Mystikal and others aren't happy with how P said on Episode 4 that he could have gotten any other producers and NL would have been just as successful. That and said they all should just have been grateful for the opportunity he gave them. Click to read the caption that he shared.
You really using Forbes? Forbes list isn't accurate. It's 100% speculation and hype. Why do you think you never see any of the execs like Bryan Turner (founder of Priority Records) on the list? It's the same way all these "celebrity net worth" sites are all bogus.
We keep explaining it. No Limit was basically a Ponzi scheme because they secured big advances from Priority for each album and got stores to order more copies than they could actually sell. Eventually, Priority realized that NL wasn't going to recoup and they hit NL with the bill for that and other expenses to the tune of more than $47 mil.
Yes, NL made and profited lots of money on many albums. But they also took in big advances and didn't have enough heavyweight sales to make up for it. P just wanted the instant money and could care less about anything long-term. That's how many hustler think and it's the reason they're often their own worst enemy.


The bolded part is the exact reason for your disconnect in this whole discussion. You're failing to read and watch the sources that we are providing you. Instead, y'all would rather cling to your opinion that P was blameless and didn't make mistakes.
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EMI bought a 50% stake in Priority in 1996, and the remainder in 1998. Despite EMI's full ownership, Priority continued to be independently managed company until 2001, when its operations were merged into EMI's major US subsidiary, Capitol Records. They merged because Priority was losing money despite having chart topping albums. (likely because of doing stuff like they did with NL).
Well, Capitol likely checked their books and realized that they actually overpaid NL and they weren't as forgiving as Priority was.
Master P signed with Universal (Capitol/EMI's biggest competitor) in 2001 by creating a brand new company (New No Limit). Seems he did this to distance himself from the debt and lawsuits with the original NL. I doubt P told them how much money he was in debt. P then allegedly did the same thing by getting a huge advance from Universal and then skipped out on them when it came time to release and promote albums. He then filed bankruptcy in 2003 to not have to pay his creditors and lost the catalogue.

Now, I can't say that's 100% how it went because I wasn't there. But from the facts that we do know, I'd say that was close to how things went and why Priority & BBTP own it. Follow the present day results and trace your way back.
And If you read the information I've previoisly posted, you'd see that your questions are exactly why that's considered the dumbest contract in sports history.
KLC produced "Move B*tch" for Ludacris. But they were stuck in litigation for 10 years and many artists and labels were cautious of working with them, not knowing if they were still under contract to No Limit.
And when P was blackballed by major labels, pretty much everybody associated with NL was effectively blackballed too. Same thing happened with Death Row.