POPULARITY
On this episode of Pilot Season Cartoon Edition, hosts Kinte, Renee, Jen, John, and Allen break down the pilot episode of G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (1983), “The Cobra Strikes,” which originally aired on September 12, 1983. It was the opening chapter of the first five-part miniseries, The M.A.S.S. Device. In this opening episode, the elite G.I. Joe team is called into action when Cobra launches a bold plan involving the powerful M.A.S.S. Device, a machine capable of instant matter transportation. As Cobra begins moving against military targets and global security, the Joes are forced into a high-stakes battle that introduces the core conflict, the major players, and the fast-paced military sci-fi style that would define the series. This episode sets the tone for the franchise with action, espionage, advanced technology, and the classic battle between G.I. Joe and Cobra. Podcast airdate: 6/17/26. John 7.8 Allen 10 Jen 10 Kinte 8 Olaf 8.5 Total: 36.5 #GIJoe #PilotSeasonCartoonEdition #ARealAmericanHero Brief history G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (1983) was produced by Sunbow Productions and Marvel Productions in partnership with Hasbro as part of the 1980s wave of toy-based action cartoons. The animated series helped launch and promote the relaunched G.I. Joe toy line by giving it an ongoing story centered on the battle between the G.I. Joe team and the terrorist organization Cobra. The first animated version began with the 1983 miniseries The M.A.S.S. Device, and the success of those early episodes helped turn G.I. Joe into one of the defining action cartoons of the decade. Short cast list: Michael Bell — Duke, Major Bludd, Xamot Christopher Collins — Cobra Commander Neil Ross — Shipwreck, Buzzer B.J. Ward — Scarlett Ed Gilbert — General Hawk Morgan Lofting — Baroness Chris Latta — Cobra Commander later in the series, Gung-Ho
Welcome to Talking: From Season 4, where hosts Jen (@followingbliss1) and Kinte (@kintefergerson) break down Episode 8, “Heavy Is the Head.” In this episode, a dangerous plan begins to take shape as Boyd weighs how much he is willing to risk for the chance to get everyone home. Fatima and Henry find themselves at two very different and disturbing crossroads, while Victor helps Tabitha and Ethan prepare for the worst. The episode's original airdate is June 14, 2026, and this podcast episode also airs on Sunday, June 14, 2026. Join Jen (@followingbliss1) and Kinte (@kintefergerson) as they react to the biggest moments, unpack the latest clues, and share their theories about where From Season 4 is headed next. Talking: From Season 4 keeps the conversation going with live discussion, fan theories, and episode-by-episode breakdowns of one of TV's most unsettling mystery series. #TalkingFrom #FromSeason4 #HeavyIsTheHead
Welcome to Talking: From Season 4, where hosts Jen (@followingbliss1) and Kinte (@kintefergerson) break down Episode 7, “Best Laid Plans.” In this episode, Tabitha and Jade's troubling history is brought to light, things begin to unravel for another resident in town, and Boyd wants to test a dangerous theory. Episode 7 is scheduled to premiere on Sunday, June 7, 2026 on MGM+. This podcast episode also airs on Sunday, June 14, 2026. Join Jen and Kinte as they react to the biggest moments, unpack the latest clues, and share their theories about where From Season 4 is heading next. Talking: From Season 4 keeps the conversation going with live discussion, fan theories, and episode-by-episode breakdowns of one of TV's most unsettling mystery series. #TalkingFrom #FromSeason4 #BestLaidPlans
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
The Future Now Resembles the Past by Kinte is the third installment in an Afrofuturist hip-hop trilogy. Part 1, The Future Is Ours, was the warning. Part 2, The Future Is Here, showed the future arriving. Now Part 3 shows humanity slipping backward, repeating the same mistakes it promised to learn from. This album tells a darker chapter where the Eden Protocol has not been activated, the last rainforest is decaying, the children of the algorithm become the system, and the future begins to look like the past all over again. But even in the collapse, the final track leaves a small glimmer of hope that the next generation may finally break the cycle. Samples come from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army, Telekon by Gary Numan, and Warriors by Gary Numan. Track Listing and Samples Intro (The Cycle Begins Again) Sample: “Listen to the Sirens” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army We Were Warned Before Sample: “This Wreckage” from Telekon by Gary Numan The Future Now Resembles the Past Sample: “Warriors” from Warriors by Gary Numan Eden Protocol Not Activated Sample: “I Dream of Wires” from Telekon by Gary Numan Cities Under Glass Are Cracking Sample: “This Prison Moon” from Warriors by Gary Numan The Last Rainforest Is Now in Decay Sample: “The Iceman Comes” from Warriors by Gary Numan Children of the Algorithm Became the System Sample: “Remind Me to Smile” from Telekon by Gary Numan New Kings in Tomorrow Sample: “My Centurion” from Warriors by Gary Numan Digital Ancestors Deleted Sample: “My Shadow in Vain” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Oceans Came Back for Their Names Sample: “The Aircrash Bureau” from Telekon by Gary Numan Build the Walls Again Sample: “The Dream Police” from Tubeway Army by Tubeway Army The Children Still Remember the Sun Sample: “We Are Glass” from Telekon by Gary Numan #TheFutureNowResemblesThePast #Kinte #Afrofuturism
On this episode of Pilot Season Cartoon Edition, hosts Kinte, Renee, Jen, John, and Allen break down the pilot episode of The Smurfs (1981), “The Smurfette,” which originally aired on November 21, 1981 Recalling Gargamel's creation of Smurfette, where the female Smurf is magically created as a spy to help the evil wizard and Azrael do away with the Smurfs once and for all. Smurfette tricks Greedy into opening the Smurf River Dam (to flood the village), but later -- when he realizes Smurfette wants to be "a real Smurf" -- Papa Smurf has an ace up his sleeve. Podcast airdate: 6/10/26. John 8 Allen 8 Jen 8 Kinte 9 Renee 8.5 Total: 33.5 #TheSmurfs #PilotSeasonCartoonEdition #TheAstrosmurf Brief history The Smurfs (1981) was produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions for NBC and premiered on September 12, 1981. The cartoon was based on the comic characters created by Belgian artist Peyo. Hanna-Barbera adapted the little blue characters for American television and turned them into one of the most successful Saturday morning cartoons of the 1980s. The show mixed fantasy, comedy, and adventure, centering on the Smurf village and their constant run-ins with Gargamel and Azrael. Its popularity led to a long network run, multiple seasons, and a lasting place in cartoon history. Main cast and who they played: Don Messick — Papa Smurf, Baby Smurf Lucille Bliss — Smurfette Michael Bell — Handy Smurf, Hefty Smurf June Foray — Mother Nature Paul Winchell — Gargamel
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
Track Listing 1. Intro (Arrival Signal: 2075) 2. The Future Is Here 3. Cities Under Glass 4. Children of the Algorithm 5. Eden Protocol Activated 6. New Lagos on Mars 7. The Last Rainforest 8. Digital Ancestors 9. No Kings in Tomorrow 10. Memory Bank Messiah 11. After the Machines Learned Mercy 12. Build the Sun Again Album Synopsis The Future Is Here is the sequel to Kinte's Afrofuturist hip hop album The Future Is Ours. Where the first album warned that humanity was standing at the edge of tomorrow, this sequel begins after tomorrow has arrived. The warnings are no longer theories. The machines are active, the cities are overcrowded, the climate has changed, and the people are now living inside the future they once feared. The album follows a world after the “Eden Protocol” has been activated. Humanity is trying to rebuild, but the old problems have not disappeared. Artificial intelligence is now part of daily life, corporations are still fighting for control, people are migrating from flooded cities, and new societies are being built in the ruins of the old world. Kinte tells the story from the point of view of someone who survived the warning and is now helping lead the reconstruction. The Future Is Here keeps the same Afrofuturist energy as The Future Is Ours, mixing technology, ancestral memory, environmental survival, Black imagination, and social commentary. But this album is less about fear and more about what happens after the fear becomes real. It asks: once the future arrives, who gets to live in it? Who gets left behind? And can humanity rebuild with wisdom instead of repeating the same mistakes?
On this episode of Pilot Season Cartoon Edition, hosts Kinte, Renee, Jen, John, and Allen break down the pilot episode of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987), “Turtle Tracks,” which originally aired on December 14, 1987. In this opening episode, viewers are introduced to Leonardo, Michelangelo, Donatello, and Raphael, four pizza-loving turtles trained in ninjutsu by their wise rat sensei, Splinter. Living beneath the streets of New York City, the turtles step into action when crime reporter April O'Neil crosses paths with the mysterious Foot Clan. As danger rises, the episode sets the stage for the turtles' battle against evil and begins the legendary rivalry with Shredder. With action, humor, and unforgettable characters, “Turtle Tracks” launches one of the most iconic cartoon franchises of the 1980s. Podcast airdate: 6/10/26 John 8.6 Allen 9 Jen 9 Kinte 9.5 Renee 9 Olaf 9 Total: 36.5 Watch episode here https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8k0wwq #TMNT #PilotSeasonCartoonEdition #TurtleTracks Brief history Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987) was produced by Murakami-Wolf-Swenson and Fred Wolf Films and premiered in 1987 as an animated adaptation of the comic-book characters created by Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird. The cartoon softened the darker tone of the original comics and turned the Turtles into a more family-friendly action-comedy series, helping make them one of the biggest cartoon franchises of the late 1980s and early 1990s. With its mix of martial arts, humor, mutant villains, and pizza-loving heroes, the show became a huge pop-culture hit and helped launch toys, movies, and more. Short cast list: • Cam Clarke — Leonardo • Townsend Coleman — Michelangelo • Barry Gordon — Donatello • Rob Paulsen — Raphael • Peter Renaday — Splinter • James Avery — Shredder • Renae Jacobs — April O'Neil
Notes Sample: “Replicas” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Concrete Gardens” is about hope growing from damaged places. Built from a sample of “Replicas,” Kinte uses the image of life breaking through concrete as a symbol of Black resilience, survival, and community rebuilding. The song touches on polluted cities, lost green spaces, and the power of people to create beauty where the world left neglect. Chapter 5: Concrete Gardens After the pressure of the city, “Concrete Gardens” brings the first real sign of hope. In this chapter, life begins to grow through the cracks. The garden becomes a symbol of Black resilience, community strength, and the ability to build beauty in damaged places. Even in polluted cities and broken systems, people still plant, create, and survive. This is where the album begins to shift from warning to possibility. #ConcreteGardens #Kinte #BlackFuture Lyrics [Chorus] We grow dreams in the concrete gardens, Rose in the rubble where the truth stay hardened. If the world too cold, we harvest starlight, Plant tomorrow in the cracks make the dark bright. [Verse 1] Grandma used a coffee can, basil on the balcony, Now I'm growing hope in a city that don't honor me. Bees missing, birds quiet, air tasting like metal, Still I'm talking to the soil like, “Please don't settle.” They paved paradise, put a price on shade, Then ask why we angry when our kids can't play. I seen a seed beat odds like a drum through stone, That's Afrofuture making home out of “don't.” [Verse 2] We not “urban decay,” we urban design, We the blueprint, we the pulse, we the future line. If a garden can rise where the bullets once flew, Then the planet can heal if we tell it the truth. [Chorus] We grow dreams in the concrete gardens, Rose in the rubble where the truth stay hardened. If the world too cold, we harvest starlight, Plant tomorrow in the cracks make the dark bright.
Notes Sample: “Praying to the Aliens” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Intro (Transmission: 2060)” opens The Future Is Ours like a broadcast sent back from the year 2060. Built around the futuristic atmosphere of “Praying to the Aliens,” the track introduces the album's Afrofuturist world of technology, survival, climate fear, artificial intelligence, and ancestral memory. Kinte sets the tone with a warning and a mission: the future may be uncertain, but it still belongs to those brave enough to shape it. Chapter 1: Intro (Transmission: 2060) The story begins in the year 2060 with a transmission sent back to the present. This intro is not just an opening; it is a warning from the future. The voice tells us that what is coming is not a prophecy, but a receipt proof of what mankind has done. It introduces the central idea of the album: the future was built out of mistakes, struggle, technology, ancestral memory, and survival. The listener is being called to wake up before the future becomes permanent. Lyrics [Spoken Word] This is not a prophecy. It's a receipt. They told us the future was neutral like code don't carry fingerprints, like machines don't learn the bias in the room. We learned to make tomorrow out of scraps: rusted dreams, stolen time, grandma's prayers wrapped in copper wire. If you hear this… it means we survived the update. It means we built a sky the way our ancestors built songs with nothing… but rhythm and refusal. Coordinates locked. Melanin: activated. Memory: encrypted. Welcome to 2060. Now press play and remember who you are. #TheFutureIsOurs #Kinte #Afrofuturism
Notes Sample: “We Have a Technical” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Sankofa 3000 (Return With the Blueprint)” is the spiritual center of the album. Built from “We Have a Technical,” the track connects ancestral wisdom with futuristic vision. Kinte uses the meaning of Sankofa returning to the past to recover what was lost as the key to building a better tomorrow. The song shows that the future cannot be built correctly without memory, culture, and history. Sankofa is a word from the Akan people of Ghana that means: “Go back and get it.” The deeper meaning is: you must return to the past, learn from it, and bring that wisdom forward to build a better future. It is often connected to a symbol of a bird looking backward while moving forward, sometimes holding an egg in its mouth. The idea is that the past is not something to be ashamed of or forgotten it is something that can guide you. For the album The Future Is Ours, “Sankofa 3000” means using ancestral knowledge, Black history, and old wisdom as the blueprint for the future. Chapter 10: Sankofa 3000 (Return With the Blueprint) This is the spiritual center of the album. “Sankofa 3000” teaches that the future cannot be built without returning to the past. The story looks back to ancestors, memory, culture, and stolen knowledge to recover the blueprint for survival. This chapter brings the album's Afrofuturist message into focus: progress is not just machines and space travel. True progress comes from combining future technology with ancestral wisdom. #Sankofa3000 #BlackFuture #Kinte Lyrics [Verse 1] Sankofa in my chest, I fly backward to move, Grab the old wisdom like “this how we prove.” Future ain't a place, it's a practice, a stance, It's grandma's hands in a hologram dance. I'm reading hieroglyphs like it's source code lines, Ancient math in the rhythm, that's the origin signs. They tried to erase us, now we restore the file, Black history not a chapter, a style. [Verse 2] I return with the blueprint, not the bruises, Build a world where the “different” ain't used as excuses. Where AI is a tool, not a god on a screen, Where the “upgrade” includes everyone in between. [Outro / Spoken] To go forward, we retrieve what was stolen. We don't worship the past we consult it.
Notes Sample: “Are ‘Friends' Electric?” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Ghost in the Algorithm” explores a world controlled by invisible systems, artificial intelligence, digital surveillance, and social media manipulation. Over the cold electronic mood of “Are ‘Friends' Electric?,” Kinte turns the algorithm into a ghost that watches, predicts, and influences human behavior. The song questions who controls the code, who profits from fear, and what happens when people are reduced to data. #GhostInTheAlgorithm #Kinte #AI Chapter 2: Ghost in the Algorithm After the transmission, the story enters the digital world. “Ghost in the Algorithm” shows how technology quietly controls people through feeds, surveillance, fear, and data. The algorithm becomes almost like a spirit haunting society, learning from human bias and selling trauma back to the people. This chapter reveals that one of the first dangers of the future is not just artificial intelligence itself, but the people and systems programming it. Lyrics [Hook] It's a ghost in the algorithm, watch it move through the feed, Selling fear by the bundle, calling trauma “a need.” If the future got a lock, we the ones with the key But the code got a shadow and it look like… me. [Verse 1] My timeline like a courtroom, every scroll feel like sentencing, Ads for a new face, while they oldface my dignity. They say “optimize,” I hear “colonize,” different spelling, same energy, They count my clicks like chains modern day inventory. I seen the pattern, it's fractal, it repeat on a loop, Smile for the camera then it label you “a threat” in a suit. Face ID love to guess wrong when the light get low, Funny how the future still can't see me glow. [Hook] It's a ghost in the algorithm, watch it move through the feed, Selling fear by the bundle, calling trauma “a need.” If the future got a lock, we the ones with the key But the code got a shadow and it look like… me. [Verse 2] I talk to my ancestors through a cracked iPhone speaker, They say, “Don't fear the machine fear the one who the teacher.” So I'm writing new instructions with a drum as my password, New language in the bassline, make the hate get plastered. They want a world with no spirit, just a metric and a graph, But we been turning grief to gold since the first aftermath. So if the bot try to mimic me, I'ma make it confess You can copy my cadence, you can't counterfeit my yes.
Notes Sample: “I Nearly Married a Human” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “The Future Is Ours” closes the album as a declaration of ownership, survival, and hope. Using “I Nearly Married a Human” as the sample, Kinte brings together the album's major themes: artificial intelligence, climate collapse, overcrowding, pollution, technology, and the fight to protect humanity. The title track turns fear into power and reminds listeners that the future belongs to the people willing to imagine it, fight for it, and rebuild it. Chapter 12: The Future Is Ours The final chapter brings everything together. “The Future Is Ours” is the victory statement after the warning, fear, collapse, and rebuilding. The song does not deny the danger of AI, climate change, overcrowding, pollution, or greed. Instead, it turns those fears into power. The future is not something people should wait for. It is something they must claim, shape, and protect. The album ends with the message that humanity still has a choice — and Black imagination, ancestral strength, and collective action can lead the way. #TheFutureIsOurs #Kinte #Afrofuturism Lyrics [Chorus] The future is ours, we been building it broke, From the fire in the belly to the code in the smoke. They can't gatekeep tomorrow, we already inside Hands on the wheel, with the ancestors riding. The future is ours, say it loud, no doubt, We ain't waiting for permission we the route. [Verse 1] I'm from a people who turned chains into jazz, Turned pain into pace, turned “last” into “last.” Now we turning new threats into lessons and armor, Turning fear of the AI into freedom's programmer. I want tech with a conscience, I want cities with trees, I want leaders who serve, not a brand overseas. I want kids who can dream without paying a fee, I want tomorrow to feel like it finally found me. [Breakdown / Chant] Say it The future is ours! Say it The future is ours! Say it The future is ours! Now build it. [Final Verse] We don't inherit the Earth, we inherit decisions, So I'm making my music a map for the vision. If the world too crowded, we crowd it with care, If the sky full of smoke, we rewrite the air. They sold us apocalypse like it's the only ending, But we come from beginnings we're experts at mending. [Chorus] The future is ours, we been building it broke, From the fire in the belly to the code in the smoke. They can't gatekeep tomorrow, we already inside Hands on the wheel, with the ancestors riding. The future is ours, say it loud, no doubt, We ain't waiting for permission we the route.
Notes Sample: “Down in the Park” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “A.I. Don't Dream” questions the difference between artificial intelligence and human spirit. Sampling the dark robotic atmosphere of “Down in the Park,” Kinte reflects on a future where machines can imitate creativity, voices, and emotion, but cannot truly feel love, grief, memory, or prayer. The song is not just about fear of AI; it is about protecting the human soul from being mistaken for data. #AIDontDream #Kinte #SciFiHipHop Chapter 3: A.I. Don't Dream The story then turns inward and asks what separates humans from machines. “A.I. Don't Dream” explores the fear of replacement, but it also defends the human soul. Machines can imitate voices, art, emotions, and memories, but they cannot truly feel pain, love, grief, prayer, or hope. This chapter makes the album's spiritual argument: technology may become powerful, but humanity's heart, history, and imagination cannot be copied. Lyrics [Movement I] A.I. don't dream, it just remix regrets, Stitching “what was” to “what sells” with a surgeon's finesse. It can paint you a heaven, but it never felt rain, Never held mama's hands through the tremble of pain. [Movement II] It knows every language but it don't know why we sing, It can predict the riot, but it don't hear the wing Of a bird in the morning like a hymn in the air, It can map every star, but it can't offer a prayer. [Movement III] So when they say “be replaced,” I say “redefined,” I'm a future with a heartbeat, can't be mined. Let the robots do the numbers, I'll do the truth, 'Cause the soul ain't a dataset it's proof. [Movement IV] It can write you a love song in the voice of your loss, But it won't feel the silence when the “I miss you” hits hard. It can mimic the laughter, fake the pause in the breath, But it never learned joy only patterns and depth. It can tell you your future from your past like a mirror, Still don't know what it means when the road get clearer. 'Cause hope ain't a formula, it's a choice in the smoke, It's a grandmastitch prayer holding tight when you broke. [Movement V] They feed it our stories, then they sell it back shiny, Call it “progress,” but the fingerprints still grimy. It learns from the world, and the world got a scar So it carries that bias like a badge in the dark. If the code was a city, who got stopped at the gate? Who gets flagged as a threat while the lie gets to skate? I'm not scared of the machine, I'm scared of the hand That decides who is “human” when it draws up the plan.
Notes Sample: “We Are So Fragile” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Exodus to the Stars” imagines humanity looking beyond Earth while questioning whether mankind has learned from its mistakes. Sampling “We Are So Fragile,” Kinte uses space travel as a metaphor for responsibility, not escape. The song asks if people will carry greed and inequality into the stars, or finally build a new world with wisdom and justice. Chapter 9: Exodus to the Stars After Earth reaches a breaking point, the album looks upward. “Exodus to the Stars” imagines humanity preparing to leave the planet, but it questions whether escape is enough. If people carry the same greed, racism, inequality, and destruction into space, then the stars will only become another broken world. This chapter turns space travel into a moral test. The future cannot simply be about leaving Earth — it must be about learning from what happened here. #ExodusToTheStars #Kinte #Afrofuturism Lyrics [Chorus] If the Earth don't hold us, we build a new ark, Starship on the shoulder of the brave and the dark. Diaspora dreaming with a planet in our scars If they won't give us land, then we taking the stars. [Verse 1] I seen gentrified galaxies in a boardroom slide, “Luxury on Luna,” while the poor still denied. They wanna flee the mess but keep the mindset same, Same greed, new orbit, different sky for the blame. But my exodus ain't escape it's a mission with a purpose, Bring a library of drums, put a garden in the surface. If we leave, we leave wiser, not repeating the sin A future that begins with what we did to win. [Bridge] We don't run from responsibility we run toward possibility. [Chorus] If the Earth don't hold us, we build a new ark, Starship on the shoulder of the brave and the dark. Diaspora dreaming with a planet in our scars If they won't give us land, then we taking the stars. [Verse 2] And if we stay, then we stay like surgeons, Cutting out corruption till the world stop bleeding. Either way, we the pilots not the cargo.
Notes Sample: “Do You Need the Service?” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Carbon Hymn (Ashes in the Air)” sounds like a sermon for a burning planet. With “Do You Need the Service?” as the sample, Kinte speaks on climate change, polluted skies, rising heat, wildfires, and corporate greed. The song treats environmental destruction like both a warning and a confession, showing how mankind keeps sacrificing tomorrow for comfort and profit today. Chapter 6: Carbon Hymn (Ashes in the Air) The story then expands from the city to the planet. “Carbon Hymn” is a sermon for a burning Earth. The skies are polluted, forests are burning, oceans are rising, and the climate is no longer a distant issue. This chapter makes mankind face the damage it has caused. It shows that the planet is speaking through smoke, heat, storms, and ash — and the message is that the future is being sacrificed for profit. #CarbonHymn #ClimateRap #Kinte Lyrics [Refrain] Ashes in the air, Lord, I taste it when I breathe, Sky turned gray like grief, and it won't leave. If the smoke is a sermon, let it say what it mean: We set fire to the future for a moment on the scene. [Verse 1] Sunday suit in the closet, but the heat got me sweating, Sun feel like an angry god, like the world ain't forgetting. They call it “climate,” like it's weather, like it's random, But I seen the pattern profits turning forests into phantom. Oceans rising like ancestors standing up, Storms got names now like they know who to hunt. They say “thoughts and prayers,” I say “laws and repairs,” 'Cause you can't hymn your way out of ashes in the air. [Refrain] Ashes in the air, Lord, I taste it when I breathe, Sky turned gray like grief, and it won't leave. If the smoke is a sermon, let it say what it mean: We set fire to the future for a moment on the scene. [Verse 2] I'm from a line that survived worse than drought, But I hate that survival is all they talk about. So I'm writing this hymn with a match turned around, Light the truth, not the trees let the greed burn down.
Notes Sample: “When the Machines Rock” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Reboot the Earth (Eden Protocol)” imagines a full reset for humanity before the planet reaches the point of no return. Sampling “When the Machines Rock,” Kinte turns the track into a futuristic repair manual, calling for people to delete greed, restore compassion, rebuild communities, protect the environment, and bring soul back into the system. In the context of The Future Is Ours, the Eden Protocol is the album's idea of a planetary reset plan — a moral, spiritual, and futuristic repair code for humanity. It means: reboot the Earth before it is too late. On the album, the world has been damaged by AI misuse, overcrowding, pollution, plastic waste, climate collapse, greed, and disconnection. By the time the listener reaches “Reboot the Earth (Eden Protocol)”, the album is no longer just warning people about the future — it is offering a solution. The Eden Protocol is like a set of instructions for rebuilding the world: Delete greed. Restore compassion. Protect the planet. Feed people. House people. Clean the water. Teach the truth. Let the Earth breathe again. The word Eden connects to the idea of a lost paradise — a clean, balanced world before mankind corrupted it. The word Protocol makes it sound futuristic, like a system command or computer program. So together, Eden Protocol means a future-tech plan to return the world to balance, but with more wisdom than before. For the story of the album, Eden Protocol is the chapter where Kinte says: we do not need to escape Earth, and we do not need to surrender to machines. We need to fix what we broke and rebuild the future with soul. Chapter 11: Reboot the Earth (Eden Protocol) After the lesson of Sankofa, the album presents a solution. “Reboot the Earth” imagines a full reset of humanity's values. Greed must be deleted. Compassion must be restored. Housing, food, water, energy, education, and peace must be rebuilt as human rights. This chapter is the repair manual for the future. It says that the Earth does not need another empire — it needs healing, justice, and balance. #RebootTheEarth #EdenProtocol #Kinte Lyrics [Hook] Reboot the Earth, run the Eden protocol, Delete the greed, reinstall the soul. If the system corrupted, we don't beg for control We patch it with love till it reach its goal. [Verse 1] Step one: unlearn what they taught you to crave, Step two: plant food where the bullets used to wave. Step three: share water like it's sacred law, Step four: build housing like human rights, not a flaw. [Interlude / System Voice] Warning: Profit motive detected. Warning: Empathy levels rising. [Verse 2] Step five: power grids that don't poison the kids, Step six: make peace louder than the bids. Step seven: tell the truth in the classroom again, Step eight: let the Earth breathe like a friend. [Hook] Reboot the Earth, run the Eden protocol, Delete the greed, reinstall the soul. If the system corrupted, we don't beg for control We patch it with love till it reach its goal.
Notes Sample: “Only a Downstat” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Plastic Crown / Poison Kingdom” attacks consumer culture, pollution, waste, and the false comfort of convenience. With “Only a Downstat” as the sample, Kinte paints a society wearing a plastic crown while poisoning its own kingdom. The song speaks on disposable products, microplastics, environmental damage, and corporations selling the problem while blaming the people. Chapter 8: Plastic Crown / Poison Kingdom The story then exposes the kingdom that created the disaster. “Plastic Crown / Poison Kingdom” attacks consumer culture, waste, and convenience. Society is wearing a crown made of plastic while poisoning the land, water, and blood of its own people. This chapter shows how corporations sell destruction as comfort, then blame ordinary people for living inside the system they built. It is the album's sharpest critique of greed and modern decay. #PlasticCrown #PoisonKingdom #Kinte Lyrics [Hook A] Plastic crown, poison kingdom, shine don't mean clean, Everything “new,” but it rot underneath the sheen. We drink out the problem, we snack on the blame Then act surprised when the planet in pain. [Verse 1] Singleuse life, but we living it daily, Fast food happiness, it don't love you back, baby. Trash in the river like confetti from a lie, Microplastics in the blood like a hush in the eye. They package the future and sell it in pieces, Then blame the consumer when the shoreline releases. “Keep it convenient,” that's the devil's soft pitch Comfort is a chain when you don't feel the switch. [Hook B] Poison kingdom, plastic crown, who you really serving? If the planet got a pulse, why we steady swerving? I don't want a throne if it sit on a tomb I want a world where the kids got room. [Verse 2] I'm not antiprogress, I'm antiexcuse, Anti “we knew” but still chose abuse. So I'm flipping the script like a bottle to recycle, Turn waste into art, turn a curse into cycle. We don't need a savior in a billionaire suit, We need community hands and some permanent roots.
Notes Sample: “I Nearly Married a Human 2” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Overcrowded (No Space to Heal)” brings the album's future fears into packed cities, rising rents, eviction, traffic, and emotional exhaustion. With “I Nearly Married a Human 2” as the sample, Kinte paints a world where people are physically close but spiritually disconnected. The song looks at overcrowding not just as a population problem, but as a crisis of housing, greed, loneliness, and lack of compassion. Chapter 4: Overcrowded (No Space to Heal) From the machine world, the story moves into the city. “Overcrowded (No Space to Heal)” shows a future where people are packed together but still deeply alone. Housing is too expensive, cities are too crowded, and people are emotionally exhausted. The track shows that the crisis is not just population growth — it is greed, inequality, and a lack of compassion. This chapter asks how people can heal when there is no room to breathe. #NoSpaceToHeal #Kinte #Overcrowded Lyrics [Verse 1] City packed like a fist every block stay clenched, Sidewalks got stories, every step feel pinched. New condos rise up like trophies for the wealthy, While the families down the street can't afford to be “healthy.” They build up the skyline, push the spirit down low, Whole lives in one room, still nowhere to go. Traffic move like a slow war, sirens in the score, Everybody “linked in,” but nobody's sure. We got billions on the planet, still lonely by design, Crowded in the physical starving in the mind. [Verse 2] Rent climbed like a rocket, paycheck stuck in sand, “Luxury” on the sign, but it's poverty in the plan. Parks turn to parking, shade turn to fees, Air tastes like exhaust and unspoken pleas. They tell you “just hustle,” like space grow on trees, Like sleep ain't a privilege you buy on your knees. I watch elders get priced out the block they survived, And the city call it “growth” while the people feel deprived. Overcrowded isn't numbers it's pressure in the chest, It's being everywhere at once and never feeling at rest. [Bridge] If the world too full, why the fridge still empty? If the world too smart, why the love still stingy? If we got all this progress, why the peace feel rented? If we got all these screens, why we still disconnected? [Verse 3] They sell “wellness” in a bottle, “peace” by subscription, Meditation app humming through another eviction. “Breathe in… breathe out…” while the landlord breathe threats, And a “selfcare” playlist can't pay off the debts. Kids grow up too fast like a glitch in the system, When your playground a parking lot, you don't learn how to listen. But we still find a pocket of sky between the wires, Still light little suns in community fires. We make room in the rhythm when the room too tight, Turn a hallway to a dance floor, turn a night into light. [Verse 4] I want cities that heal, not cages with views, Where the future ain't gated and the air ain't used. Where trees don't cost extra and water ain't rare, Where “home” don't mean panic every time you hear stairs. Overcrowded is a symptom, not a curse from above It's the math of greed subtracting out love. So I'm speaking to tomorrow like “open the door,” We don't need more towers we need space for the poor.
Notes Sample: “It Must Have Been Years” by Tubeway Army Written and produced by Kinte Synopsis “Oceans on the Doorstep” turns climate change into a personal story of rising water, flooded streets, lost homes, and communities forced to carry memories before they are washed away. Sampling “It Must Have Been Years,” Kinte makes environmental collapse feel immediate, showing that the ocean is no longer a distant headline. It is already knocking at the door. Chapter 7: Oceans on the Doorstep “Oceans on the Doorstep” makes the climate crisis personal. The rising water is no longer a news report; it is in the streets, at the doors, and inside people's memories. Families are forced to carry photo albums, leave homes, and watch neighborhoods disappear. This chapter shows the emotional cost of environmental neglect. The ocean becomes a character in the story, knocking on humanity's door and demanding change. #OceansOnTheDoorstep #Kinte #ClimateChange Lyrics [Verse 1] The water came quiet, like it didn't want trouble, Just kissed the curb first, then it doubled and doubled. Old man on the corner said, “I seen this in a dream,” Police tape on the block like a cut in the seam. My niece asked, “Where we going?” like it's summer camp, But her favorite park underwater like a broken lamp. News said “unprecedented,” I said “unaddressed,” They call disaster “natural” to dodge the test. [Verse 2] We carried photo albums like they were sacred text, Because memory don't float when the flood come next. I watched a whole neighborhood turn into a lake, And the rich on a hill still asking, “What's at stake?” If the ocean at the doorstep, the planet ain't playing, It's knocking with a fist, it's demanding we change it. So I wrote “WE ARE HERE” on the highest wall, Not as a warning… as a roll call.
Season 11 continues with Episode 202 of Men & Women Talk: The Mars/Venus Show, hosted by Diarra and Kinte. This second episode of the season takes on one of the hardest and most talked-about relationship questions: Why do people cheat in relationships? Airing live on Monday, June 8, 2026 at 6pm PST / 9pm EST, this episode opens the conversation on trust, temptation, betrayal, emotional needs, communication, loyalty, and accountability. With guests ryan, Josh and Graycon, Diarra and Kinte lead a real discussion from both male and female perspectives about why people step outside their relationships, whether cheating is ever forgivable, and what happens when trust is broken. From emotional cheating to physical betrayal, this episode brings honest opinions, real-life experiences, and raw conversation about love, choices, and the damage cheating can leave behind. #MarsVenusShow #WhyPeopleCheat #RelationshipTalk
Sample source: “Non Compos Mentis” by Haiku D'Etat Synopsis (written by Kinte): This intro is the signal breach—the moment the airwaves go fuzzy and the paranoia clicks on. Over radio-static textures and ominous phrasing, Kinte sets the tone: reality feels hijacked, the noise is constant, and the “frequency” is contaminated. It's less about proving anything and more about the feeling of being watched, misled, and pulled into the wrong channel. #StaticOnTheFrequency #Intro #Kinte
Sample source: “No, No, No” by D-Nice Synopsis (written by Kinte): A sharp takedown of influencer panic culture. The lyrics call out the “prophets” who monetize outrage: cropped “proof,” endless threads, confidence without receipts, and followers turned into foot soldiers. Kinte's point is simple: truth doesn't need a ring light—fear does. #BlueCheckProphets #Kinte #SocialMediaRap Tracklist 1. Eye II: Static on the Frequency (Intro) 2. NWO: One World, One Screen 3. Q Code: Rabbit Hole Blues 4. Dead Drops & Payphones 5. Black Budget Moonlight 6. Firewall Psalms (Finale) 7. Condensation Trails (Chemtrails) 8. Mirror Room Manifesto 9. Pyramid Scheme (Not About Money) 10. Eyes Wide, Hands Tied 11. Blue Check Prophets 12. False Flag Freestyle (Newsroom Remix) 13. Exit the Labyrinth (Outro) 14. Grove Night Sermon (Bonus Track) #StaticOnTheFrequency #KinteFergerson #ConspiracyRap
Sample source: “Get Retarded” by Canibus Synopsis (written by Kinte): A sky-watching metaphor track: contrails become a mirror for anxiety, rumor, and the human need to explain chaos. The lyrics don't try to “prove” anything— they show what happens when uncertainty spreads faster than evidence, and families start arguing under the same sky. Kinte turns the lens back on the real poison: stress, manipulation, and distraction. #CondensationTrails #Chemtrails #Kinte Tracklist 1. Eye II: Static on the Frequency (Intro) 2. NWO: One World, One Screen 3. Q Code: Rabbit Hole Blues 4. Dead Drops & Payphones 5. Black Budget Moonlight 6. Firewall Psalms (Finale) 7. Condensation Trails (Chemtrails) 8. Mirror Room Manifesto 9. Pyramid Scheme (Not About Money) 10. Eyes Wide, Hands Tied 11. Blue Check Prophets 12. False Flag Freestyle (Newsroom Remix) 13. Exit the Labyrinth (Outro) 14. Grove Night Sermon (Bonus Track) #StaticOnTheFrequency #KinteFergerson #ConspiracyRap
Sample source: “Patriotism” by Company Flow Synopsis (written by Kinte): The escape scene. The lyrics recognize the maze for what it is: not always walls and villains—often screens and incentives. Kinte chooses small, real acts as the exit: calling loved ones, slowing down, admitting “I don't know,” and treating truth as a practice, not a trophy. It's the final breath after the storm. #ExitTheLabyrinth #Outro #Kinte Tracklist 1. Eye II: Static on the Frequency (Intro) 2. NWO: One World, One Screen 3. Q Code: Rabbit Hole Blues 4. Dead Drops & Payphones 5. Black Budget Moonlight 6. Firewall Psalms (Finale) 7. Condensation Trails (Chemtrails) 8. Mirror Room Manifesto 9. Pyramid Scheme (Not About Money) 10. Eyes Wide, Hands Tied 11. Blue Check Prophets 12. False Flag Freestyle (Newsroom Remix) 13. Exit the Labyrinth (Outro) 14. Grove Night Sermon (Bonus Track) #StaticOnTheFrequency #KinteFergerson #ConspiracyRap
Sample source: “Soul Fever” by Camp Lo Synopsis (written by Kinte): A ruthless industry/social critique: the “pyramid” isn't cash—it's access, silence, and compliance. The lyrics describe how gatekeeping works, how people are rewarded for being non-threatening, and how “success” can become a polished chain. It's a no-hook pressure-cooker track where Kinte chooses independence over being “chosen.” #PyramidScheme #NotAboutMoney #Kinte Tracklist 1. Eye II: Static on the Frequency (Intro) 2. NWO: One World, One Screen 3. Q Code: Rabbit Hole Blues 4. Dead Drops & Payphones 5. Black Budget Moonlight 6. Firewall Psalms (Finale) 7. Condensation Trails (Chemtrails) 8. Mirror Room Manifesto 9. Pyramid Scheme (Not About Money) 10. Eyes Wide, Hands Tied 11. Blue Check Prophets 12. False Flag Freestyle (Newsroom Remix) 13. Exit the Labyrinth (Outro) 14. Grove Night Sermon (Bonus Track) #StaticOnTheFrequency #KinteFergerson #ConspiracyRap
Sample source: “The Machman” by Tubeway Army Synopsis (written by Kinte): A manifesto about distortion—how the internet becomes a mirror maze where every reflection is a different “truth.” The lyrics walk through the psychology: fear makes certainty addictive, and the loudest explanation starts to feel like the safest one. Kinte's “manifesto” isn't a set of claims—it's a set of rules for staying human: slow down, check sources, build community, don't let the maze turn you into a weapon. #MirrorRoom #Manifesto #Kinte Tracklist 1. Eye II: Static on the Frequency (Intro) 2. NWO: One World, One Screen 3. Q Code: Rabbit Hole Blues 4. Dead Drops & Payphones 5. Black Budget Moonlight 6. Firewall Psalms (Finale) 7. Condensation Trails (Chemtrails) 8. Mirror Room Manifesto 9. Pyramid Scheme (Not About Money) 10. Eyes Wide, Hands Tied 11. Blue Check Prophets 12. False Flag Freestyle (Newsroom Remix) 13. Exit the Labyrinth (Outro) 14. Grove Night Sermon (Bonus Track) #StaticOnTheFrequency #KinteFergerson #ConspiracyRap
Link Up w/The Morning Sickness Digitally All Over:Instagram: @hms_98_official, @bosskupd, @bretvesely, @dickToledoX/Twitter: @HMSon98, @DickToledo, @bretveselyFacebook: @HMSKUPDYouTube: @hmspodcast9320, @98kupdRequest/Call in/Wakeup Song line:(IN AZ) 602.585.9800More HMS: holmbergpodcast.com, 98kupd.comEmail: dtoledo@98kupd.com, bvesely@98kupd.com, bbogen@98kupd.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Link Up w/The Morning Sickness Digitally All Over:Instagram: @hms_98_official, @bosskupd, @bretvesely, @dickToledoX/Twitter: @HMSon98, @DickToledo, @bretveselyFacebook: @HMSKUPDYouTube: @hmspodcast9320, @98kupdRequest/Call in/Wakeup Song line:(IN AZ) 602.585.9800More HMS: holmbergpodcast.com, 98kupd.comEmail: dtoledo@98kupd.com, bvesely@98kupd.com, bbogen@98kupd.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.