A TRUMP-obsessed rapper has teased a run for political office and claimed the Republican presidential candidate is a “gangster” in an exclusive interview.
Forgiato Blow, real name Kurt Juntz, a hip-hop artist from South Florida, has made a career out of his larger-than-life pro-Trump persona.
Trump-mad rapper Forgiato Blow at the recent RNC in MilwaukeeCredit: Supplied
His recent music video Trump Trump Baby stars rapper and model Amber RoseCredit: Youtube /donttreadonme9422
Blow says he has met with Trump several times – and doesn’t rule out a political careerCredit: Getty
Since releasing his first song in support of the Republican leader, 2016’s Silver Spoon, Blow has become a distinctive figure at Donald Trump rallies.
He says he has received shoutouts from Trump at rallies and has recorded music supporting other figures on the right including Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz, and former White House spokeswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Blow recently had the honor of having his song used at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
And The U.S. Sun caught up with him inside the cavernous Fiserv Center that was hosting the RNC.
With his gold Donald Trump head chain and his $40,000 Maga ring, the rapper is hard to miss.
He also has a massive tattoo of Trump’s face on his thigh.
Describing himself as “Trump’s Nephew” on social media, he said that he never got any negative feedback on his music when he rapped about “guns, drugs, and murder,” or “gangs.”
But when he started rapping about Donald Trump and the Maga movement, Blow claims that he suddenly became a controversial figure.
Blow says he has attended every single Trump rally during this current election season except one.
That happened to be the rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, earlier this month where Trump was shot and one person was 𝓀𝒾𝓁𝓁ed.
Blow got his moment of triumph recently in Milwaukee when his song and video, Trump Trump Baby, was played on the first day of the RNC.
The playing of the music video, featuring rapper and model Amber Rose, came as a surprise even to Blow.
Rose, who expressed her pro-Trump views this year, addressed the RNC earlier this month, where she claimed his supporters were her “people.”
Blow told The U.S. Sun about the “issues” he had with getting the song made and claimed that Sony “tried to take it down,” possibly over its similarities to Vanilla Ice’s 1990 hit Ice Ice Baby.
That song was controversial too for its uncredited sampling of the baseline from the 1981 song Under Pressure by Queen and David Bowie.
But Blow believed there was a different reason he encountered difficulties with the song.
“Every time you speak the truth they try to bring you down,” he said.
Blow shows off his Trump tattoo on his right thighCredit: Supplied
Rose was a surprise speaker at this year’s RNCCredit: AFP
Blow began his career in 2013, collaborating with mainstream names including Rick Ross, French Montana, and Kodak Black.
For that reason, he says it annoys him when people say that he raps about Trump “as a grift, to make money.”
In the music video for Silver Spoon, Blow can be seen wearing a Maga hat, and it was at this point that he started to “really pay attention to politics.”
“I already had super success before that. I already had the Rolls Royce, the jewelry, the cars, the money, and the success,” he said.
Every time you speak the truth they try to bring you down.
Forgiato BlowPro-Trump rapper
Now, he says he’s focused on “doing what’s good for your country.”
Describing himself as a “diehard” fan, he says he was originally drawn to the Maga leader as a “businessman,” and because he was from Florida, where Trump has his Mar-A-Lago residence.
“I liked the flash, the cars, the beautiful women, the jewelry,” he said. “I mean, Trump’s a boss, and when you’re trying to be a rapper you have to be like a boss!”
But he said it was after Trump got into office in 2016 that he realized “how corrupt” politics is.
Back then, he says, he was getting a lot of bookings from Republicans to perform at events.
And after 2020, he says the Covid lockdowns and vaccine mandates, as well as a social media ban, solidified his political views.
“This is the fight, every single day, as a conservative,” he said.
Blow says that while it would be “amazing” if Trump directly acknowledged his song, he knows that “he sees me” and has met him numerous times.
But he adds that he is trying to shift the culture, and for that reason, “I don’t need a 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡day party from Donald Trump.
“I’m trying to help him the way I can help him win the election.”
Does that mean he would consider running for political office or even serving in a possible Trump administration in the future?
“If me and him end up doing something cool together one day that’s cool,” he said.
“I’ll probably run for something when I’m 40,” he added. “I’m 39 so it’s getting close!
“But I mean, I work with a lot of different politicians. Marjorie Taylor Green, Matt Gaetz. Vivek [Ramaswamy] is a good friend of mine.
“I know everybody in the movement. They’ve been seeing me.
“If you’re a real Trump person you know I’ve been down with Trump since day one.”
Does this mean we could see a Vance/Blow ticket come 2028? Watch this space.
Blow outside the Fiserv Center which played host to the RNCCredit: Getty