It was like a break that I needed, but I didn't want. just watch TV and eat Ding Dongs and play video games and just. And honestly, it kind of felt good not to work for a year. ![]() And it made me able to slow down and realize I need a personal life. And it was like one and the same until the pandemic. I mean, juggling my personal life and my career, I used to have a problem separat it. What are the biggest challenges that you faced over the years through the show and how does the pandemic sort of rank in that? Well, "Black Ink Crew" has been on the air since 2013. It's like, "Yo, I have to deal with the same thing like you." "Yo, keep your head up." I know what type of stuff that, you know what I mean, people go through and people don't shed light on it. And it's funny how I run into people in the streets all the time. I feel like a lot of things that I go through, people find similarities or basically could see that, "Yo, I went through the same thing." I've been through a lot of things with my family and a lot of things with friends, a lot of things with people in general. With a lot of things, a lot of things that people go through and it never gets brought to light. I mean, I think it's affected me in a major way, but not in a negative way. With you personally, how are you handling the mixture of your personal life and career or how has having your personal and family life on TV affected you? ![]() So that's why you going to see a lot of that in "Black Ink" this season. I still do that because I remember I was looking for somebody to do that when I was that age, when I was in the community, when I was struggling. There's not too many celebrities 10 years strong on television, still saying, going back to that community, feeding their community, doing stuff with their community, talking to the community, talking to the people in school.
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