

It’s like, ‘damn, this right here got me to where I’m at right now.’ I done been through so much shit in the last seven or eight years, I had to talk about that. It was like there was so much shit going on, I wanted to start all the way back from when I was born but the last couple years of my life been so raw, I had to talk about that. How was the actual writing experience for you?

#Snow on the bluff part 2 movie
I was like, ‘my real life story is a book.’ So when the movie came out and it was a, I was like ‘I’m about to try a book too.’ I hooked up with the people who helped make this shit happen and here we go. Me and my friends, we used to write lil’ shit, just to be bullshittin’. The book’s been in the making ever since I’ve been in the 9th grade. How did the idea come about for you to write a book and how long has it been in the making? Snow talked about his new book, how his life has changed since the release of Snow On Tha Bluff, if he’s worried about negatively affecting the youth, Snow On Tha Bluff 2, and his upcoming shirt and skateboard with DGK clothing.įollow Curtis Snow on Twitter: “My Name Is Curtis Snow And I’m A G” here

Taking a momentary step away from film, Snow is trying his hand at the literary realm with his book “My Name Is Curtis Snow And I’m A G.” An autobiography of his life, primarily over the last few years, Snow discloses some of the trials he’s overcome to readers in a raw but sincere fashion. And Snow is just one example of the countless souls plagued with the trials and temptations that come with residing in an impoverished community. The karma that comes as a result of the dealings is unfortunate but not a surprise to those familiar with the street lifestyle.Īlthough the film is based in Atlanta, it’s a candid depiction of the struggles that are prevalent in many underprivileged communities across the globe. Some hearts were touched, some tempters were ignited, but, if nothing else, a conversation was created about the occurrences going on within the Bluff, a crime-ridden neighborhood minutes from Atlanta’s Georgia Dome.įor more than an hour, a stolen video camera captures several capers and drug transactions committed by Snow and his comrades in the film. What’s real and what’s fake is difficult to decipher in the film, making it enthralling to some viewers and bothersome to others. That conversation supposedly “ended tensely.”Įlsewhere in music, Lil Wayne shared that he has three albums on the way.When the documentary-styled crime drama Snow On Tha Bluff was released last year, viewers received a vivid account of what it’s like to walk in the shoes of Curtis Snow, a west Atlanta street hustler and robber. The two hopped on the phone again following “Snow On Tha Bluff,” and Noname explained, “He was apologetic and like, ‘The song wasn’t really about you, it was more like, it’s about a type of person on the internet,’” but she didn’t believe it. I’m not thinking this n***a just wrote a song about me.” She reached out to him two days prior to the release of “Snow On Tha Bluff” to ask him to “sign this open letter to the industry that we were going to refuse to perform at venues or spaces that hire police,” adding, “He had mentioned the fact that he was making music again: He just made this song, he’s really into it. “The celebrity is always the biggest thing.” Noname also considers the events “petty,” mainly because she and Cole actually keep in contact. “The celebrity was bigger than the point I tried to make,” she said. She and Cole then dropped what many considered “diss tracks” aimed at each other the North Carolina rapper released “Snow On Tha Bluff” and Noname hit back with “Song 33,” the pair essentially answering each other’s concerns. I knew that people were likely to think I was either talking about Kendrick or Cole,” Noname explained. “I knew people were going to take it how they were going to take it. N****s whole discographies be about Black plight and they no where to be found,” it didn’t come as a shock to her that Cole took offense to it. The 29-year-old artist shared that while she never namedropped anyone in her tweet that read, “Poor Black folks all over the country are putting their bodies on the line in protest for our collective safety and y’all favorite top selling rappers not even willing to put a tweet up.
