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Rewrite and translate this title Andrew Schulz Responds to Kendrick Lamar Dissing Him on ‘GNX’: ‘It’s a Good Album, F*ck You Though’ to Japanese between 50 and 60 characters. Do not include any introductory or extra text; return only the title in Japanese.

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On the latest episode of his podcast Flagrant, Andrew Schulz responded to Kendrick Lamar potentially dissing him on the GNX opener “Wacced Out Murals.”

Right at the start of the episode, Schulz joked that he’s finally “got beef” after the release of GNX. “Listen, rappers are telling comedians we need to be more respectful to women,” he said. “So we need to sit back and reflect. … Listen, no one has respected women more through art than rappers. So I completely understand how a rapper could look at a comedian telling a joke and be like, ‘Yo, you need to switch that shit up. How dare y’all keep saying your wives are annoying. Be more like us, bitches ain’t nothing but hos and tricks, I beat my bitch with a stick.'”

He continued to suggest that Kendrick Lamar, or at least hip-hop as a whole, has a problem with misogyny. Schulz pulled up the lyric from the track, which he read out: “Don’t let no white comedian talk about no Black woman, that’s law.” He then condescendingly said, “Now, technically speaking, if we’re going off of grammatical English, he is saying I can talk about Black women.”

He said that if K Dot is implying white comedians can talk about Black women, that helps him understand why he’s producing a comedy movie with South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone. “He appreciates white comedians that make fun of Black people,” he continued. “They’ve done that brilliantly for decades, and he wouldn’t want to break one of his own laws. I mean, didn’t they have a character called Token on the South Park show? Which I’m sure Kendrick is a big fan of.”

In “Wacced Out Murals,” Kendrick Lamar also calls out what he sees as Black people who have enabled white people to become too comfortable with Black culture. “The n***as that coon, the n***as that bein’ groomed, slide on both of them,” he raps on the track, which Schulz also took issue with because one of his co-hosts on the podcast is Alexx Media. “If he’s about protecting Black people, why would the cult of violence be towards the Black dudes, not the white guy making the joke?” he asked.

Schulz’s co-host Akaash Singh said that it’s “very important” for Kendrick Lamar to “protect Black women,” which is why he’s “never done a song with an abuser confirmed,” seemingly referring to his multiple collaborations with Kodak Black or Chris Brown. He also referred to when Kendrick threatened to pull his music from Spotify over its “hateful conduct” policy, which removed music by R. Kelly and XXXTentacion among others from official playlists.

“Are you saying that Kendrick Lamar put it on wax that he is protecting Black women from white comedian’s jokes, but not the kidnapping, molestation, and rape of R. Kelly?” Schulz said. “He would take off his own music off Spotify to protect R. Kelly?” Schulz added, “Everybody gets these jokes over here!”

Schulz said that he had a lot of people telling him that Kendrick took a shot at him on GNX, but he was focused on shooting his next stand-up special so it took him a week to find out. “What a time to be alive where rappers gotta talk about comedians for clout,” he said. “We are up right now. The biggest story about the album, out of the album and people enjoying it, was a sub at a comedian? And you ain’t even gotta say my name and it still makes headlines? You’re welcome. How many views did I give him, do you think?”

On an episode of Flagrant earlier this year, Schulz made some remarks about Black women that were criticized as racist. He implied that white men dating Black women will lose their hair due to stress, and grow beards because they’ll get assaulted by their girlfriends. After two of his guests said they’ve dated Black and white women and don’t have a preference, Schulz said, “Kendrick fans, get them!”

Schulz acknowledged that clip was probably what prompted the subliminal diss. “Now Kendrick wanna talk some shit,” he said. “He got some slappers on there, I ain’t gonna lie. I went there trying to hate, and I listened to it again and there was a few… Bro. … They killed it. It’s a good album, fuck you though. … But I don’t like him threatening the violence, I don’t like that. I don’t like him telling people to slide on you guys.”

Schulz questioned why people were letting Kendrick talk so much smack right now, and Singh said that even during the Drake beef he was critical of his songs alluding to threats of violence. “He’s like Trump on Jan. 6,” Schulz said. “He’s trying to get people to storm the Capitol a little bit. … That’s dangerous rhetoric out there.”

He said that if he ever had a run-in with Kendrick, he would get hurt if any of his security team was there. “But, just Kendrick? I would make love to him and there’s nothing he could do about it,” he said. “Just Kendrick Lamar, I would make love to him. And the only thing that he could do is decide if it’s consensual or not. … I would go so far as to say he couldn’t stop most people on the planet from having sex with him. … He’s talking a lot of shit, but if it came down to it I could put him on my lap, I could feed him a bottle.”

Schulz previously offered a response to Kendrick Lamar through DJ Akademiks, who quoted Schulz as saying, “Is this guy too woke to understand a joke?”

Watch the full episode of the podcast above.

in HTML format, including tags, to make it appealing and easy to read for Japanese-speaking readers aged 20 to 40 interested in fashion. Organize the content with appropriate headings and subheadings (h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6), translating all text, including headings, into Japanese. Retain any existing tags from

On the latest episode of his podcast Flagrant, Andrew Schulz responded to Kendrick Lamar potentially dissing him on the GNX opener “Wacced Out Murals.”

Right at the start of the episode, Schulz joked that he’s finally “got beef” after the release of GNX. “Listen, rappers are telling comedians we need to be more respectful to women,” he said. “So we need to sit back and reflect. … Listen, no one has respected women more through art than rappers. So I completely understand how a rapper could look at a comedian telling a joke and be like, ‘Yo, you need to switch that shit up. How dare y’all keep saying your wives are annoying. Be more like us, bitches ain’t nothing but hos and tricks, I beat my bitch with a stick.'”

He continued to suggest that Kendrick Lamar, or at least hip-hop as a whole, has a problem with misogyny. Schulz pulled up the lyric from the track, which he read out: “Don’t let no white comedian talk about no Black woman, that’s law.” He then condescendingly said, “Now, technically speaking, if we’re going off of grammatical English, he is saying I can talk about Black women.”

He said that if K Dot is implying white comedians can talk about Black women, that helps him understand why he’s producing a comedy movie with South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone. “He appreciates white comedians that make fun of Black people,” he continued. “They’ve done that brilliantly for decades, and he wouldn’t want to break one of his own laws. I mean, didn’t they have a character called Token on the South Park show? Which I’m sure Kendrick is a big fan of.”

In “Wacced Out Murals,” Kendrick Lamar also calls out what he sees as Black people who have enabled white people to become too comfortable with Black culture. “The n***as that coon, the n***as that bein’ groomed, slide on both of them,” he raps on the track, which Schulz also took issue with because one of his co-hosts on the podcast is Alexx Media. “If he’s about protecting Black people, why would the cult of violence be towards the Black dudes, not the white guy making the joke?” he asked.

Schulz’s co-host Akaash Singh said that it’s “very important” for Kendrick Lamar to “protect Black women,” which is why he’s “never done a song with an abuser confirmed,” seemingly referring to his multiple collaborations with Kodak Black or Chris Brown. He also referred to when Kendrick threatened to pull his music from Spotify over its “hateful conduct” policy, which removed music by R. Kelly and XXXTentacion among others from official playlists.

“Are you saying that Kendrick Lamar put it on wax that he is protecting Black women from white comedian’s jokes, but not the kidnapping, molestation, and rape of R. Kelly?” Schulz said. “He would take off his own music off Spotify to protect R. Kelly?” Schulz added, “Everybody gets these jokes over here!”

Schulz said that he had a lot of people telling him that Kendrick took a shot at him on GNX, but he was focused on shooting his next stand-up special so it took him a week to find out. “What a time to be alive where rappers gotta talk about comedians for clout,” he said. “We are up right now. The biggest story about the album, out of the album and people enjoying it, was a sub at a comedian? And you ain’t even gotta say my name and it still makes headlines? You’re welcome. How many views did I give him, do you think?”

On an episode of Flagrant earlier this year, Schulz made some remarks about Black women that were criticized as racist. He implied that white men dating Black women will lose their hair due to stress, and grow beards because they’ll get assaulted by their girlfriends. After two of his guests said they’ve dated Black and white women and don’t have a preference, Schulz said, “Kendrick fans, get them!”

Schulz acknowledged that clip was probably what prompted the subliminal diss. “Now Kendrick wanna talk some shit,” he said. “He got some slappers on there, I ain’t gonna lie. I went there trying to hate, and I listened to it again and there was a few… Bro. … They killed it. It’s a good album, fuck you though. … But I don’t like him threatening the violence, I don’t like that. I don’t like him telling people to slide on you guys.”

Schulz questioned why people were letting Kendrick talk so much smack right now, and Singh said that even during the Drake beef he was critical of his songs alluding to threats of violence. “He’s like Trump on Jan. 6,” Schulz said. “He’s trying to get people to storm the Capitol a little bit. … That’s dangerous rhetoric out there.”

He said that if he ever had a run-in with Kendrick, he would get hurt if any of his security team was there. “But, just Kendrick? I would make love to him and there’s nothing he could do about it,” he said. “Just Kendrick Lamar, I would make love to him. And the only thing that he could do is decide if it’s consensual or not. … I would go so far as to say he couldn’t stop most people on the planet from having sex with him. … He’s talking a lot of shit, but if it came down to it I could put him on my lap, I could feed him a bottle.”

Schulz previously offered a response to Kendrick Lamar through DJ Akademiks, who quoted Schulz as saying, “Is this guy too woke to understand a joke?”

Watch the full episode of the podcast above.

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