
HIP HOP IS A HUGE BUSINESS, AND JUST THINK…. IT WAS CREATED FROM NOTHING, FROM THE SLUMS OF UPTOWN….THE SOUTH BRONX NYC!
MADE BY AFRO-LATINO INDIANS BLOOD SWEAT AND TEARS {AKA BLACK PEOPLE}
…NOW WE HAVE THIS DICK HEAD SPENCER PRATT???? WHERE DOES HE FIT IN IN OUR CULTURE? HE SHOULD STAY IN HIS “REALITY-FAKE-TV” WORLD THAT HE’S IN AND LEAVE HIP HOP ALONE! UNEDUCATED WHITE KIDS NEED TO “CHILL” AND RESPECT WHERE THIS MUSIC COMES FROM AND WHERES ITS GOING!
AT THIS RATE…HIP HOP IS GOING TO BE DESTROYED JUST LIKE REAL ROCK -N- ROLL MUSIC WAS!!! {Peace to MURS im listening to “and this is for”}
HALF THE KIDS THAT LISTEN TO ROCK DONT KNOW WHO B.B. KING, CHUCK BERRY, LITTLE RICHARD, OR MUDDY WATERS ARE OR WHAT THEY HAVE DONE FOR OUR MUSIC!!!!!! THEY DONT KNOW WHO PETER TOSH IS OR EVEN KOOL HERC???
BUT THAT SAME KID WILL BY SPENCER PRATT’S RECORD, ASHER ROTH’S RECORD & CAGE’S RECORD…AND THEY ARE ALL FAKES!
ITS SO COOL TO BE FAKE THAT YOU CAN BRING IT UP IN YOUR INTERVIEWS!
AS LONG AS YOU MAKE MONEY …I GUESS YOU CAN SELL YOUR OWN MOTHER!
Peace to MURS im listening to “and this is for”
HERE IS SPENCER’S INTERVIEW BELOW!
Why on earth would Spencer Pratt make a rap album?
To be honest, my whole life I’ve always been listening to rap music or reggae. But I never heard of rappers making billions of dollars, so being a rapper wasn’t really in my crystal ball. It took people like 50 Cent to come along and, you know, he’s on the Forbes list making $500 million, so I’m like, ‘Wow, there can be a lot of money in this.’
So you’re in it for the money.
This is what I say to people: I’m not in the music industry. I’m in show business. So when people are like, “What are you doing coming into the rap game?” That’s the wrong question. I’m already in the game I’m in, and that’s pop culture and entertainment. I’m not coming in saying, “Oh, I’m the truth, I’m the biggest lyricist ever to walk on the Earth.” I’m not trying to make music that changes history. No one is doing that anymore. Music has become disposable. You’re lucky if your song lasts a month. That’s the state of the music industry right now.
Saying that you’ll be making disposable rap doesn’t make me want to run out and buy your music.
Let me be clear: I’m making phenomenally great music. “I’m a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here” is one of the catchiest songs in years. I plan on making hit music, but I just don’t believe that it’s like when Eminem first came out with “Lose Yourself.” I’m not trying to make an inspiring song right now. I’m just making what the market wants right now. Ringtone rap.
I read an interview where you referred to yourself as the “White Jay-Z.” Seriously?
I have more street cred than any new dudes: I manage a professional fighter, King Kevin Casey — who is also a hip-hop superstar — and every single day I do MMA training with him where I have a 195-pound black belt in Brazilian Ju Jitsu try to punch me in the face. I know for a fact that Jay-Z in his whole life has never been for one hour in the situations I put myself in with my professional fighter.
I thought you were a lover, not a fighter.
I’ll challenge pretty much anyone to a fight, if that’s what is needed to prove my street cred. If it’s about toughness, I’m tough. If it’s about how many guns you have, nobody has more guns that me. If it’s about ammo, nobody has more ammo than me. So when I say I’m the white Jay-Z, I’m just like, “So all this guy does is talk about all the expensive things he buys?” Well I buy expensive things and I’m 30 years younger. I was never a fan of Jay-Z. The only rapper I really was into was Tupac.
How good of a rapper are you?
Incredible. I have the biggest mouth on earth, so why wouldn’t I be the best rapper — you know what I mean?







