Dr. Dre came through Kendrick Lamarās āPop Outā concert and delivered the instantly iconic ādead peopleā intro to K.Dotās Drake diss āNot Like Us.ā
Kendrick brought Dre onstage during his Wednesday (June 19) show, and then asked: āYou aināt gonna say nothing else before we continue to party?ā
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The N.W.A legend responded with: āYeah, okay. Iām just gonna need a moment of silence for this one.ā
He then introduced Kendrick Lamarās diss song with its intro: āPssst. I see dead people.ā
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Before helping the āMoney Treesā rapper launch into his latest hit, Dr. Dre ran through other hits āStill D.R.E.ā and 2Pacās āCalifornia Love.ā
Check out the clips below.
.@drdre says @kendricklamar is "one of greatest that's ever did it" š #ThePopOutpic.twitter.com/6Avi2P5qst
ā HipHopDX (@HipHopDX) June 20, 2024
.@drdre & @kendricklamar performing "Still D.R.E." š¤š„ #ThePopOutpic.twitter.com/g2rfe35PqJ
ā HipHopDX (@HipHopDX) June 20, 2024
.@kendricklamar performed "Not Like Us" 5 times in a row š¤Æ @drdre#ThePopOutpic.twitter.com/YE1Gdrkhez
ā HipHopDX (@HipHopDX) June 20, 2024
Kendrick Lamar references the 1999 film The Sixth Sense with the intro for āNot Like Us,ā whispering the same words that the movieās young protagonist, played by Haley Joel Osment, shares with his therapist during the movieās climactic moment.
The allusion is a notable Kendrick bit, in the sense that K.Dot also referenced the film and its star actor on his first Drake diss, āEuphoria.ā
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Digging a bit deeper, fellow West Coast rapper The Game kicked off his 2006 diss track towards 50 Cent, āItās Okay (One Blood),ā by whispering: āDre, I see dead people.ā
Lastly, Kendrick Lamarās use of āpsstā carries on from his closing lines of āEuphoriaā: āIf you take it there, Iām takinā it further/ Psst, thatās something you donāt wanna do.ā
The āPop Upā concert put the stamp on a remarkable battle between Kendrick and Drizzy ā a beef that was recently declared āgreatā for Hip Hop by LL COOL J, who also said that K.Dot definitely won.
Appearing onĀ The Bootleg Kev Podcast in an episode published earlier this week, Cool James ā who knows a thing or two about rap beefs ā shared his thoughts on the infamous feud.
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āI thought it was great for Hip Hop,ā he told Bootleg Kev. āI thought it was the right thing. I thought they both did well, they held their own. I thought that Kendrick won, but I thought that Drake by no means did he embarrass himself or have anything to hold his head down about.
āHe did his thing, he showed up and I think his fans can feel comfortable wit that. [ā¦] The key to that stuff is as a long as it doesnāt distract you from your ultimate goal, itās a wonderful thing to participate in. I love it.ā