Former presidential hopeful Marco Rubio was downright babyfaced when compared to his rivals on the debate stage, and his knowledge of rap —chronicled in “The Marco Rubio Guide to Hip-Hop” in the Washington Post — only served as a reminder that (GOP) voters were dealing with a new generation of candidate.
During his run for president, Secretary of State John Kerry also claimed that he was “fascinated by rap and by hip-hop,” particularly its coupling of poetry and social energy. We’re not convinced Kerry, who seems to gravitate to prehistoric singer/songwriters like James Taylor and Jimmy Buffet, could name a favorite rapper, though.
Today was Bill Clinton’s turn to weigh in on hip-hop.
WATCH: @BillClinton says GOP candidates fighting each other in Florida primary "sounded like a rap tune on MTV" https://t.co/jcrfeenA1g
— ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) April 5, 2016
https://twitter.com/omairsheikh5/status/717422579334651904
@ABCPolitics there's music on MTV?
— world jim (@blueroadearth) April 5, 2016
@ABCPolitics @billclinton so outdated – MTV stopped playing music long ago.
— bsharif (@beasharif) April 5, 2016
@ABCPolitics @billclinton MTV doesn't play music anymore.
— Comfy American (@ComfyTradLad) April 5, 2016
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@ABCPolitics Bill & Hillary both still live in perpetual 1995. https://t.co/7UzbYR8aS1
— TheRightWingM ?? (@TheRightWingM) April 5, 2016
@ABCPolitics @billclinton the true reason of @SenSanders being so strong at this point in the campaign is memories from the Clinton years…
— Régis Le Sommier (@LeSommierRgis) April 5, 2016
Proof that @billclinton is 20 years behind the times.#FeelTheBern
— Casey Junkins (@CoasterChamp) April 5, 2016
https://twitter.com/rk510/status/717417697747709952
Uh oh. Quick, someone get him a saxophone!
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