Hulu must’ve clued into the fact that we’re all depressed, isolated potato sacks right now because the streaming platform is giving us plenty to laugh at this month.
Lamorne Morris’ Woke arrives early to give us a fresh and timely twist on the Black Lives Matter moment that we’re living in before PEN15 debuts its second season filled with more pre-pubescent cringe-comedy that we can’t help but relate to. Here’s everything coming to (and leaving) Hulu this September.
Woke (Hulu series streaming 9/9)
New Girl’s Lamorne Morris stars in this imaginative comedy series about a Black cartoonist on the rise who suddenly has his eyes opened to the injustice and inequality surrounding him. Morris plays Keef, a talented artist keeping things light with his work — which is set to go mainstream — until a violent run-in with the police leaves him questioning his reality. It’s timely for sure, taking an inventive approach to the Black Lives Matter moment, but there’s still plenty of humor to keep it all grounded.
Pen15: Season 2 (Hulu series streaming 9/18)
The second season of Hulu’s breakout comedy lands on the streaming platform this month as Maya (Maya Erskine) and Anna (Anna Konkle) navigate the end of summer and the start of a new school year. The girls flit between awkward pool parties, school plays, weird break-ups, and bloody sleepovers while trying to maintain their close friendship and rise in the popularity ranks. It’s the best kind of cringe-worthy comedy.
Here’s the full list of titles coming to Hulu in September:
Avail. 9/1 Mike Tyson Mysteries: Complete Season 4 Jeopardy!: Episode Refresh 50 First Dates (2004) Absolute Power (1997) Aeon Flux (2005) American Dragons (1998) An American Haunting (2006) Any Given Sunday (1999) Anywhere but Here (1999) Back to School (1986) Bad Girls from Mars (1991) The Bank Job (2008) Because I Said So (2007) The Birdcage (1997) Broken Lizard’s Club Dread (2004) Call Me (1988) Carrington (1995) The Cold Light Of Day (2012) Cool Blue (1990) Criminal Law (1989) The Day the Earth Stood Still (2008) De-Lovely (2004) Demolition Man (1993) Desperate Hours (1990) Deuces Wild (2002) Employee of the Month (2006) The End of Violence (1997) Evil Dead II (1987) Extreme Justice (1993) The Festival (2019) Hanoi Hilton (1987) Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay (2008) Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle (2004) Hoosiers (1986) The House on Carroll Street (1988) I Feel Pretty (2018) The Impossible (2012) Invasion U.S.A. (1985) Jessabelle (2014) Julia (1977) The Last Boy Scout (1991) The Last House on the Left (1972) The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane (1976) Love Is All There Is (1996) Mad Money (2008) Man of La Mancha (1972) The Mechanic (1972) Mississippi Burning (1988) Mr. North (1988) Music Within (2007) Not Another Teen Movie (2001) Notorious (2009) The Omen (2006) Outbreak (1995) Pee-wee’s Big Adventure (1985) Pieces of April (2003) Practical Magic (1998) Rambo (2008) Reasonable Doubt (2014) Religulous (2008) Slow Burn (2007) Some Kind of Wonderful (1987) Stargate (1994) The Terminator (1984) Things You Can Tell Just By Looking At Her (2001) This World, Then the Fireworks (1997) Top Gun (1986) Trolls World Tour (2020) Turkey Bowl (2019) Twilight (2008) The Twilight Saga: New Moon (2009) The Twilight Saga: Eclipse (2010) The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 (2011) The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (2012) Tyler Perry’s Daddy’s Little Girls (2007) The Weight of Water (2002) Wanted (2008) The Woods (2006)
Avail. 9/2 Hell on the Border (2019)
Avail. 9/3 Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life (2016)
Avail. 9/6 Awoken (2019)
Avail. 9/7 Madagascar: A Little Wild: Complete Season 1A (Hulu Original)
Avail. 9/8 American Ninja Warrior: Season 12 Premiere Brother vs. Brother: Season 7 Premiere
Avail. 9/9 Woke: Complete Season 1 (Hulu Original)
Avail. 9/10 Prisoners (2013)
Avail. 9/11 My Hero Academia: Episodes 64 – 76
Avail. 9/16 Archer: Season 11 Premiere
Avail. 17 The Good Shepherd (2006)
Avail. 9/18 Pen15: Complete Season 2 Sherman’s Showcase: Black History Month Special Babyteeth (2019) The Fight (2020) Gemini Man (2019) StarDog and TurboCat (2020)
Avail. 9/20 The Haunted (2020)
Avail. 9/21 The 72nd Primetime Emmy Awards: Special
Avail. 9/22 Filthy Rich: Series Premiere The Addams Family (2019)
Avail. 9/23 Cosmos: Possible Worlds: Special If Loving You Is Wrong: Complete Season 5
Avail. 9/24 Teen Titans Go! Vs Teen Titans (2019)
Avail. 9/25 Judy (2019)
Avail. 9/26 The Wilderness of Error: Series Premiere
Avail. 9/28 Bless the Harts: Season 2 Premiere Bob’s Burgers: Season 11 Premiere Family Guy: Season 19 Premiere Fargo: Season 4 Premiere The Simpsons: Season 32 Premiere
Avail. 9/29 Inherit the Viper (2020) Trauma Center (2019)
Avail. 9/30 Southbound (2015)
Here’s what’s leaving Hulu in September:
Leaving 9/30 2001 Maniacs (2005) 50 First Dates (2004) A Bridge Too Far (1977) A Mighty Wind (2003) A Perfect Murder (1998) Best In Show (2000) Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970) Brick Mansions (2014) Brokedown Palace (1998) Buffy, the Vampire Slayer (1992) Buried (2010) Cats & Dogs (2001) City Slickers (1991) City Slickers 2: The Legend of Curly’s Gold (1994) Cold War (2012) Die Hard 4: Live Free or Die Hard (2007) Employee of the Month (2006) Escape from Alcatraz (1979) For Your Consideration (2006) Friday the 13th – Part III (1982) Friday the 13th Part IV: The Final Chapter (1984) From Paris with Love (2010) Futureworld (1976) Hoosiers (1986) House of 1000 Corpses (2003) Iron Eagle IV: On the Attack (1999) Kung Pow: Enter the Fist (2002) Larry Crowne (2011) Mississippi Burning (1988) My Cousin Vinny (1992) Nate and Hayes (1983) Norma Rae (1979) Pathology (2008) Poseidon (2006) Post Grad (2007) Practical Magic (1998) Rabbit Hole (2011) Rambo (2008) Right at Your Door (2007) Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991) Sands of Iwo Jima (1950) Some Kind of Hero (1982) Speed 2: Cruise Control (1996) Spider-Man 3 (2007) Stargate (1994) Strategic Air Command (1955) Sugar Hill (1994) Sunset Strip (1999) The Birdcage (1997) The Client (1994) The Color Purple (1985) The Devil’s Rejects (2005) The Eye (2008) The Eye 2 (2005) The Inevitable Defeat of Mister & Pete (2014) The Mask (1994) The Ninth Gate (2000) The Sender (1982) The Shawshank Redemption (1994) The Truth About Cats & Dogs (1996) The U.S. vs. John Lennon (2006) Three Musketeers (2011) Top Gun (1986) Undertow (2004) Unlocked (2017) Waiting for Guffman (1997) Wanted (2008) West Side Story (1961)
The Philadelphia 76ers will begin searching for a new head coach after firing Brett Brown after seven seasons as head coach. The news came via Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN and was confirmed by Kyle Neubeck of Philly Voice.
The Philadelphia 76ers fired coach Brett Brown, sources tell ESPN.
Brown guided Philly through the extremely lean Process years before making the leap to a perennial playoff team (overall a 221-344 record), but one that never capitalized fully on the promise of its young stars.
The final straw was a rather humiliating playoff sweep in the Orlando Bubble at the hands of the rival Boston Celtics, in which Philadelphia’s roster outside of Joel Embiid underperformed and the team struggled to find consistency on either end of the floor — even moreso than was to be expected without Ben Simmons. The question in Philly is whether this is just the beginning of organizational changes for the Sixers, because their issues are far from just the fault of the coach.
While Brown’s questionable lineups and rotations played a role — and there are grumblings of his influence in personnel decisions like moving on from Jimmy Butler — there is plenty of blame to go around in Philadelphia’s front office for constructing a roster that lacks balance. If those problems aren’t addressed this offseason as well, whoever comes in to coach the Sixers next will have their hands full trying to figure out the right combinations to try and unlock the potential of the Simmons-Embiid combo, without having the desired personnel to do so.
Even with a roster that has clear flaws in its construction and a pair of highly paid players in Al Horford and Tobias Harris who didn’t come close to living up to their contracts this season, the presence of Embiid and Simmons figures to make the Sixers coaching job a highly coveted one. The question is what kind of coach Philadelphia will be looking for, with my money on them seeking out a coach with an offensive track record in hopes of unlocking something more on that end — in expectation of them still being a quality defensive team given their pieces.
MTV’s Video Music Awards kicks off this Sunday and the awards show is known for memorable moments in pop culture. How could anyone forget the time Lady Gaga showed up on the red carpet sporting a dress made of raw flank steak? Or when Kanye West infamously took the microphone away from Taylor Swift during her acceptance speech? Though the show will have limited live attendance due to the pandemic, MTV hopes to make this year’s event just as memorable with a line-up of big-name performers. The VMAs just unveiled the musicians who are playing sets during the pre-show, and fans aren’t too happy about some of the picks.
VMAs shared their pre-show lineup Monday, which boasts performances by Chloe x Halle, recent XXL Freshman Jack Harlow, Lewis Capaldi, Tate McRae, and Machine Gun Kelly featuring Travis Barker and Blackbear. As soon as the full bill was announced, fans instantly took to social media to express their disappointment that Chloe x Halle weren’t booked for a main show set.
One fan said MTV was showing the duo “disrespect” for their pre-show placement, while others were simply upset.
Chloe x Halle have been ripping up that tennis court all of this pandemic outperforming artists YEARS their senior and the VMAs put them on the pre-show. Leave me alone I’m irritated.
While the sister duo didn’t make the main show cut, Chloe x Halle are still nominated for a couple awards on the night. Their track “Do It” from their recently-released record Ungodly Hour is nominated for Best R&B and their MTV Prom-A-Thon performance of the track is nominated for Best Quarantine Performance, a new category for the awards show.
Ungodly Hour is out now via Parkwood Entertainment. Get it here.
The MTV VMAs pre-show premieres 8/30 at 6:30 pm EDT. Watch it here.
“I mean, it’s one banana, Michael. What could it cost, ten dollars?”
That line, spoken by Lucille Bluth during season one of Arrested Development, has become a catch-all reference for any time a rich person has no idea how much a basic item costs. Like on Monday, when Postmaster General Louis DeJoy was asked by Rep. Katie Porter (D-Calif.) about the price to mail a postcard. “I don’t know, he said.” Now, I’m not a fancy, big-city blogger, but it doesn’t seem great that the guy in charge of the United States Postal Service doesn’t know how much it costs to mail something. imo.
DeJoy, who was selected by President Trump as postmaster general in May (it probably has nothing to do with that “since 2016, Mr. DeJoy has donated $1.2 million to President Trump’s campaign coffers and nearly $1.3 million to the Republican Party”), was testifying before the House Oversight Committee when he failed to answer that postcards cost 35 cents. He added that he knows “very little about postage stamps.”
Porter then quizzed DeJoy on the weight limit for priority mail, which he correctly said was 70 lbs. He was unable to tell Porter the starting rate for priority mail. DeJoy also said he was unable to say how many people voted by mail in the last election.
“I’m glad you know the price of a stamp, but I’m concerned about your understanding of this agency,” Porter said. “I’m concerned about it because you started taking very decisive action when you became postmaster general.”
DeJoy was also grilled on the Postal Service’s “cost-cutting moves” ahead of a presidential election that requires unprecedented mail-in voting due to the pandemic, but it’s that “I don’t know” that’s going to stick with him. It’s his “it’s one banana, Michael” moment, or in this case, you can’t mail a postcard without spending… ten dollars?
BREAKING: Rep. Katie Porter just got Postmaster General DeJoy to admit he doesn’t know the cost of priority mail or mailing a postcard. This is who Trump has in charge of the Postal Service. DeJoy needs to resign immediately.
Katie Porter just asked DeJoy the most basic questions about the post office and he flunked most of them. Has no idea how much it costs to mail a postcard, how many people vote by mail, literally knows nothing about his job. Wish someone would ask Trump questions like this.
I May Destroy You (HBO, 9:00 p.m.) — After a season-long mystery inside Arabella’s mind, she returns to the scene of the crime to confront the man who raped her. Let’s just say that closure comes in many shapes and sizes, and viewers will be thrilled and satisfied with where Arabella ends up personally and how she dispenses with the ghosts underneath her bed. It’s a blazingly beautiful ending to a firestarter of a season with wonderful resolutions for Kwame and Terry as well.
The Republican National Convention 2020 (ABC, CBS, NBC, 10:00 p.m.) — The 2020 Republican National Convention is officially underway while taking over the networks and plenty of cable coverage as well. The main attraction tonight should be Donald Trump Jr.’s bombastic ways, as well as an appearance by “St. Louis gun-toting couple” Mark and Patricia McCloskey. Other guests include Steve Scalise, Matt Gaetz, Nikki Haley, Kimberly Guilfoyle, Andrew Pollack, and more.
Lovecraft Country (HBO Max) — The unfurling of monsters continued on Sunday night, and there’s no time like now to catch up if you missed it. Snakes are darting across an astral plane and Atticus gets roped into a cult ceremony, and along the way, there’s plenty of pulpy sci-fi splatter as the bad guys go down.
Late Show With Stephen Colbert — Jon Favreau, Jon Lovett, Tommy Vietor, Tim McGraw, and Laura Benanti
The Late Late Show With James Corden — Maisie Williams, Bright Eyes
The RX is Uproxx Music’s stamp of approval for the best albums, songs, and music stories throughout the year. Inclusion in this category is the highest distinction we can bestow, and signals the most important music being released throughout the year. The RX is the music you need, right now.
If you can get through more than two songs on Los Angeles rapper Duckwrth’s debut album SuperGood without at the very least two-stepping and snapping your fingers, the term “two left feet” is probably insufficient to describe your inability to dance. Within those first two songs, “New Love Song” and “Money Dance,” the veteran underground rapper utilizes such infectious four-on-the-floor beats and disco-influenced grooves that even the most off-beat person would feel hard-pressed to keep still.
Duckwrth’s debut, which has been nearly a decade in the making, comes along at a time when the lines between dance music and rap aren’t just blurring, they’re skittering and scratching like a California seismograph. Doja Cat scores her first No. 1 with nu-disco hit “Say So,” bringing Nicki Minaj along with her, then Nicki’s main rival Cardi B taps into a Jersey club classic to issue one of the most talked-about smashes in recent memory in “WAP” with Megan Thee Stallion. That’s to say nothing of the resurgence of interest in the history of house music as a creation of Black subcultures in the 1980s.
SuperGood is right in line with these ideals, from the glittering dance-floor funk of lead single “Coming Closer” to “Quick,” a slippery bop that pulls from Afrocentric traditions. It’s the rare rap album — at least, it would have been rare just a year ago — more interested in stimulating listeners’ physical reactions than lighting up their intellect or convincing them how tough its creator had it growing up. That isn’t to say Duckwrth isn’t RAPPING on this project, because he has more than enough silver-tongued, slick observations to have listeners reaching for the rewind button.
But this album is about making you feel something, and that something is an involuntary urge to wiggle. It’s so effective that I was still rocking when I connected with Duckwrth via Zoom call to talk about the album, its eight-year gestation period, his gift for collaboration, the pioneering partnerships he formed over the past few years, and just why dance music is making such a tremendous comeback.
There’s some interesting evolution from your 2019 Falling Man EP to SuperGood, with SuperGood feeling a little more like your older stuff. Was Falling Man more like a detour, or was it a stop on the way?
Falling Man was definitely like a death and rebirth, and SuperGood is just like, “We’re cool.” Falling Man was reflective of my life as a part of me died. Every couple of years, a part of me dies. So at that moment, it was more of a physical manifestation of it. I cut all my hair off and for years people have known me, for ten years people known me for my hair.
So I got on IG Live. I got some razor, electric razor and cut all off. I was like, “Well, I got to do something from here,” so I knew I was going to do that. Actually, I was already writing the Falling Man, but I was like, “Something got to be different about this one.” And it just worked out. So I guess you die, and then you rebirth. So I guess SuperGood is the new launching pad for who I am today because I’ve been wanting to do SuperGood since 2013 but I never was in the right place to do it. I’m Uugly came from me wanting to do SuperGood, but I wasn’t in the right place. Xtra Uugly Mixtape, Falling Man was like, “Well, I know I got to do SuperGood, but until then let me do this.” And yeah, SuperGood it’s finally here. It’s finally out.
I think that for me, it was proving to myself who I am and what sound I like the most for myself, what space I want to be in, and it’s something about soul and more specifically rhythm. Rhythm is my shit. When I perform, I don’t stop moving. Unless it’s just one of those moments I have to sit still, but further than that rhythm is my shit. So I think SuperGood solidified it for me. Like, “N****, this is you, so kick it here for a bit,” but I’m still going to play with different genres.
You have so many of great collaborations on SuperGood. What kind of energy do they bring to the recording process and how do they help get more out of you?
Jean Deaux, we met a year ago in the studio and just vibed immediately. She was hella cool. She’s a real Chicago woman to the truest extent and yeah, I was trying to figure out the groove and I had this beat from Terrace Martin and I was like, “This one thump. I’ll see if we can do some with it.” And it went from there, the relationship was lit because she just hella cool. She really from the hood and she’s intellectual as fuck. I always appreciate her bravery and essence. She powerful. And I always say I’m a dragon, but not on some Kanye shit.
Dragon energy.
We got dragon energy [laughs]. No, no, no, I mean, it’s something about that greatness that I try to find in other people and she got it. She got it hands down. That’s my friendship with her, and then also I flew out my homegirl Julia Romana who’s on “Coming Closer.” She lives in the UK, but I flew her out for a month to stay in the same place. We got one of those studios, that’s like a home studio. So the studio is in the back house and then the home is in the front. I just flew her out for a month and I was like, “Let’s just throw everything at the wall,” and yeah man, she’s on probably 60% the album as well.
She has those great vocals that work well with mine. It’s definitely a sweeter tone. But even shit, Alex Mali too, who’s on “Find A Way,” she did vocals on “Tuesday” and then she definitely did vocals on “Say What U Mean.” So very subtle, but perfect. “Say What U Mean” had a really crazy chorus. I love that chorus so much because it’s not elaborate. They’re just really saying, “Say.” That shit so tight to me.
I really had to research to find out more about G.L.A.M. What made you want to share this platform with kind of an unknown artist and what do you think it brought out of the song?
Well, G.L.A.M. is a long-overdue collaboration. That’s been my homie for a long time. We know each other from teen backpack days in San Francisco. She’s a fucking spitter. We both held back on “Coming Closer” because it’s a dance track, so we just going to try to have fun in it. But she, oh my gosh, she goes ham and she produces all her music. She knows her sound. She likes my sound. We both connect on some NERD shit. Even my song I had called “Love Is Like A Moshpit,” with Rico Nasty, that was originally supposed to be G.L.A.M.
I think she so tight that if I can use whatever bit of my platform to be able to shine some light on her so people can know, and then from there she can take the ball and run with it, whatever it may be. But I think world should definitely know her.
It’s funny because for the last week, I’ve been thinking about NERD and Gorillaz and Channel Tres. Recently, “WAP” came out and now we’re talking about Black people in house music again. We’re talking about those Jersey club tracks. The history doesn’t tell how closely related hip-hop is with these other Black-created forms of music, but now artists like the ones we mentioned and yourself are bringing them back together. Why is it so attractive to us now that we bring these things together these dance music grooves into hip-hop?
Personal theory, I think that the reason why house is so big in the white demographic is because it’s very much straightforward. It’s two, three, four, one, two, three, four, and with Black folks, we like…
We put a little swing in everything.
We put a little swing that thing. I feel the original creators of it like Mr. Fingers. I think Mr. Fingers had a bit more of a soulful flare to it, and then as time went on different people started grabbing it, and then it may have become more simple. Because even Mr. Fingers’ bass top line, it still has some swing to it. And that’s how we got [Kanye West’s] “Fade.” I think you can hear the Blackness in the original house.
SuperGood is obviously your first major label project and in your wildest dreams, in your ideal world, where does SuperGood place you in terms of on the charts, in your life, in the music scene, publications, press? Just spitball wildly here, go for broke.
I mean, my main thought in making it was just “Grammy.” Even if I don’t win shit, I want that shit to feel so fucking great that n****s would really have to consider nominating that motherfucker. Just the way I composed it. Right when you turn it on, it’s bringing you into a world and then just the chorus, or the girls that are singing at the end of “New Love Song,” it’s a Clark Sisters flip. So it’s taking these very classical moments, and composition, and sound, and mixing it with who I am today. I’m trying to bring sounds from the past, sounds from the present and then trying to fill out what’s going to be the future in putting it all into one sound. Even sounds that we use, we use the same synths that they had in Thriller, the [Roland Juno-106] and stuff like that. Michael was a big inspiration for this album. So it’s just taking those different textures of greats and putting that into my music.
What’s the story between 2012 when you were first popping up on 2DopeBoyz and now? What have you been doing? What have you been up to?
Just really finding myself, I suppose.
I think the best musicians are the ones that really know themselves. Because you can find yourself mimicking your favorite artists, but you never really find your sound until you find yourself. So I think for these past years, I’ve just been growing up and really diving into myself, not just as a creative but as a human. I think it’s gotten to this point of today
. Absolutely. All the projects that you’ve done since Uugly, which is a funny album title by the way, have been-
It has a meaning. People never just look into the meaning.
Okay, what’s the meaning behind Uugly then, because I always wondered.
Pretty much when the bass slap in a certain way, when the snares hit you in the spine, whatever it may be, when a beat knockin, your face frowning up. [We both do the face.] Exactly. I’m ugly.
So you have been pushing boundaries sonically for a while. What was the inspiration behind trying to push the boundary of what LA rap is supposed to sound like?
First, I got to show love to the people that did come before me. It was groups like J*Davey, which is Brook and Jack. It was mainly J*Davey that gave me the courage to, being from LA, just working a more eclectic sound. But yeah, I kind of dipped out… I definitely dipped out 2006. So when I dipped out from LA at that time, a lot of groups really started popping and I was in San Francisco, 2008, 2010, around that time. And then, 2012 or 11, that’s when it really started cracking off in Los Angeles. So it was like, I’m in San Francisco and I moved to San Francisco because LA just wasn’t eclectic like that. I say it was only like gang-bangers and jerkers.
I’m going to tell you, I first became aware that you were kind of on the scene again, when I was watching Spider-Man (Into The Spider-Verse). I actually had the Spider-Man soundtrack ahead of time. And I was like, Duckwrth is on here? And then I heard it and I was like, “This is hard.” But then when I saw it in the movie, I was like, it’s in the movie. A lot of songs get on the soundtrack, they’re not in the movie. And you had a song during one of the more pivotal parts of the movie. What went through your head when you saw that?
They told me they were going to be using that song during a scene where a kid was listening to music. And the way they described it was like, he was supposed to be listening to rebellious music or music you’re not suppose to be listening to, I guess.
But I didn’t know exactly what scene it was going to be in until I saw it. And I was like, “Oh, okay, that’s crazy.” And the feeling I had, I don’t know, man, it’s weird. These type of moments, they’re more surreal. It makes you feel like a dream. It don’t feel real. You know what I’m saying? Like, how is this even possible that my voice is being played in this movie? And it was tight because it was the Black Spider-Man. It was surreal, but it was tight. And then what hit me wasn’t even a scene. It was when the ending credits, when my name came down, my artist name came down and my real name came down. I’m like, “Yeah. Okay. That’s tight.”
Yes, sir. Speaking in terms of just the things that you were able to accomplish since your comeback, the one that stood out to me the most was your League Of Legends role, which is an incredible thing. Because it feels to me it’s getting a little lost in the wash. Travis Scott is in Fortnite and all these other guys are doing virtual concerts in games because of the pandemic and yet you were at the forefront of that before anybody else was whispering about it. So again, you’re a little bit ahead of your time. What’s the process of creating music that is supposed to be music, but as someone else for a very specific thing, that’s a little bit outside of what you would normally create it for in like normal concepts?
I think it’s like acting, like you’re playing out a role, especially in those types of scenarios where I’m playing a character. This is what the character would say. If I was this character, I would say this. And that’s the fun part, really. You know what I’m saying? The moment that you can be outside of your skin, think differently. Especially from a character that lives in a fantasy world, it’s just like, there’s a challenge. And I love that. But also, Gorillaz is one of my favorite groups, and I’ve always wanted to do some CG shit, where I make the music for it, but it’s a totally different character. So between League Of Legends or even the animated video for “Find A Way,” these are my “dip my toe in the pool,” and just satisfy my need to want to do like some type of illustrated character.
What’s a superhero-ish character that you would love to play?
Shit. It’s a great question. Shit, this is an easy one with Miles Morales, if they ever do another one. I for sho would be Miles Morales. Really, I want to do one of the X-Men, but I don’t have then accent. But I like Nightcrawler.
You can learn to do a German accent.
I’m not going to do that. No, there are some German folk they can get for that [laughs]. Okay. Static Shock, hands down.
Hey, a Static Shock reboot, featuring Duckwrth. Let’s pitch that to somebody make it happen.
Go crazy. Static Shock.
SuperGood is out now via Republic Records. Get it here.
Harrowing footage of another police shooting of a Black man circulated on social media on Sunday night after an incident in Kenosha, Wisconsin, quickly went viral and sparked outrage and protests in the town and online.
Jacob Blake, a Black resident of the town, was shot multiple times by police while his back was turned to officers, sparking a night of protests and condemnations from across the world, including Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden. The NBA world also expressed its outrage with yet another example of an unarmed Black man being shot by police, starting with Utah Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell.
“F the games and playoffs,” Mitchell wrote on Twitter Monday as video of the brutal shooting spread. “This is why we don’t feel safe.”
As a warning, the video is graphic but was shared by a number of players as further evidence of the systemic police brutality against Black people.
F THE GAMES AND PLAYOFFS!!! THIS IS SICK AND IS A REAL PROBLEM WE DEMAND JUSTICE! ITS CRAZY I DONT HAVE ANY WORDS BUT WTF MAN! THIS IS WHY WE DONT FEEL SAFE!!!! https://t.co/3E4Dd2wS3e
LeBron James, also in the Bubble in Orlando, shared his anger and pain about seeing yet another Black man shot by police, this time while an officer grabbed his shirt and fired several times into his back while Blake tried to get into a car with three of his children.
And y’all wonder why we say what we say about the Police!! Someone please tell me WTF is this???!!! Exactly another black man being targeted. This shit is so wrong and so sad!! Feel so sorry for him, his family and OUR PEOPLE!! We want JUSTICE https://t.co/cJxOj1EZ3H
Many retweeted a statement from Taylor Rooks on Monday.
A black person shouldn’t have to be perfect or extraordinary or a college grad or a parent in order to explain why they deserved to not be shot by a police officer. This is a simple concept.
The NBA’s players have made a point of continuing to advocate for social justice issues while in the Bubble, both with jersey slogans and actively commenting about societal issues while essentially sequestered from society in Orlando. Mitchell, for one, has largely turned his social media presence into a conduit to amplify the Black Lives Matter movement and encourage change.
Incidents like what happened in Kenosha on Sunday only seem to reaffirm their desire to speak about issues like this, as well as prove the point many have made that these societal problems are ongoing even while NBA basketball has resumed and that the focus can never shift off of these issues.
The Los Angeles Lakers will pay tribute to Kobe Bryant on Monday night by bringing back their “Black Mamba” uniforms for Game 4 of their first round series with the Portland Trail Blazers in honor of Bryant’s birthday on Sunday and it being 8/24.
Throughout the second half of this season since the tragic death of Kobe, his daughter Gigi, and the nine others that were killed in the helicopter crash that rocked the sports world in January, the Lakers have offered various tributes to their legendary star. On Monday, City of Los Angeles city council president Herb J. Wesson announced that Bryant’s memory will live on outside of Staples Center where the Lakers play every day going forward when they rename Figueroa Street, “Kobe Bryant Boulevard.”
Figueroa St. will soon be Kobe Bryant Blvd. between Olympic & MLK.
Kobe’s legacy is bigger than basketball. #KobeBryantBlvd will be a reminder to everyone, young and old who drive down it, there is no obstacle too big and that with the #Mambamentality , anything is possible. pic.twitter.com/gvekIFOU5u
The renamed section will run from MLK Jr Blvd, down by USC’s campus, to Olympic Blvd, just past L.A. Live, putting Staples Center officially at 1111 Kobe Bryant Blvd. It’s a great gesture by the city of L.A. and a fitting tribute to Bryant, given that he made Staples one of L.A.’s hottest destinations for almost two decades. A statue to join those of Shaquille O’Neal and other Laker (and Kings) legends is surely on the way for outside of Staples, as well, and the center of the L.A. sports world residing on Kobe Bryant Boulevard seems just about right.
“Cumbiatón is a party for the hood by the hood, it’s lead by women, queer, and trans people of color … It is a party where you can come and be your most authentic self and rejoice in your own existence.” DJ Sizzle Fantastic knows that at a time when we’re all feeling more isolated from one another, having a sense of community and a place where you can shed your layers and be your authentic self is vital. That’s why when COVID-19 threatened to put a pause on Cumbiatón, a haven so many had come to rely on as a safe space of self-expression, Sizzle, and her Cumbiatón co-founder Normz La Oaxaqueña stepped it up and got creative.
“Shifting our production from being out with people in real life 3D to Instagram or Twitch … it’s definitely been a journey,” says Sizzle in the above video, “But I think the love for the music and the love for my community fueled me to keep going and to keep learning.”
Prior to the pandemic, the Cumbiatón crew had taken their intergenerational movement from the LA barrio of Boyle Heights, California to communities in San Francisco, Seattle, and New York, acting as a vessel of art and music, and a healing place for people looking to belong.
“Cumbiatón is a space for you to come and be yourself and you will be loved and respected for that,” says La Oaxaqueña, and Cumbiatón’s ability to weather a pandemic proves just how essential that sense of community they were able to foster truly is.
Get to know the people behind Cumbiatón in the above video, which is the second episode of our Los Ángeles series.
It looks like Kanye West isn’t the only hip-hop artist looking to siphon some votes from Donald Trump and Joe Biden come November. Live streaming financial news network Cheddar reports that Akon has joined the political campaign for independent candidate Brock Pierce, best known for his acting roles in The Mighty Ducks and First Kid, as well as his work in cryptocurrency.
Pierce serves as chairman of the Bitcoin Foundation and was named one of the “top 20 wealthiest people in crypto” by Forbes magazine in 2018. Akon, meanwhile, funded a $6 billion “futuristic cryptocurrency themed city” Senegal built on his “Akoin” cryptocurrency, according to Bloomberg and Bitcoin. Akon will serve as the chief strategist for the campaign, calling Pierce a “standup guy” in the statement making the announcement.
“I’ve always known Brock Pierce to be a standup guy,” Akon said in a statement. “He’s a real people’s person and he doesn’t operate between party lines.”
Of course, Akon is better known for his musical hits “Locked Up” and “Lonely” and helping to launch the careers of pop superstars Lady Gaga and T-Pain. His musical work has gotten him nominated for five Grammy Awards and sold millions of copies of his hit songs. In 2018, he made headlines for “seriously considering” a presidential bid of his own, but has apparently decided that backing Pierce is the safer bet. Pierce said that Akon’s aspirations and accomplishments “will be valuable for our platform on a regional, national, and worldwide level.”
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