New York’s DJ Whoo Kid is partnering with legendary boxer Mike Tyson to bring you a new strain of cannabis hitting the market in July. “Whoodini” is the latest venture from DJ Whoo Kid and is set to be released under Mike Tyson’s TYSON 2.0 brand. “Whoodini” will sponsor a social media campaign that will award participants $5,000 quarterly to the creator with the best video.
In addition to his new cannabis venture, DJ Whoo Kid is preparing to release two new singles: MNDS featuring Benny The Butcher, Dave East, and Nasty C and HELL NAH featuring Travis Porter and Waka Flocka. He continues to tour the world, performing with artists at festivals and securing residencies at venues across the country. When he isn’t doing a show, you can catch him co-hosting on Mike Tyson’s Hotboxin’ Podcast.
DJ Whoo Kid Upcoming Show Dates
JULY 17- BEACH CLUB MONTREAL
JULY 22-24– ROLLING LOUD MIAMI
JULY 29-31- WRESTLING SUPER STAR RIC/ FLAIR ROAST WEEKEND NASHVILLE
About DJ Whoo Kid
DJ Whoo Kid has been one of the most visible figures in post-millennial East Coast hip-hop. An exceptionally prolific mixtape DJ since the late ’90s and a force behind 50 Cent‘s early-2000s mainstream infiltration — he has hosted dozens of G-Unit Radio tapes alone — he has fortified his enduring career as a radio host, interviewer, program director, and selector via terrestrial and satellite outlets. Additionally, he has toured the planet as a headliner and in support of high-profile MCs including 50 Cent and Waka Flocka Flame, and stepped into an executive role as CEO of Shadyville Entertainment. Unlike the boisterous styles with which most of his contemporaries mark their territory, Whoo Kid’s arrivals on recordings are often marked with a ghostly “Whooo kiiiid.”
Originally from Brooklyn but a native of Jamaica, Queens, Yves Mondesir began his ascent as DJ Whoo Kid during the late ’90s, when he worked as an assistant DJ and host on Hot 97’s Stretch Armstrong Show. By the end of 2000, he was hosting the New York City station’s POW! Radio program, and had been behind several tapes, including multiple volumes of 90 Minute Shootout and Murda Mixtape, the latter of which were co-hosted with Armstrong. In 2001, he hosted 50 Cent‘s first proper mixtape, 50 Cent Is the Future, which began a long-term association with the future multi-platinum rapper and his G-Unit group. Whoo Kid supported well over two dozen G-Unit Radio volumes alone, as well as numerous solo titles from 50, Lloyd Banks, Tony Yayo, and Young Buck. Whoo Kid likewise appealed to West Coast legends such as Snoop Dogg; he either hosted or co-hosted several of the Doggfather’s secondary releases into the late 2000s.
Amid all that activity, Whoo Kid had also extended his reach to satellite radio via the Whoolywood Shuffle on Eminem‘s Shade 45 channel, and eventually became CEO of Shadyville Entertainment. Consequently, mixtape releases weren’t as frequent during the 2010s, though he notably worked with several U.K. grime artists, including Wiley and Tinie Tempah, and continued to issue one-offs with rappers from several corners of the U.S. He established a close affiliation with Waka Flocka Flame, presenting tapes such as 2014’s I Can’t Rap, Vol. 1 and 2015’s Salute Me or Shoot Me 5. He also DJ’d for the rapper and performed with him, billed as the Turn Up Godz with material aimed at hard-partying EDM audiences. Whoo Kid continued to host the occasional tape, such as Smith and Hay‘s The Whoodlum Ball, issued in 2018.