Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Chance The Rapper’s Mini Concert With Q&A for Breakfast Buffet.




 By Laura Medina











It was a wonderful Fall Monday morning in the ‘Bu, Malibu.

After living in Ghana for 6 years, Chance The Rapper made a comeback on a Monday morning, during breakfast.

Man, what a spread welcoming him back.

Aviator Nation Dreamland, the active wear brand’s nightclub-restaurant-headquarters boutique, welcomed him and the guests with a lavish breakfast buffet spread of fresh fruit salad, oatmeal with brown sugar, scrambled eggs, bacon, chicken sausage, mini pancakes, French Toast, orange juice, and coffee.

It was as a delicious wake-up and a welcoming Malibu hospitality.


The breakfast buffet woke people up at 9am.

Chance The Rapper debut new songs, from his upcoming album and revisited the classics around 10am, as fans sip coffee and orange juice, noshing and nibbling on scrambled eggs and French Toast.

Chance softly and honestly segued into what’s happening now in his hometown dealing ICE, “Chicago is a reactive city.”

Then, he opened up about his parents starting out as political activists where dad wound up working for Barack Obama.

While working for Obama, his dad taught his aspiring rapper son how to psychographic target market his audience.

Way back when, Chance’s dad told him to make a list of all and every Facebook fan he has, then jot down which school they go to.

Then, his dad would make him wait outside his Facebook fans’ school to pass his CDs, promotional ads for his upcoming shows, and swag as his Facebook fans were released from school. Schools that Chance didn’t go but his dad made him go to his fans to build his business and career. Smart dad.

To catch up with his audience of fans at Aviator Nation Dreamland breakfast, Chance told them he’s been in Ghana, where he lectured on Marcus Garvey and the link between African-American heritage and history with Ghana.

Chance the Rapper’s morning breakfast buffet, mini performance and lecture nourish the brain, the soul, and stomach with food and intellectual nutrition.










No comments: