[2][3] Upon their return to the United States, they first lived in Ann Arbor, Michigan, then moved to Detroit.
[4] At age 15, Weaver started performing at open mic nights and getting into Detroit's battle scene in its late-1990s heyday.
Weaver's passion for activism was sparked when members of the Ku Klux Klan gathered and spoke at Ann Arbor's city hall.
[2] They collaborated with Finale, Suheir Hammad, Marco Polo, Tunde Olaniran, and Waajeed of the Platinum Pied Pipers.
festival in Washington, D.C.[6] That same year, Invincible received attention after the music video for "Ropes" was banned on mtvU, MTV's college-targeted channel, after it was deemed "too problematic" because of its theme of suicide.