Fab 5 Freddy: How Hip-Hop Was Born
The James Altucher Show
James Altucher
4.6 • 2.7K Ratings
🗓️ 10 March 2026
⏱️ 76 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
A Note from James:
In the Blondie song “Rapture,” which was the number-one song in 1981, Debbie Harry has this famous line: “Fab Five Freddy told me everybody’s fly.”
So the question is—who is Fab Five Freddy?
This guy is one of the central figures in the birth of hip-hop culture. Not just rap music, but the whole ecosystem: graffiti, breakdancing, fashion, DJ culture, art, film—everything that eventually turned into a massive global industry.
Hip-hop today represents hundreds of billions of dollars in music, fashion, and entertainment. But in the late ’70s and early ’80s it was just a small creative movement happening in New York.
Fab 5 Freddy helped connect all those worlds. He bridged graffiti artists, musicians, downtown art scenes, and eventually MTV.
He also just wrote a book called Everybody’s Fly, and it was a huge honor for me to talk with him about the origins of hip-hop and how creativity actually grows.
Episode Description:
Before hip-hop became a global industry, it was a loose network of DJs, graffiti artists, dancers, and musicians creating something entirely new in New York City.
Fab 5 Freddy was at the center of it.
In this conversation, he explains how hip-hop emerged from a mix of street culture, art scenes, punk music, and experimentation with records and sound. He discusses the origins of graffiti tagging, the rise of DJs like Grandmaster Flash, and the cultural moment when Blondie’s “Rapture” helped bring hip-hop into mainstream awareness.
Freddy also shares how the first hip-hop film, Wild Style, helped unify the culture’s elements—music, dance, graffiti, and fashion—and introduce them to a wider audience.
The conversation then turns to the modern era: AI-generated music, the attention economy of social media, and why artists today may need to slow down and develop their work before exposing it to the world.
What You’ll Learn:
- How hip-hop emerged from a mix of music, graffiti, dance, and street culture
- Why early DJs searched old records for breakbeats to create new sounds
- How the film Wild Style helped define hip-hop culture for the world
- Why artists today may need to resist posting unfinished work online
- How creativity evolves when technology disrupts the music industry
Timestamped Chapters
- [00:02:00] The Story Behind the Title Everybody’s Fly
- [00:03:01] A Note from James
- [00:04:15] Meeting Biz Markie and the Culture of Collecting Hip-Hop History
- [00:05:35] How Jazz, Blues, and Soul Influenced Early Hip-Hop
- [00:06:22] DJs Digging Through Records to Find Breakbeats
- [00:07:40] Grandmaster Flash and the Science of DJing
- [00:08:41] Why Producers Became Central to Hip-Hop Music
- [00:09:54] Blondie’s “Rapture” and Hip-Hop’s Mainstream Breakthrough
- [00:11:00] The Downtown Art Scene: Basquiat, Keith Haring, and Andy Warhol
- [00:12:24] The Origins of Graffiti and Tagging Culture
- [00:13:48] Graffiti as Competition and Artistic Evolution
- [00:15:12] Punk Rock and Hip-Hop: Parallel Cultural Revolutions
- [00:17:47] The Idea for the First Hip-Hop Film Wild Style
- [00:19:02] Bringing Breakdancing, Graffiti, and Rap Together on Film
- [00:21:50] Lessons Modern Artists Can Learn from Early Hip-Hop
- [00:22:49] Why Posting Creative Work Too Early Can Hurt It
- [00:24:00] Social Media, Attention, and the Speed of Culture
- [00:26:00] Hip-Hop’s Global Influence
- [00:29:00] The Birth of Conscious Rap
- [00:31:12] Directing KRS-One’s “My Philosophy” Video
- [00:33:00] Finding Great Hip-Hop in the Streaming Era
- [00:36:00] Battle Rap and Lyrical Skill
- [00:37:00] Artists Who Still Push the Genre Forward
- [00:40:11] How Rappers Make Money Today
- [00:43:00] What Makes an Artist Stand the Test of Time
- [00:47:00] Sampling, Technology, and the Evolution of Music Production
- [00:54:00] AI Music and the Future of Creativity
- [01:02:00] What “Everybody’s Fly” Really Means
Additional Resources:
- Fab 5 Freddy
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fab_Five_Freddy
- Rapture
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rapture_(Blondie_song)
- Wild Style
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_Style
- Grandmaster Flash
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grandmaster_Flash
- KRS-One
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KRS-One
- Debbie Harry
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debbie_Harry
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Today on the James Altiger show. |
| 0:04.0 | Interestingly, you know, the title of my book is also inspired by what Debbie Harry sung on the record Rapture when she said Fab Five, Freddie told me everybody's fly. |
| 0:15.0 | And clearly not a part of the hip-hop scene, she took a piece of hip hop and expanded it, kind of took |
| 0:22.9 | the message out to mainstream America, the desire to put whatever you're making, developing, |
| 0:30.5 | thinking about online too soon. Because it can dissipate, yeah, people get addicted to the likes and the thumbs-ups and all that adulation, |
| 0:42.3 | but it can be so fleeting, as you know, we're bombarded with so much these days, |
| 0:46.3 | and the energy can be drained out of something before it really gets a chance to develop. |
| 0:57.0 | This easing your ad business podcast, and he's not your average host. |
| 1:02.2 | This is the James Altager show. |
| 1:15.6 | Jay, do you like Blondie? Who doesn't like him? |
| 1:17.3 | Well, in the song Rapture, which was the number one song in 1981, |
| 1:21.1 | first of all, it's one of my all-time favorite songs. |
| 1:22.9 | Second, she had this great line, Fab Five Freddie told me everybody's fly. And the question is, who is |
| 1:30.2 | Fab Five Freddie? Well, this guy is like the godfather of all hip hop. And hip hop was like this |
| 1:37.5 | massive cultural shift, including breakdancing, graffiti, fashion, and of course, hundreds of billions of dollars of music |
| 1:47.1 | with the whole rap scene. |
| 1:48.7 | But anyway, Fab Five Freddy, which Blondy mentioned in 1981, basically kicked it all off. |
| 1:54.2 | And here he is on the show. |
| 1:56.4 | He just wrote the book, Everybody's Fly, and such an honor for me, I'm such a fan, such an honor for me to talk to Fab Five Freddy in the flesh, here he is. |
| 2:10.9 | So, oh my God, this is like, this is a big event for me. |
| 2:18.6 | You're like an icon of hip hop. |
| 2:21.5 | You're the godfather of the whole hip hop universe. |
... |
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