Benny the Butcher not happy with how nerds have taken control of the culture

IllmaticDelta

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:stopitslime:


That's not what Benny was talking about though. That's you talking about something different Benny was talking about when the streets had a hold on the game. Tragedy's music when he was the Intelligent Hoodlum reflected the conscious era of that time not the street element that would take hold by the mid 90'. Tragedys music didn't even reflect what Benny is talking about till CNN came out with War Report.

dude, don't play dumb:comeon: there's a reason why the likes of Rakim in the 1980s were spitting that knowledge while at the same time, dressing the part of a urban crack dealer: Those were two intersecting & interwoven threads of reality within the SAME local "street" population.
 

Plankton

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dude, don't play dumb:comeon: there's a reason why the likes of Rakim in the 1980s were spitting that knowledge while at the same time, dressing the part of a urban crack dealer: Those were two intersecting & interwoven threads of reality within the SAME local "street" population.

Meanwhile Beastie Boys who looked like punk rockers were commercially bigger then Rakim and Run DMC. Fresh Prince and Kid n Play were commercially bigger then Rakim. Heavy D went platinum 3 times while Rakim only want platinum once because Heavy D was commercially bigger than Rakim. Fat Boys went platinum before Paid In Full and had a box office successful movie. And though the Fat Boys were from the hood there image was not that of street dudes. They had ( As Bernie Mac would refer it as) that 'fun rap' image. So you bringing up Rakim is irrelevant when commercially bigger artists did not have a street image look confirming the street image was not the dominant image prior to 93.

You are the one playing dumb knowing damn well that The Message song in 82 portrayed poverty and being in the streets as a goal to move away from not embrace. Hip Hop didn't embrace poverty living and being in the streets till gangster/drug dealer rap took off on a whole new level commercially in 93. Prior to that the street image was not dominant.
 

WIA20XX

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This is a very hard pill to swallow for most rappers :dead:

Public Enemy opening up for the Beastie Boys - and seeing Montauk bros knowing all their songs.

Black Thought and The Roots touring the country and dealing with Becky's..

At least DOOM leaned into it.

But Griselda.. WWE stuff is a nerdy as Kung Fu and comic book stuff that the Wu was pushing. Griselda's marketing and merchandising is straight outta nerd-dom.

And if the streets was so lucrative, why even rap? Them and the Clipse and every other "I'm a trapper not a rapper"

Hey guyz, I've written some poetry and would like to recite for everyone!!!
 

NormanConnors

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:comeon:

Stop it.

Benny literally said that there were cons to when the streets had a hold om the culture. He's obviously talking about when Gangster Rap really took off in 93 all thru 50 Cents reign. The conscious era of 88 - 92 did not have a street element at the forefront. You did not think of "the streets" when Kid N Play Fresh Prince and MC Hammer were running things.

All of them would put hands on you if needed though, cats weren't soft, at least not back then
 

Peter Parker

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1. He needs to shave that shyt
2. Those are his fans lol
3. "Nerds have their hands in everything, gangstas wont even touch the police" - Lupe to Royce who was saying the same thing Benny is saying now
 
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