Full Episode: Does Hip-Hop Reject Women? E! True Hollywood Story | E! Rewind

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hip-hop is everywhere hip-hop now is the ultimate influence in the world but for five decades it's been ruled by Men At the top the industry has the power to silence the female voice female rappers must constantly prove their skills every woman I know has had to fight I've been working at this for years Nicki Minaj and cardi B are today's rap royalty with film television and fashion projects adding to their huge success you can Google me so why are there so few other women in hip-hop the industry views women as disposable I'm still trying to figure that out can female MC's break through the male dominated industry I'm the first female solo rapper to ever sell a million records and it's not cuz I was sucking no dick and claim the mic for themselves you are going to spaz you are going to love it you are going to go [Music] crazy hip hop is the dominant force in music and pop culture today hip hop is a way to tell stories in ways that no one has ever told them no matter the language the race the color the Creed hip-hop is the Tie that binds us all it's the way we interact with each other it's you know how we tell our story hip hop is a movement that grew into a multibillion doll business oh Dig That Crazy Rhythm but when it comes to Dollars and cents the top money-making rappers are almost all men the industry is definitely male dominated you know 100% at the top of the food chain the amount of pressure that females have to endure in the business was pretty insane dude if the men don't like you you're most likely not going to get in in 2018 there were more than 450 rap releases less than 10% came from women and that's why every woman in this industry you remember because there's not enough of them the lack of women is indicative of the ways in women artists have not been promoted and supported by the industry today it's boiled down to two women cardi B and Nicki Minaj Nikki is so dope because just her style Nikki came in on a mainstream level though like yo don't get it confused like women can rap Little Wayne was just looking to build this Empire and he saw promise and Drake and Nicki [Music] Minaj super they had the foundation she had Drake she had Wayne it was all one combined unit with a net worth around $85 million as of 2019 Nicki Minaj is the only woman among the top 50 wealthiest rappers there weren't a lot of nikkis out there then Along Came cardi B my mixtape is not really about some H like it's mostly about popping all rapper cardi b a former exotic dancer with more than 10 million followers has dethrown Taylor Swift from the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 cardi B is so much fun because to me she is that Spanish girl from New York the accent is everything and she's a hustler you speak your mind cardi B you do not hold back I feel little butterfly in my stomach and vagina cardi B won the hearts of just everyone based upon her personality Nikki and cardi became household names by collaborating with some of the biggest superstars in music Kanye West Ariana Grande Selena Gomez and Migos despite Nikki and Cardi's success female rappers still fight for equality in the music business hip-hop was always male-dominated from the beginning of time it was birth that way in the early days of hip-hop it was only a boy club a lot of people didn't believe believe in females being in hip-hop back then all you was hearing was male rappers it was hard for a women to get their music on the air I'm just saying I didn't hear any [Music] women I never thought about whether it was a good old boy club I knew I had a talent for it and I also knew that there was no plan B for me it was do or die when salt and Peppa started out in 1985 becoming an MC was just a dream male artists are the ones who are getting signed because commercial viability is seen as only possible for men salt and Peppa were telemarketers at Sears until their coworker convinced them to record the showstopper now tocs jam it was supposed to be a school project but it ended up being dope enough song to take to the radio we took it to Marley Maul finally played Our Song and then the showstopper became a hit they didn't even know who we were they would just keep saying who them girls and there was a line in the showstop that said cuz we go together like you know like salt and pepper and we ran with that first time people see us this is the reaction the feedback that we got back from men was like what but the nerve like okay that was cute I ain't going to last y ain't going to last out here we heard it and we didn't care we knew we had something it was like this is some of the most cool thing I've ever seen like two women with a female DJ Sal and Peppa's first album hot cool and vicious comes out in 1986 and it's hugely impactful it has these great remixes on the B side like push it uh that really changes the game in [Music] de Jam record CEO Russell Simmons wasn't a [Music] fan someone happened to ask him about the salt and pepper girls what do you think and Russell gave us a thumbs down and I remember feeling like I can either listen to the father of Hip Hop and fold or I can use that as fuel we weren never intimidated when they said we couldn't we did and then years later Russell tried to sign us to Death Jam and we was like no we good being ourselves and being free in this male dominated field was always very important to us just the boldness the fashion the things that we talked about empowered women Sal and Peppa ushered female fans into Hip Hop's predominantly male fan base and elevated female MC's From The Underground into the Limelight in more ways than one salt and pepper inspired me to want to be an MC we were in the midst of making history MC light's big moment came in 1988 you did it because you really loved it and you wanted to be heard and really nothing else mattered before graduating High School MC light wrote and recorded her debut album light is a rock I was the first solo female MC with a full length album my message was an anti-drug message I had seen so many people getting arrested getting killed so I wanted to speak to my generation MC Light released five hit albums before the age of 30 she had a powerful voice but many male rappers didn't want to hear it I guess some of the guys have a little bit of attitude about going on before me as MC's who are women we were facing what could be a real challenge coming up not no no no [ __ ] they broke the word out working with Ice Cube I said no you can't call me a [ __ ] Hardy versus Nikki I couldn't ask for anything else but some more money I'm a hell of a writer and it's not cuz I was nobody a sucking no dick it's because I was talented [Music] hip-hop is music hip-hop is an attitude there cannot be hip-hop without women by the late 80s bold women like gy light and salt and pepper carved out space in Hip Hop's boys club Salt and Peppa wasn't treated as equal we had to prove ourselves and we did we went platinum and double Platinum it was the first female to do that and we were working hard for it hip-hop grew in popularity but few female artists match salt and Peppa's success when rap starts taking off commercially we have these lyrics that are more about sexualizing women the first time I saw two life crew I knew there was going to be a shift in the way when men were going to be perceived in the business women were there to just dance around and bump up against the artist at that time we love women only people we talk about is [ __ ] in 1988 2 years after salt and Peppa brought female empowerment to the masses NWA offered a stark rebuttal with nwa's walk into hip hop calling women [ __ ] in that way it Chang the game they broke the word out so then it just you know it just didn't stop we didn't make the word just using it by 1991 NWA sold millions of albums with songs like a [ __ ] is a [ __ ] and just don't bite it the change that called for women to be used much more as objects was jolting was like oh wow is this where we are now then in 19 1992 Dr Dre Snoop Dogg and Death Row Records took things to the next level the lyrics were [ __ ] a but holes and tricks get on the knees and suck the what like that was just what we were here you realize then what your role meant as a female in this culture more women were objectified the more we were called [ __ ] and hoes the worst things God for women in the music business what the industry insiders were doing is saying this sells so we're just going to keep promoting artists who do this the more popular the artist the greater disregard they had for women the greater the audience would absorb that which ultimately set the tone for hip-hop there were certainly male MC's who said this is not who I am but it sure looks good for the so you know not really understanding the message that they're sending out on a worldwide level you really were one of the first female rappers to sort of give it back to the guys right back in their face that's why I made a song like ladies first because it really was to inspire females to take pride in themselves and demand more Queen Latifa and mo Love Led this new wave of bold Unapologetic women in hip-hop in the early '90s our first single came out out when I was 17 and I signed my contract and my album came out when I was 18 Queen Latifa was demanding the respect she did that with such Authority you know that was powerful to me it was refreshing to hear a woman bust through the room and say you grab my booty oh you nasty you punching men in the eyes now Quin Latifa okay women hip-hop artists in the 9s were the unsung heroes of the feminist movement claiming a space for black women and girls for little girls like is what we needed at that time yoyo also commanded respect from day one growing up in South Central Los scandales when it came to battle rapping I knew who my competitors were and I was riding to take them down there was not many males willing to go back there and battle with me I took them on one at a time help me build my character Ice Cube was leaving NWA looking for a female artist at that time they were the biggest group in Los Angeles so I was just thinking wow here's this guy that sings songs like a [ __ ] is a [ __ ] and you know I ain't the one yo-yo came out simply saying don't play with my yo-yo like don't play with me my name is yoyo I'm not a ho no and right there that bar created the biggest hype of my life I remember doing Bonnie and Clyde and we were doing the lyrics he was like got me a down ass [ __ ] on my team I said wait wait wait you can't you can't call me a [ __ ] he was like yo it's just like I said no you can't call me a [ __ ] just by demanding that respect it was given she's got this tough aggressive sound she's saying that she can be as rough as the guys and she's got the baddest guy out there ice cube endorsing that that's a great uh moment of turning the tables I've always love yoyo she was a woman of power that you could look up to and you wanted to be like her De Brat was a teenage Tomboy from the west side of Chicago dreaming of being an MC we had a few dope female MC's but they weren't making that much noise so I had a lot of people try to knock me and be like uh you need to go on and go to college honey be a doctor be a lawyer it got me down but it made me more determined to make my dream come true I started battling guys in junior high and High School and I start winning and then I got a little name for myself and then I met Jermaine depri Jermaine has already solidified himself in this industry as being a dope producer thank God I was signed to Jermaine Dupri I got to be myself no one told me you have to look like this you have to rap like that I was not pressured to show tits and ass whatever you want to call it the brat was like raw and tough but she was mad cool at the same time she had the dudes on their toes when I was recording funkified JD was like listen brat I don't want you to have too many high expectations girls most of the time only go gold so if you go gold that's good De Brat shattered the gold ceiling in 1994 becoming the first solo female rapper to go platinum you can never take away that I'm the first female solo rapper to ever sell a million records and it's not cuz I was nobody or sucking no dick it's because I was talented and I had a mentor to believe in me coming up little Kim changed everything everybody wanted to be like her if you're selling sex it's going to sell the thing I loved about hip hop there were many female voices many women expressing themselves in many different ways by the mid99s female MC's had claimed the mic for themselves it was just an overwhelming amount of feminine energy slicing through Hip-Hop Hip-Hop had officially become pop music with record labels pouring money into marketing their artists during that time period hip-hop was both being consumed and purchased by the mainstream aka the white audience and it became this big business at that point there were more rap releases platinum albums and women achieving success than ever before it was like this new wave of young women Lauren and Missy ellot especially who could go toe-to-toe with any of the men Missy opened up a new room in the house of hip-hop the way she looked the way she was Unapologetic about the clothes that she wore what's up y'all she dared to be different she didn't care if somebody told her to wearing a big trash bag wouldn't work she did it anyway yeah yeah yeah Lauren Hill was next what I loved about Lauren when I first was introduced to her through the Fuji was she told me that as a woman you don't have to be boxed in she's in a group with two men and she's by far the best MC to me Lauren changed The Narrative of hip-hop because she came mind and was like look I can sing as good as I rhyme and the funny part about it is Sony initially didn't even want to release her album The Miss education of Lauren Hill but they did and look what happened you know you [Music] better about that that [Music] that Lauren Hills solo debut sold more than 11 million units it Remains the highest selling album of all time by a female MC you have hit songs and then you have cultural phenomenons the miseducation was a cultural phenomenon that visual of Lauren Hill winning five Grammys that's the first time we were able to say damn it we did it although Lauren Hill's lyrics won over critics Hip Hop's top exex saw more profit in selling sex to fans I came up in a time where the record labels they didn't really get involved with the Aesthetics that is why everyone just looked and sounded so different but then you have a new type a female MC who's not afraid to show skin Little Kim changed everything in 96 when she first came out Lil Kim came out with the sexy I don't give a I'mma wear this thong and these pasties and it was really bold and that made her stand out everybody wanted to be like her plus she was bagged by the greatest to ever do it the Notorious BIG there was this heavy heavy Shi into the idea that female rappers had to be very seductive and sadly men would suggest to them that that's how they had to come across notorious BS tell Little Kim to sexy it up and really that changed everything that was latched on to by the industry as a way to make rap more marketable by putting money behind artists who fit that mold rather than less hypersexual women who came before them times are changing either you get witht it or you get left behind Li Kim sold millions of Records so did Foxy Brown both flaunted their sexuality and their Talent album after album Foxy Brown Little Kim it was like all right guys this is how y'all look at us okay so now we're going to reverse that they use their sexuality no difference than the way Madonna did but for women in Hip Hop embracing your sexuality and being bold about who you are is a double standard where female MC's saw personal empowerment the male dominated record labels only saw dollar signs in this industry sex sells if you're selling sex it's going to sell Lil Kim becomes this kind of magic equation where we have a talented rapper but she's also eye candy for the guys a lot of people started to go that way started to really Express themselves through the idea of sex and so that's what happened to the industry at large once you're feeding that to the consumer and the consumer wants more of it and the label's going to pay for the consumer to get more of it and then you've got this cycle the record labels in their rush to exploit the success of Kim and Foxy push the idea of the queen bee on hip hop for the first time they try to pit Lil Kim and Foxy Brown against each other unfortunately the industry thinks that we want to see a cat fight and the two of them either play into that or get thrown into that the record labels and publications profit from any rivalry when it comes to hip-hop what did Little Kim say about Foxy on this song and what did foxy say about little Kim on this song radio stations profit they profit in listeners it was horrible because we all kind of loved each other and supported each other and then when that happened it always just shot to that doesn't happen with men it's really unfair the thought process that only one can Reign when you do that it stifles our growth as a culture so did the industry intentionally kill the female presence in hip-hop I would have to say yes coming up it took a special woman to break through those barriers AR going to go crazy she said what the she want to say I want to thank you like I love this song so much I'm a trend Setter and I like for people to follow what I do when it comes to my music when it comes to my style when it comes to my dress hip-hop female artists continuously reinvent themselves you have to constantly stay hot or they move on to someone else you're expected to look a certain way they want you to be beautiful can't get fat but men could be fat as hell like look at Biggie and look at Heavy Deep really the main thing you always want to beable after 20 years of being overlooked by Hip Hop's Boys Club women and rap got their own category at the Grammys in 2003 I'm honor I stay humble and I'm going to continue to you know keep doing music as long as y'all allow me to it was amazing when they finally gave women a solo category because we stand alone hey you here because your mama was a woman okay no day but just 2 years later the academy abandoned the category claiming a lack of releases I sat on the board for the Grammys and you know no disrespect to them at that time but they knew little about women in Hip Hop and so I don't think they valued it that much I think it absolutely sucks that that category only lasted for two years but at the same time there stopped being enough female rappers to put in the category over the next 6 years the labels released less than 20 albums from women rappers compared to more than a thousand from the men they stopped believing in female rappers because the sales weren't as good they were saying that we were too expensive it's horrible because everybody is greedy as Hell by the mid 2000s some of Hip Hop's iconic women were missing from the main stage salt and Peppa went through breakups and stopped recording Lil Kim's album sales rapidly declined MC light failed to chart Queen Latifa went into acting if you had to do one thing either sing or act acting is paying good money right now Lauren Hill got into legal troubles over unpaid taxes Hill was given 3 months behind bars followed by 3 months of house arrest her attorney says Lauren has fully paid what she owed watching this hard work go down the drain it was just really disheartening then technology changed the rules of the game programs like Napster allowed hip-hop fans to illegally download music for free once something has become free and open then you can't really shut it down people were able to download music for free you got us busted our ass in a studio and you me to tell me I'm not getting paid for it from 1999 to 2009 digital piracy cut album sales by more than $8 billion a year major labels they were then hesitant at that point to put money into anything that they didn't think was going to make them enough they were just constantly looking at the bottom line unfortunately that bottom line did not include women at the time during that time the record label determined what artist was going to get the attention for whatever reason they didn't believe in women in hip-hop they were just shelving projects and pushing women off to the side by 2010 only three female MC's remained signed to Major labels down from 40 in the early '90s your whole career can come to an end because a bunch of Executives that don't look like you that don't understand what you're saying are determining whether you could sell or not they didn't want to give us a budget for hair and makeup and clothes but you want us to look good for your label cuz if we don't look good you don't look good it's very contradicting and it's stupid as hell dudes could literally just wake up out of bed and jump on stage and I'm going to be accepted but a female can't do that she ain't just going to come out and jogas that's just not the way it works got to have hair I got to have makeup got to have fake boobs got to have big butts that aren't naturally given to you that's what we push as a society I without a doubt think the industry killed the female voice DJs aren't playing them we're not hearing them on our radio they're not getting signed by the labels women had to always go the extra M to fight for their right so multiply that coming into an industry where everything is vain and 99% at the time mostly male dominated figures in very strong positions you're talking about black women who took this art form to the next level with their own boldness and for labels to just sit there and say you've had a good run we're just going to shelf this project it was a massive dis respect with consumers unwilling to pay the labels bet on men leaving female MC's to battle for their rightful place in the rap game it took a really really really special woman to break through those barriers coming up nck Nicki Nicki her introduction was like lightning drop a cookie in my mothering comments you don't need a label anymore more you can throw that up on YouTube and make some money off of it I definitely feel like the recording industry killed the female voice in the early 2000s the nominees for best rap album Beasty Boys Jay-Z LL Cool J Nelly Kanye West by the early 2000s after decades of men calling the shots female MC's weren't about to go out without a fight the women always been there they always been doing their thing they always was just blocked from these big buildings and these big execs and going in they didn't support our women they didn't allow us to coexist when the drought hit rap city was a recent college grad and aspiring MC trying to break in when I came up during the summer of 20 5 there were no females being signed to record label deals there was definitely a deficit in the number of the female rappers that were in the space but they weren't going to quit just because there wasn't any money being thrown at them I remember the very first time I tried to get a manager this guy he looks me up and down head to toe and says yeah I could do something with that I walked straight out you know I'd rather figure it out on my own than to have somebody change the person that I was and to live a lie you have to be strong and believe in who you are and just be like I'm going to get this one way or another as music moved from Radio to the web artists discovered a new way to attract fans social media I love when social media came about because it took the power back we're controlling our music we're controlling who hears it when they hear it and how they hear it you can post whatever you want to post you can say what you want to say drop a cookie in my comments heavy Nikki Minaj was basically unknown until she posted a freestyle on MySpace that caught the industry's attention and landed her a record deal in 2009 Nikki you are going to spaz you are going to love it you are going to go crazy her introduction into the business was like lightning Nikki added flavor she added color Pizzazz sassiness the industry had completely turned its back on the woman rapper for so long and it takes a Nicki Minaj to make the industry wake up and say wait a minute I said how are you today nobody rhymed like her and she had a lot of tits and ass to show so she had all the recipes for Success Nicki Minaj embodied so effortlessly what the industry thought could sell undeniable Talent with marketable commercially viable sexuality what she talked about what she wasn't afraid to talk about in the age of social media hype we hadn't seen that that's why it took off the way it did Nikki had almost a solid 10-year reign as really the only female rapper in the space who was doing exceptionally well and then Along Came cardi B around 2015 hey y cardi B built a massive fan base online and then as a cast member on the reality series Love & Hip Hop New York I want to say thank you everybody this is crazy she gains the following by having you know this massive Appeal on Instagram I want to thank you like I love this song so much she's very expressive she said what the she want to say nobody else was like cardi B if you have a built-in fan base with a 2.1 million followers if you want to drop a rap album you already have a following already ready to go Atlantic record signed the social media star to a recording contract in 2017 cardi dropped her multiplatinum debut album A year later there are certain things that help you rise really quickly and one of those is a marketing machine behind you to get the music to the masses cardi B and Nicki Minaj are pop culture icons but they're also the only women who enjoy success near the top male rappers Unfortunately they were pitted against each other from the start who's better you know Who's hotter in the industry there can only be one woman at the top of the charts the queen be cardi had no chance to rap and be her own identity without being compared to Nicki Minaj Nicki Minaj had no chance in embracing a new female artist if she wanted to because they were automatically comparing other huge story cardi versus Nikki everyone is talking about this big brawl that happened at Fashion Week they end up being enemies based on all the energy that is is being given to it the last thing you're expecting to see is this brawl shoes being thrown hair being pulled they don't need to rely on that beef we're already listening to them they're already selling records but unfortunately because they're only two they seem to think that they have to Duke it out despite their public Feud Nikki and cardi owe much of their success to social media but can the same approach help other women break through to stardom the internet was like probably the best thing that could have happened for me but it's not as easy as a big recular label machine behind you young Ma's been promoting music on the web since the Myspace days she finally blew up in 2016 when o came out and everything when you get that big Record Man everybody loves you so it was crazy man to date the music videos received 300 million views on YouTube all without the backing of a major label you know I said with major labels with top dogs I mean I always felt like a record label is something that's supposed to build an artist from ground up I already did that so I said you know what I'm just going to stay independent and continue to do do it the way I've already been doing it online platforms are allowing MC's to find success on their own terms you don't need a label anymore you can sell that on your own social media and throw that up on YouTube and make some money off of it the business is the is the hard part it took me 5 years of development to put out my first mixtape not my first album my first mixtape so that has been the climb that raps has been climbing for the past 6 7 8 years years I want to be known as one of the best rappers of all time because my lyrics are just out of this world rap city is known for spitting bars next to some of rap's most respected male artists including Kendrick Lamar and Chance the Rapper as a woman your talent or your storytelling goes beyond just your gender and you can be just as good if not better than any guys but no man wants to say they were outra by a woman because of how the world looks at that Rap City broke out of the Indie scene in 2018 when she was the only female hip-hop artist nominated for a Grammy for the outside world it validates me for everybody else who needs numbers and accolades to say that it's dope I think the reason raps ends up not winning the Grammys and Kendrick Lamar ends up taking them home is because Kendrick Lamar is a household name women in rap have more opportunities than ever before but they're still a long way to go it should just be if you're a dope MC you're a dope MC man whether you male or female it's just it's one industry I still don't understand why is it's so segregated when I got in the music business and I started to see what female rapper and female MC me labels are put on us to divide us and make us feel section do I'm not trying to be a cool female rapper I'm trying to be one of the greatest ever you can follow the path or you can knock the tree down and make your own path make your own [Music] path coming up we've seen cardi do the work I'm dying of happiness I couldn't ask for anything else but some more [Music] money is that verified certified that no one can can do it like you it's verified in 2019 fresh off of chart topping collaborations with Bruno Mars and Maroon 5 cardi B became the first female solo artist to ever win a Grammy for best rap album everything thing that I worked off this year is happening we've seen cardi do the work to be thrust into a situation where they said only Nikki could exist people keep asking how do you feel and it's just like I feel like I'm dying of happiness I couldn't ask for anything else but some more money you know what I'm saying as hip-hop approaches its fifth decade female rappers are entering the industry in numbers and diversity never seen before you have to have that presence you have to have that aura you have to make the [ __ ] love you there could not have been a young and may when we were coming up it was not allowed in hip-hop her being gay to me is not the focus the focus is the skill she's just dope when I came into the industry I didn't want nobody to label me I didn't want nobody say gay rapper I knew me being who I am and me being what I represent was going to be an issue for people uh I knew that I just didn't care she came in and said yes you know I like girls I wear a dildo and it's just one of those things that I never heard it women in hip-hop for us to have a young ma it shows that as a culture we are evolving artists like Ma and Rap City have huge online fan bases that are spilling into the mainstream hip hop is here to stay it's not going anywhere but I think for the genre to evolve it's going to have to have new life breathed into it from a whole crop of young women artists the industry has the power to silence the fale female voice but there is an opportunity to take the power away from the powers that be we just need to have women Empower who have the means and the money and the platforms to support women we need to see every level of the industry change women are definitely getting more respect but the respect that they get they had to fight for it us males have to Champion the female movement we need to start recognizing it ourselves and start waiting on the industry to do so is the message that you're sending a positive message to there are upand cominging artists like Melly city girls and lizo you could had a bad [ __ ] not committ help you with your career just a little to hold me down mean they're taking the hip-hop world by storm online and hitting the billboard charts put it out there for me for Jesus if you want to see more women represented you have to speak with your dollars go to the shows buy the music that's how you show that you appreciate women the future is so bright you know I smile because I get excited about it cuz I can already see it I see more females producing I see more women running labels it's still a lot of opportunities out there this is way deeper than music you go through whatever you have to go through because I'm still going through and you find other ways to reinvent yourself times are changing people want to hear more people want a variety we keep going we here and guess what salt and pepper is still relevant made timeless music I know that when I leave this planet push it is still going to be in commercials Let's Talk About Sex it's still going to be in the classroom sh is still going to be the number one karaoke song long past the time that I'm gone if there's something that you want to say get on a mic and say it go out conquer Speak Your Truth stand for something hip-hop can't exists without women women MC's are here to stay Nicki Minaj and cardi B have forged their own paths to stardom and provided an opening for aspiring female artists to do the same Nicki Minaj has set standards for a female rap artist she's not going to get faded out because she's learned from the greats is different today than it was back then cardi B came out as her own self and it's all thanks to social media I want to tell upcoming female artists don't be catting you should support period it's a ticket to go to heaven helping others congratulations to all the girls in this world who are strong who are confident it takes guts it takes balls I'm proud of you keep on doing it keep on killing it next on True Hollywood Story I do believe movies can be cursed The Exorcist Rosemary's Baby amville horror our first week of shooting somebody died in the lake people were worried for me and they were praying for me we have lost wonderful people one Hollywood temps fate fate temps back are they cursing the very people whom they're working with it's Hollywood baby I wouldn't be [Music] [Music] surprised he
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Channel: E! Rewind Pop Culture Throwbacks
Views: 25,755
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: E! True Hollywood Story, E! SHOWS, ENTERTAINMENT, TRUE HOLLYWOOD STORY, TRUE_HOLLYWOOD_STORY, E! TRUE HOLLYWOOD STORY, hip hop, Yo-Yo, Da Brat, MC Lyte, Cardi B, Yo Yo, yoyo, nicki minaj, barbz, salt n peppa, Young M.A, young MA, rapsody, rap, female rappers, music, hiphop, full episode, documentary, entertainment, music documentary, women, Lil Kim, lil wayne, drake, rappers, E THS, megan thee stallion, megan the stallion, lauren hill, missy elliot
Id: idG5-SDS1p8
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Length: 43min 58sec (2638 seconds)
Published: Mon Jan 29 2024
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