Meek Mill Relates 'Squid Game' to 'Hood Poverty' In America: 'It's The Exact Same Thing'

Meek Mill became the latest person to join the 'Squid Game' conversation, when he took to Twitter to compare aspects of the show to 'hood poverty' in America.

meek mill performing on stage
Getty

Image via Getty/Gotham

meek mill performing on stage

It seems everyone’s talking about Squid Game these days. 

Meek Mill became the latest person to join the conversation about Netflix’s surprise hit, when he took to Twitter to compare aspects of the shows to what he called “hood poverty.” 

“Squid games’ pay attention how fast people switch and kill each other to survive,” Meek wrote. “Now think about the ‘hood’ poverty ...it’s the exact same thing ...if you just help them with work/money they won’t be that way ‘just a common sense message.’” 

Squid games”pay attention how fast people switch and kill eachother to survive ...now think about the “hood” poverty ...it’s the exact same thing ...if you just help them with work/money they won’t be that way “just a common sense message”

— MeekMill (@MeekMill) October 11, 2021

Squid Game follows 456 contestants who leave their impoverished lives behind for a deadly competition with a huge cash prize. It’s a scathing social critique of economic disparity in South Korea, and it’s clear that Meek sees similarities between certain systems there and the ones in place in America.

But not everyone agreed with Meek’s interpretation

It takes more than work/money. Sorry @MeekMill, the hood proverty excuse needs to stop being the “go to.” reason we “understand” & “overlook” all this senseless killing.

— NgoziAtNight (@ngoziatnight) October 11, 2021

In principle you’re right. But the squid game players (adults) willingly chose to return to survival mode fully aware of the consequences, the hood poverty “players” (kids) are born into survival mode not fully aware. Jobs and money are too simple a solution. #squidgames

— LJBR | Dream Drive (@dreamsdriveljbr) October 12, 2021

Others agreed with the Philly rapper’s take.

Exactly!!!!!!!!! The hood is the same thing on surviving just trying to make it the next day to eat, somewhere to sleep. Keep the lights on. I feel like most murders etc from the hood is because they feel deprived. Imagine if suburban money flooded through the whole hood 🔥

— WiFye (@WiFye) October 12, 2021

Exactly.. the people in power know this to be true they're just playing real life squid games with the hood . Organized confusion!!!!!

— BalancedBear (@Balanced_Bear1) October 12, 2021

The rapper and activist is currently celebrating the release of his fifth studio album Expensive Painwhich moved around 95,000 album-equivalent units its first week and featured appearances from Kehlani, ASAP Ferg, Moneybagg Yo, Young Thug, and Brent Faiyaz, among others. “I think this is probably one of my favorite albums where I express myself,” Meek told Zane Lowe recently.

“I actually said expensive pain on a song with Uzi when we was in a booth rapping. I said, ‘You ain’t rich, your stash can’t pay my drug bill.’ Basically we smoke a lot of weed and stuff like that, and I was playing it for Brent Faiyaz one day in the studio, he heard me say that, he was like, ‘That bar hot.’ He was like, ‘That’s a fire word, expensive pain.’ He was like, ‘That should be an album title.’ And I start thinking about it and then I stuck with it.” 

Latest in Music