Rick Ross ‘doubts’ 50 Cent beef is squashable: ‘Everything he does sucks’
50 Cent and Rick Ross are still at odds, as the rapper recently said that everything the G-Unit leader does is “sucks.” He also gave his reasoning for believing that the decrease in other creatives’ careers is due to age 50. The Miami native agreed with the interviewer when they made disparaging references to Fif’s 2005 movie Get Rich or Ԁie Tryin’ during a recent interview with Complex.
In response to the interviewer, who also said that filmmaker Jim Sheridan’s career took a turn for the worse after Get Rich or Ԁie Tryin’ seemed to get mixed reviews, Ross responded, “Everything 50 [Cent] does sucks.” This gave Rozay the excuse to keep criticizing Fif—who he claimed was making the film in vain—at the expense of the director.
“God bless you. “See what 50 Cent did to you,” he remarked, addressing Sheridan. But at least a movie about him was made. He exploited the structure. But please, oh my God! Who would like to watch a film about fifty? A question concerning Ross playing The Game’s 2005 Һit song “Hate It Or Love It” on Instagram is posed later in the interview, suggesting that the rapper is referring to Fif’s late mother’s sexuаl orientation.
“I brought up his mother,” the enterprising rapper remarked. She belonged to that group. I said that the front of the song, but my friends Cool & Dre produced it. Thus, the music was really good. I’m a sh*t on you, though. He’s not receiving any money. Ask him, “How does it feel, Rozay, getting all that money?” if he ever comes back.
In response to a question about whether Ross and 50 could reconcile in the same way as Meek and Drake did, the MMG boss expresses his “doubts” that such a day will ever arrive. The emcee declared, “We got no jobs for him or nothing.” “He definitely [needs a job].”
The dispute between Rick Ross and 50 Cent is one of the most persistent in modern hip-hop. The rivals have put out several diss tracks against one another; in 2009, 50 responded with “Officer Ricky (Go Head, Try Me)” and Ross unleashed “Mafia Music.” Over the years, the rivals have continued to trade jabs in interviews, songs, and even court cases.