Anonymous ID: f9a90c Dec. 13, 2017, 7:24 a.m. No.88152   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8168 >>8396

Clinton has began racking up a slew of endorsements from rappers and hip-hop artists since 2012 and the Clinton campaign is not letting them go unnoticed.

About a month after she announced her presidential bid, "Tonight Show" host Jimmy Fallon, noted Clinton's growing number of hip-hop endorsements and said "Thank you Hillary Clinton for getting endorsed for president by several rappers," nicknaming her "Ghostface Hillah," after the Wu-Tan Clan's Ghostface Killah.

Clinton responded with a Tweet: "Thanks, @jimmyfallon—but we actually prefer this," posting the logo "RUN HRC" in red, white and blue, which is a play off of the logo of the classic 80s-90s hip hop group RUN—D.M.C.

View image on Twitter

 

In a post titled "Why Hillary Clinton's 'RUN HRC' isn't okay" in "Blavity: The Voice of Black Millennials," Victoria Massie writes: "We are not just swagger to be exchanged … If Clinton wants to begin sincerely courting us for more than celebrity support, she must be willing to love us and our issues as much as she loves our musical legacies. She cannot bank on us having her back if she does not have ours."