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THE GTKPRS PODCAST EP.2- THIS IS NOT A MUSIC REVIEW / Nas x DJ Premier “Light Years”17 Dec 202501:34:20

This is not a review of Light Years by Nas & DJ Premier.

In Episode 2 of GTKPRS (Gatekeepers) powered by the ADHD Network, Trap Bradshaw is joined by Glasses Malone, Uncle Trill, Steve Da ZOE, Lex Diamond, and Shatif for a heated, unfiltered conversation about legacy, expectations, and honesty in hip-hop.

The consulate debates whether hip-hop legends are still allowed to be critiqued, why fans confuse respect with silence, and how honest criticism has started to feel like hate in today’s culture. From production standards to double standards between new artists and icons, this episode challenges the way hip-hop conversations are happening right now.

Debate-heavy. Uncomfortable. Necessary.

THE GTKPRS PODCST EP.1- NO CUTTING THE CULTURE LINE12 Dec 202501:26:20

Welcome to




GTKPRS, where the culture don’t move unless WE say so. This is the room where your favorite rapper might get denied at the door like they wearing fake Mauris. It's me, Trap Bradshaw, and I got the council with me: Glasses Malone, Lex Diamond, Uncle Trill, Teef, Steve, and the homie Sane.

Tonight, we’re establishing the rules. We’re deciding who’s allowed in hip-hop, who’s temporarily suspended, and who’s been banned since ‘04 and don’t even know it.

If you sensitive, this ain’t the podcast for you. If you love the culture? Pull up a chair. The gate is open — but not for everybody.

THE GTKPRS PODCAST EP.3- "When Rappers Say ‘F* the Streets" — Growth or Disrespect? |22 Dec 202501:58:15

In Episode 3 of THE GTKPRS, the group tackles one of the most controversial conversations in hip-hop right now: When rappers say “f** the streets,” what do they really mean?*Trap Bradshaw is joined by Shatif, Steve DA Zoe, Precious Gorgeous, Glasses Malone, Lex Diamond, and Trill Nunley for a raw, unfiltered discussion on street culture, growth, accountability, and how language impacts the communities hip-hop comes from.Is rejecting “the streets” about condemning violence — or is it unintentionally disrespecting the hood and the people who still live there?Can artists evolve without disowning their origins?And who is this message really for: the youth, the culture, or corporate comfort?This episode doesn’t chase safe answers. It challenges narratives, checks respectability politics, and asks whether hip-hop is starting to distance itself from the very communities that built it.🔥 Expect strong opinions🔥 Real debate🔥 No fence-sittingDrop your take in the comments — growth or disrespect?

GTKPRS Episode 7: Gatekeeping, Access & Who Gets to Speak for Hip-Hop20 Jan 202601:42:54

In GTKPRS Episode 7, Trap Bradshaw, Glasses Malone, Uncle Trill, Lex Diamond, and Shatiff sit down for a raw, unfiltered conversation about gatekeeping in hip-hop — and how access, platforms, and credibility determine who gets heard and who gets ignored.

The episode digs into how hip-hop conversations are shaped behind the scenes, not just by talent, but by relationships, positioning, and proximity to power. The panel debates how certain voices are elevated while others are dismissed, and whether the culture is being protected — or quietly controlled — by the same small circles.

Throughout the episode, the crew breaks down:

  • What gatekeeping actually looks like in today’s hip-hop industry

  • How access to rooms, platforms, and networks changes narratives

  • The difference between earned credibility vs manufactured influence

  • Why some people get labeled “culture voices” while others are sidelined

  • How media, podcasts, and personalities impact public perception of hip-hop

  • The tension between speaking for the culture versus speaking from it

Rather than surface-level takes, Episode 7 exposes the politics of hip-hop discourse — who gets the microphone, who decides what conversations matter, and how power quietly moves through the culture.

GTKPRS Episode 7 is less about trends and more about truth — challenging listeners to think critically about who they listen to, why they listen, and who benefits from certain narratives being pushed.

💬 This episode is guaranteed to spark debate.
Jump in the comments and weigh in:
Is gatekeeping protecting hip-hop… or holding it hostage?

GTKPRS Podcast EP.6 - HIP-HOP’S ACCOUNTABILITY TEST: Aiden Ross, Black Women, & Salt-N-Pepa vs UMG12 Jan 202601:35:32

Hip-hop gets put on trial in GTKPRS Podcast Episode 6.

We debate the uncomfortable questions: Does hip-hop’s language + culture give outsiders a “pass”? What does the Aiden Ross moment reveal about how people talk about Black women—and who gets protected vs. who gets mocked?

Then we pivot into the industry side: Salt-N-Pepa vs UMG, contracts, master rights, and why legacy artists keep ending up in the same fight. Plus: the crew riffs on “timeless music” and what people are really going back to (including Drake / PartyNextDoor talk).

🔥 Tap in, pick a side, and drop a comment:
Is hip-hop responsible for what the audience repeats—or is that a cop-out?

✅ Subscribe for more debate episodes
💬 Comment your take + timestamp the wildest moment

#GTKPRS #GatekeepersPodcast #HipHopPodcast #HipHopDebate #AidenRoss #BlackWomen #HipHopCulture #RapCulture #Accountability #Misogyny #Racism #SaltNPepa #UMG #MusicIndustry #MastersRights #Drake #PartyNextDoor #TrapBradshaw #GlassesMalone #LexDiamond

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GTKPRS Episode 5: Self Check-Out - Ice-T Checks In With Glasses Loc05 Jan 202601:35:31

Episode 5 of GTKPRS delivers another raw, unscripted conversation rooted in hip-hop culture, industry curiosity, and real-time debate.

The room briefly heats up when Ice-T checks in for a quick call, showing love and tapping into the energy before bouncing. Later, OG Rashad calls in to ask questions around the FILA store and King Tee’s involvement, sparking discussion and clarity around ownership, branding, and legacy connections.

With Trap Bradshaw, Lex Diamond, Shatiff, Uncle Trill, Glasses Malone, and Steve Dazoe leading the room, the episode stays true to GTKPRS form — honest questions, sharp opinions, and conversations that move naturally instead of being forced.

This episode captures what GTKPRS does best:
• Real-time call-ins without hype or scripting
• Industry curiosity instead of clickbait narratives
• Hip-hop dialogue from multiple perspectives
• Organic debate that feels like the room, not a rollout

🎙️ GTKPRS isn’t about moments — it’s about conversations.

GTKPRS Podcast EP. 4 - Texts From R.Kelly30 Dec 202501:12:39

In GTKPRS Episode 4, Trap Bradshaw sits with Glasses Malone, Steve Dazoe, Uncle Trill, Shatif, and Lex Diamonds to unpack one of the most uncomfortable conversations in hip-hop and culture: the impact, implications, and reactions surrounding texts connected to R. Kelly.This episode isn’t about headlines or shock value. It’s about accountability, silence, complicity, and how the culture responds when the truth is no longer abstract. The crew discusses how information changes perception, why some people distance themselves while others stay quiet, and how the industry often prioritizes protection over principle.Topics include:• How new information reshapes public opinion• The difference between outrage and responsibility• Why hip-hop struggles with accountability• Who gets protected — and why• The role of silence in cultural damageThis is a real conversation, handled with seriousness, context, and honesty — not entertainment.Gatekeepers isn’t here to soften the truth.It’s here to confront it.

GTKPRS PODCAST EP 11: IS HIP-HOP LOSING ITS EDGE? BIGGIE & NAS, NEW YORK $$ & DOES THE STREETS STILL MATTER?17 Feb 202601:50:56

In GTKPRS Episode 11, Trap Bradshaw is joined by AL B Back, Shateef, Lex Diamond, Uncle Trill, Steve the Producer, and Glasses Malone for one of the most layered hip-hop debates yet.This episode dives deep into:• The difference between an MC and a rapper• Is hip-hop losing its edge or just evolving?• Does a street co-sign still matter in 2026?• The power of the “New York dollar” in hip-hop• Illmatic vs It Was Written• Ready to Die vs Life After Death• Was Biggie’s album leap the greatest ever?• Was Jay-Z the best rapper of the 2000s?• Does music hit different in the car vs the subway?The crew breaks down how environment shapes sound, whether cosigns still validate artists, and how hip-hop’s ecosystem changed from park battles and mixtapes to algorithms and AI.From Nas and Biggie to Kanye, Eminem, Prodigy, OutKast, and the evolution of the Black dollar in music — this conversation goes everywhere.If you care about hip-hop culture, legacy, street validation, album growth, and the future of rap… this one is mandatory listening.Drop your take in the comments:Is hip-hop losing its edge — or are we just nostalgic?#GTKPRS #TrapBradshaw #GlassesMalone #HipHopDebate #Nas #Biggie #JayZ #Illmatic #LifeAfterDeath #HipHopCulture #RapPodcast #ADHDPodcast

GTKPRS EP. 10 - J. COLE’S ALBUM DIVIDES HIP-HOP, BIG PUN’s Legacy, Greatest Names in Hip Hop09 Feb 202601:59:26

In GTKPRS Episode 10, Trap Bradshaw is joined by Glasses Malone, Lex Diamond, Al B. Back, Shatif, Steve Dizzo, and Uncle Trill for one of the most heated Gatekeepers conversations yet.What starts as a breakdown of J. Cole’s latest album quickly turns into a full-blown culture debate—touching on legacy vs. lyricism, replay value, authenticity, and whether J. Cole’s story has run its course. The panel debates whether the album is evolving with each listen or falling into safe, anticlimactic territory, and whether Cole is still pushing hip-hop forward or reheating past moments.From there, the conversation spirals into New York hip-hop identity, with explosive arguments over who “belongs,” who gets claimed, and where lines get drawn. Queens, the Bronx, Brooklyn, D.C., and the South all get pulled into the crossfire as the crew debates what it really means to be “of the culture.”The episode also takes a deep dive into Big Pun’s legacy, the weight of classic albums, and how short careers are judged against long ones. From Capital Punishment to LL Cool J, Nas, Rakim, DMX, and beyond, the panel argues over what defines greatness, how legends are remembered, and why names still matter in hip-hop.This episode is raw, unfiltered, hilarious, and confrontational—exactly what GTKPRS (Gatekeepers) was built for: real debates, real history, and no safe opinions.If you care about hip-hop albums, lyrical standards, legacy conversations, and culture politics, this is one you don’t skip.

GTKPRS Podcast EP. 9 | J. Cole’s Mixtape, Bad Bunny & Hip-Hop’s Grammy Ceiling09 Feb 202601:33:15

In Episode 9 of the GTKPRS Podcast, Trap Bradshaw, Uncle Trill, PG, Lex Diamond, Glasses Malone, and Shatif break down one of the most heated hip-hop conversations of the year.The crew debates J. Cole’s January 28th mixtape drop, his decision to rap over classic New York beats with DJ Clue, and what it really means when an artist pays homage versus claiming a city. The conversation spirals into a deeper argument about New York hip-hop identity, regional ownership, and whether legacy cities are evolving—or being diluted.Things heat up even further when the panel reacts to the Grammys once again overlooking hip-hop, as Bad Bunny dominates global categories. Is this proof of hip-hop’s worldwide influence—or another example of the culture being used for views without real respect?From mixtape nostalgia and DJ culture to generational divides, regional pride, and hip-hop’s global crossroads, GTKPRS Episode 9 delivers raw, unfiltered debate that cuts to the core of where the culture stands right now.🎧 Tap in if you care about lyricism, legacy, and who really gets to speak for hip-hop.

GTKPRS Ep. 8 | Is the Big 3 Era Over? Kendrick, Drake & J. Cole Debate26 Jan 202601:54:55

In Episode 8 of the GTKPRS Podcast, the panel tackles one of hip-hop’s most uncomfortable questions: Is the Big 3 era officially over?As debates heat up, Trap Bradshaw, PG (Precious Gorgeous), Glasses Malone, Uncle Trill, Shatiff, Lex Diamond, MIQUO, and Steve DA ZOE (The Producer) break down the shifting power dynamics around Kendrick Lamar, Drake, and J. Cole — and whether the industry has quietly moved on.The conversation cuts deep into:Why the “Big 3” conversation even exists in the first placeWhether the culture, not the artists, decided the era was doneHow media narratives, fan fatigue, and industry politics shape perceptionIf lyricism, impact, or relevance should still define hip-hop dominanceWho benefits when the culture crowns — and then discards — its leadersWhat starts as a ranking debate quickly turns into a larger industry autopsy, exposing truths many platforms avoid admitting out loud. No scripted takes. No safe answers. Just raw dialogue, sharp disagreements, and moments that force the room to pause.If you care about hip-hop history, accountability, and where the culture is headed next, this episode isn’t optional.🎧 Watch, debate, and decide for yourself.

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