![]() It looks like they slapped it together with what they had, but it’s the only thing I remember from that video. Theotis’ part in the Shake Junt video isn’t particularly seminal or even well-edited. Someone skating to “Dey Know” in the year it peaked would’ve been massive it’s the perfect fit for the second part of a video. They’d rather edit to a Big L song, or a remix of a Big L song, or a remix of a remix of a Big L song remixed by a guy who specializes in remixing Big L songs. Most skaters in 2008 didn’t take the Trilogy soundtracking approach. ![]() The remix gave it a second life, soundtracking every skate trip car ride that spring, and essential at the parties that we were able to sneak into. To hold us over, he dropped Ice Cream Man Part 2, which included the remix to Shawty Lo’s “Dey Know.” The regular version was everywhere at that point: the horns were infectious, and the initial beat drop is the sonic equivalent of when the ball swishes through the hoop for the win at the buzzer. This was when he was at the height of his powers - the most effective motivational speaker on a desperate planet approaching a recession, and in need of a spark. It was the the start of 2008, and Jeezy hadn’t released an album in over a year. Nobody is going to skate to “Brocolli” in a major video next year, and if someone does, who cares. A mixtape will come out, and by the end of the week, there are three Insta clips to songs off it, and at least one new video in your YouTube subscription feed using the same tune for a trip clip. That same joy of skate videos using songs that pushpin memories into your mind doesn’t exist anymore. ![]() Even in those middle school years when RJD2 was cool, there was something validating about hearing it in Mosaic. I had an ear-to-ear smile on my face the second I heard the “I Love It” beat at the start of Biebel’s Fully Flared section for the first time. For that same reason, there has always been a special joy in major videos using songs that soundtracked a summer, or helped us power through a winter. Quartersnacks has often utilized a #musicsupervision approach akin to a video like Trilogy: a 1996 video full of songs released in 1996, mirroring what the people involved in making it were actually listening to during the time. In fact, he’s exactly the sort of artist whose music geriatric skater types will insist you are using “ironically” in YouTube comments. ![]() No, Lo has no place in the canon of skate video music supervision. ![]() Shawty Lo died in a car crash early yesterday morning. ![]()
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