50 Cent Regrets Involving Fat Joe In Ja Rule Beef

BY Erika Marie 3.1K Views
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STARZ "Power" Season 4 L.A. Screening And Party
WEST HOLLYWOOD, CA - JUNE 23: Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson and Fat Joe attend STARZ "Power" Season 4 L.A. Screening And Party at The London West Hollywood on June 23, 2017 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Todd Williamson/Getty Images for STARZ)
Fif admits that he was "buggin'" for targeting Joey Crack in his decades-old tension with Ja.

We never know when 50 Cent and Ja Rule will reignite their longstanding tension. Often, the two New York rappers will throw verbal jabs on social media, and it's a beef that goes all the way back to 1999. It was then that Ja was robbed at gunpoint, purportedly by one of Fif's associates. Later, the rappers had a confrontation at a nightclub, and since then, they've been at each other's throats.

However, it isn't just Ja who was a target in this tension; 50 Cent would also go after anyone affiliated with the Murder Inc. icon. Fat Joe was connected to Ja Rule and even collaborated with him, so he found himself in Fif's crosshairs. It's a decision that 50 Cent now seems to regret, and explained to Rolling Stone why he wouldn't have involved Joey Crack.

MTVs 2003 Spring Break- "MTV Invades Miami" Taping
50 Cent during MTVs 2003 Spring Break- "MTV Invades Miami" Taping at Double Tree Surfcomber Hotel in Miami, Florida, United States. (Photo by Theo Wargo/WireImage)
Read More: Ja Rule Responds To 50 Cent: “You’re Nothing Without Eminem”

"There’s an element, a part of our culture that I’m aware of it because I am it," said Fif. "Your Lil Durks, your NBA Youngboys, the whole surrounding cast of that … it almost splits our culture in half because when you cool with one, you can’t work with the other. There’s an energy that runs through it that if you cool with people I got a problem with, then you with them."

50 Cent used himself as an example as he brought up Ja and Joe. "It was like my issues, I was using the same thinking in the very beginning of my career because it’s just the thinking you would use in the environment,” he said. “If anybody went next to Ja Rule, I’d jump on the person who featured with them, anybody who was faintly near them, ’cause I put him on life support and you wanna go resuscitate him. So that energy, later you look at it and you go, ‘I was buggin’.'"

Read More: Ja Rule Calls 50 Cent A Liar

"‘Cause I’ll say that. Fat Joe, his issues, I would see him a little uncomfortable with the success I was having," 50 continued. "And I interpreted as, ‘He doesn’t like me,’ when he’s really the kind of guy you want to be friends with because he’s loyal to a default. He’s so loyal for one record that [Murder Inc] did with him ['What’s Luv’] that we became enemies.”

Despite Fif once involving Fat Joe in his shenanigans, the two are now good friends who respect one another. Meanwhile, the beef with Ja Rule is alive and well.

[via]

About The Author
Since 2019, Erika Marie has worked as a journalist for HotNewHipHop, covering music, film, television, art, fashion, politics, and all things regarding entertainment. With 20 years in the industry under her belt, Erika Marie moved from a writer on the graveyard shift at HNHH to becoming a Features Editor, highlighting long-form content and interviews with some of Hip Hop’s biggest stars. She has had the pleasure of sitting down with artists and personalities like DJ Jazzy Jeff, Salt ’N Pepa, Nick Cannon, Rah Digga, Rakim, Rapsody, Ari Lennox, Jacquees, Roxanne Shante, Yo-Yo, Sean Paul, Raven Symoné, Queen Naija, Ryan Destiny, DreamDoll, DaniLeigh, Sean Kingston, Reginae Carter, Jason Lee, Kamaiyah, Rome Flynn, Zonnique, Fantasia, and Just Blaze—just to name a few. In addition to one-on-one chats with influential public figures, Erika Marie also covers content connected to the culture. She’s attended and covered the BET Awards as well as private listening parties, the Rolling Loud festival, and other events that emphasize established and rising talents. Detroit-born and Long Beach (CA)-raised, Erika Marie has eclectic music taste that often helps direct the interests she focuses on here at HNHH. She finds it necessary to report on cultural conversations with respect and honor those on the mic and the hardworking teams that help get them there. Moreover, as an advocate for women, Erika Marie pays particular attention to the impact of femcees. She sits down with rising rappers for HNHH—like Big Jade, Kali, Rubi Rose, Armani Caesar, Amy Luciani, and Omerettà—to gain their perspectives on a fast-paced industry.

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