J. Cole Announces 144-Page The Fall-Off Magazine

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA – APRIL 6: J. Cole performs onstage during the 2025 Dreamville Music Festival at Dorothea Dix Park on April 6, 2025 in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Photo by Prince Williams/WireImage)

Rap superstar J. Cole is entering hip-hop media in 2026 with the announcement of The Fall-Off Magazine, which debuts with interviews from GloRilla, Lil Yachty, J.I.D., and more. The 144-page magazine supports the rapper’s upcoming tour.

The magazine explores hip-hop through original reporting, photography, artwork, and design. The Fall-Off magazine’s editor-in-chief is award-winning journalist Bonsu Thompson. Produced in a limited print run, the magazine arrives as a companion to “The Fall-Off,” offering a deeper look at the culture that shaped both the artist and the album.

“Like all essential creative by and for a culture, this collector’s edition arrives when most needed by its audience,” said Thompson in the press release. “Hip-Hop journalism has somehow expanded, diversified, atrophied and become amorphous all at once. So my aim was to deploy storytelling and the humanization of starpower to educate the world on how Godly the craftsmen and innovation behind Hip-Hop commerce were, are and will forever be. No wifi needed.”

Hip-Hop Star J. Cole Announces The Debut Issue Of The Fall-Off Magazine, Featuring Cash Cobain, GloRilla, J.I.D., & More

The magazine’s publisher is Felton Brown. Thompson assembled a team of 60, including notable journalists, photographers, designers, and more. New York City’s own Cash Cobain will be one of the many featured artists in the magazine’s debut. For Brown, the magazine marks an evolution.

“‘The Fall-Off Magazine’ documents a singular moment in time,” Brown said. “Hip-hop has never stood still. Every generation has added to the culture, and this publication was built to create space for generations of old and new to commune in conversation with one another.”

Emphasizing on the importance of context, Brown added, “We built this publication because we believe context matters, conversation matters, critical thought matters and original content matters. Hip-hop has always mattered.”

According to J. Cole and Dreamville, the magazine is meant to carry forward the tradition of print publications that have long-form documented hip-hop into the next generation. The Fall-Off Magazine’s debut issue will be available for purchase on the upcoming tour and on the official website.


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