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Paper Boi is tested on an introspective Atlanta

Earn and Al question their ideas of success in "Born 2 Die"

TV Reviews Atlanta
Paper Boi is tested on an introspective Atlanta
Donald Glover Photo: Guy D’Alema/FX

Atlanta is great at saying the quiet part out loud when it comes to uncomfortable dynamics in the music industry. When Team Paper Boi has an interaction with someone with power, they’re often disrespected, even when the other party means well. (It all started with Earn’s radio friend and his n-word joke.) In “Born 2 Die,” Al has to deal with the slight of being pushed aside by a new generation of rap: white boys who rise up the charts on subpar skills thanks to unlimited resources and rapid industry acceptance. The show presents another view of how, even after a successful arena tour, the music industry is both a come-up and an existential letdown for someone like Al.

Both of the formulas presented by Bunk’s get-rich-quick seminar (the Chief Keef trajectory and the Young White Avatar) are dynamics that are totally a thing if any hip hop fan thinks it over for more than five seconds. The older vanguard of rappers have settled into other lanes in entertainment. Aside from Ice Cube’s family films, there’s Fast & Furious regular Ludacris, Power’s 50 Cent, and “Mr. He Keep A Job” Snoop Dogg. As for the YWAs, co-signs are a major part of up-and-coming rappers’ rise to mainstream fame. Atlanta previously hinted at rappers helping each other out with Paper Boi and Clark County’s partnership in season two (which many fans think was an unspoken nod to Childish Gambino and Chance the Rapper’s friendship). Most of the biggest mainstream rappers throughout the history of the art-form got a cosign from an elder while they were starting out. Enimen? Dre. G-Eazy? Lil Wayne. Jack Harlow? Kanye. (It’s a different genre, but Bieber? Usher, baby.)

In the end, both Al and Bunk make it to the Grammys off of their YWAs, with Yodel Kid and Benny, respectively. Their success is played as a way to manipulate the game that siphons off your culture and talent but will only pay you up to a point. But Al isn’t in the same mindset as Bunk and his colleagues. After Yodel Kid dies and sweeps his categories, there’s no celebration, with Al saying that managing made him feel “sick.” Coupled with Darius’ “Grammys ain’t for Black men,” the whole YWA journey just feels like a digression that left Al with a cool million and a bit of clout, both of which wouldn’t last very long. The rapper is left contemplating Earn’s thought: “It’s not about what feels good. It’s about what survives.” Can Paper Boi really build a legacy in an industry where the victors are decided by people like Benny and his dad?

After Earn’s therapy session in episode two, “Born 2 Die” continues to drop hints on just how successful Paper Boi has gotten. The closest that writer Jamal Olori comes to saying that Al has hit the mainstream is his arena tour, which is a step up from where he was in Europe. Still, there are so many questions to be answered. We haven’t seen Al or Van’s places (or much of Van at all—we want more Van, always more Van). And Earn mentioned renovating a condo that we haven’t look at. Atlanta’s domestic environs aren’t the first that I think of for the show, but they took up a good part of the earlier two seasons. I wouldn’t be mad if the writers continue dropping only breadcrumb-sized hints, but the homebody in me wants to see more day-to-day evidence of how far the group has come.

While Alfred’s storyline is focused on clout-chasing, Earn gets the runaround in a quest for a new client. In an attempt to avoid a PR blitz for a Karen client, he jumps on his boss’ example of a big client and says he can probably sign neo-soul king D’Angelo. The office scene is dispatched quickly and never brought back up, but in those two minutes the show gives a perfect parallel to Al’s adventures. You could argue the same system that allowed a racist incident to spin out into a book deal and fund a PR team for the racist is the same that would propel someone like Benny (who commodifies hip-hop culture) to the top of the charts over a more skilled descendant of the socio-economic inequalities that led to hip hop in the Bronx in the’70s. The way the camera stays zoomed in on Earn’s trademark “do y’all hear this?” expressions lets the scene stay light even as it comments on the broken state of his own industry. And the impact of such a short scene reminds me how much I’ll miss Atlanta as a show that points out the bullshit without being corny or sanctimonious.

The gray cinder block room behind Rally’s sets up so many interesting questions, thanks in part to the framing by director Adamma Ebo (Honk For Jesus. Save Your Soul.). The chamber gets that bigger-on-the-inside feel in its great introduction, with the right and top sides of the vault door left unseen and Glover being shot from below so the ceilings look 15-feet-high. The bloodstain under the mat hints that Earn is about to be tested. Unfortunately, from the moment the secret hatch in the wall is revealed, the resolution of the storyline is only as strong as the viewer’s knowledge of D’Angelo’s struggles with his popular perception as a sex symbol and his aversion to industry execs being involved in his artistry. It’s a nice deep cut of a storyline. But episode one’s similar Blueblood arc was much more balanced within the runtime.

Three episodes in, it’s clear that one of Atlanta’s themes this season is building a legacy outside of traditional terms. Blueblood is brought back in after the premiere’s pensive scavenger hunt, but the Grammy hunters see the way he left the world as a shame. If they can’t get rich, they’d rather at least be known, and a funeral attended by less than 10 people is any fame-seeker’s worst nightmare. In this episode, Al tries it their way and feels uncomfortable; at the same time, Earn sees D’Angelo, a man who deeply struggled with his popular image, turned into a vaguely-defined commodity. There’s a national mood right now of redefining what success means under capitalism (racism, sexism, insert “-ism” here), and both of the cousins are slowly redefining themselves. I’m glad the character work is being done, even in a relatively mid episode.

Stray observations

  • Yodel Kid is played by Tucker Brown, but Mason Ramsey is now on TikTok with all the other 15-year-olds.
  • Judging by how hostile Earn’s boss is, that move to L.A. is probably happening.
  • I’m pro-autotune, but not autotuned yodeling. Break the machine.
  • The seminar leader’s line delivery kind of reminds me of Kirk Franklin (the “God Saved Me From The Trap” tee doesn’t help), who cosigned Tori Kelly.
  • I’ll save you a Google: It’s Rally’s on the West Coast and Checkers on the East Coast. Rally’s used to be owned by the same company as Carl’s Jr. and Hardees, but they were sold to Checkers in ’97. Besides the name, they have identical menus and checkerboard design.
  • Dasani would be my breaking point too. I’d also try the peanut butter, chicken-skin sandwich, so maybe I’m wrong.
  • Al wears a lot of BAPE when he’s meeting up with Benny. Is BAPE still a thing?
  • “Rickin’ And Rockin’” could at least become a duet trend with the right production, and I hate it here.

23 Comments

  • dtj483-av says:

    It’s Rally’s on the West Coast and Checkers on the East Coast.Unless you’re in Michigan, where the name changes depending on which county you’re in (e.g. there’s a Rally’s in Pontiac and a Checkers in Fenton).

    • gospelxforte-av says:

      Thank you for saying that. I was about to chime in with the fact that we have Rally’s in Michigan. I know there are Checkers around, but all of the places I’ve lived and worked in have had Rally’s.

  • cosmicghostrider-av says:

    I haven’t watched the episode yet but I just wanted to say I am thrilled to see someone new writing Atlanta reviews this season. I didn’t hate the last person, but it was not a good fit.

  • disqusdrew-av says:

    That Dasani bit was golden. The show is regularly filled with good laughs but that one got me good.
    Also, there’s a good visual jab/joke when Paper Boi, Bunk, and the Seminar Leader (did he get a name?) meet in the lobby. Seminar Leader is standing next to who I assume is his YWA and that guy is definitely a Post Malone stand in.And yeah, I think I might try that peanut butter/chicken skin sandwich. The key, though, is figuring out what fast food chicken brand to use. It’s probably all nasty, but maybe, just maybe the right blend of spices could work with peanut butter

    • grrrz-av says:

      I don’t get it; what’s the thing with Dasani?

      • pete-worst-av says:

        There are a number of reasons, but the main one I’ve heard about is that it’s basically just tap water that Coca-Cola bottles and sells for a huge profit margin after they’ve filtered minerals out of it and replaced them with salt..

      • disqusdrew-av says:

        Its widely regarded as the shittiest of the bottled waters.

        • froot-loop-av says:

          I’d like to see that taste test. Sounds like bullshit.

          • sethsez-av says:

            I’ve long maintained that bottled water tastes the same and some people are way too goddamn precious about it.Except Dasani.They seem to add way more minerals and salt back to the water than anyone else and the end result almost tastes metallic, like sucking on a penny. For better or worse, it’s distinct.

  • antsnmyeyes-av says:

    That long break between seasons 2 and 3 really killed the hype for this show.Which sucks because it’s so damn good. 

    • jigkanosrimanos-av says:

      It didn’t kill the hype. you’re wrong 

      • antsnmyeyes-av says:

        How am I wrong? There’s way less discourse, less social media mentions, less ratings…the enthusiasm for this show isn’t half of what it was during season 2.

        • jigkanosrimanos-av says:

          none of that has changed. The show still has a big following 

        • breadnmaters-av says:

          If you’re not seeing the abundance of media response to the show that it used to have, that isn’t really an indicator of how many people are watching. I’m seeing reviews on all of the major ‘visual arts’ sites. There just isn’t much interest on this one.

        • peregrinusalso-av says:

          Feel free to quantify anything you’re saying. 

    • docprof-av says:

      The hype going into season 3 was enormous. And then season 3 sucked. This line from the review really stood out to me: And the impact of such a short scene reminds me how much I’ll miss Atlanta as a show that points out the bullshit without being corny or sanctimonious.because season 3 didn’t do that. It was all corny and sanctimonious. So far season 4 has been much better.

      • timnob00-av says:

        I’ve seen several people say this season is so much different. Feels like the exact same slew of bottle episodes to me, except set in Atlanta instead of Europe. Feels like the same show coasting on surrealness. I like it, but not sure how they’ve ‘regained focus’ or whatever.

    • robgrizzly-av says:

      I think it depends on your stratosphere. For some folks, nothing has changed. But in my stratosphere, I agree that it feels a little like interest in Atlanta has dropped. (Felt like that between the long breaks for Fargo, also).

      • peregrinusalso-av says:

        I think the issue is the world is burning, the global economy is failing, America is sliding aggressively into fascism and World War III might have already begun. The bandwidth for a really great television show is pretty slim these days. 

  • toddtriestonotbetoopretentious-av says:

    B??? Y’all

  • dr-boots-list-av says:

    Can anyone explain to me the joke about there being, like, a franchise of different D’Angelos around the world? That one went over my head. I was also all ready, with the tunnel and the talk of “experiencing D’Angelo”, for a Being John Malkovich riff.

    Fried chicken and peanut butter sounds good. It’s basically a chicken satay sandwich.

  • subson23-av says:

    Good lord can’t remember when I laughed harder at something- “I’m Ricky! I’m Rocky! I’m Tik-y! I’m Tok-y!”

  • robgrizzly-av says:

    That awkward moment when you walk into a studio and some white boy is yodeling… Al ending up with him because he couldn’t get the other kid was the episode’s funniest joke XD. Their relationship being so impersonal that Al didn’t even know he died was the next funniest joke. I liked this one, though the time jump straight to the Grammys was jarring. I would have loved to spend some time with Al managing this guy.
    Shortcuts like this make the show feel small sometimes. Even the Grammys didn’t seem like it had that ‘Grammy atmosphere.’ So it brings me to the review’s comments about wanting to see their houses, and how they are living and more evidence of how far they’ve come, and I can only presume this is a budget thing.

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