Pusha T’s Son Has The Time Of His Life At The Zoo

G.O.O.D Music president Pusha T is all about his daddy duties. The hip-hop star lights up Instagram with some adorable footage of his queen and prince out together on a zoo trip. The must-see clip features Nigel Brixx Thornton having fun growling at monkeys while also making loud noises strolling through the park. In December […]

The post Pusha T’s Son Has The Time Of His Life At The Zoo appeared first on SOHH.com.

Pooh Shiesty Says Final Goodbye To His Brother

Pooh Shiesty’s brother, rapper Tee Da P, passed away last week following his reported battle with brain cancer. The buzzing Shiesty Season artist, who currently has one of the most popular hip-hop projects in the world, publicly mourned with the following statement.

“Still wondering where tf that sh*t come from,” wrote Pooh on Instagram. “Ig we gotta go out that way we both survived bullets. That sh*t ain’t strong as us these p*ssies will never be able [to] take us out. You ain’t get killed or shot I’m going out [the] same way save my spot go find Treday first.”

Drake sent his love to the rapper, who has been having a tough time processing his brother’s passing. This week, Tee Da P was laid to rest in a private funeral service, from which Pooh shared pictures and another message. “We don’t go in ground,” said the “Back In Blood” rapper, posting a video of his brother’s gold casket being placed inside of a mausoleum’s wall. “I love you boy 100k to put you away Ik u would’ve did same.”

While some are questioning why Pooh shared the price of his brother’s funeral and casket, others are being more sensitive and sharing their condolences in the comments.

Rest in peace, Tee Da P.

Ant Clemons Is Choosing Happiness In His Day-To-Day Life

Ant Clemons might be a name you’re still getting acquainted with, but the New Jersey native is worthy of an immense amount of respect and attention. In just the last two years, Clemons has found himself working alongside artists like Beyonce, Justin Timberlake, Ty Dolla Sign, Jeremih, Chance The Rapper, Cordae, and more. All of it came as a result of landing a writing credit and background vocals on “All Mine” from Kanye West’s eighth album, Ye. While the project may have endured lukewarm reviews, the song turned out to be one of the album’s brightest moments.

“It was a song I did with my brother, Jeremih,” Clemons said during an interview with Uproxx. “It grew legs and moved and I had no idea that it was moving as fast as it was moving.” The record opened a multitude of doors for the singer, but just before folks could box him in as a songwriter, Clemons arrived with his debut project, Happy 2 Be Here, at the beginning of 2020. The 8-track effort delivered features from Timbaland, Pharrell, and Ty Dolla Sign and granted him the opportunity to establish his name as a lead artist, one he achieved as he earned a Best R&B Album Grammy nomination for it.

While the singer is — I’m sorry, I have to — happy to be here, winning the Grammy award would make things even sweeter. “I want to win Grammys, so God willing, I win this 2021 Best R&B Album Grammy,” he declared. “If this not this year, then it’s going to be the year after that, or the year after that because I know what’s meant for me is meant for me.”

In a few days, Ant Clemons will learn whether or not he’ll take home the coveted Grammy award. However, before that, we spoke to the singer about Happy 2 Be Here, life before fame, his songwriting style, and what he hopes is next for him.

You just celebrated the one-year anniversary of Happy 2 Be Here with the new song “June 1st.” It commemorates the day Kanye dropped his 2018 album Ye, one that you had a writing credit on. I can only assume the next few days after that moment were an absolute whirlwind, but I wanna hear from you. How did things really change after June 1st, 2018?

All of it was just surreal. It had been a whirlwind of just emotions and a culmination of hard work and perseverance, like meeting at one time in real life. It’s crazy when you think about those things. It’s like okay, yeah, there’ll be a milestone moment along the journey somewhere, but I can’t wait for it. I don’t even know what that looks like to me at this point. I was just working, so in it, just trying to figure out what my big break was going to be. What was going to be my Big Sean rapping for Kanye moment or like J. Cole going to New York and giving Hov the CD that he never heard or like Drake and Jas Prince and their relationship and then getting the call to go meet Wayne. Where was my validation from the people that I thought were great? That’s what I was constantly seeking and I kind of gave that up. I was like, you know, I’m done chasing this moment, and the moment I gave up looking forward to it, it happened for me. I talked to my friends about this, and I always laugh and joke about it, but I feel like I never went home because the me that came home [after working with Kanye] was Ant Clemens the artist that is on the song with Kanye that’s on the radio right now that just went No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100. I was trying to catch up to it as it was happening in real life.

Your debut album, Happy 2 Be Here sounds like a drawn-out moment of gratitude, one that you of course earned through hard work and patience. Outside of working with Kanye, what about the journey before that June 1st day are you most grateful for?

If I began this list, one, I would say God. I’m just appreciative of the Lord. Then my parents, both my mom and my dad being my support system, like really telling me and my two sisters that we can literally do anything with Christ that strengthens us. So instilling that in us early gave me the confidence to succeed at anything. I didn’t really have any fear of being inadequate of anything because I knew I could conquer anything cause I always had God with me. But in human form, every single person along the journey from my big sister, who was the first person that grabbed me up and say, “Yo, we going to Cali, let’s let’s figure this out,” to my brothers Scott, Ali, and Dre, who allowed me to stay at their house and just write one song a day instead of rent. My brother Ray Keys introduced me to my brother Bongo [ByTheWay]. Both Ray and Bongo are like my bros for life. Bongo introduced me to The Game, Jeremih, and Ty Dolla Sign and I’m meeting all these people I’ve always dreamed of working with. It was so cool having moments of like, wow, I’m really right here looking across from The Game or looking across a Ty Dolla Sign, and they actually care about what I have to say.

I feel like the phrase, “Happy 2 Be Here,” also lives in your songwriting world. We’ve seen you in rooms with the likes on SZA, Ty Dolla Sign, Justin Timberlake, Wale, and more. What is your favorite aspect of writing with other artists?

Being able to walk in a room and see someone that you’ve only seen on television is an experience that I just don’t think I’ll ever just get over. I keep that in me because I choose to be happy to be here because we do have some form of a choice as to which emotion we’ll give light to and I want to choose happiness every day. For me, being happy to be here, just looking around, taking a moment, actually breathing, and thanking God just for right now, helps me to remember that I could be somewhere else. I could be doing something completely different than what I’m doing right now and this might not be where I want to be, but I got to be happy to be here to get to where I want to go. So not in the space of I’m fearful of the blessings going away, but I want to make sure my heart posture is correct at all times. Walking in a room with someone that I’ve always wanted to work with is a great feeling when you’re songwriting. Working with brand new people that you’ve never met before, that you just have the common love of music is a fun thing. I like creating and if I can catch a vibe with you in the studio because you also like to create it, we gon’ make it happen.

What’s the process of songwriting like for you? Are you introverted or extroverted? Do you knock it out quickly or is it a drawn-out process? How’s it work for you?

I like to think I draw it out quickly, the process is pretty fast now. It’s kind of repetition like shooting a jump shot, the mechanics of making sure you have your elbow tucked in, the follow-through. Once you do it a certain amount of times, no matter what course you go to, you’re able to get into your groove. I used to be a little introverted because I was just shy. I didn’t want people to know what I did, but my personality is extroverted, if you will. So I like people to be included in my deepest thoughts. It’s like, well, how does this make you feel? How does this sound? Is this coming out the way I want it to sound? I like feeding ideas off of people. For me, the writing process used to be writing in my phone and to a beat. Now I hate listening to beats, I don’t want to hear no beats, don’t you send me no beats! For me, when I hear the music for the first time, I want to be able to react to it and if I can’t record it and I heard it on the phone, it’s like I’ll be trying to recreate my very first reaction to it. It might be because I’m just so ADD when it comes to creating that it’s so freestyle-based, I get to whatever it is I want to get to and then it’s on to the next one.

And speaking of that Grammy, where were you when you found out you got nominated? How’d you celebrate the news?

I’ve been still trying to figure out if it’s real, to be honest. I woke up to a whole bunch of messages and stuff, and my friends were blowing me up. I went on Twitter and I saw Gayle King say, Best R&B Album, the nominations are and then say Ant Clemons and I was like she knows my name?? It really didn’t hit me until I was listening to the Joe Budden Podcast and I heard Joe say “Ant Clemons,” I was like, “wow, this is a thing.” I celebrated by being in the studio, but I’m in the studio all the time. I went right back to work, just super excited and I’m still in a space of shock that this is even a thing. I loved Happy 2 Be Here, I loved working on those records, but I had no clue that people felt the same way. To be nominated and to be accepted by your peers is such a cool thing.

I saw that you recently made a virtual visit to your alma mater, Burlington County Institute of Technology, to speak to students. Why did you feel it was important to head back there.

Man, I can’t tell you how cool it is to have your high school or someone from your high school even know what you do outside of there. But to think that those amazingly talented students at BCIT wanted me to even speak to them was surreal. Dr. Ashanti Holly, I love her to death, she was like one of my superintendents when I was in middle school, so to see that she’s a part of the BCIT high school experience is so cool. A couple of my teachers shared some really cool comments and it was the best man like that’s what all it is is about. If it’s not for everyone, then it’s not for me. I learned a long time ago that my life, not that it’s meaningless, but it wasn’t about me. I started living my best life when I really realized that it had nothing to do with me. It was really about what I could do for others and how I could help. So anytime somebody has a question, it’s my responsibility to answer because I would want somebody to turn around and give me answers just to help me get from point A to point B. If I’m not doing that and I’m not being an example, then what are we doing?

In a second life, what would Ant Clemens be doing if it wasn’t being an artist? Where’s your second passion lie?

It would be in the art in some form. I draw like so it would be graphic design, I’d probably be an animator at Disney somewhere. I’d probably be in church somewhere, not saying that that’s not what I’m doing right now. I’m not sure, my mom always told me that my grandma said I would be a pastor when I was a kid. That was something in the back of my head that was really scary to think of cause I was like that’s a big responsibility, I don’t want to be in charge of anybody getting into heaven or not. I don’t think that’s what a pastor is, but as a kid I didn’t want to be the guy that says yes or no in heaven, that’s a lot of responsibilities. But nah, in another life I’d probably be expressing myself in some form or fashion. If it wasn’t through song and dance, it’d be through some type of visual art. I got to express myself.

You’ve worked with some of the industry’s best, you’re Grammy-nominated, you’ve got a growing resume, and you’ve only put out one album. So what’s next for you on the bucket list?

It’s so many things. I’m very, very happy, but I guess I’m never content. So I’m constantly setting goals and I want to work with Drake. I’ve been saying it everywhere, I would love to work with Drake. I want to work with Frank Ocean. There’s a few people — Kendrick, I would love to do some stuff with Kendrick — and be able to at least get in the room with some of my favorites before they venture off and do other things outside of music. But outside of just music goals, I’m really excited to just live and be able to experience everything that God has for me. I’ll be 30 this year, I’ve never even thought about what my life would look like at 30. I thought I’d be like getting ready to get married or something. So, whatever the Lord has for me this year and this time, I’m excited for it.

Happy 2 Be Here (Anniversary Edition) is out now via legion/Human Re Sources. Get it here.

The Weeknd Showered In Platinum RIAA Certifications

Days ago, it was revealed that The Weeknd had made Billboard history with his insanely successful single “Blinding Lights.” The second single from Abel’s massive fourth studio album After Hours has reportedly maintained a position within the top 10 spots of the Billboard Hot 100 for 52 weeks straight, setting the record as the first song to achieve such a feat. The achievement even prompted a response from The Weeknd himself, who reacted to the milestone accomplishment with a simple flushed face emoji and red heart. 

Now, it appears that Abel is in for even more great news, as the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has announced a bevy of certifications for the Canadian singer-songwriter. As of March 9, 2021, “Blinding Lights” has officially reached seven-times platinum status, while other album cuts “Save Your Tears,” “After Hours,” and “In Your Eyes” have become newly-minted platinum singles. The Weeknd’s After Hours album itself has also been deemed a double-platinum album, which coincides with the two-times multiplatinum certification of its lead single “Heartless.”

With so many RIAA certifications this week alone, Abel will definitely have a load of plaques to unpack soon. As more developments regarding The Weeknd’s unstoppable commercial dominance keep rolling in, it’s becoming more clear than ever that his lack of nominations for the upcoming 63rd Annual Grammy awards is, in fact, one of the most egregious Grammy snubs of recent memory.

[via]

Kevin Gates Confuses Fans W/ Futuristic Shoes

Kevin-Gates-Confuses-Fans-Futuristic-Shoes

Louisiana rap star Kevin Gates might just be 2000 years ahead of us – or behind? He has fans confused, yet also amused, in a strange way after being spotted wearing some futuristic shoes. Kevin Gates Confuses Fans W/ Margielas A picture of the “ICEBOX” rapper has been trending on social media after he posted […]

The post Kevin Gates Confuses Fans W/ Futuristic Shoes appeared first on SOHH.com.

Bow Wow Training For WWE With Legend Rikishi

Bow Wow has been going back-and-forth with WWE wrestlers for the last month, calling out different members of the Retribution faction and teaming with Soulja Boy during the rapper’s current feud with 14-time world champion Randy Orton. Bow revealed that, following the release of his last album, he plans to focus on his television and film endeavors. In addition, he wants to fulfill his childhood dream of stepping into a WWE ring.

Previously expressing an interest in teaming with Rey Mysterio for a chance at the tag team titles, Bow Wow now appears to be on pace for a program with Soulja Boy against Randy Orton. While his exact involvement in the WWE is yet to be determined, he’s taking his mission of joining the roster seriously by signing up for some heavy-duty training with Rikishi, one of the greatest superstars of all-time.

“I’m very excited to be able to be the guy to be able to give him this knowledge and help train him,” said Rikishi to Wrestling Inc. about his plans to get Bow Wow in ring shape. “For me, it’s good for business. If Bow Wow can come into our industry and put asses in seats at WrestleMania, then why not? And everybody should motivate him or help him because him coming in, or anybody coming in from hip-hop or the movie industry into our industry, obviously they’re green and they need to be smartened up.”

 
Gabe Ginsberg/Getty Images

According to the legendary big man, Bow Wow will go through the same steps as any of the other wrestlers that have stepped foot into his training facility. “I’m going to train him like I train all my students,” said Rikishi. “We know his celebrity status, but in order for him to really understand the industry correctly, we got to put that all aside. He’s got to understand what it is when he gets in the ring how to protect himself, how to be a storyteller and all that theatrical movement.”

Once he learns and ins and outs of professional wrestling, maybe he’ll tell his friend Soulja Boy that it’s not as “fake” as he thinks it is. While the outcomes are largely pre-determined, the injuries sustained on a daily basis are very, very real.

 
Brad Barket/Getty Images

Do you think Rikishi can get Bow Wow to where he needs to be?

[via]

Eminem And Cancel Culture: An Incomplete History

Across three decades, Marshall Mathers III has inhabited many different roles in hip-hop. Among them, he’s been a record-breaker, a commercial titan and even a label boss. But if there’s one position that he’s refused to bequeath to new talents or contemporaries, it is that of hip-hop’s chief agitator. Save for Tyler, The Creator, whose initial work caused such an uproar that he was banned from several countries, no one in the history of hip-hop has even come close to causing the level of moral panic that Eminem could during his prime– and perhaps still incites, to this day.

Seen as the scourge of the suburbs by many parents during his initial rise to superstardom, Em is a unique case in the sense that, rather than soften his approach once he entered the mainstream, Detroit’s finest doubled down in his right to offend and abhor. However, where Eminem is capable of delivering a verse that challenges your perception of where “the line” is, he is equally able to uplift listeners with tales of resilience and grit. What’s allowed Mathers to fluidly move between these seemingly opposing identities comes from the idea that there’s Marshall, and there’s Shady. By donning an alter-ego that served as the vessel for his most depraved thoughts and murderous fantasies, the traditional approach was for listeners to accept that there was a degree of distance between the real man and the maniacal character that he assumes.

But in modern times, the context around what’s being said within a work of art has taken a backseat for quick soundbites. And on a soundbite-driven platform such as TikTok, Eminem has found himself scrutinized by “Gen-Z” for some of the lines on 2010’s “Love The Way You Lie.”  

eminem and rihanna love the way you live cancel culture

Eminem & Rihanna performing at the 2010 MTV VMAs – Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

A number one record around the world when first released as the second single from Recovery, this Rihanna duet tells the story of a tempestuous relationship and the temporary madness that it could instil in both parties, but wasn’t really subjected to any ripples of controversy at the time. Yet framed through the hyper-lens of cancel culture, lines such as “if she ever tries to fuckin’ leave again, I’mma tie her to the bed and set this house on fire” have led to accusations that Em was actively promoting domestic abuse and as a consequence, should be cast aside. 

TikTok users’ attempts to take Em to task has been met with audible groans by fans who see it as a needless exercise. While from the perspective of fellow artistic provocateur Corey Taylor, who caused his own stir in the 2000s as the frontman of mask-clad metal outfit Slipknot, he believes that trying to defame Em based on one line sets a dangerous precedent. 

“At this point, you’re talking about the Salem witch trials,” Taylor remarked in the wake of the news. “You’re talking about America in the ’20s where the KKK was like a political force. You’re talking about complete condemnation without context or any rationalization for an action like that.”

Although Corey’s comments about social media acting as judge, jury and executioner speak to larger issues around free speech, the reaction from those who’ve charted Em’s career is more one of bemusement. When it comes to Marshall Mathers making controversial statements or having high-profile run-ins with offended parties, his lyrics on “Love The Way You Lie” might as well be a lullaby.

Through both his art and the ways in which his words have been received, Em’s career path stands as a testament to not only his own imperviousness to any attempts to condemn him, but of a high-profile journey that likely would have been cut short long ago if it’d began in modern times. And, if Eminem were to have began his career in our current decade, the possible hurdles he’d face would fall into two distinct categories. 

eminem cancel culture

Kevin Winter/ImageDirect/Getty Images

The Bars

Throughout his entire career, Shady has presented himself as a master of the macabre, deranged and, at times, downright gross, in a way that would likely prove prohibitive when attempting to enter the mainstream today. After all, it wasn’t until after Tyler, The Creator and his Odd Future cohorts such as Earl Sweatshirt dispensed with the grislier side of their personas that they obtained their greatest successes. Yet for Em, his rise to world domination always had an undercurrent of menace that veered from playfully juvenile to incomparably twisted in any rap sub-genre, aside from horrorcore.

Over the course of this chaotic run, compromise has very seldom if ever been entertained by Em or those in charge of his career. In fact, two of the more notorious times that censorship was foisted on him by his label came on 2000’s The Marshall Mathers LP. Most notably, in “Kim,” a six-minute fantasy about murdering Eminem’s ex-wife, the line about a “four year old boy laying dead with a slit throat” was seen as taking it too far. As a result, the line was censored, even on the explicit record, but was still unchanged from what Em had written on the pad. 

EMINEM Cancel culture

Sal Idriss/Redferns/Getty Images

Taking domestic violence way further than “Love The Way You Lie” ever did, the vengeful ideas that were harboured on “Kim” are just one piece of the puzzle when it comes to Em’s status as a sneering middle finger to the boundaries of taste. 

When it came to the other instance of censorship that Shady ran into on The Marshall Mathers LP, his words took on a much more controversial tone in that rather than being a work of fiction, a creation of his brain’s most sinister urges, they were derived from death and despair that’d taken place in real life.

Taken from the iconic “I’m Back”– and far from the only monstrous but masterfully-crafted bar on the track– Em found his words subjected to further intervention from his label when he referenced a high school massacre that’d shook America to its core, just a year prior to the album’s release date, spitting:

I take seven {kids} from {Columbine}, stand ’em all in line

Add an AK-47, a revolver, a 9

A MAC-11 and it oughta solve the problem of mine

And that’s a whole school of bullies shot up all at one time” 

At once paying homage to the scheme from Eric B and Rakim’s “My Melody” and pushing his incendiary wordplay to the limits of public acceptance, Em would have to wait until the release of “Rap God,” 13-years later, for the line to be heard without any muted words. 

In these two examples, we see clearly where Interscope/Aftermath decided to pull rank and save Eminem from himself, when his every move was already marred in controversy. However, minus those few bars, what remained across singles and albums wasn’t exactly sterilized for public consumption, either. Whether he was making a mockery of Michael Jackson’s Legal issues on “Just Lose It,” discussing the lewdest of sexual acts on “FACK” or showing that he hadn’t lost a step when it came to causing outrage on Relapse, the Detroit native has never hesitated to use shock as a selling point. 

By no means a complete list, here are a few rhymes that, if “Love The Way You Lie” was considered egregious, would likely have TikTok users calling 911. 

“Low Down, Dirty” (1997)

Used to let the babysitter suck my dick when I was littler
Smoke a blunt while I’m titty-fucking Bette Midler
Slap dips, support domestic violence
Beat your bitch’s ass while your kids stare in silence

“97 Bonnie & Clyde” (1998)

Oh where’s mama? she’s takin a little nap in the trunk
Oh that smell (whew!) da-da musta runned over a skunk

Now I know what you’re thinkin’, it’s kind of late to go swimmin’
But you know your mama, she’s one of those type of women

“Just Don’t Give A Fuck” (1998)

Then I went to Jim Beam, that’s when my face grayed
Went to gym in 8th grade, (raped) the women’s swim team

“Criminal” (2000) 

My words are like a dagger with a jagged edge
That’ll stab you in the head, whether you’re a f*g or les
Pants or dress? Hate f*gs?
The answer’s ‘yes’

“Stay Wide Awake” (2009)

I see my target, put my car in park, and approach a tender
Young girl by the name of Brenda, and I pretend to befriend her

Sit down beside her like a spider, hi there girl, you mighta
Heard of me before, see whore, you’re the kind of girl that I’d a–
-ssault and rape, then figure why not try to make your pussy wider

Fuck you with an umbrella then open it up while the shit’s inside ya
I’m the kind of guy that’s mild but I might flip and get a little bit wilder
Impregnate a lesbian, yeah, now let’s see her have triplets, and I’ll di–
-sintegrate them babies as soon as they’re out her with formalde–
-hyde and cyanide, girl, you can try and hide, you can try to scream louder
No need for no gunpowder, that only takes all the fun out of
Murderin’, I’d rather go vinn-vinn, and now you see just how the
Fuck I do just what I do when I cut right through your scalp, uhh
Shit, wait a minute, I mean skull, my knife seems dull, pull another one out, uh

“Insane” (2013)

I was born with a dick in my brain, yeah, fucked in the head
My stepfather said that I sucked in the bed

Til one night he snuck in and said
We’re going out back, I want my dick sucked in the shed


The Conflicts

Considering that Eminem came out the gate with the most unhinged bars imaginable on 1997’s Slim Shady EP, there’s every chance that if Shady were to emerge today, he may not have been granted access to the entertainment world’s inner circle. And yet, his love for vulgar bars and button-pushing has meant that Em has had to weather storms of controversy and frequent attempts at “cancellation” (prior to the term being coined), which proves that if he couldn’t be taken down on those numerous occasions, he might as well be indestructible.

Many of Em’s most persistent detractors have come from the LGBTQIA community. A byproduct of his tendency to use homophobic slurs, which Em has always insisted was spawned by battle rap days, rather than a hatred of gay people, it’s an issue that’s dogged him from the days where gay activist groups would protest outside of his shows all the way through 2018, when controversy arose after his remarks about Tyler, The Creator on “Fall.” 

eminem gay activists protesting

GLAAD (Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) activists outside the Grammy Awards, protesting Eminem’s lyrics, 2001 – Jason Kirk/Newsmaker/Getty Images

But where using a slur in that manner, even in 2018, could have meant the death knell for any high-profile celebrity, Em was granted a fair hearing in much the same way he was, when he chose to collaborate with Elton John at the 2001 Grammy Awards Ceremony.

When asked why such a prominent gay artist would choose to show solidarity with Em, the British singer/songwriter’s explained his rationale to The Los Angeles Times. He claimed that he’d “rather tear down walls between people than build them up. If I thought for one minute that he was hateful, I wouldn’t do it.”

eminem elton john

Elton John & Eminem performing at the Grammy Awards, 2001 – Dave Hogan/Getty Images

Empowered by Elton’s endorsement, it allowed Eminem to be framed in a new context that it’s unlikely he’d be afforded today. In many ways, it mirrored the same leeway that he received when numerous enemies flagged up his use of racially-charged lyrics on 1993’s “Foolish Pride.” The song, which was dug up in 2003 as part of Benzino’s on-going beef with Eminem at the time, was originally written after Em’s girlfriend broke up with him, prompting his youthful declaration, “never date a black girl because blacks only want your money.” It was shocking, but did little to damage his legacy in the eyes of fans around the world, as Em faced the backlash head on and accepted responsibility. In a way that seems almost unfathomable today, where a slip-up from one’s past can resurface to cause irrevocable damage.

From publicly airing Mariah Carey’s voicemails in what’d be seen today as a blatant invasion of privacy, to making lyrical allusions to the Manchester Arena suicide bombing that claimed the lives of 22 concertgoers on Music To Be Murdered By, Em’s career has been lined with events and choices that would’ve completely destroyed a lesser artist. For comparison, even A$AP Rocky had to make amends for disparaging comments made about Rita Ora on 2015’s “Better Things.” Meanwhile, Em hasn’t so much as had to reconsider his lyrics about Lana Del Rey, Lindsay Lohan or any number of prominent figures that have faced his meticulously-crafted wrath.  

No matter how hard certain parties may try, you can’t cancel what is undeniable. Regardless of how much of his past is dredged up or how society changes, Em’s legacy as a commercial artist and pedigree as an MC is such that he simply isn’t going anywhere. After all, this is a man that’s been investigated by the Secret Service on two separate occasions in relation to threats made towards presidents that entered office decades apart. 

So, as an artist that had cemented his name in the history books and in the hearts of fans the world over, long before cancel culture was a thing, Em has safeguarded himself– and even his most divisive work— against the rules that are applicable to the lives of any artist that is setting out on a career today. 

Air Jordan 5 “Stealth 2.0” Revealed: Official Images

Ever since 2020, Jumpman has been doing everything possible to pay homage to the Air Jordan 5. For those who don’t know, this was the first Air Jordan silhouette of the 90s, and last year, it officially turned 30 years old. Due to this massive birthday, Jordan Brand opted to release various retros while also coming through with some colorful new offerings that brought in some renewed interest for the Air Jordan 5. In 2021, Jumpman is keeping the party going, this time with a callback to the Air Jordan 5 “Stealth” from the mid-2000s.

This latest shoe is appropriately being dubbed “Stealth 2.0” and the entire shoe can be viewed in the official images below. As you can see, most of the shoe is covered in white leather, all while silver and blue accents are placed all the way throughout. It’s a pretty clean look that should keep fans excited, especially those who have a particular love for the Air Jordan 5.

You won’t have to wait too long for these as they are slated to drop in just a couple of weeks on Saturday, March 27th, for $190 USD. These will also be coming out in sizes for the whole entire family, so if you need a gift for the young one in your life, these are a fantastic option.

Image via Nike
Image via Nike
Image via Nike
Image via Nike
Image via Nike

Jack Harlow Gets Double Dose Of Love In Chris Brown-Featured “Already Best Friends”

One of the catchiest songs from Jack Harlow’s debut studio album That’s What They All Say has officially been blessed with a music video. The collaboration between the Kentucky rapper and Chris Brown, titled “Already Best Friends”, is out now in video form after being teased earlier this week.

Jack Harlow announced the music video on Wednesday, informing his fans of the premiere twenty-four hours ahead of time. The video is officially out, showing the pair of superstar recording artists taking a trip out to Mexico and detailing their experiences with a duo of women. The song breaks down a conversation between Jack and his companions, with who he’s trying to have a ménage à trois. For the video, the rapper sits in a hot tub with two gorgeous women, going through the talk with them and getting up close and personal. 

In his scenes with Chris Brown, the world-class dancer shows off his moves behind as they walk through a packed party in the jungle.

This follows a pretty outstanding year for Jack Harlow, who has had one of the strongest come-ups in the rap game.

Watch the new music video for Jack Harlow’s “Already Best Friends” with Chris Brown above.