News Opinons Politics

Public Enemy’s Flavor Flav Sends Cease and Desist Letter to Bernie Sanders

This week in hip hop beef, Flavor Flav has taken issue with Bernie Sanders’ use of his likeness and Public Enemy’s name for his campaign.

The Public Enemy co-creator sent a cease and desist letter via lawyers to Sanders. Flav’s bandmate and Public Enemy co-creator Chuck D has publicly endorsed Sanders for the Democratic nominee for president and plans to perform at a rally for the senator in Los Angeles.

In his letter, Flav’s lawyers note that neither he nor the iconic group have not endorsed any candidate.


“While Chuck is certainly free to express his political views as he sees fit — his voice alone does not speak for Public Enemy,” Flav’s lawyers wrote. “The planned performance will only be Chuck D of Public Enemy, it will not be a performance by Public Enemy… To be clear, Flav and, by extension, the Hall of Fame hip hop act Public Enemy with which his likeness and name have become synonymous has not endorsed any political candidate in this election cycle and any suggestion to the contrary is plainly untrue.”


Netanyahu’s Cabinet calls High Court a ‘judicial mafia’ and ‘gang of dictators’
Look at What All the Dems Suddenly Turning on Platner Said After His Numerous Other Credible Disqualifying Scandals
Woman suspected in Monaco bombing found shot dead in Ukraine
SPLC arraigned on superseding charges of donor fraud
Shock Report: Macron and France Were Prepared for ‘War’ with America After Maduro Raid
VIDEO: Suspected Antifa Surgical Strike Leaves Conservative Streamer’s Wife, Bedroom Soaked in Chemical Irritant
Progressive Dems’ full-throated Platner endorsements come back to haunt them after rape allegations
Smithsonian’s American History Museum Engages In ‘Extreme Political Activism,’ New White House Report Concludes
Kingmaker Mamdani calls on Platner to ‘drop out of the race’ after rape allegation
Macron addresses ‘elements of risk’ in Syria’s reintegration after bomb goes off outside his hotel
Trump welcomed with pomp and pageantry by Turkey’s Erdogan at NATO
Nigel Farage to resign, run again for Parliament in ‘people vs. the establishment’ by-election
Manhattan high-rise evacuated as officials warn of potential collapse
Trump taunts Meloni with fresh photo salvo as NATO summit puts allies face-to-face
Trump could hand prized stealth jets to NATO ally once seen as alliance headache

See also  Two Americas: Mamdani and Trump give speeches ahead of Independence Day

Sanders’ campaign announced a March 1 stop in Los Angeles last week with a poster using the title of Public Enemy’s famed song “Fight the Power” as a call to action for his campaign. The poster also said the rally, to be held at the Los Angeles Convention Center, will be Bernie Sanders and Public Enemy.

“It is unfortunate that a political campaign would be so careless with the artistic integrity of such an iconoclastic figures in American culture,” the letter reads. “Sanders claims to represent everyman not the man yet his grossly irresponsible handling of Chuck’s endorsement threatens to divide Public Enemy and, in doing so, forever silence one of the nation’s loudest and most enduring voices for social change.

“Perhaps Sanders didn’t intend to sow these irreconcilable differences but, by and through his disregard for the truth, he has nonetheless.”

Story cited here.

Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter