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00:00Guess what? We are here for our last panel of SNGU Creator House. We've had an
00:12impactful weekend. I know everybody got airbrushed merch. Everybody had great
00:19photos over there as you can see. But what I really want everybody to do is we
00:24are in the presence of legends that are about to take the stage. So can everybody
00:30please come and sit and get nice and close. We have some legends in the
00:37building and this needs to be seen. So come grab a seat. You guys can always get
00:46back online for merch but please. So with that I really wanted everybody
00:53to know that this is probably one of my favorite panels that we have because it
01:00discusses a lot of important topics. We see sports and we see athletes as you know
01:07just on the court and what's really important is is that they're not just
01:12athletes. They're also people. They're entrepreneurs. They're content creators.
01:18They're beauty influencers. They're rappers. You name it. And so we thought it was so
01:24important to have this conversation about how you can be you can't be put in boxes
01:30and you shouldn't have to be put into a box. So with that being said I want to
01:36introduce myself. I'm Rachelle Dennis and I actually was a former athlete myself. I was
01:41a former UCLA gymnast. Yeah. Okay. Y'all got to stop embarrassing me over there. I receive it.
01:58I receive it. Thank you. So with that let's get right into our panel and let me
02:04introduce you to three phenomenal women who are really at the top of their game in
02:10sports. So let's give it up for these three women. The first one I'm bringing
02:16out. Can you guys hear me? Okay. They're telling me one sec. Just a second. Any
02:30athletes in here? Any aspiring athletes? What sport do you guys play? Basketball and
02:40baseball? Do you guys want to go pro? What do you guys do you guys want to go to
02:45college for it? Yes. What's your name?
02:49What's your name? My name is Jameson. Okay. What sport do you play? Basketball and
02:57baseball. Who's your favorite athlete? Trae Young from the Atlanta Hawks. Who? Hold on. Say it
03:05louder. Trae Young from the Atlanta Hawks. Okay. You want to be like Trae when you get older?
03:10Yes. Is that your sister? Does she play also? What's your name? Come up here. Introduce
03:22yourself. My name is Juliana and I do cheerleading. Who's your favorite athlete?
03:33Ozzy albies. Let's clap it up for the future of sports. Do we have any other aspiring athletes
04:00in here? Hint, hint. I saw somebody raise their hand over there. Right there. You want to come up
04:08and tell us your name? My name's Morgan, and I do cheerleading. Who's your favorite athlete?
04:19Jada, she's on cheer on Netflix. Clap it up. Clap it up. All right, so now I really for real
04:37this time want to introduce you guys to three phenomenal women. These women are pushing culture
04:44forward, not just on the court, but also off the court. So without further ado, I would
04:50like to please welcome up my panelist, Miss Tia Cooper. Hello. Miss Belanger.
05:09And Shay Dawson. Come on, I need y'all to get louder than that. Let's go. Let's get louder.
05:20This is the last panel. All right. How are you guys? Great. How are you? I'm good. I'm doing
05:31this all day. I'm chilling. I'm chilling. Is this you guys' first Essence Fest, second Essence
05:37Fest? Yeah, they're my first one. This is your first one? Uh-huh. I like it. It's just hot.
05:42It is hot. Oh, no, it is hot. It is humid, hot, you name it. So you've gone to LSU and you've
05:50never been to Essence Fest? Well, I'm a freshman. It's my first year in Baton Rouge. Okay, well,
05:54we'll cut you some slack there. We'll cut you some slack there. But really just to get into
05:58it, I definitely want to, you know, have you guys also say your names, introduce yourselves
06:03to the crowd, and just, you know, maybe one thing that the crowd maybe doesn't know about
06:09you. Hey, everyone. I'm Shea Dawson. I work for Overtime. I'm head of athlete relations there.
06:16And I would say something that people don't know about me is I study the monarchy. It's
06:21random, but yeah. The monarchy. It's like kings and queens. Oh, okay. My name's Flaje. I'm
06:30an artist, athlete. One thing y'all don't know about me. Oh, a project dropped on July 14th.
06:36Y'all probably don't know. Can people pre-save it? Can people pre-save it? Yeah, like next
06:42week it's going pre-save. Okay. So y'all better take out your phones and pre-save it, okay?
06:45I better see some phones out. My name is Taya Cooper. I'm a basketball player, CEO, and
06:51influencer. And one thing y'all don't know about me is I have my own hair company called
06:56Hollywood Luxury Hair. CEO. I know that's right. All right. So my first question for you
07:04ladies is that it's no secret that women have always shined in sports on the court, but it
07:11seems like the world is really just catching up. So what does it feel like to be at the
07:16forefront of sports and pushing and elevating sports culture?
07:21It's Flaje. You know, coming up like a natty and just being like really, you know, people
07:29really proud of us for what we did at LSU. I think, yeah, you can clap it up for sure.
07:34Come on. That deserves a clap. People really proud of us. And you know, I don't take that lightly. I think
07:40that when once you achieve something great, you know, people have like an attachment to
07:44that, you know, we, we represent something bigger than ourselves. So knowing that, you
07:49know, it's players that always came before us. It's like Taya, you know, who built a brand
07:54and put women's basketball on the map. So I think it's cool to just to be a part of that
07:58change. Yeah.
07:59Thanks, Laje.
08:01That's no cap.
08:03So Shay, as someone who has been both behind the scenes and on the court, how do you continue
08:11to be a guiding mentor and confidant for the next generation of women in sports?
08:15Yeah, I mean, I would say listening to the youth. They always tell you what the future
08:20holds. Listen to your kids. They're on it before you're on it. The reasons why they have
08:25time. So yeah, I always, you know, talk to my nephews, talk to my cousins and see what
08:30they're into. They're the ones that told me about, you know, the current job I'm at
08:33now. They were telling me what the hottest thing was. And they told me about Tik Tok.
08:37So I got on that. So I'm a studier. So I like to study what the kids are doing. And even
08:42Flaje and Taya and what they're doing. Just creating elements and spaces where crossover
08:49happens. And that's what I love to see today in today's athletes is that you can't put us
08:53in a box anymore. Like with Flaje, what she's doing, Taya with her hair company, you can't
08:58put us in a box. And even me kind of in a front office slash like athlete relations space,
09:03it's not even athlete relations, it's human relations. And so it's just being staying
09:07inspired, staying inspired and understanding what's coming next.
09:10Yeah. And so a big part of this conversation is, you know, like you said, not being put
09:16into boxes. So, so many times you hear about athletes on the court. What is it like to also
09:22be behind the scenes, really supporting, you know, off the court, because we don't
09:28also highlight that enough. So what's that like? And how are you also making sure that
09:33kids also see in the audience that you can also be behind the scenes as well?
09:38Yeah. I mean, it's all about education. It's all about exposing young people and people
09:42who are come from different backgrounds, different things. And I think that's kind of what some
09:46of the black community lacks sometimes is exposure to things. And so getting in and infiltrating
09:51in businesses, getting in and doing things that's not endemic to your brand and taking
09:56that back and say, oh, guess what I learned? Or this is the person that I met, you should
09:59meet them too and put other people on. So it's just staying fragile and, excuse me, agile
10:04and staying in flow state and not worrying about what you do and staying in your lane, even
10:09though you have a niche thing that you do, but always take a little bit from everybody else
10:12to continue to grow. I think that's what I'm noticing. That's what I'm seeing. And so that's
10:16why you say yes to things like this. That's not something that I normally do, but this is
10:21something that I'm diving into because I want to know, I want to see, I want to hear, and
10:24I want to be inspired. Love that. So Flawjay, after a monumental win for LSU and breaking
10:31the internet, racking up followers, you've created a whole new lane for yourself through music.
10:39And so from landing a management deal with Roc Nation, what was the process in pivoting into
10:47a different industry? Also being a rapper, but also being an athlete.
10:52Okay. So first, I don't have a management deal. My mama is my manager right here. Yeah. Hey mama.
10:59Yeah mama. I have a, um, I have a deal where, um, I own my masters. I have creative control over everything
11:08that I do. Yeah. And they just backed me. And, but no, being able to do both of my things,
11:15like, it's just something, I always say, it's like something that y'all just now seeing because
11:18I've been rapping and playing basketball since I was legit. You know what I mean? Like I've been hooping
11:23and I've been rapping since I was like seven years old. So it's just cool to see how the story unfolded.
11:29Like I never stopped grinding. I never stopped working. And now it's all at the forefront. And I think it's so cool
11:35that I won a national championship and now I'm able to pursue my dream and music as well. So it's like
11:41they both leveling each other out. You feel me? And it's just like, they collide perfectly. And I just
11:46want to make history and just continue to inspire the younger athletes that's coming up.
11:52Yeah. And there's so many young athletes that are in the crowd and, you know, just hearing earlier,
11:58we did like a whole question on them when like, what's your sport? Like what, who's your favorite athlete?
12:03So, you know, I definitely am so happy and excited that we're having this conversation.
12:07Cause you guys are mentioning, right? How important it is to have young athletes also know that they can,
12:13you know, do this. So that leads me into my next question for Taya. So you are also now the seat,
12:21or you can now have a hair company and how has it been, you know, running your hair business?
12:28Has there been anything that, you know, you were surprised about or anything that, you know,
12:33you can draw kind of parallels to your life as also an athlete?
12:38Well, first of all, I was at the national championship game and the national championship game was cool.
12:43It was cool. They won. That was like great. But when they dropped her song afterwards, that was crazy.
12:50I was like, everybody cheering for the win. Like, yeah, yeah. Next thing I'm like, oh wait, athlete.
12:55It was her on the speaker. I'm like, nah, they've never done that. Like they've never done that.
13:01You can't even play really like rap music in a basketball arena. It's really like Taylor Swift, you know,
13:07but like they really put air song. I was like, oh shoot. So that was, that was dope.
13:12But as far as my hair company, I feel like my favorite part is that I always wanted to have my own hair company,
13:20but now that I was able to learn about marketing, I went to school for marketing.
13:25So now that behind the scenes with my hair company, I get to use other athletes who either don't believe in themselves
13:32or don't think that they can switch into that lane and actually market them in the way that I like to market myself.
13:36So just going and finding other young athletes that, you know, want to be in that lane or want to branch out
13:43and just being able to do that. So I like the marketing side of my hair company the most.
13:47Yeah. And how, how's that, has that marketing side also come easy? Like how do you kind of find inspiration?
13:55Um, it's definitely not easy because it costs a lot of money, but I would say from being an athlete,
14:02you actually got to have something that people can market and then being behind the scenes and picking people.
14:08It's like, now I get why it costs so much or why people be so picky when it comes to certain things like that.
14:14But, um, I think the hard part is knowing what you're worth and then what people think you're worth.
14:22Yeah. So like the balance between that and now that I'm on both sides, it's like, girl, I'm not paying you on it.
14:29But then it's like, okay, respectfully. All right. I get it.
14:32So unfortunately in the case for women everywhere, you know, we're expected to be, to be the best in every single aspect, right?
14:40Especially when you're a black woman, you got to be the best in everything that you do.
14:44So with that, as you guys continue to grow your brands and continue thriving on, on and off the court,
14:51how do you ensure that, you know, people are really seeing you, right? And really valuing you.
14:58Um, so how do you guys select people that you work with, whether it be brands or whether it be even, right?
15:04Just friends or like, you know, people around you.
15:08I would say it's really difficult. Honestly, you have to be bold. You have to be brave.
15:12You have to scream. You have to shout. You have to make your presence felt in every room.
15:17You have to walk in the room like you deserve to be there because people are still going to doubt you.
15:22They're still going to question you. There's no matter how many things you do as a black woman,
15:26you're still going to find something to criticize, to talk about, to nitpick at.
15:31And we just have to keep going through that and being just confident in that.
15:35I think like, you just got to have that confidence. Like, you know what I mean?
15:41I honestly think that like, when you walk in a room, you got to know like, nah, this is my room.
15:46Like, you know what I'm saying? Like, this is my couch. You feel me? Like, that's how I feel right now. You feel me?
15:51So I think that just being yourself, I was saying this earlier, like, when you yourself and you unique,
15:57like, people ain't got no choice but to respect it. You know what I mean?
16:01Or you're going to fall in line to get left behind. So I think being in the industry, being with them brands,
16:07like, how I'm talking to y'all right now, this is how I go when I'm at the Puma headquarters
16:12and I'm talking to them folks. I talk to them just like this. This is what I want to do. This is how I want to look.
16:16You know what I'm saying? And I never change and I'm always myself and they respect me for that.
16:20You know what I'm saying? I could go up there, my name is Flaw's agent. I'm not doing that.
16:25You know what I mean? Because, you know, they respect who I am and how I came up.
16:29So you just got to be you. And that's like one thing my mama always taught me, like, never minimize yourself.
16:35You know what I'm saying? Be you. Facts.
16:39And you?
16:40I would say, well, to all the parents out here, y'all really have the power of the tongue when it comes to y'all children.
16:49I think that children are a real reflection of, you know, how their parents treat them.
16:54And when your parent believe in you and they pushing you and something that you believe in yourself, it make you a whole completely different person.
17:01And without that, it's hard because finding it in people that's not your blood or like that you living with is inconsistent.
17:07So you end up being inconsistent with yourself. And I would just say to the parents, like, it's really y'all.
17:13Not to say that y'all don't need it too, but that's not the kid's problem. Like, you just missed out on it.
17:20So I would say just don't do what happened to you to somebody else. So, like, just keep installing that.
17:24And everybody that's around you, whether you grown or young, it's like the people around you matter the most to believing in yourself.
17:31Shout out to all the parents out there driving everybody from practice and back from practice after bad games, whatever it is.
17:42And that really, you know, makes me think about how important having people that you look up to or role models.
17:49I mean, I don't like to necessarily say like role models because I think role models also do start with parents.
17:54So my question is, is who's somebody that has had an instrumental part on your life and why?
18:01Oh, for me, my mom, she raised me and my brothers by herself. You know what I'm saying?
18:10All I know it was, yeah, for real. Yeah, give it a hand.
18:13Yeah, like, I seen her like, you know, wake up, 5 a.m., go to work, get off of work, come pick us up,
18:23take us to practice, be a team mom, go home, cook us dinner, and wake up and do it all over again
18:30and never, like, took no for an answer. You know what I mean?
18:33So now that I'm in the position I am, I think that just instilled that work ethic in me.
18:38You know what I'm saying? Gave me that drive because, I mean, I woke up and see my mama do it every day.
18:42So ain't no way I can't do it, you know? So I think, like, backing up what Taya said,
18:47having somebody, like, you can just see every day and they build and they putting that in you,
18:52that's, like, the greatest asset that you can have for sure.
18:57Um, what was the question?
19:00Y'all could clap if y'all want to.
19:03Yeah, why y'all acting shy?
19:05What was the question?
19:07Yeah, so the question was...
19:09Yeah, um, I would say on the basketball side, well, basketball and not basketball, but, um, my father.
19:17He was everything for me and my family.
19:21Um, he started an AAU team when nobody...
19:25I was terrible. He started an AAU team.
19:28He thought I could play basketball. I didn't think I could play basketball.
19:31And he took two years off and dedicated to training me.
19:35And ever since then, it just worked out for me.
19:39But he installed in me the confidence that y'all see now since I was little.
19:44And confidence isn't just, oh, how you look or what you're capable of.
19:49Like, he installed, like, respect, morals, stuff like that.
19:53That's something that just can't be wavered.
19:55And, um, really just being true to myself.
19:58Like, I'm not afraid to look in the mirror.
20:00Like, the stuff that I had to work on, flaws, character flaws, stuff like that.
20:04He made sure I knew my shit, like, it stank sometimes.
20:07So, he was just real with me.
20:09And I respect that the most for my father.
20:11And then my mom, she real into the beauty part that everybody, uh, really know me for.
20:16But, um, yeah, so I was just blessed to have two parents who really, really, really wanted to be parents.
20:22And, um, took time to really, like, cater to me and my brothers and my sisters.
20:26So, shout out to my parents.
20:28Yeah, that's amazing.
20:30And I just want to shout out that, um, parents are doing a good job.
20:34Like, having somebody starting in your home, growing that seed, watering that plant.
20:37Giving you that confidence to go out in the world.
20:39Because the world is mean.
20:41The world is hard.
20:42The world is cruel.
20:43The world is cruel.
20:44But you consistently have to go on the things that your parents and people instilled in you.
20:48Um, and I would say my mother, too.
20:50I would say my brother.
20:51Um, but I would also say just, like, the healthy relationships that she taught me.
20:56Um, not having vitriol.
20:57Not having hate in my heart for anybody.
20:59Being able to go into any room and speak to people with confidence and kindness and open doors.
21:04And just do all those little things that no one else does.
21:07Um, or no one else does on a regular.
21:09I'd say there's very few people that do do that.
21:11But the ones that do do that, you find your tribe in those people.
21:14Yeah.
21:15Um, but I would just say little things like that.
21:17I think that's the keys to success is the, the kind, the good that people, that your parents,
21:22that you're instill in you too.
21:23And I'd just say, like, also just watching the youth.
21:25Like, the youth is very inspiring.
21:27I see a lot of people sometimes try to kill the people inside them.
21:31But, like, I just encourage you all to cultivate whatever it is that they, if they're telling
21:36you something, they know what they're talking about.
21:38Respect children.
21:39And that's one thing I learned early is to respect kids.
21:42I love that.
21:44And so, going into that, you know, talking about respecting, you know, kids, I think
21:49another thing that has really, and especially our generation, is social media.
21:55And social media has made it almost possible for anybody, right, to say whatever they want.
22:02So, you know, as you guys elevate and as you guys climb, you know, win championships, launch
22:11brands, you know, are literally just on social, whether you're a content creator or not, how
22:18has social media make it, how have they made it impossible for you guys to also, you know,
22:24flourish?
22:25And now, with reporters, critics, and fans commenting on everything, how do you really
22:32stay positive, focus on what you're doing, and also not listen to all that outside noise?
22:38Who go first?
22:39You?
22:40Me?
22:41Yeah, go.
22:42I would say I wasn't allowed to have social media until, like, my junior year in high
22:45school.
22:46So, when it was brought to my attention, my father made sure that I knew it was a business
22:50and not a place to be playing on.
22:53So, therefore, I just view social media as a space to where I post something and I'm giving
22:59free range to the world to view it how they want to view it.
23:02So, I would say be careful, but also be carefree, because they're going to say what they want
23:07regardless, and that's your space to play and make money.
23:10I wouldn't use it as a tool for social gatherings at all, because it could get real ugly.
23:15But if you use it to make money, it would be a whole different story for your life.
23:19Seriously.
23:23I think, oh, yeah, my bad.
23:27Me and social media got, like, a love-hate relationship, because, like, I'm just learning.
23:34It's just a lot of different people on these apps, you know what I mean?
23:39So, but learning how to navigate and just making my social media basically like my billboards
23:44or whatever I'm posting, it's just going to be specifically to build my brand, for me just
23:50to connect with the people, you know what I mean?
23:53To grow my audience and for people to hear my music.
23:56I really want to create a positive change, but you can't really create change on the app
24:00where people just want to misunderstand you, you know what I mean?
24:03So, I think all I can do is just put that positive message out there and let people eat it up
24:09how they want to, you know what I mean?
24:10Like, I don't try to get too sucked up in it, but it's hard, because, like, it's on my phone.
24:14Like, I'm looking at it.
24:15Like, they talking to crazy to me, and I can't even get to them.
24:18So, it's like, you know, just using it for what it is, you know what I mean?
24:23But I think that for all the parents, like, it's important to really shelter your kids on that social media stuff
24:30and not let them get too into it until you build that and instill that confidence of them knowing who they are.
24:37Because a lot of kids be changing because of the comments and the things on social media.
24:42Because it get real ugly out there.
24:43So, for parents coming from a teen, like, for the season, I told my mama, like, I'm getting off social media.
24:48Like, I'm going to let somebody handle my social media, and I just want to lock in, you know what I mean?
24:52So, for all parents, like, take that note.
24:55The kids might get mad at you, but they appreciate it in the long run.
24:58Yeah, I think Flage is exactly right.
25:02I think it's a team thing, especially if you already have a brand.
25:05Like, your parents and you should be co-managing, you know, talking about the different posts,
25:09talking about the things you see, starting conversation, opening that dialogue.
25:14Because when kids are left alone, they're intaking so much that they can't process, right?
25:19And they don't have enough life experience to cipher what is real and what's not.
25:25And so, that's what scares me, but I think it's a gift and a curse.
25:28I work in digital media, so, of course, it's a great tool to make money.
25:31It's a great way to get data on what you're doing, to see in the back end who's liking what and who's doing what,
25:38you know, what your demographic is.
25:40And so, I think that's a good way to learn about yourself, too.
25:42But it also can be damaging if it's not the numbers that you want or it's not what you want.
25:46And like Taya said, like, people, now she's on the business side.
25:49She's the CEO.
25:50Now she knows who she's going to work with and who she's not going to work with.
25:53And so, even delivering that information on, you know, why we're not going to use someone for a certain campaign or whatever.
25:58I just think doing that with love and doing that with, like, transparency and maybe just adding tips on how they can grow if they're not where they need to be.
26:06So, I think, again, it's about creating a healthy conversation, healthy relationships, being honest, being transparent.
26:12And for me, myself, I think I don't really use it business-wise.
26:15I just more use it for inspiration.
26:17I try to follow people that just are doing good things in the world.
26:20And that fills me up.
26:21But I will say it's a distraction.
26:23Like, it literally distracts me from my work.
26:25It distracts me from creating.
26:26So, I wish I could use it in a way that was more responsible.
26:30And I haven't found that, so.
26:32But, yeah, that's how I feel about it.
26:34And to close out this amazing panel that we've had and conversation we've had, really quickly,
26:41we have the saying here about how black women are forever the blueprint.
26:45So, I want to know how are black women forever the blueprint to you guys?
26:50I'll go first just because I've been thinking about this for a long time.
26:56We're extremely versatile.
26:59We can do anything.
27:00We can play.
27:01We just had a black little mermaid.
27:03Like, I grew up on that movie.
27:04So, shout out to Haley for doing that.
27:07We can do anything.
27:08Be anybody.
27:09We were kings and queens before, you know, we were taught about it.
27:12And we can change our hair.
27:14We can run fast.
27:16We can sing.
27:17We can write.
27:18We're doctors.
27:19We're everything.
27:20And so, I just think that continue to imagine who the black woman is going to continue to be.
27:25And I think our time is now, as you can see.
27:27Look at this room.
27:28It's beautiful.
27:29And, yeah, we're going to continue to make noise.
27:31So, watch out, everybody.
27:35Yeah.
27:36I seen this post.
27:37It was like, black women are the most unprotected people on earth, you know?
27:43And I seen that.
27:44And I was like, how can we be so, like, unprotected but so powerful at the same time?
27:49You know what I mean?
27:50And I feel like we just got something undeniable.
27:54Like, that glow and that spark that we carry.
27:57And I think once we get closer to that and we become more of sisters to each other and more brothers to our brothers,
28:05I think that we'll be unstoppable.
28:07So, I just believe that we're just so powerful.
28:11Like, we're so powerful.
28:13And once people know that and step into that, like, oh, my gosh, it's going to be incredible.
28:19I mean, it is.
28:20It's now, like, I'm seeing more people come together.
28:23I'm seeing us embrace each other, support each other.
28:27You know what I mean?
28:28And it's becoming a thing.
28:29People are like, whoa.
28:30Like, you know what I'm saying?
28:31Like, what's going on?
28:32That's why we have big events like this.
28:34You know what I mean?
28:35We're there for each other, supporting each other.
28:37And so, I'm just, I'm really blessed to be up here showing my melanated, beautiful skin
28:43and being able to be a part of something like this, for sure, for sure.
28:51I think she did a great job.
28:53I'm going to let her.
28:54She killed that.
28:55Yeah, she killed that.
28:56Yeah, she killed that.
29:01Do you want to?
29:02I think she ate on the black woman part, but when it comes to comparing yourself to others
29:10and, you know, seeing things on social media where it's like, she got this but I didn't get that
29:14or he doing this or he doing that, it's like, just stay in your lane.
29:18Because when I tell you, if you knew the truth, you would not want they life.
29:22So, no life is better than yours.
29:24And just stay in your lane and ride your own wave.
29:27Do not compare yourself to nobody.
29:29And, yeah, just stay true to yourself.
29:31As black women, we all got each other.
29:33And, you know, just keep supporting each other.
29:36Like, we not in competition with each other.
29:38We can all eat.
29:39So, I would say just continue to eat together.
29:42Yes.
29:43And tell your stories.
29:44Tell your stories.
29:45And so, before we go, I want to know how can the audience support you guys?
29:56For me, I just would really appreciate if y'all just listen to my music, man.
30:01Like, my music is a way.
30:03Where can they find it?
30:04Yeah.
30:05Where can they find it?
30:06It's everywhere.
30:07Wherever you listen to music, you type in F-L-A-U, it's gonna pop up.
30:10You ain't got to type the rest in.
30:11F-L-A-U.
30:12It's gonna pop up.
30:13I know that's right.
30:14So, yeah, just listen to my music.
30:16I'm telling a story for sure.
30:18And I'm dropping my mixtape July 14th.
30:20So, be on the lookout for that.
30:22July 14th.
30:23You heard that?
30:26You guys can support me by going to follow my hair page,
30:30underscore Hollywood Luxury Hair on Instagram, and shopping.
30:34The website is up there, and it's unlimited hair.
30:37And you can find me at LaShayla.
30:41I go by Shay.
30:42I really just talk about on my page inspiring and advocating for athletes,
30:46parents, and families.
30:47That's my job.
30:48I'll do that no matter what company I work for.
30:50So, yeah.
30:51All right.
30:52So, Taya, LaJay, and Shay, thank you for joining us today.
30:58And sharing your experiences.
30:59Thank you, Rochelle.
31:00Thank you, everybody, for listening.
31:01Thank you, guys.
31:03Thank you, guys.
31:04Let's go.
31:34Let's go.
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