logo
Is this Perth's youngest rap music fan?

Is this Perth's youngest rap music fan?

Perth Now2 days ago
He might only be eight years old, but Yokine's Noah Gianotti was as passionate as any rap music fan lining up to meet British performer Central Cee at Perth Airport on Tuesday evening ahead of the star's RAC Arena show tonight.
One of forty or fifty dedicated locals attempting to greet the star, Noah was overcome with emotion after the drill rapper stopped to say hello, posed for a photo, and signed a cover of his 2025 album Can't Rush Greatness.
'I actually started crying after, because I'm a big fan of him,' Noah told PerthNow, with the youngster's parents on hand to capture the pair's encounter. Rapper Central Cee stops for an autograph for Noah Gianotti on Tuesday at Perth Airport. Credit: Nick Gianotti
But it wasn't enough to simply meet his hero, with the youngster compelled to take his fandom a step further.
'I actually did one of his rap verses back to him,' he added.
If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your .
To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide.
While the touring artist's music is crafted for adult ears, the RAC Arena show is billed as an all-ages event.
Sure to play Noah's favourite tracks Sprinter and BAND4BAND — cracking 900 million and 400 million listens on Spotify respectively, the youngster will not be attending the star's last Aussie show.
For him, the tangible nature of a face-to-face meeting with his musical heroes means more than simply cheering them on from a distance. Yokine's Noah Gianotti poses with his signed Central Cee album cover. Credit: Nick Gianotti
'I just like having the memories of waiting for them and just seeing if they'll come and say hi, and sign an autograph,' he said.
Noah's parents Nick Gianotti and Prue Earl have influenced his taste in music, and have been playing hip hop around the house for his entire life.
As patient as he is passionate, Noah has waited hours to meet the likes of Drake, Post Malone, and Blink-182's Travis Barker upon their trips to Perth in recent times.
His parents manage an Instagram account which shares all of his celebrity encounters.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom split confirmed in joint statement
Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom split confirmed in joint statement

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom split confirmed in joint statement

After months of speculation, Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom have finally confirmed their shock separation. The A-list couple got engaged in early 2019 after dating for three years, before welcoming their now four-year-old daughter Daisy Dove in 2020. Representatives for the couple confirmed the split in a statement shared with Page Six . 'Due to the abundance of recent interest and conversation surrounding Orlando Bloom and Katy Perry's relationship, representatives have confirmed that Orlando and Katy have been shifting their relationship over the past months to focus on coparenting,' the statement read. 'They will continue to be seen together as a family, as their shared priority is — and always will be — raising their daughter with love, stability and mutual respect.' Rumours have been swirling about the couple's separation since January, following reports of the pop star telling close friends that her nine-year relationship with the British actor was practically over. Perry, 40, has been spotted several times with her daughter while touring Australia in the past few weeks. Meanwhile, Bloom, 48 has made multiple solo public appearances, even attending the wedding of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez in Venice. More to come...

Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom break silence on separation
Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom break silence on separation

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Katy Perry, Orlando Bloom break silence on separation

After months of speculation, Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom have finally confirmed their shock separation. The A-list couple got engaged in early 2019 after dating for three years, before welcoming their now four-year-old daughter Daisy Dove in 2020. Representatives for the couple confirmed the split in a statement shared with Page Six. 'Due to the abundance of recent interest and conversation surrounding Orlando Bloom and Katy Perry's relationship, representatives have confirmed that Orlando and Katy have been shifting their relationship over the past months to focus on coparenting,' the statement read. 'They will continue to be seen together as a family, as their shared priority is — and always will be — raising their daughter with love, stability and mutual respect.' Rumours have been swirling about the couple's separation since January, following reports of the pop star telling close friends that her nine-year relationship with the British actor was practically over. Perry, 40, has been spotted several times with her daughter while touring Australia in the past few weeks. Meanwhile, Bloom, 48 has made multiple solo public appearances, even attending the wedding of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez in Venice. More to come...

Blinkers on for Demon after comforting fiancee Katie
Blinkers on for Demon after comforting fiancee Katie

The Advertiser

time5 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Blinkers on for Demon after comforting fiancee Katie

Alex de Minaur has revealed the difficulty of having to blank out the disappointment of his fiancee being knocked out of Wimbledon as he focused to keep his own title ambitions afloat at the grass-court grand slam. British star Katie Boulter bowed out, surprisingly beaten by Argentine lucky loser Solana Sierra, on Wednesday on the eve of de Minaur's own second-round match, which, after an absent-minded start, he won in four sets against French qualifier Arthur Cazaux. The exit of the high-profile Boulter was a headline tale in the British sports - and news - pages where her relationship with de Minaur as the most celebrated couple in tennis often features too. After the loss, she told reporters gloomily: "Sometimes I just have to accept that my moment might not come." De Minaur, who attended her match on Wednesday, was left to try to console his 28-year-old other half, to whom he got engaged just before Christmas. "There's no real rule book that you can go on, but it's not ideal, it's not nice," said the sympathetic 26-year-old Sydneysider. "I felt for Katie yesterday, and I've been in those positions myself. It's not easy by any means to forget about it. It's something that kind of stays with you. "On my side, there's obviously the part of doing my best to comfort her and try to be there for her, the same way she is there for me through the good stuff and the bad stuff. "It definitely does have a little bit of impact on yourself, and you've got to do your best to try and have a mental reset and kind of shift your focus towards yourself, realising you do have a match the following day that you've got to prepare for. "It's not going to be an easy one, it's going to be a battle. So, it's a lot of different aspects to deal with, which aren't easy. I think I can get better at it, but that's experience." De Minaur has become much more of a favourite with the British crowds since the pair became an item. "I've felt an amazing shift of support the last three or four years, and spending a lot more time here in the UK, it's been quite special," said de Minaur, calling Wimbledon his "second home slam" after getting a rousing reception following his 4-6 6-2 6-4 6-0 win. "It feels like I'm growing roots here. All the way from spending some time together, being at home with Katie, knowing the location a lot better, it definitely gives you an overall better feeling as you go into this tournament." Alex de Minaur has revealed the difficulty of having to blank out the disappointment of his fiancee being knocked out of Wimbledon as he focused to keep his own title ambitions afloat at the grass-court grand slam. British star Katie Boulter bowed out, surprisingly beaten by Argentine lucky loser Solana Sierra, on Wednesday on the eve of de Minaur's own second-round match, which, after an absent-minded start, he won in four sets against French qualifier Arthur Cazaux. The exit of the high-profile Boulter was a headline tale in the British sports - and news - pages where her relationship with de Minaur as the most celebrated couple in tennis often features too. After the loss, she told reporters gloomily: "Sometimes I just have to accept that my moment might not come." De Minaur, who attended her match on Wednesday, was left to try to console his 28-year-old other half, to whom he got engaged just before Christmas. "There's no real rule book that you can go on, but it's not ideal, it's not nice," said the sympathetic 26-year-old Sydneysider. "I felt for Katie yesterday, and I've been in those positions myself. It's not easy by any means to forget about it. It's something that kind of stays with you. "On my side, there's obviously the part of doing my best to comfort her and try to be there for her, the same way she is there for me through the good stuff and the bad stuff. "It definitely does have a little bit of impact on yourself, and you've got to do your best to try and have a mental reset and kind of shift your focus towards yourself, realising you do have a match the following day that you've got to prepare for. "It's not going to be an easy one, it's going to be a battle. So, it's a lot of different aspects to deal with, which aren't easy. I think I can get better at it, but that's experience." De Minaur has become much more of a favourite with the British crowds since the pair became an item. "I've felt an amazing shift of support the last three or four years, and spending a lot more time here in the UK, it's been quite special," said de Minaur, calling Wimbledon his "second home slam" after getting a rousing reception following his 4-6 6-2 6-4 6-0 win. "It feels like I'm growing roots here. All the way from spending some time together, being at home with Katie, knowing the location a lot better, it definitely gives you an overall better feeling as you go into this tournament." Alex de Minaur has revealed the difficulty of having to blank out the disappointment of his fiancee being knocked out of Wimbledon as he focused to keep his own title ambitions afloat at the grass-court grand slam. British star Katie Boulter bowed out, surprisingly beaten by Argentine lucky loser Solana Sierra, on Wednesday on the eve of de Minaur's own second-round match, which, after an absent-minded start, he won in four sets against French qualifier Arthur Cazaux. The exit of the high-profile Boulter was a headline tale in the British sports - and news - pages where her relationship with de Minaur as the most celebrated couple in tennis often features too. After the loss, she told reporters gloomily: "Sometimes I just have to accept that my moment might not come." De Minaur, who attended her match on Wednesday, was left to try to console his 28-year-old other half, to whom he got engaged just before Christmas. "There's no real rule book that you can go on, but it's not ideal, it's not nice," said the sympathetic 26-year-old Sydneysider. "I felt for Katie yesterday, and I've been in those positions myself. It's not easy by any means to forget about it. It's something that kind of stays with you. "On my side, there's obviously the part of doing my best to comfort her and try to be there for her, the same way she is there for me through the good stuff and the bad stuff. "It definitely does have a little bit of impact on yourself, and you've got to do your best to try and have a mental reset and kind of shift your focus towards yourself, realising you do have a match the following day that you've got to prepare for. "It's not going to be an easy one, it's going to be a battle. So, it's a lot of different aspects to deal with, which aren't easy. I think I can get better at it, but that's experience." De Minaur has become much more of a favourite with the British crowds since the pair became an item. "I've felt an amazing shift of support the last three or four years, and spending a lot more time here in the UK, it's been quite special," said de Minaur, calling Wimbledon his "second home slam" after getting a rousing reception following his 4-6 6-2 6-4 6-0 win. "It feels like I'm growing roots here. All the way from spending some time together, being at home with Katie, knowing the location a lot better, it definitely gives you an overall better feeling as you go into this tournament." Alex de Minaur has revealed the difficulty of having to blank out the disappointment of his fiancee being knocked out of Wimbledon as he focused to keep his own title ambitions afloat at the grass-court grand slam. British star Katie Boulter bowed out, surprisingly beaten by Argentine lucky loser Solana Sierra, on Wednesday on the eve of de Minaur's own second-round match, which, after an absent-minded start, he won in four sets against French qualifier Arthur Cazaux. The exit of the high-profile Boulter was a headline tale in the British sports - and news - pages where her relationship with de Minaur as the most celebrated couple in tennis often features too. After the loss, she told reporters gloomily: "Sometimes I just have to accept that my moment might not come." De Minaur, who attended her match on Wednesday, was left to try to console his 28-year-old other half, to whom he got engaged just before Christmas. "There's no real rule book that you can go on, but it's not ideal, it's not nice," said the sympathetic 26-year-old Sydneysider. "I felt for Katie yesterday, and I've been in those positions myself. It's not easy by any means to forget about it. It's something that kind of stays with you. "On my side, there's obviously the part of doing my best to comfort her and try to be there for her, the same way she is there for me through the good stuff and the bad stuff. "It definitely does have a little bit of impact on yourself, and you've got to do your best to try and have a mental reset and kind of shift your focus towards yourself, realising you do have a match the following day that you've got to prepare for. "It's not going to be an easy one, it's going to be a battle. So, it's a lot of different aspects to deal with, which aren't easy. I think I can get better at it, but that's experience." De Minaur has become much more of a favourite with the British crowds since the pair became an item. "I've felt an amazing shift of support the last three or four years, and spending a lot more time here in the UK, it's been quite special," said de Minaur, calling Wimbledon his "second home slam" after getting a rousing reception following his 4-6 6-2 6-4 6-0 win. "It feels like I'm growing roots here. All the way from spending some time together, being at home with Katie, knowing the location a lot better, it definitely gives you an overall better feeling as you go into this tournament."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store