PaperRoute Woo: It’s a New York City flex in the ‘Critical Thinking’ music video

Want a dab of what hip-hop artist PaperRoute Woo has to offer? Look no further than the ‘Critical Thinking’ music video.

It’s pure glowing and showing out for the rap artist living it up from the Big Apple. Geek out.

Produced by That Boy Daymon, “Critical Thinking” is a flex-heavy rhyme clinic. Woo shows off his wit and wordplay as he coolly weighs his luxury options: “Chargers over Ferraris, n***, Ferrari’s too many problems / Hellcat, dodge twelve, n****, that ain’t no problem.” The video, which dropped over the holiday weekend and has already garnered over 100k views, captures Woo during a recent NYC tour stop, where he opened for Key Glock on the GLOCKAVELI Tour. He moves through the city like a local, shooting hoops uptown, catching the subway to Chinatown, and making a stop in Bushwick.

Building a big fanbase in Memphis off the strength of his street singles, like "Ricky" ft. Young Dolph, and Boyz In The Hood, his collaborative tape with PRE's SNUPE BANDZ, Paper Route Woo is ready to step out on his own. Last year, he dropped red hot singles like “UHUH UHUH” and "Bubblegum," previews of his upcoming solo mixtape Slime Dunkin'. Paper Route Woo had been making a name for himself in the Memphis rap game, dating back to 2020 with "In My Bag" and continuing through 2021's "Pop Out," which drew 2 million YouTube views. He also joined his mentor Young Dolph on "Nothing To Me," a standout single from the 2021 PAPER ROUTE iLLUMINATi mixtape, generating over 10 million views.

Cyrus Kyle Langhorne

Vanilla Skyin’ 24/7 - with some form of Action Bronson and Curren$y playing on a daily - if not hourly - basis. AMC A-List fanatic and gaming goals daily from a stationary workout bike, of course. All contact: Cyrus@attacktheculture.com

http://www.attacktheculture.com
Previous
Previous

Pimmie: It’s repeat everything mode whenever she’s delivering anthems like ‘Bless Up’

Next
Next

21 Harold, Sexyy Red & 21 Savage: It’s three the hard way in the ‘Nookie’ music video