Eminem responds 50 Cent & Drew Barrymore’s video message!

50 Cent has recently set down with Drew Barrymore to talk about how he built a franchise at STARZ with five different shows, and what his new show Black Mafia Family is about! The two also record a video message for Eminem.

After recording the video, Fif asked Eminem to send the message in exchange and it looks like Eminem actually did it.

Few hours ago, 50 Cent shared an Instagram post with the caption: “Eminem texted me and was like ‘Hey I know I am late to the party. I just saw the Drew Barrymore show. Bro you are crazy, only you would do something like that.”

Check out the post below:

50 Cent shows love to legendary Rakim

Taking to Instagram to pay homage, 50 Cent shared a clip from the legendary Rakim’s Tiny Desk Concert, with the caption: “If you do not know who this is please do not talk to me in life, please and thank you,” Rakim fires off rapid-fire bars from his classic Eric B collaboration “Know The Ledge.”

Check out Fifty showing love to the one of the greatest rappers of all time and watch the 2018 Tiny Desk Concert after the jump below:

50 Cent – “Wish Me Luck,” ft. Snoop Dogg, Moneybagg Yo & Charlie Wilson

Snoop Doggy Dogg makes a grand entrance on stage for his performance during the Black Mafia Family premiere screening, which was held at Cellairis Amphitheatre at Lakewood last night in Atlanta, Georgia.

The legendary rapper was joined on stage by some other performers, including TV series’ executive producer 50 Cent, Moneybagg Yo and many more.

50 Cent, Moneybagg Yo and Snoop Dog even performed the series’ theme song “Wish Me Luck” for the crowd of fans and partygoers, which also features Charlie Wilson on the hook.

Now the song is officially out on streaming platforms. You can bump “Which Me Luck” below:

50 Cent tells Jimmy Kimmel why Eminem didn’t pursue movie career after “8 Mile”

Yesterday, 50 Cent visited Jimmy Kimmel where the two talked about going to Florida to do color commentary for the Holyfield fight, his nine-year-old son Sire’s birthday and taking him to a candy store, playing video games together, all of the different shows he’s producing, working with Eminem and Snoop Dogg on “BMF” for Starz, and his theory about Nicki Minaj’s cousin’s friends balls.

“I persuaded Eminem to come up on BMF. I actually directed the episode that he is in. I called him. I put pressure on him.” said Fifty

Later few seconds, Jimmy asked: “He did 8 Mile movie. It was huge hit and he was great in it. And then he was like ‘okay that’s it I’m done.’ why?”

On which Fiddy replied: “I think he had terrible experience on 8 Mile project cause he just didn’t wanna go back again, ever again. There was period when Hollywood would offer me things to get Eminem cause agent would go like ‘yeah this is good go give it to 50 and then him.’ I offered him 8 million dollars for one project, he looked at it and he was like ‘I think we should do the movie like Warriors.’ and I’m like ‘did you just missed 8 million dollars thing?’ and then he says ‘lets just go and record records man.'”

You can watch it below:

Eminem, 50 Cent & Dr. Dre — Rolling Stone updates “500 Greatest Songs Of All Time”

One of the most prestigious magazine in the world, Rolling Stone has just updated their list of “500 Greatest Songs Of All Time.” They also noted that the list was created from over 250 artists, writers and industry figures who participated in a poll of over 4,000 songs. Check the list below.

#444 – 50 Cent – “In Da Club”

Rolling Stone: 50 Cent’s rhyme skills caught the notice of Dr. Dre and Eminem, who helped assemble this party track. “50 walked into the studio and picked up a pen,” Dre said. “We were done in an hour. We just made some shit we wanted to hear.”

#424 – Blackstreet – “No Diggity” ft. Dr. Dre & Queen Pen

Rolling Stone: No one wanted to record “No Diggity.” Teddy Riley introduced the idea for this R&B rump shaker to Aaron Hall during failed reunion talks for their pioneering New Jack group Guy; Hall passed. Riley’s then-current group, Blackstreet, didn’t like it either: He had to persuade them to do it, even singing the first verse as encouragement. With its old-school harmony vocals and a sample of some Bill Withers acoustic guitar, “No Diggity” became their biggest hit and a guaranteed floor filler ever since its release.

#320 – Dr. Dre & 2Pac – “California Love” 

Rolling Stone: There are a few myths surrounding the creation of 2Pac’s biggest hit. One claims that Dr. Dre made the beat during a barbecue at his Calabasas, California, home, and 2Pac jumped in the booth and dropped his verse in a few minutes. Another claims that Dre intended the track for his follow-up to The Chronic, but Death Row don Suge Knight coerced him into giving the single to Pac — whom he had just bailed out of prison and signed to the label. Regardless, “California Love” represents gangsta rap at its most flamboyant and cinematic.

#248 – N.W.A. – “Straight Outta Compton” 

Rollin Stone: N.W.A came in with a bang, kicking off their debut album with this West Coast gangsta attack, changing hip-hop forever. “Straight Outta Compton” cranked up the violence to previously unheard of levels, with DJ Yella and Dr. Dre’s explosive production and Ice Cube boasting “Here’s a murder rap to keep you dancin’/With a crime record like Charles Manson!” It takes only three lines for the first weapon to get fired. “Straight Outta Compton” was an instant sensation, claiming L.A. as rap’s new capital. As Chris Rock said, “It was kind of like the British Invasion for Black people.”

#223 – Eminem – “Stan,” ft. Dido

Rolling Stone: Eminem’s scariest song is rooted in a terrifying nightmare: What if the rapper’s violent, self-destructive lyrics could drive an obsessed fan to murder? “He’s crazy for real, and he thinks I’m crazy, but I try to help him at the end of the song,” said Eminem of his character. “It kinda shows the real side of me.” Anchored by a sample from Dido’s “Thank You” (which became a hit itself as a result) and augmented by a haunted house’s worth of sound effects, “Stan” proved that Eminem understood the dark side of his music better than his worst critics did.

#190 – N.W.A. – “F**k Tha Police”

Rolling Stone: With this song, the long-standing battle between young Black men and the LAPD was placed out in the open for white America to see and hear. The confrontational L.A. crew’s label, Priority Records, received a bulletin from the FBI denouncing the song for encouraging “violence against and disrespect for the law-enforcement officer”; the promoter who booked the group’s next tour imposed a contract that the band would be fined $25,000 if it ever played the song live. But as MC Ren told Arsenio Hall, the song was more about venting than threatening: “Once in everybody’s lifetime, they get harassed by the police for no reason, and everybody wants to say it, but they can’t say it on the spot ’cause something will happen to ’em.”

#167 – Eminem – “Lose Yourself”

Rolling Stone: Few rappers can throw themselves into a character as fully as Eminem, but for the relentlessly striving anthem to his not-exactly-autobiographical film debut, 8 Mile, the rapper said he struggled to find a voice for his alter ego, Jimmy “B-Rabbit” Smith. “I have to make parallels between my life and his,” he wrote. “That was the trick I had to figure out — how to make the rhyme sound like him, and then morph into me somehow, so you see the parallels between his struggles and mine.” Ditching his persona shifts and shock-rap gags, Eminem turned in a track as earnest as an Eighties-soundtrack fist pumper.

#29 – Dr. Dre – “Nutin’ but a ‘G’ Thang” ft. Snoop Dogg 

Rolling Stone: At the intersection of past and future West Coast hip-hop sits Dre’s debut solo single, a smooth and inimitable kickback classic that would help define his career following the demise of N.W.A. In a radio interview, the producer and rapper revealed that the song originally sampled a track by Boz Scaggs before he settled on the bass line from Leon Haywood’s 1975 hit “I Want’a Do Something Freaky to You.” Snoop was in jail while Dre was recording, so he had to originally record his parts over the phone. “I really wanted this demo done, so he called in and I taped the receiver of the phone to the mic,” Dre recalled. “You can hear jail sounds in the back.”

For the full list, check here.

Ja Rule to 50 Cent: “You are nothing without Eminem, white boy made you”

After so many years, the beef between 50 Cent and the Murder Inc. Records is still alive.

After last night’s Verzuz battle between Fat Joe and Ja Rule, 50 Cent became a trending topic on Twitter during the event. This caused Irv Gotti to respond the matter on Instagram:

“You all talking that 50 s**t, all good. He got beat up, stabbed up. Shot up. Sued us. That is all I am going to say. Your hero is not what you think he is. Period and facts.” said Gotti.

50 Cent responded back to him with several Instagram posts, saying: “I put their whole label out of business, f**k with me if you want to. I would stay out of my way if I was not me.”

Today, Ja Rule has also responded to Fifty in an exclusive interview with radio host Big Tigger: “Eminem made you, created you. You are nothing without that f**king white boy. Stop it.”

You can listen to it below:

BREAKING: Eminem to play ‘White Boy Rick’ in 50 Cent’s “Black Mafia Family” TV series

Detroit legend Eminem will play Richard Wershe Jr., known as “White Boy Rick,” in 50 Cent’s upcoming Starz drama TV Series, based in Detroit.

The show, ‘BMF,” (Black Mafia Family) is based on the story of two brothers, Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory and Terry “Southwest T” Flenory, who came from Detroit and led one of the most influential crime families in the United States in the 1980s.

Eminem will be playing Wershe Jr. also known as White Boy Rick, who was an FBI informant in Detroit during the 80s. Unfortunately, he will be in only one episode.

50 Cent confirmed the news via his social media accounts! You can check out the announcement and the trailer of the show below:

50 Cent says nobody can top Eminem’s verse on Nas’ “EPMD 2”

Today, NAS came out with the second installment of his Grammy-winning King’s Disease album and a collaboration with Eminem came with it.

50 Cent shared a fragment of Eminem’s verse on “EPMD 2” on his Instagram with the caption: “No you can not front on this verse. You just gotta listen, shut the f**k up and listen.

In the comment section, Fifty also commented: “Top 5 dead or alive,” referring to Eminem.

You can check out the post below:

BREAKING: 50 Cent to release new album in September, talks possible Eminem feature

It’s been over seven years since 50 Cent released an album. Animal Ambition was put out in June 2014 via G-Unit Records and was met with mixed reviews.

In a new interview with Independent UK, 50 Cent announced that new music is on the horizon. The G-unit legend revealed that his highly anticipated Street King Immortal album has been scrapped but that a new album is on the way.

“That original version of Street King Immortal is not being released but I am releasing new music in September. Will Eminem feature on it? I did not finish the tracks with him…I am not gonna tell who is on it because I am the most exciting person on the album [laughs].” said 50.

Fiddy continues: “Eminem is still one of the best artists to me. He means more to the culture than a lot of other artists – a lot of people looked at him and saw themselves, and understood how they fit into hip-hop culture.”

For the full interview, visit Independent here.

Ed Sheeran tells funny story behind his Eminem & 50 Cent collaboration

Ed Sheeran chats about everything from salvaging Eric Clapton’s guitar from a fire, to collaborating with Eminem and 50 Cent, to the time he brought Courteney Cox to Tesco at Hot Ones on First We Feast.

At one point, the British superstar was asked to tell a bigger story behind his song “Remember The Name” featuring Eminem and 50 Cent.

“Collaboration with Eminem and 50 Cent fall in my Top 3 career accomplishments. Cause when I was in school, I mean, look at me, if you would to go to my school and ask which one of this kids is gonna do a song with Eminem and 50 Cent, no one would have guessed me.”

“I’ve done a song with Em for his album. And then I put together the collaborations project. I sort of asked him, I’d love to get 50 on it, and he was like ‘yeah no problem, I’ll get Fifty on it.’ And I remember, 50’s gonna probably disagree with that but, I was walking into the Wembley dressing room where we were presented the plaque. And I don’t think Fifty had a f**king clue who I was. I think afterwards he was like ‘oh, Shape Of You.’ But you could see in his eyes he could not recognize me.” says Ed Sheeran while laughing.

You can watch it below:

The Game raps about G-Unit & a battle with 50 Cent on his new song

The Game is back with the bars. The Compton rapper teams up with DJ Kayslay for their lethal collaboration, “72 Bar Assassin.” Over the menacing beat, Game unleashes a series of brash and unapologetic rhymes.

In the song, Game mocks Diddy with the following lines: “Flow like a condom / Ni**as still not fu**in’ with it. King of New York, king of L.A. / And I don’t give a f**k what Diddy say / My semi spray.”

He also addresses a Verzuz battle rumors with 50 Cent “Just to talk about a Verzuz with 50 / Tell Swizzy I need a hundred cash.”

Later, he shouts out Young Buck and Lloyd Banks: “Can’t see me now, couldn’t see me with Young Buck and ’em / Shout out to Lloyd Banks, album go hard, ni**a.. You supposed to do your squad like Yo Gotti do ’em / Therefore it’s still the Unit long as I can still move ’em.”

Listen to the song below:

50 Cent calls Lloyd Banks ‘lazy’ in his book, Banks responds on a new song “Stranger Things”

Last week, Lloyd Banks dropped his first proper studio album in over a decade, titled The Course of the Inevitable.

In 50 Cent’s book Hustle Harder, Hustle Smarter, Fiddy writes: “I always felt that if I had maybe done a better job teaching Banks and Yayo how to evolve and change their habits, they each would be in better places right now. While I was out hustling, Banks was more content staying on his porch and watching the world from there.”

“Banks wanted things to come to him, as opposed to going out and getting them for himself. That’s not me trying to assassinate his character—the guy has ‘Lazy Lloyd’ tattooed on his arm. He literally wears his laziness on his sleeve.”

On a song titled “Stranger Things,” from new album, Banks responds to Fifty: “When you’re f**ked up, behavior turns irregular quick, sometimes the pressure overwhelms when you’re the head of the clique/But don’t get ahead of yourself, I ain’t bending for s**t/Nobody sees your vision until you’re successful.”

He continues, “Your favorite’s nowhere near me when I’m dedicated/Always humble, usually disciplined and never hated/Call me quiet, call me lazy, talent never faded/It’s frustrating when your grindin’ ain’t appreciated/Should have been dead in my twenties, s**t, at least I made it/Guess I gotta prove myself again, increase your payment.”

Listen to the song below:

Exit mobile version