Rapper Chuck D told fans to stop using Public Enemy's protest song 'Burn Hollywood Burn' in images and videos depicting the L ...
"[The song] has nothing to do with families, losing everything they have in a natural disaster. Learn the history," Chuck D ...
With wildfires continuing to wreak havoc on Southern California, Chuck D is denouncing a gross misinterpretation of his work.
The 1990 track "has nothing to do with families, losing everything they have in a natural disaster," says the rapper The post ...
As fires rip through Los Angeles, rapper Chuck D wants to put an end to anyone misinterpreting Public Enemy ‘s “Burn Hollywood Burn” as a sick celebration of the devastation.
Chuck D called on people to stop pairing Los Angeles wildfires videos with Public Enemy’s "Burn Hollywood Burn" on social media.
Chuck D is dispelling assumptions about the 1990 "Fear of a Black Planet" single featuring Ice Cube and Big Daddy Kane.
On Instagram, 62-year-old Public Enemy frontman Chuck D wrote: “Burn Hollywood Burn is a protest song extracted from the Watts rebellion monikered by the Magnificent Montague in 1965 against ine ...
It has nothing to do with families losing everything they have in a natural disaster. Learn the history,” the hip-hop says of ...
legendary Public Enemy front man Chuck D is asking social media users not to use the group’s 1990 protest song “Burn Hollywood Burn” to celebrate those who have lost their homes in the ...
"[The song] has nothing to do with families, losing everything they have in a natural disaster. Learn the history," Chuck D wrote on Instagram Taylor Hill/Getty I Chuck D won't tolerate the ...
By Mesfin Fekadu Chuck D wants you to stop using his Public Enemy track “Burn Hollywood Burn” in social media videos of the wildfires devastating Los Angeles.