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No, and that's fine because my mother was American. Well, not American born. She's from the Caribbean, St. Lucia. But she was always in the States and she dragged us everywhere in the States. But primarily she always had a Western New York accent. She lived for the longest time in Medina. And then she encouraged me to use that accent because she said it sounds a lot more better. Well, it sounds a lot better, I'd always say. And then she said... Anyways, then, you know, talking ghetto, right? Because black people have the stereotypes, the stereotypical black people. So she said you could be like them or you could be a little different and not stand out quite as much. And then what I did though was I just kind of picked up on the way people talk in Toronto. It's a little bit different, right? So I kind of... I think... I think... I'm not sure, but I think I've gotten the Toronto talk down. So, yeah. No, I was mainly just talking about the two different types of voices you hear in those states. That's all, right? Like Michigan's kind of like that. You hear kind of a blend of... like the parts that's closer to Ontario, you hear a lot of that. And then the parts that's even further away, you hear totally something else. You know, Ohio's kind of like that. Like part of Ohio, there's different voices.
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