Lil Pazo is dragging local TV stations for massive hypocrisy regarding censorship. The singer slammed broadcasters for banning his tracks over alleged vulgarity while the songs blow up everywhere else. He argued that television gatekeepers ignore what actual humans want to watch because they cling to outdated regulations.
Lunabe pointed out that his track Ekisododo gets massive rotation in bars and homes despite the television blackout. He claimed that regular people in the ghetto jam to his content daily, yet media houses pretend the demand does not exist.
The artist called out the double standard where international acts get a free pass. Pazo noted that stations happily blast music from Cardi B and Nicki Minaj without filtering the lyrics. He insisted that those foreign superstars release material far filthier than anything local creators produce.
He also highlighted dedicated slots for Jamaican dancehall, which often contains extreme content. The musician feels frustrated that foreign smut gets airtime while homegrown hits stay blocked under the guise of maintaining moral standards.
Lunabe pointed out that his track Ekisododo gets massive rotation in bars and homes despite the television blackout. He claimed that regular people in the ghetto jam to his content daily, yet media houses pretend the demand does not exist.
The artist called out the double standard where international acts get a free pass. Pazo noted that stations happily blast music from Cardi B and Nicki Minaj without filtering the lyrics. He insisted that those foreign superstars release material far filthier than anything local creators produce.
He also highlighted dedicated slots for Jamaican dancehall, which often contains extreme content. The musician feels frustrated that foreign smut gets airtime while homegrown hits stay blocked under the guise of maintaining moral standards.