The Ballad of Biggie and Tupac - podcast episode cover

The Ballad of Biggie and Tupac

Jan 22, 202651 min
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Episode description

Biggie Smalls and Tupac Shakur had a famous beef with one another in the mid-90s. It was so intense, it sparked an even wider rivalry between the East and West Coasts. In just a few years, both men had been murdered and the music world was changed forever.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Hey, everybody, We're going on tour. We're going to be in Denver, Seattle, and San Francisco soon and tickets are still available.

Speaker 2

That's right, in the next few days. Actually, we're gonna be in Denver on Tuesday, the twenty seventh of January. We're gonna be in Seattle the next night, our dear beloved Seattle, and.

Speaker 3

Then finally winding it up on Thursday the twenty ninth.

Speaker 2

And San Francisco is part of our sketch best appearance And you can get all the ticket into our information at stuff youshould know dot com.

Speaker 3

Isn't that right?

Speaker 1

It is right, And we love you Denver, and we love you San Francisco too.

Speaker 3

That's right. We love all you cities and we missed you and we can't wait to be back.

Speaker 2

Welcome to stuff you should know, our production of iHeartRadio.

Speaker 1

Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too, so this is a good old fashioned stuff you should know. One of our ongoing hip hop editions. Yeah, I feel like a door anytime I say hip hop, so I usually say rap. Yeah, but regardless, that's what we're talking.

Speaker 2

About Yeah, we're talking about Biggie and Tupac, and we want to issue a.

Speaker 3

Warning and a trigger warning.

Speaker 2

No pun intended there, but this one's obviously gonna because we're talking about the lives of these two guys who were in many ways real gangsters. A lot of stuff went down, including sexual assault and gunplay and murder, and it's you know, it's probably not appropriate for the younger listeners, and so you just wanted to get that out there. Hopefully, if you know anything about Biggie and Tupac, you know that there's some more adult content coming your way.

Speaker 1

Nice CoA man. Yeah, so, yeah, we are talking about Biggie and Tupac, and they are pretty well known. If you listen to either one of them, or even kind of have a passing awareness of hip hop, especially in the nineties, you probably know that Biggie and Tupac had probably the biggest rivalry in the hip hop world. It's referred to as a beef between one another, so much so that it actually triggered, or caused, at the very least popularized the East Coast versus West Coast thing of

rap in the nineteen nineties. That was huge. It was the central focus of rap during basically that whole decade.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and sadly would leave both of them dead from violence. It was I hope that's not a spoiler for anyone, but yeah, at very young ages. It's super sad what happened to those guys, and just super sad that that was, you know, brought about because of just sort of the lifestyle that went along with their careers, you know.

Speaker 1

Yeah, And a lot of people make a case that that lifestyle was essentially demanded by fans and the media and certainly fostered and nurtured by fans in the media. And so I think both Biggie and Tupac and all the people around them and other rappers basically felt like they had to act like they the stuff that they wrapped about, or else they would be fake baby gangsters

sometimes or studio gangsters even worse. Well yeah, yeah, and then they were also surrounded by literal bloods and crips, so it essentially had it was inevitable that it would end in death and violence.

Speaker 3

Yeah.

Speaker 2

I mean, I think hip hop more than other types of music too, there's an expectation to be.

Speaker 3

To be real again, got all these funs flying out of.

Speaker 1

My mouth, oh from Cypress Hill.

Speaker 3

Yeah, of course.

Speaker 2

But to be real and like you said, not you know, if you were found out to be sort of rapping about something and really kind of fake in real life like that, that's no good for your career as a hip hop artist. So it's sort of you know, they I don't know, to me, they're sort of victims of that whole thing in a lot of ways.

Speaker 1

Yeah, but at the same time, they definitely bought into it. Yeah, I mean, they essentially laid the groundwork for that. It's just it's crazy because it's just such a ubiquitous, widespread thing for so long. It's strange to think that you can trace it back to one group, one duo essentially.

Speaker 2

Yeah, So we're going to tell you a little bit about Tupac and his beginnings, a little bit about Biggie and then once they met up kind of what happened from there. But as far as Tupac goes, he was born in nineteen seventy one, same year as me. He was born in Harlem. His mother was a Finny Shakur

and she was one of the Panther twenty one. I'm pretty sure we talked about them in the Black Panther episode, but they were part of the Black Panther Party, the ones who were accused of carrying out a bombing campaign. She did win an acquittal in court defending herself and exposed a lot of stuff about undercover cops and the tactics they used that were very untoward. But Tupac was born about a month after that trial and born Lesaine Crooks. But it's not like he changed his name to be

a cool hip hop guy later. He was actually renamed by his mom when he was about a year old, after indigenous South American revolutionary Tupac Amaru the second, So he's essentially he was always Tupac.

Speaker 1

Yeah, he was named after an eighteenth century Incon I believe, who led a rebellion against the Spanish. Little known fact. I didn't know that, did you. I did not, So I usually think I associate Tupac with New York because pretty much all the movies he was ever in were all set in New York. But he's from San Francisco.

I mean, he was born in Harlem, but his family moved to San Francisco, or actually Marin County, which is a suburb of San Francisco pretty early on in his life, and at the time, his mom was struggling with a crack addiction, So Tupac was essentially on his own from a very young age, and as black kids at the time in the eighties in particular, did to make money when you were in a situation like that, he sold drugs and that's how he supported himself for a long

time while he was even going through school too.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and he was like, we'll see, Biggie was he was a really good English student, and I bet a lot of hip hop performers were good in English. You know, it just sort of makes sense. But he dropped out of high school. He studied poetry. He continued to after he dropped out, and actually his teacher, his English teacher, one of them, Leela Steinberg, was like, hey, I see a lot of potential in you. You can crash on my couch when you need to, And she ended up becoming his first manager.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and she said, you always have to wear that bandana around your head just so like you because I love it.

Speaker 3

It looks super cool.

Speaker 1

I know we've also talked about this before, but he was a member of Digital Underground with Humpty Hump of the famous Humpty Dance. He's shown dancing in the Humpty Dance video in the background. He was a dancer for Digital Underground, but later I think wrapped on some of their albums. Yeah, but even from the outset, his whole

vibe was much much edgier than Humpty Humps was. Like Humpty Hump was rapping about how big his nose was and having sex and burger king bathrooms, right like Tupac was rapping about what poverty and crime are like in the black community.

Speaker 3

You know, he didn't go by Humpty Hump.

Speaker 1

What was this? Why do You Go Buy?

Speaker 3

That was shock G.

Speaker 1

I've heard him referred to on other songs as.

Speaker 2

Well, all right, aka Humpty Hump. So yeah, you weren't completely wrong.

Speaker 1

A little side. I would direct people to the mrs song Risky Business that features Humpty or shock G. It's a pretty pretty cute little song, all right. So Tupac goes out on his own. He's got, like I said, a totally different vibe, and he released a solo album called Tupac Ellipse. Now, there was no other title that it could have possibly been than that, Yeah, for sure, But the problem was like there was. He was keeping it real, so there was nothing in the studio that

he was producing that could be played on the radio. Yeah, so it was an underground sensation, but publicly, most people had not heard of Tupac at that point.

Speaker 3

Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 2

Dan Quayle kind of gave him a little more press when he blamed that record to Apocalypse Now on the shooting of a Texas State trooper. So he was in the news a little bit at least mm hm. And he started acting kind of right afterward. In nineteen ninety two and nineteen ninety three, he put out where he was in the movies Juice and Poetic Justice, both really great movies. Juice is awesome, actually, so is Poetic Justice. I love both of those movies.

Speaker 1

The one I've seen him and I don't think. I think I saw Juice. I didn't see Poetic Justice. I saw Above the Rim. He was really good, and Above the Rim.

Speaker 3

I never saw that one.

Speaker 1

Oh that's a good one. He should see it.

Speaker 3

Wet them together and have a Tupac watch party.

Speaker 1

I guess, Okay, let's do that.

Speaker 3

Yeah.

Speaker 2

But he started getting a little more famous, sort of slowly, and this is when kind of the early nineties, at the very beginning of his career is when he first started getting into trouble and getting like a real reputation as sort of living that lifestyle.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I mean, like for real. He was involved in a shootout at the Marin County Festival where he lived, where he had just performed, that killed a six year old who was playing on a school ground nearby.

Speaker 3

Yeah.

Speaker 1

He shot at off duty police in Atlanta in nineteen ninety three when he tried to prevent them from beating up a black motorist, and those charges were thrown out because it turns out the cops were off duty, didn't

announce themselves as cops, and were super drunk. But you know, those kind of things, like his legend as like a thug living the thug life, which I think he basically coined, that just formed, melded really quickly right out of the gate, Like this guy was legit as far as his fans were concerned.

Speaker 3

Yeah, for sure. So that's Tupac's early days.

Speaker 2

Biggie Smalls was born he's a little younger. He's born in nineteen seventy two in Brooklyn. His name was Christopher Wallace. He was born to Jamaican immigrant parents, and his mom was a preschool teacher. His dad was a politician in Jamaica but ended up, you know, leaving when he was two years old and became a welder in the United States.

But her, his mom, you know, Veletta, really thought a lot about education, obviously as a teacher, so she took on a second job just so she could send him to a very well regarded high school and then later went to George Westinghouse Career in Tech Education High School, which had quite an alumni base as far as hip hop goes, because DMX, Buster Rhymes, Love Busta, and jay Z all went there.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I'm guessing I didn't. I wasn't able to find it, but I'm guessing they crossed paths. May have been there at the same time.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I mean, Donald Glover would have gone to my high school had they not sent him to the School of the Arts. Oh yeah, And I saw him in New York City a few feet from me when I was there in December. And let me tell you, dude, I don't know if I've ever seen a more handsome grown man in person.

Speaker 3

With my eyeballs.

Speaker 2

Really, he's astoundingly good looking, and I wanted to go over and say, like, hey man, we grew up in the same neighborhood basically.

Speaker 1

And you're really good looking, You're really handsome.

Speaker 2

But he I'm such a big fan of his but from his music to his acting. But he was with his family and like it was just like, I'm just not going to do that.

Speaker 1

Instead, you got in your car and shouted Dan high rules and like laid rubber peeling out of the parking lot.

Speaker 3

Yeah that's right. Sure, Danger Mouse went to my high school too, though.

Speaker 1

Oh yeah, oh I forgot about Danger Mouse. Danger Mouse did that gray album with the Beatles, and.

Speaker 3

Right, I don't know, we'll.

Speaker 1

Find out the hard way. So, like you said, a lot of hip hop artists are probably or probably were our good English students, and Biggie Smalls was not an exception to that. Like Tupac, he was. Actually he excelled in English and high school. But also like Tupac, his family was not exactly well to do. Remember, his mom took a second job to put him just through high school.

So he started selling drugs on the side, crack again because it's the eighties, and eventually he dropped out of high school, and I think any kind of straight and narrow he might have been on from high school was just kind of removed and he started to get in like actual trouble with the cops.

Speaker 2

Yeah, he ended up in jail, actually spent nine months in jail at one point because it couldn't make bail. And once he got out, he made a demo tape under the name Biggie Smalls. His nickname as a kid was big, but I think that came from a gangster in a movie from nineteen seventy five called Let's Do

It Again. Biggie Smalls did, and he said that he wasn't trying to get into a career, he just sort of did it for fun, and that got him on Source magazine's list in nineteen ninety two of Unsigned in their Unsigned hype Columneah, which eventually put him on a compilation with other Unsigned rappers, which eventually landed him on the ears of a twenty.

Speaker 3

Three year old named named Sean Combs.

Speaker 1

So yeah, Shawn Combs, puff Daddy did he People have probably heard of him by now for all sorts of reasons. His career as a twenty three year old was as vice president of Uptown Records, and being an entrepreneur and all sorts of other things, he decided to found his own record company, bad Boy Worldwide Music Group usually known as bad Boy Records, and one of the first things he did was sign Biggie Small's and they became paired

up in the media. They hung out there, friends, They were fairly close, but like those two were inseparable as far as like the public was concerned whether that was fully true or not.

Speaker 2

Yeah and his when he put out his first single, it was under the name Notorious Big because of legal issues.

Speaker 3

I guess with the movie Yeah Biggie Smalls was that my take you? Okay? So he was Notorious Big Ig officially everyone called him Biggie. Of course.

Speaker 2

He had as a kid in ninety three with his high school girlfriend jan Jackson, not Jana Jackson, and he hadn't really broken through at this point, even though he was with Shawn Combs at the time. But he you know, so he continued to kind of deal drugs, apparently colms. It was like, he can't do that kind of stuff if you want to get anywhere.

Speaker 3

But he broke up with his.

Speaker 2

High school sweetheart who he had his first kid with and a few months after that ended up with Faith Evans.

Speaker 3

Who was also on the Bad Boy label.

Speaker 2

And that is is Biggie and his start, So good time for a break.

Speaker 1

Yeah, we're at nineteen ninety three, Tupac's already a star and Biggie's starting to come up.

Speaker 3

All right, We'll be right back.

Speaker 1

As why why Why s K as big.

Speaker 4

Tough. He should know, definitely should know, Charles s K. So.

Speaker 1

One of the things you may or may not know, if you're just kind of passing passingly familiar with the beef between Biggie and Tupac, is that they started out as friends. They were actually pretty good friends for a while. Tupac, like I said, before he broke, was already a star. His star was established and still growing. Biggie was just starting to come up. He was pretty pretty well known around New York, and Tupac kind of became a mentor

to him. They met in nineteen ninety three, and they hung out with a bunch of other people, played around with a bunch of guns at Tupac's house, and they became close enough that whenever Biggie went out to la he stayed on Tupac's couch.

Speaker 3

That's right.

Speaker 2

Uh, he was, like I said, he was a He kind of considered Biggie like one of his lieutenants at the time and definitely was a mentor. Biggie's debut came out, it was called Ready to Die in nineteen ninety four, and before that, Biggie was like, you know what, I think you should just be my manager and take over from takeover for Shawn Combs, and Tupac was like, no, man, you need to stick with that guy. Apparently Tupac wasn't

a big fan of Combs. Yeah, but you know he said that I had a feeling he just didn't want to get into managing him.

Speaker 1

Well, he said, he'll make you a star, and I think he did know that. Like, you know, Tupac wasn't a manager or a label owner. Like he was a performer and Sean Combs liked the thing think of himself as a performer, but really he was an executive. So it probably was the smarter move to stay with him, at least at first, right. Yeah, the problem was is Seawn Combs again remember inextricably linked BFF with Biggie as far as the public's concerned, was actually jealous of Biggie

and Tupac's friendship. He wanted to be friends with Tupac. He was jealous that Bickie got to be friends with Tupac. The reason Tupac didn't care about being friends with Sean Combs is that he thought Shawn Combs was basically a poser. He was a record executive, playing like he was a hardcore rapper, and he didn't have much respect for him. And I think that really kind of came through to Shawn Combs after a little while, and he didn't he started not liking Tupac.

Speaker 3

Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 2

So the beef is sort of the beef seed is planted as they are, you know that old saying.

Speaker 1

Where's the beef seed?

Speaker 2

It's been exactly red to die. Like I mentioned, was Biggie's debut in ninety four. It was a big hit that went double platinum about a year later, which means a lot of records were sold. And this was when the West Coast was sort of like all the big hip hop stars were mainly out of the West Coast, so he was kind of the biggest thing coming out of New York right off the bat. And it's a great record, he was you know, he rapped a lot about you know, sort of like the lifestyle and the

gangs of stuff that he was doing. But also there was a lot of vulnerability on that first record too.

Speaker 1

Yeah. Yeah, he and Tupac wasn't shy about rapping about mental health and stuff like that. And up to this point, like you did not talk about that kind of stuff. It was all about partying and having sex and like doing drugs and all that stuff. You didn't talk about being paranoid or like super worried about being killed or

anything like that. And I just to kind of set the scene, can we talk a little bit about the brief history of hip hop up to that point and how big of a deal it was when Ready to Die came out, Sure, because you said that the West Coast had kind of taken over from the East Coast, like from Slick Rick and ll cool J and all them the ones who were coming up in the eighties. At the time that Biggie Small's record came out, everyone was all about Doctor dre Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, all

these guys, like that's where rap was. It was on the West Coast. So for somebody to come along and basically snatch that away and bring it back to New York.

It was just a really big deal. And it took a rapper of the caliber of Biggie Smalls to do something like that, because there are tons of other albums that had come out, like Tribe Called Quest had three albums by this time, and yet the Biggie Small's record coming out just completely undid essentially caused an earthquake in the rap world and tilted everything back to New York.

Speaker 3

Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 2

So as this is happening and Biggie's blowing up like in a big way, Tupac is in New York filming a movie in nineteen ninety three and we get a new guy on the scene, or he was actually on the scene, but a new guy as far as his podcast goes named Haitian Jack, and he starts hanging out with Tupac.

Speaker 3

Tupac likes this guy. They start partying together.

Speaker 2

Biggie knows about Haitian Jack because he was pretty familiar with the street gangs of New York, and he warns his friend Tupac and he's like, man, this guy is real trouble. So like you got to watch out. You should probably stay away from this guy because like he's a super violent dude. Like, I know, we're all real, but this guy is. He will land you in jail probably at some point, So stay away or get you killed.

Speaker 1

Yeah, so things are going along. Biggie and Tupac are friends. One's in New York, one's on the West Coast. It turned out Biggie was pretty right in warning Tupac against Haitian Jack, because shortly after that, Tupac met a girl named Ayana Jack. She was nineteen at the time, while he was in New York filming hanging out with Haitian Jack, and she alleged that Tupac Haitian Jack, the road manager for Tupac, Charles man Man Fuller, and another man I couldn't find who he was, gang raped her and she

called the police. Afterward, the police showed up, they found guns in the room, and now Tupac is in big, big trouble again. Right, So two threads begin here. One is Tupac is now charged with sexual abus, sodomy and possession of guns illegal guns. Yeah, that starts. That thread starts,

so we'll pick up again later. But another thread starts, which is a dispute a beef now with Haitian Jack because he thought that Haitian Jack had dropped the dime on Tupac to get out of the trouble for this gang rape charge.

Speaker 2

Yeah, so Haitian Jack had his case separated from man Man Fuller and Tupac. He pleaded down to a lesser charge. He pleaded guilty to misdemeanors and avoided jail time. Tupac always said he was innocent and that he was set up and sold out by Haitian Jack. But that, you know, we need to point out that completely contradicts the story

of the victim from Ayana Jackson. So but you know, the whole point of this is there's, like you said, there's now this official beef that kind of again planted the seed of what would happen to he and eventually Biggie moving forward.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and the thing that really kind of blew this this whole thing up is Tupac said as much. He said, Haitian Jack cooperated with the police, This major actual gangster in New York cooperated with the police. In an interview with the New York Daily News, So the New York Daily News prints Tupac saying that, and that did not make Haitian Jack very happy. Those two separated immediately. They

didn't talk anymore. They weren't friends anymore, they didn't hang out, and no, Tupac had essentially an enemy in Haitian Jack, which is from what I can tell, not what you want it.

Speaker 3

No, not at all. So the case is moving forward.

Speaker 2

At this point, Tupac is financially strapped because while he is making money, he's spending it faster than he's making it. He's also helping out friends and family with their finances. So there was an invitation from a guy named Jimmy Henchman Roseman. He knew Shawn Combs, he knew Haitian Jack, and he said, Hey, Tupac, why don't you do a guest spot for this rapper, Little Sean. He's in Biggie Circle. He's a guy with Shawn Combs as well. We'll pay seven grand. He needed the money, so he did it.

He shows up at Times Square at Quad Recording Studios on November thirtieth along with three of his guys, and before getting on the elevator to go up and record, they were met by these other three guys who draw guns tell him to get down on the ground. Tupac draws his gun and he ends up being shot, ends up being robbed, He ends up being beaten pretty badly. And Combs and Biggie and Henchman Jimmy Henchman Roseman were

up in the studio at the time. They were there, So all of a sudden, Tupac is getting wheeled out on a gurney sees those guys and he flips a bird at Biggie and his crew because he thought they were in on this attack. And that's when the beef like really started between these two.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and Biggie was like, I have no idea what he's talking about. And Tupac just decided that if Biggie Smalls hadn't set him up, he had at least turned his head and let all of this happen, like he knew that it was going to happen. He didn't warn him. There's no evidence whatsoever either one of those things happened. Yeah, And Biggie Small's always is like, no, I like this had nothing to do with it. After Tupac died, he was obviously heartbroken and spoke in public about how sad

he was that Tupac was dead. It seems like it was. He's a one sided beef, but the beef on Tupac's side was so energetic that you couldn't just ignore it. There was just a divide, and the divide was so great that Blood's hung out with one side, I think Tupac side, and Crips hung out with Biggie's side. Yeah, and you have that kind of thing, like there's very little chance of like reconciling or accidentally hanging out because you ran into each other on the street and you

kind of crush things up. That is not going to happen with you now hanging around with the Crips and the Bloods.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and no one ever really got to the bottom of who was behind that shooting. There's a lot of disagreement and people pointing fingers and claiming.

Speaker 3

This and that.

Speaker 2

I guess we don't need to totally get into that. But after he was beaten and shot and robbed, he's bandaged up, he's in a wheelchair. He's still got this court case going on, and he has found guilty of sexual assault, he's acquitted on the other charges, and he sent its to eighteen months in prison and where his third album came out, Me Against the World, came out while he was in prison serving that sentence.

Speaker 1

Dude, if you want cred, release your rap album while you're in prison.

Speaker 3

Yeah, called Me against the World.

Speaker 1

Yeah exactly.

Speaker 3

Yeah.

Speaker 1

So, while Tupac was in jail, I don't remember how long he was in for it, eighteen eighteen months, Okay. While he was in jail, Biggie releases a track called who Shatcha, and Tupac interprets that as it was completely directed to him. It was essentially Biggie Small's gloating about having set up Tupac, and now Tupac was in jail and he'd been shot, and that seems to not be the case at all. Biggie Smalls apparently wrote that song before the Quad City shooting. And again, just from all evidence,

it seems like Biggie had no problem with Tupac. This

is all in Tupac's head. Like this whole East Coast West West Coast beef seems to have come from Tupac being paranoid, essentially, And I looked up why he might have been paranoid, and apparently there's pretty widespread acknowledgment or belief that he was suffering from substantial mental health issues while he was alive, and that that had a huge impact on the way that he interacted with people, the level of trust he would afford, even the closest people,

Like I think it was very easy to fall out of his favor because you might do or say something that he suddenly found suspicious and now all of a sudden, like you were his enemy, like you would do something like set him up or rob him or pay for him to be killed or something.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I wondered about that. I'm glad you looked into that.

Speaker 1

Thank you, I am too.

Speaker 3

You're welcome. Maybe we should take another break.

Speaker 2

Yeah, all right, we'll take another break and we'll we'll get back to it right after this.

Speaker 1

As why why.

Speaker 4

SK as good.

Speaker 2

Tough?

Speaker 4

He should know?

Speaker 1

Definitely large house of h.

Speaker 4

Y s K.

Speaker 2

All right, So, uh, I don't need to go over what we've been talking about because everyone's listening. So at this point, the record labels that were handling this kind of music, it wasn't like the major label stuff at this time, like that would happen in the future, but it was.

Speaker 3

It was basically hip hop labels.

Speaker 2

You had bad Boy with Shawn Comb's death Row Records on the other side, that company was founded about the same time in nineteen ninety two by Doctor Dre and a few other guys, and one of those guys was his former bodyguard, Marion sug Knight.

Speaker 3

Spelled s u g e h.

Speaker 2

He was the CEO of death Row Records and he was a blood like he was you know, he was just a straight up blood for from South central Los Angeles.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and he's now the CEO of death Row Records, right, so that automatically makes death Row Records like another It's a legit music label as far as like the stuff that the artists on the label are rapping about. The CEO of the record label is a blood, not a form of blood, a blood.

Speaker 3

Yeah.

Speaker 1

So we talked about how the Quad Studio shooting like really kind of started the beef. The thing that made that beef really genuinely public came at the award show for Source Magazine their annual awards this time this one was in nineteen ninety five, where sug Knight, who'd been visiting Tupac and Jail and apparently had bought into Tupac's theory that Seawn Combs and Biggie Smalls had set him

up to be shot and robbed. Suge Knight was accepting an award and during his speech he invited any rapper who didn't want to worry about the executive producer trying to be in all the videos, which was a direct shot at Shawn Comb's. He said, come on over to

death Row Records. And I mean, if you go back and look at like Biggie Small's videos and like basically any rapper on this label at the time, oh yeah, Shawn Combs is probably going to pop up making a cameo, if not dance on it, usually with his shirt wide open. He really was not. He was not what they, like death Row Records was doing. And so, like Suge Knight made it a pretty good point, like if you were

really actually looking for legit stuff, come over here. But saying it publicly and doing it by taking a shot at Sewan Comb's at the Source Awards while you're accepting an award. It was a big deal. That really kind of made that beef public and it turned into East Coast versus West Coast essentially immediately.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I mean I remember at the time thinking because I remember just and it wasn't just rappers like they had like some R and B acts And I feel like, I feel like Combs was always in those videos just like like you said, either dancing or just like yeah yeah in the background.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 2

And I remember thinking about the time at the time, and this wasn't like my hip hop was all like earlier stuff and tribe call quests and that kind of thing, and you know, Doctor Dray and Snoop. I was into that at first, but this generally wasn't my thing. But I remember thinking, like, this guy's like he sucks, like he's not he's not a talented artist, no, because he wasn't.

Speaker 3

I guess you know.

Speaker 2

He was a like you said, an executive and a producer, and I was I remember thinking, they're like, why is he always throwing himself in there in front of the camera, like he sucks?

Speaker 1

Yeah, And he was dorky even compared to who were essentially mainstream rap artists like Tupac and Biggie Smalls. Oh yeah, no, shade on them, but there were way more underground rappers at the time putting out really good stuff. Tribe called Quest is a really good example of that that when you compared them to them, he became even more cringey.

Speaker 3

Right, Yeah, yeah, for sure he was.

Speaker 1

It was and he definitely like kind of brought down the credibility of the label and all the artists on it for sure. Like Biggie Smalls was exponentially too good for Sean Combs. Seawan Combs just kind of had him under his thumb.

Speaker 3

Yeah, absolutely, which is sad.

Speaker 1

Because I mean, Biggie Smalls is. Biggie Smalls and Tupac usually kind of battle for first or second place on most lists of the greatest rapper of all time. My money's on Biggie Smalls.

Speaker 3

What about you as the greatest rapper of all time?

Speaker 1

Well, it's between Tupac and Biggie how about that?

Speaker 3

Oh okay?

Speaker 2

Because Chuck d like dead in the bullseye for me, Oh yeah, oh yeah, I was always a public enemy guy like that started in high school.

Speaker 1

I like them too, but I don't know, I think I don't like the I don't like the instrumental track to a lot of their stuff. It's too hard edgy for me.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I liked it, I mean, trust me, I was way more into like, uh, the tribe called Quest and Far Side and Jungle Brothers and like that kind of style. Uh so public Enemy me being into Public Enemy in high school is definitely kind of a weird thing.

Speaker 3

Yeah, But as I was listening to the Smiths and The Cure, It's.

Speaker 1

Right, no, I'm with you. I was listening to Smith's and The Cure, but also like boot Camp Click, like Smith and Wesson, Nah's Wu Tang Gangs.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I see. I never I like Gangstar, but I never got into Wu Tang.

Speaker 1

They were pretty good. They were they were better solo. I think most of like method Man and Rizza were better solo than Wu Tang together.

Speaker 3

But whatever, and this is two middle aged white guys that's their hip hop pass.

Speaker 1

I do have to say that Doctor Dre's The Chronic was literally life changing, oh for sure. And it's not just me that that happened to. I think that changed a lot of people's trajection.

Speaker 3

I was one of them.

Speaker 2

Man, that thing by heart and inside and out. It's a fun listen when I put it on a lot of nostalgia, Let's back it is.

Speaker 1

I thought the same thing would be for Doggie Style Snoop's debut solo album, It's not It does not hold up.

Speaker 4

Yeah.

Speaker 3

I mean it's not like it wasn't as good as the Chronic, not a mile.

Speaker 1

But I liked it as much as the Chronic at the time, and I don't anymore.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I'm with you.

Speaker 2

And part of that may have to do with the fact that Snoop Dogg has I don't know, become the Snoop Dogg of today.

Speaker 1

Man, he's amazing. He's now the owner of the Thrower Records.

Speaker 2

No, he's awesome, but I just feel like he's he's a bit over exposed for my taste.

Speaker 1

Oh, I see, he's like the the Peyton Manning of the hip hop world. He's the Pedro Pascal of rap.

Speaker 3

Okay, even better said, but he's.

Speaker 1

An American treasure though. I mean like he's an Olympic mascot along with Flavor Flav.

Speaker 2

Now I'm picturing Snoop Dogg, Pedro Pascal, and Peyton Manning and just sitting at lunch just saying, like, guys, this is great.

Speaker 1

I could see that talking about mutual funds.

Speaker 3

Yeah, we should do something together because we're done out there.

Speaker 1

Enough, right, it'll blow everyone's mind.

Speaker 3

All right.

Speaker 2

So we are in September nineteen ninety five, At this point, sug Knight has dropped the dropped the bomb at the Source Awards, which I'm sure did not sit well with Shawn Combs. And Tupac is in prison at this point, and Knight and Comb's go to the same party here in Atlanta at what was called the Platinum House. It's a strip bar over on Piedmont Road near the Colonnade.

Speaker 3

Which you love.

Speaker 2

Yeah, a fight breaks out and a guy named Jake Roebles it was a death Row employee and he was a blood and a close friend of sug Knight. He was shot and killed and witnesses were like, Seawan Combs's bodyguard is the one who did.

Speaker 1

It, right, So this is not good. This has not helped this rivalry at all. And eventually, I guess over the same time, Tupac is still in prison, but sug Knight is still visiting Tupac there, and like they're becoming closer and closer because not only is Suge Night going out of his way to go visit Tupac in prison, he's also helping him financially, helped him post bail to get out on an appeal. And when Tupac gets out of prison, again. He's now deeply indebted to sug Knight,

but apparently they have become real friends. He releases his fourth album, All Eyes on Me. I think it was in February of nineteen ninety six, like immediately when double Platinum. I think it went to number one on the charts.

Speaker 2

So at this time, Death Row is at CANAM Studios outside La That's what they're working out of, and people, you know at the time were like, you know, the real stuff is going down. There's a big gangster culture in and around that studio. Sug Knight is a real heavy. He's threatening people right and left if they don't, you know, aren't on his good side. And people are hanging out there with gang members who are their security. So there's you know, there might be bloods there one day, there

might be crips there one day. There might be a huge singer there one day recording. But all of this is sort of happening around can M Studios.

Speaker 1

Right. So twopuckets out of prison, and remember like this guy's like essentially a heat seeking missile focused on Biggie Smalls. Like I get the impression that he just sat in prison like ruminating about Biggie Smalls and getting back at him. So one of the first things he does was hire Biggie Small's wife, Faith Evans, who was herself a pretty popular recording artist at the time. He offered her twenty five thousand dollars to be on one of his records, a track for his album All Eyes on Me, and

she did. She's like, sure, twenty five grand I'll do it. And I guess after she performed or laid down the track, I guess what it's called. He was like, I got my check at the hotel room. You got to come over to my hotel room to get it.

Speaker 3

The red flag.

Speaker 1

Yeah, so she went. Both of them say that he propositioned her. He says that they had sex. She has repeatedly denied and emphatically denied that they did. But just the fact that they were in a hotel room together gave tupac even if it wasn't true that they had sex, gave him plenty of grounds to tell everybody that they did have sex to at least gnaw at Biggie Small's with questions, you know in this yeah.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and this is his wife, so like it's on for real. At this point, There's no coming back. At the Sole Train Award show, this in March of ninety six, Tupac and Biggie both won award, so they were there. That was the first time they had been together since that Quad Studio shooting, which is where it all started.

Speaker 3

And they both had their guys with them. They both had their entourages.

Speaker 2

Tupac had the Bloods, Biggie had the South Side Crips on his side, and there was a guy named Keith d and he was a crip, so he is with Biggie. And outside of this, at the Soul Train Award show, they got into a fight.

Speaker 3

Basically.

Speaker 2

Witnesses said that Tupac is shouting, shouting down biggiees groups, sort of inciting them. They all brandish guns, but nothing happens at this point, just a lot of sort of back and forth and like, you know, I've got my gun, so shut up.

Speaker 1

Yeah. It's astounding Crips and Bloods with their guns drawn in the same spot and no one shot anybody. That's crazy. So Tupac released Hit Him Up, which is considered one of the best diss tracks of all time. He actually specifically names Biggie Bye Well by name He also talks about how he slept with Biggie's wife, Faith Evans. Yeah, and while this is also going on, there's like a lot of money to that people have figured out we can make from this, right, like this beef and like say,

you know, some street skirmishes or whatever. This stuff makes news, right, Like, people know about this and this is before I think cell phones were still kind of bricky at the time, long before the Internet, like, and people still knew about this stuff. It was just a big deal. And that helps sell records like crazy. It also helps sell magazines. There's a Vibe magazine from September nineteen ninety five, and on the covers Biggie Smalls and Sean Combs and it

talks about East versus West. Some people put their finger on that Vibe issue and point to it as like fanning the flames of this beef and essentially making these these two groups like have to hate each other even more or else they're going to seem weak or like, you know, fake whatever.

Speaker 2

Yeah, for sure, And while the this is all going on, Tupac is becoming a little more paranoid about death Row records and sug Knight and basically like suge Knight's kind of controlling the money, saying that you know you're gonna blow all your money unless I'm in control. He didn't think he was getting the proper royalties. He thought, you're holding me back in Hollywood, and I'm trying to get my movie career going. So like trouble is sort of

brewing on the inside there, which finally would culminate. On September seventh, nineteen ninety six, a lot of people connected with death Row records, Tupac, you know as one of them, went to the Mike Tyson fight against Bruce Selden in Las Vegas, and after the fight, one of the Death Row group members, he was a blood named Trevon Lane, saw a guy who said, hey, he stole a death Row necklace from me a few months ago. That guy's name was Orlando Anderson. He was a crip and a

nephew of Keith d and Tupac. Sug Knight and other people jump Anderson rough him up pretty good and a few hours later, Suge Knight and Tupac are at a STOPLIGHTE Cadillac pulls up next to them and the car is shot up in Tupac.

Speaker 3

Is dead six days later at the age of twenty five.

Speaker 1

Yeah, apparently he was like making jokes and everything as he was being put onto the gurney after the shooting. But he just went downhill really quick from there.

Speaker 3

Yeah.

Speaker 1

So a lot of people are like, this is Biggie, this is Sean Combs. They had they said they had nothing to do with it, but this, this, this did kind of give Biggie Smalls like a wide opening to be like, this stuff has to stop. These this East coast West coast thing has gotten out of hand. And it seemed pretty cut and dry that really it was them beating up Orlando Anderson and him and other crips being in town who targeted and carried out this drive by.

You know, that seems like almost certainly the explanation for the whole thing.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I mean, that's who the cops thought from the very beginning. It was the guy that was jumped and beat up. They didn't arrest him. He died a couple of years later in a shooting in Compton. Fast forward all the way to twenty nineteen. In a memoir where Keith d admitted that he was in that Cadillac. He said, I gave the gun to Anderson. He was in the back seat. There were two other guys in the car. Some people say it was a guy named DeAndre Smith

who was the actual trigger man. But basically everyone in that car ended up being killed except for Keith D. And in September twenty twenty three, he was arrested and charged with Tupac's murder. And that trial is going to happen all these years later, coming up this summer in August of twenty twenty six.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and Keith D and later on a Bad Boy co founder named Kirk Burrows and others. After all these allegations in revelations about what Sean Combs has been up to came out, They've come forward him and like we think he actually did have something to do with this. Seems like a pretty quick turnaround to me. I think it was just crips retaliating for a beatdown. So Tupac is gone now, like you said, age twenty five, and if you want, you can go. You know where Clarkston is, Chuck?

Speaker 3

Uh? Sure? That was a rival high school of Ridan.

Speaker 1

There is a Tupac statue in memorial in Clarkston.

Speaker 3

Did you know that I did? I've never seen it though.

Speaker 1

We went there, You mean, I went there, and it's pretty it's pretty amazing, and it's just in the middle of this little RinkyDink suburb of Atlanta. Strange, but yeah cool.

Speaker 2

That was kind of my stomping grounds. Was that area of Memorial Drive where Clarkston was z owned?

Speaker 1

Oh yeah, yeah, Well we'll have to go to the Tupac statue together.

Speaker 3

I'll go check it out.

Speaker 1

So I think what Chuck like, less than six months no, right at about six months after Tupac was killed, Biggie Small's was murdered.

Speaker 2

Yeah, this was March nineteen ninety seven. He was in a car, riding in a car leaving a party a Vibe magazine in La pronounced dead at the hospital. He was but twenty four years old. And immediately everyone was like, this is Shuge Knight, who by the way, people blamed Tupac shooting initially on Shuge Knight. Yeah, but he was shot as well. He was just grazed, but that seems obviously to have not been the case. But everyone immediately

was like, no, Suge Knight. It definitely was in on Biggie's murder.

Speaker 1

In retaliation for Tupac shooting, right. Yeah, It's also entirely possible that Shawn Combs did this too, but it certainly seems to have been a contract hit. Like the people who killed Biggie Small's shot and shot into his car. They were lying in wait. They were essentially parked at this intersection, waiting for them to stop. They stopped. Shawn Comb's car ran a red light and Biggie's car stopped at it. So Shawn Combs wasn't near the shooting when

it happened. There was an FBI agent who came forward or actually I guess created a whole report on this, who was like this. It was essentially the LAPD hiring a hit man at the behest of either Suge Knight or Sean Combs. And if so, it was not Tupac's probably was not a conspiracy. Biggie Small's murder was almost certainly a conspiracy.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and you know Suge Knight would have done all this from jail. He was in jail at the time. He is in jail. He's in prison now. Again, this is from This is a twenty eight year sentence, so this is a big one. And this is for the death of a Compton businessman from twenty fifteen. He was never charged in Biggie's killing. But Biggie's last record or last you know, sort of official release. I know they both put out a lot of stuff posthumously. But his

next like real drop was Life After Death. Was called that before he was murdered. But that sold more than ten million copies and certified diamond.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I guess not as Tupac released nine posthumous albums, seven of them went platinum. Yeah. Did you know sug Knight has a podcast from jail called collect Call uh Hit.

Speaker 3

That's a pretty good name. It's a great podcast from prison.

Speaker 1

Agreed. Yeah, you want to know what ended the East Coast West Coast beef?

Speaker 3

Oh was that still not happening?

Speaker 1

No? No, it ended fairly soon after this rat became more decentralized in groups like Outcast came out. Yeah, and the whether you were from the East Coast or the West Coast was watered down. It didn't matter nearly as much. So you can thank Outcasts for ending the East Coast West Coast rivalry.

Speaker 3

Yeah, because people are like, no one's got a beef with Big Boy and Andre.

Speaker 1

No, everybody loves them for sure, Like I know we've some maybe facetious. We are not being.

Speaker 3

Facetious right now. No, hell abotcast.

Speaker 1

One last thing. Apparently Michael Jackson assaulted Tupac once in a studio when Tupac insulted Quincy Jones's daughter.

Speaker 3

Oh h, Rashida or another one.

Speaker 1

Another one, not Rashida. I don't think it was Rashida. I don't know.

Speaker 3

I went. I wonder how. I wonder how that fight went.

Speaker 1

It's a widespread rumor. And apparently also, you know, Biggie was on one of Michael Jackson's songs like doing his thing, like legit doing his thing. It wasn't watered down for the radio or anything like that. And apparently Michael Jackson threw his lot in with Biggie and was not a big fan of Tupac and snubbed him once. Oh wow, and apparently in addition to beating him up.

Speaker 2

And everyone said, no one cares put side here on Michael Jackson. You don't have that kind of cred.

Speaker 1

No, but it is a like Biggie does a pretty good job on that song.

Speaker 3

I'll have to check it out.

Speaker 1

Okay, I think that's it, Chuck man.

Speaker 3

We did it.

Speaker 1

We did it. We made it through. Hopefully we didn't sound too ridiculous and dorky at any point, but we'll find out. Yeah, Chuck said, yeah, it means it's time for listener now.

Speaker 3

Yeah, this is just kind of a nice email with some good suggestions. Hey guys, my name is Josiah Brown. I live in Tennessee.

Speaker 2

I've been a devoted fan since I was about ten years old and I'm twenty now. My mom put me on you guys, and I basically never stopped.

Speaker 3

So thanks Mom.

Speaker 1

Thanks Mom.

Speaker 3

I've been binge listening recently. I do that every so often.

Speaker 2

I've just been reminded of how wonderful the show is, and I just want to reach out and say thanks for providing some wonderful content and bringing the same big old smile to my face all these years.

Speaker 3

Keep up the good workfellas, and that is Josiah Bee. And Josiah had a lot.

Speaker 2

Of good ideas, including Ann Frank, Oscar Schindler. Motown Okay, I want to do Motown for sure, mister Rogers, I can't believe we haven't done that one yet.

Speaker 1

We were going to, and then that Tom Hanks movie came out and kind of ruined it for a little while.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I finally saw that on a plane recently.

Speaker 1

Would you think did you see it?

Speaker 3

Uh? It was? Okay yep.

Speaker 2

And the Hindenburg, and that the Hindenburg is going to be coming at some point in the not too distant future because we commissioned that article and it's it's in the folder on the computer, so I definitely know we're going to get to that one.

Speaker 1

Okay, boo, Yeah, who is that again, Josiah, Josiah, thanks a lot, Josiah. That was a very nice email, and thanks for all the great ideas. If we do any of them, hopefully will remember to credit you with them, right.

Speaker 3

That's right, except for the Hindenburg. Yeah, it's already in the bad Okay.

Speaker 1

If you want to be like Josiah and email in, we would love to hear from you. You can send it off to Stuff podcast at iHeartRadio dot com.

Speaker 3

Stuff you Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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