What up, my name is Jell-O-Wolf, I'm here in Boston at the Karma Loop office, or looks
like Office2B, and I'm here today to tell y'all about Radioactive, so hit me!
The Cypher this year, when Marshall dropped my name in his verse, no I didn't expect it,
we didn't hear anybody's verse, like no one heard each other's verse, we just went in there,
when the beat dropped and the camera turned on, everybody just went in, so everybody heard each
other's verse for the first time right there, and I was a huge surprise and an honor, you know,
they put me in his verse like that. I chose the name Radioactive for this album, well the name
came first, I was doing a record with Big Boy called Ain't No DJ, the first concept for that
record was to something about bombs or a nuclear bomb, and the term, you know, the word, the phrase
came up Radioactive, the words Radioactive just stuck, and I thought then that it would be an
incredible name for a project, so I kind of just started building concept around the word,
I do that a lot, I came up with Trump music before Trump music was created, I had the title,
and I started just building around that, and what Radioactive turned into is the fallout to my
life story, you know, the after effects of what I've been through so far, all of my inspirations
brought together, and then also to be active on Radio, it's my first real shot at having records,
you know, crossover into the mainstream. Marshall became, you know, even more involved when I turned
in my album, he didn't know that I had even started an album, and I saw him in LA, I just told him,
I was like, I did an album, and next day we went and listened to it in the studio, and it just really
got the wheels turning, you know, we had a lot of great records, we had a few potential big singles
already recorded, and he just got really excited, you know, and it's the perfect timing, and who
better than, you know, Marshall to back a project. There's one question I wish people would stop asking
me, how'd you get the name, the other full word that come from, I've answered that about a million
times, how many tattoos do I have, it's really corny, I don't know, I don't count my tattoos, I mean,
regardless, I'm gonna answer them anyway, but I am sick of hearing those questions, like I feel like
some people, you know, the art of the interviewer has kind of been lost, and there's a lot of baby
blogs, and baby bloggers out there, and Fisher Price, my first interview people that, you know, if you
just do a little research, you know, not only do you make the artist feel better about being there,
you're gonna pull more out of the artist if you could just show a little respect by knowing a little
bit about the artist before you interview them, and all you got to do is go online and read just a
tiny bit, you know, so put up this Jell-O-Wolf, you're watching Karma Loop TV, reclaim your TV, holler.
