Is Nas the most stanned rapper by other rappers of all time?

CASHAPP

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Nas is the GOAT :blessed:

And it's not even just rappers stanning him, the late Amy Winehouse was a Nas stan

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hex

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Lupe started rapping after he heard IWW :wow:

Drake said he studyed IWW for his debut album :wow:

Jayz called his crib without Nas giving him his numbers :wow:

First non Wu Tang member feature :wow:

J Lo and M.I.A both said Nas their favorite rapper :wow:

Denzel said Nas is his favorite rapper :wow:

Common said Nas is his favorite rapper :wow:

He's in Fabolous's, 50's, Kendrick's, Eminem's top 5 :wow:

Kanye wants to be a "chi-town nikka with a Nas flow" :wow:

Came in here to say Pac but you present a compelling argument.

Fred.
 

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Pac himself was somewhat of a nas stan
You Nas fanboys are a joke. Nas is definitely the most stanned by losers on this site. :heh: Pac being a Nas Stan when he shat in dude before he died. Called him a fraud who wanted be him. Then what he Nas do after he died? First he cried then he.......
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That Stan shyt has always been one way.
 

IllmaticDelta

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Sorry but the proof is in the pudding...

You Nas fanboys are a joke. Nas is definitely the most stanned by losers on this site. :heh: Pac being a Nas Stan when he shat in dude before he died. Called him a fraud who wanted be him. Then what he Nas do after he died? First he cried then he.......
ahanopfie4aiwzkm4qs1.jpg

19bf047da41d38243699649fd17c2702.jpg
dkacmopiabafki1azvzha69nl.470x702x1.jpg

That Stan shyt has always been one way.


The Nas admiration from Pac is documented
True:ehh:
But did you read about pacs love for illmatic in Born TO Use Mics:usure:

My nikka even got yelled at for blasting it to loud:pachaha: And when he kept rewinding the beginning over and over not even wanting to listen to the rest of the album:wow:
And him protection illmatic before his fight with the Hughes brothers:krs:

Goat recognizes goat:ahh:


Tupac ends his third and final verse with a venomous tirade against New York rapper NaS, who he accuses of various hip hop crimes. According to Tupac, NaS is an impostor who stole rap legend Rakim's lyrical style ("you heard 'My Melody' . . . tryin' to sound like Rakim") and plagiarized Tupac's life story ("read about my life in the papers . . . now you want to live my life"). Behind this public hatred was a private admiration. Tupac was a huge fan of NaS' debut album, Illmatic, and was inspired to write "Me and My Girlfriend" after hearing NaS' "I Gave You Power," an anthropomorphic first-person narrative told through the "eyes" of a handgun. He made peace with NaS in New York's Bryant Park on September 4, 1996 and even listened to NaS' sophomore album, It Was Written, as he made his fateful trip to Las Vegas for the Tyson-Seldon fight three days later. According to Suge Knight, Tupac intended to remove the NaS disses from the Makaveli album but died before he could do so. In a magazine interview after Tupac's death, NaS admitted crying when he first heard "Against All Odds."

11.2 K-THORO FM: Amazing Breakdown of "Against All Oddz" (NEW INFO)

and...

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dream hampton on how pac felt about illmatic:

'Hampton credits Illmatic with providing a common artistic ground for rappers on the West Coast and East Coast rap scenes. In the 2009 essay "Born Alone, Die Alone," she recounts the album's impact on West Coast artist, Tupac Shakur. While working as a journalist for The Source in 1994, Hampton covered three court cases involving Tupac. Around this time, she received an advance-copy of Illmatic and immediately dubbed a cassette version for Tupac, who became "an instant convert" of the album. The next day, she writes, Tupac "arrived in his assigned courtroom blasting Illmatic so loudly that the bailiff yelled at him to turn it off before the judge took his seat on the bench.'

Despite these regional differences, Hampton credits Illmatic with providing a common artistic ground for rappers on the West Coast and East Coast rap scenes. In the 2009 essay "Born Alone, Die Alone," she recounts the album's impact on West Coast artist, Tupac Shakur.[108] While working as a journalist for The Source in 1994, Hampton covered three court cases involving Tupac. Around this time, she received an advance-copy of Illmatic and immediately dubbed a cassette version for Tupac, who became "an instant convert" of the album. The next day, she writes, Tupac "arrived in his assigned courtroom blasting Illmatic so loudly that the bailiff yelled at him to turn it off before the judge took his seat on the bench." In her essay, Hampton implies that Nas' lyricism might have influenced Tupac's acclaimed album, Me Against the World, which was recorded that same year.[108]
 
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