There is absolutely no pressure for anyone to pledge to this Patreon. Of course, I greatly appreciate it if you do, but don't worry about me or anything, I'm alright. In 2020 I started doing daily voiced shitposts, but it became hard for me to make the time for them while I focused on stuff that would actually pay my bills, especially since I chose not to run ads on them. In February 2021, after many suggested it, I finally opened a Patreon. Patreon support helped make make it so that I could keep making those videos. The voice files for every post were the only exclusive reward for supporting the Patreon at $5 a month or more. On April 3rd, 2022, after two years of doing daily voiced shitposts, I decided that I really wanted to pursue other goals, primarily really focus on building a career in voiceover, and announced that I would no longer be doing the shitposts daily, but still sometimes just for fun because I did still love doing them. So, this Patreon still stands, as a library of all of the posts for everyone. Except now, the voice files are available for the whole world. Over 700 posts, ripe for the suffering! Yes, you can use them however the hell you want, go nuts and have FUN! Unleash chaos! I'd love to see what kind of fun stuff everyone whips up. Pledging does not net any exclusive reward anymore, it's merely a tip jar now for anyone who really likes me and my work and wants to throw some support over anyway. There is no pressure for anyone to do this, but if you do, thank you.Assuming that an artistic defense of hip-hop is possible, Gilbert Newman Perkins’s Sept. The fact that a “standard hip-hop song” has “16 bars” and “various beats-per-minute patterns” doesn’t mean that it “mirrors” a Shakespearean sonnet.Ģ0 op-ed, “ Hip-hop hypocrisy,” wasn’t it. A hip-hop song has notes as well, but Mr. Perkins surely wouldn’t say it “mirrors” Bach. The same goes for the fact that rap artists use the same basic literary devices that also appear in middle school fan fiction. The only specific example of hip-hop’s worth that Mr. More likely he means that the letter “g” in the word “lasagna” is silent, but of course it isn’t: Otherwise the word would be pronounced “la-sa-na.” So much for having “mastered the English language, with all its nuances and transmutations.” Perkins mentioned was Lil Wayne’s lyric “Real Gs move in silence like lasagna.” Lil Wayne can’t be saying that “lasagna,” the food, “moves in silence,” so the simile collapses the minute you think about it.
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