WORLDWRAPFEDERATION.COM

IN THE STREETS & ON THE WEB

Maybe she was right about that whole “Obsessed” thing.

Eminem is back to taking shots at Nick Cannon over ex-wife Mariah Carey, spitting his latest venom at the former flames on Fat Joe’s new track “Lord Above” from the new album “Family Ties.”

“Word to the Terror Squad, Joe, this is all puns aside though/I know me and Mariah didn’t end on a high note,” raps the wordsmith, 47, on the track that dropped Friday morning. “But that other dude’s whipped, that p—y got him neutered/Tried to tell him this chick’s a nut job before he got his jewels clipped/Almost got my caboose kicked, fool, quit, you not gon’ do s—t/I let her chop my balls off, too ‘fore I lost to you, Nick.”

Eminem — real name Marshall Mathers — is likely responding to a September episode of rapper T.I.’s podcast “ExpediTIously” where Cannon, 39, claimed he almost flew to Detroit to confront the “Lose Yourself” rapper over disrespecting his then-wife on the 2009 song “The Warning.” Cannon and Carey, 49, were married from 2008 to 2016.

“I think we was flying back on a jet from Africa or somewhere and this motherf–ker drops a song, like, talking s–t. Calling [Mariah] all kinds of bitches and hoes,” Cannon told T.I. “I’m like, this is my wife. This is my new wife. I wrote a letter first, I don’t even know if Twitter had came out yet. So, I wrote this long-ass letter pretty much saying, ‘Look, I respect you as an artist. I’m actually a fan and I think you’re one of the best to ever do it. But from man to man, you talking out of pocket to my wife. You gotta be held accountable for that so I need to see you face-to-face.’”

Cannon also released his own response to “The Warning” titled “Ima Slick Rick” in 2010.

SOURCE

Views: 66

Comment

You need to be a member of WORLDWRAPFEDERATION.COM to add comments!

Join WORLDWRAPFEDERATION.COM

Listen to Scurry Life Radio For Artist Placement On The Site Contact: R5420records@yahoo.com

© 2024   Created by WORLD WRAP FEDERATION.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

Subscribe