Age changes your definition of “home.” As your sphere of experience expands, you begin to understand that home isn’t just a warm bed, a room in a building, or a house on a block, but a feeling of being held, an inner glow sparked by embracing a loved one or hearing a familiar local accent. That’s the driving force behind MIKE’s latest project, the incisive, extraordinary Showbiz! It’s a portrait of a young man’s complicated search for a place to hang his hat, a quarter-life catharsis that’s both eager and apprehensive to approach the crossroads. The existential questions that have been a trademark of his work since 2017 remain, but there’s also a newfound, fire-seasoned wisdom: “Be patient, it ain’t every race that you lead,” he raps on “Then we could be free…”
MIKE spent his childhood shuffling between New Jersey, London, Philadelphia, and New York City, but home was always his mother, Anuoluwapo Sandra Akinboboye. The two shared a deep bond, and when she passed away in early 2019, MIKE plumbed the depths of his grief, trying to figure out where and to whom he belonged. In his early twenties, he forged a community with his label and collective 10k, and gained a legion of adoring followers (one appears at the end of “Da Roc” to express his love for MIKE: “Full glaze. I don’t care if I’m glazing,” he testifies). At this point in his career, MIKE spends chunks of each year on tour and devotes his time in New York to writing and recording. It’s a rambling life, one that weighs friendly faces in every city against the nagging anticipation of constant change.
Starting with 2022’s Beware of the Monkey, MIKE began uncurling. His music started to sound more assured, and by 2024’s Pinball, a full-length collaboration with producer Tony Seltzer, he was rapping with a fire in his belly, trading heartfelt examinations of depression for songs full of swagger and self-confidence. Showbiz! largely follows that path but tones down the fervor. MIKE’s raw immediacy is still there—most songs don’t have more than one verse—but this is not a step back into the shadows so much as a mindful reset. He roots himself in the here and now, treasuring every fleeting moment. “While you have it, you should cherish that/You won’t get it back,” he advises on “Lucky.” There’s a synthesis of his distinct modes, oscillating between delicate moments of presence, wherein MIKE analyzes his dreams or prays for peace, fleeting dips into depression, and blasts of triumphant, grinning shit-talk. Showbiz! celebrates that complexity, acknowledging that softness and strength often reinforce one another.