The Bilingual Revolution: Why Code-Switching Rappers Are the Future
Twenty-five million Americans live between two languages every day — and a new generation of artists finally sounds like them.
READ THE STORY →From Trina to Doechii: Florida's Women Have Always Run This
Florida didn't just contribute to female rap — it built the blueprint that every woman with a microphone is still working from.
Tallahassee and the Panhandle: Florida's Forgotten Rap Frontier
North Florida doesn't sound like the rest of the state — it sounds like the Deep South with a Florida edge, and it's been overlooked for too long.
ON THE COVER
19 STORIESMiami's Next Wave: 5 Artists Who Are About to Change Everything
These five artists are coming out of Miami's neighborhoods right now with sounds nobody else is making — and the city is about to export another revolution.
Drake Keeps Pulling From the Latin Playbook — Is It Appreciation or Appropriation?
From dancehall to dembow, Drake has made a career of absorbing sounds from the diaspora — and the bilingual community has thoughts.
Latin Trap in 2026: The Artists and Sounds That Are About to Dominate
Latin trap didn't die — it evolved, and the 2026 version is darker, more experimental, and more Florida-connected than ever.