E.D.I. Mean talks how Hollywood dirt Pac's legacy, and the squashed beefs

E.D.I. Mean talks how Hollywood dirt Pac's legacy, and the squashed beefs

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Hii Interview ilifanyika 2014.

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DX: A lot of people don’t like Tupac’s character in the Notorious movie. What are your thoughts on it?

E.D.I. Mean: I feel like Anthony Mackie was put in a bad position, because he had to work with a bad script. No disrespect to the family of Biggie, but I feel like [Notorious] was a movie that didn’t do him any justice. If y’all gonna do Biggie like that, it might as well get released on VH1 like the TLC movie and not in theaters. I told the producers of the upcoming Tupac movie the very same thing. I told them if they were trying to Notorious my nigga, then they should just leave it alone. ‘Pac doesn’t have a story that you can just tell in an hour-and-a-half. You’ve got to really do it on some Malcolm X or Ray movie time lengths. That’s the only reason I’m involved in the movie, and if I see that they are not trying to do that, then I’m not going to touch it. I’m the one that has to deal with the fans on the street, even with the Biggie movie! We had nothing to do with that movie, yet fans were telling me that it was fucked up the way we allowed them portray ‘Pac. And I’m like, “What the https://jamii.app/JFUserGuide do you mean? I didn’t have anything to do with that.” I had one fan tell me that they were going to kick Anthony Mackie’s ass if they ever saw him. I had to tell him that it wasn’t Anthony’s fault because he had to work with what he was given. As for the upcoming Tupac movie, I’m real happy that John Singleton is going to be involved, because he’s someone that actually spent time with ‘Pac, and I feel like this project means something to him. It’s not just another check or a vanity project to him. I feel like he’s going to take his time, put real effort into it, and try to bring the best picture to light. It’s not about making ‘Pac look good or bad—it’s about telling the story for the people that love the story.

DX:
There’s a sense of concern about the executives above him who call the real shots.

E.D.I. Mean: Absolutely, and hopefully they give him the freedom to do his thing and not come in with all that business shit that fucks up a movie. You had one of Putin’s aides say that Tupac was the only thing that interested him from America. This is a global fucking icon, so don’t do the movie if it’s going to be on the level of Notorious. Again, no disrespect to his family and friends.


DX: Have you ever made peace with the people who were put on blast in the “Bomb First” and “Hit Em Up” songs?

E.D.I. Mean:Going back to your question, we’ve run into everybody from Puffy on down. We had a skirmish with Puffy at an MTV event many years ago, but that was worked out. ‘Pac was just an extreme dude, and if he did something he went all the way with it. He wasn’t into subliminal disses, and I can’t even imagine him trying to do that someone. The thing is after the Makaveli album, he said that he got that shit out of his system and he wasn’t doing that anymore. He actually contacted Nas to let him know about the Makaveli album, and as a matter of fact, he was the only one that ‘Pac reached out to. He told him that the album was coming out and that he was going after him in it. They made peace at the MTV Awards—the meeting that his brother Jungle spoke about saying that we were scared and they had us under pressure. We had half of Jersey with us at the MTV Awards, and Nas was only with his brother and like two other dudes. I remember that meeting well because ‘Pac kept telling him, “Speak up! I can’t hear you.” Nas was saying in a low voice, “There’s no beef, you know what I’m saying?” ‘Pac was like, “Huh? I can’t hear you. Speak up!” They squashed it after that because ‘Pac was a Nas fan, as we all were. In hindsight, maybe we shouldn’t have all gone that route with those songs, but we were going to ride with ‘Pac to the end regardless, and we did. Fans always tell us to do a new “Hit Em Up” and just diss everybody. It’s never just one person they want us to diss but the whole Rap game. I’m like, “Uh, alright. Cool.”

E.D.I. Mean Recalls Tupac's Reconciliation With Nas At The 1996 MTV VMAs | Rappers Talk Hip Hop Beef & Old School Hip Hop | HipHopDX
 
E.D.I Amin anyooshe maelezo tu kuwa Pac hakuwa mnafiki ukweli ataongea tu hata uwe rafiki wa damu kama aliweza kumpa makavu bosi wake Suge sembuse Nas
 
E.D.I Amin anyooshe maelezo tu kuwa Pac hakuwa mnafiki ukweli ataongea tu hata uwe rafiki wa damu kama aliweza kumpa makavu bosi wake Suge sembuse Nas
Ndio pretty much anachosema hapo, Nas sauti iligoma kutoka mbele ya Pac. Na Pac alikuwa hana noma sana na Nas, ilikuwa ni challenge tu kama kawaida ya rap.

'/Now i'm worldwide, N!ggaz gossip and hide/
no offense to Nas, but the whole fcukin world is mine/'
 
You's a beat biter
A Pac style taker
I'll tell you to your face you ain't shit
but a faker
Softer than Alize with a chaser
About to get murdered for the paper
E.D.I Mean approach the scene of
the caper
Like a loc , with Little Ceas' in a
choke
Gun totin' smoke. We ain't no
motherfucking joke
Thug Life, niggas better be known
Be approaching in the wide open,
gun smoking
No need for hoping, it's a battle lost
I got em crossed as soon as the
funk is bopping off
 
You's a beat biter
A Pac style taker
I'll tell you to your face you ain't shit
but a faker
Softer than Alize with a chaser
About to get murdered for the paper
E.D.I Mean approach the scene of
the caper
Like a loc , with Little Ceas' in a
choke
Gun totin' smoke. We ain't no
motherfucking joke
Thug Life, niggas better be known
Be approaching in the wide open,
gun smoking
No need for hoping, it's a battle lost
I got em crossed as soon as the
funk is bopping off
That was the best diss song ever, actually it was more than a diss. Pac went all bananas, and delivered. Johnny J once said, he would never wish to record anything of the sort, ever again
 
and since we all came from a woman
got our name from a woman
and our game from a woman
i wonder why we take from our women
why we rape our women
do we hate our women
i think it's time to kill for our women
time to heal our women
be real to our women
and if we dont we'll have a race of babies
that will hate the ladies
that make the babies
and since a man can't make one
he has no right to tell a woman when and
where to create one
so will the real men get up
i know you are fed up ladies
but keep your head up.
 
No diggity-doubt about that Chief. To me he was a great man too, great teacher.

exactly,his songs stand the taste of time like dear mama that is the greatest song ever,you never get tired of listening to it.
 
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