Out music
superstar Lil Nas X just released the video to his latest single off his debut
album, Montero, and it's another visual delight.
The epic
"Industry Baby" begins with Nas being thrown in "Montero State
Prison," depicted as a gay fantasia filled with pink jumpsuits, dance
routines in the shower, and chiseled men working out and rubbing up against
each other. Gay Arrow star Colton Haynes even has a cameo as a
horny queer cop that Nas knocks out with one punch as he makes his escape from
the clink. The one straight aspect may be Jack Harlow, the straight rapper who
duets with Nas on the single.
The video
received rapturous praise from gay Twitter, seeing it as another act of Nas's
subversion against the straight white male establishment, akin to the video for
"Montero (Call Me by Your Name)." But the video has ambitions beyond
expressing a bold queer sensibility: It also serves as a fundraiser for the
Bail Project, a "national nonprofit organization on a mission to end cash
bail, one of the key drivers of mass incarceration and structural racism in the
U.S. criminal legal system."
Nas wrote the
following on the Bail Project's fundraising page:
"Hi,
It’s me, Lil
Nas X.
Music is the
way I fight for liberation. It’s my act of resistance.
But I also
know that true freedom requires real change in how the criminal justice system
works. Starting with cash bail.
This isn’t
just theoretical for me. It’s personal. I know the pain that incarceration
brings to a family. And I know the disproportionate impact that cash bail has
on Black Americans.
People
like Vita from New Orleans, Kamren from Austin, and Leticia from
Baton Rouge—their stories remind us why we must take action.
So I’m doing
something about it and I invite you to join me. Ending cash bail is one of the
most important civil rights issues of our time. Donate what you can to the Bail
X Fund.
Let’s bring
people home & let’s fight for freedom and equality."
The Bail
Project indicated it's already made millions in donations thanks to Nas. Donate here and learn more here about how cash bail disproportionately
affects low-income individuals and people of color.
SOURCE: ADVOCATE
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