Public Enemy's Chuck D criticized the use of their song Burn Hollywood Burn amidst the growing Pacific Palisades wildfires spreading across Los Angeles.
Chuck D is asking people not to use the Public Enemy song "Burn Hollywood Burn" to celebrate those who have lost their homes in LA wildfires.
And Public Enemy was hot as fish grease at that time ... Flavor Flav and Tupac Shakur at the 1989 American Music Awards Clarence Gatson/Gado/Getty Images You got in trouble a lot as a kid.
Chuck D is dispelling assumptions about the 1990 "Fear of a Black Planet" single featuring Ice Cube and Big Daddy Kane.
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. The song is from Public Enemy’s ...
American rapper Chuck D has criticised the use of the Public Enemy track Burn Hollywood Burn, which he said has nothing to do with families losing “everything” during the Los Angeles blazes.
Chuck D called on people to stop insensitively pairing Los Angeles wildfire videos with Public Enemy’s “Burn Hollywood Burn” on social media and educated those misusing the track of the true ...
"[The song] has nothing to do with families, losing everything they have in a natural disaster. Learn the history," Chuck D wrote on Instagram ...