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  • Capital City Podcast #137 “The Old Welcomes The New"
    Feb 16 2026

    Capital City Podcast #137 “The Old Welcomes The New"

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    27 Min.
  • Capital City Podcast #136 "Hip-Hop’s Slippery Slope: Raunchy Rap, Gang Culture, Mumble Era… Who Opened the Door?"
    Feb 9 2026

    Hip-hop didn’t jump to “extreme” overnight—it evolved. In this episode, Capital J and D.L. Glass break down the progression pattern that keeps repeating in the culture: something small shows up, nobody checks it, then years later it explodes into the new normal.

    From raunchy rap shifting from “you had to be at the show” to on wax to full-on image + brand, to gang culture going from references… to real affiliations… to “every crew is a gang,” to violence becoming content, to raunchy male rap hitting a ceiling, to the mumble/SoundCloud era where “unpolished” stopped being a dealbreaker—this conversation connects the dots in a way that’s going to have you pausing, rewinding, and arguing in the comments.

    And yes… y’all heard it right: they put KRS-One, N.W.A., Master P, Lil’ Kim, and today’s artists on the same timeline and ask the question everybody avoids:

    Did the culture choose this… or did it get conditioned into it?

    0:00 – Cold open / behind-the-scenes

    J talks remixing the podcast theme and how the show has evolved (audio + occasional YouTube video).

    0:56 – The episode thesis: “the progression”

    D.L. lays out the core idea: “bad/tough stuff” in hip-hop often starts small, gets ignored, then balloons into its most extreme form.

    1:35 – Topic 1: Raunchy female rap’s timeline

    Early era: raunchy mostly a live-show thing (not always on record). First “shock on wax” moments (example mentioned: BWP). Lil’ Kim as a turning point: lyrics + image + photoshoot era. The “normalized” moment: what used to be scandal becomes everyday.

    6:00 – The culture’s desensitization effect

    “Went from ‘Oh my God’ to ‘Who cares?’” The bigger point: once the shock wears off, the next extreme has to be louder to get attention.

    7:30 – Topic 2: “Gay rapper” progression

    Argument: this trend hasn’t “floodgated” yet the way others did, but the pathway looks familiar. Discussion of artists pushing boundaries and the idea that time determines what becomes normalized.

    10:00 – Topic 3: Gang culture 1.0 → 2.0 → 3.0

    West Coast storytelling era → real affiliations becoming visible → “everything is a gang” era. Conversation shifts to how mass appeal + branding can make dangerous identities feel “cool.”

    13:45 – Topic 4: Violence in hip-hop

    Violent imagery existed early (movies, covers, stage presence). Debate around “who introduced it” vs “who trivialized it.” Timeline logic: early shocks → pauses → later explosions → today’s extreme outcomes.

    18:00 – “Mentorship vs outcome” moment

    A big “what if” discussion: how different paths and guidance could have changed outcomes.

    19:00 – Topic 5: Raunchy male rap reaching the ceiling

    From novelty raunch to mainstream—then into on-stage extremes. They argue it’s hit the “pinnacle” where there’s nowhere else to go.

    23:30 – Topic 6: Mumble rap / “unacceptable becoming acceptable”

    Debate around Master P opening the door for unpolished sound to reach the masses. Connection to the SoundCloud era: polish stopped being required to “finish the race.”

    29:00 – Topic 7: R&B following rap’s raunchy curve

    R&B examples across eras and the argument that it’s on the same path, just not fully “exploded” yet.

    31:30 – The “negative trends spread faster than positive” takeaway

    Why positivity doesn’t create a wave the same way controversy does.

    33:00 – Topic 8: Street code → oversharing era

    From silence about real life to broadcasting everything (social media, diss cycles, public beefs). Monetization + attention economy as the accelerant.

    38:00 – “Trivializing violence” discussion

    The difference between “meaningful” violence vs “casual” violence in lyrics and skits, and how that shapes listeners.

    40:00 – Closing thoughts + final punchline

    They call for a progression of positive and end with the “2026” reality check.

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    41 Min.
  • Capital CIty Podcast #135 "From Crates to Waveforms: How DJ Culture Really Changed” (w/ Deron Juan)
    Feb 2 2026

    The club looks the same… but everything about DJ’ing—and the crowd—has changed.

    Capital J and D.L. Glass sit down with Deron Juan (102 Jamz / Heavy Hitters) to break down the real shift from the vinyl era to today’s waveform era: why DJs run through songs faster, how attention spans (and social media) changed the whole party, why dance floors are basically extinct, and what DJs used to have to do (scratching, bringing it back, “save-me” records) just to survive a night.

    They also get into the truth about multi-DJ lineups, promoters chasing flyer hype over execution, and how Deron Juan still breaks records—using radio + social media—like the new-school version of what DJs used to do with pure influence.

    If you ever wondered why parties don’t feel like “back in the day,” this one explains it from the people who lived both eras.

    Tap in, share it with a DJ, and tell us: are today’s parties better… or just different?

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    53 Min.
  • Capital CIty Podcast #134 "The Worst Things to Happen in Hip-Hop” : From Scott La Rock to Streaming (feat. M Woods)
    Jan 26 2026

    On this episode of the Capital City Podcast, Capital J and D.L. Glass are joined by M Woods to debate a heavy question: what’s the worst thing to ever happen in hip-hop? Starting at the beginning with Scott La Rock’s death, the conversation moves through major turning points like the Biz Markie sampling lawsuit, the rise of violence and gang/drug culture, Tupac signing to Death Row, the deaths of Tupac and Biggie, and how tit-for-tat beef still echoes today.

    They also dig into modern shifts—streaming payouts, YouTube as the new Wild West, and how hip-hop became the lens the world uses to view Black culture. Tap in, then email your take on the worst thing to happen in hip-hop to info@overheartv.com.

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    45 Min.
  • Capital City Podcast #133 "The End of An Era in Hip-hop"
    Jan 19 2026

    Capital City Podcast #133 "The end of an era in hip-hop"

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    27 Min.
  • Capital City Podcast #132 How Radio has Changed ft Dj DVS
    Jan 12 2026

    Capital City Podcast #132 How Radio has Changed ft Dj DVS

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    1 Std. und 27 Min.
  • Capital City Podcast #131 Answering Plies’ Question: Why DJs Play the Same “15 Songs” (and how to break new music) ft. DJ 360, Skaz Digga & Patrice
    Jan 5 2026

    Plies went viral asking a question every DJ has heard before: “Why y’all play the same 15 songs?” Capital J and DL Glass bring in a real panel to answer it the right way — DJ 360 (one of the Triangle’s busiest DJs), DJ Skaz Digga (Butter Team / on the road with Big Daddy Kane), and Patrice representing the real party people who know when a DJ is actually DJing.

    They break down the truth behind “safe records,” reset songs, reading the room, crowd trust, why streaming/TikTok changed the DJ’s power, and how to introduce new music without killing the floor. Along the way they start naming the actual “15 songs,” debate Cash Money vs No Limit, and talk about why residencies matter if you want a DJ’s style (not just a playlist). They close with “songs we want to break” right now — including CeeLo Green’s “Best of My Life” and a push to bring Miami Bass back to parties.

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    1 Std. und 19 Min.
  • Capital City Podcast #130 Dr. D Breaks Down the Origins of Gospel DJ Culture & Its Impact on Hip-Hop
    Dec 29 2025

    In this powerful episode of the Capital City Podcast, hosts Capital J and DL Glass sit down with Dr. D, widely recognized as a pioneer of the Gospel DJ movement, to break down the untold history of how DJs helped shape gospel music, hip-hop culture, and faith-based spaces.

    Dr. D shares real stories from the early days of spinning records in churches, the pushback DJs faced, and how gospel DJ culture evolved alongside mainstream hip-hop. The conversation dives deep into music ministry, DJ entrepreneurship, cultural resistance, and the lasting influence DJs have had on both sacred and secular music scenes.

    This episode is a must-listen for:

    • DJs and music creatives
    • Hip-hop historians
    • Gospel music fans
    • Anyone interested in faith, culture, and the business of music

    Topics covered include:

    • The origins of gospel DJs
    • Faith vs. culture debates in music
    • Hip-hop’s influence on gospel spaces
    • DJ legacy, purpose, and impact

    Follow the Capital City Podcast for weekly conversations on hip-hop culture, music business, and real stories from the culture.

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    1 Std. und 11 Min.