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Cozy Len's journey from Zachary to "The Voice"

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Cozy Len, a remarkable musician from Zachary, Louisiana, is stepping into the spotlight on the national stage as a contestant on season 26 of NBC's "The Voice" with Team Gwen. Join us as we connect with Cozy to explore his transition from aspiring basketball player to soulful singer, a journey redirected by a wrist injury that led him back to his musical roots. Cozy recounts the deep influence of his church environment and the awe he holds for artists like Brian McKnight, Snoop Dogg, and Boyz II Men.

Our conversation takes a turn as Cozy opens up about his experience on "The Voice," offering an insider's perspective on the audition process and the relief of Gwen Stefani turning her chair. He shares what it takes to maintain vocal health and authenticity in performances, emphasizing the invaluable coaching and camaraderie he’s found on the show. Cozy’s dual role as the frontman of Rewind Band and a worship leader at Healing Place Church highlights his dedication and the support he draws from his local community, underscoring the importance of faith and resilience on his artistic path.

As we conclude, Cozy shares a touching tribute to a special person in his life who has been his perpetual source of strength and inspiration, reminding us of the personal connections that propel our dreams forward. The episode wraps with a sense of celebration and anticipation for Cozy's continued journey on "The Voice," as we cheer him on from his hometown to the national stage. This is more than a story of musical success; it's a testament to the power of perseverance, community, and unwavering support.

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Speaker 1:

My name is Cozy Lynn. I am from Baton Rouge, louisiana, a Zachary resident currently, and I am on season 26 of NBC's the Voice Team. Gwen hey and you got to keep listening to Porch and Parish, the number one podcast in Zachary Louisiana.

Speaker 2:

All right, everyone, welcome back to another episode of Porch and Parish the podcast, your inside scoop on everything happening right here in Zachary. From our headquarters on Virginia Street, I'm your host, jen Gennaro, and today we've got a special story that's making waves not just here in our hometown but on the national stage. Our very own Zachary resident, cozy Lynn, is lighting up the stage on the Voice. Cozy is showing the country what we already know here in Zachary that we've got some incredible talent. We're so excited to dive into Cozy's journey, share some behind-the-scenes stories and rally our community to support one of our own. So, without further ado, this is Porch and Parish the podcast.

Speaker 3:

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Speaker 2:

All right, cozy. I was actually tipped off about this story by our friendly neighborhood barista Katie Lofton at PJ's. She said you're a regular, so what is your order?

Speaker 1:

Lofton at PJ's. She said you're a regular, so what is your order? My order currently is ice green tea with three honeys.

Speaker 2:

Three honeys. Is that like a matcha tea or we're doing like a?

Speaker 1:

Green tea. Okay yeah, just ice green tea. Sometimes I'll do the hot green tea, but I usually do that in the colder season.

Speaker 2:

Are you not like a hot coffee drinker?

Speaker 1:

I am, but I had to get away from coffee man. Coffee, the caffeine really over time drives your voice out, damages your vocals. Oh no, kidding, so I kind of opt for the lesser caffeine option whenever I drink caffeine.

Speaker 2:

Oh, is that what's wrong with?

Speaker 4:

me.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so who is one musical artist whose voice you love but could never emulate?

Speaker 1:

Oh man, I grew up loving Brian McKnight's voice. I grew up, I can remember.

Speaker 2:

That's who you remind me of.

Speaker 1:

Really.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, oh, I love some what. Circa 2000 Brian McKnight yeah, he's so good, yeah, I love Brian McKnight.

Speaker 1:

I can remember being in high school and I would try to emulate him so much, man to the point to where it got frustrating at times. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

And what did you want to be when you were little?

Speaker 1:

Wow, I always wanted to be a musician. I mean, I was just hands down. I came from a music family. My dad, he was a pastor for about 40 years. I grew up in a church. My mom was musically inclined. I think it missed my older brother though I think that's the only person it missed but I always wanted to be a musician. Um, aside from being a musician, though, I really wanted to play basketball. Basketball kind of it was one of my main things, and when I got in high school it kind of almost pushed music to the back burner. But God had a different plan, man. When I went to school and college at UL it was USL, then it was 1999, my freshman year I went to try to pursue a basketball scholarship, tried to walk on with the university and my first practice man, I fractured my wrist and that was a done deal.

Speaker 2:

So, needless to say, I just fell back on music it was kind of God's way of telling me man it's, I got a different journey for you. All right. So, as a Zachary resident, tell me what is your favorite dish from a Zachary restaurant.

Speaker 1:

Ooh uh, I like to go to. I'm pretty simple man, I really am I love. I love red meat, I love steaks, so I like to go to Sidelines really and go to their steak night yeah, I like to either go to their steak night and get a steak, or I'd go get their quarterback hamburger okay, yeah, there's a lot of good steaks in Zachary it is.

Speaker 1:

Now there's a place closer. Yeah, yeah, there's a lot of good steaks in Zachary. It is Now there's a place closer. That's on Plank going down. You make a right on Plank and it's right to the right. Me and my wife went there for that Thursday night steak night for the first time last week. I can't remember the name, is it Mills or something like that? I can't remember the name of it In Zachary. Yeah, it's to the right.

Speaker 2:

By, like Angus, by that coffee time trailer.

Speaker 1:

I think so oh.

Speaker 2:

I'll have to look into that.

Speaker 1:

They have a Thursday night steak night. It was really good.

Speaker 2:

I love a good steak night.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

All right Cozy. So tell us a little bit of intro and background when?

Speaker 1:

did you grow up? I grew up in Baton Rouge, in North Baton Rouge, in the Glen Oaks area. I grew up there. Since I was a kid, lived there for most of my life.

Speaker 2:

Okay, and are you allowed to say what your real name is?

Speaker 1:

My real name is Cozy.

Speaker 2:

No way yeah.

Speaker 1:

My real name is Cozy, First name's Cozy C-O-Z-Y. My middle name is Lynn L-E-N, so that's where I get my artist name from Cozy Lynn? No kidding, I always thought that was like a stage name, my last name is Gage G-A-G-E and of course I'm junior because my dad is senior.

Speaker 2:

How cool. Okay, I thought for sure, there was going to be some sort of backstory about a nickname.

Speaker 1:

Well, the backstory about me choosing my first and middle name as an artist name, one of my mentors, ty Cook. I'm really close to him and his wife Darnell. She would just always call me Cozy Lynn, off the cuff, cozy Lynn, cozy Lynn, and I just love the ring to it. And she comes from a musical family as well. Her brother's an accomplished musician artist and she just started calling me that off the cuff man and I like the sound of it, so I just kind of took it on as my, as my stage name.

Speaker 2:

I love it. That's a great name. So when did you realize that you had a voice like a real voice?

Speaker 1:

so I guess I was around eight, nine-ish at the time. I was a big hip-hop fan. I had a friend of mine who I grew up with in the neighborhood. We wanted to start a little rap group. So we started a rap group. Um, my parents, our parents realized the talent that we had so they tried to put some backing to it. They got us a manager and we would write our own songs and we would record on karaoke machines, tape cassettes, things like that. So, uh, in writing our own songs and doing our own music, I kind of combined this thing of rapping and singing and the more people actually heard me sing outside of the church set in the hip hop set.

Speaker 1:

They were like man, you should really push that more, you should really push that more. So as I got older, I just gravitated more to singing than I did actually rapping. Do you write your own music? I do, I do. Yeah, I have original music available on all digital platforms Spotify, google, apple Music, the whole nine Awesome. It's all available.

Speaker 2:

So who's been your greatest supporter in your musical journey?

Speaker 1:

My wife.

Speaker 4:

Really.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she's been my biggest, greatest supporter, man. She's a blessing. We'll be married four years next month actually on the 20th, november 20th and she's really been the wind beneath my wings, the blessing that I needed, because she's very supportive.

Speaker 1:

I work so hard in what I do and she calls me a workaholic. She says I never sit down, I never kind of rest and I tend to get tapped out a lot, gigging so much with my band day in and day out, sometimes three, four nights a week in a different city every night. So I'll hit these brick walls to where I get really depleted and I'm just like man, I don't know how long I can do this. I'm ready to give this up. And she's the one she's always the one patting me on the back and holding me, saying look, you can't give up. This is you, this is who you are, this is the gift that God gave you and you just got to stay true to your promise and keep doing it. So yeah, man, there were a lot of times I wanted to quit and she was the one that stopped me from doing it.

Speaker 2:

I think I need to hire Jasmine as like my personal hype woman to come pat me on the back. I think any artist of any medium you know whether it's a writer or a singer or what have. You can relate to feeling that way at times, like why am? I doing this. You know that's wonderful.

Speaker 1:

She sounds great. Yes, um, how long have y'all lived in Zachary? We have been living here for over a year now. I think we moved here last June, okay, and uh, we moved here because we really couldn't find a good school for our youngest daughter to go to in EBR. My wife is a school teacher, so that's her main job. She's actually an interior designer and decorator and stylist, but being that she's a school teacher, she wanted to move into a better school district, so she was already living here before we got married. So when we got married, she moved in with me in North Baton Rouge where I was living at the time, and as Casey and our youngest started getting older, we wanted to get her in a better school district. So we ended up moving back here to Zachary.

Speaker 2:

Wonderful. And last question of our background. You are a pretty sharp dresser, so tell us where do you shop for your looks? You?

Speaker 1:

are a pretty sharp dresser, so tell us where do you shop for your looks, man? So my two main places for my suits that I love to shop is Express and Men's Warehouse.

Speaker 2:

Okay, but I love finding things on sale, so when I shop at Express I go to the outlets. I love Express.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, my wife, we kind of I don't want to say we clash, but we kind of fight about style sometimes because she thinks she has a better style than me. At times I got a reminder. I'm like, look, I had style before I met you, but she, she dresses me for the most part. She actually dressed me for, uh, my blind audition. Okay, the producers ended up, uh, picking that outfit that she picked out for me and, uh, she picked out basically all my outlet, uh outfits for, uh, all of my filming I bet she never let you live that down.

Speaker 1:

Nah, nah, she won't she wants to take all credit and she's deserving of it yeah yeah, but those are my two places that I like to get my suits from. There's some other places that I like to shop. I'm a sweater guy. I love sweaters, button-down shirts, my comfortable feel. I love to golf, so I got my golf pants on right now. I like to wear things like that pullover polo shirts, things. But I love shopping for sales.

Speaker 2:

This guy here.

Speaker 1:

He's not miced up today, but uh, mike has discovered ebay and buying like lululemon and polo and all these nice clothes for like 20, so you can get lululemon on ebay for a discount oh yeah, man, I'm learning something today.

Speaker 2:

He's a, he's an ebay connoisseur now man, thank you for that all right, let's move on and talk a little bit about your experience so far on the voice. So, of all the judges on the voice, who were you starstruck by the most?

Speaker 1:

I can't say that I was starstruck by any one of them the most, and I really can't say that I was starstruck at all. Uh.

Speaker 2:

I mean, those are legends up there they are.

Speaker 1:

They are, but I mean, I've done this is not to diminish them at all. I've been in the music industry for a long time and I've had the God-given privilege to meet a lot of people and you know, when I met them, it's not that I was so much starstruck as much as I was just excited to be around them, in their presence, because they are legends and the opportunity to know that I have to glean from them and learn from them. And I guess I'm saying I wasn't starstruck because you can get to a point to where if you're starstruck it can affect your nerves.

Speaker 2:

And it didn't really seem to affect your nerves Exactly Like you were just super cool with it.

Speaker 1:

Exactly so. Yeah, that's what I didn't want to happen. You know you want to be able to operate as a professional. I mean, you're here to do a job and you're here to try to do that job well and to have to prepare for that moment the nerves can actually break you, moment the nerves can actually break you. This is, this is another platform, this is another stage that uh has a tendency to break some people who are actually good, you know. So I just try to hold that demeanor and still be appreciative of you know, meeting some of these great legends, man in their own right. They're all fantastic, from Michael Buble to Gwen Stefani to Reba McEntire and Snoop Dogg. I go the furthest back with Snoop, though, because I was a big hip hop fan coming up in the 90s. So I loved Snoop when he was with Death Row Records. Uh, with Dr Dre, I loved a lot of what he did because I was a big hip hop fan and I love to see his maturation as well, even when he came in the late 90s.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's been so cool to watch his career. Just, you know now he used to be like this, you know real hard rapper, and now he's like collaborating with Martha Stewart and I just love that Like he's

Speaker 4:

a.

Speaker 2:

Snoop for all ages. He's the best, so that's awesome. Um, now, how did you decide on your song choice for the blind audition?

Speaker 1:

well, I was a big uh boys to men fan and um, that was a song that we could actually get clear to do on the show. So, being that I was a fan, I really wanted to do that song. I could see myself, I could remember myself, actually, when I was younger, I would be in my living room playing their music on the stereo and the cassette tape and I play it it loud, and I'd sit in the living room Nobody's at home I'm acting like I'm performing, performing to their music, performing to their songs. You know, r&b at a time back then it was when people really sang. It wasn't, you know, studio made.

Speaker 2:

Pitch wheels and all that Exactly.

Speaker 1:

You know auto-tune this, that and the other. So I felt like it would be a good song for me to display two strengths uh about my voice the smooth texture of my voice. That would, uh, exemplify my tone, and it would also give me the dynamic range in the song to be able to express, uh, my high pitch range and my falsetto that's what Mike said earlier.

Speaker 2:

We were very impressed by the high notes. I mean, not everybody can pull that off.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I think my brother was impressed too, because he's about to be turned into a meme and how he was looking side stage with my wife.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's great, ok. So what went through your mind when Gwen turned around for you?

Speaker 1:

man, what went through my mind was finally you know, because I'm talking to myself through the whole song, I'm getting through it. I'm like, OK, here's the start, we're coming off the runway. And then I hit the chorus. I'm like, OK, we're getting there. And I'm like, OK, the bridge is coming up, Nobody's turned yet. So I'm panning to the crowd and as soon as I get to the pinnacle of the song, I see her turn and I'm like, finally and it was like a a light bulb went off to where I just took my foot and put the pedal to the metal and just just went hard with it.

Speaker 1:

So, you know it was. It was a wonderful feeling. And then, uh, gwen not Gwen, I'm sorry Reba ended up turning as well. So it was a great feeling. It's a great feeling. That's that's what I was there for. And it was a great feeling because I knew that if I didn't get a chair turn, my journey was over, and I didn't want my journey to be over like that.

Speaker 2:

Right. So what has been the most surprising or unexpected part of the competition so far?

Speaker 1:

that's a good question. Um, I can't say that anything was too surprising or unexpected. Um, I went into this competition with an open mind, uh, and going into it with an open mind, I was fully ready for whatever was to come. I kind of knew the ground floor of the steps that we had to take in each process of the competition. What I can say is this that I had heard a lot about the Voices process, how smooth it is, how much the producers make it easy for you. They don't bring you in having you to worry about too much. All they want you to really worry about is your vocal health and you performing at a high level, and they facilitated that for us well, so there wasn't too much that I was really surprised about it.

Speaker 2:

It kind of caught me off guard, but it was a wonderful process now they don't do pitch wheels or voice tuning or anything like that, right?

Speaker 1:

so what we're hearing, yeah yeah, what you're hearing is is is truly who you are you know so if you and that's a lot of pressure too, because if you mess up on that stage then it's gonna show right yeah?

Speaker 2:

how much one-to-one like what is it like being on team gwen? Do you interact with her a lot, do, do you? Are you like texting with her? Can I have her number, like what you know?

Speaker 1:

we're either working towards something, if we're working toward the next phase after our blind audition, which is the battles, so we'll work together as a team. Usually a lot of our interaction is on camera, some of us off camera, but she does have the autonomy and the interaction to coach us, to help us be better, to hear us in our rehearsals, to point out you know what we can do here to make us better, or what we can do here to to Help us out on stage, how we look, how we sound. Yeah, we have a pretty good amount of interaction with her to build that rapport.

Speaker 2:

Are the judges kind of hanging out with you guys in the downtime or?

Speaker 1:

are y'all totally separate.

Speaker 3:

Okay, it's not like that, yeah, got it.

Speaker 2:

So is there any advice that you've received during your time on the Voice that's really stuck with you, any specific coaching, anything you've really taken to heart?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the first thing that comes to mind is when Gwen first heard me in our initial rehearsal, she had to stop and she was like man, I absolutely love your tone and your falsetto tone. It's just freaking amazing. And then she doubled down by saying you just have amazing instincts. And then she doubled down by saying you just have amazing instincts. That really sticks with me because it blessed me. Michael Buble has some great comments from my blind audition that really stuck with me. Although he didn't turn his chair, I felt like he would have if he didn't already have the diversity in his team.

Speaker 2:

He had a good reason Right right.

Speaker 1:

But you know, I can tell from his spirit man he's a genuine guy. He has some great comments. Snoop has some great comments. Yeah, there was a lot of things that the coaches and the interactions that we've had told me that I really hold to heart, that actually keep me going.

Speaker 2:

So, moving on to your connection to Zachary in the Baton Rouge area, tell us a little bit about your singing, like your worship services, your work at Healing Place, just kind of give us a background as to where people can hear you perform locally.

Speaker 1:

So I'm the front man for a band called Rewind Band. We're based out of Baton Rouge. We're a party band. We do mostly private gigs, so we travel a lot. We're usually mostly in Louisiana, but sometimes we can be outside of Louisiana across the Southern region Mississippi, Texas, Florida. We've been in California a few times. I've been the front man for them for the last seven years. I'm also one of the lead worship leaders at Healing Place Church on Highland Road. I lead worship there with them on Sundays. We have three services. We have a eight o'clock, a 930 and an 1130. So, yeah, that's where I am. That's where I am on the weekends doing worship with HPC and my main gig is being a traveling and gigging musician with Rewind Band.

Speaker 2:

So have you ever had it happen where you're playing music until like 3 o'clock in the morning, Yep, and then you've got to get up and okay.

Speaker 1:

Always.

Speaker 2:

Oh man Always always.

Speaker 1:

I'm in a different city pretty much 98% of the time every Friday and Saturday night.

Speaker 2:

So I don't know how your green tea is getting you through that 8 am worship service.

Speaker 1:

Man look when I get in Saturday. Most of the time I'm getting in 1.30. I can get in the bed for two, and then I got to be up and be at call time at service for 6.45 am.

Speaker 4:

Holy moly.

Speaker 1:

Yes, with on the cusp of me having gigged for the last two three days straight. Each gig is about three to four hours, so my vocals are kind of like.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Almost on their last leg.

Speaker 2:

I got you, so has the support from your hometown and your church community given you extra motivation, motivation during this whole process.

Speaker 1:

they have, they have I'm really uh, I'm really blessed at how they responded. Baton rouge, zachary, I'm really blessed how the community has gotten behind me and I've been looking at all the comments and the youtube videos the videos that's been posted by the comments and the YouTube videos, the videos that's been posted by the Voice and myself and man, the comments are so encouraging, they're blessing me.

Speaker 2:

And I really appreciate it. Everybody's really proud of you. I mean it's really exciting.

Speaker 1:

I really appreciate that man and I just with that statement. I always have to say this, and it makes me feel a little indifferent at times when people say they're proud because in all actuality, I really wouldn't be here on this stage if it were not for God opening this opportunity for me. You know, I mean, obviously I put in the work but without having the favor of the Lord on me I wouldn't have made it out of hundreds of thousands of people to be able to be on this stage. So yeah, if you want to say you're proud of me for putting in the work, I appreciate that. But actually, having this opportunity, I'm thankful and proud of God for even giving me the chance.

Speaker 2:

Amen, that's wonderful to hear. All right, so let me see we are coming up on time and I still want to have you. I'm going to put you on the spot to sing me a song. Ok, but tell us what is your ultimate goal as an artist, both during and after the competition.

Speaker 1:

My ultimate, ultimate goal as an artist. My ultimate goal as an artist is to do music at the highest level possible. If that means you know, success is different for everybody, right? My success generally is to be able to tap out my potential and to do music at the highest level. My vision is to be able to travel the world and do shows in front of hundreds of thousands of people. My ultimate vision is to be able to travel the world and do worship in front of hundreds of thousands of people. And my ultimate vision is to be able to travel the world and do worship in front of hundreds of thousands of people and bless the people of God with the gift that he has given me.

Speaker 1:

So I guess that's my ceiling, that's what I'm aspiring after, that's what I'm striving toward, and I'm just trying to put in all the work that I can and to give myself the opportunity to walk through any door that God opens for me. So I just have this mantra where I have to say always, stay ready, always stay ready. And it's hard staying ready because you can put in the work for so long. You'll get discouraged when nothing happens. Nothing happens. But you have to stay focused and stay believing.

Speaker 1:

And that's where my wife comes in again to kind of double back on that. You know, when you put in the work for so long, you don't see anything happening. You have to have somebody in your corner that can just tell you hey, it's going to happen. You just got to keep doing what you're doing, like the Bible said. The Bible says the best. Don't be weary in well-doing. If you know you're doing something well and you're striving out to something, don't get weary in it. You'll get tired, but don't allow that to affect you to the point to where you're saying I want to stop and I want to quit. Keep going so you can reach that potential.

Speaker 2:

What wonderful inspiration. Thank you for that. Okay, so give us a quick recap on where we are in the competition. What's coming up next? As we're recording this, it is Tuesday, october 29th, so what is in store for the next few episodes of the Voice?

Speaker 1:

So what's in store right now? We're still in the battle phase of everything. Once we get out of the battle phase, we'll be moving over to knockouts, and the next round out of knockouts will be playoffs, and after playoffs, we'll find out who's all making it to the live shows at the end of this thing, which will start in November. So that's what we're looking forward to.

Speaker 1:

Well how can the Zachary community support you and kind of rally around you and all be present for these live shows that are coming up? Number one the Zachary community can support me by streaming my music. You can go on any platform, check out my music. I got good R&B music, good Christian music out there good my music. You can go on any platform check out my music. I got good R&B music, good Christian music out there, good, clean music. So look me up. I'm on every platform. Artist name Cozy Lynn C-O-Z-Y-L-E-N. I'd be happy for you to check me out Also. Stay watching the show. Stay tuned. Comment. Go to my Instagram page Cozy Lynn. Follow me. Follow my journey. Go to my Facebook page Cozy Lynn. Follow me. Follow my journey. That's the way that you can support me and stay in tune to what I'm doing.

Speaker 2:

We will definitely put all those links in the show notes and in the social posts. All right, so last question if you win the voice, what is the first thing you'll do to celebrate?

Speaker 1:

Going to Disneyland. No, I'm joking.

Speaker 2:

I really thought you were going to say that You're going somewhere. Where are you going?

Speaker 1:

Man, I'll probably take my wife and kids to an international trip. They love trips, so we'll probably go somewhere internationally, somewhere of their choosing. I know my wife likes she really wants to go to Jamaica, so may do a Jamaica trip.

Speaker 2:

A little Christmas cruise to Jamaica.

Speaker 1:

That would be fun too, because she likes to do that. She likes to take trips for holidays as well, so that might be fun. Go to a tropical island for Christmas, or tropic Christmas Love it All right.

Speaker 2:

Now it is time for you to sing me a song. I was going to make you sing Fancy by Reba McEntire, but I don't know Does he have the range.

Speaker 1:

I don't know about that man. Some people try to put me on the spot. I think I got Mariah Carey range but nah, it's just depending on the time of day, you know.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, All right. Why don't you sing one of your originals that you're really proud of and that you'd love for everybody to hear?

Speaker 1:

Oh, one of my originals? Sure, OK, this is one of my originals. It's called Angel. You can download it on all platforms. I actually recorded this live with my band Cozy Lynn Experience. So yeah, go check it out. But here it goes.

Speaker 4:

She was standing five-five beautiful brown eyes Lady looking so fly. She's blowing my mind. Soft, caramel complexion, beautiful like the sunrise, make me say, oh my, and what I've been holding my eyes. Her style's like no other. No other lady is above her. She is the only one for me. Her inner beauty is so, so deep. Never thought I'd meet someone like this. I sit back and reminisce, thinking of you, thinking God that I have you cause you're my angel. You're the only one for me, my lady, always there to care for me, my friend. Together we will always be and nothing can ever break us apart. You're the one for me, wow.

Speaker 2:

Wow, was that about me? No.

Speaker 4:

That was beautiful Cozy, thank you.

Speaker 2:

I know.

Speaker 1:

I love it.

Speaker 2:

I love that.

Speaker 1:

Thank you Awesome.

Speaker 2:

Alright, that is going to wrap up our interview. Thank you so much for sharing your voice your talent your stories with us. And we are so excited to rally around you and we will all stay tuned to the Voice.

Speaker 1:

Thank you all so much. It's been a blessing.

Speaker 2:

All right, this is Fortune Parish, the podcast. Yes, ma'am.

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