She got brains, beauty and sass. I mean.

00:02:14
Talent, talent, that talent. We don't have any talent.

00:02:17
Well, George has a little singing talent when he likes to

00:02:19
do the jingles. Break me off a piece of that.

00:02:22
Prep a bar. That's all you got?

00:02:24
Oh, you can not. Very good.

00:02:27
All right, Well, listen. What are we?

00:02:28
Doing set the mood, Yeah, you guys, you, you know, we like to

00:02:31
set the mood a little bit, kind of give you a little motivation,

00:02:33
maybe something funny. Tonight's a little bit of

00:02:34
motivation, since we're going to be talking about social media a

00:02:37
little bit. Anyway, let's fire right into

00:02:39
that, George. I think specifically nowadays,

00:02:43
it's so easy to numb. There's so many distractions, so

00:02:46
many things that we can just avoid feeling things with, you

00:02:50
know, staple being your phone. You, you, you want to cry.

00:02:53
You, you fight your tears, you're feeling stressed.

00:02:57
You're overthinking some things. So you just pull up Instagram

00:03:00
and you doom scroll for 20 minutes.

00:03:02
You get distracted. You see a funny video of a cat

00:03:04
close your phone and you forget about it.

00:03:06
That's not gone. Those feelings are still there,

00:03:08
they're just pushed down from a couple.

00:03:10
Instagram videos that are distracted and next thing you

00:03:13
know, a couple days go by and you just feel this anxiety over

00:03:16
yourself and you're like, why do I feel anxious?

00:03:17
I just feel like I can't, I can't sleep and wake up at 5:00

00:03:20
AM overthinking like I don't know what's going.

00:03:21
I have no idea. People are like, well, you

00:03:23
stressed about anything like no. And this is something that I've

00:03:26
had to call myself out on. If you ask me if I'm stressed at

00:03:29
the time, my answer is no. You feel, are you stressed?

00:03:32
No, I'm fine. I feel great.

00:03:33
And then if you look at me like, do you feel calm?

00:03:35
You feel at ease? Do you feel relaxed?

00:03:38
I'd be like fuck no, so where where where am I feeling?

00:03:42
And for some reason stress to me is like numb but it's stress so

00:03:46
I don't really feel it. And it's typically from not

00:03:49
allowing myself to lean into the shitty times, the shitty

00:03:53
thoughts, the shitty days, and being able to sit with them and

00:03:55
be with them, accept what they are and process them properly

00:03:59
rather than just numbing them. There he is.

00:04:03
Lance, you disappeared on me. I was just going to say we're

00:04:04
just checking his audio. Something happened.

00:04:06
So I reset the audio because the mods were saying we were having

00:04:08
an issue. Now you're good.

00:04:10
OK, that's great. You never know.

00:04:12
There's always, you know, there's always a little

00:04:13
technical glitch here and there. So listen, we're joined tonight

00:04:16
by IMA. If you guys haven't been living

00:04:18
under a rock here in the United States and you have seen her all

00:04:21
over social media for her song Carmageddon, that particular

00:04:27
song, as you guys know, got her into all kinds of, you know,

00:04:31
personal issues when it came to her record label.

00:04:33
We're going to be talking about that night, but I want to talk

00:04:35
about Australia and lots of other things.

00:04:36
She was raised in a tiny rainforest village in far North

00:04:39
Queensland, Australia, by her mother and older sisters.

00:04:43
His journey to music began as a broke medical student.

00:04:46
I love that part. The broke part?

00:04:47
Researching HIV in New York, A Chance ride in an NYPD card.

00:04:51
A rapper Shaggy's house where she performed a cover song and

00:04:55
ate his hummus mark the start of her solo career, you know?

00:05:01
So as you guys know, in Carmageddon, she confronts

00:05:04
societal divides to unite and rebuild and heal.

00:05:06
This track is the first from an exciting upcoming album that's

00:05:09
coming out, and I may continue to push boundaries and speak

00:05:12
truth in a world that needs it more than ever.

00:05:14
Let's bring her in, George. No reason to leave her

00:05:16
backstage. Wait, hold on a second.

00:05:18
I'm checking to make sure the mic's good.

00:05:21
OK. All right.

00:05:22
Welcome to the big, big show, my Aussie friend from down Under.

00:05:26
I am May. What's happening, girl?

00:05:28
Hello. How should I say?

00:05:30
Doctor May? No.

00:05:33
Kidding, right? I mean, you know, George did set

00:05:35
it backstage. Beauty, talent and brains.

00:05:39
You know, I found that only about 1/2 hour before the show.

00:05:42
I obviously didn't do my due diligence, but that's a really

00:05:45
interesting to go from a medical and then obviously to a top.

00:05:50
Charts real quick. Ready.

00:05:51
Yeah, we're gonna look at that. Yeah.

00:05:53
Warm it up. We got a scrubs.

00:05:55
We had to go grab a scrubs photo of you.

00:05:57
You know we have to do that. I.

00:05:59
Don't know about the mask thing though.

00:06:00
Yeah. Wow, great.

00:06:02
You know, let's let's start though.

00:06:03
I always like to start people because you never really know

00:06:07
what they as a child did you get.

00:06:09
Was it, was it your family? Was your family always, you

00:06:11
know, was they, were they into music at the house?

00:06:13
Was there anybody else that influenced you that was in your

00:06:15
family? Kind of how did you decide or

00:06:16
how did that get started as far as music was concerned and your

00:06:20
interest in singing? Bit of a random story.

00:06:25
I I didn't really sing ever growing up.

00:06:29
However, from the years of like one to four, I would sing by

00:06:33
myself and then I became really scared of singing and then I

00:06:35
kind of just stopped. But that's kind of what drew me

00:06:39
to be curious about singing again later in life.

00:06:42
And I didn't really do music much.

00:06:44
And my family, like there was some musical talent in there,

00:06:46
but it wasn't like a push thing. It was more of like a go down

00:06:49
the science path. You know, my mom was very happy

00:06:52
for me to study medicine and everything.

00:06:54
But when I was in medical school, I felt this like, I

00:06:59
guess you could call it like an intuitive sense and niggling

00:07:01
like a like a like a curiosity that I wanted more in life, even

00:07:05
though I was super grateful for what I had.

00:07:07
I had AI was about to be a doctor.

00:07:08
I had beautiful friends. I lived in a beautiful part of

00:07:10
the world. But I'm like, it's just

00:07:12
something not quite there yet for me.

00:07:14
And I started singing again and I started doing cover songs and

00:07:19
I was never intending on being a singer.

00:07:21
I just thought I'm just going to sing a couple cover songs, show

00:07:23
my mates and just see how it goes.

00:07:24
Like, you know, there was no huge goal or anything.

00:07:27
And honestly, like one thing led to another.

00:07:30
I'm like, this is the best thing ever.

00:07:32
I love it and it's like my passion.

00:07:34
So I kept doing it. Can I ask you any special

00:07:37
fielding doctor? Just regular medical doctor?

00:07:40
What? Yeah.

00:07:42
So it's more like General Hospital work, and I was working

00:07:46
in the emergency department and I worked in COVID clinics and

00:07:48
just stuff like that. But now I'm doing a lot of

00:07:50
holistic stuff and I love nutrition and like preventative

00:07:53
medicine. Are you good at mending broken

00:07:55
hearts? Can I mend my own broken heart?

00:08:00
No. I write music to do that, honey.

00:08:04
That's what the music's for, George.

00:08:06
That's absolutely what the music's for.

00:08:09
That's George you can always expect him to come out with A1

00:08:11
liner somewhere you know I so it's interesting let's let's

00:08:16
talk a little bit about Australia.

00:08:18
You know we heard lots of stories about the pandemic.

00:08:21
We heard lots of stories about the politics there.

00:08:24
You never really know because as you know, here in the United

00:08:26
States, our our media is a controlled operation.

00:08:30
You know, most of the time there's there's a real paid

00:08:32
operation behind the scenes. You can see it in the mainstream

00:08:35
media and then it heads over into social media.

00:08:38
And they, and I'm sure you've seen our political environment

00:08:41
here. It's pretty embroiled in

00:08:43
controversy between the partisan politics that seem to occupy too

00:08:49
many people's minds over and over again.

00:08:50
We get tired of even dealing with it.

00:08:52
Let's talk about what you thought, you know, as a doctor

00:08:56
and now what you know, maybe know about COVID.

00:08:58
I don't know what you know then. I don't know if they made you

00:09:00
get vaccinated. I assume it was Australia.

00:09:02
So they probably did tell me what it was like there during

00:09:04
COVID. And kind of what do you think

00:09:06
politically as far as the country, how does it kind of

00:09:09
stand when it comes to that medical environment of the

00:09:11
pandemic? Look, I worked mostly in

00:09:16
Queensland during COVID, so the other states were a lot more

00:09:20
hectic with lockdowns. I think Queensland's full of the

00:09:23
Kangaroos, you know, we're really chill.

00:09:26
Like Melbourne and Sydney were locked down for a long time and

00:09:29
it was really tough. I did get stuck in Byron Bay for

00:09:33
a while. I couldn't leave.

00:09:34
And you know, all the lockdowns and everything, it was wild.

00:09:37
It was hectic and there were a lot of people that lost their

00:09:39
jobs and a lot of families that were pulled apart.

00:09:44
I think Melbourne was one of the most locked down cities in the

00:09:46
world for a while there. It was full on.

00:09:48
But I mean, nowadays I don't know what.

00:09:51
I think people's views have changed.

00:09:52
I think people are a lot more relaxed and we're kind of

00:09:55
questioning the narrative a lot because we were locked down so

00:09:58
hard. I mean, I'm speaking for myself

00:09:59
here. I don't know about everyone, but

00:10:02
yeah, like I think, yeah, people's perspectives are have

00:10:06
changed a lot now. Yeah, since then.

00:10:09
It's a different environment here.

00:10:11
You know, there's so many people, of course, the vaccine

00:10:13
was really controversial because of the way they they did it.

00:10:15
And I know it was tough over there.

00:10:17
I saw them dealing with people that didn't want to get

00:10:19
vaccinated in Australia. We saw that from here.

00:10:22
We were always concerned about what really what the global

00:10:24
initiative was behind it. So let let me ask you about

00:10:27
this. Let's we're going to talk about

00:10:28
the Shaggy story, but I got to ask this, you talk about this

00:10:31
being a small town in Australia that you grew up in.

00:10:34
Man, it must have been sticker shock going to New York because

00:10:37
I grew up in Fordham Rd. in the Bronx and George is from New

00:10:40
Jersey, northern New Jersey. And for somebody that didn't

00:10:44
grow up there, what was that? Was that the first time you'd

00:10:46
been there when you went there for your when you were studying

00:10:49
AIDS, the AIDS virus? Yeah, dude, I was so overwhelmed

00:10:53
and so excited simultaneously. I was like, this is the best

00:10:56
thing ever. I'm from this tiny little

00:10:58
rainforest town. It's literally, literally has a

00:11:01
3000 people. I think now it's this hippie

00:11:03
little rainforest area. It's cool though.

00:11:07
And I've always been drawn to travel and like the moment I can

00:11:14
travel, I will absolutely do it when I can.

00:11:16
But when I got to New York, I was just like, what is this

00:11:19
planet? Like this is something crazy and

00:11:22
I'm not used to this. I'm used to trees and I don't

00:11:25
know, the wind and the sun and Kangaroos and stuff.

00:11:28
And then I come here, I'm like, Oh my gosh.

00:11:31
But I fell in love with it. I just feel like I I fit right

00:11:34
in because I found an amazing vocal coach actually through

00:11:37
Shaggy's recommendation and I just was just around this

00:11:41
amazing community of creatives and it just inspired me to do

00:11:44
music. It was it was actually the

00:11:45
energy of New York that inspired me to be a creative and just do

00:11:48
it all the time. Yeah.

00:11:51
You know, my daughter, she's a kind of a celebrity tattoo

00:11:54
artist. She does lots of different

00:11:56
celebrities and singers and that sort of thing.

00:11:58
And she's moving to New York now because she has the same

00:12:01
perspective on she didn't grow up there.

00:12:02
She grew up in Colorado. I'm actually in the state of

00:12:05
Colorado now. I don't like it very much.

00:12:07
The the political environment here is kind of strange, but New

00:12:10
York is a melting pot. It pretty pretty well embraces

00:12:13
everybody. But it can also be a sticker

00:12:15
shock. The people probably in

00:12:17
comparison to your town, they're relatively aggressive, meaning

00:12:20
that, you know, they're like, hey, come on, we're going, we

00:12:22
got to go now. What are you guys doing?

00:12:23
I mean, it's pretty pushy, shovey it.

00:12:25
It seems to me that that must have been a little tricky for

00:12:28
you when you got there. Did you did you grab grab one of

00:12:30
The Dirty water dogs or a slice of pizza off the street?

00:12:33
I mean, what did you hit any of that food straight up front that

00:12:36
maybe you didn't have, you know, the cart dogs or otherwise?

00:12:40
I don't know. I was pretty boring.

00:12:41
I like, like nutrition and organic food and all that

00:12:44
healthy craft, I suppose. Yeah, I didn't know.

00:12:48
I'm, I'm joking. I fully just remembered I went

00:12:50
clubbing and I'd always go to artichoke pizza.

00:12:51
I wonder who am I talking about? I was like 5:00 AM.

00:12:53
What was that on the weekends? That was so good.

00:12:56
What clubs? What were they, 1 Oak and Ave.

00:13:00
and oh they still open? No, I think they're open now.

00:13:04
Yeah. The meat packing district.

00:13:06
Yeah. And then I'd.

00:13:07
Yeah. And then we'd go to this.

00:13:09
The artichoke pizza would just have lines of people outside it

00:13:12
every night. I think there's a Busta Rhymes

00:13:14
in line next to me. I was like, what is this?

00:13:16
This is awesome. Let.

00:13:16
Me tell you that meat packing district didn't look like that.

00:13:20
It was. Oh yeah, nothing.

00:13:21
And then they built it up. Yeah, it was.

00:13:23
Yeah, it blew up. It used to be.

00:13:24
It used to be really a meat packing district.

00:13:26
It didn't have any of that, you know, used to be like the

00:13:29
Chelsea district in Manhattan were the main spots years ago.

00:13:32
And that change, you know, there's so many different

00:13:34
neighborhoods now that that got built out because the real

00:13:36
estate got so expensive. They kept branching out into the

00:13:39
neighborhoods that weren't built out trying to, you know,

00:13:41
obviously lower the price. Of course, the market just kept

00:13:44
pushing up. So it's an interesting

00:13:45
environment, although I don't know now what's going to happen.

00:13:48
You know, there's a lot of a lot of people that are concerned

00:13:50
about what the immigration did to that market.

00:13:52
Do you guys, I don't know if you guys do, I'm unaware of this.

00:13:54
If you do, do you guys have any kind of immigration issue in

00:13:57
Australia or is that not really an issue there?

00:14:01
I don't know too much about that.

00:14:03
It's more so, yeah, in Melbourne or Melbourne and Sydney.

00:14:06
It's not like you guys, our population just isn't even close

00:14:08
to what you guys have. Right.

00:14:10
You got to remember it's very hard.

00:14:11
Just you ain't going to just on a little boat to Australia.

00:14:15
Oh, no, no. And they're actually.

00:14:16
Their immigration, their immigration over there in

00:14:18
Australia, they're strict. They're on top of the game, I'll

00:14:21
give them that. Yeah.

00:14:22
Where they look through people's bags, always catch up evil, just

00:14:25
with food or anything. They're very strict.

00:14:27
So I mean. Yeah, well, it's interesting,

00:14:32
you know, you never really know what the government's got in

00:14:34
mind. You know, that they pushed it

00:14:35
here because they were trying to create a a ghost voter pool of

00:14:39
like 30 million deep voters they could use in the last election

00:14:42
that probably manipulate the turn out.

00:14:44
So it's really tricky. All right, let's talk about the

00:14:47
NYPD, Dr. New York's Finest and you're you're meeting of Shaggy.

00:14:52
Since that seems to be kind of the real starting point of your

00:14:55
musical career. Let's let's, let's tell the

00:14:58
audience about that. I think I've been in New York 3

00:15:00
weeks and I just had an idea that I thought I'm just going to

00:15:03
do music in some sense, like I'm just going to dabble.

00:15:05
I might do. My goal is maybe like a cover

00:15:07
song in a bar. Maybe there'll be 5 people

00:15:09
watching and hopefully they don't laugh at me.

00:15:11
And that's going to be like the the pinnacle of my music career.

00:15:16
And then as you do in New York, you just meet people out in the

00:15:18
city. And I met 1 of Shaggy's

00:15:19
producers at the time and we were hanging out and we became

00:15:22
mates. And then one time he's like, I'm

00:15:25
at Shaggy's house, come by and meet him in Long Island.

00:15:29
And I was like, well I'm super poor and I can't get an Uber or

00:15:34
a taxi. So I'm just going to have to

00:15:36
like train it for two hours and just see what happens.

00:15:40
And then I'm thought, you know what, I'm just going to try and

00:15:43
manifest this and I'm just going to walk through the city and see

00:15:45
what happens. Maybe someone will help me out.

00:15:47
And sure enough, I've bumped into these two coppers. 2 police

00:15:51
officers. No say coppers, that sounds.

00:15:53
Just say the coppers. Just do me a favour.

00:15:56
He's going to be full out. Australian here.

00:15:58
Say coppers again. There were two young dude

00:16:01
coppers and they're like, they probably were like, hey, man,

00:16:05
what's good? As opposed to like, how's it

00:16:07
going? And I was like, hey, what's up?

00:16:10
And then like, what? What are you up to?

00:16:11
I was like, honestly, I'm trying to get to Long Island, can you

00:16:14
help me out? And they gave me a lift and I

00:16:17
got jumped in the back, which was funny.

00:16:19
I got to be I got to be honest with you.

00:16:21
If two cops said what are you doing and and I needed a ride

00:16:24
and they said yeah, jump in the back, I wouldn't do it.

00:16:29
You never see cop. Like back in the day, yeah, they

00:16:31
would give you rides or whatever, you know, get you to

00:16:34
your house. But no get in the back, No.

00:16:37
Yeah, lately, if I'm in the back, I'd be in handcuffs

00:16:40
probably. But especially being a woman

00:16:42
though too. Like I'd be like, no.

00:16:45
Let me answer this. Was it clean?

00:16:47
You know the New York Police cars are not known for being

00:16:50
hygienic. Was it pretty clean the car?

00:16:51
That was spotless and I had the plastic stuff all over the.

00:16:55
Wow. That means the ice slants.

00:16:57
They're not doing an arrest. We know how New York is, so of

00:16:59
course it's gonna be. Clean.

00:17:01
Yeah, yeah, OK. All right, so go ahead, tell us

00:17:05
about the rest of it. Yeah, So then they gave me a

00:17:08
lift. I was like, cheers, guys, you're

00:17:09
the best. Ran to Shaggy's house, made it

00:17:12
on time, and there were a couple guys working on a A record, I

00:17:15
think it was for Chris Brown or something.

00:17:16
And my friend was there, Shaggy wasn't there yet.

00:17:20
And so it's like he wanted some snacks and pulled out some

00:17:23
snacks from the fridge. And key details here.

00:17:26
Shaggy's hummus, it's just holding into that.

00:17:30
I love hummus. Like, I know that's weird, but I

00:17:31
love it. And then?

00:17:33
Actually, I like homage too. It's actually a great food

00:17:35
depending on, you know, Yeah, I make.

00:17:36
Homemade homeless I know how to make.

00:17:38
It you don't, it's the best. Swear to God it's for garlic.

00:17:41
Yep, got to have the garlic, yeah.

00:17:43
Absolutely. And then Shaggy walked in.

00:17:45
He's like, hey, love. It's like hey man and super

00:17:48
whatever. Super casual, lovely guy.

00:17:51
Hope he doesn't mind me telling the story.

00:17:53
Anyway, Super lovely. Yeah, Shaggy too.

00:17:54
And then? Don't just say it wasn't me.

00:17:57
It was that was. Not me.

00:17:59
Oh no. I.

00:18:00
Don't know that girl? Listen now, hold on.

00:18:02
I got to interrupt you. Lance, think about this.

00:18:04
Can you imagine if Shaggy the guys at the house and is she

00:18:06
this cop car pulling up their first?

00:18:09
Thoughts. Exactly.

00:18:09
They're like, put the weed away now, yeah.

00:18:12
Yeah, but then this Australian girl gets out and be like, hey,

00:18:16
yeah. Exactly.

00:18:18
It's just set. Up.

00:18:19
How good? Yeah, and then I sang for the

00:18:23
producer in the studio and he referred me to this vocal coach

00:18:27
in New York. And shout out to Craig Derry, my

00:18:30
absolute favorite, one of my favorite humans in the world.

00:18:32
He runs this class in New York. The thing is for rappers,

00:18:37
there's a lot of hip hop, soul, R&B focus, their hop.

00:18:41
And I just found myself like blown away by the talent coming

00:18:44
out into into this, into that classroom with, with the talent

00:18:47
from New York. Like it was just insane.

00:18:51
Nothing I'd ever seen before. And I just, I felt like I just

00:18:53
wanted to be a sponge and absorb all this beautiful energy and

00:18:56
just learn from my peers. And I did.

00:18:57
I sat there for months and I watched and I listened and I

00:19:01
learned and I was inspired and I thought, I want to have my own

00:19:05
song too, just like these these other kids, like I want to do

00:19:08
that. And I didn't really know I could

00:19:09
write songs. And I was like, you know, what,

00:19:12
if I go to medical school and learn all this stuff, I'm going

00:19:14
to friggin learn how to write a song.

00:19:16
And I was on my way to a party in Atlantic City with my with my

00:19:19
friend Ria. And I was in the bus, and I was

00:19:22
just Googling how to write a song.

00:19:24
And I started writing in New York, and I started singing in

00:19:27
the class. And I got a lot of

00:19:29
encouragement. And my coach was like, you got

00:19:31
to do this as your career. Like, you're a creative.

00:19:33
And he instilled such conviction in my heart.

00:19:37
And like, I'm thankful for life for that.

00:19:40
Yeah. Can I ask?

00:19:41
You, you know. I got to ask George.

00:19:43
Sure. Did your mom send you to medical

00:19:44
school or it was you? No, it was me, mom.

00:19:49
What was your mom's take when you go to medical school to

00:19:51
become a doctor, but you come out an artist?

00:19:53
Like was she like what happened? It was it was a lot for her.

00:19:58
She was very confused. Love my mom.

00:20:01
My mom's awesome. Yeah.

00:20:02
She's been a beautiful mom for me and my sisters.

00:20:05
Just her raising up on her own. Bless her, honestly.

00:20:09
It was a shock. My family's like, what are you

00:20:11
doing? Is this a face?

00:20:12
It's like, it's not a face. And I'm like, sure.

00:20:13
I'm like, it's not a face. And one of my sisters is also

00:20:18
super creative and into the arts, and she was very

00:20:20
encouraging and helps me to this day.

00:20:23
But yeah, my friends are a bit confused, but they're all for

00:20:25
it. They're like, this is cool.

00:20:26
Just keep doing you. That's great.

00:20:30
I could just see her mother cursing out in New York.

00:20:32
What did you do to my girl? My baby?

00:20:34
My baby girl, Yeah. Exactly.

00:20:38
You know, it's interesting. You obviously you have a great

00:20:40
spirit. You can just feel your positive

00:20:42
energy. You're just like that.

00:20:44
I'm sure the people in New York really enjoyed that.

00:20:46
That's one thing about New Yorkers when they embrace

00:20:47
people, they recognize the differences.

00:20:50
We're all a little, a little rough around the edges in New

00:20:52
York where many of us are. But at the end of the day, it's,

00:20:55
it's, it's really when we, when we meet somebody like you, we,

00:20:57
we, it's easy to identify it is what I mean, you know, did you,

00:21:01
when you were doing this, were you always a socially conscious

00:21:04
person? Because let's face it, your

00:21:05
lyrics are really, really distinctive.

00:21:08
You know, they, they obviously they're societal.

00:21:11
Was that always something where you always kind of a socially

00:21:13
conscious human being as you grew up?

00:21:15
Or is that something that maybe as you went through your

00:21:18
education and going to medical school that came out?

00:21:20
Or was that something that always existed?

00:21:23
You know what, I just really care about the world and the

00:21:27
environment, the animals and healing.

00:21:29
And it's part of why I wanted to be a doctor.

00:21:32
And like, I think our legacy is the effect that we have on the

00:21:37
lives of others. That's what we leave behind.

00:21:40
And I, I want to make the world a better place with my music,

00:21:44
with my art, with my medicine. And I think the last five years

00:21:47
has really well given perspective to all of us, but

00:21:52
really stirred up a big pot within myself of like, what the

00:21:56
heck is going on with this world?

00:21:59
Not a politician and not an activist, but I really care and

00:22:02
I really want my music to reach people's hearts and to heal the

00:22:05
world in some way, even if it's just in a small way.

00:22:10
But I just think it's hard to. I mean, I'm, I'm not hugely into

00:22:13
politics. Honestly, some of it's really

00:22:15
boring. I'm way more into art and music.

00:22:17
I love that. But like, the last few years has

00:22:21
forced all of us to be like, what's going on and what's going

00:22:25
on with my brother, my sister, my friend?

00:22:27
Like we're all being affected by this.

00:22:28
And it's like, what can we do to change the stuff before it?

00:22:31
It just feels dark. But there's hope, you know?

00:22:34
There's so much light still. You know, it's funny, I was

00:22:37
never a political person up until about 2011.

00:22:41
I, I never got involved. I never voted.

00:22:43
I never did any of that. And I saw things I'd actually

00:22:47
worked around government agencies years ago and I kind of

00:22:51
realized it was always a dark side to government, but I was a

00:22:54
different person back then. And I started to change and I

00:22:57
realized that I really didn't have the the luxury of sitting

00:23:01
on the sidelines because just like you, I thought, man, these

00:23:04
people are just up to just no good.

00:23:06
And if we continue to let it go down this path, I don't know in

00:23:09
an art, you know, in our country, we call it the deep

00:23:11
state. We talk about the new world

00:23:13
order, we talk about what their mega plan is, whether it's

00:23:17
people at Davos or trilateral Commission com 300 the UN,

00:23:21
there's lots of groups that seem to be pushing their agenda for

00:23:24
and it's not about people. And unlike you, I've always been

00:23:27
an animal person. I'm big, big animal.

00:23:29
I've I've 5 little rescue dogs, an accidental cat.

00:23:32
If I was in, if I was in Australia, I'd probably have a

00:23:34
wombat. I'd probably grab one of those

00:23:36
little cute guys. I'm going to.

00:23:38
Get you with those Guru Lance. You know, Kangaroos, I got to

00:23:41
tell you, there's something about Kangaroos when they're

00:23:43
full grown, you know, adults, they, they have a little

00:23:46
frightening side. I I keep seeing these pictures

00:23:48
of them online where they look like they've been taking

00:23:49
steroids their whole life. They're so.

00:23:51
Big you got this. What are you talking about?

00:23:54
Yeah, you know, I'm, I'm a pretty big tough guy, but I got

00:23:56
to tell you, those claws and I see them going after people's

00:23:59
dogs. I don't know if that's all true.

00:24:01
I see what's online. It always seems to be these

00:24:03
these aggressive attack videos. Now, I never see that with the

00:24:06
wombats. I never see them doing anything

00:24:08
like that. So, you know, so anyway, at the

00:24:10
end of the day, I agree with you.

00:24:13
It's come to a point where you you can't just sit there and not

00:24:16
do anything. And in my case, it's not so much

00:24:19
about the politics, about it's about getting people in there

00:24:21
that are going to make a difference that maybe care about

00:24:24
people again and care about, you know, our environment and the

00:24:27
animals and the the rest of what it takes to actually have a

00:24:30
successful planet. It it's tough because these

00:24:33
people that have taken control of our governments in different

00:24:35
countries, I don't think they think like that.

00:24:38
I think whatever happened to them for the majority of them

00:24:40
been corrupted in a way that they're only worried about, you

00:24:43
know, greed and their own personal interests.

00:24:46
They aren't worried about what the people need.

00:24:48
We see it here a lot, even with our homeless situation that's

00:24:50
now exploded, especially does immigration.

00:24:53
You know, I want to switch gears here a little bit with you.

00:24:55
I, I found your, your, I guess what, I guess your favorites, at

00:24:59
least in an article you talked about Lauryn Hill, TLC, which I

00:25:02
love, Massive Attack, which I love in Moby.

00:25:05
Let's talk about your favorites. You know, when you were growing

00:25:08
up, were these your primary influences?

00:25:11
Were this, was this some music you listen to that you enjoyed

00:25:13
the most? And was it because maybe it had

00:25:15
a a message in the lyrics? Yeah, Lauryn Hill.

00:25:20
I love Lauryn Hill. I've I discovered her album when

00:25:22
I was probably 13 because my older sisters, they're quite a

00:25:26
bit older than me. I'm the young, youngest and

00:25:28
older baby. The baby.

00:25:32
The baby, yeah, yeah. And they they influence me a lot

00:25:35
and they listen to a lot of R&B, hence that the TLC and stuff.

00:25:39
My mom was more of the Moby Massive attack and I found like

00:25:42
Queen by myself which is really cool.

00:25:45
Yeah, Queen's unbelievable, right?

00:25:46
Is that ridiculous? Good.

00:25:48
I remember the first time I heard Queen when I was a kid,

00:25:50
and I was like, wow, are you kidding me?

00:25:52
This is amazing. Yeah, the voice.

00:25:54
So, yeah, it's so fascinating, that guy's story.

00:25:58
But Lauryn Hill. I found A mis Education of

00:26:00
Lauryn Hill as still my favorite album to this day.

00:26:03
Yeah, that album moved me because, yeah, not just her

00:26:07
voice and sonics, but her message.

00:26:09
And she really cares and she wants to heal the world.

00:26:12
And I just latched onto that. And I thought, this is, I love

00:26:15
this. And I love that energy.

00:26:16
And to this day, she inspires me.

00:26:18
Like, she's one of my favorite artists.

00:26:20
Yeah, but it's her message and as well as her talent.

00:26:22
She's so unbelievably talented. But you can really tell that she

00:26:26
wants to speak truth into the world and wants to speak light.

00:26:29
And I just really love that about her and other artists that

00:26:31
do that as well. I'm really inspired by that.

00:26:34
You know, it's, it's interesting, I think that the

00:26:36
when it comes, you know, a lot of times people, they some

00:26:39
people that aren't really focused on music, they listen to

00:26:41
it, they enjoy the beat. They don't necessarily know all

00:26:43
the lyrics, but it's interesting the ones you pick.

00:26:46
Now TLC, you know, I love that incredible act.

00:26:50
When they came out, they just blew up and you know, no scrubs,

00:26:53
waterfalls, creep creep was unbelievable.

00:26:56
Which is you have a favorite song for TLC that you like the

00:26:58
best? No, it's no scrubs.

00:27:00
Like, I mean, I know everyone says that, but it actually is

00:27:02
such a banger. It's so good.

00:27:04
Yeah, it. Comes on.

00:27:05
No, it's a great, it's a great song.

00:27:06
Can we get it a little quick tune from you about it?

00:27:09
Come on, give us a little liner. Let me hear it.

00:27:11
I don't want no scrub scrub with the guy.

00:27:14
They can get no love from me. It's and I have to tell you, I'm

00:27:20
kind of a Massive Attack fan, so I've got to go with your mom on

00:27:23
this one. Is your mom got a favorite song

00:27:26
for Massive Attack in particular?

00:27:28
I don't remember. I'm going to have to ask her.

00:27:32
She also listened to a lot of Dire Straits.

00:27:35
Oh, yeah, they're great. Romeo and Juliet, love that.

00:27:38
Yeah. It was cool having her taste as

00:27:42
well mixed into the the mix of my sisters who are more into

00:27:44
like that real 90s stuff and then her influences.

00:27:48
It's given me like a bit of a mixed bag, yeah.

00:27:52
You know, there's, there's a lot of artists I wondered, did did

00:27:55
you get it was, you know, there's some amazing, you know,

00:27:59
really interesting lyrics from some of the early artists, some

00:28:03
of the early R&B people. Did you, did you like Marvin

00:28:06
Gaye at all? Did you ever listen to him or

00:28:07
Nina? Stallone.

00:28:09
Beautiful. Yeah, Yeah.

00:28:10
And Etta James as well. I love Etta.

00:28:13
James James. Incredible, right?

00:28:15
What a talent, you know. What about Bob Marley?

00:28:18
That seems to be something that might be in the genre of the

00:28:20
some people being. Like, man, Bob Marley is so

00:28:23
cool. Just the way he speaks for

00:28:25
humanity. He is an Angel sent to us.

00:28:27
Yeah. He's so inspiring.

00:28:29
I don't even care if his songs are good or bad to me.

00:28:32
I mean, they're obviously really great, but like, it doesn't even

00:28:34
matter because the messages he's singing is just like for the

00:28:37
soul, you know, and for the people.

00:28:39
He really had. I really always thought when you

00:28:42
listen to his music and it came out and that he really had good

00:28:45
intent for humanity, which you know, it's it's it's it's a

00:28:48
tricky deal, especially when you go into hip hop genres and

00:28:51
music. You know, there's many of them

00:28:53
that are just in it for the money that aren't actually in it

00:28:54
for the craft. But there are some that clearly

00:28:58
that's not the truth. What about were you a fan of

00:29:00
during the So, even in that same genre of real strong messages,

00:29:04
what about Public Enemy? Don't know many.

00:29:07
Yeah, no N.W.A. Well, I didn't really get into

00:29:13
that. I was a bit, yeah.

00:29:15
No, nothing like that. Listen, we're going to hold

00:29:17
we're going to hold your thought there.

00:29:18
We're going to take a short break.

00:29:19
When we come back, we're going to play her new song

00:29:22
Carmageddon. We'll be talking more about the

00:29:25
what's going on with that and that what's what's happened

00:29:27
recently in the news. You guys know about it.

00:29:29
Stay tuned Biggie mafia and subscribers.

00:29:31
We right with back with I am May and George Valentin and myself

00:29:35
Lance miliage. Stay tuned.

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brings. They would run up to the bamboo

00:31:48
fence and they would be shooting between the bamboo at the

00:31:51
buildings, you know, just shooting inside.

00:31:54
The Wanted man is Joseph Kony, charged with abducting huge

00:31:58
numbers of children, forcing them to kill and mutilate

00:32:02
innocent victims. Somebody had to pay the price.

00:32:05
Sam did that. Sam Childers never stopped.

00:32:08
Because. The bad things never stop.

00:32:10
There is only one Sam Childer. There is no one else like him in

00:32:14
the world. Then I said to him.

00:32:15
I said. Would you go?

00:32:17
Now to get Kony in the Congo, he says.

00:32:20
Without a doubt in a second. Now it's the DRC.

00:32:22
Tell us what's happening to children in the DRC.

00:32:25
Do you have ISIS there? You have Islamic State and you

00:32:28
have ADF? Hey, Sandy.

00:32:30
Joseph Kony's still alive. He's in the Congo and now God

00:32:33
has me in the Congo, you know, So hopefully we'll meet up one

00:32:37
day. But maybe I can lead him to the

00:32:40
Lord or send him there. One or the other,

00:32:57
huh? All right.

00:32:58
Welcome back to the big, big show.

00:32:59
Here we host George Valentin, Lance Migliacho and our new mate

00:33:03
from Down Under. I am May.

00:33:07
I just want to say right now it's 11:30 in the morning in

00:33:11
Sydney, in Australia, anywhere actually.

00:33:14
I want to know where's all the Australian people in the chat.

00:33:16
I know you guys are up. You know, you guys all watch

00:33:18
Rumble. I have the statistics on you

00:33:20
guys. I know.

00:33:21
Where my where my Aussies at? Come on, Aussie.

00:33:23
Aussie Aussie mate mate mate where you sat?

00:33:26
Can we get some Aussie support here?

00:33:29
Exactly. Yeah, Trying to expand that big,

00:33:31
big show all over the globe. We're popular in Asia.

00:33:33
I don't know why in South Korea especially, they seem to like

00:33:36
our show. I'm not sure what that's all.

00:33:37
About I want to bring this up so.

00:33:40
Yeah, please. You know Trump's inauguration,

00:33:42
and I know they always put musicians out there, music acts.

00:33:45
Nobody reached out to you to see if you want to do your thing

00:33:48
over there a little, sing your song, No.

00:33:51
No, you're talking to me. No, I'm talking to the other

00:33:55
beautiful singer next next to you.

00:33:57
Yeah, I'm talking to you. Hey, maybe Lance sings too.

00:34:01
No, he definitely. Doesn't.

00:34:02
I can tell you that No. Belt out and if.

00:34:04
Lance sings. This is what happens.

00:34:05
Ready. Yeah, I have zero talent all the

00:34:10
way around. I think all I have is

00:34:11
experience. If you got if you got invited to

00:34:14
sing at the inauguration, would you do it?

00:34:18
I would totally consider stuff like that.

00:34:20
Yeah. I want to go back to the US all

00:34:23
the time. I love the USI was there twice

00:34:25
last year. It's mad.

00:34:26
I mean, you know what, Lance, when I hear the song

00:34:29
Carmageddon, Roden actually thinks of the term that you

00:34:31
coined or it again, right. Yeah.

00:34:34
Coincides. Yeah.

00:34:35
Yeah, I came up with a term that I that Urban Dictionary

00:34:38
published. It was Border Geddon, and it was

00:34:40
about the border invasion. I have this this weird habit

00:34:44
I've got. I think I've got 10 words

00:34:46
published now, or 9 words published over there on Urban

00:34:49
Dictionary. Yeah, like dead mocrat.

00:34:53
That's because our voter rolls are full of dead voters and they

00:34:56
don't want to cleanse the rolls because they use those votes to

00:34:58
manipulate the elections here. So yeah, it's just a weird

00:35:01
thing, one of those weird, strange.

00:35:03
You know, I have a lot of weird hobbies like that.

00:35:05
I don't know why you get, you get down a rabbit hole sometimes

00:35:07
and you feel like to make a difference, you have to use what

00:35:11
I would consider unusual concepts.

00:35:14
You can't just go straight on because you'll just be silenced.

00:35:17
You know, we got suspended. George and I both got suspended

00:35:19
on Twitter because years ago I was a government contractor and

00:35:24
I, we had come upon a story called Italy Gate where they had

00:35:27
used a Leonardo Spa satellite to hack the election systems.

00:35:32
And I was disclosing that information on X.

00:35:35
And back then it was Twitter. Jack Dorsey was working with

00:35:38
lots of government agencies like DHS and the CIA and FBI to

00:35:43
suppress accounts that were putting out election information

00:35:46
that had to do with election interference.

00:35:48
Because my thing is, you know, I just want what the people want.

00:35:50
I want free and fair elections. You know, I want free speech.

00:35:54
You know, the Second Amendment for me isn't about weaponizing

00:35:57
the people. It's because you need the Second

00:35:59
Amendment to protect the 1st Amendment here in the United

00:36:01
States. And at the end of the day that

00:36:03
our founders and framers wanted a constitutional Republic that

00:36:06
was for the people, by the people, because they already

00:36:08
dealt with what the monarchy had to deal with in other countries.

00:36:11
So they they had, it was called the grand experiment.

00:36:14
They wanted to do it. That's what I want.

00:36:16
You know, I at the end of the day, we go after both sides of

00:36:18
the aisle on this show and, and for anybody that isn't good for

00:36:21
the country or it's people, you know, you can become a victim

00:36:24
instantly. I prom, we promised the viewers

00:36:26
her video. They're they're waiting.

00:36:28
They actually want her to sing live.

00:36:29
So let's play video. Stop.

00:36:31
Let's get that video fired. Looking I got to do this

00:36:33
sometimes. Let's get it.

00:36:34
Let's do it man all. Right here we go.

00:36:36
Here's our Here's our song, Armageddon Play.

00:36:39
From the. Stop.

00:37:08
So well, maybe that's all life comes when people that's

00:37:14
important than a prophet lie. No one cares about your dreams

00:37:17
of space attacks on time keeps holding hold mean into you now

00:37:24
gender, guns, religion and abortion rights.

00:37:27
You better pick a tribal Nate the other side keeps going.

00:37:32
Did you see Taylor live High high high mermaid virus watch

00:37:37
some millions the biggest profit of their lives here's inflation

00:37:42
that's your prize. This is come again and turn on

00:37:47
the nose and leave the lies can walk on you pick your side can

00:37:52
so cold to water vibe. This is come again and

00:37:57
corporations where they never lie.

00:38:00
Politicians brought to life more than worse genocide.

00:38:05
This is come again. Don't go through the chaos all

00:38:09
the times if you were left in love, go right and pray we make

00:38:14
it our life. This is going to get.

00:38:29
It's Fashion Week. Celebs lose ribs.

00:38:31
Balenciaga. How's the kids?

00:38:34
Just a stray Keys losing beef. Kendrick killed a mini snake.

00:38:39
This tracks about beating up your queen.

00:38:42
More women dying doesn't cause a scene while we're fed all these

00:38:47
distractions. Kids are killed from Miss Rose

00:38:50
actions. I'm gonna sleep my mind sick to

00:38:53
death of all these crazy lies. A circus for your Melanie's a

00:38:56
kind We just want a piece of life.

00:38:58
Give the people back their eyes and I still got a bee because

00:39:03
Fouch is laughing and we've been asleep and who's the light and

00:39:07
it's run a deep big fond of it. Eat they the devil make them we

00:39:11
mermaid virus watch some millions die.

00:39:14
Biggest prophet on their lives is inflation.

00:39:18
That's your price. The lies can walk on you pick a

00:39:27
side can so cold to water vibe. This is come get in corporations

00:39:34
where they never lie politicians brought to life water wars

00:39:40
strata side. This is come get Welcome to the

00:39:44
chaos of the times. If you go left and I go right,

00:39:49
when we make it out alive, this is come get.

00:40:08
So I want to let all the viewers know, all right, cancel culture

00:40:12
is actually trying to cancel IMA and this song.

00:40:15
So US viewers and us, we, we can't let that happen.

00:40:19
We we know what we do with cancel culture and they're woke

00:40:21
stuff. So you guys all need to go out

00:40:23
there, support her, go to her websites, in the chat, in the

00:40:26
links, everything's there. Support IMA because it's music

00:40:30
like that that blesses our hearts because it means great.

00:40:35
And it makes, it makes a huge difference, you know, that you.

00:40:38
That song touches on political division, media manipulation,

00:40:42
corporate greed, public apathy. I mean, touches on a lot of

00:40:46
really heavy subjects. You know, when you when you were

00:40:49
writing the lyrics, did you expect and I'm going to read 1

00:40:52
of the I want to read. This is just one of the many,

00:40:54
There's so many news articles. I just picked this one.

00:40:57
It's not for any reason. The title of this daily maul was

00:41:01
who is IMA Australian singer loses contract with record label

00:41:04
over Carmageddon song. When you were writing the song,

00:41:08
which I think is super strong. It's so on point with so many

00:41:11
things, Valenciaga and so many other topics in there.

00:41:15
You know, when you're on social media as much as us, you see

00:41:17
these societal issues that you know, are, are are really about

00:41:22
corporate greed and many other things.

00:41:23
And you and you go, God, how can we let that happen?

00:41:26
That's just crazy. You went after it.

00:41:28
Did you expect this kind of response?

00:41:32
To the song from the fans, I was expecting a lot more backlash

00:41:39
and I was me and my music producer Danny were expecting to

00:41:43
have to like post it and jump off and not read the comments.

00:41:47
I guess because the the industry backlash I had before I released

00:41:51
it, it's kind of set it up like that.

00:41:53
But now I've realized that actually like it seems that most

00:41:57
people are just thinking the same thing and I'm just singing

00:42:00
what we've all been feeling. Yeah, we're, you know, and there

00:42:05
and there's no doubt we, you know, I Can't Sing.

00:42:08
As I said before, nobody would want to listen to me sing, but

00:42:12
it's interesting when you when you are dealing, especially for

00:42:15
us, you know, we're on media, we cover a lot of we have a couple

00:42:18
of different shows. We have our main main show, the

00:42:20
big, big show. And then we have a global

00:42:22
finance forum show. We have a crypto show that's

00:42:24
going to be coming out very soon.

00:42:25
But you have to spend so much time on social media and in the

00:42:29
news. And I always talk about how

00:42:31
sometimes it's tough, it's depressing in fact, that you see

00:42:35
this going on and not only you can't always make a change.

00:42:37
So you try to bring awareness to it.

00:42:39
You try to educate people about the truth and tell them, well,

00:42:41
that story's not true. Here's the real story.

00:42:44
Because of that, when you did, where were you, I guess your

00:42:48
label when they dropped you in the manager?

00:42:52
And I think that's at least the story that I've heard.

00:42:54
Where did you? Were they already giving you?

00:42:56
Push back. Don't put the song up, change

00:42:58
the lyric because I think there's a specific part of the

00:43:01
lyric that has to do with Israel.

00:43:02
Is that the one that made that triggered everybody or was it

00:43:05
just the whole song in general? So I actually left my label just

00:43:12
yeah, for other reasons. The manager, however, said if I

00:43:16
didn't change lyrics, then we wouldn't work together.

00:43:20
And you know, I really thought about it and I really tried to

00:43:23
empathize and understand his perspective as well because

00:43:26
that's what this song is about. It's about division.

00:43:28
And I don't want to be left or right.

00:43:31
And I'm not saying any of us should be, but I'm saying, let's

00:43:33
have a look at what we're doing as a collective.

00:43:35
Like we are being divided. And let's not because in unity

00:43:37
we have the strength. And that, you know, that was

00:43:40
kind of how ironic it was because this manager was saying,

00:43:43
if you don't change this, we're not working together.

00:43:45
I'm like, look at how divided we are now.

00:43:47
Why can't we just have a conversation?

00:43:48
And I ended up saying, Nah, man, I'm not going to dilute my

00:43:52
lyrics. I'm not going to change my art.

00:43:53
Like you're not the artist. And I feel that I have to say

00:43:57
this to the world. Like this is the truth that I

00:43:59
want to share. So it just ended up, yeah, just

00:44:03
just cancelling the the contract we had.

00:44:05
And we we went our own ways. And it was just a wild, I mean,

00:44:08
it, it developed after that. There was a lot of, yeah, awful

00:44:12
messages from that person and I ended up just having to just

00:44:16
completely just stay away from that toxic kind of professional

00:44:19
relationship and just go my own way.

00:44:21
So I ended up having this huge team behind me to no one and

00:44:24
just myself and my music producer, which is scary for an

00:44:29
artist. And to be honest, it's all just

00:44:31
been like a such a huge silver lining because now I can say

00:44:34
what I want to say and it looks like people are really rallying

00:44:37
behind it all over the world. I'm shocked.

00:44:39
Like this song has taken off. This was just going to be a, you

00:44:42
know, just hey, put it out, see what happens.

00:44:45
Hopefully don't get too much hate or maybe I will, whatever.

00:44:48
But like people are fully going hard and and it just it just

00:44:51
shows to me that the last five years has had a huge impact on

00:44:55
people, on the hearts of people. And I feel like I'm just yes,

00:44:59
singing what people are thinking.

00:45:01
So it's cool. I think you have a, you're

00:45:02
gaining a lot of support, you have a lot of support.

00:45:04
You're going to have more after the show.

00:45:06
I know Rumble supports you. Yes, Rumble is awesome.

00:45:11
Shout out to Nick by the way. I've discovered that platform

00:45:14
recently and it's really cool. Yeah, Rumble's a great location

00:45:18
for you because I think that you're you're saying the things

00:45:22
that everybody thinks on Rumble. We're lucky because they don't

00:45:25
restrict and they don't suppress and they don't suspend.

00:45:29
We got suspended, I think finally again for the final time

00:45:32
over YouTube last week because we've had a lot of not

00:45:37
controversial, but a lot of people from that are medical

00:45:40
experts come on the show like Cali Means and Jillian Michaels,

00:45:44
if you know her from the from the Biggest Loser, people like

00:45:47
that. And they're very, they're very

00:45:49
outspoken. A lot of people, Mary Holland

00:45:51
from the Children's Health Defense who works with RFK

00:45:54
Junior. So we've really gone into the

00:45:56
issues. You know, there's the autism

00:45:58
race gone through the roof of vaccines and other things.

00:46:00
So of course, YouTube is still under the environment that

00:46:03
that's medical misinformation, even when it comes from the CDC

00:46:06
or VARES or actually doctors and medical experts, even though

00:46:09
nobody over at YouTube's a medical expert.

00:46:11
So they don't want that information to come out.

00:46:14
You know, I, I got to ask you this besides your, your label,

00:46:18
you know, we get on our show because we're very direct and,

00:46:21
you know, we kind of run the show with No Fear.

00:46:24
So we go after people, we get a regular amount of nasty direct

00:46:28
messages and death threats and all kinds of crazy stuff.

00:46:30
But we feel like it's our job, George and I, that to expose the

00:46:34
truth is kind of what we're doing through our show.

00:46:36
No matter what that truth is. It may be uncomfortable and

00:46:38
maybe people don't want to hear it, but at the end of the day,

00:46:41
we feel like when we come across stories from our sources or

00:46:43
otherwise, and we're like, look, this is not what's going on.

00:46:45
Here's the truth, here's a source, here's where we got the

00:46:48
information. But people aren't happy.

00:46:51
Like I said, we've had some death threats and other stuff

00:46:53
about what horrible human beings we are for exposing the truth.

00:46:57
They're just key. They're just keyboard warriors.

00:47:00
Yeah. Yeah, if they were face to face,

00:47:02
they wouldn't say nothing. Yeah, one or two.

00:47:05
It wouldn't go down like that. You can't really threaten a New

00:47:07
Yorker face to face or a guy from New Jersey.

00:47:10
We really just want. They do look, they take this,

00:47:12
they threat with this right here.

00:47:14
Come on. Yeah, Yeah.

00:47:15
It's cyber bullying. You can just walk away from it

00:47:17
and put the phone down and then that's it.

00:47:18
It's not your way. It's not.

00:47:19
Real, you know, they don't get they don't, you know, we have

00:47:21
such thick skin, you know, when you're in New York as a kid

00:47:24
chopping on it either and joking around with sarcasm.

00:47:27
That's our second language. So for us, it's it's kind of

00:47:30
worthless. But do you find that that that

00:47:33
is it really, is it galvanizing in a way that there's one side

00:47:35
of the divide? Or do you feel like the majority

00:47:38
of people have reacted positively?

00:47:39
Or do you still have a certain a number, maybe 1020% of the

00:47:43
people that are trying to send you these messages about you're

00:47:46
a rotten human being or otherwise?

00:47:47
I don't agree with that. I think the message you put in

00:47:50
here with spot on. Thanks.

00:47:54
I would say it's now 90% positive that yeah, that there

00:47:59
was a bit of controversy around the man made virus line.

00:48:05
I'm like, dude, there's just so much information on how it's

00:48:08
probably man made. Relax.

00:48:10
And yeah, so there's that. And obviously the Israel stuff

00:48:15
is super complicated and I empathize with everyone.

00:48:19
You know, like everything that's going on, it's a lot.

00:48:21
It's a lot for people. So that was a big one too.

00:48:24
But I think it's mostly positive.

00:48:28
Maybe that's the algorithm, I don't know, I have no idea.

00:48:31
But I think because the song is not just about 1 issue, it's

00:48:36
about all the issues, you know, so many things.

00:48:40
So if you don't relate to one bit, you're probably going to

00:48:42
relate to another part. Yeah.

00:48:44
But but overall, overall positive, which has been really

00:48:48
cool and really surprising, yeah.

00:48:50
You know, we, we've interacted, we've had quite a few musicians

00:48:53
on the show. We had, we had, you know, quite

00:48:55
a few people that come through. We're friends with people like

00:48:57
Forgiato Blow, who you've seen. His stuff is pretty

00:49:00
confrontational. I think he also did a Balenciaga

00:49:03
song that he produced. Trump Latino is another group,

00:49:07
you know, so there's lots of them that come through, you

00:49:10
know, I guess. Lance, we got to, I got to stop

00:49:12
because they, they want to, they want to hear her sing acapella.

00:49:15
What do you think? I am, man.

00:49:17
I say go for it. You don't want to hear me.

00:49:18
Definitely want to hear her do it if she's going to do it.

00:49:20
Should we? What do you think?

00:49:21
You want to break out a little acapella A.

00:49:23
Little bit pull some some. No pressure.

00:49:27
What would you like me to? Say I don't know, you're the

00:49:29
artist. Do you pick?

00:49:30
Something that you like? And you're wasn't about.

00:49:32
I'm going. To show that positive side, I am

00:49:35
a that positive energy side for the audience.

00:49:37
Let's do it. All sing calm again.

00:49:40
I open up my phone on a Monday morning, staring at my screen.

00:49:46
I'm tired and a little lonely. Mr. Muskie says some shit.

00:49:51
The left's are angry. Twitter wars and gods are man.

00:49:56
It's overwhelming. Maybe that's how life becomes

00:50:00
man people less important than a profit line.

00:50:03
No one cares about your dreams. Just pay your tax on time.

00:50:06
Keep scrolling. Also, that makes me want to say

00:50:13
actually thanks. There's an acoustic version

00:50:17
coming out soon and I cannot wait to show that to you all.

00:50:20
So. Yeah, it's exciting.

00:50:22
We definitely want to help you with it.

00:50:23
Let's talk about what are you going?

00:50:25
What are you going on fire here in the US?

00:50:28
Go ahead. Huh.

00:50:29
Well, you got coming, you said what's what do you got?

00:50:32
In the works, an acoustic version of Calm again has is

00:50:35
coming to your ears. OK, Yeah.

00:50:38
So how the downloads going, you were kind of cranking there?

00:50:41
I know some of the platforms aren't telling the truth about

00:50:44
your numbers. They're higher than that.

00:50:46
You don't necessarily have the sound.

00:50:47
But I guess not too long ago you were saying that you were

00:50:49
trending on YouTube at 30. Has that gone up from there?

00:50:52
We obviously want to help with that.

00:50:54
Tell us about how the downloads are going across the maybe even

00:50:56
the US and across the globe. So it's really interesting,

00:51:02
YouTube, yesterday we had a look, it was number 23 trending,

00:51:06
which is wild. I only put.

00:51:08
Up that so crazy. I only put up that lyric video

00:51:12
which to be honest, it's just like a bunch of videos me and my

00:51:15
mate took in Newcastle, Australia.

00:51:17
He's an awesome videographer, Bradley.

00:51:19
And we just smashed them all together and uploaded it and

00:51:22
that was like just, yeah, three weeks in a day ago and it's like

00:51:26
over 1 views already. And you have to understand like

00:51:29
this is no funding, this is organic, this is no label.

00:51:32
This is my music producer myself.

00:51:33
Like, you know, I'm posting everyday.

00:51:36
I'm posting and I'm replying to comments.

00:51:38
And it's just us. And the fact that it's trending

00:51:42
on Instagram, Facebook, it's trending on YouTube.

00:51:46
It was it hit #2 in Australia, on iTunes, number #2 in

00:51:49
Malaysia, number one in Cyprus #4 in Spain.

00:51:53
It's like, what the heck? It's it's yeah.

00:51:56
And it's thanks to the people because iTunes is the people

00:52:01
buying it and Shazamming the song and and requesting it on

00:52:04
the the local radio stations. It actually hasn't had support

00:52:08
yet. I'm hoping they just haven't

00:52:10
seen it yet from Spotify, which is crazy because it's hitting

00:52:14
number one in viral 50 of like Spain, for example.

00:52:18
It's number one on their viral chart, which is like an

00:52:20
algorithmic chart, I think. So it's like the people are

00:52:24
listening to it and downloading it and it's feeding into these

00:52:26
big platforms, but maybe they haven't seen it yet.

00:52:29
But it's because of you guys. It's not.

00:52:30
It's truly because of you guys. There is no label.

00:52:32
There is no money. You know, it's just just the

00:52:36
people like wanting to share it, which is I just feel so blessed

00:52:39
and so grateful. It's so nice to see.

00:52:42
You know, Lance, I think she's talking about Spain.

00:52:44
So Miguel from Solem, that's in Abesia.

00:52:47
He's in the chat. Yeah, he he, he does music too.

00:52:51
He's a big fan of your. It's a crypto company we're

00:52:54
involved with, but Miguel's a big he he does a lot of DJ ING

00:52:57
and a lot of music production over in Ibiza, Spain.

00:53:01
So obviously high, high end music environment.

00:53:04
But it's your timing and I think it's your energy.

00:53:06
I think you, you, you come across as such a unique talent

00:53:10
that you you really seem heartfelt to me.

00:53:12
And I don't say that a lot. We, you know, we get a lot of

00:53:14
tough people on this show and, and, and you know, the

00:53:18
interviews are always, there's always some confrontation maybe

00:53:21
at different times on the interviews.

00:53:23
You know, I, I see you as being something really unique.

00:53:25
And I think the timing of what you've done here.

00:53:28
People want the truth. People always ask, you know, we

00:53:31
hear this story a lot. People say, oh, what do you

00:53:33
think is going to happen now Trump's president?

00:53:35
Well, it really comes down to the, the, the, the fact of

00:53:39
whether or not he's willing to do what needs to be done.

00:53:42
But the country itself, you know, we get liberals on the

00:53:45
show and, and non partisans, we get everybody.

00:53:47
You know, we went to an event called Rescue the Republic,

00:53:49
which was really a left event in New York, But it was amazing,

00:53:52
incredible energy, great people, fantastic.

00:53:55
And what it really comes down to is I think the globe is really

00:53:59
is at this moment where so many people, at least I would say,

00:54:03
you know, 80 or 90% of the people really are tired of what

00:54:08
maybe the powers that be want for us.

00:54:09
We all want something different and we want we have this

00:54:12
expectation that we want to make things better on the on the

00:54:16
planet for everybody. And I think your message is so

00:54:20
clear that that's what your intent was.

00:54:22
And it's so it's really just genuine the way it comes across

00:54:25
when I looked at the lyrics and I was, you know, I listened to

00:54:28
it half a dozen times your song before I ever contacted you

00:54:31
again. You were blowing up on social

00:54:33
media. But that's not why I contacted

00:54:34
you. I, I reached out to you guys

00:54:36
because I thought the message was so important because one of

00:54:39
our lines on our show, one of our tags lies is educating and

00:54:41
unifying the country one episode at a time.

00:54:44
That's what we do on our radio show.

00:54:45
It's about educating people so that there's unity versus

00:54:48
division and chaos because the governments in general, division

00:54:52
and chaos is a tool they've used for a long time.

00:54:55
I think when you have a unifying message like yours, and I think

00:54:58
as your music continues down that path, I think people are

00:55:01
just going to eat it up. So it doesn't surprise me at all

00:55:04
that your downloads are so successful and that you're at

00:55:07
the top of the charts because I think it's deserved because you

00:55:10
identified the necessity for exposing the truth in a way that

00:55:14
I think is just really genuine. So I don't know how you feel

00:55:17
about that, but I don't know what that what other people and

00:55:19
how are they the people on the positive side?

00:55:21
How are they reacting to your message?

00:55:24
You feel like it's a unifying and galvanizing moment.

00:55:27
Yeah, I saw, I saw some comments, a comment last night.

00:55:31
So I try to read through comments, you know, there's so

00:55:32
many and I'm super thankful for that.

00:55:35
And but one of them was said when I hear this song calm again

00:55:39
and I feel less lonely and less alone and that's so beautiful.

00:55:43
And it's like, me too, man. Like that's why I wrote this

00:55:47
song. Like it's just all the stuff

00:55:48
that we've been dragged through. And that's when you said unity.

00:55:53
That's exactly what the song is about.

00:55:55
Unity is strength. And I and I want division and,

00:55:57
and we need to call out the corruption and we want the truth

00:56:01
and we want healing and we want light.

00:56:02
We're sick of the crap that we've been drawn through.

00:56:04
And becoming aware and self aware is the first step to

00:56:09
healing. You know, we have to recognize

00:56:11
what's going on and then we can start that process.

00:56:14
And art is a beautiful medium to do that.

00:56:16
It allows people to be united through something that's

00:56:19
beautiful, like music, to share opinions and not to judge each

00:56:22
other. This song is not is not a

00:56:24
judgement. It's just a conversation.

00:56:26
It's just hovering over the world in a spaceship being like,

00:56:28
whoa, whoa, whoa, what is this chaos?

00:56:30
What's going on? And let's talk about it.

00:56:32
You know, that's what it is. It's it's it's being

00:56:35
politicized, this song by others.

00:56:36
But, but it's not a political song, you know, It's actually a

00:56:39
conversation from a human to a human.

00:56:42
You know, it's the people that beautiful measures.

00:56:43
The people that take offense to that song are the people that

00:56:46
are doing the stuff that's written in that song and they're

00:56:49
and they're to me, their, their fear of being exposed more.

00:56:53
Otherwise, you're right, it's a music, it's lyrics.

00:56:55
It should be loved by all, whether they like it or not.

00:57:00
Just like, you know, the comedians, they tried cancelling

00:57:02
a lot of comedians out. No, they're come, they're making

00:57:04
a comeback. They're just saying what they

00:57:05
want now without worrying about the whole culture and cancel

00:57:08
culture. That's the way it's supposed to

00:57:10
be. But yeah.

00:57:12
I mean, there's no doubt that that kind of unifying message is

00:57:15
becoming more popular. Of course, we were getting

00:57:18
restricted. It's still difficult to get out

00:57:21
that message, you know, through music, you're getting it.

00:57:23
But for, like I said, YouTube suspended us.

00:57:26
We got suspended on X. And then when you know, you

00:57:30
know, Elon Musk bought X. It helped us a lot because it

00:57:33
gave us back our accounts. George still didn't get his

00:57:35
original account back. We got our primary account,

00:57:37
which was the big, big show. We got that back in my personal

00:57:39
account back. Just a bad boy, I guess.

00:57:41
I don't. Know.

00:57:41
Yeah, they don't. They don't like you, George.

00:57:43
I don't. Like them, but don't matter,

00:57:46
Yeah. We've you developed thickness,

00:57:48
thick skin over time. So let me ask you this.

00:57:50
I'm sure everybody's wondering what's next for IMA?

00:57:53
Is it there's going to be a full blown album are you working on?

00:57:56
How many songs have you written? Where do we stand on that?

00:57:58
Because I'm, I'm sure your, your, your fans want to know

00:58:01
what's what's next for you. Yeah, I've been working on music

00:58:06
for ages now with my music producer Danny.

00:58:10
You know, with all the stuff going on with the label and the

00:58:12
manager and and then obviously COVID and not being able to go

00:58:17
anywhere and do anything and had to work as a doctor again.

00:58:19
All the stuff has just inspired this, this new birth of music

00:58:23
for me. And there's a ton of songs we

00:58:25
have. So yeah, there's, there's

00:58:28
definitely new stuff coming. I don't know when, but it's

00:58:31
going to be this year and it's going to be hopefully soon.

00:58:34
And I, I mean, I prefer the other songs more than calm

00:58:36
again. And personally, I think they're

00:58:38
great. And one thing I just want to

00:58:41
keep in my art is just authenticity and just heartfelt

00:58:44
stuffs. It's not always going to be a

00:58:45
social commentary. And you know, maybe, maybe there

00:58:48
will be songs about heartbreaking pain and suffering

00:58:50
and, and other aspects of the human experience, but it's, but

00:58:53
it's stuff that's true to me and it's going to continue in that

00:58:56
era of truth. Well, since you're just got you

00:59:00
and your, was it your producer, you said?

00:59:02
Yeah. And you guys need some help

00:59:05
stitching videos together, stuff for production.

00:59:07
Lance and I, we're here to help. Yeah.

00:59:09
And George, if you want a closed caption, if you want any

00:59:12
translation and closed caption, we've got AI to do all that.

00:59:15
George has gotten incredible at translating.

00:59:18
So if you want to get that so that maybe the lyrics are at

00:59:20
least translated into into a 10 or 25 languages, George could

00:59:24
help you with that. If you want any assistance with

00:59:25
that, that would. Be great.

00:59:27
We're doubling down on that because our plan is to go global

00:59:31
and we have been going global. We take our even this episode

00:59:34
you're going to be up on 50 podcast platforms.

00:59:36
We strip the audio off and then we'll do an edited version on a

00:59:39
rumble. It gets a smaller amount of

00:59:41
views, but we do it in 25 languages.

00:59:44
Your episode today. So yeah, so we I.

00:59:47
Know Danny's smiling right now. It's like wow I got some help.

00:59:51
Yeah, so if you need any help, we'd be glad to give you those

00:59:54
resources. Of course, as you come out with

00:59:56
any new albums, reach out to us. We'd love to have you back on.

00:59:59
But before we wrap things up, just let's plug.

01:00:02
Let's go for the shameless plug. Let's talk about the download.

01:00:05
Let's talk about your website. Let's talk about your social

01:00:07
media. Let's put it all out there on

01:00:09
the line. Aya.

01:00:10
Thank you. Appreciate it, guys.

01:00:13
Yeah, I'm on Instagram. I am Mayhem Tiktok, I've got to

01:00:19
remember this Imahem YouTube, obviously it's there.

01:00:22
I just joined, just started posting on X probably like a

01:00:25
couple weeks ago and it's like it's done.

01:00:28
The track's circulating there, which is cool.

01:00:30
And website isima.com. But yeah, like if there's a

01:00:34
follow on Spotify and Apple and just saving the track to your

01:00:38
playlists, watching the YouTube video and supporting iTunes,

01:00:41
like all that stuff is so helpful for an independent

01:00:44
artist. And that's what's going to help

01:00:45
this track. We heard it doesn't look like

01:00:47
it's going to be the industry. It looks like it's it's going to

01:00:49
be the people who are going to get this song out there.

01:00:51
And I really hope that it keeps doing that.

01:00:54
I got your website up here, anything you want to point to

01:00:56
them on here? Yeah, oh, there you can see the

01:00:59
social links, Instagram's there, Apple Music, YouTube, the whole

01:01:03
work, Spotify, whatever you guys listen to music on.

01:01:06
Yeah, but Spotify is really helpful.

01:01:08
So is Apple Music. And if you want to connect on

01:01:10
socials? I just connected with you on

01:01:13
TikTok IG just now. Twitter X was yesterday.

01:01:17
Awesome. And we followed you back from

01:01:20
all our accounts, the Lance Miliaco and the Big Mig show and

01:01:23
of course G Ballantine on X. And well, if you, if you end up

01:01:25
on any other platforms, let us know.

01:01:27
We have a decent presence. I think we've got about, I don't

01:01:29
know, 1.2 or 1.3 million followers across platforms now.

01:01:33
So we're growing rapidly. We're pretty happy about it.

01:01:36
You know, we really appreciate it.

01:01:37
Number one, I want to thank you for joining us all the way from

01:01:39
Australia and down Under. We really appreciate the time

01:01:41
you took today. We want to help you in any way

01:01:43
we can. So we're going to try to take

01:01:45
short form content, promote it. We'll put the link for the

01:01:48
download on Spotify. If you can ever get up early

01:01:51
enough, we've got a nationally syndicated radio show that goes

01:01:53
out to three to 9 million listeners.

01:01:55
Happy to have you on that. But it's an early, it's an early

01:01:58
rise. I think we were talking to your

01:01:59
management and we thought, wow, that is pretty early because

01:02:03
it's from 8:00 to it's like 8:00 to 10:00 AM, you know, mountain

01:02:07
standard. But if you decide you want to,

01:02:08
you want to pull that trigger and you want to come on, let us

01:02:10
know and we'll make sure there's a slot for you over there.

01:02:12
At least come on for 1/2 an hour, an hour to do the same

01:02:15
thing we did here. It's a different audience.

01:02:17
It might help you get some more downloads because we love what

01:02:19
you did and our audience loves what you did.

01:02:22
And I think X loves what you did the way that people have

01:02:25
embraced you over there. I think you, you have a bright

01:02:27
future and I for me, I hope you stay independent.

01:02:30
I don't want to see the record labels control a talent like

01:02:33
you. And, you know, sometimes in the

01:02:34
record world, at least here in the United States, there are

01:02:37
some nefarious operators that seem like they have good intent,

01:02:40
but down the road they don't. So I hope that you continue to

01:02:43
do what you're doing because I think you're a bright star and

01:02:45
you have a bright future and we really appreciate everything

01:02:48
you're doing. So God, country family, you are

01:02:51
doing it all and you're doing it in the right way in my opinion.

01:02:53
George, what else you got for I on the way out?

01:02:56
I yeah, I'll do short form content.

01:02:58
I'll put it up on all the social media.

01:02:59
I'll tag you in them so you see it.

01:03:02
Tell Mama May. Hello, good job.

01:03:05
Yeah, good job. And I'm going to connect you.

01:03:09
I'm going to send over my contact information for my

01:03:11
daughter. They're moving to New York right

01:03:12
now. She's moving in with her

01:03:13
boyfriend. But I think you guys are kindred

01:03:15
spirit. She'll get to know her.

01:03:17
She, like I said, she travels all over the world doing her her

01:03:21
work on that I've got. To come back to New York this

01:03:23
year. It's my favorite city, Man Pop,

01:03:25
for my little rainforest hippie village.

01:03:26
Yeah. Let me know when you come to New

01:03:27
York. Yeah, absolutely.

01:03:30
Likewise in Sydney, you. Better you better tell your

01:03:32
daughter. Free ink bro.

01:03:34
Yeah, yeah, of course. I mean, of course, if you're up

01:03:37
for what she does, she does a new thing.

01:03:39
You know, I grew up with, I think, gangster tattoos because

01:03:41
I grew up in Fordham Rd. in the Bronx.

01:03:43
There ain't got no tattoos. My no, I have no art.

01:03:46
But you know, that wasn't really decision I got.

01:03:47
A few I. Got a few.

01:03:50
I got more than both of you. Yeah, you probably do.

01:03:53
I I did it for different reasons years ago.

01:03:55
I didn't want any identifying marks because I was in a

01:03:57
different life back then. So everything's different now.

01:04:01
The world changes, you know, we also.

01:04:02
Identify a marked view. Come on.

01:04:04
Yeah. Yeah, that giant.

01:04:05
I do have a giant head. I can't deny that.

01:04:07
All right, listen, we appreciate the big Mcmuffy and subscribers.

01:04:10
We appreciate you. And get over to Spotify,

01:04:13
download Carmageddon, like it, share it, comment.

01:04:16
Help her elevate this song to the next level, please, and

01:04:20
share it with your friends and family members.

01:04:22
Get out there and push it. You guys, You guys have more

01:04:24
power than you realize. And especially in a situation

01:04:27
like this where somebody is doing the work that needs to be

01:04:30
done. She's taking some of the shots

01:04:32
to come with that. We've seen it ourselves.

01:04:35
Help her YouTube views. Let's get it done.

01:04:37
George. Last words on the way out the

01:04:39
door. But we forgot, so I are are

01:04:43
people in the chat or mods and everybody, they coin themselves

01:04:45
the big, big mafia. So now you're a family now as

01:04:49
you can't leave. So.

01:04:51
You're now you're a friend of ours.

01:04:53
Yeah. Thank you.

01:04:54
So much. No, but seriously, thank you.

01:04:56
Oh, yeah. Thank you.

01:04:57
Let's go. Let's go.

01:04:58
Thank you for your support. It means the world.

01:05:00
Stay tuned. Don't go nowhere.

01:05:01
All right, Well, you guys have a blessed weekend.

01:05:03
Thank you all. We'll see you Monday if we.

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They would run up to the bamboo fence and they would be shooting

01:07:15
between the bamboo at the buildings, you know, just

01:07:17
shooting inside. The Wanted man is Joseph Kony,

01:07:21
charged with abducting huge numbers of children, forcing

01:07:25
them to kill and mutilate innocent victims.

01:07:28
Somebody had to pay the price, Sam.

01:07:30
Did that Sam Childers never stopped because the bad things

01:07:34
never stop. There is only one Sam Childer.

01:07:37
There is no one else like him in the world.

01:07:40
Then I said to him. I said.

01:07:41
Would you go? Now to get Kony in the Congo, he

01:07:45
says. Without a doubt in a second.

01:07:46
Now it's the DRC. Tell us what's happening to

01:07:49
children in the DRC. You have ISIS there, you have

01:07:52
Islamic State and you have ADF. Hey, Sandy.

01:07:55
Joseph Kony's still alive. He's in the Congo.

01:07:57
And now God has me in the Congo, you know, So hopefully we'll

01:08:01
meet up one day. But maybe I can lead him to the

01:08:06
Lord or send him there. One or the other, huh?