Jack Harlow's authenticity in hip-hopJack Harlow's consistency in fashion and personalityMedia

Jack Harlow

Aug 18, 2024 · 0:45

Summary

A rider delivers an impassioned defense of Jack Harlow's character, praising everything from his fashion sense to his moral compass. The stranger argues that Harlow "stayed true" to rap unlike Post Malone's genre shift, and hasn't released a single bad song. But the real thesis? Jack Harlow embodies "good Black morals" despite being white, making him "the most morally sound white guy I ever seen in my life." The monologue takes a sharp turn when the rider jokes about letting Harlow say the N-word. Kareem lets the whole thing ride.

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Full Transcript

Post Malone dropped "White Iverson," but then he just went to like whatever country rock thing he's on now. But Jack Harlow stayed true, been rapping. I never heard a bad song by him.

I never seen him in a bad fit, never seen him not be funny in an interview. Uh-huh, never even seen his hair just the wrong way, to be honest. He just seems like a genuine, really kind guy—like a nice Black guy.

Yes, he seems like somebody who loves their mother just as much as a Black man. He just has good Black morals, and that's—I feel like that's the separation between Black people and white people. Black people have like strong morals, you know what I mean?

They're very morally sound people. And Jack Harlow, that's the most morally sound white guy I ever seen in my life. Except if Jack Harlow say the N-word around me, I'll be like, "Yes, more, Daddy, please." That's who Jack Harlow is.

This is the last stop with Kareem Rama.

⇄ Transfer at this station