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Subject: "Straight Outta Compton (The Movie)" Previous topic | Next topic
-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Mon Aug-17-15 09:56 AM

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"Straight Outta Compton (The Movie)"


  

          

Who's planning to see it?

I'm heading to the premiere tonight, but a lot of my folks have already seen it. Literally everyone who saw it said that it is good, even though they omit a lot of things, and change up some scenarios.

I heard there was plenty drama during the first half of production, but looks like it all got ironed out.

------------------------------

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
It's dope even if the second half loses steam.
Aug 10th 2015
1
I actually disagree. The last 2/3s of the film were better than the firs...
Aug 16th 2015
64
I love the Giamatti casting
Aug 10th 2015
2
I honestly haven't decided if I really want to see it or not
Aug 10th 2015
3
I saw it. 9/10 entertainment value. Here's the thing though
Aug 11th 2015
4
We are going on Friday...
Aug 11th 2015
5
Agreed. Lots of made up shit.
Aug 14th 2015
25
yeah, there's no such thing as an accurate biopic.
Aug 15th 2015
48
You're very correct about the inaccuraties
Aug 16th 2015
65
We goin.
Aug 11th 2015
6
Chucks...can't forget the Chucks
Aug 11th 2015
7
duly noted
Aug 11th 2015
10
Oh people were dressed hilarious in there last night.
Aug 11th 2015
9
Maybe I'll wear my Eazy E costume.
Aug 13th 2015
23
I'd rather watch the criterion collection of Birth of A Nation
Aug 11th 2015
8
thx for your contribution
Aug 11th 2015
11
If someone doesn't dissent something would be wrong with the world
Aug 11th 2015
17
Exactly, I wanna see the movie but I totally HATE Dr. Dre lol
Aug 11th 2015
15
Catching it Friday at the Magic Johnson theatre in Harlem
Aug 11th 2015
12
Whoa, that just sounds hood because ours was the most hood ever
Aug 11th 2015
13
      it's gentrified but hood niggas still pack the theater out
Aug 11th 2015
14
      To me, the magic was super hood until I moved back to Chiraq lol
Aug 11th 2015
16
           Wow! I mean, I rarely ever went to Magic, but it was never "hood"
Aug 11th 2015
18
i plan on seeing it this weekend
Aug 11th 2015
19
Once a clear bootleg comes out, it's watch party time!
Aug 11th 2015
20
Naww $upport it
Aug 13th 2015
22
lol, i'm with you. it seems everyone has forgotten how sleazy cube
Aug 17th 2015
89
going soon, however i know its gonna be whitewashed
Aug 12th 2015
21
It's not very feel good at all.
Aug 14th 2015
27
im there this weekend.
Aug 13th 2015
24
Just got back from a screening.
Aug 14th 2015
26
Did you think it was too long? What's wild is that most people
Aug 14th 2015
30
      I did, but at the same time...not long enough...
Aug 14th 2015
32
           See, about that.
Aug 14th 2015
33
                Yeah, exactly.
Aug 14th 2015
35
                     Yeaaaa. Like even if they linked back up, I feel like it woulda needed
Aug 14th 2015
38
                     How I interpreted that scene
Aug 16th 2015
67
this movie owed me NOTHING. Fucking fantastic for NWA fans.
Aug 14th 2015
28
I swear I forgot it wasn't Cube, as I said before
Aug 14th 2015
29
The first half of "Straight Outta Compton" was amazing
Aug 14th 2015
31
Do you think they tried to cover too much, and just lost focus?
Aug 14th 2015
34
      A little of both
Aug 14th 2015
36
           ^^^All this.
Aug 14th 2015
39
           See I mostly agree, but it feels like the 2nd half
Aug 14th 2015
40
           Well dammmmm!!!
Aug 14th 2015
41
           DPG vs. Ruthless, was that during a Montell Jordan video shoot?
Aug 16th 2015
68
                Yup, Nate went nutty with the golf club
Sep 09th 2015
186
           this is great analysis
Aug 14th 2015
45
           This would have been a way better way to go.
Aug 14th 2015
47
           ^^ the beginning had me wanting to leave.
Aug 15th 2015
54
           I gave benefit of doubt to the 2Pac scene
Aug 16th 2015
69
           It wasn't.....Makaveli was recorded in 3 days in July of 1996
Aug 17th 2015
88
           i agree w/all that.
Aug 16th 2015
70
           RE: A little of both
Aug 16th 2015
72
           eh, that wasn't on Death Row though
Aug 16th 2015
77
           With you 100000000000000000%
Sep 07th 2015
164
For me I think this is gonna be the first biopic that fits the bill of.....
Aug 14th 2015
37
just got back.. LOVED it man
Aug 14th 2015
42
Grantland called it the hip hop Avengers.
Aug 14th 2015
43
      absolutely
Aug 14th 2015
46
Dope. Fucking Dope.
Aug 14th 2015
44
Loved it!!
Aug 15th 2015
49
so we tried to go
Aug 15th 2015
50
Dope movie.
Aug 15th 2015
51
who in the hell casted Snoop? Lifetime?
Aug 15th 2015
52
Didn't matter. Dude was great as snoop.
Aug 15th 2015
53
It's a testiment to the strength of the movie that all people can
Aug 15th 2015
55
hold on...all I said was that he didn't resemble snoop
Aug 16th 2015
59
RE: who in the hell casted Snoop? Lifetime?
Aug 16th 2015
57
Portrayal. Not impersonation
Aug 16th 2015
75
outside of Cube's SON(duh) none of the main characters really looked...
Aug 17th 2015
82
He looked close to what Snoop looked like at that age
Aug 17th 2015
87
dope as hell
Aug 16th 2015
56
Deadline: S.O.C. headed to 59 mil first weekend (SWIPE)
Aug 16th 2015
58
Can't wait for the Jay-Z Biopic where he loses 92 Bricks
Aug 16th 2015
60
I hope they show when Chris Martin brings him into the Illuminati
Aug 16th 2015
61
Don't forget *NOT* stabbing Un Rivera
Aug 16th 2015
62
So R-Tistic, what is it you believe was real and what was fake?
Aug 16th 2015
63
it was perfect until Eazy's Wet & Wild Party*
Aug 16th 2015
66
No movie cliche is worse than the "coughing character."
Aug 16th 2015
71
      yup. Best Man Holiday syndrome
Aug 16th 2015
73
      really? no movie cliche is worse?
Aug 17th 2015
79
      ?
Aug 18th 2015
92
      RE: No movie cliche is worse....
Aug 18th 2015
104
Man... I want to see it, but that casting call left a really bad taste i...
Aug 16th 2015
74
if this is about dark skinned women, they were well represented
Aug 16th 2015
76
...they were casting women to play groupies in pool party scenes.
Aug 17th 2015
80
      Django had a casting call for SLAVES bruh... SLAVES!!!
Aug 17th 2015
81
      Did you see the casting calls?
Aug 18th 2015
97
dre and cube come off too squeaky, content controversy within community
Aug 17th 2015
78
Dre socked a dude out for his brother, he had a groupie in the hotel
Aug 17th 2015
83
      iono they felt like the protags, driven and 'right,' whereas eazy
Aug 17th 2015
85
      RE: Dre socked a dude out for his brother, he had a groupie in the hotel
Sep 07th 2015
165
Overall I liked it, as an old head that was in high school when NWA firs...
Aug 17th 2015
84
I can't lie....This movie truly made me reflect on my life at times
Aug 18th 2015
90
A 5'6 DJ who beats up everyone...you're the alternate universe Rtistic
Sep 07th 2015
158
Dre's influence over the movie was pretty obvious.
Aug 18th 2015
91
no 'Dre Day' or 'Real Motherfuckin Gs'
Aug 18th 2015
93
      It's criminal to leave that out. Overall Dre was a little too..
Aug 18th 2015
94
They shouldve showed how Death Row ended up being a small shitty
Aug 18th 2015
95
F GARY GRAY was the PUMP IT UP cameraman! WTF?
Aug 18th 2015
96
Here's the Dee Barnes Gawker piece. It's a tough read.
Aug 18th 2015
98
Good stuff!
Aug 18th 2015
99
Definitely a lot of good info here
Aug 18th 2015
100
The difference being, of course...
Aug 18th 2015
101
I wasn't speaking on her or the incident being left out
Aug 18th 2015
102
The value in producing one's own biopic. Lol
Aug 18th 2015
103
I work in the media so I hate this
Aug 18th 2015
105
that dude is a pos
Aug 18th 2015
106
Oh, I don't doubt anyone who says awful things about Gawker writers.
Aug 18th 2015
108
Let's slow down....
Aug 19th 2015
115
      you're correct.
Aug 19th 2015
118
RE: I love Dre’s song “Keep Their Heads Ringin”
Aug 19th 2015
138
These thinkpieces are the worst.
Aug 18th 2015
107
None, except for Barnes'.
Aug 18th 2015
109
This is true.
Aug 18th 2015
110
I don't get why that would be part of HIS story. That would be part of H...
Aug 19th 2015
114
No reason for her to be in it because there's no resolution.
Aug 19th 2015
135
im not mad @ any character omissions like that BUT
Aug 18th 2015
111
RE: These thinkpieces are the worst.
Aug 19th 2015
117
      Right, but I specifically separated hers.
Aug 19th 2015
128
Loved it, except for the '94-'96 time jumble.
Aug 18th 2015
112
DOC speaks on NWA/his career circa 2004
Aug 18th 2015
113
way tl:dr.
Aug 19th 2015
120
RE: way tl:dr.
Aug 19th 2015
123
      i couldn't do it.
Aug 19th 2015
127
great read, thanks. n/m
Aug 19th 2015
126
Dope interview.
Aug 20th 2015
152
i just saw the "costume designer" for the movie.....y'all have fun
Aug 19th 2015
116
she's white. what would the issue be?
Aug 19th 2015
119
we get it, lazy.
Aug 19th 2015
121
If people want to nitpick....Suge had hair up until about 1993
Aug 19th 2015
122
good one.
Aug 19th 2015
124
I wanted to see more of Ren and Yella
Aug 19th 2015
125
If they ever make an EPMD movie......and i find out....
Aug 19th 2015
129
WHAT???? Maaaan, get all the way outta here!!!!
Aug 19th 2015
130
Dre stole his lunch money in grade school, man.
Aug 19th 2015
131
EXCUSES! they couldn't recreate a set of cuts from 1986?
Aug 19th 2015
132
      reminds me of when n'sync was singing acapella...but yet they had
Aug 19th 2015
133
           let's have a get fresh crew movie and have rahzel ghost beat box lol
Aug 19th 2015
134
Even your criticisms are lazy.
Aug 19th 2015
136
someone else said, they exposed Eazy's lack of rap skill BUT
Aug 19th 2015
137
      but like...(and Im not trying to argue so dont get mad)
Aug 19th 2015
139
      Except that E wasn't a rapper.
Aug 19th 2015
140
           he such an awesome dj...why he need Jazzy Jeff to do the cuts?
Aug 20th 2015
144
                wait...you thought that was actually Dr. Dre on screen?
Aug 20th 2015
145
                Dude...............stop!
Aug 20th 2015
146
                     but i haven't even gotten to the white sox hat
Aug 20th 2015
147
                     they make a story of your life, who u gon hire to do the djing for you?
Aug 20th 2015
148
                          Jazzy Jeff again!
Aug 20th 2015
149
                               wow.....ok. i hear ya bruh. mine would be me
Aug 20th 2015
150
https://youtu.be/kPX3oUMmaDE
Aug 20th 2015
151
Here's my blog post on it:
Aug 19th 2015
141
RE: Here's my blog post on it:
Aug 19th 2015
142
it was good and my takes and 2 cents
Aug 19th 2015
143
Got round to watching it - loved it
Sep 06th 2015
153
it was quite dramatic how they prefaced the creation of FUCK THA POLICE
Sep 06th 2015
154
One scene in particular bothered me which for me was very revealing
Sep 07th 2015
155
i wouldnt expect anything less
Sep 07th 2015
156
I hear ya but what bothers me was that even today when you ask
Sep 07th 2015
157
Thats what made the scene hilarious and real as fuck
Sep 07th 2015
159
Well to be fair a diss song is personal.
Sep 07th 2015
160
holy fuck, you dont think they did that on purpose?
Sep 08th 2015
166
      Uh NO because I specifically said in this post that the REAL Jerry Helle...
Sep 08th 2015
168
           uh OBVIOUSLY it was real, i never said it was faked for dramatic effect
Sep 08th 2015
169
                Then what exactly are you saying because most ppl I'm sure had no
Sep 08th 2015
172
                     that says alot about you and the people you know
Sep 08th 2015
173
                          You sound stupid and childish...please go elsewhere, gadfly
Sep 08th 2015
176
that shit was a fairytale comedy.
Sep 07th 2015
161
every1 except cube & dre were portrayed as either stupid
Sep 07th 2015
162
Lol i agree
Sep 07th 2015
163
how could anyone expect them to put all of that into the movie?
Sep 08th 2015
167
they found time to add all that fiction to it.
Sep 08th 2015
170
      movie was in development hell for years
Sep 08th 2015
174
Erics wife
Sep 08th 2015
175
ehhhhhh. we know who is REALLY the power behind the pen
Sep 08th 2015
179
It's a movie. EVERY Biopic changes up this kind of info
Sep 08th 2015
181
meh
Sep 08th 2015
171
wow, I thought Cub'es son was one of the weakest actors
Sep 08th 2015
177
the story revolved more around Eazy than I expected
Sep 08th 2015
178
      no one laughed in our movie theatre...
Sep 09th 2015
184
Their costume designer was a young woman that wasn't even alive
Sep 08th 2015
183
So. The original album hit #4 on Billboard. The title song hit #38 on
Sep 08th 2015
180
I'm wanting more on this angle
Sep 08th 2015
182
http://izquotes.com/quotes-pictures/quote-history-is-almost-always-writt...
Sep 09th 2015
185

bwood
Member since Apr 03rd 2006
8613 posts
Mon Aug-10-15 01:00 PM

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1. "It's dope even if the second half loses steam."
In response to Reply # 0


          

I hope it makes a grip.

------------------------------------------
America from 9:00 on: https://youtu.be/GUwLCQU10KQ

  

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ramaj1
Member since May 20th 2008
1393 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 07:27 PM

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64. "I actually disagree. The last 2/3s of the film were better than the firs..."
In response to Reply # 1


  

          

The first third of the film is beautifully filmed and engaging but a tad uneven.

  

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Amritsar
Member since Jan 18th 2008
32093 posts
Mon Aug-10-15 01:03 PM

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2. "I love the Giamatti casting"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

That might be enough to get me to see it

  

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Dstl1
Charter member
56226 posts
Mon Aug-10-15 01:04 PM

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3. "I honestly haven't decided if I really want to see it or not"
In response to Reply # 0


          

.

...I'm from the era when A.I. was the answer, now they think ai is the answer - Marlon Craft

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 11:50 AM

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4. "I saw it. 9/10 entertainment value. Here's the thing though"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

There's a LOOOOOOOOOOT left out, a LOOOOOT that's incorrect. But........the issue is that for folks like me, we just know way too much about them to accept this. Truth is, EVERY single biopic is this biased and incorrect, just that some of us aren't as familiar with the artists or whoever the subject is, and won't realize how much is off.

I say that because I know it's gonna be the main complaint from most folks here. The acting was very good, I'd say B+. Almost all the actors feel like the person they portray, and Cube's son and Eazy felt spot on. There were a few times I really forgot that I was looking at Cube's son and not Cube...like I had to snap out of it.

I know some folks will be mad that they omit folks like Michel'le, or the Dee Barnes incident, but the shit is already 2 and a half hours long. As much as I felt could have or should have been included, I feel that it did a good job of focusing directly on NWA and their story as a group. You could damn near make a 20 hour movie involving the characters and everything else that went down on the side.

There's also plenty scenes that were made just to get a reaction out of you, although they didn't happen in real life.

It did a great job of capturing highs and lows. There were times that everyone was laughing HARD, and within 15-20 minutes, you'd damn near be in tears.

It's a lot I'll hold off on saying until after the weekend...I can't necessarily spoil it plot wise (unless you really didn't know Eazy died), but it's plenty of things that would ruin the movie if I spoke about it.

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
79555 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 11:54 AM

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5. "We are going on Friday... "
In response to Reply # 4


          

****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:34 AM

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25. "Agreed. Lots of made up shit. "
In response to Reply # 4


  

          

But still it succeeds way more than it failed and the performances from all actors were fantastic.

The live NWA shit was incredible.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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b.Touch
Member since Jun 28th 2011
20514 posts
Sat Aug-15-15 01:01 AM

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48. "yeah, there's no such thing as an accurate biopic."
In response to Reply # 4


  

          

Now, you can run into issues when they're widely inaccurate and/or rely too much on fictionalized material (see also "Stonewall", "Cadillac Records"), but for the most part, there's going to be some fictionalization done to keep the plot cohesive, moving along, and to hit all three acts of the standard narrative structure in under three hours.

  

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ramaj1
Member since May 20th 2008
1393 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 07:41 PM

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65. "You're very correct about the inaccuraties"
In response to Reply # 4


  

          

I just came back from a screening a couple hours ago. Overall, it was a very good biopic even if unlike many of the other posters here, I found the last two thirds better than the entertaining yet uneven (ans somewhat cliche) first third. Beautiful cinematography all throughout, I must say.

Now, my only true grip w/ the film was the historial inaccuraties presented. Listen, I know that Dre is a member of the establishment now and a huge money-maker with ties to the Jimmy Iovine powerhouse, Apple and Monster so they couldn't make their asset look too bad but dude was truly whitewashed IMO.

#1--He had to include how he supposedly met his current wife, Nicole. That whole scene was BS. Dre was engaged to Natasha Walker, still fucking with Miche'le and had just had another child w/ another woman when Nicole came on the screen. I'm not saying SOC had to turn into a 'hood soap opera but if you're going to include that, don't clean it up. Show it as it was.

#2--As R-Tistic noted, Dre and 'pac were not friends and the latter was forced to appear on "California Love". The body language in the classic video shows you, alone, that Dre and 'Pac didn't fuck with each other.

#3--Dre's triumphant exit from Death Row was BS. "What's the name of the company?" "Aftermath"....end scene. GTFOH. It didn't go like that at all. Did anyone forget that Dre brought Suge into the picture to strong arm the contracts from Eazy in the first place? Oh, wait, the film didn't tell that. lol.

Eazy and Cube were portrayed fairly but Dre's depiction was just a little too whitewashed for my taste. It sucks that Ren and Yella were non-entities but since this is a Hollywood biopic designed for the general public, not hardcore hip hop or general music heads, I guess I understand.

  

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infin8
Charter member
10401 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 11:55 AM

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6. "We goin. "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Starching some khakis and a fresh Pro Club ta-NITE.

IG: amadu_me

"...Whateva, man..." (c) Redman

  

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ALmighty44
Member since Feb 09th 2004
19824 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 12:00 PM

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7. "Chucks...can't forget the Chucks"
In response to Reply # 6


  

          

.

  

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infin8
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Tue Aug-11-15 12:08 PM

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10. "duly noted"
In response to Reply # 7
Tue Aug-11-15 12:10 PM by infin8

  

          


I got some vans in blue c-rag print but I aint tryna get shot. lmao

IG: amadu_me

"...Whateva, man..." (c) Redman

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 12:08 PM

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9. "Oh people were dressed hilarious in there last night."
In response to Reply # 6


  

          

Chucks, Raiders jerseys, all that. My boy got a pic with this SUPER OG lady from Bompton: https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpt1/v/t1.0-9/11863372_10153906440939239_3704116324715485091_n.jpg?oh=d7fcc6e3e709f5e0750d00af5d8cc494&oe=563A9CE1

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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SoWhat
Charter member
154163 posts
Thu Aug-13-15 05:39 PM

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23. "Maybe I'll wear my Eazy E costume."
In response to Reply # 6


  

          

fuck you.

  

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Atillah Moor
Member since Sep 05th 2013
13825 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 12:07 PM

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8. "I'd rather watch the criterion collection of Birth of A Nation "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

But hey-- at least it'll entertain. Something black people have been doing since day one in this country.

______________________________________

Everything looks like Oprah kissing Harvey Weinstein these days

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
79555 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 01:21 PM

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11. "thx for your contribution"
In response to Reply # 8


          

****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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Atillah Moor
Member since Sep 05th 2013
13825 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 02:06 PM

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17. "If someone doesn't dissent something would be wrong with the world"
In response to Reply # 11


  

          

______________________________________

Everything looks like Oprah kissing Harvey Weinstein these days

  

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isaaaa
Member since May 10th 2007
30565 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 01:51 PM

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15. "Exactly, I wanna see the movie but I totally HATE Dr. Dre lol"
In response to Reply # 8


          


Anti-gentrification, cheap alcohol & trying to look pretty in our twilight posting years (c) Big Reg


Get 25% off www.karmaloop.com w/ rep code JR9103 |
Nike, G-Star, Herschel, Adidas (Men's & Women's clothing)

  

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Brother Rabbit
Member since Oct 31st 2007
1617 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 01:28 PM

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12. "Catching it Friday at the Magic Johnson theatre in Harlem"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

______________________________

They're bureaucrats! I don't respect them.(c)Rick Sanchez

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 01:31 PM

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13. "Whoa, that just sounds hood because ours was the most hood ever"
In response to Reply # 12


  

          

on Crenshaw.

------------------------------

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atruhead
Charter member
85230 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 01:44 PM

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14. "it's gentrified but hood niggas still pack the theater out"
In response to Reply # 13


  

          

we're going Thursday night by the crib, in hopes of no one knowing it's showing early

  

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isaaaa
Member since May 10th 2007
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Tue Aug-11-15 01:54 PM

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16. "To me, the magic was super hood until I moved back to Chiraq lol"
In response to Reply # 13


          


Anti-gentrification, cheap alcohol & trying to look pretty in our twilight posting years (c) Big Reg


Get 25% off www.karmaloop.com w/ rep code JR9103 |
Nike, G-Star, Herschel, Adidas (Men's & Women's clothing)

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
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Tue Aug-11-15 04:55 PM

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18. "Wow! I mean, I rarely ever went to Magic, but it was never "hood" "
In response to Reply # 16


  

          

where I was like scared. It was always ghetto shit though. I remember seeing a R rated movie, and seeing 4 SMALL kids walk in there by themselves to watch it. Like, the oldest was six...the others were 3-5. They actually sat quiet too, watching Notorious.

------------------------------

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musiclover86
Member since Jul 20th 2015
123 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 09:11 PM

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19. "i plan on seeing it this weekend "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

< --- my first crush

  

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no_i_cant_dance
Member since Apr 10th 2006
5577 posts
Tue Aug-11-15 09:20 PM

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20. "Once a clear bootleg comes out, it's watch party time!"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

nm

<<Mood...Poppy Okotcha in Look 1 at Ashish Fall 2016
________________________________________

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sa7KBq0q5bU

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Thu Aug-13-15 05:38 PM

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22. "Naww $upport it"
In response to Reply # 20


  

          

------------------------------

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scout
Charter member
44572 posts
Mon Aug-17-15 01:19 PM

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89. "lol, i'm with you. it seems everyone has forgotten how sleazy cube"
In response to Reply # 20
Mon Aug-17-15 01:20 PM by scout

  

          

is/was. his new cosby dad/are we there yet persona has clearly got some folks fooled. that n*gga is a sleaz-ball crook. ask chris tucker and cubes illigitimate son, lol. i can't stand neither him or dre so i'll wait for the bootleg to scoff and roll my eyes

_____________________

hello, lover.

  

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mistermaxxx08
Member since Dec 31st 2010
16076 posts
Wed Aug-12-15 02:34 AM

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21. "going soon, however i know its gonna be whitewashed"
In response to Reply # 0


          

because you know Hollywoood and the feel good vibe.

i expect it to be good and yet it won't touch welcome to death row that documentary is how you do something uncut.

alot of hands involved on NWA. alot of money and hands in that pie.

mistermaxxx R.Kelly, Michael Jackson,Stevie wonder,Rick James,Marvin Gaye,El Debarge, Barry WHite Lionel RIchie,Isleys EWF,Lady T.,Kid creole and coconuts,the crusaders,kc sunshine band,bee gees,jW,sd,NE,JB

Miami Heat, New York Yankees,buffalo bills

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:50 AM

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27. "It's not very feel good at all."
In response to Reply # 21


  

          

It's ultimately about the Dre/Cube/Eazy friendship and bond, but it's not as whitewashed as you'd think. Certainly grittier than I would have expected. Tonally it hinges on a bit of a mess at times, but the opening scene will hook you.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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SoWhat
Charter member
154163 posts
Thu Aug-13-15 05:41 PM

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24. "im there this weekend."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

fuck you.

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:44 AM

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26. "Just got back from a screening. "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Loved:
The first half (basically up until Cube splits/No Vaseline).
The live performances.
All the actors performances.
Lots of little nods and references.
The social/political commentary.

Disliked:
The length.
The need to shoehorn in a lot of smaller characters.
The somewhat obvious made up events to bridge scenes.

Overall - very well done. Everything about the rise of NWA is magical, in fact. Doesn't fall into any obvious biopic traps - some underdeveloped subplots and whatnot but nothing egregious. Without spoiling a thing, there's one Cube centric line that the audience roared at.

It was pretty incredible to see a screening where probably 50% of the crowd was 50+ white people and they were getting it - even hearing No Vaseline for the first time, they actually had context for why the lines mean something.

Ultimately, this is the story about Dre, Cube, and Eazys friendship and bond. It succeeds way way more than it fails. Far from perfect but some scenes gave me chills.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 12:44 PM

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30. "Did you think it was too long? What's wild is that most people"
In response to Reply # 26


  

          

felt it moved and didn't seem like it was long, yet most will mention 4-5 things that should have been included. So it shows how long the movie coulda been.

>The need to shoehorn in a lot of smaller characters.

I thought the character selections were interesting. No Michel'le of course. They had to put Snoop and Pac in just because they're who they are, but then to not see BG Knoccout and Dresta, or Daz and Kurupt, was still kinda question mark to me.

And most of all.......NO MENTION of the Wreckin Cru?????? Like, you saw him in the suit DJing at Alonzo's spot, but that was it! BTW, Alonzo still owns a club on El Segundo/Broadway, and he STILL an asshole! LOL

>The somewhat obvious made up events to bridge scenes.

It was a lot of them, mainly against the police, but also just for dramatic effect.

------------------------------

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:04 PM

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32. "I did, but at the same time...not long enough..."
In response to Reply # 30


  

          

Like (SPOILERS FOR THOSE WHO HAVENT SEEN)...































I felt like the Death Row stuff was FAR too short. Like I know Dre was really only a part of DR for what - 3-4 years? But it goes from him starting the label to becoming disillusioned SO quickly, like things became a circus SO fast.

So many shots of the guys driving or walking weren't necessary (except during the riots, or when Eazy sees The Chronic billboard).

Love The DOC but his storyline feels so abrupt, like if you don't know the story - why do you care about this dude? Sure, sad he got in an accident but he's such a peripheral character.

Fun to see Pac and Snoop of course, but why are we getting just a snippet of Bone Thugs? Woulda been cool to see more of them than just hearing they were at the club with Eazy.

I think my biggest issue was that NWA was planning on getting back together. Like, maybe...I guess, and I guess it was needed to raise the stakes on Eazy's illness, but I was always under the impression that Cube and Dre made up with Eazy in the hospital. Speaking of which, I have a friend who's basically a vegetable - and when he went into the hospital, I was Dre (talking to him, thinking he's getting out), and my friend was Cube (wait, he can't talk?I can't see him like that). Scene kinda fucked me up.

Anyway, tons of great stuff in this of course, a lot of this is nitpicky. It felt long, because the first hour MOOOOOVES and is so fun.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:14 PM

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33. "See, about that."
In response to Reply # 32


  

          

>I felt like the Death Row stuff was FAR too short. Like I know
>Dre was really only a part of DR for what - 3-4 years? But it
>goes from him starting the label to becoming disillusioned SO
>quickly, like things became a circus SO fast.

I remember telling someone that Pac's only in the movie for like 90 seconds, and they were mad and said "that's wack, I wanted to see him play a part" and I'm like....it's the NWA story though, not Death Row!

I do think it was real choppy, and I even said "how did Suge turn into a bad guy SO damn fast in here?" But I actually feel like they showed Death Row more because that was the most important time in West Coast Rap history, more so than it really being needed within the context of this movie. I can see if Death Row had really lead to NWA wanting to get back together, but that time frame was off.

>Love The DOC but his storyline feels so abrupt, like if you
>don't know the story - why do you care about this dude? Sure,
>sad he got in an accident but he's such a peripheral
>character.

They didn't really show enough about him for you to really "get it."

>Fun to see Pac and Snoop of course, but why are we getting
>just a snippet of Bone Thugs? Woulda been cool to see more of
>them than just hearing they were at the club with Eazy.

As said before, yeah I was just trippin off them not showing BG/Dresta, and not showing the Death Row vs Ruthless fight, which shows how divided the sides really were at that point.

>I think my biggest issue was that NWA was planning on getting
>back together. Like, maybe...I guess, and I guess it was
>needed to raise the stakes on Eazy's illness, but I was always
>under the impression that Cube and Dre made up with Eazy in
>the hospital. Speaking of which, I have a friend who's
>basically a vegetable - and when he went into the hospital, I
>was Dre (talking to him, thinking he's getting out), and my
>friend was Cube (wait, he can't talk?I can't see him like
>that). Scene kinda fucked me up.

I never thought they REALLY planned on getting back together to that extent. Now, what I felt like, was that Eazy's career was really a wrap at that point...Dre/Snoop/DR KILLED him, and only a few folks still rode with him during "Real Muthaphukkin G'z" and it was in part because his music just wasn't as good. But they didn't show any of that beef, and it kinda felt like they were saying "Eazy begged them to link up again because Heller left him dry, and he needed to revive his career." It also put ALL blame on Heller, as if he was the only roadblock to their reunion.

------------------------------

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:25 PM

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35. "Yeah, exactly."
In response to Reply # 33


  

          

Like they go from Death Row to Eazy finding out Heller scammed him but they act like E was just sad that he and Dre could have done huge things and totally gloss over Dre Day/Real Muthaphuckin Gz, etc. He's staring lovingly at a billboard of The Chronic when the Chronic's INTRO is hating on E.

Just weird, is all.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 02:05 PM

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38. "Yeaaaa. Like even if they linked back up, I feel like it woulda needed"
In response to Reply # 35


  

          

a lot more to go into that side of it.

As a whole, Dre is painted like a Saint who was just a super focused genius, that didn't get involved with much tension in anyway.

------------------------------

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atruhead
Charter member
85230 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 08:27 PM

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67. "How I interpreted that scene"
In response to Reply # 35


  

          

He's staring lovingly at a
>billboard of The Chronic when the Chronic's INTRO is hating on
>E.

"Damn I fucked up and look at what Dre became", people often smile out of disbelief or trying to manage their grief through tears

  

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MistaGoodBar
Member since Nov 04th 2004
29351 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 03:50 AM

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28. "this movie owed me NOTHING. Fucking fantastic for NWA fans."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

no way they could cover EVERYTHING....but man, did they touch on the important shit

Oshea Jr plays Ice Cube better than Ice Cube

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
http://mistagoodbar.com
Twitter/IG: mistagoodbar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 10:00 AM

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29. "I swear I forgot it wasn't Cube, as I said before"
In response to Reply # 28


  

          

Like, I almost thought I was watching footage from 1988 for a good second til I snapped out of it

------------------------------

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TheStandard
Member since Nov 05th 2007
3642 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:02 PM

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31. "The first half of "Straight Outta Compton" was amazing "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

and then it completely fell apart and turned into an absolute clusterfuck. Disappointing for me as a fan to be honest.

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:14 PM

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34. "Do you think they tried to cover too much, and just lost focus?"
In response to Reply # 31


  

          

------------------------------

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TheStandard
Member since Nov 05th 2007
3642 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 01:39 PM

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36. "A little of both"
In response to Reply # 34
Fri Aug-14-15 01:51 PM by TheStandard

  

          

After the first half which was amazing the movie gets too ambitious and forgets what story it wants to tell. The era between 92-95 (and 96) is just completely blurred.....it's just all over the place.

As much as I loved the scene with Ice Cube getting angry about his contract with Priority Records and taking a baseball bat and destroying the office.....it wasn't needed. They could have just taken out his interactions with the head of priority and had Ice cube go solo and be successful without showing us those priority scenes. They weren't necessary towards showing us the impact NWA had. After a while it just felt like oh, everyone has contract problems over and over again. Ice Cube's beef with Eazy/Heller needed to be shown, as did Dre's beef and Suge getting him and DOC out of their contracts....We didn't need Cube's priority beef.

How was Cube beefing with Priority more important than Dre Day/Real Muthafukkin G's Eazy & Ruthless vs Death Row Beef? That's legit mind boggling to me....

To me, Ice Cube's story could have damn near ended with him leaving NWA, dissing NWA & blowing up after going solo.....maybe have him connect with Dre at some point and how he's doing movies now (Friday....and he needed a Dre track for the soundtrack-Keep Their Heads Ringin", just something to let us know him and Dre were cool throughout the Ruthless/Death Row Beef....maybe a Let me ride reference) and then bring him back in for the club scene meeting with Eazy where they had their final talk.


Dre meeting his wife Nicole wasn't a necessary scene either....like WTF? Why was that scene even there when Dre smacking Dee Barnes isn't......like it's really a total joke. There needed to be the honesty of NWA's misogyny, especially during the Efil4zaggin time period. I didn't expect this to be there but if Dre meeting Nicole is more important to an NWA movie than Dee barnes to the writers/directors then I feel like I'm being lied to....


They didn't make the best use of time considering how long this movie was. 2pac's scene wasn't needed either considering his run in 95/96 was after Eazy died (they also fukked the sessions up, had Pac recording Hail Mary in 1995 before recording California Love, that didn't happen like that....Hail Mary was recorded in 96) I know 2pac got out of jail in 95 but it was pointless when they didn't show things like the Ruthess/Death Row beef or Eazy in the white house (although they mentioned it)


The movie felt like the epitome of the phrase, "History is written by the victors." as opposed to the raw truth.....You can feel the guiding hands of it's executive producers, Dre, Ice Cube, Tamika Wright......it paints them in the best light but not the way that would make for the best story......meanwhile they completely assassinated Suge's character (made him look worse off while not taking the time to address many of their own flaws....I left the theater feeling bad for Suge, thinking he had every right to approach them for how they portrayed him in this movie) Even Tamika Wright looked competent lol

They showed Dre get pulled over n his Ferrari and caught on the highway but changed it around to make it look like he was just driving fast after a fight with Suge when in reality he was just racing his car, drunk one night.......he got home to his garage and couldn't find his remote....then the cops caught him. That lead to him violating his probation and having to do time in jail......which made him reevaluate his life and the situation at death row and decide that he wanted to go a more positive direction. This was always the most interesting thing part of Dre's life to me.....how even though he didn't grow up being a fucked up person, the music industry changed him into something he wasn't.....he saw that he was headed down the path of destruction and changed.

In general, I feel like this movie gave us Andre Young and not Dr. Dre.....for a period from say 1991 to 1995 I feel like Dre lost himself in his Dr. Dre character (beating up Dee Barnes, partying out of control (beating people up), he assaulted a police officer in a new orleans hotel, he assaulted a record producer in 1992 breaking his jaw. (http://articles.latimes.com/1992-12-15/entertainment/ca-2260_1_violent-reality)
He was convicted in both cases, received a fine, probation and a 60 day house arrest.... Dr. Dre also ended up getting shot in the leg....

They made it seem like Dr. Dre didn't initially revel in this Death Row lifestyle before finally realizing the error of his ways when shyt got too hot...........They made dude look like a saint during that era.....while giving Suge no redeeming qualities.

I hated the ending....in some ways they tried to tie it up like, yeah we're gonna get everyone back for an NWA album.....just felt like a typical cheesy hollywood ending when in reality Dre had a lot of regret for the beef with him and Eazy and how he was living his lifestyle but they didn't even show it.....they just put it all on Suge which was unfair to me.

The most telling/ironic thing about this movie was watching Dre make beats by himself and watching Ice Cube write Friday without DJ Pooh. I'm honestly good on biopics executive produced by the artists.......It's just not interesting to watch artist refuse to show their negative qualities and mistakes.


I think if the 2nd half of the movie was just Dre/death row beefing with Eazy/Ruthless...Dre getting out of control, locked up on the PO violation, then Eazy Dying, Dre realizing he let the industry ruin a good thing....I would have enjoyed it a lot more.....everything after the group broke up just felt sloppy. Maybe I'm too hard to please tho.....

  

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Monkey Genius
Member since Mar 04th 2005
8099 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 02:06 PM

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39. "^^^All this."
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

First half was great. Second half was a string of cameos and references and everyone having warm fuzzies with E.

----------------------------------
I have a webcomic: www.watchthecomic.com

My webcomic has a page: www.facebook.com/watchyourheadcomic

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 02:16 PM

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40. "See I mostly agree, but it feels like the 2nd half"
In response to Reply # 39


  

          

Kinda solidifies a lot of the themes of the movie - friendship, bond, real gangsters don't carry guns, etc.

I mean, the second half of a movie SHOULD solidify the themes, but you get it.

There's enough good in the second half that I can dismiss a lot of the shortcomings, but this was easily too long and not long enough to cover all the ground they laid out. Tough to edit a lot of that stuff, but they should have. I read the director's cut is 3.5 hours and that'll be released - and apparently that goes a lot more in depth.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 07:05 PM

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41. "Well dammmmm!!!"
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

>After the first half which was amazing the movie gets too
>ambitious and forgets what story it wants to tell. The era
>between 92-95 (and 96) is just completely blurred.....it's
>just all over the place.
>
>As much as I loved the scene with Ice Cube getting angry about
>his contract with Priority Records and taking a baseball bat
>and destroying the office.....it wasn't needed. They could
>have just taken out his interactions with the head of priority
>and had Ice cube go solo and be successful without showing us
>those priority scenes. They weren't necessary towards showing
>us the impact NWA had. After a while it just felt like oh,
>everyone has contract problems over and over again. Ice Cube's
>beef with Eazy/Heller needed to be shown, as did Dre's beef
>and Suge getting him and DOC out of their contracts....We
>didn't need Cube's priority beef.

I feel like it could have been left out, but it was the most exciting scene in the 2nd half. I figured it was all false, though.

>
>How was Cube beefing with Priority more important than Dre
>Day/Real Muthafukkin G's Eazy & Ruthless vs Death Row Beef?
>That's legit mind boggling to me....

Yeah, and hell, even the Lench Mob vs Ruthless being bigger than DPG vs Ruthless at the Golf Course.

>To me, Ice Cube's story could have damn near ended with him
>leaving NWA, dissing NWA & blowing up after going
>solo.....maybe have him connect with Dre at some point and how
>he's doing movies now (Friday....and he needed a Dre track for
>the soundtrack-Keep Their Heads Ringin", just something to let
>us know him and Dre were cool throughout the Ruthless/Death
>Row Beef....maybe a Let me ride reference) and then bring him
>back in for the club scene meeting with Eazy where they had
>their final talk.

>Dre meeting his wife Nicole wasn't a necessary scene
>either....like WTF? Why was that scene even there when Dre
>smacking Dee Barnes isn't......like it's really a total joke.
>There needed to be the honesty of NWA's misogyny, especially
>during the Efil4zaggin time period. I didn't expect this to be
>there but if Dre meeting Nicole is more important to an NWA
>movie than Dee barnes to the writers/directors then I feel
>like I'm being lied to....

It's as you say later...they're the ones who wrote it. Dre was painted as positive the entire film, and as if he was just focused on his music, and not as much of a womanizer as the rest.

>They didn't make the best use of time considering how long
>this movie was. 2pac's scene wasn't needed either considering
>his run in 95/96 was after Eazy died (they also fukked the
>sessions up, had Pac recording Hail Mary in 1995 before
>recording California Love, that didn't happen like
>that....Hail Mary was recorded in 96) I know 2pac got out of
>jail in 95 but it was pointless when they didn't show things
>like the Ruthess/Death Row beef or Eazy in the white house
>(although they mentioned it)

Oh I caught the Hail Mary shit ASAP. And even with California Love, we know that was Dre + Cube's song, and that Suge forced Pac on it, and Dre and Pac didn't get along. They make them seem buddy buddy in there.


>The movie felt like the epitome of the phrase, "History is
>written by the victors." as opposed to the raw truth.....You
>can feel the guiding hands of it's executive producers, Dre,
>Ice Cube, Tamika Wright......it paints them in the best light
>but not the way that would make for the best
>story......meanwhile they completely assassinated Suge's
>character (made him look worse off while not taking the time
>to address many of their own flaws....I left the theater
>feeling bad for Suge, thinking he had every right to approach
>them for how they portrayed him in this movie) Even Tamika
>Wright looked competent lol

It surely is the whole "written by the victors" but for several reasons, I'm not at all mad about it. The main thing is that unlike most biopics I've seen, I REAAAAALLY know everything about them, even from before my own time. So it's so much that I know was changed, left out/ignored, and completely exaggerated, but I'm not really mad at how biased it was.

>They showed Dre get pulled over n his Ferrari and caught on
>the highway but changed it around to make it look like he was
>just driving fast after a fight with Suge when in reality he
>was just racing his car, drunk one night.......he got home to
>his garage and couldn't find his remote....then the cops
>caught him. That lead to him violating his probation and
>having to do time in jail......which made him reevaluate his
>life and the situation at death row and decide that he wanted
>to go a more positive direction. This was always the most
>interesting thing part of Dre's life to me.....how even though
>he didn't grow up being a fucked up person, the music industry
>changed him into something he wasn't.....he saw that he was
>headed down the path of destruction and changed.

>In general, I feel like this movie gave us Andre Young and not
>Dr. Dre.....for a period from say 1991 to 1995 I feel like Dre
>lost himself in his Dr. Dre character (beating up Dee Barnes,
>partying out of control (beating people up), he assaulted a
>police officer in a new orleans hotel, he assaulted a record
>producer in 1992 breaking his jaw.
>(http://articles.latimes.com/1992-12-15/entertainment/ca-2260_1_violent-reality)
>
>He was convicted in both cases, received a fine, probation and
>a 60 day house arrest.... Dr. Dre also ended up getting shot
>in the leg....
>
>They made it seem like Dr. Dre didn't initially revel in this
>Death Row lifestyle before finally realizing the error of his
>ways when shyt got too hot...........They made dude look like
>a saint during that era.....while giving Suge no redeeming
>qualities.

Yea, that was part of them making Dre seem like he wasn't the devil he was at the time. And they made Suge turn evil completely over night.

>I hated the ending....in some ways they tried to tie it up
>like, yeah we're gonna get everyone back for an NWA
>album.....just felt like a typical cheesy hollywood ending
>when in reality Dre had a lot of regret for the beef with him
>and Eazy and how he was living his lifestyle but they didn't
>even show it.....they just put it all on Suge which was unfair
>to me.

It was unfair to Suge, but it's Suge.....people REAAAAAAAAAAALLY hate that mafucka, and for good reason LOL.

>The most telling/ironic thing about this movie was watching
>Dre make beats by himself and watching Ice Cube write Friday
>without DJ Pooh. I'm honestly good on biopics executive
>produced by the artists.......It's just not interesting to
>watch artist refuse to show their negative qualities and
>mistakes.

I mean it was so much left out, and some of it I can understand why, but I still think it made for a good movie. Even the "Friday" scene is funny to me, because Chris Tucker adlibbed the "you got knocked the fuck out!" line...that wasn't at all written by Cube.


>I think if the 2nd half of the movie was just Dre/death row
>beefing with Eazy/Ruthless...Dre getting out of control,
>locked up on the PO violation, then Eazy Dying, Dre realizing
>he let the industry ruin a good thing....I would have enjoyed
>it a lot more.....everything after the group broke up just
>felt sloppy. Maybe I'm too hard to please tho.....

I get it, I do think it lost some focus and was fragmented, but it was really so many different directions to go from that point. And even more so, the story with them STILL isn't "over" so it coulda ended at any point they wanted it to.

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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atruhead
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68. "DPG vs. Ruthless, was that during a Montell Jordan video shoot?"
In response to Reply # 41


  

          

I heard about a fight at a golf course but I never knew who was involved

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
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186. "Yup, Nate went nutty with the golf club"
In response to Reply # 68


  

          

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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theprofessional
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45. "this is great analysis"
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

i enjoyed the movie immensely, but i came at it as someone who wasn't a fan of NWA and who knew/cared about basically none of this history. you did a great job here filling in the gaps. takes nothing away from the movie for me, 'cause they still did what they set out to do very effectively. but you're right that they could've set out to do something completely different, maybe something more honest, but there's a good chance it wouldn't have been as good a movie.

"i smack clowns with nouns, punch herbs with verbs..."

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
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Fri Aug-14-15 11:10 PM

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47. "This would have been a way better way to go."
In response to Reply # 36


  

          


>They showed Dre get pulled over n his Ferrari and caught on
>the highway but changed it around to make it look like he was
>just driving fast after a fight with Suge when in reality he
>was just racing his car, drunk one night.......he got home to
>his garage and couldn't find his remote....then the cops
>caught him. That lead to him violating his probation and
>having to do time in jail......which made him reevaluate his
>life and the situation at death row and decide that he wanted
>to go a more positive direction. This was always the most
>interesting thing part of Dre's life to me.....how even though
>he didn't grow up being a fucked up person, the music industry
>changed him into something he wasn't.....he saw that he was
>headed down the path of destruction and changed.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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Marla
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54. "^^ the beginning had me wanting to leave."
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

Because it brought back memories, but it got real cinematic real quick and I settled down. I appreciate it for what it is. It's a little surreal to see people critiquing it who were in diapers or not around when NWA was coming up.
Watching it put me back in those times so my own viewpoint is biased. I knew early into the movie that I was going to need to see it a second time because the first time was emotional for me.

I agree with most of the assessment made here. I think that the movie offered a lot more to those who were around at the time observing their rise than it does to those who are looking to it as a history lesson.

There's so much missing. I liked the mention of KDAY but wish they'd touched on the banned video. Just more explanation of how they were able to spread so far despite the censorship.

There's a lot packed into so little time. They mentioned D.O.C. like he was just on the periphery not like he was a contributor. Maybe that's it. There were so many contributors to their success it would have watered down the story. Instead they focused on the most successful out of the group and turned it into a movie. It's too bad there can't be a part 1, 2, and 3. The music is more autobiographical than the movie so maybe that's where those who want real history should start.

  

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atruhead
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69. "I gave benefit of doubt to the 2Pac scene"
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

2pac's scene wasn't needed either considering
>his run in 95/96 was after Eazy died (they also fukked the
>sessions up, had Pac recording Hail Mary in 1995 before
>recording California Love, that didn't happen like
>that....Hail Mary was recorded in 96)

his work ethic in the studio was crazy. Im hoping that some Makaveli stuff was recorded during the All Eyez On Me sessions (even though Toss It Up was clearly after he didnt fuck with Dre anymore), because that would have been a HUGE error

  

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TheStandard
Member since Nov 05th 2007
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Mon Aug-17-15 01:06 PM

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88. "It wasn't.....Makaveli was recorded in 3 days in July of 1996"
In response to Reply # 69


  

          

Here's his original hand written trackless as of July 22nd 1996 http://41.media.tumblr.com/a3d91d28491d9010ffe286f82e5b26bb/tumblr_mstxuhTHxA1qdqlj1o1_500.jpg

At one point it was called the 3 day theory. I have the Original unmixed version of it.....Even on 1 track (I think crazy, he says 3 day theory instead of 7 day theory)

  

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SoWhat
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70. "i agree w/all that."
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

fuck you.

  

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Nick Has a Problem...Seriously
Member since Dec 25th 2010
16580 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 09:04 PM

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72. "RE: A little of both"
In response to Reply # 36


  

          

They skipped right over Me Against the World altogether. That album dropped right before E died. I couldn't do nothing but laugh at the Pac scene.

******************************************
Falcons, Braves, Bulldogs and Hawks

Geto Boys, Poison Clan, UGK, Eightball & MJG, OutKast, Goodie Mob

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
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77. "eh, that wasn't on Death Row though "
In response to Reply # 72


  

          

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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Brew
Member since Nov 23rd 2002
24413 posts
Mon Sep-07-15 09:50 PM

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164. "With you 100000000000000000%"
In response to Reply # 36
Mon Sep-07-15 10:10 PM by Brew

          

Literally every single point you made were all annoyances to me as well. I enjoyed the movie well enough, to be sure, mostly because I love the music...but the blatant whitewashing is obnoxious, specifically regarding Dre's production work, and I agree wholeheartedly with your general principle commentary regarding artists producing their own biopics. Such a joke. I truly can't understand how a 50 year old could so blatantly lie like that about fairly well known events and sleep at night.

One major Dre-related annoyance you didn't mention was captured perfectly by my fiance who said "the guy playing Dre is way too hot to be accurate." I would've said "way too skinny..." rather than "hot" but the sentiment remains. Just the casting alone should alert anyone to the annoyances that Dre's involvement in this biopic would ultimately bring forth.

The Chronic stuff was pretty annoying, too. Like, Dre clearly did not play G Thang on the keyboard. Please, dogg. And I cringed when they made it seem like Snoop just strolled into the fucking foyer and freestyled the song. We all know it didn't go down like that.

More cringe-worthy moments include Eazy telling Heller what NWA stood for (so forced) as well as the fucking ending which may have been the most egregious example of "get the fucking fuck outta here" in the whole movie. "Whatchu gonna call this bullshit company anyway?" (for starters what angry co-CEO would ever ask that question in the first fucking place?????) "Aftermath." *roll credits*. Uggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

And how is Yella gonna allow a line like "oh you tryna be Dr. Dre now?" towards Yella's character to get into the movie?!? How fucking cold is that shit?! Shitting on a dood that probably produced like 50% of your shit! (I don't really believe that but Yella did more than hit on chicks, let's be fair).


>After the first half which was amazing the movie gets too
>ambitious and forgets what story it wants to tell. The era
>between 92-95 (and 96) is just completely blurred.....it's
>just all over the place.
>
>As much as I loved the scene with Ice Cube getting angry about
>his contract with Priority Records and taking a baseball bat
>and destroying the office.....it wasn't needed. They could
>have just taken out his interactions with the head of priority
>and had Ice cube go solo and be successful without showing us
>those priority scenes. They weren't necessary towards showing
>us the impact NWA had. After a while it just felt like oh,
>everyone has contract problems over and over again. Ice Cube's
>beef with Eazy/Heller needed to be shown, as did Dre's beef
>and Suge getting him and DOC out of their contracts....We
>didn't need Cube's priority beef.
>
>How was Cube beefing with Priority more important than Dre
>Day/Real Muthafukkin G's Eazy & Ruthless vs Death Row Beef?
>That's legit mind boggling to me....
>
>To me, Ice Cube's story could have damn near ended with him
>leaving NWA, dissing NWA & blowing up after going
>solo.....maybe have him connect with Dre at some point and how
>he's doing movies now (Friday....and he needed a Dre track for
>the soundtrack-Keep Their Heads Ringin", just something to let
>us know him and Dre were cool throughout the Ruthless/Death
>Row Beef....maybe a Let me ride reference) and then bring him
>back in for the club scene meeting with Eazy where they had
>their final talk.
>
>
>Dre meeting his wife Nicole wasn't a necessary scene
>either....like WTF? Why was that scene even there when Dre
>smacking Dee Barnes isn't......like it's really a total joke.
>There needed to be the honesty of NWA's misogyny, especially
>during the Efil4zaggin time period. I didn't expect this to be
>there but if Dre meeting Nicole is more important to an NWA
>movie than Dee barnes to the writers/directors then I feel
>like I'm being lied to....
>
>
>They didn't make the best use of time considering how long
>this movie was. 2pac's scene wasn't needed either considering
>his run in 95/96 was after Eazy died (they also fukked the
>sessions up, had Pac recording Hail Mary in 1995 before
>recording California Love, that didn't happen like
>that....Hail Mary was recorded in 96) I know 2pac got out of
>jail in 95 but it was pointless when they didn't show things
>like the Ruthess/Death Row beef or Eazy in the white house
>(although they mentioned it)
>
>
>The movie felt like the epitome of the phrase, "History is
>written by the victors." as opposed to the raw truth.....You
>can feel the guiding hands of it's executive producers, Dre,
>Ice Cube, Tamika Wright......it paints them in the best light
>but not the way that would make for the best
>story......meanwhile they completely assassinated Suge's
>character (made him look worse off while not taking the time
>to address many of their own flaws....I left the theater
>feeling bad for Suge, thinking he had every right to approach
>them for how they portrayed him in this movie) Even Tamika
>Wright looked competent lol
>
>They showed Dre get pulled over n his Ferrari and caught on
>the highway but changed it around to make it look like he was
>just driving fast after a fight with Suge when in reality he
>was just racing his car, drunk one night.......he got home to
>his garage and couldn't find his remote....then the cops
>caught him. That lead to him violating his probation and
>having to do time in jail......which made him reevaluate his
>life and the situation at death row and decide that he wanted
>to go a more positive direction. This was always the most
>interesting thing part of Dre's life to me.....how even though
>he didn't grow up being a fucked up person, the music industry
>changed him into something he wasn't.....he saw that he was
>headed down the path of destruction and changed.
>
>In general, I feel like this movie gave us Andre Young and not
>Dr. Dre.....for a period from say 1991 to 1995 I feel like Dre
>lost himself in his Dr. Dre character (beating up Dee Barnes,
>partying out of control (beating people up), he assaulted a
>police officer in a new orleans hotel, he assaulted a record
>producer in 1992 breaking his jaw.
>(http://articles.latimes.com/1992-12-15/entertainment/ca-2260_1_violent-reality)
>
>He was convicted in both cases, received a fine, probation and
>a 60 day house arrest.... Dr. Dre also ended up getting shot
>in the leg....
>
>They made it seem like Dr. Dre didn't initially revel in this
>Death Row lifestyle before finally realizing the error of his
>ways when shyt got too hot...........They made dude look like
>a saint during that era.....while giving Suge no redeeming
>qualities.
>
>I hated the ending....in some ways they tried to tie it up
>like, yeah we're gonna get everyone back for an NWA
>album.....just felt like a typical cheesy hollywood ending
>when in reality Dre had a lot of regret for the beef with him
>and Eazy and how he was living his lifestyle but they didn't
>even show it.....they just put it all on Suge which was unfair
>to me.
>
>The most telling/ironic thing about this movie was watching
>Dre make beats by himself and watching Ice Cube write Friday
>without DJ Pooh. I'm honestly good on biopics executive
>produced by the artists.......It's just not interesting to
>watch artist refuse to show their negative qualities and
>mistakes.
>
>
>I think if the 2nd half of the movie was just Dre/death row
>beefing with Eazy/Ruthless...Dre getting out of control,
>locked up on the PO violation, then Eazy Dying, Dre realizing
>he let the industry ruin a good thing....I would have enjoyed
>it a lot more.....everything after the group broke up just
>felt sloppy. Maybe I'm too hard to please tho.....

----------------------------------------

"Fuck aliens." © WarriorPoet415

  

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normal35762
Member since Oct 20th 2004
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Fri Aug-14-15 02:03 PM

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37. "For me I think this is gonna be the first biopic that fits the bill of....."
In response to Reply # 0
Fri Aug-14-15 02:06 PM by normal35762

  

          

1. Liked and followed the subject/artist/group. Check.

2. Was around and cognizant of who they were when they first appeared on the scene as opposed to being around before my time or came out when I was 2 years old. Check.

So it's gonna be cool to look at it from that point of view.

  

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Amritsar
Member since Jan 18th 2008
32093 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 09:15 PM

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42. "just got back.. LOVED it man "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

theatre audience reciting the lyrics to the songs during the studio scenes lol


I'm glad I saw this on the big screen. Felt a communal experience with the other movie goers.



I went in expecting it to JUST be about NWA and NWA only - surprised they included the Death Row stuff



in that way it almost felt like a west coast hip hop epic. Story about the foundation of our part in this. Our contribution.


I hope this sets the standard for how hip hop history is treated in hollywood.

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 09:22 PM

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43. "Grantland called it the hip hop Avengers."
In response to Reply # 42


  

          

Kind of accurate, honestly.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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theprofessional
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Fri Aug-14-15 10:16 PM

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46. "absolutely"
In response to Reply # 43


  

          

"i smack clowns with nouns, punch herbs with verbs..."

  

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Walk On
Member since Apr 04th 2005
8332 posts
Fri Aug-14-15 10:13 PM

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44. "Dope. Fucking Dope."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

<--- #LoveCitees

message brought to you by...

www.onustees.com

  

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lightworks
Member since Feb 17th 2006
5818 posts
Sat Aug-15-15 04:29 PM

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49. "Loved it!!"
In response to Reply # 0


          

  

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atruhead
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Sat Aug-15-15 05:46 PM

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50. "so we tried to go"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

got to Jerry Heller offering them a deal at the skating rink and the theater was evacuated, there was what smelled like a fire somewhere

10-15 minutes later they let us back in, no sound was on and I guess they didnt stop the film

so the movie is being spoiled for me by this point, they're famous, their CDs are steamrolled, groupies at the hotel, Dre and his mom crying because someone died, the infamous Fuck The Police performance, all with no sound

finally the sound came on and they rewinded back to Jerry Heller warning them about the FBI before the performance. I gave up and went home, my wife decided to stay

I'll try again tomorrow

  

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normal35762
Member since Oct 20th 2004
13246 posts
Sat Aug-15-15 06:17 PM

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51. "Dope movie."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

The first half was AWSOME like someone already said and the second part the timelines seem to get mixed up but it was bearable to me. The first half? Man....

  

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revolution75
Member since May 07th 2003
3372 posts
Sat Aug-15-15 06:41 PM

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52. "who in the hell casted Snoop? Lifetime? "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Dude looked nothing like Snoop

Eclectic Soul/Sunday, 2-4 PM est/89.3 WCSB.ORG

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Sat Aug-15-15 06:58 PM

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53. "Didn't matter. Dude was great as snoop. "
In response to Reply # 52


  

          

Frida Kahlo looked nothing like Salma Hayek - but she was great in that role. Hell, the dude as Eazy in this movie looked nothing like him.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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lightworks
Member since Feb 17th 2006
5818 posts
Sat Aug-15-15 09:25 PM

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55. "It's a testiment to the strength of the movie that all people can "
In response to Reply # 52


          

nitpick is a secondary character's likeness.

Don't get me wrong I too didn't think the actor looked like snoop but he definitely sounded like him after the initial introduction.

But for sure I think it is a sign of success that the biggest error people find outside pf some minor plot issues is the fact that Snoop wasn't castes right.

  

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revolution75
Member since May 07th 2003
3372 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 06:23 AM

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59. "hold on...all I said was that he didn't resemble snoop "
In response to Reply # 55
Sun Aug-16-15 06:27 AM by revolution75

  

          

Which is a fact
And like the person said above..dude playing eazy didn't favor him either
BUT they both did a good job..everyone did a damn good job considering the fact that most were unknown actors.
It's a good flick and I'm sure with the success of this film, there will be more big screen hip hop biopics.

Eclectic Soul/Sunday, 2-4 PM est/89.3 WCSB.ORG

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
23113 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 06:07 AM

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57. "RE: who in the hell casted Snoop? Lifetime? "
In response to Reply # 52


          



He may not have LOOKED like Snoop...But he sure as hell sounded like him...And he had the mannerisms down....

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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Amritsar
Member since Jan 18th 2008
32093 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 09:22 PM

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75. "Portrayal. Not impersonation"
In response to Reply # 52


  

          

Besides, the actor had snoops mannerisms and voice down

  

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ThaTruth
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Mon Aug-17-15 09:01 AM

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82. "outside of Cube's SON(duh) none of the main characters really looked..."
In response to Reply # 52


          

like the people they portrayed but they had the voices and mannerisms down. Dude playing Dre looked nothing like Dre but he sounded a lot like him.

________________________________________
"Take the surprise out your voice Shaq."-The REAL CP3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2H5K-BUMS0

  

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Heinz
Member since Dec 26th 2003
20759 posts
Mon Aug-17-15 11:24 AM

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87. "He looked close to what Snoop looked like at that age"
In response to Reply # 52
Mon Aug-17-15 11:27 AM by Heinz

  

          

If you seen pics...he didnt have the big nose but to say he didnt look like him is ridiculous. He acted EXACTLY like Snoop. Mannerisms, voice...That was Snoop. Even Pac was pretty good, voice was on point and he looks exactly like him

https://instagram.com/marccrose/


____

TWITTER : Heinz21st

IG : H_N_Z

  

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2.tears.in.a.bucket
Member since Sep 04th 2009
6185 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 05:56 AM

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56. "dope as hell"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

.

♚♚♚♚

#BYLUG >>> https://goo.gl/1ooFp6

♚♚♚♚

screamin' mothafuck a 12 /
bitches ain't shit /
cops ain't neither /
they huntin' my people /

- i. rashad

♚♚♚♚

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
23113 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 06:15 AM

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58. "Deadline: S.O.C. headed to 59 mil first weekend (SWIPE)"
In response to Reply # 0


          



Happy for F. Gary Gray and the crew...And my FAMU homie Will Packer....It's ridiculously exceeding all expectations....

Good shit....

‘Compton’ Rivals August Tentpoles With $24.3M Friday, Heads To $59M+ Weekend – Saturday AM B.O.

http://deadline.com/2015/08/straight-outta-compton-man-from-u-n-c-l-e-weekend-box-office-1201499183/

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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TheStandard
Member since Nov 05th 2007
3642 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 10:47 AM

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60. "Can't wait for the Jay-Z Biopic where he loses 92 Bricks "
In response to Reply # 0
Sun Aug-16-15 11:06 AM by TheStandard

  

          

and lives to tell the story, Guru unleashes the flutes as Hov completely disregards any existence of Jaz-O, Calvin "Klein" Bacote, & Dehaven. He blows up and sells millions of albums rapping on nothing but his own sheer God given talent, knocks out Beanie Sigel in disgust from constantly getting in trouble, never takes any of Biggie's lines, he unanimously defeats NaSir Jones in a rap battle because Ether doesn't exist, & takes credit for all of Dame Dash's contributions to the success of Roc-a-fella Records (such as signing Kanye to be a rapper & running the business for example) all while portraying Dame as nothing more than a loud mouth, obnoxious, vain, dancing buffoon who could never avoid ruining business relationships by placing his foot in his mouth...............................all while going on to become the greatest rapper and businessman hip hop has ever seen.



One can only imagine the levels of revisionist, polishing, over exaggerating, Hollywood bullshit a Jay-Z biopic is capable of.

  

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after midnight
Member since Jul 04th 2007
1208 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 11:08 AM

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61. "I hope they show when Chris Martin brings him into the Illuminati"
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j/k.

__________________
Laces out like the bookings, just the way that Run did it

  

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j.
Member since Feb 24th 2009
3819 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 11:21 AM

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62. "Don't forget *NOT* stabbing Un Rivera"
In response to Reply # 60


  

          

over bootlegging, *NOT* begging Nas to be on his records, *NOT* shook on hot 97 the day after Ether, and possibly being the greatest clothing designer of all time when Roc a wear launched

  

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KCPlayer21
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63. "So R-Tistic, what is it you believe was real and what was fake?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

as Ruthless/Death Row was the soundtrack to my middle/high school years (graduated in 1994), I'm interested in what you thought was exaggerated in the movie....




We the children of the Light, you know what I mean?
That's why I'm hating on the darkness like Paula Deen
Cause in my hood they masked up like it's Halloween
We going hard for the Rock, but we not some fiends
- Andy Mineo

  

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atruhead
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66. "it was perfect until Eazy's Wet & Wild Party*"
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*or whenever he first started coughing, it felt like they were going to rush the rest of it

O Shea Jr. KILLED it in the jheri curl, he seemed more like a regular LA dude and not Cube (outside of the rap scenes) when he shaved it off

my gripes are minor: the actor was a few shades darker than Eazy E though he had the mannerisms down, the actor playing Suge looked almost friendly and polite in most of his scenes where most of his crew seemed far more cold blooded, how do you leave out "Natural Born Killaz" and especially "Dre Day" if you're covering The Chronic?

but it was crazy to see the album recorded 2 miles from my apartment

my favorite scene was Cube standing on the dumpster on stage in Detroit ready for whatever with the police and watching NWA's reaction to No Vaseline (though I wonder if they were actually that calm about it irl). I loved rapping along as songs were performed and recorded

I would watch it again maybe up until the LA Riots scene was over, it got lowkey ridiculous as they tried to tie everything up towards the end

I didnt care for the last scene. yeah we know the history of Dre leaving Death Row but it was just so random then the credits rolled

  

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Frank Longo
Member since Nov 18th 2003
86670 posts
Sun Aug-16-15 08:59 PM

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71. "No movie cliche is worse than the "coughing character.""
In response to Reply # 66


  

          

Just ONCE I'd like to see a movie where a dying character doesn't have multiple ominous well-placed coughs throughout the 2nd/3rd act.

My movies: http://russellhainline.com
My movie reviews: https://letterboxd.com/RussellHFilm/
My beer TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thebeertravelguide

  

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atruhead
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73. "yup. Best Man Holiday syndrome"
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theprofessional
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Mon Aug-17-15 03:23 AM

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79. "really? no movie cliche is worse?"
In response to Reply # 71


  

          

you still don't get it, do you?

"i smack clowns with nouns, punch herbs with verbs..."

  

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Frank Longo
Member since Nov 18th 2003
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92. "?"
In response to Reply # 79
Tue Aug-18-15 10:49 AM by Frank Longo

  

          

I don't know what "you still don't get it, do you?" means in response to my mild hyperbole about an awful biopic cliche. As if my statement of criticism regarding something I didn't like in a movie I enjoyed overall is a reflection on my intelligence.

Sheesh.

My movies: http://russellhainline.com
My movie reviews: https://letterboxd.com/RussellHFilm/
My beer TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thebeertravelguide

  

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JtothaI
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Tue Aug-18-15 06:34 PM

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104. "RE: No movie cliche is worse...."
In response to Reply # 71


  

          

That's how everyone around Eazy characterized his illness. Everyone said he seemd sicked and was coughing but that was it. Members of Bone and Yella have said it if I'm not mistaken.

  

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Hitokiri
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74. "Man... I want to see it, but that casting call left a really bad taste i..."
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I can't bring myself to support that kind of bullshit.

--

"You can't beat white people. You can only knock them out."

  

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atruhead
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Sun Aug-16-15 09:30 PM

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76. "if this is about dark skinned women, they were well represented"
In response to Reply # 74


  

          

homegirls hanging out in the studio, groupies, women at parties, women randomly saying hello, every shade was in there

their wives were all on the lighter side, so there isnt much you can do casting there

  

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SoWhat
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Mon Aug-17-15 08:12 AM

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80. "...they were casting women to play groupies in pool party scenes."
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how else should the casting call have gone?

fuck you.

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
79555 posts
Mon Aug-17-15 08:37 AM

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81. "Django had a casting call for SLAVES bruh... SLAVES!!! "
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****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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Hitokiri
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97. "Did you see the casting calls?"
In response to Reply # 80
Tue Aug-18-15 04:23 PM by Hitokiri

  

          

They straight up asked for light skinned women to play the attractive ones and dark skinned women to play the unattractive.

Fuck you mean?

--

"You can't beat white people. You can only knock them out."

  

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dba_BAD
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Mon Aug-17-15 01:27 AM

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78. "dre and cube come off too squeaky, content controversy within community"
In response to Reply # 0


          

(as opposed to controversy among white establishment) omission seems like a big deal to me

but yeah knowing cube and dre are around to manicure their image and have it projected out exactly as they choose, while eazy not having that luxury plays the fool in the narrative, iono

__

fairweather

  

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atruhead
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83. "Dre socked a dude out for his brother, he had a groupie in the hotel"
In response to Reply # 78


  

          

aside from the Dee Barnes incident Im not sure what could have been included of note

Cube fucked up a whole record label office about his money

they just werent as reckless as Eazy and Suge

  

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dba_BAD
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Mon Aug-17-15 09:21 AM

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85. "iono they felt like the protags, driven and 'right,' whereas eazy"
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Mon Aug-17-15 09:21 AM by dba_BAD

          

bumbled around w flawed vision

__

fairweather

  

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Brew
Member since Nov 23rd 2002
24413 posts
Mon Sep-07-15 10:08 PM

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165. "RE: Dre socked a dude out for his brother, he had a groupie in the hotel"
In response to Reply # 83


          

>aside from the Dee Barnes incident Im not sure what could
>have been included of note

An accurate portrayal of his aggressiveness towards, well, everyone, from like 91-95 would've been fine. Including his involvement in the Suge/Eazy situation as well as a lot of the shit that went down in the early Death Row years. You really believe that Dre was just an innocent, focused genius bystander to all the shit that happened?

Also, considering the story was about Dre/Cube/Eazy mostly, I think a pretty important piece to that puzzle is the fucking years-long diss-fest between Dre and Eazy. Call me crazy.

----------------------------------------

"Fuck aliens." © WarriorPoet415

  

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ThaTruth
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Mon Aug-17-15 09:17 AM

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84. "Overall I liked it, as an old head that was in high school when NWA firs..."
In response to Reply # 0


          

dropped I literally grew up with that shit. I heard almost all positive reviews and going in I was skeptical that it couldn't be THAT good.

But I was pleasantly surprised, they covered most of the basics. Yeah lot of stuff was left out and they took some artistic liberties with other things but you can pretty much say that with all biopic type films. People forget that its a MOVIE, not a documentary.

Overall I felt the casting was good. I wasn't as enamored with the performance of Cube's son as others but I thought he was decent. I loved the music, I was reciting the lyrics to all the songs. The young lady I was with is like 10+ years younger than me so she was looking at me like "damn, you really know this shit, huh?", lol.

________________________________________
"Take the surprise out your voice Shaq."-The REAL CP3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2H5K-BUMS0

  

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TheStandard
Member since Nov 05th 2007
3642 posts
Tue Aug-18-15 09:53 AM

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90. "I can't lie....This movie truly made me reflect on my life at times"
In response to Reply # 0
Tue Aug-18-15 10:01 AM by TheStandard

  

          

The opening scene with Dre where he was laying down listening to Roy ayers-Everyone Loves the Sunshine with a pile full of records reminded me of me as a teenager when I first started Djing.

When he was cutting up "It's Time" (done by Jazzy Jeff BTW) it reminded me of being in the park cutting up with all the Philly old head djs....


I actually beat someone up over a parking spot last year (a la Suge in this movie) I'm not particularly proud of it......but yeah. I was in front of the gym and was about to park, dude decided that he was just gonna park anyway despite me obviously about to pull in....I hop out, make dude rolls his window down and I just stole on dude. His wife was right in front of him crying, hysterical. Nonetheless they moved. I ended up cracking my iPhone screen because I got so angry I threw it when I hopped out and ended up running it over. They told the gym....and all the black trainers in the gym had to meet with me to calm me down and make me apologize. His wife was still crying : (. I felt so bad afterwards.....despite the fact that he blatantly tried to take my spot.


I had to tell grip up a club owner & tell him I'd kill him. Once again not proud of it......but sometimes people push you to your limit. I didn't mean it, but I had to convince him I was "bout it" to get my money. lol

Suge is always who I felt like I'd be if I weren't only 5'6

  

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Brotha Sun
Member since Dec 31st 2009
6778 posts
Mon Sep-07-15 10:34 AM

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158. "A 5'6 DJ who beats up everyone...you're the alternate universe Rtistic"
In response to Reply # 90


          

"They used to call me Baby Luke....but now? The whole damn 2 Liiiive Crew."

  

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daryloneal
Member since Jan 08th 2005
9267 posts
Tue Aug-18-15 10:45 AM

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91. "Dre's influence over the movie was pretty obvious."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

That Death Row exit scene was a little over the top for me, for example.

And did they completely leave out "Dre Day" or did I miss it?

Overall I enjoyed it though.

Ice Cube's son did a great job. He nailed it.

---
but have you ever checked out my website? www.dtaylorimages.com

  

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SoWhat
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Tue Aug-18-15 01:10 PM

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93. "no 'Dre Day' or 'Real Motherfuckin Gs'"
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fuck you.

  

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daryloneal
Member since Jan 08th 2005
9267 posts
Tue Aug-18-15 01:26 PM

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94. "It's criminal to leave that out. Overall Dre was a little too.."
In response to Reply # 93


  

          

"teflon" for me.

You mean to tell me that he never took any L's at Death Row?

Even the fight they depicted, he walked away from that without a scratch?

---
but have you ever checked out my website? www.dtaylorimages.com

  

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Heinz
Member since Dec 26th 2003
20759 posts
Tue Aug-18-15 01:35 PM

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95. "They shouldve showed how Death Row ended up being a small shitty "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

company in Toronto with a office in Liberty Village where CP Records/XO ended up recording LOL (sarcasm, but that shit actually happened)


____

TWITTER : Heinz21st

IG : H_N_Z

  

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lazyboi
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Tue Aug-18-15 04:07 PM

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96. "F GARY GRAY was the PUMP IT UP cameraman! WTF?"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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Frank Longo
Member since Nov 18th 2003
86670 posts
Tue Aug-18-15 04:59 PM

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98. "Here's the Dee Barnes Gawker piece. It's a tough read."
In response to Reply # 0
Tue Aug-18-15 05:00 PM by Frank Longo

  

          


The F. Gary Gray bit is mind-blowing.

http://gawker.com/heres-whats-missing-from-straight-outta-compton-me-and-1724735910

Here's What's Missing From Straight Outta Compton: Me and the Other Women Dr. Dre Beat Up
Dee Barnes

On January 27, 1991, at a record-release party for the rap duo Bytches With Problems in Hollywood, producer/rapper/then-N.W.A. member Dr. Dre brutally attacked Dee Barnes, the host of a well-known Fox show about hip-hop called Pump It Up! Dre was reportedly angry about a Pump It Up! segment hosted by Barnes that aired in November 1990. The report focused on N.W.A., and concluded with a clip of Ice Cube, who had recently left the group, insulting his former colleagues. Soon after the attack, Barnes described it in interviews: She said Dre attempted to throw her down a flight of stairs, slammed her head against a wall, kicked her, and stomped on her fingers. Dre later told Rolling Stone, “It ain’t no big thing – I just threw her through a door.” He pleaded no contest to assault charges. Barnes’s civil suit against Dre was settled out of court.

Barnes agreed to watch F. Gary Gray’s just-released film about N.W.A, Straight Outta Compton, and reflect on it for Gawker.

***

I never experienced police harassment until I moved to California in the ‘80s. The first time it happened, I had just left a house party that erupted in gunfire. A cop pulled me over and ordered me out of the car. I was 19, naive, and barefoot. When I made a move to get my shoes, the cop became aggressive. He manhandled me because he supposedly thought I was grabbing for a weapon. I’m lucky he didn’t shoot me. There I was, face down on the ground, knee in my back. In June, I was reminded of what happened to me when I watched video of a police officer named Eric Casebolt grabbing a 15-year-old girl outside the Craig Ranch North Community Pool in Texas, slamming her body to the ground, and putting his knee in her back.

Three years later—in 1991—I would experience something similar, only this time I was on my back and the knee was in my chest. That knee did not belong to a police officer, but Andre Young, the producer/rapper who goes by Dr. Dre. When I saw the footage of California Highway Patrol officer Daniel Andrew straddling and viciously punching Marlene Pinnock in broad daylight on the side of a busy freeway last year, I cringed. That must have been how it looked as Dr. Dre straddled me and beat me mercilessly on the floor of the women’s restroom at the Po Na Na Souk nightclub in 1991.

That event isn’t depicted in Straight Outta Compton, but I don’t think it should have been, either. The truth is too ugly for a general audience. I didn’t want to see a depiction of me getting beat up, just like I didn’t want to see a depiction of Dre beating up Michel’le, his one-time girlfriend who recently summed up their relationship this way: “I was just a quiet girlfriend who got beat on and told to sit down and shut up.”

But what should have been addressed is that it occurred. When I was sitting there in the theater, and the movie’s timeline skipped by my attack without a glance, I was like, “Uhhh, what happened?” Like many of the women that knew and worked with N.W.A., I found myself a casualty of Straight Outta Compton’s revisionist history.

Dre, who executive produced the movie along with his former groupmate Ice Cube, should have owned up to the time he punched his labelmate Tairrie B twice at a Grammys party in 1990. He should have owned up to the black eyes and scars he gave to his collaborator Michel’le. And he should have owned up to what he did to me. That’s reality. That’s reality rap. In his lyrics, Dre made hyperbolic claims about all these heinous things he did to women. But then he went out and actually violated women. Straight Outta Compton would have you believe that he didn’t really do that. It doesn’t add up. It’s like Ice Cube saying, “I’m not calling all women bitches,” which is a position he maintains even today at age 46. If you listen to the lyrics of “A Bitch Iz a Bitch,” Cube says, “Now the title bitch don’t apply to all women / But all women have a little bitch in ‘em.” So which is it? You can’t have it both ways. That’s what they’re trying to do with Straight Outta Compton: They’re trying to stay hard, and look like good guys.

I knew the guys of N.W.A. years before they blew up. I first met Andre (who’s wonderfully portrayed by Corey Hawkins in Compton) when he lived with his cousin Jinx, who would later introduce me to O’Shea Jackson, a.k.a. Ice Cube. I was at Lonzo’s house when Andre and Antoine Carraby, a.k.a. Yella, were both still in the World Class Wreckin’ Cru. I was there at the radio station KDAY with Greg Mack. Later, while they were creating the N.W.A and the Posse album, I would meet MC Ren and Arabian Prince. It was at Lonzo’s studio that my best friend Rose Hutchinson and I formed the rap group Body and Soul. We spent countless days and nights at Lonzo’s house, and in his studio we recorded a demo produced by both Dr. Dre and DJ Pooh. It was there where I also met Eric Wright, a.k.a. Eazy E. These men became my brothers.


I wasn’t in the studio to hear them record their disgusting, misogynistic views on women in songs like “A Bitch Iz a Bitch,” “Findum, Fuckum & Flee,” “One Less Bitch,” and perhaps most offensively, “She Swallowed It.” (On that track, MC Ren brags about violating at 14-year-old girl: “Oh shit it’s the preacher’s daughter! / And she’s only 14 and a ho / But the bitch sucks dick like a specialized pro.”) I heard the material like everybody else, when I was listening to the albums, and I was shocked. Maybe that was their point. Maybe they said a lot of that stuff for the shock value. There were always other girls around, like Michel’le and Rose, and we never heard them talk like that. We never heard them say, “Bitch, get over here and suck my dick.” In their minds, only certain women were “like that,” and I’ve never presented myself like that, so I never gave them a reason to call me names.

Accurately articulating the frustrations of young black men being constantly harassed by the cops is at Straight Outta Compton’s activistic core. There is a direct connection between the oppression of black men and the violence perpetrated by black men against black women. It is a cycle of victimization and reenactment of violence that is rooted in racism and perpetuated by patriarchy. If the breadth of N.W.A.’s lyrical subject matter was guided by a certain logic, though, it was clearly a caustic logic.

It was so caustic that when Dre was trying to choke me on the floor of the women’s room in Po Na Na Souk, a thought flashed through my head: “Oh my god. He’s trying to kill me.” He had me trapped in that bathroom; he held the door closed with his leg. It was surreal. “Is this happening?” I thought.


Their minds were so ignorant back then, claiming that I set them up and made them look stupid. That wasn’t a setup. It was journalism and television, first of all, and secondly, I had nothing to do with the decision to run the package as it did. After an interview with N.W.A., the segment ended with Ice Cube saying “I got all you suckers 100 miles and runnin’,” and then, imitating N.W.A. affiliate the D.O.C.: “I’d like to give a shoutout to the D.O.C. Y’all can’t play me.” I was a pawn in the game. I was in it, but so was a true opportunist: the director of Straight Outta Compton, F. Gary Gray.

That’s right. F. Gary Gray, the man whose film made $60 million last weekend as it erased my attack from history, was also behind the camera to film the moment that launched that very attack. He was my cameraman for Pump It Up! You may have noticed that Gary has been reluctant to address N.W.A.’s misogyny and Dre’s attack on me in interviews. I think a huge reason that Gary doesn’t want to address it is because then he’d have to explain his part in history. He’s obviously uncomfortable for a reason.

Gary was the one holding the camera during that fateful interview with Ice Cube, which was filmed on the set of Boyz N the Hood. I was there to interview the rapper Yo Yo. Cube was in a great mood, even though he was about to shoot and he was getting into character.

Cube went into a trailer to talk to Gary and Pump It Up! producer Jeff Shore. I saw as he exited that Cube’s mood had changed. Either they told him something or showed him the N.W.A. footage we had shot a few weeks earlier. What ended up airing was squeaky clean compared to the raw footage. N.W.A. were chewing Cube up and spitting him out. I was trying to do a serious interview and they were just clowning—talking shit, cursing. It was crazy.

Right after we shot a now-angry Cube and they shouted, “Cut!” one of the producers said, “We’re going to put that in.” I said, “Hell no.” I wasn’t even thinking about being attacked at the time, I was just afraid that they were going to shoot each other. I didn’t want to be part of that. “This is no laughing matter,” I tried telling them. “This is no joke. These guys take this stuff seriously.” I was told by executives that I was being emotional. That’s because I’m a woman. They would have never told a man that. They would have taken him seriously and listened.


It was that interview that was the supposed cause of Dre’s attack on me, as many of his groupmates attested. My life changed that night. I suffer from horrific migraines that started only after the attack. I love Dre’s song “Keep Their Heads Ringin”—it has a particularly deep meaning to me. When I get migraines, my head does ring and it hurts, exactly in the same spot every time where he smashed my head against the wall. People have accused me of holding onto the past; I’m not holding onto the past. I have a souvenir that I never wanted. The past holds onto me.

People ask me, “How come you’re not on TV anymore?” and “How come you’re not back on television?” It’s not like I haven’t tried. I was blacklisted. Nobody wants to work with me. They don’t want to affect their relationship with Dre. I’ve been told directly and indirectly, “I can’t work with you.” I auditioned for the part that eventually went to Kimberly Elise in Set It Off. Gary was the director. This was long after Pump it Up!, and I nailed the audition. Gary came out and said, “I can’t give you the part.” I asked him why, and he said, “‘Cause I’m casting Dre as Black Sam.” My heart didn’t sink, I didn’t get emotional; I was just numb.

Most recently, I tried to get a job at Revolt. I’ve known Sean (Combs) for years and have the utmost respect for him. Still nothing. Instead of doing journalism, I’ve had a series of 9-5 jobs over the years to make ends meet.

There’s a myth that I was paid so well by the settlement I received from Dre that I’d never have to work again. People think I was paid millions, when in reality, I didn’t even get a million, and it wasn’t until September of 1993. He and his lawyers dragged their feet the whole way. He stopped coming to court, they kept postponing it. I was tired, and, toward the end, pregnant, but I still tried to show up for everything. And I never thought I was going to have to stop doing what I loved for my job. That was the furthest thing from my mind.

The last time I saw Dre, and was up close and personal with him, we were cordial but not friendly. That was years ago, before “Guilty Conscience,” the 1999 Eminem/Dre collaboration that references me (“You gonna take advice from somebody who slapped Dee Barnes?”). I most recently saw Cube at the Kings of the Mic show at Los Angeles’s Greek Theater in 2013. We talked briefly and he was very unfriendly. Standoffish, even.

There were two things that made me emotional while watching Straight Outta Compton. The first was the scene where D.O.C. is in the hospital after a car accident that nearly decapitated him. I went to see him then, and I was devastated. I thought he was going to die. I saw him fresh, when he was hooked up to life support and had blood and cuts still visible.

The other scene was Eazy’s death. I got a chance to see him prior to his dying of AIDS-related complications in March of 1995, maybe about a month before. I briefly owned a production company. Our office was on Melrose, and we shared it with another production company. Eazy came in to the other production company to look for a director for a Bone-Thugs-n-Harmony video. I didn’t know he was coming, he didn’t know I was going to be there. It was just a pure blessing. I am so grateful I had the opportunity to make peace with him before he passed. We hugged, we kissed, we talked, and I felt good when I saw him, but I knew something was wrong. He didn’t look well. I thought maybe he just had a cold. He wasn’t coughing, the way it was dramatized in the movie. He sounded congested and he looked skinny. We had a nice conversation and I felt really good about it.

I believe that if Eazy were alive, neither Tairrie B., nor JJ Fad wouldn’t have been ignored in the movie. Eazy was the straight shooter of the group and he just would have kept it more real. JJ Fad was a trio of female rappers from Rialto, California, whose debut album was released by Ruthless in order to establish and legitimize the label. It was commercially successful and featured the mega hit “Supersonic,” produced by Arabian Prince, who appears only briefly in Straight Outta Compton. JJ Fad’s success paved the way for the release of the Straight Outta Compton album. It’s a very pivotal moment that was erased from N.W.A.’s story. It’s easy for them to be dismissive of women, because they don’t respect most women.

With the exception of short scenes with mother figures and wives, the rest of the women in the film were naked in a hotel room or dancing in the background at the wild pool parties. Yo Yo, a female rapper who worked with Ice Cube after he left N.W.A., was nowhere to be found. Nor are women who worked with Dre later in his career, like Jewell and the Lady of Rage. They both contributed tremendously to the ultimate sound of the classic album The Chronic. What about Ruthless R&B singer-song-writer Michel’le, who at the young age of 17 was singing vocals on World Class Wreckin Cru’s “Turn Off The Lights”? Michel’le and Dr. Dre developed a personal and professional association and he went on to produce her two best-known hits, “No More Lies” and “Something In My Heart.” Both songs reflected their volatile relationship. Then there is Ruthless Records/Comptown Records solo female artist/Eazy E’s protege Tairrie B, the first white female hardcore rapper. A bold blonde at the time who wasn’t afraid to speak her mind, Tairrie B released an album named The Power Of A Woman (how fitting!) and dropped singles like “Murder She Wrote” and “Ruthless Bitch.”

In 1990, at a Grammys party in front of an A-List crowd, Dr. Dre assaulted Tairrie B. This was a year before my assault. In an interview, F. Gary Gray said these were considered “side stories” and not important to the narrative.

If that’s the case, it’s too bad for the movie and it’s too bad for its audience. Straight Outta Compton transforms N.W.A. from the world’s most dangerous rap group to the world’s most diluted rap group. In rap, authenticity matters, and gangsta rap has always pushed boundaries beyond what’s comfortable with hardcore rhymes that are supposed to present accounts of the street’s harsh realities (though N.W.A. shared plenty of fantasies, as well). The biggest problem with Straight Outta Compton is that it ignores several of N.W.A.’s own harsh realities. That’s not gangsta, it’s not personal, it’s just business. Try as they might, too much of N.W.A.’s story ain’t that kinda shit you can sweep under no rug. You know?

My movies: http://russellhainline.com
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SoWhat
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99. "Good stuff!"
In response to Reply # 98


  

          

I'm glad she's not bound by some nondisclosure agreement with Dre.

fuck you.

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
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Tue Aug-18-15 05:32 PM

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100. "Definitely a lot of good info here"
In response to Reply # 98


  

          

I do think they should have at least mentioned the attack, but as everyone has said, they tried to make Dre's image appear as completely being "the hard worker who was only focused on music."

They definitely omit all the women she named, but at the same time, they omit a LOT of the men as well. Arabian Prince got no mention that I recall, Nate Dogg, Kurupt, DPG, BG Knoccout, Dresta, and several others didn't either...so it wasn't just the women. And D.O.C. was shown as just "the homie who's always around" and not a major factor musically.

Dre and even Cube should publicly apologize to Dee and the other women, but I feel he'll make no mention of it unless he's forced to do so.

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

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Frank Longo
Member since Nov 18th 2003
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Tue Aug-18-15 05:38 PM

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101. "The difference being, of course..."
In response to Reply # 100


  

          


>They definitely omit all the women she named, but at the same
>time, they omit a LOT of the men as well. Arabian Prince got
>no mention that I recall, Nate Dogg, Kurupt, DPG, BG Knoccout,
>Dresta, and several others didn't either...so it wasn't just
>the women.

... that omitting the men doesn't specifically and intentionally omit an incredibly unsavory part of the life of one of the film's stars (and executive producers).

I imagine someone will need to address it. It will almost certainly be F. Gary Gray.

My movies: http://russellhainline.com
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-DJ R-Tistic-
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Tue Aug-18-15 05:47 PM

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102. "I wasn't speaking on her or the incident being left out"
In response to Reply # 101


  

          

But just saying that they left out a lot of folks from that time frame.

And yeah, the internet is gonna force them to mention it soon.

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

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SoWhat
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103. "The value in producing one's own biopic. Lol"
In response to Reply # 100


  

          

It's definitely bullshit and will help sanitize NWA's image. Which is why I'm glad Dre, Cube and Tamica are being called out by those who were are still here to tell their tales.

fuck you.

  

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atruhead
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Tue Aug-18-15 06:39 PM

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105. "I work in the media so I hate this"
In response to Reply # 98


  

          

1) The dude behind it wrote this and he's been trash to me since http://gawker.com/5985096/beyonce-has-never-been-less-convincing-about-the-veracity-of-her-pregnancy-than-she-was-in-her-own-movie

he challenged me to write a rebuttal to ^^^that in 2013, I declined.

2) He started fake caring about Dee Barnes 2 weeks ago and I called him out for being opportunistic. Today he personally tweeted this story to me on some gloating shit, I told him my feelings remained the same and asked why Gawker didnt care about Dee Barnes before Dr. Dre had a movie out, he then blocked me

so yeah Im not cool with Gawker exploiting her already publicized tragedy 24 years later for site traffic.

  

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sndesai1
Member since Feb 02nd 2013
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Tue Aug-18-15 06:59 PM

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106. "that dude is a pos"
In response to Reply # 105


  

          

not unlike many other gawker "journalists"

but i still think the dee barnes piece is worth reading

  

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Frank Longo
Member since Nov 18th 2003
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Tue Aug-18-15 08:39 PM

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108. "Oh, I don't doubt anyone who says awful things about Gawker writers."
In response to Reply # 105


  

          

That said, it *does* provide a good venue for Dee Barnes to share her story with the younger generation who is seeing this movie but absolutely would never have otherwise heard of her. I hate the site and pretty much every hypocritical thing they do, but I can't deny that it'll get her story the attention it deserves from the mass media.

My movies: http://russellhainline.com
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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
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Wed Aug-19-15 08:58 AM

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115. "Let's slow down...."
In response to Reply # 105


          



Take it from me....

Whether or not the asshole Gawker writer is a brazen opportunist who thrives on the tabloid trash of the day is moot....

Gawker was very smart in the way they handled this....Because they made the story an As Told To according to Dee Barnes....

Basically, Gawker's reputation for being a shady journalistic operation that seems to have less chill than TMZ is dwarfed by the fact that the woman herself is telling her truth....

Whether or not someone is egging her own simply has no place in this discussion for obvious reasons...Dee Barnes is the one in front of this story....Not the Gawker writer as much as he wants to gloat about it....

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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atruhead
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Wed Aug-19-15 10:44 AM

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118. "you're correct."
In response to Reply # 115


  

          

I just dont dig anything about their practices

  

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normal35762
Member since Oct 20th 2004
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Wed Aug-19-15 03:41 PM

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138. "RE: I love Dre’s song “Keep Their Heads Ringin”"
In response to Reply # 98


  

          

Hahahhaaha!! Funny.

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
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Tue Aug-18-15 08:37 PM

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107. "These thinkpieces are the worst."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

We'll see what got cut out in the director's cut. I'm not saying Dee Barnes should have been omitted, especially given what was in the movie. But let's not act like JJ Fad was truly noteworthy in the larger story being told. Why do we give a shit about BG Knoccout and Dresta aren't in it?

Yes, Bone Thugs was huge. Yes, they're part of Eazy E's tree. They were hardly mentioned (but that timeline wasn't off - Yella says their album, which was E.1999 - not Creepin On Ah Come Up which Eazy was ON, so...). But seriously, they aren't really all that needed in the larger story.

How many "WHY WAS _____ CUT OUT OF THE STORY" do we need though?

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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Frank Longo
Member since Nov 18th 2003
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Tue Aug-18-15 08:40 PM

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109. "None, except for Barnes'."
In response to Reply # 107


  

          

Barnes is the only one with a reason that isn't "but I was an important part of their lives!"

My movies: http://russellhainline.com
My movie reviews: https://letterboxd.com/RussellHFilm/
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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
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Tue Aug-18-15 08:52 PM

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110. "This is true. "
In response to Reply # 109


  

          

But like someone said, part of the reason making your own biopic is probably preferable to a guy like Dre. He SHOULD tell his story warts and all (yes, beating women is a huge shadow, but I'm just using colloquialisms). I'd be very interested to see what was cut out of the movie versus what just never made it into the script period.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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Heinz
Member since Dec 26th 2003
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Wed Aug-19-15 02:54 AM

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114. "I don't get why that would be part of HIS story. That would be part of H..."
In response to Reply # 109


  

          

story being told.....I'm not denying it happened, that its fucked up...but its non essential to NWA or Dre as far as their story goes especially with the amount of time they were trying to tell their story.

There were other things in their timeline that couldve been put in that would be higher on the list than their incident. I do agree with people who say they wish they saw more of their flaws as far as the whilrwind some of them went thru other than the versions of the speeding in a Ferrari or tension/beefs between people around them that were told. think that part of the movie couldve been told better.


____

TWITTER : Heinz21st

IG : H_N_Z

  

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Marla
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Wed Aug-19-15 02:32 PM

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135. "No reason for her to be in it because there's no resolution."
In response to Reply # 109


  

          

It's a fictionalized account which means that everything relevant about the main characters is tied up in a little bow of completion of resolve by the end.

Adding Barnes to the story would require a resolution for the main character, i.e. next he goes to anger management and makes up with Barnes or something. Then his character would necessarily need to have an epiphany about his past behavior and never touch or speak disparagingly about another woman again. Paying her off doesn't resolve the character's flaw and adding the rest to it is way too far out into the realm of fiction to be believable.

Now I'm not saying that he is still a woman beater or remained a woman beater after the fact (you know because he's a big guy and I'm a woman) but what I'm saying is that trying to incorporate that into the movie might appear to be too much of a tangential fantasy sequence to make things believable.

  

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dba_BAD
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Tue Aug-18-15 08:52 PM

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111. "im not mad @ any character omissions like that BUT"
In response to Reply # 107


          

as i mentioned above i do think the controversy around content within the black community and hip hop community (as opposed to the rifling of feathers among the white establishment which as it should have been was an anchor theme) is a big omission. it's faulty to remember them ONLY as controversial for speaking truth or pushing boundaries to a white audience uncomfortable with it, they were controversial also for their misogyny and violence and whatnot among the black community and hip hop community, and i think thats an important part of their story

__

fairweather

  

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murph71
Member since Sep 15th 2005
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Wed Aug-19-15 09:44 AM

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117. "RE: These thinkpieces are the worst."
In response to Reply # 107


          



It's Dee Barnes words...Not simply a "think piece"....

GOAT of his era......long live Prince.....God is alive....

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
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Wed Aug-19-15 12:18 PM

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128. "Right, but I specifically separated hers. "
In response to Reply # 117


  

          

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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JFrost1117
Member since Aug 12th 2005
23877 posts
Tue Aug-18-15 10:14 PM

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112. "Loved it, except for the '94-'96 time jumble."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Which probably wouldn't have bothered me if they didn't show 'Pac recording "Hail Mary".

____________
Twitter & IG: @rulerofmyself
SC: rulerofmyself17

Yes! She's on the drugs. (c) BoHagon

  

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JtothaI
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Tue Aug-18-15 11:48 PM

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113. "DOC speaks on NWA/his career circa 2004"
In response to Reply # 0
Tue Aug-18-15 11:49 PM by JtothaI

  

          

We all know there wasn't enough DOC in the movie, so maybe this will shed a little light for those who weren't up on him and his contributions

from out interview with hiom Crica 2004

http://dformula.bizland.com/doc_ruthless_to_death_row_thaformula_music.html

Q & A W/ THE D.O.C.: FROM RUTHLESS TO DEATH ROW

ThaFormula.com - First off, I just wanna say that this is an honor, and that in my opinion if it weren't for your tragic accident, you would have been the greatest MC of all time...

D.O.C. - Now wait a minute, what's up with this would have been shit? Don't count me out like that!

ThaFormula.com - Nah man, I'm sayin' at this point in time I feel you would have been the best and I say that only because you and Dre were one of the greatest combinations of all time...

D.O.C. - Ok, well thank you brother, and you know what I think man? I think you are exactly right, and I don't mean any disrespect to nobody, but I think you are absolutely, exactly right, and when I say don't count me out yet, don't let it be because my voice is gone that that takes that marquee away from my name. We still working on me being the greatest of all time. It just may take a little while.

ThaFormula.com - I always thought that you wrote a lot of the material from the early Death Row days. Did you have a lot of input when it came to that?

D.O.C. - Well what I did was the same thing I do with these young guys now, which is that I don't persay write the shit, but I don't allow them to write bullshit. I listen with a loving ear, that means I want you to be the shit and everything less just ain't civilized.

ThaFormula.com - I always tell people that I felt the biggest tragedy in hip-hop, was the day you got in that accident and lost your voice. Hip-hop was robbed of what would have been one of, if not the greatest MC of all time?

D.O.C. - Well god works in his own time and he works in mysterious ways, so it must have been meant for me not to say nothing for these ten years, but for some reason I feel like talkin' now. So I'm ready to talk, and I can rap a little bit. It may not be what it once was but these words still sting pretty heavily. Although the vocal power ain't what it once was, it's still a lot of power in this raspy voice I got.

ThaFormula.com - I'd like to start from the beginning Doc, let's go back to the early years and let all those that don't know, exactly how it all started?

D.O.C. - Well N.W.A. hadn't really got together yet. At least the group that the world knows as N.W.A. hadn't really all come together yet. When I got there everybody started finding there places. Everybody had their own individual skills, but Cube belonged to another group called C.I.A. at the time. Eazy was doing his own records at that time. Dre was just a producer, Ren was around and Dre worked with Yella. There was another dude around called Arabian Prince. All those guys was working with each other. Everybody was doing they own shit, but they all worked together. By the time I got there, guys really started taking that shit serious and they stopped fucking with Arabian Prince. Cube came from C.I.A. and left his other group alone. That's when we started doing work all together, but N.W.A. hadn't even really started working on it's material. We all spent all our time trying to put Eazy's record together.

ThaFormula.com - What did you do for the Eazy-E album "Eazy Duz It?"

D.O.C.- I wrote about maybe 30 or 40 percent of that record. I wrote "Still Talkin Shit," I wrote "We Want Eazy," and more.

ThaFormula.com - You came from the South, how did you and Dre hook up?

D.O.C. - Well there was this dude named Dr. Rock who used to DJ with Dre at a club called the "Eve After Dark." Well, Dre came down to visit this dude Dr. Rock because Dr. Rock had moved from Compton and came down here and got a gig on the radio. Well, when this rap shit started happening, Rock tried to put him a group together. I was in the group Fila Fresh Crew. Dre came down and was visiting with this dude and ended up doing some beats at this dudes crib for us, and once me and Dre started coming together, dude was like "nigga you the shit," "If you come out to the West Coast, I guarantee you we will be rich." Well later on I found out this dude Rock was taking money, so I gave Dre a call. To me it was all about the music. I've never been a really a street kind of dude. I'm more of a thinker.

ThaFormula.com - And at that time it was all about the music and nobody was really thinkin' about being rich were they?

D.O.C. - Shit nah. I think what Dre saw was my ability to help him make great records. Making a hit song for Eazy-E wasn't the easiest thing in the world. Eazy didn't have any rhythm, so it was hard to cross and besides I think Dre wanted to cross over his music so he could get it played on the radio. At that time they wasn't playin that gangsta shit on the radio. They wasn't trying to hear that, but if I could write songs for Eric that were gangsta, but not "gangsta," uh , I could have Eazy talkin' about all the gangsta shit in the world, but use words that don't scare white people. That's really all it was.

ThaFormula.com - Looking back, you had a hell of a vocabulary for coming out of a gangsta rap camp like N.W.A.?

D.O.C. - Sure, but I was a reader. I was always a reader as a young kid. I was never outside in the streets sellin' this doing that. I used to read books, that's what I did. I actually read books so that I could trick my parents into thinkin' that I was going to school and shit. But once I got to the West Coast, it was just such a thrill to be in California. I had been to L.A. as a kid or young child, but as an adult I had never been to L.A., so my vibe was so great I was putting songs together in fuckin' 5 minutes back then. I can't remember one rap I wrote that Eazy didn't love, and muthafuckas in L.A. from Dre's relatives to Eazy's relatives to Cube's friends didn't love. Muthafuckas were like, "Doc you the shit!" Once they came in like that it was hard for me to come back to Texas because Texas never showed me that kind of love, but from the time I got off the plane in California, them muthafuckas was like, "nigga you the shit."

ThaFormula.com - What happened after that?

D.O.C. - Well I was just a part of the team at that time. See, to me there was no difference between Eazy-E, N.W.A. or D.O.C. There was just titles that you put on a record. Like in my heart of hearts, you can't have an N.W.A. record without me, but anytime you see anything about N.W.A. in magazines they will never mention my name, but I was a pivotal part of that scene.

ThaFormula.com - You had the dopest intro on the "Straight Outta Compton" LP, which was for the track "Parental Discretion is Advised." What type of input other than track that did you have on that album?

D.O.C. - Well whenever you heard Eazy rappin', that was me, and then I stuck my own shit in like when Dre was doing the court room shit before "Fuck the Police," I was in there at the end. But to me it was more about making Eazy sound like he the shit. That was my job, and I took that shit serious. After the N.W.A. record it was just my turn.

ThaFormula.com - Was there a problem with that? I always wondered if that wasn't one of the reasons that Cube left, other then money?

D.O.C. - Nah, Cube just had problems with Eazy and the money, and Jerry Heller was really Eazy's downfall in the business world.

ThaFormula.com - Was Jerry Heller really as bad as they made him out to be?

D.O.C. - Well I don't know if he was as bad as muthafuckas claim, but he was just a Jewish guy that was in a position of power as far as Eazy was concerned. Eazy still had to sign the paper. He still had to sign the check, but Jerry would convince this guy that this is the best move or that it is the best move, no matter what any of us said, Eazy was gonna do what the fuck Jerry said because he felt that the guy was right. He had taken him from just makin' money on the street doing what he was doing, to being a serious businessman and making great music. I mean he wasn't really controlling shit, but he was in Eazy's ear so tuff and Eazy had so much faith in him that I guess you could really say that to a certain extent, yeah he was. He had a lot of control over Ruthless, a lot more then any of us had. So when you think about when the money started coming and I'm sure it was more money and faster then Eazy had ever made working on the streets, but Eazy chose not to share it with those guys the way they wanted it to be shared. The way they wanted to be compensated for their hard work. So instead of this dude saying "well let me take a step back and try and fix this shit because this is my business," he took the street stance of, "nigga this is my shit, fuck you," "you can beat it if you want to." So that's what the fuck Cube did.

ThaFormula.com - Did this problem start before or after your album was gonna drop?

D.O.C. - Yeah, the problem happened before we even got off into my record.

ThaFormula.com - So when did the decision to do your record come?

D.O.C. - It was just a natural process. We'll do Eazy's then well do N.W.A.'s, then I'm next.

ThaFormula.com - Why wasn't Cube next, because it always seemed like he would be the next one with the solo album?

D.O.C. - Well, N.W.A. had music out. I don't think Cube was really trippin' on a solo album at that time. He wasn't sayin, "I want an Ice Cube record." He wasn't trippin' like that. He was happy in N.W.A. He just wasnt getting paid.

ThaFormula.com - Now I wanna speak on a rumor that has been going around for years. Is it true that you sold your publishing for a...

D.O.C. - for a watch and a gold chain?

ThaFormula.com - Yeah, was that true?

D.O.C. - Sure it was. I mean I didn't know what I was doing. I was a fucking 19-year-old kid. I didn't know shit about no fucking publishing and this and that.

ThaFormula.com - Did you sell it to Eazy or Jerry?

D.O.C. - I sold it to Eazy. He took advantage.

ThaFormula.com - Do you think that he did that, or do you think that Jerry Heller was behind that?

D.O.C. - Nah, I think Eazy did that. Eazy was always a money-hungry muthafucka. Eazy was a greedy one, and I was a perfect match for him because I'm a giving person. Money don't mean nothing to me because I make great music. Its in my heart and you can't keep that shit down forever. I kept saying to myself, one day it will be my turn.

ThaFormula.com - So now comes your album. What I want to know is how was it recording "No One Can Do It Better" because that was the only album that I can remember where Dre produced it all by himself, without the help of any other co-producer or whatever. It was just you and Dre. This is the album I always tell people to explain to me when they say Dre can't produce by himself or that he jacks everybody's beats. There was no one to jack for your album right?

D.O.C. - Well, let me explain something to you and you can print this so your people will understand. I went through this shit with Daz and now they're going through this shit with Mel-Man. Let me tell you something. What Dr. Dre gives those young men, they can't give you enough money for, what that guy gives these young producers that are trying to come up. The only reason Dre even has anybody else in there fucking with him is because he's lazy. That's the only reason. When Dre is in the studio, that shit is coming out of his mind and none of these other guys are responsible for it and I was there from day 1, 'till fuckin' '94 or '95 when I had to leave. Then I came back because doing records with Dre is like going to school, because if you sit and you watch, and you look and you learn, the guy is teaching you how to make great records. Now with this new record I made, I'm only doing what Dre would have did, and I used my own judgment. The one thing that Dr. Dre is missing now is D.O.C. and that's the same way that I would tell those young guys, hey that sucks! I would tell Dre's big ass the same shit. Hey, I love you, and your the greatest of all time, but that's bullshit!

ThaFormula.com - So at this point in time there is nobody in there to tell him, "Hey Dre, I don't know about that beat right there?"

D.O.C. - That's right. Number one, there is nobody there that I think, and this is just my own personal humble opinion, there's nobody there that I think knows the difference between a hit record, or not, and even if they knew, they're going to get paid so they're not gonna tell him. Me, I never gave a fuck. You muthafuckas ain't payin' me anyway, so I might as well tell you your shit stinks.

ThaFormula.com - Now let's get back to your first album Doc, what was it like recording that album?

D.O.C. - Just fun man. That's the only word I got for that. The shit was so much fun because at that time when I moved to California, I moved at Dr. Dre's urging. Once I got there I had to stay with this dudes brother by Centenial High School for like a month or 2, and then Dre got his own apartment. Him and Yella got an apartment, so I spent all day everyday with Dre for those first 3 or 4 years, I was with this guy all day everyday. We slept in the same house, we ate at the same time. We drove to work together in the same beat up little Toyota Corrolla. It was the closest thing that you could have to a brother because we fought and argued like family. That's the kind of person I am. I'm a real southern kind of person, so if I have love for you and if something's in my heart, then I'm gonna express myself. There ain't no gangsta shit. I don't wanna beat yo ass, I don't wanna shoot you in your ass, or none of that shit. I just want you to think about what I'm sayin' and try to do right. At the same time, show business was around us and everybody was just blowin' up in they're own way, and you know how show business can really get muthafuckas' heads fucked up.

ThaFormula.com - Did every song recorded for "No One Can Do It Better" make that album?

D.O.C. - Yep, every song, and the "No One Can Do It Better" album was just me being me, and Dre being Dre. We had no plans. We just had fun and did the shit, and when we felt like we had enough, we quit. "How many is that?," "17?," "Yeah that's enough, fuck it, let's move on." He was ready to get back into N.W.A. mode.

ThaFormula.com - What made you do the track, "Beautiful But Deadly" and go down that avenue?

D.O.C. - Oh, that was Dr. Dre's idea. Traditionally I'm a East Coast rapper, so he felt what Run and them was doing back then, uh, well we felt that I could do that kind of thing. Crossover into a Rock n' Roll kind of theme and not reaqlly skip a beat or lose any of my hardcore audience doing it. Because of the type of rapper that I was. But it really wasn't straight Rock n' Roll because that's a old parliament song, and Dre is a Parliament freak.

ThaFormula.com - What was your favorite song off that album?

D.O.C. - As a young man, my favorite song was "Doc and the Doctor," because I used to love to be able to holla and do my Run DMC imitation. My favorite song now is "Tha Formula."

ThaFormula.com - Likewise, which is why we named the site "thaformula.com," because what you were spittin' on that track was the truth, and pretty much summed up the formula to making real hip-hop?

D.O.C. - Now I will tell you how that song came about. It's a funny story. Dr. Dre and Michel'Le went somewhere and they didn't make it back home till about 1:30 or maybe 2 o'clock in the morning. Now me I'm straight outta Texas. I ain't got a pot to piss in, or a window to throw it out of, so when they go out I'm just at the house on the floor. Well I was sleepin' when he came back in, and he said, "nigga, I was on my way home and I got caught up in a day dream, it was me and you was bustin' a song called "Tha Formula" to a Marvin Gaye beat!" He went in there and he got a tape and he played me the Marvin Gaye song and he went in there and went to sleep. Well me, I stayed up from about 2 o'clock till about 5:30 maybe finishing that song and we did that song the next day. That's what I mean, me and Dre were really in sync. Like I go good with his ear. Not just his beats, I can hear the kind of shit that he hears, but still I'm able to hear my own shit in it.

ThaFormula.com - Well, I never heard anyone flow over a Dre beat the way you did on "Tha Formula" and I really don't think anyone ever will.

D.O.C. - Well I remember Mel-Man telling me one time that he asked Dre who was the best to rap on top of his beats and Mel-Man told me that Dre said it was me, and I can pretty much believe that because I am one of the few muthafckas' that loved, and I don't mean I like it as in when I hear it I wanna dance, but I loved Dr. Dre's production. So that means when it stinks we need to fix it, because I love it. Not in the terms where it's something that I like, but it's something that I want to be great and I wanted him to be great. I always wanted Dre to be Quincy Jones. At least in this hip-hop thing, I wanted him to be Russell Simmons. I didn't want him to just be satisfied with being Dr. Dre, hit maker or beat maker. The guy has the potential to be huge in this world. I mean he's a smart guy with a good heart, and I think he's got the best ears in the business today.

ThaFormula.com - How about "It's Funky Enough?" That was a different type track at that time. No one had really done anything like that in hip-hop at that time?

D.O.C. - Well that was me sittin' at the turntable listening to a song called "Misdemeanor" by The Silvers, and I loved it. It was a funky little thing. It was the shit, but Dr. Dre said there is nothing I can sample. I'm not fucking with it. A couple of days later I'm back in the studio and I pull that muthafucka back out and I'm listening to it, and I ask him again. He said, there is not enough space or some shit, and that he can't sample the record so he can't use it. I let it go again. Well we came back in there, and I think it was like a week later, and I got the record and I was playing with it, and I had to beg this guy to make the fuckin' beat. He says "okay fuck it, I'll make it." He put the shit down and I was gonna write another rap to it, but the way he was clowning me behind it I said, "fuck it, Ill just put this rap that I got on it, then we can work it out if it ain't right." I had been drinkin' some beer, and smokin' some weed with Laylaw on the other side of the studio. So that when I got back inside the studio I was feelin' kind of good and the beat sounded like some Jamaican shit to me after Dre finished fucking with it. That was the reason why I rapped it the way that I rapped it, because it wasn't designed to be like that. I did that muthafuckin' song one time through, thinkin' that we were gonna go back and do it over again, and Dre was like "fuck that, that was a one take willy."

ThaFormula.com - Why do you think that doesn't happen any more man?

D.O.C. - I don't know man, but I seen it with Snoop. Snoop's was a one take willy, but his shit was all freestyle. He hadn't written nothing down. He just came in and started busitin'.

ThaFormula.com - Wait a minute...what track are you talkin' about?

D.O.C. - The song was "The Shiznit".

ThaFormula.com - That was all freestyle?

D.O.C. - Yep. The guy came in and he started bustin' and then when we got to the break, Dre cut the machine off, did the chorus and told Snoop to come back in. He did that throughout the record. That's when Snoop was in the zone then.

ThaFormula.com - What happened to that Snoop?

D.O.C. - Show business man. Once you make it to the top, it's very hard unless you got people around you like me who are gonna tell you when you suck. That's the key. I don't want this to sound fucked up man, but nigga I'm the key. I am the key. I don't make beats and I don't really write raps for muthafuckas' no more, but I can tell you this. When it comes to making classic records, I was the key to that shit there.

ThaFormula.com - It was nice to see you, Dre, and Snoop together in the "Still Dre" video and at The Up In Smoke tour, because it just brought back a lot of memories?

D.O.C. - Well when you get this new album, "Deuce" there is a little piece by Snoop Dogg where he basically says the same thing you said. He says, if it wasn't for me, there wouldn't have been no Snoop. He said he got as good as he got because we wrote together and I criticized his shit and made him change this and change that. So really the shit that you feel, there is a lot of truth in it, and in a minute everybody is gonna know it, but my concern now is Six-Too, El Dorado, and Uptite. Those are my young soldiers down here, and Snoop Dogg is one of the great ones of all time. He used to hold the spot that Six-Too is coming for.

ThaFormula.com - No doubt, Six-Too has an incredible amount of talent. How do you look back at the Ruthless and Death Row days, because to a lot of people think those were the some of the greatest times in hip-hop?

D.O.C. - Those were seven of the most violent years of my life. I ain't lying to you either nigga. I seen and did cause I told you when I was a younger guy I was kind of church kid you know. I had never really been involved in that shit, and those, uh, man! I could remember one time in Hollywood at Snoop's apartment. Daz and Nate Dogg are downstairs about to get into it with some niggaz, and Daz yells upstairs for me to come down and to bring my shit. Because at that time I was packin' a gun, knowin' I'm not fittin' to shoot nobody, but I'm still packin' it because Suge gave it to me, we was close back then. So he told me to come downstairs with my girlfriend. I came down there and you have to picture this because it's the funniest shit you will ever wanna see. I'm downstairs with a gun in my waist trying to break up a fight? Whew! That was some backward shit man! But that's life and I wouldn't change none of that shit.

ThaFormula.com - Did you see everything coming as far as the break up of N.W.A. and everyone heading their separate ways after your album dropped?

D.O.C. - Hell nah! Back in those days, uh, see I was in L.A. because of Dre. Now they never reported this and nobody ever says this, but Dre didn't leave Ruthless because Suge went and found him and showed him some funny shit in his contract, he left Ruthless because I asked him to. He left Ruthless because I wanted us to go and make our own label. Mine and his because we were the ones putting in all the work.

ThaFormula.com - And at that time Suge was your bodyguard right?

D.O.C. - Well at that time Suge was a friend of mine and they said the guy was my bodyguard because I got a 300 pound plus muthafucka following me around. But I never paid this guy to fuckin' watch over me. He probably just smelled money like everybody else and was kickin' it.

ThaFormula.com - So you asked him to leave and you guys were supposed to start your own label right?

D.O.C. - That's what it was all about and Suge had a lot to do with it because I was trying to start a label with Suge Knight. I had an office in Beverly Hills, but I was going through issues after that car wreck. I was trying to find myself and we felt like we needed Dre in order to make that shit work.

ThaFormula.com - How bad did it get for you after that accident when you found out your voice was damaged like that?

D.O.C. - Well you know what's funny dog? I probably really couldn't answer that question because it took ten years for me to even be able to admit that that shit caused me pain. I wouldn't have admitted it to anybody. I was like "ahh we'll just keep it going. That's what I was saying in my mind, but my heart must have been going through some shit.

ThaFormula.com - I still remember the day I heard about your accident. I remember hoping it was just a rumor and then I remember sittin' at home and watching your new video for "Mind Blowin" and thinking to myself saying, "I know it's just a rumor." Because in that video you looked good and it didn't look like anything had happened to you. Plus the fact that you made that video after your accident and that it was a remix.

D.O.C.- But that was the tripped out part though, because in the "Mind Blowin" video I was trying to show muthafuckas that that's what happened. In that particular video I was supposed to have had a crash and they had me on a gurney, then my spirit came out and then it went back in and said, "Nah you can kick it." In laymen's terms to me, that's what happened. I was close to death and I made it. So after the accident Jerry Heller, Eazy and them all thought I should keep going. "Whatever you do, don't stop making records." They thought I should make another one. Well I asked Dre what he thought, and he said that if it was him, he wouldn't make another record. He said they think your the king right now and that's how I would go out. I had so much faith in Dre, that when Dre said that then that was it. There was no more rappin' for me. Now I'm gonna use my writing ability to help us be the shit because that's really what I always wanted. It wasn't about no money to me. I just wanted to be the greatest. I wasn't trying to get rich out there with these guys, even though I did. I mean I wanted the fame and the fortune and all that, but I wanted when muthafuckas said my name, I wanted it to be unequivocal that this guy D.O.C. is the greatest. Now I'm a lot more humble and ill be happy with "he may be the greatest of all time." (Laughs)

ThaFormula.com - Sometimes we sit around and think about what you and Dre would have come out with after "No One Can Do It Better" if it weren't for that damn accident...

D.O.C. - Ahh man, that would have been the shit! It would have been the shit, but I would have had to probably fight with Dre a lot because I don't think he was really interested in the direction that I wanted to go in. He was only interested in making party songs that muthafuckas wanna get drunk and dance to.

ThaFormula.com - What were you trying to get into?

D.O.C. - Well like I said, I used to be a church kid. Like when you get this record, you will feel it. It's god in my record and its a gang of nigga shit. It's a gang of old N.W.A. shit. When muthafuckas hear this record, their first comment is that they knew I was where all of the old N.W.A. shit came from. That's everybody's first word. So it's dirty in that sense, but there are bits and pieces where I'm rappin' myself for like little soliloquies and it's a trip. It will make you cry, it will make you laugh, it will make you mad, it will make you wanna drive fast and then it will make you wanna get drunk. This album is a trip.

ThaFormula.com - When you guys recorded the "Straight Outta Compton" LP, did you guys record any more tracks then what was laid down?

D.O.C. - Nah, there were other tracks of N.W.A. There was actually one more D.O.C. song called "Bridget" that i think came out a little later. There were more N.W.A. songs, but they sucked.

ThaFormula.com - Do you think those songs would still sound bad today?

D.O.C. - Sure they would. They sucked then, they would suck now. Either the song is good or it's not. There is really no two ways about it. I'll tell you the mistake that a lot of these people in the rap business make today. They think because they got Snoop, DJ Quik, Ice Cube, and Mack 10 on a song that that song is the shit. Well guess what. If one of those guys raps sounds like shit and the idea of the song sucks, then your gonna have a wack ass song. I wouldn't give a fuck who was on it. Now that was my job and I held my nuts and I stuck them to the plate because I knew that these muthafuckas had so much respect for me that when I said it they wouldn't say shit to me.

ThaFormula.com - Well if anybody could say it, it was you.

D.O.C. - I was one of the muthafuckas that set the blueprint. That's what it was, and if you work with one of the muthafuckas that built the mouse trap then you can't come in there trying to build some shit tellin' me it's right when I'm tellin' you it's wrong.

ThaFormula.com - So did you know Snoop would be the next big thing after N.W.A. and you?

D.O.C. - Shit, it took me about 5 minutes. When Snoop came in, he was great. He had all the tools in him to be what he is right now, but he didn't have the desire and nobody was there to push him. That was my job. You have to be able to communicate with everybody, not just muthafuckas in Long Beach, and not just muthafuckas in L.A. So that means your subject matter may have to switch, your wordplay may have to change a little bit. You know just give us all something that we can love on.

ThaFormula.com - So how did it happen Doc, to where you had no involvement in Death Row business wise?

D.O.C. - Shortly after I had that accident, I started fucking with drugs. That's when I first started doing ecstasy. That was way back in '89. I started trying other things and it got to be a way for me to escape that pain. The white people at the top in the big offices, the ones with all the money, they were really only interested in Dre and Snoop. That shit got to be sort of painful even though they needed me to come and sign papers to get things done. It just started to feel like I was slippin', so I started getting more fucked up. I still seemed to make it to the muthafuckin' studio everyday and put my work in, but the more I fell, the more I slipped into that hole. These other guys, the more they started to rise up, nobody reached down to pick me up you know.

ThaFormula.com - The way you would have reached down and picked them up?

D.O.C. - Sure and it's funny because that's the way me and Six-Too ended up hookin' up. He was out there in the world fuckin' up. I'm not gonna speak on what the fuck he was doing, but I was fuckin' up and I saw in him the world. This guy could have the world if he wanted it.

ThaFormula.com - I feel you on that, I really wish he would of had a bigger part in the Chronic 2001 album?

D.O.C. - Well, and there in you will come up with another one of Hollywood's or the music businesses big downfall. They knew what you knew. What you know about this guy Six-Too, they knew it too. So to have him too much is to take the shine away from other muthafuckas who needed it. Which was any of the muthafuckas on that record god dammit! I wouldn't give a fuck who it was.

ThaFormula.com - Personally I would have loved to have heard more Six-Too. In fact, I think Six-Too and Devin are the most impressive MC's I have heard come out of the South in years.

D.O.C. - You god damn right and I'll tell you why. Because you're going through almost 13 years of what we been doing. That shit is old soup. You can't come tell me you gonna kill a muthafucka no more and shock me! Let me say that 99.9% of these guys even though they think the shit that they saying is coming from them personally and is different from anybody else, it's not true. It all sounds the same. It all sounds like I smoke a gang of weed, I fuck hoes, I'm the shit, and I'll bust you in yo ass. Now Six-Too man, it's hard to put a thumb on this dude man because he's unorthodox with his delivery. I guess if you had to put BB King and Snoop Dogg together and mash out a little kid, it would sound like Six-Too. Anyway, after we all came together and started this Death Row shit, I started sinkin' and they started rising. I started losing control, and they started going to meetings without me. I got to give these guys credit to say that they had enough respect for me to where they thought that I was in complete control and knew what I was doing. I fucked up a lot of Dr. Dre's parties and business meetings that I would go to fucked up and nobody still wouldn't say shit to me. They wouldn't say, "Hey Doc, you can't do this or take this muthafucka home. None of that shit. I'd be the only muthafucka in there drunk, "walkin' around with a sawed off shot gun and no shirt on." Threatening everybody and would nobody say shit to me man. So I'm just out there and I can understand to a certain extent why they would be like, "man we gotta handle our business." I ain't fittin' to let this muthafucka fuck mine off. But when I first started making this attempt to come back, none of those guys reached out to really help me and they had their own issues at the time, and I don't look for no nigga to help me because I could make it happen. But none of those guys really felt bad about none of my situations, except for Nate Dogg, let me take that lie back. Nate Dogg was the one person who continually through those seven years, always had great empathy for my situation and always told me that.

ThaFormula.com - Wasn't Nate Dogg in the military or something coming up?

D.O.C. - Shit, we were all in churches as kids. Hell Snoop used to sing in the church quire. And even to this point all of those guys are great guys, even Suge Knight. You know Suge didn't have to come to my hospital bed everyday. I wasn't paying him. He didn't know at that time we were gonna go make Death Row.

ThaFormula.com - Now what about that D.O.C.? I got to speak to Suge once before he went to jail. He seemed like a great guy and showed a lot of love. So I have always wondered, was he as bad as he was made out to be?

D.O.C. - Sure he was. He was a ding a long, that's for damn sure. Suge is the kind of dude to piss on your leg and laugh because he's 350 pounds and he knows you ain't really fittin' to do shit. He got sort of a kick out of that kind of shit. So the more power he got, the more outrageous he got. I believe that he's at a point now where he can't turn around and go back because he put himself out there as this huge Mafioso figure, which these dudes will do because they don't know how to express themselves any other way. But he's put himself out there as such a mafioso type figure that if he turns around then there will be somebody in his own camp waiting to do something to him. As far as I can see it that's the way that game works.

ThaFormula.com - So basically you feel that even if he wanted to turn back and make peace, there is just no turning back for him anymore?

D.O.C. - He really can't. Take into consideration Al Capone, he was at the height of "gangsterism." If he could have had a change of heart, they would have put a bullet in his ass so quick, you couldn't have smelt it and that's probably the same position old boy's in. He really can't play any other role but the one that he has created for himself.

ThaFormula.com - The stories told about Death Row with all the Gangstas in the studio, and how Ruthless it was, was it all true?

D.O.C. - Most of it. It could be kind of cheesy for me to say that my view is the right one, but the only reason that I stand up for mine is that I can stand up to you face to face and man to man and tell you I was Fucked up.

ThaFormula.com - Well you were one of the only ones that were never really caught up in any of the major beefs.

D.O.C. - For what? What they gonna fuck with me for. I'm not talkin bad about nobody.

ThaFormula.com - Well you were there since day one and I believe that if anyone was tellin' the truth, it would be the one that was there since day one and was never really caught up in any beefs.

D.O.C. - Well I got a movie thing happening right now and it's gonna bug muthafuckas out because number one, I don't fear none of these guys you know, so I'm not worried about it. When I get ready to do this movie thing and you can believe what I will tell you is a hundred percent truth. I mean all the shit that they did and all the shit that I did. Oh it's gonna be some shit dawg. It's gonna be some shit! I'm gonna tell you what the name is, but maybe if I'm lucky late 2003 or 2004 I'm gonna be puttin' this movie out and it's gonna be based around my experiences from when I met Dr. Dre in Dallas Ft. Worth Texas, until today. Were actually doing the end right now. It's a great movie because coming from Dallas, being sort of a church kid and getting caught up in a world of gang bangon and I dun saw shit that I knew nothin of.

ThaFormula.com - What are you looking at doing with the movie as far as distribution?

D.O.C. - Well actually, were talkin' to a couple of different people to see how viable it is to get it to a big screen, but I really just wanna get this monkey off my back. To get the truth off my chest.

ThaFormula.com - I always wondered how a real N.W.A. movie would have done?

D.O.C. - Oh, we gone see, and you know what's funny? I'm not gonna have any problems getting any of those guys to be involved in it. Any of them! That's the cool part about the position I'm in now. If I call Dr. Dre and ask him for some help, he's gonna say yes.

ThaFormula.com - Why is it that you get this respect from these guys that's very rare to get?

D.O.C. - Well, they know me. Those guys know me like nobody ever will ever know me. They knew me when I was in the front. We could have all took pictures and I would have been the nigga standing in the front, but I was comfortable standing in the back because in my mind, when they won, I won. Now Cube is one of the realest muthafuckas I'll ever meet, I already know that to be the truth because he told me when we were on this "Up In Smoke" shit. "When you need me, call me," so that's what I did and the nigga came right away. I mean he didn't take 5 minutes. He had to leave his movie shoot to come to the studio and give me 30 minutes and got back to work. Now you tell another muthafucka, "Oh 'I'ma call Cube and he'll be over here in 30 minutes, bust his lyrics and go back to work. He wil say, "Nigga what!!" That's Ice Cube man!

ThaFormula.com - That's love and loyalty man.

D.O.C. - That's what I'm talkin' about, and that's what it's really all about. See I never got a chance to finish the lessons. It's not really all about shoot em' bang bang, kill a muthafucka. We do need soldiers. Soldiers are very necessary, but we have to think. We can't be dumb. Sellin' see that's what got everybody geeked up. Eazy-E sold dope. That made everything lovely because that's all that really niggas could do, so they got off into making records about sellin' dope. Now everybody is a dope seller. Now what we never got a chance to tell these kids is that sellin' dope ain't cool. Sellin' dope ain't the shit, don't get it twisted. Just because niggas is rappin' about this shit and it may even sound great, but that's a record. It's like going to the movies and you see Arnold Shwartzenegger bustin' somebody in the ass may have looked pretty good, but that will get you put in jail. Nobody gave these kids that lesson. See when I lost my voice, that was my next lesson dawg. Well now after ten years, I finally got enough air back in my balls where I feel like talkin' and trust me when you hear this record, your gonna be like man! Matter of fact there is shit on this record that is so dirty, I know these muthafuckas are gonna be comin at me like, "Nigga how you gonna say some shit like that, hell naw get that off the shelf. You're ruining our kids. When they come at me with that conversation, watch how cool, calm, and collective as I sit back and converse with these folks. Oh, I got they ass. They fucked up( Laughs).

ThaFormula.com - Now let's get into the Chronic. You were in the "Nuthin' but a G Thang" video and everything seemed great at Death Row. Was it?

D.O.C. - Yeah, everything was great at that time. I still didn't have anything of my own but I was staying at Dre's house and I had no money of my own, but I could ask Dre for 5 grand at any time and get it. Matter of fact, I used to ask Dre for 5 grand every 3 or 4 days for about 2 years and would get it and then go spend it up on dope. I don't know if Dre knew, but how could you not know?

ThaFormula.com - So how was it recording the first Chronic during that time?

D.O.C. - Man, "The Chronic" was the most fun that I have ever had on a record. Snoop brought a vibe to the music that wasn't there before. If there was levels to the game, let's say NWA stayed intact and I never had the accident. The next level would be Snoop. That was the only way you could come and totally fuck everybody up because when you the youngest you always gonna fuck it up, and he was the young one at the time. Now let me get this point straight first. I would have forever been Marvin Gaye god dammit. When I opened up my mouth, it would have been nothing but jewelry, but when Snoop came, me being the type of person that I am I would have had so much love for him and put so much energy into his shit the same way I did that he would have had no choice but to be the shit. The same thing with this guy 6'-2". 6'-2" really has no choice but to be the shit because I'm right behind him and I'm not allowing anything else. Any song 6'-2" does, I'm producing it. All of the shit that you have heard. I went here and grabbed a beat from this person and that person, then I brought the beat back home and I got in the studio with this dude and we started punching out songs. 6'-2" is not allowed to be fucked up right now. I'll give him a good 5 or 6 years and then when he gets ready to make his own records. If he hasn't learned how to make great songs by then, then you will start hearing some shit where it ain't as good. Same thing with these other guys. I mean I'm not gonna say nobody's names and put them out there like that, but you know who I'm talkin' about and what I'm talkin' about. There is a difference between what you were doing at this time and what you doing at this time and it ain't just skill level. Your skill ain't went no where.

ThaFormula.com - Well as a fan, I do have to admit that I miss the old Dre and the old Snoop.

D.O.C. - That's right, I miss the old Snoop too, but in Snoop's defense, your music is a reflection of what's going on in your world. So if your congested and there is a lot of shit around you and it's hard for you to get together and really make that magic then it's gonna be hard to do, and Snoop when he made magic, he had me and Dre. So it's gonna be hard for Snoop to go and make that magic without me and Dre and it's really gonna be hard for Snoop to make that magic even if he had Dre without me there because there is always gonna be a piece missing.

ThaFormula.com - During the making of the first Chronic, who all was in the studio at that time?

D.O.C. - Oh, we all were man. We were there everyday and there is no better place to be than the studio. That's where all the weed at. That's where the drinks is at, and niggaz is doing they thang. Besides, I took it very personal that these guys wouldn't make bullshit around me. I remember when Dre first started making the beat to "Dre Day." He had a lot of shit missing and it was certain things that he was doing and I was like, "that sounds like a load of shit." He says "OK we'll wait till' tomorrow." By the time I got to the studio the next day that muthafucka was bangin.'

ThaFormula.com - Alright I got a good one for you. Explain the reasons behind the Jimmy Z album, and the Tairrie B album?

D.O.C. - Ahhaha!! That was Jerry Heller's great idea along with Eazy -E's futuristic sort of vision I guess. But really that was probably Jerry's attempt at getting Eazy to put his money behind crossover acts that could make him money. Knowing Jerry Heller, he probably had a piece of each of those acts.

ThaFormula.com - Did Dre want to do those projects?

D.O.C. - Hell Nah, man. Dr. Dre didn't wanna do any of that. Well, let me take Jimmy Z back. Dre is a musician so he may have wanted do get in there, but I couldn't see so I spent very little time around him when he was doing that stuff. Tairrie B? Nah! She was sorta a primadona in the rap world but Dre is not into working with muthafuckaz that ain't good. If you will notice, Dre has done 2 albums on very few people. I think he did 2 on Eminem, I think he did 2 Chronics and 2 NWA records. Everybody else only got one.

ThaFormula.com - Is that by choice?

D.O.C. - Sure it is, and this is Dre talkin' when I talk. He said to me the hardest thing to do in the world is to make a second album on a muthafucka because once you make a platinum album on somebody then they get full of they own oats. Then it's all about they wanna do this and they wanna do that. But like I said before, when you're in the studio with Dre, that shit that's on tape is what's in his mind, and that shit used to piss me off. I'm talking about ferociously when these guys would come and tell me Dre's stealing beats. As a matter of fact, I remember when I went to do this Shyne video in New York for "That's Gangsta." Puffy was having a meeting with all his people, which is something that Dre didn't do, which I thought was the shit on Puffy's part lending an ear to people around him and giving them a forum to speak to see what they thought. Anyway, it was they're understanding that Mel-Man was behind a lot of the shit going on over there.

ThaFormula.com - Yeah, that's what a lot of people seem to think.

D.O.C.- Well, me being me, and me having a couple of little drinks in me at the time Ha Ha! I felt it necessary for me to break up there little meeting and tell them no that's not the truth. If you wanna know what's popping, ask me I was there. Dr. Dre does that. Anything you hear over there is Dr. Dre. Even if Dr. Dre left the studio and allowed those guys to make their own records, part of that shit would still be Dr. Dre and believe me that's only the good part. These guys know nothing about making great beats and have very little idea about making a great song and wouldn't know a hit if you took "Thriller" before it came out and smacked them with it.

ThaFormula.com - So tell me what exactly did Yella do for NWA?

D.O.C. - Yella was sorta the technical kind of dude. He understood the machines that these guys worked on. He knew them backwards and forwards. He was great with the tape machines, drum machines, and boards. I'll put it to you like this. I considered myself to be another pair of ears in the studio when Dre was working. Well, if I was another pair of ears, then Yella was another pair of hands. It's hard to make a great record by yourself man. There will always be at least 5 great musicians together to make a classic record. That's what we had with NWA's records, that's what we had with the first Chronic record.

ThaFormula.com - Then what about the first D.O.C. album?

D.O.C. - Well, me and Dr. Dre, were an anomaly. Like Dre could have made a whole beat record with no guitars, no bass, and I could have made raps for all those beats and still would have made a great record. What Dre does is make shit that you could see in your head when it's playing. He knows how to bring drama. He knows how to take it away and leave it all up to the artist. He knows how to sometimes just make it quiet. I mean that dudes pretty god damn good.

ThaFormula.com - After the first Chronic dropped, did you see things starting to come to an end or not?

D.O.C. - Oh sure I did. See the shit that they were doing was unnecessary and sooner or later that shit is gonna catch up. The drug shit had started to get kind of old. In '94, I asked Dre what's up with me rappin'. I had written a song and he said you should let me put that on this next record and it really pissed me off because nobody was really givin' a fuck about me. I told him what about me muthafucka, I wanna rap to. I wanted to do something, but they had regulated me to comic relief. I'm a damn fool anyway. I'm a natural comedian so that's what I had been regulated to. I was the comic relief on the album.

ThaFormula.com - So Dre said no about you rappin then?

D.O.C. - He didn't think that you could make a good record with this voice. So that's when I left out of there. See me and Dre is like a big brother, little brother thing and when the big brother piss his little brother off, then his little brother is gonna number one, take his shit and run with it, which I did. "Heltah Skeltah" was really a Dr. Dre record that he was starting to plan on working on that I had actually already started writing lyrics for, and one of the songs that he was trying to takeaway from me was a song that he wanted to put on "Heltah Skeltah." So I was like "fuck this shit," went to Atlanta and recorded the album.

ThaFormula.com - When you look back at that album now, what are your thoughts on it?

D.O.C. - I think that the album was as far as hip-hop records are concerned not a great record. There is merit to the record because of who it is and because of the shit the dude done went through trying to get his shit done, but I didn't go buy it. I'll put it to you like that and if I wouldn't go buy it then it ain't really happening.

ThaFormula.com - Do you think it was a mistake when you look back at it now?

D.O.C. - Hell nah, I needed money. I had no money.

ThaFormula.com - So did the album end up doing alright?

D.O.C. - I think it ended up selling 290,000 copies. I had some real strong D.O.C. fans out there that I hated to bug and jack them out of their 16 dollars like that.

ThaFormula.com - You know what Doc, even if you were to do a show and you were lip synching, I would pay for that shit.

D.O.C. - Well I'll put it to you like this. I haven't tried it yet.

ThaFormula.com - Man I would pay just to see you on stage perform the songs I never got to see you do as a kid?

D.O.C. - No shit! You know what that really fucks me up, but I am gonna trip you out. You just gave me one of the dopest ideas I ever had. I gotta do it man. I know it would be the shit. That's great, thanks a lot man.

ThaFormula.com - Now back to the first Chronic LP. How do rate that album?

D.O.C. - The dopest hip-hop record of all time. "Straight Outta Compton" could have been the greatest, but it was so raw and hard that it didn't give you no time to fuckin' party and shit. With "The Chronic" that's all you did and you never knew what was coming next. With all the NWA records, after a while you kind of got an idea of what was gonna happen next.

ThaFormula.com - What was your involvement in the Niggaz4Life LP?
D.O.C. - The same as always. I wrote the songs that made those niggaz sing. That's what I did. Also Kokane had started coming around then. Above the Law was real deep into everything at that point and I started writing more for Dre and Ren, but I wrote everybody's shit by then.

ThaFormula.com - What album do you think was more enjoyable to record, "Straight Outta Compton" or "Niggaz4Life?"

D.O.C. – “Sraight Outta Compton.” “Niggaz4Life” wasn't as much fun because they was to busy trying to prove that they were just as good without Cube and that took a lot of the fun out of the shit and the money was all fucked up. Some people had money, some didn't. Once Cube left really the energy was gone.

ThaFormula.com - Do you remember a few years ago when you were on Eazy-E's radio show with the Dogg Pound?

D.O.C. - Yep, I remember that. They was on the radio talkin’ shit and Eazy said something that was a lie and I was sitting right there listening to the shit so they handed me the phone and I let him have it which is what I do, but it was just really fun to me. It was no big deal, I wasn't really trippin’ with the muthafucka, I was just jokin’ and laughin’.

ThaFormula.com - How serious was the beef between Death Row and Ruthless?

D.O.C. - Wasn't very serious to me. It was pretty funny if you ask me. But just like any other saga, these guys they started believin’ the hype. They wanna gangbang on records and all that old kind of dumb shit and at that time I couldn't really say nothin’ cause I was probably doing the same shit.

ThaFormula.com - How many songs did you guys record for the first “Chronic” that didn't make the album?

D.O.C. - Shit, maybe 2 or 3. Sometimes niggaz would record a whole bunch of songs and record the best ones. It used to be like that early in the days, but if you were gonna do 19 songs on a record and by the time we get to 21 we pretty much done figured it out.

ThaFormula.com - When exactly did the drama start to kick in?

D.O.C.- Well there was always drama around our house, but the bigger that people started to get the more the money started coming into the picture that's when shit started getting fucked up. None of those guys really knew what they were doing. They didn't know how to accept the money. They didn't know what to do with it when they got it. Suge's wife was Snoop's manager. She was probably taking the guys money and it was just all kinds of crazy shit going on. The bigger Snoop got and when muthafuckaz started losin’ control of Snoop, then you could see it wasn't gonna last that long. After so long Snoop would be like “man fuck this shit and I'm not havin’ this shit,” cause he's the star and he was tired of being told what to do, where to go and shit like that. It's hard to have a company run by a bunch of young cats who don't know shit about business. You will have a lot of muthafuckaz just trying to grab they balls. You can't have a great business if all of your business practices are gangbang oriented because there is no loyalty among street niggaz like that. I wouldn't give a damn what they told you.

ThaFormula.com - So during all this what were you and Dre doing?

D.O.C. - Well Dre was living good. Dre was the shit. He was bringing all the shit to the table so he's getting all the pussy, he's getting all the money and he's getting the 5 mics. Me, I'm with Dre. Wherever he was at, that's probably where I was at.

ThaFormula.com - Were you still fucked up on drugs at that time?

D.O.C. - Pretty much and that lasted from about 1990 to 1997…

ThaFormula.com - Wow! 7 years man?

D.O.C. - Yep, and I'm not your classic dope fiend muthafucka. It's like drinkin’ man. I don't have an off switch. Like some muthafuckas can drink and they get a buzz and they cool. Me, Im gonna drink until the bar is closed. There is no good way to put it. I’ma be in that muthafucka drinkin ’ till either I pass out, there's no more liquor or I ran out of money or some kind of goofy ass reason like that, and that went for anything else. It wasn't that I was addicted to it. It was just shit that I did to get away from feelin’ fucked up and I didn't have a stop switch. So it was off and on for about 7 years. Playin’ games here, playin’ games there, and I met 6’-2” in 97 and that's when I started making sort of a turnaround.

ThaFormula.com - When exactly did you leave to do “Heltah Skeltah?”

D.O.C. - I left L.A. at the end of ‘94 because I wanted to rap and Dre didn't see it.

ThaFormula.com - Do you agree with Dre now when you look back at how things turned out with that project?

D.O.C. - Well that's a yes and a no answer, because if you’re Dr. Dre you can take “twiddle dee” and make a hit record. You’re Dr. Dre god dammit! There’s nothing that you can't do in a studio, so if it was in your heart to make a hit record on me, you would have done it. You would have found some kind of way to do it. When you think of the old D.O.C., it's probably best to leave it like that, but you know when you think about D.O.C. the person, the man that's still breathin’ right now, still has music in his soul that he has to get up out of him, then you want him to get that shit out.

ThaFormula.com - So you made the move in ‘94 and went where?

D.O.C. - I went to Atlanta Georgia. I started staying in the house of my homeboy MC Breed and I started helping him work on a record. The record was called “The New Breed.”

ThaFormula.com - It's funny how that album turned out to be the best album he ever recorded and had a sound similar to the Chronic.

D.O.C. - Yep. I mean the formula goes where I go. You took 2 of the major components from the Chronic days with me and Colin Wolfe, and moved them over here and that's really what it was. Colin was a musician so Dre would say play, and Colin would play. Sooner or later he would come up on a couple of chords that we all liked so, uh, I'll give you a perfect example. “Deep Cover,” the guy was just playin’ the 4 notes and Dre said “wait a minute keep playin’ that.” That baseline was Colin Wolfe's shit. Dre added the drum the piano hit and that was it, that was the song.

ThaFormula.com - You know I remember that "Gotta Get Mine" video with 2pac. That was a classic Breed track right there?

D.O.C. - Yeah that was a good song. I was in that video too. That was at Andre Rison's house before it got burnt up. The dude had a good record man. Now MC Breed who was a good friend of mine, has the ability to make classic rap records, but chooses not to.

ThaFormula.com - Why is that?

D.O.C. - Breed is just one of those dudes man that no matter what you tell him, he is gonna do whatever the fuck he wants to do and it's hard to make a classic record when what's going on in your head is the only thing that's coming out on record. You have to be able to be flexible and know that the hardest thing for an artist to ever do is to listen to his own shit objectively because it's his shit and he's gonna love it no matter what. He's gonna want it to be good, no matter what, when in actuality it could sound like a load of shit. Breed is probably the closest thing I got outside of Dre to a brother with me, where me and this guy will argue and I mean argue even to the point where he thought Pac was the coldest and I thought Biggie was the coldest.

ThaFormula.com - How do you feel about the hip-hop being done by artists nowadays?

D.O.C. - Most of the hip-hop I hear now sounds like it's been dipped in shit. It used to be that there was some dope rappers, a good amount of cool rappers, and a little bit of garbage. Now all there is, is a bunch of cool rappers and a shit load of garbage.

ThaFormula.com - When do you feel this change came about?

D.O.C. - When Death Row exploded it was dead. When Dr. Dre left Death Row it died. It may have died even before that. It may have died shortly after Snoop Dogg's first record came out. In all fairness I have to say after the “Above the Rim” record, that was probably the last little bit of last “G-Funk” shit. When you got to the Dogg Pound record, it had started changing again. He started leaving the streets even more then.

ThaFormula.com - Did Dre have any input on the Dogg Pound album?

D.O.C. - Sure, you could hear it in the music. You have to make a record on them. There not gonna come to the table with songs that you could use, so you have to manufacture records with these guys, and Dre was probably tired of dealin’ with all them muthafuckas and tired of coming to work with 50,000 gang bangers in the studio. He was probably sick and tired of that shit, so you can tell the music stopped being hard and started being softer. He started having pretty singin’ in every piece of the shit. Even though niggaz was talkin’ about murderin’ muthafuckas, the music sort of made you wanna go to sleep.

ThaFormula.com - What are your thoughts on someone like Devin the Dude, ‘cause he reminds me a lot of 6’-2”?

D.O.C. - Devin is a 6’-2” guy, which means his talent is so genuine it would be hard for you not to like Devin. I cannot wait until I can get this “Deuce” project up & runnin’ so that I could get back to finishing 6’-2”'s album so I could put him and Devin on a song together. I can't wait for that shit, and I just wanna talk on that record shit! Like when Snoop was writing “G Thang,” I asked him “whatever you do, just pick a rhyme in that muthafucka, and make sure it's at a place where it will have a great impact and put my name in that muthafucka.” That's my way to keep myself up in the game. See this is how you know that Dre has real love for me because he finds me and tells me, “you know you gotta come do this.” He told me that. “You gonna have to ride out in the back seat with us when you get in the car, you know that right?” I was like, “yeah, I know, I'll be there.”

ThaFormula.com - See and that's what's killin’ the game now also DOC. There’ s no more loyalty in this game anymore…

D.O.C. - You just said a mouthful just then. I used to always wanna be part of a group like Wu Tang, and then I found out that those don't exist. It's always one muthafucka making money and everybody else is figuring out how they can be like the muthafucka making the money and you can't win like that. Animosity, greed and envy will destroy any relationship. But I'm glad all of them are making money.

ThaFormula.com - What was your relationship with 2Pac like if there was one?

D.O.C. – Well, and I got to be honest cause that's the way I do it. In the beginning back when the guy was with Digital Underground, he was a very quiet dude. He never really spoke. I saw him a couple of times and I thought he was a cool young guy. The last couple of times that I saw 2pac, we weren't on great terms at all. Him and Breed was the shit, so when I was at Breeds house and he came to visit Breed especially for this record and shit. The guy was clownin’ me. He was I guess trying to make me feel that I was weak by tellin’ me that those guys in Los Angeles had ran me out of town and things like that. I think the guy was just 2Pac’n it at that time. I like to tell muthafuckas that I was 2pac before 2pac was 2pac, meaning I went through a period shortly after my record was released and shortly after that accident where I would go into a club be drunk push bitches down, slap them in front of their niggaz. You know I had a big ass 300 pound plus nigga with me. What the fuck is you gonna do. I did that for attention, but that wasn't my personality but I felt like I needed to do that for a while. I think 2pac had started to get into his character after that movie that he had did. I think that that started to play a little bit on his psyche and the deeper he got off into that character the harder it was for him to get up out of it. Now that's my humble opinion because I can't see why a guy in his position would wanna go to a club and just start pushin’ muthafuckas down out of the blue. I like to call it Mr. entertainment. When Mr. Entertainment get on your back, you will do things that you had no idea you would do. It's enough to fuck a young black man up!

ThaFormula.com - I always thought the way you would flow over a beat was incredible man, I mean you rode that beat like no MC I had ever heard before. The way you would start and stop and cut the corners on the beat at the drop of a dime was crazy...

D.O.C. - That's right brother. Timing is everything and it was a lot of hard work. I really, really loved to write as a young guy. I'll tell you when I knew I was the shit. When I went to California and we were doing NWA's record and I used to rap for these guys all the time. You know that little fast pace thing I used to do when I would speed up slow it down and speed it up. I used to call that stutter steppin’. Well I knew I was the shit when I heard Cube use that in a rap. It was on “Parental Discretion.” When Cube did that I knew I had to be the shit. Cube just took my definition and applied it.

ThaFormula.com - When you look back at all the great times you have had, do you ever see times like that happening again?

D.O.C. - Sure man. Those kinds of things never go away. Those are youthful times. I don't see them happening more or less for me in those terms, but I see them with these young guys. The cool thing about when you’re working with me is that I have a complete understanding of what the formula is of great records. I know what it's gonna take and usually a big portion of that is having fun. A lot of muthafuckas don't know that. That havin’ fun is probably one of the biggest parts of making a classic record. Being able to sit in that muthafucka stress free and just get fucked up and kick it. Shit tends to usually just come out. Let these guys have their fun and find themselves, and I'll sit back and be the guru now.

ThaFormula.com - What were your thoughts on the Snoop album "Doggystyle"?

D.O.C. - Well by that time Snoop was coastin’. Snoop was on cruise control, all cylinders were clicking and you knew what it was gonna be. If I remember right, they were playing this guys album on the radio way before it came out. That's how bad muthafuckas wanted it. Playing it will all the curses and finding

  

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SoWhat
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154163 posts
Wed Aug-19-15 10:48 AM

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120. "way tl:dr."
In response to Reply # 113


  

          

LOL

fuck you.

  

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JtothaI
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Wed Aug-19-15 11:17 AM

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123. "RE: way tl:dr."
In response to Reply # 120


  

          

its worth it though, if your a music loving factoid nerd (like most of us)

  

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SoWhat
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154163 posts
Wed Aug-19-15 11:59 AM

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127. "i couldn't do it."
In response to Reply # 123


  

          

fuck you.

  

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ThaTruth
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99998 posts
Wed Aug-19-15 11:54 AM

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126. "great read, thanks. n/m"
In response to Reply # 113


          

________________________________________
"Take the surprise out your voice Shaq."-The REAL CP3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2H5K-BUMS0

  

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normal35762
Member since Oct 20th 2004
13246 posts
Thu Aug-20-15 12:23 PM

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152. "Dope interview."
In response to Reply # 113


  

          

Now that he mentioned it I can hear the DOC in some of those "Still Talkin" verses. Example...


I got a fable that you need to listen to
It's a funky little rhyme about a bitch or a two
One Sharone and the other one Shine
I want to nut but which one do I want?
Shine said Eazy let me fuck you blind
And Sharon said E I want to blow your mind
I said fuck it, I know what should be done
Just pull your panties down and I'll fuck the biggest one
And then I get the other pussy put it in the freezer
So I can always have a on-hold skeezer
Get out to tick it, I do it like that
So I told the ho's to take a big step back
Took the zipper down, I'z wide and said
Here's what I'm gonna put inside
Grab it like a rabbit, grab it let's wreck it
But I won't love you,
When I'm done I'd still be talkin' shit ...


Imagine the DOC's voice rappin in that same cadence as Eazy. Shit matches up perfectly.

  

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lazyboi
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Wed Aug-19-15 09:26 AM

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116. "i just saw the "costume designer" for the movie.....y'all have fun"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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atruhead
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Wed Aug-19-15 10:45 AM

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119. "she's white. what would the issue be?"
In response to Reply # 116


  

          

  

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SoWhat
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Wed Aug-19-15 10:48 AM

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121. "we get it, lazy."
In response to Reply # 116


  

          

ain't nobody studyin your opinion on the movie. and we already know it.

you can relax.

fuck you.

  

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TheStandard
Member since Nov 05th 2007
3642 posts
Wed Aug-19-15 11:12 AM

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122. "If people want to nitpick....Suge had hair up until about 1993"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

but he's seen as far back as 89-88 with a bald head


From 92
http://www.trbimg.com/img-54cbb7e1/turbine/la-et-ms-suge-knight-life-in-pictures-002/1300/1300x731

Death Row Launch party
http://images2.laweekly.com/imager/suge-knight-at-the-chasens-launch-party/u/745xauto/4244325/chasenssuge.jpg

  

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SoWhat
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Wed Aug-19-15 11:18 AM

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124. "good one."
In response to Reply # 122


  

          

fuck you.

  

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exactopposite
Member since Aug 21st 2002
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Wed Aug-19-15 11:32 AM

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125. "I wanted to see more of Ren and Yella"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

Especially Ren's contribution to the lyrics. Also Suge wasn't portrayed very well. his character was too 1 dimensional. Overall though i enjoyed it. I'm looking forward to this directors cut.

Hearing NWA in a theater was a great experience all on it's own

  

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lazyboi
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Wed Aug-19-15 01:32 PM

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129. "If they ever make an EPMD movie......and i find out...."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

that dj scratch doesn't do the scratches and cuts..... wait that'll never happen

that reminds me of when they got another singer to sing the songs on what's love got to do with it.....oh wait...tina sang those songs for the movie lol

i mean a hip hop biopic ...about a group with TWO dj's...and they gotta go hire a dj from another hip hop act to perform the scratches (that neither one of the djs in the group could EVER have a prayer of doing). ...that's lame as hell lol





"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
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Wed Aug-19-15 01:45 PM

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130. "WHAT???? Maaaan, get all the way outta here!!!!"
In response to Reply # 129


  

          

It was a dope addition to have Jeff do those!! Neither Dre or Yella have actively DJ'd to where their cuts would be anything like they were back in the day. Scratch is still primarily a DJ, along with producing, but he was always focused on DJing even as EPMD primed. Dre wasn't even DJing for Snoop or anyone in the Death Row era. And besides, they have characters playing their roles, not like it was actually Dre fake DJing and Jeff was really behind it.

This gotta be the weakest complaint I've heard about the movie, by far!! LOL man....

------------------------------

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Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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SoWhat
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Wed Aug-19-15 01:48 PM

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131. "Dre stole his lunch money in grade school, man."
In response to Reply # 130


  

          

you gotta understand.

fuck you.

  

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lazyboi
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Wed Aug-19-15 02:11 PM

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132. "EXCUSES! they couldn't recreate a set of cuts from 1986?"
In response to Reply # 130


  

          

they had to get a dude to make them sound better than they actually were? preposterous!

"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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lazyboi
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Wed Aug-19-15 02:13 PM

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133. "reminds me of when n'sync was singing acapella...but yet they had"
In response to Reply # 132


  

          

boyz II men on the mic back stage helping them out......allegedly

i mean this IS still hip hop, right

"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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lazyboi
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Wed Aug-19-15 02:14 PM

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134. "let's have a get fresh crew movie and have rahzel ghost beat box lol"
In response to Reply # 133


  

          


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Wed Aug-19-15 03:04 PM

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136. "Even your criticisms are lazy. "
In response to Reply # 129


  

          

This is dumb as hell.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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lazyboi
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Wed Aug-19-15 03:39 PM

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137. " someone else said, they exposed Eazy's lack of rap skill BUT"
In response to Reply # 136


  

          

the augmented dre's

the part i saw...eazy couldn't even rap on beat....but when it came time to show dre's dj skills...they went and got one of the best dj's ever to represent his bedroom dj-ing.

lol boo, negro, boo. i wasn't the only one that peeped it



"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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atruhead
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Wed Aug-19-15 05:22 PM

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139. "but like...(and Im not trying to argue so dont get mad)"
In response to Reply # 137
Wed Aug-19-15 05:23 PM by atruhead

  

          

no one cares about DJ'ing as a part of Dr. Dre's legacy

if you're pressed for every detail you know about the World Class Wrecking Cru and Roadium swap meet tapes.

the movie was about him becoming a producer

it's like watching a Michael Jordan movie and being mad they made him a A+ student in high school

  

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Ryan M
Member since Oct 21st 2002
43737 posts
Wed Aug-19-15 05:33 PM

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140. "Except that E wasn't a rapper."
In response to Reply # 137


  

          

Dre actually was an amazing DJ. I'm not sure why I need to explain this to you.

Go open up Google.com and look for some old mixtapes.

------------------------------

17x NBA Champions

  

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lazyboi
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Thu Aug-20-15 09:24 AM

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144. "he such an awesome dj...why he need Jazzy Jeff to do the cuts?"
In response to Reply # 140


  

          

lol.... ijs

"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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atruhead
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Thu Aug-20-15 10:55 AM

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145. "wait...you thought that was actually Dr. Dre on screen?"
In response to Reply # 144


  

          

I realize you havent seen the movie, but you're upset about an actor who probably isnt a DJ

if your point is Dre should have done the scratching for the actor in the movie, maybe he isnt as sharp at 50 as he was 29 years ago? Jeff dabbled in producing, Dre dabbled in DJ'ing, both perfected what they were good at

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Thu Aug-20-15 11:19 AM

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146. "Dude...............stop! "
In response to Reply # 144


  

          

Not even worth arguing, but wow

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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lazyboi
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Thu Aug-20-15 11:50 AM

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147. "but i haven't even gotten to the white sox hat"
In response to Reply # 146


  

          

lol


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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lazyboi
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Thu Aug-20-15 11:51 AM

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148. "they make a story of your life, who u gon hire to do the djing for you?"
In response to Reply # 146


  

          

just a question

"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Thu Aug-20-15 12:10 PM

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149. "Jazzy Jeff again! "
In response to Reply # 148


  

          

But point is, it wouldn't be me unless they were using legit audio of me scratching something. Like for Flavor Battle, they would probably use that exact audio...but for a bedroom scene? Surely it'll be re-created

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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lazyboi
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Thu Aug-20-15 12:16 PM

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150. "wow.....ok. i hear ya bruh. mine would be me"
In response to Reply # 149


  

          


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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lazyboi
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Thu Aug-20-15 12:22 PM

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151. "https://youtu.be/kPX3oUMmaDE"
In response to Reply # 129


  

          

:-) https://youtu.be/kPX3oUMmaDE


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Wed Aug-19-15 08:09 PM

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141. "Here's my blog post on it:"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://djrtistic.tumblr.com/post/127118185000/my-thoughts-on-straight-outta-compton

Less than a week after its release, Straight Outta Compton is already one of the most successful Rap based films ever. With that, it’s also one of the most controversial and debated Rap films that I can recall. Most of us have always felt that Rap films come off as corny or contrived, and it makes it even harder to watch groups that you personally saw every week on TV, in comparison to “What’s love got to do with it” and “Ray” where many of us weren’t alive during the artist’s prime. This was surely the case when we saw the Aaliyah film (shoutout to the memes), Notorious, and even the TLC film, which I felt was solid.

In today’s post, I’ll discuss a bit of everything…my thoughts on the film, the main complaints and controversies I’ve heard, and N.W.A’s legacy to follow the film.

-What I loved about it-

-The cinematography was ridiculous. The cut scenes where dudes rode their motorcycles and lowriders, the scene following Tyree’s death, when Dre turned the corner and walked in the middle of the group, and the transition between the Lench Mob vs. Ruthless fight into the Rodney King beating were perfect.

-The lead actors did a stellar job, without question. Jason Mitchell really did feel like Eazy throughout the movie, and I even think he should receive nominations for it. Oshea Jackson Jr. made me forget I wasn’t actually watching Cube at times, although his slight suburban accent still showed at some points. Corey Hawkins sounded exactly like Dre.

Each time Eazy would go into business mode, it connected. I loved the part when the protestors stomped on their records, and he essentially says “They can do whatever they want to with them….they paid for them!” His last days in the hospital were extremely believable as well…the crowd was dead silent both times I saw it, as we were all caught in the moment.

-The studio and live performance parts were dynamic, and the energy seemed to spread throughout the audience every time they started rapping one of their classics. They could have played the entire “Boyz n da hood” song, and the audience would have rapped along word for word. The scene in Detroit was on point, and seeing Cube say “What’s up???” to Dre, as Jerry Heller nervously hoped they wouldn’t perform the song that earned them free advertisement from the FBI, was extremely well done.

-This felt like a completely authentic L.A. movie. The school bus scene was literally perfect…every single Black male who was born in L.A. has stories about being “banged on,” in which we fear for our lives as it happens, but usually leave unharmed, and actually laugh about it when re-telling the story. Even the random goons in the movie felt like the ones we really see in the hood, and not just paid actors.

-The police brutality scenes seemed to strike a cord for all of us who have dealt with it in some form.

-The DJ scene where young Dre (scratched by Jazzy Jeff) gets off on that early 80’s Electro track “Al-Naafiysh” was fire! I’m a DJ nerd, so I’ll probably rewind this part 50 times once it comes out on Blu Ray.

-The “No Vaseline” scene…man. The reactions from the group, and the way Jerry Heller was ONLY concerned about the supposed “Anti-Semitism” were excellent.

-The L.A. Riots scene was compelling. The slow motion effects, Cube making eye contact with the police officer, seeing the peaceful protesters in the same scene as the violent looters, and the red + blue bandana tied together were all powerful.

-What was left out?-

I truly understand that it’s impossible to place every single thing within a two and a half hour movie, so I’m not as mad as others about the things that were left out. If they included all of the things I’ve heard, the movie would be more like a 5 part series. The way I see it, the movie is great at covering the main points, and for those who would like to dig deeper, there’s plenty of history that can be found online and in magazines from that period. Also, the director’s cut is three and a half hours long, and I am hoping it is released on DVD.

Here’s a list of things I’ve heard mentioned that were left out:

-JJ Fad and their song “Supersonic” which was one of Ruthless’ first hit records, weren’t mentioned at all.

-Arabian Prince, an original member of N.W.A, wasn’t mentioned at all.

-Michel’le was mentioned, but wasn’t depicted at all. This has probably been the biggest complaint that I’ve heard, and this is one of the few that I think should have been in there for sure. She was a factor in the N.W.A/Ruthless era, as well as with Death Row.

-MC Ren’s contributions weren’t shown in depth, and D.O.C. seemed to just be the homie who was around, versus the highly successful solo artist and contributor that he was at the time.

-Dogg Pound/Death Row vs Ruthless beyond Eazy and Suge…in particular, “Dre day” vs “Real Mothaph’kkin G’z” which was a major beef at the time. They show the fight between Ruthless and Lench Mob, but make no mention of the fight between Dogg Pound and Dresta/BG Knoccout that happened on the golf course (When Nate Dogg regulated for real): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CIB2jaH8lE


-I didn’t realize Chuck D was depicted in the movie until seeing it for a second time, but they don’t speak much on how Ice Cube connected with the Bomb Squad in NY.

-As a whole, Dre and Cube were shown in the most positive light, while Suge’s character was one –dimensional and showed a seemingly overnight transition into the meme-worthy villain that he’s known as. Jerry Heller’s character showed decent balance, and left you with the impression that he cared for the group as human beings, but that his money was always more important than anything else. I guess he was right about Cube being Anti-Semitic (I’m being sarcastic).

-All of Dre’s domestic violence and assaults against women were left out, and I will speak about this next.

-Dr. Dre vs. Dee Barnes (and other women)-

In 6th grade, I recall being in an American History class that covered everything from Columbus’ claiming territory that wasn’t his, up to the Reagan era. When we got to the Civil War section, they only mention slavery in one paragraph. Not only did it not mention that slaves were forced on a boat from Africa, but it said something about how most slaves were treated with respect because it made them more productive.

I got home, and was furious. I told my dad, and expected him to call the Principal, or confront my teacher. He sat calmly, and said “well….who do you think wrote the book?”

Seeing this movie, and realizing that everything negative that Dre did to women was omitted, I was reminded of what happened in class that day. Being that Dre and Cube were behind the movie, it gave them a chance to sanitize their history as a group, and as individuals, and many folks think this taints the movie. I feel that Dre was shown as being the extremely focused, hard-working creative that didn’t care as much about groupies or even money…yet, there’s folks who will say that he was by far the most violent, abusive person in that circle when it came to relationships with women.

This discussion has been extremely divisive in the last few weeks. There have been some women who feel that Black women should boycott the movie due to the omission, and others who have spread numerous articles on Dre’s history. On the other side, many folks feel that this happened so long ago, that it shouldn’t affect his current status, and they point out that he did go to trial and settle with Dee Barnes back when it happened.

-The 2Pac scene-

One of the most obvious anachronisms was regarding Eazy-E wearing the Sox hat before it came out, but the one that bothered most of us was the timeline after 1993, especially concerning 2Pac and Death Row.

The years don’t show at the bottom of the screen after 1993, but a lot of things were out of order, leading up to Eazy’s death in March of 1995. The main thing that confused us was 2Pac’s studio scene, which followed immediately after showing Eazy-E passing Tower Records and seeing The Chronic billboard, which was in 1993. 2Pac wasn’t released in prison until after Eazy-E passed away, and he actually got married a month after Eazy’s death while he was still in jail. Along with that, Hail Mary may have been recorded during the sessions of “All eyez on me,” but most of us figure that it was recorded afterwards, most likely in Spring/Summer 1996.

Along with “Hail Mary” being recorded, it’s said that Dre was going to feature Ice Cube on “California Love” and use it as his own first single, but Suge made a change and put 2Pac on it instead. In hindsight, this was a brilliant move by Suge.

-Compton: The Album (and semi-soundtrack)-

Dr. Dre, D’Angelo, and Jodeci actually released real albums this year! I’m still in shock. With this album, it served as somewhat of a soundtrack to the film, which was more than most of us expected when we first heard that it was coming out. I would personally say it’s a 7.5/10 album…I certainly wasn’t expecting a classic, but was hoping for more standout songs. However, the album is worth it solely for “Animals,” in which the #1 and #2 Rap producers in history finally linked up on a track, and made a potentially classic song. I think they should create an intense video that captures the essence of the “Black Lives Matter” movement, showing everything from Mike Brown, to Sandra Bland, to Trayvon, to Rodney King and Latasha Harlins.

-The film’s legacy-

This movie is going to have a major long term impact, especially with the younger generation that was probably born after N.W.A’s debut album came out. I have already seen a lot of folks in L.A. dressing like they were from this era, but I think the songs will actually become big with kids who never listened to any Rap that came before the 90’s or even 2000’s. Seeing a Batman remake of the song “Straight outta Compton” itself, along with this Kids Pop video shown below, is proof that the movie has truly crossed generations and cultures:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XM4GlI9Onu4

This movie comes out at the most perfect time in my opinion, as L.A. Rap is finally back into the forefront after suffering a commercial drought for most of the previous decade. This movie shows the origins of the strongest family tree in Hip Hop, which includes artists such as Snoop, Will.I.Am and Fergie, Kendrick Lamar, 50 Cent, Eminem, and Bone Thugs, who all came through the N.W.A tree in some sort of way. I hope this film will lead to more high budget, polished Rap Biopics that show other legendary rap families, such as Native Tongues, Def Jam, Wu-Tang, and No Limit/Cash Money.

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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ThaTruth
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Wed Aug-19-15 09:00 PM

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142. "RE: Here's my blog post on it:"
In response to Reply # 141


          


>-I didn’t realize Chuck D was depicted in the movie until
>seeing it for a second time, but they don’t speak much on
>how Ice Cube connected with the Bomb Squad in NY.

I missed that, need to watch it again...

>This movie comes out at the most perfect time in my opinion,
>as L.A. Rap is finally back into the forefront after suffering
>a commercial drought for most of the previous decade. This
>movie shows the origins of the strongest family tree in Hip
>Hop, which includes artists such as Snoop, Will.I.Am and
>Fergie, Kendrick Lamar, 50 Cent, Eminem, and Bone Thugs, who
>all came through the N.W.A tree in some sort of way.

I had no idea the Black Eyed Peas started out on Ruthless records, lol

________________________________________
"Take the surprise out your voice Shaq."-The REAL CP3
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v2H5K-BUMS0

  

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mistermaxxx08
Member since Dec 31st 2010
16076 posts
Wed Aug-19-15 10:00 PM

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143. "it was good and my takes and 2 cents"
In response to Reply # 0


          

dug the first hour the best
and felt the hungry aspect and drive.

real chemistry their big time
and it brought back alot of memorys indeed as i could still see Fab 5 freddie interviewing them on YO back in the day.

they cleaned up Dr Dre nicely for the film and i understand the business of it.

the snoop character tripped out because dang they got a broke Eddie Grffin for the Snoop role.

Suge part was pushed a bit sooner and not even close to how Suge actually was. because yeah he got at Vannellia Ice,however Suge was alot more smoother at first than what lead to the final cut.


by felicia tripped me out dug that and got that.

jerry heller was a trip and his book was hit and miss.

glad they gave John Mcclain a Shout out for getting the Chronic released and this is the same Man who co runs michael jackson's estate and helped Janet Jackson get a career amongest other things he did. MCclain should have had a film made about him IMO he is the unknown Black Forrest Gump. anybody wanna know in box me on John Mcclain. he was doing things before jimmy iovine and after.


anyway they were cool until they tried to throw death row and lench mob all at once.

and also Eazy e was getting a dollar off of Dre for a good minute as part of the buy out. same thing Suge did to Snoop when Snoop left and Suge got a dollar off everything he sold.

priority records was a slave label like tommy boy and those others.


the DOC didn't get enough juice in their though. he had a big hand on things.

o shea jr looked and acted like his pops. matter of fact everybody of the main folks was on point
and it could win a oscar or two.

F Gary Gray was on point.

staging and pacing was on point.

everything with the cops was accurate and thensome.

they got the jimmy iovine look alike down pat. tripped me out,

Cube got 32 thousand not 75 i remember that like yesterday.

you can tell the cats though all loved Eazy and eazy was respected on both coasts and did his thing.


that studio thing with the east coast cats was real because it was so different back then.

mistermaxxx R.Kelly, Michael Jackson,Stevie wonder,Rick James,Marvin Gaye,El Debarge, Barry WHite Lionel RIchie,Isleys EWF,Lady T.,Kid creole and coconuts,the crusaders,kc sunshine band,bee gees,jW,sd,NE,JB

Miami Heat, New York Yankees,buffalo bills

  

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cal.25
Member since Nov 10th 2014
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Sun Sep-06-15 05:01 PM

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153. "Got round to watching it - loved it"
In response to Reply # 0
Sun Sep-06-15 05:11 PM by cal.25

  

          

the influence of D.O.C. on the group was missed, but that was my only problem with the film. Also straight away got me listening to Cube's solo albums, something I've never got round to doing

Two points that someone may be able to clear for me (i was born after NWA's run)

- when did NWA achieve national success, at the release of SOC or earlier?

- the film showed bloods/crips, but were those gangs affiliated with NWA?

  

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BigJazz
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154. "it was quite dramatic how they prefaced the creation of FUCK THA POLICE"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

when in reality, word on the street is that them niggas was shootin people with paintball guns and thats why the police hemmed them up.

THEN

Cube was motivated enough to write FUCK THA POLICE

  

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vee-lover
Member since Jul 30th 2007
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Mon Sep-07-15 09:54 AM

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155. "One scene in particular bothered me which for me was very revealing"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

in regards to how these white rap executives exploit HipHop artists and much of the negative self-destructive music they make

During the listening session Jerry Heller was (and still is to this day) upset abt Cube's lyrics in "No Vaseline" abt HIM...but he never had no problem w/NWA's music when they were rapping abt blk on blk violence and misogyny but a few diss lines toward him was so over the top as far as he was concerned

grassrootsphilosopher

  

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BigJazz
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156. "i wouldnt expect anything less"
In response to Reply # 155


  

          

if i'm jerry heller,i can listen to Dopeman or Niggaz4life and give less than a fuck.

it doesn't resonate.

but NO VASELINE knocked on his door. nah, fuck that. NO VASELINE kicked in his front door and snatched him up out his bed at 4am while he was sleeping.

  

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vee-lover
Member since Jul 30th 2007
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Mon Sep-07-15 10:12 AM

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157. "I hear ya but what bothers me was that even today when you ask"
In response to Reply # 156


  

          

him abt some of NWA's most controversial lyrics his response is invariably "it was just music" but somehow he took Cube's lyrics to be literal when they aimed at him


>if i'm jerry heller,i can listen to Dopeman or Niggaz4life
>and give less than a fuck.
>
>it doesn't resonate.
>
>but NO VASELINE knocked on his door. nah, fuck that. NO
>VASELINE kicked in his front door and snatched him up out his
>bed at 4am while he was sleeping.
>
>

grassrootsphilosopher

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
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Mon Sep-07-15 01:43 PM

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159. "Thats what made the scene hilarious and real as fuck"
In response to Reply # 155
Mon Sep-07-15 02:03 PM by legsdiamond

          

Jerry didnt give a fuck about Black on Black violence or the message until he was on that summerjam screen.

but let's be honest... most people don't care about the nessage until it's personal.

you can talk about hoes, niggas, being the best that ever did it but as soon as you say a person's name it's next level...

so it's not really that deep IMO.

****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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Heinz
Member since Dec 26th 2003
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Mon Sep-07-15 03:39 PM

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160. "Well to be fair a diss song is personal."
In response to Reply # 155


  

          

NWA was talking about a general fucked up situations going on everyday in a community. Anything personalized to YOU hits anyone harder than a general statement (no matter how fucked up). Look how people react over a subliminals vs when names are fully called out. Its stupid. But people are generally stupid LOL

Old white executives don't care what colour the act that is making them money is. I don't know why people think this a thing. As long as you make money thats what they care about. They exploit as many white acts as they do black acts. Exploiting is the business part of their job. Being exploited is the job of an artist when you joint the music business. It just is what it is. Whats that line Kanye has in his book "To use is necessary. And if you can't be used, then you're useless.” The artist is using these old white excutives to reach more people and to get to a higher level within the industry.

____

TWITTER : Heinz21st

IG : H_N_Z

  

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seasoned vet
Member since Jul 29th 2008
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Tue Sep-08-15 03:40 AM

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166. "holy fuck, you dont think they did that on purpose?"
In response to Reply # 155


  

          

jesus christ
the shit yall get pissed about LOL!

  

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vee-lover
Member since Jul 30th 2007
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Tue Sep-08-15 07:58 AM

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168. "Uh NO because I specifically said in this post that the REAL Jerry Helle..."
In response to Reply # 166


  

          

is still angry today abt the lyrics aimed at him in 'No Vaseline'

I've seen *recent* interviews of Heller discussing the movie and he stated that he could never reunite w/the members of NWA again because of what Cube said abt him in that record

So no, that scene wasn't added for the purpose of dramatic effect

>jesus christ
>the shit yall get pissed about LOL!

grassrootsphilosopher

  

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seasoned vet
Member since Jul 29th 2008
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Tue Sep-08-15 09:41 AM

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169. "uh OBVIOUSLY it was real, i never said it was faked for dramatic effect"
In response to Reply # 168


  

          

to me they purposely put it in there for the folks that dont know

i would think you knew better than that scene being so *revealing* for you

  

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vee-lover
Member since Jul 30th 2007
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Tue Sep-08-15 10:53 AM

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172. "Then what exactly are you saying because most ppl I'm sure had no"
In response to Reply # 169


  

          

idea that Heller took Cube's lyrics so personally, moreso than the members themselves...and I'm also sure that no one knew he still holds a grudge right to this day against the group against Cube because of that diss record and stated that would be the reason why he could never see himself reuniting w/them

And yes, that scene FOR ME was quite revealing mainly because I wouldn't have thought he would've took those lyrics to heart considering he was always a staunch defender of
the content of NWA's most controversial music/lyrics


>to me they purposely put it in there for the folks that dont
>know
>
>i would think you knew better than that scene being so
>*revealing* for you

grassrootsphilosopher

  

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seasoned vet
Member since Jul 29th 2008
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Tue Sep-08-15 11:30 AM

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173. "that says alot about you and the people you know"
In response to Reply # 172


  

          

  

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vee-lover
Member since Jul 30th 2007
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Tue Sep-08-15 12:00 PM

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176. "You sound stupid and childish...please go elsewhere, gadfly"
In response to Reply # 173


  

          

>e

grassrootsphilosopher

  

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lazyboi
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Mon Sep-07-15 07:02 PM

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161. "that shit was a fairytale comedy. "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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lazyboi
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Mon Sep-07-15 07:14 PM

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162. "every1 except cube & dre were portrayed as either stupid"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

incompetent or evil monsters.

EVERYBODY. cube and dre were the only two portrayed as having any brains and morality .
lol

seriously name any other character in the movie. and they fall in t e category as stupid/incompetent..or evil monster. cube and dre were the ones that showed everybody the way.

Dre's effin "i have a dream speech" to death row was sposed to be serious, but i giggle my mothafuckin ass off like eddie murphy's father

Yella wasn't with Eazy when he passed out. Yella was shooting porno
Jerry passed out the Straight outta compton LP cover to the group..not one of the five members looked at it and said..."hey! who is this 6th n*gga on our LP cover?" (six n*ggas in a car, are u crazy?)

u know Cube was bankrolling this movie, they let like 3 ENTIRE ice cube verses spit.

y'all really think Eazy called Dre to set an NWA reunion in motion? hmmm let's Ask Eazy Himself. (dis to yella)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40HfnByvQ4o

Well let's ask Ice cube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcJcwRMj6gw

Ok let's ask Dre Dre
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReFjAowiYkI

yeah...that phone call happened...... lol


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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Heinz
Member since Dec 26th 2003
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163. "Lol i agree"
In response to Reply # 162


  

          

Watching the whole thing you can definitely tell who was putting money behind it. Thats one thing I didn't like. They didnt show ANY bad or vulnerable things from either Cube or Dre. It was just like "nah we only showing our highlights"
____

TWITTER : Heinz21st

IG : H_N_Z

  

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seasoned vet
Member since Jul 29th 2008
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Tue Sep-08-15 03:48 AM

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167. "how could anyone expect them to put all of that into the movie?"
In response to Reply # 162


  

          

your post is so weird.

i dont think the movie would of been as successful without the semi-fairytale ending

but this is hollywood
im confused as to what you expected

to add Yella says he was shooting those pornos at Easy's house when he found out about him being sick. so i have no idea what you were trying to say or where you were going with that

  

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lazyboi
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170. "they found time to add all that fiction to it. "
In response to Reply # 167


  

          


"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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seasoned vet
Member since Jul 29th 2008
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Tue Sep-08-15 11:32 AM

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174. "movie was in development hell for years"
In response to Reply # 170


  

          

  

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Kama7
Member since Mar 11th 2005
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Tue Sep-08-15 11:54 AM

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175. "Erics wife"
In response to Reply # 162


  

          

  

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lazyboi
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179. "ehhhhhh. we know who is REALLY the power behind the pen"
In response to Reply # 175


  

          

Eazy was made to look incompetent Dre and Cube were above it all lol

"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
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Tue Sep-08-15 12:46 PM

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181. "It's a movie. EVERY Biopic changes up this kind of info"
In response to Reply # 162


  

          

And I don't think Eazy or even Ren were shown as incompetent or evil. Eazy is shown to be multidimensional, where he goes along with it all at first, but then realizes that he was wrong. Ren is seen as somewhat of a sidekick, which is false, but surely not incompetent. Even Brian at the label wasn't shown as a blatantly evil monster.

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

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bentagain
Member since Mar 19th 2008
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Tue Sep-08-15 10:05 AM

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171. "meh"
In response to Reply # 0
Tue Sep-08-15 10:08 AM by bentagain

  

          

didn't really move me one way or the other TBH

I can dig the ending, moving the story toward a moral; don't take time for granted...

...better than just posting the bank accounts of cube and dre...

SHOUTS TO THE HOMIE Sir Jinx

critiques

FITTED HATS

the first thing that jumped out at me was the product placement of new era and the use of fitted hats

neither happened until well into the 90s

CUBE

needs his own movie

long play, may have been a better idea to save more of his solo career, and focus on it for the follow up/sequel

his character was too strong for this movie, he dominated too much for the movie to detail more aspects of NWA

and cube has way more depth as a biopic

like he just came home one day and decided to write a movie

c'mon

ACTING WAS BAD

Dre (actor) = bad, I'll just say the brother's death/phone call scene was not convincing

Eazy (actor) = maybe he was too good, because you get the feeling E in real life was a cutup, but I couldn't take him seriously...ever, and a couple of very serious scenes, folks was laughing.

Cube (actor) = I believe his son, did a tremendous job

like I said, I would have rather seen Cube's solo career as a biopic

and I hope that happens for the young man, he did a great job

as did F Gary Gray

it was a good moive, but probably more for folks that were not there

watching the Rondey King footage 25 years later in a theater full of people >>> Straight Outta Compton, IMO



---------------------------------------------------------------

If you can't understand it without an explanation

you can't understand it with an explanation

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
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Tue Sep-08-15 12:02 PM

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177. "wow, I thought Cub'es son was one of the weakest actors"
In response to Reply # 171


          

Eazy was the star of this movie.

Dre was good



****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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bentagain
Member since Mar 19th 2008
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Tue Sep-08-15 12:08 PM

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178. "the story revolved more around Eazy than I expected"
In response to Reply # 177


  

          

so he was the star of this movie

but there shouldn't be giggles and laughing when some of the scenes are so serious

other than the tragedy curl

I thought cube's character was the most convincing

sincerely, I hope there is a cube biopic

even a Dre biopic (with a different actor)

we might could call this Eazy's biopic

---------------------------------------------------------------

If you can't understand it without an explanation

you can't understand it with an explanation

  

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legsdiamond
Member since May 05th 2011
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Wed Sep-09-15 08:41 AM

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184. "no one laughed in our movie theatre... "
In response to Reply # 178


          

so maybe it's the people in your hood

****************
TBH the fact that you're even a mod here fits squarely within Jag's narrative of OK-sanctioned aggression, bullying, and toxicity. *shrug*

  

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lazyboi
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183. "Their costume designer was a young woman that wasn't even alive"
In response to Reply # 171
Tue Sep-08-15 11:09 PM by lazyboi

  

          

back then. Mind you when you have 4 of the SIX (not five) members involved, in a movie telling such a recent story...do u REALLY need a costume designer? They didn't wear costumes. they wore regular clothes. did krush groove and tougher than leather have costume designers for the artists?

and then she failed. wrong sox logo, fitted caps. small errors that didn't need to happen. they paid more attention to girl's skin tone in casting, than they did for stuff that the masses saw when it was happening. hell watch 2-4 nwa videos and u can see what they wore. the members can TELLL what they wore. but they got her, and IMHO she failed.

"If you wanna help us, fine. Sit down with your kids and make 'em study at night...otherwise, shoot THIS mothaf*cka!" (c) Morgan Freeman,

  

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-DJ R-Tistic-
Member since Nov 06th 2008
51986 posts
Tue Sep-08-15 12:42 PM

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180. "So. The original album hit #4 on Billboard. The title song hit #38 on"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

the Hot 100. And Boyz n da hood hit #50. All of them were basically debuts on the charts, too.

------------------------------

50+ FREE Mixes on www.DJR-Tistic.com!

Twitter and Instagram - @DJ_RTistic

  

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bentagain
Member since Mar 19th 2008
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182. "I'm wanting more on this angle"
In response to Reply # 180


  

          

we know the Def Jam story

we know Master P's story

but the actual story

from the ground up

building a record company

AND DOMINATING

felt skimmed over

I legit want to know what was in those contracts

how they got fucked

how death row got up and running

etc...

there's a capitalist's dream in this story somewhere

but they went hallmark with the moral

---------------------------------------------------------------

If you can't understand it without an explanation

you can't understand it with an explanation

  

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FrankEinstein
Member since Dec 03rd 2003
3758 posts
Wed Sep-09-15 11:55 AM

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185. "http://izquotes.com/quotes-pictures/quote-history-is-almost-always-writt..."
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

http://izquotes.com/quotes-pictures/quote-history-is-almost-always-written-by-the-victors-and-conquerors-and-gives-their-view-or-at-any-jawaharlal-nehru-255517.jpg

  

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