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#dizzy tingz
etherealvirgo0 · 2 years
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me having and eating disorder:
my family: you’re killing yourself
me: that’s kinda the point silly
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yin-shimo · 5 months
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bro my body is so weak i barely moved things around today [cos yk moving tingz] and i b getting dizzy and in pain so fast
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factsmoon · 2 years
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Rub a dub riddim rar
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It's gonna be a dope night - in one room we have Channel One Soundsystem booming the Jafa rig supported by NZ's best roots and culture selectors, while the dancehall party hosted by Bigga Tingz will be popping shit off next door!!!!!! Zippy 1. I'm pretty excited to be asked to jam for an upcoming NYE party (thanks Tobi) featuring the almighty Channel One Soundsystem! So as I do, I thought I would bang out a little mix to celebrate and promo the BIG night! So without further ado, we have 50 stone cold classics from the rocksteady and reggae eras, through to roots, dub, rub a dub and digital styles! Check the gig if you are kicking around the shakey isles of Auckland, New Zealand. Vybz Kartel - Real Friend (Peenie Wallie Riddim) Leftside - Turn Up Di Party (Naughty Wifey Riddim) Wayne Marshall f Jr Gong, Aidonia, I Octane, Assassin, Bounty and Vybz - Go Hard Stylo G - Call Me A Yardie (SoulForce RMX) Konshens - Simple Song (Mental Maintenance) Popcaan - Full Swing (Loudspeaker Riddim) Million Stylez - Ya Habibti (Arabian Nights Riddim) Konshens - None a dem (Chupacabra Riddim) Gappy Ranks and Winky D - Kings of Africa (Yard Rock Riddim)Ĭhan Dizzy - Herbalist (High Times Riddim) Pinchers - Yellow Belly Vaquero (Rock & Stop Riddim) Million Stylez - Roots Of All Evil (Bellyful Riddim)Ĭhronixx - Start a Fyah (Game Theory Riddim) Virtus - Run the Track (Make it Gwan Riddim) Wrongtom Meets Deemas J - Old Time Stylee (In East London)Ĭali P - Dem a Boss (Remix) (Ima Bhass Riddim) Mr Williamz - We Run England (More Spiritual Riddim) Solo Banton - Me No Know (Ba Ba Boom Riddim) Protoje - Our Time Come (The 7 Year Itch) Romain Virgo - No Money (No Money Riddim) Romain Virgo - Nah Fidget (The Return Riddim) Romain Virgo - Think Mi Weak - (Good Things Riddim) Tarrus Riley - Prophecy Fulfill (Rude Boy Be Nice Riddim)ĭalton Harris - Gi Mi That Whine (Sweet Ride Riddim) Tarrus Riley - The World Is a Ghetto (Reggaeville Riddim) Mark Wonder and Al Pancho - Dancehall Stylee (Redeemer Riddim)
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Luciano - Rub a Dub Market (Rub a Dub Market Riddim) Gentleman and Rebillion - Intention (Feel Good Riddim)īusy Signal - Reggae Music Again (9.58 Riddim)ĭa Professor - Peace & Unity (The Laboratory)ĭelly Ranx - Jah Jah A Mi Everything (Life After Lifetime Riddim) Timeka - Undercover Lady (Rock & Come Een Riddim) Tafari - Money in My Pocket (Money in My Pocket Riddim)Ĭhristopher Ellis, Stephen Marley and Jah Cure - End of Timeįuzzie Barz - Slow Down (Cos I'm Black Riddim) Ken Boothe and Mr Vegas and Chauncey D - When I Fall In Love (When I Fall In Love Riddim) Major Lazer f/ Sani Showbizz - Big Piece of Chickennnn (Alibaba Riddim)Ĭhino f/ Kardinall Offishall - L.S.L (Live Some Life Riddim) Slim Smith and Cecile - Girl You Hold Me (Leggo di Riddim)Ĭourtney John - Every Way (You Dont Care Riddim)Įtana - Johnny Too Bad (Mesopotamia Riddim) What's your favourites? Fresh ZippyLink reup! Part 1. We have producers Fenchie, Dre Skull, Don Corleon, Major Lazor, Head Concussion and Shane Brown ruling tings. We see Romain Virgo pretty much reach super stardom while staltwards Delly Ranx, Gentleman, Tarrus, Vybz, Milly, Konshens, Mr Williamz and Mr Vegas lead the pack again. We have the return of Penthouse and Digital B running some big riddims again! We see newcomers Exco Levi, Chronixx, Chan Dizzy, and Protoje cement their place at the top of the scene. Well the return of it anyhow! Busy got jailed, and released, and still dropped the biggest tunes of the year! We have some big relicks, big roots and big dancehall outta both Europe and Jamaica.
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These things come together in music.” - Vaughn Benjamin, singer of the reggae band Midnite. I don’t sing a melody in front of everyone. If the riddim is militant and heavy, you have to fight this battle called life.
"Riddimguide" - The Essential Tool for Reggae Enthusiasts.
Mutiny Aboard the Slave Ships in the 18th century: Implications for the Transatlantic Slave Trade.
Steel Pulse – “Put Your Hoodies On ” (3rd Anniversary Edition) (Official HD Music Video 2015) March 3, 2015.
“Criminal” – Lutan Fyah & Turbulence (Official HD Music Video March 2015) March 6, 2015.
“Woman Yuh Strange” – Beres Hammond & Dennis Alcapone (360 Riddim / Heavy Beat Records March 2015) March 8, 2015.
“The Modern Greek Enlightenment and Revolution” – An original history research paper by rootsnwingz March 12, 2015.
Falling In & Outta Love: A lovers rock reggae selection by rootsnwingz March 13, 2015.
Capital Letters – “Wolverhampton” (Full Album HD Audio) March 26, 2015.
The Cluster Planet aka OmNebula Presents “The Forest Of Dub”, this Saturday, April 18th at 11:00pm – 7:00am IT The Place, Athens, Greece April 16, 2015.
rootsnwingz with Bluez on the melodica The Forest of Dub April 21, 2015.
Buju Banton – “Destiny” (rootsnwingz remix) May 22, 2015.
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truth-spoken · 3 years
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I haven't fasted in a while cause my app like "punished" me if I didn't fast for a day. Any good fasting apps or weight loss apps? I am getting so dizzy for no reason I hate that.
Much love <3
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skin33notw1nn1ng · 2 years
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just ate one of my BIGGEST binge trigger foods (although only 290) and didn’t start binging😮‍💨😮‍💨
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cyberloser123 · 2 years
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sirengf-moved · 4 years
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hsshdhbsd goodnight y’all
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deerixiie · 4 years
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goldfish.
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description: making coffee at 2 AM brings you stress, goldfish, and kuroo tetsurou.
pairings: kuroo x gen!reader
w/c: 653
genre/warning: fluff, established relationship, witty banter, college au
a/n: thank you @sintaroou for betaing this mess of a drabble 😺👍🏾
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“Boo.”
You shrieked and fumbled with the mug in your hand, saving it mere seconds before it met its demise on the tiled floors. You glared at the perpetrator, 188 centimeters of pure annoyance and arrogance. (And gorgeous abs, but you weren’t going to give him the satisfaction.) Also known as Kuroo Tetsurou, your boyfriend.
Kuroo had the audacity to smirk.
You narrowed your eyes.“Never,” that single world was drenched in an explicit amount of bile, “do that again.”
“Ok yeesh, I’m sorry.” The smirk on his face said otherwise. “But it’s like two in the morning, what are you doing awake?”
You held up your mug. “Making coffee.”
“At two AM?”
“You are in no position to judge me. In fact, you owe me something because you literally almost ended my life.”
Kuroo raised an eyebrow. “What are you, a goldfish?”
You stared at him blankly.
“Ah, don’t tell me the marine biology major doesn’t understand? C’mon, because goldfish can die from fear?”
“It’s stress,” you corrected, turning back around to continue making your coffee.
“Same difference.” Your breath hitched as you felt Kuroo’s bare chest press into your back, his breath sending shivers down your body. “What’s the real reason you’re awake?” he murmured.
His proximity made it extremely difficult to think of a witty way to avoid the question, so you stay silent, drinking up his dizzying warmth. Kuroo sighed. “Kitten, c’mon.”
“I don’t have to tell you everything.”
“It isn’t healthy.”
He obviously wasn’t going to let you escape without telling him, the persistent jerk. “I need to catch up on some work that I fell behind on,” you finally admit, staring down at your unfinished coffee.
“So you’re drinking coffee to help you stay awake.”
“Mhm.”
You could practically feel him frown. “That’s not healthy.”
“I know.”
“Then why are you doing it?”
“It was keeping me up all night.”
“Ah,” he places his hands on your shoulders, gently rubbing circles into your skin. “You’re stressed.”
“I’m not-”you bit your lip. “Whatever.”
“This isn’t going to help your stress, yknow,” he hummed. “How about taking a day off?”
“I can’t just take a day off!” you spluttered. “I might miss-”
Coherent words die in your throat when Kuroo slowly places his lips on your neck. “You’re stressed. Take a break.”
You half-heartedly swat him away with your hand, electricity spreading throughout your entire body. “You’re acting like stress will kill me or something,” you mutter.
He kissed you again, this time on the cheek. “Yeah, because you’re a goldfish, remember?”
You scoffed. “You’re so dumb, Tetsu.”
“You’re talking to a chemistry major.”
“Doesn’t mean you’re any smarter.”
“Goldfish have small brains.”
“I swear if you mention goldfish one more time I’m moving out.”
He pressed his head into your neck, his hands moving back to your waist. “Not without our de-stressing day.”
“Having to deal with you gives me more stress than the schoolwork does.”
“Says the one that’s practically melting into my touch right now.”
Fire bloomed under your cheeks. “Sh-Shut up.”
“Ah, I’m guessing that’s how goldfish say ‘please shower me in affection Tetsu?’”
“Kuroo.”
“Okay, okay, I’ll drop it!” he chuckled softly. You felt the vibrations of his chest against your back and let out a small breath. He smiled against your skin. “Let’s head back to the room, ‘kay?”
Your eyebrows furrowed. “I need to clean up first.”
“We’ll deal with it in the morning, it’s not hurting anyone.”
“Wow, you’re so responsible.”
“Says the one behind on their work.” He placed a quick kiss on your lips before you could respond and walked off toward your bedroom, hands in the pocket of his sweatpants. You didn’t have to be looking at him to know he was smirking.
You rolled your eyes and walked up to his side, falling into step with him. He wrapped his arm around your shoulders and pulled you closer to his side. You sank into his warm embrace, letting the sharp scent of cologne wash over you.
Annoying and smug as he could be, Kuroo Tetsurou was still your boyfriend.
(But you were going to kill him for the goldfish comments.)
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drabble taglist: @joliechuchoter @pablopascal @sunshine-hina @princess-semisemi @yn-tingz @vannerz @strawberriimilkshake @tetsumiya @bokukiyoom @ceeswrites @tttournesolll @hajibee @sintaroou @kageyuji (send an ask/dm if you want to be removed, fill out the form here to be added!)
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etherealvirgo0 · 2 years
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looking at pictures of an old relationship is sad
but have you looked at pictures from when you weighed less?
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ho4bakugou · 4 years
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Monstertober Day 2- Demon overhaul
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ft. an edit by my beautiful talented amazing best friend @thatonespidermonkey​
When your eyes opened to the darkness of your bedroom, the panic had already set in. Your breathing was labored and it felt like there was something weighing down your chest. Though when you looked around, there was nothing. Nothing except for the furniture that occupies it. So, you slowly laid down on your mattress and shut your eyes in hopes to fall back into sleep.
It wasn’t long until you woke up again with the same panic from the first time. However this time, there was a looming shadow in the corner of the room, with a silhouette of a tall man. A scream erupted from your throat, but it was silent. There was no sound in the room except for the slow ticking of the clock on the wall.
The headboard was preventing you from moving back and farther as the man approached. As he got closer, you noticed the withered horns that sat atop his head. They looked like someone had dragged a knife across them. 
The man walked to the end of your bed, then stopped and stared at you. He looked at you like you were something he was almost fond with, like someone looking at a loved one. His presence seemed to calm you despite the terror you felt, and it made you almost dizzy with confusion.
“My name is Overhaul. I am here to protect you.There is no need to be afraid, I will not harm you.” You willed your body to fight, but with each word you relaxed more and more. He had an aura of strength around him, but it was comforting, like being held in a strong embrace. 
Your voice was trembling when you spoke, “How do I know that you won’t kill me? You just appeared in my room in the middle of the night. And you look like some kind of demon.”
His eyes crinkled, and you could tell that he was hiding a smile behind the purple mask he wore. “You are correct, I am a demon. I apologize for the intrusion, I had to get here quickly to make sure they didn’t get in.” He paused, and you had half the mind to ask who ‘they’ were, but you stayed silent. “I will not harm you, I can promise you that. You do not have to trust me, but I will be here to protect you whether you like it or not.”
When he didn’t continue, you nodded slowly and pulled the blanket up to cover your chilly legs. The man- Overhaul- had not moved from his spot by your bed and had made no room to reach for you, so you allowed yourself to relax as much as you could given the situation. 
The curtains over your windows moved in the wind, and Overhaul turned to look out at the street below your apartment. Wordlessly he moved to stand in front of it, and you noticed that his footsteps made no noise. A demon thing, you guessed. He stood there for what seemed like an eternity, but was probably only a minute.
You blinked, and Overhaul was gone. The wind continued to flow through the room, and the exhaustion hit you all at once.
As you drifted to sleep, you remembered that you hadn’t left your window open the night before.
@bakuhoetoedoroki​ @yn-tingz​ @boosyboo9206​
taglist is open
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mommyissuezcancer · 3 years
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Gotta romanticize life to get thru with it right 😍
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medproish · 6 years
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Tweet This
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NEW YORK, NY – SEPTEMBER 16: Nicki Minaj performs onstage during the Meadows Music and Arts Festival – Day 2 at Citi Field on September 16, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Nicholas Hunt/Getty Images)
If you listen closely, you’ll hear a 24-year-old white guy tweeting right now that Cardi B is better than Nicki Minaj.
Click on that tweet, and you’ll find at least one response from somebody arguing the exact opposite. The Cardi vs. Nicki argument has brewed at least since Cardi topped the charts with her breakout single “Bodak Yellow” back in September, and it’s reached a fever pitch in the six days since she dropped her debut album, Invasion of Privacy. It’s easy to see why people are so quick to lump both rappers into the same category: They were both raised in New York, they both did huge numbers with their debut albums, and… they’re both women.
That’s all that matters, right?
As reductive as the comparison sounds, those three elements have been more than enough for fans to incessantly pit Cardi and Minaj against each other. (Actually, forget about the album sales: people see “woman” and “rapper” in the same sentence and they already start drawing parallels.) Fans and haters alike have used social media to hype up the imaginary feud, despite the fact that both artists have publicly denied any bad blood, explicitly complimented each other’s work and, you know, appeared on a track together (Migos’ “Motorsport,” which hit No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 last year).
Now, as Minaj returns to the music world with two new singles, “Barbie Tingz” and “Chun-Li,” some of those same fans and haters are bound to perceive it as an attempt to sabotage Cardi B’s first week sales for Invasion of Privacy. But Minaj’s new singles won’t hurt Cardi’s commercial bow. Instead, both artists’s new releases will benefit each other, because they’ll force listeners to reckon with the fact that, yes, two female artists can release music during the same week and both succeed.
When Nicki Minaj dropped her debut album, Pink Friday, in 2010, it seemed like women finally had a formidable champion to root for in the rap world. Not since Missy Elliott nearly a decade prior had a female MC dazzled with spitfire raps, dizzying punchlines and the right pop sensibilities to send her to the top of the charts. Pink Friday debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 with 375,000 copies in its first week, eventually topping the chart, while “Super Bass” became the sleeper hit of the summer, peaking at No. 3 on the Hot 100 and eventually going 8x platinum in the United States alone.
Minaj topped the charts again with her next album, 2012’s Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded, while her 2014 full-length The Pinkprint peaked at No. 2. She sent four other singles into the Top 10 as well, falling just short of the top spot with her biggest hit, “Anaconda,” which peaked at No. 2. But despite all the platinum plaques, the Grammy nominations, the streaming records and the Forbes Hip-Hop Cash Kings appearances, Minaj’s success didn’t spark a paradigm shift in the rap world. She alone shouldered the burden for commercially viable female rappers, jostling for the same respect that her male counterparts commanded as a legitimate successor failed to materialize.
Enter Cardi B. The self-made Bronx native documented every step of her ascension up the ladder of stardom, from stripper to social media celebrity to reality TV personality to chart-topping rapper. Her debut Atlantic Records single, “Bodak Yellow,” has gone 5x platinum, making Invasion of Privacy eligible for a Gold certification from the RIAA the second it dropped. “Bodak” sales notwithstanding, Privacy is pacing for a No. 1 debut, and it’s easy to imagine several of its tracks contending for this year’s coveted Song of the Summer title.
With her brash personality, hilarious catchphrases and seemingly endless volley of solo hits and guest verses, Cardi B seems like the closest thing we have to a perfect star, created in an incubator and thrust out into the world ready to steal headlines. So it’s a shame that some people refuse to appreciate her on her own merit and instead feel compelled to stack her up to Minaj. Oh, Cardi has Chance the Rapper and SZA features on her debut? Minaj had Kanye West, Eminem, Rihanna and Drake on hers! Frankly, the comparisons are exhausting, petty and counterproductive.
The truth is, Minaj’s new singles won’t affect Cardi’s albums sales in any discernible way, since 1) they’re coming out almost a full sales frame later, and 2) they’re an entirely different medium (album vs. single, duh). And if fans are really concerned about their commercial prospects, get this: They can stream both artists at the same time. It takes roughly an hour to listen to “Barbie Tingz,” “Chun-Li” and all of Invasion of Privacy in one sitting. You could do that three times in a row and make a grilled cheese sandwich in the time it takes to sit through Chris Brown’s Heartbreak on a Full Moon. I think we all know what the better choice is.
In a genre where different men can trade the top spot on the Billboard 200 every week, listeners still treat successful female rappers like a novelty, a pleasant but ultimately inferior change from the status quo.  That myopic viewpoint inhibits people from allowing two women to thrive on the charts at the same time, instead prompting a slew of unnecessary and unproductive comparisons. But Cardi B and Nicki Minaj’s dual releases aren’t an excuse to pit both artists against each other. It’s an opportunity to celebrate both of their successes and allow them to flourish simultaneously.
It’s rare to see a woman dominate the rap game the way Nicki Minaj and Cardi B have. It’s nearly unprecedented to see two of them do it at once. Now, the public’s reaction will determine whether there’s room for more than two women to succeed at the same time.
“>
NEW YORK, NY – SEPTEMBER 16: Nicki Minaj performs onstage during the Meadows Music and Arts Festival – Day 2 at Citi Field on September 16, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Nicholas Hunt/Getty Images)
If you listen closely, you’ll hear a 24-year-old white guy tweeting right now that Cardi B is better than Nicki Minaj.
Click on that tweet, and you’ll find at least one response from somebody arguing the exact opposite. The Cardi vs. Nicki argument has brewed at least since Cardi topped the charts with her breakout single “Bodak Yellow” back in September, and it’s reached a fever pitch in the six days since she dropped her debut album, Invasion of Privacy. It’s easy to see why people are so quick to lump both rappers into the same category: They were both raised in New York, they both did huge numbers with their debut albums, and… they’re both women.
That’s all that matters, right?
As reductive as the comparison sounds, those three elements have been more than enough for fans to incessantly pit Cardi and Minaj against each other. (Actually, forget about the album sales: people see “woman” and “rapper” in the same sentence and they already start drawing parallels.) Fans and haters alike have used social media to hype up the imaginary feud, despite the fact that both artists have publicly denied any bad blood, explicitly complimented each other’s work and, you know, appeared on a track together (Migos’ “Motorsport,” which hit No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 last year).
Now, as Minaj returns to the music world with two new singles, “Barbie Tingz” and “Chun-Li,” some of those same fans and haters are bound to perceive it as an attempt to sabotage Cardi B’s first week sales for Invasion of Privacy. But Minaj’s new singles won’t hurt Cardi’s commercial bow. Instead, both artists’s new releases will benefit each other, because they’ll force listeners to reckon with the fact that, yes, two female artists can release music during the same week and both succeed.
When Nicki Minaj dropped her debut album, Pink Friday, in 2010, it seemed like women finally had a formidable champion to root for in the rap world. Not since Missy Elliott nearly a decade prior had a female MC dazzled with spitfire raps, dizzying punchlines and the right pop sensibilities to send her to the top of the charts. Pink Friday debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 with 375,000 copies in its first week, eventually topping the chart, while “Super Bass” became the sleeper hit of the summer, peaking at No. 3 on the Hot 100 and eventually going 8x platinum in the United States alone.
Minaj topped the charts again with her next album, 2012’s Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded, while her 2014 full-length The Pinkprint peaked at No. 2. She sent four other singles into the Top 10 as well, falling just short of the top spot with her biggest hit, “Anaconda,” which peaked at No. 2. But despite all the platinum plaques, the Grammy nominations, the streaming records and the Forbes Hip-Hop Cash Kings appearances, Minaj’s success didn’t spark a paradigm shift in the rap world. She alone shouldered the burden for commercially viable female rappers, jostling for the same respect that her male counterparts commanded as a legitimate successor failed to materialize.
Enter Cardi B. The self-made Bronx native documented every step of her ascension up the ladder of stardom, from stripper to social media celebrity to reality TV personality to chart-topping rapper. Her debut Atlantic Records single, “Bodak Yellow,” has gone 5x platinum, making Invasion of Privacy eligible for a Gold certification from the RIAA the second it dropped. “Bodak” sales notwithstanding, Privacy is pacing for a No. 1 debut, and it’s easy to imagine several of its tracks contending for this year’s coveted Song of the Summer title.
With her brash personality, hilarious catchphrases and seemingly endless volley of solo hits and guest verses, Cardi B seems like the closest thing we have to a perfect star, created in an incubator and thrust out into the world ready to steal headlines. So it’s a shame that some people refuse to appreciate her on her own merit and instead feel compelled to stack her up to Minaj. Oh, Cardi has Chance the Rapper and SZA features on her debut? Minaj had Kanye West, Eminem, Rihanna and Drake on hers! Frankly, the comparisons are exhausting, petty and counterproductive.
The truth is, Minaj’s new singles won’t affect Cardi’s albums sales in any discernible way, since 1) they’re coming out almost a full sales frame later, and 2) they’re an entirely different medium (album vs. single, duh). And if fans are really concerned about their commercial prospects, get this: They can stream both artists at the same time. It takes roughly an hour to listen to “Barbie Tingz,” “Chun-Li” and all of Invasion of Privacy in one sitting. You could do that three times in a row and make a grilled cheese sandwich in the time it takes to sit through Chris Brown’s Heartbreak on a Full Moon. I think we all know what the better choice is.
In a genre where different men can trade the top spot on the Billboard 200 every week, listeners still treat successful female rappers like a novelty, a pleasant but ultimately inferior change from the status quo.  That myopic viewpoint inhibits people from allowing two women to thrive on the charts at the same time, instead prompting a slew of unnecessary and unproductive comparisons. But Cardi B and Nicki Minaj’s dual releases aren’t an excuse to pit both artists against each other. It’s an opportunity to celebrate both of their successes and allow them to flourish simultaneously.
It’s rare to see a woman dominate the rap game the way Nicki Minaj and Cardi B have. It’s nearly unprecedented to see two of them do it at once. Now, the public’s reaction will determine whether there’s room for more than two women to succeed at the same time.
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