Will Jim Jones, Meek Mill & Rick Ross Meet With Dee-1?
Dee-1 and Jim Jones might be working their way to a peaceful resolution.
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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /wordpress-versions/6.7.2/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Dee-1 and Jim Jones might be working their way to a peaceful resolution.
Jim Jones called Dee-1 a figment of the Dipset rapper’s imagination after the New Orleans native criticized Jones, Rick Ross and Meek Mill.
New music and a fire stable of artists remind the culture that Jim Jones as one of the best to ever do it.
A recent revelation from Jada Pinkett Smith has Jim Jones asking questions. The “Set If Off” actress is opening up about her past ahead of her candid upcoming memoir Worthy, making some startling admissions in a series of viral interviews. Smith’s revelations have been the talk of social media, with everybody chiming in, including Jim Jones. The Dipset rapper took to Instagram Live over the weekend, calling on one of her old customers to speak out. “If you sold crack in the nineties, nine times out of ten, there’s still some crackheads in the neighbourhood that can vouch that you were selling that butter,” Jim Jones said. “I don’t know where Jada grew up at, but we need to go check and see if they got some fiends that can verify, validify that she was selling that she had that butter on the block for sale.” Check out his comments below. During a recent interview with PEOPLE, Jada Pinkett Smith spoke openly about her drug-dealing past as a teen growing up in Baltimore. “I knew that anything that I needed was something I needed to provide for,” she explained. “I decided to sell drugs.” “Growing up, the drug dealers were the ones that had affluence,” Smith added. “That’s what we readily saw as success. And so for me, considering my circumstances at the time, my mother was not doing well. She was a high-functioning heroin addict. We didn’t have the things that we should have. The home we lived in was not taken care of.” It wasn’t just Jim Jones who had something to say about Jada Pinkett Smith dealing drugs. “Alright enough is enough,” 50 Cent wrote, sharing a headline about Smith selling crack. “FREE WILL SMITH! WTF is going on.”
Jim Jones reached out to fellow Harlem native and battle rap legend Ms. Hustle to ask her to join him at Byrdgang.
Y’all want a Dipset and The Lox Verzuz rematch?
It seems that Cam’ron got fooled by an AI diss track that had disrespectful bars aimed at his capo Jim Jones.
Jim Jones said Dipset were “following suit” by engaging in rap beefs, claiming labels used rivalries between artists as a marketing tool.
Rapper-turned-sports talk show host Cam’ron commented on fellow Dipset member Jim Jones’ feud with Pusha T.
Verbal competition keeps Hip-Hop great.
Jim Jones returned with a diss track and accompanying video aimed at Pusha T on Saturday night (June 24), just hours after teasing it online. The Diplomats rapper chose the same beat Clipse used during Pharrell Williams’ Louis Vuitton debut in Paris last week. For more than two minutes, Jones lays into King Push with lines like, “The only beef you know n###a is Arby’s or the Big Mac/When we drive through, we drive-by in the car with the big macs./That last s### you dropped was garbage take that s### back.” He also claims Pusha T is highly overrated, saying, “That s### was trash we gonna let them get a do over/They got you gassed, they must think you’re the new Hova/You a 4.0, n###a, I jumped in the new rover/Your brother still jumping on the bed, tell him ‘Move over.’” Of course, Jones wasn’t there and soon took aim at Pusha T’s fashion sense. “You be dressing kinda weird man you really need a stylist/Plus we all know what you identify with/Plus you kinda, sorta dress, n###a, you been a fly b####/And then he said I was trying to chase a feature/N###a’s a gorilla cause he got some apes in his features/All my gorillas got stones, I’ll have these apes come and meet you.” He continued, “Don’t talk about my jewels that was a cheap shot/These is all VVS’s this ain’t the cheap rock/I don’t know if you’re a rapper, I should treat you like a street opp.” The public discourse between Jim Jones and Pusha T began in April, when Jones questioned Pusha T’s inclusion in a list of 50 greatest rappers. More than two months later, Pusha T chose Williams’ fashion show to debut a new Clipse song in which he appears to sub Jones. As both rappers began to trend on Twitter, Jones shared a video of himself laughing alongside a reference to Pusha-T’s 2013 album, My Name Is My Name. “Let me know if they serious cause my name is my name #Capo,” he wrote before adding in his Instagram Stories, “Let me know when they really ready.” Apparently, Jim Jones then got to work. Listen to the track in full above.
The vitriol between the two began in April after Jones stated King Push didn’t belong in a Top 50 list of greatest rappers.
Jim Jones previously claimed Pusha T wasn’t a Top 50 rapper, which led to an apparent diss on a new Clipse song.
Jim Jones returned Pusha T’s subliminal shots using the title of King Push’s debut album while seemingly advising him to “Come Again.”
Pusha T seemingly shaded Jim Jones on an unreleased Clipse track premiered at Pharell Williams’ Louis Vuitton debut.
Jim Jones believes the poor air quality in New York is a sign of the impending apocalypse: “We definitely at the end of the Bible.”
Promoting his debut album My Brother’s Keeper that arrived last month, Brooklyn rapper OnPointLikeOP has released a new video titled “Everything A Go”
Rappers Jim Jones and Maino have come a long way, transforming their initial friction into a deep bond, which has led to not only their first joint album, “Lobby Boyz,” but also a completed follow-up, “Lobby Boyz 2.”
The bad blood between Cam’ron and Jim Jones appeared to resurface over comments made by the latter Dipset member.
Jim Jones, Fabolous, Maino and Dave East are taking their passion for fitness to a new level with their rap group fit lit. Read more!