Frederick Douglass vs Thomas Jefferson. Epic Rap Battles of History

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  • Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
  • Frederick Douglass vs Thomas Jefferson. Epic Rap Battles of History
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    ▼ CAST ▼
    =========
    Frederick Douglass: JB Smoove
    bit.ly/TweetJBS...
    Thomas Jefferson: Nice Peter
    www.nicepeter.com
    / nicepeter
    ▼ CREW ▼
    =========
    Executive Producers:
    Peter Shukoff and Lloyd Ahlquist
    Directed by:
    Nice Peter
    Co-Director:
    Mike Betette
    Written by:
    EpicLLOYD, Nice Peter, Mike Betette, Zach Sherwin , Dante Cimadamore & Samantha Kellie
    Senior Director of Studios:
    Michelle Maloney
    Production Coordinator:
    Shaun Lewin
    Song Produced by:
    Nice Peter
    Mixed by:
    Nice Peter and Jose ""Choco"" Reynoso
    Mastered by:
    Jose ""Choco"" Reynoso
    Beat Produced by:
    Epistra Beats
    epistra.com
    Video Editing by:
    Andrew Sherman, Ryan Moulton and Nice Peter
    Assistant Editor:
    Josh Best
    VFX and Compositing:
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    Director of Photography:
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    Costume Designer:
    Sulai Lopez
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    Tara Lang Shah
    Make Up:
    Brittany White, Hanny Tjan & Angie Peek
    Art Department:
    Remington Brimmer
    AC:
    Kurt Schmidt
    Gaffer:
    Andrew Kurchinski
    Music Supervisor/Playback:
    Dante Cimadamore
    Grip:
    Andy Chinn
    Production Assistant:
    Atoki Ileka & Edrei Hutson
    Intern:
    Matthew Ciampa
    Produced by:
    Atul Singh for Maker Studios
    ▼ LINKS ▼
    =========
    erbofhistory.com
    erbmerch.com
    / erbofhistory
    / erb
    / erb
    nicepeter.com
    epiclloyd.com

Комментарии • 95 тыс.

  • @nicolasdiaz1542
    @nicolasdiaz1542 3 года назад +24397

    For anyone who didn't know, when Frederick Douglass talked about the photos, he was bragging about how he was the most photographed person in the 18th century

    • @cortes2j
      @cortes2j 3 года назад +1364

      He was born in the 19th century…

    • @nicolasdiaz1542
      @nicolasdiaz1542 3 года назад +1589

      @@cortes2j yes, you're right. Thats my mistake

    • @Discojericho
      @Discojericho 3 года назад +852

      @@nicolasdiaz1542 Its not like there was a more photogenic or photographed person in the 18th century so you are fine.

    • @MichellePaulette79
      @MichellePaulette79 3 года назад +389

      How many people from the 19th century can you look at their photos, and they have a style that would not be completely out of place even today.
      Ahead of his time in so many ways.... even fashion!
      I do wish that somewhere in this rap battle were his words to the youth in his own Time..
      Agitate, agitate, agitate!
      Which I personally think is great advice!
      Yet another reason this man was so far ahead of his time.

    • @cortes2j
      @cortes2j 3 года назад +20

      @@MichellePaulette79 about four…

  • @EpoxyResin-x3s
    @EpoxyResin-x3s 4 года назад +9214

    I don't remember this part of Hamilton

    • @lucascurio8345
      @lucascurio8345 4 года назад +265

      Because in real life Hamilton and his wife were big slave owners, Douglas would whoop their arses.

    • @EpoxyResin-x3s
      @EpoxyResin-x3s 4 года назад +79

      @@lucascurio8345 that's a #bruhmoment if I do say so myself

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 4 года назад +206

      ​@@lucascurio8345 Douglas won't even need something like that since Hamilton destroyed his own reputation which prevented him from ever becoming president.
      Got this from Wikipedia:
      Hamilton is not known to have ever owned slaves, although members of his family were slave owners. At the time of her death, Hamilton's mother owned two slaves named Christian and Ajax, and she had written a will leaving them to her sons; however, due to their illegitimacy, Hamilton and his brother were held ineligible to inherit her property, and never took ownership of the slaves. Later, as a youth in St. Croix, Hamilton worked for a company trading in commodities that included slaves. During his career, Hamilton did occasionally purchase or sell slaves for others as their legal representative, and one of Hamilton's grandsons interpreted some of these journal entries as being purchases for himself.
      By the time of Hamilton's early participation in the American Revolution, his abolitionist sensibilities had become evident. Hamilton was active during the Revolution in trying to raise black troops for the army, with the promise of freedom. In the 1780s and 1790s, he generally opposed pro-slavery southern interests, which he saw as hypocritical to the values of the American Revolution. In 1785, he joined his close associate John Jay in founding the New-York Society for Promoting the Manumission of Slaves, and Protecting Such of Them as Have Been, or May be Liberated, the main anti-slavery organization in New York. The society successfully promoted the abolition of the international slave trade in New York City and passed a state law to end slavery in New York through a decades-long process of emancipation, with a final end to slavery in the state on July 4, 1827.
      At a time when most white leaders doubted the capacity of blacks, Hamilton believed slavery was morally wrong and wrote that "their natural faculties are as good as ours." Unlike contemporaries such as Jefferson, who considered the removal of freed slaves (to a western territory, the West Indies, or Africa) to be essential to any plan for emancipation, Hamilton pressed for emancipation with no such provisions. Hamilton and other Federalists supported Toussaint Louverture's revolution against France in Haiti, which had originated as a slave revolt. Hamilton's suggestions helped shape the Haitian constitution. In 1804 when Haiti became the Western Hemisphere's first independent state with a majority of the population being black, Hamilton urged closer economic and diplomatic ties.

    • @lucascurio8345
      @lucascurio8345 4 года назад +41

      jp3813 holy shit nice paragraph dude

    • @jp3813
      @jp3813 4 года назад +23

      @@lucascurio8345 It ain't mine. lol

  • @tadstrange1465
    @tadstrange1465 5 лет назад +14353

    I love how legitimately pissed Fredrick Douglass seems here.

    • @MrLoukato
      @MrLoukato 5 лет назад +1245

      I mean it's a slave owner vs a former slave. Considering how stuff was back then and all he went through, I feel like he has a right to be pissed.

    • @TheHenrydu
      @TheHenrydu 5 лет назад +298

      ikr, has to be too, with their parody on NWA, nigga does have an attitude

    • @tadstrange1465
      @tadstrange1465 4 года назад +164

      Rohunt
      Yeah it's great acting on this guy's part

    • @samiryeahman7005
      @samiryeahman7005 4 года назад +25

      Tad Strange is that a gravity falls character I see????

    • @nathanseper8738
      @nathanseper8738 4 года назад +149

      There is nothing more powerful than righteous fury.

  • @minecraftsteve2504
    @minecraftsteve2504 Год назад +6536

    "YOU LET FREEDOM RING BUT DIDN'T PICK UP THE PHONE MAN"
    I love it.
    Douglas came out not seeking violence, but seeking the truth.

    • @GoingToAFuneral
      @GoingToAFuneral Год назад +35

      YOO YOU GOT A HEART CONGRATS

    • @minecraftsteve2504
      @minecraftsteve2504 Год назад +45

      @@GoingToAFuneral honestly I wasn't anticipating it
      Really threw me off guard when I saw it in my notifications
      Much love to the boys behind erb

    • @weego2585
      @weego2585 Год назад +17

      @@minecraftsteve2504they really are good guys ngl.

    • @wldnrkls
      @wldnrkls Год назад +7

      you didn't even get the quote right with the video right in front of you

    • @greasemaster
      @greasemaster Год назад +1

      Ggs

  • @rocky4629
    @rocky4629 4 года назад +7010

    “Ah Fredrick I’ve never heard a verse I Doug Less”
    that line was so corny i ended up laughing too hard.

    • @Nayhan123
      @Nayhan123 4 года назад +14

      epiphany you got likes thought I'd tell you

    • @rocky4629
      @rocky4629 4 года назад +12

      aaron bacchus i know that

    • @michaelgiffen7541
      @michaelgiffen7541 4 года назад +120

      I hate that I didn't get that until I saw this

    • @drewwatkins3053
      @drewwatkins3053 4 года назад +15

      @@michaelgiffen7541 same lmao

    • @sephiroth24592
      @sephiroth24592 4 года назад +10

      I was in the shower when I realized that was a pun....

  • @arielcahn7728
    @arielcahn7728 3 года назад +10887

    "You let freedom ring but never picked up the phone"
    I come back to this battle for this line. Genius.

    • @lokitmg4123
      @lokitmg4123 3 года назад +69

      Clever line

    • @neraka-z4n
      @neraka-z4n 3 года назад +346

      Even better when you realize that Fredrick Douglas lived long enough to see the invention of the telephone.

    • @toodmorales8462
      @toodmorales8462 3 года назад +24

      I’m happy I was the guy to provide you with 1k, cause I agreeeeeee

    • @datguymiller
      @datguymiller 3 года назад +17

      Also made sure former president Jefferson was finished with his rap

    • @flappynautintheocean8824
      @flappynautintheocean8824 3 года назад +6

      @@lokitmg4123 can't be tamed bros

  • @noahkelly3627
    @noahkelly3627 4 года назад +5015

    The line “not to mention third president” line is so subtle but very clever. Jefferson didn’t consider being president a real big accomplishment in his life. On his tombstone, it mentions other accomplishments (writing the Declaration of Independence, writing the Statute of Virginia for Religious Freedom, and founding the University of Virginia) but does not mention him being president at all because he didn’t really see it as that important

    • @jeremytewari3346
      @jeremytewari3346 4 года назад +295

      That whole concluding verse of his accomplishments followed by “the fuck’d you do?” is so powerful

    • @andyknightwarden9746
      @andyknightwarden9746 4 года назад +12

      @@caden7745 Agreed.

    • @IsaTehGothicMando
      @IsaTehGothicMando 4 года назад +195

      @@caden7745 Its a battle, Jefferson's remarks amounted to "Im gonna brag about everything I've done" and "You look silly" ,and then apologizing his entire second verse, you're crazy to think he took this. Douglas threw everything he said back in his face, called him not only a racist, but a gigantic hypocrite whose greatest accomplishments ring hollow because he didnt back it up with his actions,

    • @justahyundai
      @justahyundai 4 года назад +57

      @@caden7745 Douglass second verse completely and utterly destroyed Jefferson no doubt

    • @MonsterIcee
      @MonsterIcee 4 года назад +28

      IsaTehGothicMando yeah but I think Noah is appreciating what the creators gave Jefferson. Given his insults must have been limited, similar to hulk vs jenner

  • @Zeke1460
    @Zeke1460 2 года назад +5239

    Douglass’s lines about “the 4th of July is an important holiday but what does it mean to this guy?” Is referring to a speech he gave about the 4th of July. Basically in that speech he discussed how the 4th of july is when america celebrates freedom and liberation but at the same time they continued to enslave black people, so the 4th of July was just a reminder of enslavement for black people.

    • @emlynselene1096
      @emlynselene1096 2 года назад +207

      Here to add on it's called "What, to a slave, is the 4th of July?"

    • @dilloncasey1194
      @dilloncasey1194 Год назад +112

      It’s also taking a shot at Jefferson who had 6 babies with his slave only 4 survived she had a choice though to be free in France or return to America with Jefferson she chose to go with him as long as long as her children would become free when they turn 21 which Jefferson never did until he died on the 4th of July 1826

    • @phillipsnichole2857
      @phillipsnichole2857 Год назад +9

      '... But what does it mean to this guy... ' well, CTFD. Doesn't it stand to reason that speeches like the one you refer to are meant to set the frame work in the mind of people of that time? Instant gratification of fast societal change is not a reasonable expectation. Change is slow. Speeches are made to inspire thought and debate.

    • @gandalf_thegrey
      @gandalf_thegrey Год назад +15

      @@dilloncasey1194 I mean, not really unexpected the 2 out of 6 babies die.
      I would even go as far an claim thats a pretty good ratio for the time

    • @grendal113
      @grendal113 Год назад +3

      To be fair. Stayed on the plantation has a real meaning for cowards.

  • @aaronjohnson1647
    @aaronjohnson1647 4 года назад +11056

    They fit a whole semester of high school history in 3 min

    • @gunargundarson1626
      @gunargundarson1626 4 года назад +359

      Another reason why the current education system is whack.

    • @notlogical4016
      @notlogical4016 4 года назад +31

      @@gunargundarson1626 yee yee

    • @inactiveuserakashahb3201
      @inactiveuserakashahb3201 4 года назад +24

      @@gunargundarson1626 hee hee

    • @justsomeguy1014
      @justsomeguy1014 4 года назад +68

      No Lollygagging the system WACK, the teachers WACK, the school WACK, the textbooks WACK

    • @notlogical4016
      @notlogical4016 4 года назад +53

      Yosuru Shi it doesn’t, the school system just forces it on you for a semester. Because the schools are dumb

  • @sabercat2178
    @sabercat2178 5 лет назад +12792

    >”I’m so down with revolutions I invented the swivel chair”
    >google
    >HE ACTUALLY INVENTED THE SWIVEL CHAIR

    • @penisparker5172
      @penisparker5172 5 лет назад +391

      Thomas is a savage

    • @TheLibermania
      @TheLibermania 5 лет назад +182

      The Simpsons already taught us that.

    • @Korfman
      @Korfman 4 года назад +458

      They don't call it Epic Rap Battles of HISTORY for nothing.

    • @Stazmanian
      @Stazmanian 4 года назад +19

      Damn boi

    • @vivaciousmyosotis
      @vivaciousmyosotis 4 года назад +4

      Saber Cat I don’t get that line

  • @thedonutqueen6454
    @thedonutqueen6454 7 лет назад +5442

    "So down with revolution, I invented the swivel chair,"
    I love that line.

    • @bobateacafe5792
      @bobateacafe5792 7 лет назад +119

      The DonutQueen “this ain’t Louisiana I aint buying it” I LAUGHED SO HARD IN HISTORY

    • @gumunduringigumundsson9344
      @gumunduringigumundsson9344 7 лет назад +1

      The DonutQueen it is sweet 🍀🌏💜

    • @MarleyMan850
      @MarleyMan850 7 лет назад +2

      Fredrick Went IceCube

    • @ashlynnnfairchild3355
      @ashlynnnfairchild3355 6 лет назад

      I thought that was Ben Franklin

    • @AJSLV2002
      @AJSLV2002 6 лет назад +2

      Yh well it didn't mention Alexander Hamilton who was actually one of the main people in the American revolution doo...

  • @Hei_Darkfire
    @Hei_Darkfire Год назад +4813

    1:23 Can we just appreciate how much effort ERB puts into these. They took 7 shots of the guy playing Frederick instead of just copying and pasting one shot into all of the photos. That is real dedication.

    • @greasemaster
      @greasemaster Год назад +14

      It sure is

    • @ServerYT
      @ServerYT Год назад +50

      > That is real dedication.
      HEADS FOR RACIST TAILS FOR SLAVE PLANTATION

    • @clickthisforawsomnes
      @clickthisforawsomnes Год назад +31

      They do things like this in every rap. Theres always eye candy and small things you can spot in the background. You can tell they love their craft

    • @what_s_that_question_mark
      @what_s_that_question_mark Год назад +6

      @@clickthisforawsomnes And we love 'em too!

    • @agc2757
      @agc2757 Год назад +12

      It's also real muggin'

  • @rebeccad9635
    @rebeccad9635 3 года назад +4999

    "and I ceased being an alien to your unalienable rights" holy fucking shit dawg

    • @hephsmith3738
      @hephsmith3738 3 года назад +11

      400 likes to the Meme Master!

    • @JeiHeirumaru
      @JeiHeirumaru 3 года назад +133

      “And ‘we the people’ stopped meaning ‘we the people…who are white’ “

    • @janverfaillie8943
      @janverfaillie8943 2 года назад +25

      0:18 "I'm endowed with certain unalienable skills"

    • @theasexualidiot4803
      @theasexualidiot4803 2 года назад +8

      @@janverfaillie8943 bro dug his own grave in one his first verses

    • @theasexualidiot4803
      @theasexualidiot4803 2 года назад +2

      Dude just burned him at the stake like the Roman’s did to the Catholics.

  • @portalmasterjake5267
    @portalmasterjake5267 3 года назад +3763

    dude i just got, "you died on the 4th of july, its a very important holiday, but what the fuck does it mean to this guy?"
    he wrote a speech called, "what is the 4th of july to a slave"
    wack

    • @neilpemberton5523
      @neilpemberton5523 3 года назад +129

      It is possibly his best speech ever.

    • @distaffpope2603
      @distaffpope2603 3 года назад +32

      @@neilpemberton5523 It's such fire

    • @senoritarat9520
      @senoritarat9520 3 года назад +11

      DAMNNN

    • @droid327
      @droid327 3 года назад +84

      Ironically, in that speech he actually quotes Jefferson decrying the evil of slavery

    • @ssj2camaro21
      @ssj2camaro21 3 года назад +4

      Well seems like we have that same issue today with BLM.

  • @ra_mry3062
    @ra_mry3062 4 года назад +4567

    Okay but no one is talking about “founding absentee father”

    • @ItRemindMeOfHome
      @ItRemindMeOfHome 4 года назад +165

      Because his family to this day refuses to talk about it

    • @jazzyprince3335
      @jazzyprince3335 4 года назад +46

      THERE'S TOO MUCH WORDPLAY!!!!!!!!!!

    • @imanuelgonzalez2853
      @imanuelgonzalez2853 4 года назад +20

      Because he said it to fast and it didn't really connect or rhyme with the previous sentence.

    • @elaovi
      @elaovi 4 года назад +73

      Because he raped and impregnated a slave woman

    • @jesseberg3271
      @jesseberg3271 4 года назад +97

      @@elaovi in some ways, he and Hemmings lived like a married couple, and when she was given her freedom by the French (before they had had children) she chose to go back to Virginia with him, which meant going back into slavery.
      This is NOT a defense of Jefferson. The fact that he could still participate in the institution of slavery while in that kind of relationship with a black woman makes him (in a way) more monstrous than someone who saw slaves as little different from livestock. He knew these were people, no different than him, and he did what he did anyway.

  • @generaljesus7669
    @generaljesus7669 Год назад +1035

    It's crazy cause I feel like Jeffferson"s first verse was absolutely lethal: he just had the wrong opponent

    • @philiphockenbury6563
      @philiphockenbury6563 10 месяцев назад +199

      The first verse was fantastic. It’s just that he’s fighting THE Black Abolitionist. So Jefferson was set up to get dunked on.

    • @erobertwicker
      @erobertwicker 7 месяцев назад +53

      @@philiphockenbury6563Agreed. Imagine if it was Thomas Jefferson vs John Adams or something like that, they ultimately were friends but disagreed on a many great things. I think Lloyd could’ve played a great Adams in my opinion.

    • @TG-om1ue
      @TG-om1ue 6 месяцев назад +39

      They had to give Jefferson an opponent he basically couldnt beat, because if it was literally anyone else he wouldve fucking crushed them. He just did too much to not clown on anyone except for the dude who was a slave, got free and became a famous Abolitionist

    • @UmbreonMessiah
      @UmbreonMessiah 5 месяцев назад +31

      In almost any other context, Jefferson's first verse would have ended the whole battle. Almost nobody can stand up to the things he accomplished in his life.
      ...but across from him is one of the only people with the knowledge, the know-how and the credentials to do just that.

    • @TG-om1ue
      @TG-om1ue 5 месяцев назад +21

      @UmbreonMessiah it's basically impossible to beat Douglass because of what he did with his life. Beyond making fun of his looks and calling him basically a narcissist (both of which Jefferson does) there isn't anything else you can touch. You could probably put anyone against Douglass and the result would be a loss

  • @ChairmanLor
    @ChairmanLor 2 года назад +5012

    Fun Fact: The dude who plays Douglas in this battle is J.B. Smoove, who also plays one of Peter Parker's teachers in the new Spiderman movies.

    • @Rygoat
      @Rygoat 2 года назад +150

      and "Leon Black" from Curb Your Enthusiasm

    • @SkiggsMoDiggs
      @SkiggsMoDiggs 2 года назад +57

      I thought he looked familiar

    • @weirdcarpetthing97
      @weirdcarpetthing97 2 года назад +39

      Oh yeah he’s that witches guy

    • @jons_7402
      @jons_7402 2 года назад +47

      He's also the barber in Everybody Hates Chris.

    • @chattaboxxx2332
      @chattaboxxx2332 2 года назад +31

      This. This right fucking here. This made my week.

  • @andrewpeters6207
    @andrewpeters6207 3 года назад +9979

    It's crazy how you guys balanced being respectful and redeeming Jefferson's character; while also shredding him to pieces. This is one of your finest videos.

    • @menthols4625
      @menthols4625 3 года назад +625

      The only character in ERB to ever have to apologize to his opponent in the middle of a rap battle, only to have that apology denied and be told to fuck off. /// Respect
      Pick one, it can't be both.

    • @andrewpeters6207
      @andrewpeters6207 3 года назад +331

      @@menthols4625 I am speaking to the fact that most writers of something like this today have ran to ignoring any of the good Jefferson did; and only see racist. Just read the comments, you will see consensus is that the stamp of racist is so big nothing else matters. Here Jefferson actually managed to dig himself out of that most dangerous brand. Douglass's retort was fair, it is the only truly fair criticism of Jefferson, that if he genuinely loved the slave girl who he was in a relationship with, why not take any steps to free her or move her to freedom? I will give you that his second verse had no attacks back, only a masterful knock down of the racist brand, is the one big negative of this video. Being branded racist is a death blow in today's political climate, so that they managed to have Jefferson brush that off and still walking away looking great, is respect for the man.

    • @trinwheeler4639
      @trinwheeler4639 3 года назад +184

      Why shouldn't being a racist be a death brand? You can hate someone while still appreciating their work and efforts. Should a serial killer get a lighter sentence just because they made a nice painting or invented something? The answer is no.

    • @thehaloscrolls391
      @thehaloscrolls391 3 года назад +97

      @@trinwheeler4639 your comparing hating a race to literally murdering several people brutally, both are bad, sure, but just being racist pales in comparison to the shit serial killers do

    • @trinwheeler4639
      @trinwheeler4639 3 года назад +70

      @@thehaloscrolls391 Social death brand, dumb ass. You know, strip racists of their achievements and prestige just like they've done to people of color for millenia.

  • @alredir
    @alredir 4 года назад +3041

    "This ain't Louisiana man, I ain't buyin' it."
    Hah, Jefferson did the Louisiana Purchase.

    • @anywaythewindblows8912
      @anywaythewindblows8912 3 года назад +4

      Right lol

    • @jaxmatthews2748
      @jaxmatthews2748 3 года назад +26

      OMG I NEVER REALIZED THAT

    • @MrJoeylj
      @MrJoeylj 3 года назад +3

      Hidden fact

    • @maxfieldjoyner5244
      @maxfieldjoyner5244 3 года назад +12

      I realized that after like 30 watches of this rap. That is embarrassing.

    • @lokitmg4123
      @lokitmg4123 3 года назад +9

      I just now realized this. At first I didn't get the reference but now that we're learning about this in history I actually understand.

  • @Aiden_Jomanski
    @Aiden_Jomanski Год назад +576

    Douglas was so powerful, that Jefferson spent his whole second verse trying to make peace with him

    • @Hokum6
      @Hokum6 7 месяцев назад +10

      First and only time in an ERB. Feels wrong.

    • @luckii.__17
      @luckii.__17 7 месяцев назад +6

      @@Hokum6 I think he should've been like "yeah I did that so what", even though he wasn't really like that irl I guess.

    • @TG-om1ue
      @TG-om1ue 6 месяцев назад +11

      @@luckii.__17 The problem is he basically cant attack Frederick Douglass on anything besides what he did in the first verse. Douglass is like the ultimate rap battle trump card because you cant really make fun of the guy who spent his whole life talking about how bad slavery was. Had Jefferson had literally anyone else as an opponent he would win easily

    • @duongnguyen-mb3rp
      @duongnguyen-mb3rp 3 месяца назад

      @@luckii.__17 too bad he was rapping agains Douglass of all people cause if he said that, it would just make things worse for him

    • @charlescollier7217
      @charlescollier7217 17 дней назад

      Frederick Douglass is quietly the best orator in American history.

  • @christopherjustice6411
    @christopherjustice6411 4 года назад +6559

    If they had put Jefferson up against literally anybody else he would've kicked ass. This matchup is perfection.

    • @konstantinopoulos33
      @konstantinopoulos33 4 года назад +80

      Hmm. Harriet Tubman?

    • @MonsieurFeshe
      @MonsieurFeshe 3 года назад +123

      ye, but he still won.

    • @ZeroTheFoolArcana
      @ZeroTheFoolArcana 3 года назад +230

      he still kicked ass tho, but we are not allowed to say it because it would be "racist" to say thomas won

    • @christopherjustice6411
      @christopherjustice6411 3 года назад +573

      Zero Your victim narrative is funny, it’s a matter of opinion of who won my dude.

    • @ZeroTheFoolArcana
      @ZeroTheFoolArcana 3 года назад +88

      @@christopherjustice6411 victim narrative is frederick whole rap...

  • @bestnumber_7225
    @bestnumber_7225 5 лет назад +5322

    Just noticed Jefferson say “I’ve never heard a verse I dug less”
    Douglass

    • @saltyonions9268
      @saltyonions9268 5 лет назад +126

      I would have never caught that

    • @oliverholland1205
      @oliverholland1205 5 лет назад +62

      How did it take you this long 😂😂

    • @verZatile_bmotp
      @verZatile_bmotp 5 лет назад +50

      "Aw Frederick , I've never heard a verse I dug less" (Douglas)
      Word play on 100!

    • @k4nj1kun83
      @k4nj1kun83 5 лет назад +40

      Also “This ain’t Louisiana man, I ain’t buying it.” I think we all know what purchases Jefferson made

    • @samwalker3165
      @samwalker3165 5 лет назад +12

      Oh. Mah. Gawd.
      I have watched this several times and never realised 😀

  • @8h723
    @8h723 3 года назад +2660

    “1st Secretary of State, VP number 2, not to mention 3rd President.” I like how that is in Numerical Order

    • @Clangdon0148
      @Clangdon0148 3 года назад +49

      1, 2, 3, that seems right

    • @오렌지-y9o
      @오렌지-y9o 3 года назад +5

      @@Clangdon0148 that’s not a question

    • @ivanthehunter3530
      @ivanthehunter3530 3 года назад +12

      Ocd has been satisfied*
      ......
      For now*

    • @masonwoods319
      @masonwoods319 3 года назад +42

      Another fun little fact, the “not to mention” pet is because it isn’t listed on his tombstone that he was president of the United States. Wack.

    • @baseballguy0125
      @baseballguy0125 3 года назад +2

      And chronological

  • @gamerstheater1187
    @gamerstheater1187 Год назад +1196

    “This ain’t Louisiana, man I ain’t buying it” I love this, it’s a reference to when Thomas bought the Louisiana territory from Napoleon

    • @Thespikedballofdoom
      @Thespikedballofdoom Год назад +18

      thanks, I somehow never caught that

    • @IsaaacWithThreeA
      @IsaaacWithThreeA Год назад +21

      “How dare you adress moi, you adolescent worm.”

    • @CA.papaBear
      @CA.papaBear Год назад +6

      @@IsaaacWithThreeA Damn it I read it and instead of reading it mentally with a normal voice instead in my head I read it as though I mentally sounded like Napoleon Bonaparte.

    • @IsaaacWithThreeA
      @IsaaacWithThreeA Год назад +4

      @@CA.papaBear This bastard’s about to see how bad a battle can be.

    • @joannnuneza4919
      @joannnuneza4919 Год назад +3

      Finally someone who saw it.

  • @PaperbackWizard
    @PaperbackWizard 4 года назад +4678

    Not gonna lie, Douglass could have talked a little more about himself. He did more than just get his picture taken.

    • @kmjkmjkmj
      @kmjkmjkmj 4 года назад +210

      You mean tell us he taught himself to read? He covered that.

    • @kikiretzorg1467
      @kikiretzorg1467 4 года назад +434

      He didn't need to talk about himself to complete dismantle Jefferson by targeting his cognitive dissonance.

    • @kanoy7817
      @kanoy7817 4 года назад +151

      That was the weakest line tbh, "oh you got your fucking face on a mountain, but I got the cool photos"

    • @kanoy7817
      @kanoy7817 4 года назад +102

      @@loveleonk No, no I don't think they will.
      Unless the regressive left keeps pushing identity politics.

    • @majeedmamah7457
      @majeedmamah7457 4 года назад +299

      @@kanoy7817 if identity politics turns you into a racist, you were already a racist.

  • @tiny99990
    @tiny99990 3 года назад +7259

    I felt that Thomas Jefferson flowed better... but Frederick was spitting truth with passion so I gotta give it to him.

    • @nimvvv8467
      @nimvvv8467 3 года назад +25

      True

    • @PsychCaptain
      @PsychCaptain 3 года назад +12

      Well said.

    • @angelfloress5063
      @angelfloress5063 3 года назад +80

      @@PsychCaptain Naw douglass was being a bit too cocky and using his race to his advantage. If this wasn’t on youtube, a leftist organization, Jefferson would’ve won.

    • @michaelmooney1914
      @michaelmooney1914 3 года назад +486

      @@angelfloress5063 RUclips isn't an organization, it's a public forum.

    • @angelfloress5063
      @angelfloress5063 3 года назад +18

      @@michaelmooney1914 Yes it is.

  • @MattBnl2ih
    @MattBnl2ih 3 года назад +6048

    Thomas was on his ass until he decided to spend an entire verse trying say “I’m not racist, my sisters boyfriends black”

    • @EriniusT
      @EriniusT 3 года назад +1015

      "I'm not racist my slave girlfriend is black"

    • @lukepearson4611
      @lukepearson4611 3 года назад +844

      I’m not racist I love black people I think everyone should own one

    • @lifesuckstbh
      @lifesuckstbh 3 года назад +87

      @@EriniusT stahhhhp 😭😭😂😂😂

    • @Mo_Real_Official
      @Mo_Real_Official 3 года назад +8

      lmao

    • @AvoirJoseph
      @AvoirJoseph 3 года назад +184

      I'm not racist, my sister-in-law's baby cousin Tracy got a brother and his girlfriend's black

  • @renaissancenerd3801
    @renaissancenerd3801 2 года назад +2637

    can we talk about how "I didn't do anything to stop the slave trade or free my own slaves because I was worried about my money" is such a painfully realistic thing for a politician to say
    Edit: the sheer amount of people in the replies looking for any and all excuses for Jefferson genuinely boggles my mind

    • @carlosg8103
      @carlosg8103 2 года назад +19

      @MasteroMatter Yep you are right

    • @CidVeldoril
      @CidVeldoril 2 года назад +151

      To be fair he lived in a time when having money meant being able to vote and he was not some kind of dictator who could have easily changed stuff. To be able to change anything for the better on any issue he needed to have money.

    • @lordspam2721
      @lordspam2721 2 года назад +60

      I agree. Jefferson and Douglas were both epic and this battle was weak. People have such a blinded view of history. They were both based AF

    • @camelholocaust5149
      @camelholocaust5149 2 года назад +138

      Jefferson was tortured over this, he argued for freeing American slaves most of his life, tried to outlaw slavery in VA and wanted to include a condemnation of slavery in the declaration but the founders thought it would isolate the southern colonies. I've never figured out exactly why he didn't free his slaves when he died, but I think he was in debt and was using the slaves as collateral. I may be wrong about that but everytime I try to look it up I get conflicting answers.

    • @degayify
      @degayify 2 года назад +10

      Ok groomer

  • @ThatsABitPersonal
    @ThatsABitPersonal 4 года назад +4895

    Frederick Douglass was also a huge advocate for women’s rights, so he could tell Jefferson that he...
    Fought to include women in the sequel.

    • @jazminnegro6747
      @jazminnegro6747 4 года назад +175

      Work!

    • @psychicbyinternet
      @psychicbyinternet 4 года назад +47

      Yay I literally just watched that last night so I get the reference haha

    • @mostlynull
      @mostlynull 4 года назад +50

      r/unexpectedhamilton

    • @mrboop8905
      @mrboop8905 4 года назад +17

      Aiden's come on man that is the most expected Hamilton

    • @yougosquishnow
      @yougosquishnow 4 года назад +4

      Nice

  • @sine-spike
    @sine-spike 3 года назад +5088

    Ok but can we talk about how hilarious Jefferson’s facial expressions are throughout both of Frederick’s verses. He’s just like “Yikes, he’s right”

    • @TheWarriorofHonor
      @TheWarriorofHonor 2 года назад +213

      more like "damn how do i get out of this??" XD

    • @MattBnl2ih
      @MattBnl2ih 2 года назад +163

      Oppenheimer had the same exact expressions yet he still managed to say “fuck this guilt trip, this is a god damn rap battle”

    • @AtomBacon
      @AtomBacon 2 года назад +8

      Had to re watch and focus on them but yeah they were great lmao.

    • @Sailorbyday
      @Sailorbyday 2 года назад +8

      Not about every thing. He was kinda wrong on some so

    • @thetruth-hl7ct
      @thetruth-hl7ct 2 года назад +3

      I think it was more like "Is that even English?"

  • @ShmeengusDingus
    @ShmeengusDingus 2 года назад +3118

    Frederick’s Last Verse: “I’m not mad, I’m just horribly disappointed in you.”

    • @function0077
      @function0077 2 года назад +128

      This is the parental dagger to the heart line.

    • @kumba713
      @kumba713 2 года назад +30

      @@function0077 true

  • @jeffreydudgeon4579
    @jeffreydudgeon4579 Год назад +566

    Those last two lines,
    "I ain't denying your fame
    I'm just saying they need to put an asterisk next to your name"
    Perfectly encapsulates this video

    • @rach2111
      @rach2111 Год назад +19

      I feel like Jefferson would agree.

    • @HookCamper
      @HookCamper 11 месяцев назад +4

      An asterisk meaning what? I thought that line was left vague so the viewer could add their own meaning to the meaninglessness, like Kanye lyrics.

    • @jeffreydudgeon4579
      @jeffreydudgeon4579 11 месяцев назад +41

      @@HookCamper that Jefferson, despite all his high minded ideals of freedom, was a slave-owner. So I thought the line was pretty straight forward.

    • @ramen2192
      @ramen2192 11 месяцев назад +36

      @@HookCamper asterisks in writing usually mean that there are caveats or more context to add to the situation

    • @spuriouslathos2518
      @spuriouslathos2518 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@HookCamper you gotta try reeeeeeeal hard to miss the point that badly.

  • @self-proclaimedcomedian1037
    @self-proclaimedcomedian1037 3 года назад +4917

    Jefferson spending his full second verse explaining himself is so beautifully realistic. It's exactly what most politicians would do. It's genius, really

    • @Jonathan-oy8cl
      @Jonathan-oy8cl 3 года назад +160

      I mean, he makes a better argument than most

    • @monke980
      @monke980 3 года назад +221

      i mean but he was being legit, he was actually explaining shit, he wasn't just deflecting with vague ideas. it's really not that genius.

    • @bijuutamer729
      @bijuutamer729 3 года назад +168

      It makes Jefferson look better because pretty much any president before Abe would have just been like, “lol don’t care you’re black”

    • @juanquixote4186
      @juanquixote4186 3 года назад +38

      Certainly what the real Jefferson would have tried to do

    • @Adalon-
      @Adalon- 2 года назад +28

      @@bijuutamer729 abe was basically the same way. All the freed slaves would have been forcibly repatriated if he hadn't been killed.
      Abe dislikes slavery, but people forget that is not what the war was about. Abe made it about that, after the fact and at a point the north was in trouble, to Garner support, rally people and to further demonize an enemy.
      They were just tools, as always in history.

  • @mariaesthervillanueva729
    @mariaesthervillanueva729 4 года назад +4838

    "You let freedom ring but never pick up the phone"
    Why aren't we talking about this line? Like, he kill him.

    • @ditw_music
      @ditw_music 4 года назад +41

      Nah, wasn't that great. Jefferson's first verse was fire

    • @MohamedAli-nf1rp
      @MohamedAli-nf1rp 4 года назад +135

      @@ditw_music you would be a dummy if you think jefferson won

    • @mariaesthervillanueva729
      @mariaesthervillanueva729 4 года назад +77

      @@MohamedAli-nf1rp Douglass won is so obvious 👏👏

    • @MohamedAli-nf1rp
      @MohamedAli-nf1rp 4 года назад +10

      @@mariaesthervillanueva729 ik

    • @Nesendrea
      @Nesendrea 4 года назад +74

      To be honest, Douglass was spitting so much fire that by the end of the battle, Jefferson should have been sweating worse than Douglas’ people, cello or no.

  • @JacobRy
    @JacobRy 4 года назад +2803

    best flow: Jefferson
    best disses: Douglass
    overall winner: swivel chair

  • @iaincoleman5947
    @iaincoleman5947 2 года назад +778

    "I'm just saying, you need to put an asterisk next to your name" is one of the greatest, most lethal rapier thrusts in all of ERB

    • @G01NGP0ZT4L
      @G01NGP0ZT4L Год назад +23

      THE WAY HE SAID IT SEALS IT

    • @jackscliparchives1080
      @jackscliparchives1080 Год назад +2

      I don’t get it still

    • @markbrehob5592
      @markbrehob5592 Год назад +63

      @@jackscliparchives1080 In sports, they will often put someone as a record holder but add an asterisk saying there was some issue (game called early or something). He's saying "you were great, but there were issues so important that when anyone mentions how great you were, this stain on your record will always be mentioned".

    • @jackscliparchives1080
      @jackscliparchives1080 Год назад +7

      @@markbrehob5592 The line sucks

    • @chocolateavian
      @chocolateavian Год назад +31

      @@jackscliparchives1080 i dont think you get how amazing it is

  • @philliptivis3082
    @philliptivis3082 3 года назад +5166

    Jefferson has an amazing first verse. The flow, the disses...it's quite a strong start...and then Douglas shuts it down with 3 words: "You finished? Okay..."

    • @Salsuero
      @Salsuero 2 года назад +207

      Yeah. Very much an underrated opening in context by Douglas.

    • @MintyCoffee
      @MintyCoffee 2 года назад +68

      Jefferson doesn’t have any disses in most of his first verse and none in his second xd

    • @MonsieurDijon
      @MonsieurDijon 2 года назад +9

      not really no, but ok

    • @xanderzelef9757
      @xanderzelef9757 2 года назад +1

      @@MintyCoffee he kinda does

    • @justanotheranimeprofilepic
      @justanotheranimeprofilepic 2 года назад +25

      He had the balls to stop Jeffersons flow instead of just turning it around

  • @greasyclown
    @greasyclown 5 лет назад +6177

    Douglass dissed Jefferson so much, Thomas apologized in next verse...

    • @thethird1967
      @thethird1967 4 года назад +26

      Lol

    • @segmentre1352
      @segmentre1352 4 года назад +10

      Ice-cave goblin no

    • @tammygreen8962
      @tammygreen8962 4 года назад +51

      @@segmentre1352 .. MMmmm..YES HE DID.. DON'T HATE.. STRAIGHT OUT OF BONDAGE 🤣😂😅💃💯

    • @matthewprue1010
      @matthewprue1010 4 года назад +76

      I kinda looked at it like, “hey I did these other things and you kinda misrepresented me.” But he did also apologize which was kinda lame. At least he apologized in a great way.

    • @ethpling165
      @ethpling165 4 года назад +11

      Inquisitor goblin hmm I wonder if there was a narrative behind that??

  • @demnbrown
    @demnbrown 4 года назад +1522

    The "face of a free man taught himself to read men no-compromise couldn't whip a fifth of me man" won the battle.

    • @laurah12
      @laurah12 4 года назад +15

      took way too long for me to find this comment

    • @TheBeastBandit
      @TheBeastBandit 3 года назад +43

      One of the hardest lines that gets so little attention. It was so fucking good

    • @cyrusmuller6502
      @cyrusmuller6502 3 года назад +3

      Tbh after rewatching this it feels one sided like with the hulk

    • @ShrodingersCatgirl
      @ShrodingersCatgirl 3 года назад +19

      "you let freedom ring but never picked up the phone" boy he DEAD dead

    • @olivergates5843
      @olivergates5843 3 года назад +1

      @@ShrodingersCatgirl What does this line mean

  • @thatjeff7550
    @thatjeff7550 5 месяцев назад +100

    "You finished? Okay..."
    And that's when Jefferson knew he was fighting waaaay out of his league... LOL

  • @jbfn14
    @jbfn14 3 года назад +4997

    "The day the 13th damn ammendment was ratified
    and I ceased to be an alien to your inalienable rights"
    One of the most powerful lines in all of ERB.

    • @ssj2camaro21
      @ssj2camaro21 3 года назад +7

      Property doesn't have rights.

    • @sayaksen7545
      @sayaksen7545 3 года назад +165

      @Kacper he's a salty confederate I assume

    • @TheWarriorofHonor
      @TheWarriorofHonor 2 года назад +15

      @@sayaksen7545 possible so, but he had a bit of a point, befire 1865, slaves were considered property (by some) and it is correct to say that property doesn't have right. technically it is correct, even if treating people as property is anything but correct

    • @passiveswan
      @passiveswan 2 года назад +25

      @@ssj2camaro21 kay why ess

    • @UKMonkey
      @UKMonkey 2 года назад +16

      Apart from the 13th just means that in order to have slaves, they need to be arrested first. Why do you think arrest rates are so high in America, especially of the black folks; or why America has one of the highest % of incarcerated people in the world?
      the 13th protects slavery - just in a hidden way.

  • @reefb6292
    @reefb6292 3 года назад +2510

    "no compromise, you couldn't whip a fifth of me man". holyyy shit the three fifths compromise

    • @lokitmg4123
      @lokitmg4123 3 года назад +18

      Oooooh yeah!

    • @loqutor
      @loqutor 3 года назад +10

      Except that's not at all what the three-fifths compromise meant. The real Frederick Douglass would have known that.

    • @lachlanwashere1279
      @lachlanwashere1279 3 года назад +78

      @@loqutor I mean, the ⅗ compromise did have to do with a slave's value, and I think they were trying to reference it's existence, not define it.

    • @samsondog2182
      @samsondog2182 3 года назад +8

      @@lachlanwashere1279 The slave owners wanted their slaves to count as one person for voting rights and for more power. The compromise was to keep the slave owning democrat from gaining more voting power.

    • @Bribridude130
      @Bribridude130 3 года назад +9

      It should have been “no compromise, you couldn’t whip three-fifths of me man”

  • @chancellorpalpatine3781
    @chancellorpalpatine3781 5 лет назад +2473

    “No compromise you couldn’t whoop a fifth of me man”
    This line is very underrated as well as this whole rap battle. So many historical references.

    • @Sara-xr9ph
      @Sara-xr9ph 5 лет назад +3

      Chancellor Palpatine atlanta compromise? what does the other part mean 😬

    • @typus6471
      @typus6471 5 лет назад +53

      @@Sara-xr9ph nigga when he said whip a fith of me man, he meant the three fith compromise dawg

    • @Yirialo
      @Yirialo 5 лет назад +61

      @@Sara-xr9ph it's based off of the 3/5 compromise. It was a compromise in the Constitutional convention. It was were southerners wanted slaves to count as "people" in their population so they can evenly proportion out Representatives, elector votes, etc. If that makes any sense.

    • @bimifoluwaomopariola8202
      @bimifoluwaomopariola8202 5 лет назад +14

      And you can interpret it as "whooping" as in slave beating

    • @timschroyer1257
      @timschroyer1257 5 лет назад +6

      Are we still using that 3/5ths lie? No where does it single out blacks or any other peoples group. It states those not freemen. That would include the irish indentured servants. And if a black man was free in the north he would be counted as a full person. The intent was to reduce the political power of the slave states so we could end slavery by passing a law instead of a war. The counting as 3/5 a man was not for their vote but as count for population for how many repesentitives a state got to send to congress. So if you wanted to end slavery you wanted the cslaves to not count at all! If you are a slave owner you wanted the slaves to count as a full person. Read the actual amendment and think. Don't just repeat your ignorant racial studies prof.

  • @bungybooce4205
    @bungybooce4205 Год назад +77

    “I’m so down with revolutions I invented the Swivel Chair” is my favorite ERB line of all time😂

  • @theblkbird5672
    @theblkbird5672 8 лет назад +5014

    Who else thinks the beat in this is on point?

    • @talonpop
      @talonpop 8 лет назад +139

      Makes me kinda wish Colonial rap was a thing

    • @aaronglandon00
      @aaronglandon00 8 лет назад +38

      +Talon Marshall I suggest listening to Hamilton the Musical

    • @bryanlanderos2223
      @bryanlanderos2223 8 лет назад +4

      +Talon Marshall lol

    • @chrisforsyth8323
      @chrisforsyth8323 8 лет назад +38

      I loved it, and the Douglas bass line was fantastic.

    • @yasminadigun243
      @yasminadigun243 8 лет назад

      I do

  • @paulpardee
    @paulpardee 5 лет назад +2483

    "when I stopped being an alien to your inalienable rights"
    Jesus Christ that hit hard!

    • @carlitojaunito2269
      @carlitojaunito2269 4 года назад +5

      Paul Pardee suffer I made it uneven

    • @trappout3104
      @trappout3104 4 года назад +3

      900th like

    • @AacaL05
      @AacaL05 4 года назад +2

      Paul Pardee I really liked that line

    • @JoeJohnson-fc5wr
      @JoeJohnson-fc5wr 4 года назад +28

      I liked the other one. "When we the people stopped meaning we the people who are white." That one really struck me.

    • @klaud7311
      @klaud7311 4 года назад

      *unalienable

  • @sewtom7309
    @sewtom7309 5 лет назад +2875

    I get that Douglass definitely won this one, but Jefferson's first verse was pretty much flawless, and among the best verses in all of ERB. Rivalled by very few.

    • @jacobgushue866
      @jacobgushue866 5 лет назад +98

      Major Spook they stacked the battle, which is fine since it was straight fire

    • @diegomontesleon136
      @diegomontesleon136 5 лет назад +264

      I think that's what makes this battle so interesting. Jefferson brought in a clean-cut brag-rap, that against anyone else would have caused a stalemate. Like Shaka Zulu's opener against Julius Caesar.
      And then comes in Douglas. Instead of trying to out-brag Jefferson, he picks up Jefferson's own ego trip and hits him with his own flaws. That also helps to make his point; Because Jefferson was a great man, he isn't even trying to outdo him, but he also was a very flawed figure, which is what Douglas has an issue with.

    • @Arcessitor
      @Arcessitor 5 лет назад +90

      @@diegomontesleon136 Lol Shaka got destroyed by Caesar. His best diss was about Caesar being stabbed by friends, while Shaka himself was stabbed by his own family. Lol.

    • @AceGANNON-tu3qh
      @AceGANNON-tu3qh 5 лет назад +62

      If it was even it would have been Jefferson all the way. But Jefferson only had one verse. Jeffersons second verse was just him apologizing for his flaws
      I don't think that Douglass had bad raps. I was saying it's not as good as Jeffersons bars. I would put Jeffersons first verse with the likes of the fathers of the Renaissance. Almost unmatched like the top comment said. But Douglass steamrolled Jefferson like James bond did. He didn't let Jefferson get words in and you can tell Jeff want to say stuff

    • @firstnamexlastname9190
      @firstnamexlastname9190 5 лет назад +1

      I agree

  • @veccyboo7694
    @veccyboo7694 Год назад +75

    I love the N.W.A reference in Douglas’ first line “Straight outta Bondage” referring to the song and straight out of Compton, which was one of the most political hip hop albums ever that tackled racism and discrimination, so much thought goes into these battles no wonder they take so long to release.

  • @crashbandicoot5636
    @crashbandicoot5636 5 лет назад +2369

    "Man, you did some good things I ain't denying your fame; Just sayin' they need to put an asterisk... Next to your name."
    F.D. killed it with the last verse.

    • @illiteratekiwi6536
      @illiteratekiwi6536 5 лет назад +46

      F. D. Killed with the whole song

    • @tristanhoward4808
      @tristanhoward4808 5 лет назад +5

      What does it mean???

    • @multiplayerrkmedia1764
      @multiplayerrkmedia1764 5 лет назад +107

      tristan howard Asterisks mean that there’s more information than provided on the topic it’s next to. F.D’s saying Thomas shouldn’t just be known for his positive actions but also his negatives

    • @tristanhoward4808
      @tristanhoward4808 5 лет назад +2

      MULTIplayerRK Media ohh I figured as much

    • @tristanhoward4808
      @tristanhoward4808 5 лет назад +2

      MULTIplayerRK Media thanks bri

  • @mikau2123
    @mikau2123 4 года назад +1784

    "You finished?"
    That's code for "I'm about to destroy you"

  • @danielsilva2200
    @danielsilva2200 4 года назад +911

    Best flow: Jefferson
    Best disses: Freddy D.
    Loser: King George

  • @NorthernSea121
    @NorthernSea121 5 месяцев назад +22

    "they need to put an asterisk next to your name" was probably the best delivery of a line i've ever heard

  • @seanbourdier8756
    @seanbourdier8756 2 года назад +3119

    My favorite thing about this battle is how Jefferson showed up for a regular battle, and Douglass was clearly here with a mission, addressing slavery. Going up against a founding father, he knew what he was doing and then Jefferson has to like back pedal because the whole battle has changed now so he has to cover his ass about it.

    • @SkiggsMoDiggs
      @SkiggsMoDiggs 2 года назад +137

      Yeah, although Thomas could've just not acknowledged it and continued like most tend to do when their opponent brings up a mistake they can't deny, Thomas wanted to address his accusations. I think that says a bit about him as well, but then again, so does his actions

    • @JB-gw7xf
      @JB-gw7xf 2 года назад +175

      @@SkiggsMoDiggs Jefferson was well aware of his own hypocrisy on slavery. In "Notes on the State of Virginia" he said
      "Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep forever: that considering numbers, nature and natural means only, a revolution of the wheel of fortune, an exchange of situation, is among possible events: that it may become probable by supernatural interference! The Almighty has no attribute which can take side with us in such a contest."

    • @danielkokal8819
      @danielkokal8819 2 года назад +61

      @@JB-gw7xf Damn that boy could write.

    • @DCPTF2
      @DCPTF2 Год назад

      yep nothing like shoving white guilt down the viewer throat

    • @jaqua7732
      @jaqua7732 Год назад +8

      Yes that was very well played, but all of these epicrapbattles usually are

  • @i.j.dragonfly3123
    @i.j.dragonfly3123 4 года назад +560

    "No compromise, you couldn't whip a 5th of me man!"
    That line was fire.

    • @xavierstanton8146
      @xavierstanton8146 4 года назад +13

      It is referencing the Three Fifths Compromise?

    • @rexduodecim3528
      @rexduodecim3528 4 года назад +6

      @@xavierstanton8146 Yes it is

    • @loqutor
      @loqutor 4 года назад +1

      Except that's not how the three-fifths compromise worked.

  • @eswan8900
    @eswan8900 3 года назад +480

    I just learned in school that when Douglass says the fourth of July is a very important holiday, but asks what it means to him is a reference to a speech he gave in 1852 called "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?" Clever reference!

    • @dalemcilwain
      @dalemcilwain 3 года назад +14

      July 4, 1826, fifty years after the Declaration Of Independence was signed. Thomas Jefferson and John Adams former presidents and bitter rivals died within hours of each other. Jefferson was gone at about 1PM, Adams passed after 4PM.

  • @tableswithoutchairs1168
    @tableswithoutchairs1168 Год назад +49

    “I’ll never work for your ass but I’ll kick it, for free”
    And that automatically made FD win imo

  • @potato-vm9ys
    @potato-vm9ys 5 лет назад +2359

    Me at 3 AM: Ok brain, I want to sleep...
    Brain: STRAIGHT OUTTA BONDAGE
    Edit: I come back to this comment in quarantine and HOLY MOLEY 2.3k likes AND an internet chorus performance? I am proud of you all fellow humans

    • @1ring182
      @1ring182 5 лет назад +16

      this mw right now

    • @LeeBreezy
      @LeeBreezy 5 лет назад +53

      BIG HAIR BIG NUTS BIG ISSUES

    • @ziadjouini1671
      @ziadjouini1671 5 лет назад +19

      THERE'S A REAL DECLARATION HEADS FOR RASIST TAILS FOR A SLAVE PLANTATION

    • @janus_1986
      @janus_1986 5 лет назад +17

      YOU'RE A SOFT, WHITE MONTICELLO MARSHMALLOW

    • @neinno8172
      @neinno8172 5 лет назад +18

      WATCHING MY PEOPLE SWEAT WHILE YOU SAT PLAYING CELLO- HELLO

  • @robin_emmel
    @robin_emmel 6 лет назад +2076

    "this ain`t Louisiana man, I ain`t buying it" shots has been fired xD

    • @JuanAlvarez-rx7oy
      @JuanAlvarez-rx7oy 6 лет назад +7

      It wasn't even that nice of a line.Bruhhhh he wasn't even trying to offend him.

    • @mhmq5051
      @mhmq5051 5 лет назад +1

      ث

    • @glencoco5159
      @glencoco5159 5 лет назад +3

      What does it mean? Im not american so i dont get the context.

    • @glencoco5159
      @glencoco5159 5 лет назад

      @@aidanmurphy40 ooh that makes so much sense now thank you.

    • @dwaki3822
      @dwaki3822 5 лет назад

      I just got that funny

  • @thealis
    @thealis 8 лет назад +11015

    I wish my history class was like this. I would have aced that. LOL 😂😂

  • @MarshmallowEclipse
    @MarshmallowEclipse Год назад +107

    I love how when Jefferson says "Set up a little place called the United States, sound familiar?" in the background are a bunch of American people previously portrayed on ERB, Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley, Babe Ruth, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison, Clint Eastwood, Barack Obama, Hulk Hogan.

    • @user-me3yb6eh4q
      @user-me3yb6eh4q 2 месяца назад +1

      ok but what about mikhail gorbachev he isn't american and he also appears at that point

    • @MarshmallowEclipse
      @MarshmallowEclipse 2 месяца назад +1

      @@user-me3yb6eh4q Gorbachev was Russian, but he did collaborate with Americans more than most other Soviets.

    • @user-me3yb6eh4q
      @user-me3yb6eh4q 2 месяца назад +1

      @@MarshmallowEclipse yea ok

    • @typicalfurry2747
      @typicalfurry2747 Месяц назад

      ​@@user-me3yb6eh4q where?

  • @garboil
    @garboil 5 лет назад +2445

    I think this the best one ever. I love them all, but this is serious dope.
    “So down with revolution I invented the swivel chair”
    “You let freedom ring, but never picked up the phone”
    Genius.

    • @mastergamingdude6191
      @mastergamingdude6191 5 лет назад +6

      u r a genius and u understand the ways of epic rap battles

    • @ositacarinosito
      @ositacarinosito 5 лет назад +21

      "I didn't come back from Paris to battle Pepe Le Pew"

    • @aaronjanestrada9484
      @aaronjanestrada9484 5 лет назад +34

      You forgot
      "I'd never work for your ass, but I'd kick it for free"
      Roasted.

    • @ChronoBaw
      @ChronoBaw 5 лет назад +11

      My issue with this one has always been the super short second part from Jefferson, he apologized and didn't put any good lines forwards towards Douglass at all, would have been way better if that part had a second verse with some actual dissing towards Douglass rather than apologizing and sitting there like a punching bag

    • @ohyeahyeah4954
      @ohyeahyeah4954 5 лет назад

      "No compromise. You couldnt whip a 5th of me man"

  • @SharkByteOfficial
    @SharkByteOfficial 8 лет назад +2990

    "Ahh Frederick, I've never heard a verse I *dug less*" How the shet did I just notice this lol

    • @CuttlefishEmpire
      @CuttlefishEmpire 8 лет назад +3

      What

    • @LithKast
      @LithKast 8 лет назад +274

      Verse I Dug less. Meaning he didn't like the verse.
      Dug less or Douglass. sound the same.

    • @natgeowildbackup
      @natgeowildbackup 8 лет назад +27

      Dude, I literally commented the same thing 3 weeks ago lol. We both think alike.

    • @SharkByteOfficial
      @SharkByteOfficial 8 лет назад +3

      ***** lol

    • @Dragons4Dummies
      @Dragons4Dummies 8 лет назад +4

      You just pointed out a whole extra curve ball to this epic edition XD

  • @the1flym459
    @the1flym459 6 лет назад +1809

    Jefferson commited the cardinal sin of rap battles: He went on the defensive

    • @TweekMorgan4dictator
      @TweekMorgan4dictator 6 лет назад +200

      I mean, yeah, but it also kinda works for his character.

    • @jdpena26
      @jdpena26 6 лет назад +5

      Noah Lamberty wait why

    • @maxg8594
      @maxg8594 6 лет назад +54

      If he attacked Douglass personally, other than that he didn't do many memorable things, he would be proving Douglass's point

    • @aviator550
      @aviator550 6 лет назад +20

      Noah Lamberty
      I think the character playing Jefferson knew if he didn't bring it up (slavery) in his rap everybody else would in the comments section

    • @NarpytheCrimeDog
      @NarpytheCrimeDog 6 лет назад +74

      This is rather accurate for Jefferson. He freely admitted that he was a coward and constantly tried to justify his character flaws - more to himself than to others. He didn't like to boast or puff his chest - nor did he really like exploitation.

  • @GotEmAll1337
    @GotEmAll1337 2 года назад +30

    Y'all are seriously so damn talented. This kind of content is what RUclips was made for.

  • @emmab3275
    @emmab3275 7 лет назад +406

    I swear this is the most underrated battle. It's one of my top 5, easily.

    • @leslierae6416
      @leslierae6416 7 лет назад +12

      Fuck yeah, the rhymes are sick

    • @nicholasvath5896
      @nicholasvath5896 7 лет назад +16

      The line "You let freedom ring but never picked up the phone" Damn

    • @LadyPallas
      @LadyPallas 7 лет назад +2

      Emma B yeah the beat is great. I'm a producer and I pay attention to that lol

    • @dreadedpatrick9876
      @dreadedpatrick9876 7 лет назад +1

      same

    • @healyrose4957
      @healyrose4957 7 лет назад

      Emma B

  • @R1NZL3R
    @R1NZL3R 8 лет назад +745

    Keep the hype train rolling boys!! Morgan Freeman vs Samuel L. Jackson!!!

  • @thebamman1
    @thebamman1 8 лет назад +654

    Samuel L. Jackson VS. Morgan Freeman

    • @sharkluxry
      @sharkluxry 8 лет назад +4

      yes

    • @TheSaul70
      @TheSaul70 8 лет назад +2

      yep

    • @jakelancer9768
      @jakelancer9768 8 лет назад +2

      Samuel Jackson vs... Denzel Washington.

    • @lewyseden6328
      @lewyseden6328 8 лет назад

      Yes.

    • @RileyBaldock
      @RileyBaldock 8 лет назад +9

      +JakeLancer Samuel L Jackson VS Denzel Washington and Morgan Freeman interrupts as hi role as God in the movie Bruce Almighty

  • @lulolie
    @lulolie Год назад +235

    I love how they gave Jefferson bars because he was genuinely a great writer but still had Frederick beat him the whole way through based on Jefferson's hypocrisy to his own words and expressed values

    • @CourtlandLess
      @CourtlandLess Год назад +9

      He would’ve won if Fred didn’t make it about race. All Jefferson did was defend himself

    • @Ravenholm337
      @Ravenholm337 Год назад +40

      @@CourtlandLess Freddy D didn't make it about race, he just pointed out Jefferson's actions or lack thereof.

    • @StrangeworldEU
      @StrangeworldEU Год назад +27

      you're surprised the frederick douglass, someone who is best known for being a former slave and abolitionist, who was *a slave in jefferson's lifetime*, would comment about slavery? To thomas jefferson? 'make it about race' my ass lol. this couldn't be about anything else.@@CourtlandLess

    • @ImVeryOriginal
      @ImVeryOriginal Год назад +16

      @@StrangeworldEUYeah white racists really don't want to think about their racism so whenever the topic is brought up in any context it's "inserting race into it" lol

    • @angelperalessalaices8696
      @angelperalessalaices8696 11 месяцев назад +4

      tell us that you're a racist without telling us you are racist@@CourtlandLess

  • @fatjuicytaco
    @fatjuicytaco 5 лет назад +918

    “When it comes to Declarations I’m a first draft pick.”
    Underrated bar.

    • @narddog2311
      @narddog2311 5 лет назад +8

      he was technically third. Ben Franklin and John Adams were asked first.

    • @fatjuicytaco
      @fatjuicytaco 5 лет назад +2

      Nard Dog Fair point. I didn’t write the lyric, but I do pay attention in history. Good catch.

    • @rookcapcoldblood2618
      @rookcapcoldblood2618 5 лет назад +39

      Nard Dog
      He wrote the first draft. That’s why the line works.

    • @tedarcher9120
      @tedarcher9120 5 лет назад +3

      First draft to the army is when the best and most experienced soldiers are called to arms. That means he is the best man to write the first draft, brilliant

  • @marcusdayungg2110
    @marcusdayungg2110 5 лет назад +531

    1:29
    “No compromise, you couldn’t whip a fifth of me man.”
    And theres five of him on screen.

    • @Plug_Art
      @Plug_Art 5 лет назад +4

      The little details 😂

    • @callmevalentine8540
      @callmevalentine8540 5 лет назад +32

      The 3/5th compromise reference😌

    • @effemeseyevee901
      @effemeseyevee901 5 лет назад +3

      on point!

    • @penisparker5172
      @penisparker5172 5 лет назад +5

      And there is idoits in the comment section who dont get the disses lmfao.

    • @jjnn2
      @jjnn2 5 лет назад +3

      I'm astounded that so many people don't understand basic references

  • @jackpot5282
    @jackpot5282 5 лет назад +1594

    Jon Snow vs. Alexander Hamilton
    Battle of the Bastards.

    • @chloehall4922
      @chloehall4922 5 лет назад +1

      JackPot YESSS

    • @Zimmathon
      @Zimmathon 5 лет назад +59

      Get the guy who played Che Guevara in their recent rap battle to play Jon Snow.

    • @kharlclear1981
      @kharlclear1981 5 лет назад +47

      Ooooooor Just Lin-Manuel Miranda vs Alexander Hamilton with Lin as a guest would be lit 🔥

    • @g-ratedhistory8233
      @g-ratedhistory8233 5 лет назад +12

      William the conqueror jumps in and slaughters them both

    • @frizzie123456
      @frizzie123456 5 лет назад +11

      Lin would LOVE to do this, oh my god

  • @dragonlord588
    @dragonlord588 2 года назад +73

    "You let freedom ring but never picked up the phone" always gives me goosebumps

    • @Listening_Books12345
      @Listening_Books12345 9 месяцев назад +1

      For me it's always the run up and finale of the line "you couldn't whip a fifth of me, man!"

  • @mandaloalaluna
    @mandaloalaluna 8 лет назад +576

    Bear Grylls vs Dora the Explorer.

  • @abdhitariefaldi
    @abdhitariefaldi 4 года назад +371

    Just realize who played Fredrick Douglas is actor who play as Peter Parker teacher in Far From Home..

    • @hellcathelton4217
      @hellcathelton4217 4 года назад +8

      Abdhita Riefaldi no way

    • @nada55666
      @nada55666 4 года назад +25

      Yes that'll JB Smoove. He also plays Leon jn Curb your Enthusiasm

    • @cheetahrun1793
      @cheetahrun1793 3 года назад +5

      What a easter egg

    • @williameldridge9382
      @williameldridge9382 3 года назад +2

      He also played Dr. Ray De Angelo Harris in Grand Theft Auto V

    • @ericpeterson8732
      @ericpeterson8732 3 года назад +1

      He's a wordsmith. (That's from a guest star on Castle)

  • @thechrignaciostrash3960
    @thechrignaciostrash3960 5 лет назад +1792

    Thomas Jefferson* vs Frederick Douglass

    • @matthewmoore2690
      @matthewmoore2690 5 лет назад +66

      @@mizzaely8863 nah it mean Thomas Jefferson was against slavery but still owned slaves

    • @ethanshields2371
      @ethanshields2371 5 лет назад +39

      that took me a minute figure out
      great comedy

    • @rinokumura9223
      @rinokumura9223 5 лет назад +6

      What does the astrick mean

    • @MrJoeylj
      @MrJoeylj 5 лет назад +1

      @@rinokumura9223 it means a person died

    • @Zom13y
      @Zom13y 5 лет назад +44

      MrJoeylj it means the person made a mistake that cannot be corrected but incorporated into any success or feat. Example baseball records broken by players under the use of performance enhancing drugs have an asterisk next to their names. In this instance Thomas Jefferson fought for freedom while benefiting from the bondage of others. It is a hideous mistake made by Jefferson that shouldn't be forgotten or excused but incorporated into the viewing of this man's achievements and motives. Also he was a rapist, try to whitewash it as much as you like but if you OWN a person there's no such thing as consent.

  • @mishtaromaniello8295
    @mishtaromaniello8295 5 месяцев назад +10

    One of those times ERB was not only entertaining but thought-provoking. One of your very best battles.

  • @TheVGC
    @TheVGC 8 лет назад +2115

    I always believe when ERB actually involve history they are objectively better.

    • @symphonyofaria
      @symphonyofaria 8 лет назад +11

      Idk I liked the Gordon Ramsay and Julia child one

    • @ravenfrancis1476
      @ravenfrancis1476 8 лет назад +29

      Yeah, no. The rapping was good, so was the beat, but the fact Hamilton actually genuinely apologized throughout his second verse kinda ruined the whole thing.

    • @sugoruyo
      @sugoruyo 8 лет назад +40

      ERB is always great but the historical episodes just hit it out of the park.

    • @kylemiller2039
      @kylemiller2039 8 лет назад +23

      +Joe Francis jefferson

    • @ravenfrancis1476
      @ravenfrancis1476 8 лет назад +2

      +Kyle Miller Sorry, my brain was loopy when I wrote that.

  • @yorick5692
    @yorick5692 8 лет назад +870

    ''Rick & Morty'' Vs. ''Emmett Doc Brown & Marty McFly''

    • @charlie135ful
      @charlie135ful 8 лет назад +14

      They've used Doc Brown already.

    • @darrenpuccala1550
      @darrenpuccala1550 8 лет назад +1

      Already used Doc Brown sadly

    • @PurpleCow81
      @PurpleCow81 8 лет назад

      So long as they re-use with a different context or focal point it should work out. I'd like to see Rick & Morty VS Marty McFly (...or Mr.Peabody & Sherman?)

    • @jackpaull8335
      @jackpaull8335 8 лет назад

      +Jesus Aguirre actually three times

    • @GizmoHibiki
      @GizmoHibiki 8 лет назад +8

      Even better, Rick and Morty vs Mulder and Scully

  • @Dandelionsinthesky
    @Dandelionsinthesky 3 года назад +311

    The fact that Daveed Diggs played Thomas Jefferson in "Hamilton:The Musical" and is now playing Frederick Douglass in "The Good Lord Bird" makes this even better

  • @amyschildgamerlive4519
    @amyschildgamerlive4519 2 года назад +14

    This is my fav erb video. The beats. The lines. The delivery... it's a masterpiece!

  • @artofthecube7227
    @artofthecube7227 8 лет назад +4285

    The Pope vs Emperor Palpatine!

  • @Jchmcom
    @Jchmcom 2 года назад +953

    “You couldn’t whip a fifth of me, man!”
    Jefferson was so ready to retort but instantly though
    “Fuck, ok that was a really good bar.”

    • @tykemorris
      @tykemorris 2 года назад +46

      Is this a reference to blacks being assessed as "3/5 human"?

    • @kenleonard7739
      @kenleonard7739 2 года назад +77

      @@tykemorris Yes. "No compromise, you couldn't whip a 5th of me, man!" refers to the 3/5 Compromise, which was made so that states whose people's main interest was maintaining their right to buy and sell human beings would join ratify the Constitution.

    • @edwardblair4096
      @edwardblair4096 2 года назад +26

      @@tykemorris In particular the southern states wanted their slaves to count as whole people when it came to allocating seats in the House of Representatives. They weren't going to get to vote, but the (rich) free men of the state would have had the advantage of their numbers in Congress. The non-slave states did not want non-free population to count at all when it came to dividing political power between the states. The compromise was between these two positions.
      I understand how dehumanizing it sounds to us today, but I am not sure if it would have been better if the South had gotten their original wish. There is a good chance that the Civil War might have started earlier, or had a different outcome if the political balance was more favorable to the higher population of the southern slave states.
      Think no Missouri Compromise and probably more slavery in the western territories.

    • @tykemorris
      @tykemorris 2 года назад +5

      @@edwardblair4096 On a similar "what if" note, a lot of people feel that the constitutional convention should have abolished slavery. While that seems right at first thought, there would have been at best 8 original states, two separate countries and no civil war to free the slaves. That would have prolonged slavery and increased the persecution of blacks.

    • @TheSpartanFactor
      @TheSpartanFactor 2 года назад +22

      I don't think his hesitation is recognition of the bar, but a realization that countering would be bragging about his ability to whip a former slave.
      Jefferson is a specimen of shame in this battle, that's why his entire second verse is a long-winded non-apology. He refuses to take the blow and move on with the battle, and spends the rest of his time explaining away his failures. He has to believe his crimes and failures were justifiable, because his own thoughts echo Douglas's words.
      Thomas knows that Douglas is right, and choosing to dispute "you couldn't whip a fifth of me man," is a tacit admission of guilt. He knows in his brain that it would look real bad to interject on that note, but he has an emotional need to respond, because the lyric is a merciless assault on a very real insecurity of his.
      As for whether or not that's how the real Thomas Jefferson felt about his actions, I can't say. If there's an answer to that question I certainly haven't read enough about him to know, but that is definitely the read I get on this particular representation of him.

  • @pleaseleave
    @pleaseleave 4 года назад +597

    Jefferson's second verse was just him going into damage control, while Fredrick just kept on the attack

    • @keiranokeeffe1861
      @keiranokeeffe1861 4 года назад +21

      Then again douglas rephrased the whole racist arguement so many times

    • @anthos8182
      @anthos8182 4 года назад +16

      Keiran O'Keeffe Fr, I agree him won, but if Jefferson actually dissed in his second verse he woulda easily took the dub. He had one of the best opening verses in ERB history

    • @petnaby
      @petnaby 4 года назад +21

      That's because what else could they have written for Jefferson? Douglass, when compared to Jefferson, is really a nobody. Jefferson lists his greatest achievements then tells Douglass who the fuck he is i.e. you're not even important in history and Douglass basically spends the rest of the rap going "u racist bro". Like, yeah, Frederick had some great lines but never addresses that compared to Jefferson he's a literal nobody. The whole song was written so Frederick could have the best chance at winning

    • @paydensquiressjuauwu1032
      @paydensquiressjuauwu1032 4 года назад

      Ya because racism isn’t cool but Jefferson Douglas apologized

    • @paydensquiressjuauwu1032
      @paydensquiressjuauwu1032 4 года назад

      And Douglas continued to diss after so of course he won

  • @dtniland
    @dtniland Год назад +20

    "you a soft white Monticello marshmallow" is one of my favorite lines because it has great flow, rhyme, and also is a good diss

  • @ramenramrod
    @ramenramrod 2 года назад +1047

    I was today years old when I realized Thomas Jefferson ACTUALLY invented the Swivel Chair. God, this series is educational and badass! 👌🏽

    • @danielkokal8819
      @danielkokal8819 2 года назад +15

      also played a mean violin

    • @2ac4_87ack
      @2ac4_87ack Год назад +14

      @@danielkokal8819 CELLO, not violin.

    • @praisetelesto
      @praisetelesto Год назад +8

      @@2ac4_87ack You mean the baby version of the Bass

    • @2ac4_87ack
      @2ac4_87ack Год назад +3

      @@praisetelesto No, I mean a cello.

    • @praisetelesto
      @praisetelesto Год назад +8

      @@2ac4_87ack oh I get it the big brother of the viola

  • @TippytoeZombie
    @TippytoeZombie 5 лет назад +622

    John Adams and John Quincy Adams Vs. George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush

    • @tedarcher9120
      @tedarcher9120 5 лет назад +7

      Good idea!

    • @yaboijoe2080
      @yaboijoe2080 5 лет назад +11

      TippytoeZombie Just gonna leave out William Henry Harrison and Benjamin Harrison :(

    • @king_supreme1102
      @king_supreme1102 5 лет назад +5

      ya boi joe they weren’t father and son... and if they were going to do family members they would do the Roosevelt’s before the Harrison’s. Although a 4 way battle would be cool.

    • @khameriengibson8834
      @khameriengibson8834 5 лет назад

      the roosevelts werent father and son just sayinh

    • @talongreene5663
      @talongreene5663 5 лет назад +3

      Either Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr or thomas jeferson and James madison vs. Hamilton and George Washington

  • @Mr.President427
    @Mr.President427 5 лет назад +859

    Everyone talking about how F.D killed it, but Jefferson’s first verse was actually solid

    • @gansta4hiren84
      @gansta4hiren84 5 лет назад +27

      FD still killed

    • @fahadalsubaie2677
      @fahadalsubaie2677 5 лет назад +25

      But F.D killed all of it

    • @eonsinfinity534
      @eonsinfinity534 5 лет назад +45

      Nah, to this day i still believe the battle was over after thomas jeffersons first verse. The entire rest of the battle was just frederick douglas trying to make sure his verse stayed relevant.

    • @gansta4hiren84
      @gansta4hiren84 5 лет назад +34

      @@eonsinfinity534 its literally the other way around. Thomas just bragged about being a rich white educated Male, while FD rapped about the struggle of slaves and how he never let that stop him from getting the things he needed to succeed. FD still killed

    • @eonsinfinity534
      @eonsinfinity534 5 лет назад +21

      @@gansta4hiren84 so tell me man, how many other rich white males went on to the same level of sucess he achieved? Let me think..... what president are we on again?

  • @ericperez9310
    @ericperez9310 Год назад +13

    “Let me run down my resume will ya.
    Set up a little place called the United States. Sound familiar?” 🔥🔥

  • @medrinkpee123
    @medrinkpee123 8 лет назад +467

    Morgan Freeman vs. Samuel L. Jackson!

  • @courageousodin
    @courageousodin 5 лет назад +404

    I KNEW i recognized the lisp in spiderman far from home. the teacher and frederick douglass are both played by jb smoove!

    • @xXSkyifyXx
      @xXSkyifyXx 5 лет назад +21

      Courageous Odin woah that’s sick thanks for pointing that out

    • @sockondik12
      @sockondik12 5 лет назад +9

      He also plays a funny guy on Curb your Enthusiasm!

    • @omkarbhambure9530
      @omkarbhambure9530 5 лет назад +3

      @@sockondik12 Leon

    • @Jorrdacakes
      @Jorrdacakes 5 лет назад +3

      this comment should have more likes

    • @dwightlove3704
      @dwightlove3704 4 года назад +3

      Goon Man Yes JB SMOOVE held his own in this battle.

  • @knifehead6796
    @knifehead6796 8 лет назад +1364

    General Grievous vs Robert E. Lee

  • @seniorbob505
    @seniorbob505 2 года назад +5

    I'd like to state that iv'e spent literally 2 and a half hours watching majority of season 1 thru 5 in my room singing and reenacting. Ive watched you guys since I was in middle school and now im 20 about to turn 21. ERB and the crew is literally the happiest place to visit especially when life is down. GO ERB!

  • @dremasacco1420
    @dremasacco1420 3 года назад +552

    This is seriously one of my favorite battles.

  • @emersonthomas7201
    @emersonthomas7201 5 лет назад +3101

    you finished?
    ...okay
    STRAIGHT OUTTA' BONDAGE
    That gets me every time.

    • @jaybanks2709
      @jaybanks2709 5 лет назад +5

      i know right crazy ROAST

    • @Nesperimus
      @Nesperimus 5 лет назад +11

      Ice Cube will be proud

    • @Nesperimus
      @Nesperimus 5 лет назад +3

      Ice Cube would be proud.

    • @Edmonton-of2ec
      @Edmonton-of2ec 5 лет назад +9

      Bruta'al BIG HAIR,
      BIG NUTS,
      BIG ISSUES!

    • @emersonthomas7201
      @emersonthomas7201 5 лет назад +8

      @@Edmonton-of2ec starting with your nickel, there's a real declaration, heads for racist, tails for slave plantation.

  • @psychopunk8817
    @psychopunk8817 5 лет назад +985

    "founding absentee father"... Damn thats cold blooded

    • @notmakingcontent
      @notmakingcontent 5 лет назад +46

      No, that's real muggin.

    • @matthewbranagan7587
      @matthewbranagan7587 5 лет назад +7

      @Max The Random Lepurchaun No compromise you couldn't whip a fifth of me man

    • @alaskagyal
      @alaskagyal 5 лет назад +6

      Matthew Branagan you got a self evident truth of your own, you let freedom ring and never picked up the phone

    • @NwoDispatcher
      @NwoDispatcher 5 лет назад +1

      those in glass houses shouldn't cast stones

    • @GenocidalSquid
      @GenocidalSquid 5 лет назад

      @@alaskagyal Aw, Fredrick,
      I never heard a verse I dug less,
      Alright, I admit it, I confess!
      I participated in a broken system that I hated!
      But I needed to keep my financial status situated,
      And the words I used were "Hideous Blot",
      To describe the slave trade and the pain it hath brought!
      And I fought to stop the trade of new slaves in Virginia,
      When I ran the whole state and still made it home for dinner.
      So forgive me, man I had a lot to do, so you're free now, so.. we cool?

  • @empratt5800
    @empratt5800 2 года назад +37

    Wow. I am so impressed by all the fantastic references packed into this rap battle, that I feel compelled to spell them out. Here’s what I think is not totally self-evident (heh) from the lyrics:
    0:11 The Declaration of Independence (Jefferson)
    0:19 The Declaration of Independence (Jefferson)
    0:27 The Declaration of Independence (Jefferson) - listed ways King George III was a tyrant
    0:40 Douglass’s 3 autobiographies: Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, An American Slave; My Bondage and My Freedom; and The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass
    0:45 Jefferson served as ambassador to France and spent time in Paris
    0:58 Straight Outta Compton (film) / Douglass’s escape from slavery
    1:04 U.S. nickel has Jefferson’s portrait on the heads side, his estate Monticello (where his many slaves lived/worked) on the tails side
    1:12 Jefferson played the violin and sometimes the cello
    1:23 Douglass’s many, many portraits - Douglass recognized the power of the fairly new medium of photography and posed for every portrait he could, always with a serious face, to counteract the racist minstrel stereotype of the “happy slave”
    1:28 The Three-fifths Compromise (Jefferson was not a part of making this, but he did benefit from it when it gave him just enough electoral college votes to win the 1800 presidential election against John Adams)
    1:31 The Declaration of Independence (Jefferson)
    2:03 The Louisiana Purchase (Jefferson)
    2:09 Jefferson had 6 children with his slave Sally Hemings, who was very probably the half-sister of Jefferson’s wife Martha and may have born a resemblance to her. It is believed Jefferson started having sex with Hemings a couple years after his wife’s death, when he was 44 and Hemings was 14. While he did eventually free all of the children he had with Hemings, he did not free Hemings herself, not even in his will.
    2:14 Jefferson died on the 4th of July, 1826 (and weirdly so did John Adams)
    2:17 What, to the Slave, Is the Fourth of July? (Douglass)
    2:24 While the Emancipation Proclamation was a limited wartime measure, the Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery permanently.
    2:28 The Declaration of Independence (Jefferson)
    2:29 The U.S. Constitution starts “We the people”
    Anything important I missed? Do comment if so!

    • @notcleetus5561
      @notcleetus5561 Год назад +2

      the straight outta compton reference is from the music video for the song not the movie, everything else is great tho

  • @alexvandyke7564
    @alexvandyke7564 8 лет назад +508

    Dr Jekyll/Mr Hyde vs Harvey Dent/ Two Face

    • @Th3J0k3R2KraZ
      @Th3J0k3R2KraZ 8 лет назад +3

      Please YEEEESSSSSS!!!!!

    • @DragonFilms
      @DragonFilms 8 лет назад +5

      This is a REALLY good one please make it happen!

    • @thelukemeister
      @thelukemeister 8 лет назад +1

      Thank you for your wise words of wisdoms you genius

    • @mustachio_comics9125
      @mustachio_comics9125 8 лет назад +2

      Would've preferred Jekyll vs Banner but this would also be great

    • @jorgemendoza5849
      @jorgemendoza5849 8 лет назад +2

      After all, Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde inspired Two-Face.

  • @topgamer101
    @topgamer101 3 года назад +1109

    To this day, J.B. Smoove's final line in this is my all time favorite ending to almost all the others. He comes in hard but that final line is calm and strong in saying you did some things worth noting, but put an asterisk with it and calmly walks away. No further ego or combative nature after it, just let the line hang in the air and walk away. Thanks for doing these guys. Hope everyone that works on them and in them are doing well. :D

    • @marleyjr.bobert6639
      @marleyjr.bobert6639 3 года назад +15

      I agree, still showing he had some respect through his character.

    • @DragonRyderGames
      @DragonRyderGames 3 года назад +7

      I don't understand the asterisk part never have what does that mean?

    • @radien239
      @radien239 3 года назад +3

      I’m just realizing that’s JB smoove

    • @Just_a_Jynx
      @Just_a_Jynx 3 года назад +3

      @@DragonRyderGames I wanna know too lol

    • @DragonRyderGames
      @DragonRyderGames 3 года назад +3

      @@Just_a_Jynx ikr lol I even looked it up online at one point and got no answer other than it having to do with wikipedia but idk how it relates to the line

  • @dontsubcribedontlike673
    @dontsubcribedontlike673 3 года назад +1816

    Never learned a thing about Frederick Douglas in school so I appreciate this ERB very much for informing me of his existence.
    edit: a lot of people keep asking so I will just specify I went to a small public school in a red state with a graduating class of 80ish people. There's a lot we didn't learn.

    • @h4rp_xo
      @h4rp_xo 2 года назад +92

      wow I'm surprised you never read his book, he was a slave born in 1818 and he talked about his experiences both before and after escaping. he talks a lot about how people use christianity in the south as an excuse to be racist, talks about how the north was just as fucked up as the south and we shouldn't ignore that behavior, and hated the idea of a happy slave because slaves would sing songs but people assume it was out of happiness but the only reason they sang was because of pure sadness. he was also the most photographed person in the 19th century, he never smiled in any pictures because he wanted to break the stereotype of happy slaves.

    • @h4rp_xo
      @h4rp_xo 2 года назад +40

      he also changed his name 3 times and his original master was his father. he talks about how slaves were treated really terribly if the other slaves knew one was the masters son. his original nae was Fredrick Bailey

    • @buds4eternity
      @buds4eternity 2 года назад +24

      literally everyone should learn about Fredrick Douglas. it’s really peculiar your school didn’t

    • @txmetalhead82xk
      @txmetalhead82xk 2 года назад +7

      Douglass is so famous, that his debate with Lincoln inspired (LD) debate in school. The Lincoln/Douglass Debate format.

    • @someonerandom704
      @someonerandom704 2 года назад +14

      Yeah I never learned about him in school either, simply wasn't in the curriculum. Dude was a badass. The "beat it for free" line is a reference to when he was sent to a "slave breaker" and ended up beating the shit out of him.

  • @foggydogy5796
    @foggydogy5796 10 месяцев назад +44

    Man, I love this battle! The fact that Jefferson spent his second verse apologizing for slavery is definitely in character with him. In the history books I've read most historians claim that Jefferson and other Virginia politicians spent a lot of time talking about how evil slavery was but didn't take any personal or political steps to stop it.

    • @CultureCrossed64
      @CultureCrossed64 9 месяцев назад +5

      Jefferson fought to end the slave trade both in Virginia and nationally. So that's false from the jump- but he also put into the Declaration of independence that slavery was evil and was forced to take it out.

    • @mnm1273
      @mnm1273 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@CultureCrossed64 He owned hundreds of slaves personally and politically his actions limited the trade but not the owning of slaves.

    • @spoopy9689
      @spoopy9689 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@mnm1273and do you think he still would've been president if he freed them? The entire South was running and profiting off of slavery, Thomas Jefferson, if he freed his slaves, he would've probably been impeached, if he freed all the slaves, there might be an early Civil War that tears the country apart before it really became a country.