Slick Bowy ft Jae Cash – Innit (Music Video)
Slick Bowy - Innit


Slick Bowy Ft Jae Cash – Innit (Music Video Review)
Alright, let’s get into it “Innit” by Slick Bowy and Jae Cash walks into the room like it owns the place, but does it really? The video screams ambition: flashy cars, stylish outfits, late-night vibes, and the kind of confidence that comes from “I know I came from nothing but I’m pretending I didn’t.”
From the very first shot, Slick Bowy pulls off that cool swagger. He’s not yelling into the camera; he’s just staring with purpose the kind of look that says, “I made it, but I’m not done proving myself.” And Jae Cash? He’s right behind him, balancing the flex with melody in a way that feels both polished and real.
DIRECTED BY COOPER
The visuals are clean: well-shot, minimal dramatics, but with enough gloss to make you believe this isn’t just another “let me show off my money” video. There are scenes with neon lights, city backdrops, and just enough luxury to make the ambition feel earned not just a rented vibe.
But here’s where the critique kicks in: for a track called Innit, which feels like it’s supposed to be about proving a point, the video could’ve pushed further. The visuals play it safely. There’s wealth on display, but not struggle. He’s celebrating success, yes but where’s the path? Where are the dirt roads, the sweat, the blood that made that money possible? We get the destination, not the journey.
The interaction between Slick Bowy and Jae Cash works not forced, not staged. They feel like partners in crime, but crime for a better life. It’s ambitious, but not arrogant to a fault. There’s charm, there’s hunger, and there’s enough performance to make you replay it once or twice just to take it all in.
Lyrically, the song backs up the visuals. It’s about success, proving people wrong, and celebrating “making it” without forgetting the grind. The hook is catchy, easy to sing along to, and repeated enough to stick in your head without being annoying.
This is a solid video for an ambitious track. It’s not groundbreaking, but it does its job: it flexes, it motivates, and it reminds you that Slick Bowy and Jae Cash aren’t just here to play they’re here to win.

