- right. - so we can be accepted. - right, right. - we're mexican-ish. we're not into traditional that much. but when i went to the canelo fight and they're singing the mexican national anthem, i'm like, "what the hell is this song that everybody's singing?" i don't know what nobody's singing. all of a sudden, i was listening to the whole crowd. i'm like, "damn, i'm not mexican." [laughter] - right, right. - i'm missing all this culture. - yeah, yeah. - because i'm from the south side of chicago, but i'm like, you know, i'm not like into the culture every day. so i was like, "damn." and i felt that pride. - right, right. - even though like i say, you notice that people from mexico don't really like mexicans from america. - so what's the beef? what's the hate? - because we're mexican but we're not mexican. and then americans don't hate-- americans don't like mexicans because we're not americans. so it's like we're in the middle. - no, i felt that too. i feel that too being a latin colombian guy. i was always kind of feeling like i was in between, between worlds. you know, i wasn't really latin enough. and i wasn't really accepted by americans. i was always, like, trapped somewhere in the middle. - here in chicago, it's like the higher numbers you grow up, it's like the better area you're in. so if you go from, like, little village,