Cloves and Fedoras: Michael Rapaport is one of the best, and hardest working, entertainers out there.

Cloves and Fedoras is Seed Sings reviews for little known pieces of pop culture.  Feel free to contact us with your own submissions of undiscovered gems that must be known.

Today I'm going to give love to another actor/director that seemed to be forgotten, but has now reappeared and is doing some great work. That actor/director I'm speaking of is Michael Rapaport.

This comes about because yesterday, on the Bill Simmons podcast, Rapaport was the guest, for the third time already, and I loved every single second. He is just an angry, yet jovial dude and I love to hear him talk about everything from music to movies to sports, mainly basketball. He is a huge basketball fan and he is extremely knowledgeable on the NBA, especially his beloved Knicks. He knows their history inside and out. He is so passionate about his team. He said on the podcast, that it is nothing but gray skies right now for the Knicks.

That's something I really like about him. He isn't a delusional Knicks fan that thinks, "this is the year we turn it around", every year, he knows that this is a very dark time for his team. They have no picks in the upcoming draft. They will be hard pressed to bring in any big time free agents, unless they trade Carmelo. They are trying to decide between Kurt Rambis and David Blatt as their next head coach. Why is this even a question? Hire Blatt. Rambis is incompetent and has proven that every time he gets a head coaching job. Blatt was in the wrong situation at the wrong time in Cleveland, and he still took that team to the finals last year. Rappaport said the exact same thing. He doesn't see the need for Phil Jackson to interview anyone else if Blatt is available. I couldn't agree more with him, obviously.

This past Tuesday, and the two other times before, he has expounded his vast knowledge of the Knicks and the NBA, and I agree with almost everything he says. I agree that the Knicks are going to be an also ran for the next three, four or even five years. I agree that the NBA is in a golden age, but it will be bad in a couple of years because of the "one and dones", he said this the last time he was on the podcast. I agree that the Knicks of the 90's were incredibly dominant, but also underachievers, because they never won a title with Ewing, Mark Jackson and John Starks. I agree with him when he says he wants the Cavs to lose the finals again because LeBron is kind of becoming whiny since he isn't the top story in the NBA anymore, it's the Warriors. I agree when he says that Russell Westbrook is a lunatic on the floor. I agree that he says there will never be another player like Kevin Durant, a guy that's 7 feet tall and can handle and shoot like a guard. Rapaport is very, very smart when it comes to all things NBA.

Rapaport's hobbies and the things that he likes goes beyond just the NBA. He is a successful podcast host himself. His podcast is very popular and he gets some big time people to appear. He was/is a very decent actor. I personally think that he is a really good actor that can play many different roles and genres. For example, look at his role in "Next Friday", next to "Cop Land". "Next Friday" he had such a throw away part, but he nailed it. He was a mildly racist mailman delivering mail to Craig's uncle's house in the suburbs. Rapaport was surprised to see a young black man answer the door and he acted like a guy that doesn't think he is racist, but there is definitely some racism in him. He was rude and ignorant and funny. And Ice Cube played off of him perfectly. "Next Friday" isn't good or bad, it's just blah, but that one scene with Rapaport and Cube is very funny and worth your time. In "Cop Land", he played a young, out of his league cop. He got to act with Harvey Keitel, who is a wonderful and legendary actor. I feel like Rapaport one hundred percent held his own. He also got to act with Sylvester Stallone in that movie as well. "Cop Land" is star studded and Rapaport does an excellent job among all the big time stars in that movie. But, nothing compares to how awesome he was in the wildly underrated "Beautiful Girls". First of all, that movie is so good and it totally holds up. The list of actors and actresses in that movie is incredible and Rapaport is so damn good in the movie. He gets to act opposite Mira Sorvino and Uma Thurman and he does a wonderful job. If you haven't seen "Beautiful Girls", do yourself a favor and watch it because it is great.

He is also a pretty good actor on the small screen too. He plays a cop a lot, he kind of looks like one, in shows like "Public Morals" and "Justified", and he is very good, but nothing compares to his outstanding, one episode feature he did on the last season of "Louie". He was so god damn good as a down on his luck security guard. He was kind of a downer and a mean guy that punched people and talked over people all the time, but it was because he was a lonely guy. His character was even more lonely than Louis CK. He was such a wannabe and such a meathead, but he was also, to be frank, a loser. Louie always wanted to be left alone, and he could be a jerk about it sometimes, but in this episode with Rapaport, you side with Louie. Louie shouldn't have to hang out with someone always talking over him, punching him and taking him to a basketball game that he doesn't want to go to, no one should have to go through all of that. But, at the end, when he loses his gun and Louie eventually finds it, his cries of agony turn into cries of joy and Rapaport is so awesome in this tiny role. He should have been nominated for an Emmy for that one episode.

Recently, Rapaport has taken his talents to directing with a ton of success. He directed a great "30 For 30" about the Big East at it's height. It is an awesome documentary and one of "30 For 30"'s best efforts. But, nothing will ever compare to the wonderful work he did on the Tribe Called Quest documentary, "Beats, Rhymes and Life, The Trails and Tribulations of A Tribe Called Quest". That doc is a masterpiece about one of the greatest hip hop groups of all time. Rapaport told every side of every story. He gave everyone a voice, even Jarobi and Ali Shaheed Mohammed. That movie is absolutely awesome. It's even more timely and wonderful and sad due to the untimely death of Phife Dawg. That was the last we really ever saw of Phife at his healthiest. It will go down as classic now that Phife has passed away. Rapaport was clearly a fan, but he wasn't afraid to talk about and bring up the bad stuff that happened to everyone in ATCQ. It's his best work by far.

I'm a big, big fan of most of Rapaport's work. I know he may come off as coarse, but if you actually listen to him, I think you will feel the same way as I do. Rapaport is a wonderful actor, director and a great, and very knowledgeable sports fan, especially when it comes to basketball. I'm a fan.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture Editor for SeedSing and the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast. He agrees with almost everything Rapaport says about the Knicks, except for the fact they will be bad for four to five years. They will be bad for decades. Ty is on twitter, go follow him @tykulik.

Thank You Phife Dawg

I was going to write about one of my favorite bands today for the greatest American band debate but, I woke up and received a text from a friend of mine that Phife from A Tribe Called Quest had passed away. I know, I wrote a very extensive piece on ATCQ as one of the greatest American bands, but Phife's passing deserves a piece solely based on him.

I love ATCQ, but I really loved Phife. As I wrote in that blog, he was, by far, my favorite member of the group. I loved his delivery. The way he rhymed was ferocious and fiery. He could spit so fast, but you could also understand what he was saying. He was a killer on some of their most popular and famous songs. Go back and listen to him on tracks like "Stir it Up", "Stressed Out", "Can I Kick It", "Buggin Out", I mean, the list could go on and on. He had a delivery like no one else then or now in rap music. He's said that he didn't like his voice at first because it sounded so high pitched, but I loved it then and I loved it when it got gruffer. He was the best in one of the best groups of all time. Sure, he and Q Tip fought all the time, but who wouldn't get angry with someone that they've been friends with since they were toddlers. In the excellent Michael Rappaport documentary, "Beats, Rhymes and Life", I found myself siding with Phife over Q Tip in every argument that they had. He seemed like the more reasonable one of the two.

It's a shame that he's gone too because he never really did any solo work. He released one solo album in the early 2000's that's okay. But, he was working with renowned DJ, J Dilla, on a new album. That would have been tremendous. I knew that he had a lot of health issues. He had to get a new kidney awhile back and he was a severe diabetic. His diabetes was so bad, he'd miss shows and appearances because he couldn't function well enough to perform. He said himself that sugar was a drug to him. He couldn't get enough no matter how much he had. He even talked about things like Dr Pepper in his lyrics, so you know he loved sugar.

All this being said though, I thought he had so much more time left to live. He said in a recent interview that he was "in a good spot" and was "feeling pretty good". I took these words to heart. Being a fan, I just wanted him to be okay. I wanted to hear more music from him. I wanted ATCQ to get back together and perform some more live shows. I assumed all this was on the table. But, then I woke up to that text. Naturally, I had to check for myself and Google and Twitter confirmed my fears that he was gone. This is a real travesty. It's not on level of what happened yesterday in Brussels, but for the music world, this stinks. Phife will be missed deeply by myself and countless others. He was a true emcee and one of the best of all time.

Go back and read my piece on them, I heap the most praise on Phife, and it's not even close. I know I will be listening to ATCQ the rest of the day. It will make me sad, but also happy that, at the very least, I have five albums to hear Phife's great and timeless work. RIP Phife Dawg, you were a true legend and will go down as such in the future. I miss you already.

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing. Follow him on twitter @tykulik.