James Artissen Rebrands With A Fresh Sound
Industry Spotlight
Grammy Nomination

Grammy Nomination
“ASSHOLES LIVE FOREVER” was born out of years of collaboration, mutual respect, and a shared vision between two of Tennessee’s most respected underground heavyweights, Extraordinaire and Crisis Tha Rhyme Don. After both appearing on the cover of Tha Hole magazine, highlighting the best rising talent out of Tennessee, the chemistry between them was undeniable. While an original group project under the “Tennessee Bad Boys” banner never fully materialized, the bond between the two artists only deepened, eventually evolving into this full-length, joint statement.
This album is a stand against conformity. It’s bold, raw, unfiltered, and unafraid to challenge the norms of today’s music scene. The title speaks to the duo’s fearless approach, unapologetic and uncompromising in their creative vision. By embracing their artistic truths, even if it means being labeled “assholes”, they crafted a body of work that represents not just where they are musically, but who they are personally.
Every track on the album is produced by Extraordinaire, creating a seamless sonic experience with continuity and character. This one-producer approach adds a deeper level of cohesion that makes the album feel like a unified force, rather than a playlist of individual songs.
This project has been in motion since the pandemic, beginning with early sessions in 2021 and stretching through 2023. The duo spent time traveling between Chattanooga and Nashville, building chemistry and refining their vision. By 2024, they were locked in, fully focused on bringing the album to life. The result is a record built with patience, intention, and purpose.
Both artists come from strong solo backgrounds. This album, however, marks a distinct shift as they channel that energy into a collaborative space. They pushed each other creatively, stepping into unfamiliar territories that neither might have explored alone. The growth is evident, from the lyrical content to the overall sonic depth.
Both Extraordinaire and Crisis Tha Rhyme Don are award-winning artists with long-standing reputations in the game. They’ve consistently been trailblazers for their respective hometowns, performing across the country and sharing stages with major industry names. Their resumes speak for themselves—but with ASSHOLES LIVE FOREVER, they add a powerful chapter to their already storied careers.
STREAM ON ALL PLATFORMS https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/extraordinaireandcrisistharhymedon/assholes-live-forever
STOMP THE YARD (I WON’T STOP) (OFFICIAL VIDEO) – EXTRAORDINAIRE AND CRISIS THA RHYME DON
https://youtu.be/qCo0SCRBnB0
I.D.F.W.Y (feat. Nandi Yetti) (Official Music Video)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
EXTRAORDINAIRE and CRISIS THA RHYME DON – GROWN FOLK PARTY (Official Video)
https://youtu.be/duHjRfIFA0Y
Follow Extraordinaire and Crisis Tha Rhyme Don
Instagram:
Extraordinaire: instagram.com/
Crisis Tha Rhyme Don: https://www.instagram.com/
TikTok:
Extraordinaire : https://www.tiktok.com/@
Crisis Tha Rhyme Don: https://www.tiktok.com/@
Twitter:
Extraordinaire: twitter.com/3xtraordinaire
Crisis Tha Rhyme Don: https://x.com/rhymedon365
YouTube:
Extraordinaire: https://www.youtube.com/@
Crisis Tha Rhyme Don: https://www.youtube.com/@
https://www.instagram.com/jl.cutt/
Atlanta legend Gucci Mane is set to headline the Atlanta Greek Picnic Step Show on Friday July 25th at the Georgia State University Convocation Center. Doors open at 5pm and tickets are going fast. This year’s cash prize for the step show winners will be $25,000. The step show will be hosted by Omega Psi Phi’s Travque and Kappa Alpha Psi’s Canice. This is guaranteed to be a fun filled night. On Saturday July 26th, hip hop superstar Rob 49 is hitting the stage at AGP Fest in the Atlantic Station Pinnacle Lot. Doors open at 2pm and tickets are going fast. One of the supporting acts for AGP Fest is Atlanta rising star Clay James. Clay is a member of Kappa Alpha Psi and has been garnering a strong buzz in the Atlanta underground music scene for quite some time. Clay’s career started at Georgia State University where he was discovered by Outkast’s Big Boi and would later sign his first record deal with hip hop legend Snoop Dogg. Clay James is an example of an independent artist that is a great representation of his Divine 9 organization as well as the Atlanta hip hop community, so it’s only right that he be apart of this years festivities as AGP is celebrating it’s 20th Anniversary. Clay James will be bringing out specials guests from his Playas Club Music Group record label as well as performing “We The Nupes Remix” with his frat brother PA The Writer. There will also be a stroll off competition where the winners can take home a $10,000 cash prize. Make sure you follow @AtlantaGreekPicnic1 and its founder @Tiwaworks01 on instagram to stay up to date with all events during AGP Week July 22nd-27th. And the link to purchase tickets to see Gucci Mane, Rob 49, and Clay James will
be listed below.
In a world that often rewards noise, author Milo Wren is choosing something softer—something slower, truer, and far more enduring. Through tender prose and emotionally immersive storytelling, Wren is carving out space in literature for the feelings we struggle to name, the truths we carry silently, and the moments of connection that define our inner lives.
Born and raised in Los Angeles, California, Milo Wren has always approached life through the lens of feeling. “Milo Wren is my legal name,” he shares. “But more than just a name, it represents the way I move through the world—quietly, reflectively, with a kind of emotional precision.”
From an early age, Wren found solace not in performance or perfection, but in introspection. Writing wasn’t a choice—it was a lifeline. “I never chased writing as a career,” he says. “It revealed itself as the only place where I didn’t have to hold back what I felt.”
The turning point in Wren’s writing journey didn’t come with awards or recognition. It came during a deeply personal season of emotional awakening—falling in love, confronting buried pain, and questioning long-held beliefs about intimacy and vulnerability.
“I turned to the page because I had nowhere else to go,” he says. “What I wrote wasn’t polished or pretty. But it was honest. And that honesty moved me.” That moment, quiet but profound, marked the beginning of something more than journaling. It marked the beginning of a voice, a purpose, and a calling.
For Wren, writing is less about storytelling and more about emotional translation. It’s how he makes sense of the world—and invites others to do the same. “Over time, I realized that my words didn’t just help me—they resonated with others,” he explains. “I wasn’t just writing to release anymore; I was writing to reach.”
That shift—from solitary expression to communal resonance—is what transformed writing from a personal refuge into a meaningful body of work.
With emotional depth as his trademark, Wren admits that vulnerability is both his power and his greatest challenge. “There’s always a tension between expressing what’s real and protecting the tender parts of myself,” he says. “Being honest on the page is freeing—but also exposing.”
He also grapples with the creative pressure to constantly produce. “I’ve had to unlearn the idea that my worth is tied to productivity,” he says. “Sometimes stepping away is part of the process.”
And then there’s the challenge of resisting the lure of virality in favor of intention. “I’d rather whisper something true than shout something hollow.”
Wren’s emotional landscape is deeply shaped by connection, especially by one transformative figure: a woman named Natalie. “She didn’t just influence my writing—she changed the way I exist,” he reflects. “Her presence slowed time and brought emotions to the surface I’d long buried.”
Though she never asked to be a muse, Natalie’s impact is evident across Wren’s work. She reminded him that truth—especially the soft, hidden kind—is worth writing for.
Wren’s most recent and deeply personal project, The Feeling When, is a novel that explores presence, memory, and the emotional residue of love without closure.
“This book doesn’t shout; it lingers,” he says. “It’s for anyone who’s ever felt something they couldn’t name, or loved someone without needing to possess them.”
Rather than a traditional romance, the novel unfolds like a slow emotional unraveling. Born from real conversations and lived experience, it’s less about plot and more about presence. “Writing it wasn’t just about telling a story—it was about documenting a feeling that refused to leave.”
While writing is at the core of Wren’s creative identity, he’s also deeply passionate about other forms of expression. Music plays a vital role in his emotional process—he composes and creates pieces that mirror his inner world. Whether it’s through instrumental storytelling or sound design, his goal remains the same: to express what words often fail to capture.
Photography and visual art are also integral. “I’m fascinated by the way a single image can hold silence, memory, and feeling all at once,” he says. “Everything I create—written or visual—is about capturing emotion.”
In a sea of stories competing for attention, Wren’s writing stands apart for its restraint, nuance, and emotional honesty. “I focus on the quiet moments,” he explains. “The silences, the hesitations, the things people feel but rarely articulate.”
His brand isn’t built on dramatic twists or formulas—it’s rooted in vulnerability without oversharing, and complexity without oversimplification. “I don’t write to solve emotions. I write to sit with them—and invite others to do the same.”
Wren finds inspiration in writers who confront the emotional complexity of being human. He cites Rainer Maria Rilke, Toni Morrison, and Ocean Vuong as key influences—authors known for their grace, depth, and fearless intimacy.
“They remind me that stories don’t have to be loud to be powerful,” he says. “They can hold space for silence, for longing, for becoming.”
Looking to the future, Wren envisions a continued path of creative growth. “In three years, I hope to have published several more books,” he says. “Each one will explore different aspects of love, presence, and human connection—but always with emotional truth at the core.”
But more than accolades, Wren is focused on building community. “I want my work to create a space where people feel seen and understood,” he says. “A space where truth isn’t explained away—it’s simply held.”
This year, Wren’s priority is completing and releasing The Feeling When—ensuring it reaches the readers who need its quiet wisdom. He’s also deepening his craft, exploring new creative projects that align with his evolving voice.
Heading into 2026, Wren plans to expand his reach, not by chasing attention, but by nurturing real connection. “I want to write books that explore love, healing, and self-discovery in new ways,” he says. “Books that linger, that whisper, that resonate.”
Several new book projects are already underway, each circling around the same emotional constellation—love, presence, vulnerability, and the complexity of human feeling. “Each story offers something different,” Wren says, “but they’re all rooted in the emotional depth that readers have come to expect from my work.”
And as always, Wren is committed to authenticity over performance. “I’m excited to share these stories—not to be seen, but to make others feel seen.”
Milo Wren is not just an author—he’s a storyteller of the soul, a translator of silence, and a quiet force for emotional truth in a world that too often looks away.
If you’re looking for words that don’t just inform but feel, you’ll find them here—in the stillness, in the vulnerability, in the voice of Milo Wren.
Newnan, GA — Rising Georgia rap artist 210 Toven teams up with breakout
female rapper BunnaB to deliver a hard-hitting new single, “FukUMean,”
set to release June 20, 2025 under Tymeless Entertainment Group and
distributed worldwide by Empire.
Produced by the buzzing beat architect LingoTheHitMaker, “FukUMean” is
poised to be the next summer anthem — an unapologetic, head-knocking
track that brings both male and female voices to the front line of the
culture. With Toven speaking up for the guys and BunnaB repping for the
ladies, the single creates a powerful call-and-response energy that
embodies boldness, defiance, and Southern swagger.
“This track is about standing on business and not folding — period,”
says 210 Toven. “Me and BunnaB both came in hungry on this one, and the
energy speaks for itself.”
BunnaB, one of the South’s most promising new female voices, delivers
sharp, confident bars that balance Toven’s raw, street-hardened
presence. Together, they make “FukUMean” more than just a song — it’s a
statement from the next wave of hip-hop stars.
Driven by LingoTheHitMaker’s signature production style — with booming
808s, eerie melodies, and high-tempo trap percussion — the track hits
hard in the car, the club, and the streets. It’s got all the ingredients
Stay Connected:
210 Toven:
https://open.spotify.com/artis
https://music.apple.com/us/art
https://www.instagram.com/tove
https://www.tiktok.com/@toven.
https://www.youtube.com/@210To
BunnaB:
https://music.apple.com/us/art
https://open.spotify.com/artis
https://www.instagram.com/hone
https://www.tiktok.com/@therea
https://www.youtube.com/@There
For Press, DJ Servicing & Media Requests:
Email: pr@tymelessent.com
Follow: @Toven.4l | @bunnab | @tymeless_ent

Drape is a rising hip-hop artist originally from Cleveland, Ohio. Drape recently performed at Big Heff’s New Energy stage for BET Weekend in LA. Catch Drape on select Streets Most Wanted Tour dates in June. He discovered his love for music at a young age, using it as a bridge to connect with others while navigating frequent school changes. Drape’s talent also extended to the track and to the football field. He is a graduate of Ginn Academy where he was mentored and trained by Glenville High School football head coach Ted Ginn, Sr., earning him a scholarship to the University of Iowa, where he played in the prestigious Rose Bowl during his senior year. Following college, Drape spent several years playing professional football in Kobe/Osaka, Japan. It was there that his passion for music deepened, and he began writing, recording, and performing in local clubs, developing a distinct voice shaped by both his Midwestern roots and international experiences. After returning to the U.S. in 2023, Drape picked up where he left off creatively, recording the tracks he wrote overseas. In the Summer of 2023, Drape moved to Los Angeles, CA to fully commit to his music career. He began performing at local Pass the Aux sessions and continued writing and recording new music. Remaining connected to his Cleveland roots, Drape shot two music videos in and around Cleveland for singles he released in 2024. In early 2025, after releasing several singles, Drape released his first full-length hip-hop album, “In the Field” which is available on all streaming platforms. His lyrics draw from deeply personal moments, including hardships his family faced and the tragic loss of one of his best friends in a fire. Authentic, introspective, and emotionally raw, Drape’s music is a testament to resilience, transformation, and finding purpose through pain.
Instagram
@drape7
TikTok
@kingdrape
OT Deezy pulls no punches in this ruthless new single “Who Wants Smoke” — a straight-up club and street banger packed with raw energy, sharp bars, and knockout production. The video goes just as hard: dark, aggressive, and unapologetic.
Los Angeles, CA — Before the bright lights of Hollywood and the big stage of America’s Got Talent, there was a little boy with a dream and two parents willing to sacrifice everything to help make it come true.
King Moore, a talented young performer born and raised in Tampa, FL now residing in California, making his national debut on this season of America’s Got Talent, began dreaming big before he could even spell the word “Hollywood.” Born and raised in a loving household led by Verlin and Ivette Moore, King declared at just three years old that he wanted to be an actor, singer, rapper, model, and dancer. But like many parents who’ve experienced the entertainment world’s ups and downs, Verlin hesitated.
“I told him to come back in two years if he still felt the same,” Verlin recalls. “He never forgot.”
True to his word, at age five, King returned and asked again — this time with even more conviction. Ivette, having overheard the original conversation, reminded Verlin of his promise. As a father committed to teaching his sons integrity, he knew what had to come next: it was time to get to work.
From that day forward, the Moore family committed themselves to helping King chase his dream. Ivette left her job to focus full-time on his training. Together, they invested deeply in King’s development — acting classes, vocal coaching, piano lessons, gymnastics, and countless hours in the studio. They traveled from state to state, giving King every opportunity to perform, grow, and be seen.
Much of King’s early inspiration came from watching icons like Michael Jackson, Chris Brown, Bruno Mars, and Justin Bieber on YouTube and TV — dreams sparked by an iPad gifted one Christmas. Those early influences planted seeds that are now beginning to bloom.
Now 9 years old, King Moore has already started building an impressive résumé. He’s had small roles in feature films including Cora Bora, The Wild Robot, and CoComelon (as Cody). His face has graced national commercials for AT&T and Toyota. He’s appeared twice on the Tamron Hall Show (ABC/Disney), as well as the Portia Bruner Show (Fox). He’s toured with stars like That Girl Lay Lay, Kenan Thompson, Young Dylan, and Heiress Harris, and even co-hosted alongside Nick Cannon at the 2025 Honda Battle of the Bands at SoFi Stadium.
King also holds the distinction of being the youngest ambassador for the Black College Expo and the youngest child entertainer invited to the White House under the Biden-Harris administration. There, he spoke on gun violence prevention, reminding the nation: “Kids make up 50% of the population, but we’re 100% of the future.”
Now, one of King’s biggest dreams — performing in front of the world on America’s Got Talent — has come true. The journey is far from over, but it’s a milestone moment for a boy who dared to dream — and the parents who believed in him enough to help make it a reality.
Follow King Moore’s journey as it unfolds on America’s Got Talent this season.
Stay Connected: https://linktr.ee/kingmoore1