Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "XXXTentacion" in English language version.
Rapper XXXTentacion was shot and killed during an armed robbery Monday in Broward County, Florida, police said. The 20-year-old rapper, whose real name was Jahseh Onfroy, was leaving a motorsports store shortly before 4 p.m. when two men in a dark colored SUV shot and killed him in an apparent robbery, said Keyla Concepción, Broward County sheriff department public information officer.
The Broward County Sheriff's Office subsequently tweeted that 'the adult male that was taken to the hospital has been pronounced dead' at approximately 5:30 p.m.
Onfroy, in his music, reminded young fans in particular that their hurt was valid but that it did not form the sum total of their lives. He gave voice to their insecurities, wrapped their unending dread in the cover of his lyricism and transformed those nervous bundles into an electrifying body of work. ... XXXTentacion may have spent his career trying to convince his most ardent young fans that they're worth more than they believe, but his legacy—of trauma endured and seemingly unrepentantly inflicted—reminds us that worth has never been distributed evenly.
His ex-girlfriend detailed the most horrendous abuse in court documents and press interviews. He will be remembered mostly for the unusually cruel violence he committed on vulnerable people, particularly his ex-girlfriend, crimes for which he never expressed remorse. His music, a combination of hip-hop and emo that was depressive, and at times devastating, reflected a life lived with disregard for humanity, both other people's and his own. ... His music rarely tried to demonstrate bravado or material gains, it mostly traced round mental illness, suicide, extreme misogyny and a prevailing feeling of numbness. ... When she [his mother] was away, a darkness and depression ate away at him, one that would define his short life.
XXXTentacion released his first track 'News/Flock' onto the music streaming service SoundCloud in 2013.
Asserting that rappers like XXXTentacion and Lil Pump are a lyrical disease on the genre because their songs aren't about serious topics is ridiculous—never mind the fact that XXXTentacion's album was about his struggle with depression, which I suppose wasn't deep enough when compared with J. Cole's 'Wet Dreamz.'
He encouraged his fans to find hope in the fog of their despair, but bragged enthusiastically about the joy he felt in brutalizing others. His music brought solace to the depressed, the same way it granted validation to violent young men like him, legitimizing the pain of so many while paving over the suffering of countless victims of domestic violence. ... Listening to a hateful song in the privacy of our minds will not turn us into hateful people—but it might make hateful people feel more comfortable in their hatefulness. The possibility haunts us. ... And this is the madness of our country right now—feeling profoundly paranoid about the hateful thoughts that might be hiding in the heads of others.
His ex-girlfriend detailed the most horrendous abuse in court documents and press interviews. He will be remembered mostly for the unusually cruel violence he committed on vulnerable people, particularly his ex-girlfriend, crimes for which he never expressed remorse. His music, a combination of hip-hop and emo that was depressive, and at times devastating, reflected a life lived with disregard for humanity, both other people's and his own. ... His music rarely tried to demonstrate bravado or material gains, it mostly traced round mental illness, suicide, extreme misogyny and a prevailing feeling of numbness. ... When she [his mother] was away, a darkness and depression ate away at him, one that would define his short life.
He encouraged his fans to find hope in the fog of their despair, but bragged enthusiastically about the joy he felt in brutalizing others. His music brought solace to the depressed, the same way it granted validation to violent young men like him, legitimizing the pain of so many while paving over the suffering of countless victims of domestic violence. ... Listening to a hateful song in the privacy of our minds will not turn us into hateful people—but it might make hateful people feel more comfortable in their hatefulness. The possibility haunts us. ... And this is the madness of our country right now—feeling profoundly paranoid about the hateful thoughts that might be hiding in the heads of others.
XXXTentacion released his first track 'News/Flock' onto the music streaming service SoundCloud in 2013.
Born near the Swap Shop in Deepside, a rough area that's a part of Broward County, Ski met X[XXXTentacion] when the two were in a juvenile detention center ... When they both got out, Ski started a group called Very Rare and brought X into the fold. Soon after that, X started Members Only, and it was on from there.
Asserting that rappers like XXXTentacion and Lil Pump are a lyrical disease on the genre because their songs aren't about serious topics is ridiculous—never mind the fact that XXXTentacion's album was about his struggle with depression, which I suppose wasn't deep enough when compared with J. Cole's 'Wet Dreamz.'
Rapper XXXTentacion was shot and killed during an armed robbery Monday in Broward County, Florida, police said. The 20-year-old rapper, whose real name was Jahseh Onfroy, was leaving a motorsports store shortly before 4 p.m. when two men in a dark colored SUV shot and killed him in an apparent robbery, said Keyla Concepción, Broward County sheriff department public information officer.
The Broward County Sheriff's Office subsequently tweeted that 'the adult male that was taken to the hospital has been pronounced dead' at approximately 5:30 p.m.
Onfroy, in his music, reminded young fans in particular that their hurt was valid but that it did not form the sum total of their lives. He gave voice to their insecurities, wrapped their unending dread in the cover of his lyricism and transformed those nervous bundles into an electrifying body of work. ... XXXTentacion may have spent his career trying to convince his most ardent young fans that they're worth more than they believe, but his legacy—of trauma endured and seemingly unrepentantly inflicted—reminds us that worth has never been distributed evenly.
His ex-girlfriend detailed the most horrendous abuse in court documents and press interviews. He will be remembered mostly for the unusually cruel violence he committed on vulnerable people, particularly his ex-girlfriend, crimes for which he never expressed remorse. His music, a combination of hip-hop and emo that was depressive, and at times devastating, reflected a life lived with disregard for humanity, both other people's and his own. ... His music rarely tried to demonstrate bravado or material gains, it mostly traced round mental illness, suicide, extreme misogyny and a prevailing feeling of numbness. ... When she [his mother] was away, a darkness and depression ate away at him, one that would define his short life.
He encouraged his fans to find hope in the fog of their despair, but bragged enthusiastically about the joy he felt in brutalizing others. His music brought solace to the depressed, the same way it granted validation to violent young men like him, legitimizing the pain of so many while paving over the suffering of countless victims of domestic violence. ... Listening to a hateful song in the privacy of our minds will not turn us into hateful people—but it might make hateful people feel more comfortable in their hatefulness. The possibility haunts us. ... And this is the madness of our country right now—feeling profoundly paranoid about the hateful thoughts that might be hiding in the heads of others.
The Broward County Sheriff's Office subsequently tweeted that 'the adult male that was taken to the hospital has been pronounced dead' at approximately 5:30 p.m.
Onfroy, in his music, reminded young fans in particular that their hurt was valid but that it did not form the sum total of their lives. He gave voice to their insecurities, wrapped their unending dread in the cover of his lyricism and transformed those nervous bundles into an electrifying body of work. ... XXXTentacion may have spent his career trying to convince his most ardent young fans that they're worth more than they believe, but his legacy—of trauma endured and seemingly unrepentantly inflicted—reminds us that worth has never been distributed evenly.
Born near the Swap Shop in Deepside, a rough area that's a part of Broward County, Ski met X[XXXTentacion] when the two were in a juvenile detention center ... When they both got out, Ski started a group called Very Rare and brought X into the fold. Soon after that, X started Members Only, and it was on from there.