Nothing in hip hop is real, everything is a work.
And no, he's not a black leader, he's an entertainer.
His contradictions make him weird. Shit like this makes his fans super weird: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CG9mtOqPMw
If 2Pac was alive today he'd be doing buddy cop movies alongside Ice Cube.
Kill your idols. Stop hero worshipping celebrities.
2pac apparently has more conspiracy theories than Elvis.
As much as I love Pac, you can't simply just assume that the whole thing was fabricated.
No one really knows the full extent of the story and what really took place.
Sure it is. I'm sure all that domestic violence stuff with Dre' is made up too right? Just because they did horrible things doesn't take away from their artistic work.
Charge? And convicted. Stop trivialising something so brutal and inhumane, there's a very real reason the victims (and I don't like that word) are called 'survivors'. It's disgusting that someone who commits sexual assault is hailed as some kind of hero because of his talents.
Some believe that the rape case came about because of the police shooting case in Atlanta. So a little insight on that first.:
Of all Tupac's much publicized, violent confrontations in the tempestuous year 1993, none better illustrated the degree to which he had become the exemplar of the gangsta-rap mandate than his arrest for shooting two off-duty police officers in Atlanta. The officers, he would later say, had been harassing a black motorist. The charges were dropped when it emerged that the policemen had been drinking and had initiated the incident, and when the prosecution's own witness testified that the gun one of the officers threatened Tupac with had been seized in a drug bust and then stolen from an evidence locker.
Gangsta rap had been provoking concern among law-enforcement authorities in this country since at least 1989
Can we talk about the rape case at all?
Okay. Nigel and Trevor took me to Nell's. When we got there, I was immediately impressed, because it was different than any club I''d been in. It wasn''t crowded, there was lots of space, there were beautiful women there. I was meeting Ronnie Lott from the New York Jets and Derrick Coleman from the Nets. They were coming up to me, like, "Pac, we''re proud of you." I felt so tall that night, because they were people's heroes and they saying I was their hero. I felt above and beyond, like I was glowing.
Somebody introduced me to this girl. And the only thing I noticed about her: She had a big chest. But she was not attractive; she looked dumpy, like. Money came to me and said, "This girl wants to do more than meet you." I already knew what that meant: She wanted to f*ck. I just left them and went to the dance floor by myself. They were playing some Jamaican music, and I''m just grooving.
Then this girl came out and started dancing-and the shit that was weird, she didn''t even come to me face-first, she came a**-first. So I''m dancing to this reggae music; you know how sensuous that is. She's touching my dick, she's touching my balls, she opened my zipper, she put her hands on me. There's a little dark part in Nell's, and I see people over there making out already, so she starts pushing me this way. I know what time it is.
We go over in the corner. She's touching me. I lift up my shirt while I''m dancing, showing off my tattoos and everything. She starts kissing my stomach, kissing my chest, licking me and shit. She's going down, and I''m, like, Oh shit. She pulled my dick out; she started sucking my dick on the dance floor. That shit turned me on. I wasn''t thinking, like, This is going to be a rape case. I''m thinking, like, This is going to be a good night. You know what I''m saying?
Soon as she finished that-just enough to get me solid, rock-hard-we got off the dance floor. I told Nigel, "I''ve got to get out of here. I''m about to take her to the hotel. I''ll see you all later." Nigel was, like, "No, no, no. I''m going to take you back." We drive to the hotel. We go upstairs and have sex, real quick. As soon as I came, that was it. I was tired, I was drunk, I knew I had to get up early in the morning, so I was, like, "What are you going to do? You can spend the night or you can leave." She left me her number, and everything was cool. Nigel was spending the night in my room all these nights. When he found out she sucked my dick on the floor and we had sex, he and Trevor were livid! Trevor is a big freak; he was going crazy. All he kept asking me was, "D-d-did you f*ck in the a**?" He was listening to every single detail. I thought, This is just some guy shit, it's all good.
What happened on the night of the alleged rape?
We had a show to do in New Jersey at Club 88. This dude said, "I''ll be there with a limo to pick you up at midnight." We went shopping, we got dressed up, we were all ready. Nigel was saying, "Why don''t you give her a call?" So we were all sitting in the hotel, drinking. I''m waiting for the show, and Nigel's, like, "I called her. I mean, she called me, and she's on her way." But I wasn''t thinking about her no second time. We were watching TV when the phone rings, and she's downstairs. Nigel gave Man-man, my manager, some money to pay for the cab, and I was, like, "Let that b*tch pay for her own cab." She came upstairs looking all nice, dressed all provocative and shit, like she was ready for a prom date.
So we''re all sitting there talking, and she's making me uncomfortable, because instead of sitting with Nigel and them, she's sitting on the arm of my chair. And Nigel and Trevor are looking at her like a chicken, like she's, like, food. It's a real uncomfortable situation. So I''m thinking, Okay, I''m going to take her to the room and get a massage. I''m thinking about being with her that night at Nell's. So we get in the room, I''m laying on my stomach, she's massaging my back. I turn around. She starts massaging my front. This lasted for about a half an hour. In between, we would stop and kiss each other. I''m thinking she's about to give me another blow job. But before she could do that, some ni**as came in, and I froze up more than she froze up. If she would have said anything, I would have said, "Hold on, let me finish." But I can''t say nothing, because she's not saying nothing. How do I look saying, "Hold on"? That would be like I''m making her my girl.
So they came and they started touching her a**. They going, "Oooh, she's got a nice a**." Nigel isn''t touching her, but I can hear his voice leading it, like, "Put her panties down, put her pantyhose down." I just got up and walked out the room.
When I went to the other suite, Man-man told me that Talibah, my publicist at the time, had been there for a while and was waiting in the bedroom of that suite. I went to see Talibah and we talked about what she had been doing during the day, then I went and laid down on the couch and went to sleep. When I woke up, Nigel was standing over me going, "Pac, Pac," and all the lights was on in both rooms. The whole mood had changed, you know what I''m saying? I felt like I was drugged. I didn''t know how much time had passed. So when I woke up, it was, like, "You''re going to the police, you''re going to the police." Nigel walks out the room, comes back with the girl. Her clothes is on; ain''t nothing tore. She just upset, crying hysterically. "Why you let them do this to me?" She's not making sense. "I came to see you. You let them do this to me." I''m, like, "I don''t got time for this shit right here. You got to chill out with that shit. Stop yelling at me and looking at me all crazy." She said, "This not the last time you''re going to hear from me," and slammed the door. And Nigel goes, "Don''t worry about it, Pac, don''t worry. I''ll handle it. She just tripping." I asked him what happened, and he was, like, "Too many ni**as." You know, I ain''t even tripping no more, you know? ni**as start going downstairs, but nobody was coming back upstairs. I''m sitting upstairs smoking weed, like, Where the f*ck is everybody at? Then I get a call from Talibah from the lobby saying, "The police is down here."
And that's what landed you in jail. But you''re saying that you never did anything?
Never did nothing. Only thing I saw was all three of them in there and that ni**a talking about how fat her a** was. I got up, because the ni**a sounded sick. I don''t know if she's with these ni**as, or if she's mad at me for not protecting her. But I know I feel ashamed-because I wanted to be accepted and because I didn''t want no harm done to me-I didn''t say nothing.
This guy gets it! HahaNo idea that Tupac dated Madonna.
I did know, however, that he was another black man caught up in the mix, trying to make a dollar out of fifteen cents.
Oh yes, some of his fans are fucking suuuuuper weird. I can attest, I ran a fan website of his and closed it down due to shit getting out of hand.
No idea that Tupac dated Madonna.
I did know, however, that he was another black man caught up in the mix, trying to make a dollar out of fifteen cents.
A dime and a nickel?
No evidence at all huh and later the charges were even dropped i just read a page or two back? Crazy.
That I didn't even know. Should hopefully show some folks in here not to draw any conclusions so quickly.
🤔Tupac - whose parents were both Black Panthers - also suggested Madonna, then 36, hurt him by saying in an interview that she was "'off to rehabilitate all the rappers and basketball players' or something to that effect".
If 2Pac was alive today he'd be doing buddy cop movies alongside Ice Cube.
Kill your idols. Stop hero worshipping celebrities.
Wait a minute. 2Pac was black?!
Yeah and I believe it was this interview where he spoke about that too. He also gets emotional and teary eyed when talking about the problems in the hood. I've always found this a damn good interview.
https://youtu.be/rBf-vpGReWU
None of the tough guy Pac here, here's a dude talking sense. A smart guy with the right intentions.
Man, it's impossible to reconcile his talking points. So the media and politicians are unfairly characterizing him as a gangsta rapper, and his music and lyrics aren't glorifying gang life and violence and dying senselessly over bullshit (but the Thug Life ethos has nothing to do with that? what?), and he's not a negative influence and doesn't bear any responsibility for what's happening on the ground? Okay, but his public persona is like the all-time definitive case study on successfully glorifying all of it, and he comes out of that bid releasing the most incendiary diss track in history which pulled a ton of people into his personal beef, turned friends on each other, and got folks killed. He crossed a line that no one was willing to cross before and everyone knows better than to cross again. All for image.
I really despise when criminals try to absolve responsibility for their actions and leave it up to "God". No matter, because I guess God gave up on him a year later
To me, the problem with it is that he didn't assault her. What he did was still fucked up, and he was still an asshole for it, more or less (he basically allowed his "friends" to do it while he slept in another room), but we can be mad at him for what he actually did, instead of making it worse than it seems to try to make ourselves seem more righteous about it.
All for image.
He was more than an entertainer just like I'm more than a videogamer.
I also lead others. Does that not make me a leader?
Tupac lead plenty of people while also being an entertainer.
Nonsense, Biggie wasn't the one who pulled Tupac into this and had nothing to do with setting him up or being apart of it.No, not true.
Abbreviation:
The diss came about because biggie was disloyal, was supposed to sign to pac and he didn't, pac told biggie to rap for the women they buy music, he schooled him
On where to go, be more mainstream, biggie took the advice and went elsewhere, 2pac got shot 5 times in the same building biggie and puff were in, crawled to them asking for help, they didn't help, they set him up/were apart of it
2pacs in jail
Biggie drops "who shot ya"
2pac gets out, drops hit em up
"I'm mad at biggie I'm rushing the nigga"
No east vs west, all media fabrication.
Two people had a problem.
We're not dealing with image here, it's disloyalty, betrayal and elimination
No, not true.
Abbreviation:
The diss came about because biggie was disloyal, was supposed to sign to pac and he didn't, pac told biggie to rap for the women they buy music, he schooled him
On where to go, be more mainstream, biggie took the advice and went elsewhere, 2pac got shot 5 times in the same building biggie and puff were in, crawled to them asking for help, they didn't help, they set him up/were apart of it
2pacs in jail
Biggie drops "who shot ya"
2pac gets out, drops hit em up
"I'm mad at biggie I'm rushing the nigga"
No east vs west, all media fabrication.
Two people had a problem.
We're not dealing with image here, it's disloyalty, betrayal and elimination
Who are you? Not a joke, but really.
You want to talk about leaders in the black community who are also entertainers, look at a Zach Randolph or a Kareem Abdul Jabbar.
I'll remember 2Pac for his great turns in Poetic Justice and Juice, some great songs, and some ridiculous beef, but not as someone who notably gave anything to the community or served as a source of inspiration and knowledge.
Not one single piece of evidence was provided of rape, no forceable entry, nothing.
Man, it's impossible to reconcile his talking points. So the media and politicians are unfairly characterizing him as a gangsta rapper, and his music and lyrics aren't glorifying gang life and violence and dying senselessly over bullshit (but the Thug Life ethos has nothing to do with that? what?), and he's not a negative influence and doesn't bear any responsibility for what's happening on the ground? Okay, but his public persona is like the all-time definitive case study on successfully glorifying all of it, and he comes out of that bid releasing the most incendiary diss track in history which pulled a ton of people into his personal beef, turned friends on each other, and got folks killed. He crossed a line that no one was willing to cross before and everyone knows better than to cross again. All for image.
Man, it's impossible to reconcile his talking points. So the media and politicians are unfairly characterizing him as a gangsta rapper, and his music and lyrics aren't glorifying gang life and violence and dying senselessly over bullshit (but the Thug Life ethos has nothing to do with that? what?), and he's not a negative influence and doesn't bear any responsibility for what's happening on the ground? Okay, but his public persona is like the all-time definitive case study on successfully glorifying all of it, and he comes out of that bid releasing the most incendiary diss track in history which pulled a ton of people into his personal beef, turned friends on each other, and got folks killed. He crossed a line that no one was willing to cross before and everyone knows better than to cross again. All for image.
You do know "forceable entry" is the only definition for rape, right? Because you point that out as though since theres no forceable entry, its not rape.
I'll remember 2Pac for his great turns in Poetic Justice and Juice, some great songs, and some ridiculous beef, but not as someone who notably gave anything to the community or served as a source of inspiration and knowledge.
I know the backstory just fine (and it's more complicated than that). .
Didn't say what I said out of ignorance.
You do know "forceable entry" is the only definition for rape, right? Because you point that out as though since theres no forceable entry, its not rape.
No idea that Tupac dated Madonna.
I did know, however, that he was another black man caught up in the mix, trying to make a dollar out of fifteen cents.
You have my respect. It takes a man to own up to his failures and still keep moving forward.I'm a father of 6, a husband, an ex-con, a deacon, a leader at my organization, an alcoholic, a public speaker, a MBA recipient, an artist, a food bank volunteer, etc. I'm many things.
If he didn't inspire YOU or give YOU knowledge, cool. That doesn't mean he didn't lead, inspire, and give knowledge to others. In fact, there are many who would say he did.
I'm a father of 6, a husband, an ex-con, a deacon, a leader at my organization, an alcoholic, a public speaker, a MBA recipient, an artist, a food bank volunteer, etc. I'm many things.
If he didn't inspire YOU or give YOU knowledge, cool. That doesn't mean he didn't lead, inspire, and give knowledge to others. In fact, there are many who would say he did.
🤔
That's not Tupac's verse[.spoiler]
I thought it was said plainly.
He writes about what he has observed and participated in all from the heart: the good, the bad, the ugly.
THUG LIFE is his adolescence. It's significant but is also a phase or a period in his life.
The media focuses on character assassination, glorification, etc, rather than talking about the real 2pac that you learn about through his music.
Have I been under a rock, or does it seem as if interracial dating has been a contentious topic lately? I've read multiple articles on it this week
You have my respect. It takes a man to own up to his failures and still keep moving forward.
He inspired me also to keep pushing, keep growing, and keep learning. No matter what.
I just want you to know YOU are inspiring. Seriously.
Man, it's impossible to reconcile his talking points. So the media and politicians are unfairly characterizing him as a gangsta rapper, and his music and lyrics aren't glorifying gang life and violence and dying senselessly over bullshit (but the Thug Life ethos has nothing to do with that? what?), and he's not a negative influence and doesn't bear any responsibility for what's happening on the ground? Okay, but his public persona is like the all-time definitive case study on successfully glorifying all of it, and he comes out of that bid releasing the most incendiary diss track in history which pulled a ton of people into his personal beef, turned friends on each other, and got folks killed. He crossed a line that no one was willing to cross before and everyone knows better than to cross again. All for image.
Who are you? Not a joke, but really.
You want to talk about leaders in the black community who are also entertainers, look at a Zach Randolph or a Kareem Abdul Jabbar.
I'll remember 2Pac for his great turns in Poetic Justice and Juice, some great songs, and some ridiculous beef, but not as someone who notably gave anything to the community or served as a source of inspiration and knowledge.
Seems like a very ignorant write up from someone that does not understand the surrounding culture or history of the black community in the U.S.
His public persona is/was his private persona, an idea that in today's world seems absolutely foreign with social media and media distortion. For Tupac it was the other way around because he did not want to be another sell out for his community. As he said in an interview before, the world has enough celebrities being worshipped and making money off the backs of everyone else. If he wanted that he could have done that but he stuck to his ethos and ideology until the final moment he took his last breath. At any time Tupac could have dropped everything and just become another Ice Cube. He understood that and that would have been taking the easy way out. It takes real guts to be a leader and leave behind the stardom most people would have given anything to achieve. He believed in his community, he believed in the future of his community and their potential but at the same time he understood that the system as a whole has to be changed if true equality and self-determination for black America is to ever come.
One thing that a lot of people today do not understand is how life is like for someone from a lower socio-economic background, specifically in the black community . Tupac Shakur came from a family known for resisting the U.S. government. His family was well known to be part of the Black Panther movement and that ideology sticks out in every single album Tupac put out.
Now for a second of your time just imagine that you're not white and that you were born in this country as a black man. Not only where you born in this country as a black man but you were born in a jail cell while your mother fought for her freedom in court against the U.S. government. Your mother not only fought against the government and won but she also spent years of her life dedicated to helping her community. White America viewed, and in many ways still does, the Black Panthers as a gang of thugs who only wanted to strike terror and death into white America. In reality what the Black Panthers really wanted to do was ideologically educate their members on self-defense and also organize mass breakfast events that would feed the poor in their communities. Imagine having done all of that for your community and then your organization is purged by your government, you and your organization that helped your community so much is forgotten, and you slowly realize that no matter how hard you attempted change you are stuck just right back were you started...just because you're black.
Let me touch on your final point regarding Hit Em Up. If you think that all of the beef started after the song was completed and finished then you are not only speaking from a position of historical ignorance but seem ignorant on how relationships work in general. All of the relationships that Tupac had with people was already well known in the "street" before he put out anything. His beef with Christopher Wallace had already been spiraling out of control for some time, and the "beef" as you call it was already clearly spelled out for everyone. Hit Em Up is not the cause of any beef, it's a response to an ongoing conflict (beef). Hit Em Up is what Tupac really thought about the whole situation, and it wasn't a persona or act.
Again, in a world where everything is expected to be viewable or everyone is expected to be online in some way, personas can be carefully planned out and constructed. For Tupac being part of the black community was his persona. His struggles, his fears, his dreams, his nightmares etc all represented the views of his community because he still was part of that. That's what a lot of people miss today (especially whites) when considering Tupac's legacy; his legacy is the legacy of his community just as Malcom X's. Malcolm X lived an extraordinary life in his own right but much of that came about because of his love for his community. He understood his community like Tupac because they both came from the gutter.
Crossing a line that cannot be crossed again is laughable. You don't know how you would respond to someone if you were in that exact same situation and you can never know how you would have. When your loved ones have (still even now) been getting killed for centuries in horrific ways by citizens of your own country that tends to have some long lasting psychological effects on your community. Those effects are not something that can be explained away or rectified by reading books in school, or even attending a Black History Museum once a year or watching Roots on History Channel. If you're in a community that has been (and continues to be) treated as second class citizens (first slaves) do you really think there is any line that cannot be crossed? When you're living in poverty everyday, when you don't have enough food to feed yourself or siblings because your parent is a drug fiend; do lines even exist anymore for people in that kind of lifestyle?
Image. So what kind of image was Tupac constructing for himself then? Everything he did was just for his own self-image so what exactly is that? When you say incorrect observations like that you do a disservice to the community Tupac Shakur served and lived for. He was real, the good the bad and the ugly, and a real problem today is that people look at Tupac without all of the historical perspective or even from a perspective of the community he served.
Seems like a very ignorant write up from someone that does not understand the surrounding culture or history of the black community in the U.S.
His public persona is/was his private persona, an idea that in today's world seems absolutely foreign with social media and media distortion. For Tupac it was the other way around because he did not want to be another sell out for his community. As he said in an interview before, the world has enough celebrities being worshipped and making money off the backs of everyone else. If he wanted that he could have done that but he stuck to his ethos and ideology until the final moment he took his last breath. At any time Tupac could have dropped everything and just become another Ice Cube. He understood that and that would have been taking the easy way out. It takes real guts to be a leader and leave behind the stardom most people would have given anything to achieve. He believed in his community, he believed in the future of his community and their potential but at the same time he understood that the system as a whole has to be changed if true equality and self-determination for black America is to ever come.
One thing that a lot of people today do not understand is how life is like for someone from a lower socio-economic background, specifically in the black community . Tupac Shakur came from a family known for resisting the U.S. government. His family was well known to be part of the Black Panther movement and that ideology sticks out in every single album Tupac put out.
Now for a second of your time just imagine that you're not white and that you were born in this country as a black man. Not only where you born in this country as a black man but you were born in a jail cell while your mother fought for her freedom in court against the U.S. government. Your mother not only fought against the government and won but she also spent years of her life dedicated to helping her community. White America viewed, and in many ways still does, the Black Panthers as a gang of thugs who only wanted to strike terror and death into white America. In reality what the Black Panthers really wanted to do was ideologically educate their members on self-defense and also organize mass breakfast events that would feed the poor in their communities. Imagine having done all of that for your community and then your organization is purged by your government, you and your organization that helped your community so much is forgotten, and you slowly realize that no matter how hard you attempted change you are stuck just right back were you started...just because you're black.
Let me touch on your final point regarding Hit Em Up. If you think that all of the beef started after the song was completed and finished then you are not only speaking from a position of historical ignorance but seem ignorant on how relationships work in general. All of the relationships that Tupac had with people was already well known in the "street" before he put out anything. His beef with Christopher Wallace had already been spiraling out of control for some time, and the "beef" as you call it was already clearly spelled out for everyone. Hit Em Up is not the cause of any beef, it's a response to an ongoing conflict (beef). Hit Em Up is what Tupac really thought about the whole situation, and it wasn't a persona or act.
Again, in a world where everything is expected to be viewable or everyone is expected to be online in some way, personas can be carefully planned out and constructed. For Tupac being part of the black community was his persona. His struggles, his fears, his dreams, his nightmares etc all represented the views of his community because he still was part of that. That's what a lot of people miss today (especially whites) when considering Tupac's legacy; his legacy is the legacy of his community just as Malcom X's. Malcolm X lived an extraordinary life in his own right but much of that came about because of his love for his community. He understood his community like Tupac because they both came from the gutter.
Crossing a line that cannot be crossed again is laughable. You don't know how you would respond to someone if you were in that exact same situation and you can never know how you would have. When your loved ones have (still even now) been getting killed for centuries in horrific ways by citizens of your own country that tends to have some long lasting psychological effects on your community. Those effects are not something that can be explained away or rectified by reading books in school, or even attending a Black History Museum once a year or watching Roots on History Channel. If you're in a community that has been (and continues to be) treated as second class citizens (first slaves) do you really think there is any line that cannot be crossed? When you're living in poverty everyday, when you don't have enough food to feed yourself or siblings because your parent is a drug fiend; do lines even exist anymore for people in that kind of lifestyle?
Image. So what kind of image was Tupac constructing for himself then? Everything he did was just for his own self-image so what exactly is that? When you say incorrect observations like that you do a disservice to the community Tupac Shakur served and lived for. He was real, the good the bad and the ugly, and a real problem today is that people look at Tupac without all of the historical perspective or even from a perspective of the community he served.
If 2Pac was alive today he'd be doing buddy cop movies alongside Ice Cube.
Kill your idols. Stop hero worshipping celebrities.