SUPPORTING MEXICO IS SAYING NO TO XENOPHOBIA โ ๐
SUPPORTING MEXICO IS SAYING NO TO XENOPHOBIA โ ๐
SUPPORTING MEXICO IS SAYING NO TO XENOPHOBIA โ ๐
SUPPORTING MEXICO IS SAYING NO TO XENOPHOBIA โ ๐
SUPPORTING MEXICO IS SAYING NO TO XENOPHOBIA โ ๐
SUPPORTING MEXICO IS SAYING NO TO XENOPHOBIA โ ๐
SUPPORTING MEXICO IS SAYING NO TO XENOPHOBIA โ ๐
I Painted Hot Emin Summer Through Rain and Sun
Most people see a meme.
I see a movement.
When I first came across @HotEminSummer, it felt different from the countless tokens that appear and disappear every week. There was something uniquely internet native about it. A community rallying around a living legend. A culture forming in real time. A project built around one of the most respected minds in crypto: Emin Gรผn Sirer.
That feeling stayed with me.
So instead of writing another post or sharing another meme, I decided to create something permanent.
A mural.
Not on a screen.
Not inside a Canva template.
A real piece of art.
And it wasn't easy.
Some days the sun was brutal. The kind of heat that drains your energy before you've even started working. Other days the rain came down relentlessly, forcing me to stop, wait, and start all over again. Paint doesn't care about your deadlines. The weather doesn't care about your plans.
But I kept going.
Because great things are worth building, even when nobody is watching.
The artwork features @el33th4xor Emin Gรผn Sirer himself, the real face behind the legend. A figure whose contributions to blockchain technology helped shape an entire industry and whose vision continues to influence the @avax ecosystem today.
Around him, I incorporated the iconic red Avalanche triangle, a symbol recognized across Web3 as a mark of innovation, resilience, and community.
The mural also honors some of the names that have become part of the Hot Emin Summer story: @nobsfud, @ExcelBaller, and @0xSmitty. People who have helped give the movement its energy, personality, and culture.
And surrounding it all are my signature doodles.
Anyone who has followed my work in Web3 knows this style. The hand drawn symbols, patterns, and visual chaos that somehow come together into a single story. It's become my fingerprint as an artist. My way of leaving a piece of myself in every project I support.
Nobody does it quite like this.
Every line tells a story.
Every symbol represents belief.
Every stroke represents time.
This mural is more than paint on a wall.
It's proof of conviction.
In an industry where attention shifts by the hour, creating physical art for a digital community is my way of saying that some ideas deserve more than a repost.
They deserve effort.
They deserve sacrifice.
They deserve to exist in the real world.
Hot Emin Summer isn't just about a token.
It's about celebrating a culture, a community, and a figure whose impact extends far beyond any chart.
Whether you're here for the memes, the community, the Avalanche ecosystem, or simply because you believe the internet still creates beautiful things, this movement has become something people genuinely want to be part of.
And that's rare.
As I stepped back and looked at the finished mural, after the rain, after the heat, after all the hours spent bringing it to life, one thought kept coming to mind:
The best communities don't just create holders.
They create believers.
And believers create art.
Hot Emin Summer.
See you on the wall.
Built under the sun. Finished through the rain. Painted with conviction. Hot Emin Summer isn't just on the timeline anymore, it's on the wall. ๐บ๐ฅ
Most people support a project with a repost. I supported Hot Emin Summer by painting it on a wall through rain, heat, and everything in between. Here's the story behind the art. ๐บ๐๏ธ
Note: This is not a paid partnership. The song in the content is a song I made for Hot Emin with Suno AI
Fact. The Yoruba's are very tribalistic that they can't speakup since the mess is from their own. But thanks to those of them who speak out against this cancer on our democracy and nation. God bless and shield them
I kid you not if Tinubu were to be an Igbo man and failing this wildly, Igbos would have been the loudest against him.
Those people don't cover for a wayward child.
In a tense live interview on Arise TV, Seyitan Atigarin confronted an APC defender, asking:
โYou keep claiming the economy is better. How much is the minimum wage now, and how much does it cost to fill your car tank?โ
The clip has gone viral, with many viewers left angry by the response.
"Please Nigerians forgive me if I have ever made you feel offended. I did a video two days ago, about one hour 30 minutes long, praying for the kidn@ppยฃd Oyo State school children and teachers. I woke up a day later and discovered that many Nigerians were feeling offended with the video. I also discovered that the video was cut and joined."
โ Gospel singer Adeyinka Alaseyori asks for forgiveness after facing bรฅcklash over her recent video.
@simpulawrence@Row_Haastrup@Iamstephkesh Na why we dey this mess at first. Religion and ethnicity has blind most of us that they can't question things especially when it comes from their spiritual head or someone from their ethnic affiliations
My take is that if you led a protest or peaceful walk when things weren't even this bad and brought about this calamity, why not organised one, since your to old to lead it others will lead or don't we have young pastors anymore.
#BringBackOurchildren#furry
My take is that if you led a protest or peaceful walk when things weren't even this bad and brought about this calamity, why not organised one, since your to old to lead it others will lead or don't we have young pastors anymore