Today, Drake posted a video of his lengthy interview on Elliott Wilson and Brian “B.Dot” Miller’s Rap Radar podcast, conducted at Drake’s home. Drake discussed his origin story as an artist, including the impact of his early music, meeting Lil Wayne, his recent collaboration with Chris Brown, and more. Watch the full interview, which clocks in at over two hours, below.

Drake also addressed his ongoing feud with Pusha-T. When asked if he could ever squash their beef, Drake said, “I have no desire to ever mend anything with that person.” When Wilson asked him if Pusha went too far by revealing the existence of Drake’s child, Drake said, “I’ll say this, I tip my hat to the chess move. I mean, it was a genius play in the game of chess. And definitely warranted my first quote-unquote “loss” in the competitive sport of rapping.” Drake went on to explain that part of the reason he didn’t immediately tell the world about his son was because a DNA test was pending at the time. Drake later said of Pusha’s work: “Some people like his music. I personally don't ’cuz I don‘t believe any of it.”

Drake also briefly touched on his fraught relationship with Kanye West, saying, “I think he kind of recruited a guy with a similar dislike for me, no matter what he says interviews.” He added: “He can tell whoever, ‘I got love for him’ or whatever, but it’s not love. It’s...there’s something there that bothers him deeply. Yeah, I can’t fix it for him, so, it just is what it is.”

At one point in the interview, Drake discussed the importance of tracks like “Lust for Life” and “Say You Will.” “Be Present in your ‘who is this?’ moment,” he says, “because you’re going to be chasing that ‘who is this?’ moment for the rest of your career.”

Later, Drake laughed when Miller asked about the Camp Flog Gnaw situation, referring to the time Drake got booed off stage when he was revealed as the secret headliner for the festival (the booers were hoping for Frank Ocean). “I think I actually made a joke on-camera,” Drake said. “I’m like: ‘How long you think it’s going to take before they boo me offstage?’” Wilson then said, “It was more jeering than booing.” “No, it was booing,” Drake said.

Read Pitchfork’s Op-Ed “My Dinner With Drake.”