#3186: Trashing Hip-Hop "Culture" [Part 2 of 2]
Work On Your Game: Discipline, Structure, and Execution Under Pressure
Dre Baldwin
4.9 • 599 Ratings
🗓️ 1 February 2025
⏱️ 33 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | How much is your integrity worth? |
| 0:02.2 | So you're willing to sell out your community and push a message of ignorance to the people who follow you just because somebody's going to give you a bunch of money to do it. |
| 0:13.0 | Ray Olaid.com. |
| 0:14.8 | He's exceptional. |
| 0:16.3 | Work on your game. |
| 0:17.7 | I like Leah Post. |
| 0:19.1 | Work on your fucking games. |
| 0:20.4 | Everybody has relates to what Gray is saying is in a different way. Work on your game. I like the approach. Work on your fucking games. Everybody has, relates to what Dre saying is in a different way. Work on your game. I like the way he thinks. Work on your fucking game. I like the frameworks that he's put together. Work on your game. And I would highly recommend it to anybody that's trying to work on their game. Work on your fucking game. I think it's a good approach. It's a different approach, too. Hey, you, work on your game. Gave me something really good. Work on you gain, dryolde.com. And his philosophy makes a lot of sense. Not only work on your game, perfect your craft. Work on your game. He knows how to communicate in such a fabulous way. I can't say it enough. Work on your game. You are now tuned into the show where you learn the discipline to show up day after day to do the work, the confidence to put yourself out there, boldly and authentically and the mental toughness to continue showing up, doing the work, putting yourself out there, even when the success you're expected to achieve has yet to be achieved. And on top of all this, you get a huge dose of personal initiative that is to go get an energy that moves any one of us, including yourself, to go and make things happen instead of waiting for things to happen. And then we put all this together into a series of frameworks, approaches, insights, strategies and techniques on the underneath the umbrella one unifying philosophy that is called Work on Your Game. My name is Dre Baldwin, also known as Dre All Day, and welcome to the show. And today's topic is we are on part two of our mini-series, trashing hip-hop, quote-unquote culture. It is not really a hip-hop culture, but what many people call the culture. It's what I'm going to be trashing here in part two. So if you miss part one, make sure you check yesterday's episode. Before we get started, work on your game university. Have me as your direct coach. Get access to all of our trainings and courses. Get access to me on our live coaching calls, whether you want to talk to me privately, whether you want to be on our group calls. We have options for everything. Go to work on your game, university.com, |
| 2:04.8 | learn more about our program and how you can get involved. All that out the way. Let's get |
| 2:08.8 | into the topic here today, which again is trashing what many of you refer to as hip hop culture. |
| 2:15.3 | So I'll pick up right where we left off, which is on point number |
| 2:18.1 | four of our series. One through three was yesterday. Number four, extreme financial consumption. |
| 2:24.6 | Now, this one is a very subjective term because extreme consumption for me may not be the same |
| 2:30.3 | as extreme consumption for you. So for some people spend $100 as extreme, |
| 2:38.4 | some people, a thousand dollars, some people a million dollars is extreme. This is one that became very popular. This whole concept, however, became very popular regardless of their dollar |
| 2:43.4 | amount back in the 1990s with rappers telling you about how much the jewelry that they were wearing, |
| 2:50.4 | the houses they were allegedly living in, the cars that they were wearing, the houses they were allegedly |
| 2:51.5 | limited, the cars that they allegedly drove, and other flashy material things that was all |
| 2:57.2 | designed to generally let you know that they, the rapper, could afford to disregard money |
| 3:03.2 | because they had so much of it coming in that it didn't matter if they paid zero attention |
| 3:07.8 | to how the money was being spent. Now, if someone is making enough money that they can afford, |
| 3:13.8 | quote unquote, to waste money in some way and they can throw a bunch of money at strippers in a |
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