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Maybe on twitter, but those people aren't actually from New York lol. Real New Yorkers don't need to tell you they're better their bank account says that for them. Lmao.
I grew up with a guy in a small town and he moved to NYC after college. He totally thought he was hot shit when he came back home. I don't think he realized he was a living cliche about how NYC think of themselves compared to the rest of the country.
It is. Until you’ve lived there with won’t get it. I grew up there spent 26 years of my life working there. Since then I’ve been in GA, and WA and nothing compares.
@@trip4923 New York City is the best city in the world if you can afford it, that’s true. The amount of amazing restaurants on one NYC block is better than the entire state of Idaho. The amount of comedy shows, great concerts (and I mean truly great concerts, not like the live music at the local dive bar) and like ten major sports teams. And it’s all a short subway ride away. If you can afford to do all that stuff, nothing compares.
Born and raised in nyc, I would have traded it for suburban living in a heartbeat. Funny thing is the suburban transplants come here and build a new personality solely based on living in NYC
Some rap definitely has a negative effect on young people AND the rapper themselves. That's why they are always getting shot and murdered. If you chant a violent song/message out into the ether through soundwaves blaring out of speakers and into people's brains around the world, the universe will react to it. You're conjuring up low frequency energy. That said I understand that alot of rappers are just reporting on their surroundings and what they experience around them growing up in the hood. But not all rappers are from the hood and many go way overboard with the gangsta rap stuff. Karma is real folks. I promise you.
That’s the conundrum ain’t it. Nas’ Illmatic is the best hip hop record of all time. It’s a perfect representation of this debate: is it glorifying the violence? Honestly, yea at times it is. But it’s also realistically depicting life in Queens at that time amongst poor gang bangin’ black folk. Should they not talk about their experience out of fear of influencing the youth? What a pickle
@@RC-hv1yx Yeah, they should definitely shut up about murdering people and get their bullshit together. Or they can keep conjuring themselves up RICO cases and LWOP charges.
Compared to other music, as limited as my knowledge is, rap feels much more self-centered, like MAGNITUDES more than any other music. From "I'm the bes mayne" to showing off wealth, getting all them women, and shooting the people, of course. This is just my uninformed opinion, but I'd challenge people to think about it yourself. I was trying to think of music lyrics on the larger scale and it's an interesting rabbit hole to get into.
Hilarious thumbnail. Only one flaw to be nitpicky: the Statue of Liberty Gillis face should be left-right horizontal flipped so the shadows match up with those on the statue
Generally refers to gentlemen from Mexico or possibly Honduras or Guatemala or other areas of Central America. Sometimes used more broadly by the Dawgs to refer to Latin Americans as a whole. But ALWAYS used with the utmost respect.
I don’t think it’s specifically about hispanics, it’s about whatever group of immigrants that make up a fat chunk of the blue collar workforce in the U.S at the time, which happens to be hispanics rn. Pretty sure I heard them refer to a polish guy as a lad once but I could be completely wrong
@15:50 i love hearing about Stormy because at the time of the scandal we lived in the same neighborhood like 3 houses down, her dumbass moved to a small town in Texas and thought we wouldnt know her
He's not wrong. Look up "the looking glass self." People emulate the culture and behavior of those they look like. The famous example is mobsters. Mobsters didn't dress that way until they saw movies where the actors wore certain clothes.