More than 30 years since it first dropped, Public Enemyโs hit song โBurn Hollywood Burnโ is unexpectedly finding new life, and Chuck D has some thoughts about it. Featuring Ice Cube and Big Daddy Kane, the song deals with a range of societal issues of the time, like Black representation in the entertainment industry, racism, and exploitation.
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The song even specifically calls out the film industry, calling for fellow Black people to, โmake our own movies like Spike Lee / โCause the roles being offered donโt strike me / As nothing that the black man could use to earn / Burn Hollywood, burn.โ
The popular track from their third studio album โFear of a Black Planetโ is suddenly trending as Los Angeles experiences one of the worst wildfires in the cityโs history. But asย the song suddenly trends on sites like TikTok, Chuck D is keeping it real with his fans, asking them to refrain from using the track in this context as it does not align with its original intent.
โBurn Hollywood Burnโ is a protest song,โ the statement reads, as D explains that the song was, โextracted from the Watts Rebellion monikered by the Magnificent Montague,โ when in 1965 the DJ said โburn, baby, burnโ on air in a cry against inequality.

โWe made mind revolution songs aimed at a one-sided exploitation by [an] industry,โ D added, providing the songโs original context, which in no way referred to natural disasters when it was written, despite the title.
He added that the song, โhas nothing to do with families losing everything they have in a natural disaster.โ The statement concludes with him writing, โLearn the history. Godspeed to those in loss.โ
The comment section of the post is filled with responses, with one user writing, โI donโt know how anyone that listens to your music could have misconstrued that.โ
Another user shared similar sentiments, writing, โAs an L.A. native we know that song wasnโt a literal desire to burn Hollywood down. You were expressing disdain for Hollywood elites. We gotcha back.โ
D made one more plea in the comments as well, specifically writing, โPlease donโt use our song on your reels and pictures of this horrifying natural disaster.โ
As we have reported, the heartbreaking and unprecedented fires in Los Angeles have made national news for days. Thousands of people have lost their homes as fires have run wild in Pacific Palisades, Altadena, Malibu, Hollywood Hills, Woodland Hills, and more. Many of these victims, as many creators have pointed out online, are not just celebrities and rich folks, but working-class people of color, specifically in neighborhoods like Altadena and elsewhere.
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