Master P is uninterested in his former artists talking negatively about him after departing his label – and it appears the fatigue stems from current feedback made by Fat Trel.
The No Limit mogul was a visitor on the most recent episode of The Gauds Show, posted on Thursday (February 16). During the dialog, P jokingly proposed a statute of limitations being imposed after seven years of leaving his label – and made some thinly-veiled swipes whereas doing so.
“I think people wanna do and say what they wanna do after time go by. Like another guy said, ‘Oh P said he was gonna do [a sequel to] Menace II Society,’ he began – referencing Trel’s recent conversation on No Jumper. “How could I do Menace II Society? Go check have I ever said that in anything. You can’t find me saying it. So what I did say was I was going to do a movie like Menace II Society.”
He continued: “Back then I had a movie in mind. It was called Get Money. But at the time, Gucci Mane kept going to jail. So I was thinking on him, putting a couple people in the movie with him – some other young boys with him. But he kept going to jail. It’s crazy how this generation will act like you just said that yesterday but that was 12 or 15 years ago. Why is that a topic? That don’t even make sense, but that let me know, oh, they scared of you.”
He continued on, including that he all the time tore up a contract the minute an artist mentioned they needed to depart him.
“I’m like, ‘How could an artist be mad with me?’” P requested. “Let me tell y’all – and I want all y’all to know this – this what my motto was: If you don’t wanna be with me, I don’t wanna be with you. It’s almost like in a relationship. I ain’t trying to hold you back.”
“That’s what I call ungratefulness. If you moved on 10 or 15 or 20 years after me, why is you talking about me? I forgot about y’all! For real. I’m the only thing you can talk about?”
“It should be a law. After seven years, you shouldn’t be allowed to go on no podcast and talk about nobody. Think about it! It’s a statute of limitations. If you ain’t been around that person in over seven years, please, you don’t deserve to talk about them.”
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Trel’s look on No Jumper arrived final month. During the sit-down, the DMV-based rapper mentioned he left Master P’s fold early in his profession after being promised a job in a Menace II Society sequel that by no means got here to fruition.
Instead, Trel accused P of creating him document for a gaggle that he by no means agreed to be part of and mentioned he even began promoting the music on-line with out giving him a contract.
“I felt like we was recording too much music because I’m like, ‘We here for the movie, bruh,’” Trel mentioned. “I been living here for about seven months, I haven’t started an acting class, we no longer spoke about the scripts, the movie never ever came up. You know we doing video shoots and photo shoots and we got shirts pressed up that say Louie V Mob and he calling us the Louie V Mob and outside of the money that he was paying me monthly, I was receiving nothing for all of the music I’m putting out!”
Eventually he give up and by no means seemed again, and Trel went on to clarify that he by no means bothered to speak to Master P about it afterward as a result of he didn’t have any respect for him.
One of Menace II Society‘s administrators, Allen Hughes, later confirmed to HipHopDX that neither he nor his brother have been ever approached by Master P or anybody from his camp in relation to doing a Menace II Society sequel.
“This is the first I’m hearing of this,” Hughes informed DX. “I respect P tremendously but would never approve a sequel to Menace, never.”
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