Black Lives Matter…then, now, and in the future. In the wake of the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and Rayshard Brooks, we decided to revisit one of our past episodes (S1E11: “Know Justice, Know Peace: Hip-Hop as Protest”) that investigates how Hip-Hop has influenced the world as a platform for Civil Rights, and how Southern Hip-Hop artists continue to create space for Civil Rights messages in their music.
You Know the Vibes: Assessing Appropriation, A Fashion Foreword, and the Last Dispatch from our Aquemini Season
Free OnlyStans: ColeMiners, Fighting on the Timeline, and Pandemic Highs
A Southern Gentleman: André 3000 is the Life of His Own Party
It’s OK to Root For All The Girls (And Everybody Black)
Gangster, Griot, and GOAT: Unpacking Lil Wayne’s Reign and Reckoning
7 Light Years Below: A “Chronicling Stankonia” Roundtable
Mad AF (Pts. 1 & 2): Thot Shit, Lil Nas X, 4 Horsemen, and a History of Conservative Outrage
Gourmet Gangsta Grillz Interlude: DJ Drama Shines on Tyler, the Creator’s new album
Money Dance: Renegades, Twerkulating, and Compensating Creators
Stream Dreams: Deluxe Editions, Dance Challenges, and Making Hit Records
Yeek, Not Yeet: Archives, Museums, and Documenting the Culture
Size Ain’t Shit: The Ballad of Bushwick Bill
Regina’s Interlude: The Cookout Rules (Get on My Level)
Food for the Soul: The Goodie Mob Interview
The World in our Heads: Exploring Mental Health in Southern Hip-Hop
Joy in the Mourning: Pushing through Parallelograms and Paninis
The Goodie Mob Survival Kit: A Bottom of the Map Preview
Space is Still the Place: A BOTM Replay
Embracing the Fire In Little Africa: On the Road in Tulsa
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