Fat Joe sat down with Ari Melber on MSNBC’s The Beat this week. The conversation hit on something New York has been carrying for a long time.
The Bronx rapper, born Joseph Antonio Cartagena, has been a die-hard Knicks supporter his whole career. He has never been quiet about it. From his early interview days to his biggest chart runs, Joe has stayed vocal about New York’s basketball team through the rough years and the near-misses. He was there for all of it. Staying loyal to the Knicks through a 53-year title drought takes a real commitment.
The Knicks hadn’t won an NBA championship since 1973. Fat Joe was two years old in 1973. He has no memory of the Knicks winning. He grew up in the South Bronx through the late 70s and 80s. He watched a team with real potential that could never close. The losses piled up. The championship stayed out of reach. That kind of history gets into your bones. It doesn’t shake loose easily.
The Knicks broke through in 2026, and New York went off. Fat Joe has ridden with this team his entire adult life. The title carries personal weight that goes well beyond the final score.
Joe brought all of that to his conversation with Ari Melber. Melber is the MSNBC anchor who has built The Beat into one of cable news’s more culturally aware shows. He takes hip-hop seriously alongside hard news. He’s quoted rap lyrics on air and pulled cultural references into political reporting. He was the right person to sit across from Fat Joe at a moment like this. The basketball story and the Bronx story are the same story.
MSNBC’s The Beat posted a clip of the interview on Instagram this week. The full sit-down is available on YouTube through MSNBC.
Fat Joe has been a fixture in hip-hop for more than three decades. He broke out in 1993 and has stayed relevant across multiple generations. His collaborations have crossed lanes, from pop work with Jennifer Lopez to rap sessions with Lil Wayne. Through all the moves in his career, the Knicks have been the one constant public loyalty. The championship at this point comes loaded with meaning. He’s been through enough losing seasons to fully appreciate what a title actually feels like.
A championship touches everyone in the city. A Bronx legend on national television talking about what the win means gives that feeling a real voice.
The South Bronx helped build hip-hop. The borough shaped American music and culture. A Knicks championship, for people from that community, is more than hardware. It’s long overdue.
The clip on The Beat’s Instagram drew more than 1,300 likes. For a sit-down interview post, that’s a signal of genuine crossover interest.
The full conversation is streaming now on YouTube via MSNBC.
