Why does the game have beef with eminem




















Both sides made a formal announcement in March that noted they would be laying their beef to rest. We now know that this friendship was not going to last. The peace treaty didn't last. It wasn't long until G-Unit criticised The Game's street cred and sent him packing once more, announcing he will not be featured on any of their albums. Potato head doll in the video of his 'Piggy Bank.

In September Game must have been feeling bad about his attacks on 50 Cent, as when he paid Angie Martinez a visit he said on air that he wanted to "talk and just to see where our heads are and see if maybe we can come to an even playing field — respectfully to each other", appealing to 50 to work together to "figure it out as grown ups". It was all quiet on 50's end. Picture: Instagram. But I was young, man.

I was dumb. I did a lot of dumb things… Now, four albums in, I can honestly say from Banks to Buck to Dre to Yayo to whoever, if it would have kept going, endless paper. Millions of albums sold — because we were great together. A few days later, in January , Tony Yayo spoke on behalf of G-Unit when he said that they would not be accepting any apology from The Game. Game tweeted 50 in November saying he was willing to end the feud, asking 50 to just pick up the phone and call.

We hope Game isn't still sitting by the phone… Cause 50's yet to act on the request. Email required. By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Notice and European users agree to the data transfer policy. Ja Rule and 50 Cent are going at it on social media and somehow Eminem got tossed in the middle of their beef.

In the 90s, the two had an all-out war, with many fans agreeing that Fifty took the bragging rights in that one. Still, many are divided as to who has the better catalog between the two. In the s, they also had some clashes, some of which were of a physical nature.

In the comment section of the live stream, Gotti took it upon himself to try and silence Fifty fans. All good. During one chapter, he claimed that it was 50s info that led to a federal investigation into Murder Inc — an accusation that 50 Cent has denied. However, Eminem did not appear in any of these D12 tracks, it was only the 5 other members. After hearing this Royce went to his local radio station for an Interview claiming he's going to be coming back much harder 3 times.

While there they played the, at the time unheard, Shit On You disses to Bizarre. Over the next few days, Royce lived up to his word and released all 3 tracks, "Malcolm X", which is a diss to all of D12, "What We Do", also a diss to D12, and finally "We Riding", a full track directed straight towards Eminem.

Each track coming harder than the last. Although We Ridin is a track directed at Eminem, it is not a full force diss track, it is merely Royce's feelings about Eminem put on wax. After these tracks, D12 had clearly been shown up. Proof being the ring leader of D12 did a remake of 50 Cents "Many Men" and released it. The track was seen as an awful attempt to diss. This was the last diss record that was released. After all this, Royce and Proof were still exchanging threats and such and decided to end it for good, by meeting in Detroit, just the two of them.

When met up, Royce and Proof went at it and were both arrested for each carrying a weapon. They both spent a night in the cell together and had a chance to talk it through and solved the beef there that night. Obviously Eminem and Royce patched things up as they have made many collaborations after this beef. Eminem's beef with Ja rule was actually started with rapper 50 Cent who had beef with Ja rule when both rappers had begun to show interest in a career in rap.

It is important to note both were born in the Jamaican area of Queens New York. Though both made it big, at the time Ja Rule was considered one of New York's biggest rappers and had gone platinum in with his album "Venni Vetti Vecci" whereas 50 Cent was only starting to sell mixtapes and wasn't into a big-time career like Ja was.

At this point, 50 Cent hasn't been discovered by Eminem or by that matter signed to Shady Records and was looking to get signed. During a video-shot for Ja's single "Murda 4 Life", 50 Cent apparently tried talking to Ja and according to 50 he was very disrespectful to him and when 50 suggested to Ja and Ja's crew that he might try to get signed to Murder Ink he was straight up rejected in a very disdainful way.

Later after Fiddy 50 got offended Ja reportedly stated that Fiddy didn't like to see "all the love he got". Later that same month Ja rule was held at gunpoint in Southside Jamaica Queens where he was filming another music video and was robbed of his chain.

Sometime later Ja Rule spotted the person who robbed him at a club with 50 and was furious. In Fiddy's biography "From Pieces to Weight" he describes the interaction: "Ja saw me in a club with the kid who robbed him. Even later in the year, 50 released a single from his shelved debut album where he disses Ja rule, full disclosure in the track Fiddy doesn't actually say Ja Rule directly but he painted a good enough picture and his fans got the point.

The next step that happens in the beef really started to turn it violent when Fiddy and Ja Rule, unaware of the other, were both booked to perform at an Atlanta nightclub. There are many different conflicting reports of what happened that night but it is clear that it started somehow like this; when the two saw each other they spoke and had a brief argument where Ja questioned Fiddy and then it turned physical with both sides swinging punches.

The exact way the fight happened is unclear as Ja claims that he pulled Fiddy's shirt over his head and started swinging at him, Fiddy claimed that he knocked him out and stole yet another one of his chains, Chris Gotti says that Ja Rule beat him and then Fiddy ran, some of Fiddy's crew said that Fiddy broke Ja's chain.

But ultimately whatever happened that night sparked more violence in March when Fiddy was stabbed at Hit Factory studios in New York after Ja Rule was told he was recording there. This ultimately started a full scale diss war between Shady Records and Murder Inc. Ja stated in the song:. As you probably know Eminem doesn't take lightly to mentions of his daughter on the track and just a week after Ja's diss was released, Eminem, 50 Cent and Busta Rhymes diss him in "Hail Mary". Ja responded in his album "Blood In My Eye".

However, this album was considered too weak to respond to as it panned and failed to match his success in his other albums.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000