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Chapter 1: What happened to Ebro In The Morning and why is it significant?
This is an iHeart Podcast. Guaranteed human. Hey, it's Nora Jones, and my podcast, Playing Along, is back with more of my favorite musicians. Check out my newest episode with Josh Groban. You related to the Phantom at that point. Yeah, I was definitely the Phantom in that. That's so funny. Share each day with me Each night, each morning
Listen to Nora Jones is Playing Along on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. On the Steno Show podcast, each episode invites you into a raw, unfiltered conversations about recovery, resilience, and redemption. On a recent episode, I sit down with actor, cultural icon, Danny Trejo to talk about addiction, transformation, and the power of second chances.
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Chapter 2: Who might take over Ebro's morning slot on Hot 97?
On paper, the three hosts of the Nick Dick and Paul show are geniuses. We can explain how AI works, data centers, but there are certain things that we don't necessarily understand. Better version of play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
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I'm Daniel Alarcon, and this is my friend who's much more famous than I am. I wouldn't go that far, but I'm John Green, co-host of the podcast The Away End with my old friend Daniel.
On our podcast The Away End, we'll share with you the magic of international football, all leading up to the 2026 World Cup. Together, we'll find out why, of all the unimportant things, football, soccer, is the most important. Listen to The Away End with Daniel Alarcon and John Green on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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Chapter 3: What are Rory and Mal's thoughts on the new Nas and DJ Premier project?
Hey, it's Edwin Castro, also known as Castro1021. And I'm Konky, his best friend and business manager. And we've got a new show called The 1021 Podcast. I'm taking you behind the scenes on how I became one of Twitch's most popular streamers. We also love sports.
And with the World Cup right around the corner, we'll be breaking down the biggest storylines ahead of the big tournament here in the USA. Listen to the 1021 podcast on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. The Volume. If Drake DM'd me die slowly, I mean, I wouldn't get depressed, but I'd, you know, I'd lock my doors. You would lock your doors?
You would go downstairs and check to see if the door was locked? Why it wasn't locked already? See if Iceman was outside? What's up with you, man?
Defend it.
Chapter 4: How do Rory and Mal feel about the current state of hip-hop radio?
I like it. Die slower, pussy. Yeah, yeah, yeah. All you niggas that was talking shit all year, clapping for that bullshit rhetoric that they was pushing about me. Yeah, die slow. I want to see all you niggas fail. What does that mean? It means die slow. I hope your next show don't work out either. Drake is not hoping that Ebro is putting to the ground next week. How do you know that? He's not.
He's not that type of person. But he's saying, Dash, though, like, yo, yeah, fuck your career. Career-wise, but we got some shit for you.
Chapter 5: What insights do Rory and Mal share about the evolution of radio personalities?
one, could take as a threat and maybe pursue a lawsuit. Hey, Rosenberg, I didn't like that. I didn't like Rosenberg pumping that. I would take that as a threat. You should sue. Like, come on, man, with the bullshit. No, he was... I didn't like that. I didn't like that. And I fuck with Pete, but I didn't like that. Pete was making a joke based off the lawsuit that Drake... No, I get it.
I get it.
Like, he's saying... I mean, suing's okay, so... Yeah, but it was that coming out of that face. Can you sue someone for saying we got some shit for you? Well, the way Pete was... You could probably get, like, a restraining order. He was trying to paint it like, yo, it's a threat.
Chapter 6: What are the implications of the changes at Hot 97 for hip-hop culture?
Oh, someone could if you want it. Yeah. If you want it. So I didn't like doing that. I was like, come on, man. You know, that's not Drake is not going to do anything to eat, bro. No, of course not. But that's why you shouldn't say we got some shit for you unless you even do it. Yeah. But we got some shit for you can be a bunch of things. It could be I got you. I got I got you on a song.
I got some bars about you in the song. I got some, you know, some some info that I heard about you from some women that you may have dated before. It could be a lot of things.
Chapter 7: How do Rory and Mal discuss the impact of social media on hip-hop artists?
It don't mean that I'm going to show up to your house with the with the owls and fucking and bring bodily harm to you. Like, it don't mean that. Bring the potters. Yeah, it don't mean that. It just means we got some shit for you. Do you think this is a bit hypocritical of what you just said about Wale? Why should Drake give so much power to these people on the Internet discussing him?
No, he's just, he's not. To the point that you say, die slower, pussy. We got something for you in the DMs and you're worth a billion dollars in the biggest artist, second biggest artist in the world. To me, he's letting people on the internet get to him. If he didn't care, he wouldn't DM somebody.
This is somebody that was the program director of a radio station in New York City that was pushing a message in the rhetoric. Yeah, but they've been pushing the rhetoric about him based on a song that came out last year. Ebro has been very vocal about that.
Chapter 8: What are the final thoughts on the future of radio and hip-hop?
He's said a lot of things about Drake over the past year. I mean, we can go down a clip of things that Ebro said about Drake as well. Listen, I don't... watch every single Ebro show to know every bad thing he said about Drake, but I also think the level that Drake is at can go to your point of what you made with Wale. It's people on the internet, there's no power.
Even when Flex was trying to beef with Drake and Drake was on stage at the Garden saying fuck Hot 97, they were playing Drake 50 times a day. It didn't affect his, it's not like he got blackballed from Hot 97. It's not like they stopped playing his music, which affects your livelihood. They were beefing with Drake Flex was beefing with Drake and had to play 10 Drake songs in his set.
Yeah, but here's the thing, Rory, because you're asking for Drake to, you know, be the bigger person. You're asking him to- I'm just making a point off the wall. No, he wanted- I don't care. I actually laughed at this. Yeah, sometimes he wanted to play Petty. Sometimes he's going to be petty. Sometimes? Yeah. Career. Yeah, exactly. So sometimes I'm going to say die slower, pussy.
Sometimes I'm going to say that. I'm going to be in the studio. I'm going to hear that you just lost your show, got canceled. And I'm going to be like, oh, shit. He was talking so much shit about me this year. Let me send him a nice little message. I just and I'm not saying this about Drake. I think it's the overall Internet now.
when drill music and streamers all like connected and they started using drill slang and metaphors in real life is when things got weird. Like smoking on packs and like all this like, you know, it's actually like really about like murder, right? Yeah, they're saying that on Twitter, but those guys are actually doing it.
That's when things, when anyone felt like they could say anything on the internet. Like, die slow or pussy, I just, I think that's a wild thing to DM somebody. It is. I just do. And I think everyone is speaking like they're all drill rappers, no matter who you are. People feel like that's just acceptable vernacular now to say certain threats that have a meaning of actual violence.
We smoke around that pack tonight. Like, wait, you know that derives from someone that was murdered, right? I just think it's, people talk crazy in DMs, on streams, on Twitter. Like, it's nuts the things that people are saying to each other with ease. And they're not even, I'm not saying this about Drake, and they're not even like that. Like, listen, do we joke around this and that?
I don't use certain words because I'm not prepared to, I'm 35 years old. I don't want any violence. Even when I was cut, homie, off in traffic, I just, I was staring straight. I don't want to fight. I'm past that point in my life. So I don't speak that way. I'm not going to threaten someone that way unless we're going that way. So I don't know.
I just think everyone on In-N-Out easily just says shit that has power behind it if you think about what you're saying. But do you understand why Drake said that? I don't, I mean, did Ebro call him a pedophile? I don't know. If someone called me a pedophile, yeah, probably. In my head, I probably, I probably hope that their career failed. He called him what? He called him a sickness. Oh, yeah.
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