Average Coli Poster
IT mgmt/A&R/Sports Agent/DimePiece Slayer
How would you answer this question?
NY?
Baltimore?
The Bay?
LA?
Everywhere?
NY?
Baltimore?
The Bay?
LA?
Everywhere?
Baltimore to NY to CA


...people point out he didn't claim the bay like that,but he did enuff...he knew exactly how much he could claim it without pissing off nikkas that's really from there...But what greater gift than being a honorary bay nikka
I honestly think Cali only let Pac claim them because he was a real nikka and one of the biggest rappers ever, if he was some cornball nikka who moved out there at 17 trying to claim he was from there they'd hit him with the
It's always been a known fact Pac was from NY, his first rap name was MC New York
He didnt even get on that reppin Cali shyt till he felt like NY turned on him in late 94
....Bone Thugs coulda fukked around and got that pass if they didn't stay shoutin out Cleveland
..nikkas wanted Bone to be from Cali,lookin for Cleveland California on the map and shyt
No Bay=no Pac ill let you decide...people point out he didn't claim the bay like that,but he did enuff...he knew exactly how much he could claim it without pissing off nikkas that's really from there...But what greater gift than being a honorary bay nikka
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Shakur left Baltimore in the spring of 1988, his junior year. Hicken, the theater instructor, never had the chance to put him in a show. Pilcher says Shakur was "heartbroken" about leaving.
From thespian to thug
"He wanted nothing more than to stay at the School for the Arts," says Pilcher. "There was respect, and acting wasn't looked upon as a sissy thing to do."
Shakur moved to Northern California, found his way into the West Coast rap scene and got his break with Digital Underground. By the time he was 22, he had starred in two films and his two albums had each sold a half-million copies. Tupac was now 2Pac, a walking symbol of the thug life.
Shakur made several return visits to Baltimore, usually as part of record promotions. He arrived in limousines, but still presented himself as the Shakur of old.
"We knew him before he adopted the gangster persona," says Hicken. "It wouldn't make any sense for him to talk to us that way."
Cole visited him in Los Angeles during the filming of "Poetic Justice," released in 1992. But Shakur cut him off when his Oakland friends arrived at the hotel where they were staying.
"I'm rather white, and I didn't fit the image of what his thug life friends wanted, and I don't think he knew how to deal with it," says Cole.
