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Where does Eminem go from here?

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Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby boonim » Nov 25th, '14, 19:50

Thought I would writeup a longish post since I've been thinking about this recently after reading a lot of criticism abou Em. For example:

http://grantland.com/hollywood-prospectus/shady-xv-eminem-in-2014/

This Grantland article is a rather long article about Eminem. It's a more eloquent way of criticizing Eminem for the misogyny in his lyrics. In short, the article says that Eminem was an angry, edgy, funny guy when he had these lyrics 15 years ago. But right now, in the current world when there has been a recognition of and discussion about violence against women, he seems "clueless" for still saying the same kind of things. There are more worthy things, people (men and women) against whom he could direct his anger, but he chooses to do it against "innocent victims".

While I don't agree much with the premise of the article which seems to be that art should be "current" and perhaps "socially conscious", I think the criticism about Eminem being out of touch with the current day is something interesting to discuss. Also, this comment from Elision from another thread on rappers who have a large body of work:

they've just done so much on a mic that they have to resort to very nontraditional styles if they want to continue to remain original. but unfortunately straying too far from the norm isn't appreciated by the majority of listeners.


I have noticed criticism about Em's choice of subject matter by fans and non-fans alike -- he can't talk about his own life (and it seems he doesn't want to), he can't be generic because the impact of the music is lessened, he can't be Shady because it's no longer edgy/funny. New fans cannot fully appreciate his music without knowing his older stuff. What he does have is an awesome amount of skill - with flows, wordplay, delivery. And the willingness to endlessly experiment.

So, if Eminem has to prolong his run for a few more years, he needs to gain newer, younger fans while still retaining older fans (who as I said have a bunch criticisms as well). How can he do that (if he can/wants to do that)?
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby csw621 » Nov 25th, '14, 20:45

Eminem can do anything.
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby Devil'sAdvocate » Nov 25th, '14, 21:01

Rap and Fucking Rap! the guy can fucking Rap so amazingly at this moment i can't get fucking enough.
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby Zhadeix » Nov 25th, '14, 22:01

I appreciate what you've written, but let me just point out a few things:
"New fans cannot fully appreciate his music without knowing his older stuff. "
Now this isn't true, both you and I know it. There are plenty of people who can enjoy his new music without going through his old albums. Just look at the wave of fans who came with Relapse/Recovery and MMLP2.
I can actually enjoy his new stuff a lot without comparing it to SSLP/MMLP or TES.

"he can't talk about his own life (and it seems he doesn't want to)"
I beg the difference. He's been really open about his private life, even back on the first 3 albums. Songs like "Rock Bottom, Kim (there was a grain of truth in there), Cleanin' Out My Closet, Sing For The Moment, Toy Soldiers, Deja Vu, Beautiful, Not Afraid, etc. So I really disagree with you on that point.


"he can't be Shady because it's no longer edgy/funny."
Now this is the biggest lie in the whole post.
Fans are dying to see Em lash out again and put Shady back on. He occasionally does, on songs like "Brainless, So Much Better, Wicked Ways, Evil Twin, Calm Down, Vegas, Right For Me, Tewrk Dat Pop Dat, to name a few, and when he does the fans love it. Him being Shady is still fun/edgy, I mean look at all the controversy Shady XV has gotten because of some lines he said. Listen to Shady XV (the song), Vegas, Right for me and tell me that he's still not edgy or fun. I say he's still the same as he was back in the day.
"Still Shady inside, hair every bit is dyed".

I hope I've gotten my point across.
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby Snakebeast » Nov 26th, '14, 00:47

With Shady XV, Em somehow conjured up a FUCKLOAD more controversy than he did with MMLP2. He could make an entire album just feeding off that (though I hope he doesn't, not entirely anyways). There's a lot of directions he could go.
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby boonim » Nov 26th, '14, 01:18

Zhadeix wrote:I appreciate what you've written, but let me just point out a few things:
"New fans cannot fully appreciate his music without knowing his older stuff. "
Now this isn't true, both you and I know it. There are plenty of people who can enjoy his new music without going through his old albums. Just look at the wave of fans who came with Relapse/Recovery and MMLP2.
I can actually enjoy his new stuff a lot without comparing it to SSLP/MMLP or TES.

The key point is "fully". If you haven't gone through Em's older stuff, it is not possible to get the inside jokes ("Fack" joke, nasally voice in just SHADYXV, and MMLP2 is full of these references).


"he can't talk about his own life (and it seems he doesn't want to)"
I beg the difference. He's been really open about his private life, even back on the first 3 albums. Songs like "Rock Bottom, Kim (there was a grain of truth in there), Cleanin' Out My Closet, Sing For The Moment, Toy Soldiers, Deja Vu, Beautiful, Not Afraid, etc. So I really disagree with you on that point.

I am referring to the criticism he will get if he continues to do this: "nothing new, it's boring, how many time will he make a song about being bullied, etc."


"he can't be Shady because it's no longer edgy/funny."
Now this is the biggest lie in the whole post.
Fans are dying to see Em lash out again and put Shady back on. He occasionally does, on songs like "Brainless, So Much Better, Wicked Ways, Evil Twin, Calm Down, Vegas, Right For Me, Tewrk Dat Pop Dat, to name a few, and when he does the fans love it. Him being Shady is still fun/edgy, I mean look at all the controversy Shady XV has gotten because of some lines he said. Listen to Shady XV (the song), Vegas, Right for me and tell me that he's still not edgy or fun. I say he's still the same as he was back in the day.
"Still Shady inside, hair every bit is dyed".

Again, I'm referring to the criticism, especially in the article I quoted that it is no longer edgy or funny.

While what he is doing is great for us fans, is he going to gain newer, younger fans with this.
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby boonim » Nov 26th, '14, 01:22

Aone10 wrote:
Snakebeast wrote:With Shady XV, Em somehow conjured up a FUCKLOAD more controversy than he did with MMLP2. He could make an entire album just feeding off that (though I hope he doesn't, not entirely anyways). There's a lot of directions he could go.


In this regard, Shady XV should've been MMLP2. There are certainly a few songs from each album that would blend perfectly together. :coffee:

SHADYXV did generate a lot of controversy, but do you think it is gaining him new fans?
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby Snakebeast » Nov 26th, '14, 01:35

Aone10 wrote:
Snakebeast wrote:With Shady XV, Em somehow conjured up a FUCKLOAD more controversy than he did with MMLP2. He could make an entire album just feeding off that (though I hope he doesn't, not entirely anyways). There's a lot of directions he could go.


In this regard, Shady XV should've been MMLP2. There are certainly a few songs from each album that would blend perfectly together. :coffee:

While I still am not a huge fan of the hook, Die Alone would've made a fantastic substitute for the abomination that was and still is Stronger Than I Was. Fine Line could've fit anywhere in there, along with Right For Me. Guts Over Fear and the weird (but great) production is the only song I have problems placing anywhere.
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby Blackquill » Nov 26th, '14, 01:39

False problem imo. Recovery gave Eminem a new influx of fans at the time. Why is it wrong for an artist to cater primarily to their existing fanbase especially when it remains massive even after taking a cut? The whole "boring, nothing new" angle isn't valid criticism, it comes from an obsession with reinventing the wheel and with an alleged need to redefine everything with each release. You know there is something fundamentally wrong when such a thing becomes an expectation rather than something that is welcome and applauded after it actually happens.
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby EminemInsider » Nov 26th, '14, 01:42

Oops, how'd I miss that it was already posted?

Anyway, here's my response to this article:


What if maturity is a myth? It’s a question that plagues a lot of people as they get older and find that, while they may change physically, their brains feel exactly the same. The accepted narrative is that maturity involves growing wiser through experience. But what if experience rewards you for being an immature asshole?


Subtext: Maturity means being a leftist/feminist/social justice warrior. Forget everything else, how does this affect the women and the gayz? Context? Wut's dat?

When Eminem came onto the scene 15 years ago, he constantly rapped about killing his wife and taking their infant daughter.


By "constantly," the author means, "twice," I guess. 97 Bonnie and Clyde and Kim, which are both part of the same long story. Remember, it is not important to be informed or accurate when you have an agenda to push.

Now that daughter has grown up and graduated from high school, and Eminem is drawing headlines for a freestyle in which he raps about a desire to punch Lana Del Rey in the face “like Ray Rice.” That line is egregious enough by itself, but when you look at the lyrics to Em’s “Shady Cxvpher” — a promotion for his label’s new compilation, Shady XV — in context, well, it’s even worse: “But I may fight for gay rights especially if they d—. It’s more of a knockout than Janay Rice. Play nice? Bitch I’ll punch Lana Del Rey right in the face twice, like Ray Rice in broad daylight in the plain sight of the elevator surveillance till her head banged on the railing, then celebrate with the Ravens.” After the tiny blowback to the Lana lyric, Eminem released another single called “Vegas,” in which he jokes about raping Iggy Azalea, which puts me in the unfortunate position of siding with Iggy Azalea, who tweeted, “im bored of the old men threatening young women as entertainment trend and much more interested in the young women getting $ trend. zzzz"


This line is only terrible for the author because it involves a woman.

This was not a freestyle, it was a cypher. The context of a cypher is similar to that of a stand up comedian's HBO special. Everything said in the show is a joke or something relating to a joke. People who actually understand rap/hip hop know going into a cypher that everything said is purely for entertainment and not to be taken seriously. Every single thing you hear will either be hyperbole or sarcasm. They will either talk about how they are so dope at rapping that they can catch lightning with their bare hands and blow up Mars by blinking, or that they will slit your throat with a thread of floss.

The author, like nearly all of them, is either completely unaware of this context, or chooses to ignore it because it would interfere with her ridiculous agenda.

Eminem has always had a habit of singling out young women to beef with, unprovoked except by their existence. One of his earliest feuds was with Christina Aguilera, after she said that he was “cute” but that women needed to watch out for abusive men. Shady responded by rapping that he was going to “grab [Aguilera] by the hair and drag her across the Sahara.” His violently misogynistic and anti-gay lyrics traditionally have been brushed off for a number of reasons: It’s satire, meant to be sickly funny, so outrageously disturbing that it’s obviously ridiculous and absurd. Slim Shady is a totally fictional character Eminem uses to exorcise his darkest impulses, which all humans have. He doesn’t actually do any of the things he talks about, he just raps about them. Or: It’s horrorcore, you stupid bitch. Feeling offended is a choice.


Waaah, stop accusing me of whining.

Remember, if someone says or does anything bad to a woman...if something bad involves a woman at all...it is "misogyny." After all, how could anyone say or do anything bad to a woman? Women can not deserve it, because they are women. They're not men.

Does anyone see any self-interest at work here?

But the excuse made most often was that Eminem’s rants reflected the authentic rage of an angry young man. His lyrics are tied to the carefree hate speech of teenagers who perceive no consequences to their actions because there honestly might not be any yet. In many ways, Eminem’s relevance feels to me like a nostalgia act. For some, perhaps, it’s a longing for a time when a rapper could describe a fantasy of murdering his wife and call it art. My own nostalgia for Eminem is indivisible from my nostalgia for being a teenager, when I heard his music everywhere. I imagine this is true for a lot of people. When “Drug Ballad” or “Superman” come on L.A.’s classic rap station KDAY, I always let them play through and I float into the past, like Tony Soprano listening to Journey.


Ah..."relevance." No, Eminem's "relevance" is that he's one of the greatest lyricists in the history of our species. He is the best in the world at his art, and some people kind of appreciate that.

Also note the moronic subtext in, "when a rapper could describe a fantasy of murdering his wife and call it art." So according to the author, if it's violent or upsetting, it can not be art. Violent films are automatically bad, too, right? As well as violent books, and violent paintings.

"If I don't 'agree' with it, that makes it bad, and not art!"

Rap, like almost all popular music, is a youth culture. And youth is the excuse traditionally invoked for artists whose lyrics transgress the boundaries of taste. Tyler, The Creator receives the same kinds of complaints about his lyrical content that Eminem used to get, and as a 23-year-old he gets Eminem’s old excuse. He’s young and angry and he loves saying shit to get himself attention, even negative attention, because that stokes the idea that he’s controversial. But there is the expectation that the 23-year-old Tyler will change and become less hateful as he grows up. The reality is that 42-year-old Eminem still desires to be seen as controversial and sounds as hateful as ever.


The author, either oblivious to the context or ignoring it altogether, mistakes "humor" for "hatred." No, Eminem's "hatred" can be heard on such actual diss tracks as "I Remember," "Quitter," and "Girls." Eminem doesn't have a hateful thought in his body pertaining to the recent things this author is offended by: he does not give a flying fuck about Iggy Azalea or Lana Del Rey, he just needed a long-A word to go with the Ray Rice scheme, which he wanted to reference since he's a big football fan and thought it would be entertaining. He has also taken note of Iggy Azalea's rise to fame as a "femcee" and thought it would be fun to joke about raping her while doing an impression of Nicki Minaj's rapping style. After he got done writing these lyrics, he started up another game of Donkey Kong while waiting for his microwaved waffles to cool. That's Eminem; he's a blue collar soul who laughs at the fact that he lives in a Kmart mansion. His biggest passion is rapping.

Expecting Eminem to stop rapping about abusing women since he has a daughter is stupid. The culture tends to reward someone for a particular set of behaviors, and then tells them they are not allowed to do those things past a certain age. It’s no wonder people don’t know when to stop. Look, I have sympathy for Eminem. It’s hard, nearly impossible, to age as a rapper. Seeing Jay Z struggle to accept the fact that he’s not 22 anymore is painful to watch, let alone listen to. Late conversions to conscious rap are rarely successful, and 37-year-old Kanye West has made brilliant albums analyzing his trajectory through the reverse arc. Did we really think that Hailie growing up and becoming a human being instead of a symbolic baby would force Eminem to think about how female listeners might take his constant assertions of violent male dominance? Who said he had to change? Why did we expect that he would?


Eminem doesn't care about your feminist agenda, nor does he care about "relevance" or "aging" or any of these ridiculous hipster-leftist mainstream ideals. The only reward he wants out of rap is to be respected by hip hop heads, which he is. He wants to raise the bar for rhyme schemes and flows higher than it's ever been before. He wants that black radio host who goes, "yo, we got Eminem in da studio wif us, ya'll can bump his new mixtape by blah blah blah" to talk about how his tracks are "fire" and for all other rappers in the industry to exclaim how "dope" he is. That's his goal. He lives in a different subculture from you...one you can't understand, but pretend to try to because of the desire for leftists to pretend they respect the urban black culture in the United States as "equals." "Let me break down this rap album and talk about what I liked and didn't like about it, using as much pretentious verbiage as possible to pretend I respect their intelligence, when in actuality I just hear a lot of Ebonics in an urban dialect and think they're a bunch of moronic gorillas."

In other words, "let's see what the ni---rs are up to."

Since Eminem is white, however, things get tweaked in various ways. You can actually understand what he says, and you just don't like it. You expect better out of him, because he's more articulate.

One of the reasons the punching-in-the-face stuff is so egregious, I think, and one of the reasons Eminem seems so not provocative but rather lazy, is that maybe, just maybe, there’s been some progress in the world. There has been an extended public conversation about sexual violence and assault, shining light in places that have always been dark, among celebrities and civilians alike, in elevators and frats and bedrooms. In the midst of all of this, Eminem comes off as, at best, a clueless kid. I’m sure he feels like the same angry boy from Detroit he has always been, but it’s as if he’s been frozen in amber for the last decade while the world has changed around him. In a sense, he has been; drug addiction immobilized him for almost five years. While time passed, he went from rap’s puckish jester to the out-of-touch dad.


Modern leftism: We aren't enlightened until the world holds my views.

In a 2009 post-rehab comeback profile in Complex, after Marshall Mathers proudly displays his library of porn DVDs, the interviewer informs Mathers that everyone now watches porn online for free, a development that Em somehow missed during his drug-haze years. An astonished Eminem insists that they pause the interview so the interviewer can show him exactly how to watch porn on his laptop. It was a shocking moment of a rather different sort, demonstrating Em’s sort of Encino Man status since essentially disappearing because of a very serious pill addiction. He name-drops Slipknot and Kid Rock in “Vegas,” like the 2000s never ended. His awareness of the Internet seems dated, too.


Uh oh...porn objectifiez women. NOOOOoooo.

Eminem doesn't use the internet because he doesn't want to read what people say about him, including people like you.

Eminem also has a dry sense of humor that apparently sails over your head.

Eminem’s descent into pill addiction is a depressing fulfillment of the Elvis comparison that he’d always played with. While Elvis’s drug problems led to his death at 42, Eminem’s current age, Mathers was able to pull back from the brink of a drug problem that involved consuming between 40 and 60 Valiums a day. A 2007 methadone overdose that almost killed him got him to go to rehab, and an early checkout led to a series of relapses before he got sober for good in 2008. His album cycle about his addiction and relapse allowed him to explore and discuss the darkest period in his life and his fears that he had turned into his addict mother. But what this represented wasn’t really maturation. The levity that had always characterized his work was gone, but in its place was something else: Rather than the toxic ambition of a young man determined to get his, he has the poisoned, defensive entitlement of a man who feels like he has earned his keep and is terrified that someone is going to take it away from him.


There's nothing depressing about it; Eminem survived when he was two hours away from death, got clean, and came back with a renewed energy to take rap to places it hasn't been before. This is an uplifting story.

I fail to see where Eminem is defensive or terrified. Who's the one writing the long article? Eminem will not read your article, and if someone informed him that someone online wrote an article, he would tell this person to bring it to him when he's taking a dump so he'd have something to wipe his ass with. Eminem does not do interviews complaining about hipsters whining about his lyrics. Once again, the only opinions that matter to Eminem as far as his music is concerned are those of hip hop heads (and perhaps his daughters, since he doesn't want to embarrass them too much).


Eminem had always been angry, but he had also been funny, and because he was funny, we’d forgiven him time and again for making jokes whose punch lines always involved violence against women and gay people. When Eminem first came onto the scene, he was remarkable for his dexterity and virtuosity and his exceptionalism as the first white solo rap star to be anointed as truly great. As he celebrates 15 years of Shady Records with the release of the compilation Shady XV, which includes the demo version of notable career peak “Lose Yourself,” Eminem is asking us to take stock of his career. And when we do, it feels willfully ignorant to ignore that Eminem is still largely taking on women and gay people as the victims of his fictional crimes. What is offensive is not only the violent, specific lyrics and the revenge fantasies about doling out humiliations; it’s that he attacks people who have done nothing to provoke it. How can someone so intelligent also be so stupid? Or is he just a forever-troll?


women and gays and women and gays and women and gays and women and gays

Dexterity and virtuosity...somebody is trying to mask the fact that she doesn't know a thing about rap technique with pretentious terms that she thinks can just be universally applied to all forms of music. These are empty, hollow words..."reviewer" words, which Amadeo has made fun of before.

Perhaps she is unaware of this, but what offends her does not necessarily offend everyone else, and that includes many other women and gay people. Why does she consider herself to be the ultimate authority on what is and is not offensive? Personally, I'm offended by this article. This means she must stop writing this type of article, right?

Rap is not only still a youth culture, it’s still a predominantly male culture. It feeds off of the need some men have to assert their dominance and masculinity by targeting vulnerable people. The very existence of women is a threat. Anyone who challenges traditional conventions of sexuality is a threat. Poverty is emasculating, and Eminem’s obsession with asserting his masculinity feels like a possible reaction to his upbringing in a run-down section of Detroit. Bullied in school, he honed his verbal put-down skills to a blade. In his early career, it didn’t feel like he was a bully. The pokes at public figures, the jokes about ripping Pamela Lee’s tits off and smacking her around in his debut single, didn’t feel done to death at first, which is why they were written off as irreverent. He didn’t invent the idolization of pimps or the glamorization of violence against women. Like most people do, he was just participating in a system that already existed, without questioning it. As a white rapper in a traditionally black musical culture, he aligned himself against the systemic oppression of black men in America. But he failed to make the parallel connection to the systemic oppression of women of all races. Maybe this was because his deepest fear was that, like horrorcore icon Norman Bates, he would turn into his mother: dependent on drugs, neglected by the state, aging, invisible, and feminized. Oddly, Eminem reserved little of his overflowing ire for Marshall Bruce Mathers Jr., his father, who absconded to California when his son was an infant and never responded to numerous letters that the younger Marshall wrote him as a teen. Eminem chose to mostly project his rage onto those who remained around him, particularly women, including his mother, Debbie, and his on-and-off girlfriend/wife, Kim.

OK, now we've crossed the line into full-fledged nutjob feminism.

What do I even say to this? The very existence of women is a threat? Oh shit, there are women in the world....NOOOooooo. Kill them ALL. We're so scared...yet according to your patriarchal theory, we've been dominant for centuries and go around raping and beating you at will and you still don't have the resources to defeat us. So, you tweet about it from your beautiful, magical iphone that we let you have while we keep you chained to the rape chamber in the bathroom where you do your makeup.

No, Eminem didn't align himself against the "systemic oppression of black men in America," which does not exist. Eminem was friends with a black dude and got into rap, because he liked rap. That's it.

We thought we watched Eminem grow up, from boy-child to boy-man, about a decade ago when he made 8 Mile. Directed by Oscar winner Curtis Hanson,1 8 Mile fully legitimized Eminem as a seriously recognized artistic genius (he can act, too!), and it finally brought hip-hop to the Oscars, for better and worse. 8 Mile saw Eminem revisit the early, hungry years of his career through a fictionalized biopic. The movie’s success and the Academy Award win for “Lose Yourself” were a high point for Eminem, but they also signaled the peak. Where do you go from the top? People who ride off into the sunset often end up going over a cliff.

Actually, he can't really act (unless you mean voice acting) - he played himself and had the range of quadriplegic who fell out of his chair. Uh oh..."ableist" joke.

All of Eminem’s talent and success were not enough to free him from his inherited demons; he fell victim to the same addictive personality that made his mother’s life hell. There were times when he seemed to have become self-aware enough to address hateful songs like “Cleanin’ Out My Closet,” apologizing to his mother in 2013 in a song called “Headlights,” in which he asks, “Did I take it too far?” and reaches this logical conclusion: “Why we always at each other’s throats? Especially when dad, he fucked us both. We’re in the same fucking boat.” What’s mystifying is that he’s still dumb enough to rap about punching women in the face. Is it just a bad habit, a different sort of destructive addictive pattern? He seems aware, at least, that he’s in danger of doing the same old thing. Yesterday, he released the video for “Guts Over Fear,” which describes his fear of irrelevancy.

What it is is there's a difference between sincerity and joking. There's a difference between song-writing rap songs and emceeing rap songs and cyphering. You have to not be an idiot to know the difference between the first one, and you have to know just a little bit about rap in order to know the second.

No, Guts Over Fear has nothing to do with "irrelevancy." Once again, Eminem does not value your hipster media values. He values having rap as an outlet. It's a reflection on his career and his fear of running out of ideas in his craft.

Eminem isn’t the only middle-aged rapper to recently backtrack on seeming personal progress and return to the woman-hating wellspring that initially made him a star. Snoop Dogg was first to pick a fight with Iggy Azalea, posting unflattering memes about her on Instagram, quickly escalating into him calling her a “c—” in a video, before T.I. convinced Snoop to apologize. Snoop’s insults toward Iggy didn’t criticize her put-on accent, persona, or any of the legitimate reasons to critique her rap career. He just reposted a meme that attacked her looks. Snoop is caught in a similar bind to Eminem’s. The pressure to grow up is drowned out by cheers for “Bitches Ain’t Shit.”

It's funny - feminists pretend they are in favor of equality and doing away with the "gender social construct," but then they are certain to point out when it's a "women" who has something negative being said or done to her. Eminem said he would slap Garth Brooks out of his Rhinestone shirt and punch Everlast in the fucking chest until his heart kicks in gear, but they didn't talk about the man-hating.

The really scary thing is that many men don’t grow up. They continue to take out their insecurities on those who are more vulnerable, physically or culturally. The more the culture changes — the more we have open discussions about sexual assault and domestic violence — the more threatened some people seem to feel. And that is one of the insidious things about going after Eminem. It’s fucking scary! Every time I have mildly criticized him on Twitter, I’ve been barraged with “kill yourself, bitch” tweets, sort of proving that his fans don’t fall that far from the tree. They’re just kidding! In a verbally threatening way that implies the threat of physical violence at the hands of angry men, which women live in fear of every single day! Why u mad? If you call him out for being a bully, you’re an enemy of free speech. If you call him out for being a hateful misogynist, you’re a humorless bitch.

As a feminist, I am entitled to generalize men and complain about their behavior. If a man does this in regards to women, LOOK OUT.

What kind of "open discussion" do they wish to have? They have already decided that they're right and non-SJWs are wrong and not enlightened the way they are. They want to control all the dialogue.

The sad truth about these new Eminem bars is that they are stunts that depend on a very real and dangerous fact: Men do hateful things toward women all the time. If Eminem’s freestyles were funnier, we might feel more apt to overlook or excuse them, because it is so much easier to forgive than to be mad about things like this, since they happen so fucking often. I don’t think Eminem’s aging discounts his right to be angry and rage against the dying of the light. I just think there are so many things to be righteously angry about in the world — why pick victims who have done nothing to deserve it? Why not go after all of the hateful, spiteful idiots in the universe, including the female ones? Why does talking about punching famous women in the face give Eminem power? Perhaps because punching famous women in the face has always gotten him press before, and this time it’s no different.

They're not stunts at all - they are lines he wrote for shits and giggles. Eminem wants respect from hip hop heads. He's a man who is obsessed with the craft of rapping. That's it.

Eminem doesn't know what to do with the money he has. Many of the things he talked about on So Far were completely sincere - he eats cheap food and has a blue collar mentality. He thinks it's hilarious that he lives in a giant "Kmart mansion." He raps, he plays Donkey Kong, he drinks diet soda and Red Bull, and he watches TV, especially sports. Sometimes he plays basketball with his friends. He's also in a fantasy football league.

He's not out to add more millions to the millions he doesn't know what to do with. He's out to rap and get respect from "hip hop heads" for doing it. Period, the end.

But when Eminem isn’t rehashing his life story, which most people know in biblical detail, or rapping about committing random acts of violence against innocent women and perceived feminine men, he tends to go back to his other well: shit and fart jokes. The problem is that without these topics, which make up his entire oeuvre, he seems lost. This is the sad truth: Eminem has become the conservative status quo that he seemingly railed against as a young man. And considering that he has always come down in favor of stomping out all things feminine, sensitive, and different, maybe he always was.

Eminem covers everything. He covered being broke. He covers sports. He covers what he eats for meals and where he shopped for them.

Eminem is not out to squash your SJW agenda. He just wants to rap. She could save herself a lot of trouble if she'd just understand that very basic fact.
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Canibus & Eminem Converse: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWB62t2_wJE
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby csw621 » Nov 26th, '14, 01:44

boonim wrote:The key point is "fully". If you haven't gone through Em's older stuff, it is not possible to get the inside jokes ("Fack" joke, nasally voice in just SHADYXV, and MMLP2 is full of these references).

True. Newer fans just aren't getting the full picture of him. A lot of people probably don't enjoy both recovery and mmlp2
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby boonim » Nov 26th, '14, 02:00

@EminemInsider: wish they opened the comments section :-).

What do you think about him gaining new fans with the kind of content he has?

Hers an article which addresses some of the things in this thread: http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/music/2014/11/25/eminem-shady-xv-misogyny-violence/19444645/

Part of the reason people continue to embrace the 42-year-old rapper (born Marshall Mathers) is because he has operated this way from the beginning, Lewis says. "Since it's been, like, 15 years of these really sadistic fantasies that he likes to rap about, people are like, 'Oh, he's harmless,' " she says. "If some of this stuff lined up with his actual life, like if he actually got charged with domestic violence, then people would think differently."
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby EminemInsider » Nov 26th, '14, 03:20

boonim wrote:@EminemInsider: wish they opened the comments section :-).

What do you think about him gaining new fans with the kind of content he has?

Hers an article which addresses some of the things in this thread: http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/music/2014/11/25/eminem-shady-xv-misogyny-violence/19444645/

Part of the reason people continue to embrace the 42-year-old rapper (born Marshall Mathers) is because he has operated this way from the beginning, Lewis says. "Since it's been, like, 15 years of these really sadistic fantasies that he likes to rap about, people are like, 'Oh, he's harmless,' " she says. "If some of this stuff lined up with his actual life, like if he actually got charged with domestic violence, then people would think differently."


Depends on what type of fans we're talking about. Eminem is a rapper's rapper.

I mean, if he wanted to tap into more pop fans, he could just collab with Elton John and do a song renouncing his use of the word, "fag," and he'd be the biggest story in music and win a Grammy. "Eminem realizes the error of his ways. A victory for humankind!"

But since that's really none of his concern, his best bet for getting more of the pure hip hop fans has less to do with content and more to do with his delivery. In order to do that, I think he needs to cut back on the double time flows and start aligning his bars better, plus drop the pop singer choruses.
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Canibus & Eminem Converse: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rWB62t2_wJE
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby DƎRDYPK » Nov 26th, '14, 03:24

hiphopshelter tbh, he went there & gave Encore 100/100
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Re: Where does Eminem go from here?

Postby csw621 » Nov 26th, '14, 03:26

An angry man's power will shut you up
Trip wires fill this house with tiptoe love
Run out of excuses for everyone

That's thirty perfectly aligned syllables dawg.
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