Los Angeles Times

Entry point for hip-hop fans

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a generation of hip-hop fans; he also built the bridge over the gap and crossed it with them.

A proper contextual­izing of Coolio requires, at the very least, a look back at the effect of his 1994 pre“Gangsta’s Paradise” album “It Takes a Thief.” The LP was released when gangsta rap was at its most brooding and stigmatize­d. It contained a massive hit in “Fantastic Voyage,” which firmly establishe­d Coolio as someone with verifiable street cred who could channel Lakeside’s 1980 true-school hip-hop/R&B single of the same name and rework it with cutting-edge modern aesthetics. It was a track that could — and would — cross over to pop audiences without trying; MTV’s “1994 Year in Review” even highlighte­d it as one of the year’s most pivotal singles, able to look to the genre’s young past without sounding dated or overly nostalgic.

It was “Fantastic Voyage” that brought Coolio to Nickelodeo­n’s hugely popular “All That” — part of the era-defining Saturday night “Snick” line-up. Revisiting his appearance today, there’s something really special about how Coolio engaged with the children’s sketch show.

Although some acts visibly phoned it in or had qualms about appearing on a kids show, Coolio put his all into it with his pre-performanc­e skit with Kel Mitchell’s recurring character Ed From Good Burger and then rocked the crowd of youngsters, many of whom were likely experienci­ng their first live rap show.

But his impact extended far outside the famed Nickelodeo­n Studios at Universal Studios, Florida — it was a generation having its hip-hop awakening in front of television sets.

What wound up making Coolio’s appearance all the more special was its timing and the relationsh­ip he built with Nickelodeo­n’s young viewers. Later that year, when “Gangsta’s Paradise” and its subsequent album and further singles became the biggest things in hip-hop and pop music, Coolio continued to appear on Nickelodeo­n.

Most important, he did it without pandering to a corporate, kid-friendly network. He was a hip-hop megastar who between appearance­s on “Saturday Night Live” and the Grammys was doing the theme music for Nickelodeo­n’s sketch comedy series “Kenan and Kel” and appearing on the channel’s annual ’90s fundraiser “The Big Help.” Same trademark hair, same fashion, same songs — he was always so effortless­ly but undeniably Coolio.

But it wasn’t just Nickelodeo­n — Coolio’s charisma was disarming in such a way that even the most familyfrie­ndly media featured him without him having to water himself down or make apologies for who he was. He was in the pages of Disney Adventures and the Source at the same time. With hiphop still part of the countercul­ture then, its ambassador­s often faced struggles or criticism, but Coolio somehow balanced rapping with Muppets and appearing on “The Rosie O’Donnell Show” while building momentum toward his 1997 album “My Soul” and his hit “C U When You Get There.”

Perhaps it’s this ubiquity that has allowed Coolio to maintain a place in millennial­s’ hearts for so long. Then, at the turn of the century, when he became one of the first hip-hop stars to move into reality television — we got to be a part of his life and grow up with him in a new way.

Maybe this is also why Coolio cameos were weekend must-sees during the home video rental era, including in “Leprechaun in the Hood” (2000) and the 2003 Ben Affleck film “Daredevil” (the director’s cut, with its restored subplot of the superhero’s lawyer alterego Matt Murdock defending Coolio’s character in court, was vastly superior).

Coolio always had time for us as kids. In turn, we always had time for him as adults, when he’d make viral appearance­s at everything from the Gathering of the Juggalos to Pornhub.

The rapper made music kids loved without it being “kids music.” He was both edgy and warm, with a presence that bridged the gap for millennial­s from childhood to adolescenc­e without having to make it his sole focus.

When you consider pivotal hip-hop stars like Whodini, Run-DMC, Hammer, etc., Coolio rightfully deserves a treasured spot among them.

 ?? Eric Draper AP ?? COOLIO accepts his rap solo award at the 38th Grammy Awards in 1996.
Eric Draper AP COOLIO accepts his rap solo award at the 38th Grammy Awards in 1996.

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