In October 2017, Snoop Dogg dropped a bold mini‑EP titled **Make America Crip Again (M.A.C.A.)**, a sharp riff on Trump’s slogan and a call to uplift Black and Crip communities via music and culture.
The title track hits hard. Snoop spits provocative bars over a woozy, laid-back beat—turning a slogan associated with division into an anthem of unity and empowerment for marginalized communities:
With cover art echoing Ice Cube’s *Death Certificate* (featuring Snoop standing over a flag-draped corpse labeled “Trump”), it was more than music—it was commentary.
At the time, fans were polarized: some applauded Snoop’s fearless social message, while others bristled at his gang reference and political stance. Regardless, Snoop doubled down—loading the message with Crip pride and community uplift over rhetoric meant to divide.
For hip-hop heads, *Make America Crip Again* signaled Snoop’s evolution—not just as a rapper or entertainer, but as a cultural provocateur turning headlines into beats and slogans into movements.