
‘I didn't realise pigs were like, massive': the London rapper who fell in love with farming
This kind of interaction is common on Hood 2 Farm, a unique and genuinely inspired YouTube series about the rapper's attempt to become the steward of his own farm. Across eight 30-minute episodes, he meets farmers from around the UK and learns basics such as milking cows, shearing sheep and driving tractors.
The resulting show wraps genuine insight about agricultural practice in the screwball energy of classic British comedy, thanks to Fekky's perpetual fish-out-of-water spirit – he is fond of wearing a Gucci cap on the farm – and clear passion for nature. With some episodes netting well over 100,000 views, the unconventional series has been a hit, and Fekky says he plans to continue with future seasons.
Fekky, 38, says the idea began before lockdown, when he went on holiday to Thailand to decompress from the pressures of life in the music industry. As a rapper, Fekky has played to crowds of thousands, appeared alongside Dizzee Rascal, collaborated with Skepta and started his own label, F Music, but has often talked about his struggles with alcohol use and anxiety. 'After my long music career, I just decided to have a break – a lot of it gets very busy and gets wild,' he says over a video call. 'I just fell in love with nature in Thailand.'
When he got home, London was plunged into lockdown, and he began gardening as a way to pass the time, documenting his progress on social media. 'I realised there were a lot of people that were engaged and loved seeing me doing it, I think because I was a fish out of water,' he says. He decided he 'wanted to live in nature full time', so he bought a plot of land – which he has dubbed F Manor – and decided to leave London for good, while continuing to post farm content. 'I just said to myself that I should basically learn farming but show everyone that's watching, especially the youth, what I'm doing – so as I'm learning, they can learn,' he says.
The posts were a runaway success, and people began messaging him asking when his next piece of farm content would go live, 'so it made sense for me to do a show about farming'. The only problem, of course, was that he 'didn't know nothing' about farming, and had never set foot on a farm until he bought one. His family back in Nigeria are farmers, he says, 'so I knew it must be something in the family, but I had no idea'.
When he decided to visit other farms, he was shocked by how little he knew about where our food comes from. 'A pig farm is like … I thought pigs were small, like that' – he holds his hands about 10 inches apart – 'I didn't realise pigs were, like, massive,' he says, still astounded. 'You see food on a plate, but you never think about where it's coming from. The first thing I learned about having chickens was like … it's weird to think you're eating chicken … but then I love my chickens, if that makes sense.'
You can see Fekky experiencing all this in real time on Hood 2 Farm, which rivals some sitcoms in its laughs-per-minute ratio. It's amazing to see how game Fekky is to puncture his own tough-guy rapper image. In the first episode, he gets hit in the face by a cow's tail while attempting to milk it, admits he previously thought a cow's teats were 'willies', and asks a farmer whether milk is actually just semen – to her dumbstruck confusion. In Fekky's mind, there hasn't been a single wildest moment of learning to farm – the entire process has been totally shocking.
'A cow tried to hit me!' he says. 'Even sheep, I was trying to herd sheep, and it was just crazy – they're going everywhere! And I never thought I would have 10,000 bees all over me. You're just walking straight into that craziness. Just being comfortable around animals was the hardest part – all the animals are big, and if you run into something where you don't know what it can do, there's a danger element. But it didn't end up being dangerous, you just feel a bit, like, out of your depth.'
The feeling of being around the animals, he says, isn't so dissimilar to being on stage. 'You're stepping into the unknown every time,' he says. 'The similarity is the adrenaline rush you get when performing on stage or when I'm with animals – because, like I said, it feels dangerous – but then after that, it's like, it's all right.'
Since making the pivot to farm life, Fekky has found that his friends and family have been more than supportive – 'a lot of my rapper friends all want to come to the farm' – and have been amazed to find that growing your own food can come with benefits on multiple levels. 'When I give my eggs, which I get from my chickens, to my friends, they say they taste so much better than from any shop,' he says. 'I think I've opened people's eyes to eating food that you're growing yourself. Something about it just tastes real.'
The greatest benefit for him personally, he says, is on his overall mental health and wellbeing. 'I think nature in general is very healing, and we live a very wild lifestyle as rappers; hotel to hotel, show to show,' he says. 'Going into farming gives you the balance. We shouldn't pigeonhole ourselves to one thing in our careers. After a while, you should start thinking about how diverse you can be, and what else can you do in life? Even if it's just a hobby.'
That's the lesson he wants to impart to black British kids who might be watching. 'I just hope the youth understand that where you start in life is not where you finish. You have to explore the world and open your thoughts. I think when we grow up, you see people like myself being rappers or footballers, and these are the most cliche careers that people think you have to go into to make it. I want you to understand that you can be you, you can explore, you can do farming, and you'll be accepted and find happiness.'
Hood 2 Farm is on YouTube

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
25 minutes ago
- The Independent
Michael Sheen ‘worried' about opportunities for young people getting into acting
Welsh actor Michael Sheen has said he is worried about how tough it has become for young people who are getting into acting. At the Edinburgh TV Festival, in conversation with TV producer and chief executive of Bad Wolf, Jane Tranter, he spoke about what it was like to attend youth theatre in Port Talbot and said a lot of the opportunities he had as a young person 'have gone'. He said: 'It is quite scary. I look back on my pathway of coming through, starting with a supportive family, coming from an area, you know it was old steel town and, sort of tough place to grow up in, not the sort of place you'd expect actors to come from but because we had Richard Burton that came from there and Anthony Hopkins … 'I again, one of the things I've realised as time has gone on is how important it is to see where you come from, represented on the world stage, and to know that it's possible. 'I never questioned whether you could be successful as an actor, because Burton and Hopkins were and they came from this town.' He said: 'It does worry me that, for young people who might want to get into this, if you are relying on the bank of mum and dad or… it's really tough to even just to go and move to London, or move to wherever these places are. 'That's why it's so important to get stuff out of London and around the country.' Earlier in the year, Sheen launched a theatre company called Welsh National Theatre, which is envisioned as separate from but complementary to Theatr Cymru, which was established in 2003 as the Welsh language national company. National Theatre Wales closed its doors in its current form as a theatre company in December 2024, after funding was withdrawn in 2023. On TV, Sheen has starred in series including US period drama Masters Of Sex, sitcom 30 Rock, and fantasy show Good Omens, alongside David Tennant. He has portrayed a number of real-life public figures including former prime minister Sir Tony Blair in 2006 film The Queen, journalist David Frost in 2008's Frost/Nixon, and the Duke of York in Prime Video mini-series A Very Royal Scandal. On stage he has played Welsh Labour Party politician Aneurin 'Nye' Bevan in the show Nye, which recently finished at the National Theatre.


Scotsman
26 minutes ago
- Scotsman
My Festival Sam Kissajukian
Six months, 300 paintings, one man's mental state. We caught up with Sam Kissajukian ahead of the Fringe show that documents them all. Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... There are thousands of shows in Edinburgh this month. Please tell us why we should come and see yours. It's actually really tough because there are five other shows at Summerhall about a guy who made 300 paintings in a cake factory during a six-month manic episode. Who or what was the biggest inspiration for your show? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The late Richard Artschwager, a New York artist who did the most unlikely variety of mediums. His exhibitions were equal measure incredible and frustrating. Who or what are you most excited about seeing this year? Maddie and Marina Bye's show Siblings: Dreamweavers. I've seen it twice. I'm going again. Funniest show I've seen to date. It genuinely makes me happy. Who do you most like spending time with in Edinburgh? Any performer after they've had a technical disaster show. It's very bonding to be around someone who's had their dreams temporarily crushed by QLab. What is the best review you've had? And the worst? There's a guy who has a YouTube channel where he reviews shows and decides whether they are boring or confusing. He said my show was boring but not confusing. I just love the idea of someone detailing their six-month manic episode and you just yell 'BORING!'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad What will we learn from your show that we didn't know before? Before what? Who's we? And what don't you know? I'm very confused. But not bored. Tell us something about you that would surprise people. When I was 17, I was ranked first in Australia at Magic: The Gathering. I won a bunch of money and wanted to turn pro. My parents forbade it and made me go to university. Joke's on them, eight years at university and now I do finger paintings. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad What are the best and worst things that have happened to you at a festival? A wonderful gentleman offered to show me his kaleidoscope collection. Outside of performing, I spend most of my time painting alone in the dark. So, at the festival, I enjoy meeting everyone and stealing energy from upbeat performers. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad What's the first thing you do in the morning and the last thing you do at night? This festival, I had two evicted clowns crashing in my living room. They had a show at midnight and mine was midday. So, I asked when they came in late if they could be quiet. They made a game of it, they told me they spent all day practising how to be silent: lowering water from the sink tap by hand and moving slowly without raising their feet. At night, I could hear them sliding around the apartment giggling and shooshing each other. It made me feel like a curmudgeon. So, I tied a bunch of bottles to a string that went across the hallway to the door handle. When they came in that night, the bottles clanged and I gave a good 'Shhhhhhhhh!'. Thanks for the interview! We'd like to buy you a drink. Where are we going and what are we drinking? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad I was quite touched by this offer, but then I found out that you've been asking all the other performers the same question Sam Kissajukian's show 300 Paintings is at Summerhall, 12:05pm, until 25 August. An accompanying exhibition, Paintings to Sleep On, is also on show in Summerhall's In Vitro Gallery.


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Coleen Rooney hits back at mum-shamers as they slammed the WAG for taking her young sons to an Oasis concert in a now deleted post
Coleen Rooney has hit back at mum-shamers on Instagram on Tuesday after trolls slammed her for taking her young sons to an Oasis concert. The WAG, 39, shared a sweet photo of her boys, Kit, nine, Klay, 12, Cass, seven, and husband Wayne, watching from a VIP box at Wembley Stadium. The couple's oldest son Kai, 15, wasn't pictured in attendance. Despite enjoying an 'unbelieveable' night at the gig watching Liam and Noel Gallagher, one fan slammed the I'm A Celebrity star and England football legend for taking their children. They wrote: 'Definitely something you should have done on your own. The kids being there is ridiculous. So many die-hard fans couldn't get tickets, and they wouldn't know them if they fell over them.' Coleen quickly hit back in a now deleted post, by resharing the follower's negative comment at 12:30am and wrote: 'He's a big fan' followed by a laughing emoji. Thousands of fans waited for hours in virtual queues to get their hands on highly coveted tickets for the band's reunion shows, however not everyone was successful. It comes after Coleen had the time of her life at Together Again Festival last month. The ITV star, who has previously revealed her down to earth holiday tastes with Butlin's a firm family favourite, and three of her children joined the crowd at the event held at Bolesworth Castle in Cheshire. The family enjoyed performances from Olly Murs, Jamie Webster and Dizzee Rascal, with Coleen seen singing away in the audience. Sharing a series of photos to Instagram, she gave an insight into their festival fun, where weekend tickets cost £199, and joined Jamie for photos backstage. She wrote: 'Thank you for looking after us Together Again Fest… fantastic set up!! 'And thanks for the photos and lovely to finally meet you Jamie Webster…. Kids had a ball. Elsewhere, Coleen's earnings have soared amid her huge TV projects as she looks set to become her family's 'main breadwinner '. The WAG reportedly boasts a net worth of £15million, with her hubby thought to be worth an enormous £170million thanks to his Premier League footballing days. But in the new phase of their lives, Coleen could be set to take over as the main breadwinner as her popularity soars. Coleen quickly hit back in a now deleted post, by resharing the follower's negative comment at 12:30am and wrote: 'He's a big fan' followed by a laughing emoji Amid her skyrocketing fame following her hugely successful I'm A Celeb stint, Disney announced on Monday a new premium access series titled The Rooneys focusing on her and Wayne's life. Thanks to her ventures, new figures for her firm, CWR 2021, up to September 2024 show the booming business already had £580,000 banked - and that was before I'm A Celeb and her Disney deal. Meanwhile former manager of Plymouth Arsenal Wayne was reportedly making £500,000, before leaving the club in December. A financial expert told The Sun: 'These earnings show that, even before Coleen signed up for I'm A Celeb, she was already bringing in more money than Wayne. 'On the back of her jungle stint, where she was incredibly popular with the viewing public, she's now likely to see her earnings soar even further - and the increased interest in Coleen after she did so well on the show is also likely to have sealed the deal on the Disney contract.' They added: 'Getting big bucks from a global streamer, plus her pay cheque from ITV, will no doubt swell the Rooneys coffers even further.' MailOnline has contacted Coleen's representatives for comment. In March, Coleen revealed that she has eclipsed Wayne in popularity after starring on I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here! Coleen took part on last year's series of the ITV show where she finished as runner up to McFlyn's Danny Jones after winning over a huge number of fans. And the mother-of-four has explained that she now gets even more attention in public than her famous footballer husband. Speaking to The Mirror at an event in Manchester, Coleen admitted she was humbled by the 'positivity' of people coming up to chat to her about her time in the jungle. She said: 'I didn't realise how big the audience was. I get parents come up to me saying "aw, we got our family back together on the couch to watch it" and that's lovely to hear.' Not being able to resist making a brutal dig at her husband, she then joked: 'Even on school runs, Wayne has passed his sell by date so no one has got a clue [about him] But then all of a sudden we get kids going "oh Coleen Rooney!"' Speaking of her popularity, Disney announced on Monday that a new premium access series titled The Rooneys is set to air, and filming is already underway. The ten part doc-series will delve into the footballer and WAG's lives 'like we've never seen them before'. It is set to see Coleen tackle 'new entrepreneurial endeavours' and Wayne stepping away from the football pitch to do school runs. The new show has 'unprecedented access' into their world and dives into their everyday life, including highs like holidays and celebrations as well as the lows.