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Crude Conversations

EP 135 What happened is what was supposed to happen with Josh Boots

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

5884 Ratings

🗓️ 10 August 2023

⏱️ 97 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this one, Cody talks to Josh Boots. He’s been a fixture in the Alaska rap scene since the 90s, back when he helped form Arctic Flow Records. It’s a legacy that solidified him as one of the best, most authentic lyricists in Alaska. He says that he and the rest of Arctic Flow truly believed that they would one day take over the world with their music. It was a belief and a dream supported by talent and selling weed. That was a big part of maintaining the dream for Josh — the weed — it brought in the money that supported his lifestyle. Since 18, that was mainly what he did for work. Now, at 44, he owns and operates a legal dispensary in Anchorage. He says that making that transition from the traditional market to the legal one was a huge jump, but there are similarities. Like how you treat the customer and how you operate in the industry. Those principles that kept him successful in the old market are now crossing over into this new, legal market. There was this moment when he was mixing his first album, “Cold Weather Survival Guide,” at Unique Studios in Time Square. He was looking out of a 10th story window thinking, “We’re here. We made it.” Partly because all of the action outside — the Puerto Rican Day Parade was going on and he had a clear view of Total Request Live — and partly because of all the greats who had recorded at that same studio. James Brown, Ice T, Tupac, Nas, Madonna, Public Enemy, Big Pun, Mobb Deep, the list goes on. And now, at 21 years old, Josh was there too. It was a dream come true. The rebellious kid who had little to no supervision and a tumultuous upbringing, just running up and down the streets of Muldoon causing trouble, was now on the path to being a household name. But he had to make a choice: Chase this rap dream or be a family man. He and his wife were in their 20s and they were starting to have kids — they would eventually have six — and he wanted to give them the upbringing that he never had. Although he never wanted for anything, including love and affection, he grew up in a rough household with lots of partying, drugs and alcohol, and he knew that’s not the environment he wanted to raise his own kids in. So, he chose to be a family man instead of a rapper. It’s a decision he’s thought a lot about over the years. Did he give up on his dream or did he follow his destiny? Ask him and he’ll tell you, what happened is what was supposed to happen. PHOTO / Leif Ramos

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

two two two

0:10.2

Welcome to the show. In this one I talked to Josh Boots. He's been a fixture in the Alaska

0:17.0

Raps scene since the 90s. Back when he helped form Arctic Flow Records. It's a legacy that

0:23.2

solidified him as one of the best, most authentic lyricists from Alaska. He says that he and the

0:29.6

rest of Arctic Flow truly believed that one day they would take over the world with their music.

0:35.5

It was a belief and a dream supported by talent and by selling weed. That was a big part of

0:42.3

maintaining the dream for Josh, the weed. It brought in the money that supported his lifestyle.

0:48.0

Since 18 that was mainly what he did for work. Now at 44 he owns and operates a legal dispensary

0:55.0

in Anchorage. He says that making that transition from the traditional market to the legal one

1:00.9

was a huge jump. But there are similarities like how you treat the customer and how you operate

1:07.4

in the industry. Those principles that kept him successful in the old market are now crossing

1:13.7

over into this new legal market. This podcast is made possible through the generous support

1:20.6

of the crude magazine Patreon subscribers. If you already subscribed to the crude magazine

1:25.6

Patreon, thank you. For those listeners who aren't, please consider subscribing at patreon.com slash

1:34.0

crude magazine. That's patreon.com slash crude magazine. And pick the subscription tier that works

1:42.4

for you. I want to thank everyone subscribed at the company man tier. These are the people who

1:48.0

have subscribed to the crude Patreon for $50 or more. Trina Doober, Seward Brewing Company,

1:55.7

the grind coffee shop in Juneau, Derek Adolf, Sharon Liska, Jake Liska, Alaska Surfer Adventure,

2:05.9

and Borderline Legacy. Thank you to all the Patreon subscribers, your money and your support

2:12.4

make these conversations possible. You can also support this podcast with a one-time payment

2:17.9

at buymeacoffee.com slash crude magazine. That's buymeacoffee.com slash crude magazine.

2:29.3

And if you have a chance to rate or review crude conversations on Apple podcasts, please do.

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