I know who I am, and I know my story, and the things that I talk about are authentic and real, and I always say this: I'd rather be hated for who I am than loved for who I'm not.

I've invested a couple million into touring, and that's paid off.

Obviously, deep down, I want people to enjoy my music, but the only people I want to enjoy my music are the people who want Logic to win and are fans of me.

No I.D. executive-produced 'Under Pressure' and helped me find the Logic sound that's evolving every day.

People try to tell me like that, 'Oh, you shouldn't be proud,' or, 'You're not this,' or, 'You aren't that,' or whatever the hell. I'm just kinda here to say, like, who is anybody else to tell me who I am or what I've gone through or what I haven't gone through?

I'm proud to be biracial, and there's a lot of people that say things like, 'I don't see color,' and I completely understand that, but I think different is beautiful, but I think our difference shouldn't separate us, and for me in this era, in this time, in everything that we're going through, my whole thing is just about unity, man.

I don't want to be looked at as just that guy with the best mixtape of the year. I want to be, all-in-all, an incredible musician.

I don't know how I'm really perceived in the world.

I want y'all to know that all of the music I make is for the people that truly appreciate it and care about it.

You literally cannot deny the fact that rock and roll was born because of blues, and blues is black man's music.

Everybody has culture, even white people have culture, but its different with me. So in high school, I was hanging out with the black and Hispanic kids. I'm not hating on white people. I hang with white people, too, but that's where I felt most accepted because I could relate to them more.

I like to always do my best to make music catchy, so I think a very catchy melody is cool.

My mother was crazy.

I turn down really well-paid shows all over the world because I want to spend more time with my wife and myself.

I'm proud to be black and white and look the way I look. I'm proud to not speak down on women or glorify things that are unimportant.

I've been blessed enough to have my eyes open because of music, first and foremost.

My mother was racist.

I'm not gonna do the same album over and over and over again.

I'm not the rapper that's too cool to tweet and talk to fans.

All I've done since I was young was hone my craft.

I wear my inspirations on my sleeve.

I was raised in a black household and grew up with black homies.

I think artists are interested in what people think of them.

I've been working a lot with No I.D. and Hit-Boy.

Everything I do creatively is never for money.

I sacrificed a lot of things growing up.

It wasn't the best childhood, but I did my best to make it good on my end... I didn't let it pull me down.

Lyricism is about painting a picture. It doesn't have to be a bunch of punchlines.

Everyone is beautiful, and the world isn't equal - and we need to fight towards that.

I'm a relationship guy. I'm not about that 'rapper life.'

If you listen to a woman, you'll know what she wants.

I'm the kind of guy who'll go to a courthouse and get married, but for women, it's different. It means a lot to them.

I think if you pick up a microphone and you rap, you're a rapper.

I'm no longer the young guy in No I.D.'s studio asking for Kanye beats.

I love movies. I own, like, every movie, ever.

I'm very weird with my money.

Sometimes I watch movies. I don't party. I don't go out. It's just me and my homies in our circle. I stay away from everyone and everything so I can just continue to remain who I am.

I was so scared because I was thought I had to work, work, work, because I thought I might only be around for five years. I thought I wasn't good enough to last.

My mother was a good woman.

It's really cool to come from nothing and essentially be a nobody and make yourself somebody.

I am an observer, I like to watch people. I am into psychology and people - how they act and such.

When people refer to 'Back in the Day,' it was a Wednesday. Just a little fun fact for you.

I say it with my tongue firmly planted in cheek but there's truth to it - being a comedian is very close to being a therapist. When you're working smaller clubs, you're listening. You're feeling an energy, you're going with a tone but when people start yelling out, you almost start a conversation with people.

I like fearless characters, people just not afraid to do anything it takes to make people laugh.

I'm always going to be someone that people enjoy watching.

People know I have a good time on stage. I love my life. I love my job.

I feel like I was born and bred to stay self-motivated. I'm not one of those people who ho-hums and feels sorry for himself when something's bad.

I do try to keep my show very improvisational. I don't work off a set list; I like to keep it more in the moment. I like to have information about where I'm going, what might be happening in that particular region as well. I like for people to feel like the show is for them.

I think there's a definite template for what can be done for the future, but I'm not going to call myself a trailblazer. It didn't seem like a big idea to me: Let people know you appreciate their loyalty, and you say thank you. I was just doing what those punk bands did with fliers. Stand on the corner and say 'Come check us out.' Instead of fliers, it was going to be instant messages and e-mails.

Every joke has its origin - the punching people in the face joke. It hurts like hell to get punched in the face.