Tony Yayo has admitted that G-Unit‘s “realest” beef was with Fat Joe and the rest of Terror Squad.
Terror Squad member Pistol Pete took to Instagram on Monday (April 10) to share a video of himself on the block with Yayo in New York City.
In the clip, Yayo spoke on G-Unit’s previous beef with Terror Squad whereas the remainder of the crew wore hats sporting the title of his former rival group.
“Yo, the realest beef was with Terror Squad,” Tony Yayo stated. “He was a real n-gga, I gotta give it up. The realest beef was with Fat Joe and them. We outside.”
Pistol Pete responded: “Tony Yayo, we fuck with you, though. We out here in the trenches, n-gga. We out here, fuck all that. We out here together, n-gga, a bunch of real n-ggas.”
Uncle Murda and CJ, who’s finest recognized for his hit 2020 single “Whoopty,” additionally appeared within the video.
G-Unit and Terror Squad’s feud erupted within the mid 2000s after Fat Joe collaborated with 50 Cent’s fierce rival, Ja Rule.
After sparring lyrically on “Piggy Bank” and “My FoFo,” tensions between 50 and Joe spilled over on the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards, the place they exchanged disses onstage and their respective crews nearly got here to blows backstage.
During a current interview with Rolling Stone, 50 Cent expressed remorse over dragging Fat Joe into his struggle with Ja Rule, admitting he was “buggin’” for going after anybody affiliated with Ja,
“There’s an element, a part of our culture that I’m aware of it because I am it,” he stated. “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.
“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. 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.”
He added: “So that energy, later you look at it and you go, ‘I was buggin.’”
Despite their sophisticated historical past, 50 Cent went on to reward Fat Joe for his loyalty to Ja Rule and Murder Inc.
“Fat Joe, his issues, I would see him a little uncomfortable with the success I was having, 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 stated.
“He’s so loyal for one record that [Murder Inc.] did with him that we became enemies.”
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