I knew he couldn't be trusted - Ski Mask Shawty July 16, 2019
Jadakiss was bald for years and could grow a full hairline. Jadakiss eating an all crust pizza doesn’t surprise me I knew he was different when he was fantasizing about dancing w/ this girl at the club but all he could think about was her messing up the collar to his white tee- Alphonse July 16, 2019 onesm∆rtniglet July 16, 2019īro what the fuck has jadakiss been thru /eNgpGRk7rc- ? July 16, 2019 Somebody tell jadakiss about breadsticks lmfao. I bet you Jadakiss wanted to keep this a secret lmaooooo I'm judging - Reef ??? July 16, 2019 Jadakiss has some folks confused and others curious about what it would be like to make adjustments to their own diets. As previously reported by Blavity, he currently owns juice bars in the Bronx and Yonkers, New York called "Juices For Life" and is responsible for creating a smoothie called “Kiss of Life.” Through the cheeseless pizza scandal and all, Jadakiss has remained dedicated to the health-conscious lifestyle. “That’s what I do - I sacrifice myself.Special request for ❗️ Who else like Crust only? ?Ī post shared by Cuts & Slices on at 10:09am PDTĪccording to Complex, the owner of Cuts & Slices has said that Jadakiss came up with the idea of ordering pizza crust in 2018. “Somebody has to take the forefront and sacrifice,” he adds. When I made the song, I wrote it to be political, controversial, and to stir some things up. “That means it’s reaching out to everybody. “They’re censoring me all over the place, and that’s good,” he says. The type of controversy that surrounds “Why” can end up helping an artist, and Jadakiss knows it. 16 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart this week. Meanwhile, “Why?,” which features R&B singer Anthony Hamilton, continues to climb the charts. 1 on The Billboard 200 last week, selling more than 246,000 copies in its first week, according to Nielsen SoundScan. “It touches the heart and says things that a lot of people are afraid to say.”īlack isn’t the only one who thinks that. “‘Why?’ is the biggest record I’ve worked,” he says. Interscope head of rap promotions Kevin “Always Bet On” Black isn’t concerned about the controversy. No one edited ‘Get Low’ by Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz.” “Freedom of speech gives him the right to say what he does. “I saw the video, where they edited the, but when it came to playing it on the radio, we never thought we should ,” WWPR PD Michael Saunders says. While some stations air an edited version of the song, other stations like WGCI Chicago and WWPR New York have opted not to. “Since they can hear us in D.C., and I don’t want Secret Service knocking down my door in the middle of the night,” the PD adds, “I’ll stick to the clean version.” “Actually, the uncensored version of that line is probably my favorite in the whole song,” says one PD, who asked to remain anonymous. Some programmers say they were serviced only with the version that omitted the line - in both the radio edit and the “clean” version. A lot of my people felt that he had something to do with it.” “I just felt had something to do with that,” Jadakiss says, referring to the events of Sept.
“I was thinking, ‘What’s the one thing that everyone has in common? Questions.’ Everyone asks why, so I decided to write a song asking questions that everyone wants to,” he adds.Īs for the controversial line, the Yonkers, N.Y., rapper’s view is unwavering. “I wanted to make something that would touch people at home in white America. “I wanted to make a song that could appeal to a broader - and not only the hood,” he tells Billboard. According to sources at MTV, the “Why?” video was serviced to the network without the lyric.įor Jadakiss, the song is a way to reach people. 11, 2001, with the lyric “Why did Bush knock down the Towers?” The line has prompted some radio stations to edit the track. Ruff Ryders/Interscope artist Jadakiss is receiving a lot of attention for his single “Why?,” featured on his new album, “Kiss of Death.” The song questions President Bush’s involvement in the events of Sept.
Most hip-hop acts, however, have remained mum on the current political environment - until now. Musicians often voice political opinions in their songs, especially during an election year.