Gay eminem song
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>All this fuss about Eminem alledgedly being a homophobe really took me by surprise. I always thought that Eminem was Pro Gay Rights (or at the very least, not against homosexuals) because in his most prominent song, The Real Slim Shady, he says (and I quote) "But if we can hump dead animals and antelopes then there's no reason that a man and another noun can't elope". When I first heard those lyrics on MTV, I was very surprised because I had never heard a rapper openly condone gay marraige, especially not in one of their songs.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE><P>You've got to grab in it context. Don't disregard in the song that he follows that line with:<P>"But if you feel like I touch I got the antidote.<BR>Women wave your panty-hose, sing the chorus and it goes"<P>His initial reference to that line also occurs previously in the song:<P>"Sometimes I wanna get on TV and just let loose,<BR>but can't, but its cool for Tom Leafy to hump a dead moose."
Releasing Joyner Lucas and Eminems What If I Was Gay? Would Have Been a Huge Mistake
Since its arrival in , Stan never really left. Stubborn, unyielding, and culturally malleable, the songs name, concept, and story structure took on a life of their own. Almost two decades later, the word is so ubiquitous there are likely millions of modern stans that hold never listened to Stan. If they did, they might adequately be horrified to be compared to the skinny, out of control character staring back at them.
The third single from The Eminem Show is now double platinum, garnered two high-profile dictionary entries, and launched a subgenre onto itself. Eminem made a sequel (so did Lil Wayne; it was called Dear Anne and was terrible). The Dido-sampling song and its woke-before-woke-was-a-thing message went on to inspire countless offshoots, the most popular (and recent) of which is Joyner Lucas, whos sustained an entire career built off recreating Eminems most popular faux-biographical, rage-filled lyric (see: Im Not Racist and Devils Work)
Eminem and the F-Word: Why Does Rap Still Tolerate Homophobia?
Too little? Too late? Well, definitely, too little.
Eminem expressed a degree of be sorry over referring to rapper Tyler, The Creator as a “f-ggot” on his latest single during a September 13 interview with MTV’s Sway Calloway. But as usual, he stopped short of actually apologizing for his offending words.
In fact, the next time he was back to gay-baiting on the new diss track “Killshot.”
Meanwhile, the rap community has once again taken the Switzerland approach. Why so deafeningly silent? Where is the outrage over yet another instance of hip-hop homophobia? In , why is rap still flagrantly using homophobic language or tacitly endorsing it by not calling out its stars for lazily falling back on it?
The late rapper XXXTentacion once bragged about nearly beating a man to death in prison for looking at him a little too long while he was naked. Still, fans and fellow rappers canonized him after his shooting death in June, overlooking his history of homophobia and violence against wom
The title of Eminem's upcoming album, The Marshall Mathers LP 2, is a direct callback to the title of popular and wildly controversial The Marshall Mathers LP. It's been more than a decade since that album won Best Rap Album at the Grammys. Since then, the entire culture of hip-hop has changed — but if his deeply homophobic new single "Rap God" is any indication, Eminem is every bit the similar lazy, offensive bile-spewer he was back then.
"Rap God" is Eminem's rapid-fire, six-minute anthem to himself, and it's peppered with brazenly and violently homophobic rhetoric. In the first verse, Eminem boasts of his ability to "break a motherfr's table over the back of a couple f-ggots and crack it in half." In the second verse, Eminem goes off on a bizarre, homophobic rant: "Little gay-looking young man / So gay I can barely say it with a straight face-looking boy / You witnessing massacre like you watching a church gathering taking place-looking boy / 'Oy vey, that boy's gay,' that's all they say looking-boy / You obtain a thumbs up, pat on the back, the way you go from your label every