Tupac Shakur Remembered By Rick Ross, Bun B At Georgia Benefit Show

Lipiec 1st, 2010

‘Tupac really influenced me to just keep it real and not fake around and act like something I’m not,’ Roscoe Dash tells MTV News.
By Mawuse Ziegbe with reporting by James “FLX” Smith






Waka Flocka and Roscoe Dash


Photo: MTV News

Tupac Shakur was known for reppin’ Cali throughout his career, but the legendary artist’s style has influenced a generation of Southern hip-hop stars as well. The South came out to pay tribute to the icon at the second annual 2Pac Birthday Concert Celebration on Wednesday, which would have been ‘Pac’s 39th birthday.

Rick Ross, Bun B and Roscoe Dash hit the stage at a benefit for the Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation at the Tupac Amaru Shakur Center for the Arts in Stone Mountain, Georgia. Waka Flocka Flame, Gorilla Zoe and rising rapper Pill were in the building. Funnyman Mike Epps also came through to show his support.

“We came out to show love for the OG like we always do for the fallen soldiers about this time,” Bun B told MTV News, who added that, more than a decade after his death, ‘Pac’s influential legacy is still going strong. “We just showing a lot of love to Tupac Shakur right now. Showing love, support to his mother Afeni, and let people know that, when you gone, you not forgotten, ever. Tupac is definitely a perfect example of that.”

Roscoe Dash, whose rock-infused swagger is ostensibly different from ‘Pac’s intense street lyricism, said the hip-hop legend inspired him to be himself. “The reason why this day is so important to me is because Tupac really influenced me to just keep it real and not fake around and act like something I’m not,” Dash told MTV News. “I just apply that in my everyday life, so I just want to come out here and give back.”

With all his contributions to music, hip-hop is not forgetting ‘Pac anytime soon. “Long live his legacy and R.I.P. Tupac Shakur,” said Bun, who also sent a simple message to the late legend: “Happy birthday, big homie.”

Share your memories of Tupac Shakur in the comments.

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Tupac Shakur Was ‘Fearless,’ Mike Tyson Says

Lipiec 1st, 2010

‘It was obvious he was a genius, he was a prodigy,’ former heavyweight recalls on what would have been ‘Pac’s 39th birthday.
By Shaheem Reid






Tupac Shakur at the Paris Theater in New York City


Photo: Ron Galella/ WireImage

The last time Mike Tyson saw Tupac Shakur, it was September 7, 1996.

‘Pac, who had struck up a friendship with Tyson in the early 1990s, came to Las Vegas like thousands of others to watch “Iron Mike” clean the clock of fellow pugilist Bruce Seldon. That night, Tyson won the World Boxing Association’s heavyweight championship title via first-round TKO. After the bout, Mike, ‘Pac and Suge Knight headed to the locker room to celebrate. No one knew that prizefight night would also mark one of the greatest tragedies in hip-hop: Tupac was shot as he left the Tyson/Seldon matchup; he died from his injuries a few days later, on September 13.

” ‘Pac was just a ball of energy,” Tyson recalled of his friend, when MTV News called him up on Wednesday (June 16).

The most prolific MC ever, ‘Pac would have celebrated his 39th birthday Wednesday. Instead, the hip-hop community honors Shakur’s life and legacy. Tyson remembered him as an individual who was unique, to say the least. The former heavyweight partied with the icon, but the two men also shared some insightful private conversations.

“He was incredible. You knew he was a special person when he’s in your presence,” Tyson said on the phone from Las Vegas.

“If you had any consciousness of the reality we live in, you could feel his energy. You knew he was a special individual.” Mike described their talks as, “purely emotionally intimate talking; expression of feeling. He was very prolific in expressing himself. He had a lot of hostility. I think it was just misguided and misdirected. It was obvious he was a genius, he was a prodigy. Whoa! He was just amazing as far as his energy was concerned. He was explosive — like a black panther ready to pounce.”

In the ring, Tyson exhibited ‘Pac-like qualities himself. He intimidated the competition, but the people loved him. He was a warrior, the fiercest gladiator the sport has ever seen.

“He looked very destructive. He came across as a world beater,” Tyson said. “As far as his music was concerned, his presence and his energy … the word I’m looking for is fearless. He came across as fearless. When you come across somebody that’s fearless, you’re a little bit in awe. You’re like. ‘Whoa!’ He’s ready to blow, too, at any moment; very volatile. He’s very focused. He can go from one second to the next and get very focused.”

Tyson and Tupac met during a turning point in both their careers. Iron Mike was the biggest and baddest draw in boxing, but also a year removed from having lost his heavyweight championship. ‘Pac was still affiliated with Digital Underground and about a year from landing the star-making role that would launch him: the intriguing, if insane, Bishop in 1992’s crime saga “Juice.”

“Magic Johnson had a party at the Palladium in Los Angeles,” Iron Mike said, jogging his memory. “What year was this? No, I wasn’t champion, it was ‘91. I just fought [Donovan 'Razor'] Ruddock … I believe I came outside. I was talking to the people running the door. They were friends of mine. They wouldn’t let these guys in, Tupac and them. I said, ‘Man, let these guys in. You remember how it was with us.’

“So they let him in. ‘Pac had said, ‘Hold up for one minute,’ and he brought back 200 more people. He had a gang of people with him. They said, ‘Listen, you can’t go through the front, you have to go through the back.’ Next thing I knew, it was over. I hear somebody on the mic — he took the mic. Him and his guys got the mic somehow and started rapping. The whole crowd started going crazy. They loved him. The guys from Digital Underground introduced him to me. They said, ‘This is Tupac.’ I met him, he was very young. He was very happy, vivacious. He just had energy. He was wild, an amazing individual.”

More than three years would pass before Tyson and Tupac crossed paths again. In 1995, ‘Pac visited the champ at the Plainfield Correctional Facility, in Plainfield, Indiana, where Tyson was serving his sentence for a rape conviction (a crime for which Tyson still maintains his innocence).

“The next time I saw [Tupac] I didn’t even know who he was,” Tyson said. “I knew he was ‘2Pac.’ But his mother had wrote me a letter in prison … I remembered that night. He came to prison to see me. We spoke. He was so much more confident than when I had met him the other time, probably a year or two prior to that. He had gone from being shy guy to very strong-willed and confident and independent. He was tremendously feeling himself. He had so much confidence. He was bursting off the air.

“He came to the prison. He was standing on the table, started talking. All the people in the prison started going crazy. I said, ‘Sit. Sit down. Sit, brother, sit,’ ” Tyson recalled. “The white prisoners, the guards, everybody went crazy in this redneck prison. They went nuts when he came in there. I didn’t know he was [famous] like that. I didn’t know he was like that! I thought he was some young brother. But when he came in, I didn’t know people was feeling him like that too. I was like, ‘Yo man. Chill, brother.’ He was wilding, sweating, talking, being very gregarious. He was prolific. He was talking, having a ball. … He was very territorial. He was an interesting guy. He was different than any other rapper I had ever met from a philosophical perspective.”

Tyson said all of the prisoners were trying to talk to ‘Pac and snap pictures with him. But the champ was concerned that all the hoopla might get him thrown out of the facility, which had happened before when other celebs had visited the boxing legend.

“I didn’t know Tupac was that big then, because I was inside,” Tyson explained. “That’s when they had that [East Coast vs. West Coast] beef stuff [with Bad Boy]. I didn’t know Tupac was who he was. I had no idea.”

Share your memories of Tupac in the comments.

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Tupac And Biggie Probably Celebrated Birthdays Together, Lil’ Cease Says

Lipiec 1st, 2010

‘Their birthdays was real close to each other,’ Junior M.A.F.I.A. member tells MTV News.
By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Shaheem Reid






Lil’ Cease


Photo: MTV News

Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G.’s relationship had its obvious downs (especially being at the forefront of that whole “my coast is better than yours” thing that hip-hop was obsessed with in the ’90s), but the homies-turned-rivals had some good times too.

Junior M.A.F.I.A. member and Big associate Lil’ Cease said the pair probably got some birthday bashes in before their friendship went south.

“I’m sure him and Big celebrated,” Lil’ Cease told MTV News on what would have been Tupac’s 39th birthday Wednesday (June 16). “Their birthdays was real close to each other too.” Indeed, it’s possible the icons popped some bottles together: ‘Pac’s birthday was June 16 and Biggie’s was May 21.

Cease said that, regardless of the occasion, Big and ‘Pac would break bread whenever they got the chance. “Whenever ‘Pac wasn’t doing anything in New York, him and Big, they’ll travel. Big went out to ‘Pac’s crib, and Big went and did stuff out with ‘Pac in Cali [or] when ‘Pac was in D.C.”

Cease has spent the years since B.I.G.’s death upholding the Brooklyn lyricist’s legacy, but he said his camp continues to show love for ‘Pac on his birthday as well. “We still celebrate that too. We may not celebrate to the level we’ll celebrate for Big, you know, ’cause that’s for his family and his peoples to celebrate. But, you know, we toast it up and we salute him. He’s definitely a soldier in the game, and he’s one of the best to ever do it as well. We show that love no matter what people think,” Lil’ Cease said. “Just ’cause [there] was drama, I mean, you can’t have beef with a dead man.”

Share your memories of Tupac and Biggie in the comments below.

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Tupac Shakur And Notorious B.I.G. Wax Figures Team Up In D.C.

Lipiec 1st, 2010

The rappers’ likenesses will hang out in the same room at Madame Tussauds wax museum in Washington, D.C.
By Mawuse Ziegbe






The Notorious B.I.G. wax figure


Photo: Madame Tussauds

Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G. didn’t have many chances to work together before they were both killed at the heights of their fame and in the midst of a feud.

But now the hip-hop icons will reunite posthumously — in wax. Wax emporium Madame Tussauds has brought the figures of ‘Pac and Notorious B.I.G. together for the first time on what would have been Tupac’s 39th birthday, Wednesday (June 16), at its Washington, D.C., gallery. The figures will stand near each other for three months.

Tupac’s figure is on loan from Madame Tussauds in Las Vegas, and Biggie’s statue, like the actual hip-hop icon, comes from New York. Visitors to the D.C. museum will have the chance to snap pictures with both figures in the same room, a rare opportunity while the stars were living, since Big and ‘Pac famously lit up headlines as MCs at the forefront of the mid-’90s East Coast/ West Coast hip-hop beef.

The museum worked to faithfully replicate the stars’ swagger. ‘Pac’s figure is bare-chested and emblazoned with the late star’s many tattoos, with his signature bandanna knotted around his bald head. The waistband of his Emporio Armani boxers peeks out from the top of his baggy jeans. Biggie’s wax figure is mean-mugging, rocking a crisp white suit and carrying a walking stick; B.I.G.’s mother, Voletta Wallace, even praised the wax rendering of her late son. The figures will be displayed in the museum’s Glamour Room.

Although Tupac and Biggie were both gunned down in the mid-’90s, their legacies are still felt throughout the music scene. “Notorious,” a biopic based on B.I.G.’s rise to fame hit theaters in 2009, and “Training Day” director Antoine Fuqua is working on a Tupac movie. Fellow icon Eminem brought the late stars together again in 2003 on the song “Runnin’ (Dying to Live)” for the “Tupac: Resurrection” soundtrack.

Will you go check out the side-by-side wax figures? Let us know in the comments!

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Tupac Shakur ‘Had A Deadline,’ Naughty By Nature’s Treach Says

Lipiec 1st, 2010

‘Pac didn’t see himself ‘growing old,’ his friend and fellow MC tells MTV News on what would have been Shakur’s 39th birthday.
By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Sway Calloway






Naughty by Nature’s Treach


Photo: MTV News

Tupac Shakur’s legacy still looms large in music more than 13 years after his untimely death. You can suss out ‘Pac’s swagger in everyone from DMX to Ja Rule; Kanye West continues Shakur’s tradition of being outspoken; and rappers still turn to his back catalog for insightful verses to graft into hip-hop hits.

Part of the reason Shakur’s presence is still felt is because the controversial icon left behind a hefty amount of music, including a formidable collection of unreleased recordings. ‘Pac might have been on top of the music world when he died, but his close friend and Naughty by Nature MC Treach said Shakur’s work ethic was fueled by his belief that his demise was imminent.

“We spoke many a time, and he was like, ‘I don’t see myself growing old,’ ” Treach told MTV News’ Sway on Tuesday, the day before what would have been Shakur’s 39th birthday.

Treach, who came up with ‘Pac when the two were roadies for Queen Latifah and Digital Underground, respectively, said that despite his homie’s affable manner and upbeat energy, ‘Pac worked as if he had no time to waste. “You gotta listen to songs like ‘If I Die 2Nite’ and ‘I Wonder if Heaven Got a Ghetto.’ When he was in that mode, in that zone, you gotta be like, ‘What’s going on? You a’ight?’

” ‘Pac couldn’t sit down for five minutes,” Treach continued. “He was always going, ‘Yeah, everything good, good, good.’ When you listen to him and you see his demeanor, he was more or less, like, on watch. He had a deadline. He was working at a pace, like, ‘Where you going? You going on vacation? You going to jail? You doing sh– like you tryna finish everything right now and cover stuff.’ You couldn’t find him half the time; he was gone. He had a plan.”

Treach believes ‘Pac’s plan extended beyond just making thought-provoking music; the Jersey rapper said Shakur wanted to realize tangible change among his fans who were living the thug life.

“Ultimately, he wanted to get the thugs all behind him — his thug nation, his thug life — and take them to the next level … unified, building up the community, reinvesting in the community, in the people.”

Treach said he wanted to use music to get the attention of the streets but then eventually make life easier on the streets. “[He wanted to bring] them in thinking it’s a gangsta party, but it’s like … it’s a militant, protect-our-own party. He was truly like a baby Panther. He was like, ‘Yo, we gotta do something to reinforce that we gonna protect ourselves.’ ”

Even though ‘Pac built his career on a brash, thug persona, Treach said there was way more to the star than his hard-core adherence to the ‘hood.

” ‘Pac was a clown. Everybody think he just like gangsta, thug-life ‘Pac. He’ll have a whole party just around him crackin’ up,” Treach said. “We almost got threw out a couple hotels. I’m talking full-floor water fights.”

Treach said he found it hilarious to see the former Digital Underground associate “runnin’ around with a Humpty nose.”

“He was an actor, he was a musician … anything you could put, if he wanted to do it, he could do that. But he was a fool too,” Treach said. “He did it well being a fool too. You don’t want to be around nobody that’s mean muggin’ all day and got an attitude and hatin’. ‘Pac wasn’t nothing like that. ‘Pac would have you just wanting to be around because you know you gonna have a ball around him and split some seams just having a good time.”

His fiery flow, revolutionary rhetoric and undeniable artistry are some of the things that have endeared ‘Pac to millions of fans around the world. Yet Treach adds that his appeal as a person was very basic: “He had a glow to him. He had something you wanted to be around.”

Share your memories of Tupac in the comments.

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Tupac Should Be Played By Unknown Actor, Biopic Director Says

Lipiec 1st, 2010

‘I want to go to the streets and find him anywhere he might be,’ Antoine Fuqua says of casting Shakur film.
By Jayson Rodriguez






Tupac


Photo: Chi Modu

Following the success of the Biggie Small’s biopic “Notorious,” and the announcement late last year that a Run-DMC flick is in the works, director Antoine Fuqua recently revealed his next project would be a feature about the life of Tupac Shakur.

“It looks like we’re doing Tupac Shakur’s movie next in September, that’s what I’ve been starting up and working on now,” Fuqua told the British entertainment website Digital Spy on Friday.

“I’ve been working on that for a while with Morgan Creek and [the production company's CEO] Jim Robinson. I just got the green light from him and we’re going in September. I’ve just started to prep that.”

Fuqua (“Training Day,” “Brooklyn’s Finest”) told Digital Spy that he would like to see a fresh face in the role of the iconic rapper, who was gunned down in 1996.

For “Notorious,” producers set out on a nationwide search for an upstart actor to play the Notorious B.I.G., before deciding on local Brooklyn rapper Jamal “Gravy” Woolard. Anthony Mackie, who had earlier played Tupac in an off-Broadway play, tied on the signature bandana again to play the West Coast rapper in “Notorious.” But Fuqua seems intent on finding multiple newcomers to play various parts in the yet-untitled project.

“That’s the goal, I want to discover someone new,” Fuqua said. “I want to discover a lot of new people if I can. Obviously I’m going to have to put some people in it that you know, just because actors have different skills. I want to go to the streets and find him anywhere he might be in the world.”

Who do you think should play Tupac in a biopic? Tell us in the comments!

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Tupac’s Mom, Afeni Shakur, Arrested For Drug Possession

Lipiec 1st, 2010

She is due back in court in May to face three drug charges.
By Mawuse Ziegbe






Afeni Shakur-Davis


Photo: Annette Brown/ Getty Images

Afeni Shakur, the activist mother of late hip-hop legend Tupac Shakur, was arrested for felony drug possession in Lumberton, North Carolina, earlier this month.

According to The Fayetteville Observer, the ex-Black Panther was charged April 16 with felony possession of marijuana, simple possession of a controlled substance and maintaining a vehicle, dwelling or place for a controlled substance.

Reps for Afeni and Lumberton Police had not responded to MTV News’ requests for comment at press time.

Since her son was fatally shot in 1996, Afeni has stayed busy upholding his legacy. She founded the Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation in 1997, which provides arts and education programs for young people and mounts an annual performing-arts summer camp for youth from troubled homes.

Afeni’s Amaru Entertainment was engaged in a legal battle with film company Morgan Creek last year over a movie about the rapper’s life, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Afeni has also managed music from Tupac that was unreleased while the star was alive.

Afeni’s battle with drug use is mentioned in Tupac’s hit 1995 song “Dear Mama.” When renovating the Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation’s center in 2005, Afeni told MTV News that her tough past was a catalyst for starting an arts foundation. “When Tupac was 13 and I was homeless,” she said, “Tupac was in the 127th Street Ensemble [theater group] right here in New York. Those people, I believe, saved his life. So what we try to do is be that for the next generation of young people.”

The Observer reports that bail was set at $10,000, and Afeni is currently out on bond, according to court reports. She is due back in Robeson County District Court on May 10.

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Notorious B.I.G. And Tupac’s Famous Freestyle Remembered By Mister Cee

Lipiec 1st, 2010

DJ looks back on ‘one of the illest live hip-hop performances of all time.’
By Shaheem Reid






Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac


Photo: MTV News

One of the greatest freestyles in hip-hop history took place at, of all places, a Patti LaBelle concert.

The Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur came onstage together in New York for a legendary performance. DJ Mister Cee tells the story as if it were yesterday.

“That was live at Madison Square Garden,” Cee said in Brooklyn, minutes from where Biggie grew up in Bedford-Stuyvesant. “It was a concert me and [Big Daddy] Kane did for the Budweiser Superfest back in 1993 at Madison Square Garden. We were the only rap group on the show. I think Patti LaBelle was on the show, Tony! Toni! Toné!. We only had 10 minutes. Being it’s New York, we wanted to do something extra crazy for our show. So we asked Big to come out. Kane told me to reach out to Big.

“Big had the record ‘Party and Bullsh–’ out from the ‘Who’s the Man?’ soundtrack,” Cee added. “He was starting to bubble. When we got to the Garden, Tupac was there anyway. The movie ‘Poetic Justice’ just came out the week before. Everybody was already hype off ‘Pac, because the ‘Poetic Justice’ movie came out. [The freestyle] just came about backstage. ‘Pac, Big, the Rugged Child Shyheim. We just brought all of them onstage, and the magic happened. I recorded that on a cassette inside Madison Square Garden. So the whole ‘Where Brooklyn at?’ To this day, when they hear that, they know [that Madison Square Garden show] is where that comes from. I recorded that on cassette, then it eventually got transferred to vinyl and became probably one of the illest live hip-hop performances of all time.”

Big Daddy Kane took the mic himself during that cipher, as did Kane’s dancer Scoob Lover.

Tuesday (March 9) marked the 13th anniversary of the death of the Notorious B.I.G. It is a day for his fans to celebrate his life and legacy.

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Tupac Featured On Night Of The Living Dead Part II Mixtape

Lipiec 1st, 2010

‘This tape is full of classic records,’ the Cookin’ Soul guys tell Mixtape Daily.
By Shaheem Reid, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes






Tupac


Photo: Courtesy of Cookin Soul

Lil Wayne’s No Ceilingsis making a serious argument for Mixtape of the Year right now. Halloween was a great day for music — heck, a bunch of great music dropped last week. This week is off to great start with the new Rihanna and Young Jeezy joints and Game is talking about releasing four mixtapes at once. Check in with us all week for some exclusives — but today, those Cookin’ Soul cats bring back one of the all-time best.

Don’t Sleep: Necessary Notables

Mixtape: Night of the Living Dead Part II

Headliner: Tupac Shakur

Co-Starring: Cookin’ Soul and DJ Whoo Kid

Key Collaborations: “The Beyond” featuring Jay-Z; “Halloween Pt. II” featuring Notorious B.I.G.; “The Fog” featuring Notorious B.I.G.

Essential Info: Producers got in on the Halloween action, putting their latest mixtape out on Saturday along with releases from Lil Wayne, Soulja Boy and others. The Soul brothers concentrated on putting a new spin on classics from Tupac Shakur.

“Last year we made a classic, Night of the Living Dead Part I,” Soul’s Big Size said.

“So we was talking with Whoo Kid and said, ‘We gotta come back this year with another classic. Tupac!,’ ” Zock added. “One of the greatest ever. We’re keeping with the concept of the first one, sampling from horror movies, original soundtracks like ‘Fog,’ ‘Halloween’ and ‘Dawn of the Dead.’ ”

“This tape is full of classic records,” Size confirmed.

“This crazy mixtape is the missing link to the B.I.G. mixtape we did last year,” Whoo Kid offered. “This should complete the collection, unless we go in with Big Pun next year. Cookin’ Soul are the best in theme mixtapes and, of course, as you can see, they sought after one of the best mixtape DJs out to put it together — pow!”

You can download the mixtape from their Web site.

Other Heat This Week

» Wiz Khalifa – B.A.R. (Burn After Rolling)

» Mike Posner – One Foot Out the Door
» Sean Price – Kimbo Price

For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines.

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Diddy Recalls Day Of Biggie’s Murder In Video Blog

Lipiec 1st, 2010

In his ‘Notorious’ vlog series, Diddy brags that the movie deserves an Oscar.
By Jayson Rodriguez






Diddy and Notorious B.I.G.


Photo: Evan Agostini/ Getty Images

“Notorious” is … Oscar-worthy?

“I’m not amping this up,” he said in part four of his Biggie confessional video blog. “It deserves to be honored at the Academy Awards. I’ve seen everything that was honored this year, from ‘The Wrestler’ to ‘Slumdog Millionaire.’ This joint right here, to me, is greater than those. I don’t wanna sugarcoat it. Those are great movies. But this one, we have the privilege to be honest.

“It’d be a tragedy if you don’t give this movie some jewelry,” Diddy added.

In “The Confessional, Part 2: The L.A. Story,” Diddy said the day that Biggie was killed, he was not supposed to be in Los Angeles. Diddy recalled how his friend called him and said he wanted to postpone a scheduled trip to London, insisting that they party instead. The rapper had recently wrapped recording for his sophomore album, Life After Death, and wanted to hang out with the Bad Boy family and Junior M.A.F.I.A. to celebrate.

“I said, ‘Yes, aiight, we’ll hang out,’ ” Diddy said, and Biggie was gunned down after leaving the Vibe party they attended. “It’s a call that I always, always, always remember. There wasn’t a way I could talk him out of it. I didn’t run Biggie. He was his own man at the end of the day, and he just wasn’t gonna go [to London]. It was just … the call plays over and over in my head. Like, what if he would have just gotten on the plane? … Some things are just meant to be for reasons that are beyond and above us.”

Diddy also divulged his thoughts on Biggie and Tupac, likening the pair to “Tom and Jerry.” Diddy repeated the often-told tale of the two Geminis hitting it off immediately.

“You could not separate these two,” he said. “The energy they had together. There wasn’t no one trying to be a gangster or a thug. I witnessed it, there was so much love and so much admiration. Their relationship was for real. It was like two children in grade school that just hit it off and just hung out with each other all the time.”

MTV News has even more B.I.G. things on the horizon surrounding “Notorious” — stay tuned!

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