Willie B. is on the beat and as soon I heard the record I just tried to capture what I think he was trying to convey at the same time. It was real reminiscent of “Terrorist Threats.” It reminded me of a riot, like 1969 type shit.

I have to give the majority of the credit to Willie B. When I heard that record i just blacked out.

I should’ve called it “Huey Knew Then” and it would’ve phonetically sounded more like Huey Newton. I might call it that for the album I don’t know.

Me and my boy Doe Burger, that’s my right-hand man; they kinda compare us to Huey and Riley from “The Boondocks” so it was a play off of that as well.

Blackout was too simple of a title, so the first face that came to my mind was Huey. It’s real reminiscent of that time.

Not even looking at it from a racial standpoint, but just looking at an awareness from society in general. All this stuff about the gun laws and the police, it’s very reminiscent of that time. I just wanted to use this hip-hop to show that we have our eyes and ears open.