In the current digital economy, it is increasingly rare for the world to come together over a single event. Despite the increasingly segmented nature of the internet, however, this past weekend it seemed like
everyone was consumed by the hip-hop event of the moment –
Drake and Kendrick Lamar, two seasoned artists at the top of their game, finally letting tensions bubble over into a clash of the titans after years of rumoured friction. Starting with a pointed guest verse from Kendrick on Future and Metro Boomin’s “Like That,” the long-simmering feud quickly escalated into a rapid-fire war of words, both artists releasing
four diss tracks (two each) with each response more unrelenting than the last. As thrilling as it is to participate in the shared experience of watching two titans of their industry challenge themselves to a gladiator-style conflict with impressive skill and turnaround, their tracks also expose a long-standing tradition in battle raps:
using women as pawns and fodder for slinging insults. When the battle is arguing over who’s the bigger misogynist, does anyone
really win? The women in these rappers’ lives sure don’t.