The Game recently vouched for Rick Ross at a California concert by abruptly stopping his performance to call out his former rap group G-Unit and its leader, 50 Cent.
While performing "Put You On The Game," the Black Wall Street leader stopped his rhymes to display his disliking with 50.
"I'll show you where the Bloods at, where the Crips at," Game rapped at the event next to Black Wall Street's Clyde Carson. "Show you where they flip crack and they pitch at, let me put you on the game/Let me put you on the Game, ayyye/My unit is, aye yo, hold up, hold up, my unit ain't guerilla sh*t! F*ck 50 Cent! Sh*ttttttttt. GG-GGGG-Gggggg. Aye! Aye! Aye! Aye! Aye!" (The Los Angeles Leakers)
After performing "Hate It Or Love It," Game called out 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks and Tony Yayo at an Amsterdam concert over the summer.
"G-Unot!," Game shouted to an Amsterdam crowd at his concert last week. "G-Unit still don't get no love, f*ck them. F*ck 50. F*ck Banks. F*ck Yayo. There's only three n*ggas left, when I'm done, it's gonna be nobody. GGG GGG GGG-Unot!!! GGG-Unot! GGGG-Unot! GGG-GGG-GGGG-Unot! F*ck G-Unit!" (Forbez DVD)
He previously apologized to the Unit and said his past "G-Unot" taunts were due to his youth.
"Jimmy [Iovine] always says, 'Man, I told you guys not to break up the Beatles,'" Game said in an interview. "He says he told John Lennon the same thing a long time ago. But I was young, man. I was dumb. I did a lot of dumb things. I felt me and 50 clashed. I'm not gonna diss 50. I'm not gonna go back on the plane. He had his side, I had my side. I did what I felt was necessary for me and my career to have longevity and survive in hip-hop and music to be around when I'm Quincy Jones' age -- not just be Quincy Jones' age, but be a Quincy Jones. Now, four albums in, I can honestly say from Banks to Young Buck to [Dr.] Dre to Yayo to whoever, if it would have kept going, endless paper. Millions of albums sold --- because we were great together. Me and 50's chemistry was like how Method Man was to Redman when they get in. You know when Method Man gets with Redman, it's going down." (MTV)
50, however, also fires a jab at The Game on his Before I Self Destruct album with the song "Strong Enough."
"That Big Poppa, I'lll send your monkey a** to see Allah," Fif raps. "These n*ggas ain't strong enough, they money ain't long enough, when they bump heads with me...When I say I'll kill ya, I'll kill ya/As a kid I wasn't fittin' in/Special Ed kid in the back on Riddelin' -- Hooptie all f*cked up/Pockets all f*cked up/Now n*gga what's up?/I'm rich now, n*ggas know about my dividends -- Crib the size of a New York City clock now/Okay, okay, try me and get shot down/I'm like a Zebra, I got so many stripes/I'm the f*cking general/I run my ciick right/There was five of us, all of us millionaires/Now one's a junkie and one's a f*cking queer/Now it's three of us/That's the way it started..." ("Strong Enough")
While performing "Put You On The Game," the Black Wall Street leader stopped his rhymes to display his disliking with 50.
"I'll show you where the Bloods at, where the Crips at," Game rapped at the event next to Black Wall Street's Clyde Carson. "Show you where they flip crack and they pitch at, let me put you on the game/Let me put you on the Game, ayyye/My unit is, aye yo, hold up, hold up, my unit ain't guerilla sh*t! F*ck 50 Cent! Sh*ttttttttt. GG-GGGG-Gggggg. Aye! Aye! Aye! Aye! Aye!" (The Los Angeles Leakers)
After performing "Hate It Or Love It," Game called out 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks and Tony Yayo at an Amsterdam concert over the summer.
"G-Unot!," Game shouted to an Amsterdam crowd at his concert last week. "G-Unit still don't get no love, f*ck them. F*ck 50. F*ck Banks. F*ck Yayo. There's only three n*ggas left, when I'm done, it's gonna be nobody. GGG GGG GGG-Unot!!! GGG-Unot! GGGG-Unot! GGG-GGG-GGGG-Unot! F*ck G-Unit!" (Forbez DVD)
He previously apologized to the Unit and said his past "G-Unot" taunts were due to his youth.
"Jimmy [Iovine] always says, 'Man, I told you guys not to break up the Beatles,'" Game said in an interview. "He says he told John Lennon the same thing a long time ago. But I was young, man. I was dumb. I did a lot of dumb things. I felt me and 50 clashed. I'm not gonna diss 50. I'm not gonna go back on the plane. He had his side, I had my side. I did what I felt was necessary for me and my career to have longevity and survive in hip-hop and music to be around when I'm Quincy Jones' age -- not just be Quincy Jones' age, but be a Quincy Jones. Now, four albums in, I can honestly say from Banks to Young Buck to [Dr.] Dre to Yayo to whoever, if it would have kept going, endless paper. Millions of albums sold --- because we were great together. Me and 50's chemistry was like how Method Man was to Redman when they get in. You know when Method Man gets with Redman, it's going down." (MTV)
50, however, also fires a jab at The Game on his Before I Self Destruct album with the song "Strong Enough."
"That Big Poppa, I'lll send your monkey a** to see Allah," Fif raps. "These n*ggas ain't strong enough, they money ain't long enough, when they bump heads with me...When I say I'll kill ya, I'll kill ya/As a kid I wasn't fittin' in/Special Ed kid in the back on Riddelin' -- Hooptie all f*cked up/Pockets all f*cked up/Now n*gga what's up?/I'm rich now, n*ggas know about my dividends -- Crib the size of a New York City clock now/Okay, okay, try me and get shot down/I'm like a Zebra, I got so many stripes/I'm the f*cking general/I run my ciick right/There was five of us, all of us millionaires/Now one's a junkie and one's a f*cking queer/Now it's three of us/That's the way it started..." ("Strong Enough")
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