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👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
No, but that's kind of like one of the major parts of your appeal is just like the non-filter.
You're just like saying, even when you rap, you're just saying what you think.
it's hard to realize that now like it's never gonna stop bro I mean you came in the game down to earth because you already like you've been were very forthright about the fact that you had like a hot like a regular 9 to 5 job and recently yeah you were actually you were doing okay you were doing good at your job yeah you were making yeah you was working hard but it was like not trying to rap you know what I mean like I had two hours out of my day to just rest in the middle of the day that's what we don't know
And then recently, like, footage came out, like, and this was from, like, what, a year and a half ago?
Of you and your old job, homie.
What job was it?
Oh, nice.
Yeah, he's working, like, a nine to five.
When the black fools would come into the restaurant, would you go switch low key and be like, yo, what's up, what's up?
Because that's what you said, swagger jacking.
Why do you feel like he was swagger jacking you?
You said Blanco, a real one.
You said Blanco, a real one, and I'll always have love for him because when I first came to the city, I didn't know nobody, and Blanco brought me to OTR and like,
It's a struggle.
It's a struggle.
Oh, Adolf too.
Those lyrics are sparking criticism of flooding social media.
Many say the comparison placing Martin Luther King Jr.
and Malcolm X alongside Jeffrey Epstein and Adolf Hitler is tone deaf and inappropriate.
Others argue the message ignores victims and their families.