Nah, I've LEGIT heard/seen people say stuff like that... especially talking about wack current rappers and saying they woulda never gotten signed back in the day, as if a record label owner would've bypassed them for not having "bars" nshyt. There were a lotta bar-less nikkas out there either floppin' or scoring fluke hits. MOST record label guys still were about $ first and foremost, signing all kinda half-ass rappers thinking they could blow up.
I definitely agree that there was a lot less fans and artists caping for trash like there are now. But that doesn't mean the trash wasn't being put out there.
I never said there was no trash being out, just that Hip-Hop was better at self-policing.
You don't even hear songs like "Paparazzi" or "Stakes Is High" anymore because nobody gives a shyt
Which is why Hip-Hop is in the state it's in.
Staying with groups, what about ATCQ, The Pharcyde, Mobb Deep, Gang Starr, The Roots, Smif-n-Wesson, OutKast, Goodie Mob, and Westside Connection?
Tribe were really big in Hip-Hop, they were selling around gold back then, which was really good for East Coast rap in the early '90s, but they were nowhere near the multiplatinum status that West Coast guys like say NWA were.
The Pharcyde was kind of seen as a joke group because of "Passing Me By" and "Yo Mama", which were moderate hits.
Mobb Deep blew up off the backs of Biggie & Nas in '94-'95. Now, they weren't Bone Thugs or Outkast levels of big, but New York/East Coast big.
I would actually add that I think Big had passed Snoop by the time LAD was about to roll out. I don't think it's a debate. Snoop took a bit on Doggfather and with Pac dead, Dre AWOL, Suge jailed etc Snoop lost alot of momentum.
However Snoop was still the most known/biggest rapper so he was easily in a position to take it back had he came back with a hot album etc but as it played out from what I remember, in early 97, it was all BIG
My question for you is, since The Chronic is what really introduced me to hip hop....pre 92-93 (Dre/Snoop) who would you say was the biggest/hottest? Cube?
It's funny you'd bring up The Chronic as this delineation, because it really was that.
Everything changed after The Chronic
Before The Chronic, Hip-Hop didn't know if it was going to go in the direction of Vanilla Ice & Hammer (who by far outsold anybody who ever did Hip-Hop up to that point) or be conscious like Public Enemy, KRS-One, Brand Nubian, or if gangsta rap was going to carry the day.
It started out in say '89/'90 being Hammer & Vanilla Ice killing all sales records and breaking into the pop charts with LL & guys like Public Enemy, Big Daddy Kane & Eric B. & Rakim representing for "real" Hip-Hop, but by '91, NWA & Ice Cube & Ice-T started to push that pendulum in the direction of the West Coast gangsta shyt.
The takeover was real
I also think that people don't trealize Drake would be probably be dominant and more dominant than Kendrick if they came out in the 90s imo.
Well Drake may likely come into serious issues with his background possibly

A half-White, Canadian, child actor, who makes simp music that he doesn't even write himself?
Another misconception is that the west coast had this big dominant run in the bulk of the 90s when really all they did was catch up to the East coast and prove that another region could make high quality hip hop too. A lot of it was controversy and media driven tbh. The movies like Boyz in the Hood and Menace, the Rodney King situation, and the fact that many West coast rappers had a different sound and image and were more vulgar all played a part. But it’s not like they were blowing away anything on the east coast musically
I gotta disagree.
It was a brief takeover '91-94, but while it was going on, it was a WASH
Snoop was selling 8 million, while guys like LL Cool J, Big Daddy Kane, and De La Soul were happy to sell a million.
Ice Cube double platinum, NWA double platinum, Too Short platinum, Spice 1 gold, E-40 gold
MC Hammer DIAMOND
East Coast guys were getting wore the fukk out in the early '90s.
Even Nas' Illmatic took 10 years to go platinum.
Biggie's Ready To Die kind of ended the West Coast dominance, but even that sold ike 1.5 million in the first year.
Snoop sold 800,000 in a week.
Sorry I had to spoiler that shyt, just unwatchable
Honorable mention to Fresh Prince, MC Hammer, Kris Kross, Insane Clown Posse, Vanilla Ice, Puff Daddy, and Twista.

The Beastie Boys were '80s and were pranksters
And Kriss Kross were a hell of a lot better than a lot of dudes today, lyrically
Insane Clown Posse were not ever a respected Hip-Hop group in the '90s
Vanilla Ice was a pop star that no one in Hip-Hop respected
Puff Daddy was a producer and record label owner, who wasn't seen as an MC, kind of like Eazy-E
And what's wrong with Twista? Dude can spit
Yea idk why he made that comment. Even Das Efx and Onyx had gimmicks if we gonna keep it a buck
I wouldn't call those gimmicks, just a style.
What's wrong with having a unique style?
A gimmick is something that isn't real.
the idea that outkast was this huge group running chit. they were 2nd tier at best.
and before people call me a hater, im gonna put one of my favorite rappers on blast - the idea that 2pac was a top-tier rapper thru '91-94.
and the idea that pac & biggie were undisputed rulers of rap.
that and people thinking pac & biggie were the top sellers.
Every Outkast record has at least gone platinum.
How is that not huge?
And Biggie & Pac were HUGE sellers from '94-'97.