Coach Ford once told me that he wanted to change Dowling Elementary’s mascot from a tiger to a cross between a mule and an alligator. We would have been the Dowling Jackassagators. He couldn’t make it happen, but he tried.

This is not “just AI music“, it’s amplified poetry. It’s always been about the words, it will always be about the words.

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Time, Love and Other Maladies

In this piercingly honest collection, poet Armando Heredia confronts the relentless passage of time and its haunting grip on love, memory, and identity. With rhythmic urgency and raw lyricism, Heredia unravels the universal “maladies” that define our humanity: the deception of nostalgia, the embers of fading love, the weight of regret, and the quiet terror of mortality.

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To Whom It May Concern (Which Is, Frankly, All of Us),

We write today not to announce a winner, nor to crown a king, but to formally recognize a vital pulse of truth resonating from the heart of our noisy, chaotic era. Armando Heredia’s lyrical work, the “money money money EP,” arrives not as a mere collection of songs, but as a stark, necessary mirror held up to the collective soul of a society drowning in green.
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🔥 Coach Ford – “All About the Benjamins” 🔥
Cash rules everything? Coach Ford flips the script. This track ain’t a celebration—it’s a subversive dissection of society’s money obsession.
Lyrical Vibe:
🎤 A sardonic anthem mocking the “who dies with the most toys wins” mentality.
💸 Features a rapid-fire glossary of 30+ slang terms for cash (from “cheddar” to “dead presidents”)—showcasing how language sanitizes greed.
⚰️ Nihilistic punchline: “Maybe you could buy the stairway to heaven… But when you close your eyes that last time, no one will be able to tell you it’s all about the Benjamins.”
Why Press Play?
If you crave lyrics with bite, social commentary, and a darkly catchy hook, this is your jam. Coach Ford weaponizes irony to ask: Is the grind really worth your soul?

A RAZOR-SHARP VERSE EXPOSÉ OF WEALTH, WORTH, AND WHAT WE TRADE OUR SOULS TO OWN

money money money, dissects capitalism’s gilded cage with surgical precision and darkly lyrical wit. From the relentless chase for “dead presidents” to the silicone-injected illusions of luxury, Heredia’s verses lay bare the addictions, absurdities, and empty promises of a world obsessed with status. Part social critique, part existential lament, this collection asks:
What does it cost us to win the rat race—and who do we become when we do?

Bold, unsparing, and unforgettably resonant, money money money is a mirror held up to the broken American Dream—and a call to reclaim what truly lasts.