Conscious Rap vs. Club Bangers – Hold Up with Dulcé Sloan & Josh Johnson | The Daily Show

3453
Published on June 23, 2022

In the premiere episode of their new podcast, Hold Up, Daily Show correspondent Dulcé Sloan and Daily Show writer Josh Johnson debate the merits of two pillars of hip hop: conscious rap and club bangers. Kendrick Lamar or Drake? J. Cole or Future? Movement music or ratchet beats? Dulcé and Josh leave no stone unturned. #DailyShow #Comedy

Follow Hold Up from The Daily Show with Trevor Noah:
Watch full podcast episodes: dailyshow.com/holdup
Listen wherever you get your podcasts: https://podcasts.iheartradio.com/HoldUpTDS

Su

Tag

12 comments

  • SoulBroRyu 2 years ago

    Conscious raps with dope production, I’m all over it.

    Reply
  • Alvin Strong 2 years ago

    I Think Rap started as a way to spread the news of what was happening in the streets of the Bronx. During a time when police corruption was at it’s peak. White people were burning buildings in the Bronx to make the property values drop so they could buy it up or, for insurance scams.

    Reply
  • unconscious music 2 years ago

    I vote for bangers

    Reply
  • Park King 2 years ago

    The trophy had me dying

    Reply
  • Paschetime🥰 2 years ago

    I love both

    Reply
  • newshoe4x8 2 years ago

    i need all of this

    Reply
  • Hope Tarrant 2 years ago

    TPP.
    Sometimes it’s the beat to lift your energy, get u moving. Other times you need words of inspiration.

    Reply
  • Paschetime🥰 2 years ago

    Black spiritual spaceship kanye

    Reply
  • Karen Sinclair 2 years ago

    people that r black with money have not left with their rich Black children (would) or start all black school s with maybe that one white child

    Reply
  • taimatsuko 2 years ago

    This pod is gold

    Reply
  • Darian Watson 2 years ago

    Tech Nine

    Reply
  • terreb2002 2 years ago

    Two generations of awakening, reflecting, reprogramming and teaching. It’s not the music. It is the reinforcement and programming to those who can’t look at the music as entertainment consciously and subconsciously.

    Reply

Add your comment

Your email address will not be published.