New film “Microphone Check” explores history of hip hop

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  • Опубліковано 22 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 175

  • @ShaamJones
    @ShaamJones Місяць тому +48

    Glad 1st generation (pre 1972) creators are being acknowledged over the 2nd generation contributors (1973-79) revisionism.

  • @kali420kush4
    @kali420kush4 Місяць тому +43

    Thank you KCal. Salute Tariq Nasheed

    • @elMaxx5
      @elMaxx5 Місяць тому +1

      Word

    • @elMaxx5
      @elMaxx5 Місяць тому +1

      Another Tariq Nasheed BANGA. Catching in theater Joe!!

  • @AnimalAlmighty
    @AnimalAlmighty Місяць тому +31

    Foundational Black Americans in this mf!

  • @cobylawson1965
    @cobylawson1965 Місяць тому +25

    Good looking out Tariq! I’m glad you are bringing this to the forefront. I can’t wait to see it.

  • @user-yy9zg1uj9s
    @user-yy9zg1uj9s Місяць тому +52

    Let’s go (FBA) stand up!

  • @PatriciaAJones-dq1ib
    @PatriciaAJones-dq1ib Місяць тому +6

    I'm glad to see that The Black American Creators & Founders of HIP-HOP are getting their Credits where it's due to them!!! Thank You, Tariq!!!❤❤❤

  • @user-tr5tr3xf2d
    @user-tr5tr3xf2d Місяць тому +60

    Black people aren't saying you can not participate in Hip Hop they just saying remember the founders are African Americans

    • @AsafoUniversity
      @AsafoUniversity Місяць тому

      They don't know FBA History. That's part of the problem. They just came here for the benefits of our struggle and our fight with oppression for rights --that these immigrants have access too. The immigrants have no idea how much intellectual property , physical property and inventions that were stolen from FBA. But maybe that doesn't matter either.

    • @d0cn0tes
      @d0cn0tes Місяць тому

      Faxxx. Next thing you know Asians will claim they were the founders

    • @EuphoricONE888
      @EuphoricONE888 Місяць тому +12

      At this point we really should gatekeep our culture more. People out here are getting out of hand.

    • @dennistaylor6342
      @dennistaylor6342 Місяць тому

      @@user-tr5tr3xf2d exactly

    • @JimmyandNandy
      @JimmyandNandy 28 днів тому +2

      Im not gonna say that hip hop isnt mainly african american., because it is. Just dont erase Puerto Ricans contribution to the genre weve been ur allies in the scene not only hip hop but the black panthers as well

  • @FBA_AllTHEWAY
    @FBA_AllTHEWAY Місяць тому +5

    This is the best doc on hip hop hands down! I salute this guy!

  • @skyegailfisher3662
    @skyegailfisher3662 Місяць тому +43

    Thank You Mr. Nasheed For Representing The "FBA" Citizens. We Adore You Appreciate You And Your Crew. Keep Up The Fantastic Work and
    "FBA" Citizens
    Are Behind You 💯.👍

  • @andremiller1566
    @andremiller1566 Місяць тому +26

    Blacks were breakdancing and rapping in the early 1900s. Long before 1970s Bronx.

    • @MichaelMorales-ll3hv
      @MichaelMorales-ll3hv Місяць тому

      Didn't bring it worldwide or at least to white people till herc came around

    • @goudagalindo1790
      @goudagalindo1790 Місяць тому +1

      😂😂😂😂

    • @JamalJewell
      @JamalJewell Місяць тому +7

      ​@@goudagalindo1790 it's facts tho laugh and deny it all you want 🤷🏿‍♂️

    • @jamaalrobinson
      @jamaalrobinson Місяць тому +3

      ​@@goudagalindo1790 my response to Latinos creating anything else besides tacos 😂

    • @goudagalindo1790
      @goudagalindo1790 Місяць тому

      @@jamaalrobinson name a dish blake people invented. Mexicans are one of the oldest societies with a rich patrimony to society like the pyramids, their food and traditions. That’s on civilization you can’t f with. The only awesome thing about Afrikaa is Egyptians but they are nother race.

  • @memoiroflife28
    @memoiroflife28 Місяць тому +2

    S/o to Tariq Nasheed for spreading knowledge to the people always. Always giving him his flowers 💐🇺🇸✊🏾

  • @beatswork
    @beatswork Місяць тому +31

    Dope

  • @divineenergy7237
    @divineenergy7237 Місяць тому +58

    FBA all day

  • @TrayMillsOfficial
    @TrayMillsOfficial Місяць тому +12

    Why was it so hard to find the like button? Anyways, this is an awesome film 💯🔥🔥🔥

  • @justju0rd
    @justju0rd Місяць тому +56

    FBA✊🏾🇺🇸

    • @Lovely-ff7uv
      @Lovely-ff7uv Місяць тому +8

      Foundational Black American

  • @bang8534
    @bang8534 Місяць тому +14

    Talk about all the music genres black Americans have created

    • @markaddison4642
      @markaddison4642 Місяць тому +3

      In real-time. Other groups take from America 🇺🇸 FBA'S grow the culture of America 🇺🇸 in real-time. Unapologetically, Reparations heals.

  • @ramadhaniduff1484
    @ramadhaniduff1484 Місяць тому +8

    Can't wait to see the documentary !

  • @Realrawww
    @Realrawww Місяць тому +64

    Black American Culture Feeds the World 🍔🌭🌯🥗🥙🥪🌭

    • @Philthy.mcguyver310
      @Philthy.mcguyver310 Місяць тому

      @@Realrawww u mean ruining society with promoting violence and drug use

    • @GregLucas-pv8nm
      @GregLucas-pv8nm Місяць тому +4

      ​@Philthy.mcguyver310 who promotes that? Blacks don't run FOX CBS or radio. Blacks don't run PR firms,Blacks don't put Sexxy red un million dollar commercials and we don't have tv studios who run these ads

    • @skyegailfisher3662
      @skyegailfisher3662 Місяць тому +18

      Those Other Groups Are So Misinformed, Jealous and Intimidated By
      "FBA" Citizens.
      So Sad😢

    • @Philthy.mcguyver310
      @Philthy.mcguyver310 Місяць тому +1

      @@GregLucas-pv8nm I never seen a sexy red commercial or fox promote rap or drill music …. I see these people create there own platforms on UA-cam and promote there own culture …. I seen fox talk about Taylor swift flying everywhere never seen lil durk on fox or sexy red 🤣

    • @Philthy.mcguyver310
      @Philthy.mcguyver310 Місяць тому

      @@GregLucas-pv8nm next your gonna say dj akademiks didn’t star the war in chiraq on his own on UA-cam 🤣 glorifying how messed up Chicago is

  • @kefparker7946
    @kefparker7946 Місяць тому +7

    Great Informative Interview 🎈

  • @The.Adept.Chamber
    @The.Adept.Chamber Місяць тому +17

    History not mystery.

  • @missfrances137
    @missfrances137 Місяць тому +1

    We left 137th Street in Harlem and moved to 1526 Sedgwick Avenue. I was 15 and that was 50 years ago this year and I went next door to 1520 Sedgwick Avenue and DJ. Kool Herc's parties with my sister, Cynthia, nephew Clifton and my baby daddy "Crazy" Clayton. Aaaahhhhh memories. If you know, you know. Hey Tariq!

  • @undisputedtruth6176
    @undisputedtruth6176 Місяць тому +80

    There is no question who the creators are, the music the fashion the dancing, stop the nonsense just enjoy Black Americas gift.

    • @Mont3000
      @Mont3000 Місяць тому +20

      Your right there yes no questions just lies from opportunists.

    • @dn30001
      @dn30001 Місяць тому +15

      ​@Mont3000 facts... and that's what they want us to stay silent on.

    • @abyss104
      @abyss104 Місяць тому

      Yes. I love me sum Sexxy Red

    • @AnimalAlmighty
      @AnimalAlmighty Місяць тому +11

      Its cool. We setting the record straight.

    • @sarahashun1180
      @sarahashun1180 Місяць тому +2

      Speaking over music started in Africa. I’ve got loads of traditional African music, including highlife music. Furthermore, when it comes to Western culture, it’s the Jamaicans who started speaking over music. It was called dub music, and there were so many diss tracks between the likes of I Roy, U Roy, Big Youth, etc. It makes my blood boil when Americans want to claim everything. It shows how insular they are. Jamaica, yes, the small island, is a powerhouse in music, culture, and dance. In my opinion, so much of its culture has been appropriated by African Americans.

  • @chrisdjohnson314
    @chrisdjohnson314 Місяць тому +4

    Flex always putting on for the culture .FBA 💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽

  • @djgreenhornet2892
    @djgreenhornet2892 Місяць тому +21

    🎤✔️ ✊🏿🇺🇸

  • @HappyGouldianFinch-cl3sw
    @HappyGouldianFinch-cl3sw Місяць тому +25

    Fba❤

  • @alvinedwards434
    @alvinedwards434 Місяць тому +4

    Salute Tariq Nasheed!

  • @MrMajid070
    @MrMajid070 Місяць тому +2

    Shoutout to Tariq Nasheed. Sitting up there looking like a rich mummy. Everybody go see "Microphone Check." ✊🏿

  • @patricksterbeatz
    @patricksterbeatz Місяць тому +29

    FBA all day!

  • @CelebrateLifeOriginal-om6ip
    @CelebrateLifeOriginal-om6ip Місяць тому +5

    Tariq 🥇👑💪🏽

  • @ambiford
    @ambiford Місяць тому +11

    So once again she is focused on the negativity of a rap battle?

    • @lf1496
      @lf1496 Місяць тому +7

      I caught that typical 🙄.

  • @dennistaylor6342
    @dennistaylor6342 Місяць тому +2

    As a former child of the South Bronx, during the 60’s and 70’s. I was in the parks and saw this first hand. Priceless experience! I’m proud to say I’m from the Boogie Down Bronx.

    • @JamalJewell
      @JamalJewell Місяць тому

      You being there in the beginning how do you feel when ppl try to downplay the fact black Americans created hip-hop

    • @dennistaylor6342
      @dennistaylor6342 Місяць тому +3

      @@JamalJewell it’s an insult as far as I’m concerned. In the beginning it was just us. Real talk!

    • @JamalJewell
      @JamalJewell Місяць тому +2

      @@dennistaylor6342 I believe it for real and it's sad cause peurto Ricans and Caribbeans didn't want to associate with black Americans at first now they saying they they helped up and whoever not from New York can't speak on it

    • @dennistaylor6342
      @dennistaylor6342 Місяць тому +3

      @@JamalJewell you make a good point. And when hip hop first jumped off, trust me it was all black. Nobody thought it would last. I remember my college roommate saying that. Like I said I was there at the time. I lived in those streets. And what most people don’t know… when it comes to break dancing. Now an Olympic sport by the way. Some of the black Gangs were the organizers. Example the Black Spades ♠️ had the Spade dance. Which was the birth of breaking in the Bronx. If you know you know.

    • @JamalJewell
      @JamalJewell Місяць тому +2

      @@dennistaylor6342 facts 💯

  • @nastynaz3376
    @nastynaz3376 Місяць тому +4

    Kool Moe Dee dissed Busy Bee directly... Bee just rocked the crowd..
    Get it right!

    • @SyeYoung
      @SyeYoung Місяць тому +1

      Busy Bee actually wasn't there when Kool Moe Dee did that. He just did it at a location that Busy Bee would perform at occasionally. However Busy Bee wasn't in the Harlem World at the time Kool Moe Dee rocked that rhyme, nobody says that part of the story because it would minimize the actual thrill that comes with two MC's battling. This is why you never heard a response from Busy Bee that night, he wasn't even in the building. When you get a chance ask Busy Bee! The actual Harlem World transitioned into stores, once even a Conway Store.

    • @sarahashun1180
      @sarahashun1180 Місяць тому +1

      Speaking over music started in Africa. I’ve got loads of traditional African music, including highlife music. Furthermore, when it comes to Western culture, it’s the Jamaicans who started speaking over music. It was called dub music, and there were so many diss tracks between the likes of I Roy, U Roy, Big Youth, etc. It makes my blood boil when Americans want to claim everything. It shows how insular they are. Jamaica, yes, the small island, is a powerhouse in music, culture, and dance. In my opinion, so much of its culture has been appropriated by African Americans.

  • @papamaehem
    @papamaehem Місяць тому +11

    FBA PRIDE 🔥 💪

  • @bigcee5702
    @bigcee5702 Місяць тому +4

    I love it!!!

  • @spotted_salamander
    @spotted_salamander Місяць тому +4

    All you have to do is ask major Ai chatbots like Perplexity Ai or Chatgpt "Which classification of people or heritage group in the U.S. has had the greatest foundational influence on American music up until present?" and you will get the obvious answer. The problem is that the U.S. gov has purposely distorted the identity of Indigenous "Black" Americans and have placed foreign people in America under the term "Black" or have been wrongly using the term "African American" for Indigenous Black Americans to destroy their Original American identity. This must and will stop. This is why Indigenous Black Americans are distinguishing themselves from people of foreign origin. They, as a people, are the creators of Everything American, in general, not only Hip-Hop. They are the Original Americans, hence the Foundation.

    • @atarahsvoice5268
      @atarahsvoice5268 28 днів тому

      @spotted_salamander this is very true, they want to keep us from having an identity. They knew that if we have no identity then there is no real blame to place on anyone for the misdeeds that we have experienced & continue to experience. They need to get over it because we do have an identity & hip hop belongs to the Black Americans that birthed it, from the beginning to & through the lineage

  • @erykahhoney588
    @erykahhoney588 Місяць тому +1

    Love this. Going to make sure I support

  • @user-dj9wf8pv8g
    @user-dj9wf8pv8g Місяць тому +1

    thank you Tariq Nasheed.

  • @problactive285
    @problactive285 Місяць тому +14

    FBA B1....Next Stop WEST COAST HOP HOP 💯

    • @Tinaisme865
      @Tinaisme865 Місяць тому +7

      Then the south, I’m here for it. 🔥❤️🇺🇸

    • @AnimalAlmighty
      @AnimalAlmighty Місяць тому +5

      Yes indeed. Cant wait.

  • @iamroyaltee539
    @iamroyaltee539 Місяць тому +3

    FBA CULTURE ALL DAY EVERY DAY!

  • @Danny-fs1hk
    @Danny-fs1hk Місяць тому +3

    👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

  • @unc1589
    @unc1589 Місяць тому

    History is one of the most vulnerable studies on earth. The slightest tweak, a missed step , an error in timeline can send it in the wrong direction quick!
    The most difficult issue is definition.
    What do you mean by hip hop ?
    The term came way later.
    Way after the foundations were in place.
    Ambiguous terms solve no cases.
    You can’t pin a thing down if the definition is subject to the opinion of the storyteller.
    “What is water?”
    Everyone knows the answer and hardly anyone is wrong because water is not debatable .
    We gotta work on a unified definition and take it from there.

  • @SyeYoung
    @SyeYoung Місяць тому +2

    Grandmaster Flowers did Graffiti, Deejaying, & MC-Ing in Brooklyn in the late 60's. He was the first to perform at a Club on Flatbush Avenue & Prospect Place called "The New World" adjacent to the original Carlton Movie Theater. Flash actually got the Grandmaster in his name from Grandmaster Flowers... There will be a need for a part two of this brilliant movie documentary.

  • @firesign4297
    @firesign4297 Місяць тому

    🔥🔥🔥🔥💣🎤

  • @xxfranknittyxx2270
    @xxfranknittyxx2270 Місяць тому

    dope

  • @antonioquis3551
    @antonioquis3551 Місяць тому

    👑✊🏾✊🏾

  • @dereklomax3941
    @dereklomax3941 Місяць тому +1

    Why is she so hell bent on the beefs and negative entity.

  • @realfloxks__0637
    @realfloxks__0637 Місяць тому +1

    She just have to throwing feud/beef hip hop battles is what its called beef is that narrative the media used in the east vs west bs

  • @thearki-vist6050
    @thearki-vist6050 Місяць тому

    Hidden colors

  • @virgilstarkwell1535
    @virgilstarkwell1535 Місяць тому

    We need a course correction. Hip hop has been given way too much social standing. Ban it for five years.

  • @PamelaPhillips-ed9sl
    @PamelaPhillips-ed9sl Місяць тому

    Grumpy Grandpa here. If you want to know about your culture. Just watch the freaking news. 😂😂😂😂

  • @unc1589
    @unc1589 Місяць тому

    Since the universe is not eternal (scientist used to believe that),
    then everything had a first!
    A before and after.
    So who did what first can be known!
    “Who created hip hop” is really a trick question.
    Because all the elements didn’t come into existence at the same time.
    Let’s try to break down the timeline (get the timeline wrong and the origins can’t be right. It’s impossible !)
    1- Bronx urban socialization. (Hip hop was born in the Bronx.) NOWHERE ELSE!
    2-Music and parties.
    (One turntable played the 2.50 minute song to the end. Then you danced to another one.)
    3- Heavily populated environments.
    (15 kids from one block would go to parties on another block 1/2 mile away . Make new friends, form new bonds. But doing it how we did it in the Bronx. Not Harlem, queens, Brooklyn of Staten Island.
    The culture went viral in the Bronx before it left the Bronx.
    So you gotta study that.
    This may sound controversial now but back in the day it was common knowledge…
    Puerto Ricans were the new guys on the block!
    They had 3 cultures to emulate.
    Black culture
    White culture
    Puerto Rican culture.
    (Aka the culture that their parents came to the Bronx with.)
    The Bronx was first white (European)…
    Then Black (southern, Caribbean)
    Then Latin (Majority Puerto Rican over other Latin groups.)
    Everybody survived and either did like their parents or broke away an became native Bronx New Yorkers.
    So in the very beginning Latinos were spectators to the black American experience.
    Still, over time, they obviously contributed to Bronx culture.
    (Some blacks even assimilated to Puerto Rican culture!)
    It’s just life. It’s how it works.
    Did Puerto Ricans help create hip-hop?
    Yes! They helped . Their first big contribution was taking breakdancing beyond the bridges of the Bronx.
    Rappin came later.
    DJing came sooner!
    The trick to solve is “what do YOU mean by hip hop?”
    Get that right and everything flows and everyone gets their just due.
    “Cmon man it’s not about race!”
    Really? In this country? Let’s not fool ourselves.
    You can’t “Not trip” on race yet get your facts wrong and say it ain’t about race.
    A Lamborghini is an Italian race car.
    If I said it was invented by the French, I would be wrong.
    Hip-hop is the black man’s Lamborghini.
    We invented it. All aspects of it.
    Then other groups contributed.

  • @river718
    @river718 Місяць тому

    She only wanted to focus on the negativity and not the overwhelmingly positives about hip hop. Also Mr. Nasheed is pushing a particularly biased agenda. I strongly suggest hip hop fans watch the documentary 'FOUNDING FATHERS: THE UNTOLD STORY OF HIP HOP' which is the true story of where and how it all actually began...

  • @pavavision4695
    @pavavision4695 Місяць тому +2

    Modern Grafitti started in Brooklyn Not Cornbread from Philly in the Coney island Train Yards 70s...Go watch the 1st Grafitti Movie Dreams Dont Die with Paul Winfield 🎶💥💯💥🎶

  • @grantashun9742
    @grantashun9742 Місяць тому

    Don't forget hip hop was Started From a man from Jamaica who came to New York I need Jamaica that started all that MC originate from Jamaica even the Dancers they got in Jamaica no way you're coming from

    • @imahotep
      @imahotep Місяць тому +6

      Stop lying. Its pathetic now.

    • @FBA_AllTHEWAY
      @FBA_AllTHEWAY Місяць тому +4

      You are misinformed.. update your knowledge it’s well documented in microphone check

    • @thetruthhurts131
      @thetruthhurts131 5 днів тому +2

      Lol, hip hop has been around since the 60s. You can find this stuff on youtube. It was African Americans

  • @misterjahi
    @misterjahi Місяць тому

    sigh....

  • @Djaytiger
    @Djaytiger Місяць тому +1

    🤡🤡🤡🤡

  • @sarahashun1180
    @sarahashun1180 Місяць тому +1

    🤔Speaking over music started in Africa. I’ve got loads of traditional African music, including highlife music. Furthermore, when it comes to Western culture, it’s the Jamaicans who started speaking over music. It was called dub music, and there were so many diss tracks between the likes of I Roy, U Roy, Big Youth, etc. It makes my blood boil when Americans want to claim everything. It shows how insular they are. Jamaica, yes, the small island, is a powerhouse in music, culture, and dance. In my opinion, so much of its culture has been appropriated by African Americans.

    • @trevormcdonald385
      @trevormcdonald385 Місяць тому +1

      Sorry not true

    • @sarahashun1180
      @sarahashun1180 Місяць тому

      It is true, they called it toasting. What do you think that word means. It simply shows your lack of knowledge and ignorance.

    • @Bigbaggzceo
      @Bigbaggzceo Місяць тому +1

      We never listened to Jamaican music nobody I know can tell you one Jamaican artist…. Only artist we know about in Jamaica is Bob Marley…. We don’t subscribe to Jamaica out here like that my guy….

    • @Bigbaggzceo
      @Bigbaggzceo Місяць тому +1

      Stop reaching….Jamaica not influential around the world like that… Shoutout to Usain Bolt and Bob Marley though…

    • @sarahashun1180
      @sarahashun1180 Місяць тому

      @@Bigbaggzceo The guy in the interview mentioned the first dis track was hip hop and speaking over music was invented in the Bronx. This is a total lie. Jamaica music isn’t only reggae. There’s ska, culture, roots, dub, dance hall, lovers rock, ragga etc. Some pioneered in the UK by Caribbean immigrants. Hip-hop originated in the Bronx area of New York in the 1970s. Its vocal origins lie in the Jamaican 'toasting' tradition. Toasting is a cross between talking and rhythmic chanting which was originally practised by Jamaican MCs and that’s a fact. They had huge sound systems and actively took part in a sound clash. It’s all out there on the internet. Even Buster Rhymes, African Bombata etc have admitted so. Furthermore, at the time, there was a huge Jamaican immigrant population in the Bronx. When I was a child, way before the inception of Hip Hop, I listen to MC’s toasting. Please educate yourself, you can learn so much.

  • @suntimes9465
    @suntimes9465 Місяць тому

    Crazy Legs knows the real history he spoke about facts thah people dont know he sp ok ke about it on Drink Champs. Plus Graffiti Art was around way before Rap so Graffiti strated Hip Hol not a Dj stop lying to these kids

    • @imahotep
      @imahotep Місяць тому +4

      Rap was going on since the 30s at least. Be quiet.

  • @Modernaire
    @Modernaire Місяць тому +1

    Next up should, hopefully be an interview of Dr. Umar Johnson.
    The actual origins of the genre and sub culture are the 1977 New York blackouts and ensuing mass looting. Many of those looting victims were small stereo businesses electronic stores were gutted in the ensuing riots. Soon there after house parties started popping up with multiple turntables, microphones, loudspeakers, new equipment, etc. Then, soon after that, Sugarhill gang steals the drum rhythm breakdown of a Nile, Rogers, Bernard Edwards Chic song for Sugarhill's 'Rapper's Delight'.
    Hey, all this is actual researchable history, which it should be researched, before it's much of it is gone. That's the real 'hidden' history that can't be revised, yet.
    Accurate history indicates that genre that was founded on theft and criminally. That’s why a few decades later detrimental street gang subculture started being glorified and accepted in the genre in the form of 'gangstarap'.
    And who is primarily targeted by the hip hop as an audience and for culture adoption with its "values" and attitudes, behavior and the mentality that comes with it? Children. Kids. Look at how the 'historian' actually celebrates vandalism, graffiti. Are the LA graffiti towers something to be proud of?
    One can observe that had by that time become a vehicle for ideologies that do more harm than good. Therefore a vehicle for political conditioning method through 'music' through culture, because it’s so pervasive.
    Think of it also as like 'J-lo' or the Kardashians, no one like them. Who buys their stuff? Makes them extremely wealthy from what appears to be no real discernible talent. Yet, they've become ubiquitous representations of something. People don't. When they hold events, concert tours, etc. tickets don't sell. Corporate entities buy their stuff. Same thing. Why is it so popular? There's your answer.
    Which leads me to this last one; you know how even old-school people say oh man what happened to music?! When they listen to a great old school jam? Well, the answer is clear. HIP-HOP.

    • @mackl8305
      @mackl8305 Місяць тому +4

      Thats not the origins. The blackouts just gave more people opportunities to participate by throwing their own parties and learn how to dj because now they had the equipment.

    • @Modernaire
      @Modernaire Місяць тому

      @@mackl8305 ... because much of the equipment was ... STOLEN. Opportunities to participate in what exactly?
      The 1977 New York Blackout was a disaster which caused mass looting.

    • @imahotep
      @imahotep Місяць тому

      Lies the culture started 69-70. You guys just hadn’t joined in yet. Stop lying on our legends like DJ Hollywood, James Brown, Clude Stubblefield, Grandmaster Flower etc.

  • @CKingdomRockTv
    @CKingdomRockTv Місяць тому +2

    This dude is a visitor in the hip hop culture, it’s always amazes me how people that aren’t or weren’t there. He sounds like a colonizer. Make your money brother.

    • @transparency29
      @transparency29 Місяць тому +1

      You're obviously a babbling tether because your pocket watching and lying. You can't spell either improve your English skills😂

    • @lflash204
      @lflash204 Місяць тому +16

      hes not a visitor,,,hes a black american,thats his culture

    • @CelebrateLifeOriginal-om6ip
      @CelebrateLifeOriginal-om6ip Місяць тому +1

      Idiotic post. Straight bozo

    • @brucesmith1754
      @brucesmith1754 Місяць тому +3

      jealous tether babble

    • @imahotep
      @imahotep Місяць тому +2

      YOU the guest in OUR culture buddy.

  • @bangswift
    @bangswift Місяць тому +5

    This is a racist documentary