Quavo + Saweetie’s Elevator Fight Sparks SOHH Fam Debate

quavo-saweetie-elevator-fight-sparks-sohh-fam-debate

The hip-hop community is buzzing over the stunning video that leaked this week showing lovers-now-exes Quavo and Saweetie fighting in an elevator. The Grammy-nominated Migos leader was filmed pushing the “My Type” hitmaker into a wall as the two wrestled over a Call of Duty case. Hip-Hop Taking Sides In Quavo + Saweetie Incident The […]

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Lil Yachty Kicks YBN Nahmir While He’s Down On April Fool’s Day

YBN Nahmir took a risk and, unfortunately, it didn’t pay off. He hasn’t lost his spirit though. The 21-year-old rapper continues to push forward after scoring a low first week of sales for his latest studio album Visionland. As reported by DJ Akademiks and other sources, the album struggled to pull 4,000 sales in its first week, paling in comparison to folks like Rod Wave, who are pushing 150,000 copies


Gary Miller/Getty Images

All week, YBN Nahmir has been getting trolled for his album’s poor performance, as well as for his new song “Soul Train”, which sees him trying out a different style. Many of Nahmir’s fans have joked and told the rapper that it’s the worst song they’ve ever heard from him. The joke has gotten so intense that even Lil Yachty is participating, using April Fool’s Day as an excuse to roast Nahmir.

“Soul train is [fire],” wrote Lil Yachty on Twitter. Minutes later, he posted a screenshot of the date and added, “Smh I’m sorry I couldn’t even let that tweet breath.” For what it’s worth, YBN Nahmir seemingly had a laugh from Yachty’s sarcastic troll. “Not even gone lie, this was the funniest sh*t I seen all year,” he replied with a crying face emoji.

YBN Nahmir previously said that before his song “Opp Stoppa” went viral on TikTok, he considered quitting rap. Despite how people have reacted to his new album, he doesn’t seem to be keen on slowing down anytime soon, posting a picture with YBN Almighty Jay and asking him if he wants to team back up to release new music together.

NLE Choppa Breaks Silence On His Arrest

NLE Choppa Gives Update On His Arrest

Memphis native NLE Choppa is clearing up the air. The Southern rap star took to social media to let it be known he had a statement coming about his recent publicized arrest. NLE Choppa Gives Update On Recent Arrest The “Cottonwood” rapper went to Twitter with a message for followers. Choppa said he’ll release a […]

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N.O.R.E. & Nas Roast Each Other’s Sneakers

N.O.R.E. is back with another hot take. After taking a stand against DJ Vlad, humiliating Tory Lanez, and hitting DJ Drama with one of the most awkward questions of 2021, the Drink Champshost has now taken to social media to roast Nas for wearing Vans.

N.O.R.E. recently shared a video of himself and Nas standing side by side with the caption, “Let’s stop nas from wearing vans u wit me!!???” In the video, fans can see the two veteran artists roasting each other’s footwear after Nas reveals that N.O.R.E. had been getting on him for wearing a pair of the popular skateboarding shoes. While the Drink Champs host mainly gets his jokes off on social media, Nas cites the 1986 movie Rad while defending his choice of footwear before turning his attention to N.O.R.E.’s sneakers, saying, “Them Michael Jordans Incredible Hulks wasn’t out in ’86. In ’86 was the red, blacks, and whites. The f*ck is those!?”

While he kept his tweet simple, N.O.R.E. further expounded upon his thoughts about Nas wearing Vans in one of his recent posts to Instagram, starting his caption off by saying, “@nas is my brother the big homey but in QUEENS WE GO HARD WE GOT JOKES SO I HAD TO TELL HIM NO VANS SLIME HAHA I LOVE BEING FROM QUEENS!!!”

He continued to roast the recent Grammy winner, writing, “I almost ask to throw em away but he the big homey so I relaaax!!! BUT PLEASE LETS BAN NAS FROM WEARING VANS LETS START NOW HE CANT WEAR NO MORE VANS IMMA SEND U THE PAPER TO SIGN HAHA LOVE U BIG BRO.”

Their roasts were clearly just harmless banter between two fellow Hip-Hop legends, but who’s side are you on — Nas’ or N.O.R.E.’s?

With Lil Nas X’s Satan Shoes, MSCHF Has Become The New Supreme

When your brand is literally called MSCHF, it shouldn’t be a shocker that there’s a good dose of actual mischief embedded in the ethos. That’s exactly what the label behind Lil Nas X’s wildly viral Satan shoes promises to deliver with each of its bi-monthly drops. Note we didn’t say “bi-monthly sneaker drops” — because while the most famous MSCHF products are shoes, they’ve also launched tongue-in-cheek bath bombs, internet browser add-ons, AI-generated feet photos, and rubber chicken bongs, along with various other weird shit and ephemera.

The Satan shoes aren’t the brand’s first brush with viral fame, either. Launched in 2016 and based in Williamsburg, Brooklyn (obvi), MSCHF is the same brand that brought you this year’s Birkinstocks — Birkenstock sandals made using the leather from real Birkin bags and those dope as hell all-white Nike Aix Max 97s filled with 60CCs of Holy Water sourced from the River Jordan back in 2019. So while it might feel like they’ve come out of nowhere, stunt marketing like this is very much their #brand.

Everything out of MSCHF comes wrapped in layers of nihilistic irony that attempts to reflect the absurdity of a world where people get hyped over things like Supreme stamped bricks and shrug off stuff like an attempted coup from a game-show-host-turned-President as just another Wednesday in the waning days of the American Empire. But by adopting the uber-capitalistic “bi-weekly drop” cadence of a modern streetwear company, MSCHF is very much part of the world they’re skewering. (The line between viral marketing and literal trolling gets very tough to see when you look at things like MSCHF’s ClickSwipe app, which swipes right on Tinder for you every time you click something with your mouse).

“Our perspective is everything is funny in a nihilistic sort of way,” MSCHF CEO Gabriel Whaley told Business Insider in an interview. “We’re not here to make the world a better place. We’re making light of how much everything sucks.”

If you take those words at face value, MSCHF feels a lot of the old Supreme — which gained legitimate clout via viral product drops. When the Supreme brick happened it was product-as-commentary, a release that reflected the absurdity of the hype machine surrounding the counterculture skatewear brand itself. The fact that people actually paid for it is what made the brick such an iconically dark moment in streetwear history.

These days, Supreme plays its relatively safe, favoring official collaborations over everything, though they’ll still drop a random accessory here and there. The gap in the “is this a real commentary on commerce or just commerce in disguise as commentary?” space that Supreme left behind has since been filled by MSCHF. And the relationship is a weirdly reciprocal one — with MSCHF’s ironic products hitting harder because we saw how well that model actually served Supreme.

Now bring all that context to bear on the Satan shoes — which a judge has just ordered the brand to stop selling. Note, that this isn’t an official collab. MSCHF calls them “art pieces” and that’s correct, though Nike is arguing that the general public isn’t sophisticated enough to know that this devil-themed footwear wasn’t actually made by Swoosh & Co., which also seems to be true. While sneaker customization isn’t illegal, when you’re selling 666 customized sneakers with blood in the air bubble and freaking out square Christian parents across the country, the brand whose shoe you’re using has every right to ask you to chill.

MSCHF will surely cease and desist and their next drop will be all the more anticipated because of this episode. Nike lawyers could squash them, but why would they? Their brand got a little badass-rebel energy from this dance and their PR machine will fight to correct misperceptions among their core suburban fanbase. Round and round we go.

Eventually, the two brands will probably collaborate for real. Again, Supreme laid down the playbook for this. In 2000 Supreme received a cease-and-desist from Louis Vuitton for lifting the brand’s signature monogram print. 17 years later the two brands announced their first of several official collaborations. Let’s hope it doesn’t take that long for MSCHF and Nike to make nice.

What you think of MSCHF’s actual products depends on your life stage and whether its model feels fresh or tired to you. Do you think blood in a shoe is bold? What about a bath bomb shaped like a toaster? Or an Instagram account that proudly proclaims “DO NOT FOLLOW US“? If that sounds corny or if you’re past it because it feels like a retread of Supreme, feel free to look away.

For the rest of us, MSCHF is infusing the world of streetwear and accessory drops with some conversation-starting fun, re-capturing the counter-culture energy of an industry that has become commercialized to the point of banality. Whether it’s capitalism masquerading as rebellion or rebellion masquerading as capitalism is impossible to say. But maybe that, too, is part of the point.

If you want to sign up for early access to MSCHF products click here.

Most Popular Hip-Hop Ad-Libs Right Now

From DaBaby’s “Let’s go” to 21 Savage’s “On God” and more, these are the best ad-libs in hip-hop right now. Continue reading…

Akon Cracks Into NFT Hustle W/ His New Digital Company

Rap veteran Akon is serious about investing into the future. The hip-hop entertainer is one of the latest high-profile musicians to crack into the NFT trend with his own AkoinNFT platform. Akon Cracks Into NFT Hustle While details are still coming together, Akon’s non-fungible tokens (NFTs) platform will aim to “supercharge and empower” fellow artists. […]

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Drake, Meek Mill, Killer Mike & More Unite For Ralo’s Freedom

Many prominent rappers have mobilized behind rapper Terrell “Ralo” Davis, who currently stands incarcerated on cannabis trafficking charges. Forbes has issued a report indicating that a letter has been sent to President Joe Biden, arranged by cannabis clemency group Mission Green. The publication has shared a copy of said letter, which received signatures of support from several prominent rappers among other public figures.

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Prince Williams/Wireimage/Ralo

“The undersigned— musicians, actors, athletes, filmmakers, current and former elected and appointed government officials, advocates, and business leaders—strongly believe that justice necessitates the exercise of clemency in this case,” reads the letter. “Our nation’s view of cannabis has evolved, and it is indefensible to incarcerate citizens based on the unduly harsh attitudes of past generations.” Signing in support of the pardon are Drake, Lil Baby, Quavo, Gunna, Dave East, Young Buck, Meek Mill, Killer Mike, T.I, 2 Chainz, Freeway, Lil Yachty, Waka Flocka, Loon, and many more. 

Upon receiving word that the letter had reached Joe Biden, Ralo took to Instagram to reflect on the outpouring of support. “TODAY MY LEGAL TEAM DELIVERED DOCUMENTS DIRECTLY IN THE HANDS OF PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN AND HIS ADMINISTRATION, BEGGING FOR A PARDON FOR MYSELF,” he writes, in a lengthy message. “DRAKE NAME WAS #1 ON THAT LIST IN SUPPORT OF MY PARDON, ALONG WITH DOZENS OF OTHER HIGH RANKING PEOPLE WITHIN OUR COUNTRY & THE HIP HOP COMMUNITY.”

“WE THANK HIM AND EVERYONE THATS PUTTING EFFORT INTO THIS CAUSE,” he continues. “@forbes AN OTHERS ARE USING MY CASE AS THE FACE FOR JUSTICE ON MARIJUANNA. WE CALLING FOR PUBLIC AN ALL INFLUENCERS SUPPORT.” In the Forbes report, it’s noted that Ralo specifically thanked Drake in particular, noting that it’s the first time the superstar has thrown his considerable weight behind a criminal justice initiative. 

Given that President Biden has previously spoken of a desire to decriminalize marijuana, many are hopeful that he will indeed consider clemency for the Atlanta rapper. As of now, Ralo has served over three years in prison; all the while, the cannabis business has flourished into a multi-billion dollar industry. Should you be interested in reading the full letter, head over to Forbes right here. 

Free Ralo.

West Coast Rappers That Made It Without A Dr. Dre Co-Sign

When it comes to Dr. Dre’s impact on his home state of California, his importance cannot be understated. The tutelage, mentorship and unparalleled wizardry that he’s exhibited behind the boards has elevated generations of talent and allowed them to fulfill their dreams, often moving beyond just a regional concern. His track record is inimitable.

From providing the bedrock of gangsta rap’s pioneering sound with NWA, to harvesting the raw potential of a young Snoop Dogg, plucking The Game from obscurity, and even finding a conduit for soulful arrangements of Anderson .Paak, Dre has a keen radar that’s routinely found high calibre MCs lurking in the golden state. More importantly, he knows how to take the intangibles that they already possess and align them with the work ethic needed to become a legend.

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Al Pereira/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Given that his era-defining album, The Chronic, was crucial to marking the West Coast as a hip-hop hotbed and taking control away from the East Coast, it’s only natural that Dre would aim to uphold this legacy by grooming many of Cali’s hopefuls for the bright lights. Dre has acted as a finishing school that equipped West Coast prospects with everything they’d need to make it in the wider world. 

But for all the vigilance he’s shown in providing a platform for California’s brightest hopefuls, a co-sign from Dre isn’t a be-all or end-all requirement for a Cali-based MC to make it. While taking a trip through Aftermath’s hallowed halls has been a rite of passage for some of the West’s most cherished names, there is a small subset of rappers who planted their flag without any assistance from the region’s resident gatekeeper. 

To begin with, there are those now-legendary stars who rose to prominence within a similar timeframe as Dre, but were never summoned to the studio to collaborate. Prone to using his rolodex of contacts to great effect, The Chronic, 2001 and Compton each saw Dre make space for an all-star team of Cali collaborators. From fellow Death Row signees such as The DOC, Nate Dogg, Daz, Kurupt, RBX and The Lady Of Rage to his own understudies of Hittman, Knock-turn’al and Cold187um, each of Dre’s landmark projects has given ample room for his fellow West Coast staples to shine. 

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Too Short and Eazy-E pose backstage together in Indianapolis, 1991 – Raymond Boyd/Getty Images

As a result, the fact that it wasn’t until 2011 that Dre called upon the services of Oakland’s Too $hort seems like a gross oversight. 

Well-versed in delivering the sort of fornication-filled content that’s always had its place on a Dre project, Todd Anthony Shaw has been making an artform out of on-wax pimpin’ since 1983. Although he’s proven himself to be a magnet for moral panic in a way that former NWA member Dre is certainly familiar with, there are admittedly ways in which Too Short and Dre exist in very different spheres. 

For one thing, where Dre averages an album every generation, few rappers from the pre-internet era have been as prolific as Too Short. Sporting five platinum plaques to his name, this Bay Area icon managed to carve out a uniquely debaucherous legacy for himself without ever calling upon the doctor for assistance. But after years of being passing acquaintances, Dre and Short Dogg’s paths would finally cross during the producer’s fabled Detox sessions. Fittingly, on an unreleased track known as “Man’s Best Friend (Pussy).” 

“Somebody suggested my name, so he called me in,” Too Short recalled to Vibe. I didn’t write the rap. Kurupt’s little brother wrote it – Roscoe – and he pimped me one hell of a sixteen-bar verse. Dre had me in there, the first session was nine hours.”

However, while Dre had managed to convey his appreciation for one of the pillars of Bay Area rap, he has historically left Vallejo, CA’s resident innovator out in the cold. 

“Snoop Dogg, shoot, he done been there. Dre, I got a lot of respect, but we’ve never done anything,” revealed the incomparable E-40 in 2018. “I sent messages and whatnot through other people saying, ‘hey, I’m right here if you need me’. Just from being a West Coast cat. All my life, I’ve sold records in LA. So, I’m like, how can you look over me? I’m a legend. Game recognizes game.”

Possessing one of the most influential discographies of any West Coast artist, E-40 has always brought his own flavour to the game. And by virtue of his unorthodox flows and ear for beats, he managed to fashion a brand new lane with the Hyphy movement, which itself meant he never required anyone else’s endorsement. As such, the sense that he represents his own subdivision of the West Coast has been a point of pride for the Sick Wid It CEO. 

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Al Pereira/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

“I’m one of the pioneers of independent music and sold records without no airplay,” he informed XXL in 2010. “I didn’t get a deal from coming up under nobody. No disrespect to Dr. Dre but I didn’t come up under Dr. Dre. I came up under E-40. I didn’t spit a hot 16 to get on.”

Despite any reservations that either man may have had in the past, it seems that any ill-feeling is now water under the bridge. At long last, E-40 and Dre’s paths will intersect on the upcoming project between 40 and the supergroup of Snoop, Too Short and Ice Cube. As if finally hearing the progenitors of Hyphy and G-funk collide wasn’t exciting enough, it was recently revealed that Dre will be the only feature on this historic project. 

For Short and E-40, their lack of interaction with Dre is understandable in that just as they were blazing their own trails through hip-hop, the doctor was fighting to carve out his territory in NWA, as Death Row’s de-facto creative director, or by himself. With so many irons in the fire, it’s natural that a couple of dream collaborations would slip by.

But even after Dre had cemented his legacy and had switched over to more of an ambassadorial, behind-the-scenes role, there have been a few immensely successful West Coast artists that had to make their way without so much as a consultation from Aftermath’s founder. 

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Scott Dudelson/Getty Images 

Resoundingly endorsed by Dre’s former label boss, Suge Knight, YG is one such artist who has placed his stamp on the West Coast in his own, bravado-filled fashion. Busting out of the gate with the now legendary My Krazy Life in 2014, the Bompton MC was content to pay homage to his coast’s hip-hop lineage without feeling the need to actively interact with the artists that paved the way. 

As the successes kept racking up and his chemistry with Mustard– who declared himself and YG to be the new Dre and Snoop-– continued to deliver the hits, YG turned his attention to forming his own label under the 4Hunnid banner. Much like E-40 before him, the lack of recognition he received from Andre Young eventually became a badge of honour for YG. On the notably G-funk-tinged “Twist My Fingaz,” YG took things a step further by declaring himself to be “the only one who made it out the west without Dre.”

Iconic as this rallying cry has become, it’s not entirely true. As when you look at the West Coast MCs that have sprung up in YG’s midst, there’s a strong class of Californian creatives that have not only fended sans Dre, but flourished while doing so.

Wrongly portrayed as the enemy of all 90’s hip-hop heads after some of his comments were blown out of proportion, the LBC’s Vince Staples has been a Dr. Dre fan since his elementary days. 

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Kevin Winter/Getty Images

But aside from sampling “Bitches Ain’t Shit” on “Blue Suede” and contributing a freestyle to Dre’s now defunct The Pharmacy on Beats 1, Vince’s career has splintered off into avenues that are far removed from Dr. Dre. Attuned to the sort of abrasive, bass-heavy beats that producers such as Officer Kenny Beats specialize in, Vince has mapped out his own style of presentation that makes for not only arresting verses, but one of the most captivating personas in modern hip-hop.

Willing to touch on everything from UK garage to hyper-pop, Vince’s eclectic approach is something that a man with as famously-diverse taste as Dre would appreciate. And when you consider that Vince has fostered close ties to fellow LBC native Snoop Dogg and even previous Dre collaborators such as Tray Deee, it seems that there’s still plenty of time for them to make magic happen down the road now.

However, where time is on Vince and Dre’s side, there are other LA-based rappers for whom the window to work with the iconic producer has tragically elapsed.

The embodiment of the West Coast in many ways, Slauson’s Nipsey Hussle was earmarked to be one of the West Coast’s new torchbearers from the very moment thatBullets Ain’t Go No Names Vol 1 hit the airwaves in 2008. Although he was insistent that he didn’t need any co-signs, both uncle Snoop and Game were quick to anoint Nipsey as next up. As the Bullets Ain’t Got No Names series gave way to The Marathon, Slauson Boy 2 and, finally, his 2018 debut LP, Victory Lap, Nipsey proved exactly why he’d accrued so much goodwill on the West Coast. But no matter how many glass ceilings Nipsey breached, the line from 2010’s “Keys To The City” in which Hussle revealed that “Dre passed, Def Jam, Capital, Atlantic too” continued to ring true. 

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Paras Griffin/Getty Images

Over time, this feeling of being overlooked by Dre would turn to bemusement, but eventually, lead to him venting his frustrations during a 2013 interview with Bootleg Kev.

“I felt like if I’m sitting back in the game, and I’m watching Nipsey Hussle, and I’m watching Dom Kennedy, and I’m watching YG at that moment developing a situation, I just felt like what I would do — I wouldn’t spend money… I wouldn’t necessarily offer financial support, but I would do what I do to these young dudes that I see. I would acknowledge they grind,” Nipsey said while discussing what seemed to be a lack of recognition on Dr. Dre’s part. “Because when it’s impossible to miss, and you don’t acknowledge it, that becomes intentionally not acknowledging it.”

Sadly, Nipsey would never get the audience with Dre that he believed that he and his contemporaries had earned. Consequently, the West Coast kingpin’s decision to honour Nipsey after his death was actually met with allegations of clout chasing. 

However, what Nipsey and his counterparts have proven is that just because they haven’t linked with Dre, it doesn’t mean that their careers are incomplete. From E-40 to Vince Staples to Dom Kennedy and the late Nipsey, this undercurrent of West Coast artists serve as the rebuttal to the notion that if you need Dr. Dre on your side if you want to transcend being a Californian MC and become an international star. Instead, these artists have triumphed off of their merits. Thus, if they choose to work with the Aftermath icon down the line, it won’t be the sum total of their legacy, but just another feather in their cap.