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  • Eminem's Amazing Pre-Fame Connection To 2Pac Revealed By Man Who Discovered Him

Eminem's Amazing Pre-Fame Connection To 2Pac Revealed By Man Who Discovered Him

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Eminem has long cited 2Pac as one of his favorite artists, but it turns out he shared a remarkable connection to the late rap legend long before he blew up — according to the Interscope A&R who discovered him.

Evan “Kidd” Bogart recently sat down with the Behind the Wall podcast and detailed his decorated career in the music industry, which began in Interscope’s mailroom in the 1990s.

Talking about his road to discovering the self-proclaimed Rap God, Bogart — a Grammy-winning songwriter who has worked with the likes of BeyoncéRihanna and Jennifer Lopez — explained that he was working as an A&R “float” on a posthumous 2Pac album that Interscope were putting together.

While working on the project, he got a call from a DJ friend to come check out an impressive young artist at the Rap Olympics.

“I was like, ‘Oh man, I’m gonna get fired. I’m supposed to not take my eyes off the reels [for the 2Pac album],'” Bogart recalled, explaining that there was a looming threat of Death Row Records trying to steal the music.

“But I played hooky because [my friend] Cassidy was dead serious. I went down to this freestyle contest in Inglewood, walked in and I proceeded to watch Eminem in this freestyle battle. It was 8 Mile-esque.”

Bogart was blown away by what he saw: “I called my friend who I was in a rap group with, this kid Aristotle, to come down there. I was like, ‘Yo, you gotta come down here and see this shit.’

“Then I called my other best friend, who I had just hired to replace me in the mailroom when I got promoted to A&R floater, this kid Dean Geislinger.”

He added: “They showed up a couple of hours later. It was the semifinals and Em was saying crazy things like, ‘Don’t make my facial tissue a racial issue,’ all this crazy shit that was mindblowing […] He ended up losing in the finals.”

Despite Eminem failing to win the contest, Bogart still introduced himself to the soon-to-be legendary rapper: “Em was pacing backstage, muttering under his breath, angry, teared up a little bit. I went up to him and I was like, ‘Hey, I work at Interscope, I do A&R.’

“He introduced me to his manager at the time, a guy named Marc Kempf. Paul [Rosenberg] was there, too, but Paul was Em’s lawyer; he wasn’t his manager.

“Marc Kempf gave me the Slim Shady EP sampler cassette. I drove home with Aristotle and Dean and popped the cassette into my car. We literally drove home with our fucking jaws on the ground. I had never heard anything like it in my whole life.”

Bogart went on to explain that he spent the next several months attempting to convince his seniors at Interscope to sign this unknown kid from Detroit, but was “largely ignored or ridiculed.”

It wasn’t until he slipped Eminem’s demo tape into Jimmy Iovine‘s possession, with the help of his friend Dean who was temping as the Interscope chief’s second assistant, that the powerhouse label finally took notice.

“Saturday morning, I get a page on my pager [from] Dean’s number. I call Dean and I’m like, ‘What’s up?’ He’s like, ‘[Dr.] Dre and Jimmy heard the tape. Is Eminem in town? […] They want to set up a meeting.’

“I was like, ‘Cool, I’ll make it happen.’ So I connected them with Em’s people, set up a meeting for Monday. Em came in and they struck a deal.”

The fact that Eminem was discovered by an A&R who was working on a 2Pac album at the time is made all the more special by his vocal admiration of the All Eyez On Me MC.

Slim Shady has previously said that ‘Pac “might be the greatest songwriter of all time” and even even went on to produce his own posthumous album for the late rapper, 2004’s Loyal to the Game.

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  • LL Cool J Gently Criticizes Lil Wayne Over Super Bowl Entitlement: 'Let Kendrick Get That'

LL Cool J Gently Criticizes Lil Wayne Over Super Bowl Entitlement: 'Let Kendrick Get That'

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LL Cool J has offered Lil Wayne some words of wisdom after he was left devastated by not being selected to perform at next year’s Super Bowl in New Orleans.

Kendrick Lamar was recently announced as the musical act for Super Bowl LIX, but the decision has proven to be polarizing, with even Wayne himself expressing disappointment over it.

Sitting down for an interview with Fat Joe for his new talk show on STARZ, LL attempted to uplift Weezy’s spirits while gently reminding him that this is Kendrick’s moment.

“Lil Wayne is one of the most talented dudes on the planet, period. He’s one of our great artists, he’s an unbelievable writer,” he said. “He’ll have his day — let Kendrick get that. Let’s keep it moving. I never did the Super Bowl!”

He then urged the Young Money legend to not let the setback get him down: “Wayne comes from a very proud state, Louisiana, and a very proud city, New Orleans. But this is the thing: your time will come, you’ll have your day […] You can’t let that break you.

“The only reason it makes me laugh is because I know how blessed he is, I know how successful he is. So he don’t need to worry about that moment. It’s just a moment, bro. It’s just one moment. It happens.

“Let me put it into perspective: I’m in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. I got not put in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame it felt like 999,000 times before I got in. It didn’t break me. I didn’t even make a comment. As a matter of fact, I laughed.”

LL concluded by suggesting that Wayne had let a sense of entitlement, stemming from his enormous success, get the better of him: “These are champagne problems. There are guys who can’t get their demo listened to! I think we get a little bit kind of, unintentionally, spoiled. It’s like, ‘Yo, man. You a bad boy.’ Wayne is crème de la crème.”

 

 

In a somber video uploaded to Instagram last month, Lil Wayne detailed his devastation after he found out that he wouldn’t be performing at the 2025 Super Bowl in his hometown — a gig he had openly coveted.

“First of all, I want to say forgive me for the delay. I had to get strength enough to do this without breaking. I’ma say thank you to every voice, every opinion, all the care, love and support out there. Your words turned into arms and held me up when I tried to fall back,” he began.

“That hurt. It hurt a lot. You know what I’m talking about. It hurt a whole lot,” he continued. “I blame myself for not being mentally prepared for a letdown, and for automatically mentally putting myself in that position like somebody told me that was my position. So I blame myself for that.

“But I thought there was nothing better than that spot and that stage and that platform in my city, so it hurt. It hurt a whole lot. But y’all are fucking amazing. It made me feel like shit not getting this opportunity and when I felt like shit, you guys reminded me that I ain’t shit without y’all… and that’s an amazing reality.”

Wayne was referencing comments made by fans and fellow artists alike, with Nicki Minaj, Birdman, Juvenile, Cam’ron and Master P all expressing disappointment at his perceived snub.

Some of this anger was directed at JAY-Z, who has helped organize the Super Bowl halftime show since partnering with the NFL in 2019.

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