Kamala Harris 'pandering for black voters' by throwing a HIP-HOP PARTY?!



Vice President Kamala Harris is not a regular VP, but a cool VP — and she wants you to know it. This past Saturday, donning hot pink pants and a ‘90s-esque neon shirt, Harris threw a party to celebrate a half-century of hip-hop.

Videos of the vice president dancing and mouthing the chorus of Q-Tip’s 1999 smash hit “Vivrant Thing” went viral, and the internet lit up with laughter and criticism.

While Jason Whitlock doesn’t actually mind the dancing at all, he does have a problem with the party itself.

“My problem is more with the vice president of the United States and the White House throwing a party for 50 years of hip-hop. It’s like, did they have one for a hundred years of rock and roll? 50 years of jazz? 60 years of country music?” Whitlock says, adding that he can’t see any other reason other than “pandering for black voters.”

Contributor Shemeka Michelle isn’t a fan at all.

“I hate it. I absolutely hate it, Jason. Simply because it’s so fake, and no, I haven’t seen them do anything for rock and roll or jazz or anything,” Michelle says.

“I think Kamala would be more suitable for something in reference to jazz. She has her pants hiked up right up under her breasts, right up under her nipples,” she continues. “She’s acting like this hip-hop guru when she’s dancing around like Clair Huxtable.”

Lil Wayne was a performer at Harris' hip-hop party, and Michelle isn’t happy about that either, noting that there’s no way Harris understands his song "Mrs. Officer."

“She don’t know nothing about that. I seen her husband; she don’t know a thing about that. Now, if she was mumbling along to Cardi B saying, you know, ‘I want to gag, I want to choke’ — now, maybe not with her husband, with the men that helped her get to where she is — she might know something about that,” Michelle jokes.

Whitlock laughs and agrees that Harris is incredibly inauthentic.

“Kamala Harris and the pandering to black voters is a statement about what they think about us,” he says. “Is it true? Are we that shallow that her dancing to Q-Tip and Hillary Clinton saying she keeps hot sauce in her purse? Are we that silly? Does that move us? Does that make them more relatable?”


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HEATED: Whitlock debates 3 former NFL players about Deion Sanders



Football season is back and in full swing.

One topic of debate for the 2023 season is whether or not Deion Sanders will lead the University of Colorado Boulder in a positive direction as the team’s new head coach.

Jason Whitlock and former NFL players Warren Sapp, Seth Joyner, and Brett Favre get heated as they deliberate the subject.

“I'm fully in because the man is so consistent and patient with them young men, and then he surrounded himself with great … coaches,” says Sapp, who’s been down to Boulder to see Sanders in action.

“He’s got a great staff with him, and the kids are all in,” he tells Whitlock, adding that “when [Sanders] in front of them talking … it's almost like they're in a trance.”

But Whitlock isn’t convinced. “Great players I don’t think make great coaches,” he says.

“There’s always an exception to the rules,” interjects Brett Favre.

“What is it about Deion, besides him being a great player, that makes you doubt?” asks Seth Joyner.

“Arrogance,” answers Whitlock. “You're incredibly gifted,” he tells the three former NFL players, but “I think a lot of times incredibly gifted people have flaws that their gifts make up for, but they think their flaws are part of their strength, and Deion was not the greatest corner to ever play the game in my opinion because of his arrogance.”

“The arrogance to me is a shield … for some insecurity,” Whitlock continues, “and just to be quite honest, when I see people that over the top, when I see people … still wearing gold chains at 56 – that's some insecurity.”

“Just got a little male jealousy,” says Sapp, clearly in staunch opposition to Whitlock’s opinions about Deion.

“I really don't,” retorts Whitlock, assuring that he “would love for Deion to be a success, [but] humility is at the foundation of all sustainable success.”

“You can't talk about his kids and what they can and what they can't do in the national media and think he ain't gonna come at you,” warns Joyner, who sees Deion’s overconfidence as an asset.

But that’s just the tip of the iceberg, or shall we say volcano.

To hear their full debate, watch the clip below.


Want more from Jason Whitlock?

To enjoy more fearless conversations at the crossroads of culture, faith, sports, and comedy with Jason Whitlock, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.