Meaghan Garvey From PitchFork Goes In On Drake

Flay Mayweather

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When will thecoli accept that it's absurd to try and ban an entire population from speaking about a form of music that's sold to them, performed for them, and played on the radio where they can hear it and that the majority of the black population doesn't care.
The only time a white persons opinion on hip hop should bit her anyone is when they're insulting where it came from or propping eminem and other white artists up as the GOAT.
You're fighting a losing battle.
Musical opinion isn't strengthened based on culture.

Still caping for white people
 

Art Barr

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you shouldnt take anyone affiliated to pitchfork's opinion seriously


she is the pr person who pr'd this crab toy nikka drake.
now, wants to rescind after realizing what all gateway rap fans realize.
When they are at the crossroads of being about or against the culture.
They faked from jump.
now, realize the damage they created and perpetuated and want to lessen their deathblow effects they created.

Art Barr

*what happens when toys realize they not hip hop and want to be, badly
 

Pifferry

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Still caping for white people
Kendrick is in my top three but Eminem is one of his GOATS, I love Killer Mike but he works with a white rapper/producer regularly, Jay Z is in my top three but he makes songs with white rappers, black rappers generally can't wait to hop on a track with eminem, they'll work with white producers or use samples that were originally performed by white people.
When the artists who make the music tend to not care about something it's silly for the fans to act as though there's some integrity their in not accepting that white people will have an opinion on hip hop especially when the vast majority of black people don't care.
As long as they aren't ranting about real hip hop, trying to call some white rapper the goat, racist, or insulting where it came from I don't care.
 

MVike28

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Edub

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Whether you're riding with the author in the OP, or you're riding with Drake, either you're riding with a culture vulture :mjlol:
Exactly...DRAKE IS THE GATEKEEPER FOR THE CULTURE VULTURES...they felt EVEN MORE WELCOME with him...all of theses comp. nerds creating memes are CV's...these companies supporting are CV's...a lot of these coli posters are CV's
 

blackslash

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for some reason when I look at Cole I see a black man, but when I look at Drake i see a Canadian Jew with extremely light skin
cool
When i see both them mulattos I see a mulattos

If u mixed u aint black or white
to me

U mixed period

Ol pretend to be black ass mulattos
 

Edub

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Not the biggest drake fan but these corny muthafukkas are the voice of the culture?:beli:
No, but it's the weak eating the weak...these people are emotional and sensitive like Drake...there feelings change weekly...I mean this bytch got a tattoo, and now sees he's a cornball...a real nikka didn't need a tattoo and a poster to realize what she finally is...Drake is a team production as shallow as street curb sewer water:francis:
 

wild100sboy

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Lol I only posted it because pitchfork usually sucks drakes dikk meats but for some odd reason I'm slowly seeing a backlash on the media front. Maybe people aren't siding with meek but maybe they're just getting tired of drake? :ohhh:

536.gif
 
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Another one:


Compares Drake to Taylor SWUFT. :mjlol:
If you follow pop culture, perhaps you spent part of this Tuesday clicking through Internet slideshows of images of the slideshow of Internet images that Drake showed at his most recent show. Perhaps you then Googled around to see whether anyone had yet made a meme involving Drake and the concept of ouroboros, and the best you could find was an image of the Toronto rapper in an Inception poster.
Related Story

Why Drake Replied

The Drake/Meek Mill feud that led to this grand exercise in the meta has captured public attention not only because it involves famous people, but also because it involves the question of what makes certain people famous. Mill accused Drake of not writing his own lyrics; Drake changed the subject with amusing disses that generated amusing memes that he then repurposed for a amusing PowerPoint-like presentation at his OVO Fest in Toronto. The sheer volume of Drake’s response has led many to call him the victor in the beef (Meek’s latest, paltry salvo: wedgie threats), but he’s still yet to deny the ghostwriting accusation that started it all—in fact, he just let the Internet ghostwrite his concert.

The saga’s made clear that Drake, like a lot of stars, should be thought of less as a solo artist than as a collaborator both with behind-the-scenes figures and with pop culture at large. He (and/or his team) serves up raw material—songs that balance tough-talking wit and sensitivity, but also “YOLO,” GIFable videos, and emoji tattoos—to be digested and turned into viral phenomena, which are then reseeded into the project that is “Drake”: music catalogue, media narrative, and merchandise trademark. Part of his success comes from whatever image of hip-hop authenticity that Mill tried to slash through, but more of it comes from his entertainment value, which has nothing to do with being real.

The Drake kind of celebrity is not new, but it is thriving. The Kardashians are continuing to pioneer new ways of not-so-secretly manipulating the public: Kim expanding into entrepreneurship and motherhood while maintaining her ability to winkingly “Break the Internet” with her body; Caitlyn Jenner using a deeply personal transition for a reality TV series that doubles as a public-awareness campaign. But the current media master is Taylor Swift, whose marketing is deeply powerful and as sophisticated as a multinational’s. She wears the memes made about her; she rewards her fans with films of them being rewarded; she presents her pivot from singer-songwriter country into factory-made pop as a move to satisfy her soul; she uses her friendships to evangelize for friendship to evangelize for herself.

Swift, like Drake, will always be a target of controversy because some people think this kind of manipulation is deceitful or wrong. Last month, partly spurred by a Twitter spat between Swift and Nicki Minaj (Meek Mill’s girlfriend![?]), a flood of pent-up dislike was unleashed toward the 25-year-old singer, perhaps most potently by Dayna Evans at Gawker. In a post titled “Taylor Swift Is Not Your Friend,” she called Swift “evil” for being a “a ruthless, publicly capitalist pop star” who uses feminism for profit. Like Meek Mill calling Drake a hack, articles like Evans’s create the impression of there being a counter-narrative that the public should wake up to; if only people realized their entertainers were putting on a show, they wouldn’t scream for them.
Drake just let the Internet ghostwrite his concert.

The truth, though, is that on some level fans and haters alike are already in on the routine. The majority of people who think every giggle and grin and shout-out Swift makes onstage is 100 percent the result of pure, spontaneous feeling are probably tweenagers or younger; even the most positive concert reviews from adults center around just how savvy she is. If you love dancing “Shake It Off,” if you cry to “All Too Well,” if your kid sister builds stronger bonds with her female friends because of something Swift posted on Instagram, then it means that the machine worked. If it doesn’t work for you, it doesn’t work for you—but another machine probably will.

What about the idea of hypocrisy? The fact that she has rooms full of songwriters and huge marketing power might make Swift’s on-stage projection of herself as a warm, selfless underdog seem false to some. But those are also the very things that allow her to be big enough to be on that stage in the first place, putting on the show at all, delivering any sort of message—deeply sincere or not. Similarly, the existence of a ghostwriter clearly undercuts a lot of what Drake raps about (“understand nothing was done for me,” yeah right). But it’s also helped bring him the success that allows him to swagger so convincingly in front of a festival he founded, slinging disses about a guy who dared to point out that it’s all an act. Of course it’s an act. It’s entertainment.

Source: www.theatlan.....emes/400463/
 
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