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An Embattled Snoop Dogg Bites Back a Little But Mostly Keeps It Cool
An Embattled Snoop Dogg Bites Back a Little But Mostly Keeps It Cool

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

An Embattled Snoop Dogg Bites Back a Little But Mostly Keeps It Cool

For 30 years, it seems that there has never been a pitch too wild for Snoop Dogg. He's done a reggae album, a funk album, two gospel albums, and even released an album on the blockchain. The Zelig of popular music, no collaborator is off limits: Willie Nelson, Stevie Wonder, Katy Perry, Quincy Jones, Daddy Yankee, the Bee Gees, Limp Bizkit, BTS, Patti LaBelle, Prince Royce, Banda MS, Tiësto, Popcaan, Jelly Roll, Charlie Sheen. He's sold his own app, his own breakfast cereal, and recently opened a weed store in L.A., the city where he will likely serve as NBC's ambassador to the 2028 Summer Olympic Games. If any of this ever seemed incongruous with being gangsta rap royalty, it has never once affected the Teflon Dogg, America's lovable uncle. He gives a truckloads of money to charity, is generally regarded as one of the nicest people in the business, and has been consistently releasing solid if underheralded solo albums since the Clinton administration. Who's going to care if the guy sells an NFT or two? More from Rolling Stone Snoop Dogg's New Album 'Iz It A Crime?' Is Here Suge Knight Strikes $1.5 Million Settlement to Avert Retrial in Wrongful Death Case Suge Knight's Retrial Roller Coaster: How Did We Get Here? That all changed in January when Snoop did a short DJ set at David Sacks' Crypto Ball, a Washington, D.C., schmoozefest held to celebrate Donald Trump's re-inauguration. Fans on social media rebelled, calling him a sellout, but Snoop stood his ground, telling The Breakfast Club, 'I'm not a politician. I don't represent the Republican Party. I don't represent the Democratic Party. I represent the motherfucking Gangsta Party, period point blank.' Snoop promised that his 21st solo album, Iz It a Crime?, would break his radio silence, fighting back against haters and doubters and reaffirming his legacy. Luckily, a defensive Snoop is still classically and effortlessly cool: 'Me and Dre at the So-Fi the only way I sell out,' he raps on 'Unsung Heroes' 'Unsung Heroes' is also the album highlight with its droning organ that sounds like it's stripped from an Ethiopian jazz record providing a hot slab of asphalt for Snoop to spit venomous invective. Tracks like 'Iz It a Crime?' with its breathy Sade sample and the breezy 'Sophisticated Crippin'' are less antagonistic as middle fingers go, listing his achievements and brushing off crumbs. The only other song that really seems to be the State of the Snoop address is 'ShutYoBitchAssUp,' which most assume is aimed at former Death Row Records CEO Suge Knight, who has been disputing Snoop's ownership of the label: 'I can see why you mad/I bought everything you own/Now you in PC snitching on the phone.' However, beyond those tracks, Iz It a Crime? isn't really the pugilistic battle record it's being made out to be. Instead it's another dependable Rhythm & Gangsta offering in a career full of them. There's his cadre of producers he's been using for the last 20-30 years (Battlecat, Soopafly, Denaun, Nottz, Rick Rock); there's the always liquid flow ('I'm talking lolos, a couple of cholos, la vida loco/Facts in a chokehold/Hey Siri, we need some more hoes'); and there's the occasional misstep (in this case, the narcotic would-be-club-banger 'Spot'). The duet with still-rising raunch-rapper Sexxy Redd ('Me and OG Snoop') is naturally electric, and Wiz Khalifa shows up like an old friend to get a little wistful ('Just the Way It Iz'). It really is just Snoop being the ever-reliable Snoop — and only a true keyboard warrior could be mad at that. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

Mariah Carey, Snoop Dogg, Jamie Foxx, Kirk Franklin Named BET Ultimate Icon Award Recipients
Mariah Carey, Snoop Dogg, Jamie Foxx, Kirk Franklin Named BET Ultimate Icon Award Recipients

Yahoo

time03-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Mariah Carey, Snoop Dogg, Jamie Foxx, Kirk Franklin Named BET Ultimate Icon Award Recipients

Mariah Carey, Kirk Franklin, and Snoop Dogg will take the stage at the 2025 BET Awards for a special performance as recipients of the Ultimate Icon Award. The honor will also be presented to Jamie Foxx, who will accept the award without performing. The show will air live from the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Monday, June 9, at 8 p.m. EST. 'Thank you @BET this is an honor,' Franklin wrote on social platform X. The award is meant to celebrate groundbreaking contributions across entertainment, music, advocacy, and community impact, according to BET. More from Rolling Stone An Embattled Snoop Dogg Bites Back a Little But Mostly Keeps It Cool Lil Wayne, Playboi Carti, Teyana Taylor Among Performers at 2025 BET Awards Snoop Dogg's New Album 'Iz It A Crime?' Is Here Last month, Carey was notably shut out of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame despite her tangible and lasting cross-genre influence on music. Foxx recently released the stand-up special What Had Happened Was, which detailed the harrowing medical scare he experienced in April 2023 while hospitalized following a debilitating stroke. 'I was fighting for my life, but I'm here right in front of you,' he said tearfully during his set. 'If I dance all night, don't mind me. I'm happy to be alive.' This year's slate of honorees marks the first time the Ultimate Icon Award has been presented since 2019, when it was awarded to Tyler Perry. Past recipients also include Janet Jackson and Deborah L. Lee. In addition to Carey, Franklin, and Snoop Dogg, the 2025 BET Awards will also feature performances from Lil Wayne, Teyana Taylor, GloRilla, Playboi Carti, and Leon Thomas. The night will also pay tribute to 106 & Park in honor of the show's 25th anniversary, which will bring together former hosts AJ Calloway, Free Marie Wright, Julissa Bermudez, Keshia Chanté, Rocsi Diaz, and Terrence J. Performers for the tribute include Bow Wow, Amerie, B2K, Jim Jones, Mya, and T.I. 'We're setting the tone for a night that celebrates 25 years of impact, creativity, and Black culture,' Connie Orlando, EVP of Specials, Music Programming & Music Strategy at BET, said in a statement. 'With electrifying performances from some of the biggest names in music and an iconic comedic host, 'BET Awards' 2025 will be a can't-miss celebration of everything the culture represents.' Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

Snoop Dogg Breaks Silence On Trump Inaugural Ball Backlash
Snoop Dogg Breaks Silence On Trump Inaugural Ball Backlash

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Snoop Dogg Breaks Silence On Trump Inaugural Ball Backlash

Snoop Dogg has hit back at critics who accused him of selling out by performing at the Crypto Ball during President Donald Trump's second inauguration celebrations in January. The rapper and longtime Trump critic ― whose tone on the president has softened in recent years ― addressed the backlash on 'The Breakfast Club' radio show last week while promoting his new album, 'Iz It A Crime?' Asked if the controversy over his short DJ set had bothered him, Snoop replied: 'No. I call it 30 for 30. I DJ'd at the Crypto Ball for what, 30 minutes? Made a whole bunch of money, made a lot of relationships to help out the inner city and the community and teach financial literacy and crypto in a space that it don't exist.' 'That's 30 minutes' he continued. '30 years, Snoop Dogg been doing great things for the community, building, showing up, standing up for the people, making it happen, being all I can be. But which one is it? 30 for 30. 30 minutes or 30 years?' Snoop, who didn't endorse any candidate for the 2024 election, said the gig had come about through other friendships but that 'even if I would have done it' for Trump 'and hung out with him and took a picture with him, can't none of you motherfuckers tell me what I can and can't do.' 'But I'm not a politician,' he pointed out. 'I don't represent the Republican Party. I don't represent the Democratic Party. I represent the motherfucking Gangster Party. Period. Point blank.' Snoop also revealed why he kept relatively silent in public as the anger grew over the gig. 'G shit, we don't explain shit. That's why I didn't explain, that's why I didn't go into detail when motherfuckers was trying to cancel me and say he a sellout,' he said, later adding: 'The things that I do in real life should matter to you more ... not what I do when I'm DJing or making music or doing this and that.' Watch from the 21-minute mark here: Lara Trump Likens Donald Trump To 'Demonized' Dog Breed Biden's Powerful 2017 Message Of 'Hope' To Meghan McCain Resurfaces After Cancer News 'Big Donald Is Watching You': MSNBC Host Mocks Gigantic Banner Of Trump 'Pretty Humiliating': John Oliver Cringes At 4 Words Trump Won't Stop Saying

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