Yukmouth Thinks OGs From His Era ‘Fumbled The Fucking Ball’ With New Generation

    Yukmouth has pointed the finger at the OGs from his era for the current climate in the Hip Hop community, accusing them of failing subsequent generations.

    In a new interview snippet posted to his Instagram page on Thursday (February 9), the Luniz rapper explained that he felt once his generation of artists got successful, they left young people in their neighborhoods to fend for themselves.

    “The root comes from us. Me and your generation. We fumbled the fucking ball,” he said in the video. “Because our OGs went to jail or got killed; the n-ggas who gave us the game, the n-ggas that had the code. We became successful in other areas. We didn’t go back to the neighborhood, we left the neighborhood, never came back, never schooled the youth.

    “They was there to figure shit out by they self,” he continued. “And they didn’t have no parents because of course, you know, they locked up or shot up somewhere or whatever. So they ain’t have no parents. They ain’t have no OGs because we all moved out the hood and never came back, we never gave the game to ’em.”

    The clip came from a December 2022 interview with the Holdin Court Podcast, in which Yukmouth addressed the prevalence of violence in Hip Hop today, calling record labels out for profiting from beef.

    “So now they studying Hip Hop, that’s their father,” he explained. “And also they young boys that’s on the street with ’em, that have no clue about this street shit, they’re raising ’em also. So now you got a generation that don’t got the game, that don’t have the code, that don’t have the morals, that don’t know how to move, figuring it out on their own. And this is what we got right now.”

    Yukmouth’s sentiments echo an open letter written by fellow Bay Area veterans E-40 and Too $hort late last year. The pair of West Coast OGs used their platform to speak out hoping for a change by penning a powerful op-ed in The Atlantic in November.

    After naming the likes of fallen rappers such as XXXTENTACION, Nipsey Hussle, PnB Rock, Pop Smoke, King VonYoung Dolph and most recently the loss of TakeOff, they chillingly wondered “who’s next?

    $hort and 40 called for an intervention in Hip Hop and they believe social media is a root cause of a surge in violence in the culture.

    “The inner city is like the MMA Octagon—it’s the cage, the trap,” they wrote. “A lot of violent shit goes down, but it’s still home for many hip-hop artists. And there’s still a lot of hope, hunger, and love in the streets. We just need to find better ways to support each other. This is our generation’s responsibility as much as it is for the young MCs.

    “One reason the violence has gotten worse is social media. Rappers are trying too hard to flex online to the detriment of their safety. These dudes are getting money at a faster rate than we ever did. We’ve been to the strip club when a rapper was sitting with walls of money—like, walls: Each stack was three feet tall.

    “How can you throw that much money in one night? We have no idea. Some of these artists spend thousands on an outfit and millions on jewelry, then jump in their Bugatti or whatever and show off so much money that they can barely hold it in their hand for an Instagram photo.”

    E-40 and Too $hort went on to write that the IG flexes are only a portion of the issue, and called on all aspects of the industry to join forces to find some solutions to the address the current violent climate.

    6 thoughts on “Yukmouth Thinks OGs From His Era ‘Fumbled The Fucking Ball’ With New Generation

    1. Yeah right. It’s pretty simple. These are crackhead babies who are now rapping. It’s only going to get worse as we move on to methhead babies. Nothing to do with OGs or any of this stupid shit. These kids don’t respect anyone because they were crack babies, so who was going to teach them?

      1. But am I lying? When you look at it through that scope, you understand why not only the rap game but society is in the shape it’s in. Why I say it’s going to get much worse. These kids now have parents who are on way worse shit than crack as hard as that is to believe. It’s how this junkie rap became normalized. You couldn’t pay a rapper to not only rap about but glorify their vices back in the 90s. They’d hide it before they glorified anything but drinking and smoking weed.

    2. It’s like when people are like nobody taught them. You need somebody to tell you that doing drugs isn’t the move? You need somebody to teach you that getting shot over dumb shit is stupid? They needed somebody to teach them not to put foreign objects in every inch of their body for the female rappers? FOH with this nobody taught them shit. It’s plain and simple. It’s the crackhead generation all grown up, and if you’ve known crackhead babies, they didn’t exactly grow up to be upstanding citizens nine times out of ten. Even when these kids came from poor backgrounds, they were some of the most spoiled and entitled people you’d ever see. There was no “teaching” them, which is why their music is so fucked up and trash. It’s why their music has no message or rhyme or reason.

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