Go Rob the Spot, Go Buy a Watch: On YG's Latest Hot Streak
Ethan Davenport breaks down YG's recent hot streak.

Art by Kevin Cortopassi
Ethan Davenport is all about the Chargers.
Monitoring famous peopleâs online activity is maybe the only purpose of social media. Following celebrities on Snapchat is, so far, the most successful way to: 1. Escape reality and 2. Become a professional stan. Anyway, I follow YG on Snapchat and since Still Brazy dropped, he is living greater than you.
A couple weeks back, YG sat field-side at the LA Coliseum for a Rams game. In some invite-only VIP section behind the end zone, an LA gangsta rapper watched a football game in LA and rooted for an NFL team based in LA. This oddly enough isnât a statement about '90s rap. YG is cut from a similar cloth as g-funk rappers of the '90s, but his success as a rapper has never relied on commercial sales. The most unbothered man west of the Rockies might be the one who wears red Toms with a bulletproof vest.
In the last week, heâs gotten together with LA cousins, TeeCee4800 and Ty Dolla $ign, for "How Many Liccs" and "Ex." Neither track is outside the expected range of all three guys, but they're two versions of YG that are easily indulged. Itâs never been outside his comfort zone to put out tracks with TeeCee or Ty Dolla, then again YG has never seemed outside his comfort zone in any endeavor.
On "Ex," Ty Dolla sings about the woman he chooses to spend time with instead of his girlfriend. It isnât a foreign concept for Ty Dolla to mention infidelity and Bombay, itâs the YG verse that continues the songâs message. âHundred times I told her I was gonâ stop/But itâs kinda hard when every night the bottles pop,â admits YG. Both men know they have a problem, but have no interest in changing. I wouldnât want them to.
Rapâs status quo is necessary and when we hear a track weâd expect, like a Little Caesarâs Hot N Ready, it brings nothing but predictable bliss. TeeCee4800âs "How Many Liccs" fits the mold and is still fully indulgent. Him and YG make music that plays well through the speakers of a Cutlass Supreme filled with the squad. Both rappers are so comfortable with each other, we hear their best on tracks like this.
TeeCee, flashing back to the days before rap, asks how many licks he has to hit before he can call himself rich. YGâs verse is in the same vein, a documentary of everything thatâs lead him from gangsta to gangsta rapper. Nothing sounds better than real life, and TeeCee and YG have never lied to me.
"Ex" and "How Many Liccs" are examples of such consistency thatâs seen with (dare I say it?) all-timers in rap. YG tosses his Bompton flat-brim in the ring, and Iâve yet to see evidence to say heâs excluded from such a list. His last four years have featured: two albums with deep cuts just as exciting as the singles, two mixtapes full of quotable lyrics and experimented sounds, a short film soundtracked by himself, the 4hunnid brand, and industry love all around. Everything YG does, from music to clothing to public appearances, is genuine.
Some of the most candid YG moments come to us from his most recent throwaway singles: "Fuck It Up" and "YNS." Much like last weekâs feature verses, each song features a different but candid YG.
On "Fuck It Up," he raps about taking a woman home from the club, but in a way that women arenât typically spoken about in sexual rap songs. âFifty-inch weave, but you bought it so itâs yours,â and âGot your own top, you donât need no n***a,â could be translated to cheering on more independent women. This is the equivalent of pro-sex feminism, word to your womenâs gender studies professor. This style of âtwerk song with depthâ isnât new for YG, ("Left, Right," "Pop It, Shake It") but itâs always welcome.
"YNS" with YFN Lucci and Blac Youngsta is another that showcases the range of Comptonâs most popular gangsta rapper. Braggadocios lines about wealth from rap and the trap, guns, and sex. The three of them could form the streetsâ first Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms. YG certainly shines in his verse, but the complementary flows from Atlantaâs YFN Lucci and Memphisâ Blac Youngsta give the track some geographical and sonic divergence. "YNS" is YGâs latest solo track to prove his all-time status.
YG is on a tear, but four month runs donât mean shit in the grand scheme of a career. These last four months shouldnât stand out for YG, this is just par. A YG verse is more dependable than 99-cent Brisk. Momentum in music is one thing, but it shouldnât be confused with consistency.
It seems that YG gets stronger with every one of Donald Trumpâs failures; by the beginning of 2018 the hottest music video in the world will feature YG driving a lowrider on the front lawn of the White House as it is (actually) burning to the ground.


