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Jim Jones says he’s solely responsible’ for Kid Cudi’s career; Cudi agrees

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Jim Jones claims sole responsibility for Kid Cudi’s professional success. He also believes that Kid Cudi would concur.

Fans will notice that Jones and Cudi collaborated on an early version of Cudi’s smash 2008 hit “Day ‘n’ Night,” which was released in 2009. Recently, Jones explained how he first heard Cudi’s music, and how his remix of the still-ubiquitous hit made its way onto the airways in a recent interview with Superstar Jay.

“Kid Cudi was nobody,” Jones said when the song was brought up around 24 minutes into the video below. “He worked in the fucking store under Koch Records. I was signed to Koch Records. I didn’t even know that Kid Cudi worked down there.”

Eventually, Jones learned about a group of video directors who had recently done free work with Cudi. An employee of Jones’s wished him to make contact with the directors, whom he was also supervising at the time of this writing.

When Jones got more involved, he was like, ‘Give me the record and I’ll let you shoot me a video,’” Jones recalled. “They got me the record, I did the record, they shot the video.”

He goes on, “I put it on YouTube,” he said. “Somebody at Hot 97 ripped it off of YouTube and started playing it at Hot 97.” According to Jones, once Cudi got his deal, he was taken off the record and the team behind the track’s push started to go for radio ads without him.

ISTHATPORKS TAKE:

There’s a saying that when you do something for someone you don’t have to mention it to anyone. So with that said, we don’t know why Jim Jones felt the need to hold an eyewitness news 10-minute spot in an interview to speak on what he’s done for someone. He must’ve had his reasons so we’ll take the high road and just leave it at that. It’s great that you helped out Kid Jim. Hopefully, he helped someone too. certainly no pork in that.

What’s your take on Jim letting the World know that he helped Kid Cudi?

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MA$E explains his “PORK” towards DIDDY and claims he created “MO MONEY MO PROBLEMS.”

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A new episode featuring Ma$e and on Million Dollaz Worth of Game podcast included him discussing his “disdain” towards Diddy.

During an interview with co-hosts Wallo and Gillie Da Kid on Sunday (July 31), the former Bad Boy Records rapper said that Puff Daddy never wanted to promote him to the next level.

“Let me take my shades off for that,” Ma$e began. “Now, I can say this because it wasn’t something I didn’t say to him. Puff – how do I wanna say this – me and Puff was like, I felt like I did more than I got credit for, more than I got paid for.

“OK, so let’s get this out of the way now, since I’m trying to be kind. I was never treated with respect or paid what I was worth. ‘Is this how you want to keep me from leaving, ngga?’ I’m out of town. Everyone from my class is gathered up here. ‘I’m the boss of all my peers.’

He continued: “When it’s time, just like somebody raise somebody up, they did work with you, they go from your lawman to maybe A&R to something else – he just kept tryna keep me right here, like he didn’t want me to grow at anything.”

Biggie’s 1997 Life After Death smash “Mo Money Mo Problems” was reportedly written by Ma$e, according to the rapper.

“Puff would go out and party and I would be in the studio writing the records,” he said. “And then I’d just come back and say, he’ll say this is his part or this is that part, but I was the person creating it all. I mean, from the lyrical standpoint, whether somebody did the beats, and even ‘Mo Money Mo Problems’ – I came up with that.

“I came up with the beat, too. I said, ‘Stevie [J], we need to do this beat and do it like this.’ So just imagine all of these moments that are taken from you, the records, the beats, you ain’t getting the money, you ain’t getting the publishing, you ain’t getting the respect.”

A few minutes later, “And I don’t think you’re like that to be pulling with you’re pulling. You know what comes with doing that, but everybody is letting you get away with it. Everybody. So me quitting after one album, it didn’t take long for me to figure it out, like I’m not gon’ be here with this. I don’t care who’s here, ’cause you’re not paying me and you’re not respecting me.”

Puff Daddy and The Family’s 1997 No Way Out Tour included a stop in Ma$e’s hometown of Atlanta, Georgia. However, he wasn’t making much in terms of his role and how much money he thought the tour was making.

The areas he went to make money when he first started his work as a freelancer were places like Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. “The No Way Out Tour was mostly for commercial purposes for me when I first embarked on it.

“So the second leg I started getting like $15,000, but the first couple of shows I really do believe they were all promotional. Because I remember the people at Bad Boy asking me, ‘Do you wanna get in a van and go state to state and go radio to radio and do promo, or do you wanna do the No Way Out Tour?’ And common sense, we did the No Way Out Tour.”

In retrospect, I kid you not, this was one of the greatest things that ever happened for me. Getting the deal, getting the fame and being able to take care of my family, but it was a lot of the worst experiences, and that’s just my understanding.”

In response to a question regarding the tour’s revenue, Ma$e replied, “I can’t count another man’s pocket. I know Budweiser was involved, I know a lot of other people. According to the day’s term, it could be a million or north, but I just know what I was getting. And now that I look back, I was the headliner, but I didn’t know I was the headliner.

“I’m cool with that – I’m cool with putting in at the beginning. And that’s what made me so upset at the end, because I felt like I was putting equity in the house, and at some point you gotta be able to pull the equity out.”

What’s Your Take On Mase’s Feelings About Diddy?

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Ying Yang Twins rapper D-ROC collapsed Onstage at a Vanilla Ice concert in Missouri

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Springfield, Missouri D-Roc, the rapper for the Ying Yang Twins, suddenly fell ill during a gig in Springfield, Missouri, and had to be carried off the stage by security.

The rapper’s tragic event at a show in Springfield, Missouri, on Sunday remains a mystery (July 31). In addition, it’s not clear whether he was transported to a hospital or treated on-site.

The following is a video representation of the scene:

When Vanilla Ice and the Ying Yang Twins performed together at the Ozark Empire Fair last week, it caused quite a commotion.

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Mark McCloskey allegedly used a photo of Vanilla Ice without permission on Thursday (July 28).

Vanilla Ice and the Ying Yang Twins would be performing at the Ozark Empire Fair, and the poster urged people to “join team McCloskey.”

Vanilla Ice and the Ying Yang Twins were featured in the campaign, which featured McCloskey alongside the “Ice Ice Baby” rapper. Vanilla Ice’s manager issued a response after the ad was uploaded on the campaign’s website and numerous social media sites.

Vanilla Ice’s managers stated that he isn’t taking a position on political matters and is striving to support his family. “Would you please make this known?”

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Dababy claims that he bills $200k for club appearances.

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According to DaBaby, his crazy activities haven’t deterred him from bringing a hefty bag of cash to nightclubs despite the fact that many people have turned their backs on him recently.

While on the Full Send Podcast, DaBaby disclosed that the cost of a club appearance is $200,000. In the opinion of the Charlotte-raised performer, the cost is justifiable given the quality of his performance.

“Oh man, it varies, you know? Sometimes I get $200K, “I always overplay it though. … If they’re giving you that type of bag that means it’s love. It means you’ve got that type of draw in that club.”

DaBaby explained that he’d gone a long way to demand $200,000 for a club performance. He used to barely make $15,000 a year, which was nothing in comparison to the millions he was raking in during performances.

On another occasion during the interview, DaBaby was questioned about the largest bag he’s ever received for a feature.

Naming his feature on Dua Lipa’s “Levitating,” he said: “I got a bag. I think it was three-even [$300K]. … I think it was 300 to be fair, I don’t wanna throw no extra grease in the pan. It was at least three, though. It might have been $350K.”

According to an interview with VladTV, Billion Dollar Baby Entertainment signee Stunna4Vegas first revealed just how much DaBaby made off of Dua Lipa’s deal a few days earlier. DaBaby was dropped from the song last year after making homophobic remarks at Rolling Loud Miami.

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