by MultiMedia and Nicolae Sfetcu
| Eminem | |
|---|---|
![]() Marshall Mathers |
|
| Origin | Detroit, Michigan |
| Years active | 1996 to present |
| Genre(s) | Rap/Hip Hop |
| Label(s) | Shady/Aftermath/Interscope |
Eminem (born Marshall Bruce Mathers III on October 17, 1972) is an American rapper, one of today's most popular and controversial rappers, and a Grammy and Oscar-winner. He is of mostly Scottish-American descent, and currently lives in suburban Detroit. Discovered by rapper/producer Dr. Dre, Eminem is known as one of the most skillful and controversial rappers in the industry, becoming a crossover sensation with his debut single "My Name Is" while simultaneously earning respect from the hip-hop community for his lyrical talent. He is noted for his ability to change his own verbal pace (flow) and style multiple times within one song without losing the beat, and has been praised for his skill in alliteration and assonance. He is infamous for the controversy surrounding many of his lyrics. With the enormous success of his sophomore album The Marshall Mathers LP following its release in May 2000, and its subsequent nomination for four Grammy awards including Album of the Year, critics such as GLAAD denounced his lyrics as homophobic, while others complained that it was also extremely misogynistic and violent. However, he has received a great deal of praise within the hip-hop community for his lyrical ability. He is the second-highest selling rapper of all time, behind Tupac Shakur, though the latter has had several posthumous albums released.
While generally avoiding overtly political tones previously (or if they were mentioned it was in passing), in late 2004 before the presidential election, Eminem released the song "Mosh," which harshly criticizes President George W. Bush. Encore, Mathers' fourth major-label album, was released later that year, but was considered by many to be a disappointment in comparison to his previous three albums and sold half of what The Eminem Show had. Though Eminem considers himself neither a militant nor a political artist, he did have his own Hip Hop Political Convention as a parody of the national political conventions held in 2004. His latest release is Curtain Call: The Hits, a compilation which covers many of his past hit songs, and includes three new tracks.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Marshall was born in St. Joseph, Missouri (near Kansas City) to parents Deborah "Debbie" Mathers-Briggs and Marshall Bruce Mathers II, and spent most of his childhood moving back and forth between Kansas City, and suburban Detroit, including Warren. His father had abandoned the family before Marshall turned two years old, and the two have not had contact since, save some rejected attempts by Marshall's father to contact Marshall after his rise to fame. Constantly moving from home to home, he frequently changed schools, often finding himself to be an outcast in the new communities, and frequently fell victim to bullying. An assault by schoolmate DeAngelo Bailey that left Marshall hospitalized was the most notable such incident, which Marshall would later recount in greatly exaggerated form on the track "Brain Damage" (The Slim Shady LP, 1999). The song prompted legal action by the assailant,[1] with accusations of libel and privacy infringement, which were eventually dismissed in court.
His childhood was further marred by his family's meager financial status, which was the primary reason for the continuous moving, during which Marshall and his mother Debbie would often find themselves living in public housing, mobile homes, and under the care of relatives, such as Marshall's great-aunt Edna, whom he mentions in "Evil Deeds" (‘‘Encore’’). During this time, Debbie was legally taking the prescription drugs Vicodin and Valium, though Marshall later claimed in numerous interviews and songs that she was abusing the drugs,[2] to which Debbie retaliated with a lawsuit pressing defamation charges (see below). In the song "Cleaning Out My Closet" (The Eminem Show, 2002), Mathers also accuses his mother of having Munchausen syndrome, adding that "my whole life I was made to believe I was sick when I wasn't... it makes you sick to your stomach, doesn't it?". This was not the first time someone had suggested Debbie had the disorder; a social worker had made similar comments following a 1996 investigation of her mistreatment of Nathan Samra-Mathers, her second child.
Before dropping out of Lincoln High School Warren as a 9th grader at the age of 17 (after failing ninth grade three times), Marshall made a number of significant acquaintances at the school. This included fellow rapper Proof, who was to become one of his closest friends, the Runyon Avenue Soldiers, and future wife Kimberly Ann "Kim" Scott, with whom he soon developed a long-term relationship. When Kim became pregnant, this further increased Marshall's drive to succeed through concern over the welfare of his new family. He discusses this in "Never Far" (Infinite, 1996), saying "I got a baby on the way, I don't even got a car...I still stay with my moms...we gotta make some hit records or something [because] I'm tired of being broke..." When the Infinite album failed to generate the revenue and acclaim he had hoped for, and Kim ended their relationship, preventing him from seeing his newborn child, Marshall decided to take his own life. However, his suicide attempt using an overdose of Tylenol analgesics failed, and Marshall resumed his efforts to succeed in the music industry and reconcile with Kim.[3] He ultimately succeeded in doing both, marrying Kim on June 14, 1999 in St. Joseph, Missouri.
The couple's daughter, Hailie Jade Scott, born December 25, 1995 would grow to become an important part of Marshall's life, as he became dedicated to giving her everything he himself was deprived of in his childhood, including a father figure and financial security. He would go on to mention her extensively in some of his songs, including "'97 Bonnie & Clyde" (The Slim Shady LP, 1999), which takes the form of a one-sided dialogue with Hailie, as well as "Hailie's Song" (The Eminem Show, 2002), "Mockingbird" (‘‘Encore’’, 2004), and "When I'm Gone" (Curtain Call: The Hits, 2005), all of which are proclamations of his love and dedication to her. In addition, he samples her voice in the less serious upbeat track "My Dad's Gone Crazy" (The Eminem Show, 2002).
The year 1999 was marked by a rise to celebrity status for Marshall, but it also ushered the beginning of his numerous legal troubles. The first of these was his mother Debbie's lawsuit against him in September of that year. The lawsuit was motivated by comments on Debbie's drug use made by Marshall on the song "My Name Is" (The Slim Shady LP, 1999), specifically the lyric "Ninety-nine percent of my life I was lied to/I just found out my mom does more dope than I do", and similar accusations in numerous interviews. Debbie refuted the statements and demanded more than $10 million in damages for defamation in two lawsuits. After rumors of Debbie dropping the suit, she and Marshall reached a settlement in 2001 for $25,000, with over $23,000 of it going to Debbie's former attorney Fred Gibson by a court order.[4] A request for reconsideration of the settlement by Debbie was denied by a judge.[5] Marshall's resentful reflections on the case can be heard on the song "Marshall Mathers" (The Marshall Mathers LP, 2000) in the lyrics "my fuckin' bitch mom is suing for 10 million/ she must want a dollar for every pill I've been stealin'" and the self-censored line "your attorney Fred Gibson's a faggot".
With Marshall's rise to stardom, new disputes arose between him and his wife, centered around Kim's dissatisfaction over the graphic fictional account of Marshall murdering her and dumping her body in a lake in the songs "'97 Bonnie & Clyde" (The Slim Shady LP, 1999) and "Kim" (The Marshall Mathers LP, 2000). The tension between the couple came to a climax when Marshall witnessed Kim kissing another man, one John Guerrera, outside the Hot Rocks Café in Warren on June 4, 2000. Highly disgruntled, Marshall threatened John with an unloaded 9 mm semi-automatic gun and allegedly proceeded to pistol-whip him.[6] Guerrera is mentioned in "Sing For The Moment" on The Eminem Show, with the exact lyric being "you're full of shit too, Guerrera, that was a fist that hit you!" On the previous day, Marshall was allegedly involved in a heated dispute in Red Oak, Michigan with Douglas Dail, an associate of the rap group Insane Clown Posse, with whom Marshall had an ongoing rivalry. On The Marshall Mathers LP, on the track "Marshall Mathers," Eminem calls ICP's Shaggy 2 Dope and Violent Jay "Faggot 2 Dope," and "Silent Gay." Furthermore, the Ken Kaniff skit on this album features the character (played by Eminem) being fellated by the ICP pair. During the confrontation, Marshall was observed to be holding a gun, which he kept pointed at the ground.[7] Being taken into police custody during the Hot Rocks Café incident, Marshall was charged with misdemeanor charges of brandishing a firearm in public, assault with a dangerous weapon, and two counts of concealed weapon possession, in two separate trials for the two incidents. After a plea bargain in the John Guerrera case, which concluded on April 10, 2001, Marshall pleaded guilty to weapon possession in exchange for the assault charges being dropped, receiving two years of probation,[8] and was ordered to pay $100,000 in damages at the conclusion of the case evaluation in 2002.[9] In the Dail case, he pleaded nolo contendere to the charges of firearm possession and brandishing, receiving one year of probation, enforced concurrently with the sentence from the first case.[10] He would later recount the former incident in the song "Soldier" (The Eminem Show, 2002) and the preceding interlude "The Kiss".
While the trials were in the beginning stages, things were only getting worse for Marshall, when on July 7, 2000, Kim attempted suicide in the couple's Sterling Heights, Michigan home by cutting her wrists. Marshall talks about this incident from Hailie's point of view in the song "When I'm Gone" from the CD Curtain Call: The Hits.[11] This prompted Marshall to file for divorce a few months later,[12] which was promptly countered by Kim with a lawsuit that sought to deny Marshall custody of their daughter and $10 million in defamation damages.[13] Within weeks, however, they settled the lawsuit, and agreed to joint custody of their daughter, with Kim gaining physical custody of Hailie, granting Marshall "liberal visitation rights".[14] By the end of the year, the couple reconciled, agreeing to dismiss divorce claims and live together.[15] Marshall mentions [Kim's] suicide attempt and the Hot Rocks Café incident on the Xzibit song "Don't Approach Me" (Restless, 2000), expressing anger and frustration with the media's constant prying into his life, and with public attention towards him in general.
The reconciliation, however, would not last, as Kim filed for divorce in 2001, which was finalized in October of that year, granting joint physical and legal custody of Hailie to both parties, as well as requiring Marshall to make child support payments.[16] There was further turbulence in their relationship when Kim was sentenced to 2 years of probation for felony cocaine possession in 2003. This was not her first such incident, as she had previously faced similar charges in 2001, although they were eventually dropped.[17] The incident was not to be her last, however, as she was sentenced to 30 days in jail in 2004, after failing a drug test for cocaine while still on probation.[18] Marshall makes numerous references to Kim's cocaine use on the Encore album, including the quotes "you're a fucking cokehead slut" and "mama developed a habit" in the songs "Puke" and "Mockingbird" respectively. Their relationship since their divorce was subject to many contradictive rumors and statements in Marshall's music and remained in an indecisive "on-again, off-again" state for a long time.
Marshall was no stranger to drugs and alcohol, as suggested by a large number of his songs, including "Drug Ballad" (The Marshall Mathers LP, 2000) and "These Drugs" (Devil's Night Bonus Disc, 2001), which are dedicated to his drug use in their entirety. The song "I'm Shady" (The Slim Shady LP, 1999) even includes the explanatory line "well, I do take pills (ecstasy or prescription drugs), don't do speed / don't do crack, don't do coke / I do smoke weed / don't do smack / I do do shrooms, do drink beer / I just wanna make a few things clear". Later tracks, including the aforementioned "These Drugs" and "Kill You" (The Marshall Mathers LP, 2000) additionally suggest cocaine use, although he has never been in a law enforcement incident involving drugs. However, with the sentence of two years of probation taking effect in 2001, during which he was subject to mandatory regular drug testing, his recreational drug use was put to an end. This fact is supported with references to his drug use in his music, which all but disappeared after 2001, and comments by band mate Proof, who states that Marshall "sobered up".[19] However, with rising pressures and workload in his professional career, Marshall found it difficult to get the rest he wanted, and turned to Ambien sleeping pills for relief. His use of the drug eventually became so severe, that in August 2005, he cancelled the European leg of his ongoing tour, and checked into a drug rehabilitation clinic for treatment.
The decline of Marshall's drug use during his probation was in line with the growing demands for responsibility in his role as a parent to Hailie. In addition, he is also known to take care of the daughter of Kim's twin sister Dawn, Alaina "Laney", whom he mentions in the song "Mockingbird" (Encore, 2004), referring to himself as her "daddy" and stating "it's almost like [Laney and Hailie] are sisters now". He also cares for his younger half-brother Nathan, who makes appearances in the music videos for "The Way I Am" (The Marshall Mathers LP, 2000) and "Without Me" (The Eminem Show, 2002). Marshall currently resides with the aforementioned members of his extended family in Clinton Charter Township, Michigan in the outskirts of Detroit.
Eminem remarried Kim on January 14, 2006 in Michigan. Eminem's best man was long time friend and D12 member Proof, while Kim's maid of honor was their daughter Hailie. They walked down the aisle to Eminem's song "Mockingbird" which was a tribute to Hailie and his niece Alaina. Guests at the wedding were 50 Cent and his G-Unit crew, as well as D12. Kim's mother attended the wedding while Eminem's mother did not.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Hailie Jade Scott (Mathers) is the daughter of Eminem and his wife Kimberly Ann Scott. She was born on December 25, 1995. The songs "Mockingbird" on Eminem's album Encore, "Hailie's Song" on The Eminem Show, and Eminem's 2005 single "When I'm Gone" are dedicated to her. Hailie joins her father in the hook for "My Dad's Gone Crazy." She also features prominently in a number of his other songs, most notably in Just The Two Of Us on The Slim Shady EP, later renamed '97 Bonnie & Clyde on The Slim Shady LP, which is a fictional account of Eminem, accompanied by Hailie, dumping the dead body of his wife into a lake, while he talks lovingly to his daughter in baby-talk.
Alaina Mathers is Eminem's eleven-year-old adopted daughter, and the biological daughter of his wife's twin sister. Eminem has custody of his niece and is raising her as Hailie's sister. She is also referenced in the song "Mockingbird" on Encore, as "Laney".
Nathan Mathers is Eminem's younger half-brother by 14 years, and is in his legal custody.
Eminem is also determined to get custody of Whitney, Kim's child by another man, in order to become the girl's father. Eminem is quoted as saying about Whitney: "I'm in love with that girl, man. She's so sweet and funny." He plans to change Whitney's last name to Mathers.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

Interested in rap from a young age, Mathers began performing as early as thirteen, later gaining some popularity with a group, Soul Intent. In 1996, he released his first independent album, named Infinite (of which he sold about 500 copies out of the back of his car.) The album received no airplay and a mixed critical response, with people claiming Eminem's rapping style sounded too similar to Nas and AZ. Drawing on the negative experiences of his life, in 1997 Eminem followed Infinite up with The Slim Shady EP demo, which saw his lyrics take a decidedly darker turn, in songs like "No One's Iller" and "Murder Murder," the latter in which he talks about having to commit crimes to feed his daughter. He became famous in the hip-hop underground because of his distinctive, cartoonish style and the fact that he was white in a predominantly black genre. Fellow rapper Snoop Dogg referred to him as rap's "great white American hope" in the song "Bitch Please II".
It is said that rap artist and producer Dr. Dre found Eminem's demo on the garage floor of Jimmy Iovine, the Interscope label chief. Though this did not directly lead to a recording contract, Dr. Dre agreed to sign him when Eminem won second place versus Otherwize at the 1997 Rap Olympics freestyle battle. Other sources state that an executive at the offices of Interscope handed the demo to Iovine who passed it to Dre, which resulted in a contract.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

Soul Intent is a Detroit rap group which was around in the early to mid 1990s. The group consisted of white rapper M&M (now Eminem), and MC Proof, and DJ Butterfingers.
There is little known about the group's releases, although there is one single called F@#!in' Backstabber, with a song called Biterphobia on the b-side. This was released in 1995 on Mashin' Duck Records. The group did not have a lot of money to spend on production, so the two tracks are built primarily on samples of other recordings, particularly F@#!in' Backstabber.
The single's title track is a "diss" aimed at an African American rapper called Champtown, who was also from Detroit. M&M had collaborated with the rapper, and even featured in one of his music videos, but found out that Champtown was actually trying to get with his girlfriend Kim, behind his back (supposedly), which caused him to make this track. It features samples from Pharcyde's "On The D.L.," amongst a variety of samples from instruments, including pianos and saxophones, and is set to a typical rock drum-beat. Biterphobia is quite different. Some people believe this is one of Eminem's best songs, and think that he has gotten worse with fame. The track is quite upbeat, with very well written lyrics and impressive production. There is some scratching which works well in the song, and the whole track is built around a guitar sample from Heaven On Their Minds, taken from the motion picture Jesus Christ Superstar, which really fits perfectly.
The original tape was pressed in very small numbers, and has been auctioned on eBay, selling for around $700, because it is so rare. Since the mid '90s, the group has split up and Eminem and Proof no longer work with DJ Butterfingers.
In 1997, Eminem made a demo tape with The Funky Bass Team (F.B.T.), called The Slim Shady EP. This tape eventually ended up in the hands of gangster-rap producer Dr. Dre. Dre was so impressed by Eminem's lyrical talent that he tracked him down and had Eminem flown to California. In the studio that Eminem worked with Dr. Dre in, there was a Detroit rapper called Royce Da 5'9". Eminem and Royce formed a duo, which they called Bad Meets Evil. Bad Meets Evil made about 8 different songs.
Proof was also part of Detroit a group called 5 Elementz, which became 5-Ela. 5-Ela consisted of himself, Mudd, and Thyme. Thyme featured on Eminem's debut album Infinite. 5-Ela have appeared on several tracks and have 3 albums of their own. Proof is also in a duo called Promatic, which consists of himself and a Detroit rapper named Dogmatic, (Pro of Proof and matic of Dogmatic). They have appeared on different albums and have an album of their own, entitled Promatic.
Eminem was also in a group called The Outsidaz, a New Jersey rap group, and appeared on their debut EP Night Life, but they have since split up, and Eminem is involved in a feud with one of the members. He was also in a group called Bassmint Productions.
Eminem and Proof now work together in the popular HipHop group D-12.
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Video: Soul Intent Live '92 (Full)

Once he joined Interscope, Eminem released The Slim Shady LP, which went on to be one of the most popular records of 1999, going triple platinum by the end of the year. With the album's enormous popularity came controversy surrounding many of the album's lyrics. In "'97 Bonnie and Clyde", Eminem describes a trip with his infant daughter, disposing of the body of his wife. Another song, "Guilty Conscience," ends with Eminem encouraging a man to murder his wife and her lover.
Album cover of The Marshall Mathers LP (2000)
The Marshall Mathers LP was released in May 2000, quickly selling 2 million copies. The first single released from the album, The Real Slim Shady, was a huge hit— thanks in part to the catchy rhythm and chorus line, "So won't the real Slim Shady please stand up, please stand up, please stand up?" (adapted from the catch phrase of the TV quiz show To Tell the Truth). It also created some buzz by trash-talking celebrities and making dubious claims about them. In the song, Eminem implies, among other things, that Christina Aguilera gave "head" (oral sex) to Fred Durst (of Limp Bizkit) and Carson Daly (of MTV's Total Request Live). In his second single, "The Way I Am," he reveals to his fans the pressures from his record company to top "My Name Is" and sell more records, and dismisses the alleged controversial link between music such as that of Marilyn Manson and shootings such as at Columbine High School as absurd, instead blaming the parents. In the third single, "Stan" (which samples Dido's "Thank You"), Eminem attempts to deal with his new-found fame, telling the story of a fan so obsessed with Eminem that the fan winds up killing himself and his pregnant girlfriend, mirroring one of the songs on The Slim Shady LP. It is now considered to be one of the classics of the genre.
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A large part of Eminem's popularity is his separation from the over-abundance of "pop-rap", in which rhymes rarely stray from bragging about money and jewelery, fast cars with large rims, huge parties, and constant casual sex. Instead, Eminem's songs typically explore deeper anger, thoughts, questions, and statements about his life and how he is treated. Common topics are:
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

With the enormous popularity of Eminem's second album, the controversy surrounding Eminem grew even larger, especially when The Marshall Mathers LP was nominated for a Grammy Award for Album of the Year. Though Mathers had always claimed that his lyrics were not meant to be taken seriously, and that he had nothing against homosexuals or women, the gay rights group GLAAD organized a boycott of the Grammys. Mathers responded to this by singing "Stan" on-stage with openly gay singer Elton John, ending the performance by hugging John to show that he didn't have anything against homosexuals. Though it shocked a lot of people, this gesture failed to appease many of his critics. In later interviews, he said he did not know Elton John was gay, but that he respected him: "Of course I'd heard of Elton John," Eminem said, "but I didn't know he was gay. I didn't know anything about his personal life. I didn't really care, but being that he was gay and he had my back, I think it made a statement in itself saying that he understood where I was coming from."
The two songs most often cited as examples in The Marshall Mathers LP of Eminem's misogyny were "Kill You" and "Kim." Critics claimed the former portrayed extremely violent abuse against women in general and contained a line about Eminem raping his own mother. The latter is not so much a song as it is a reenactment of a fictional fight between Eminem and his wife, although he does rhyme his shouted, hoarse lines. Despite his conflicting expressions of love and hate throughout the track, Eminem ends up slitting Kim's throat at the end (accompanied by cries of "Bleed, bitch, bleed!"); several people objected to the graphic description of spousal abuse. On the clean version of the CD, the track was removed and replaced with a song almost entirely devoid of profanity called "The Kids."
Since Eminem's rapid ascent to fame, tell-all biographies of varying quality have been published, including Shady Bizzness by his former bodyguard Byron Williams. Eminem himself has written a book called Angry Blonde, released in 2000, where he reveals the emotions and intent behind the lyrics in the Marshall Mathers LP, and describes his passion for and approach to rapping.
As one of six members of the rap group D12, Eminem appeared on the album Devil's Night, released in 2001. The album was certified multi-platinum. The album contained the single "Purple Pills", renamed "Purple Hills" for radio play. Another song, "Blow My Buzz", was on the soundtrack for the film The Wash (2001), in which Eminem had a cameo appearance.
Eminem's third major album, The Eminem Show was released in summer 2002. It featured the single "Without Me," an apparent sequel to "The Real Slim Shady," in which he makes derogatory comments about boy bands, *NSYNC's Chris Kirkpatrick, Limp Bizkit, Moby, and Lynne Cheney, among others. The album reflected on the impact of his rise to fame, his relationship with his wife Kim and his daughter Hailie, and his status in the hip-hop community. He also addresses the charges he faced over assaulting a bouncer he saw kissing his wife in 2000. While there is clear anger present on several tracks, this album was considerably less inflammatory than the previous, and as such did not face any protests of misogyny and homophobia that had plagued The Marshall Mathers LP.
On November 19, 2003, new controversy surrounded Eminem when a cassette tape was played during a press conference held by The Source magazine. The cassette featured Mathers performing a freestyle rap in which he made disparaging remarks about black women, calling them "dumb chicks" in comparison to white women and claimed they are only after money. Other racial slurs and remarks were on the tape, including the use of the word "nigger". Mathers claimed he made the recording after breaking up with his black girlfriend in 1988; however The Source claimed the tapes were recorded in 1994, and old friends of Eminem's claimed he never had a black girlfriend. Eminem later filed a lawsuit against The Source for alleged copyright infringement.
On December 8, 2003, the United States Secret Service admitted it was "looking into" allegations that Mathers had threatened the President of the United States after the unreleased song "We As Americans" leaked onto the internet. The lyrics in question: "Fuck money / I don't rap for dead presidents / I'd rather see the president dead / It's never been said, but I set precedents...". The song was being recorded to possibly be on Encore, but wound up on a bonus CD accompanying the album Encore. The second use of the word "dead" was edited out of that version.
Then, in 2004, Eminem made the music video "My Band" with D12. The song was the band's sarcastic response to the media's frequent portrayal of D12 as Eminem's band, giving little or no credit to its other members. The video contained various parodies, including that of the Janet Jackson "incident", and of 50 Cent's "In Da Club" video.
On October 12, 2004, a week after the release of "Just Lose It", Eminem's first video and single off Encore, Michael Jackson called into the Los Angeles-based Steve Harvey radio show to report his displeasure with the video, which parodies Jackson's child-molestation accusations, plastic surgeries, and an incident in which Jackson's hair caught on fire while filming a Pepsi commercial in 1984. The lyrics to "Just Lose It" also refer to Jackson's legal troubles. Many of Jackson's supporters and friends spoke out about the video, including Stevie Wonder who called the video "kicking a man while he's down" and "bullshit",[20] and Steve Harvey who declared, "Eminem has lost his ghetto pass. We want the pass back".[21] In the video, Eminem also parodied Pee Wee Herman, MC Hammer, and a Blonde-Ambition-touring Madonna.
BET was the first channel to stop airing the video. MTV, however, announced it would continue airing the video, and "Just Lose It" became the #1 requested video on TRL for the week ending October 22. The Source magazine, through its CEO Raymond "Benzino" Scott, wanted not only the video to be pulled, but the song off the album, and a public apology to Jackson from Eminem, though this was likely due to his personal hatred of Eminem rather than any genuine concern for Michael.[22]
Others dismissed "Just Lose It" as a tame "Weird Al" Yankovic-style knockoff.[23] Regarding Jackson's protest, Yankovic, who parodied the Eminem song "Lose Yourself" on a track titled "Couch Potato" on his 2003 album Poodle Hat, himself told the Chicago Sun-Times, "Last year, Eminem forced me to halt production on the video for my "Lose Yourself" parody because he somehow thought that it would be harmful to his image or career. So the irony of this situation with Michael is not lost on me."
On October 26, 2004, a week before the U.S. presidential election, 2004, Eminem released the video for his song titled "Mosh" on the Internet. The song features a very strong anti-Bush message, with lyrics such as "fuck Bush" and "this weapon of mass destruction that we call our president". The video features Eminem gathering up an army of people presented as victims of the Bush administration and leading them to the White House. However, once the army breaks in, it is revealed that they are there to simply register to vote, and the video ends with the words "VOTE Tuesday November 2" on the screen. After Bush won the election, the video's ending was changed to Eminem and the protesters invading while Bush was giving a speech. On October 31, Eminem performed the song on Saturday Night Live, but some thought that he appeared to be lip-syncing the chorus, only a week after Ashlee Simpson was caught lip-syncing her performance on the program. His management observed that he was merely rapping over a backing track so as not to lose the beat, and in any case, since the Simpson incident had occurred only the week previously, Eminem made a point of lowering the microphone whenever the backing vocals were heard while he wasn't rapping. None of the publicity helped the album however, which saw its sales stall at 4.7 million copies, a number dramatically lower than his past two albums.
In summer 2005, Mathers embarked on his first US concert run in three years, the Anger Management 3 Tour, featuring Lil' Jon, 50 Cent and G-Unit, D12, Obie Trice, The Alchemist, and others. In August 2005, Eminem canceled the European leg of the tour and subsequently announced that he had entered drug rehabilitation for treatment for a "dependency on sleep medication". At the same time as he was entering rehab, his aunt and uncle, Jack and Betty Schmitt, sued Mathers, charging that he had reneged on a promise to build a $350,000 house for them and supply them with money for the house's upkeep. The couple claimed that Mathers had kept the house in his name, and then issued them eviction orders.
Eminem has made many enemies in the music industry, including Ja Rule, Benzino, Everlast, the Insane Clown Posse (although recently, at an ICP concert, they sat down with Proof of D12 and talked out their differences, officially "squashing the beef with D12"), Canibus, Vanilla Ice, Fred Durst and others.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

Rap star Eminem, because of his battle rap style, created a large number of enemies in the music industry, including Ja Rule, Benzino, Everlast, the Insane Clown Posse, Canibus, and others. Many times, these hip hop rivalries stay on wax and are nothing more than lyrical sparring between artists. Other times, the confrontations have turned violent.
Here is a short list of rivalries that have followed the famous MC throughout his career:
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Video: Eminem - Just Don't Give a Fuck (Original Version)
This is the best known recent beef that Eminem has had. While the dispute didn't erupt in a significant way until 2003, its roots date back to 2000, when Eminem's critically-acclaimed sophomore album The Marshall Mathers LP only received a 2/5 mic (the equivalent of 2/5 stars) rating from The Source, the leading hip-hop magazine at the time. While several subscribers protested the rating and it was eventually changed to 4/5 mics, Eminem clearly took offense, and included the lines "[...] 5 mics in The Source, ain't holdin' my fuckin' breath/But I'll suffocate for the respect 'fore I collect the fuckin' check" in "Say What You Say," a track from The Eminem Show.
In 2003, Benzino, a rapper who had secretly co-owned The Source for some time, released a diss single titled "Pull Your Skirt Up" against Eminem. The track attacked Eminem's "street cred" (although Eminem has never claimed to be "[...] reppin' the streets," a line Benzino includes in the song) and accused him of being a tool of the music industry. In the same year, The Source attempted to tarnish Eminem's image by digging up an old tape from his time as a young rapper in Detroit where he insulted black women and used the word "nigger."
Eminem was quick to respond with two underground diss tracks, "Nail in the Coffin" and "The Sauce," in which he attacked the credibility of The Source and claimed that Benzino was only attacking him to get his album The Benzino Project publicity. Though Benzino would later respond with more diss tracks, it is generally accepted in the hip-hop community that Eminem won the feud, as Benzino is not considered a very skillful artist after having poor sales from all of the albums he had released in the past(This would indicate some kind of pay for play access to the Source magazine as generally speaking when a recording artist has a flop he is relieved of his contractual obligations, but in Benzino's case with every flop he was given another recording contract with another major label, very peculiar in the business).
As a result of the beef, Shady/Aftermath ads were pulled from the magazine. XXL, which had featured negative coverage of Shady/Aftermath artists since Eminem included the lines "Okay, let me give you motherfuckers some help/Here -- DOUBLE-X-L! DOUBLE-X-L!/Now your magazine shouldn't have so much trouble to sell/Ah fuck it, I'll even buy a couple myself" on "Marshall Mathers," stepped in to fill the void, accepting Shady/Aftermath ads and doing a 180 in its coverage of its artists. Currently, XXL leads The Source in circulation, and Benzino's actions are generally perceived to have severely tarnished the image and credibility of the magazine.
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After Eminem gained underground notoriety following the release of The Slim Shady EP, underground New York rapper Cage claimed that he had bit (copied) his style and lyrics for his "Slim Shady" persona. While not devoting full diss tracks to the feud, Eminem took shots at Cage in "Get You Mad" ("Wagin' wars, went on stage and sprayed Cage with 'Agent Orange' [underground Cage single]/And wiped my ass with his page in Source") and "Role Model" ("I bought Cage's tape, opened it, and dubbed over it.") Disses by Cage include "Illest 4 Letter Word," a full diss track, as well as "Escape to '88" ("Being black balled by a white MC, pause, I guess that faggot found the right MD") and "Still Babblin,'" which include shots at Eminem. The feud took place early in Eminem's career and has since been inactive.
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On the track "Still Don't Give a Fuck" from his debut album The Slim Shady LP, Eminem included the lines, "I'm a cross between Manson, Esham and Ozzy." The line was meant as a tribute to Detroit rapper Esham, and he didn't take offense. However, the feud escalated later, and on the track "Kill You" from The Marshall Mathers LP, Eminem rapped, "I ain't 'acid rap,' but I rap on acid," apparently responding to accusations that he had bit Esham's style. Following the release of D12's debut Devil's Night, which was more shock-oriented than Eminem's solo albums, claims that he and the other members of D12 had bit Esham's style increased.
Esham took shots at Eminem on the track "Chemical Imbalance" from his 2001 album Tongues:
As a result, at the Warped Tour in Camden, New Jersey after Esham's album Tongues was released, Eminem's group D12(without Eminem because he was at home in Michigan), and 40 friends and associates of D12 assaulted Esham and T.N.T., a bandmate from his group Natas, pelting them with rocks and kicking them in the heads, leaving Esham with damaged hearing in his left eardrum, a concussion and a ruptured eyeball and T.N.T. with bruises and cuts. As a result, Esham, Natas and D12 were dropped from the tour. Esham told Billboard that he videotaped D12's entourage just minutes before the attack, for the possibility that the footage would be used for identification purposes in court. Esham also said that D12 were 100% in the wrong, and that him being kicked off for defending himself was horrendous. He also believed Eminem premeditated the attack. [3]
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On the Dilated Peoples album The Platform, hip hop/rock musician Everlast (formerly of House of Pain) insulted Eminem in a fairly subliminal and non-specific battle verse. Everlast in later interviews did state that he was targeting Eminem specifically in that verse, apparently behind a perceived slight of him by Eminem at a show. Eminem's response titled I Remember, however, specifically mocked Everlast for many things including the demise of House Of Pain, his conversion to Islam, and his new rock-orientated musical direction. The song was in itself a parody of this musical direction, with heavily strummed guitars and faux-melancholic sung vocals. Everlast responded on a track called Whitey's Revenge in which he incurred Eminem's wrath by mentioning that if Eminem were to go to jail in his then-ongoing assault trial, he would "look in on (his) lady and do things for (his) kid". Eminem quickly shot back with the single "Quitter" which was split into two parts, the first being somewhat reminiscent of I Remember and the second using 2Pac's uptempo Hit 'Em Up beat and featuring other rappers from Eminem's group D12.
In response to two couplets aimed at Dilated Peoples in Quitter, which referred to the group as "underground bitches", Dilated's Evidence and DJ Babu recorded a track titled Search 4 Bobby Fischer which attacked and mocked Eminem for many things including his dyed-blonde hair and his supposedly taking credit for other people's production work. This track was fairly well-received by listeners, and some felt that Eminem mocking Dilated for being "underground" in the first place was hypocritical considering that in the early stages of his career Eminem was heavily involved in the underground hip hop scene (and in fact once freestyled on radio with Dilated Peoples themselves.)
Eminem responded on a bonus diss track on D12's debut Devil's Night called "Girls," which is actually a solo track. The diss, while primarily directed at Fred Durst and DJ Lethal of Limp Bizkit (the latter had supported Everlast in the feud) included lines about Dilated Peoples, where Eminem claims that he never intended for "Quitter" to be leaked. He also states that he only involved D12 in the beef because of comments Dilated Peoples had made in support of Everlast.
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Insane Clown Posse perform in a 2007 concert to their fans, known as "Juggalos".
This beef with Eminem and the Insane Clown Posse (ICP), goes way back to 1995. ICP consists of two people, Violent J (Joseph Bruce), and Shaggy 2 Dope (Joseph Ulster). Everything started in 1995, when Eminem was handing out flyers for a party where he was performing. The flyer apparently said "Appearance from ICP...maybe". Violent J wasn't too happy about this and he told Eminem to "fuck off" and that he wouldn't play at his party. This, apparently, struck Eminem the wrong way and he and ICP started to exchange dis tracks. He told people that he threw ICP out of a club in Detroit and he told a close friend that ICP were pussies for not responding. Eminem has dissed ICP on many tracks before. For example, on "Get You Mad," he says "dress up like ICP and have them come see you perform live" and on "Drastic Measures" he says, "ICP are over rated and hated because of their false identities". Within the past few years, ICP has recruited Detroit rap group Twiztid to the fold and this Detroit crew released their first diss towards Slim with the infamous "Slim Anus" track made by dubbing over select parts of Eminem's hit song "My Name Is" to give the song homosexual meanings. Eminem responded in the track "Marshall Mathers" from The Marshall Mathers LP, which includes the lines, "'Slim Anus,' you damn right slim anus/I don't get fucked in mine like you two little flaming faggots." The track following "Marshall Mathers," "Ken Kaniff (skit)," has ICP giving oral sex to fictional homosexual character Ken Kaniff.
On June 3, 2000, Mathers was involved in a heated dispute in Red Oak, Michigan with Douglas Dail, an associate of the Insane Clown Posse. During the confrontation, Marshall was observed to be holding a gun, which he kept pointed at the ground[1]. Being taken into police custody after an unrelated incident the next day, Marshall was charged with misdemeanor charges of brandishing a firearm in public, assault with a dangerous weapon, and two counts of concealed weapon possession, in two separate trials for the two incidents. In the Dail case, he pleaded nolo contendere to the charges of firearm possession and brandishing, receiving one year of probation, enforced concurrently with the sentence from the first case. [2]. ICP responded with an underground diss track called "Nuthin' but a 'Bitch' Thang" (a parody of Dr. Dre's hit single "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang",) which opens with Eminem being sodomized by Dr. Dre and continues with a response by ICP to "Marshall Mathers" and a reference to the Red Oak incident.
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This beef probably has been the most personal Eminem has had so far. Before Eminem was signed to Aftermath, he and Ryan Montgomery, better known as Royce Da 5'9", had been close friends in the Detroit underground scene. They worked together as the rap duo Bad Meets Evil, and appeared on each other's debut LP (Eminem on Royce's "Detroit Rock City", and Royce on Eminem's "Bad Meets Evil").
Problems first arised between the two in 1999 when Eminem introduced Royce to Dr Dre. At first Dre and Royce worked well together and Royce was scheduled to appear on Dre's critically acclaimed 2001 LP and to ghost write some of Dr Dre's verses. It was believed that Dre was going to give a record deal to Royce after 2001 came out but sadly their connection was severed when Royce's manager did a radio interview talking up Royce's position with Dre and made it out to sound like Dre was nowhere near as good as Royce. This offended Dr Dre so much that he immediately pulled all of Royce's material from the album and rescinded any record deal to Royce. Afterwards it was believed that the reason that Eminem never gave a record deal to his friend Royce was that he was afraid of also offending Dr Dre. There was also a strong amount of tension from the fact that members of Eminem's group D12 and Royce did not get along either. Members of D12 were afraid of losing their connection with Eminem and it does appear so when seeing that early in Eminem's career he used Royce as his hypeman instead of Proof (his current hypeman) and that Royce appeared on the Slim Shady LP, though no one from D12 did. Royce and Eminem have also worked on many songs together including "Scary Movies", "She The One" and the original version of "Renegades".
The friendship finally ended in 2003 when Eminem signed 50 Cent to his label while he had recently denied signing Royce claiming that he was too busy. This annoyed Royce and the beef began on the Anger Management Tour Mixtape. It was a highly disputed line from Royce on a freestyle on the DJ Green Lantern mixtape where Royce said "Fuck Anger Management, I'll hire someone to deal with my problems." Members of D12 immediately took this as a diss and talked Eminem into cutting off his old friend. Royce complained about D12 "getting in Em's ear" and changing his close friend to separate the two. Diss tracks between the two ensued over the next year which led to issues between Royce and Eminem. Following the line by Royce da 5'9', "quicker than Eminem can pinch Elton's ass," (poking fun at Eminem and Elton John's performance at the Grammys). Eminem has never officially come back - however, he 'subliminally' dissed Royce on the Invasion 3 freestyle:
"Rhinestones, are so nice, they shine so bright Especially at night, after a hit of ecstasy, ain't that right Rooooooooyyyyy---whoo wait a minute I'm ramblin'"
(Royce is known for wearing rhinestone-covered bandanas)
However, D12 (minus Eminem who has remained silent on the subject other than the previously mentioned diss) have only taken small shots at Royce, as on the song "Smack Down", a remix of 50 Cent's "Back Down" which they released on a limited edition mixtape on the internet; neither Eminem or Proof had any lines in the song. D12 never officially dissed Royce again, though Proof's "Many Men" remix does subliminally take shots at Royce. Violence has been a part of this beef as in Detroit Proof's ex-group Goon Squad, lead by the infamous Trick Trick, rushed Royce on stage who was doing a show for family members. Though never confirmed, rumors had it that Royce, a member of M.I.C., and Royce's own mother were forced to go to the hospital from the attack. The beef ended after a situation in Europe where D12 and Royce happeneded to both be touring at the same time. Rivals Proof and Royce got into a confrontation which lead to both men pulling guns on each other and both being arrested. While in jail the two squashed the beefs and there haven't been anymore diss tracks from either sides though Eminem and Royce have not worked again since. Royce has shown to be finished with his beef, showing love to Eminem on songs on the Death Is Certain LP and also on Independent's Day. Many speculated that Eminem talked about the sad beef on the D12 song "How Come" though Kuniva of D12 confirmed that his verse was about Proof.
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Eminem vs EverlastThis article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.

Eminem made his Hollywood acting debut with the semi-autobiographical 8 Mile, released in November 2002. He recorded several new songs for the soundtrack, including "Lose Yourself," which won Eminem an Academy Award for Best Song; it was not performed at the ceremony, reportedly because ABC wanted him to perform an edited version.
Eminem has done some voice acting, both on Crank Yankers and a web cartoon called The Slim Shady Show, which has since been pulled offline and is instead sold on DVD.
Eminem has also been linked to "Songs of Hope" by U2 and supported the Boys and Girls Club of America and the Leary Fire Fighters Foundation with various proceeds donated to these causes. In 2004, he held a political convention of his own in New York City, in response to the National Republican Convention. In the song "Mosh", Eminem expresses his support for American troops, but speaks against the Iraq war and the Bush administration. The Raelians Religious Movement, a religious group whose beliefs are centered around communication with extraterrestrial life tried to appoint Eminem as an honorary priest . In addition, he has raised AIDS and other STD awareness in a number of songs portraying infected people having promiscuous sex with numerous partners.
Although Eminem owns his own label, he is strictly signed to Dr. Dre's Aftermath Entertainment as a solo artist. The Aftermath roster includes 50 Cent, Busta Rhymes, Stat Quo, Eve, The Game and newcomer Bishop Lamont.
Dr. Dre's leading protégé succeeded in multi-platinum record sales. Eminem was granted his own record label, a sublabel of Aftermath Entertainment. He and his manager Paul Rosenberg created Shady Records in late 2000. Eminem and Dr. Dre had signed 50 Cent on a joint venture between Aftermath & Shady Records. His own Detroit collective D12 and rapper Obie Trice were signed to the Shady Records label. In 2003, Eminem and Dr. Dre signed on Atlanta rapper Stat Quo to the roster. DJ Green Lantern, the former deejay for Eminem, was signed to Shady Records until a dispute with 50 Cent forced him to depart from the label, and he is no longer associated with Eminem. The Alchemist is now officially Eminem's tour deejay. In 2005, Eminem officially signed another Atlanta rapper known as Bobby Creekwater to his label. There are also plans to sign a rapper by the name of Fizzy B to Shady Records. Many other rappers have been speculated as possible additions to Shady Records, including West rappers Ras Kass, Ice Cube, Xzibit, and Detroit rappers Trick Trick, King Gordy, Marv One, and J Hill. There have also been rumors that Eminem was interested in signing Young Zee, a friend of his from the group Outsidaz.
Eminem signed a deal with Sirius Satellite Radio to program a rap-oriented station called Shade 45, which debuted on October 28, 2004. He also owns a clothing line called "Shady Ltd."
Eminem is also active as a producer of rap records. Besides being the executive producer of D12's two albums, Devil's Night and D12 World, he has also produced numerous tracks on Obie Trice's Cheers as well as 50 Cent's Get Rich or Die Tryin' and The Massacre. In addition, Eminem has produced and appeared on several songs by other famous rappers such as The Game's "We Ain't," Jadakiss' "Welcome To D-Block," Jay-Z's "Renegade," Lloyd Banks' "Warrior Part 2," Tony Yayo's "Drama Setter," Trick Trick's "Welcome 2 Detroit", and Xzibit's "Say My Name" and "Don't Approach Me." Most of The Eminem Show was produced by Eminem himself, with co-production from longtime collaborator Jeff Bass. He split the production with Dr. Dre on Encore. He also executive-produced 2Pac's posthumous album Loyal to the Game with 2Pac's mother Afeni Shakur. On certain tracks, 2Pac's voice was slowed down or sped up, and digitally altered to say things like "2005" and "G-Unit," angering devoted 2Pac fans.
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8 Mile
Directed by: Curtis Hanson
Produced by: Brian Grazer, Curtis Hanson, Jimmy Iovine
Written by: Scott Silver
Starring: Eminem (Marshall Mathers), Kim Basinger, Mekhi Phifer, Brittany Murphy
Distributed by: Universal Pictures
Released: 6 November 2002
Running time: 110 min
Language: English
Budget: $41,000,000 USD (Est.)
IMDb profile
8 Mile is a movie starring Eminem (Marshall Mathers) as the young white rapper Jimmy Smith Jr. Eight Mile Road is a road which forms the boundary between predominantly African American Detroit, Michigan, United States and the city's mostly "white" northern suburbs. The term "8 Mile" therefore represents a barrier that is difficult to cross.
Besides Mathers, the movie stars actors like Kim Basinger, Brittany Murphy, Mekhi Phifer, Omar Benson Miller, Eugene Byrd, Michael Shannon, Evan Jones, Chloe Greenfield, Taryn Manning and De'Angelo Wilson.
The movie spawned two soundtracks, one of which featured several new songs by Eminem, along with collaborators 50 Cent and Obie Trice.
The second soundtrack featured songs referred to in the movie. These songs are all Hip-Hop tracks from 1995 and earlier, as per the setting of the movie. Some artists on the soundtrack include Mobb Deep, Notorious B.I.G., Wu-Tang Clan and The Pharcyde. It doesn't, however, feature all of the songs from the film, as songs by Cypress Hill and Montell Jordan amongst others are absent.
The score's most famous track, Eminem's "Lose Yourself" (played over the closing credits), won the 2002 Academy Award for Best Original Song. Eminem and co-writer Jeff Bass did not attend the award ceremony, nor was the song performed on-air for the awards show. Co-writer Luis Resto accepted the award on behalf of the other two.
The movie featured several music performers in small cameo roles, including:
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The story of the film is about a young man living in Detroit who is supposed to be a prodigy of freestyle rap. The movie starts out with Eminem's character ("B. Rabbit"), at a locally (And less professionally) organized music event similar to the Rap Olympics. He chokes on his first performance (doesn't say a word) and loses the competition.
Rabbit's best friend "Future" is the MC of this event and is played by Mekhi Phifer.
After the initial scene at the music event, the movie focuses on the life of B. Rabbit, a young sheet metal factory worker named Jimmy Smith, Jr., who is struggling with many different aspects of his life: Getting a possible music career started, ending a relationship with one girlfriend (Janeane, played by Taryn Manning), starting a relationship with another (Alex, played by Brittany Murphy), and the constant danger that exists as a result of the people he hangs around with. He lives at the rundown 8 Mile Road trailer park home of his alcoholic mother Stephanie (Played by Kim Basinger), his much-younger sister Lily (Chloe Greenfield), and his mother's abusive live-in boyfriend Greg (Michael Shannon). Over the course of the next few days, Rabbit begins to realize that his life is spinning out of control and the only way he can get it back into control is to lose himself in the music he practices rapping to over and over again.
The final, climactic scene of the movie takes place a week later at a freestyle competition similar to the one in the movie's opening scenes. At this point, Rabbit has been hyped up by his friends as a really good rapper, but until this point we are only shown snippets of his skills.
Rabbit wins the opening round, and viewers see three progressively more impressive freestyle raps by Rabbit. In the lyrics of his last round he ultimately acknowledges with pride his 'white trash'-roots and compares it with the relatively privileged background of his antagonist (His antagonist's real name is Clarence, he went to a private school, which is Cranbrook, he lives with both parents, which are also married) which is usually very unfit in a hardcore environment like the 313, where you're supposed to be someone from "the streets". Not being this, this leaves his opponent speechless and Rabbit clinches the title. As a sign of his growing maturity throughout the film, he humbly resists the pleas of his friends to go out and celebrate his victory, instead quietly walking off into the night to return to his shift at the sheet metal factory.
Tagline: Every Moment is a Chance to Turn it Around.
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There has been considerable debate, in the mainstream press, amongst reviewers, and other viewers, on the extent to which 8 Mile is semi-autobiographical, biographical, or totally fictional. This has been fueled by the fact that events and characters depicted in the movie appear to parallel events, and people, in Mathers' own life (as presented in the media and in various songs).
Some have suggested the character Jimmy Smith mirrors Mathers as a young adult, with an alter ego of "Bunny Rabbit"/"B-Rabbit"/"Rabbit" mirroring Mathers' own "Eminem"/"Slim Shady"-alter ego, although Eminem never made any allusion to this in any of the bonus feature portions of the 8 Mile DVD.
Other suggested parallels include but are not limited to:
Also note, 313 is Detroit's Area Code.
The suggestion amongst those holding such a view is that identities and events were changed in the film, and thus should be considered "biographical", or "semi-autobiographical" (given Mathers' role in the creative process). Some people holding such views have suggested changes of names and events were done to make civil lawsuits against Eminem more difficult. Others have suggested that names were changed along with a fictionalized, sanitized account of real events, designed to legitimize Eminem as an artist, and present him in a positive light.
In contrast, Eminem, on numerous occasions, has stated that 8 Mile is a fictional story. However, he has admitted that he did indeed have a role in the creative process, and that places and events were indeed based on real events in his life. However, how far this role extended is still being debated.
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D12 performing live at the Anger Management Tour in 2005.
In 2001, Eminem brought the rap group he was a member of, D12, to the popular music scene. In 2001, D12 released their hit debut album titled Devil's Night. The first single released off of the album was "Purple Pills," an ode to recreational drug use (although this was preceded in the UK by a song called "Shit On You", which was included on the Special Edition version of the album released in that country). The version of the song released on the radio and music television was heavily rewritten to remove much of the song's offensive nature, and retitled "Purple Hills." While the first single was a massive hit, the album's second single, "Fight Music," was not as successful. Some have attributed this to the emotional change caused in American society due to the September 11, 2001 attacks. After their debut, D12 took 3 years in hiatus from the studio, later regrouping to releasing their sophomore album, D12 World, in 2004, which featured the popular hit single release "My Band." The other members of D12 have also appeared as guests on all of Eminem's albums since The Marshall Mathers LP. D12's third album is tentatively scheduled for a 2006 release.
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In 2005, some industry insiders speculated that Eminem is considering concluding his rapping career after six years and numerous multi-platinum albums. Speculation began in early 2005 about a double-disc album to be released late that year, rumored to be titled The Funeral. The album manifested itself under the name Curtain Call, and was released on December 6, 2005.
In July 2005, the Detroit Free Press broke news of a potential final bow for Eminem as a solo performer, quoting members of his inside circle who said that he will begin to fully embrace the role of producer and label executive. The Free Press, Eminem's hometown paper, wrote that the aptly titled Encore album would now stand as his final solo album. [24]
Deep within Eminem's inner circle there is talk that the rapper is planning on retiring after he concludes his Anger Management Tour in Detroit. The reason for his retirement is to focus on acting, spending time with his daughter and niece, and more on his increasing popularity in production. Eminem and his manager Paul Rosenburg as well as their representatives will not comment on the situation. This may not mean his retirement from rapping completely, as he may well still contribute to many of his Shady Records and Aftermath artists projects as well as Dr. Dre's planned Detox album.
Eminem announced via MTV News that he does not plan on retiring soon, though he is planning on taking a break to produce music. He is still uncertain whether another album will be released, but his career has not come to a full stop. However, as he entered rehab in 2005 for dependency on sleep medication, many are speculating that he will use this event to lay down his microphone. The star is continuing to work out of the spotlight, including producing the Redman album Red Gone Wild. One track to be released on that album which has a gained attention is "I C Dead People", which will feature raps from three deceased artists: Big Pun, Big L and the Notorious B.I.G.
At "Anger Management" in Madison Square Garden and Atlanta's HiFi Buys Amphitheater he openly announced that he is not retiring and indicates this is all just gossip by saying the moon exploding is a more credible rumor. However, many still speculate that he will be retiring and the announcement at Madison Square Garden was only a ploy to distract the fans.
Adding to the already feverish rumors from fans, Eminem released a track to be on Curtain Call entitled "When I'm Gone." The lyrics feature the topic of Slim Shady's destructive power over Marshall Mathers' life, and talks of laying Slim Shady to rest, one line featuring the lyrics "Find a gun on the ground / cock it, put it to my brain / scream 'Die Shady!' and pop it." Whether or not this is an unsubtle hint at retirement is currently up for speculation. The lyrics also show feelings of guilt, Eminem feeling he should've spent more time with his daughter Hailie; "'Daddy, where's Mommy? I can't find Mommy, where is she?' 'I don't know, go play, Hailie, baby, your daddy's busy.'"
On December 6, 2005, the day of Curtain Call's release, Eminem told suburban Detroit radio station WKQI-FM's "Mojo in the Morning" show that he and Kim had reconciled and were probably going to remarry. He denied that he was retiring, but implied that he would at least be taking a break as an artist, saying, "I'm at a point in my life right now where I feel like I don't know where my career is going ... This is the reason that we called it 'Curtain Call,' because this could be the final thing. We don't know." [25]
In September 2007, Eminem called into New York radio station Hot 97 during a 50 Cent interview and said he is "in limbo" and "debating" about when and if he would release another album. He said, "I'm always working -- I'm always in the studio. It feels good right now, the energy of the label. For a while, I didn't want to go back to the studio ... I went through some personal things. I'm coming out of those personal things [and] it feels good." And though he jokingly said he'd release the new CD "tomorrow", there is no official release date, according to Interscope.
That same month, Dr. Dre confirmed in an interview with the Los Angeles Times that he would be devoting two months to work on Eminem's new album, saying, "We'll be trying to get his thing done and work on a few things on my own project".
In June 2008, Eminem called in to his radio station, Shade 45, to talk to LL Cool J who was being interviewed. While speaking, Eminem said, "Everything is good. I'm just in the studio now working on songs."
In September 2008, Interscope finally confirmed that a new Eminem album is being released and could possibly be in stores before the end of the year. This announcement coincides with Eminem's recent appearance on Shade 45 in which he said, "Right now I'm kinda just concentrating on my own stuff, for right now and just banging out tracks and producing a lot of stuff. You know, the more I keep producing the better it seems like I get 'cause I just start knowing stuff." Eminem has reportedly spent the last month in Florida working with Dr. Dre on the album.
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Video: Eminem - Rap Dynasty - New King Mathers Album Track 2008

| Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Sales and certifications (sales thresholds) |
||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | AUS | AUT | BEL | CAN | FRA | GER | ITA | NZ | SWE | SWI | UK | ||||||||
| 1996 | Infinite
|
— | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||
| 1999 | The Slim Shady LP
|
2 | 49 | — | 7 | 9 | 52 | 51 | — | — | — | 25 | 1 |
|
|||||
| 2000 | The Marshall Mathers LP
|
1 | 1 | 40 | 1 | 9 | 2 | 3 | 7 | 11 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
|
|||||
| 2002 | The Eminem Show
|
1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
|
|||||
| 2004 | Encore
|
1 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 6 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
|
|||||
| "—" denotes releases that did not chart. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Year | Title |
|---|---|
| 1997 | The Slim Shady EP
|
| Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Sales and certifications (sales thresholds) |
|||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | AUS | AUT | CAN | GER | IRE | ITA | NL | NZ | SWE | SWI | UK | |||
| 2005 | Curtain Call: the Hits
|
1 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 7 | 8 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 6 | 5 | 1 |
|
| Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Sales and certifications (sales thresholds) |
||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | AUS | AUT | CAN | FRA | GER | ITA | NZ | NL | SWE | SWI | |||
| 2002 | 8 Mile soundtrack
|
1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 6 | 1 | 9 | 1 | 2 | 10 | 3 |
|
| Year | Title |
|---|---|
| 2000 | E
|
| 2002 | All Access Europe
|
| 2005 | Eminem Presents the Anger Management Tour
|
| Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Album | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US Hot 100 | US R&B | US Rap | AUS | AUT | CAN | FRA | GER | IRE | ITA | NL | NZ | SWE | SWI | UK | |||||||||||||||
| 1998 | "Just Don't Give a Fuck" | — | 62 | 5 | — | — | — | — | 34 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | The Slim Shady LP | ||||||||||||
| 1999 | "My Name Is" | 36 | 18 | 10 | 13 | — | 30 | 70 | 37 | — | — | 12 | — | 16 | 29 | 2 | |||||||||||||
| "Guilty Conscience" (feat. Dr. Dre) | — | 56 | — | — | — | — | 97 | — | — | — | — | — | 25 | — | 5 | ||||||||||||||
| 2000 | "Bitch Please II" (feat. Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Xzibit, & Nate Dogg) | — | 21 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | The Marshall Mathers LP | ||||||||||||
| "The Real Slim Shady" | 4 | 11 | 7 | 11 | — | 15 | 6 | 7 | — | — | 5 | — | 3 | 2 | 1 | ||||||||||||||
| "The Way I Am" | 58 | 26 | 24 | 34 | — | 40 | — | 19 | — | — | 10 | — | 6 | 19 | 8 | ||||||||||||||
| "Stan" (feat. Dido) | 51 | 36 | — | 1 | — | 28 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 26 | 3 | 14 | 3 | 1 | 1 | ||||||||||||||
| 2001 | "Drug Ballad" | — | 51 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | |||||||||||||
| 2002 | "Without Me" | 2 | 13 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 3 | 1 | — | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | The Eminem Show | ||||||||||||
| "My Dad's Gone Crazy" (feat. Hailie Jade) | 115 | 64 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| "Cleanin' Out My Closet" | 4 | 11 | 5 | 3 | 5 | 91 | — | 40 | — | 8 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 5 | 4 | ||||||||||||||
| "Business" | — | 77 | 25 | 4 | 22 | — | — | 15 | 7 | — | — | 14 | — | — | 6 | ||||||||||||||
| "White America" | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| "Lose Yourself" | 1 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 9 | 3 | 6 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 8 Mile soundtrack | |||||||||||||
| "8 Mile" | — | 54 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| 2003 | "Superman" (feat. Dina Rae) | 15 | 44 | 10 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 42 | — | — | — | The Eminem Show | ||||||||||||
| "Sing for the Moment" | 14 | — | 18 | 5 | 7 | 2 | 28 | 5 | 3 | 5 | 8 | 5 | 11 | 8 | 6 | ||||||||||||||
| 2004 | "Just Lose It" | 6 | 35 | 7 | 1 | 4 | — | 7 | 2 | 2 | 2 | — | 1 | 12 | 1 | 1 | Encore | ||||||||||||
| "Encore/Curtains Down" (feat. Dr. Dre & 50 Cent) | 25 | 48 | 20 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| 2005 | "Mockingbird" | 11 | 51 | 10 | 9 | 18 | 77 | — | 15 | 7 | 20 | — | 8 | — | 14 | 4 | |||||||||||||
| "Like Toy Soldiers" | 34 | 64 | — | 4 | 8 | 24 | 34 | 8 | 3 | 8 | — | 2 | 14 | 3 | 1 | ||||||||||||||
| "Ass Like That" | 60 | 93 | — | 10 | 27 | — | — | 31 | 4 | — | — | 14 | — | 25 | 4 | ||||||||||||||
| "When I'm Gone" | 8 | 96 | 22 | 1 | 7 | — | — | 6 | 5 | — | 6 | 2 | 5 | 7 | 4 | Curtain Call: the Hits | |||||||||||||
| "Shake That" (feat. Nate Dogg) | 6 | — | 11 | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | — | 6 | ||||||||||||||
| "—" denotes releases that did not chart. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Album | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US Hot 100 | US R&B | UK | |||||||||||||||||
| 2000 | "Kill You" | — | 102 | — | The Marshall Mathers LP | ||||||||||||||
| 2002 | "Hailie's Song" | 113 | 110 | The Eminem Show | |||||||||||||||
| 2004 | "Mosh" | — | 112 | — | Encore | ||||||||||||||
| "—" denotes releases that did not chart. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Title | Certification |
|---|---|
| "The Real Slim Shady" |
|
| "Stan" |
|
| "Without Me" |
|
| "Lose Yourself" |
|
| "Just Lose It" |
|
| "Like Toy Soldiers" |
|
| "Mockingbird" |
|
| "When I'm Gone" |
|
Eminem has collaborated on different songs as a featured performer, some of which have entered in one or more music charts.
| Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Album | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US Hot 100 | US R&B | US Rap | UK | ||||||||||||||||
| 1999 | "Dead Wrong" (with The Notorious B.I.G. & Puff Daddy) | — | 39 | — | — | Born Again | |||||||||||||
| 2000 | "Forgot About Dre" (with Dr. Dre) | 25 | 14 | — | 7 | 2001 | |||||||||||||
| 2002 | "Rock City" (with Royce da 5'9") | — | 99 | — | — | Rock City (Version 2.0) | |||||||||||||
| 2003 | "My Name" (with Xzibit & Nate Dogg) | — | 66 | — | — | Man vs. Machine | |||||||||||||
| 2004 | "One Day at a Time (Em's Version) (with Tupac & Outlawz) | 80 | 51 | 22 | — | Tupac: Resurrection soundtrack | |||||||||||||
| 2005 | "Welcome 2 Detroit" (with Trick-Trick) | 100 | — | — | — | The People vs. | |||||||||||||
| 2006 | "Smack That" (with Akon) | 2 | 34 | — | 1 | Konvicted | |||||||||||||
| "You Don't Know" (with 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks, & Cashis) | 12 | 7 | — | 4 | Eminem Presents: the Re-Up | ||||||||||||||
| 2007 | "Jimmy Crack Corn" (feat. 50 Cent) | 101 | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
| "Touchdown" (with T.I.) | 109 | — | — | — | T.I. vs. T.I.P. | ||||||||||||||
| "—" denotes releases that did not chart. | |||||||||||||||||||
| Year | Title | Artist(s) | Album |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | "Trife Thieves" | Bizarre, Fuzz | Attack of the Weirdos |
| "We Shine" | Da Ruckus | Episode 1 | |
| "Fuck Off" | Kid Rock | Devil Without a Cause | |
| "Green and Gold" | The Anonymous | Green and Gold | |
| 1999 | "Hustlers & Hardcore" | Feel-X | Behind the Doors of the 13th Floor |
| "Busa Rhyme" | Missy Elliott | Da Real World | |
| "The Last Hit" | Mr. Eon | Home Field Advantage | |
| "Any Man" | Soundbombing II | ||
| "The Anthem" | Sway & King Tech, RZA, Tech N9ne, Xzibit, Pharoahe Monch, Kool G Rap, Jayo Felony, Chino XL, KRS-One | This or That | |
| "Get You Mad" | Sway & King Tech | ||
| "Stir Crazy" | The Madd Rapper | Tell 'Em Why U Madd | |
| "Bad Influence" | End of Days soundtrack | ||
| "What's the Difference" | Dr. Dre, Xzibit | 2001 | |
| "Bad Guys Always Die" | Dr. Dre | Wild Wild West | |
| "If I Get Locked Up" | Dr. Dre | The Tunnel | |
| "Murder, Murder" | Next Friday soundtrack | ||
| 2000 | "Rush Ya Clique" | Outsidaz | Night Life |
| "Get Back" | D12 | The Piece Maker | |
| "Hellbound" (H&H remix) | J. Black, Masta Ace | Game Over | |
| "Off the Wall" | Redman | Nutty Professor II: The Klumps | |
| "Desperados" | Proof, Bugz, Tha Almighty Dreadnaughtz | Kill the DJ | |
| "Don't Approach Me" | Xzibit | Restless | |
| "What the Beat" | Method Man, Royce da 5'9" | The Professional, Pt. 2 | |
| 2001 | "What If I Was White" | Sticky Fingaz | Black Trash: The Autobiography of Kirk Jones |
| "Renegade" | Jay-Z | The Blueprint | |
| 2002 | "Watch Deez" | Thirstin Howl III | Skilligan's Island |
| 2003 | "Go to Sleep" | DMX, Obie Trice | Cradle 2 the Grave |
| "Patiently Waiting" | 50 Cent | Get Rich or Die Tryin' | |
| "Don't Push Me" | 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks | ||
| "We All Die One Day" | Obie Trice, Lloyd Banks, 50 Cent, Tony Yayo | Cheers | |
| "Shit Hits the Fan" | Obie Trice, Dr. Dre | ||
| "Lady" | Obie Trice | ||
| "Hands on You" | Obie Trice | ||
| "Outro" | Obie Trice, D12 | ||
| "911" | Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E., B-Real | West Koastra Nostra | |
| "Three Six Five" | Skam | Fat Beats Volume Three | |
| 2004 | "I'm Gone" | Obie Trice | The Streetsweeper Vol. 2: The Pain from the Game |
| "Welcome to D-Block" | The L.O.X. | Kiss of Death | |
| "Warrior Part 2" | Lloyd Banks, Nate Dogg, 50 Cent | The Hunger for More | |
| "Soldier Like Me" | 2Pac | Loyal to the Game | |
| "Black Cotton" | 2Pac, Kastro, Young Noble | ||
| 2005 | "We Ain't" | The Game | The Documentary |
| "American Psycho III" | B-Real, Bizarre | The Gunslinger | |
| "Gatman and Robbin" | 50 Cent | The Massacre | |
| "My Ballz" | D12 | The Longest Yard | |
| "Lean Back" (remix) | Fat Joe, Mase, Lil Jon, Remy Ma | All or Nothing | |
| "Hip-Hop" | Bizarre | Hannicap Circus | |
| "Pimplikeness" | D12 | Searching for Jerry Garcia | |
| "Off to Tijuana" | MC Hush, D12 | Bulletproof | |
| "Drama Setter" | Tony Yayo, Obie Trice | Thoughts of a Predicate Felon | |
| "It Has Been Said" | The Notorious B.I.G., Obie Trice, P. Diddy | Duets: The Final Chapter | |
| "No More to Say" | Trick-Trick, Proof | The People vs. | |
| 2006 | "Shady Narcotics" | Eminem Presents: the Re-Up | |
| "We're Back" | Obie Trice, Stat Quo, Bobby Creekwater and Cashis | ||
| "The Re-Up" | 50 Cent | ||
| "Public Enemy #1" | |||
| "Shake That" (remix) | Nate Dogg, Obie Trice and Bobby Creekwater | ||
| "No Apologies" | |||
| "There They Go" | Obie Trice, Big Herk | Second Round's on Me | |
| "Frontpage Stardom" | Hittman | Hittmanic Verses | |
| 2007 | "Pistol Poppin'" | Cashis | The County Hound EP |
| "Peep Show" | 50 Cent | Curtis | |
| 2008 | "Who Want It" | Trick Trick | The Villain |
| "Norman Bates Motel" | 50 Cent | Before I Self Destruct |
| Year | Title | Director(s) | Album |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1998 | "Just Don't Give a Fuck" | Darren J. Lavett | The Slim Shady LP |
| 1999 | "My Name Is" | Dr. Dre, Phillip Atwell | |
| "Guilty Conscience" | |||
| "Role Model" | |||
| 2000 | "The Real Slim Shady" | The Marshall Mathers LP | |
| "The Way I Am" | Paul Hunter | ||
| "Stan" | Dr. Dre, Phillip Atwell | ||
| 2002 | "Without Me" | Joseph Kahn | The Eminem Show |
| "Cleanin' Out My Closet" | Dr. Dre, Phillip Atwell | ||
| "Lose Yourself" | Eminem, Paul Rosenberg, Phillip Atwell | 8 Mile soundtrack | |
| 2003 | "Superman" | Paul Hunter | The Eminem Show |
| "Sing for the Moment" | Phillip Atwell | ||
| 2004 | "Mosh" | Ian Inaba | Encore |
| "Just Lose It" | Phillip Atwell | ||
| "Like Toy Soldiers" | Saline Project | ||
| 2005 | "Mockingbird" | Eminem, Quig | |
| "Ass Like That" | Phillip Atwell | ||
| "When I'm Gone" | Anthony Mandler | Curtain Call: the Hits | |
| 2006 | "Shake That" | Plates Animation |
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Video: EMINEM MOSH - Original Version
D-12 performing live at the Anger Management Tour in 2005.
D12 (aka The Dirty Dozen) are an American hip-hop group originating from Detroit, Michigan which have had albums reach the top of the US and UK album charts - Devil's Night in 2001 and D12 World in 2004. D12 was formed in 1990, but they only came into the hip hop spotlight when their most accomplished member, Eminem, had risen to international fame and notoriety in the early part of the 21st century, although D12 had been a powerful force in the underground rap scene for several years prior.
D12 (also known as Dirty Dozen and D Twizzy) was initially formed in 1991 by Proof who invited local Detroit rappers such as Bizarre, Eminem and other members who would leave the crew before it achieved success including Eye Kyu, Killa Hawk and Fuzz. The group was a loose collective in the vein of Wu-Tang Clan. Several members began making names for themselves in hip hop during the late 1990s. Bizarre was named Inner City Entertainment's "Flava of the Week". He would also release an album entitled Attack Of The Weirdos and become a member of Tha Outsidaz with Eminem and Rah Digga. Proof won a freestyling competition run by The Source in 1998.
However, it was as a solo artist that D12 member Eminem found success. All of the members of D12 have aliases and Eminem chose Slim Shady as his. He recorded an independent EP called The Slim Shady EP in 1997 that caught the attention of famed rap producer Dr. Dre and Interscope CEO Jimmy Iovine, and soon signed to Aftermath/Interscope, releasing his breakthrough album The Slim Shady LP in 1999 which went on to be certified 4x platinum in the U.S.
Eminem's success persuaded Proof to establish D12 on a more permanent basis in early 1999. As well as Eminem and Bizarre, he recruited Kuniva, Kon Artis and Bugz to join the group. Kuniva and Kon Artis were previously part of Da Brigade. However, Bugz passed away in Detroit on May 21, 1999 because of a gun incident at a picnic that turned into a shooting death, leading the group to recruit Swift to take his place. Each of the members of the crew wears a tattoo of Bugz's name in his honor. The tracks "Good Die Young" and "Bugz 97" (the latter of which features an appearance from Bugz) on D12 World are also in his memory.
The six members of D12 signed a contract with Eminem's Shady Records and Interscope in 1999. The fact that D12 rose to prominence after Eminem led many people to assume that the other members had less significance in the group - this would be the concept of the group's 2004 hit single "My Band".
Despite Eminem's prominence in the music industry, D12 insists that there is no frontman in the group and that Eminem is just another member. In spite of this, D12 recently began to tour as a separate entity to Eminem, a controversial move that could lead to confusion among concert-goers who may believe they are paying to see Eminem as well as the other five performers.
Their debut album, Devil's Night, referring to the old Detroit tradition of setting abandoned buildings on fire (something that has since become a thing of the past in Detroit) the night before Halloween, was released in June 2001. It debuted at number one on the US and UK chart, also reaching the top of the Canadian charts. Devil's Night went on to sell four million albums worldwide and two million in the US. It featured the following hit singles:
The group's second album was D12 World released on April 7, 2004 featured production by Dr. Dre, Eminem himself and Kanye West and guest appearances by Obie Trice and B-Real. It debuted at the top of the US, UK and Australian album charts and number 2 in Germany, selling over half a million records in its first week of release in the US alone. "My Band", the first single, also has been successful reaching number one in Australia and the US rhythmic top 40, top 5 in the UK and Germany and top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100.
As of 2006, D12 consists of six members:
Past members of the group include Bugz, Eye-Kyu, and Blizzard.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Eminem albums
| Curtain Call: The Hits | ||
|---|---|---|
![]() |
||
| Compilation album by Eminem | ||
| Released | December 6, 2005 | |
| Recorded | 1998–2005 | |
| Genre | Hip hop | |
| Length | 77:55 | |
| Label | Shady/Aftermath/Interscope | |
| Producer(s) | Dr. Dre, Eminem, Jeff Bass, Marky Bass, Mike Elizondo, The 45 King, and Mel-Man | |
| Professional reviews | ||
| Eminem chronology | ||
| Encore (2004) |
Curtain Call: The Hits (2005) |
|
Curtain Call: The Hits is Eminem's fifth major label release, being a greatest hits album. It was released on December 6, 2005.
The album contains three new songs: "Fack", "Shake That", and "When I'm Gone."
The album has debuted at #1 in the UK Albums Chart, after only being given 2 sales days to chart, in a similar fashion to his previous album Encore. It also gave Eminem his fourth straight #1 album in the U.S. The title of the album sparked rumours that Eminem was planning to end his rapping career; there has been no official statements to this effect, but Eminem has acknowledged the possibility that this may be the last Eminem release.
NOTE: In the clean version of Curtain Call, "Intro" and "Fack" were removed and "My Name Is" was moved to the first track.
Total: 2.02 Million
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Video: Stan-Eminem feat. Dido
| "When I'm Gone" | ||
|---|---|---|
| Single by Eminem | ||
| from the album Curtain Call: The Hits | ||
| Released | 2005 | |
| Format | CD | |
| Genre | Rap | |
| Length | 4 min 41 s | |
| Label | Shady/Aftermath/Interscope | |
| Producer(s) | Eminem | |
| Chart positions | ||
|
||
| Eminem singles chronology | ||
| "Ass Like That" (2005) |
"When I'm Gone" (2005) |
"Shake That" (2005) |
"When I'm Gone" is a song from Eminem's 2005 Curtain Call: The Hits greatest hits album. The song is about Eminem's career's effect on his relationship with his family. It talks about him not being there for his daughter, and (in a sort of metaphoric "dream") Hailie confronts him at a concert and demands to know why he was so cruel towards her mother (and his then ex-wife). She ends the confrontation by telling Eminem that he loves his fame, career, and fans more than his own family. After she leaves, Eminem turns around and sees a gun. He picks it up, screams "Die Shady!" and kills himself. After that, he wakes up, realizing that it was only a dream. It's spring, Hailie's playing in the yard, and he's still married to Kim.
Furthermore, this is a continuation of Marshall's difficulty coping with fame and his dark alter ego, Slim Shady ("When I'm gone just carry on, don't mourn"). "When I'm Gone" is a progression of this dilemma: where does Marshall end, and Shady begin? Who is the dominant alter ego and how does this figure into Eminem the artist and family man?
The single was released officially in the USA on the 6th of December 2005, It is unknown if this is the case with other countries.
Tarick Salmaci, (from the TV show, The Contender) makes an appearance in the video with his wife.
Whitney Scott is Kim Mathers's daughter by another man, from the period in which she and Eminem were divorced. She appears in the video to the song.
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Academy Awards
Golden Globe Awards
Grammy Awards
Grammy Award nominations
MTV Movie Awards
MTV Video Music Awards
MTV Europe Music Awards
American Music Awards
ASCAP Pop Music Awards
The ASCAP Pop Music Awards, held annually by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, honors the songwriters and publishers of the most performed pop songs. Eminem has won the award once.
Brit Awards
Billboard Music Awards
2001
2002
2003
Detroit Music Awards
2001
2003
2005
2006
Teen Choice Awards
2005
2003
Much Music Video Awards
People's Choice Awards
NRJ Radio Award
Other awards
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Video: Eminem & Tupac - When I'm Gone
Promotional poster for 8 Mile (2002).
Eminem made his Hollywood acting debut with the semi-autobiographical 8 Mile, released in November 2002. He recorded several new songs for the soundtrack, including "Lose Yourself," which won Eminem an Academy Award for Best Song; it was not performed at the ceremony, reportedly because ABC wanted him to perform an edited version.
Eminem has done some voice acting, both on Crank Yankers and a web cartoon called The Slim Shady Show, which has since been pulled offline and is instead sold on DVD.
Eminem has also been linked to "Songs of Hope" by U2 and supported the Boys and Girls Club of America and the Leary Fire Fighters Foundation with various proceeds donated to these causes. In 2004, he held a political convention of his own in New York City, in response to the National Republican Convention. In the song "Mosh", Eminem expresses his support for American troops, but speaks against the Iraq war and the Bush administration. The Raelians Religious Movement, a religious group whose beliefs are centered around communication with extraterrestrial life tried to appoint Eminem as an honorary priest . In addition, he has raised AIDS and other STD awareness in a number of songs portraying infected people having promiscuous sex with numerous partners.
Although Eminem owns his own label, he is strictly signed to Dr. Dre's Aftermath Entertainment as a solo artist. The Aftermath roster includes 50 Cent, Busta Rhymes, Stat Quo, Eve, The Game and newcomer Bishop Lamont.
Dr. Dre's leading protégé succeeded in multi-platinum record sales. Eminem was granted his own record label, a sublabel of Aftermath Entertainment. He and his manager Paul Rosenberg created Shady Records in late 2000. Eminem and Dr. Dre had signed 50 Cent on a joint venture between Aftermath & Shady Records. His own Detroit collective D12 and rapper Obie Trice were signed to the Shady Records label. In 2003, Eminem and Dr. Dre signed on Atlanta rapper Stat Quo to the roster. DJ Green Lantern, the former deejay for Eminem, was signed to Shady Records until a dispute with 50 Cent forced him to depart from the label, and he is no longer associated with Eminem. The Alchemist is now officially Eminem's tour deejay. In 2005, Eminem officially signed another Atlanta rapper known as Bobby Creekwater to his label. There are also plans to sign a rapper by the name of Fizzy B to Shady Records. Many other rappers have been speculated as possible additions to Shady Records, including West rappers Ras Kass, Ice Cube, Xzibit, and Detroit rappers Trick Trick, King Gordy, Marv One, and J Hill. There have also been rumors that Eminem was interested in signing Young Zee, a friend of his from the group Outsidaz.
Eminem signed a deal with Sirius Satellite Radio to program a rap-oriented station called Shade 45, which debuted on October 28, 2004. He also owns a clothing line called "Shady Ltd."
Eminem is also active as a producer of rap records. Besides being the executive producer of D12's two albums, Devil's Night and D12 World, he has also produced numerous tracks on Obie Trice's Cheers as well as 50 Cent's Get Rich or Die Tryin' and The Massacre. In addition, Eminem has produced and appeared on several songs by other famous rappers such as The Game's "We Ain't," Jadakiss' "Welcome To D-Block," Jay-Z's "Renegade," Lloyd Banks' "Warrior Part 2," Tony Yayo's "Drama Setter," Trick Trick's "Welcome 2 Detroit", and Xzibit's "Say My Name" and "Don't Approach Me." Most of The Eminem Show was produced by Eminem himself, with co-production from longtime collaborator Jeff Bass. He split the production with Dr. Dre on Encore. He also executive-produced 2Pac's posthumous album Loyal to the Game with 2Pac's mother Afeni Shakur. On certain tracks, 2Pac's voice was slowed down or sped up, and digitally altered to say things like "2005" and "G-Unit," angering devoted 2Pac fans.
This guide is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
Video: 8 Mile trailer