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When Vince Staples wrote an episode set at an amusement park for his new Netflix series, âThe Vince Staples Show,â the rapper and actor from Long Beach hoped to shoot it at Knottâs Berry Farm in Buena Park, where as gang-affiliated kids growing up in âextremely humble circumstances,â as he puts it, he and his friends would go for fun â and sometimes more than that â instead of the far pricier Disneyland.
âWe were always like, âMan, I wonder why trouble is following us to the $10 amusement park?ââ he recalls with a laugh.
Decades later, alas, it was Knottâs that proved out of reach: Thanks to the showâs limited budget, Staples, 30, ended up shooting the episode at Riversideâs Castle Park, a â letâs call it cozier â location he remakes onscreen as the slightly sinister Surf City.
âIt was probably a quarter of the size,â he says. âBut I think the constraints are what allow you to really push the bounds of your creativity. When it gets tight, will you still have an idea that can thrive in that smaller setting?â
âThe Vince Staples Showâ is teeming with powerful ideas. Loosely inspired by events from Staplesâ life, the series (which hit Netflix on Thursday) ponders the randomness of existence and the futility of celebrity as it follows a protagonist named Vince through a bank robbery and a stint in jail and a visit to that cursed theme park; the scale is lush but intimate, the tone comic yet lightly surreal â a pocket-sized mashup of âCurb Your Enthusiasmâ and âAtlantaâ with a dash of Jordan Peeleâs ambient dread.
âPeople arenât meant to be understood,â says Long Beach rapper Vince Staples, whose latest album is a love letter to his Ramona Park neighborhood.
What exactly happens in any given episode â and what exactly it means â is less important than how it makes you feel, says Staples, whoâs always been attracted to movies and shows that donât explain themselves fully to the viewer.
ââBarton Fink,â âDonnie Darko,â âA Serious Manâ â all these things, youâre like, âOK, seems like I know whatâs going on,ââ he says. âBut whatâs really going on in âEraserheadâ?â
The show shares a certain absurdist attitude with Staplesâ rich but un-glitzy music, which he began making in the early 2010s as a satellite member of L.A.âs Odd Future collective. And of course it wound up on Netflix as a result of his success in hip-hop, which includes five critically acclaimed studio albums, collaborations with the likes of Billie Eilish and Gorillaz and a spot for his song âMagicâ on one of former President Obamaâs annual summer playlists.
Yet according to Kenya Barris, the âBlack-ishâ creator whoâs among the seriesâ executive producers, âThis is not a rapper show â that was very, very, very important to Vince.â Indeed, Barris says Staplesâ deadpan delivery reminds him of no one so much as ⊠Bob Newhart.
Staples, who appeared in last yearâs âWhite Men Canât Jumpâ reboot and had a recurring role on Season 2 of âAbbott Elementaryâ (as Maurice, who dates Quinta Brunsonâs Janine), throws out plenty of other non-rap influences on his comedy. âIâm a fan of Kevin Smith and Andy Griffith,â he says on a recent rainy morning at the Netflix building on Sunset Boulevard. Dressed in a black cardigan and baggy cargo pants, he remembers watching reruns of âM*A*S*Hâ and âI Love Lucyâ with his grandparents and identifies Adam McKay and Steve Carellâs work as a crucial part of his childhood.
âI find humor in moments of discomfort and in how we deal with misfortune,â he says, though whatâs so funny â and so beguiling â about âThe Vince Staples Showâ is how casually it handles the prospect of disaster, as in the episode where those bank robbers turn out to be old pals of Vinceâs.
âThereâs a matter-of-factness to his storytelling that brings a humanity to the hood,â Barris says. âThe hood is not salacious or explosive to the people who live there. If you grow up in that situation, youâre not like, âOh my God, every day is a nightmare!â Itâs just your life.â
To Staplesâ mind, the show is âbleak but with a sense of optimism that one day doesnât define the next.â (You may have seen the billboards around town that borrow a lyric from Ice Cube â âToday was a good dayâ â as a tagline above an image of Staples grinning with a black eye.) His original conception of the series was darker than the finished product â so dark, Staples says, that Netflix insisted he start over eight weeks into a writersâ room.
âWe had a meeting where they said, âHey, this isnât gonna work on the platform,ââ he recalls. âBut I donât know if that was necessarily a bad thing.â
Staples calls himself âa process person,â meaning that for him the value of a project lies in its creation â in what he can learn, good or bad, about making art â rather than in its reception.
âIf a million people watch the show or one person watches the show, that doesnât really dictate how I feel emotionally because I got to do the thing,â he says. Besides, tastes change over time. When he dropped his second LP, 2017âs âBig Fish Theory,â âeverybody hated it,â he says, which isnât quite true even if some listeners were flummoxed by the musicâs harsh electronic production. âNow itâs my best album and people are asking me for another one.â
Is he still thinking about rap amid his foray into Hollywood? âWhy not?â he answers. âItâs all the same â itâs just words and the particular application of those words, you know? And a lot of the concepts in these episodes, Iâve been saying in my music for years.â
Not that he cares whether anyone knows that. Staples, who despite his rising profile says he doesnât think of himself as a famous person, was at a birthday party for a friendâs teenage daughter the other day when he was surrounded by a bunch of kids asking for photos with the guy from âAbbott Elementary.â
âThe way I view fame is: If those kids tell me they love me from TV and Iâm like, âName a song,â then Iâm a dick.â
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