The Hamilton Spectator

Black Ink Crew looks to change negative stereotype­s of Compton

Tattoo TV series opens doors in city known for gangs, murder rate

- JONATHAN LANDRUM JR.

COMPTON, CALIF. — Danny (KP) Kirkpatric­k has inked tattoos for Diddy, Nas, Taraji P. Henson and numerous other stars, but his latest venture aims to create a safe space in his hometown of Compton.

Kirkpatric­k stars in “Black Ink Crew: Compton,” the newest VH1 series that chronicles prominent tattoo artists. He hopes his shop can help change the image of a city known for gang culture and high murder rate.

“We’re showing we can unite. We’re shedding a different light of Compton through art, our ink and music,” he said of the series, which airs Wednesdays on VH1. He’s a native of the area and owner of iAMCompton, which is considered the community’s first Black-owned tattoo shop.

Kirkpatric­k and his crew of tattoo artists attempt to make the shop a “safe zone” in Compton and help build up one of the most economical­ly underserve­d communitie­s in the United States. He believes attracting a mix of outside clients and locals to the appointmen­tonly shop can start to make that happen.

The reality series is the third spinoff of the “Black Ink Crew” franchise. The other locations include Chicago and New York, which is currently airing its eighth season on Sundays.

Kirkpatric­k, 36, has already made his mark as a famed tattoo artist for several celebritie­s including Travis Scott. He could have opened a tattoo shop in a more popular area in Los Angeles, but he felt compelled to plant roots where he grew up to show that a Blackowned business can thrive in Compton, a city of roughly 100,000 people south of downtown Los Angeles.

Before that could happened, Kirkpatric­k and his cousin Tim Simmons met with Compton’s rival gang leaders to seek their approval to open the shop, which turned into a small scuffle. He later got the blessing from a group of gang members who barged into the shop’s ground-breaking party. anything that’s not happening. Our goal is to try to clean this up the best way we can. We’re not making up false gang allegation­s. It’s real out here.”

“People in this city actually want change,” said Kirkpatric­k, a former college football player who was kicked out of school after a drug charge. He learned the art of tattooing after selling his drawings to a local tattoo parlour more than a decade ago.

“This is my second chance,” he said. “And honestly, nobody wants to be going to funerals all the time. I grew up and ran these streets. For me now, I’m really telling the homies like, ‘Yo, I’m doing something. It could be big for all of us.’ This show will show that people can positively change the way they live.”

Simmons said their meeting with gang leaders was imperative, calling it “hood politics.” He said they couldn’t safely open their shop or film the show in Compton without the gangsters’ permission first.

“You have to start with the homies,” said Simmons, who is also a former college football player. “They are the ones who keep the violence up or down. You get them, then corporate sees that and now they want to invite you in. You got power. Once you show you got power, then you can change the environmen­t.”

Christian (Ink) Thomas wants to connect the divided worlds between the city’s Black and Mexican residents, some of whom have been at odds for years.

“The two people who damn near hate each other the most, that’s who I am,” said Thomas, a tattoo artist at iAMCompton who is Mexican and Black. “I want to show that you can be whatever you are mixed with. You can be bigger than what your mix came out to be. When you start with the colour of your skin, then it goes to the colour of your rag, then to the colour of your laces. We’re artists. We make that perfect blend work.”

 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Danny (KP) Kirkpatric­k, Erica (Barbie) Thompson, Christian (Ink Drippin) Thomas and Timothy (Tim) Simmons star in the reality television series “Black Ink Crew: Compton.”
CHRIS PIZZELLO INVISION/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Danny (KP) Kirkpatric­k, Erica (Barbie) Thompson, Christian (Ink Drippin) Thomas and Timothy (Tim) Simmons star in the reality television series “Black Ink Crew: Compton.”

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