Shaq will be the first Orlando Magic player to have his jersey retired. Shaquille O’Neal was surprised with the jersey retirement via Alex Martins, CEO of the Orlando Magic, and his pal Ernie Johnson during Inside the NBA.
“When someone asks who was the first player to officially put the Orlando Magic on the map, the answer is simple — Shaquille O’Neal,” Orlando Magic CEO Alex Martins said. “He took this franchise to new heights, both on and off the court, and his legacy is still felt within our organization today. On behalf of the DeVos family, we are excited to honor Shaquille by raising No. 32 into the rafters of the Kia Center, where it will remain forever.”
Shaq has previously retired jerseys with the Los Angeles Lakers (No. 34) and Miami HEAT (No. 32). He was the No. 1 overall pick by the Magic in 1992 and spent his first four seasons with the franchise, becoming rookie of the year, four-time All-Star, and led the team to their first NBA Finals in 1995.
“It was a great four years there,” Shaq said during Inside. “I just wanted to come in and just make a name for myself. … I’d like to thank the city of Orlando, like to thank the Orlando Magic organization. Appreciate you very much.”
The retirement ceremony will be Feb. 12 when the Magic take on the Oklahoma City Thunder. The game, retirement and Inside the NBA will be on TNT.
There is no better term to describe Nas and Hit-Boy’s working relationship than “magic.” Ever since the two released their first collaborative album in 2020, their six-album run within the past three years has been nothing short of epic. With each quality King’s Disease and Magic release, Nas and Hit-Boy strengthened their chemistry and proved to be the rapper-producer pairing that fans did not know they needed.
The two recently concluded their second trilogy of albums with the release of both Magic 2 and Magic 3 this year. Further, we celebrated their first trilogy with a ranking of the King’s Disease albums, but now it is time to spotlight the Magic series. Ranked from least to greatest, look at our hierarchy of Nas and Hit-Boy’s Magic trilogy below.
3. Magic 2 (2023)
The sequel to 2021’s Magic arrived back in June, following the release of King’s Disease III last year. While it is an admirable sequel, Magic 2 sits at the bottom of the series. It is a quality release on its own merit, but it is far from the strongest work that Nas and Hit-Boy have made together. The album certainly continued to accentuate the duo’s chemistry, but it does not stack up to the others in the trilogy. Nas’s rapping and Hit-Boy’s production on Magic 2 make for an enjoyable listen, but it features the weakest production compared to the other Magic and King’s Disease albums.
The choppy “Abracadabra” and the menacing “Motion” may not feature Hit-Boy’s best, but Nas still shines as a lyricist. Magic 2 includes several highlights, including “Bokeem Woodbine,” “Earvin Magic Johnson,” and “Pistols On Your Album Cover.” The celebratory “One Mic, One Gun” with 21 Savage served as yet another example of Nas and Hit-Boy’s ability to merge generations of hip hop seamlessly. Magic 2 has plenty of strong moments, but Nas and Hit-Boy set the bar so high with their previous works that they have had to keep up with themselves.
2. Magic 3 (2023)
Nas and Hit-Boy ended both the Magic trilogy and their six-album run on a perfect note with Magic 3. Released just months after its predecessor, the trilogy’s final installment strongly executes the consistent level of quality that the two have maintained. On the album, Nas celebrates his accomplishment of releasing six albums in three years with Hit-Boy. He basks in his longevity on songs like “I Love This Feeling” and “Speechless Pt. 2,” as well as proving that his storytelling is still on point with “Based On True Events, Pt. 2.” On “Never Die,” Lil Wayne delivers a brilliantly constructed verse that sticks to one consistent rhyme scheme.
Hit-Boy’s production throughout the album is luscious and gritty, creating a perfect soundtrack to end the series. The song “1-800-Nas&Hit” serves as the closing credits to the Magic trilogy, creating a perfect send-off to their prolific string of albums. Released on Nas’s 50th birthday, Magic 3 may have marked an end to a trilogy, but it also felt like the rap legend was just getting started.
1. Magic (2021)
Nas and Hit-Boy were in the zone when they released Magic. Arriving on December 24, 2021, just months after King’s Disease II, the album was a true holiday gift for fans. The nine-track opus felt like an extension of the masterpiece they had released earlier in the year. Hit-Boy’s production on Magic emphasized traditional loops in favor of its predecessor’s layered instrumentation. However, the album had the same polish of the King’s Disease sound he had already established. Hit-Boy’s approach to Magic allowed Nas to freely showcase his signature style after releasing a project full of new flows.
Magic’s opening song, “Speechless,” sees Nas commanding a mesmerizing loop from Hit-Boy, rapping about his timeless winning streak. Album highlights like “Ugly” and “40-16 Building” serve as tales of old New York, while Nas and A$AP Rocky feel themselves on “Wave Gods.” Magic left minimal room with its concise tracklist, solidifying a new prime for Nas on an album that served as an appetizer to feed the buzz of King’s Disease III. Nas and Hit-Boy ultimately summed up their chemistry and consistent run of quality releases with the perfect word: magic.
Nas clearly heard all the jokes. For years, the rap veteran has been maligned — perhaps unfairly, although likely not — for having bad taste in beats. For rushing his projects as they neared deadlines. For giving halfhearted effort to the preternatural gifts he’d been given. For never truly living up to the bar set by his seminal 1993 debut, Illmatic. And sometime during the music industry shutdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, he decided he’d had enough of the critiques.
That was when, after he was jokingly called out by Big Sean, Nas decided to get serious. A chance meeting with Fontana producer Hit-Boy spawned not only the greatest creative chemistry he’s shared with a producer since that groundbreaking debut but also an astonishing six full-length albums comprising two separate trilogies in the next four years. The finale of this collaborative project, Magic 3 , dropped on Thursday, Nas’ 50th birthday.
Now, I’m not here to break down the new project or review it; if you’ve heard the five albums prior, you know what to expect. You either like it or it’s not for you. But I have to say I don’t think we have really talked enough about how incredible this whole moment has been — what it represents for both artists’ careers, for hip-hop music, or the culture at large. So, let’s talk about it. Nas and Hit-Boy’s four-year run should go down in hip-hop history as the best of what this genre can be; it should be an instruction manual for artists to follow for years to come.
At the time Nas announced the first King’s Disease album produced by Hit-Boy, he was coming off of yet another creative slump that saw his legacy reeling from the dreary The Lost Tapes II and the disastrous Nasir. Not to mention, he’d been accused of some rather nasty behavior by ex-wife Kelis; he had some work to do to get back into the public’s good graces. For an artist who’d once been lyrically derided by Jay-Z for his fitful work ethic, no one could have expected the burst of output to come.
(“Four albums in ten years, n***?” isn’t actually that bad when you think about it, but compared to his prolific rival, looked pretty bad, especially considering the reception of those albums.)
On its face, the decision to link up with Hit-Boy could have seemed to an outsider to be confusing at best, if not downright cynical. Here you had two artists who were opposites in almost every way you could think of: East Coast/West Coast, old-school staple/new-school hitmaker, one recovering from back-to-back duds, the other, still celebrating his most recent beat placement winning a Grammy for one of LA’s most-revered late rap titans, Nipsey Hussle. Nothing about it made sense; maybe that’s why it worked.
For Nas, Hit-Boy’s production was a jolt of both fresh air and much-needed consistency, providing a diverse array of complementary soundbeds for Nas’ complex, time-tested flow. He also plugged the weathered veteran into a whole new world of contemporary collaborators, allowing him shake off the mantle of disgruntled old head and instead play the role of the sage mentor, the voice of experience guiding his successors’ generation with a steady hand and just enough burst to keep up with the kids.
No doubt, artists like A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, Anderson .Paak, ASAPs Ferg and Rocky, Big Sean, Blxst, Don Toliver, Fivio Foreign, Lil Durk, and 21 Savage had grown up revering Nas’ contributions to hip-hop music. But Nas’ generation has proven … less than generous in issuing accolades, advice, or acknowledgment to their successors. Instead, there has been a slew of gruff admonitions, gatekeeping, and laments about the “state of hip-hop.” Nas himself had been accused of the same when he released Hip-Hop Is Dead in 2006.
So, for him to make that effort to bridge the generation gap — aided by Hit-Boy, who provided the connective glue to make such tricky collaborations stick — is meaningful to both his career and the fabric of rap as a whole. Yes, it helped Nas to quell speculation that his music is no longer relevant — some of which even came from one of his future collaborators, 21 Savage — but it also provided a Golden Era parallel to what Gucci Mane’s been doing in Atlanta as a godfather of trap rap.
It showed that hip-hop doesn’t HAVE to be just a “young man’s game” (if anything, I wish he’d included more women’s voices to prove it’s not only a man’s game, either). It showed that the vets don’t have to dismiss the kids in their own twilight; in fact, by embracing subsequent generations, the older artists get to hang on to their golden years just that much longer. And it showed that the best approach for anyone isn’t just to chase trends or follow the market, but to find the spark that comes from doing what you love out of inspiration, not obligation.
And it’s wild to think that we have Hit-Boy to thank for lighting this fire under Nas; aside from both being cast aside by a certain superproducer who couldn’t be bothered to dedicate his time, resources, and appreciation to them for their collaborations with him, both had incredible bounces back as a result. Hit-Boy got even more prolific while working with Nas, churning out enough material for collaborative projects with Dom Kennedy, Dreezy, Music Soulchild, and even his own formerly incarcerated father.
Thanks to Hit, Nas gets to have the last laugh, and thanks to Nas, Hit’s name is buzzing more than ever. Their collaboration resulted in the producer taking home even more Grammys hardware and the rapper bringing in his first-ever trophy despite his 30-plus years of hip-hop prominence. It was, as they declared with the title of their second trilogy, Magic. Now, we can’t wait to see what comes next for them both.
It’s Hard Knocks season and, however unwillingly, this year’s training camp edition features the New York Jets. After the NFL was forced to select a team following a lack of volunteers from the league’s 32 sides, the Jets seemed like the obvious candidate. A longstanding basement dweller and league laughingstock, the team rocketed into contention with a blockbuster trade for Aaron Rodgers.
Hard Knocks is now airing weekly on HBO and Max, showcasing every aspect of the Jets’ training camp. Since then, the team has gone 1-1 in their preseason openers, falling to the Browns but shutting out the Panthers. Furthermore, they added yet another offensive weapon to the team by singing free agent running back Dalvin Cook. Now, we all know that Aaron Rodgers likes to attune and open his third eye. However, he was exposed to a whole other type of magic in the preview for the next episode of the HBO documentary series.
Acclaimed mentalist Oz Pearlman joins the team for reasons that are sure to be made more clear in the full episode. Singling out Rodgers, Pearlman asks the veteran QB to visualize a playing card and then hold a deck tightly in his cupped hands. After Pearlman correctly guesses the suit (diamonds), he reaches in and draws out a card. He then asks Rodgers to reveal which card he was thinking of (three of diamonds) before revealing that he, Pearlman, is holding the three of diamonds.
However, the trick didn’t stop there. Pearlman then turns to safeties coach Marquand Manuel to reveal what animal he had visualized earlier in the trick. After Manuel says “goldfish”, Pearlman asks Rodgers to reveal the deck of cards he had been holding, revealing that it had magically turned into a goldfish in a clear, deck of cards-sized case. The entire team goes absolutely wild over the trick, with Rodgers simply sitting there in disbelief. There is surely context for this trick, which you will have to watch the full episode for this week.
Back in June, hip-hop/pop/punk-rock chameleon Rico Nasty unveiled a swaggering summer track called “Magic,” which now has a brand-new music video. Featuring the Maryland-born performer dancing in a variety of sharp outfits and hairstyles, plus riding a dirt bike, “Magic” kind of looks like if Spice Girls’ “Say You’ll Be There” video met Mad Max. Which is to say, it’s highly stylish and entertaining.
“Obviously, we don’t know what [my genre] is now because it’s only been three years of rapping,” Rico Nasty told Uproxx last year about her immense musical versatility. “It’s because they’re just unfamiliar with it, but 10 years down the line, it’ll be a trail of what this is. It could be punk, it could be a bunch of things. But I say I don’t resonate with those things, because rather than putting me in those things, I would rather people just watch and see what happens. Because I change a lot, so you never know what it could be. Just appreciate it for what it is.”
Rico, who is currently teasing a new mixtape, released her critically acclaimed debut studio album, Nightmare Vacation, last year, telling Vulture: “The whole journey of a Nightmare Vacation is to overcome a series of things that you didn’t think you could and find peace in them. That’s what this whole year [2020] has been like. So many people lost their jobs, lost family members, lost being able to travel, lost things that brought them peace. And for the first couple months, we was all running around here like chickens with their heads cut off, like What are we about to do? What is our purpose? We started paying attention to the things that really mattered to us.”
Watch the video for “Magic” above.
Rico Nasty is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.