The truth of the war between Eminem and Nick Cannon
Case in point is the bruhaha involving Nick Cannon, his wife Mariah Carey, and Eminem. By this point I'm sure many have heard about what is going on, but for those that havent it boils down to this. Eminem once dated Carey for a brief time. His next albulm will contain a song that disses her and husband Cannon. Cannon heard a leaked version, was inflamed, and jumped all over the internet to protest.
Does this matter at all? Not really. I mean it's nice to see Nick Cannon standing up for his wife. But the manner and degree that he is doing so has only one outcome. More sales for Eminem's albulm. Not that most in the music industry will admit it. Except
"By getting irate, threatening Eminem, and digging up his old dramas, Nick has done exactly what Marshall Mathers hoped he would do. Eminem is the bad guy people love to hate. Nick has spent too much time on the subject.
Nick should have simply said that he did not appreciate the song and would discuss it would Eminem." - Billy Johnson Jr.
This effectively is turning out to be the same battle as the one between 50 cent and Kanye West. [By the way wasn't one of them supposed to quit music forever?] It doesn't improve the music, it just makes the sales jump. It's hype pure and simple.
At least this time someone is admitting it. Not that this won't bump sales, for no good reason. Which is a shame since I always thought music, no matter the genre, was supposed to be about quality and the listener. Chalk up another change to rap.
Labels: Billy Johnson Jr., Eminem, Mariah Carey, Marshall Mathers, music industry, Nick Cannon






[Ok here is a pet peeve of mine. What happened to the s? The word is cents, not a difficult word. I presume that the rapper has had enough education to know the proper spelling of this word. I could be wrong. Even if the word is supposed to be 50% where is the per? It just annoys me the way the American English language is abused for profit, encouraging misuse by those who do not profit but believe that it must be ok since rich entertainers do it. See my thoughts on
I am sure some (referred to colloquially in the Black African American culture at least as golddiddgers) may find this inspiring. I am amazed at the greed that is on display. Without regard for the feelings that Ms. Smith and her late husband shared, the various legal battles for his estate are less than virtuous at least in appearance. The press coverage of this case will no doubt be a standout. The big question of course is what precedent will be set by this case. And how much wealth can be shared by those in an inheritance. Keep dad away from those strippers or else.