Joseph Edgar Foreman (born July 28, 1974), known by his stage name Afroman, is an American rapper, singer, and musician. His fourth album, The Good Times (2001), featured the singles "Because I Got High" and "Crazy Rap". "Because I Got High" was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2002 for Best Rap Solo Performance.

Foreman wrote a number of protest songs to memorialize a 2022 raid of his Ohio home by sheriff's officers that yielded no charges or criminal evidence. Several officers sued Foreman for incorporating unflattering video footage of the raid taken by surveillance cameras inside his home into the songs' music videos. Foreman prevailed in court, arguing his work was protected by freedom of speech laws; in an amicus brief, the ACLU characterized the suit as a strategic lawsuit against public participation.

Early life

Foreman was born on July 28, 1974 in Los Angeles. He lived for a short while in Mississippi before moving to South Central Los Angeles at an early age. He later lived in Palmdale in the High Desert, briefly in Las Vegas, and then in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

Career

The first song Foreman wrote was entitled "Hairy Carrie". Written during his time in middle school, it was a "diss song" about a student known for her harassment of fellow students' appearances. </blockquote>Foreman performed in his church at a young age, playing drums and guitar. where he met drummer Jody Stallone, keyboardist/bassist Darrell Havard, and producer Tim Ramenofsky (a.k.a. Headfridge). Foreman attributes his musical success in part to leaving southern California, saying that Midwesterners and Southerners were more willing than people in Los Angeles to experiment with their taste in music.

thumb|right|Afroman performing in 2011

Ramenofsky produced and released Foreman's album Because I Got High in 2000 on T-Bones Records; it was distributed primarily through local concerts and the file-sharing service Napster before the title track was played on The Howard Stern Show. The song humorously describes cannabis use degrading the narrator's quality of life. Foreman joined the lineup of Cypress Hill's fall festival "Smoke Out" with Deftones, Method Man, and others. Universal Records signed Foreman to a six-album deal, and released The Good Times in 2001, a compilation of Foreman's first two albums together with new songs. He was part of the 2010 Gathering of the Juggalos lineup. In October 2014, Foreman released a remix of "Because I Got High" to publicize the usefulness of cannabis, as part of the effort to legalize its sale across the United States.

Presidential ambitions

On December 20, 2022, Foreman's campaign manager, Jason Savage, announced that Foreman would stand in the 2024 presidential election as an independent candidate, citing inflation, the housing market, law enforcement corruption, and legalizing marijuana as key campaign issues. He made an FEC filing on April 5, 2023.

On April 20, 2026, Foreman indicated that he would seek the nomination of the Libertarian Party in the 2028 presidential election.

Personal life

In 2003, Foreman declared himself to be a Christian. As of 2026, he lives in Adams County, Ohio.

Raid on Ohio home

In August 2022, the Adams County Sheriff's Office in Ohio searched Foreman's home while he was in Chicago, on suspicion of kidnapping and drug trafficking. No evidence of criminal activity was found and no charges were laid. Foreman said he only had a few blunts and unused pipes. He posted about a previous burglary on his home after which the sheriff's department threatened him with arrest if he kept checking about the progress of the case. He was told they did not have time to provide him with an update.

He recorded three songs criticizing the raid, titled "Will You Help Me Repair My Door", "Lemon Pound Cake"—set to the tune of "Under the Boardwalk" by The Drifters, and subsequently the title track of his 18th studio album—and "Why You Disconnecting My Video Camera." He released three music videos on December 29, 2022, composed primarily of security camera recordings of the raid. The music video for "Will You Help Me Repair My Door" was viewed over 11&nbsp;million times, while "Lemon Pound Cake" was viewed 5&nbsp;million times on the YouTube platform.

On March 14, 2023, seven sheriff's officers (Shawn Cooley, Justin Cooley, Michael Estep, Shawn Grooms, Brian Newland, Randolph Walters, Jr., and Lisa Phillips) sued Foreman, alleging that his use of the video of the raid invaded their privacy. The suit said that the music videos and social media posts Foreman had made resulted in "humiliation, ridicule, mental distress, embarrassment and loss of reputation." The court dismissed the claim that he improperly used the officer's likeness for commercial purposes, but let the claims of defamation and false light go to trial. The trial began in March 2026, with Foreman taking the stand to testify on the second day. Throughout the trial, Foreman wore a suit and a pair of sunglasses adorned with US flags. On the stand, Foreman told jurors,

Each of the plaintiffs also testified. Afterwards, Foreman saw a 500% increase in streaming.

Discography

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  • Fro-Ever (1997)
  • My Fro-losophy (1998)
  • Because I Got High (2000)
  • Sell Your Dope (2000)
  • The Good Times (2001)
  • Afroholic... The Even Better Times (2004)
  • Jobe Bells (2004)
  • 4R0:20 (2004)
  • The Hungry Hustlerz: Starvation Is Motivation (2004)
  • Drunk 'n' High (2006)
  • A Colt 45 Christmas (2006)
  • Waiting to Inhale (2008)
  • Frobama: Head of State (2009)
  • Marijuana Music (2013)
  • The Frorider (2014)
  • Happy to Be Alive (2016)
  • Cold Fro-T-5 and Two Frigg Fraggs (2017)
  • Save a Cadillac, Ride a Homeboy (2020)
  • Happily Divorced (2020)
  • Lemon Pound Cake (2022)
  • Famous Player (2023)
  • 20 Twenty-Fro (2024)
  • Freedom of Speech (2026)

References

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  • Foreman at Apple Music
  • Foreman at Spotify Music