Earlier this month, The Game said he's is apologizing to 50 Cent, G-Unit and all the affiliates under that umbrella for his part in the highly-publicized beef.
50 and G-Unit never responded, so it was unclear how they feel about it. Tony Yayo chose to speak on Game's apology with MTV, saying he isn't accepting.
In an interview with MTV, founding G-Unit member Tony Yayo explained that he ain't buying the Compton rapper's apology because he could change his mind tomorrow, calling him bi-polar.
"He said in that interview he might feel a different way the next day. Game is bipolar," Yayo said. "One day he's this way, the next day he's the next. When you got a group like G-Unit ... we sold millions of records, we got a lot of egos. From Buck and Game, I think they just gotta learn how to control them egos. In their eyes, to me, they got jealous of 50. They'll say, 'Yayo is up under 50's ass.' Or 'He's 50's yes-man.' It's not that -- I don't have any hate in my heart towards anybody. I don't have hate in my heart towards Game or Buck. But when we built a brand, G-Unit was selling millions of records like he said -- yeah, we was the Beatles.
Game's history does show that he tends to be an indecisive person, constantly contradicting himself. But, he doesn't care, saying that he'll speak how he feels at any given moment regardless of how it looks.
Yayo went on to say that he understands why both Game and Buck went against 50, explaining that a beef with the superstar rapper would get you more press than being underneath him. He even admitted that if he were to start a beef with his longtime friend, he'd probably get more attention as well, but says that would never happen because he's loyal.
"Let me keep it real. You're either gonna be down with 50 and be below him a little bit ... but you're still travelling the world. I just came back from Ireland, Switzerland and Turkey. So I don't care what nobody says," Yayo explained. "Or you could go against him and get more publicity. Buck and Game, when they went against 50, they got way more publicity. Way more people wanna interview them and know what the beef's with 50. So they gain more interest than me.
"If I was to flip on 50 today, it would get me more media than me being down with him. But I'm not a snake. So Game started the 'G-Unot' thing, tried to hurt the brand. C'mon, people respect the movement. They respect when they see guys from the 'hood who came from the 'hood -- started out with nothing, now got something, not knock each other when we get to the point where we all got money, houses, cars, kids, bills," he continued.
50 and G-Unit never responded, so it was unclear how they feel about it. Tony Yayo chose to speak on Game's apology with MTV, saying he isn't accepting.
In an interview with MTV, founding G-Unit member Tony Yayo explained that he ain't buying the Compton rapper's apology because he could change his mind tomorrow, calling him bi-polar.
"He said in that interview he might feel a different way the next day. Game is bipolar," Yayo said. "One day he's this way, the next day he's the next. When you got a group like G-Unit ... we sold millions of records, we got a lot of egos. From Buck and Game, I think they just gotta learn how to control them egos. In their eyes, to me, they got jealous of 50. They'll say, 'Yayo is up under 50's ass.' Or 'He's 50's yes-man.' It's not that -- I don't have any hate in my heart towards anybody. I don't have hate in my heart towards Game or Buck. But when we built a brand, G-Unit was selling millions of records like he said -- yeah, we was the Beatles.
Game's history does show that he tends to be an indecisive person, constantly contradicting himself. But, he doesn't care, saying that he'll speak how he feels at any given moment regardless of how it looks.
Yayo went on to say that he understands why both Game and Buck went against 50, explaining that a beef with the superstar rapper would get you more press than being underneath him. He even admitted that if he were to start a beef with his longtime friend, he'd probably get more attention as well, but says that would never happen because he's loyal.
"Let me keep it real. You're either gonna be down with 50 and be below him a little bit ... but you're still travelling the world. I just came back from Ireland, Switzerland and Turkey. So I don't care what nobody says," Yayo explained. "Or you could go against him and get more publicity. Buck and Game, when they went against 50, they got way more publicity. Way more people wanna interview them and know what the beef's with 50. So they gain more interest than me.
"If I was to flip on 50 today, it would get me more media than me being down with him. But I'm not a snake. So Game started the 'G-Unot' thing, tried to hurt the brand. C'mon, people respect the movement. They respect when they see guys from the 'hood who came from the 'hood -- started out with nothing, now got something, not knock each other when we get to the point where we all got money, houses, cars, kids, bills," he continued.
Comment