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Gervonta Davis’s Stylist Fires Back After Blame Game Over Lamont Roach Jr. Draw

HonkMagazine

Brooklyn was alive with excitement on Saturday night (March 1) as Gervonta “Tank” Davis entered the ring to fight Lamont Roach Jr. But it wasn’t just the match that caught everyone’s attention. After a surprising majority draw, where Davis even took a knee in the ninth round, he made headlines for an unexpected reason, he blamed his hairstylist for his performance. Yes, you read that correctly. After the fight, Davis told the crowd that his hairstylist had used too much grease when styling his hair just two days prior. He claimed that when he started sweating, the grease got into his face and burned his eyes.

“The stuff was just, like, you know, burning my eyes,” he said, trying to explain his struggle. The audience wasn’t buying it, as they reacted with boos, bewildered that a boxing match could be affected by hair products. But the drama didn’t stop there. The stylist, known on social media as @leebthebrand, responded online, asserting that Davis shouldn’t blame them for his issues in the ring. While the stylist’s detailed response is still coming to light, it’s clear that fans and the stylist are not pleased with the situation.

In a sport where fighters are expected to take responsibility for their actions, many question whether Davis’s hair grease excuse is a way to avoid facing the truth about his tough fight. The whole scenario has sparked plenty of discussion online. People are having a lot of fun with this unusual excuse, but it’s clear that Tank might want to focus more on his fighting skills than his hairstyle next time. With @leebthebrand standing firm, this unexpected feud might be the most captivating story in boxing this year, at least outside the actual fights.

Artist Spotlight

GOODTWIN shares reflection with indie-pop single, “Soak It Up”

GOODTWIN

The indie-pop project GOODTWIN offers a subtly stirring new single, “Soak It Up,” that’s sort of like taking a deep breath after drowning out the world for so long. The track combines avant-garde jazz elements with their indie-pop sensibilities. “Soak It Up” is more of a quiet rallying cry than a rousing proclamation.

The song gently explores the push-pull of life between external pressures and inner peace, the feeling of being pulled in multiple directions while seeking a soft place to land. GOODTWIN’s leading force and vocalist, Gus Alexander, wrote the song in response to that insidious, yet understated, influence on modern life, and the need for validation, doing something useful with your time today, and, at the same time, being attractive enough to get what you need gutted from someone else.

“Soak It Up” offers an encounter with the concepts by attending to how it was made, with a focus on presence rather than performance and on significance over distraction. The balance between warmth and precision in the production is immaculate. The track, produced and engineered by Carly Bond and Germaine Dunes of Sound and Hearing at Altamira Sound, has a refined yet raw feel that doesn’t seem polished but rather suggests a human element, which suits its introspective tones.

Jack Doutt’s mastering adds another layer of depth to a soulfully rich composition, leaving enough space for each element to shine without overwhelming the others. The result is a cohesive, immersive sound that feels intentional throughout. For fans of indie-pop with a sprinkle of jazz, introspective verses, and emotionally driven production, the track is an exciting addition to GOODTWIN’s blossoming discography. It’s a piece of music that invites a slower tempo, that forces attentive listening, and, with it, an experience more fully lived.

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Artist Spotlight

G3 the Plug moves like a ghost on latest release “Danny Phantom”

G3 the plug

G3 the Plug goes darker with his new single, “Danny Phantom,” a moody slice of hip-hop whose chord, and melody-led chills make it feel less like a song and more like this state of mind you have after the witching hour. Emotionally understated and  raw, the track embodies that quiet intensity of moving through the city when everything is far away and everything seems blurred, half-seen.

Built on a minimal trap foundation, “Danny Phantom” excels in its simplicity. The production is intentionally loose, leaving room for the emotions to breathe rather than smother. It’s a beat that doesn’t beg for attention, it settles in, serving as an enveloping setting that mimics the song’s motifs of isolation, motion and presence. Every bit of sound seems deliberate, supporting the introspective mood rather than competing with it.

G3 the Plug doubles down on understatement. He chisels away rather than overexplain, allowing space to pass like streetlights out a car window. It has that drifting feeling, of being in a place while actually not being there at all, that gives the album its ghostly contours. The title seems right, G3 floats through the track like a ghost, invisible but powerfully present, in landscapes where silence is as telling as language.

The key to making “Danny Phantom” stand out is its emotional honesty. This isn’t a track intended for the spectacle, it’s meant for reflection. It’s a record that speaks to anyone familiar with the sensation of being alone in motion, tumbling toward some destination and hauling thoughts up from the depths after dark. Lying in the land between underground rap and atmospheric hip-hop, “Danny Phantom” makes clear G3 the Plug’s capacity to convey mood through music without forcing it. It’s a slow-burn record, one that uncovers itself with more listens, with the music lingering long after its final beat.

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