But still, does this mean that Lamar’s track may not simply be “ours” anymore, but a song for everybody now, one that white listeners will accept as their own? The Sklar Brothers podcast ...
The impact of Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl ... style made him popular with Black women (his core demographic…aside from lame ninjas like DJ Akademiks) and white hip hop fans who enjoy the ...
A controversial SNL “Black Jeopardy” sketch name-checked Kendrick Lamar and featured Tom Hanks ... After Doug correctly answered a question about the white “Church Lady,” he ranted about ...
These were the words of Kendrick Lamar during his ... us all that the place of Black people in America has always been under threat. And now, with an unmistakably white-supremacist administration ...
One of the most anticipated moments ahead of the 91st Academy Awards in 2019 was expected to be Lamar performing his track “All the Stars” from Black Panther, which was nominated in the Best ...
Kendrick Lamar's Super Bowl 59 halftime show was "DEI" for "in the hood Black people," according to ... And when I say most, of course, I mean white people." Kid Rock added: "Everyone’s like ...
But Lamar portrayed Black people as the very fabric holding this nation together, even as white nationalists, including those currently occupying the White House, claw at each thread to unravel ...
From racial terror to literacy tests to modern-day voter suppression, efforts to silence Black political power have never stopped.
Kendrick Lamar's Super Bowl performance shines a light on African-American history, reparations, and the importance of acknowledging history.