The Kendrick-Drake battle has taught us many things β among them is that our tolerance for culture vultures has diminished in 2024. Itβs why DJ Vlad, one of Hip-Hopβs premiere buzzards, might finally be experiencing the reckoning heβs had coming for some time now.
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In what mightβve been a throwaway tweet if it came from someone else, Vladislav Lyubovny demonstrated exactly why so many people in the Hip-Hop community canβt stand him: After Kendrick Lamar released his anti-Drake hit βNot Like Us,β Vlad went to Twitter (sorry, Iβll never call it X) to complain about the songβs mixing quality.
Author and Princeton University Professor Morgan Jerkins told Vlad that this was a Black issue and that his voice wasnβt needed. Vlad responded by threatening to reach out to Princeton to tell the school that Jerkins βis telling me that a white person shouldnβt be allowed to voice their opinion about Hip-Hop.β
Vlad was thoroughly dragged for his response to Jerkins and attempted clean-up and denial in a follow-up tweet, but Jerkins wasnβt going: She alleges Vlad contacted her family.
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This is only Vladβs latest transgression against Black folks. Heβs worked in and around Hip-Hop for decades, starting as a producer and DJ before planting his flag early during the YouTube boom. To his credit, he often snags interviews with artists early in their careers and paints essential background information about them before they become stars β I admit that Iβve used his videos as research for new artists that Iβm covering.
But Vlad developed a horrible reputation for a reason: he often coaxes artist into incriminating themselves, admitting to alleged crimes on camera. He cashes in on new artistsβ worst instincts of machismo and pursuit of street credibility and gladly boasts about the YouTube views that come with the drama.
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This exploitative bottom-feeding approach may help Vladβs bank account, but itβs a terrible look for Hip-Hop: It perpetuates stereotypes that already plague the genre and Black people writ large, inflames tension between foes that can lead to more violence and makes these artists even more of a target for law enforcement than they already are.
Hip-hop fans and media personalities alike have repeatedly taken him to task, but views are the priority for Vlad: His Twitter bio proudly boasts 5 million subscribers for his YouTube, and thatβs his bottom line.
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As off-base as his assessment is of the mix of βNot Like Us,β heβs welcome to have an opinion on the song β the issue here is the way he handled Jerkinsβ post. He couldβve easily just defended his opinion (as he did in an exchange with Bomani Jones), stuck up for his right to have an opinion as a participant in Hip-Hop or simply ignored the tweet altogether.
But attempting to have a Black woman reprimanded by her employer was unnecessary. Frankly, itβs the most Karen-esque response possible: instead of holding his ground or letting it go, he decided to call the manager. And despite his attempts to hide his hand by stating days later that he was βtrollingβ and didnβt actually plan to reach out to Princeton, itβs indisputable that he tagged the venerable institution several times during the dispute.
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Making matters worse was his subsequent response to the backlash. On Monday, when he revisited the conversation, he offered to discuss the issue in future interviews. As always with Vladβ¦numbers first.
Vladβs handling of this disagreement with Jerkins mirrors his relationship with Hip-Hop: relentlessly pursuing engagement with no regard for the impact his actions would have on others. Itβs time to get him outta here for good.
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William Ketchum III is a Brooklyn-based freelancer.
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