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Perhaps you’ve seen the music video for “Whiteboy,” which currently has more than 22 million views on YouTube and made a minor celebrity of a carpenter turned pro wrestler turned rapper named Tom MacDonald. It’s set in a Southern California classroom where the musician, who is white, wears blond box braids and sits at a desk in a row of bored-looking students. Just as he starts rapping about how he shouldn’t have to feel bad for being white, the students start to make faces and throw paper at him. The teacher, played by a Black actor, tries to quiet MacDonald down, waving his arms and wordlessly shouting. The rest of the classroom begins to taunt him: “White boy, don’t say that/White boy, you so bad.” MacDonald overpowers them with a scream of anguish, his voice rising above all the others in the room: “White boy, white noise, saying shit I can’t say with my white voice.” Naturally, there are viral videos mocking the song. “Cringing With Whiteboy,” a reaction video, is currently sitting around 1.6 million views. Almost as if it were an HBO Max original, MacDonald released an accompanying behind-the-scenes clip where he describes the concept of the song. He says that he wanted viewers to get pissed off. Those reactions, he hoped, would “spark the conversation.”īut MacDonald started something more vicious than a conversation. Even if you’ve never seen the video for “Whiteboy,” you know precisely the type of person who would put it on repeat. Eventually, white nationalists discovered the song. MacDonald said he spent hours deleting their comments celebrating him. “That freaked me the fuck out,” he said, claiming that, as a Canadian, he was unaware of the chaos his track would unleash. Of course, he brought this upon himself.įour years after “Whiteboy,” MacDonald is eager to “show people I’m not just some brainwashed right-wing zombie.” When we spend time together this winter at his place, he’s ultra-paranoid about Covid, requiring us to stay masked and socially distanced even outdoors. He suggests that he isn’t against abortion, or gun control, that he watches videos about “intersectionality.” All of which throws me off. MacDonald’s music since “Whiteboy” has been a steady stream of ever-more-viral tracks trashing Black Lives Matter, fat acceptance, and whatever other liberal boogeyman was on Fox News that week. Although he also makes pop punk about breakups and moody tracks about sobriety, those never seem to blow up the same way.
He acknowledges extreme positions benefit him. “I think a lot of people benefit from social unrest and civil conflict,” he tells me matter-of-factly. “But like my whole thing is, like, be aware.” It’s Fox News and CNN and whoever the fuck else - R olling S tone.” It’s also Tom MacDonald, he concedes. “Be aware” sounds a lot like “stay woke.” But don’t be fooled.
In all of MacDonald’s body of work, his favorite target is wokeness.Ĭonversations about free speech and cancel culture have created a cottage industry for public figures willing to use language that many people might find offensive. At the highest valuations, celebrities like Joe Rogan have been able to build some of the most popular individual brands in America - in Rogan’s case, amid calls for him to be deplatformed for everything from vaccine misinformation to a number of since-deleted episodes in which the host routinely says the n-word. MacDonald is likely the most famous artist in a budding genre of his own creation: right-wing protest rap.