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  • -My first guest tonight is an Emmy-nominated

  • and three-time Grammy-winning artist.

  • He's also the founder of the non-profit SocialWorks.

  • Here is Chance the Rapper. Yeah!

  • That's what I'm talking about. -Hey.

  • -You look good, bud. You look good. I missed you, man.

  • -Oh, thanks, man. You look good too.

  • -I appreciate it. -It's awesome to be back

  • with you. -Where are you calling us from?

  • Looks like you're in a recording studio?

  • -Yeah, I'm at the studio, just chilling.

  • -Is this the studio where you recorded all your stuff or no?

  • -Yeah, this is CRC in Chicago.

  • This is where I have been recording here since 2014.

  • I made "Coloring Book" here. Most of my projects,

  • my Christmas projects, "Surf" this is the spot yeah.

  • -When you first started out, how did you afford studio time?

  • -I was in high school when I found this after school program.

  • Or it found me, kinda. I was walking down the street.

  • And this guy came out and told me about a free studio

  • inside the library.

  • And I came in and checked it out and it was a really cool

  • after school learning center called Umedia,

  • and the guy who brought me in was called Brother Mike.

  • He became my mentor.

  • A lot of kids in Chicago, a lot of people --

  • well, they're adults now.

  • but a lot of the people that I work with

  • all came out of that same program.

  • Yeah, they had a free studio. So I just -- yeah, right.

  • -Have you always gone by Chance the Rapper?

  • -No. So, well, it was --

  • It actually, when I was in high school,

  • I used to go by Chano. It was a terrible name.

  • And when Twitter first game out,

  • this girl that was a friend of mine,

  • made a twitter for me and made me Chance the Rapper

  • and I was like, okay, I will just go with that.

  • -No way, I love hearing that. -Yeah.

  • -Do you remember when you wrote your first rap?

  • -Well, when I first started out, I started making poetry first.

  • Really I first started as a dancer, right?

  • And then fourth grade, we did this thing called

  • The Young Author's Project.

  • But we did it every year, and this year,

  • I decided to do a book of poems,

  • and I liked it and I had never written poetry before.

  • But I just -- out of nowhere, I just decided to start doing it,

  • and then soon after that I fell in love with hip-hop.

  • And then I started recording and when I was probably 14,

  • My cousin had his own studio that I got to go to

  • once or twice and I recorded two songs there.

  • And I just always loved it and always was like,

  • this is going to be my thing.

  • But the first rap I wrote was probably -- I know what it was.

  • It was a song called the Black Definition.

  • And I do not want to rap it right now.

  • But yeah I remember, I've been writing songs for a long time,

  • since I was a kid. -Yeah, was everyone supportive

  • of you growing up, wanting to be a rapper?

  • -Uh, I don't know if they were supportive of it.

  • But it was understand.

  • It was a thing that people knew that I rapped.

  • Like, since I was a kid. And that was just a thing

  • I was into and I moved my hands and stuff.

  • I don't know. It was weird. Yeah, my dad actually really --

  • right when I got out of high school, we kind of --

  • you know, as parents do when their kids graduate

  • from high school and they don't go to college or get a job,

  • it's kind of like a friction thing.

  • -Sure. -Yeah, but after we separated

  • for a while, he came -- we got back together

  • and he really helped, you know, just guide me in terms of

  • the amount of work and focus that I needed to work on it

  • from a business side.

  • And he still is doing that to this day.

  • But yeah, the beginning, my dad did not want me to be a rapper.

  • -It's like telling your parents you want to be a comedian.

  • They're like, no. Anything but that.

  • No, you can't do that. But -- looking at you now, man.

  • You have been crushing it.

  • I got to say, you never stopped working

  • since I first was introduced to you.

  • You have a top-ten song with Justin Bieber.

  • You have done three virtual concerts.

  • The virtual concert, this is amazing.

  • It's cool that you're doing these things.

  • And thank you for doing these things.

  • -Thank you, man. -You did one for --

  • you said the mix was just for car speakers.

  • -Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like -- I don't know.

  • I have been taking this virtual concert thing really seriously.

  • I put a lot of time into -- not just writing the story

  • Around it or shooting it but also in the mix.

  • Just in the audio, spending days and days

  • trying to make it sound, you know, robust

  • And like a studio album versus a big room or something.

  • And so we mixed the last one for the ride there,

  • the one that's in the car. Yeah, it's a mix, to be --

  • you know, listened to in the car.

  • It sounds good. Try it. -I love that, man.

  • That's taking it to the next level.

  • No I want it to sound great if you're in a car.

  • This is perfect for this.

  • I want to talk about some of the other cool things you're doing,

  • in addition to being a talented artist,

  • you're also a very good activist.

  • You were named to billboard's 2020 R&B Hip-Hop Power Players,

  • in the year of activism, congratulations on that.

  • Your organization, SocialWorks recently launched its

  • Warmest Winter initiative. What is that?

  • -Yeah, so Warmest Winter is actually something we have been

  • doing for, this is I think our fifth year,

  • and it's basically a series of events

  • that start around November, around right now,

  • and go through the beginning of March.

  • And it's just a series of events and initiatives that we do

  • that target the homeless and sometimes specifically

  • the homeless youth in Chicago.

  • And it's -- you know, we do warming centers.

  • There is always a big thing, which we're pivoting this year,

  • called the Night at the Museum.

  • Where we have, like a huge -- we take over the

  • Museum of Science and Industry, and this year specifically,

  • we added a couple events and kind of pivoted away from

  • some of the -- you know, big person events.

  • And we're doing actually a Turkey give away.

  • I think it's next weekend, and yeah,

  • we have a bunch of different spots around the city

  • that we're starting to do -- we've actually never taken

  • part in the Turkey giveaways.

  • We do a lot of other kind of events.

  • But we're trying to like start it to it early

  • and just give back, because of the climate

  • with the pandemic and everything.

  • -Dude, never stop, man. I think it's so cool.

  • You always, since day once, you always give back.

  • The Turkey give away, if you want information on that go to

  • socialworkschi.org.

  • It is very, very cool what you're doing. I love that.

  • Give away those Turkeys. -Thanks, man.

-My first guest tonight is an Emmy-nominated

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