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In 1988, Black rage — over social conditions, over police violence, over the scourge of crack — fueled coast-to-coast landmarks from Pubic Enemy, N.W.A and Ice-T.
Flavor Flav made a name for himself as a member of the seminal rap group Public Enemy. He stood out from other rap figures of the late 1980s by wearing a clock on his neck.
Public Enemy has new rhymes designed to fill your mind. The iconic hip-hop group dropped new protest song “March Madness” in ...
In an interview with Roxanne Shante for her SiriusXM show Have a Nice Day, Public Enemy hypeman and rapper Flavor Flav shared how a drug addict inspired his signature clock chain. "So one day, as ...
Flavor Flav, left, and Chuck D. of the rap group Public Enemy, pose for photographers upon their arrival for the MTV Music Awards at New York’s Radio City Music Hall, Sept. 8, 1994.
Public Enemy was like the second coming of Malcolm X and the Black Panthers except that they had a funky and chaotic beat behind them to rap over. Lead rapper Chuck D was a well-read intellectual ...
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