Cam’ron took an episode of his show Talk With Flee (“where Killa talks about what he want to talk about”) to respond to viewer questions, and he got (and answered) a very revealing one: who is the toughest member of his Dipset crew?
Killa Cam began by defining the scope of the question.
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“Dipset is not just rappers,” he explained. “It’s a bunch of tough n-ggas in Dipset that y’all guys probably never seen on television or heard about on the internet — they don’t do social media. So the answer is no.
“But if we’re talking about the group, the rappers, the people that you see, the answer is still no.”
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He then gave his answer: Freekey Zekey, “by far.”
Cam explained that some people might be surprised, because Zeke is very animated when telling stories, which might give viewers the impression that he’s lying. However, Killa continued, all of Zeke’s wild stories are actually true.
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He then demonstrated his point by sharing a wild excerpt of this Zeke interview with QuietRoom, in which Zeke was, as Cam said, very animated when describing a robbery and shootout. But, the Harlem rapper and It Is What It Is host revealed, there was surveillance footage to back up everything in the improbable-seeming story.
Check the whole segment below.
In other Cam’ron news, he recently took the blame for LaMelo Ball making a homophobic remark during a postgame interview, for which the NBA star was fined $100,000.
After the Charlotte Hornets triumphed over the Milwaukee Bucks 115-114 earlier in the month, Ball was speaking to a reporter about his team’s defense in the final possession when he said: “Yeah, we loaded up — no homo — but that’s what we wanted.”
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The 23-year-old point guard was criticized for the comment, which the NBA called “offensive and derogatory” in announcing their six-figure fine.
Speaking on his sports talk show It Is What It Is on November 19, days after it happened, Killa Cam claimed that he and his native Harlem are to blame for the controversy.
“I blame myself. I really do, man,” he said. “I blame the east side of Harlem. You got this in Jefferson Projects probably in 1996 when we were saying this. And before that — what the fuck? God damn, we did this a long time.”
Cam continued: “To be honest with you, this is why we started saying ‘pause.’ We used to say what Melo said, but we were like, ‘The people are sensitive, you get fined.’ And that’s why we don’t say it anymore.”
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Co-host Ma$e, meanwhile, was taken aback by the fine, commenting: “Just for that? My goodness […] I mean, people gotta be responsible for their words but I think if you know these guys are playing, it should be taken a little bit lighter.
“It’s not like he said it towards anybody living a certain way. He was just joking.”