Lighten upCloset Trump supporters writing essays on how a hip White rapper is evidence of White superiority like Black Men being "cool" is all we have to offer.
Yet the extent of his political opinions can be summed up as "Both sides" Pathetic.
Lighten upCloset Trump supporters writing essays on how a hip White rapper is evidence of White superiority like Black Men being "cool" is all we have to offer.
Yet the extent of his political opinions can be summed up as "Both sides" Pathetic.
me right nowMost dudes here are like 1 or 2 generations back music wise. Nas and Jay Z stans...
Indeed. I feel like the apparatus, that is, the machine that creates these kinds of people, outright plants or overhyped people, should be looked into more since decent number of these plants are interchangeable in some ways.Jack Harlow is the definition of industry plant. NOBODY Black fukks with him and when the album dropped even the whitest of white publications like Pitchfork shytted on him. He had the mythical “Drake Stimulus” package and still didn’t make any real noise amongst the black community.
I kind of understand what the OP is trying to get at but you used bad examples and calling Hip Hop the Black Man’s “bread and butter” sounds like some shyt a white person would say honestly
Now here's why it affects you, black man.
You know these "pawgs" and "snow bunnies" that you're always sweating? Deep down, if they could have a white boy with the swagger of a "Fabolous"-esque black man, they would scoop him in a heartbeat. Look how hard women go for Fez from Euphoria....
Think about it. These bunnies don't have to worry about bringing white chocolate Arnold home to meet their parents. They don't have to carry any stigmas that come with swirling. They're free from society's chokehold on them. They don't have to worry about the "struggle" their kids would have to go through if they were half black. It's like how some c00ns like black women features better on non-black women (i.e. Pawgs, Kylie Jenner lips, etc).
Cacs will never take over hip hop. Black men and women create and set the trends in hip hop and music in general