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Why Did Katy Perry Support Rick Caruso And His Unsuccessful Bid For Mayor Of LA?

While Rick Caruso, who reportedly spent $100 million running to be Los Angeles’ next mayor, lost to Democrat Karen Bass, he still received a lot of support from prominent celebrities ahead of the election. One of them being pop star Katy Perry, who faced backlash from fans after supporting the Republican candidate… who only switched to being a Democrat in January.

“I am voting for a myriad of reasons but in particular because Los Angeles is a hot mess atm,” Perry posted, complete with an image of her posing with her ballot, as she clearly voted for Caruso. She also included some colorful hashtags like #doyoubutjustuseyourvoteok and eventually turned off the comments.

Perry’s fans were shocked by the move, as she previously had voted for Hilary Clinton and advocated for maintaining Roe V. Wade. Meanwhile, Caruso’s past policies include being linked to anti-abortion organizations and pledging $1 million to seemingly support abortion rights (but never donating).

Other Caruso supporters include Elon Musk and Kim Kardashian, so at least Perry can place herself in normal billionaire company. “Los Angeles is fortunate to have someone like Rick Caruso running for mayor,” Musk wrote in a now-deleted tweet. “He’s awesome.”

“Elon, thank you for your support. L.A. is the greatest city in the world. I would be honored to be her next mayor and serve the city that I love,” Caruso replied. Despite all of his vocal celebrity supporters, Bass still won the mayoral election.

View some additional fan reactions to Katy Perry’s polling pick below.

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Donald Trump Is Now Selling ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ Wrapping Paper Just In Time For The Holidays

With Thanksgiving less than a week away, the holiday season is officially upon us. And December will be here before you know it. If you’re Donald Trump, that means it’s time to start wishing a “Merry Christmas” to everyone — even if you don’t celebrate the holiday. If you’re Melania, you might offer someone a snide “Merry F***ing Christmas,” then complain about it later.

While the former First Couple may no longer be able to force their garish holiday aesthetics on the White House, they can attempt to profit from the holiday from the diehard MAGAs who still believe in what they’re selling. And what Donald is selling, literally, is a festive $40 roll of Christmas wrapping paper that tells Joe Biden to go f**k himself. Because the former president is classy like that.

As Raw Story reports, Team Trump’s latest money-making scheme combines three of his favorite things: Christmas, grifting, and insulting the man who beat him in the 2020 presidential election. New York Magazine’s Margaret Hartmann was clued into the former president’s latest scheme via a fundraising email, which she wrote about on Thursday:

Following a protracted battle with my spam filter, a few months ago I finally started receiving the emails I signed up for at DonaldTrump.com. It has been a delight. Every few days I get a message with some bit of ‘URGENT NEWS’ from my ‘favorite president.’ On one very exciting week in early October, I got messages from both Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner. Regardless of which Trump is reaching out, the emails always end with a personal invitation to give them money, which I find very on-brand.

Was I flattered to learn that Trump considers me one of his ‘Best supporters,’ despite the fact that I’ve never actually given him a dime? Sure,” continued Hartmann. “But 40 DOLLARS for a single roll of ‘Let’s Go Brandon’ wrapping paper? I guess Trumps can afford to drop that much on rude wrapping paper, but I usually snatch up generic holiday gift wrap at HomeGoods for $3 a roll. To make matters worse, it’s not even cute or clever ‘fuck the president’ wrapping paper. For a donation of just $5 more, the National Republican Senatorial Committee will send me two rolls of this adorable paper featuring Trump in a Santa hat and the phrase ‘Don’t Be a Snowflake.’”

Not to be outdone, Melania is also getting in on the gifting grifting. The recent Christmas convert is selling her own line of ornaments with inspirational, and grammatically incorrect, messages like: Be Best.

(Via Raw Story)

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Kari Lake Flew Down To Florida To Whine About ‘Ballot Harvesting’ With Trump And WWE’s Linda McMahon In Front Of A Sad Mar-a-Lago Crowd

Election denier Kari Lake is still refusing to concede in Arizona’s gubernatorial race despite Democratic incumbent Katie Hobbs scoring a pretty decisive majority of votes during the 2022 Midterms. And while she battles against reality, and Tom Petty’s estate for using his music in campaign videos posted to social media, she’s also teaming up with Donald Trump to give meandering speeches at senior citizen conventions down in Florida.

Lake paid a visit to Mar-a-Lago earlier last night to speak in front of a sparse crowd of MAGA supporters where she threw out a bunch of trigger words that have been historically proven to rile up her ignorant right-wing base. Lake, who embraced both Trump and WWE matriarch Linda McMahon on stage, used the event to spread more baseless theories about voter fraud in her home state.

“They had to do everything they could to stop us. Ballot harvesting. They had to shut down the machines on Election Day, but we know their tricks and they think they can slow and pour cold water on a movement. It is not possible people,” Lake said, desperately trying to liven up the geriatric crowd.

Still, despite hiring a legal team to fight against her own election loss, Lake’s closing comments made it seem like she wasn’t too hopeful the results would be overturned.

“I’ll tell you this right now, I don’t know what my future holds other than [that] I’m going to continue to fight for this country,” Lak said. “But I will do everything in my power to make sure this man is back in the White House.”

(Via The Gazette)

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Tighten Up Those Tinder Profiles! Harry Styles And Olivia Wilde Have Reportedly Broken Up After Two Years

While many people speculated that Harry Styles and Olivia Wilde were broken up two months ago after they didn’t show any PDA during the press run for Wilde’s Don’t Worry Darling at the Venice Film Festival, the stars were just being extremely professional. Why take away attention from Wilde’s directorial efforts and Styles’ acting chops (or Spitgate???) But now, it seems as though the “As It Was” singer and Wilde have split, or are at least “taking a break.”

“The public pressure on them has been difficult,” a source told People. “They’ve had ups and downs throughout the relationship.” The source indicated that the couple are choosing to take time to focus on their own priorities at the moment. For Styles, that includes taking the Love On Tour to Mexico and South America for a number of dates before 2022 is over — and nevermind that he just came down with the flu and had to cancel three of his LA dates.

“He’s still touring and is now going abroad,” the source confirmed to People. “She is focusing on her kids and her work in L.A. It’s a very amicable decision.”

Wilde has two children from her previous marriage to Jason Sudeikis. She has attended Styles’ concerts in the past and even brought the kids along to an LA show this week. But it seems as though that was a fond farewell to a…friend? “They’re still very close friends,” the source said of the pair. While another source added that, “Right now, they have different priorities that are keeping them apart.”

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Big Sean And Jhene Aiko Have Welcomed A Baby Boy: ‘Happy, Healthy, And Everything We Could Ever Ask For’

Big Sean and Jhene Aiko‘s family has grown by one. Today, Aiko took to Instagram to announce the birth of their baby boy.

Their baby was born last week, on November 8, and Aiko revealed that his name is Noah Hasani.

“after 24 hours of labor, a total lunar eclipse, and while it was pouring rain… he came,” Aiko said in her Instagram post’s caption. “my baby Yoda, my Sani.”

In her post was a collection of photos, mostly of her surrounded by family and loved ones at the time of the birth. Also, at a nearby windowsill was a framed picture of her late brother, Miyagi, surrounded by crystals.

Sean also took to his Instagram to share the news, also recalling the rain and eclipse, saying, “he’s here safe and sound. Happy, Healthy and everything we could ever ask for and more. Any and everything for you Son.”

Noah is Aiko’s second child and Sean’s first. In an interview with Billboard back in June, before the two even announced they were expecting, Aiko said the best advice she could give to parents is to find a responsible balance.

Take moments to yourself and find gratitude in those moments, even when you have to do laundry. That’s why I like driving. It’s also important to spend time with your kids and find the joy in that because they grow up so fast. You’ll miss when they were with you all the time.

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Jack Antonoff Calls Out Industry ‘Merch Taxes’ That ‘F*ck’ Rising Touring Musicians ‘So Hard’

Jack Antonoff logged on to social media to share his thoughts about touring. A longtime producer and collaborator with Taylor Swift, Antonoff’s series of posts came just hours after Swift took to Instagram with some angry feelings toward Ticketmaster. “It’s truly amazing that 2.4 million people got tickets, but it really pisses me off that a lot of them feel like they went through several bear attacks to get them,” Swift wrote.

Following the disastrous presale (and general on-sale ticketing cancellation) for her 2023 The Eras Tour, a significant amount of fans have rallied to petition to dismantle the ticketing monopoly. And, it appears to be working, as today the Justice Department has reportedly started a formal investigation into Ticketmaster and Live Nation’s joint business venture.

“while we are having the discussion can venues simply stop taxing merch of artists? this is literally the only way you make money when you start out touring,” Antonoff wrote, speaking to the larger issues in the music industry that prevent rising artists from ever turning profits. “the more we make it tenable for young and small artists to make a living on the road the more great music we will get.”

“touring is one of the most honest ways to make a living. some of the hardest and most heartfelt work you can do. so why must [they] f*ck artist so hard?” he continued. “simpel solutions, stop taxing merch, stop lying to artists about costs of putting on shows, include artists in more areas of revenue. the stories i could tell from my years touring are bananas. young artists on tour are the last to see any money.”

Oh, and Antonoff also offered some more choice words for Kanye West. “ok one more, kanye a little bitty little b*tch,” Antonoff ended before noting he had to get back to work.

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The Biggest Strength And Weakness Of Each Top-5 Rookie In The 2022 NBA Draft (So Far)

Four of the top-five selections from this summer’s Draft are quickly approaching the midterm portion of their first NBA semester (get well soon, Chet Holmgren). Paolo Banchero, Jabari Smith Jr., Keegan Murray, and Jaden Ivey have all played at least 350 minutes. They’re all logging 29+ minutes a night, which makes it easy to compile initial returns on their games. Given the infantile nature of their presumptive careers, any hardline stances would be rash and faulty.

That, however, does not mean we can’t assess what we’ve seen from this quartet through one month and identify some strengths and areas of improvement for each of them. So, let’s do exactly that, praising one aspect of their skill-set and noting another that presents room for growth.

Paolo Banchero

Biggest strength: An advanced driving game

Though on the mend with a sprained ankle the past week and a half, Banchero’s roared out to a prolific start. The 20-year-old is averaging 23.5 points, 8.3 rebounds, and 3.6 assists on 55.6 percent true shooting. He’s been remarkably consistent, scoring at least 20 points in all but two of his 11 games. He doesn’t even yet know an NBA reality where he scores fewer than 15. He leads all rookies in Estimated Plus-Minus at plus-2.1 (39th overall), stationed right above All-Star guards Kyrie Irving and Dejounte Murray. Assuming he returns soon from his injury, an All-Star label next to his own name this year isn’t too far-fetched. He’s that good already.

Offensive superstardom awaits him. The primary reason for such a future stems from an adept slashing game. He’s a powerful 6’10, 250-pound tank downhill, merging strength, explosion, footwork, and a silky handle. His technical refinement, in conjunction with a special athletic profile, belies his first-year status.

According to NBA.com, he’s logging 13.3 drives per game and generating points on 69.2 percent of them, two marks that parallel Giannis Antentokoumpo (14.5, 73.8 percent), the gold standard for high-volume, big man slashers. The fluidity with which he moves and dribbles at his size, while also gracefully mashing through defenders when necessary, is a marvel to watch.

Only 44 percent of his makes at the rim are assisted (88th percentile among forwards), per Cleaning The Glass. He’s shooting 68 percent there (55th percentile). Overwhelmingly, he’s converting or drawing fouls (.472 free-throw rate). Banchero’s jumper has largely escaped him to open his career (26 percent from deep, 40 percent from midrange), but he’s still playing like a tremendous offensive talent because he’s already a dynamo attacking downhill. His array of physical gifts and advanced perimeter skills are the reason why.

Biggest area of improvement: Off-ball awareness

For all of his offensive exploits, Banchero’s defense is often a detriment. He’s a good rebounder and, when he analyzes rotations properly, an impactful secondary rim protector. That’s the extent of his reliably beneficial contributions. His awareness lags behind. He labors through screens, an understandable issue at his stature. More pressing, though, is his general lack of attentiveness. He loses cutters, fails to properly rotate on the weakside in help-the-helper scenarios, and just generally seems to not recognize or adhere to his responsibilities off the ball.

Apathy may not be the correct framing for his gaffes. But he’s certainly not up to speed on the complexities of his duties, nor does he position himself well, whether it’s standing upright or being caught in ineffectual purgatory. There are various plays most nights where the opposition creates an advantage and he played a prominent part in it.

Among motor, recognition, and technique, much must be cleaned up for Banchero to not be a liability in space off the ball defensively. The rebounding and rim protection are valuable traits, but they cannot override everything else at the moment. He’s quickly established himself as a borderline star, and defensive progression would help him further climb that hierarchy.

Jabari Smith Jr.

Biggest strength: Perimeter mobility

Prior to the Draft, when Smith was seemingly in the mix to go No. 1, his allure centered on this juiced-up 3-and-D forward whose versatile floor-spacing and comfort on the perimeter defensively would make him a distinct, indispensable cog for high-level winning.

The offense hasn’t burst onto the scene. The Houston Rockets aren’t utilizing him ideally on either end of the floor. They’re playing him in drop coverage against ball-screens a good bit, which seems like a poor allocation of his services. Nonetheless, he’s showcased flashes of rangy perimeter chops. He needs to build core strength to counter brawny wings and his screen navigation is clunky, due to some inflexibility.

But man, he can glide laterally. When he unfurls his 7’2 wingspan and crouches low, he covers some serious ground to fluster opponents. It’s awesome stuff so early in his NBA tenure, and an obvious point of optimism upon which to build.

Biggest area of improvement: Attacking closeouts

Smith is only shooting 30.4 percent beyond the arc on more than five attempts per game, an inauspicious start for someone billed as such a tremendous long-range gunner. Some of that isn’t his fault. The Rockets don’t really incorporate his movement shooting into their offensive sets. Far too commonly, he’s stashed in the corner and/or relied upon as a floor-spacer for Jalen Green, Kevin Porter Jr., and Alperen Sengun. Occasionally, that’s fine. Houston desperately yearned for spacing last season and Smith can help there. It’s the norm, though. Eventually, he will knock down more of these looks — his elevated release point is already a weapon, and hopefully, he’ll be better accommodated for his talents to shine.

What does look like more than merely an inauspicious start is his 32.8 percent clip inside the arc. That’s concerning for any player, let alone a 6’10 forward. Smith struggles to thrive off the catch when defenses close out aggressively. He doesn’t operate with much haste, force, or wiggle. Physicality rattles him. While he’s not gained traction from deep yet, defenses much prefer the alternative than to let him bomb away.

According to Cleaning The Glass, he’s shooting 52 percent at the rim (2nd percentile among bigs) and 24 percent from midrange (12th percentile). He looks overmatched around the basket and so many of his drives conclude with difficult fadeaways or pull-up jumpers. Those are wins for the defense.

Smith will rediscover his outside stroke. He’s been a very good shooter for a long time. But if he continues to be erratic inside the arc, shrewd defenders and schemes will skirt him off the line and exploit his shortcomings. It’s early, of course, and he doesn’t turn 20 until next May. Navigating options inside the arc can be one of the more complex learning curves for young shooters. That’s certainly the case for Smith at the moment.

Keegan Murray

Biggest strength: Off-ball versatility

The 8-6 Sacramento Kings are cruising. They’ve won seven of nine and are the league’s second-ranked offense. They’re tied for seventh in the West and a game out of second. Beyond De’Aaron Fox’s ascension, Sacramento’s lethal offense is built upon dynamism. Kevin Huerter, Malik Monk, and Keegan Murray are all malleable off-ball scorers. They’re equipped to flourish around Fox’s driving and Domantas Sabonis’ handoffs, screening, and interior presence. That’s exactly what they’re doing.

Murray’s slid into that role seamlessly. He’s a highly diverse off-ball scorer, leaving his imprint via cuts, relocation triples, movement threes, curling around handoffs, deftly tossing in floaters, and occasionally punishing mismatches. He’s averaging 12 points on 57.2 percent true shooting (.451/.375/.778 split). His early season scoring signature is littered with a plethora of different buckets playing off of Fox and Sabonis.

In trading for Sabonis last winter, Sacramento forged a clear vision for its future. The additions of Huerter, Monk, and Murray helped solidify that vision and amplify its success. Murray is a snug fit in this offense that’s proving to be a symbiotic partnership.

Biggest area of improvement: Defending in space

Just as Murray follows the lead of his teammates offensively with versatile scoring, he is similarly doing the same defensively. The frontcourt trio of him, Sabonis, and Harrison Barnes is quite slow laterally. The offseason worries about the defensive personnel of the roster have come to fruition. The Kings are 26th in defensive rating. They don’t have adequate rim protection, nor do they hoard an army of wing stoppers to mitigate their interior limitations.

Murray is among those unqualified to provide stout on-ball protection. He’s rather sluggish in space and cannot promptly flip his hips in response to changes of direction. Whether it’s on or off the ball, tracking movement from his assignments is a lofty task; dribble handoffs are a nemesis. His steps are choppy and he fails to curtail driving angles as a result.

Some of his interior rotations have been precise and impactful. He’ll read passing lanes well to muck up actions as well. Playing the three alongside Barnes and Sabonis doesn’t provide him any leeway. But becoming less susceptible in space, however he can, should be a priority to help that off-ball offense lead to even more individual and collective profits.

Jaden Ivey

Biggest strength: Finishing craft

Jaden Ivey seems to etch another highlight into his rapidly growing catalog on a nightly basis. He’s absurdly explosive, ingenuitive, and crafty. His downhill escapades will command attention from the audience, regardless of how they end for him. Through 15 games, the former Purdue star is averaging 16.3 points, 4.9 rebounds, 4.1 assists, and 1.3 steals.

The bedrock of his advantage creation is founded on his downhill speed and finishing. Only 35 percent of his buckets at the rim are assisted (67th percentile among combo guards). Forty-four percent of his field goals occur there (92nd percentile), where he’s shooting 62 percent (56th percentile).

Despite the Detroit Pistons’ cramped floor-spacing and dearth of effective ball-handling around him (sans Cade Cunningham), Ivey is an excellent finisher as a rookie. He’s flexible, creative, and will convert with either hand. He adapts on the fly when rim protectors rotate over. He explodes through space. Like an elite pass rusher, he ducks his shoulder, burrows his head, and charges inside. Eliminating the edge against him is exceptionally difficult.

Biggest area of improvement: Midrange game

Try as he might, Ivey cannot live exclusively at the rim. He can, however, call the paint his home. His screen manipulation, East-West handle, pliability, and burst enable him to routinely generate paint touches. When he finds himself probing inside the free-throw line yet outside the restricted area, a wave of discontent seeps into his game.

He’s shooting 29 percent from midrange. Floaters and intermediate pull-ups are a last resort. The floater looks like an uncomfortable push shot; it’s important he’s experimenting right now, even if the outcomes are murky. He’s prone to relinquishing advantages and resetting the possession when stuck in the midrange. Advantages are hard to fashion. Surrendering one can spell doom. The best initiators avoid such pitfalls.

A lot of analysis regarding Ivey seems to land on his long ball. He shot 32.2 percent at Purdue and has drilled 31.9 percent of his triples with the Pistons. More salient for his ceiling as a creator, at least from my perspective, is the midrange development. Much like other trackstar guards before him — ex: John Wall, De’Aaron Fox, Ja Morant — defenses will always prioritize stopping the drive ahead of the three. Ivey would have to become such a terrific sniper for that dynamic to shift.

Instead, broadening his pathways to success on these downhill forays, which he can almost always forge, would augment his offensive value. The finishing is stellar, but defenses will take it away at times. Expanding his midrange prowess is a necessary counter.

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Early Access: Pod Yourself A Gun Season One Finale, With David J. Roth

The latest episode of Pod Yourself The Wire is available now to subscribers. Sign up at Patreon.com/frotcast to hear this and all episodes of Pod Yourself The Wire totally AD FREE.

“By the time you’re on your fourth or fifth show it will be a full zoo crew situation.” -David J. Roth

Taint and the Beav, aka Matt and Vince, welcome writer, podcaster, Defector co-founder, and unofficial Pod Yourself a Fourth Member, David J. Roth, for a morning-zoo-crew-influenced edition Pod Yourself The Wire. Matt fires up the soundboard as the three break down The Wire’s first season finale, “Sentencing.”

There are many reasons David keeps getting invited to do the podcast, not the least of which is his ability to remember weird old guys that may have slipped from the cultural consciousness. Today, he reminds us of The Greaseman, a former radio personality who, according to his Wikipedia page, lost his position as a volunteer deputy sheriff in Falls Church, Virginia after saying a really racist thing on the radio, and is possibly the person responsible for popularizing the phrase, “who’s your daddy?”

Because even The Greaseman contains multitudes. David also has funny, insightful things to say about this episode of The Wire, but you knew that already. You didn’t know who the daddy of “who’s your daddy?” was until right now, so thank David.

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The Best New Hip-Hop This Week

The best new hip-hop this week includes albums, videos, and songs from Roddy Ricch, Saweetie, and more.

The holidays are peeking over the horizon, and while that means that there are fewer new music releases, they are no less impactful. Friday saw the releases of new songs from Babyface Ray (“Spend It” with Blxst and Nija). Chance The Rapper (“Yah Know“), Don Toliver (“Do It Right”), and Travis Scott (“Down In Atlanta” with Pharrell) after a week that included new drops from Gucci Mane “Letter To Takeoff“) and Rich Brian (“Vivid) along with the releases listed below.

Here is the best of hip-hop this week ending Month TK, 2022.

Albums/EPs/Mixtapes

38 Spesh & Harry Fraud — Beyond Belief

38 spesh beyond belief
38 Spesh

After teasing their joint release for a few weeks, upstate New Yorker 38 Spesh and city kid Harry Fraud have dropped the heavily anticipated project. It features rugged bars and haunted beats from Spesh and Fraud, respectively, as well as mean-mugged rhymes from the likes of Benny The Butcher and Conway The Machine from Griselda, Curren$y, El Camino, Jim Jones, Ransom, Stove God Cooks, and Wiz Khalifa

Brockhampton — The Family

brockhampton the family
Brockhampton

Yes, Brockhampton released two projects this weekend, and yes, The Family is more of a Kevin Abstract album than anything else but given it’s actually finished, it rates a little higher than TM, a more random collection of clippings. Both projects are interesting glimpses into the collective mindset of a group pulling itself apart while making one final pass at providing closure for their fans.

Jaypitts — Minimum Wage

jaypitts minimum wage
Jaypitts

Although Jaypitts hails from Detroit, his music would seem, at least at first blush, to be a departure from the reckless, punchline-oriented street style purveyed by the likes of BabyTron, Icewear Vezzo, and Sada Baby. His approach is more soulful, introspective, and narrative-driven — which makes for a fascinating, rewarding listen that encourages repeats.

Omeretta The Great — Emotional Gangsta

omeretta the great emotional gangsta
Omeretta The Great

Omeretta clearly defined the limits of her hometown for us earlier this year but makes an effort to get “Back To The Basics” on this eight-song release, refocusing on delivering rewind-worthy bars rather than courting controversy. It’s an effective strategy that evokes the early music of trap rap pioneer and fellow ATLien, T.I.

Roddy Ricch — Feed Tha Streets III

roddy ricch feed tha streets iii
Roddy Ricch

After Live Life Fast, his sophomore album, caught a lukewarm reception from fans, Roddy has returned to the fertile creative ground he traversed on his first two Feed Tha Streets mixtapes. The project will probably benefit from a more focused, constrained approach among his day-one fans while linking his latest effort to the lower stakes entries in his discography will buy him forgiveness for not exploring new territory. It’s a win-win.

Saweetie — The Single Life

saweetie the single life
Saweetie

Speaking of artists who need to buy back some goodwill, it’s clear that Saweetie’s frequent recalibrations of her debut album have worn fans’ patience down to the nub. With The Single Life, she simplifies the sound palette, gets back to her signature of sampling existing hits (Mtumbe’s “Juicy Fruit” on “P.U.S.S.Y.”), and resurrects the car freestyle flow that first garnered her attention and set her on the path to stardom. Will it renew excitement for Pretty Bitch Music? Who knows, but it’s nice that she finally released some music at least.

Singles/Videos

Busta Rhymes — “Bulletproof” feat. Skillibeng

This week was kind of a big one for EPs (which artists may see as a compromise between letting attention spans lapse for the winter and dedicating the resources to promoting a full project during a potential dead zone for new releases). Busta dropped The Fuse Is Lit with five new tracks, including this nod to his Caribbean roots.

Key Glock — “Jigsaw”

Key Glock also dropped a new EP, PRE5L, taking the inspiration for its single from Saw. A menacing beat and tough talk from Key — what more do you need?

E-40 — “In The Air Where It’s Fair” feat. Cousin Fik

Yay Areaaaaaa! 40 Water flexes his slippery flow over a wobbly, post-hyphy instrumental produced by prolific partner Rick Rock.

Morray — “Broken Vows”

J. Cole isn’t the only Fayetteville native whose name is ringing off outside of North Carolina. Despite drawing early comparisons to Rod Wave, Morry
has distinguished himself as a soulful, accomplished rap crooner in his own right. “Broken Vows” is a sign that he’s preparing to release a new album soon, which could be his breakout moment.

Westside Boogie — “Nonchalant” feat. Mamii

Westside Boogie’s More Black Superheroes was quietly one of the year’s best projects. This week, he updated it with a deluxe version adding five new songs, including live versions of some of the original’s standout tracks. The “Nonchalant” video highlights one of the strongest tracks, which examines a situationship that Boogie regrets putting mediocre effort into.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Pod Yourself The Wire 12: ‘Cleaning Up,’ With MMA Writer Ben Fowlkes


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“I once dated a woman who compared me, not entirely unfavorably, to McNulty, and you know what? It was kind of a wake up call.” -Ben Fowlkes

Making his debut on Pod Yourself The Wire is writer and podcaster from the Co-Main Event podcast, Ben Fowlkes, who joins Vince and Brent (still filling in for Matt even though his kid is like four-weeks-old which is old enough to get a job damn cut the cord already, Matt) to talk about The Wire season one episode 12, “Cleaning Up.”

Featuring one of The Wire’s most memorable scenes, what you might not remember about this episode, if you’ve already watched the series, is that Lester really walks a fine line between smooth older man and total creep taking advantage of a terrified young confidential informant. If learning how a beautiful woman likes her coffee and then reminding her of your military service were a crime, Lester would still not be in jail because cops look out for each other.

What you probably remember is the end of young Michael B. Jordan’s character, Wallace. He wasn’t cut out for the game. His heart did pump Kool-aid after all. RIP Wallace and RIP the uneaten hot dogs Poot, Bodie, and Wallace leave on the table just before the murder. Neither Wallace nor the dogs got to reach their full potential, but the game is the game.

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Support the Pod: become a patron at patreon.com/Frotcast to get more bonus content than you could ever want. Sign up for the Pod Yourself a Shoutout tier to hear Vince give you a corner nickname on the podcast like this week’s newest members: Queef, The Gigolo, Trout, Baby Horse, Screwdriver, Staples, Jailbird, and Lil Drummer Boy.

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