this is true. I had people on the coli argue me down saying no one has been able to disprove him. nikka.![]()

this is true. I had people on the coli argue me down saying no one has been able to disprove him. nikka.![]()
Damn near every story Fat Joe has told has been confirmed by others, half of them by dudes that was beefing with him, or not cool with him like that.not on this site. Last year when I discussed fat joe's lies, everyone came out in defense of him claiming how "real" he was.
Damn near every story Fat Joe has told has been confirmed by others, half of them by dudes that was beefing with him, or not cool with him like that.
He's a street dude, so his stories are exaggerated, but no different than any other hood dude telling stories. He tells stories similar to hood/street dudes on the block tellin reminiscing. The number of people present be exponentially high, the size of the guns goes up, the sound effects, how fast people ran...That's just the way it is.
Snoop never tells a story the same way twice. Daz doesn't seem to lie, but it always comes down to what he's owed for this and that.
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"Daz Dillinger has claimed JAY-Z owes him some money after allegedly drawing inspiration from one of his tracks for Dr. Dre‘s “Still D.R.E.”
During a recent interview with Home Grown Radio Podcast, the Dogg Pound rapper discussed his impact on West Coast Hip Hop, his time at Death Row Records, his business ventures and more.
However, at one point in the conversation, Daz made an interesting revelation regarding one of Dr.Dre’s biggest hits.
It’s well know that Dre asked JAY-Z to ghostwrite the lyrics for “Still D.R.E.,” which served as his comeback single following his 1992 debut with The Chronic. Daz, however, has claimed that Jigga may have borrowed and re-tooled some lines for those ghostwritten bars.
Daz said that according to whosampled.com, a track entitled “Serial Killa” was implicated as a reference on “Still D.R.E.” The song was featured on Snoop Dogg‘s debut album, 1993’s Doggystyle.
Besides laying down some rhymes on the track alongside RBX, The D.O.C., and his Dogg Pound brethren Kurupt, also served as co-producer with Dr. Dre.
Daz claimed that Jay was influenced by one of his lines from the song: “If you ain’t up on thangs/ Snoop Dogg is the name, Dogg Pound’s the game/ It’s like this, they don’t understand.”
He then referenced the bars that showed up on Dr. Dre’s track: “(If you ain’t up on thangs) Dr. Dre is the name/ I’m ahead of my game.”
“So in my mind, JAY-Z was listening to Serial Killa while he was writing that muthafukkin’ rhyme, and I wanna get my money for that,” Daz said, before alleging that he did contact try and contact the pair regarding the incident, but was threatened with legal action.
“Music has no statue of limitations, ” he said before directly calling out the “Family Feud” rapper and demanding “some percentages” from him.
[/QUOTE]Dillinger is not shy about letting people know when he’s owed. In another section of the interview, the West Coast producer revealed how he once forced Suge Knight into paying him $2.5million.
During the chat, Dillinger recalled an incident in 1997 where he allegedly forced the former Death Row Records CEO to cut him a seven-figure check after threatening him with a screwdriver.
“shyt, I got a check for like $2.3million from Suge Knight,” Daz said when asked about the biggest check he’s ever received. “Delmar Arnaud, Suge Knight, Death Row Records, $2.5million. I had to give Kurupt some too.”
He added: “I had to go in and strong arm Suge to get the money. I had everybody in they office hemmed up against the wall, n-gga. We on mushrooms. We in that muthafukka lit! N-gga in the corner laughing. I felt a little something, n-gga, I ran, ahhh! Had a big ass muthafukin’ diesel screwdriver. You know them big long diesel screwdrivers?”
Daz Dillinger Claims JAY-Z Owes Him For ‘Still D.R.E.’ Reference
a half truth is still a whole lie. If I go to the market and buy some bread, and tell everyone, "I went to the market one day and bought every piece of bread they had in the building". It's truthful I went to the market and bought some bread; it becomes a lie once I exaggerate (the word you used) about how much bread I bought. No one is saying there isn't SOME truth to the stories he's telling, but they become lies once he starts adding shyt to make himself look like Kingpin. I seriously hope that's not hard to understand.Damn near every story Fat Joe has told has been confirmed by others, half of them by dudes that was beefing with him, or not cool with him like that.
He's a street dude, so his stories are exaggerated, but no different than any other hood dude telling stories. He tells stories similar to hood/street dudes on the block tellin reminiscing. The number of people present be exponentially high, the size of the guns goes up, the sound effects, how fast people ran...That's just the way it is.
Snoop never tells a story the same way twice. Daz doesn't seem to lie, but it always comes down to what he's owed for this and that.