

On a late-July afternoon this year in Manhattan, Miller met with me for one of the first interviews he would give about Swimming. Hundreds of fans mourn the death of rapper Mac Miller at a public vigil held at Frick Park’s Blue Slide playground which he named his 2011 debut album after. “Up until the last words we spoke to each other, it was nothing short of pure excitement.”

“He just wanted people to know how hard he’d been working,” Thundercat says.
#SNAPCHAT USERNAME FOR MAC MILL TV#
He and Miller were set to hit the road this fall on a joint tour behind the rapper’s new album, Swimming, and, more urgently, they had plans to shoot a bold music video in mid-September for the collaborative track “What’s the Use?” A wide-ranging cast of celebrities and friends of Miller’s, from TV personality Guy Fieri to Kehlani and Mac DeMarco, were set to make cameos dancing along to the song. Thundercat and Miller had big plans for the rest of the year. He was like, ‘The last thing he said was, “Bro, I just want to make it to tour.” ‘ “ The first time I cried in years.” When he heard the news, Ty quickly phoned Thundercat. “I went outside of my bus to try to catch a breather,” he says. When he learned of Miller’s passing, via text message while on tour in Tampa with G-Eazy and Lil Uzi Vert, Ty broke down. “She didn’t think he was gonna be that cool, but he was supercool. “He had everybody in the room dying laughing.” Miller also met Fifth Harmony member Dinah Jane for the first time that day, “and she was talking about how nice he was,” Ty remembers. “He was in good spirits,” says Ty, who first met the rapper through the pair’s mutual friendship with Miller’s onetime Rostrum labelmate Wiz Khalifa. Two weeks before Miller’s death, Ty Dolla $ign, who was in the midst of working with him on a joint project, spent the day with Miller at Chalice Recording Studios in L.A. Miller had been working with his sober coach since 2016, and was working out at an L.A. By all accounts, he was in his best mental and physical condition in years when he died. I had never been that close to somebody who had issues like that.”īut for those closest to him, Miller’s death still came as a shock. “He had sort of made a turn after the making of Blue Slide Park, where I think he got a little bit deeper into drugs and was talking about it,” says Benjy Grinberg, the founder of independent Pittsburgh record label, Rostrum Records, who signed Miller to his first record deal in 2010 and served as his de facto manager for several years afterward. It peaked around the time he was making his 2012 mixtape, Macadelic. Miller openly discussed his dependence on lean, a combination of codeine and promethazine. The last such incident before the night of his death, according to his assistant, had been on September 4th, just three days before his death. While he was attempting sobriety, he had frequent “slip-ups,” according to a statement in the autopsy report, that could be excessive. Miller had long struggled with addiction. and discovered Miller’s body that anyone close to him knew anything was wrong. It was only when the assistant arrived the next morning - he typically woke Miller at 11:30 a.m. on September 6th, and spoke to his mother on the phone that night. They are far more likely to view and enjoy your story if they don’t have to listen to it.According to witness statements in the autopsy report, Miller was last seen by his assistant around 10:30 p.m. – Sure, some videos are enhanced by sound, but not everyone is going to be able to turn their volume up when they’re on the go. Don’t feel the need to make a story every day, and don’t keep recycling the same story schtick. – If you take your Furby out every single day, then it’s going to get old. Try to keep your story length between 3 and 6 snaps, depending on the theme. – On the other hand, if you don’t include enough snaps, people won’t get your point. Even silly stories and how-tos should be capped. If you’re doing a themed story (and you should), don’t go overboard with how long you make it.

– We already mentioned this above, but it bears repeating. Who wants to scroll through dozens of snaps a day – none of which are connected? This is tempting, because you’d hate for people to miss out on the perfect picture, but it will only make people less likely to look at your story at all. – Don’t add every snap you take to your story. Whether you’re choosing an idea from this list or coming up with one of your own, there are a few Snapchat Story no-nos that too many people ignore. Can’t seem to capture the right blooper? Just filter your pets.
