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Public Enemy

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Combining the imposing delivery of Chuck D with the comedic flow of Flavor Flav, Public Enemy were the most revolutionary, provocative and most important act to emerge from the golden age of hip-hop. Carlton Ridenhour and William Drayton first met at Long Island's Adelphi College in the early '80s and after putting out a tape named Public Enemy #1, the pair adopted their more familiar monikers of Chuck D and Flavor Flav, added DJ Terminator X and Minister of Information Professor Griff to their line-up, and assembled a production team, The Bomb Squad, whose abrasive sampling-heavy approach helped power the group's politically-charged and socially-conscious rhymes. Despite the initial reluctance of label boss Rick Rubin, who believed Flav - famous for wearing wacky sunglasses and an oversized clock around his neck - detracted from Chuck D's powerful rhetoric, the group signed to Def Jam in 1986 and a year later released critically-acclaimed debut album, Yo! Bum Rush the Show. The group then fulfilled their goal of making hip-hop's equivalent of Marvin Gaye's What's Going On with 1987's It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, a truly seminal record credited with ushering in a new wave of black consciousness. After recording the theme to Spike Lee's "Do the Right Thing" (1989), the group fired Professor Griff over anti-Semitic comments he made to The Washington Post, and briefly disbanded before returning with 1990's Fear of a Black Planet, a typically fearless affair which entered the US Top 10. Follow-up Apocalypse 91 The Enemy Strikes Back fared even better, peaking at No.4 on the Billboard 200 and spawning their first Top 50 hit, while its reworking of "Bring the Noise" with thrash metal giants Anthrax is widely recognized as the invention of nu-metal. 1994's Muse Sick-n-Hour Message was the first Public Enemy album to receive mixed reviews, but after an eventful break in which DJ Lord replaced Terminator X, Professor Griff rejoined the fold and Chuck D retired the band from touring, they returned to form with the soundtrack to basketball drama "He Got Game" (1998). In 1999, Public Enemy became one of the first major acts to debut an album on the internet with There's a Poison Goin' On, and although their commercial appeal waned over the following decade, the likes of 2002's Revolverlution, 2005's New Whirl Odor and 2006's collaborative album with California rapper Paris, Rebirth of a Nation, all proved they still remained as vital as ever. Tenth album, How You Sell Soul to a Soulless People Who Sold Their Soul first hit stores in 2007, but third single, "Harder Than You Think," became an unexpected UK Top 5 hit five years later when it soundtracked Channel 4's London Olympics coverage. Later that year, the group released two albums, Most of My Heroes Still Don't Appear on No Stamp and The Evil Empire of Everything, while after their 2013 induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, they added to their legacy with 2015's Man Plans God Laughs.

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Movies

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No Score Yet No Score Yet Busta Rhymes: Everything Remains Raw Unknown (Character) - 2004

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No Score Yet No Score Yet Great Performances Guest 2020
No Score Yet 50% The Late Show With Stephen Colbert Music Performer 2020
No Score Yet 42% Jimmy Kimmel Live! Music Performer 2015
No Score Yet 44% The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Music Performer 2014
No Score Yet No Score Yet Late Night With Jimmy Fallon Music Performer 2009
No Score Yet 57% Saturday Night Live Music Performer 1991