50 Cent has revealed that he thought he was on the TV show Punk’d when he first met Eminem.
Fif stopped by Million Dollaz Worth of Game on Monday (September 2) and shared a story about his first time meeting Marshall Mathers.
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The G-Unit mogul was asked about his first encounter with Em by co-hosts Wallo and Gillie Da Kid.
He said: “It was wild. Remember that show they had, Punk’d? I thought they had cameras and they was gonna come out and say, ‘You’ve been punk’d.’”
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Fif’ continued: “He flew me to LA, I came out. I was so bugged out from the experience that I came through the airport with the [bulletproof] vest and shit on … I get there and he’s like, ‘Yo,’ he hugs me.” 50 revealed that Em was so enthusiastic that he was questioning whether the experience was real or staged.
“It felt so good that it couldn’t be right,” he concluded.
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Check out the clip below, which begins at about the 50:24 mark.
Since that first encounter, 50 and Em have had a fruitful relationship.
Back in 2022, 50 Cent thanked Eminem after winning his first Emmys for the Super Bowl LVI Pepsi Halftime Show.
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After the show, 50 showed love to Eminem, with whom he shared the Super Bowl stage alongside Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Kendrick Lamar and Mary J. Blige during the Los Angeles Rams’ 23-20 victory over the Cincinnati Bengals at Inglewood’s SoFi Stadium in February.
“@eminem is the man,” he wrote on Instagram next to a headline of the Super Bowl’s Emmys success. “He wouldn’t do the show with out me that’s my boy!”
In October of 2022, 50 said that despite all of his accolades, Eminem doesn’t get enough credit for his true impact on Hip Hop culture and its global reach.
Fif stopped by Ebro In The Morning and said that the Detroit legend made Hip Hop accessible to more people, thus helping the genre and culture reach new heights.
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“I don’t think that they give Em the credit that he deserves,” he explained. “Because, in order for people to embrace something, they have to see where they fit in.”
He continued: “I think part of Eminem’s legacy is the growth of our culture. People wouldn’t buy it if they didn’t see where they fit into it. And he’s there and he’s a legitimate artist because of his journey. When you’re look at 8 Mile, you’re seeing a Black story with a white lead. You seeing poverty, you’re seeing [similar] circumstances. Look at his friends Proof and D-12 and everybody: these are real Hip Hop guys. Which is why he’s a real Hip Hop guy.”
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