Shownotes
The crew sits down with Curtis Davis, a real one who did a quarter-century stretch in Angola penitentiary—one of the most notorious prisons in America. Curtis breaks down what it was really like locked up alongside some of the biggest names in rap, including C-Murder and Boosie Badazz, two legends who caught serious time themselves. He gets raw about the politics inside the pen, how these rappers moved when freedom wasn't guaranteed, and what separates the real ones from the fake ones when the cell door closes. Curtis shares untold stories from the yard, the mentality needed to survive decades in that system, and how music kept certain heads sane through the madness. This is street knowledge straight from the source—no Hollywood version, just the truth about doing hard time in one of the South's most brutal lockups.