Miki Hellerbach of Euphoria magazine opined that "while Kendrick Lamar's voice was the sound of the Mike Brown/ Eric Garner/ Freddie Gray protests with his song ' Alright', it seems clear why Lil Baby is the sound of now". Riley concluded that Lil Baby seamlessly articulates "the frustration, confusion, and innate call to stand up for something much bigger than himself". Riley Wallace of HipHopDX called the song and video "powerful" and appraised it as "a protest anthem that manages to strike even more poignantly by not inherently branding itself as such". "The Bigger Picture" received critical acclaim. But of all the feelings Lil Baby exorcises on the track, it's trepidation and fear that colors 'The Bigger Picture '". In verse, he's both angry and confused - 'I find it crazy the police will shoot you and know that you dead but still tell you to freeze' - trying to make sense of what millions of Americans are struggling to come to grips with. "Baby raps like a torrent, sprinting across the beat as he tries to come to grips with the weeks-long protests calling for justice after the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and countless others. Ĭharles Holmes of Rolling Stone summarized the song and its concept: With the line, "Corrupted police been the problem where I'm from, but I'd be lying if I said it was all of them", Lil Baby references the heated sentiment that all police officers are racist oppressors ("All Cops Are Bad" or A.C.A.B.). However, Lil Baby continues with optimism, rapping "But we gotta start somewhere". It's deep-rooted, it's systemic and it's going to require a lot of time to change". Riley Runnels of Paper noted "The chorus dictates what protestors are fighting for is 'bigger than Black and White'. Lil Baby then starts rapping, venting over a hard, clicking drum clap and a dramatic and "haunting" piano riff. It begins with morose keys, a soundbite taken from the news detailing the George Floyd protest in Minneapolis, and chants from Black Lives Matter protesters, chanting " I can't breathe". The song was written by Lil Baby, alongside its producers, Section 8, (who also produced Lil Baby's " We Paid") and Noah Pettigrew. He was accompanied by the city's Councilman Antonio Brown. Prior to the song's release, Lil Baby was seen marching down Mitchell Street in his hometown Atlanta, during the George Floyd protests in Georgia. The song received two nominations at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards: Best Rap Performance and Best Rap Song. It was later added to the deluxe edition of his second studio album My Turn. It is Lil Baby's highest-charting song as a lead artist on the Billboard Hot 100, debuting and peaking at number three, behind " Trollz" by 6ix9ine & Nicki Minaj and " Rockstar" by DaBaby & Roddy Ricch. Proceeds from "The Bigger Picture" benefit The National Association of Black Journalists, Breonna Taylor's attorney, The Bail Project, and Black Lives Matter. In the song, Lil Baby shows solidarity with the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests calling for justice against police brutality in the United States and systemic racism. It was released on June 12, 2020, in the wake of the murder of George Floyd. " The Bigger Picture" is a protest song by American rapper Lil Baby. In-depth analysis reveals improved robustness to out-of-vocabulary words andĮnhanced generalization in low-data regimes.2020 protest song by Lil Baby "The Bigger Picture" Leading text recognizers and demonstrate consistent performance gains,Īchieving state-of-the-art results over multiple benchmarks. Model-agnostic framework, named CLIPTER - CLIP Text Recognition, on several Is introduced that gradually shifts to the context-enriched representation,Įnabling simply fine-tuning a pretrained recognizer. Recognizer word-level features via cross-attention. Obtain a rich representation of the entire image and fuse it with the The crop-based recognizer with scene, image-level information. Representative power of recent vision-language models, such as CLIP, to provide However, current scene text recognizers operate on cropped text Download a PDF of the paper titled CLIPTER: Looking at the Bigger Picture in Scene Text Recognition, by Aviad Aberdam and 7 other authors Download PDF Abstract: Understanding the scene is often essential for reading text in real-world
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