My cousin who’s from FTB told me about Kado, a story about them being at a gas station where he prevented his homies from getting down on him due to a situation where Kado did something solid for him when they were in the county jail or YA
I like the way he gave it up with no extras, and had a humble approach to critical questions and incidents, no glorification, just a sober look back on the past, and you can easily see all this happened through the lens of teenage life, no modern twist on historic context of 40 plus years ago, it provides great clarity when you can separate the two
When I first moved over there, all the names I heard of was Jesse James, Redd, Wood Stone, Green Eyes, Chuck and Cotton Ball. All these guys and more were real dudes. There were to brothers that were no joke Tracey T and Eddie Boy from Marvin's. Real ones. Great interview to hear the history from a real one
We moved to Garth in ‘78. I was 8 years old. First writing I saw in the alley was 107. Then PBG took over. I looked up to PBG’s. My friends older brothers were PBG. Saw a lot at young age in that hood. Running around from Cadillac to Shenandoah. I recall two PBG’s on pcp fighting until the ambulance showed up. Crazy times. My intro to LA gang culture started in that hood. Pops moved us out in ‘81 to get away from the criminal activity. Glad I stumbled on this video. It is historical and should be documented. God bless…
Hell yeah.. he even broke down the pop locking battles.. this generation today don’t know about that… before fist were thrown we took it to the dance floor…
I met Jesse James in the Harlem Avenues when I was a teenager. Him & little Cadillac from PBG will always be looked at as members of Harlem because of how much time they spent in the 30s.
Mane I was in Walmart the other day in the bike section and heard the Kev Mac intro song coming all the way from the electronic section. I broke camp over that way just to see who it was so I could politic with em. It was a damn white boy!! Needless to say I made a new friend just because of Kev Mac that day. The nigga Mac bridging the gap baby!!💯✊🏾
Shout out from the N.O... it’s crazy how a lot of y’all OG’s has roots from New Orleans... Shit gudda down hea but I see it’s gudda out there in L.A... keep doing your thang Kev Mac you definitely have me tuned in from the N.O
True history we got our suspenders style and apple hat style from Rerun . Rerurn was allowed to attend our Boss Tom cross record hops years before his TV show.
We moved to that area in 1971. The apartment building, PBG hood, “LaCienega Heights” section he’s talking about was primarily Jewish at that time and bordered by Robertson Bl., LaCienega Bl., Cadillac Av., and Sawyer St. The buildings were mostly constructed in the 50s and 60s and most had courtyards with swimming pools and unlocked glass entryways. In the summers of ‘74 and ‘75, my friend and I would get up at the crack of dawn and go from pool to pool until we got kicked out by the apartment managers. “White flight” happened quickly. It was a fun-as-hell, safe neighborhood with a ton of kids in the ‘70s.
West LA is hip hop. MidCity too. Crips and tagbangers. I painted and occasionally kept that thang. Shopped for records and hopped fences. 90s shit.. The OGs on this side are hip hop and gangster to the fullest. Shoutout to Bedford/Cadillac-Bedrocc!
I remember seeing big Bedrock tags on the ground right behind pasture or on the corner of Airdrome and Fairfax back in the 80s.. I used to think Bedrock was a dope ass name, it reminded me of the Flintstones.
@@konstantgrowth7551 Real shit cause Bedford was always a famous block. Then the youngsters on Bedford started BedRoccGangsta for a cool minute, named after the street and era you speaking of.
@@OldeSoul Here's another lil piece of history that wasn't spoken on in this interview. For one thing, I grew up on Bedford and Shenandoah Street back in the 1980's and 1990s. I knew the Bedroc Gangsters when they were little kids living on Bedford street, but back in the 1980's, there was a lil dance crew called the Bedrock Dancers and my cousin was part of that group. Yeah, Bedford street was a very popular street in the La-Cienega Heights back then partly because my brother's dad's family were very popular on that street. Good times.
@@WLAs_Finest3x that’s dope history! Fast forward to mid 2000 my lil cuzns and they homies brought back BedRoccGangstaCrip. And they were holding their own for a cool minute but eventually the native GCs got all that back. Shenandoah corner store was active with the family feuding.. Only one part though bro I think Jesse James gon put down some great history.
One of the main things that allowed lower class black ppl move to middle class were those factory jobs. You could get a good paying job and a house without a high school degree.
Man, I don't know how you guys pulled that off because the video games were behind a separate counter with a door in the northeast corner of the store. Whenever you wanted to buy a game, you had to take the yellow ticket to the register, pay for the game, then take the ticket and your receipt to that counter and an employee would go over there and get your purchase. Unless you hit the game consoles and games that were in the display case, yeah, that's a different story, and when the Rodney King riots happened, shit, Toys R Us got cleaned out! Lmao. I used to work at that Toys R Us back for the Christmas holiday 1993.
@@WLAs_Finest3x back then before all that ticket bs, they had the games in the aisles. Maybe bcuz of us, they started putting the video games behind the counter, lol...
Back in Detroit in the late 70’s/early 80’s the Playboy brand was considered to be gangster and cool. It wasn’t uncommon to see groups of kids walking down the street wearing Playboy t-shirts.
Thats true! as kids if we could get away with wearing a playboy shirt we would! One of my partners had a playboy 1988 shirt and the playa came out when he wore it!
There’s a neighborhood called Oakcliff in Oklahoma City not to be mistaken for the Oakcliff in Dallas Tx that’s all Playboy Gangster Crips 44th Blocc and 40 ounce is the clique
Every hood had dancers it was parallel, as teens we popped and cripped they went hand and hand, khaki Suits w/ old English letters on the back went both ways
Even though it played out in L.A. there were 2 groups The Mods (represented by the image of Prince) & The Rude Boys (represented by the image of Rick James). They would meet have a dance off then a fight.
KMV I see a few Interview from OG Jesse James. Homie going to have some good stuff to say about his Life Style... You can just tell he going All Inn and he going to open up. His process on Interviewing him you not going to have to say much... He very enthused and up beat... Looking forward to this one to be a Classic
La cinenga heights / Pico area in the 60's - 70's was where the black people with good jobs or rising economic status moved from south central/ watts/ Compton etc
@@California-king Rollin 20 Outlaws for being such a small hood that spread alotta places and 52 Hoover for arguably being one of tha deepest crip sets in USA.
Professor Melly Mel and Baby Smacc got a Cold way of warming you up in you're own Conversation to make you feel Comfortable. Then they get all the History from you!!! That's a hellva Nac
Boy that nigga couldn't wait to get on Kev mac and drop some 💎 you don't gotta ask him nothing he just wanna talk.another banger for the culture Kev mac.....
When I came around from play boy gangsta it was pippin I loved west la it's always something to do big Jesse is my big homie they made the set I continued to follow form I'm Big Termite
This was really dope it makes me wonder if this was during the era that they say the Hoovers were the Groovers and pop lockers back in the day? And to some degree remembering some of those dance crew names from back in the days but yet I was having no clues to the origins or how all that really played out.. loving the history
From his interviews cutes was a peace maker and a teacher just by his he way he answered the question about going to war with the Mexicans in that rocchead monster sit down said it all
The good old days. We used to walk up there all the time. My brother took Judo there. We used to go to the little library across the street before they tore it down and built the new one or get ice cream from 31 Flavors.
This was an interesting interview for sure! Just how how the PBGC came about & how the name was taken from a dance crew during the mid-late 70's into the early 1980's! One question I did have is, what was the influence to add Gangster Crip to the end of the name? Was it due to Crips being the popular at the time for young brothas in the streets?
@@donaldmcclurejr.494 Jesse James was influenced by the Harlem Crips, cause that where he grew up...and the older Westside Crips that lived in West L.A.
Much love to all the bunny Hopper's!, Shouts to og green eyes, master d, big man( Cory), my lil homie veno, and especially my guy big tut!, Y'all in rabbit paradise!, Stay hopping 3 times!!!
OG HOMIE King TUT..Dont 4get O.C BOYS *IMPERIAL PUPPETS: Aka S.A Watergates TICN SMITH SIR WAVE SQUIRT FELIX ROCWAVE(ME)! PUPnTaco FLACO 2SMOOVE. BOOGALOO SHRIMP SHABADOO & HANDYMAN. DYNAMITE KIDS OUTTA CARSON. Even ESE FROSTY THE RAPPER USE TO POP.
hey kev i see u cover the history about how the 83/60 war. but from the look of things the hoovers and neighborhood car seem to have a bigger issue. do u think u will ever elaborate on how that beef started?
I Like Dude Personality, He Funny As Hell. Seem Like He'll Keep You Laughing LBS. Shout Out To Jesse James. And Who Made That Song @ The End? That Joint Hard 🔊💪🏾.
Another BANGER. While we're talkin, get the homey Dredd Scott on here to touch on this and some good L.A. hip hop. Real heads know who I'm talkin bout. Oh ya, when the F***CK they start callin it La Cienega Heights over there?? Anyway, R.I.P. to that Music Plus, Montgomery Ward, Circuit City AND that Toys R Us that used to be over there and the rest of the West L.A. LEGENDS that didn't make it to 50. Keep linin em up Kev 💪😎
I love hearing these stories of history and culture. I REALLY wish OUR culture stayed legit and BRANDED in to the corporations back then and we could really have a hold on things. Just too many BIG EGOS would fight over names and tags. We could be wealthy off the tribes and Branches. Just think it could be a real fraternity
"When I was gangbanging if you wasn't from my hood you don't come to come my hood , "If you come to my hood and you don't know anybody in my hood then you die" Jesse James
All facts. I grew up near their hood and I went to Pasteur Jr high around the same time the OG was there. One of my best friends was former Laker Cedric Ceballos and he lived in the heart of PBG hood and I went to his house one time and had to keep my head on a swivel walking home by myself. They didn't play.
Everyone hit the like button now now
☝🏽🗣FACTS
Socked the SHIIIT outta that button too
Stayed on c street in 84...yellow house on the corner.....i remember lerry loc and a dude name butter.....
Before I even watch it! Always!!💯✊🏾
Are you the babyboy he's talking about
He mention my dad, “KADO” from Harlem 30’s. He passed away in 1987. This the first time I heard anyone other then my family mention him. 😔
Was he first generation?
SALUTE TO KADO
My cousin who’s from FTB told me about Kado, a story about them being at a gas station where he prevented his homies from getting down on him due to a situation where Kado did something solid for him when they were in the county jail or YA
@@Saluteorshoot2 facts.
Is this the same KADO that was freinds with Tupac and is in “ how long will they mourn me” when Tupac said “why they take my nigga Big KADO
"I started lifting weights and was on swole, they started calling me Bigg Mizz"
- Bigg Mizz
That’s a classic quote
Big Mizz Said “You Know Baby Doughnut 🍩 Right” ?
@@Kiva-LPP 😂😂😂
Or when he’s says “yeah” all animated
@@Kiva-LPP Big Mizz needs his own podcast🔥
@@larose6551 You ain’t Lying 💪🏾
I respect him for standing up for his history. Allot of Gangsters dance, pop-lock, break dance etc. Shit look at Booya -Tribe etc.
Bro this my dad right now he Jessie James Gibbs and I’m Joshua James Gibbs real pbgs
One of the most underrated interviews on KMV in my opinion. A lot of good WLA history and a humble dude with no extras!
Dude was genuine as hell, shout out to him
Salute
I like the way he gave it up with no extras, and had a humble approach to critical questions and incidents, no glorification, just a sober look back on the past, and you can easily see all this happened through the lens of teenage life, no modern twist on historic context of 40 plus years ago, it provides great clarity when you can separate the two
Well spoken brother
When I first moved over there, all the names I heard of was Jesse James, Redd, Wood Stone, Green Eyes, Chuck and Cotton Ball. All these guys and more were real dudes. There were to brothers that were no joke Tracey T and Eddie Boy from Marvin's. Real ones. Great interview to hear the history from a real one
We moved to Garth in ‘78. I was 8 years old. First writing I saw in the alley was 107. Then PBG took over. I looked up to PBG’s. My friends older brothers were PBG. Saw a lot at young age in that hood. Running around from Cadillac to Shenandoah. I recall two PBG’s on pcp fighting until the ambulance showed up. Crazy times. My intro to LA gang culture started in that hood. Pops moved us out in ‘81 to get away from the criminal activity. Glad I stumbled on this video. It is historical and should be documented. God bless…
Judging by part 1. This bout to be a classic series!
U!...ain’t neva lied.
Hell yeah.. he even broke down the pop locking battles.. this generation today don’t know about that… before fist were thrown we took it to the dance floor…
I met Jesse James in the Harlem Avenues when I was a teenager. Him & little Cadillac from PBG will always be looked at as members of Harlem because of how much time they spent in the 30s.
That
True
Peace
Reggie
Dog
And
Mene
Gene
AVENUE
GODFATHRRS
Reggie
Dog
And
Mean
Gene
Avenue
Godfathers
Mane I was in Walmart the other day in the bike section and heard the Kev Mac intro song coming all the way from the electronic section. I broke camp over that way just to see who it was so I could politic with em. It was a damn white boy!!
Needless to say I made a new friend just because of Kev Mac that day. The nigga Mac bridging the gap baby!!💯✊🏾
🎶 Kev Mac Videeeo, you knooow, this is fo shooooo
@@1stone379 🤦🏽♂️... NOW, I’ma be singin dis shyt ALL DAY!!!
@@joealmeida4603 facts
😂😂😂 A white boy...
Almost everybody on that “wall” is either PBIP or doing all day. A few are my loved ones. Excellent history Kev by way of the G.
Shout out from the N.O... it’s crazy how a lot of y’all OG’s has roots from New Orleans... Shit gudda down hea but I see it’s gudda out there in L.A... keep doing your thang Kev Mac you definitely have me tuned in from the N.O
True history we got our suspenders style and apple hat style from Rerun . Rerurn was allowed to attend our Boss Tom cross record hops years before his TV show.
We moved to that area in 1971. The apartment building, PBG hood, “LaCienega Heights” section he’s talking about was primarily Jewish at that time and bordered by Robertson Bl., LaCienega Bl., Cadillac Av., and Sawyer St. The buildings were mostly constructed in the 50s and 60s and most had courtyards with swimming pools and unlocked glass entryways. In the summers of ‘74 and ‘75, my friend and I would get up at the crack of dawn and go from pool to pool until we got kicked out by the apartment managers. “White flight” happened quickly. It was a fun-as-hell, safe neighborhood with a ton of kids in the ‘70s.
Just passed thru Cadillac and hit that left on Robertson and passed by Hamilton to catch the 10 like 2 weeks ago. Shit's chaaaaanged around there
OG gave some cold history, this series is gone be a top 5 maybe even top 3!
Salute Kev and S Mac...
The Great Kev Mac history book!!!
West LA is hip hop. MidCity too. Crips and tagbangers. I painted and occasionally kept that thang. Shopped for records and hopped fences. 90s shit.. The OGs on this side are hip hop and gangster to the fullest. Shoutout to Bedford/Cadillac-Bedrocc!
I remember seeing big Bedrock tags on the ground right behind pasture or on the corner of Airdrome and Fairfax back in the 80s.. I used to think Bedrock was a dope ass name, it reminded me of the Flintstones.
@@konstantgrowth7551 Real shit cause Bedford was always a famous block. Then the youngsters on Bedford started BedRoccGangsta for a cool minute, named after the street and era you speaking of.
@@OldeSoul Here's another lil piece of history that wasn't spoken on in this interview. For one thing, I grew up on Bedford and Shenandoah Street back in the 1980's and 1990s. I knew the Bedroc Gangsters when they were little kids living on Bedford street, but back in the 1980's, there was a lil dance crew called the Bedrock Dancers and my cousin was part of that group. Yeah, Bedford street was a very popular street in the La-Cienega Heights back then partly because my brother's dad's family were very popular on that street. Good times.
Real spill
@@WLAs_Finest3x that’s dope history! Fast forward to mid 2000 my lil cuzns and they homies brought back BedRoccGangstaCrip. And they were holding their own for a cool minute but eventually the native GCs got all that back. Shenandoah corner store was active with the family feuding.. Only one part though bro I think Jesse James gon put down some great history.
West LA has given some good interviews so far.
East LA is the grimiest
W3ST L.A M3VIN ......ALL CIDES
@@mrprosperity4897: Unfortunate facts.
One of the main things that allowed lower class black ppl move to middle class were those factory jobs. You could get a good paying job and a house without a high school degree.
PBGC3x Denver, Co. Much Love to the WLA homiez! Worldwide Rabbit Gang!! 🌍🐰3️⃣✖〰️〰️〰️〰️〰️
3x🐰
CO shit. I’m from the bellz and always had love for the rabbs. I’m in Az now the homie sneak out here my guy. Pbgc deep here too
GOOD INTERVIEW WITH JESSE JAMES ON HIS POPLOCCING AND THE HISTORY OF PBGC LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA.
Grew up with Jesse in the Harlems. Went to school with Lil Jesse. Hold ya head comrad!!
They had a playboy gangsta crip set in houston off fondren and main st. In the early ‘90’s
Dont forget to at least hit the like! This man is givin us content you cant find no where!
Watup Kev I seen u had a PBG interview and i was just listening to Big Sad 1900 😄 fr tho
Great content, great history. OG Jesse James voice reminded me of Big Rebo; I'm gonna go watch those interview clips again.
This content so damn good Kev should be at least 1 million subscribers
now this interview here !!! OG Jesse James can tell a story. can't wait for the rest
🗣That was cool, Bess part ,”what was your Lock’n name”😂
The Hood was rough in the 80s we use to call it Beirut!!!!!
I remember going to TOYS R US by his hood as a young teen and stealing Sega games back in the 90s
Man, I don't know how you guys pulled that off because the video games were behind a separate counter with a door in the northeast corner of the store. Whenever you wanted to buy a game, you had to take the yellow ticket to the register, pay for the game, then take the ticket and your receipt to that counter and an employee would go over there and get your purchase. Unless you hit the game consoles and games that were in the display case, yeah, that's a different story, and when the Rodney King riots happened, shit, Toys R Us got cleaned out! Lmao. I used to work at that Toys R Us back for the Christmas holiday 1993.
@@WLAs_Finest3x back then before all that ticket bs, they had the games in the aisles. Maybe bcuz of us, they started putting the video games behind the counter, lol...
We also use to hit Montgomery ward when it use to be next door to Toys r us.. lol
Bloc Crips our neighborhood Crips they're really not gangster Crips
@@Mr-gn7yj I think I remember that. Lol
this interview was dope homie real Poplock history can t water down real gangsta shit
Back in Detroit in the late 70’s/early 80’s the Playboy brand was considered to be gangster and cool. It wasn’t uncommon to see groups of kids walking down the street wearing Playboy t-shirts.
I hate the playboy brand for unknown some reason
PBGs were in Detroit too.
@@JesusIsLordLasVegas They are. They just got swept by the FBI not too long ago. Google: playboy gangster Crip Detroit
@@JesusIsLordLasVegas I don’t think it was the same gang. A lot of gangs in Detroit around that time used the Playboy logo.
Thats true! as kids if we could get away with wearing a playboy shirt we would! One of my partners had a playboy 1988 shirt and the playa came out when he wore it!
There’s a neighborhood called Oakcliff in Oklahoma City not to be mistaken for the Oakcliff in Dallas Tx that’s all Playboy Gangster Crips 44th Blocc and 40 ounce is the clique
Those the homies we all the same
I'm in Dallas and I heard about the PB's in okc
Yup SE 44 del city
Jesse James interview is in my top 5 Kevmac interviews this my 3rd time watching
Every hood had dancers it was parallel, as teens we popped and cripped they went hand and hand, khaki Suits w/ old English letters on the back went both ways
Even though it played out in L.A. there were 2 groups The Mods (represented by the image of Prince) & The Rude Boys (represented by the image of Rick James). They would meet have a dance off then a fight.
Damn thats some hidden LA history
Smac interview game getting better not so aggressive. 😎👊
KMV I see a few Interview from OG Jesse James. Homie going to have some good stuff to say about his Life Style... You can just tell he going All Inn and he going to open up. His process on Interviewing him you not going to have to say much... He very enthused and up beat... Looking forward to this one to be a Classic
Wouldn’t mind hearing how playboy gangster and playboy hustler began. Also how bloodstone villains and bloodstone pirus began too
he has a good series on BSV already.
“It’s called ‘Black dysfunctional-fam’lees!”🤣. Ayo, I’m 4:12 into this- he might be THE 🐐. Thank U Kev Mac✊🏾... I gotta git back to it....
La cinenga heights / Pico area in the 60's - 70's was where the black people with good jobs or rising economic status moved from south central/ watts/ Compton etc
Jesse James PBG Paved the Way
Salute Bro Kev! Great interview and Good history. Salute Bro S Mac!
I use to love that Montgomery wards. I moved into By yo self hood in 83. That shopping center changed a lot now.
That Music Plus over there was where it was at.. 💪
@@1stone379 i bought that whodini album there. You right it was the spot.
This a dope ass interview Big Kev. This is a top three gang I've always wanted to know history on.
Who the other two?
@@California-king Rollin 20 Outlaws for being such a small hood that spread alotta places and 52 Hoover for arguably being one of tha deepest crip sets in USA.
@@DJKaptainKold 52 not deep in LA, they must got numbers out the state
@@peppajack2149 mannnne outta state them niggaz got whole towns full of em.
@@DJKaptainKold OG Madd Ronald (W/S R20z) gives the scoop on that on Alonzos channel.. But it's about this channel right now 😂
Kev.mac is active ✔ 💯
Professor Melly Mel and Baby Smacc got a Cold way of warming you up in you're own Conversation to make you feel Comfortable. Then they get all the History from you!!! That's a hellva Nac
Reminds me of my punk as principal in high school when I started big fights
@@tmclifestyle4238 😂😂😂
Its bout time u hit us with some more content INWHICH is always worth the wait.....
Boy that nigga couldn't wait to get on Kev mac and drop some 💎 you don't gotta ask him nothing he just wanna talk.another banger for the culture Kev mac.....
When I came around from play boy gangsta it was pippin I loved west la it's always something to do big Jesse is my big homie they made the set I continued to follow form I'm Big Termite
Fire content Kev Mac 💙 you always bring the heat. I was waiting for OGGG to pop lock I bet he still got it💯💯✊🏾
Bunny gang!!!!! From west L.A. to OKC!
Good to see the OG back with content
Side bar: RIP Gonzoe. Got hit up in Seattle. 🙏🏿🖤😤
🙏🏽
Kev Mac Do a interview w Eddie Boy from Marvin
This was really dope it makes me wonder if this was during the era that they say the Hoovers were the Groovers and pop lockers back in the day? And to some degree remembering some of those dance crew names from back in the days but yet I was having no clues to the origins or how all that really played out.. loving the history
A little bit after that time period
OG Cutes name was mention as a solid dude by one of reputable. Yet, there are people still say he is nothing but a weight lifter. SMH.
Even Jesus had haters...
From his interviews cutes was a peace maker and a teacher just by his he way he answered the question about going to war with the Mexicans in that rocchead monster sit down said it all
@@1stone379 Jesus not real.
@@vaughnreedjr6592 Ok.... Well even Malcolm X had haters then....
Hoover’s been savage.
Right lol tf was they problem 😂
Why their Most Hated
hellyea. seem like they been on 1 from the start 😂
They were formed to be on bs basically
Say dat deal bro 👉🏾🍊👈🏾🐗
This seems like a fun dude to chill with
He is. him and his Lil bro are real good people.
Jesse James is a hard ass name.
He Said His Popping Name Was "Re-Run" LOL Too Funny. Great Interview!
Salute to Robertson Park. A lot of fun times hoopin up there and spittin to the females that came from Hamilton high school.
It changed now not the same!!!!
The good old days. We used to walk up there all the time. My brother took Judo there. We used to go to the little library across the street before they tore it down and built the new one or get ice cream from 31 Flavors.
This was an interesting interview for sure! Just how how the PBGC came about & how the name was taken from a dance crew during the mid-late 70's into the early 1980's! One question I did have is, what was the influence to add Gangster Crip to the end of the name? Was it due to Crips being the popular at the time for young brothas in the streets?
He said it.
Playboy Dancers + Pop Lock Gangsters = Playboy Gangsters
@@joemosely9383 appreciate it bro. How did the Crip come about in the name though?
@@donaldmcclurejr.494
Jesse James was influenced by the Harlem Crips, cause that where he grew up...and the older Westside Crips that lived in West L.A.
@@joemosely9383 appreciate it bro. Thanks!
No it came from Pop lock GANGSTER 🗝
Much love to all the bunny Hopper's!, Shouts to og green eyes, master d, big man( Cory), my lil homie veno, and especially my guy big tut!, Y'all in rabbit paradise!, Stay hopping 3 times!!!
OG HOMIE King TUT..Dont 4get O.C BOYS *IMPERIAL PUPPETS: Aka S.A Watergates TICN SMITH SIR WAVE SQUIRT FELIX ROCWAVE(ME)! PUPnTaco FLACO 2SMOOVE. BOOGALOO SHRIMP SHABADOO & HANDYMAN. DYNAMITE KIDS OUTTA CARSON. Even ESE FROSTY THE RAPPER USE TO POP.
Yeah Big Tut was a true blue God!!!! Real One.....
“What was yo poplockin’ name?”, that took me out 😆💯
Serious though, brutha got a lot of history to speak on
Shit had me laughing too lol
OK, THAT ANSWER A LOT OF QUESTIONS ABOUT THEM....KP
what's up great part one video this is definitely gonna be a great series im looking forward to watching the rest of it salute peace
Who remember Bobs Big Boy on LaCienega and Sawyer
Lots of history on la brea and venice blvd area 70s/80s/90s 🍻🍻🍻🍻
hey kev i see u cover the history about how the 83/60 war. but from the look of things the hoovers and neighborhood car seem to have a bigger issue. do u think u will ever elaborate on how that beef started?
There’s videos already on how that beef started.
I Like Dude Personality, He Funny As Hell. Seem Like He'll Keep You Laughing LBS.
Shout Out To Jesse James.
And Who Made That Song @ The End? That Joint Hard 🔊💪🏾.
do a video on PBstyle crip 95st or any PBS crip would be good history told.
93 PBH and 106 PBS too
What up P? 5lok3 95PBSC
@@chipdavenport4077 I aint from PBSC my pops is tho Eminem Penuts 95PBSC
@@chipdavenport4077 ..who is 5lok3??
@@acewest6010 ..I'm Lil jumbo from 95th street pbsc ask yo dad about me
I always liked war time ..
Not cuz im attacking people but
Becuz its more unity 💯🔥🏋🏿♂️🏋🏿♂️🏋🏿♂️ #HEAVY !!!
All dynamite interviews keep tht fire comming bro. Good to hear all the real facts from people who wer there. Respect all the way from Scotland
All my homies from PBGs look just like him.lol skinny,light skin.tall.lol
And were no muufuuuuqin joke 😂
True.
“That nigga stole my part so I stole his name” 😂😂😂😂
Another BANGER. While we're talkin, get the homey Dredd Scott on here to touch on this and some good L.A. hip hop. Real heads know who I'm talkin bout. Oh ya, when the F***CK they start callin it La Cienega Heights over there?? Anyway, R.I.P. to that Music Plus, Montgomery Ward, Circuit City AND that Toys R Us that used to be over there and the rest of the West L.A. LEGENDS that didn't make it to 50. Keep linin em up Kev 💪😎
BOBS BIG BOYS STILL THERE THOUGH ?
@@DEPSTEPS Don't think so. A lot of shits not there except Kaiser
@@1stone379 and that baby store with the Stork on it !
@@DEPSTEPS 😂😂😂
@@DEPSTEPS Yep the baby store. Got my first jacket for school there. Bob's Big boy been gone since the early 90s, maybe mid 90s
Texas always Tapping In..Let's get it KMV
You already know..Austin Texas in the building
Triple D Webb Chapel Rollin 60 Tappin In
H-Town
Keep Em Comin Bigg Homie Kev Mac Much Owe Love All The Way From Dallas Tx Homie
Just getting juicy.. cut. Me and the editor going to run that fade 😂
Used to paint graffiti on cadillac and venice at the river, good times
Alot of Shorelines used to call them The Pooh Butt Gangsta Crops back in the '80's
Damus n Locs - history is amazing kevmac is the real
Km team and Og great interview. Was the brother in the made in america doc?
Yes he was
🐇🐇🐇 PbgC 3X 🥕🥕🥕 Playboy or Play dead we All over the Country
Tapping in with the homie kevmac man hit that like button for my LOC
I love hearing these stories of history and culture. I REALLY wish OUR culture stayed legit and BRANDED in to the corporations back then and we could really have a hold on things. Just too many BIG EGOS would fight over names and tags. We could be wealthy off the tribes and Branches. Just think it could be a real fraternity
Get my bro views up he should be having millions of views all these subs come on mac heads and maniacs 👍🏻
It's so funny listening to dude talk about my old neighbor hood
That intro was 🔥🔥🔥
That intro is fire 🔥🔥🔥Cuz
Great interview.
Did he say "still bill at 20:38? I wonder if that is the same guy that Cutes mentioned in his interview?
Yes
Keep it coming Kev Mac
"When I was gangbanging if you wasn't from my hood you don't come to come my hood , "If you come to my hood and you don't know anybody in my hood then you die" Jesse James
All facts. I grew up near their hood and I went to Pasteur Jr high around the same time the OG was there. One of my best friends was former Laker Cedric Ceballos and he lived in the heart of PBG hood and I went to his house one time and had to keep my head on a swivel walking home by myself. They didn't play.
He seem like a good dude
Keep it Gangsta!! #FITZGERALDJR
I lived on Sherborne and Guthrie and worked at a refinishing shop on la ciénaga and Cadillac
Rabbit Gang