B.o.B

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B.o.B, not "Bob"
Some dare call it
Conspiracy
Icon conspiracy.svg
What THEY don't want
you to know!
Sheeple wakers
Were you looking for "Bob"?
Now the mirror lizard's breath got the clones scared cause
Woo, use your, use your common sense
Why is NASA part of the department of defense?
They divided up the seas into thirty-three degrees
Feeding kids masonry, bruh, be careful what you read.
—Excerpt from his song "Flatline". Just a small taste of B.o.B's crank magnetism.[1]

Bobby Ray Simmons, Jr. (a.k.a. Bob B.o.B) (1988–) is an American rapper and conspiracy theorist.

He is mostly known for pretending that airplanes in the night sky were like shooting stars his 2016 Twitter brainfart wherein he endorsed the flat Earth hypothesis.

Flat Earth[edit]

In January 2016, B.o.B decided to share his insights that the Earth is flat based on extremely old and unscientific arguments. Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson responded to B.o.B's statements, countering them with science.[2] B.o.B did to Tyson what rappers usually do to other rappers, and he released a diss trackWikipedia aimed at Tyson called "Flatline" (though what the "n" is doing in the name is an open question, since he never pronounces it). The song further expresses B.o.B's bogus opinions, and is sprinkled here and there with some other conspiracies, mostly those revolving around NASA.

However, Neil deGrasse Tyson's nephew Stephen is also a rapper, and the two collaborated together to release a song aimed back at B.o.B, titled "Flat to Fact",[3] in which Tyson hilariously stated at the end, "To be clear, being five centuries regressed in your reasoning, doesn't mean we all still can't like your music."

Tyson then appeared on The Nightly Show on Comedy Central, where he stated, "It's a fundamental fact of calculus and non-Euclidean geometry. Small sections of large curved surfaces will always look flat to little creatures that crawl upon it... And by the way, this is called gravity [literally drops the microphone]."[4]

One would think that, as a wealthy entertainer, B.o.B could afford to simply charter a flight to the edge of the Earth in order to prove his doubters wrong.

The first image showing the Earth's curvature, from 1933

On September 21, 2017, B.o.B. launched a GoFundMe campaign to try to raise US $1 million to purchase and launch 1 or more satellites to "research" the curvature of the Earth.[5][6] Unlike Kickstarter and Indiegogo, GoFundMe is exceedingly lax with regard to the ability of people to scam donors; GoFundMe doesn't actually require recipients to do anything with money received.[6] Nonetheless, on September 26, 2017, GoFundMe felt compelled to temporarily suspend B.o.B.'s campaign even though it did not violate the terms of service.[6] Subsequently, the goal of the campaign mysteriously changed to "purchase and launch multiple weather balloons and satellites into space, for experimental exploration."[7] The experiment can be and has been conducted nowadays for just a few hundred dollars: buy a weather balloon, a helium cannister, and a GoPro camera with the fisheye lens effect removed.[6] The earliest photographic proof of the curvature of the Earth from a balloon was in 1933.[8] B.o.B. is still fishing for $1 million though.

Other bullshit[edit]

See the main article on this topic: Crank magnetism

If the flat Earth thing wasn't enough, B.o.B is also a Holocaust denier, urging his own fans to "do their research" on David Irving.[9][10] In his song "Flatline", he declares that science is a cult. Adding to this soup of delusion, he believes that celebrities are being cloned pretty much every damn second.[11] And to make things even crazier, he believes reptilians control the universe. Which is greatly ironic and hypocritical considering how he first gained popularity through the record labels run by the very same "reptilian" elite and "cloned" celebrities he so despised, not to mention that some of the artists he collaborated in his recent albums (e.g. Lil Wayne, Young Thug, T.I., Big K.R.I.T., Ty Dolla Sign, Usher, CeeLo Green among others) were also the subject of various Illuminati/occult conspiracy theories. He did move to an independent label in recent years, but whatever success he had when he first rose to the pop charts is now next to nil, and he is now viewed as either a washed-up flash-in-the-pan or a complete joke.

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. "Flatline"
  2. "Neil DeGrasse Tyson tries teaching rapper B.o.B that the Earth is actually round". 
  3. Platon, Adelle (26 January 2016). "Neil deGrasse Tyson Responds to B.o.B Diss Track with Drake-Referencing 'Flat to Fact'". Billboard. 
  4. Said-Moorhouse, Lauren (29 January 2016). "Neil deGrasse Tyson fires back at B.o.B with epic mic drop". CNN. 
  5. Show BoB The Curve (September 21, 2017) GoFundMe (archived from September 26, 2017).
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 B.o.B's $1 million flat Earth conspiracy satellite GoFundMe is a scam: It should go without saying, but please don't donate money to this by Chaim Gartenberg (Sep 26, 2017, 4:44pm EDT) The Verge.
  7. Show BoB The Curve (September 21, 2017) GoFundMe (archived from November 29, 2017).
  8. See the Wikipedia article on Alexander Dahl.
  9. "[Gawker.com: archive.is, web.archive.org B.O.B Just Started a Rap War With Neil DeGrasse Tyson Over His Flat Earth Tweets]". 
  10. Brait, Ellen (26 January 2016). "Flat earth rapper BoB releases Neil deGrasse Tyson diss track". The Guardian. 
  11. Moore, Jack (January 26th 2016) GQ.com http://www.gq.com/story/bob-human-cloning