Pusha T Response to Drake: The Story of Adidon

I knew drake was always soft. Put Pusha-T did a nice chess move, and it really expose how drake is really bitch made.

You a grown man, and you have to get another grown man to handle your own beef. Stop talking tough and acting like a boss.

You know hip hop is pretty much over when people say Pusha-T took it too far :hmm:

I could image when Nas went at Jay-Z, Jay-Z would look like a bitch if he could not handle himself.
 
No artist in the record industry is his own man. Name me an artist who putting the money up for the shows, tours, albums, etc.

Intentionally obtuse

The point which you knew is that Drake brags about being his own boss who makes his own boss moves and pretty clearly he is not so that's done.

Has shit to do with him being signed to multiple folks who dig in his pocket that's everybody more or less
Those same people ain't sending out letter heads like a boss to try and diss cats either
 
So for those keeping score...

adidas-three-stripes-history-11.jpg


.... upper managment...

160504182605-kanye-west-exlarge-169.jpg


...dude's immediate supervisor...

j-prince


..and big homie with clout, all had to intervene AND intercede on Drake's behalf in order to get Pusha-T off his ass. Nigga gets into a school yard brawl and now parents, the principal, and the police gotta get involved because he got a bloody nose.

Yeah Drake is now a vegan. 'Beef' need not ever be part of his life.




Oh fam YOU KNOW Drake had at least 3 "Niggas don't want none" and/or "The fuck you gonna do" tracks on there. Bet they was fire too.

Right into the garbage.




It don't work like that.

If J Prince is about code then he knows street muscle don't / can't fuck with civilians without just cause. I'm a square. I'm going to work.

*two cents*


:roflmao3:
 
Intentionally obtuse

The point which you knew is that Drake brags about being his own boss who makes his own boss moves and pretty clearly he is not so that's done.

Has shit to do with him being signed to multiple folks who dig in his pocket that's everybody more or less
Those same people ain't sending out letter heads like a boss to try and diss cats either

Anyone who actually believed him saying that isn’t to bright. Nothing about him says “boss” in the music industry. People need to grow up and stop believing what artists say. It’s entertainment
 
Anyone who actually believed him saying that isn’t to bright. Nothing about him says “boss” in the music industry. People need to grow up and stop believing what artists say. It’s entertainment


Yea now it's wwe when the pressure is on lol
Not how they carry it tho

Like 2 weeks ago he was ready to box with a 6'10 300lb dude at an NBA game lol
 
P
i guess i'm out of the loop

what the fuck does j prince have to do with any of this.. why muthafuckas running around like he's the boogy man or something.... what exactly is he the "OG" of

these nigga act like he they daddy or something
Like Pac said " you can be touched"
 
Lmbaooo the fear factor he’s amassed is amazing , it’s legendary it’s to the point of comical. It’s like the Wizard of OZ at this point I mean yes dude has connections but it’s like he’s not Human anymore it’s cartoonish .

I have nothing to worry about because I'm a civilian...

But those who run in that world...



FEARED HIM.

*two cents*
 
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This shit not a good look. This looks like Prince protecting Aubrey from another lyrical assault lol.

That's exactly what it is.

It's like if you were serving up a fresh plate of ass whopping to a kid at the bus stop that had it coming and his pop's showed up.

You a kid yourself so you gonna stop, but for the rest of the school year that kid better not say shit because everyone knows that the only thing that stopped that ass whooping was a grownup.

*two cents*
 
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Lmbaooo the fear factor he’s amassed is amazing , it’s legendary it’s to the point of comical. It’s like the Wizard of OZ at this point I mean yes dude has connections but it’s like he’s not Human anymore it’s cartoonish .
Man coming from Texas....you've always heard the stories of Prince.........most of it in the 90's and 2000's.........but if we all keep it 100.....most of his name and his "fear" is based on how he was earlier in his life. Most of these guys who fear him don't even know who he is or his history. :lol: Not to say he's somebody to fuck with. He should be respected. But niggas speak his name like he's Godzilla. He's made threats to Birdman and Birdman still out here saying fuck y'all phleboi.
 
That's exactly what it is.

It's like if you were serving up a fresh plate of ass whopping to a kid at the bus stop that had it coming and his pop's showed up.

You a kid yourself so you gonna stop, but for the rest of the school year kid better not say shit because everyone knows that the only thing that stopped that ass whooping was a grownup.

*two cents*
That analogy fits this perfectly. Shit not a good look. It would've been a better look if Aubrey dropped a record and it was trash then for him to get saved by J Prince and not say nothing. I don't know if any of this shit would hurt Drake's career because his fans like Canibus would say is 99% females........but it tarnishes his brand.

Looking at how all this transpired he should've never responded to Pusha or did it in the fashion that he did. He should've dropped a song with one or two lines dedicated to Pusha when Scorpion dropped. He thought he was being smart dropping that diss record so fast and it was initially if Pusha wasn't a worthy opponent.......

But J Prince can't use that argument of "Drake is too good to be battling with these people" when Drake himself already let it be known that he's not too good and Pusha is a worthy enough opponent for him to make a diss record less than 24 hour after Pusha spoke on him.

Its been said before but i'll say it again. Pusha baited him and it was genius how he did it.
 
my guess is because Universal is directly involved - they are going to work that in court
Oh I know that's exactly what that is. My point is, Prince at the end of the day ain't some reckless gangster. He's a smart businessman. He can get you in the court room our out of it. But his reputation is that of Al Capone or some shit.
 
Aubrey gonna have that jew law crowd looking like.....:money:


Experts on Whether Pusha T's Drake Dis Could Land Him in Court

6/4/2018 by Gil Kaufman

As of now, the court of public opinion seems to have rendered its verdict on the case of Pusha T v Drake.

With his super hard-hitting takedown "The Story of Adidon," in which Push alleges that Drake is an absentee father to his secret love child with a porn star, the former Clipse member appears to have bested the 6 God in the battle track game. By doubling down with the single's cover art in which Drizzy is seen in blackface -- an image Drake says was meant to highlight racism in the TV and film industries -- Pusha appeared to have scored a rare K.O. against Drake in this round.

But could Drake come back at him in a different arena and win? Billboard asked First Amendment expert attorney James Chadwick of Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP if the private information Pusha included in the track could leave him open to retaliation in the courts.
"There's no automatic exemption from potential liability for expression in the context of an artistic performance," Chadwick tells Billboard about whether Push is on solid ground because he leveled the attacks in a song. "The context is still important, because the context may affect whether or not assertions are treated as assertions of fact or as non-factual assertions. Opinion is a general category, but it's really more a question of whether or not a court would treat a statement as likely being understood by the audience as assertions of true fact, as opposed to someone just mouthing off, rhetorical hyperbole, exaggeration."

When asked what protections the First Amendment has in the case of one artist potentially having a financial impact on another's major roll-out campaign for a brand line, Chadwick, speaking in general terms without specific knowledge of the Pusha-Drake situation, says that's more complicated. "Financial loss doesn't affect whether or not speech is protected by the First Amendment," he says, "Financial loss may be a prerequisite for certain kinds of claims. There are claims that could be asserted other than what you might expect in a traditional defamation or invasion of privacy [case]."

That claim is called tortious interference of economic advantage, which, in layman's terms, refers to a case in which one person's unlawful, meddling actions intentionally damage someone else's business relationship with a third party, resulting in economic harm to either one. So, for example, if Pusha's apparent reveal that Drake's new line with adidas is going to be called Adidon in honor of his alleged secret son (reportedly named Adonis), and that the revelation of his offspring's story was going to be part of the roll-out campaign (as reported by TMZ) somehow interferes with Drake's business relationship with adidas, that could be an issue. A spokesperson for Drake had no comment for this article.

"Showing harm is part of that claim, and you might be able to assert a claim like that, but you'd still have to show that the speech at issue is not protected," he says, hinting at the difficulty in such a case.

The kind of back-and-forth that typically takes place in rap battles isn't automatically protected, according to Chadwick, but rather a mixed question of fact and law in which a court looks at the context and factors in who is involved in the beef. "Obviously public figures have a higher burden to establish liability for something like defamation," he says. "If you have well-known artists exchanging barbs, in general it's less likely that those will be treated as statements of fact. They're going to probably be deemed as opinion, but it's not impossible for them to be treated as statements of fact, to be found to be false and to be found to be defamatory. But is it even defamatory to accuse a rap artist of having an illegitimate child? I'm not sure it is."

The bottom line is on a good day libel/slander cases are typically very hard ones to win thanks to robust First Amendment protections. And unless Drake is willing to open up his private life to scrutiny and deny the information is true or confirm it and potentially lose face with both adidas and his fans, chances are he’ll respond with a track rather than a legal brief. "Truth is an absolute defense in all defamation/slander cases," adds noted hip-hop attorney Stacey Richman, who has worked on behalf of DMX, J Rule and Lil Wayne in the past.

And given the hip-hop bro code, in which bars are one thing but legal action is another, it's highly unlikely that Drake would come back at Pusha with a subpoena in place of another dis track. Besides, considering it's been more than a week since Pusha dropped "Adidon" and Drake has yet to respond, legal action -- versus lacerating verses -- would be a questionable strategy for the latter from a PR perspective. "Drake would lose more points [from hip-hop fans] for going to court," says hip-hop journalist and Genius' manager of artist relations Rob Markman.

Now, if the details spilled by Pusha in his song are all true, they may not be considered defamatory or actionable, but Chadwick says there could be a claim on invasion of privacy grounds, which assumes the information disclosed is true, but private and not newsworthy. "[But] that claim is difficult in a context like this, as well with people who are known for exchanging attacks," he qualifies.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bi...ha-t-first-amendment-experts-possible-lawsuit
 
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