ScHoolboy Q believes Los Angeles is up there with the most dangerous places for rappers to be and explained why.
During his recent appearance on Drink Champs, N.O.R.E. asked Q whether he thinks his hometown is âone of the most dangerous places for rappers.â
AD LOADING...
The TDE rapper understood the notion and blamed it on people constantly âchecking inâ with each other.
âYeah, because, I mean, everybody be checking in,â he said. âThatâs yâall favorite thing to do: check in with somebody thatâs gonâ rob your stupid ass.
AD LOADING...
âYou think that guy that you donât know muthafucka in California got your back? The guy that got beef with other hoods and all this, you checking in to that dude?
âBro, just go to the hotel, get you something to eat, go back to the hotel, go have some fun where shit is fun. Why do you wanna go over there? For what?
AD LOADING...
âDonât call me. Muthafuckas be having the nerve to call me sometimes. What are you talking about, bruh? Iâm playing video games. My daughter got a soccer game tomorrow, bro.â
He added: âGrow the fuck up. Iâm not about to drive over here to Beverly Hills and drop you off an ounce of weed, cuh.â
Something to think aboutđ@SchoolBoyQ on @DrinkChamps going âŹď¸
THURSDAY @RevoltTV
FRIDAY AUDIO
SATURDAY đđžđ @Noreaga@DJEFN#DrinkChampspic.twitter.com/phVh8VWRRr
â Drink Champs (@Drinkchamps) March 20, 2024
ScHoolboy Q spoke about the state of rappers being killed during an interview with Vulture in April 2019.
âDonât let death fool you,â he said. âWhat it is, is thereâs way more rappers than there were back then. People have been dying since the beginning of time. People are gonna pass. Itâs sad to say, but there are going to be people that get murdered.
âNipsey [Hussle]-wise ⌠[whistles in disbelief]. That was some bullshit. That was weak as fuck. Iâm just saying, in general, youth gangbanging is at an all-time low. People donât want to talk about that.â
ScHoolboy Q released his latest album Blue Lips earlier this month, which debuted at No. 13 on the Billboard 200 chart with features from Freddie Gibbs, Ab-Soul, Rico Nasty, Jozzy and others.
AD LOADING...
The project served as the follow-up to 2019âs Crash Talk, which peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard 200.