"I’m trying to become the Martin Scorsese of street rap," Pusha told INTERVIEW. "I want that brand." In that same conversation, Pusha addressed those who criticize him for still making coke raps after two decades of music.
"I have to tune it out," he explained. "Everything that’s being done right now is all out of love, all out of the competitive spirit, out of the honest act of living a lifestyle. My parents told me rap wouldn’t last 20 years."