

Otherwise, most of California is going to be hot.” Rowe didn’t use the words “perfect storm,” because weather folks don’t talk like that. Or maybe in the middle of San Francisco Bay? That might be good. “If you’re lucky,” he said, “it might hit the 60s in Point Reyes. Head to Point Reyes : Asked where the lowest temperatures will be this weekend, meteorologist Scott Rowe with the National Weather Service knew the answer practically without thinking. I wish we could learn that w/o two artists I admire having a public dispute.10 ways to escape the Bay Area's heat this weekend Close Menu I can agree with that and can apply it in my own life. He continued: “Everybody’s argument on either side is, we can’t personally attack each other if we really want to see a revolution. It’s not constructive and undermines all the work Noname has done. #ChanceTheRapper criticized Cole’s song, and called out Cole’s attempt to mask “patriarchy and gaslighting as constructive criticism.” “They both my peoples but only one of them put out a whole song talking about how the other needs to reconsider their tone and attitude in order to save the world. He really bout to write about me when the world is in smokes? When it’s people in trees? When George begging for his mother saying he couldn’t breathe, you thought to write about me?” But naggers in the back quiet as a church mouse, basement studio when duty calls to get the verse out. All cops, they say they found her dead,” she rapped. I seen her everything immortalized in tweets. Like scrubbing blood off the ceiling and bleaching another carpet how my house get haunted? Why Toyin body don’t embody all the life she wanted? A baby just 19, I know Dream all black.

“I saw a demon on my shoulder,” she begins. She specifically pointed out the continuous silence and lack of support Black women are given she used the death of Oluwatoyin “Toyin” Salau as an example. “Right or wrong I can’t say, but I can say it was honest.” In response, Noname dropped her own track called “Song 33,” which addressed her ongoing battle with Cole. I stand behind every word of the song that dropped last night,” he wrote. On Wednesday, Cole doubled down on his lyrics and confirmed that he was talking about Noname saying, “Morning. Some felt it was petty for the rapper to dedicated an entire song to attacking a Black woman instead of being proactive about the issues she addressed. Many Black women also mentioned that him referring to Noname as “angry” at a variety of things only perpetuates ugly stereotypes about Black women.

People began calling Cole out, noting that seemingly wants to be coddled and continuously educated on the issues Black people face. Many fans believed that Cole was referring to Noname since he mentioned quotes that were directly pulled from her old tweets. “How you gon’ lead, when you attackin’ the very same n-– that really do need the s- that you sayin’?” He also says in a verse that her “queen tone” bothers him and said “F*ck is the point of you preaching your message to this that already believe what you believe?” As soon as the song was released, Cole started getting dragged over his misogynistic tone. Some of the lyrics were “Just ’cause you woke, and I’m not, that s- ain’t no reason to talk like you better than me,” he continues.
