DeStorm’s ‘King Kong’ Music Video Hits MTVu

Wassup world! Your boy DeStorm has officially gone mainstream. The YouTube-famous rapper with more than 1.2 million subscribers to his credit has debuted a music video for his new single, “King Kong“, on MTVu.

“King Kong” is a cut from DeStorm’s recently released mixtape of the same name, and though the astronauts he teased in an Instagram shot don’t show up in this particular video, the whole thing is pretty sharp and jives well with the aggressive, percussive nature of DeStorm’s rapping and beats. In the video, DeStorm is a janitor, but then he’s chained up like a beast, then he’s a janitor again, then he’s neither. That’s the best written description I’ve got; honestly, “King Kong” speaks for itself.

“King Kong” premiered on MTVu, reminding us that there is still a place in the MTV network for actual music videos. Do people still watch music videos? If they do, then perhaps “King Kong” can get some mainstream attention and give YouTube’s favorite rapper the airplay he deserves. Personally, though, I feel there’s only one place where people still watch music videos: On YouTube

. DeStorm’s already got that base covered, but I expect the “King Kong” video to quickly become one of the most viewed entries on his channel.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

Of course, with YouTube views now factored into the Billboard charts, DeStorm has another route to pop awareness. He’ll get plenty of online reach thanks to his large subscriber count, so if he can score even a modest amount of airplay, he’s got a chance to reach the charts. It’s another example of how the new Billboard system is slightly flawed, but that’s not DeStorm’s fault. He’s a talented rapper, one who has worked hard for years, and he would deserve any theoretical rise to the top of the charts.

Share
Published by
Sam Gutelle

Recent Posts

Jordan Matter, Michelle Khare, and Samir Chaudry are strategic advisors at a new creator education startup

As our industry becomes ever more populated by experts, and in the absence of collaborative…

11 hours ago

YouTube says Premium subscribers are “podcast super-users.” So it’s giving them more exclusive listening features.

With the amount of attention audio content is getting lately, we might as well rebrand…

12 hours ago

Have you heard? PewDiePie drops vlogs, Spy Ninjas spends $25 million, and Jason Kelce gets a YouTube show

Each week, we handpick a selection of stories to give you a snapshot of trends,…

13 hours ago

Netflix and Spotify just paid $100 million to take Jay Shetty’s podcast off YouTube

Netflix has visited the farm once again. The streamer and Spotify have together poached Jay…

2 days ago

What’s on the menu for the Sidemen? A cooking competition split between YouTube and Prime Video.

The creator supergroup that revived Supermarket Sweep on YouTube is ordering up another culinary competition.…

2 days ago

Meta officially offers perks for paying subscribers across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp

Meta is establishing paid subscription tiers across its network of social media platforms. A trio…

2 days ago