Bruce Wayne
THE GODDAMN BILLIONAIRE
Those are just all his Friends. 

Whatever helps you sleep.
I never said those songs weren't loved Down South. The point I'm making here is that nobody is omnipresent (everywhere). Where one person says this song or that song was bigger here another could easily refute it by saying "well, it wasn't in my area". That's the reason why something like a Billboard chart is more tangible because you know they actually measure things like airplay.
My argument doesn't solely rest on a Source ranking, but it's relevant because I was referencing the impact of those beats.
"Money Cash Hoes" was a single. What's funny is that "nikka What, nikka Who" was initially a B-Side to that song, but became a single of it's own and still outperformed the A-side.
bullchit.
a minute ago, you tried to say those songs weren't organic. now youre saying that they were loved.
a billboard chart is not more tangible. people sell for certain reasons. certain singles sell for certain reasons. youre in here comparing the billboard stats of a single designed & pushed for mainstream success to songs that might not have even been singles in the 1st place.
nobody gave a f*ck about some source rankings brehski.
"nika what nikka who" had a video. what part of that don't you understand?
bullchit.
a minute ago, you tried to say those songs weren't organic. now youre saying that they were loved.
a billboard chart is not more tangible. people sell for certain reasons. certain singles sell for certain reasons. youre in here comparing the billboard stats of a single designed & pushed for mainstream success to songs that might not have even been singles in the 1st place.
nobody gave a f*ck about some source rankings brehski.
"nika what nikka who" had a video. what part of that don't you understand?
I said "Money Cash Hoes" wasn't organic. That has no bearing on whether those songs were loved or not.
Yes, a Billboard chart is more tangible. "Money Cash Hoes" was designed and pushed for mainstream success as much as "nikka What, nikka Who". "Money Cash" had it's own CD single which made it eligible to chart. That song was a single. That's a fact. "Jigga My nikka" was a CD single as well. The difference is that song didn't have a vid.
Jigga my nikka was for the ruff ryders compilation..
It wasnt even for his album...that shyt hit the streets so hard the djs were forced to play it..for a compilation album for an artist who isnt even on the label
nikkas talkin about songs that were strategically placed or designed to be singles..nikka what was a southern sounding beat and it had his artist amil and jaz who he wanted to sign..i would put it on the b side too..![]()
you don't know what organic means.
and like I said, they didn't have a video. and youre too much into charts.
"nikka what nikka who" had a video and it dropped when bone thugs & double-time rap was an automatic money grab.
EXACTLY!!
I know exactly what organic means. "Jigga My nikka" produced by Swizz Beatz wasn't exactly organic..
stopped reading right there.
Organic would imply that it was a song that took on a life of it's own so much that the label had no choice.
organic = blowing up without being forcefed.
swizz production didn't age well at allwell they weren't good in the first anyway
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