There are artists who make music — and then there’s Boooka, who builds movements out of moments. His latest release, “Medswasposed2help?”, feels like stepping inside the mind of a misunderstood genius. The video, directed with cinematic precision, unfolds as a bold critique of America’s overmedicated youth and the quiet crisis of mental misdiagnosis in the Black community.
The story follows Boooka in a desperate chase after a psych doctor who keeps prescribing pills instead of healing. It’s raw, eerie, and strikingly artistic — orange prescription bottles scatter across the frame like trophies of trauma. Each scene carries a message: medication without understanding is just another form of oppression.
Boooka’s lyricism cuts deep. When he spits, “Crazy ain’t a look you just put on,” he dismantles the stereotype that mental illness has a face or a vibe. He opens up about the real side effects — not just the physical toll from overmedication in his twenties, but the emotional numbness that follows.
What’s most impressive is how he turns pain into philosophy. Boooka’s message isn’t anti-help — it’s anti-blindness. He challenges listeners to look beyond the pill bottle, to see the system profiting off confusion. With every bar, he reclaims the narrative: being “crazy” doesn’t mean being broken, it means being human in a world that profits off your healing.
As the final words echo — “I thought the meds was supposed to help” — it’s clear Boooka isn’t just telling his story. He’s speaking for an entire generation tired of being misunderstood, mislabeled, and misled.
Medswasposed2help? isn’t just art. It’s activism in motion — and Boooka proves once again why he’s not just an artist, but a visionary voice reshaping hip hop’s purpose.
