Childish Gambino has commented on the spat between Drake and Kendrick Lamar, use it as a springboard to discuss society in 2024.

On Wednesday, June 26, the rapper and actor went on TikTok Live to discuss the well-publicized rivalry and how, in his opinion, it represents a worrying tendency ingrained in contemporary culture.

We’re not having enough fun, and that’s the issue. He made reference to his new album Bando Stone in the New World when he added, “So this rollout that’s coming, it’s mostly about fun, I’m trying to have fun.”

“It seems like people aren’t enjoying themselves enough,” There were great things that would bring us together when I was a child, and I’m sorry for you guys. You folks just don’t grasp it; this generation is so blind. Generally speaking, whatever that everyone can participate in is flawed.

“We’ve got the greatest enjoyment from a fight even this year. “A song from a fight, from a rap beef,” he went on, alluding to Kendrick Lamar’s smash hit diss track “Not Like Us.” which I relished every second of. It was a lot of fun. However, it is quite unfavorable in several aspects, I suppose.

Watch the video down below.

Hip-hop artist Childish Gambino is not the first to criticize the intense rivalry between the two rap titans.

Questlove objected to rumors and slander that were commonplace in the diss recordings that Drake and Kendrick Lamar traded.

Last month, he posted on Instagram, saying, “Nobody won the war.” “Skill was not the issue here. This was mudslinging, takedown at the level of a wrestling match, with ladies, children, and actual facts be damned.

The same people who are calling for blood will soon post “rip” posts as though they weren’t involved in the issue. It’s true that hip hop is dying.

The Roots drummer added, “Here We Are Now…,” as a moral challenge to K. Dot and Drizzy, writing it in the post’s description.Will you amuse us?

The Chaldean The God further acknowledged that some of the claims made, including those of pedophilia and domestic abuse, prevented him from fully enjoying the battle.

“Watching these brothers Me Too each other over a rap feud bothers me.” I think that’s ridiculous,” he remarked on The Breakfast Club. “You need to have solid evidence before you can accuse someone of being a pedophile or a woman beater.

“Those are some serious accusations—you’re going to call my friend and my girl parents of a child, and me believing that child is mine.”

The radio presenter went on, saying, “That seems crazy to me; it’s not like they’re trying to hold each other accountable; they’re just hurling these kinds of charges about to try to harm the other’s reputation. Everything else has gone really well.