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Ozone Mag Super Bowl 2012 special edition

Page 13

representing flint, michigan, jon connor’s name has been generating buzz as a newcomer to watch in 2012. ozone checked in with this son of a MINISTER to find out what MESSAGE HE’S PREACHING. Are you signed to a major or independent? I own my own independent company. Me, my team, Cleeze, Jason Richardson, and my man Young Savv. We’re doing it independent and shopping our situation around. Flint, Michigan isn’t exactly a hotbed for rap music. Were you seeing what other artists had accomplished independently from other regions and felt like you could bring that same success to your hometown. When I was young, like twelve years old, I came up seeing Master P and No Limit and Cash Money and Slip-N-Slide and all these independent labels doing their thing. As a kid I always wanted to do that. I idolized that idea of just being an entrepreneur and taking matters into your own hands. It probably doesn’t seem that way now because the game has come so far, but when you think back before Master P and No Limit, New Orleans really didn’t have that nationwide appeal that it has now. He took his hometown and brought it to a point where the whole world was rocking with it. Cash Money did the same thing and added to that movement. I was looking at Houston and J Prince’s movement with RapA-Lot; they made Houston pop off worldwide. I didn’t want to just come in the game and be a rapper. I wanted to become [an inspiration] like they were to me. I wanted to do that; take my hometown and make the whole world rock with me. Just seeing the pioneers and cats that came before me let me know that I could do it. If they could do it, I definitely could do it. I wanted to be what Jay-Z is to Brooklyn, what Wayne is to New Orleans. That’s what I’m going to be to Flint, Michigan. The most common perception we have of Michigan Hip Hop comes from Eminem and the whole 8 Mile visual. Do you feel like that movie was an accurate portrayal of what it’s like to come up in your state? Battle rapping was more of a Detroit thing. 8 Mile was a pretty accurate depiction of Detroit, being an industrial town and how he worked at the auto plant and all that. In Michigan as a whole, you know, once you get out of high school, if you don’t have anything else planned you end up working at the auto plant. As far as Flint, I don’t think the world has seen an accurate depiction of Flint yet, and that’s what I’m going to bring to the table. In 2012 I’m planning on writing my own straight-to-DVD

movie so people can see and understand what it’s like in Flint because our story hasn’t been told yet. Right now, the only thing they have to go off of is Michael Moore movies, and he does an excellent job. But I don’t think Flint’s story has been told from the perspective of somebody who’s actually living in the poverty and living amongst all of the craziness that’s going on. Em did a hell of a job with 8 Mile for Detroit and I feel like it’s my responsibility to do the same thing for Flint. We’re only 45 minutes away but it’s different. When the recession hit, the car manufacturing industry in particular had some heavy losses. People also have the perception that you can buy houses in Detroit and Flint for a dollar and that those areas were hit much harder than other parts of the country. Is that accurate or media sensationalism? It’s accurate. I’m not a dude that’s going to just sit here telling sob stories in interviews, but it’s fucked up. It’s bad. Even when I was a kid Flint wasn’t as bad as it is now. When the economy crashed in Flint and the automotive industry left, that was something that offered hope at one point in time. Back when my mother was growing up, you know, you either went to college or you went to work in the [auto] shop. But that’s not really here anymore. There’s a couple plants here and there but it’s not like it used to be. It’s not flourishing, and more than anything, the worst thing about poverty is that sense of hopelessness. That’s what Flint, Michigan has now - that sense of, “What am I going to do?” Everybody can’t rap, everybody can’t play basketball. And you end up with that whole crabs-in-a-barrel mentality. Everybody’s trying to get up but you’ve got to pull somebody else down to do it. So people are turning to hustling and doing other things, and that might sound like the typical cliche rapper story, but nothing is exaggerated about Flint. Anybody coming from Flint knows they went through some shit to get out of there. Even me having this interview with you right now, this shit is not real to us. We can’t fathom the idea of me being in OZONE Magazine and doing all this stuff I”m getting to do. We haven’t had any rappers come out of Flint in like twenty-five years. So honestly, the media isn’t showing enough. It’s one thing for y’all to read about it, but it’s another thing for y’all to come here and see it. That’s what I’m going to bring to the people. It’s like Tupac said about the Vietnam War. Once people saw the Vietnam War on TV and how ugly it was, all the murders and killings, for us to stop the Vietnam War. It’s so fucked up in Flint and nobody is saying anything about

OZONE MAG // 9


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Ozone Mag Super Bowl 2012 special edition by Ozone Magazine Inc - Issuu