From Homelessness to Streetball Legend: Chris White on The Digital Social Hour #32
In this riveting conversation, Chris shares his journey in balancing his passion for music, entrepreneurship, and businesses. We dive into the essential life skills that schools have failed to teach, as Chris recounts his own personal experiences with unpaid taxes and overcoming obstacles. But Chris's story doesn't end there!
Discover Chris's perspectives on the uniqueness of New York, living out your dreams, and how he gained traction for his YouTube channel through unapologetically authentic content. We also reflect on the world of streetball, emotional control and Chris's ambitious upcoming plans for creators and streetballers alike.
Listen to this episode now as we delve into the intense world of streetball, viral one-on-one match-ups, and Chris's ability to find solutions when facing adversity. Don't let this exhilarating conversation pass you by!
So what are you waiting for? Hit play and join us on this exciting journey with Chris White. Trust us, you won't regret it! Let's go!
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Transcript
All right, welcome back to the Digital Social Hour.
I'm your host, Sean Kelly, along with my co-host, Wayne Lewis.
What up, what up?
And our guest today, Chris White.
What's good, baby?
Man, how we doing?
You dripped out.
Yeah, I'm all
here on some flyboy shit.
I see you.
Oh, man.
I mean, I figure, you know, we're going to pop outside.
We might as well.
What you been up to, man?
Grinding.
I'm doing a lot, man.
I'm doing a lot.
I'm shuffling
a crazy life, man, that I never really imagined I'd be living.
I'll tell you that much.
I feel that.
Between
entrepreneurial stuff, YouTube.
One of my passions is music.
You still doing the music?
I mean, always.
Okay.
But it's like the way music works, if you ask me, you can't just
do it.
You got to do it and do it properly.
Right, right, exactly.
You're going to be like everybody else, a SoundCloud.
You know, be on SoundCloud, being a SoundCloud rapper.
You know what I'm saying?
SoundCloud founded a lot of rappers that we have today.
Yes.
Yes, indeed.
That's it.
No shade to the SoundCloud rappers.
But there's...
But Cloud founded them.
There's kind of like a dip, though,
and how it's kind of oversaturated now, though.
Yeah.
On SoundCloud.
That's what I mean.
So, like, no disrespect to anybody who came up like that.
Yeah.
I saw one of your music videos and all the comments were like, yo, he can actually rap.
People were surprised.
They'd be shook.
They'd be like, what?
Like, what?
Wait, hold on.
First, there are babies on the court.
Now you got bars.
Right, right.
You know, so if they're not hating, then they understand.
Yeah.
Well, a lot of hoopers try to get into rap, but it doesn't really work out.
Right.
Because most of them just think it's, I mean, most people think, a lot of people think they can rap, but rapping is actually an art.
I feel like music is an evolution, and most people who are hoopers don't, can't, can't take the time
either don't or can't take the time to to put the the pain in you know the 10 000 hours to become better an actual artist and your musician right you know what i mean like because it's all an evolution right when you start your ass oh can i curse on this yeah okay cool uh
it's gotta make sure
i don't know it looks pretty professional up here i want to be that guy yeah good brother uh but yeah you know you start your ass and then by the time you put in 10 000 hours you're fired yeah absolutely but but that applies with everything you do right literally basketball too so it should be easy for them because the same work ethic goes into that we're going to putting it in the studio but that's the thing is i imagine you know think about how many basketball players and how much time they have to actually do that yeah because they're full-time ball yeah it's like impossible
so what percentage of your time is basketball and music well actually basketball is taken and youtube has taken a lot of it because
I have businesses too, so I have a credit repair agency.
Okay.
That's good money.
Yeah, I got a car rental situation going on okay and then uh i'm opening up a semi-truck uh business oh nice wow uh yeah with some pretty good um and you rented all that out in florida right yeah well florida and then new york so some of the credit repair agency is out of new york yeah that's good money man i used to partner with one and send them clients and it's it's solid money yeah i mean yeah it's it's it's pretty it it's like wildfire though because once you have one person you know and then the credit gets cleaned and then everybody else is like yo yeah we actually
got one credit repair company during a pandemic.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah,
cure credit.
So, yeah, yeah, we actually bought it during the pandemic.
So, I definitely know it's great business to be in.
You know, everybody needs their credit fix.
Right.
For sure.
I mean, and I just appreciate
America for giving us the law and the opportunity to be able to
handle our business if we need to.
It's a second chance.
I mean, it's actually a fourth and fifth chance of getting your credit clean as much time as you want.
Right.
How many young, how many young people you know that ruin their credit immediately?
I feel feel like everybody.
Almost everyone.
I had 35 things on my credit when I first started life.
I didn't even know what a credit was when I was 18.
No one teaches you.
And that's the thing I don't like either, though.
Yeah.
Because think about it.
Think about how much time that
kids and everybody spends in school.
Yeah.
You're not teaching them any tools of life at all.
They don't teach credit.
They don't teach tax.
I got hit with a tax bill.
I'm like, what is this?
Yeah,
they don't teach money.
They don't really, they teach us history.
True story.
True story.
I had when I was 19 years old.
A false history.
False history.
I was going to say that, but I didn't know.
So, true story, though, I was 19 years old.
I made like probably $60,000 as a salesperson in
this office on 42nd and Time and Time and Fifth Avenue in Times Square, selling security training.
Okay.
60 racks in like three months.
I'm making bank, just selling security training.
And
true story, i i never paid those taxes and then i got over the the limitation of years i never had to take it wait i don't know if i should be saying that new york and new york can't new york comes down
i mean yeah whatever it's 12 i mean it's 12 it's twice it's over the 12 years so whatever but new york sorry guys comes comes down tax this year huh sorry new york comes down on you hard though when you don't pay taxes right uh that's cali i really don't i'll be honest i don't know california is tough new york has a city tax i'm not a fan of that well they have a state new york have a state, city, and federal.
Yeah.
And California has state and federal.
Vegas only has federal taxes.
State, city, and federal.
Think about how that sounds.
Yeah, that's why they take them.
So because you live in a city, in a state,
you got to pay another tax.
Right, right.
If not, move your ass out to the country.
And then you got the property taxes.
And then it still haven't fixed their rat problem.
Oh, my God.
How should they fix that, though?
Is it even fixable?
Man, I see so many successful traps online.
I'm just like, why don't you guys get one of these guys guys who create these successful traps and make a big one and just
get them in there?
I don't know.
How do you fix that?
Someone should.
If you lived in New York, you'd understand why they don't care about that.
Why?
It's terrible.
Yeah, there's just so much stuff going on.
New York is an environment full of tons of cultures.
I mean, like.
Tons.
Yeah.
Like, you don't, like,
every block is different.
Like, you know what I mean?
Yeah.
Unless you're like in a set neighborhood where, you know, it's the hood or whatever the case is, right?
Cool.
But it's like, and that's the other thing.
Like, people will live in New York and they'll stay in their hood so much
that they
won't ever see you there.
And then they'll see you somewhere else and be like, yo, you won't be outside.
So, so have you always,
have you always played basketball?
Was that like your thing?
I was always in the parks growing up.
So did you used to get into a lot of fights because you, you know.
Well,
I mean, yeah.
I was, you know.
The white boy that could ball.
You know, technically I got a percentage of Cuban
But you know yeah, but it's like at the same time But I'm mostly mostly I'm mostly Sicilian German and Irish Yeah, okay, so yeah, you know
So you so used to have having to handle your beds a lot of the time
you fight every other day
That's the thing.
That's what I'm saying like in New York You could be walking down the block
You could be walking down the block and just end up in the wrong eye contact conversation with somebody like what you looking at yeah because people are so miserable everybody's Everybody is just trying to chase a bag and figure out how to survive and
live the American dream, right?
So, but everybody's not acquiring that, so they're miserable.
And then, what they do is they take their misery and they project it to everybody else because they have to release it somewhere, right?
I feel that.
So, you think that's the problem?
That's what it is.
It's just a bunch of angry people that's not living out their dreams.
That's fucking insane.
I mean, I wouldn't say their dreams, but even, sorry, I mean, cut you off, not even their dreams, but not even like the life that they feel is, feel is, uh, you know, healthy.
Yeah.
So because it's not to their, whatever they're, you know, they want,
then they're, they're living in a, in a, in a, in a space where it's a recycling mentality that keeps them in the same place.
Yeah.
There's certain people you could feel the energy suck just
taking away your energy, man.
Yeah.
You know, and then, and that's a lot of people in New York.
You'd be walking down the block, you're gonna find somebody like that.
Seriously, bro.
Going to the grocery store, somebody miserable because he can't find his apples.
Like, you know what I mean?
I feel that.
So when did you actually
get into the YouTube space and start hooping and realize, like, yo, I got something here?
Like, what was the first video you was like, okay, I'm turned thrown by this?
Like, I'm about to do this shit, full-time.
Wait, what?
Whoa.
Nah, I'm.
Financially turned throwing by it.
I would say.
I didn't really start YouTube until 2021.
Wow, but I've only been doing it in a couple years.
Yeah, I've only been in the space for like, he gets views.
A year and a half.
Sheesh.
I mean, I have a knack for unapologetically being myself.
He says gets views, right?
I put it like this.
You know what I mean?
I have a knack for unapologetically being myself.
And it drives people fucking nuts.
So
is that the actual recipe is to be authentic?
Do you, you, you, you feel like in that space?
My authenticity.
I guess.
Because we had one guy.
It took him, what, five years, right?
Which guy?
I forget his name.
Oh,
Victionary.
Yeah.
It it took him five years to get to a certain point.
And you said you've only been doing it since you said 2021.
Yeah.
And actually, I didn't start my own channel until 2022.
Bro, that's like no shit.
He also caught the right timing because basketball started blowing up on YouTube, like the streetball culture.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like he was part of the group that brought it back.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
So basically, like I ended up, I was at the, I was going to a park regular to play with my boy invited me to come play.
I'm thinking that it's a regular run.
I show up.
I show up and there's there's this guy, this kid there that I actually had seen before.
Like, I had played with him before because we beat them.
Okay.
When I first met him, he was playing with the Ball of Life East Coast squad.
We beat them, and then they kind of shaped the video.
It was funny, too, because they shaped the video to make it look like we lost, but we won.
It was hilarious.
Whatever.
They do that.
Yeah, yeah, they do that.
So, whatever.
And then...
I had, and then when I bumped into him the second time, that same kid,
his name's Nick Briz.
You probably know who Nick is, right?
Yeah.
So
I guess he had a boy there that was there, and he just was, he was just, he got real disrespectful, like, shut the fuck up.
You know,
what?
So I started, all I did is just kind of naturally react how I would if there wasn't cameras.
Right, right, right.
You know what I mean?
Like, what do you mean?
Dude, swing on me so I can beat you up then.
Because now I understand because I've, you know, from lawsuits and shit,
that if you punch somebody in the face first, you're you're definitely going to get sued and going to jail.
So now my first reason, and my now, my first intuition is, do something.
Swing on me so I can be jail.
And that's what happened.
And then that video just went crazy.
It clicked 2 million views, I think, in like two days.
Damn.
Yeah, it was crazy.
And then after that, I started popping out with that kid, Nick.
And every single run, it was like there was always the beef, though, and shit.
And like just disrespect for someone.
Some whispering in my ear, calling me me a b.
Somebody's doing this.
So it's something.
Just like somebody crossing a line every time.
That's what it got to.
You know what I mean?
So that's how I ended up into the YouTube and I was rocking with Nick.
So you're a villain.
Technically.
I was painted to be a villain.
Yeah.
You were created like the Joker.
I mean,
made into a villain.
Exactly.
Because I was really just chilling.
You know what I mean?
I came out to play basketball.
We were playing a competitive game.
I was talking my shit.
You know, because there's a big difference, there's a big difference between talking basketball shit and talking shit.
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
So I talk basketball shit.
I play ball, talk basketball shit, play hard.
Once people talk personal, it gets to you.
Well, what happens is that if they're on the ass end of that, they can't control their emotions.
So now they cross the line.
You know what I mean?
It's like, you know, think about it.
Most young men these days are not being taught that as a man, if you're going to be a man, you have to control your emotions.
Absolutely.
You know what I mean?
Even I'm,
I'm whom I'm talking all this shit, but I'm a person.
I lose control too sometimes.
I feel that.
That's why I ended up bugging out because I lost control in the situation.
Right?
But it's like, you know, you grow as you know, you grow as you get older.
Yeah.
And in the environment, though, with the YouTube stuff, it just kept happening and it kept going viral.
So we were just
a mill, a meal.
They were getting a mill every video.
Every minimum.
Sometimes three.
It was crazy.
And this was your first year on YouTube.
Well, it was in my channel that I was performing for.
That's not normal.
So I was performing for, it's not normal at all.
So I wasn't performing though for my channel.
I was performing for the kid Nick Brizz's channel.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was, and it was, um, it was a, it was really cool for a while.
Um, and then it just kind of so how, how far do you want to take it?
Like, what's like, where do you, where do you want to go with it?
Do you have a direction?
I have a big direction.
Oh, that's scary.
I don't know if I can tell you guys on camera.
Why?
Because you know what it is.
You don't want anybody to steal it?
Well, I have a
name of the company trademarked already.
But they're not you.
Yes, you're very right.
But you know what it is?
I just understand that this space has a knack for unoriginality and synthetic and synthetic imagination.
Okay, so synthetic imagination is essentially someone's idea and then creating a new idea with that idea and making it into something of their own.
Okay, and that's that's the knack for this industry, even in music, everything.
That's what I'm saying.
Okay, so without telling us directly, just kind of give us
your
not idea, because that's actually telling us directly, but just kind of give us like a concept of it.
Like, anyway, it's an entrepreneurial way to create a center hub for the act for the creators
to come, get paid,
have a huge platform,
be overseas and here in America,
balling the fuck out.
Oh, that's fire.
Interesting.
I kind of
and
how about this.
And, all right, and it's attached to something that has to do with all of the viral food TikToks.
Ooh, now we're talking.
I'm a big foodie, man.
That's all I'm going to say.
That's dope.
I love
big, big plan.
So, have you already started working on it?
Oh, yeah.
Curating everything?
Oh, yeah.
Everything's already in place.
We're looking at a location.
We're looking at a bunch of things.
And that'll be in Orlando, or will it be somewhere else?
Yeah, I'm looking to do it in Orlando.
Okay, I'm looking to put basically,
I'm looking to put
something in the space that just gives, because you know, what's happening with, you know, companies are trying to like corner the street ball market now.
Why?
Why, though?
Well, because there's money in it.
Yeah, they see the money.
They don't own it, right?
Remember, and one?
Yeah.
But they're essentially trying to do the same thing, and one.
Yeah, but and one actually started and finished and then ball up followed up after that.
But what, like, ball up?
Does anybody even know what the fuck that is?
No, I don't know what that is.
Ball up.
What the fuck is Ball Up?
At one point,
I thought you meant Baller's Life.
No, I'm like, Ball's Life came after Ball Up.
I don't remember Ball Up.
Me neither.
Ball Up was like a spin-off of Anne One.
Where are you from?
L.A.
Okay.
So it was in LA.
No, Ball Up.
No, they did a tour, like, and one.
They literally took the whole concept.
That's f ⁇ ing hilarious.
Well, that's...
Like I said, synthetic imagination.
There you go.
Look at that.
You've played all over the country.
Yes.
Which city had the best hoopers?
New York.
New York?
Are you biased or you actually think it's New York?
Nah, I'm not biased at all.
It's New York because the tenacity you get from New York players, even if somebody else is skilled in another city, you don't get the same tenacity.
You just get the skill.
You know what I'm saying?
New York comes with a certain grit when it comes to playing.
Kyrie.
Kemba.
He's from Jersey, I thought.
He is.
I mean, that's the same thing.
But you're playing in a New York circuit.
That's the same shit.
Yeah, it's Kyrie.
Because when you're in the New York Circuit, I mean, especially in the parks, if you ask me, bro.
Like, the parks are
really like...
that's how I grew up.
You got to be tough to play to even play in those parks.
I think as a kid in New York, you got to be tough to even skateboard, do anything out there.
Yeah, it takes courage because you're walking into an environment you don't even know.
So you're going to a park, you don't even know these people.
You know what I mean?
For sure.
Growing up, try a new park, go play ball somewhere new, you move somewhere.
It's a new park, you're pulling up, you don't know who's going to be there.
Y'all have a certain grit to y'all, like a certain toughness.
It's like you can't emulate that shit.
Shaq, too, is from Jersey.
Shaq's big, and look, he's one of the biggest dogs dogs that dogs that's ever balked like absolutely you know what i'm saying so you said some of the tough some of the best basketball comes from new york yes what about playing like on the west coast how's that what what's the what's what's what's the difference in gameplay
i think the only place you get a new york feel is in venice beach venice beach yeah you're not getting like like as far as the grit yeah you know what i'm saying yeah like venice beach they they they they're they're about it like they're playing and they'll squabble yeah yeah yeah and they go right back to playing for sure and that's how i grew up like in new york though what's the way that's the way you do like if you you got a problem and something gets too excessive across the line, you shoot a quick fade, and either your face is too bumpy, so you leave, or your face ain't so bumpy, so you check the ball up.
You know what I'm saying?
That's right.
And that's that simple.
Yeah.
That's wild.
That's the natural culture.
That's crazy.
You don't ask no questions.
Let them fight it.
That's it.
Stop fighting.
Don't get away.
All right.
Let them fight, bro.
So you like playing streetball more than organized basketball?
Oh, absolutely, man.
Why?
Because look at the way organized basketball is.
It's all cookie cutter.
Think about it, and I'm not dissing anything about the way that they play.
That's their style.
They want clean, cut, smooth, robots that are very skilled at basketball.
Okay, you got it.
That's your thing, no problem.
So no disrespect.
But to me, that shit gets boring.
Like, that's just my perception.
You know what I mean?
Like, it gets boring to me.
Like,
except for like certain players that, like, are really exciting to watch.
John Morant.
John Morant.
I love Kyle.
I I love watching Kyrie play.
I love watching Luca.
LeBron, obviously, for years now.
He's been a great person to watch.
That's what I'm saying.
Like, there'll be exciting teams and players to watch, so you'll tune in.
But it's not something where you're fully invested.
You know what I mean?
Like, if a basketball game is going on and my phone rings, like, I'm going to stop and pick it up.
You know what I mean?
I'm not that interested.
I'm not going to be like, nah, let me ignore this call.
Yo, I can't believe this is happening.
What's going to happen next?
You know what I mean?
Like, you don't think like it's a different type of enthusiasm.
You know what I mean?
And that's what really tuned.
I feel like that's what really got street ball back into the wave.
Is, bro,
this is a place where for YouTube, fans don't have to worry about if I say, ah,
I feel like if I say origin, I feel like that's where ball originated at.
That's like the church of basketball.
Streetball.
It's streetball, bro.
Yeah.
That's church.
Church, bro.
I like that terminology.
That's, bro.
I feel like that's church.
Like, I feel like if you've never played in a street ball game, you're not really like,
you're not really laced up.
Like, you ain't, you ain't, you ain't really experienced basketball at its, I feel like NBA is high level, but highest intensity is streetball because it's so rugged.
It's on CEO.
You got people this close to you.
They all, you know, the fans are all in your face.
It's like doggy dog, bro.
I feel like you're not really proclaimed until you actually experience the street ball.
And I feel like that's why a lot of some of the greats, the legendary players, they go to the Rutgers, they go to Sunset, get to get that full grit experience and play against somebody.
Dude, there's some ballers out there, bro.
KD was getting a run for his money out there.
He's KD.
Yeah, I saw that.
Kobe, I think Kobe damn near played every summer out there.
You know what I'm saying?
He was out there.
He was religiously out there, bro.
Because
when you're in that environment, though, bro,
you have to either perform or get embarrassed.
And that, it's that same,
that's why, like, most of the time, people would be so surprised with me because, you know, I used to be real lean and like, you know, kind of real munt and then real husky.
And then
I kind of went through this real bad time in my life, you know what I mean?
Where just everything was messed up before all the success, before I created everything I needed to,
I basically, I went through a period of my life where I was homeless.
I had nothing.
I slept on a park bench.
I had to walk walk to the gym six miles every day there and six miles back.
No.
So, when I finally did get a spot,
and
I and I just kind of.
How did you overcome that?
Like, what mindset did you have?
Do you want me to answer you honestly?
Yeah, no, no, for real, no.
I want you to be really
transparent.
No, be transparent.
How do you overcome without indicting yourself criminally?
Yeah, right.
How do you overcome a time like that, right?
And persevere to be who you are now, smiling, you know, fresh and able to tell your story.
Like, how do you overcome that?
Perseverance.
I think a lot of times.
But how do you persevere?
How do you persevere?
How do you persevere?
I think a lot of times people
focus their attention and energy so much on the problem,
they forget to realize, yo.
Okay, what's the fucking answer?
You know what I'm saying?
So it's like, so, oh my God, this is happening.
And then they go, oh my God, this is happening.
And then they go, oh, my God, this is happening.
Bro, okay, you said that five fucking times already.
What is the answer?
What's the solution?
And what's the first steps to getting there, right?
So for me, what it is is the way I come at things is like this.
It's like, all right, something bad happens.
I can do something about it.
So why worry?
Right?
Something bad happens.
Something bad happens.
I can't do anything about it.
So why worry?
You know what I'm saying?
It's like if you put yourself in this panic state, oh my God, everything's fucked up.
My life is a mess.
Right?
It's all you're thinking about.
You're not imagining what the solutions are.
You're not imagining the steps that you need to take to get to where you want to be.
You're not thinking about the process.
You're not thinking about the work, you know, what needs to be done.
You're focused on the problem and not
the actual work that it takes to get to where you want to be.
So the way I really persevered,
a lot of cold days, man, a lot of cold days where
it just hurt.
know, when you woke with a heavy heart, man, you know, how often did you cry?
Oh, man, crying?
Crying's not really my thing.
Oh, so you never cried the whole time?
I've cried, of course.
Okay.
I'm not going to lie to you.
Do you feel like crying is important?
I think it is a good outlet.
I don't disagree with the fact that crying is a good thing, but I just,
for me, I like to keep my conversations and cries, you know,
between me and the creator.
You know what I'm saying?
I got you.
I feel that.
That's what I do.
Because
it's like everybody has an opinion right right but if you allow people people's energy to affect you and you and and in your moments of duress
that opinion could really rub you the worst way and then send you way off track gotcha you know what i mean so i just kind of keep things to myself focus get on track with where i need what i need to do the steps because everything is steps
for my life it's all steps i've just stepping stone piece by piece you know what i mean and that and and taking the time to invest into those steps is where success lies.
Gotcha.
If you ask me.
That's dope.
And let me ask you this:
one more question.
What would be the most, who, what opponent would you want to match up with to make the most viral one-on-one game?
Like, who would be the number one opponent to where, like, yo, this is going to be the most viral one-on-one game in YouTube history?
Who would be that guy for you?
Whether it's a street baller or maybe NBA player, but who's that guy one-on-one i think i know it would be the biggest viral what is a couple of them because you gotta understand who's number one though like who's number one where you guys know about the fallout yeah this is this is this is gonna blow i mean i don't think that that fallout you think that fallout one-on-one would be the but would be would be lit you versus nick yeah it would be versus nick
views yeah yeah what if we boxed that would get even more views
hey what if a winner hey after this at box or play play ball then box listen Iris chess boxing.
Have you seen that?
They play chess in the ring, and then they box in between rounds.
So
with that, though, I can say, like, look, here's the other question I have, though, before we continue real quick.
You really think that 1v1 is the most exciting thing?
I don't think 1v1 is the most exciting thing, but I'm saying from your perspective, I want to know your opinion on this.
Like, who would be your viral?
match like to where it's one-on-one or however you want to set it up like what would be the most viral game to you?
What would be a viral game to you to where everyone would want to tune in for this?
Even pay for it?
I think, I think, obviously, everybody, you know, obviously, yes, that one-on-one with Nick Briss would be very, would be way up there.
I think the way that I am intense and talk my shit.
I really think, though, a 1v1 with Draymond Green would be like one of a very like entertaining video.
Right, right.
You know what I'm saying?
Plus, like, you know,
I think that would be interesting.
And then besides that,
I don't know.
I don't know.
I think if I had to pick one, a one-on-one, or Chris Brown,
he could hoop.
He could hoop.
Yeah, he's definitely hoop.
I actually really want to play him once.
He's natural.
Because he can hoop.
No, like, he's nice.
Yeah.
Like, I watched him.
And, you know,
since I play basketball, I can kind of see details that cameras, because cameras lie.
I look slow on camera.
You do.
But really, I'll shift the shit out of somebody.
And they don't know it.
You know what I'm saying?
There's some comments saying you got some handles now.
Yeah, no, I mean, the love is kind of shifting a little more because they're seeing what's happening.
I get a lot of hatred because, like I said, I'm unapologetically myself.
So it makes people pissed.
I feel that.
But so they can't even take the time to appreciate even my growth
of my game and with me working on what I'm doing.
No, I see you shooting threes now, man.
I see you working on that.
We got to wrap this up, man.
But any closing thoughts on where people can find you?
Yes.
You can find me on Instagram at that ChrisWhite,
T-H-A-T-C-R-S-W-H.
Oh, you got it up there.
Oh, yeah, I gotta see, man.
This is telling you this professional vibe.
I got it.
I'm surprised I can curse here.
So, but yeah, and then also I'm on TikTok at CRSWHT underscore.
You guys might not have that one, but it's cool.
And then YouTube is CRSWHT.
Perfect.
Wayne at the Creator on Instagram.
I let me.
There we go.
Yopsy.
Sean Kelly here.
Thanks for tuning in, guys.
I'll see you next week.
Peace.