Garage Pictured on Jack Harlow’s New ‘Jackman’ Album Cover Vandalized

The Louisville garage featured on the cover of Jack Harlow's 'Jackman' album has been reportedly tagged with graffiti.

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The Louisville, Kentucky garage featured on the cover of Jack Harlow's Jackman has been reportedly tagged with graffiti. 

The incident transpired shortly after Harlow dropped off his surprise Jackman project last week, which caused tourists to flock to the aforementioned garage in Louisville's Highlands neighborhood. The garage is pictured on the cover of the tape alongside a shirtless Harlow.

According to the Courier-Journal, hundreds of fans have since stopped by to snap a few photos, but the outlet also reported that vandals had tagged the Richmond Drive garage with graffiti, spraying the word "Crips" in blue paint.

Louisville garage featured on Jack Harlow album is tagged with graffiti https://t.co/hfydDfXuVq

— Courier Journal (@courierjournal) April 30, 2023

Jack Harlow most recently gave fans a tour of his hometown in the video for "They Don’t Love It," which dropped on Monday. The video shows Harlow stopping by a few Louisville landmarks with the locals in his community greeting him with excitement.

"They Don't Love It," the first single off Jackman, also raised a lot of eyebrows due to Harlow's claim about being "the hardest white boy since" Eminem.

“Ya boy’s strivin’ to be the most dominant ever/The hardest white boy since the one who rapped about vomit and sweaters,” Harlow raps on the Hollywood Cole-produced track. “And hold the comments ’cause I promise you I’m honestly better than whoever came to your head right then/They ain’t cut from the same thread like him/They don’t study, doin’ work to get ahead like him/They don’t toss and turn in the fuckin’ bed like him.”

The lyrics are in reference to Em’s diamond-certified classic “Lose Yourself,” where Slim Shady spits: “His palms are sweaty, knees weak, arms are heavy/There’s vomit on his sweater already, mom’s spaghetti.”

Jackman serves as the follow-up to 2022’s Come Home the Kids Miss You, which debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200 with an estimated 113,000 total album-equivalent units sold in its first week. The No. 3 finish was a two-spot improvement over Harlow’s debut album That’s What They All Say, which peaked at No. 5 back in 2020.

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