The Most Successful Culture Vulture
Drake (Aubrey Graham) is argued to be the most successful "culture vulture" in rap history — a Canadian Jewish-raised former child actor who built a career performing a Black cultural identity he never lived. His commercial success allowed the rap community to overlook inauthenticity that would have ended lesser artists' careers. ---
Key Concepts
| Concept | Definition |
|---|---|
| Culture Vulture | An artist who adopts and profits from a culture they don't belong to, without genuinely understanding or having lived its experiences |
| Non-transferable street credit | The idea that proximity to gangsters or hood environments doesn't grant legitimacy — you can't borrow someone else's biography |
| Cultural perspective vs. aesthetic | Black culture argued to be a worldview shaped by systemic oppression, not just fashion, slang, and street names |
| Ghost writing in rap context | Uniquely problematic in hip-hop specifically because the culture is rooted in battle rap and personal lyricism — unlike pop/R&B where songwriting credits are openly shared |
Notes
Drake's Background vs. His Persona
- Born Aubrey Graham, raised Jewish with his mother in Toronto suburbs
- Child actor on *Degrassi* from age 14 (hired 2001)
- Grew up with an entire basement to himself, middle-class comfort
- Father reportedly from Memphis — Drake filmed "Worst Behavior" video there despite not growing up there
- Deliberately mispronounces words in songs to sound less Canadian/white
The "Started From The Bottom" Problem
- Contrast drawn with Francis Ngannou: born in poverty in Cameroon, worked in sand quarries from age 12, illegally crossed borders, lived in homeless shelters in Paris
- Drake's own home tour video shows a comfortable suburban home, well-stocked fridge, personal basement studio
- Lyric in "Started From The Bottom" references driving his uncle's car — argued to represent upper-middle-class struggle at worst
Why the Community Let It Slide
- Drake is a consistent, talented hit-maker — people overlook inauthenticity when they enjoy the music
- Normalized a "catchy songs are all that matters" mentality across rap
- By contrast, artists like Iggy Azalea and Danny LJ faced immediate backlash because they didn't have Drake's commercial output to shield them
Ghost Writing
- Drake grew up in the battle rap tradition, which prizes personal, unwritten lyricism
- Using ghost writers while claiming top-five lyricist status is treated as a fundamental contradiction
- Argument: nobody knows what portion of his catalog reflects his actual talent vs. his team's resources
Drake's Commercial Crossover Origins
- Co-signed early by Lil Wayne and Nicki Minaj — instantly crossed over to both Black and white audiences
- Achieved in months what took Beyoncé, Usher, and Lil Wayne a decade
- Described as visibly "corny" early on; his persona became progressively more hood-coded as he gained success and collaborated with gangster rappers
Allegations and Concerning Patterns
- Multiple deleted tweets referencing underage girls ("I can't wait till she's 18," "if she's 16 I'm 16")
- Video footage of a 17-year-old fan describing a close texting relationship with Drake
- Executive producer credit on *Euphoria* — a highly sexualized show whose main characters are explicitly written as underage high schoolers
- *Euphoria* argument: if actual teenagers played the roles, the show would legally constitute child pornography; the adult casting is framed as a thin legal distinction
Actionable Takeaways
- When evaluating an artist's authenticity, separate the quality of the music from the credibility of the persona being performed
- Recognize that cultural appropriation in music is most harmful when the borrowed identity is used to exploit an audience that culture belongs to, not just when aesthetics are shared
- Hold top-tier artists to the same standards as smaller ones — commercial success shouldn't function as a pass on accountability
Quotes Worth Keeping
That street credit is non-transferable.
Black culture is a perspective — one that Drake doesn't have.
Almost anybody got more cred than Drake. A newborn baby born in the hood got more respect in the hood than Drake.
I don't know what part of his hits is due to his talent and what part is due to his resources.
He was seeming more like a light-skinned dude and less like the only white kid in a ratchet school — taking a culture he don't belong to and using it for monetary gain.