Arcade room, nail shop, or under neon lights: Brooklyn at night. Since June 5th, a music video has been flashing our radar — and not just for its polished artistic direction. In She Bugging, Khantrast delivers his punchlines wearing a Project X Paris jacket.
Artist: Khantrast, rapper from Brooklyn (New York)
Video:She Bugging, released June 5, 2026 — directed by Paul Song, produced by Flint
Counter: over 100,000 views in one week
Single:She Bugging (Whatchu Gonna Do), available for streaming
Arcade, nail shop and neon: the New York clips forget
Khantrast carves his own path in the New York scene. For She Bugging, the rapper from Brooklyn lays down his lyrics in settings that big videos ignore: an arcade game room, a manicure salon, a gold shop. A neighborhood New York, filtered through the eye of director Paul Song.
The track plays with clichés to better flip them. And the signal quickly spread: over 100,000 views on the counter in seven days, and the international hip hop press picking it up. Not bad for a confident jam session.
And what about the sound?
On a production by Flint, Khantrast delivers a deliberately low-tension track — no flashy drop, a loop that settles in and a relaxed flow. The lyrics turn the genre’s codes upside down: no catalog gold digger here, but an independent girl who pays her own bills.
It’s the mark of an artist who carves his own path in a New York scene saturated with manufactured buzz. The single She Bugging (Whatchu Gonna Do) is already available on all platforms — and the frequency deserves tuning in.
A must-see: She Bugging, directed by Paul Song.
A Revolt jacket on screen: when Paris captures Brooklyn
The keen eye will have noticed: throughout the video, Khantrast wears the Revolt zipped jacket from Project X Paris. No coincidence — the artist is part of the brand’s collaborations, which also organized a photoshoot with him around its Denim sets.
At Project X Paris, seeing one of our pieces cross the Atlantic to appear in a video shot in Brooklyn is exactly the kind of signal we watch for. Parisian streetwear now speaks the language of New York — and the frequency is good.
BROOKLYN CAPTURES PARIS
One jacket, one video, a signal flashing on both sides of the Atlantic. The radar stays on — the frequency is only opening up.