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*First Time Hearing* Public Enemy- 911 Is A Joke|REACTION!!  

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The beat is so dope
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15 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 10   
@carlbaker7242
@carlbaker7242 8 месяцев назад
Here it is , breaking bearers, smashing social media with such a funky beat. Pioneering P.E.!!! TURN THE VOLUME UP!!!
@robertepps2834
@robertepps2834 8 месяцев назад
This was a very popular song back when it came out in 1991. Great reaction!
@rhinno1969
@rhinno1969 8 месяцев назад
Public Enemy w/ Anthrax Bring the Noise 🤘
@troyrichardson2019
@troyrichardson2019 8 месяцев назад
Thanks for playing my request I requested a while ago I figured you enjoyed it and it's entertaining and funny. React to DeBarge Love Me In Special Way.
@IceManLikeGervin
@IceManLikeGervin 8 месяцев назад
A very dope reaction ☎ 🚑⌛! I see 👁👁 that you have reacted to Public Enemy before: Night Of The Living Baseheads, Brothers Gonna Work It Out, Fight The Power, Black Steel In The Hour Of Chaos, Can't Truss It and Shut 'Em Down. 911 Is A Joke was released as the third single from Public Enemy's 1990 album: Fear Of A Black Planet. It was written by Flavor Flav, Keith Shocklee and Eric "Vietnam" Sadler. It was produced by the Bomb Squad. It sampled: Devil With The Bust by Sound Experience (1974), Thriller by Michael Jackson (1982), Body Jackin' by Incorporated Thang Band (1987), Flash Light by Parliament (1977), I Feel Like Dancing by Bad Bascomb (1972), Singers by Eddie Murphy (1983), Misunderstood by Mico Wave (1987), Hit By A Car by Eddie Murphy (1982), Think About It by Lyn Collins (1972), Somethin' Funky by Big Daddy Kane (1987) and Unity Part 6 (World III) by Afrika Bambaataa and James Brown (1984). The song reached #1 on the Rap chart, #15 on the R&B chart and #26 on the Hot Dance Singles chart. It also reached number one on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart. This was due largely to its sales, which were unusually high for the level of mainstream airplay it received; Billboard reported that only one of the stations on its Top 40 panel was playing the song. The music video was directed by Rupert Wainwright and featured a cameo by a then unknown actor Samuel L Jackson, Jam Master Jay and DJ Hurricane. It did well on MTV, which hewed toward more comic filled music videos when it came to rap over the violent music videos. The song bashes the 911 emergency response system in urban areas, where according to Flav, you're better off calling the morgue truck, because you'll be dead by the time they get there. The song is comical in tone (this is Flavor Flav, after all), but the concern is real: 911 services can be quite lacking in poor neighborhoods where they are underfunded. A common misconception about this song is that it's critical of the police response time in urban black neighborhoods. Actually, it's about the paramedics response time - an important distinction. Unlike most Public Enemy songs where Chuck D handles most of the vocals, Flav takes the lead in this song. Flavor Flav sang this intentionally out of key. Chuck D explained: "When you put him in key, it gets syrupy - too close to music. See, when you add noise on top of noise, you gonna tune everybody out. But with Flavor, he becomes the noise, because he is annoying!". In October 1994, the song was featured prominently in the television series: New York Undercover, during the opening scene of the episode" "Tasha". In 1995, the Rock band: Duran Duran, covered the song: "911 Is A Joke", on their album: Thank You. In 2010, the NBC television show: Community ("Epidemiology"), series character Jeff (actor Joel McHale) is unable to contact a 911 operator during an emergency-prompting him to declare that: "Flavor Flav was right". Lyrics 📝: Hit me Going, going, gone Now I dialed 911 a long time ago Don't you see how late they're reacting They only come and they come when they wanna So get the morgue truck and embalm the goner They don't care cause they stay paid anyway They treat you like an ace they can't be betrayed A no-use number with no-use people If your life is on the line then you're dead today Latecomers with the late coming stretcher That's a body bag in disguise y'all, I'll betcha I call 'em body snatchers cause they come to fetch ya With an autopsy ambulance just to dissect ya They are the kings cause they swing amputation Lose your arms, your legs to them it's compilation I can prove it to you watch the rotation It all adds up to a fucked up situation So get up get, get get down 911 is a joke in yo town Get up, get, get, get down Late 911 wears the late crown So get up get, get get down 911 is a joke in yo town Get up, get, get, get down Late 911 wears the late crown 911 is a joke 911 is a joke Everyday they don't never come correct You can ask my man right here with the broken neck He's a witness to the job never being done He would've been in full effect But late 911 was a joke cause they only joking They the token to your life when it's croaking They need to be in a pawn shop on a 911 is a joke we don't want 'em I call a cab cause a cab will come quicker The doctors huddle up and call a flea flicker Reason why I say that cause they flick you off like fleas They be laughing at you while you're crawling on your knees And to the strength so go the length Thinkin' you are first when you really are tenth You better wake up and smell the real flavor Cause 911 is a fake life saver So get up get, get get down 911 is a joke in yo town Get up, get, get, get down Late 911 wears the late crown So get up get, get get down 911 is a joke in yo town Get up, get, get, get down Late 911 wears the late crown 911 is a joke 911 is a joke So get up get, get get down 911 is a joke in yo town Get up, get, get, get down Late 911 wears the late crown So get up get, get get down 911 is a joke in yo town Get up, get, get, get down Late 911 wears the late crown Public Enemy Info 📰: Public Enemy was formed in 1985 by Carlton Ridenhour (Chuck D) and William Drayton (Flavor Flav), who met at New York, Long Island's Adelphi University in the mid-1980s. Developing his talents as an MC with Flav while delivering furniture for his father's business, Chuck D And Spectrum City, as the group was called, released the record "Check Out The Radio", a social commentary album. Rick Rubin, President of Def Jam Records, eventually sign Chuck D, whose song "Public Enemy Number One" he had heard and loved. Chuck D recruited Spectrum City, which included Hank Shocklee, his brother Keith Shocklee, and Eric "Vietnam" Sadler, collectively known as the Bomb Squad, to be his production team and added another Spectrum City partner, Professor Griff, to become the group's Minister of Information. With the addition of Flavor Flav and a local DJ named Terminator X, the group Public Enemy was born. Public Enemy rose to prominence for their political messages including subjects such as racism and media biases. Their debut album: Yo! Bum Rush The Show, was released in 1987 to critical acclaim, and their second album: It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back (1988), was the first hip hop album to top The Village Voice's Pazz & Jop critics' poll. Their next three albums: Fear Of A Black Planet (1990), Apocalypse 91... The Enemy Strikes Black (1991) and Muse Sick-n-Hour Mess Age (1994), were also well received. Public Enemy's 1991 album: Apocalypse 91... The Enemy Strikes Black, won the 1992 Soul Train Award for Best Rap Album. The group has since released twelve more studio albums, including the soundtrack to the 1998 Spike Lee directed film: He Got Game, a collaboration album with Bay Area rapper Paris: Rebirth Of A Nation (2006) and their most recent album: What You Gonna Do When The Grid Goes Down? (2020). Public Enemy has gone through many lineup changes over the years, with Chuck D and Flavor Flav remaining the only constant members. Co-founder Professor Griff left in 1989 but rejoined in 1998, before parting ways again some years later. DJ Lord also joined Public Enemy in 1998 as the replacement of the group's original DJ Terminator X. Public Enemy's first four albums during the late 1980s and early 1990s were all certified either gold or platinum and were, according to music critic Robert Hilburn in 1998, "the most acclaimed body of work ever by a hip hop act". Critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine called them "the most influential and radical band of their time". In 2005, Public Enemy received a MOBO Award for "Outstanding Contribution To Black Music". Chuck D narrated and appeared on-camera for the 2005 PBS documentary "Harlem Globetrotters: The Team That Changed The World". He apeared on-camera for the PBS program Independent Lens segment: "Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats And Rhymes", in 2006. Public Enemy was inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame in 2013. Also, they were honored with the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award at the 62nd Grammy Awards in 2020. The Source ranked Chuck D at No. 12 on its list of the Top 50 Hip-Hop Lyricists of All Time. In 2023, Chuck D as a solo artist and with Public Enemy still puts out new music and continues to tour with a Public Enemy group line-up consisting of: Chuck D, Flavor Flav, DJ Lord, Sammy Sam and a live band. Public Enemy Legacy And Influence 🥊: Public Enemy made contributions to the Hip-Hop world with sonic experimentation as well as political and cultural consciousness, which infused itself into skilled and poetic rhymes. Critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote that "PE brought in elements of free Jazz, hard Funk, even musique concrète, via their music producing team The Bomb Squad, creating a dense, ferocious sound unlike anything that came before". Public Enemy held a strong, pro-black, political stance. Before PE, politically motivated Hip-Hop was defined by a few tracks by Ice-T, Grandmaster Flash And The Furious Five, Kurtis Blow and Boogie Down Productions. Other politically motivated opinions were shared by prototypical artists Gil Scott-Heron and The Last Poets. PE was a revolutionary Hip-Hop act whose entire image rested on a specified political stance. With the successes of Public Enemy, many Hip-Hop artists began to celebrate Afrocentric themes, such as Kool Moe Dee, Gang Starr, X Clan, Eric B & Rakim, Queen Latifah, The Jungle Brothers, A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Brand Nubian and many more. ****CONTINUE BELOW****
@IceManLikeGervin
@IceManLikeGervin 8 месяцев назад
Public Enemy was one of the first Hip-Hop groups to do well internationally. PE changed the Internet's music distribution capability by being one of the first groups to release MP3-only albums, a format virtually unknown at the time. Public Enemy helped to create and define "rap metal" by collaborating with Living Colour in 1988 on the song: "Funny Vibe", with Sonic Youth on the 1990 song: "Kool Thing", and with New York thrash metal outfit Anthrax in 1991 on the song: "Bring The Noize", a remix of their 1987 single: "Bring The Noise". The 1991 Anthrax collaboration was a mix of semi-militant black power lyrics, grinding guitars, and sporadic humor. The two bands, cemented by a mutual respect and the personal friendship between Chuck D and Anthrax's Scott Ian, introduced a hitherto alien genre to Rock fans, and the two seemingly disparate groups toured together. Flavor Flav's pronouncement on stage that "They said this tour would never happen" (as heard on Anthrax's Live: The Island Years CD) has become a legendary comment in both Rock and Hip-Hop circles. Metal guitarist Vernon Reid (of Living Colour) contributed to Public Enemy's recordings, and PE sampled Slayer's song: "Angel Of Death" half-time riff on their song: "She Watch Channel Zero?!" Members of The Bomb Squad produced or remixed works for other acts, like Bell Biv DeVoe, Ice Cube, Vanessa Williams, Sinéad O'Connor, Blue Magic, Peter Gabriel, LL Cool J, Paula Abdul, Jasmine Guy, Jody Watley, Eric B & Rakim, Third Bass, Big Daddy Kane, EPMD, Chaka Khan and more. According to Chuck D, "We had tight dealings with MCA Records and were talking about taking three guys that were left over from New Edition and coming up with an album for them. The three happened to be Ricky Bell, Michael Bivins, and Ronnie DeVoe, later to become Bell Biv DeVoe. Ralph Tresvant had been slated to do a solo album for years, Bobby Brown had left New Edition and experienced some solo success beginning in 1988, and Johnny Gill had just been recruited to come in, but he had come off a solo career and could always go back to that. At MCA records, Hiram Hicks, who was their manager, and Louil Silas, who was running the show, were like, "Yo, these kids were left out in the cold. Can y'all come up with something for them?" It was a task that Hank, Keith, Eric, and I took on to try to put some kind of hip-hop-flavored R&B shit down for them. Subsequently, what happened in the four weeks of December (1989) was that The Bomb Squad knocked out a large piece of the production and arrangement on Bell Biv DeVoe's three-million selling album: Poison. In January (1990), they knocked out the album: Fear Of A Black Planet, in four weeks, and PE knocked out Ice Cube's debut solo album: AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted, in four to five weeks in February". They have also produced local New York talent including: Son Of Bazerk, Young Black Teenagers, Leaders Of The New School, Kings Of Pressure and True Mathematics, and gave music producer Kip Collins his start in the business. The revolutionary influence of the group is seen throughout Hip-Hop and is recognized in society and politics. The band "rewrote the rules of Hip-Hop", changing the image, sound and message forever. Pro-black lyrics brought political and social themes to hardcore Hip-Hop, with stirring ideas of racial equality, and retribution against police brutality, aimed at disenfranchised blacks, but appealing to all the poor and underrepresented. Before Public Enemy, Hip-Hop music was seen predominately as "throwaway entertainment". Public Enemy brought social relevance and strength to Hip-Hop. They also brought black activist Louis Farrakhan to greater popularity, and they gave impetus to the Million Man March in 1995. The influence of the band goes also beyond Hip-Hop in a unique way, indeed the group was cited as an influence by artists as diverse as Autechre (selected in the All Tomorrow's Parties in 2003), Nirvana (It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back being cited by Kurt Cobain among his favorite albums), Moby (also selected It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back as one of his favorite albums), Nine Inch Nails (mentioned the band in Pretty Hate Machine credits), Björk (included Rebel Without a Pause in her The Breezeblock Mix in July 2007), Tricky (did a cover of Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos and appears in Do You Wanna Go Our Way ??? video), The Prodigy (included Public Enemy No. 1 in The Dirtchamber Sessions Volume One), Ben Harper, Underground Resistance (cited by both Mad Mike and Jeff Mills), Orlando Voorn, M.I.A., Amon Tobin, Mathew Jonson, Aphex Twin (Welcome To The Terrordome being the first track played after the introduction at the Coachella Festival in April 2008), Rage Against the Machine (sampling the track in their song "Renegades Of Funk"), Porcupine Tree's Fear Of A Blank Planet and My Bloody Valentine who was influenced by The Bomb Squad's production for their sound. Public Enemy Classic Group Members 🎤 : Chuck D- MC, Bomb Production Squad Member Flavor Flav- Hype Man, MC, multi-instrumentalist Terminator X- DJ, Producer Professor Griff- Minister Of Information Sister Souljah- Minister Of Information S1Ws (Security Of First World) 🥷🏾🥷🏾🥷🏾🥷🏾🥷🏾🥷🏾🥷🏾 🥷🏾: Big Jake Pop Diesel Big Casper Brother Mike James Bomb Brother Roger Brother James The Interrogator The Bomb Squad (Public Enemy Music Production Crew) 💣: Hank Shocklee (James Boxley III) Keith Shocklee (Keith Boxley) Eric "Vietnam" Sadler Gary G-Wiz (Gary Rinaldo) Public Enemy Documentary 🎥: Public Enemy: It Takes A Nation - The First London Invasion Tour 1987 (2005) Public Enemy: Where There's Smoke (2007) Public Enemy: Prophets Of Rage (2011) Fight The Power: How Hip-Hop Changed The World (2023) Believe The Hype The Flavor Flav Story (2023) *In Production Flavor Flav Television And Film Credits 🎬: Mo' Betta Blues (1990) New Jack City (1991) Why Colors (1992) Who's The Man (1993) CB4 (1993) Private Parts (1994) Death Of A Dynasty (2003) Paper Chasers (2003) The Bernie Mac Show (2004) The Surreal Life (2004) My Wife & Kids (2004) Confessions Of A Pit Fighter (2005) The Farm (2005) Strange Love (2005) Cain And Able (2006) Flavor Of Love (2006-2008) Larry The Cable Guy's Christmas Spectacular (2007) Under One Roof (2008-2009) Nite Tales: The Series (2009) We Run Sh*t (2012) Artifact (2012) Stupid Hype (2013) Snoop & Son: A Dad's Dream (2015) Body High (2015) The Labyrinth (2017) A.P. Bio (2018) Dear White People (2019) Hold On (2019) Public Enemy Albums 📀: Yo! Bum Rush The Show (1987) It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back (1988) Fear of a Black Planet (1990) Apocalypse 91... The Enemy Strikes Black (1991) Muse Sick-n-Hour Mess Age (1994) He Got Game (1998) There's A Poison Goin' On (1999) Revolverlution (2002) New Whirl Odor (2005) Rebirth Of A Nation w/ Paris (2006) How You Sell Soul To A Soulless People Who Sold Their Soul? (2007) Most Of My Heroes Still Don't Appear On No Stamp (2012) The Evil Empire Of Everything (2012) Man Plans God Laughs (2015) Nothing Is Quick In The Desert (2017) Loud Is Not Enough (2020) What You Gonna Do When The Grid Goes Down? (2020) Chuck D Albums 📀: Autobiography Of Mistachuck (1996) Objects In The Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear w/ Concentration Camp (2000) Don't Rhyme For The Sake of Riddlin' (2012) The Black In Man (2014) If I Can't Change the People Around Me I Change The People Around Me (2016) The Party's Over EP (2016) Prophets Of Rage w/ Prophets Of Rage (2017) Celebration Of Ignorance (2018) Flavor Flav Albums 📀: Flavor Flav (2005) DJ Terminator X Albums 📀: Terminator X & The Valley Of The Jeep Beets (1991) Super Bad (1994) Sister Souljah Albums 📀: 360 Degrees Of Power (1992) Professor Griff Albums 📀: Pawns In The Game (1990) Kao's II Wiz-7-Dome (1991) Disturb N Tha Peace (1992) Blood Of The Profit (1998) And The Word Became Flesh (2001) ****CONTINUE BELOW****
@IceManLikeGervin
@IceManLikeGervin 8 месяцев назад
Some more good Public Enemy songs 🎶: I, Rebel Without A Pause, No, By The Time I Get To Arizona, My Uzi Weighs A Ton, Louder Than A Bomb, Welcome To The Terrordome, Nighttrain, So Whatcha Gonna Do Now?, I, Give It Up, B Side Wins Again, More News At 11, A Letter To The New York Post, Can A Woman Make A Man Lose His Mind?, You're Gonna Get Yours, Lost At Birth, I Don't Wanna Be Called Yo N!ga, 54321... Boom, How To Kill A Radio Consultant, Move!, 1 Million Bottlebags, War At 33⅓, Leave This Off Your Fu✩kin Charts, What A Fool Believes, Timebomb, Public Enemy No 1, M.P.E., Fear Of A Black Planet, Revolutionary Generation, Can't Do Nuthin' For Ya Man, Power To The People, Who Stole The Soul?, Get Your Shit Together, Bring That Beat Back, Caught Can We Get A Witness?, Terminator X Speaks With His Hands, Rebel Without A Pause, Terminator X To The Edge Of Panic, Cold Lampin' With Flavor, Pollywanacraka, Raise The Roof, Megablast, What Good Is A Bomb, Now A'Daze, What Kind Of Power We Got, Anti Ni##a Machine, She Watch Channel Zero?!, Bring The Noise, Bring The Noize (w/ Anthrax), Don't Believe The Hype, World Tour Sessions, Makes You Blind, Do You Wanna Go Our Way???, What Side You On?, Crayola, Sophisticated B!tch, Rightstarter (Message To A Black Man), Here I Go, LSD, 41:19, Crash, Prophets Of Rage, Get The F--- Outta Dodge, RLTK, Son Of A Bush, Gotta Give The Peeps What They Need, What A Fool Believes, Harder Than You Think, Hard Truth Soldiers, Raw Sh*t, As Long As The People Got Something To Say, Y'all Don't Know, Pump The Music Pump The Sound, Hard Rhymin', Sex Drugs & Violence, Plastic Nation, Me To We, First The Sheep Next The Shepherd?, Invisible Man, Revolution, Give Peace A Damn, Check What You're Listening To, Death Of A Carjacka, Get Up Stand Up, Hoover Music, Bedlam 13:13, Hit Da Road Jack, Last Mass Of The Caballeros, What What, Long And Whining Road, Unstoppable, Air Hoodlum, Tie Goes To The Runner, Superman's Black In The Building, Preachin' To The Quiet, Escapism, Between Hard And A Rock Place, Amerikan Gangster, Swindlers Lust, Rise, Black Is Back, Harder Than You Think, Politics Of The Sneaker Pimps, Hannibal Lecture, Kevorkian, Can You Hear Me Now, Head Wide Shut, No Sympathy From The Devil, Lost In Space Music, Rest In Beats, Eve Of Destruction, Riotstarted!, White Heaven Black Hell, Get It In, Frankenstar, 1 (PEace), Spit Your Mind (Pt I, II, II, IV), Truth Decay, Beat Them All, Don't Give Up The Fight, ...Everything, Race Against Time, Say It Like It Really Is, FassFood, Catch The Thrown, Most Of My Heroes Still..., I Shall Not Be Moved, Hell No (We Ain't Alright), 2 (ResPEct), Mine Again, Can't Hold Us Back, sPEak!, Whole Lotta Love Goin On In The Middle Of Hell, Rebirth Of A Nation, See Something Say Something, Man Plans God Laughs, Livin' In A Zoo, Broke Diva, Watch The Door, Field N*gga Boogie, The Enemy Battle Hymn Of The Public, ICEbreaker, Fame, Beat Them All, Smash The Crowd, Grid, Check What You're Listening To, Get Off My Back, I Stand, Go At It, Accused, Gotta Do What I Gotta Do, Yesterday Man, How You Sell Soul (Time Is God Refrain), Public Enemy Number Won, Run Til It's Dark, Rest In Beats (Part 1 & 2), Those Who Know Know Who, State Of The Union (STFU), Corplantationopoly, When The Grid Go Down..., SOC MED Digital Heroin, Terrorwrist, Sells Like Teens Hear It, Coinsequences, Party For Your Right To Fight, How You Sell Soul To A Soulless People Who Sold Their Soul???, Toxic, If You Can’t Join Em Beat Em, R.I.P. Blackat, Praise The Loud, Earthizen, Put It Up, New Whirl Odor, MKLVFKWR, Beyond Trayvon, Fight The Power Remix 2020, WTF?, He Got Game, So Be It, Funny Vibe (w/ Living Colour), Move!, Hazy Shade Of Criminal and Burn Hollywood Burn. Fun Fact 🕵🏾‍♂: Flavor Flav is a classically trained pianist. When the group was on tour, he would often play the pianos in the hotel lobbies - folks who would stop and listen would be shocked to see him playing classical music on the piano.
@cartgamerytcarter5729
@cartgamerytcarter5729 8 месяцев назад
Thumbs up on the video ma😉
@davidwaite7861
@davidwaite7861 8 месяцев назад
🌷🥀⚘️🌹
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