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Detroit rapper Tee Grizzley is a Twitch star
Detroit rapper Tee Grizzley is a Twitch star

Axios

time30-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Axios

Detroit rapper Tee Grizzley is a Twitch star

After first making his name as a rapper, Detroit's Tee Grizzley is now making money as an online gamer with more than 1 million people following his streaming channel. The big picture: Tee Grizzley is at the forefront of rappers and musicians who are branching out into livestreaming to prolong their careers and earn more money. Zoom in: On streaming platform Twitch, subscribers and followers watch for hours at a time as Tee Grizzley plays a modified version of "Grand Theft Auto V" and other games. Tee role-played a law enforcement officer in one recent livestream, narrating his movements, arresting other players and initiating conversations with them by asking questions like, "You got a gun license for that gun?" Catch up quick: Tee's rap career exploded eight years ago with the release of " First Day Out." He began focusing on gaming during the pandemic, when he was often playing video games at home. The latest:"I was a gamer before I was a rapper," he said last week during a StockX event at Gilly's downtown. He was there to promote his upcoming album, " Forever My Moment," with the "All The Smoke" podcast. Tee acknowledged making good money from gaming, but he wasn't pressed for specifics. In 2022, he told the "Million Dollaz Worth of Game" podcast that he was making about $50,000 per week: "I get paid from Twitch. I take the Twitch videos that I already streamed, put it on YouTube, get paid from YouTube … then you got sponsorships, you got ads." By the numbers: Since April 2019, Tee has streamed for more than 4,800 hours, per He has nearly 1.2 million followers and more than 2,000 subscribers. Prices range from $5.99 to $24.99 per month. Subscribers get fewer advertisements and access to chat boards. Twitch creators keep 50%-70% of their subscription fees, says Justin T. Huang, a Michigan Ross assistant professor of marketing who studies social media and online ecosystems. It's "definitely within the realm of possibility" that Tee Grizzley is making $50,000 weekly with that and money from ads and other revenue sources, Huang says.

Tycoon Festival 2025: Chris Brown stars, Sexyy Red surprises, Detroit hip-hop represents
Tycoon Festival 2025: Chris Brown stars, Sexyy Red surprises, Detroit hip-hop represents

Yahoo

time20-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Tycoon Festival 2025: Chris Brown stars, Sexyy Red surprises, Detroit hip-hop represents

In a lively and festive Saturday night at Little Caesars Arena, the Tycoon Music Festival made its Detroit premiere as Chris Brown headlined to a packed house. Detroit's Tee Grizzley and viral rapper Sexyy Red were among the top surprise guests in a four-hour affair that delivered multiple artist cameos to go with the announced lineup of Brown, Wiz Khalifa, Gucci Mane, Fabolous and Skilla Baby. It was the sixth edition of an annual event launched in 2019 by Brown's manager, Ant Wilson, who was on hand at LCA along with girlfriend and R&B star Monica. Detroit was the latest destination for Tycoon after previous runs in cities such as Atlanta and Houston. Here's a rundown: Brown's 50-minute set reaffirmed his onstage bona fides as he closed the night for one of Team Breezy's most devoted U.S. markets. Kicking off with a neon-streaked 'Party,' Brown drew mostly on the recent years of his two-decade catalog, though he did dip back to the early days with a dash through 'Yo (Excuse Me Miss),' 'Poppin'' and a glistening 'Strip.' Brown was joined at times by a high-energy dance crew to complement his own dazzling, hip-hop-influenced moves, though he was just as comfortable commanding the proceedings alone onstage. He shined on a mid-show stretch of bedroom soul ('Sweet Love,' 'Back to Sleep') and a warm, glowing 'Residuals.' Clad in a shirt citing Ecclesiastes 9:11 — a Bible verse about endurance through life's twists and turns — Brown wrapped up with 2014's 'Loyal' after thanking fans for their allegiance: 'It'll never go unnoticed,' he said. Saturday's set was a quick taste of what may be coming with Breezy Bowl XX, which will kick off in June and eventually feature pair of August shows at Ford Field: a slick, visual-heavy production (including pyro and a pair of giant inflatable Chris Browns flanking the stage), dynamic choreography and a heap of hit songs. By virtue of its timing, this year's Tycoon became a 4/20 weekend celebration — the weed aroma was apparent as soon as you pulled into an LCA parking area — and this Pittsburgh stoner-rapper was certainly up for the cause. Spliff in hand as he hit the stage, Wiz romped through a trippy 40-minute set of hazy floaters ('Mezmorized'), hypnotic numbers ('We Dem Boyz') and catchy hits like 'Roll Up,' which came with giant balloon joints tossed to the crowd. Fans especially locked in as he wrapped with an upbeat 'Young, Wild & Free' and anthemic 'See You Again' with Charlie Puth's piped-in vocals. Three months after her own LCA headlining appearance, the breakout St. Louis rapper was back Saturday, drawing screams of recognition as she hit the stage two hours in. Twerking in a skintight suit, Sexyy Red clocked all of five minutes in her cameo. She followed a pair of unannounced sets from Detroit rapper Payroll Giovanni — who performed his solo hit 'Hoes Like' and nodded to his westside group Doughboyz Cashout — and Chicago's G Herbo. It was Tee Grizzley who got the prime-time spotlight, joining Brown for the duo's 2023 hit 'IDGAF' and wrapping his mini-set with a crowd-igniting 'First Day Out,' the rapper's 2016 breakthrough smash. In between — with Brown momentarily ceding his own stage — Tee paired up with fellow Detroit rapper Skilla Baby for their collab 'Gorgeous.' Earlier, Skilla Baby had kicked off the Tycoon fest with a ladies-pleasing set that had him venturing out into the arena to give fans a chance to grab their own close-up TikTok moments. 'There's no place like home, there's no place like home,' the 26-year-old intoned at one point. Highlights included 'CFWM' and 'Tay B Style' — and a Skilla-led crowd singalong on Keyshia Cole's 'Love.' Atlanta trap pioneer Gucci Mane logged a pro performance with a set that included a vivacious onstage appearance from his wife, Keyshia Ka'Oirr, during his early career hit 'Freaky Gurl,' part of a set that included crowd-pleasers 'Pillz' and 'Wasted.' Fabolous, equipped with his agile, sing-song delivery, kicked off with a latter-day track ('Cold Summer') before ultimately making his way back in time to the smooth grooves of 'Can't Let You Go' and the set-closing 'Breathe.' Contact Detroit Free Press music writer Brian McCollum: 313-223-4450 or bmccollum@ This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Tycoon fest in Detroit: Chris Brown stars, Sexyy Red surprises, more

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