Tyga was ‘confused’ about the ‘Ay Caramba’ video backlash, but now he’s listening

A man with neck tattoos, twists and sunglasses poses for a picture
Tyga has taken accountability for the criticism surrounding his “Ay Caramba” music video.
(Richard Shotwell / Invision/Related Press)

“Ay Caramba” generated a number of buzz, however not in the best way the rapper Tyga stated he meant.

When the colourful music video dropped earlier this month, many viewers known as out the “Freaky Deaky” rapper for utilizing visuals that perpetuated Mexican stereotypes. Weeks after the video garnered tens of millions of views on YouTube, Tyga addressed the backlash and apologized to the “Mexican neighborhood and my followers which can be Mexican.”

“I had no intentions on offending anyone,” he stated Thursday in an interview on Energy 106-FM Los Angeles.

He sat down with “American Cholo” podcast host Gil Tejada to kind out the backlash. The interview started with Tejada explaining why “Ay Caramba” acquired pushback on social media, particularly from Mexican followers.

“I’m wanting on the video and initially I see a greasy, fats Mexican consuming chips, room’s all soiled, after which I see when he’s outdoors within the lowrider you bought tortilla chips falling down,” Tejada stated.

The “American Cholo” host defined that if a music video from a brown creator used stereotypical Black photos — for instance, exhibiting the character “consuming fried rooster” and “watermelon falling from the sky” in lieu of tortilla chips — that particular person would even be a goal for backlash. Tyga realized concerning the backlash final week when he returned from his exhibits in Europe and stated he was “confused, in order that’s why I didn’t reply.”

“I attempted to do my analysis somewhat bit, I attempted to ask a number of my associates that I grew up with that had been Mexican,” he stated.

Tyga stated he consulted numerous Mexican folks in his internal circle, such because the engineer on his music video and his DJ. He additionally stated that he meant for the video to showcase “completely different Latin issues.”

“It wasn’t a Mexican-themed video,” he stated.

The primary character, the rapper defined, was a nod to considered one of Eddie Murphy’s many personas in “The Nutty Professor,” and he reiterated that he didn't imply to offend. Tejada stated that Tyga isn’t the one musician to applicable Mexican tradition for music movies, itemizing YG’s apparel in “Go Loko” and the mariachi band in Blueface’s “Carne Asada.” Tejada stated appropriation of Mexican tradition is “nearly at like a boiling level.”

Tyga, who stated he grew up with Mexican associates and tradition in Los Angeles, acknowledged that he’s in no place to find out what can or can’t be offensive to the Latino neighborhood.

“I can perceive somewhat bit now the place you’re coming from as a result of it was speculated to be a humorous video,” Tyga stated, including that it wasn’t meant to make enjoyable of a selected neighborhood.

Tejeda recommended that Tyga rent cultural consultants the subsequent time he desires to pay “homage” to the neighborhood. The rapper added that collaborations with Mexican artists can result in higher illustration.

Tejada requested the rapper if he would “be prepared to take that video down?”

“I’m undoubtedly open for that,” Tyga responded however joked that greater, extra common data ought to stay untouched.

As of Friday, it appeared Tyga made good on his phrase. The “Ay Caramba” music video is not publicly listed on YouTube and isn't on his official web page.

“My artwork isn't meant to offend anyone,” Tyga stated. “My artwork and the music brings folks collectively.”

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