Topic: Wap

3 chapters across the catalog

63: We Are People 1
0:00 - 3:30

63: We Are People 1

WAP, Maxine Waters, Megan Thee Stallion Discussion Introduction

Adam Curry and Mo Facts introduce episode 63, titled "WAP," noting it will be a two-part series. The discussion centers on the cultural impact of the song "WAP" and the unexpected endorsement of Megan Thee Stallion by Representative Maxine Waters. A parental guidance warning is issued due to the explicit nature of the subject matter.

52: Build Black Better
2:41:09 - 2:46:33

52: Build Black Better

Cardi B Interview Critique, Megan Thee Stallion, WAP

The hosts critique Cardi B’s interview with Joe Biden, noting it was heavily edited to hide her lack of political sophistication. They suggest that when the "mockery" of the interview became too much, Cardi B used a public divorce announcement and the release of the song "WAP" as distractions to regain her standing. This is presented as a cycle of using "low-class" culture to maintain political influence.

48: Shootist
2:26:53 - 2:30:55

48: Shootist

The "Studs and Sluts" Campaign and "WAP"

The discussion turns to the "Studs and Sluts" narrative in popular culture, which Tom Burrell claims promotes black men as brutes and women as hyper-sexualized. Mo Facts cites the song "WAP" by Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion as a modern example of this "culture of death." He argues that the music industry is used to socially engineer the public, with white audiences often defending the content as "empowerment."