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Dr. Dre came through Kendrick Lamarā€™s ā€œPop Outā€ concert and delivered the instantly iconic ā€œdead peopleā€ intro to K.Dotā€™s Drake diss ā€œNot Like Us.ā€

Kendrick brought Dre onstage during his Wednesday (June 19) show, and then asked: ā€œYou ainā€™t gonna say nothing else before we continue to party?ā€

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The N.W.A legend responded with: ā€œYeah, okay. Iā€™m just gonna need a moment of silence for this one.ā€

He then introduced Kendrick Lamarā€™s diss song with its intro: ā€œPssst. I see dead people.ā€

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Before helping the ā€œMoney Treesā€ rapper launch into his latest hit, Dr. Dre ran through other hits ā€œStill D.R.E.ā€ and 2Pacā€˜s ā€œCalifornia Love.ā€

Check out the clips below.

Kendrick Lamar references the 1999 film The Sixth Sense with the intro for ā€œNot Like Us,ā€ whispering the same words that the movieā€™s young protagonist, played by Haley Joel Osment, shares with his therapist during the movieā€™s 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, ā€œEuphoria.ā€

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Digging a bit deeper, fellow West Coast rapper The Game kicked off his 2006 diss track towards 50 Cent, ā€œItā€™s Okay (One Blood),ā€ by whispering: ā€œDre, I see dead people.ā€

Lastly, Kendrick Lamarā€™s use of ā€œpsstā€ carries on from his closing lines of ā€œEuphoriaā€: ā€œIf you take it there, Iā€™m takinā€™ it further/ Psst, thatā€™s something you donā€™t wanna do.ā€

Kendrick Lamarā€™s ā€˜Pop Outā€™ Concert Headliners & Set Times Revealed
Kendrick Lamarā€™s ā€˜Pop Outā€™ Concert Headliners & Set Times Revealed

The ā€œPop Upā€ concert put the stamp on a remarkable battle between Kendrick and Drizzy ā€” a beef that was recently declared ā€œgreatā€ 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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ā€œI thought it was great for Hip Hop,ā€ he told Bootleg Kev. ā€œI 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.

ā€œHe 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 doesnā€™t distract you from your ultimate goal, itā€™s a wonderful thing to participate in. I love it.ā€