Entertainment
Snoop draws controversy with Trump shooting video
Snoop Dogg has drawn controversy for appearing to shoot US President Donald Trump in a new video that also takes aim at police brutality.
Snoop Dogg has drawn controversy for appearing to shoot US President Donald Trump in a new video that also takes aim at police brutality.
Snoop Dogg, an early figure in California gangsta rap who had mellowed in recent years, this week released a video for Lavender in which most actors are clowns.
One clown is unmistakably Trump, sporting bouffant hair and a red tie that dangles below the waist as he gesticulates wildly at the podium of The Clown House.
The clown—named Ronald Klump—puts his hands up as if under arrest as Snoop Dogg draws a pistol, with a flag popping out.
Senator Marco Rubio, a rare member of Trump’s Republican Party who has spoken of his fondness for hip-hop, criticised the video and recalled that “we’ve had presidents assassinated before in this country.” Snoop Dogg said he was aiming to make a video that was “not controversial but real.”
“I feel like it’s a lot of people making cool records, having fun, partying, but nobody’s dealing with the real issue with this... clown as president,” Snoop Dogg said. In addition to police brutality, Snoop Dogg voiced anger at Trump over his ban on visitors from certain Muslim-majority countries.