American media personality, YouTuber, model, and singer, Trisha Paytas, who made cameo in Eminem’s 2009 “We Made You” music video, has recently shared a clip of her speaking about Eminem, aimed to the recent ‘Cancel Eminem’ activity on TikTok.
Trisha remembered the encounter she experienced with Eminem behind the scenes of “We Made You” video shoot: “Behind the scenes with Eminem was so fun. He was so nice. He was like ‘hi, thank you for doing this.’ He was insanely nice person.” Watch the video below:
Detroit rapper Sada Baby has recently done a live stream on Instagram where he showed love for Royce Da 5’9″, Big Proof and Trick Trick but was salty towards Eminem.
Sada Baby said: “You know I’m heminem. Not Eminem but I got love for Royce Da 5’9″, I love Royce. His homeboy [Eminem] is just weird. I love Trick Trick, his homeboy is just weird. Rest in peace Big Proof, he died two blocks from my grandma’s house, his homeboy is weird.”
For the record, Sada Baby and Eminem both jumped on Big Sean’s “Friday Night Cypher.” You can watch the video below:
Westside Boogie has been on an absolute fire lately as the Compton rapper is warming up for his upcoming album under Eminem’s Shady Records label. After dropping “Joe Exotic,” “Said Sum” and “Do 4 Love” freestyles, Boogie is back with the another one. This time the Shady artist destroys CJ’s hit song, “Whoopty.”
“Hundred percent of me went to the Lord, when momma was poor and I never wanted a sip.. Hate on the front of my lip, how I’m gon’ stomach this s**t, this hunger a son of a b**ch. Feel like you love to trigger me. Can’t forget how to touch an enemy.” raps Boogie.
Royce 5’9″ drops the lyric video of “Hero,” featuring White Gold, produced by Royce from Grammy-nominated album, The Allegory. “Hero” is a follow up song to “Cocaine” track off of his 2018 album Book of Ryan. In an interview with TMZ, among other things, Royce expressed concern with airing out his father as an addict on the song Cocaine. In this song, he tells us that people are not perfect.
One of the Hollywood’s power players, Anthony Mackie, whose latest film, Outside the Wire, is currently trending on Netflix, has recently visited Hot Ones on First We Feast where the host asked the actor how did he prepare for a Papa Doc role in Eminem’s 8 Mile movie, on which he replied:
“You know what’s interesting? I find myself very lucky to have studied Shakespeare. When you look at Shakespeare, the way he wrote, he wrote in verse. So the idea of approaching a rapper from the perspective of an actor, you are really just speaking in poems. I always said, one of the greatest rappers that ever lived was William Shakespeare. So It helped a lot as far as being able to understand the cadence, the verse, the meter and putting those words in rhyming couplets and into form.”
In one of the recent episodes of The Brilliant Idiots, Charlamagne Tha God and Andrew Schulz talked about the recent trend on TikTok where the users are trying to cancel Eminem.
Charlamagne Tha God: TikTok is trying to cancel Eminem. I think it’s funny as f**k when kids go back to the eras where they should not be even playing around. If you were talking to a child, you will be like ‘don’t go in that 90’s box.’ Thy are just playing old Eminem lyrics and doing what outrage culture does. Trying to build a case against Eminem. But I’m going to tell you why it will never work. THAT’S EMINEM’S WHOLE STICK.
Andrew Schulz: Yeah, it’s tricky man, because if you go back and listen to some Eminem songs or even like skits, Eminem was one of the wildest people in history bro.
Charlamagne Tha God: “Eminem was the reason we thought we could get away with that type of s**t. [Laughs] For real though. In the era we grew up where there is a bar so if you are growing up in entertainment, you are performer, you are rapper, comedian, radio personality, if your bars are the Howard Sterns and The Stars and Eminem, all these people you hear saying wild s**t, what are you supposed to do? It’s crazy but the funny part is seeing little kids being upset about it. You are not going to build a case against Eminem. You know why? Cause all the people who have a power to ‘cancel’ or whatever the f**k that means, they grew up loving Eminem too. Eminem was one of the biggest stars in the world and at one point THE BIGGEST STAR. He was everybody’s guilty pleasure. I never was a fan. I respected him as a lyricist but I never was a die-hard Eminem fan. But he has a lot of die-hard fans.
Battle rapper Daylyt has recently done an Instagram Live session where he talked about why Eminem’s “Lose Yourself” is the anthem for anyone who is battling anything and what is the difference between prime and today’s Eminem.
“Prime Em… What Eminem does with his rhyme pattern is so amazing bro. It’s Amazing. Then I’m listening to doubles and stacks and the passion he puts in his verse. Yo, Em is so fire. Prime Em, ni**a’s so fire. I’m listening to this “Lose Yourself” song and I’m thinking of the setup of that record and as a battle rapper and a person that has stepped into any battle, I don’t just mean battle rap, I mean basketball games, sports, anything that was a moment that could shift your life, this song spoke to you. Any moment in life where you go. This record is for all those moments. And I think about that all the time, like, yo, that’s fire!”
“I just when through Em’s whole catalog and then I went though new catalog and I realize what is the problem with Em right now. Em has grown, mentally, physically, spiritually. He can’t rap about the things he rapped no more. But mainly, I’m gonna tell you, mainly what is hurting Eminem. Right now, it’s beat selection. Em is trying to do what he normally does over modern beats and he’s traying to add modern style production inside of his ability. Like, when you are adding water and oil together, it just don’t mix. If Em is to get on some boom bap, some heavy boom bap s**t…BOY! We need Eminem and Alchemist. We need Eminem and Dilla. We need Eminem and Willie D. We need Eminem on whoever produces for Conway The Machine. We need Em and them type of ni**as bro. Em will do DAMAGE if he gets back to those type of beats. Em would do an ultimate damage. And I’m only saying this because I want to put energy out there and hopefully Eminem is watching this. And hopefully somebody that’s related to Eminem is watching this. And tell Em I said this personally.”
“At the Eminem universe, they hate me and love me because I’ve been f**king with Em so much. And I troll a lot because I’m a fan. That’s what fans do. They troll and say opposite of how they feel. I’ve been listening to a lot Eminem and other than that, I’ve been listening to a lot of Ice Cube, Tupac, Kendrick Lamar, J. Cole…”
A hatred campaign against one of the greatest rappers of all time, Eminem, has recently started on TikTok by likely bored Gen-Z who attempted to bring down Eminem once and for all. The reason? A violent lyrics used by Eminem on “Love The Way You Lie,’ featuring Rihanna.
In an apparent response to the viral movement, Eminem came through to unleash some animated visuals for “Tone Deaf,” a song from his latest album, Music To Be Murdered By, as the lyrics of the song references cancelation lines: “I won’t stop even when my hair turns grey, ’cause they won’t stop until they cancel me,” raps Eminem.
Though the clip is only an animated lyric video, one has to once if it foreshadows a more substantial clip to come — after all, there are plenty of vivid images found throughout that would feel right at home in an Eminem video. You can watch it below:
British Columbia rapper Merkules has released a new single “Bodies,” featuring Slaughterhouse’s Kxng Crooked and D12’s Swifty McVay, produced by C Lance and mixed by Nato.
In the the description on his YouTube channel, Merkules wrote: “I grew up listening to D12 and Slaughterhouse so having both these legends on the same track from ‘Merk Mondays’ is a huge blessing.”
The Bay Area icons, E40 and Too $hort has recently spoke about the supergroup they are forming with Snoop Dogg and Ice Cube and revealed that Dr. Dre will be making an appearance on the new album:
“Dre is on there, man. He’s on there. Snoop got him on there. Dre is on there. That’s Snoop’s guy. That’s Ice Cube’s guy. They shot a big movie together. He’s on there. Ain’t no doubt about it. You don’t even got to ask him.” said Too $hort
“Definitely on there. Shout out to Dr. Dre. He already did his part. It’s already certified. He’s on the project.” – added E-40.
“We told Ice Cube on one song, ‘Bro, you just went too hard, too hard,’ and he waited about a couple hours and then he hit back and said, ‘I’m not changing sh*t. We was like, ‘F*ck it.’ Me and $hort and Snoop, we just … even Snoop say, ‘You know me, dog. I’m the easiest. You know me. I’m the baby of the bunch. I’m out of it.’ We was like, ‘All right. That is Ice Cube. F*ck it. Let him do what he do.’ We ain’t trying to water down sh*t. He going hard, too. Everybody going hard. We going hard on that b*tch, just jam.” collectively told by $hort and E-40.
KXNG Crooked has recently sat down with Math Hoffa’s latest episode of ‘My Expert Opinion’ series where the Death Row legend remembered the times when he was asked to diss Eminem and Dr. Dre:
“We just talked about me being on Death Row Records and to slide over there and to be able to… Being myself. I always tell artists to do this. It’s a life jewel, really, but for artists, in particular, be yourself. I was on the radio, live with Ja Rule, Irv Gotti, and Ja played that joint “Loose Change” that he had dissing Eminem where he said uh some real crazy stuff about Em’s daughter and all that. He premiered it on the radio, and you know, it was lit, he was at it. And the host was like, ‘Yeah, so Crooked, you’re up next. You’re about to send some shots to Dre and Em, you got something for them?’ And I was like, ‘Nah, that’s not my beef. I just got over here, you know. I’m trying to make great music. I’m trying to bring that back to the W. That’s my focus, Yo, Dre is the greatest producer ever. Sounds like Em got bars and all that’. The gist of what I was saying was I don’t believe that Suge brought me to Death Row to be a wind-up doll, go after people, and to be a paper soldier. I believe that it was something deeper than that, and I don’t have any problem with these guys. I don’t even know what this whole shit is about, I just got here. What I’m gonna do, just jump in?”
“And little did I know… I was at record store Fat Beats. I was about to do this mixtape called Young Boss vol. 1, and half of the beats was going to be Chronic 2001 beats, and the other half was going to be DJ Premier beats. So I went to Fat Beats, got The Chronic 2001 instrumental vinyl, and my phone rang. That was Dre. I was off Death Row at the time, and he was like, ‘Yo, I heard you that night when you was on the radio. Me and Em was listening’, or some to that effect. And he was like, ‘Yo, you never took a shot. Every time they try to get you to shoot at me, you never did’. And he said, ‘I respect the f**k out of that. So, you know, you want to get down, holla at me’.”
“I truly believe that that night is one of the reasons why I was able to have a Death Row past and still be able to go over there to Shady and have a future, and it’s all good. It would have been easy for me to say, ‘Hell yeah, f**k them ni**as, let’s go’. That was easy. But I was like, ‘Nah, I’m not gonna do that’. And that’s just what was on my heart.”
Couple of days ago, Detroit’s one of the most uniquely talented rapper Nasaan hit Twitter to reveal to his fans how Eminem inspires him when he feels down:
“So crazy cause I feel old as f**k. I’m 22 and get mad I am not a megastar but then I will talk to Eminem and he will be like ‘Man, I wish I was where you were when I was at your age or that advance musically.’ That s**t makes me feel a lot better.”
Check his tweet below:
so crazy cuz i feel old af (22) and get mad i’m not a megastar but then ill talk to Em and he’ll be like “Man, i wish i was where you were when i was your age or that advance musically”