Hit Dawgs Hollerin’: Andrew Schulz & Gary Owens Respond To Kendrick Lamar’s ‘White Comedians’ Lyric

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Kendrick Lamar turned 2024 into a masterclass of putting people in their place, now two habitual line-steppers are responding to his call-out.

Gary Owen x Kendrick Lamar x Andrew Schulz

Source: Gilbert Carrasquillo/Arturo Holmes/Charley Gallay / Getty

As fans clamor to take in the Compton-born rapper’s surprise album, GNX, a couple of comedic culture vultures couldn’t resist commenting. In response to a lyric on the album’s opening track “wacced out murals” in which Kendrick says,

“Don’t let no white comedian talk about no Black woman, that’s law”

Vanilla villains Gary Owen and Andrew Schulz have hollered like the dogs they are. First, Owens took to Instagram and posted the lyrics alongside the caption,

“If that’s the law that makes me a criminal”

A bold take from a man whose entire career exists because Black people decided it could.

Never the one to know when to hush, Schultz spoke with resident capper Akademiks about Kendrick‘s alleged “diss” towards him and responded exactly how someone with a history of being loud and wrong would.

“His reaction was, ‘Is this guy too woke to understand a joke?” Akademiks said in reference to their conversation.

Schulz found himself at the center of a debate about the constant disrespect of Black women after appearing alongside the ShxtsNGigs podcast hosts James Duncan and Fuhad Dawodu earlier this year. During a conversation about a popular TikTok trend about the Black girlfriend effect—the idea that men who date Black women have a glow-up of epic proportion—Schulz took his klan robe out of the closet.

“They shave their hair because they start losing it from being so stressed, being around this Black girl that’s complaining about s**t all the f**king time,” the melanin-deficient degenerate said during the episode.

He continued,

“They grow a beard because there’s more cushion when they get slapped. I think the Black Girlfriend Effect might be a protective instinct.”

Dawodu and Duncan would go on to release an apology for how gleefully they took in what Schulz said after being dragged by social media, relentlessly, for several days.

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