
This week’s episode kicks off with Jermaine Dupri’s bold claim on The Joe Budden Podcast that he could produce an album as big as Thriller. The crew debates whether that’s realistic in today’s music landscape and what it would take in 2025 to create something with that level of cultural impact.
Rome then leads a discussion on teachers and style, sparked by a viral pencil-skirt moment. Are teachers unfairly held to stricter standards, or is personal style part of professionalism? Shan follows with the TikTok coffee date controversy, unpacking whether a coffee meet-up is thoughtful or low-effort, and how social media pressures are reshaping dating expectations.
From there, Shan dives into the state of R&B—once dominant in the ’90s and 2000s, now reshaped by artists like SZA and Brent Faiyaz. Is this era an evolution or the funeral of traditional R&B? Jab brings some nostalgia with 43 years of the CD, recalling first purchases, lost album booklets, and whether physical music should make a comeback like vinyl.
The conversation then shifts to Spirit Airlines’ financial turbulence—what budget carriers mean for travelers—and a lighter take on Future’s midlife crisis vibes with his new hair color.
Jab takes listeners deep into hip-hop’s generational divide, asking whether each era claims the next one “killed” the culture, and which decade had the biggest impact. That flows into a debate on hip-hop trends we’d delete forever—from shiny suits to face tattoos to TikTok dance rap—and which ones we’d bring back.