Respecting Perspectives
Self Discovery and Emotional Awareness are just a few of the topics discussed in this "If Theo Von met Mac Miller" podcast series.
Tune in as Andrew "AWALL" Cornwall (Rapper turned Hitmaker) and his guests, explore what it means to be human, from every perspective imaginable!
Respecting Perspectives
From Anime To Alt: Building A Creative Identity With Korri Darkheart
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What does it look like to live as art, not just make it? We sit down with Korri Darkheart, a musician, poet, painter, and cosplayer whose creative identity was forged in church pews, theater halls, and late-night rooms full of makers. From the first middle-school poem that cracked something open to the trance-like hum of a choir that never wants to stop, Korri charts how moments of awe become a lifelong practice of expression.
We explore the eclectic mix that shapes her sound and style: anime and J-Rock edges, French jazz textures, 90s scene energy, and the lyrical precision of Kendrick and Biggie. Korri talks candidly about building a persona that protects the private self while freeing the performer: pink hair, gothic and Rococo threads, and a presence that announces “ART LIVES HERE.” She breaks down what real feedback looks like - naming value, weight, shade, and light - so growth becomes a craft, not a wound. The conversation turns deeply human as she shares how confidence now lives in her skin after surviving self-harm, and how her songs speak to anyone wrestling with heavy feelings and looking for a way through.
We also get a moving look at creative partnership. Korri and Bajsh (RP EPISODE 29) navigate life as two artists in love: photo shoots, late sessions, constant attention and build trust and boundaries that keep the work pure. Their albums unintentionally weave a shared story when played back-to-back, proof that honest art harmonizes itself. There’s playfulness too: advice to younger Korri, rapid-fire quirks, and a dream to one day fill a national stadium. We close with a quiet charge: do what makes you happy, and keep moving toward the work that tells the truth.
If you felt seen by this conversation, follow Korri on Spotify and socials, share this episode with a friend who needs it, and leave a quick review. Your words help more artists find their people and their voice.
Watch more episodes here: https://respectingperspectives.com
ALL AWALLARTIST SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS:
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APPLE MUSIC: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/awallartist/1519132019
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IG: https://www.instagram.com/awallartist
FB: https://www.facebook.com/AWALLARTIST
X: https://x.com/awall_artist
TIKTOK: https://tiktok.com/@awallartist
Welcomes, Vibes, And Purpose;
SPEAKER_01What's going on?
SPEAKER_03Yeah, low right here, come here.
SPEAKER_00Oh wow. Okay, that's beautiful.
SPEAKER_03Your style is killing it. I'm telling you. You got something.
SPEAKER_01It's really tough.
SPEAKER_03No, dude, you're making it look easy.
SPEAKER_01What? Yeah. Thank you. You are. That's a great compliment.
SPEAKER_03Yeah, I'm telling you, dude. You're making it look easy. You know, you really are. And I want to thank you for just supporting your friends and and the people that are around you and becoming a part of something that is greater than you and I. And it's beautiful that so many different walks of life can come together and just have a conversation. You know?
SPEAKER_01Uh, you know, actually um means a lot to me personally because my entire life, I feel like art has been a calling for me. Matter of fact, um, I feel like I've known since I was extremely young, like five years old. When asked what I wanted to do with myself, I said I wanted to become art. And I didn't want to ever limit myself to any type. I wanted to be able to become it. I wanted to be able to sing, to dance, to draw, to paint, to act, whatever may take me. And in doing so, I found myself always in rooms with other creatives. And so it's just if I'm not around my people, you know, I I gotta find y'all. I gotta be there.
SPEAKER_03Found well, consider yourself found, all right? Yo, let's start it off. Let's let's get it going. We are here with the respecting perspectives podcast, and you got AWOL here, and I have this young lady, let me tell you, Miss Corey Darkhart. She is a vibe, okay, a vibe and a half, all right. She she came through the first time I met her, and just her energy and her presence was just just um it was captivating. And uh, gosh, you know, she's a musician. You could tell she's a stylist, she is a she's a poet, and gosh, uh, you know, I'm gonna let her uh tell a little bit about herself, kind of where you came up and um kind of where you what how we ended up here.
Art As Calling From Childhood;
SPEAKER_01First of all, Gali G, thank you so much, AWOL. I am just blushing right now. Um, I before anything else, I want to take a moment and say to you as well, like, you also are doing an amazing job. You also have been someone who I met at Wide Awake, and you inspired me. You lit a fire in me too, and you made me excited, and you made me feel like meeting people like you let me know I was going in the right direction and seeing all that you're doing now and what you're continuing to do and where you're really coming from. Like, wowie once again inspire me. Once again, makes me super happy to be here. Um thank you so much. No, pleasure. That means a lot. It means a lot. Uh, more about me. Hmm. Yeah. I'm from the East Coast and the West Coast, you know? Mom's in Virginia, dad's in California. Um, growing up, I was always kind of like the weird kid, you know what I mean? Uh, and I just kind of grew into that. I remember in high school, I was like one out of like maybe four alternative African American girls, and I would still run into people who didn't even know that you could be both of those things. Um I grew up with like a lot of multi-languages influences in my life. Most like, of course, I love anime, Japanese culture, seeing like French jazz, all that stuff. My mother always tried to make sure that I was very like well-versed in that, and I guess. If you want to know me as a person, you have to know that I'm always going to find a way to communicate to you a feeling that I've felt because I think it's important to share it, be it through language or music or art or painting, and something that that's something that really drives me.
SPEAKER_03Yeah, I can tell. It's it's it's super apparent, and you you shine with that, and it's just so it's cool to to see and and and to be a part of at the same time. Let me ask you this though. When do you think the first time in your life you knew music was going to be that thing for you?
Origins, Identity, And Cultural Mix;
SPEAKER_01I'd say there might be two times, one so more personal and the other more like macro, I guess, more bigger. The personal one for me was being in middle school and trying out for the whatever so um talent show. And my mom telling me to wait for her because she was going to try and figure out a song or something for me to do because I was terribly shy, horrendously so. Oh my. And um, she ended up not making it in time, and you know, she was like got caught in traffic, and I just remember that emotion that I'd felt at that time, and it compelled me to write this really like deep poem, and I remember like holding back tears and being asked because it was my time to be um auditioned, and the uh I later found out she was the drama teacher. She saw that I was like clutching the poem in my hand, and she said, Let me see this. And she read it, and then she read it again, and she was like, You're gonna show up tomorrow after school, you need to go out there and read that. And then I did, and they were like, Yeah, wow, where did that come from? And I was like, I just came up with it now. Yeah, off the job. Yes. Um, from there I was involved in theater, but I think the second time, the more spiritual side of it, that I realized that I music was my destiny was being in church when the spirit takes over, when it's like this emotion, like everyone goes into a trance like nothing I've seen before. There's no drug that can induce it, there's no person that can command it. It is just an energy that is so overwhelming that you must you must express, you must create. And it's like when you're in church and the song has stopped, but for some reason the choir just keeps on humming. And for some reason the pianist just keeps on playing. And that drummer, oh my lord, like the feeling of like changing colors, like my skin scale by scale, you know what I mean? From my head to the bottom of my feet, realizing I wanted so desperately to be a part of that and to go to wherever that is. Like, wow.
SPEAKER_03That's amazing. It's so cool that you can share that with us and be able to describe it, uh, you know, in in the way that you have. And gosh, I mean, to piggyback off that, what would you say are maybe either some of the influences or people, places, or things, whatever it may be, that help shape, you know, your artistry itself?
SPEAKER_01Uh might sound really weird and all over the place, but I feel like um uh anime was a really big influence for me growing up, and that and showed me like a lot of music from over there, introducing me to other cultures, but also just the art of it. Um, my mom wanted me to listen to music that came from all over the place, and also just growing up, my preteen years were that era where like emo scene party music was really popular. Lady Gaga was going on, um, Kanye was making his thing happen, and then as I got older, I started to focus on like the literal the lyrical skills of like Kendrick. I started really looking back at artists like Biggie. I started really just becoming more aware and taking in more and trying to use what made me feel something in my artistry and my music. Did I answer your question?
Awakening To Music And Spirit;
SPEAKER_03Yeah, no, definitely. You you actually Doug, it's great when you can give specific references, you know, because then other people who have, you know, a liking for those people can also be like, yeah, you know what, they they actually did that for me as well. So it's cool to make those connections and understand, you know, where uh they they come from, you know? It's it's crazy. Um, let me ask you, I mean, because you know, since the first time I met you, the way you dressed was a little bit uh different than the people around you, and it was, you know, you can tell that you're not scared to express yourself. You can tell that like when you walk down the street, like you know you're an artist. Like you had those, do you? I'm sure you have people who like come up to you and they're like, You're an artist, right? Like, I'm I'm telling you, you got that, you just got the look.
SPEAKER_01Well, actually, I am a cosplayer. Um during the summer, I do more cosplayer events and stuff like that. During the fall, I focus more on Corey Darkhart things. Okay. So Corey absolutely has more of that anime cosplay, almost like J-Rock um K-pop influence mixed with like uh subtle, like um, like what's the word I'm looking for? Rococo or like the styles, gothic styles like that. Okay, lots of 90s influences, but so mostly what people ask me is is there a convention nearby? Is there a part? Where's the party at? I get that lab with my boyfriend. Like, where's the party at? Where are you guys going? Are you guys performers?
SPEAKER_03They know, they know right off the bat. You got that, they got that performer spidey sense.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, I mean, so I'm I'm just used to it. I mean, of course, sometimes it's a little interesting with responses. I've been recorded before, or like I'll I'll have people point, but at the same time, I'll be like, what are they looking at with a full head of pink hair? Like, yeah, what are they? Like, oh yeah.
SPEAKER_03So it's like, you know what though, that you're proud of the way that you you look, you know, and it's cool to see that because especially in today's, you know, society and world where you know you feel like you have to, you know, fit in somewhere, you know, and it's so cool that like it doesn't matter how you look, you know, you can still fit in, you know, to to whatever you know you're trying to fit in, and you really don't have to put yourself in a box, you know. It's beautiful that we can we can dress, I mean, like all of these options that we have. I mean, to be able to express ourselves, and then you know, hopefully what that does is that kind of bleeds onto the page and onto paper. Um, and uh, you know, what what makes us the artists we are today? And uh I uh I'm very curious to know. I mean, you did give me some of like the backgrounds, but like give me some artists that you um some favorite artists, whether it's singers or it's um maybe an author or uh a painter, or do you have any any that you could throw out there?
SPEAKER_01An artist that I often enjoy showing to my friends is Salvador Dali, especially when he works with Disney. It's just really fun because most people don't expect him to have lived in the same time period, but also I just really enjoy his art. Um, there's a painter, oh I'm gonna butcher his name, please forgive me. It's like Francisco Del Role or something like that. Okay. He's a painter that focused on ballerinas, cool, which I always found was really cool. I um my grandmother was a huge fan of Michael Jackson.
SPEAKER_03Okay.
Influences From Anime To Hip-Hop;
SPEAKER_01So the his tenacity with like how he performed, how um he would like beatbox to create sounds, um, the way that he carried himself when it came to his music and whatnot, that was something that influenced a lot of my sound and the way that I also did things. Corey is actually a persona to one, give me the freedom to express myself the way I like, but also just protect the people around me and my personal life as well. And I feel like Michael Jackson did it that a lot too, you know. Like something I normally say is like, Corey has pink hair. I don't have pink hair. This is not Corey. Corey is like a magical girl that only shows up when it's time to perform.
SPEAKER_03It's a persona, you know, and and to be able to transform into that is um, you know, it's really cool. I think it's I think it's awesome that we have all of these influences around us, you know, that we can. And I think the wild thing is when it comes to like someone like Michael Jackson who like lives that like he lived that, you know, and there's some artists who they don't separate themselves from the art. Now you hear that, right? Like, you know, separating yourself from the art. Do you feel like that is something that um either should be done or like do you have you ever found yourself needing to like separate yourself from the art so that way you didn't get like hurt, like if you got like a bad comment or or not a bad comment, but like you know, somebody gave you some some constructive criticism about it and it wasn't like the best thing ever?
SPEAKER_01For that, I would say there is no separation between me and art itself. There may be different versions of myself that I allow to express different types of art. Corey is obviously more like a music lyrical person. Uh, my own personal self in my everyday life, that is someone who paints, who enjoys like working on portraits and landscapes and and painting clouds and birds and whatnot. You know what I mean? Um, whenever people give me their feedback, I don't think it's a problem, but that's also because like I pride myself on growing up with a lot of like art and advanced art being my life. And in doing so, we would have exercises where we did give constructive criticism to each other. And those rules were can you explain it? Can you be respectful about it? Is it something that you can actually point out and use words like its value, its weight, the shades, how much light or dark it has? Because saying something like, Well, that's stupid, or you look dumb, that's it's not a real thing. And when people do it in real life, um it excites me, it makes me really excited. Like if I get looked at weird, or if I get a weird sneer, I'm like, because I know there's probably some younger girl who got bullied or was made to feel like less than. So it's like, oh, you want to make someone feel bad? Make me feel bad.
SPEAKER_03Right? Cool, you can right and smile in their face. You know what I mean?
SPEAKER_01Right, absolutely, yeah. And that's just that's just how I face that.
Style, Cosplay, And Self-Expression;
SPEAKER_03Yeah, I love that. I love that. You're you're a strong woman, and it's cool to see you face those things with a smile and to you know be confident in yourself. You know, confidence, gosh, confidence is something that um I think we all struggle with. Um, is there anything that that helps bring confidence in in your life or something that makes you feel like maybe a piece of clothing that makes you feel more confident or I would say what makes me feel more confident is actually my skin itself, so who I am, no matter what clothes I put on.
SPEAKER_01Um and that is because uh it's a little might be a little personal, but growing up I died, I struggled with self-harm. If you listen to Corey's music, if you truly listen to those words, I'm speaking to someone out there who, like me, at one point struggled to not harm themselves, struggle with those really big emotions that you felt like no one else could get. So, um, and also the reason that I do cover up my um scars is because I don't want to like trigger anybody. That was something that I was worried about. I don't want someone to see my skin and feel like they you know what I mean. It's not that I'm ashamed of it, but that is why I'm the most proud of it. Because no matter what I put on my body, I've had to accept me at my most raw and my most natural. So no matter what clothes I put on, my body is my temple and it is valuable to me. So nothing and everything is what makes me feel amazing.
SPEAKER_03I love that so much. It you you described that very well, and uh gosh, it makes you think of right, all the different different emotions that you go through when you're younger, you know, and the struggles that that are out there and and how ways to deal with them. Um and uh gosh, I you know, I it makes me think about all the struggles that like I've personally never been through, but like I was telling you, you know, having conversations like this, it helps me so much learn about myself. And I'm so grateful to be able to talk to someone like you who has been through different struggles than I have, but at the same time understanding that we're going through them, you know, and that we're here and that we're trying, and that we are, you know, like you were saying early, earlier, you know, the way that we express ourselves and the different uh mediums at which we can do that. You guys were talking about, I want to, I do definitely want to mention, so you gotta you gotta tell the world who your boyfriend is, who you're dating, and like let me tell you something. They are two of the most passionate artists, and they are just a team. They are when I asked somebody who their favorite duo is right now. I gotta say, I gotta say you and him, because you know, you gotta show up. You he gave you a hug and a kiss before the podcast, and you know what? That's support. Like that's what it's about. You know, that that small stuff that some people think is cheesy, but you know what? Cheese is good. Okay, so don't mess with me right now, all right? So tell tell the world who he is and uh how you met him and what he's done for you as an artist, and maybe like a struggle, or I know that's a lot of things, but I I I would love for you to because you inspire you guys inspire me with your relationship. So I would love to hear how you do this.
SPEAKER_01Oh, bless your heart. Okay, um, everybody, I have an announcement to make officially. Beige, I'm in love with you.
SPEAKER_03Um handled that well.
Personas, Boundaries, And Critique;
SPEAKER_01We are dating and we were like really happy together. Um he's someone that I haven't found this type of happiness with in a long time. I think it's amazing that we both are so passionate about art and music, and that is something that we fell in love with each other more on. I've never experienced the spiritual emotion of singing with someone the way I've sang with him. I've never I've never sang this way before in my life, I've never felt this way about art and about music before in my life. And I think it is so wonderful because you know, when you first look at us, you think, oh, they're so different, they're so this or those, so that. But he helps me understand parts of life that I may not want to take a second glance at us so much, you know, and I feel like I help him with parts of that life where it's like more of the assertion and more telling him, like, if you if that's which how you feel, then go with it. Those are your emotions, this is your music, this is your like drive. Yeah, so much of his music in his albums, it's it's a pleasure to be interwoven through so much of it. It is amazing that like when you place our albums and our music side by side, if you play one after another, it actually creates a story and it tells like how each one is feeling and where they are going in life, and that's something that is so amazing to be a good thing. That's a cool media concept, right?
SPEAKER_03I've never thought about something like that, making like a double album where like that person, but then if you were to play each track kind of back to back, then it would create a whole different story that you uh that you knew about, but you weren't able to make those connections with.
SPEAKER_01Right, and it's just it's not something that we intentionally didn't. That's what's so amazing about it. Um, if I had to think of something that we needed more work on as a team, I would say. Because I don't want to say struggle, it wasn't bad, it didn't end the world, you know what I mean? It was just how to mitigate and really handle our performing personalities being in a relationship, as well as our personal lives being in a relationship. Because at the end of the day, it's it's fine if you are around me, but this is something I've struggled with when I dated other men, you know? They either fall in love with Corey, and then when I'm myself, they're like shh, or they like me, and because they like me, they feel like Corey is too much, too flashy, uh, oh, uh. You know what I mean? So it was really about like thinking about how we wanted to move, when we wanted to introduce the idea, how we wanted to go about it, setting our boundaries when it came to other people as well, because it's not a normal relationship, no matter how you slice it. Uh, he makes music, I make music, he has photo shoots, I have photo shoots. People are telling you all the time that you look good and you gotta go, thank you. I know. Right? You know, so that was something that we communicated to and I believe worked on. It was something that at first was a little bit daunting, you know, uh because a lot of the things that would be a red flag in a normal relationship is not a red flag here. Like, oh my god, he's just a friend. Oh my gosh, he's just a friend. Hey, this is a person I'm working on a project with.
SPEAKER_03Right.
SPEAKER_01This is actually a person I'm literally sitting on a couch with you at a podcast. Yeah. You imagine being like, hey babe, I um I'm gonna go do this thing. If you didn't trust someone and if you were not ready for this type of relationship, this would be very hard. Right. I've had men in the past struggle with me going to podcasts and assume the worst, and it's like, wow, you really have to be ready for this, yeah. Yeah, you're 100% right. Beige and I I feel like we've really worked on and put a lot of energy to, and I'm proud of him about it.
Confidence, Scars, And Healing;
SPEAKER_03Aww, I love that. It's so cool to hear that and to just be inspired by by that, you know, and um, you know, you're you're lucky to have found someone out there that you can you can really be yourself with, and he's he's lucky as well, you know. And gosh, I mean, you know, hopefully that will help the listeners, you know, try and try and put down their guard a little bit and and and maybe, you know, try and find that other half that that they're out there, you know, that they know is out there. Because with eight billion people, let me tell you, like he or she or they are out there, okay? So don't even stress that, you know. You just have to know yourself well and uh you know be be well grounded, and I think that's one of the most important things. Um wait, wait, do you hear that? Do you hear that? What is that noise? What noise? Oh my gosh, wait a second. It's it is a phone call.
SPEAKER_01Oh, you do you have to take that?
SPEAKER_03You know what? I should I I think I you won't believe you won't believe who it is.
SPEAKER_01Who is it?
SPEAKER_03Yes. This little Corey? Okay, wait a second, wait a second. Okay, this is the oh, the young G, Corey. Okay, alright. Well, guess who I'm sitting here with? Excellent. Yes, great guest. You got one right. And uh, what what do I want you to do here? Oh, see, you're prepared. You already came prepared. Alright, here she is.
SPEAKER_01Hey little Corey, how are you doing? Uh-huh. Yeah. It'd be like that. Okay, okay, okay. I I get it. Listen, no matter what, don't go to Tijuana, okay? Do not go to Tijuana. Don't go to Tijuana no place. Stay home, stay home. Listen to your dad and stay home. Do not party over there. But seriously though, um, there are gonna be times in your life where things may be a little different. There are gonna be times in your life where things may be a little bit hard. I'm gonna need you to really focus on what matters because that is what's going to drive you, and that will be your northern star. I'm gonna need you to remember no matter what that you love yourself and you're doing this for yourself. Okay? There are going to be times where you're not going to be sure what to do at all. It's okay to ask for help. It's okay to talk to your mom or your dad. Your mom's actually really cool now. She's really cool now, dude. Like, go hang out with her.
unknownYes.
SPEAKER_01Oh, you gotta go? Yeah. Okay, bye. Tell her you love her. Oh, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Listen, listen. I love you, and I'm so proud of you. Okay. I love you so much. Bye. Oh, that was good. Thank you so much.
SPEAKER_03That was so good. There you go.
SPEAKER_01I'm just gonna hug myself a little bit.
SPEAKER_03Yeah, give yourself a hug because you deserve it.
SPEAKER_01You too. We should hug ourselves.
SPEAKER_03Hug ourselves for each other.
SPEAKER_01You know, actually, funny secret. It wasn't until I was watching it with my boyfriend the other night I didn't realize that Corey Darkheart was inspired by Care Bears.
SPEAKER_03Oh my god. Isn't it crazy? Dude, I'm sure there's so many inspirations behind it that you like later on think about, like, you know what? That really made me do this thing or want to be this person. Right? It's so cool that we have all of those things too. Absolutely. Alright, we got rapid fire here. Okay, we're putting 10 seconds on the clock. What's one thing you can't live without?
SPEAKER_01Um my voice memos.
Creative Partnership And Trust;
SPEAKER_03You gotta talk, talk into the microphone. Oh, sorry, my voice memos. Okay, voice memos. It is if you could be any sea animal, what would it be and why?
SPEAKER_01Oh, rapid fire. Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. I would be a blue whale. Yes, and why rhymes with blue whale and they're really cute.
SPEAKER_03Yes, love it, love it. Alright, what's what's your superpower? What's your superpower? Telepathy.
unknownTelepathy.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_03Okay. Daytime or nighttime?
SPEAKER_01Nighttime all the way.
SPEAKER_03All the way, all the way. Favorite kind of flower?
SPEAKER_01Hyacinth. I adore them. Oh man, they're so good and they come back every single year.
SPEAKER_03Shouts out the high, shout out to the annual hyacinth. Uh, let's see here. The most unique food.
SPEAKER_00Um, I would have to say sea urchin. I've never had it, but I want to try it.
SPEAKER_03Oh, love that. Love that. Uh, New Testament or Old Testament?
SPEAKER_00The one with Jesus in it.
SPEAKER_03Oh, Jesus is in it. All right. Alright, favorite color.
SPEAKER_00Pink.
SPEAKER_03Pink. Got it. Really? Okay, okay.
SPEAKER_01I like black, but pink goes with it really well.
SPEAKER_03Oh, you're right. Okay, okay. Favorite curse word. That's not really a curse word, but people consider it a curse word.
SPEAKER_01Heliante. Heliante.
SPEAKER_03That is awesome. Okay, favorite spice girl. Oh, scary spice. Got it. Got it. Alright, what's my spirit animal?
SPEAKER_01You're like a giant sloth when they were still fast.
SPEAKER_03Taking it. I'll take that all the way. Alright, what's your favorite season?
SPEAKER_01Hmm. I really love the transition from fall into winter. It's just really pretty. And like snuggle weather, Ash Bay. It's like I'm always trying to make the room super cold so we can cuddle. Yeah.
unknownOkay.
SPEAKER_03That's smart. That's smart. Snuggle season in the house here. Alright, what's one thing you've always wanted to do but haven't yet?
SPEAKER_01Hmm. I want to like perform in a stadium.
unknownOh, dude.
SPEAKER_01Yes.
SPEAKER_03What stadium would it be if it could be any?
SPEAKER_00I'm not sure. Like, I don't want to be too ambitious.
SPEAKER_03Dude, be ambitious AF.
SPEAKER_00Like the National Stadium.
SPEAKER_03Oh, there you go. Yeah. Dude, love that. Oh, I can see it now. Corey, Darkheart performing at the National Stadium in front of a hundred thousand people. Oh my gosh.
SPEAKER_01I'm not ready yet, but one day I will be. Oh my gosh.
SPEAKER_03Keep working, keep hustling. And one last question. Coconut or pineapple?
SPEAKER_00Pineapple, because they will never fall from the sky and concuss me.
SPEAKER_03Oh my god. That is such a good reason to pick that. Okay. I haven't heard that one before, and I've asked that question a lot of times. And that actually put like that actually made me, that swayed my decision a little bit.
SPEAKER_01Pineapples are cute, they just grown from the ground. Like they're really nice.
SPEAKER_03Oh, dude, you are so right about that. Alright, well, gosh, we're we're coming to the end here, and uh will you give the world a little bit of inspiration? Will you leave them with a final thought?
SPEAKER_02Hmm.
SPEAKER_00It's okay. Do what makes you happy.
SPEAKER_01I'll be here with you.
SPEAKER_00My name is K-O-R-R-I, Dark Heart, like what is in here?
SPEAKER_03Love that. Oh, thank you guys so much for joining us. And uh thank you, Corey, for being here. It's been a pleasure. And uh, I'm so excited to uh to see what you have uh in the future. And uh is there any project or anything that that people should look out for? And how can they find you online?
SPEAKER_01I have two projects right now that I'm really I think working on. One is based on like the Greco-Roman gods and stories that I've been building. I might call it Gorgon, and the other one is just more I think to cope, and that's really like just self-exploration after trauma, what happens and accepting it and how we all deal with these things. Um, I haven't released them yet because I am a perfectionist, unfortunately, and I've tried to rush myself, and that just ruins it all. So I'm still continuously working on it and adding songs. I can be found on Spotify at Corey Darkhart and Instagram at Cory underscore darkhart.
SPEAKER_03And it's K-O-R-R-I.
SPEAKER_01Yes, and then TikTok as Corey Corey Darkhart. And YouTube, I think Corey Darkhart too. Just Corey Darkhart, you'll find me.
SPEAKER_03Yeah, go find Google that. I will thank you so much for being here. And until the next time, peace.