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Young Thug: "I'm the new Tupac"


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AmericanGUY

i am…disgusted 

꧁ 𝕛'𝕧𝕖𝕦𝕩 𝕡𝕒𝕤 𝕞𝕠𝕦𝕣𝕚𝕣 𝕥𝕠𝕦𝕥𝕖 𝕤𝕖𝕦𝕝𝕖 ꧂
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HOTNebraskaGuy
3 minutes ago, littlepotter said:

Literal who

You've never heard of young Thug :selena:

jk I don't think I've ever head his stuff :laughga:

One, five, ten lay a million on me
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Pacify Him

Giving me, "I'm the female Weezy" teas

Stream Nicki's best song:

Spoiler

 

 

I’m getting on your nerves
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T3ARS

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It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept, and celebrate those differences. - Audre Lorde
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littlepotter
1 minute ago, MetalliGa said:

Giving me, "I'm the female Weezy" teas

Stream Nicki's best song:

  Reveal hidden contents

 

 

Why would she degrade herself like that

chaeri pls
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OBEY
9 minutes ago, littlepotter said:

Literal who

he's known in north america he's an average try hard rapper

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KyliesChild

In the new biopic according to people Tupac is listening to his new album and Young Thug does discuss topics about liberation and gender fluidity and Tupac didn't really get a chance to prosper to his fullest potential. His music is good, but comments of the sort are so pretentious. 

When young, suburban white men began consume around 80% of hip-hop music in 1991, we were collectively bombarded with one version of what a Black man looked like. A version that would lead to less The Isley Brothers and Prince, and more, baggy pants, fitted caps, and the horribly named “wife beaters.” Likewise, much of the homophobia and women-bashing lyrics found in rap were no less present in other forms of music or any facet of mass media altogether. Now, a large demographic listens to Young Thug's motives about believing that there is no gender. 

Let's take a young fan of 2pac who was listening to All Eyez on Me back in the mid-'90s as an extremely hypothetical (and not at all autobiographical) example. "All Bout U" is one of the more sexist, degrading songs that the late Tupac Shakur ever released -- and there are many to choose from. The also-departed Nate Dogg chorus goes "Every other city we go, every other vi-de-o/ No matter where I go, I see the same hoe."

He is one of some rappers who are speaking out about topics of the sort and people can learn from their mistakes so as an influential artist breaking the norms in that aspect isn't something that Tupac had the chance to do. 

 

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rumours

"I'm the new Tupac"

So.... is he indirectly acknowledging that he needs to associate himself with a legend to offset his lack of talent? 

I seriously don't understand the whole mentality of being the "next _______". Wouldn't you just want to be yourself?

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