


Producer Kuya Beats scatters soft, cool synths over deep bass swells and busy drums, leaving the track wide open for Bay Area MCs Kool John, DB tha General, and Plane Jane to talk shit. The weed song is a well-loved rap trope, and “Full of Dat Weed” might be this year’s best addition to the canon.

DB Tha General & Plane Jane – “Full of Dat Weed” Plus, 10 years from now, you can say you remember the world’s biggest rapper back when he was still Dame Jones of the YN Rich Kids and not the next Method Man.Īlso, I am still hungry where them Cheetos at? - Trey Kerbyĥ0. It’s still great and it’s still fun and it’s still worth showing someone who’s never seen it. Whatever the case, we shouldn’t forget about “Hot Cheetos and Takis” just because it dropped in the summer of Psy. One of these songs is a great piece of music by some children having fun, the other is by an American-trained Korean guy who was sick of the excess and commercialism of a certain area of his homeland - and the wrong one became the world’s biggest viral sensation.īut you know, who’s to say being overshadowed by Psy is a bad thing for the YN Rich Kids? Maybe this is an Eric Bledsoe kind of thing where a talented youngster is allowed to develop out of the limelight until he/they is a fully-formed beast, or maybe I just forgot what website I’m writing for and made a reference to a basketball player who is still kind of off the radar. “Gangnam Style” has 962 million views and will be torturing me during NBA game breaks for the next 15 years, has led to a full-on controversy for the artist and is honestly still catchy no matter how many times you hear it but come on. “HCAT,” as the kids call it, has 4.5 million YouTube views and has been heard in a non-computer setting once. But still, it is a real song that is actually enjoyable to listen to outside of the first time you ever heard it.īasically, what I am trying to say is that this isn’t “Gangnam Style,” which I’m pretty sure was created in a viral marketing lab by the same people who invented Lays potato chips and Betty White. And yes, it is a real song about spicy snacks that is rapped by children as part of an after-school project and not a real band or rap group or some avatar for coolness. Yes, “Hot Cheetos & Takis” is a real song by children about two different spicy snacks that aren’t available in all markets. Passion of the Weiss Top 50 Hip Hop Songs, 2012: Part I (#25-1 ) (Left-Click) Passion of the Weiss Top 50 Hip Hop Songs, 2012: Part II (#50-26) (Left-Click)
