In the heart of Southern Idaho’s Magic Valley, where hip hop once seemed like an impossible dream, a group called Untouchable made history. What started as four hungry artists—P.$ho’ty/G, Bones, Smokin Joe, and 40—quickly grew into something bigger than music. Their secret weapon, the fearless MC kt munee, shattered expectations and proved that Idaho had a voice in hip hop worth hearing.
Untouchable wasn’t just a group. They were the first crew to break onto local radio in the Magic Valley, igniting a spark that inspired artists across the entire state. For kids growing up in small towns with little access to the culture, hearing someone from “right around the corner” hit the airwaves was a revelation.
For P.$ho’ty/G, hip hop wasn’t just sound—it was survival. Raised on legends like Eazy-E, he connected with the grind and hustle it represented. “We are products of the streets,” he explains. “Living our lives in the streets. Telling our stories from the streets.” That reality inspired the name of their debut album: Untouchable Street Products.
But success comes with turmoil. Just as quickly as Untouchable rose, they fell apart. Still, P.$ho’ty/G and kt munee pressed forward, dropping the Untouchable G-munee album—another record stacked with powerful, raw tracks. Both projects left behind a catalog fans still call phenomenal. Yet the grind wore them down, and the music paused. Years slipped by.
Then came the spark. A couple of years back, Bones and P.$ho’ty/G shot a video for Mi Tierra, one of the standouts from Street Products. The reaction was explosive. Despite having no social media presence, the video racked up thousands of views. Even more powerful were the stories from fans—people who shared how Untouchable’s music shaped their lives. After all that time, the impact was still alive.
“It inspired me in return,” P.$ho’ty/G admits. “Back then, it was all word of mouth, local radio, shows, and trunk poppers. Now it’s old-school tactics to online fanatics.”
Through it all, P.$ho’ty/G never cared for bragging. He doesn’t need to. The music speaks for itself: gritty, real, and unapologetically gangsta. He’s collaborated with many, represented even more, but the essence has never changed.
Because Untouchable isn’t just a name.
It’s a statement.
It’s survival.
It’s a product of the streets.
And as P.$ho’ty/G puts it best:
“We are street products.
We can’t be touched.
We are Untouchable.”