Jeezy
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Source: Cam Kirk / CTE Records
Jeezy has been busy lately. On Monday (Oct. 30), the Snowman announced that he has departed his longtime Def Jam recording home, but is nevertheless dropping a new double album on Friday, November 3.
The new project from the Atlanta rapper is called I Might Forgiveā¦But I Donāt Forget and is being released via his own label, CTE New World, and in partnership with Stem Distribution. Jeezyās entire solo career (on a major label) up until now has been with Def Jam, beginning with his critically acclaimed 2005 debut Letās Get It: Thug Motivation 101 and concluding with 2020ās The Recession 2.
For his thirteen album, the I Might Forgive⦠portion of the project will feature production from ATL Jacob, Ricky Polo, Cubeatz, Hendrix and more. However, the But I Donāt Forget side is wholly produced by The J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League, who are longtime collaborators with the Snowman and have also crafted beats for the likes of Rick Ross, Mary J. Blige and Drake.
Jeezy has been busy lately. In August he dropped his memoir, Adversity For Sale, where he detailed using therapy to deal all the struggle heās had in his life. Most recently, he filed for divorce from his wife Jeannie Mai after two years of marraige.
āThe decision to end this chapter in my life was not made impulsively and comes with a heavy heart,ā said Jeezy in a statement. āDespite this, my love and respect for Jeannie remains and the time we spent together holds a cherished place in my heart.ā
The topic, and more, will surely permeate his new music.
The full tracklist to I Might Forgiveā¦But I Donāt Forget is below.
āI Might Forgiveā¦ā
1. I Might Forgive
2. My Name
3. No Complaining
4. They Donāt Love Me
5. Trust No One
6. Sad
7. Couldnāt Lose if I Tried
8. Rewrite History
9. Never Had a Bad Day in My Life
10. This Too Shall Pass
11. Donāt Deserve Me
12. If Iām Being Honest
13. Donāt Cheat
14. Shine On Me
15. Keep The Change
āBut I Donāt Forgetā
1. Delusional
2. Nothin to Prove
3. Titanic
4. Everything About Me Is True
5. Expectations
6. Claim to Fame
7. What I Gotta Do
8. My Intentions
9. Never Be a Fan
10. Sade
11. Donāt Let Up
12. Since Pac Died
13. Free Champagne
14. No Choice
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Source: Derek White / Getty / Jeezy
The Snowman finally talks after filing for divorce from television host Jeannie Mai.
Spotted on XXL, Jeezy broke his silence on his pending divorce from the former The Real co-host, Jeannie Mai,Ā in a statement sent to the Hip-Hop website.
āThe decision to end this chapter in my life was not made impulsively and comes with a heavy heart,ā Jeezy told XXL. āDespite this, my love and respect for Jeannie remains and the time we spent together holds a cherished place in my heart.ā
In the statement, the āPut Onā rapper touched on the coupleās 1-year-old daughter and his commitment to co-parenting.
āOur beautiful daughter is the best gift from our relationship and I am committed to assuring she feels the love and stability she deserves. During this period, I kindly request that you respect our familyās privacy as we focus on healing,ā he continued.
The rapperās statement comes after Jeanie Mai announced she was taking a break from social media and spoke on the divorce in a recent interview on Sherri Shepherdās talk show Sherri.
āIām not going to lie,ā Jeannie Mai said. āIt takes every day to just to really sit and just be quiet with your thoughts, take care of me. But one thing I know is, you give God your pain, he will give you his power, period. So, every day, Iām like, āHere you go. You got room for more? Hereās some more.ā Just taking it day by day,ā Mai told Shepherd.
Mai and Jeezy began dating in 2019, tying the knot in 2021 and eventually welcoming their 1-year-old daughter, Monaco Mai Jenkins, into the world.
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Photo: Derek White / Getty
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Source: Paras Griffin / Getty / Jeannie Mai
After being banned by the Snowman, oops, we mean hit with a gut punch after Jeezy filed for divorce, Jeannie Mai is taking a much-needed break from social media āto heal.ā
Spotted on Page Six, the former co-host of The Real is putting her mental health front and center following her shocking divorce from Jeezy.
The television host announced her break with a photo of a handwritten note with the message, āSometimes, you need to take a break and disconnect, to heal,ā with just a black heart emoji in the caption on her Instagram account.
Maiās announcement comes after Page Six exclusively learned from a source that she was ādevastatedā by Jeezy putting their union on ice.
Per Page Six:
āThe truth is Jeannie wants her marriage to work and wants her family to be one solid unit,ā the insider said.
āEven though Jeezy has filed, Jeannie is holding out hope that he would be willing to sit down and works things [out]. She is hoping for a resolution and wants to remain as a united family unit.ā
The Jeezy/Mai union ended after the 46-year-old āPut Onā crafter filed for divorce on September 15, after two years of what everyone assumed to be a happy marriage.
Jeannie Mai & Jeezy Were Separated Before The Divorce
In court documents obtained by Page Six, the rapper, born Jay Jenkins, said he and Mai were already separated at the time, noting that their marriage was āirretrievably broken.ā
Jeezy also seeks joint custody of the now-former coupleās 1-year-old daughter Monaco.
According to TMZ, Mai and Jeezy are reportedly still living together while being separated for the sake of their child.
The celebrity gossip site reports that they barely interact with each other even though they still live under the same roof.
While Mai struggles mentally, Jeezy seems to enjoy his newfound āfreedomā and promoting his book while posting cryptic messages on social media.
Maybe there is still room for some reconciliation.
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Photo: Paras Griffin / Getty
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Jeezy and Jeannie Mai looked to be one of entertainmentās top power couples but the Atlanta rapper filed for divorce late last week which shocked many. A quick scan of Jeezyās Instagram page shows the CTE boss clearly moving on by way of posting a cryptic message along with an old clip featuring his soon-to-be ex-wife that might raise eyebrows.
Jeezy, real name Jay Jenkins, and Jeannie Mai wed in 2021 after the pair met each other after Jeezy appeared on Maiās former daytime talk show, The Real. Jenkins and Mai are the parents of a toddler girl and the rapper is asking for joint personal custody while also clearly stating that there is no saving the marriage.
On Instagram, the Snofall artist can be seen standing in front of a custom Mercedes-Benz and decked out in bright jewelry in a residential neighborhood with the caption for the image reading, āToo focused on who Iām becoming to focus on whoās not coming with me.ā
In subsequent images from the post, Jeezy is still sporting a diamond-encrusted wedding band. Some online, especially in the comments section of the post, believe that this was a message for his estranged wife but that hasnāt been confirmed. The image was posted the same day news of the divorce filing went wide.
Jeannie Mai has not posted to her in five days, in which she shared images of her visit to New York for NYFW. She also shared a behind-the-scenes video of her preparation for the photo shoot on her TikTok page with Nick Minajās āLast Time I Saw Youā as the backing music. As some noted, she too is still wearing her wedding ring.
Mai nor Jeezy have not made any full public statements regarding their split.
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Photo: Getty
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Jeezy and Jeannie Mai seemed to be one of the more solid celebrity unions today but it appears that things are changing in the Jenkins household. Jeezy has reportedly filed for divorce from Jeannie Mai, who share a young child together after just over two years of marriage.
According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Jeezy, real name Jay Jenkins, filed for divorce in Fulton County Superior Court in Georgia. It isnāt known what day the rapper and author made the court filing.
Jeezy is seeking joint legal custody of the coupleās toddler daughter. According to the outlet, the pair are already legally separated and a prenuptial agreement is also in place.
The couple began dating after Jeezy was a guest on Maiās former talk show, The Real, where she served as one of the co-hosts. Based on the coupleās public image, it appeared to be a strong relationship but apparently, that perspective is shifted.
A public statement from the pair has yet to be issued.
If Instagram is any indication of pain or heartbreak, none was witnessed on their respective pages, as can be seen in the posts below.
On X, formerly known as Twitter, the reactions to the news are pouring in and theyāre all over the place. We added some for viewing below. Keep in mind that weāre just reporting what we saw and are not offering further opinions on the matter.
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Source: Kevin Dietsch / Getty / Vice President Kamala Harris
Over the weekend, Vice President Kamala Harris held a huge bash to celebrate Hip-Hopās 50th anniversary.
One of the biggest parties celebrating Hip-Hop 50 went down in Washington D.C. on Saturday, Sep. 9, at the Vice Presidentās residence.
With the VP handling hosting duties with some help from Club Quarantineās owner, DJ D Nice, Hip-Hop vets like Common, Roxanne Shante, Dougie Fresh, MC Lyte, and Slick Rick all hit the stage to perform tunes out of their iconic catalogs.
āHip-hop now shapes nearly every aspect of American popular culture, and it reflects the incredible diversity and ingenuity of the American people. I truly believe hip-hop is one of Americaās greatest exports,ā VP Harris told the roughly 400 guests in attendance.
The Second Gentleman, Douglas Emhoff, added, āThis is a hip-hop household!ā
Lil Wayne Was A Big Surprise
The day also featured scorching performances from Fat Joe and Remy Ma, who hit the stage to perform āAll The Way Up,ā but the biggest surprise came when Lil Wayne made an appearance.
For those who still remember, Lil Wayne let us all down when he decided to take a picture with Agent Orange, disgraced former President and leader of the mayo-infused insurrection, Donald Trump.
Trump, more than likely caping for some Black votes, gave Weezy a pardon, but he denied shilling for Trump.Ā
Per Variety, after his surprise set, which included a āMrs. Officerā performance off his critically acclaimed album Tha Carter III during the concert, Wayne told attendees, āI canāt believe Iām here.ā
Weāre sure many of the guests felt the same due to his previous actions, but hey, we all can appreciate when a person rights their wrongs.
Source: Johnny Nunez / Getty
VP Kamala Harris Dancing To āVivrant Thingā Was A Vibe
Of course, the reactions were pouring in on X (formerly Twitter) about the event, specifically the MVPās dance moves. A video of VP Harris hitting her auntie two-step to Q-Tipās classic record āVivrant Thingā has made its rounds on social media.
Shoutout to the MVP for giving Hip-Hop its flowers and celebrating the art form in a space many would have never thought you would hear rap at.
You can see more reactions in the gallery below.
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Photo: Getty Images
2. Love to see it
3. The VP is right
4. Hold up
5. Love to see it.
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Source: Bernard Smalls / @PhotosByBeanz
Jeezy is about to boss up once again. He is releasing his first book this summer.
As spotted onĀ HipHopDX the Atlanta trapper turned rapper is taking writing skills to the next level. This week he announced his first published literary work Adversity For Sale: Ya Gotta Believe. The āSoul Survivorā rapper took his Instagram account to share the news. āThis is for all my day ones and everybody thatās been down with me since the beginning. This is the greatest story never toldā he wrote. āIn this motivational memoir, I use parts of my life story, every step, every mishap, every up and down that Iāve gone through to get to this point in my life to motivate the hustlers, entrepreneurs, and believers.ā
The formal press release adds more details regarding Da Snowmanās purpose of the book. āJeezy will use parts of his story to illustrate some rules and principles heās used to get him through his darkest days and kept him going, even when it felt impossible to go any further and the odds stacked against him felt insurmountable. Through this book, his goal is to give everyone from the block to the boardroom a message of hope to get through their days.ā
You can pre-order the book here.Ā
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If youāre an avid TV watcher, youāre probably familiar withĀ Power.Ā Helmed by showrunner Courtney Kemp and 50 Cent, the six-season series proved to be a gem on the STARZ network courtesy of Omari Hardwick, who played the showās protagonist James St. Patrick.Ā
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Patrick was quite debonair. His luxe suits and magnetic charm always wooed everyone he came across. His skill for closing business deals and monopolizing properties made him a sizable threat in New York City. And though Patrick was a smooth bandit across the board, he had a murderous streak that no one could tame.Ā
When Jeezy enters the Billboard offices, he does so with the same swagger that made St. Patrick a beloved treasure in the Power Universe. Upon arrival, heās gracious and flattered by the reactions to his bloodthirsty feature on EST Geeās āThe Realest.ā After laying the hammer down with a blistering 24-bar verse, Jeezy released his Gangsta Grillz-helmed projectĀ SNOFALLĀ with his formerĀ Trap or DieĀ partner DJ Drama on Friday (Oct. 21). The 17-track affair is primarily a solo expedition for Jeezy until he collides with Lil Durk on āMost Hated,ā 42 Dugg on āPut The Minks Downā and āScarfaceā with EST Gee.
āIf you really look at the game, everybody thatās in the rap game that came after me,ā says Jeezy. āI left the door open for them. A lot of these cats are really from the streets. They saw if Jeezy could do it, they could do it too.ā
And while Jeezy is enjoying his life as a businessman, father, and newly-wedded husband, he proves whyĀ SNOFALLĀ is his āF-Uā to father time as he seeks to reclaim his throne as the forefather of street music.Ā
ā[Iām] James St. Patrick,ā he says with a sly grin. āWhen I put them Air Force 1ās on, you already know.āĀ
Billboard chatted with the Atlanta star about his new projectĀ SNOFALL,Ā if he has accepted being a legend, performing B-Side concerts, and ending his beef with Freddie Gibbs.
I saw you said on the Big Facts Podcast that music is your talent, but business is your passion.
Yeah, thatās real. Always been though.Ā
I feel like with you, you came back to music because this is something youāre good at.Ā
You know how you have that one thing you got when girls come around? You might be good at dribbling a basketball. That one thing when you know like, āIām gonna get my sāt off.ā Thatās what music is.Ā
Also, I realized I still have a responsibility as well ā because I still have some influence in this. I canāt just leave the game like, āI got mine and yāall figure it out.ā Itās more, āThis is how Iām moving ā and you aināt gotta move the same, but if youāve been in the game this long, this is how you balance it all.ā A lot of things people think you canāt do, because rap is so stereotyped. With me, I can do whatever I want, at my own time and my own pace. Coming back with Drama for this SNOFALL was like Scottie Pippen and Michael Jordan having a one-on-one in they background.Ā
If you respected and you get to see that, like, āSāt, I got to watch Pippen and Jordan play one-on-one,ā thatās like me and Drama. We both up and having fun with what we do ā but at the same time, itās still the game of street music. We get to do that at a high level with all of the wisdom we got. Itās like getting to see your two favorite basketball players or boxers spar at the gym. You like, āDamn, that was legendary.āĀ
When you heard Geeās āThe Realestā for the first time, you mustāve shed a tear ā because you took this verse somewhere else.Ā
When he came [into the studio], I heard his music and saw what he did. I see a lot of me in him trying to figure it out. I just wanted to keep the lines of communication open. Youāre going to run into some situations where youāre gonna wanna talk to somebody whoās done it, because heās a street dude running into rap. You gotta navigate it, and I wanna make sure I can be there. When he played me his album, I was like, āDān.ā He said, āI think this is my intro.ā I was like, āThat should be the last record.ā
We had that conversation and he was like, āI really want you on it.ā I was like, āSay less ā give me a day or two and I got you back.ā I pinned it up, on some big homie sāt. I wanted to keep going. Like when Jay-Z gave me the āGo Crazyā verse, he wanted me to know, āI fāk with you like this.ā Thatās where I was with it and I loved the concept of the record. Same thing with the BET Awards, I just wanted to show him love. On that same platform, Jay came with me and did āSeen It Allā with me at the BET Awards. That was unheard of ā and I felt like it was the same thing for me, like, āI got you.āĀ
You always had that mentality of being the big homie even with someone like Kodak Black. Who besides Kodak or Gee have you taken over from a mentor standpoint?
Definitely [Lil] Durk. You just want to have somebody you can bounce sāt off of. 42 Dugg is another one of my guys. Haiti Babii is another guy I just signed from Stockton to Def Jam. The list goes on, to even upcoming cats like Baby Money from Detroit ā and Payroll was one of my real [guys]. Me and Pay talked all the time. I was like, āPay, people donāt know you produce.ā Heās one of the hardest producers Iāve ever heard. He donāt produce his own sāt, and he produced his last project and he called me.Ā
Iām never gonna be the person to try to tell people what they should do. I just know what I been through, and I know it wasnāt easy. I know there were times I wished there was somebody I could call ā but they wouldnāt understand my position, because theyāre not from the streets and not doing what Iām doing now. I got a wealth of knowledge and wisdom when it comes to that. I hate when they see me and go, āOG.ā Nah, aināt nothing original about gangsta, donāt call me that. Big homie wanna see you win more than he has won. OG gonna put you on some dummy missions.
Was it easy for you making that switch from businessman to street rapper again, knowing itās familiar territory with Drama?
Yeah, I get in that mode ā and I mean that on the Gee record when I say, āI got four million in cars and nowhere to go.ā I mean that. I aināt on it like that, but I can be. I can go get some chains and throw them on and do what I do. When Iām in that zone, Iām in that zone. Iām still a street guy to the core. I still have street values, morals and integrity ā but at the same time, I understand whatās going on in the world. Iām not gonna go out here and act like Iām exempt because itās me.Ā
I thought the B-sides concerts youāve been doing have been dope. Talk about the feelings youāve experienced performing those cuts, compared to a traditional Jeezy concert.
Yeah, thatās something Iāve always wanted to do. Since me and Drama were coming together on this particular project, I thought it would be a perfect time. Weāve been in each otherās circumference a lot. I was like, āI thought it would be crazy to do a B-side concert.ā And put it in a secret location, with standing room only, and you gotta win a ticket, so you canāt go buy this to pay to get in. And itās strictly for your day-one people. It was one of those things where picking the records was therapeutic. We just sat there and reminisced, like, āRemember when we did this?ā
People donāt remember I was riding around in a Ferrari, and Iād pull up to Dramās to get my show tapes made before we did a mixtape⦠Dram would be like, āTake your shoes off.ā Iād be like, āNāa, you live in the hood. You buggin!ā We been through all that, so we laugh about the times we had. Going through the records was like, āDamn, bro, we really have a history and legacy with what weāre doing.ā I remember a lot of those records I was writing still in the street. I didnāt know if this was gonā work out. So when I heard myself say certain things, like on āMr. 17.5,ā Iām like, āDamn.ā And I wasnāt all the way in. I was still trying to figure it out. Look how far I came. For you to go and take records you did back then and get people in a room to do them now, it says something.Ā
A lot of people have projects, but they donāt have enough of a movement to do a B-side show. We had 70 on the board. The other ones, we had to go through and condense it down. Itās crazy, because when we did The Real Is Back one and two intros, even for me, I was dancing to āHoly Ghost.ā Sāt is crazy. Iāve been on the tour with the best of them, and this was the first time I was in the room and doing all the sāt that I wanted to. Just seeing the love was crazy, because weāre doing more B-side concerts.Ā
I saw a lot of different people, especially of all ages, embracing you as the peopleās champ in the SNOFALL trailer. Talk about touching all different walks of life.
Iāma tell you a quick story. I went to Jamaica a couple years ago. One of the drivers was a native and he wanted to take us somewhere special. Weāre going up in the mountains, and two hours later weāre in Nine Mile where Bob Marleyās from. From the second I touched down in that area, I immediately started hearing stories about what Bob did for the people ā whether it was loaning money, helping with a bully, or walking kids to school. They just had this genuine love for Bob Marley that was beyond music. I remember sitting there ā like, I always loved his music, but now I see why he sings āOne Love.āĀ
When I see these youngsters coming up I see what I did for their fathers and brothers ā itās generational. Thatās what itās really about. You donāt want to be a hit record. Itās a flash in the pan. But when you in the hearts of women, men, and children, itās a real thing. I do it for someone to walk up and say, āJeezy, you changed my life.ā They just giving you these different ways you helped them out and for me, thatās the fulfillment. It aināt the awards, itās that love. I got that when I went to Nine Mile.Ā
I think about your legacy, and youāve had your fair share of beefs ā whether it was with Gucci Mane, Rick Ross, and Freddie Gibbs. Interestingly enough, youāve been able to end all your feuds. How were you able to obtain this level of peace, knowing the situations youāve been through in your career?
When I realized that most of the time people act out, you donāt have to match energy and engage or react ā because, at the end of the day, especially with the Freddie sāt, it was just bad communication. Same thing with Ross ā just bad communication, and it took the right people to get in the mix. What I have learned is the same when Nas did āHip Hop Is Deadā and I reacted. I was kinda spazzing out on the radio, if you remember. Iāll never forget when I got in the car from the radio station, somebody from Def Jam was like, āNas wanna holla at you. Heās on the phone.āĀ
Iām ready for whatever heās gonna say ā Iām all for it. We can fight dogs, race cars, shoot guns or whatever he wanna do. He said, āWhatās up, King?ā He asked how Iām feeling, and he was like, āI can understand your frustration, but let me explain what Iām saying, and how it has nothing to do with you.ā He was so calm ā and I always remembered that. When me and Freddie [Gibbs] had our thing, that was one of the reasons I remained calm ā because Iāve been on the other side of that. So Iām hearing his frustration, and I get it, because weāre doing business and not everybodyās gonna be happy. Itās like being married, you gotta communicate. You canāt be like, āIām gonna blow the whole house up.ā
As Black men, we rarely do have good communication. It was love. Thatās it. It wasnāt even nothing to have a conversation about, because we both knew where we stood at that. So going forward, we gotta communicate better.
I remember having a conversation with Ludacris, and I asked him if he was finally comfortable with the word ālegend.ā He said it took him so long to accept that. Have you accepted that?
Man, itās so hard, because I feel like [I do with] the OG sāt. Like, what does that mean? It just feels like youāre not in it no more, and thatās not the truth. I could be in it any way that I choose to. Whether I sign someone or run a label, I could go run Def Jam tomorrow. Itās when you do other things and you have success there. Letās just say, Magic Johnson ā one of the best to ever do it ā heās an even better businessman. I wouldnāt approach him like, āWhatās up old timer? You used to play basketball, but now you own the Dodgers.ā Itās a mindset.Ā
My focus doesnāt have to always be rap. Iām building companies ā Cognac, vodka, gin, and performance fuel water ā and my real estate portfolio is nuts. When I say I own half of Atlanta, I mean that sāt. LLC Shawty, thatās me. My focus aināt gonā be in one place, but that doesnāt mean Iām not in it anymore. When you say āJAY-Z,ā heās doing astronomical things. If you put him in the studio with any of these young cats, he gonna tear they ass up. Thatās what he does ā but that doesnāt mean thatās what he has to do every day.
Going to the ālegendā thing, it makes it sound like the run is over. How so? Itās because I believe in reinventing myself all the time. Itās Snowman forever. I been on tour with the best of āem, and I look in that crowd and see 500 Snowman shirts. I can identify my people, and that means itās real and tangible. This is like Metallica sāt. It wasnāt just about the songs, it was about the movement.Ā
I donāt even think LeBron has hit his highest plateau yet. Even who he is and what heās doing. Weāre gonna look up and heās gonna be larger than we could ever think, because of his businesses. Weāve never seen somebody whose business is so on point. Heās like the Barack Obama of basketball. Heās about his business, and we aināt seen no scandal. Heās clean-cut, and the connoisseur for music, because heās still young enough that everyone wanna send LeBron their records. Weāll look up in 10 years and look up like, āThis is crazy.ā Who knows, he could run for president.Ā
I think itās fair to call Nipsey [Hussle] a legend. Because everything he was working towards, he was working for his people, and he was taken too soon. I think itās fair to call 2Pac a legend, because of everything he was doing for his people and he was taken too soon.
I aināt even figured it all out yet. Iām still getting in rooms that I never thought Iād be in. Iām getting knowledge every day. Iām James St. Patrick for real. Clark Kent for real. Iām trying to do it bigger than it has ever been done. Like I would look at Jay and Nas, of course we know theyāre legendary ā but they still got work to do. Nas is getting Grammy Awards. He wasnāt getting no Grammys back then. His business is impeccable. It wouldnāt be fair to cancel my man out just yet. I agree with Ludacris on that: Between [legend] and OG, Iām confused.
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