Straw man argument. To deflect from multiple examples of P biting Tupac
false.After the success of the album released after his death, Don Kiluminatti....there was a steady stream of Pac material released in stores, and bootlegs and it sold well. He still appeared on magazine covers for years to come, and several soundalike clones emerged.
Try again with "industry downplayed Pac after he died"
Again false. P might have big down South, but the VERY first exposure he got in NYC was the song on the soundtrack to The Show, which was the "Is There A Heaven for a Gangster" record. First video of his that got ANY airplay up here. So yes, biting Pac was vital to him expanding his reach outside of the South.,,,and breaking as a national act.
that yukmouth comment wasn't a strawman argument, or an argument at all. that comment was pure facts pointing out the inconsistencies of you dudes. and obviously you don't know how to react.
as for the bolded, I see that my comment went way over your heard. none of this has anything to do with what im talking about.
im talking about the slanted coverage, all the dirt they threw on pac's name and the way they played him out like a villain. meanwhile, all of biggie's peoples/associates are shining, reppin him hard & making him out to be an innocent angel. the bullchit FOX special that Ice T did last year basically rekindled memories of the past. because garbage like that was basically the narrative that was shoved down the public's throats on a day-to-day basis back then. people who were around know exactly what im talking about.
master p wasn't just some regional southern rapper who was only big down south just because he hadn't hit NYC yet.

his first big video look was ice cream man. HE WAS ALREADY PLATINUM before "iz there a heaven for a gangsta"(which really wasn't even a pac bite like that, but i'll let you rock). and you up here tryna pop fly talking bout "the show soundtrack". LOL. it was on the "rhyme & reason" soundtrack. "the show" came out a year prior. the most I can say about that video is it was the first no limit vid that MTV felt comfortable playing...….late at night.
and the songs that really expanded no limit to the east coast sounded nothing like 2pac.
he really didn't get into the 2pac stuff until mid-'98, when no limit was ALREADY at its apex.
a lot of revisionist history in your post. you come off a lil young - which is cool, but your posts read like youre piecing stuff together via web forums & half-ass google searches.
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