Why did Suguru Geto turn evil in Jujutsu Kaisen? Why did he betray Gojo? A lot of things happened in Geto’s life that turned him into a curse user. Here is a guide on why Geto turned evil and betrayed ...
The King of the Curses is a malevolent individual who has been responsible for the deaths of hundreds of people. Sukuna has ...
In the early evenings of late January 1991, after local news and Wheel of Fortune, the majority of American families tuned in to CNN’s coverage of Operation Desert Storm, the first ever real-time, ...
Haider is a writer and editor with years of experience and has been a fan of Game Rant for years due to its great content. As an anime features writer for the site, he theorizes about the latest anime ...
Pioneering Houston rappers Willie D and Scarface reunite for a show that’s all about their community, not about them. Geto Boys Reloaded continues their bid to instruct, with Dennis and Jordan taking ...
Richard “Bushwick Bill” Shaw, one-third of iconic 80’s Houston rap group Geto Boys, passed away on June 9th after a brief battle with pancreatic cancer. The rapper was 52 years old. Shaw fell ill and ...
This article contains spoilers from Jujutsu Kaisen's Shinjuku Showdown arc. Geto died at the hands of Gojo and Kenjaku fell ...
The Geto Boys are among the most important acts to emerge out of the South. At a time when so much of hip-hop's national visibility centered New York and L.A., the Dirty South started gaining more ...
The question of how Geto is still alive has plagued the Jujutsu Kaisen anime-only fans ever since the prequel movie Jujutsu Kaisen 0 was released in theaters. While Suguru Geto acted as the anime's ...
The Geto Boys are true legends in hip-hop and in their hometown of Houston, Texas. The rap trifecta of Scarface, Willie D and the fun-loving sociopath Bushwick Bill ...
Bushwick Bill terrified a vice president’s wife into regulating song lyrics, released album art of himself bleeding on a gurney with a gunshot wound to the eye, and helped put Houston into the global ...
FM radio drive-time personalities across the nation made merciless Desert Storm skits and parodies built of cultural ridicule. American political and spiritual leaders offered no objections, as ...