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I trained Sheng Long and Shonuff
nikkas gone be in here flexing, but they know it's true, the only business we support is the barber and beauty shop![]()
I've heard a few nikkas tell me Dominicans make the best barbers

nikkas gone be in here flexing, but they know it's true, the only business we support is the barber and beauty shop![]()
You see the same thing with Tidal vs Apple/Spotify threads. nikkas was screaming fukk Tidal, I'm not trying to make Jay-Z richer, I'm not supporting him just cause he's black, what has he done for the black community, etc.
Meanwhile Apple got sued for discrimination against black people, ain't ever did shyt for black people, and has 200+ billion in cash and nikkas was happy as hell to give them 9.99/mo to stream music![]()
Typical hotep, pseudo--militant fakkit shyt. "Bu bu bu muh capitalism and muh entrepreneurial integrity."
Ain't NOBODY tipping $16 for a hotdog.
And@ selling hotdogs for more than a $1.50 , have fun being in business for no more than six months, if that. Anybody with sense would hit up 7-11 or now burger king for cheaper hot dogs. Sorry mom & pop, Globalization
Then you have dumb shyt like this nikka
This dumb Jamaican fukk actually thinks Jay-Z owns a stock in Tidal and he's not just a spokeperson.
andat paying to listen to music, have fun being cucked brehs. Black White or Beige, if you pay money for a streaming service for music, you're just duuuuuumb.
I agree. A guy I know who runs a business goes through it.the response to the black dude is on point and I've seen it plenty of times on here especially in tariq threads. All that's missing is calling the black dude a hustler and saying if he cared about black people eating he'd give the hot dogs away for free
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Most races haggle with their own, true. But to imply that blacks come at Habibi and Kim with that 'hook a brotha up!' at the corner store or the fast food spot is in my experience, false. The hot dog in the example I took to be a metaphor for buying products, be they hot food or blunt wraps, in general.snip
some people dont want to scrounge the internet looking for links, and actually like supporting the artist they like.
X.tidal subscriber
i'll agree with thatMost races haggle with their own, true. But to imply that blacks come at Habibi and Kim with that 'hook a brotha up!' at the corner store or the fast food spot is in my experience, false. The hot dog in the example I took to be a metaphor for buying products, be they hot food or blunt wraps, in general.
There's black people in this very thread reporting first and second hand accounts of black folks trying to go cheap on each other when we know not to do that with other races.
Bruh, artist don't make shyt from those streaming services, are you being for real? You falling for that okie-doke?
None of those services pay the artist shyt. It's the labels getting paid.
Musicians, it’s time to stop hating streaming services, and here’s why. Troy Carter, one of the world’s most powerful artist managers (John Legend, Meghan Trainor, and previously Lady Gaga) just busted some myths with four reasons streaming is the future of music, not the end.
The Truth About Streaming: It Pays Labels A Lot, They Don’t Pay Musicians
Musicians, it’s time to stop hating streaming services, and here’s why. Troy Carter, one of the world’s most powerful artist managers (John Legend, Meghan Trainor, and previously Lady Gaga) just busted some myths with four reasons streaming is the future of music, not the end.
Basically artists who are mad about streaming should demand better deals from their labels, remember the alternative is getting their work stolen, be patient, and tour. CD sales didn’t get huge overnight either. Once more people realize how amazing it is to be able listen to any song they want, the money will come.
- Streaming Will Earn Artists A Lot With Enough Users – Royalty payouts from streaming might seem small now, but that’s because it’s very new. Eventually as more listeners sign-up, the payouts could match the amount artists made at the height of the $16 CD era.
- The Alternative Is Piracy – If music isn’t easily accessible for free with ads or through a subscription, people will just steal it and then artists earn nothing.
- Labels Are Hoarding The Royalties – Services like Spotify and Apple Music pay more than 70% of what they earn to the labels, and most of the rest covers expenses of running the apps. The problem is that the labels push artists into exploitative record deals where they only get a tiny share of the royalties, and the labels keep the rest.
- The Big Money’s Always Been In Touring And Merchandise – Labels have always screwed artists out of recorded music dollars. Artists should think of streaming as a way to get more famous, and sell more concert tickets and t-shirts.
The Truth About Streaming: It Pays Labels A Lot, They Don’t Pay Musicians
i notice they aint mention tidaleither way, pennies would add up if more people supported the artist they enjoy. instead, we download everything then bytch about it online.
i never said it was black owned. tidal gives artist a higher cut though. plus, like i said, everybody aint about lurking the net for links.Breh, Tidal is not a black owned company.
TIDAL is an artist-owned coalition. The founding TIDAL artists are Alicia Keys, Arcade Fire (Win Butler and Regine Chassagne), Beyonce, Calvin Harris, Chris Martin, Daft Punk, Deadmau5, Jack White, Jason Aldean, J. Cole, Kanye West, Madonna, Nicki Minaj, Rihanna, Shawn “JAY Z” Carter and Usher.
Who Owns TIDAL?