Students who swerve around the notorious Toronto potholes that Drake raps about will arrive at Dundas Square, Toronto’s equivalent of Times Square. There, the aggressive glow from billboards that frequently promote Drake will light their path into Ryerson University, which now features the rapper on its curriculum.
Like many people there, Mr. Higgins referred to Ryerson as X University. The institution is undergoing a renaming process following protests over the man it’s named for, Egerton Ryerson, who was a key figure in crafting Canada’s residential school system.
Such is Drake’s mark on Toronto that a 2020 “Saturday Night Live” sketch, starring Issa Rae, featured a news reporter trying to find an elusive Drake in the city.
“You know where I’m at, I put the Six on the map,” Drake raps on his track “Talk Up,” one of the countless references to Toronto in his music. Though Toronto has piggybacked on the glittering Drake brand, the city can’t take credit for his stardom as a homegrown talent, Mr. Higgins said.
“Toronto did not make Drake, like, at all,” Mr. Higgins told me, adding that the same holds true for the Weeknd and some of the city’s other successful hip-hop artists. They, he observed, started their careers in the United States, signing contracts with American record labels and with the support of the American music industry and its fans. Only then did their popularity and stardom eventually trickle back to Toronto.
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