WATCH: Afroman Reprises ‘Then I Got High’ Hit to Hilariously Mock Hunter Biden, Family Influence Peddling

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    Screenshots from alleged iCloud "leak" of Hunter Biden videos.

    Remember Afroman, America? The hilarious rapper whose “Then I Got High,” a catchy, 2020 hit was about a hapless, down-on-his-luck stoner who blames lost opportunities and his worsening plight on his penchant for smoking copious amounts of marijuana? Yeah, that guy. 

    Welp, Afroman is back — and he couldn’t be funnier.

    In a brilliant remix of “Then I Got High,” the rapper mocks Hunter Biden and the Biden family’s influence-peddling business, bigly. The name of the remix? “Hunter Got High,” of course.

    The song kicks off with: “Hey y’all Hunter… roll up one of them congressional blunts, brotha…” 

    Afroman then sings:

    Afroman also mocks Hunter over the Secret Service confirming cocaine was found in the White House, last summer.

    Here’s a clip:

    Beautiful. ain’t it?

    Next Up, Biden Family Influence-Peddling

    RedState has written extensively about the Biden Family business, including various influence-peddling schemes. I reported on March 14 about former Hunter business partner Tony Bobulinsky accusing the Bidens of “running away from the truth,” and suggesting that Hunter, Joe, and Joe’s brother, Jim, testify before Congress under oath to “ensure the truth is being told.” 


    Read more: Ex-Business Partner Slams Hunter, Joe Biden for ‘Running Away’ From the Truth, Offers Perfect Solution


    In the song, Afroman rips the Bidens to shreds over the accusations — hilariously, of course.

    Baste Records, founded by Matthew Azrieli, the original publisher, CEO, and founder of The Post Millennial, bills itself as a “harbinger of the counter culture to cancel culture.” 

    Now, ladies and gentlemen, for your viewing and listening pleasure, the entire official video of “Hunter Got High.” 

    The Bottom Line

    I found it interesting that Afroman would take it to the Bidens. In today’s politically-charged America, poking serious fun at one side suggests you support the other side — and for the life of me, I don’t see Afroman as a Trump fan.

    Then again, the fact that Afroman and Baste Records did go after the Bidens might suggest they felt there wasn’t a downside to doing so, which, given Joe’s toilet-bowl-swirling approval ratings, is probably correct.

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