Tag Archives: State of the Culture

Joe Budden Had The Biggest Come Up In A Year He Was Supposed To Struggle

It was one year ago this week that Joe Budden exited the show Everyday Struggle. On December 18, 2017, DJ Whoo Kid unceremoniously took Budden’s seat on the Complex weekday talk series alongside co-hosts Nadeska Alexis and DJ Akademiks. The guest known best as a G-Unit DJ and radio personality told viewers that Joe was tending to a newborn baby, which was certainly true. However, the rapper never returned to his chair to the program he had given several “fire in the stadium” moments throughout that year. Highlights included exchanges with Migos, Lil Yachty, and and some controversial words about previous collaborator and onetime employer, Eminem. The narratives and storylines pulled Everyday Struggle from YouTube and put them on gossip shows, aggregated it across the web, and suddenly awakened the mainstream to a new show on the block.

As re-negotiations reportedly reached a stalemate, the retired MC-turned-media man marked his exit by unpacking the laundry on his Joe Budden Podcast. Joe said he wanted a long-term contract, a significant raise, or Complex equity for the show he had piloted in its debut season. This was after receiving what he called “pennies and biscuits” for compensation. The parties failed to reach an agreement. Joe walked, but not quietly. Beyond press releases or tweets, Joe laid out his reasoning and put boardroom business in public. His fans listened in as Budden walked. Although, where exactly he was going was unclear.

Since 2016, Joe had become a media comet. In May of that year, Budden’s then-titled I’ll Name This Podcast Later pulled no punches in critiquing Drake’s Views album. Joe called the rapper/singer “uninspired” and accused him of “hopping on waves.” A month later, one of the biggest stars in music responded to Budden in the form of “4PM In Calabasas.” Joe’s words had bubbled up from Soundcloud and irritated Drake, who is especially gifted at using social media as a strategic device, enough to cock-back.

Drake’s diss prompted a True Detective Season 1-style shootout of bars in the days since between both MCs. Nearly two months later, some apparent Drake fans were trespassing in Joe’s New Jersey driveway. Confronted, the rapper chased them, before showing up on one’s doorstep in a made-for-Internet news cycle. He appeared on HOT 97’s Ebro In The Morning to promote his Rage & The Machine album, only to end up addressing his loyalty and character in one of the first (and most authentic) interview walkouts of an era where such things trend. Wherever Joe went, his brand of gruff commentary, thoughtful analysis, and colorful entertainment industry experience popped. It’s what made his podcast one of the most successful of its kind, a step apart from N.O.R.E. & DJ EFN’s Drink Champs, and more exciting than the typical Hip-Hop commentary fan fodder. One of the first Rap artists to make daily videos, via Joe Budden TV, long before Vh1 deals, Joe seemed to be the most interesting person in the culture. If it wasn’t what he was saying, it’s what he was doing. In a much different way than Kanye West, Joe Budden could make a 24-7 media cycle manifest its destiny. He was something like Pump Up The Volume-meets-Truman Show.

No longer with Complex, Joe focused on his weekly podcast, alongside his team of cohosts, Rory and Mal, engineer Parks, and others in the room. From the beginning of the year, Joe was a target. As Complex replaced Budden with former syndicated radio host-turned Troi “Star” Torain, Eminem, Drake, and Vic Mensa were among those who seemingly sent shots in the retired rapper’s direction. Even Joe’s 18-year-old son, Tre, joined the fold, making a song about his father’s shortcomings (which Joe shared online). If there was a time to get back at Joe Budden, it was when he was retired and relegated to just a podcast, right?

Budden seemingly basked in all of it, ready to react and create new content. This was an artist who took a mid-2000s dispute and co-founded Slaughterhouse. He and The Game took verbal shots at each other in the era of the mixtape. He and Ransom dissed one another relentlessly in the era of the blog. He tensely stepped to Consequence in the era of Rap reality TV. In the era of “content is king,” Joe used his personal platform to react, respond, and analyze a story-line that always seemed to involve him in most weeks. On top of topical relevance, the show is entertaining, funny, and a companion to many in commute, at the gym, or simply seeking engaging conversation. With a community of content aggregators around him, Joe funneled the narratives through his show and gained more and more fans. They came to hear Joe’s response to Eminem, his latest thoughts on Drake’s new video, his response to D12’s Bizarre, but they seemed to stay for much more.

For much of his career, Joe Budden always seemed to be the underdog. It is part of his brand. Since his days spitting introspective verses on Cutmaster C and DJ Clue Desert Storm mixtapes, he plays the role on anything that he has been part of. It’s why Joe was often painted as the coffee-swilling, cigarette-smoking Rap curmudgeon from Jersey City. After early 2000s success, the rapper spent too much time on Def Jam waiting for a sophomore release date. During this period, he dabbled as a media personality, working at HOT 97. He went independent when major label deals were a status symbol. His lyrics showed vulnerability and admitted depression and addiction at a time of brute machismo. Vh1 viewers will recall Budden stuck on bended-knee trying to win back his scorned love Internet-lightyears before Offset’s recent antics. On his podcast, Budden will share with listeners that the bags for his concerts in recent years were far from big, and he will accept pot-shots from co-hosts and peers about fashion choices, ambitious Rap purist concepts, and time spent on the C-list of rappers. In 2018, the narrative that Joe Budden is an underdog changed, even if he refused to change with it.

In May of this year, Diddy and Revolt seemingly made Joe an offer he couldn’t refuse. State Of The Culture premiered in September. Joe became an Executive Producer too. This time, Joe’s panel included another artist in the midst of a re-branding comeback, Remy Ma, fellow Complex alum Brandon “Jinx” Jenkins, and fellow former HOT 97 personality Scottie Beam. The move showed that Budden had value, and that trusting his instincts to renegotiate affirmed the process. State Of The Culture is a different kind of show, aimed at some different audience demographics than Everyday Struggle, which has carried on with third co-host, Wayno. It brought profile to Revolt, and a place for Budden and company to have honest—often bold discussion on TV and web.

September proved to be an intersection for Joe. As S.O.T.C debuted, Joe also launched a podcast partnership with Spotify. His hobby discussion with some of his “nearest and dearest” had landed Joe a position with the streaming giant, Creative Content Director. It adjusted the podcast format to twice per week, and as he and his cohorts regularly tease one another, presumably padded their pockets. Meanwhile, the deal kept the show free, just a few days after subscribers could get it. The tone, format, and rawness of the show had not shifted, even if the ensemble regularly jokes about pending battles over content, music drops, and upsetting the set-up. As if on cue with this move to Spotify, the content stars lined up.

Eminem released Kamikaze at the end of August, with no warning. If January’s “Chloraseptic (Remix)” caused a difference of opinion between D12’s Bizarre and Joe over if Eminem was rapping to him, “Fall” left no doubt. A day later, Joe went off the rails on his podcast. Incensed, he shouted that he’s been a better rapper than Marshall Mathers since 2008, and vented his frustrations as a former Shady Records artist. Joe chided for a proper battle if Eminem wanted to take it there, reminding his former employer that he was “backed now” and accusing Mathers of not knowing Joe’s history. Coupled with MGK also being the butt of Em’s disses, the media cycle awakened fans to consume the content and pick sides. Some Slaughterhouse members reacted. The pot was stirred as everything was coming to a boil.

As if to compete with Joe’s advantages in having a media platform, Em produced video interviews that gave him a platform to vent his side of the problem with Joe and Slaughterhouse’s hiatus, along with MGK, Tyler, The Creator, and others. Just like his 2016 dealings with Drake, Joe Budden proved the power in his words and audience. He could ruffle superstar feathers with words, not lyrics. Once thought to be a convenient escape from a music career, Joe’s media endeavors showed that they had scaled. At a time when Spotify was eager to see Joe Budden’s reach, it made him a three-ring media circus master with all ears (and eyes) on him. One week he was ready to return to rapping if Eminem was up for the challenge. The next week Joe was being challenged to make a half-a-mil bet with CyHi The Prynce (who also reacted to critical podcast commentary in verse). Expanding to guests, Joe’s podcast hosted the most revealing interview with Pusha-T in 2018, especially as it pertained to Drake beef. Joe and another superstar he’d criticized, Chance The Rapper, had a spirited podcast debate about what independent music looks like in 2018. While Joe joked about it for much of the year, it started to seem plausible that Drizzy Drake could be a guest on the show after all.

In the midst of this late ’18 media blitz, Budden returned to Love & Hip Hop New York with partner, Cyn Santana. This time, Joe and his baby’s mother were in the starring roles, not supporting. They join Remy there. While Joe’s podcast colleagues regularly roast him about the show and plot-points, it broadcasts his character and a dynamic of his life apart from music and Rap culture to a completely different audience than the other vehicles. Additionally, those vehicles get cross-promoted on an established, hit reality series. Joe also has an E.P. credit thanks to the return after half a decade away. In an era when positions of power are sought-out by creatives, Joe Budden has one of the best resumes in the game. It is a far cry from late December of 2017.

Joe Budden is still the underdog, but only in his attitude. As an artist, his music career was compromised by waiting for others, seemingly punished for speaking out against the powers that be, and black-balled for challenging the establishment. Meanwhile, his media career is booming for doing the very same thing. At a time when “trusting the process” can sound good on paper, Joe Budden’s place in the game shows what that really looks like. This month Spotify confirmed that The Joe Budden Podcast is their second-most-streamed exclusive in the category (and the podcast is only exclusive for 2 days).  Those rankings come three months after the deal. Remy Ma is someone who has taken careful note. “[Joe Budden] has made a lot of power moves this year. I really feel like it needs to be acknowledged. I remember when [State Of The Culture was announced], people were like, ‘Another show with Joe? Again? He has the podcast.’ But you have managed to finesse every last one of them. I love when I drive through Times Square and see your light-skinned light-bulb-shaped head up on the billboards. It just warms my heart. I’m proud of you and I’m very happy for you,” she said on a recent episode of S.O.T.C. (21:30).

Reacting to Rem’s compliment, Joe says he never thought about it in that way. He also described what makes him happy about his ’18. “The fact that I take pride [in] is that I can employ some people; I can provide some opportunities to some other people who may not have gotten them without me being in this spot…as a rapper I never put stock in it, maybe ’cause I was never able to do it. Or you just don’t think about those things. But you feel really good helping people.”

Even as an underdog, Joe Budden’s 2018 teaches so many to know their value—whatever it is, in whatever you do. If you have patience, persistence, and are willing to take the harder road at times, the right things can happen in the way you envision. He also shows that it is never too late to apply the things that make you who you are to a different place, and conquer.

It was one year ago this week that Joe Budden exited the show Everyday Struggle. On December 18, 2017, DJ Whoo Kid unceremoniously took Budden’s seat on the Complex weekday talk series alongside co-hosts Nadeska Alexis and DJ Akademiks. The guest known best as a G-Unit DJ and radio personality told viewers that Joe was tending to a newborn baby, which was certainly true. However, the rapper never returned to his chair to the program he had given several “fire in the stadium” moments throughout that year. Highlights included exchanges with Migos, Lil Yachty, and and some controversial words about previous collaborator and onetime employer, Eminem. The narratives and storylines pulled Everyday Struggle from YouTube and put them on gossip shows, aggregated it across the web, and suddenly awakened the mainstream to a new show on the block.

As re-negotiations reportedly reached a stalemate, the retired MC-turned-media man marked his exit by unpacking the laundry on his Joe Budden Podcast. Joe said he wanted a long-term contract, a significant raise, or Complex equity for the show he had piloted in its debut season. This was after receiving what he called “pennies and biscuits” for compensation. The parties failed to reach an agreement. Joe walked, but not quietly. Beyond press releases or tweets, Joe laid out his reasoning and put boardroom business in public. His fans listened in as Budden walked. Although, where exactly he was going was unclear.

Since 2016, Joe had become a media comet. In May of that year, Budden’s then-titled I’ll Name This Podcast Later pulled no punches in critiquing Drake’s Views album. Joe called the rapper/singer “uninspired” and accused him of “hopping on waves.” A month later, one of the biggest stars in music responded to Budden in the form of “4PM In Calabasas.” Joe’s words had bubbled up from Soundcloud and irritated Drake, who is especially gifted at using social media as a strategic device, enough to cock-back.

Drake’s diss prompted a True Detective Season 1-style shootout of bars in the days since between both MCs. Nearly two months later, some apparent Drake fans were trespassing in Joe’s New Jersey driveway. Confronted, the rapper chased them, before showing up on one’s doorstep in a made-for-Internet news cycle. He appeared on HOT 97’s Ebro In The Morning to promote his Rage & The Machine album, only to end up addressing his loyalty and character in one of the first (and most authentic) interview walkouts of an era where such things trend. Wherever Joe went, his brand of gruff commentary, thoughtful analysis, and colorful entertainment industry experience popped. It’s what made his podcast one of the most successful of its kind, a step apart from N.O.R.E. & DJ EFN’s Drink Champs, and more exciting than the typical Hip-Hop commentary fan fodder. One of the first Rap artists to make daily videos, via Joe Budden TV, long before Vh1 deals, Joe seemed to be the most interesting person in the culture. If it wasn’t what he was saying, it’s what he was doing. In a much different way than Kanye West, Joe Budden could make a 24-7 media cycle manifest its destiny. He was something like Pump Up The Volume-meets-Truman Show.

No longer with Complex, Joe focused on his weekly podcast, alongside his team of cohosts, Rory and Mal, engineer Parks, and others in the room. From the beginning of the year, Joe was a target. As Complex replaced Budden with former syndicated radio host-turned Troi “Star” Torain, Eminem, Drake, and Vic Mensa were among those who seemingly sent shots in the retired rapper’s direction. Even Joe’s 18-year-old son, Tre, joined the fold, making a song about his father’s shortcomings (which Joe shared online). If there was a time to get back at Joe Budden, it was when he was retired and relegated to just a podcast, right?

Budden seemingly basked in all of it, ready to react and create new content. This was an artist who took a mid-2000s dispute and co-founded Slaughterhouse. He and The Game took verbal shots at each other in the era of the mixtape. He and Ransom dissed one another relentlessly in the era of the blog. He tensely stepped to Consequence in the era of Rap reality TV. In the era of “content is king,” Joe used his personal platform to react, respond, and analyze a story-line that always seemed to involve him in most weeks. On top of topical relevance, the show is entertaining, funny, and a companion to many in commute, at the gym, or simply seeking engaging conversation. With a community of content aggregators around him, Joe funneled the narratives through his show and gained more and more fans. They came to hear Joe’s response to Eminem, his latest thoughts on Drake’s new video, his response to D12’s Bizarre, but they seemed to stay for much more.

For much of his career, Joe Budden always seemed to be the underdog. It is part of his brand. Since his days spitting introspective verses on Cutmaster C and DJ Clue Desert Storm mixtapes, he plays the role on anything that he has been part of. It’s why Joe was often painted as the coffee-swilling, cigarette-smoking Rap curmudgeon from Jersey City. After early 2000s success, the rapper spent too much time on Def Jam waiting for a sophomore release date. During this period, he dabbled as a media personality, working at HOT 97. He went independent when major label deals were a status symbol. His lyrics showed vulnerability and admitted depression and addiction at a time of brute machismo. Vh1 viewers will recall Budden stuck on bended-knee trying to win back his scorned love Internet-lightyears before Offset’s recent antics. On his podcast, Budden will share with listeners that the bags for his concerts in recent years were far from big, and he will accept pot-shots from co-hosts and peers about fashion choices, ambitious Rap purist concepts, and time spent on the C-list of rappers. In 2018, the narrative that Joe Budden is an underdog changed, even if he refused to change with it.

In May of this year, Diddy and Revolt seemingly made Joe an offer he couldn’t refuse. State Of The Culture premiered in September. Joe became an Executive Producer too. This time, Joe’s panel included another artist in the midst of a re-branding comeback, Remy Ma, fellow Complex alum Brandon “Jinx” Jenkins, and fellow former HOT 97 personality Scottie Beam. The move showed that Budden had value, and that trusting his instincts to renegotiate affirmed the process. State Of The Culture is a different kind of show, aimed at some different audience demographics than Everyday Struggle, which has carried on with third co-host, Wayno. It brought profile to Revolt, and a place for Budden and company to have honest—often bold discussion on TV and web.

September proved to be an intersection for Joe. As S.O.T.C debuted, Joe also launched a podcast partnership with Spotify. His hobby discussion with some of his “nearest and dearest” had landed Joe a position with the streaming giant, Creative Content Director. It adjusted the podcast format to twice per week, and as he and his cohorts regularly tease one another, presumably padded their pockets. Meanwhile, the deal kept the show free, just a few days after subscribers could get it. The tone, format, and rawness of the show had not shifted, even if the ensemble regularly jokes about pending battles over content, music drops, and upsetting the set-up. As if on cue with this move to Spotify, the content stars lined up.

Eminem released Kamikaze at the end of August, with no warning. If January’s “Chloraseptic (Remix)” caused a difference of opinion between D12’s Bizarre and Joe over if Eminem was rapping to him, “Fall” left no doubt. A day later, Joe went off the rails on his podcast. Incensed, he shouted that he’s been a better rapper than Marshall Mathers since 2008, and vented his frustrations as a former Shady Records artist. Joe chided for a proper battle if Eminem wanted to take it there, reminding his former employer that he was “backed now” and accusing Mathers of not knowing Joe’s history. Coupled with MGK also being the butt of Em’s disses, the media cycle awakened fans to consume the content and pick sides. Some Slaughterhouse members reacted. The pot was stirred as everything was coming to a boil.

As if to compete with Joe’s advantages in having a media platform, Em produced video interviews that gave him a platform to vent his side of the problem with Joe and Slaughterhouse’s hiatus, along with MGK, Tyler, The Creator, and others. Just like his 2016 dealings with Drake, Joe Budden proved the power in his words and audience. He could ruffle superstar feathers with words, not lyrics. Once thought to be a convenient escape from a music career, Joe’s media endeavors showed that they had scaled. At a time when Spotify was eager to see Joe Budden’s reach, it made him a three-ring media circus master with all ears (and eyes) on him. One week he was ready to return to rapping if Eminem was up for the challenge. The next week Joe was being challenged to make a half-a-mil bet with CyHi The Prynce (who also reacted to critical podcast commentary in verse). Expanding to guests, Joe’s podcast hosted the most revealing interview with Pusha-T in 2018, especially as it pertained to Drake beef. Joe and another superstar he’d criticized, Chance The Rapper, had a spirited podcast debate about what independent music looks like in 2018. While Joe joked about it for much of the year, it started to seem plausible that Drizzy Drake could be a guest on the show after all.

In the midst of this late ’18 media blitz, Budden returned to Love & Hip Hop New York with partner, Cyn Santana. This time, Joe and his baby’s mother were in the starring roles, not supporting. They join Remy there. While Joe’s podcast colleagues regularly roast him about the show and plot-points, it broadcasts his character and a dynamic of his life apart from music and Rap culture to a completely different audience than the other vehicles. Additionally, those vehicles get cross-promoted on an established, hit reality series. Joe also has an E.P. credit thanks to the return after half a decade away. In an era when positions of power are sought-out by creatives, Joe Budden has one of the best resumes in the game. It is a far cry from late December of 2017.

Joe Budden is still the underdog, but only in his attitude. As an artist, his music career was compromised by waiting for others, seemingly punished for speaking out against the powers that be, and black-balled for challenging the establishment. Meanwhile, his media career is booming for doing the very same thing. At a time when “trusting the process” can sound good on paper, Joe Budden’s place in the game shows what that really looks like. This month Spotify confirmed that The Joe Budden Podcast is their second-most-streamed exclusive in the category (and the podcast is only exclusive for 2 days).  Those rankings come three months after the deal. Remy Ma is someone who has taken careful note. “[Joe Budden] has made a lot of power moves this year. I really feel like it needs to be acknowledged. I remember when [State Of The Culture was announced], people were like, ‘Another show with Joe? Again? He has the podcast.’ But you have managed to finesse every last one of them. I love when I drive through Times Square and see your light-skinned light-bulb-shaped head up on the billboards. It just warms my heart. I’m proud of you and I’m very happy for you,” she said on a recent episode of S.O.T.C. (21:30).

Reacting to Rem’s compliment, Joe says he never thought about it in that way. He also described what makes him happy about his ’18. “The fact that I take pride [in] is that I can employ some people; I can provide some opportunities to some other people who may not have gotten them without me being in this spot…as a rapper I never put stock in it, maybe ’cause I was never able to do it. Or you just don’t think about those things. But you feel really good helping people.”

Even as an underdog, Joe Budden’s 2018 teaches so many to know their value—whatever it is, in whatever you do. If you have patience, persistence, and are willing to take the harder road at times, the right things can happen in the way you envision. He also shows that it is never too late to apply the things that make you who you are to a different place, and conquer.

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

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Watch: Joe Budden Addresses 6ix9ine’s Drama, Waka Flocka’s Retirement & More

State of the Culture

Former Slaughterhouse group member Joe Budden is squeezing in a bunch of topics on the latest “State of the Culture” broadcast. In the newest episode, the New Jersey native and his panel talk about everything from 6ix9ine‘s publicized issues to Waka Flocka Flame gearing up for retirement.

On Monday, REVOLT TV released its packed 57-minute episode.

The post Watch: Joe Budden Addresses 6ix9ine’s Drama, Waka Flocka’s Retirement & More appeared first on SOHH.com.

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‘State of the Culture’ Renewed for 10 More Episodes by REVOLT

State of the Culture has become a hit within the Hip-Hop community by touching on the various topics that keep headlines rolling. Joe Budden and his co-hosts of Remy Ma, Scottie Beam, and Brandon “Jinx” Jenkins have received an extension fo their show. Billboard reports REVOLT has ordered 10 additional episodes for the new show.

“Joe and I worked tirelessly for months to create a one-of-a-kind show that the culture would love, and the response to State of the Culture has been overwhelmingly positive,” Diddy shared in a statement. “The culture has a point of view and I want to deliver it. I’m all about giving the people what they want, so more raw and uncensored content through the lens of hip-hop is coming your way.”

The next run of State of the Culture episodes will include a 2018 recap before the next set of shows are available in 2019.

“We had a lot of fun during the first 10 episodes and the response has been nothing short of amazing,” Budden told Billboard. “I look forward to improving on what’s already been built. Thank you Puff, REVOLT and most importantly the fans. See you soon.”

The post ‘State of the Culture’ Renewed for 10 More Episodes by REVOLT appeared first on The Source.

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Remy Ma Calls Cardi B and Nicki Minaj Beef ‘Corny’

Remy Ma has been there and done that.

The Bronx femcee has been a fan favorite on Revolt’s State of The Culture, where she freely expresses her opinion on the culture’s biggest topics. Of course, she was asked about her stance on the state of the female rap game. When asked about the Cardi and Nicki’s longstanding controversy, she explained that she completely tired of it. “They aired all the dirty laundry, and were like there’s no beef,” said Remy as she rolled her eyes.

“I don’t want to hear this. The part that made it the corniest, after everything for a whole fifteen hours, they’re both like okay, let’s be friends now!” The “All the Way Up” rapper seemed more annoyed with the non-musical affair associated with the beef. There has been a lot of back and forth, but not one diss record. “I’m different,” says Rem.

In 2017 Remy Ma released “Shether,” a diss record towards Nicki Minaj. Minaj failed to respond with a direct response, declaring Remy Ma the fan favorite and decisive winner. Nowadays she is preparing to birth a child and is building a great reputation as a State of The Culture co-host. Catch the full episode of State of The Culture below.

The post Remy Ma Calls Cardi B and Nicki Minaj Beef ‘Corny’ appeared first on The Source.

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Remy Ma Seemingly Defends R.Kelly, Twitter Attacks

Remy Ma Defends R Kelly

Source: Gary Gershoff / Getty

The latest episode of Revolt’s Joe Budden hosted talk show State of The Culture has been the subject of heated debate. Earlier in the week, Budden came under fire for what was seen as an apparent misogynistic take to co-host Scottie Beams feminist stance.

Now it’s Remy’s turn to feel Twitter’s wrath and deservingly so.

The “Conceited” rapper is getting dragged on social media for defending the king of R&Pee R.Kelly. Remy already caught flack for defending Pill Cosby, and now she chose another ridiculous hill to die on. While discussing the upcoming Lifetime docu-series Surviving R.Kelly, she tried her best to defend Kelly by ridiculously pointing out “rapists don’t eat a**,” there are a lot of young women who sleep with older men, and the women in living with him are not complaining.

Twitter immediately wondered if Remy was dumb for even attempting to go this route when it’s obvious Kelly has a serious problem. Whether this is her angle on the show, it’s just not a good look and is quite hypocritical of the for to take such a stance when she called out Nicki Minaj for defending her pedophile brother.

You check the gallery below to see all of the heated responses to Remy Ma below.

Photo: Gary Gershoff / Getty

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Joe Budden Gets Big Mad At Scottie Beam’s Feminist Stance, Sparks Gender War On Twiiter

Joe Budden vs. Scottie Beam

Source: Revolt / State of The Culture

Joe Budden had the internet buzzing this weekend thanks to a clip he shared from an upcoming taping of his Revolt show State of The Culture.

Without much description, with the caption “just gonna leave this here and go,” Joe Budden dropped the bomb in the form of a clip which featured a heated debate between himself and his fellow co-host Scottie Beam. Joe gets BIG MAD at what he describes as “fake women empowerment” and Scottie not being mad Brittany Renner for sharing her sexual escapades in her recently released tell-all book.

Scottie holds her own despite Joe not letting her get much input in and makes the valid point that male rappers talk about women whom they have had sex with on songs all of the time.

As you can imagine the video made its rounds quickly starting a gender war where many came to the defense of Scottie calling out Joe for what they took as misogynistic take meanwhile men like Freddie Gibbs took this as their opportunity to die on a crappy hill.

If just a clip could spark the masses, imagine what the debate in its entirety will cause to happen. Is this definitely not the “state of the culture?” Or did Scottie and Joe’s heated discussion cast a new light on the culture’s problematic ways?  You can see the fallout from Joe’s rage directed toward Scottie Beam in the gallery below.

Photo: Revolt / State of The Culture

 

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