Part investigative documentary, part real-life gangster movie, '69: The Saga of Danny Hernandez' unpacks the life of polarizing rap sensation and internet troll Tekashi69.
ٹریلر
کاسٹ
Vikram Gandhi
Self, also narrator and interviewer
Miguel Cutz
Self
Shadow the Great
Self
6ix9ine
Self
Sara Molina
Self
Adam Lucas
Self
David Percy
Self
Takashi Matsuba
Self
Jordan Granados
Self
Rebecca Faye
Self
Bodega Bamz
Self
Lee Weinberg
Self
Zayo
Self
Dalyb
Self
Michal Novotný
Self
Eric Wahlforss
Self
Adam22
Self
آپ کو یہ بھی پسند آ سکتا ہے
69: The Saga of Danny Hernandez
Bad 25
Charli XCX: Alone Together
Sean Combs: The Reckoning
Supervillain: The Making of Tekashi 6ix9ine
Greta Thunberg: A Year to Change the World
NYC Revealed
BTS Monuments: Beyond the Star
Jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy
Hip Hop Uncovered
Ariana Grande: Dangerous Woman Diaries
Everybody Loves Natti
Choir
Ladies First: A Story of Women in Hip-Hop
Noisey
Welcome to Rap City
Jeen-yuhs: A Kanye Trilogy
RapCaviar Presents
Fight the Power How Hip Hop Changed the World
Watch the Sound with Mark Ronson
BINI World Tour Stories
Origins of Hip Hop
Hope on the Street
Beauty in Black
تبصرے
10 تبصرے
bonsoir
un bon
source: 69: The Saga of Danny Hernandez
Vikram Gandhi definitely went into this project with an ax to grind. Throughout the interviews, you hear him throw not-so-subtle shade that he tries to disguise will feigned praise, which is ironic b/c although he claims during the prologue that he wants to know who the real Danny is, it's pretty clear that he was producing this film to gain clout from the clout maker himself. You're supposed to believe that Vikram is asking the "hard questions," but all he does is pander to 69's haters. There's even a point when Shotti points out that Vikram's preoccupation with Scumgang is comical b/c Scumgang never existed, "If Takashi saw this, he'd laugh." This was-at best-clumsy filmmaking and at worse, it was dirty journalism. Despite Vikram's high school Slam booking, he did a great job at finding generous interviewees. Shotti fo'sure provided the most balanced perspective on Danny, where it seems like Vikram also did a good job at gathering interviewees that would paint the picture he has of the 69. Either way, the best parts of the film are when you're hearing people closest to 69 tell their stories.
Desperate cry for attention and shamelessly claiming to be a musician. Just ploy of personal branding by a shameless hoodlum.
A little annoyed at myself for even clicking this doc out of curiosity, because idk how, but i didn't know of him at all, and the rainbow hair got me. And obviously I don't think this person deserves any more attention. I will say, I'm pretty intrested to see what it's creator comes out with in the future. So many poorly thrown together documentaries come out on streaming platforms, and at least after watching this I didn't feel duped in that way. I felt like even if it wasn't 100%, the person who made this cared about doing a good job.
He is who he is. You are who you are Be kind. Its only a documentary.
Sorry but this guy is an idiot, rude and pathetic. What a waste of time.
This is the worst documentary ever. I don't know why Hulu made this documentary film.
You should listen to what the producer said at the very beginning of the movie. That they were interested in the difference between the persona people show online versus their real, interior self. Who is Danny Hernandez? The people who are reviewing this in a negative way cannot understand that you can watch this from an objective standpoint. This documentary talks about the real world themes such as the cycle of poverty, generational trauma, anger, what masculinity looks like, etc through the story of 69.I truly do hope that this movie begins a conversations about rap culture, why young men and young, at risk youth are attracted to hip hop, and what it means to show dominance and masculinity in our society.
