Sep 7, 2021 Kendrick really dropping he just waited for all this drakeXkanye drama to be over. but Dre and Eminem could drop anytime from now to november.
Sep 7, 2021 Yeah @Ricky we need to see how you look in a wedding dress! I assume you used a Durag as the veil?
Sep 7, 2021 For the people who might not check the grip thread his next video isn't for walkthrough so I'm sorry for the stans that want nothing more than to see Em's face again
Sep 7, 2021 and this is kind weird, cuz Eminem has Promoted Yela WITH A vIDEO... bOOGIE WITH A VIDEO..Why not Grip? maybe Eminem is working on his own s--- and don't have time anymore.
Sep 7, 2021 Possibly I just feel like it would be smart to do a vid for walkthrough but I'm not complaining cause I like momma told me
Sep 7, 2021 Not sure if this was posted already but they talk about Otherwize, the guy who beat Eminem in the 1997 rap olympics. More on this: Spoiler Otherwize ultimately took the crown. In an exclusive interview with HipHopDX, DJ Breeze said it wasn’t a landslide by any means. "Eminem held his own as well,” he tells DX. “The battle with Wize had to go extra rounds because these dudes were going at it. The battle had also a slight racial overtone to it. Obviously ’cause there were few white rappers at the time. So it definitely started to take on the feel of Black versus white. I will say this, the battle between those two guys was phenomenal. It had to go extra rounds because at one point it just seem like they were so evenly matched. “Even though you could feel the crowd wanting Otherwize to win, you couldn’t deny Eminem skill set. But I do feel confidently 100 percent that Otherwize did win the battle. Did he blow them out of the water? No, he did not. But he did win.” He adds, “It also adds a kind of lore to Otherwize’s name considering Eminem bought all the footage so nobody could see the battle.” DJ Bonds and DJ Breeze knew what Otherwize was up against. They’d heard through the grapevine Dr. Dre was working with a new artist — a white guy. “At that time, it was rare to see white rappers, and we all knew that was also a reason why Dre was working with Em besides his skills as an MC,” Breeze says. “To be quite honest, these out-of-towners came in and really underestimated these L.A. MCs. Why? Because at that time, Los Angeles’ underground Hip Hop scene was still just getting warmed up. So, I think these guys came in and thought they could just run over these guys. But MC’s here in our city quickly let it be known that this was not gonna be an easy battle.” https://hiphopdx.com/news/id.64378/...97-rap-olympics-ultimately-led-to-dr-dre-deal
Sep 7, 2021 that entire event was just to showcase Eminem’s skill. Didn’t really matter if he won or not.
Sep 7, 2021 It would definitely of been good promo for grip. Maybe they’re waiting to do a video later for whatever reason
Sep 7, 2021 Approaching that Rap battle’s 20th anniversary, The Murder Master Music Show interviewed J.U.I.C.E. for episode #348. Within, the Chicago MC offers a rematch to the man he defeated, and a few trademark jabs to entice him. “I was lucky enough to win that particular day, and there were a lot of factors that played into why I won.” The Windy City artist explains, “I started the head-games early. Like, how Floyd Mayweather does in a fight…or Conor McGregor. I started talking s--- early, so I had already tried to establish that I was dominant before we even met. I was lucky enough to beat him. They did a documentary on [the battle]. There’s a situation in place with Netflix now to air a brief documentary about it, which will let everybody know exactly who, kinda, I am, even now. Even now, because people are hearing me online and hearing me still at a top level, they hear me taking the art even further than I did against him. It’s the only reason I’m relevant now. It’s just because people are still listening; y’all help me spread the art.” J.U.I.C.E. released his New Money mixtape in 2008, in addition to singles and appearances. Continuing, J.U.I.C.E. warns, “Yeah, I did beat him. If he ever wanted to do it again, I’d beat him again.” While his career is lower profile, he professes, “I’m still the same me [that] I’ve always been.” As for Em’, J.U.I.C.E. compares a series of bars from 2000’s “k--- You” to 2010’s “Love The Way You Lie,” and breaks down the contrast. According to the Scribble Jam victor, he attributes Em’s decline in skills to past substance abuse and pressures of fame.
Sep 7, 2021 Wait, he tried to diss Em by using a content-driven song from 11 years ago as an example?
Sep 7, 2021 Not realiable no one remember the whole bs thing they did with revival claiming they new the release date and then they were flat out wrong and started s--- talking people on Twitter