We’re looking forward to introducing you to King Beezy Supreme. Check out our conversation below.
King Beezy, a huge thanks to you for investing the time to share your wisdom with those who are seeking it. We think it’s so important for us to share stories with our neighbors, friends and community because knowledge multiples when we share with each other. Let’s jump in: Who are you learning from right now?
“Studying the art like it’s divine text — I’m tuned in heavy, lessons from Rhymefest.”
Hip-hop legend
Can you briefly introduce yourself and share what makes you or your brand unique?
Peace. I go by King Beezy Supreme — an entrepreneur, creator, and visionary committed to building purpose-driven platforms that uplift, empower, and inspire. My work is rooted in authenticity, creativity, and culture. Whether I’m crafting meaningful stories for children, developing a cleaning business with community impact, or building the next bold brand — every move I make is about legacy, ownership, and elevation.
My brand is more than a name — it’s a declaration. “Supreme” is about mastering self, leading with intention, and setting a new standard in whatever lane I’m in. I don’t just hustle — I build. I don’t just create — I awaken. My mission is to leave a mark that outlives the moment.
Right now, I’m working on projects that blend heart and hustle — from children’s literature that celebrates Black beauty and identity, to businesses that create opportunity and push culture forward. Every step is strategic. Every play is purpose.
King Beezy Supreme isn’t just who I am — it’s what I stand for.
Okay, so here’s a deep one: What part of you has served its purpose and must now be released?
The part of me that has served its purpose and must now be released is the version of me that played small to make others comfortable.
I used to dim my light — shrink my vision, quiet my voice, second-guess my power — all to fit into rooms that weren’t built for me. That mindset helped me survive, but it won’t help me thrive. It kept me grounded when I needed to fly. It taught me humility, but now I’m learning to walk in confidence — not arrogance, but alignment.
That version of me helped me build silently. But the new me is ready to build boldly, speak louder, lead louder, and live in full expression of who I am. No more apologizing for the crown I wear.
What did suffering teach you that success never could?
Suffering taught me what success never could: the value of resilience over reward.
Pain introduced me to parts of myself I didn’t know existed — the warrior in me, the healer in me, the creator who turns pressure into purpose. Suffering stripped away ego, distractions, illusions — and left behind nothing but truth. It taught me how to sit with myself when the applause fades, when the money’s slow, when the path ain’t clear.
Success might celebrate you, but suffering builds you.
Success might put you on stages, but suffering teaches you how to stand when no one’s watching.
It taught me gratitude, patience, and how to hustle from the heart, not just the hunger.
Suffering gave me soul. Success just gave me shine. And now I move with both.
Next, maybe we can discuss some of your foundational philosophies and views? What are the biggest lies your industry tells itself?
One of the biggest lies my industry tells itself is that success equals visibility — that if you’re not loud, viral, or constantly online, you’re not winning.
But that’s cap. Real value don’t always come with a spotlight. Some of the deepest impact happens off-camera — in the grind, in the planning, in the healing, in the legacy-building.
Another lie? That you have to chase trends to stay relevant. Nah — timelessness will always outlast trends. They tell us to “follow the market,” but I believe in shaping it.
And maybe the biggest lie of all: that you have to compete to win.
Truth is, when you walk in your lane, rooted in purpose, nobody can block what’s meant for you.
Okay, so before we go, let’s tackle one more area. Have you ever gotten what you wanted, and found it did not satisfy you?
Yeah, I’ve gotten what I thought I wanted — and it left me feeling empty.
There were moments I chased the win, the look, the applause, the bag — thinking it would fill the void. And when I got it? It felt hollow. Why? Because it wasn’t rooted in purpose, it was rooted in ego.
That’s when I learned: not everything you want is what you need.
Sometimes, you outgrow the version of you that set that goal in the first place.
Success without alignment is just noise.
Now, I don’t just chase goals — I check my why.
If it doesn’t feed my soul, build my legacy, or serve something greater than self… I don’t want it.
Contact Info:
- Instagram: King_ Beezy_Supreme
- Facebook: King Beezy Supreme
- Youtube: https://youtube.com/@kingbeezysupreme?si=St2pIMVcyTzz4BwZ
- Soundcloud: https://on.soundcloud.com/6L86l7XFLsjuB7rbwR
- Other: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/king-beezy-supreme/1498323249


















