Despite a torrid run of critically acclaimed, popularly adored guest verses, Andre 3000 has shied away from hip-hop. As such, fans have tended to blame him more than they blame Big Boi for the duo's dearth of material over the last decade--though by this point, most hip-hop listeners have stopped pointing fingers and simply given up. In a new sketch for their Comedy Central show, Key and Peele imagine what it might be like when Andre and Antwan run into one another in 2015. The piece centers on a chance encounter at a coffee shop (where Dre orders a preposterously complicated drink, complete with green food coloring). He refuses to respond unless referred to by his full name and espouses the virtues of his new album, which he says is simply the sounds of metal screeching together, along with "one spoken word per song." Big Boi, of course, isn't having any of it.

In reality, the pair has only publicly come together once since the turn of the decade, for their reunion tour of the 2014 summer festival circuit. Their last proper group album was 2000's Grammy-winning Stankonia; where that won the statuette for Best Rap Album, they would take home Album of the Year honors for 2003's Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, which was a double-disc effort that separate the two artists. They've made no full-length releases since the soundtrack to 2006's ill-fated Idlewild. Big Boi, however, has dropped a pair of solo albums, including 2010's minor masterpiece Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty.

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