Welcome to rappers teaching how to scam!

teejayx6 whispers into the ear of an aspiring young scammer in need of guidance: “You need a fake ID.” The 18-year-old rapper, who’s recently gone viral thanks to his brazenly specific scam-based songs about identity theft and credit card fraud, is holding court at a self-proclaimed “scammer convention” inside of a Manhattan streetwear store. Seasoned scammers, future scammers, and the scam-curious form an orderly line in front of him—they’re all in a trance, as if the pope is about to give a benediction from the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica. Neocities.

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Many of the kids at the convention see themselves in Teejay: They just want to come up and get fly, and scamming is their means to do that. Naysayers may criticize the rapper for normalizing such illicit techniques, but scamming is a culture that has existed long before the rapper ever came along, and it’ll be around long after the hype behind him dies down. And given that many of his described crimes involve swindling some of the wealthiest companies on Earth, he could even be seen as something of a rap Robin Hood for the age of cryptocurrency.

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