I'm very grateful for the platform that I've had in my life to speak out about the things I care about.
Not to sound egotistic, but I've gotten kind of good at it. It's something that came naturally to me, but my rapping is rooted in my writing.
I don't know [whether] if I didn't get paid, or my career didn't keep going where it goes, if I would keep doing music.
If we actually supported these gay artists and pumped money behind them the same way they pump money behind these divas, a conversation of homophobia in hip hop wouldn't be. Because I would have the money and the revenue coming in. It's not about homophobia or who's going to push back. It's all about who's supporting you and where there's money from.
In this day and age of social media, where everything is so centred around how many Instagram and Twitter followers you have, what's keeping me afloat is the fact that my live performance is something that people can enjoy.
Coming into this, making music, I knew that was something that was going to be held over my head. Okay we get it, you're openly gay, but do you know how to rap? Can you really rap and deliver? And I feel like I have that pressure put on me that other artists don't. A lot of people don't have to focus on being so lyrical and actually putting on shows. Before anyone was gonna tell me I was bad, I was gonna prove that I was good.
I like to consider myself a student of hip hop. There's a certain level of certification and wit and craftsmanship that comes with rapping. As rap progresses - it's a young genre - it's becoming way more mainstream, crossing over to different lanes. I feel like it's losing its essence in a way, because it's getting commercialised. I want to keep it fresh and keep it progressive, but I also want to respect the foundation of what rap is about.
I personally feel I still have so much to learn as a writer; each novel is better than the one before, just because I'm getting better at it.
Louis Armstrong is jazz. He represents what the music is all about.
American families cannot compete with billionaires. Our involvement in government should not be dependent on our bank account balances
People call me all the time and say, “Man, your players aren't signed yet. ” Well, it doesn't really matter what time dinner is when you're the steak.