We’re still learning new things about COVID-19 on a near-daily basis but one of the earliest facts we knew about this virus was that it was particularly difficult for people with preexisting conditions. Which preexisting conditions put you at greater risk, however, was always a question that remained unanswered and up for debate. Chronic respiratory diseases like asthma or autoimmune disorders like HIV seemed likely to top that list, but a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) examining over 5,700 New York City COVID-19 patients is finally starting to give us a clearer idea of which groups are at risk.
Patients were surveyed from Northwell Health System, which has the largest concentration of COVID-19 patients in the country. The study revealed that 88% of hospitalized patients in the New York City area had more than one preexisting condition, dropping sharply to just 6% amongst patients with one or no preexisting conditions. The five most common preexisting conditions that resulted in hospitalization were hypertension (53.1%), obesity (41.7%), diabetes (31.7%), morbid obesity (19%), and coronary artery disease (10.4%), with Asthma (8.4%) as the sixth most common, and HIV the 14th most common preexisting condition (0.8%).
The median age of the patients requiring hospital care was 63 years old, and 94% of patients had at least one pre-existing condition. Researchers in the study also examined the outcome data of the 2,634 patients who had either been discharged from the hospital or died and found that 14% of them needed ICU treatment, 12% required the help of a ventilator, 3% needed kidney replacement therapy and 21% died. Patients who had diabetes in addition to COVID-19 were much more likely to require the need of a ventilator and although only 12% of patients needed a ventilator, a shockingly high 88% of those patients died, making diabetes one of deadliest conditions for COVID-19 patients.
The full study is free to download at the JAMA Network, so check that for a full breakdown of the study’s findings.
After launching an unprecedented comeback, My Chemical Romance was, just like the rest of the music industry, forced to delay all touring plans for this year. Still, the band’s vocalist Gerard Way is doing what he can to keep fans entertained. The singer previously shared four unreleased demos to SoundCloud while detailing their inspiration on social media. Now, Way returns with two more unreleased demos, “PS Earth” and “Crate Amp_01.”
Announcing the demos on social media, Way wrote detailed descriptions of each track. Starting with “PS Earth,” Way wrote that although he likes the song, he’s not sure if he’s going to finish it: “This one was recorded at the tail end of the Hesitant Alien demo sessions, just Doug and I. I liked it well enough at the time, felt kind of 90’s, didn’t end up putting any vocals on it though. I like the bridge a lot. Looking back at the whole thing, I like it, but not sure if I’m going to finish it.”
For his “Crate Amp_01” demo, Way said that the demo’s noisy sound can be attributed from the vintage amps he was playing around with at the time:
“I think we can get it to sound even more messed up. At one point, I think in a later track, Doug tried to do this thing where he put a glass bottle over one of the mics, to make it sound more messed up and kind of underwater. Oh and when I bought this amp, I also bought an old Peavy, which is another kind of amp that is cheap and you saw a lot of metal bands using in the 80’s. That one sounds pretty messed up too, and I think it also has built in distortion. The amps sound pretty different from each other though.”
Listen to “Crate Amp_01” and “PS Earth” below.
My Chemical Romance is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music.
During a new interview with LA radio host Big Boy for Big Boy’s Quarantine Couch show on YouTube, Charlotte rapper DaBaby revealed just how much impact the coronavirus could have on his earnings if social distancing precautions continue into the summer. Like many artists, the festival favorite rapper relies on touring for much of his income and having so many shows canceled or postponed and certain states shutting down performance venues through the next year could really put a dent in his pocketbook.
“If it goes to July…I’ve already missed millions for sure,” DaBaby tells the host. “I’ll pull the calendar up right now and show you. I would’ve been on tour right now, and after that I would’ve did an overseas tour. So if we go to July… I’ma hold up how many millions I think.” He then holds up five fingers, indicating $5 million before someone else off-camera chimes in to estimate $7 million.
DaBaby’s guess echoes that of fellow rapper Young Thug, who also guesstimated that he’d be losing out on millions — an appraisal that earned him derision from newfound rival French Montana, who used his measure to snipe that he thought Thug was “going broke.” Fortunately for DaBaby, he’s got a new album out, which should generate some streams, but as we all know by now, those streams are no replacement for the revenue that comes from touring — especially since it seems to not be much of a fan favorite. While Spotify has a new feature allowing fans to donate to artists directly, it seems unlikely that an out-of-work fanbase could drum up $7 million.
Watch the interview with DaBaby above.
May 15 is a big day for Nicholas Hoult. It’s the 10-year anniversary of Mad Max: Fury Road, one of the best films to come out this century, and it’s also when his new TV series debuts on Hulu. The Great stars Hoult as the Peter III of Russia to Elle Fanning’s Catherine the Great, the country’s longest-ruling female leader. If the “thoroughly modern with occasional historical facts” trailer above reminds you of The Favourite, that’s because it was created by the Best Picture nominee’s co-writer Tony McNamara.
Here’s the official plot synopsis:
The Great is a satirical, comedic drama about the rise of Catherine the Great from outsider to the longest reigning female ruler in Russia’s history. Season one is a fictionalized, fun and anachronistic story of an idealistic, romantic young girl, who arrives in Russia for an arranged marriage to the mercurial Emperor Peter. Hoping for love and sunshine, she finds instead a dangerous, depraved, backward world that she resolves to change. All she has to do is kill her husband, beat the church, baffle the military and get the court onside. A very modern story about the past which encompasses the many roles she played over her lifetime as lover, teacher, ruler, friend, and fighter.
The Great, which also stars Phoebe Fox, Adam Godley, Gwilym Lee, Charity Wakefield, Douglas Hodge, Sacha Dhawan, Sebastian de Souza, Bayo Gbadamosi and Belinda Bromilow, premieres on May 15 on Hulu.
It’s going to be a long wait until the final season of Better Call Saul rolls around. That doesn’t mean we can’t have a little fun with the show until then. On the TV side, Brian Grubb will certainly continue to speculate on what’s coming for this ill-fated crew, but real talk on the food tip — did anyone else get hungry when Kim Wexler described that room service burger from the swanky hotel?
I sure did. “Veils” of cheddar? “House-made” buns? High-end beef? Yes to all of that.
I knew it was my job to make Kim’s burger immediately. First, I went back and wrote down all the things Kim actually says. Right away, I could tell I was venturing into deep waters. There were also some big gaps in what Kim was describing, so I found the actual hotel in Albuquerque that Kim and Jimmy were staying at and dove into their menu. Sure enough, the Hotel Andaluz’s menu has a burger on it that’s pretty much exactly what Kim was describing, flowery language included.
With that information in hand, I went ahead and made the burger, the “house-made” bun, and the goddamn shoe-string fries. It was a lot of work, but very worth it.
SHOESTRING FRIES with TRUFFLE SALT
This is the moment Kim Wexler broke bad. Shoestring fries are the work of the devil. I’ve worked in kitchens and made a million orders of fries. I also know a lot of chefs and cooks. I can tell you with authority that only an asshole chef wants their staff to make shoe-string motherf*cking fries to order.
Making shoe-string fries at home sucks. It sucks so much, I don’t think I like Kim anymore.
Ingredients:
- 4 Queen Anne Potatoes
- Dried Truffles
- Coarse Sea Salt
- Vegetable Oil
- Water
Prep:
Peel the potatoes and put them in a bowl with water as you peel each one. Pour that water off once you’re done peeling. Using a mandolin with a small teeth plate, slice the potatoes along their horizontal line.
Return potatoes to bowl and cover with room temp tap water and add a punch of salt. Use your hands to work the potato “shoelaces” in the water to draw out the starch. It’s like a gentle massage. Let sit for at least 30 minutes.
Pour that water off and then start wringing all the water out of the potatoes in a cheesecloth. Basically, you’re going to need to do a fistful at a time and really wring the life out of the potatoes until no more water drips out.
Layer the potatoes on a baking sheet lined with a towel. Pat down, set aside.
Later, we’ll fry this is small batches in vegetable oil at 350F. You’ll need to add them very slowly to the oil as they cause the hot liquid to boil up dramatically. Use a slotted spatula to move them around until golden brown and crisp. This will takes eight to ten minutes.
Move to a bowl lined with a cloth. Remove cloth. Hit with several grinds of dried truffle and salt. Toss. Serve. You’ll see them pictured at the end.
CONDIMENTS
This is where the menu from Hotel Andaluz came in handy. They list “house-made ketchup,” “hatch green chili BBQ,” and “mojo mustard” as the condiments for this mighty burger. I’m going to go over these pretty quickly.
House-made Ketchup:
- One can of Tomato Puree
- 1/4 cup of Dark Brown Sugar
- 1/8 cup Apple Cider Vinegar
- One tsp. Cumin
- One tsp. Allspice
- One tsp. Garlic Powder
- One tsp. Onion Powder
- One tsp. Smoked Paprika
- One tsp. Dried Truffles
- One tsp. Sea Salt
- Half tsp. White Pepper
Add all ingredients to a small saucepan. Stir. Bring to a bare simmer. Cover and simmer until reduced by about a quarter, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat to cool. Serve.
Mojo Mustard:
- 1/2 cup good quality Mustard
- Zest of one Lime
- Juice of 1/2 Lime
- Zest of 1/2 Orange
- Juice of 1/2 Orange
- Two Sprigs of fresh Oregano (minced)
- One clove of Garlic (minced)
- One tsp. Habanero Paste
- Pinch of Sea Salt
- Few Cranks from Black Pepper Mill
Add all ingredients to a bowl. Stir until completely incorporated. Cover and place in the fridge to rest.
Pepper Jam:
- One Green Bell Pepper
- Two Cayenne Peppers
- Two Pointed Peppers
- 1/2 Yellow Onion
- Two Cloves of Garlic
- One cup Chicken Broth
- Juice of 1/2 Lime
- Juice of 1/2 Orange
- Sea Salt
- Black Pepper
- Olive Oil
Heat a medium pan on a medium-high flame with a glug of olive oil. Add chopped onion, peppers, and garlic. Hit with salt and pepper. Cook until onions wilt. Add liquids. Reduce heat and simmer off the liquids until it looks like the image below. It should take around 30 minutes.
“HOUSE-BAKED SESAME SEED BUNS”
Kim, you’re killing me with this burger. I’ve never made hamburger buns. So I have to admit — I am curious. However, I have a busted oven. I have to eyeball the flame to set the temp and my broiler is shot. Still, I soldier on because I love this show and I want to have this recipe in my arsenal.
You’re going to need a scale for this recipe. Always bake by weight. There’s no better way. Cooking is art; baking is science.
Ingredients:
- 7 grams Dry Yeast
- 450 grams Bread Flour
- 50 grams Raw Sugar
- 250 grams Whole Milk
- 50 grams Unsalted Butter
- 1 Medium Egg (beaten)
- 7 grams Fine Sea Salt
- Olive Oil
Wash/Topping:
- 1 Medium Egg
- 1/4 cup Whole Milk
- Sesame Seeds
Prep:
Start off by putting the milk and butter in a small saucepan on a low flame on the stove. Turn off as soon as the butter melts and let cool down to at least 130-100F. If it’s too hot when you add it to the yeast, it’ll kill it.
Add 50 grams of flour, the sugar, and yeast to a large mixing bowl and whisk together. Add in the milk and butter and stir until completely blended. Let sit for ten minutes so the yeast can activate.
Add the rest of the flour, egg, and salt. Mix using a wooden paddle until it comes together into a cohesive dough.
Flour a working surface and plop the dough down.
Knead the dough for at least five minutes. I go until the dough is completely smooth and no longer sticks at all to the surface of the counter.
Form into a ball. Brush olive oil around a receiving bowl. Place the dough ball into the bowl top side down and then flip it over so that the whole ball is coated in oil.
Cover in plastic wrap and set aside. As soon as the dough has doubled in size, it’s ready.
Line a baking sheet with baking paper. Preheat your oven to 375F (mine was closer to 400F, I think) with the rack in the middle.
Roll the dough onto a lightly floured surface. Gingerly roll the dough into a foot-long log. Cut in half. Cut those halves in half. Cut those quarters in half. You’re left with eight buns.
Turn each of those eighths into balls by folding the ends under until the top is smooth. Dust each one with flour. Place them on the baking sheet with plenty of room. Pat them down so that they’re about an inch tall.
Cover loosely in plastic wrap and let them proof until they’ve doubled in size. This will take anywhere from 20 to 40 minutes depending on how hot your kitchen is.
Bake:
Mix the milk and egg in a bowl until well blended. Use a brush to gently brush the wash onto each of the buns. Then, sprinkle generously with white sesame seeds.
Place in the oven for 12 to 15 minutes. I set an alarm for six minutes to turn the baking sheet around. Otherwise, let them bake. Unfortunately, I don’t have a broiler, so the tops didn’t get a nice brown to them.
Remove from the oven and place them immediately on a wire cooling rack.
I had to taste test one. So I broke it open and ate it while it was piping hot with some butter. And, wow, I’m definitely doing this again. But not right now.
CHEESEBURGER
Hey guys, we’re finally going to make this burger!
The photo below is a pretty good example of how I felt while making this goddamn burger. It’s also one of the only chances I had to see the burger in the show.
It’s kind of dark and certainly not the focal point of the shot. So, let’s take a closer look.
We get another look here:
There’s not a whole lot to go on besides a thick, fancy-schmancy New York steakhouse style patty, cheese, and what looks like that “housemade ketchup” up top with a butter lettuce leaf below.
Here’s the burger from the real-life hotel for comparison. It’s what I’m aiming for in the end.
Prep:
I make two 200-gram (seven ounces) Irish beef patties. It’s 80/20 lean/fat. I hit the burgers with salt and pepper. And, since this is a boutique hotel burger, I’m going sous vide with a reverse sear. So I vac-seal those patties with a sprig of fresh sage and rosemary.
Cook:
I place the patties in a 132F water bath for two-hours. Now, it’s crucial that ground beef reaches 140F to be safe. I’m cooking them to 132F in the sous vide and then searing them off in a cast-iron skillet, which will allow the patties to hit the magic-mark of 140F. I assure this by using a meat thermometer.
I slice my home-made hamburger buns in half, butter them, and sprinkle ’em with garlic powder. I then toast them off in a ceramic pan because why not add more dishes to the pile at this point!
(This is also where I fry the shoe-string fries using a wok with one-liter of vegetable oil at 350F).
Next, I get the cast iron ripping hot with a good glug of olive oil. I fish the patties from the sous vide, remove them from their vac-sealed packages, pat them as dry as possible, and sear them off.
After they’re seared on one side, I flip them over. This is where I add a thick slice of white Irish Cheddar. I kill the heat and put a lid on the skillet, trapping in the steam. I let that sit for at least five minutes so the cheese can “veil” over the patty.
Construction goes like this:
- Bottom Bun
- Mojo Mustard
- Folded Lettuce Leaf
- Patty with Cheese
- Pepper Jam
- Housemade Ketchup on the Top Bun
Then, I grabbed a California Cab since they were 100 percent drinking red wine with their burgers and I’ve f*cking earned a bottle glass of wine at this point.
And there it is. I did it. Shoe-string fries are dumb but, I have to admit, I loved them here. They were light, crisp, full of umami, and salt. In fact, hitting fries with dried truffle flakes and sea salt is delightful — even in shoe-string form.
As for the burger, yeah, it’s goddamn delicious and messy and nap-inducing and I want it again. I just want someone else to make it for me next time. I have to say though, I’m only making my own ketchup from now on. And, home-made buns are actually worth the effort. The mojo mustard really made things sunny and sharp. The peppers were a great add on. Now, about that nap…
Just a month ago, rap was introduced to its latest star, Memphis rapper Jucee Froot, by way of her hard-hitting major label debut Black Sheep. You’d be forgiven for thinking she came out of nowhere, but she’s actually been a fixture of the underground rap scene for some time. In 2018, she was billed as a member of Rich Gang, but since then, she’s come into her own, proving she has no need for celebrity co-signs.
The first sign of her impending stardom: Even before Black Sheep came out, Jucee had been recruited for the soundtrack to one of 2019’s most-hyped movies, Birds Of Prey. After that, she attracted fellow burgeoning superstar Rico Nasty to appear in the video for her rambunctious single “Psycho (Remix).” Her latest accomplishment: She landed a song, sight unseen, on Issa Rae’s Twitter-favorite television show, Insecure this season.
Jucee’s come a long way in a relatively short time but she’s just getting started. Uproxx interviewed the Memphis firebrand about her quarantine activities, classic Memphis hip-hop, and her placements on the soundtracks of huge cultural moments like Birds Of Prey and Insecure.
Yeah, absolutely. Well, of course, we have to start pretty much every interview with how are you passing the time while you’re not allowed to go outside?
Recording, playing with my son, playing card games, board games, taking a stroll before it gets dark outside. Other than that, that’s pretty much it. I’m trying to stay off the internet as much as possible because it just seem like it’s just worse news every day. So, I’m just saying to myself.
When did you first realize that hip-hop was kind of what you wanted to do for a living, and how did you start to make that transition from whatever you were doing before to doing this now?
I’ve basically been around music since I got out the womb, type stuff. My mama put me in the choir when I was six, and I can form words in complete sentences, and everything. And when I was in there, they told me they liked my voice. So then my sisters, they always used to sing around me, like listening to Beyonce, and everything else.
But I liked to rap. I just always liked to rap more than anything. So from then on, I started playing the piano at like 10, and on up I start writing my songs and making beats and stuff on GarageBand. And then when I got old enough, I start just putting videos up on the internet, on Facebook and stuff, and staying consistent. And then I went viral a couple of times, but it wasn’t until I met my manager, who’s my boyfriend, I met his brother, and he made me just want to do music for real. And it got to a point where I start getting all the tattoos. And I got one on my face, and I got one on my neck, and after that, I couldn’t get a job. So I just had to make it with the music.
You’re from Memphis, your name’s Jucee, that can’t be a coincidence. How much of an impact did Juicy J, Three 6 Mafia, 8Ball & MJG, and Gangsta Boo, of course, have on your musical style?
I was born in ’94, so, Three 6 Mafia is basically all that I know. DJ Paul, I spoke with him not too long ago, and he was telling me it was some people before him, but I feel like they were the people that like made everything pop. It was the way we said our words, just like Project Pat, got that sizzurp, and all of that type of stuff. I got Juicy J up on the album. As far as Gangsta Boo, she bigging me up. We’ve been conversating. I was supposed to get up with her when I was out there in L.A., but everything take like an hour and 30 minutes, so we never got to link up.
You did get to link up with Rico Nasty for the “Psycho” remix? What was the process and what does it mean to you to have that support and sisterhood from somebody who is already popping, in her own respect, coming back to show you that same sort of love?
It was good. It was nice. So, okay, I got signed, and that was one of the songs they wanted to roll with. And we was talking about features and her name got brought up. It’s not a lot of females that link together and do stuff like that.
With me being from Memphis, I’m used to people being bougie and stuck up when they on a certain platform. But she was not like that. She was so sweet. She was complimenting me. I was complimenting her. After we had got done doing one scene, she came to the trailer in there with me while I was smoking, and it’s like the vibe was just completely right.
I’m pretty sure the label had sent over the song to her and she had knocked it out, and sent it back. And I just loved her energy, and just loved her vibe, period. Working with Rico was real nice.
How did they get you to perform a song for the Birds Of Prey soundtrack? Did they bring you the concept, or did you turn something in and we’re going to just put it in the movie?
They was like, “Okay, we got this placement for you. We want to see what you can do.” It took me at least like a week or so to do it, because they had me make two different versions of it.
The first version I did, I just went straight in, just straight rapping. And the second version Daniel Pemberton had made the beat, and we was in contact with him, and this was a new sound for me. So while I was in the studio, he was like throwing out ideas, like just say some girly stuff, like girls can chant.
That’s basically what I did. And I didn’t curse on the second version. On the first version, I cursed. On the second version, I didn’t. So after everything I turned in, they wound up sending the stuff back and I loved it. They basically merged the first version and the second version together, and it just went good from there on. It was something new for me, and I was so frustrated in the booth. Like, what can I say? Because it’s so different from my regular sound. But, I’m real happy that I did it. I got new fans from overseas. They be hitting me up, they be making the videos to it, and I just loved the reaction.
At first, I was afraid that a lot of people was going to be like, “Oh, she’s not like that for real, and this and that.” But they really gravitated to it. So I was really excited about that. And my kids, they like [superhero] movies. Even though it was females, they still like [superhero] movies. And they said that they liked it.
That’s fire. What did you think of the movie? Did you enjoy it? I thought that they really did a great job but there are people that have complaints. Mainly, it comes from the fact that it’s all women.
Yeah, exactly. Because you know certain people, they just not used to that type of stuff. But I loved it. The fighting scenes, the mood swings from the females. You had the hardcore, and then you had the giggly, goofy one. Then you had the weird one that just came from out of nowhere. It was funny. It was filled with comedy, thriller, action, everything. Everything you can ask for, which is what I think women are made of. We can be sad, we can be happy. We can go crazy, we can fight, we can do whatever we want to. So I feel like basically, the movie was based on females, our personality, and just to show dudes we can do it. It was just a good movie for me to watch. And I felt like I was a part of the team watching the movie and everything.
Absolutely. Women are definitely capable of doing anything and that’s shown in no place more so than hip-hop. An interesting thing that came up in my research is that the XXL freshman 2020 nominees include 16 women, including yourself. When I say that, what does that make you think? What does that make you feel about women’s place in hip-hop?
I feel like we making an impression. Like now, the boys is finally paying attention. Y’all not the only ones that can do it no more. Now we coming in, and we not trying to overpower, but we just want to be heard. Even if people is calling it stripper rapping, pussy rapping, all of that stuff. We just want to be heard and have fun. Dudes done had enough fun, and enough time to voice their opinion. So seeing that many females on there, and I know a couple of them, and done linked up with them, it feel good, period, just to have just somebody else that’s your same gender who you can root for, and not hate on, and all of y’all is doing this together.
How do you feel like a Black Sheep?
I just say that the Black Sheep title really came from me and my manager just talking about it. I always felt like I was the black sheep of my family. I was the black sheep at my school. It’s just throughout life I always felt like I was the black sheep. People just made me an outcast because either I was too honest, or too outspoken, or I didn’t do everything like everybody else.
So, with this being my first major project dropping with a big label, I was like, “Okay. Well, we going to do something that’s going to be spoken for, that’s going to describe who I am, and how I feel.” And we just basically tried to bring it to life. Because all the tracks up on there, it ain’t the usual… it just ain’t the usual stuff that people been hearing.
It’s the stuff where not just women can relate to it, men can relate to it, too. So, I don’t feel like it’s a lot of that going on. I just went with Black Sheep and the labor had liked it when I threw the idea out there, and it was just something that we had tried, and it did real, real good. And, that’s mostly it.
How did your placement on Insecure come about?
I was a fan of the show already, but what had happened was, my A&R will call me and they’ll just be like, “How do you feel? Do you got a song for this?” Because they knew when I got signed, I had over a hundred and something unreleased songs.
So they know that I’m prepared for when they do need a placement. And they hit me, and I was excited about it. And that record had already been done. I didn’t even have to redo it. It was already done. And when they picked it, I was just excited, because that was one of the records that I really, really, really liked when I did it. They hit me up, I sent it over. In a matter of like two weeks, they hit me back and was like, “She loved it, we want to roll with this one.”
So what’s your goal for the next year? If you have everything go the way that you want it to go, what are some of the things that you’re going to be able to say this time next year, when we do another interview?
I don’t know. That’s the thing, with me, I ain’t really a materialistic person, or really worried about doing a lot of big stuff. I just want my kids to just… if I was to pass away or anything happen to me, I just want my kids to be paid up for life, and they kids to be paid up. I could say that I could see a Grammy or performing on BET Hip-Hop Awards or even playing in a TV show or something. I just want everybody to hear my music and be able to relate. And for some people that’s going through depression or whatever situation that they in, that my music can help them. That’s where I get my enjoyment from. I don’t really care for the trophies and all the other stuff that come with it.
Jucee Froot is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
Sometimes, all it takes is a poorly-sourced quote from a dubious outlet on social media to spark all-out war on the timeline. That’s exactly what happened today when ASAP Rocky and Nelly trended alongside “Air Force 1” as fans debated which of the two rappers was more responsible for helping to make Nike’s summertime staple one of the companies best-selling models of all time.
When the hip-hop blog Kollege Kidd posted an unsourced ASAP Rocky quote claiming responsibility for the trend — likely taken from a town hall that the rapper participated in, in which he calls Air Force 1s “wack sneakers” and says that he wore them just to see if he could spark interest in them. He comments on the number of designers that borrowed looks from him and ASAP Mob around 2011, saying as soon as people “started wearing them again, I stopped wearing them.”
ASAP Rocky Says He’s The Reason Everyone Wears Air Force Ones pic.twitter.com/iafJ7dnJ6E
— Kollege Kidd (@KollegeKidd) April 22, 2020
However, for a certain class of hip-hop head, this contradicts the established history of the sneaker, which was the subject of Nelly and the St. Lunatics’ 2002 single paying homage to the Nike classic. “Air Force Ones” peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and very likely sparked a wave of interest in the shoe, which at the time were already one of Nike’s best-selling models.
This discrepancy naturally sparked yet another intergenerational battle on Twitter, as elder members of the millennial generation went to bat against their younger peers and Gen Z-ers to set the record straight, while younger fans backed up Rocky’s assertion. Meanwhile, still others joined in to point out the enduring popularity of the classic silhouette. One thing is for sure, though — the shoes are enough of a cultural linchpin that they are still capable of captivating the attention of fans across multiple generations and regions.
Check out some of the responses below.
Nelly the reason them hoes ain’t $55 no more. https://t.co/I1JiexSQIM
— Jay Boogie (@theejayboogie) April 22, 2020
Nelly still gets free Air Force ones from Nike for a song he dropped in 2002 https://t.co/9YjoMwjNSj
— 8 24 (@MikeSceezie) April 22, 2020
NELLY + THE ST LUNATICS DID NOT STOMP IN THEIR AUURR FORCE ONES TO BE DISRESPECTED LIKE THIS https://t.co/mWVstTyw0u
— TheDawn (@RebekaDawn) April 22, 2020
Respectfully, rocky and Nelly are homies.But we have BEEN doing them out here.And I would venture to say that us doing them as far back we did is reason why we got a song about them needing 2 purr in the Midwest. STYLES TRAVEL. Hov didn’t “baby suit, white Nike her”for this.
— Crime Rhyme Houdini (@JustBlaze) April 23, 2020
Y’all was wearing forces BECAUSE of Nelly?
LMAOOOOO
— Thelonious Martin (@KingThelonious) April 23, 2020
Today I learned that there are people who seriously believe that it was Nelly who made AF1s a THING.
— Rob Markman (@RobMarkman) April 23, 2020
Now if we wanna give Nelly credit for something, it’s prolly this lol https://t.co/jP2L25atiW
— Low (@LowKeyUHTN) April 23, 2020
So now everyone was rocking AF1’s before Nelly’s song????? pic.twitter.com/g8BULmMtnO
— BEAN (@MGRADS) April 23, 2020
Air Force never really went out, but I’m not go lie Chief keef Put niggas back on forces then Gherbo just put the icing on the cake https://t.co/wndWW8Fl9I
— BMB Ambassador (@GovernorOsama) April 23, 2020
He’s the reason why wyt girls wear Air Force Ones til they’re creased and unrecognizable
Fixed it for you! https://t.co/eDrM4yT7cr— Ivie Like Poison (@FrenchCreole_) April 23, 2020
I could be wrong, but on a national level, Jadakiss – not Nelly – was the first rapper I heard REALLY rapping about Air Force Ones. He rapped about them a few times on We Are The Streetz (2000) and had people losing it when he showed these in the “Knock Yourself Out” video pic.twitter.com/6ieXeXHQC5
— Andrew Barber (@fakeshoredrive) April 23, 2020
EYE KNOW when AF1’s came out & EYE know SOME OF YALL wore them, but to say they were as popular BEFORE as they were AFTER Nelly’s anthem is a flat out lie. Let’s not do this. No one was asking for 2 pair of crispy’s in 1998.
— BEAN (@MGRADS) April 23, 2020
Hold heartily agree with this. I had a pair always.
But…
Nelly did tell me I need two pairs. https://t.co/ildCSVtLOs
— Arturo Torres (@arturodraws) April 23, 2020
I know y’all young on here, especially thinking nelly or rocky made af1s cool, hell it was a basketball shoe first in 82’ pic.twitter.com/44kgA9zIqa
— blk tray (@blktray) April 23, 2020
After about ten years of remaining dormant with his solo material, Icelandic musician Jónsi returns with the orchestral single “Exhale.” Known as the frontperson in the award-winning band Sigur Rós, Jónsi transmutes the human experience and our connection to the natural world into expansive soundscapes. “Exhale” is an example of his meticulous and experimental production.
Directed by Giovanni Ribisi and Jónsi himself, the track’s cinematic accompanying visual depicts a dancer emerging in slow motion from a black tarp. The delayed emergence mimics the track’s slow-burning production, with the dancer’s metamorphosis arriving in unison with the track’s delicate instrumentals. Opening with soft, resounding piano, Jónsi’s reverberating vocals wax and wane until a vivid crescendo of synths and percussive elements arrives part-way through the track.
Co-produced by A.G. Cook, who is currently working with Charli XCX on her quarantine album, the emotive song pushes Jónsi’s gripping vocals to new territories. “Just let it go now/ It isn’t your fault,” Jónsi repeats in the lyrics, both a mission statement and a guiding principle for the modern times.
Watch the choreographed “Exhale” video above.
Some of the artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
This week in hip-hop is so stacked, there isn’t even enough room to cover it all. So, while we hit on our faves at multiple levels of exposure from just-under-the-radar to superstar-in-the-making, there is plenty more to look for, from Azizi Gibson’s latest to yet another new release from E-40. Giving the artists below some spins shouldn’t prevent you from checking out Jackboy’s self-titled debut, Lil Gotit’s Hood Baby 2, Quelle Chris and Chris Keys’ reunion Innocent Country 2, or Ron-Ron’s joint EP with Compton rapper YS, Street Icons, but these are the projects we’ve been anticipating the most.
Here are all the best new hip-hop albums coming out this week.
Asher Roth — Flowers On The Weekend
The originator of so-called “Frat Rap” returns with a reflective, jazzy project that blends his love of abstract, funny, and surprisingly insightful raps with some newfound maturity, letting him rap about grown-up topics alongside an astonishing roster of guest stars that includes Buddy, Joyce Wrice, Lil Yachty, and more.
Fivio Foreign — 800 BC (Before Corona)
The burgeoning superstar arrived last year with the Pain And Love EP, launching his career in spectacular fashion with his hit single “Wetty.” Now, he follows it up with another EP that aims to prove his breakout success was no fluke, bringing more New York drill sounds to the broader hip-hop landscape.
Ivan Ave — Double Goodbyes
Ivan Ave hails from Norway and has opened up the boundaries of imported hip-hop with nineties-inspired, jazz-heavy beats from producers from Dâm-Funk, Kiefer, and Kaytranada. It’s left-of-center, smart, introspective hip-hop that works on both intellectual and emotional levels.
K Camp — K.I.S.S. 5
For the fifth installment of K Camp’s K.I.S.S. mixtape series, the Milwaukee rapper said he wanted the “coldest R&B artists in the game” to join him. He’s come close, recruiting 6lack, Ari Lennox, and Tink for the tongue-in-cheek “Black Men Don’t Cheat,” as well as Jacquees, Jeremih, and Wale — who may as well be an R&B artist himself — on separate tracks.
Kierra Luv — Take It Or Leave It
The 18-year-old Harrisburg rapper returns after pushing back her debut. She’s a tough-as-nails, aggressive rhymer whose bars are as hard-hitting as they are complex.
Skyzoo & Dumbo Station — The Bluest Note
The Brooklyn rapper’s rapper is well-known for wordplay that resembles the construction of a jazz song — multilayered, deceptively deep, improvisational, and experimental — so it’s fitting for him to team up with an actual jazz band and pay homage to the genre’s rich connection to hip-hop.
Tre Capital — Liberty
Tre is one of hip-hop’s most powerful underground forces, with a richly creative approach worthy of his pedigree (he’s also Xzibit’s son). While he hasn’t revealed much about Liberty, judging from his past works, it’ll be a tour de force.
Trouble — Thug Luv
The Atlanta trap rap pioneer is releasing his first project with Def Jam, containing appearances from 2 Chainz, Ducko McFli, Jeezy, and Quavo. Playing around with different sounds, Trouble pushes the boundaries of the subgenre, while remaining thoroughly and deeply rooted in the street strand of Dirty South rap.
Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.