The rapper said where he’s from, people don’t get hit, they get taken out.
This week, a battle rap video captured the attention of the hip hop community and beyond. The v Wolf boasted in his rhymes that he was told not to use the n-word then started his next bar with “my n*gga” as he addressed his opponent.
He wasn’t able to say much else because Wolf would later comment on the incident, saying that it wasn’t “that deep” for him to get hit over, but there are others in the rap scene who have openly disagreed. was caught by a TMZ cameraman making his way through Los Angeles International airport and was asked about his opinion on the controversial video.
“It’s probably just a bad situation for him,” Boosie said. . You gotta know how to say that word.” He added, “In a battle rap you dissin’. In a battle rap, it’s different. It’s aggression.” Boosie said under different circumstances the n-word is said “like love,” but at a battle rap, the white rapper should have been corrected physically.
“They was supposed to bust him in his sh*t, they did the right thing,” he said. “If you were trying to be derogatory with it, like you was trying to be offense-ful with it, and that’s something that you can’t do being who you are. That’s why it happened.” The Louisiana rapper couldn’t say whether or not this viral video was a warning to white rappers because he was never into battle rap. “Where I’m from, if you talk about somebody, you die Watch his clip below.