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Sober Gang

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Sept - Oct 2017

With the rising support of drug legalization and normalized substance use in popular media, sobriety appears to become the new deviance. But it’s nothing we haven’t seen before

- Lex Celera

Sober Gang

When you’re young, there’s a need to discover yourself and own an identity. Vices provide convenient archetypes: the stoner chick, the guy who always smokes, the avid beer drinker. Tobacco. Weed. Lean. Xans. Molly. LSD. The list of possible vices goes on, and so does the list of their mentions and references in pop culture: film, television, and more prominently, music, being the medium that’s the most accessible among the three.

While country is listed as the genre with the most drug references (shoutout to Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson), hip-hop appears to be the most prevalent when it comes to bringing the names of drugs and alcohol into our daily vocabulary. Alcohol, weed, and lean (codeine cough syrup mixed with a soft drink) are just some of the many drugs that you not only hear mentioned in their music but also see in the music videos. Kid Cudi raps in Travis Scott’s “through the late night”: “N, N-Dimethyltryptamine and Lysergic acid diethylamide/The vibes are effervescent, delicious, just how they should be.” When someone spells out the full name of DMT and LSD, you know that they know what they’re talking about.

And why should they not rap about what they do in life? Image is a big deal for many rap stars. As rapper Vince Staples describes in an interview with

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Scout

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Girl of the year

After years on hiatus, 17-year-old Ylona Garciaa has found her way back to her first love: music

time to read

6 mins

January - March 2020

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Walking on a Tightrope

The Binisaya Film Festival grew from pop-up screenings in beaches, rooftops, basements and basketball courts. How did founder Keith Deligero go against the tide?

time to read

7 mins

January - March 2020

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URBAN DISRUPTION

As street art falls into the trap of commercialism, collectives like koloWn of Cebu reclaim urban spaces through works that dare to disrupt

time to read

5 mins

January - March 2020

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Take no prisoners

At 13 years old, Alex Bruce has already built a name for herself in the local hip-hop scene

time to read

5 mins

January - March 2020

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Paperback dreams

As print was beginning its decline, we were passionate, young creatives who wanted to resuscitate publishing—even if it meant making our own magazines

time to read

6 mins

January - March 2020

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Putting the spotlight on the South

Run by DJs, MCs and dancers, Laguna Hip-hop is ready to break borders with their growing community

time to read

3 mins

January - March 2020

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Bekiand the great Gay language

Our local gay lingo is radical in nature

time to read

5 mins

January - March 2020

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Baybayin: a renewal through art

Filipino-American Baybayin artist Kristian Kabuay talks about Baybayin as a didactic art form that bridges past and present

time to read

6 mins

January - March 2020

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Wild card

Marco Gallo never dreamt of becoming an actor, so why is he working hard to be the best one out there?

time to read

7 mins

October - December 2019

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Postcards after the drug war

It went from promises to end illegal drugs in three to six months, to countless protests from human rights activists, and a vice president appointed and (eventually fired) to head the government’s campaign on illegal drugs.

time to read

2 mins

October - December 2019

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