Wu tang gay

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Thread: Ghostface Killah Branded 'Deadbeat' Dad By Lgbtq+ Son: 'You Made Me Hate Myself'

  • 05-25-2023, 12:48 PM#1


  • 05-25-2023, 01:24 PM#2


  • 05-25-2023, 02:55 PM#3


  • 05-26-2023, 07:38 AM#4


  • 05-26-2023, 08:27 AM#5


  • 05-26-2023, 10:48 AM#6


  • 05-26-2023, 12:24 PM#7


  • 05-26-2023, 12:46 PM#8

    I've met Ghost and was kind of a dick, unlike Trife and Rae. And other members communicate about him being a bully and an asshole. And I follow some of the same Muslim IGs. Ghost is always liking the more excessive homophobic posts. And he's had a lot of homophobic lyrics.

    I disbelief Ghost will change and he probably thinks homosexuality is a choice or some ignorant shit. And he also probably has more than one kid he isn't involved with. It is what it is. Just because a rapper is nice lyrically doesn't mean they are a good or enlightened person.

    "Why are you looking hard with a hood on and Timberland boots, staring at me for one hour..? When you could walk up and shake my hand? Why?"

    Kool Keith, "Intro" Black Elvis/Lost in Space


  • 05-26-2023, 01:22 PM#9


  • 05-26-2023, 01:28 PM#1

    Wu-Tang’s Ghostface & U-God Communicate Obama and the “Gay Rap Scene”

    Vice sat down with members of the Wu-Tang Clan after a concert in London and asked a few left-field questions pertaining to social and political issues that hip-hop constantly grapples with.

    While Method Man chimes in with a couple of responses, the bulk of the questions are addressed to Ghostface Killah and U-God, who have both released albums in 2013. Instead of being asked about 'Twelve Reasons to Die,' or even about his upcoming 'Supreme Clientele 2' album which is in the works, Ghostface is asked about his stance on President Obama and about the "gay rap scene."

    Ghostface's response regarding Obama is candid: "Obama’s just a puppet—he’s a puppet in a chair [...] People just voted him in because he's black. They don’t even know why they were voting for him—whether he was right or wrong." Speaking on specific policies, Ghostface says, "The same-sex attracted marriage law—you think it’s fucked up? When he’s gone, they’ll blame it on him: the shadowy president. He’s gonna be known as

    Short Profile

    Name: Robert Fitzgerald Diggs
    DOB: 5 July 1969
    Place of birth: Brownsville, New York, United States
    Occupation: Rapper, record producer, star, film director

    RZA, as the de-facto frontman of Wu Tang Clan, when did you realize you had what it took to be a leader?

    The commander part, I actually tried to nervous away from! If people follow a leader, when the leader does not move, then they don’t move. So we talked about it in the Wu Tang Clan to have me as the abbot, the abbot essence “the best knowing.” I am the one who knows the best. If you can’t discover an answer yourself, we take it to the abbot. He gives you the purest, unfiltered answer. Instead of a leader, I would always declare to the crew, “We all travel to practice direction because at any given moment you never know who’s going to own to be the tip of the spearhead. But the spearhead won’t proceed through unless everybody is pushing.”

    What accomplish you mean?

    For example, when Method Man’s song was on our second unattached, it was such a strong tune, it was everything that hip hop needed. And in order for that song to be a single, everybody else in the crew had to sit back and wait for their time. And I said, “We all stand behind

    The Wu-Tang Clan is 20 years old. And unlike other musicians who’ve made it to the double-decade mark, they’ve never had to rely on endlessly repackaging greatest hits albums or playing matinee shows in theaters to keep the dream alive. That might be because they’re the greatest hip-hop group of all period, as well as the fact that there’s not much point in releasing compilations when you’ve got eight members pumping out new albums every year. They’re still packing venues in the same way they did when 36 Chambers was released.

    Earlier this summer they completed the final leg of their 20th anniversary tour in London, and I arranged to meet with them in the lobby of a Shepherd’s Bush hotel. When I showed up, all eight members were milling around, and I sat down with U-God and Ghostface Killah to talk about politics, poverty, the past, and pussy. 


    U-God

    VICE: Let’s start with the hard-hitting questions: What do you think of Obama, globally and domestically?
    Ghostface Killah: George Bush wouldn’t execute the things he’s doing. Obama’s just a puppet—he’s a puppet in a chair. The gay marriage law—you think it’s fucked up? When he’

    A Hip-Hop Group With An Openly Homosexual Member Has The #1 Album

    On September 21, Brockhampton released Iridescence, the fourth studio album from the group and the first not included in the Saturation series they kicked off in 2017. In fewer than two years since debuting, the group—consisting of rappers/vocalists Kevin Abstract, Bearface, Matt Champion, Joba Don McLennon and Merlyn Wood, plus producers and their creative team—has exploded into the forefront of Rap, particularly among younger demographics. Founded in Texas by 22-year-old Abstract, Brockhampton has received a groundswell of support; the team has sold-out shows on their current tour, both in Australia and Modern Zealand plus the United States. Recognizable for boundary-pushing song, high-energy stage performances, DIY aesthetic and a unique social-media presence, Brockhampton is easily Hip-Hop’s most exciting group of its size since the Wu-Tang Clan (Brockhampton is even larger, with more than ten members). However, Brockhampton is making history their New York predecessors never did.

    Brockhampton has the number-one album in the country, with Iridescencedebuting in the top notice on the Billboard 200 charts. Accordi