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Nilüfer Yanya Unveiled A New Song During Her Electrifying At-Home Tiny Desk Concert

Nilüfer Yanya was last seen in NPR’s DC studios for a Tiny Desk concert last September and now the singer has returned to the series once again, this time from the comfort of her home. During her performance, Yanya gave renditions of tracks from her 2019 debut album Miss Universe, unveiled an unreleased song, and shared a poignant statement about racial injustice.

Armed with a bubblegum pink electric guitar, Yanya opened her performance by sharing the fan-favorite “Heat Rises.” The singer then moved into a rendition of “Paralyzed,” a song she has never played live before. Ahead of closing the concert with “Heavyweight Champion Of The Year,” the singer unveiled the brand-new track “Day 7.”

Along with performing her music, Yanya paused the show to share a statement about racial injustice in light of recent protests across the US and the world. “One of the things that’s been on my mind recently a lot is the racism and violence and injustice going on towards Black people and people of color,” Yanya said. “Not only in America, but here in the UK and all over the world. As a person of mixed heritage, this is an issue is something very close to my heart. I see the people being hurt as my family and my friends. I urge you to see it the same way. I think that’s the only way we can work towards solving it.”

Watch Nilüfer Yanya’s at-home Tiny Desk concert above.

Miss Universe is out now via ATO. Get it here.

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Riot’s Soha El-Sabaawi Is Working To Reprogram Gamer Culture To Be More Inclusive

Half an hour into an in-depth chat about gaming and diversity with Soha Kareem, Riot Games’ Manager of Diversity Outreach and Community, I learn “Kareem” is not her actual last name. It’s a pseudonym, one she began using shortly after Gamergate to protect herself from the doxing and online harassment being hurled at her fellow female gamers on various social platforms.

That was six years ago and if there’s one tangible metric for measuring how far the industry’s come in terms of inclusion, it might be best represented in Soha’s name. Her real name. Soha El-Sabaawi, which she feels more comfortable sharing after years working at both small and big game studios to open the space to players who look more like her.

Or who look completely different from her, which is the whole point of her job.

Nearly five years ago, when she started working at Riot Games – a developer, publisher, and tournament organizer responsible for the massive gaming phenomenon known as League of Legends – she didn’t know of any Diversity and Inclusion positions at other large gaming companies. Riot itself was struggling to create a more inclusive atmosphere. The company would later be the subject of an earth-shaking report by Kotaku detailing sexism and allegations of sexual harassment from current and former employees. It’s been a long road since with ESPN offering a concise rundown. A look back by Kotaku a year after the initial report in August of 2019 indicated that the company had taken real steps forward, but while it’s not related, the spotlight again found Riot recently when an executive resigned after causing outrage by posting a meme about George Floyd.

“Riot hired me partially as a way to be like, ‘Hey, this [Gamergate] highlighted to us how systemic these issues are in the industry and we need to start deliberately investing in this space to figure out what happened and why it’s like this,’” Soha tells UPROXX Gaming.

Amidst Kotaku’s investigation, Riot addressed the toxicity plaguing their work environment, and their League of Legends arena play, letting 25 percent of their employees go and committing to hiring more staff to work with Soha on the external side of the Diversity & Inclusion initiative to make the space welcoming for women and minorities in ways it might not have been before.

“That really drove us to respond swiftly and strongly when it came to confronting our own D&I challenges,” Soha explains. “We wanted to be a better company. Everybody showed up and was like, ‘This is not okay. We don’t want these kinds of behaviors.’”

Riot continues to fight against its perceived “bro culture,” something Soha is actively working towards with the knowledge that “diversity” is an ever-shifting marker.

“It doesn’t just end, this is an everyday movement,” she says. “So that’s been the biggest learning [curve] for all of us — you don’t just fix it and it’s cool we solved the D&I issues. Diversity changes. It’s always evolving.”

She wants the gaming world to keep evolving too, which is why she’s advocating for new voices and underserved communities to have a hand in crafting what they like to play.

It’s a shockingly novel concept, particularly because, for the longest time, gaming has catered to a specific demographic which, in turn, stunted its growth. Sure, effects and platforms and consoles got better, more refined. But characters and storylines were becoming stagnant, and diversity was only happening at the micro-level.

Soha had been a casual gamer since she was five years old – when her family immigrated from Saudi Arabia to Canada and she was introduced to titles like Doom and Prince of Persia.

“Probably not the best age to get into Doom, but that’s when I started really getting into video games and would sneakily play them while nobody was really paying attention,” she recalls. “From there it really just grew into a solitary escape for me. It wasn’t really until I got a bit older that I started playing games with other people.”

But even for someone who spent her life gaming, studied film and storytelling in college, and got connected with the indie game scene in Toronto later on, it wasn’t until she hooked up with the nonprofit Dames Making Games (DMG) at a video game art festival called Vector Art that she realized how limited her view of the space was.

“I was like, ‘This is a really cool space that I didn’t think existed,’” Soha says. “As a consumer and as a hobbyist of games at that point, it was very much like ‘What are the big titles and what are the big games?’ And that must take geniuses to make. It just feels so untouchable to even think about creating a AAA video game.”

At Vector Art, DMG led a panel discussion on feminism in games but also on the idea of DIY game-making, talking with experts, and hosting an arcade full of titles that members of the community had made. The chat opened Soha’s eyes not only to a new audience of gamers hungry for variety but also to the idea that gatekeeping, at least in the gaming ‘verse, was dying out, seemingly opening up opportunities for anyone who had the skill, time, equipment, and want to program their own storytelling, mold their own characters, and build a world they hadn’t seen before.

“They were so powerful,” Soha remembers when recalling the immensely creative games she saw on display at Vector. “Some of them were very personal stories. Some of them were retro 80s kind of style of games. There were horoscope games and tarot games. Bright pink ones. And I was just like, ‘This is something I didn’t think of as a step forward in game design.’”

She now sits on the board of DMG, who continues to create mentorship programs to invite new voices into the gaming space – incubation initiatives like Indigicade which targeted young indigenous women and non-binary people between the ages of 14 to 25 and helped them craft their first games.

But she’s also taking that desire to see a variety of ethnicities, nationalities, genders, and sexual orientations represented to Riot Games, heading up projects that are starting to ask wildly different questions of gaming developers.

How do studios attract new players or players they haven’t targeted before? How do you make a game that’s accessible? How do you make a champion that resonates with players in different countries? What can you do to make gaming a more social, connective experience?

Riot started answering some of those questions, and they’re doing it by creating characters like Senna, League of Legends’ first Black female champion.

She was created largely by members of Riot Noir, Riot Games’ employee resource group for Black employees. Soha’s team connected Riot Noir to League of Legends’ champion team so that they’d have input on how the character was ultimately formed.

“We’re really, really proud of what she represents, not only to Black players and aspiring Black players but also to our Black Rioters who felt like they had a say in almost every single thing,” Soha says. “Down to her voice, her facial features, her skin tone, her hair. We really put in the work to make her look as authentic and real as possible. And so it’s things like that, that have sparked a lot more conversations.”

Senna has become one of the League’s most popular champions.

“People just want to play something cool,” Soha says. “They just want to play a character who’s cool. And that coolness can be defined in so many ways. A character’s beauty and general appeal can be defined in so many ways that resonate with a huge amount of people. I feel like K/DA (League of Legends K-Pop inspired champion group) and True Damage (League of Legends virtual Hip-Hop group) are big examples of that. Suddenly, my family members and friends who don’t play games, or if they do play games, they’ve been too intimidated by League, are just like, ‘This is pretty dope. How do I get into this?’ And it’s because they’re seeing cool aesthetics and the cool aesthetics happened to be on our female champions and on our champions of color.”

It sounds like common sense – to attract a wider audience, you need to represent that diversity in your gameplay – but it’s taken years of working with developers and studios for the vision of more inclusive gameplay to start coming to life.

“It’s like if you build it, they will come,” she explains. “If you make a super cool Black female champion, people are going to get excited and then people are going to think, I want to work there. I want to work for a place that makes that. Start getting into your discomfort zone and make something that is not for you and learn what it’s like to not be you.”

Challenging the traditional notion of gameplay, not just what characters look and act like, but also how games are played, feels even more vital in the age of COVID-19, as more and more people hop aboard the gaming trend. Riot Games is focused on expanding their mobile gaming outreach which might be the next frontier in terms of diversity in the space, and Soha says they’re seeing an uptick in non-competitive forms of play – like Animal Crossing.

“It’s just a game that encourages people to be nice to each other,” she explains. “I usually would not go on a subreddit to be like, ‘Oh, who’s turnip prices are really good?’ But everybody is so sweet. There are laws of etiquette that we all abide by. So that’s actually been a really nice escape. Just seeing how creative people can get has been really awesome.”

The popularity of this socially-minded game is another reason why the industry needs to continue making real progress in inclusion. If more people are playing and gaming is becoming an increasingly (and rare) vital space where we can interact with each other, then all people, of all interests and backgrounds need to be represented.

“What we can do is give people a space to just be themselves, to just have fun because the world feels really tense right now,” Soha says. “I feel like as a service, we can ground people and we can just keep them in the moment. And hopefully they make some friends along the way too.”

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PSG Star Kylian Mbappe Is On The Cover Of ‘FIFA 21’

This year’s edition of FIFA is set to include the world’s best young footballer on the cover. EA Sports announced on Wednesday morning that Kylian Mbappe, the superstar forward for Paris Saint-Germain and France’s talisman during its victory in the 2018 World Cup, will appear on all three covers of this year’s game.

FIFA 21 will feature three versions: Standard Edition, Champions Edition, and Ultimate Edition. All three feature a collection of different images of Mbappe on the cover — the Standard Edition is a collage that shows him on and off the pitch.

The Champions Edition prominently features Mbappe tucking his hands underneath his armpits, his signature goal celebration that is inspired by his younger brother.

And in a more simplistic look, the Ultimate Edition shows Mbappe away from the pitch with no additional images on the perimeter.

While the 2019-20 Ligue 1 season came to an abrupt (and controversial) conclusion due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Mbappe was phenomenal for PSG, which were awarded the league championship by nature of being 12 points ahead of second-place Marseille at the time of the stoppage. The 21-year-old French star bagged 18 goals and five assists in 20 league games, and across all competitions for his club, Mbappe scored 30 goals and doled out 13 assists in 33 matches.

FIFA 21 is scheduled to drop on Oct. 6 for those who pre-order the game and Oct. 9 worldwide on current generation consoles. There is no word on when the game will be available for those who want to play it on next generation consoles.

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The NBA Debuted A New Ad With Issa Rae Ahead Of Its Disney Restart

Basketball is finally back on Wednesday afternoon. While the 8-game stretch into the 2020 NBA playoffs doesn’t begin until next week, teams are going to square off against one another in a series of scrimmages as players look to get back into playing shape following a four-month layoff due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ahead of things tipping off, the league is debuting a new ad featuring Issa Rae. In it, Rae heads into an empty arena, repeats the old adage “you don’t miss something until it’s gone,” and gives fans a reminder of some of the most exciting moments that occurred in the league this season prior to the stoppage.

“Thankfully the wait is over,” Rae says. “Because it’s all back … well, with a slight twist.”

Once we get through the next week or so of scrimmages, the league’s restart will begin on July 30. Things will tip off with a tilt between the Utah Jazz and the New Orleans Pelicans (which might not have the services of Zion Williamson) at 6:30 p.m. EST, followed by a meeting of the two Los Angeles squads at 9 p.m. Both games will be broadcast on TNT. From there, teams will be in the midst of an all-out sprint to the playoffs, which are slated to tip off on August 17.

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Everything Coming To And Leaving Netflix In August 2020, Including ‘Hoops,’ More ‘Lucifer,’ And ‘Project Power’

Did we make it to August? Almost, and we deserve some relaxation.

Fortunately, Netflix is here for you with plenty of original content, including another A-list action movie starring Jamie Foxx and Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Elsewhere, the Devil is back in another Lucifer season, a sleeper Danish series brings us more of The Rain, and Jake Johnson’s shooting Hoops as a profanity-loving, inept basketball coach. The streaming service is also adding plenty of films (including the Jurassic Park trilogy) and TV series (including Cobra Kai) to its lineup.

Here’s everything coming to (and leaving) Netflix in August.

Lucifer: Season 5 (Netflix series streaming 8/21)

Lucifer has grown terribly weary and disenchanted as the Lord of Hell, so he’s returning for a penultimate season in Los Angeles to get racy again and take off his shirt near many swimming pools. As one does! The stakes are supposedly higher this time around — and these episodes will equal one half of a season with more to come — as Lucifer gets his thrills by assisting the LAPD. The trappings of Hollywood vs. Hell are sure to provide plenty of metaphors and sexual double-entendres, so there’s no use in refusing to surrender to the lure of this particular Satan.

Hoops: Season 1 (Netflix series streaming 8/21)

New Girl‘s Jake Johnson returns to voice acting (following Spider-Man: Into The Spiderverse) in a curse-word-laden animated series from creator Ben Hoffman (Archer, New Girl) about a basketball coach who’s terrible at basketball. You probably don’t need to know what an “alley oop” is to enjoy this series, since Johnson’s charm will reel you in, and he’s working again with Spiderverse‘s Phil Lord and Chris Miller, who are executive producers. One lesson here might be that people enjoy re-teaming with Johnson, so give his awful coach a fighting chance.

Project Power (Netflix film streaming 8/14)

Jamie Foxx plays an ex-soldier with a vendetta, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s portraying a New Orleans cop in this wild-looking movie about superpowers that can be unlocked by taking a mysterious pill. This won’t be anywhere on the level of The Matrix, of course, and these superpowers only last for five minutes, which feels like a real ripoff (and unnecessary gamble) for the characters. Yet Netflix’s recent track record for superedible action movies seems destined to fuel yet another event movie from the streaming giant.

The Rain: Season 3 (Netflix series streaming 8/6)

It’s all coming to a head for this Danish post-apocalyptic series about a deadly virus that feels a lot easier to avoid than the one we’re dealing with in real-life 2020. This season, the beleaguered Rasmus must figure out how to handle his recently revealed Patient Zero status while continuing to toss black, inky stuff across rooms, and Simone only wants to figure out how to save the world. Warring objectives have led nowhere yet, but hopefully, these siblings can agree on something to halt an instantly deadly disease and maybe, finally, enjoy life again. Like we all need to do.

Here’s the full list of titles coming to Netflix in August:

Avail. 8/1/20
Super Monsters: The New Class
A Knight’s Tale
Acts of Violence
The Addams Family
(1991)
An Education
Being John Malkovich
Death at a Funeral
Dennis the Menace
Elizabeth Harvest
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Hardcore Henry
Iron Man: Armored Adventures
: Season 1-2
Jurassic Park
Jurassic Park III
The Lost World: Jurassic Park
Mad Max
(1979)
Mr. Deeds
My Perfect Landing
: Season 1
Nagi-Asu: A Lull in the Sea: Season 1
The NeverEnding Story
The NeverEnding Story 2: The Next Chapter
The Next Step
: Season 6
Nights in Rodanthe
Ocean’s Thirteen
Ocean’s Twelve
Operation Ouch
: Season 1
Operation Ouch: Special
Remember Me
Seabiscuit
Toradora!:
Season 1
Transformers Rescue Bots Academy: S2
The Ugly Truth
What Keeps You Alive

Avail. 8/2/20
Almost Love
Connected

Avail. 8/3/20
Immigration Nation

Avail. 8/4/20
A Go! Go! Cory Carson Summer Camp
Malibu Rescue: The Next Wave
Mundo Mistério / Mystery Lab
Sam Jay: 3 In The Morning

Avail. 8/5/20
Anelka : L’Incompris / Anelka: Misunderstood
World’s Most Wanted

Avail. 8/6/20
The Rain: Season 3
The Seven Deadly Sins: Imperial Wrath of The Gods

Avail. 8/7/20
Alta Mar / High Seas: Season 3
Berlin, Berlin
The Magic School Bus Rides Again Kids In Space
¡Nailed It! México
: Season 2
The New Legends of Monkey: Season 2
Selling Sunset: Season 3
Sing On! Germany
Tiny Creatures
Wizards: Tales of Arcadia
Word Party Songs
Work It

Avail. 8/8/20
The Promise
We Summon the Darkness

Avail. 8/10/20
GAME ON: A Comedy Crossover Event
Nightcrawler

Avail. 8/11/20
Mr. Peabody & Sherman
Rob Schneider: Asian Momma, Mexican Kids

Avail. 8/12/20
Scary Movie 5
(Un)Well

Avail. 8/13/20
Safety Not Guaranteed
Une fille facile / An Easy Girl

Avail. 8/14/20
3%: Season 4
El robo del siglo
Fearless
Glow Up
: Season 2
Project Power
The Legend of Korra: Book One: Air
The Legend of Korra: Book Two: Spirits
The Legend of Korra: Book Three: Change
The Legend of Korra: Book Four: Balance
Octonauts & the Caves of Sac Actun
Teenage Bounty Hunters

Avail. 8/15/20
Rita: Season 5
Stranger: Season 2

Avail. 8/16/20
Johnny English
Les Misérables
(2012)

Avail. 8/17/20
Crazy Awesome Teachers
Drunk Parents
Glitch Techs
: Season 2

Avail. 8/19/20
Crímenes de familia / The Crimes That Bind
DeMarcus Family Rules
High Score

Avail. 8/20/20
Biohackers
Good Kisser
Great Pretender
John Was Trying to Contact Aliens

Avail. 8/21/20
Alien TV
Fuego negro
Hoops
Lucifer
: Season 5
Rust Valley Restorers: Season 3
The Sleepover

Avail. 8/23/20
1BR
Septembers of Shiraz

Avail. 8/25/20
Emily’s Wonder Lab
Trinkets
: Season 2

Avail. 8/26/20
Do Do Sol Sol La La Sol
La venganza de Analía
Million Dollar Beach House
Rising Phoenix

Avail. 8/27/20
Aggretsuko: Season 3
The Bridge Curse
The Frozen Ground

Avail. 8/28/20
All Together Now
Cobra Kai
: Seasons 1-2
I AM A KILLER: Released
Orígenes secretos / Unknown Origins

Avail. 8/31/20
Casino Royale
Quantum of Solace

Here’s the full list of titles leaving Netflix in August:

Leaving 8/1
Skins: Vol. 1-7

Leaving 8/3
Love
Paranormal Survivor: Season 1-2

Leaving 8/7
6 Days
Judy Moody and the Not Bummer Summer
St. Agatha

Leaving 8/14
Adventures in Public School
Being AP
Goon

Leaving 8/18
The Incident

Leaving 8/19
Some Kind of Beautiful

Leaving 8/20
Bad Rap

Leaving 8/21
Just Go With It

Leaving 8/23
Fanatic

Leaving 8/25
Blue Is the Warmest Color

Leaving 8/28
Bring It On: Worldwide Showdown
The Wicker Man

Leaving 8/31
Bad Boys
Bad Boys II
Candyman
Child’s Play
Clueless
Failure to Launch
Get Him to the Greek
Groundhog Day
He’s Just Not That Into You
Jerry Maguire
The Karate Kid
The Karate Kid Part II
The Karate Kid Part III
The Lake House
Life as We Know It
Murder Party
Observe and Report
One Day
Public Enemies
Rugrats Go Wild
School Daze
Tootsie
United 93
V for Vendetta
Valentine’s Day

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SWMRS’ Joey Armstrong Responds After Being Accused Of Sexual Misconduct By Another Musician

Joey Armstrong, SWMRS drummer and son of Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong, was accused of sexual misconduct by The Regrettes’ Lydia Night. Night detailed her relationship with Armstrong, which started when she was 16 and he was 22. Night named Armstrong her “abuser” and said he engaged in “emotional abuse and sexual coercion” while they were on tour. After Night’s story went public, Armstrong has issued a response.

Armstrong posted a brief response to Night’s allegations on SWMRS’ social media. In his message, Armstrong confirmed their relationship and said he has “privately” apologized to her:

“While I don’t agree with some of the things she said about me, it’s important that she be allowed to say them and that she be supported for speaking out. I respect her immensely and fully accept that I failed her as a partner. I was selfish and I didn’t treat her the way she deserves to have been treated during both our relationship and the two years since we broke up.”

The drummer concluded his message by saying: “I own my mistakes and will work hard to regain the trust I lost.”

Armstrong’s response arrives after SWMRS’ label Burger Records was accused of misconduct by numerous women and alleged to be “curating a culture built on pedophilic tendencies and teenage fetishization.” Shortly after the allegations surfaced and were compiled on an Instagram account, Burger Records announced they would be re-branding as BRGR RECS under new management. After that news, however, label co-founder Sean Bohrman confirmed that Burger Records had been shut down completely.

Read Armstrong’s full response below.

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Perfume Genius Performed Two Songs From An Empty Concert Venue On ‘Fallon’

Talk shows have functioned differently during the pandemic than they usually do. Hosts have moved their productions from their studios to their homes and put on simplified versions of their shows. All the while, musical guests have been taking similar measures, performing from their living rooms or home studios.

Slowly, though, things are inching back towards normal. Jimmy Fallon recently brought The Tonight Show back to its usual recording space, and musical guests are finding their way out of their bedrooms and into more traditional performance spaces. Perfume Genius was the musical guest on last night’s Tonight Show episode, and Mike Hadreas and his band performed from an empty concert venue.

Instead of being in the studio with Fallon and The Roots, Hadreas and company took the stage at an empty The Lodge Room in Los Angeles to perform “On The Floor.” There usually isn’t a ton of audience noise during late-night TV performances, so from a viewer’s perspective, this rendition of the song doesn’t feel too out of the ordinary. For Hadreas, though, he was performing to an empty room, although that didn’t appear to have a negative impact on his idiosyncratic stage presence.

They also played “Jason” as a web-exclusive video, so watch both performances above.

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‘True Blood’ Star Anna Camp Says She Tested Positive For Coronavirus After Not Wearing A Mask ‘One Time’

If Tom Hanks can’t convince you to wear a mask in public, you’re a lost cause. But just in case, maybe actress Anna Camp describing her symptoms after testing positive for COVID-19 will get you (or your uncle who spends too much time on Facebook) to mask up.

“Completely losing my sense of smell and taste without knowing when or even if they will return is extremely disorienting. I’m only smelling about 30 percent of how I used to now,” the Mad Men, True Blood, and Pitch Perfect star wrote on Instagram. “Other persistent symptoms are (a month later) dizziness, extreme fatigue, impacted sinuses, upset stomach, nausea, vomiting, and fever.” Again, that’s after an entire month with the virus, and all because, as Camp confesses, she didn’t wear a mask “one time”:

“I was incredibly safe. I wore a mask. I used hand sanitizer. One time, when the world was starting to open up, I decided to forgo wearing my mask in public. One. Time. And I ended up getting it. I believe it may have been because of that one time. People are saying it’s like having the flu, but I’ve had the flu, and this is absolutely not that. The panic of contracting a virus that is basically untreatable and is so new that no one knows the long term irreparable damage it does to your immune system is unbelievably stressful.”

Camp continued, “Please be safe out there. Let’s all do our part and wear a mask. I don’t want any of you to go through what I did. Even though it’s a little thing, it can have a huge impact, and it’s so incredibly easy to do.” In other words, don’t be a particles guy.

Wear a mask.

(Via Instagram/Anna Camp)

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What Happens To Underground Rap Scenes When Their Biggest Stars Pass Away?

Earlier this week, the deluxe edition of Pop Smoke’s posthumous debut album was released in honor of the late Brooklyn rapper’s birthday. While the original version was a star-studded affair, fans of drill worried that without the genre’s biggest star, its chances of a wider takeover were lost with Pop Smoke. He should have turned 21 years old, yet instead of celebrating that milestone with him, his fans were granted the consolation prize of finally getting the album they should have gotten in the first place — the one where the drill music vanguard rapped alongside other members of the burgeoning underground scene.

Even then, the additional tracks only provided glimpses of the scene’s emerging talents, pairing Pop with frequent collaborator Fivio Foreign and members of his Woo collective: Dafi Woo and Dread Woo. There are no signs of fellow drill flag wavers like 22Gz, Blixky Boyz, Sheff G, or Sleepy Hallow. Their absence represents a missed opportunity to hand the torch from Pop Smoke, clearly the loose collective’s greatest star, to a worthy successor, keeping the spotlight firmly affixed to the purveyors of the gritty, aggressive sound. While there’s still time for one to emerge, we’ve seen this movie play out before. What exactly happens to a bubbling underground scene when its biggest star passes away?

In 2017, it seemed as though South Florida menace XXXTentacion was poised to take over the world as his breakout hit “Look At Me” flooded playlists and young hip-hop fans clamored for new music from the antisocial punk-rap rebel. This was despite the domestic assault charges hovering over him for allegedly beating his then-girlfriend senseless and threatening to sexually assault her with a barbecue fork. Such was his popularity that his associates Matt Zingler and Tariq Cherif were able to launch the Rolling Loud Festival series behind his name — a series that has since massively grown in scale and traveled from Miami to Oakland, Los Angeles, and New York. To this day, the festival remembers its fallen hero, as XXX’s collaborators and friends blast “Look At Me” throughout the weekend, imploring fans to fist pump, mosh, and observe moments of silence in his honor.

But the sense of community between those collaborators’ has fractured since X was shot to death while buying a motorcycle midway through 2018. Not only were XXX’s last few albums received only marginally by critics, but members of the South Florida SoundCloud punk-rap scene have received less and less publicity as the years have passed. Check Google Trends, and you can see that searches for X collaborators like Ski Mask The Slump God and Smokepurpp — arguably the two most recognizable artists of the scene — have dropped tremendously, despite Smokepurpp steadily releasing projects since 2018. Ski Mask’s searches peak in 2018 around the release of his album Stokely, but there are only a handful of reviews, while sales maxed out in the first week with 51,000 units — mostly from streaming.

That’s nothing to shake a stick at, but considering the juggernaut XXXTentacion had been in life, it’s hard not to wonder whether the halo effect of his stardom would have illuminated the careers of his nearest and dearest. Something similar happened with the emo-rap stars that proliferated around the late Lil Peep. While adherents like Brennan Savage, Horse Head, and Lil Aaron have continued trucking along, they certainly receive much less attention than they did when Peep was capturing the public’s imagination. Having a star to focus on generally helps other members of a scene or a movement in music, even if those satellite stars never shine quite as brightly.

After all, throughout the early 2000s, aligning with a well-known rap crew such as Disturbing Tha Peace, Murder Inc., Roc-A-Fella Records, or Ruff Ryders helped launch a number of otherwise unremarked-upon rappers into the national spotlight. Being famous by association helped make minor stars of rappers like Beanie Siegel, Charli Baltimore, Drag-On, Freeway, I-20, Jin, Memphis Bleek, and Shawnna, even if their latter-day careers petered out or their albums undersold major label expectations. However, that isn’t to say that just because the scene itself appears to have died out, that it’s automatically a wrap for those waiting in the wings.

Just look at the precursor to the Brooklyn drill scene in Chicago. In 2012, it seemed Chicago drill was everywhere judging from the breathless coverage of the scene in the wake of Chief Keef’s breakout hit “I Don’t Like.” That coverage brought more attention to fellow drill rappers like G Herbo (then Lil Herb), Katie Got Bandz, Lil Bibby, and Lil Durk, among others. However, as Chief Keef, the most popular of the Chicago subgenre’s champions, began to suffer the negative consequences of the increased scrutiny — namely, a handful of stints in and out of jail as a result of parole violations stemming from one of his interviews — excitement for the scene as a whole dwindled. However, rather than disappearing altogether, many of its members evolved their sounds and became stars in their own right.

Just this year, Herbo released the critically hailed, fan-favorite album PTSD, embracing a wholly different sound from drill — much more melodic and lyrically-focused, with bars that concentrate on the traumatic emotional effects left behind by the violence once bluntly described by drill. Likewise, Lil Durk has begun to flourish after some legal troubles of his own, releasing Just Cause Y’all Waited 2 in May, with a similar bent toward emotive, half-sung lyrics. Both have enough credibility from their eight-year duration in the rap game to have swung some impressive guest stars; Lil Baby and Gunna adorn the tracklist of Durk’s effort, while Herbo’s includes looks from fellow Chicagoan Chance The Rapper, 21 Savage, and Lil Uzi Vert. Meanwhile, their musical evolution is reflected in the new generation of talent from the Windy City, including Polo G, the heir apparent to Chicago’s gritty street sound.

Lil Bibby may be the ultimate example of pivoting after the spotlight fades. In 2017, he signed Juice WRLD to his Grade A Productions and negotiated a lucrative contract at Interscope for the then-teenaged emo rapper. That deal blossomed in the wake of hits like “Lucid Dreams” and “Robbery,” with three hugely successful albums — the most recent of which, the posthumously released Legends Never Die, taking the world by storm and producing the biggest streaming week of 2020 so far. Intriguingly, Juice himself was at the forefront of a more diffuse movement of emo, SoundCloud “mumble rappers” that included participants like Lil Uzi Vert, Lil Skies, and Trippie Redd — all massive stars in their own rights, despite early criticisms from rap purists.

It remains to be seen what will become of the remaining Brooklyn drill kids — or even their precursors in the South Florida SoundCloud wave. Public interest is fickle; maybe something new will come along to pull attention into a new direction. If that happens, it shouldn’t spell doom for Pop Smoke’s associates. The Chicago originators of their rowdy, rebellious style have shown that if they can adapt, they can find their way in whatever comes next.

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

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Dave Grohl Defends Teachers (Like His Mother) In A New Audio Essay

Foo Fighters leader Dave Grohl has taken to narrative writing over the past few months via his Dave’s True Stories Instagram account, on which he has penned essays about his life and career. Yesterday, though, instead of his Instagram page, Grohl published an essay titled “In Defense of Our Teachers” in The Atlantic. Now, Grohl has shared an audio version of the piece, as read by himself.

He begins, “I hate to break it to you, but I was a terrible student. Each day, I desperately waited for the final bell to ring so that I could be released from the confines of my stuffy, windowless classroom and run home to my guitar. It was no fault of the Fairfax County Public Schools system, mind you; it did the best it could. I was just stubbornly disengaged, impeded by a raging case of ADD, and an insatiable desire to play music.”

Elsewhere in the piece, Grohl discusses the complicated issue of re-opening schools during the pandemic and remote learning, with help from the perspective of his mother, Virginia Grohl, a retired teacher:

“Over the years, I have come to notice that teachers share a special bond, because there aren’t too many people who truly understand their unique challenges — challenges that go far beyond just pen and paper. Today, those challenges could mean life or death for some.

When it comes to the daunting — and ever more politicized — question of reopening schools amid the coronavirus pandemic, the worry for our children’s well-being is paramount. Yet teachers are also confronted with a whole new set of dilemmas that most people would not consider. ‘There’s so much more to be addressed than just opening the doors and sending them back home,’ my mother tells me over the phone. Now 82 and retired, she runs down a list of concerns based on her 35 years of experience: ‘masks and distancing, temperature checks, crowded busing, crowded hallways, sports, air-conditioning systems, lunchrooms, public restrooms, janitorial staff.’ Most schools already struggle from a lack of resources; how could they possibly afford the mountain of safety measures that will need to be in place? And although the average age of a schoolteacher in the United States is in the early 40s, putting them in a lower-risk group, many career teachers, administrators, cafeteria workers, nurses, and janitors are older and at higher risk. Every school’s working faculty is a considerable percentage of its population, and should be safeguarded appropriately. I can only imagine if my mother were now forced to return to a stuffy, windowless classroom. What would we learn from that lesson? When I ask what she would do, my mother replies, ‘Remote learning for the time being.’

Remote learning comes with more than a few of its own complications, especially for working-class and single parents who are dealing with the logistical problem of balancing jobs with children at home. […] Remote learning is an inconvenient and hopefully temporary solution. But as much as Donald Trump’s conductor-less orchestra would love to see the country prematurely open schools in the name of rosy optics (ask a science teacher what they think about White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany’s comment that ‘science should not stand in the way’), it would be foolish to do so at the expense of our children, teachers, and schools.”

Grohl also praised his mom’s abilities and impact as an educator:

“As a single mother of two, she tirelessly devoted her life to the service of others, both at home and at work. From rising before dawn to ensure that my sister and I were bathed, dressed, and fed in time to catch the bus to grading papers well into the night, long after her dinner had gone cold, she rarely had a moment to herself. […] She was one of those teachers who became a mentor to many, and her students remembered her long after they had graduated, often bumping into her at the grocery store and erupting into a full recitation of Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, like a flash mob in the produce aisle. I can’t tell you how many of her former students I’ve met over the years who offer anecdotes from my mother’s classroom. Every kid should be so lucky to have that favorite teacher, the one who changes your life for the better. She helped generations of children learn how to learn, and, like most other teachers, exhibited a selfless concern for others. Though I was never her student, she will forever be my favorite teacher.”

Listen to the essay above and read it here.