2Pac disses MC Hammer (1991 KRON)
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- Опубліковано 28 вер 2024
- #TupacTuesdays - Rare clip of a teenaged Tupac Shakur. --- While 2Pac's latter career/life included many stories of the bonding between the iconic late rapper and fellow Oakland rap/hip-hop artist MC Hammer, including 2Pac collaborating on MC Hammer's never released mid-nineties Death Row album, several years earlier at the beginning of the '90's/ 2Pac's meteoric career rise - as seen in this 1991 KRON TV San Francisco clip with DJ Fuze in audience of Dominique DiPrima produced/hosted hip-hop special (NOTE: this is not "Home Turf" but a one-off special also hosted by Home Turf's ever talented DiPrima). The hip-hop special aired on San Francisco TV station KRON on April 8th 1991. The then 19 year old 2Pac was among the many hip-hop fans and artists at the time who were vocally critical of MC Hammer's crossover success. Sitting beside Shakur was friend/collaborator DJ Fuze of Raw Fusion who along with Money B of DU collaborated on "Violent" on the "2Pacalypse Now" album.
EDIT - check out 4-part response videos to the mean UA-cam comments posted by "fuckin clowns"
"MEAN 2PAC COMMENTS - BAS-One reacts Pt 1" = • MEAN 2PAC COMMENTS - B...
Pt 2 = • #tupactuesdays BAS-One...
Pt 3 = • Mean 2Pac comments - B...
Pt 4 = • Mean 2Pac comments - B...
It doesn't matter how many years and decades go by, somebody always seems to find new music, photos, and video footage of this man. Its absolutely uncanny, how much he managed to do in less than 6 years.
Makes you think it was all scripted and he's alive?
@@woah5985 no
Facts 👍🏽
He was a professional nomad.
Going from place to place to place
letting everyone get a piece of his essence. Pac could adapt very well.
@@5hadœwbånnedbyyouWhat a coincidence because he is really from nomad origin, his biological father is of tuareg descent.
Hammer was a Legend larger than life. Looking back as an adult it's absolutely insane what he accomplished as an entertainer out of Oakland. Now, everyone dying to make up the next tik tok dance. Hammer put his form of hip hop on Cereal boxes, Saturday Morning cartoons, major films, and action figures. Pretty wild man. Respect to Hammer
I feel like that whole late 80s/early 90s era was the era of character entertainers. Hammer, Vanilla Ice, Milli Vanili it seemed like to me your look and your appearance took precedence over the actual music to the masses at least
He fucking sucks. He had a few catchy songs but the lyrics are rudimentary and completely lacking in dexterity. Not a talented MC at all.
@@KDubb-ws9zc I liked and still like mc hammers music. Sure he played a character, but I think even todays hip hop artists do the same. Tekashi six9? Bahd barbi? That Gucci gang dude? They all had hits and are just as untalented as vanilla ice.
💯💯
I have to agree.
Little did Pac know, Hammer would be the one to visit him in hospital before he passed…
This was before hammer and pac get together,, learn bruh
@@helowgaes7544 Yet my original comment still stands because it happened bruh 🤦🏿♂️
Hindsight isn’t twenty twenty
@@truthhurts3305 yeah and edited comment i know
@@helowgaes7544 dummy, the person is saying that hammer isnt a do evil for evil person. hope that helps.
At that time people didn't know how much Hammer was helping his people and community.
I’m guessing you mean not whites
@@hermesmcclintok of course. Do you know any white people that live in East Oakland?
Hammer was my hero as a kid and I'm a dorky white guy. After that I started getting really into Public Enemy in 1992. The PE is 100000x better than NWA.
@@flightofthebumblebee9529PE were blackballed from the industry
@@flightofthebumblebee9529🙌❤
The sad part was Hammer helped a lot of people who turned their back on him when he got down. And this is insult on top of it all. So much hatred even if you succeed in some people's eyes they will always find fault. the never ending disease of the disrespect and hatred
Pac and hammer became friends later so he grew and learned. We make mistakes.
The sad thing too is that Hammer was one of the people who visited Pac in the hospital before he passed…
He got hate for being a sambo.
Pac, too, hammer in deathrow when hammer was broke. That's love.
RIP Colonel Gaddafi.
I was in the US navy with Hammer. Stanley Burrell is a beautiful brother, we were instant friends the moment we met, he loved baseball and so did I, and he loved to dance and so do I.
And here we go
I call bs
@@cdubb-qm8el lol. Nobody in 2022 is trying to get credit by name dropping Hammer.
@@ryanlynch290 riiight....people will always try to get credit
@@foundernodeholder5097 Maybe... I've met several famous people, have known quite a few, and have been good friends with quite a few. I almost married one that was really well known (although not a superstar, but still very well known). It's not a big deal. They're just people.
Now consider the 6 degrees of separation... its not a big deal and this person very well knows Hammer.
The way 2pac says a point and makes everyone’s eyes light, it’s special.
I think it’s when he called him a sambo. Or right before that when he said he likes him because he’s a brother. Which anti white point made all the brothas and sistas eyes light up?
@@hermesmcclintokstfu white boy black people cant be anti white the way y’all fucked us up we can’t be nothing negative towards y’all
@@Ykthevibe35 thanks for the example. Stay strong, my brotha.
This dude was around 19-20, so powerful!
Did the humpty dance around the same time though.
@@justinwarner1183 Because it paid the bills, he was offered a part of the group to be a backup dancer, no one would say no especially if your broke lol
Leave it an interloper to makke assumptions🚩🚩🚩@@illmatic9096
@@justinwarner1183 mayonaise over here thinks that Pac being associated with Humpty is a negative
@@illmatic9096 💯
This guy was always himself. It’s crazy how commanded the room like that. Destined for greatness
I don't agree with you at all. 2pac was an actor. I think 2pac adopted this fake gangsta persona later in life. He wasn't about that. He was an intelligent, outspoken young artist. He adopted the gangsta shit, particularly in his later years with Suge, just to sell records. Sadly, I believe this is what got him killed, considering the incident with the gang member that he jumped in LA. Pac could have just made conscious rap without fucking with Suge, and I'm sure he'd still be alive.
yep he was destined for greatness filled with bullet holes
It was an act, he hasn't always been like that
He grew up being a back up dancer and dancing for the white man. He diluted rap by being a fake gangster & getting people riled up. Pac is fake & black community stuck on his jock & dnt want to admit it. Biggie better
Destined for death. Gotta use your head when making enemies.
This is 1991...he died 5 years later..about 1800 days between this and his demise...in 5 years he built the myth the legend based purely of his charisma and ability to write and lay down powerful raps..he is on murals in Africa the middle east and Brazil etc...he was never a gangsta but his music was so potent he created a rap persona with his "beef" drama that they still speak of today...what an incredible ball of energy he was...talented and youthfully wild..Maranatha
Amen. He did A LOT in a small period of time. Imagine where he would be if still around.
He never said he was a gangsta. He was just a black voice for black music and culture
Thank u finally someone knows, pac never sold drugs or none that bs. He was no thug lol dude did ballet & went to arts 🎭 school. Biggie on the other hand was the real Thug! BIG was really in them streets gettin busy.
@@moneyonfleek305 Pac was militant..He was bonr into the Panthers...revolutionaries ...Fred Hampton..Huey Newton
@@moneyonfleek305 dude PAC was a thug, he sold cracks, when he first got to Cali, he hanged around with the some gangsters, you don't know shit about pac
MC Hammer is a legend!!!!! He did a lot for rap and his people. Love you Hammer!
Pac mad nobody was dancing to his music in 91 lol
Mc hammer ain’t do a dam thing and his music was trash,his legacy is nowhere near Tupac and is not a legend
Sure did a lot for rap, and he helped this community
@Jordan Sharpe what did who do?pac or hammer?hammer hasn’t done anything
@@Magnus1718 yea Tupac did
Even a young 2Pac had to grow and evolved to have more appropriation for MC Hammer. 2Pac was in a different space at the time. 2Pac and MC Hammer are legends. They later became good friends. RIP 2Pac
As I’ve grown and matured I feel like 2 PAC was going to die young no matter what. His attitude towards others (black or other) and quick to fight nature (police, movie directors, gang members, etc) reinforces that. He was an intelligent young man who had a huge chip on his shoulder. I always said if he had lived (that a BIG if btw) he would’ve been an author and activist
I just turned 30 and I’ve started to see thing differently as well. Especially over the past 3 years. Pac was a gift and a curse
He was a poet who just happened to be really good at rapping.
Prime example of why we as black/brown ppl from inner cities need their father , those high emotions be the downfall of so many youth .... where the fathers at * hassan campell voice*
Yep. 2pac was an Art school kid- very intelligent and artistic but he went out of his way to hang out with genuine thugs and gang members with no future or talent.
Pac clearly idealised that life and paid the price. If he'd lived I'm sure he would have distanced himself from all those numb skulls at some point like Snoop and Dre did
Tupac was an erratic loudmouth. Hammer literally had 100 plus people on his payroll and took them around the world with him. Tupac did nothing for the black community but promote violence and misogyny with a few "poetic/heart warming" songs thrown in between.
Little did he know that in 5 years time he would be writing songs for MC Hammer...
If 20-year-old Pac only knew Hammer was all about the shit he was about. Helping the community 100%. He had his style of music and it was dope. Sad how niggas see other niggas as a threat when we all out here just trying to get it our own way.
True. Gotta zoom in on the person instead of the persona.
Years ago I went on a mission trying to watch every one of 2Pac’s videos… And just today I find this one and I’ve never seen it before! I’m amazed how many Tupac videos there are out there!
🤣🤣 2PAC was always full of jokes. He knows how to speak and be controversial. He provokes good conversation. Funny how all those he spoke about end is being in his life, some how or being friends 👑
Tupac really sharp. He came back real quick with that crack comment.
@@BobbyHo2022 manlisssennn
I'm gonna use that line somehow somewhere, shout to Pac💎
1991-"Selling records don't mean nothing "
1995- " I sold 5 million records, biggie is barely touching 2 million" smh
Tupac was a walking contradiction
2pac wasn't against selling records, and he never said he was. He just let it be known that just because you sold a bunch of records doesn't mean you can rap, or that you got the people's respect.
Good point and he kissed hammers ass later. Love Tupac but gotta call out the wack shit he said and did too
@@brown123487 that’s basically every rapper .
@@kobiecamp1134 numbers don’t lie . MC Hammer damn sho changed a lot of peoples views on music who didn’t know anything about the rap culture and that’s a fact.
Because Hammer back then wasn't calling women bitches, talking about ghetto life, or flashing 9s in his videos, he wasn't seen as hard. Hammer was trying to promote peace and positively, something that was needed and still needed during that time.
2Pac so intelligent his charisma level was off the charts
That's the reason he's not with us and he didn't belong in that evil industry.
Yeah he was special
Yo GAE azzz
Coming from a guy who took ballet classes and went to art school 😂
Has nothing to do with his point.
@@cassio2034 Exactly! I don't know what the OP is trying to say, was 2pac doing "ballet" rap? How did he dilute the music?
As history would have it, when Pac got into trouble in death row, who was his go to O-G within the same label? You guessed right: "MC Hammer". Lesson learnt: Opinions matter but sometimes get to know the person behind the music. Both are legends irrespective. RIP Pac!
Correct but PAC was always a punk picking fights with people till he got his bells rang hard
@@FrankKnights Yup Yup... They not only touched him but told his security they got him.
he always hated mainstream Hip Hop culture. his plan was always to evolve out of music industry. he just learned how to move in it as he got older. he even wrote for Hammer & became label mates with him
Look at how mainstream is messing up the music now
@@ivy8252 definitely that’s why I’m always searching high and low for a new underground artist because this water down bull crap that gets all the airplay is trash and any artist with a message or some thing powerful to say in their music is pretty much ostracized.
@@dro2real836 facts
Yo, you still under every Tupac video eating up??? Get off your knees beloved and stop speaking up for that deceased man like you knew him. I know you talk about Tupac more than you talk about ya own pops. A damn shame!!
Tupac was mainstream
I still rock with Hammer to this day.
And that's why he only lived for 25 years.
Tupac was hating.. Many rappers were jealous and hating on MC Hammer... MC Hammer is the first rapper with a diamond certification album and the first rapper to win the "International Album of the Year Award"... MC Hammer brought Hip Hop/Rap music to the mainstream and he became a worldwide international music Icon...🎵🎵🎵
Soulja Boy was the next MC hammer he owned everything on Crank dat
@@Itzz_isabell_ Soulja Boy is not even on MC Hammer's level..... That's an insult to MC Hammer...
@Millennial Smark Many rappers were hating on MC Hammer at that time... Tupac was hating...
@GeTTeM ( i ) GoTTeM ENT Listen to MC Hammer's "Help the Children" song and "Pray" song... MC Hammer definitely had a message and he gave back to his community.. Don't forget that MC Hammer is from the streets of Oakland, California...
@Millennial Smark he was a punk. He gangbeat someone before he got exactly what he deserved. He was a wimpy lil punk.
Hammer seemed like he was no threat, but he was a hardcore gangster in reality.
Ask Redman
@@ghostshipone That story makes me laugh every time! Also, ask 3rd Bass!
And Tupac was the actual non threat. He was a gay thesbian in reality pretending to ply gangsta
@@Baker19911 This comment section has so much truth in it
Yeah i found this out through all of Vlad T.V. interviews. #OG
Very Rare footage of tupac and fuze. Nsb4 thanks billy Jam
It amazes me how young Pac is yet so articulate and intelligent.
People are supposed to be articulate at 20?
These are the thoughts of an immature child. What's articulate about trashing something you yourself would later go on to do? 😂
Fr
Mann Pac been real since tha beginning and been Real til tha very End he was Too Real for tha Industry Miss u my Nigga 💯
miss you? you never knew him
@@DanRustle I didn't say I did now did I miss what he was bringing out to tha world speaking on sum real shit saying wat other muthafuckas can't say out here they be secretive n Fake Tupac was telling it like it is like it or not
Crazy thing about Hammer though, he was with the smoke. A lot of niggas talked shit about him but go look up the RedMan interview about Hammer. His name is MC Hammer and he had a group called 357. If you know you know.
Facts
He still was a wack ass rapper ..who came out dissing other rappers, got mad when they came back at him, and wanted to resort to bs, because he didn't want to compete, then dropped the mc off his name.
That's true MC Hammer isn't to funk with but him and pac became friends after this
@@ederrell6032 Who did he come out dissing?
Mc hammer was still a trash rapper nobody talking about street cred
Personally went to a Hammer show, back in the day. Excellent production. He was really attempting to take his whole hood with him on the ride. The music, choreography, effects … 1st rate. But, if the business behind the scenes, might have been lacking. If it wasn’t for this, he would be still touring at same level today; offering opportunities, for next generation, to do family friendly shows … maybe even duplicating, what he tried to do back then.
Loved the way he was able to spark a controversial debate
You don’t get it…Pac was out there just to say that stuff about hammer…Record company’s put Pac inbthe front row..it’s sad how all black ppl look at Tupac as a god….A Industry plant🤦🏿♂️🤦🏿♂️🤦🏿♂️ RIP pac
@@bryant51w you're weird lol
You're a mushroom of thought, fungi sprouting on my screen @@bryant51w
@@cornellhartfield8731 always the ones with the fancy names😭😵💫🥴
@@cornellhartfield8731 projecting what they never had🎭
Amazing clip, never seen it before
Hammer showed how marketable Hip Hop had the potential to b. He was a pioneer and his music was positive and had universal appeal.
Hammer made music people could dance to and yet he was more gangster than the so called gangster rappers.
He controlled the conversation. Be nice if he were around to see what’s going on and speak up about it
He spoke about it from the grave on a song callD "niqqas done CHANGED "😂🤣😂on Richie richs album, 2pac wasn't LYING because hiphop/NIQQAS definitely have changed and it's really really sad 😔💔
I'm convinced 2pac lived the equivalence of 5 lifetimes despite dying at the age of 25. When I listen to 'So Many Tears' its scary how much wisdom and life experience he had already accumulated that most people don't reach until they are in their 50s.
So true
And it feels like in the digital age we are less inclined to gain experience to create our own wisdom. 10 years of UA-cam could teach you a lot but gotta get out there and use that knowledge.
Me too.
Amazing life. Wish he didn’t die.
no it's just that he ran his mouth for attention so much it just seems that way
he was no thug. Only thug he ever had in him was the one that raped him in prison. Known fact. He was a good go go dancer for digital underground though. Pure studio gangsta
After this 2pac’s first and second albums were 2pacalypse and Stricty For My N.I.G.G.A.Z. ..some revolutionary street rap aimed at speaking out against the system and the corrupt cops and speaking up for the brothas and the sisters from the gutter.
Ironically he would go on to be one of the highest selling rappers in hip hop history in life and in death for speaking his mind and making relatable music aswell as ghostwriting for Hammer.
He's wearing a 2Pacalypse hat.
@@Mahdi-dn8jm yep ..promo…2pacalypse was released towards the end of that year.
Imagine jewels being hand to an innocent child💎💎💎
@@tha_jet_king3537 & his insightful reflective poetry inspired Nas & Jay to open up on records🎭just without the same impact
Just a rapper though, y'all.
"The Pot Calling the Kettle Black"? Coming from someone who was attending fine arts classes and studying acting! Oh your first intro into hip hop as a background dancer for Shock G Digital Underground. Pointing your finger has 3 pointing back at yourself & one (thumb) skyward to our Creator who knows what's real!
He is not rapping about fine arts school. It is not about where you come from it is how you present the genre & the art.
Still there was funky fun rap b4 there was gangsta rap (but the funky rap was talking about real issues)
@@Shay45
My comment was about 2PAC Schooling background!
If you’re replying to me & read it not into it your way!
Empty hammer said a lot more than just you can't touch this on his albums he spoke against the violence the gang balance police violence, Helping the children and yes he made dance hits but it was also a tribute to what he loves to do and James Brown and the rest of the grapes even MJ, Most of all he was making positive music or at least trying to be a positive influence
The audience didnt realise they were in the presence of a true legend and a cultural icon whos name would be etched in yhe stars of Hollywood, would be inducted in musicians royalty and whos name will live forever!
Pac was 20 years old in this clip. Let that sink in.
Wow
Sink in what? 15 or 20 so what?The title of this link is 2Cap disses Mc Hammer... And that’s what he did... Why all the sugar coating?
But I BET MY LAST DOLLAR THAT 2Cap couldn’t see Mc Hammer with the Hands 👊🏾 👊🏾
@@IJones-yz6qm it's not that he dissed him. It's *how* he dissed him and what he said..
He sounded like he was reciting a poem sometimes when he was excited. My favorite rapper ever. Wonder what else he may have done.
Shout out to Hammer he's still alive.
2Pac was a real G. Only the good die young! If they took you out, that means you did it RIGHT!
Well said Josh 👍
No he wasn't MC Hammer was doing his thing
Man Pac was so charismatic. 2 weeks away from the 27th year anniversary of his death and he’s as relevant as he ever was.
Crazy how deep 2Pac analyzed life and the bigger picture at an early age. He was probably 19 or 20 in this video. You don't see that much from rappers anymore.
he didn't say anything deep here tho
He was 17-18 in this video
@@JMacTheFanatic yes he did. "Stepin Fetchit" was one of the richest black men before any other black man by being what Tupac said "Hammer" was being. Basically the same type of monetary gain.
@@ANGELGOESrandom the description literally says he was 19😂
Pac was an idiot
He knew he was destined for greatness
I'm 42, bumped alot of Pac music growing up. But, come on now.. let's not think everything he said is either gospel or right smh
None of us is right about everything we say or do, but Pac was young…full of vigor, life, and opinions. He was a very engaging person. I’m pretty sure he changed his mind about Hammer once he met him years later.
PAC Was The Push Back He Never Intended To Live Long He’s In A Better Place Then Most Of Us Alive Today
True we still living in this crazy ass world trying to figure are life out
You nailed it he was just a man not a prophet or god as some like to say He just seems young in this clip Hammer was waay ahead of his time and more gangster/street than the rappers that were rapping about it
Thank you!!!! Glad someone finally said it!!!
Tupac the Hustler in full effect. He's donning a '2pacalypse' hat to promote his debut album '2pacalypse Now' released later that year on 12 November 1991. He also filmed 'Juice' that year and was most likely getting a last feel of anonymity here knowing full well his fame would skyrocket shortly thereafter.
2pac just randomly sitting in the audience lol That lady wasn't ready 😂 dude spoke facts tho and always stood up for what he believed in #greatestrapperdeadoralive
You can tell Pac had good sense of humor 😂
They big mad in the comments writing "think" pieces 😭
2Pac was one of the realest that ever lived! R.I.P. King Pac🙏🏼
That was cold. Dam pac Oakland loved you.
Pack was lost man smh
He was 20 in this clip and hammer and Pac became good friends
Come on homie this an old clip from over 30 years ago hammer and pac been cool for years after this lil issue y’all acting pac said this yesterday like literally yesterday lol
More examples of how pac couldn't stop runnin his mouth
I wouldn't say he "dissed" hammer, he kept it Real! 💯 as usual if you know 2pac.
That was a diss u🤡
If BIG would hv said that about 2pac y'all would be having a fit
@@ultramag0343 talking about yourself 👏🏾
@@rolandbaron5813 How'd 2pac balls taste ??
Says the guy doing ballet!
I guaranteed MC Hammer has never seen that video. Its no way, you can be friends with someone dissing you on national TV like that.
Hammer approached Pac about this that very same year. After that confrontation, the two became friends. Pac had zero idea about how deep Hammer was in the streets
@@TonyVega123 That’s because PAC had a habit of running his mouth too much.
@@itrollthetrolls28 Got him into a lot of fights. Odd behavior for someone who was clearly quite intelligent
@@itrollthetrolls28 2Pac always ran his mouth which is why he got himself into so much trouble
@@itrollthetrolls28 All respect to pac but it was probably the reason he died
This the one of the times pac was talking s#%t. He even said in an interview I said alot of wrong stuff I wish I could take back
NOW,that statement shows-maturity,wisdom and GROWTH.I admire Pac for saying that.
"that's not dancing, he's got a sandcrab in his pants!" - Bill Hicks on Hammer 😂😂
😂😂
Crazy how divided we were back then! Glad PAC and Hammer peaced it out in the end. Both to me are great!!!
Back then? 😂
Uhm there's even more division in today's society
@@joeyvillarreal761 Didn’t say we weren’t divided now! That is obvious! Just pointing out what was in the video then!
@@kevinblack7125 Again didn’t say anything about now! The video was about the past and commented about the past 🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️Division now is clearly obvious.
Back then? They programmed us to be like this bro Willie lynch letter and the book how to make a bigger slave talks about just that.
Facts!! It wasn't a diss. Mc Hammer pave tha way for artists to get in certain venues globally when the industry was scared and didn't understand Rap. If you said you wasn't a fan, you a lie. Not the music but the business, you have to respect. We needed safe rappers to open the door and let Pac in.
I wish Pac wouldn't have called Hammer a Sambo.. That was a bit too much.
@@tatestar6143 I agree 💯 I cringed a little
💯💯💯👍👍
But it was a diss and jealousy
@@truthhurtz8517 Pac was a kid. He didn't speak the gospel. He was completely wrong calling Hammer a Sambo. I would be willing to bet that an adult Pac would disagree with what he said as a teenager. It's really sad the lack of discernment people have to believe that young man would've thought the same way once he gained more life experience. That's why Mike Tyson is one of the realist to me.
@@tatestar6143 I agree it was a diss bro.. MC Hammer did pave the way and open doors for other rappers...
People can try to twist it as "he's just keeping it real" or "he's just speaking his mind", all they want, Pac was straight up HATING on Hammer here, period. He was jealous of his success, you can hear it in how he's talking. Not only was he being a hater, he called the man a Sambo, which is pure disrespect, he tried to sugarcoat it and say he was still down with Hammer because he was a black man making money, but nah. He called Hammer a "sellout" yet Hammer was always helping black people in the hood by giving them jobs, money, food, etc. Hammer was a real one, just because he danced and didn't make gangsta rap doesn't mean he was some sort of sellout or "sambo".
People want to act like everything Pac said or did was right and justified, like he was infallible and could never do any wrong, and that's BS man, Pac was immature and hotheaded and said and did a lot of BS and people still idolize him for it and justify it. Stop putting the man on a pedestal like he was God or something.
Yep the best thing about hammer was that he put alot of working class people on deck to make money. Plus people didn't really look in to hammer... that dude was way more street than pac was.
I think he’s making an insightful comment about society at that time, very passionately, very Tupacly. He was an intellectual above all else, not to mention a brilliant lyricist and would-be good-to-great movie actor… all in short time.
Man, I love Pac. Got his name tattooed on my arm when I was 16 (I'm 41 now). I went into this clip thinking, "Damn. I have a feeling I'm about to dislike what Pac is saying here. How could he hate on Hammer?!"
And yet again this young man blew my mind. He gave Hammer his props but definitely put across an interesting point.
Pac was levels deep, man. Levels. He was 20 here FFS.
Lmao! You got Nother man's name inked on your body? Lmao! Kind of stupid.
Class of ‘99 my dude
@@theunexpected249 and it's "real men", not "real man", thicko. Get an education. 🤡
"... he's playing that sambo role, and the only reason people are buying his records is becuase he's no threat, and everybody wanna see sambo dance!" tupac was the realest!
Wasn't 2oac a dancer for DU 🤔
@@ultramag0343 and...
@@justinfuriated and a Ballerina
Says Pac, the digital underground back up dancer, who was gyrating his hips in underpants.
@@777tillinfinity he did what he needed to do, once he got in position, he did what he wanted to do
Host - “who’s your favorite rapper?”
Me - that guy sittin in the front row.
BRUH HOW IS IT ALWAYS SOME UNSEEN SHIT OF PAC COMING OUT 30+ YEARS LATER (btw that crack analogy was DOPE) 🤣
some rapper is gonna sample that analogy and put it on a song.
People don’t understand that MC Hammer was like the Soulja boy of the 90s and made tons of mistakes but was a huge influence on black and white audiences and gangsta rappers and black unity type rappers hated him for it. He ultimately did sellout when he gave into being part of the gangsta image of the mid 90s as did PAC. It was culturally acceptable to diss hammer for branching out
In my opinion, pumps n a bump was probably his best jam
@@yell0wberry "Pump It Up" and "Let's Get It Started"....
That's a lie
PAC was a real one🙏
2Pac will always be 2Pac!!! The guy is very special to a lot of ppl.
He was so young 😎
But even at a young age he still had wisdom 😁
There was no wisdom in what he said
@@PhoenixRising82672 your just to blind to see it grow up and then we'll talk kid
Goodbye 👋
Pac said they want to se Sambo dance but he kept escalating the east coast west coast beef and kept send out co tradicting messages into the world by being conscious and chaotic at the same time.
You're definitely mission in action 🤣
Your brain is missing in action
Pac had a problem with 2 individuals…it’s the media that escalated it into a east vs west thing
@@just2fresh814 not really ur just too much of a fanatic and think god is gonna punish u for speaking against ur idol.. That was some hating ass slick sides shit to say y’all just too much of “2pack groupies” to admit it 😂
@@tha_jet_king3537 I partially disagree because him and the media blew it up. Pac was a wise dude, too wise to help the media blow it up which tells me he blew it up on purpose
never fails....i love seeing rare 2pac footage, also despite what hes saying about mc hammer...theres some truth, but i got love for hammer and pac, i did all of mc hammer dances when i was kid, as i was a teen i gravitated to 2pac, i had all of their cassette tapes, they both are legends in their own right. RIP 2PAC.
HOWEVER low key pac was kinda hatin, bc obviously mc hammer wasnt his fav, and saw it as an opportunity to roast him instead of showing love to whomever his fav rapper/son was. I know yall gone drag me, but it is what it was. peace and love, hip hop 4ever
2Pac is dead. MC Hammer is still alive and living the good life. Who won in the end?
You are commenting on a video about Tupac that means Tupac won because he will be remembered forever
2pac was way ahead of his time
This was bad thinking. Would change his opinion today. He was a dancer himself.
How?
@@aaronflowers8881 “there’s a God if you need a reason”
WOW! i never saw this clip!!
I understand his point, but of course I have to disagree. I’m glad that he was able to mend fences with a hammer later on in his life.
Nobody cares what you think
Facts
Is that a hammer pun
Why does it matter if you know who squashed it so and so
Hopefully Hammer called him out on his hypocrisy, for being a dancer, before the gangsta rap lol
It probably took him to see hammer was dancing but was with some real gangstas made him think different bout hammer
2Pac was a deep brother at a young age!
That response was legendary 👏🏾
Yet it made zero sense, Tupac just being a jealous hater. That's why he's no more
@@pinebarrenpatriot8289 how “did it not make sense “ ?
This is interesting! Pac’s career started as backup dancer in a comedic hip hop group, and Hammer was a true G and nobody even knew it
Facts
Its the same thing with Metal. If your not playing as fast or as heavy as possible your considered a sell out.
Just let people make music and quit worrying about what others are doing.
There was a lot of ignorance in this interview, in spite of how much I liked some of 2Pac's music. The real "Sambos" were the people (Pac included), who were writing lyrics in songs about killing and committing violent acts against other Black men. Rappers who constantly wrote misogynistic lyrics and beat up and sexually abused women. To me there's no bigger sellout than clowns like that. Anybody clapping for what he claimed was real, was basically showing their ignorance. Near the end of his life he wrote some absolute garbage music and was a grown man playing at being a gang-banger, caught in the middle of an east coast/west coast beef, which was beyond ignorant. Hammer probably gave more brothers work than any of these materialistic rappers ever did. Too many of us got caught up in the nonsense of what these clowns were saying out of jealousy, only to see many of them become actors and endorsers later in life (e.g...Ice Cube, Ice-T, etc.).
Hammer was killing all of them and he gave the best show ever!!!!!!!
why am I only seeing this now?? This is such a gem.
Wow we really lost a real one. Tupac was so wise for his age (19 at this time) and definitely was destined for greatness! He stood out even out of the Digital Underground. He put this lady in her place too about that 10 Mill sold! That doesn’t always mean you’re great!
He wasn't close to being wise at 19. This hating was the opposite of wise and typically of someone young.
How did he put that lady in her place ??? By making a truly DUMB remark ??? You're in the music business to sell records,saying selling 10 million records is NOTHING is pure jealousy and STUPID.
but then 5 years later he was bragging about selling more than biggie and badboy records. he was a walking contradiction!
@@deepstate3358 Life is a paradox and so are we. 💯
He didn't put that lady (Dominique DiPrima) "in her place" at all. She was addressing why rappers who constantly rap about bitches, hoez, and fucking are applauded by young people and rappers like Hammer were being bashed. Several young people that day in the audience expressed preferences for 2 Live Crew and Too Short and she was questioning why rappers who use bitch and hoe regularly, (which Pac would soon become) were being embraced while Hammer was being criticized. This is just one snippet of the show. I watched the whole thing when it first aired more than 30 years ago. She had a point, especially since hip hop would soon be saturated with rappers talking about hoez, bitches, guns, and drugs. It seems that's all rappers want to talk about now and it started around that time.
Pac was destined for greatness.....any video clips of him impact knowledge n influence
Pac always shared Information
I said wow maybe 15 times in a row... In less than 1 minute this man summed up what no rapper in hip hop could explain which is why did SO MANY PEOPLE HATE MC Hammer!! His voice, facial expression, passion, conviction, his CHARISMA... man Pac was one in a TRILLION and till this day can't be touched! (No pun intended)
Hate him for what reason So we're not allowed to have fun
Tupac would back down had Hammer escalated this into a full blown beef.
Hammer was more of a thug than he was. Pac was not ready for that.
He was so young right there and so ahead of his time. I hate that he got his life taken so soon
It's crazy how clear and pronounced his voice is. When I hear rappers speak now I honestly find it hard to understand what they're saying
And you wanted to be in a thug life and look where it got you six feet under
he was playing a role, and selling it to the youth.
@@WhatisReal11 I dont think he was playing a role, think he just got grouped up with bad apples. Ive had friends who i grew up with that were total nerds, in middle school and high school, loved to play games, collect pokemon cards ect... when we got out of high school, he started hanging out with wannabe gangsters and ended up selling drugs and doing them, got this chick pregnant, started dressing like a gangster, big shirts, baggy pants, ton of chains, complete 180 in terms of character. You'd be surprised how influential the people you hang with can be.
The character is dead. He's not.
@@RurouniKenshinShinta no. He Definitely put on a fake Persona & fucked up the youth. & people wanna say he was Great. Lmao. Foh.
And look at you! A clown talkin ish on social media. Ya goof b*+€#
Pac was wrong for this, Hammer could dance next level...and was one of the only bringing absolute power to his dance style
You didn't listen
The lack of self awareness when he was dancing around for the.mam with digital underground
Says Pac, the digital underground back up dancer, who was gyrating his hips in underpants.
Not to mention his hardcore ballet skillz 🩰
@@xmunki1389 Yet you never seen him dance ballet
@@pcangeldust Well, I saw the photo... Also, he said it himself lol
In this clip the teenaged version of PAC looks likes my oldest NEPHEW not me.
2pac lived his life backwards. So many people trying to escape poverty, and gangs, when they do, move their families out of their conditions to somewhere safer for their children and generations to come. Tupac reverted into gang lifestyle and paid with his life for it.
Pac always shine when speak .