The Game (rapper)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Game | ||
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Background information | ||
Birth name | Jayceon Terrell Taylor | |
Also known as | Chuck Taylor, Hurricane Game | |
Born | November 27, 1979 (age 27) | |
Origin | ![]() |
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Genre(s) | West Coast hip hop Gangsta rap |
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Occupation(s) | Rapper, Actor | |
Years active | 2002-present | |
Label(s) | Interscope (2003-present) Geffen (2006-present) The Black Wall Street (2006-present) Aftermath (2003-2006) G-Unit (2004-2006) |
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Associated acts |
The Black Wall Street Dr. Dre Snoop Dogg Ya Boy |
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Website | comptongame.com |
Jayceon Terrell Taylor (born November 27, 1979 in Los Angeles, California),[1] better known by his stage name The Game, is a multi-platinum American rapper signed to Geffen Records. The Game rose to fame in 2005 following the success of his debut album, The Documentary and his two Grammy nominations. Since then, The Game is considered to be a driving force in bringing back the West Coast hip hop scene and competing with many of his East Coast counterparts.[2][3][4]
Aside from releasing two albums that debuted at number 1 on both the United World Chart,[5][6] and the Billboard 200, The Game has also gained notoriety for the hip hop feuds he has taken part in. The Game's music falls under the subgenre known as gangsta rap, a style of hip-hop created and popularized in his hometown of Compton, California.
Contents |
Biography
Early life
Jayceon Taylor was born to an African American mother, Lynette Baker, and his father George Taylor, who is of Spanish and Native American descent, in Los Angeles, California in 1979. He spent the earliest years of his life in the district of La Brea before his family moved to Compton, California when he was four years old.[1] After his older sister accused his father of sexual molestation[7] when Taylor was five, his family was split up and young Taylor lived with a foster family for eight years in Carson, a suburb of Los Angeles (located immediately southwest of Compton). When Taylor was 13 his mother was regranted custody and he was reunited with his family in Compton. He spent his later life living in a primarily Crip gang neighborhood known as Santana Blocc,[8] although the rapper would grow up to become a member of the Bloods.[9] Taylor claims that his mother and father were both affiliated with Crip gangs. After graduating from Compton High School,[10] Taylor had a short stint at Washington State University on a basketball scholarship. However, he was kicked out in his first semester because of drug allegations.[11] It was then that he started fully embracing street life and turning towards selling drugs.[12] At the age of 18 he began to follow his older half brother "Big Fase 100", who was the leader of the Cedar Block Pirus. Taylor was shot five times after a failed drug deal in 2001,[10] receiving bullet wounds to the heart, stomach, and arms. This attack put him in a three day coma and while recovering in the hospital, he decided to pursue a career in the rap industry.
Early career
Studying various influential rap albums, The Game developed a strategy to become a rapper himself, and with help from Big Fase they founded The Black Wall Street Records. The label originally featured such artists as Glasses Malone, Vita, and Nu Jerzey Devil, along with The Game himself. The rapper's stage name was coined by his grandmother, who gave him the nickname because she claimed he was always "Game" for anything. The Game first gained prominence when he attended a hip-hop summit hosted by Russell Simmons and Louis Farrakhan,[13] releasing his first mixtape named You Know What It Is Vol. 1 in 2002, followed by a record deal with the independent label, Get Low Recordz owned by JT the Bigga Figga. Originally Sean Combs of Bad Boy Records was going to sign him to his label,[14] but Game's mixtape found its way into the hands of famed producer Dr. Dre, who proceeded to sign him to Aftermath Entertainment. To capitalize on the growing buzz, The Game continued to release music. In October, 2004 The Game released his first album Untold Story through Get Low Recordz, which managed to sell over 82,000 copies within its first 3 months.[15] The album featured artists like Sean T, Young Noble (of the Outlawz), and JT the Bigga Figga.[16] The Game also appeared on various mixtapes hosted by DJ's such as DJ Kayslay, DJ Whoo Kid, and DJ Clue. The Game also released a second mixtape You Know What It Is Vol. 2 through his own record label, and appeared on the video game NBA Live 2004 on a song produced by Fredwreck called "Can't Stop Me".[17]
Rise to fame
The Game was originally signed as an artist on Aftermath Entertainment, but Interscope Records CEO Jimmy Iovine and Dr. Dre decided to have The Game also work with 50 Cent and G-Unit. The arrangement was to help build a growing buzz around The Game which would also fuel interest in G-Unit. Since then he made numerous cameo appearances in music videos by 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks, Young Buck, and Fabolous. Even at this early stage in his career, he was embroiled in rap feuds associated with G-Unit, including those with Joe Budden, Ja Rule, and Memphis Bleek. His first appearance on a single was on Jim Jones' "Certified Gangstas", before his own single "Westside Story" was released in 2004.
The original title of the album was Nigga Wit' An Attitude Volume 1 (as can be seen in the lyrics to "Dreams"), but an injunction filed at the request of Eazy-E's widow prevented him from using N.W.A.'s name in the album title. Dr. Dre and 50 Cent were executive producers on The Game's major label debut album, The Documentary, which spawned the hit singles "How We Do" and "Hate It or Love It" (the latter receiving 2 Grammy nominations).[18] The album debuted at number one on the Billboard music charts and was the tenth best selling album of 2005 in the United States.[19] It also debuted at number 7 in the United Kingdom and sold over 5 million copies world wide.[20]
Due to his disputes with 50 Cent, The Game left Aftermath Entertainment and signed with Geffen Records in order to terminate his contractual obligations with G-Unit in the summer of 2006. The rapper finished working on his sophomore album Doctor's Advocate, which was released on November 14, 2006. This album was set out by The Game to prove that he is able to make good music and be a successful artist without the help of Dr. Dre or 50 Cent. He is also working on getting his own label, The Black Wall Street Records, signed to a distribution label. While The Game originally claimed Dr. Dre would still do production work on the album in the November issue of XXL magazine,[21] he admitted in September (after the XXL interview was conducted) during an interview on radio station Power 105 that Dr. Dre would not be producing any tracks on the album.[22] The album debuted at number one in the U.S., selling over 358,000 copies its first week.[23] However, although it was met with positive reviews by critics, Doctor's Advocate did not sell as much as his debut The Documentary.
Other ventures
As a result of his fame, The Game has ventured into areas outside of rap. The Game was chosen to play and had bought a large selection of shares for the now defunct Inglewood Cobras, an ABA franchise team.[24] The Game is also venturing into acting. In 2004 he had a minor role voicing the character "B-Dup", in the video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. He will also voice a character in the upcoming video game Def Jam: Icon. In 2006 he made his film debut in the movie Waist Deep as a character named "Big Meat" and has been/is filming at least two more movies.[25] The Game has also partnered with 310 Motoring to create his own shoe called The Hurricanes. A portion of the proceeds of the shoe are donated to the victims of Katrina.
Personal life
The Game has one child, a son named Harlem Caron Taylor, who was born on June 30, 2003. Baron Davis, a basketball team mate in high school,[12] and current NBA all-star was named Harlem's godfather.[26] The Los Angeles Times reported that as of 2006 The Game is a resident of Glendale, California after having purchased a home in the Kenneth Village neighborhood. The Game announced that he was engaged to actress/model Valeisha Butterfield, the daughter of U.S. Congressman G. K. Butterfield. The couple were set to marry in March 2007, but the engagement was called off in June 2006.[27] In February 2007, The Game revealed in an interview with Mistah F.A.B. on radio station Wild 94.9 that he was expecting his second child in April, with former substitute teacher Tiffany Webb.[28]
Controversy
Even before releasing his debut album The Game has been involved in feuds with many rappers. The rapper has previously had rivalries with Suge Knight of Death Row Records, Ja Rule, Joe Budden, Yukmouth, as well as Jay-Z, Memphis Bleek, and the Young Gunz of Roc-A-Fella Records. The most prominent rivalry he has is with 50 Cent and G-Unit. The Game has also had minor feuds with Xzibit, Ja Rule, Guerilla Black, Bishop Lamont, Domination, and Benzino.
Joe Budden
The origin of the feud with Joe Budden began when 50 Cent criticized Joe Budden's album for "lacking street credibility". Joe Budden took offense and released various insults directed at G-Unit. The Game previously did a freestyle for DJ Clue, and then Joe Budden used the end of the freestyle without notifying The Game. While on the end, Joe Budden took shots at G-Unit. In defense, The Game made several records against Joe Budden, most notoriously the track "Buddens". Joe Budden mocked The Game's appearance on the dating game show Change of Heart. The Game has consistently defended his appearance on the show. Later, at a party in New York, the rappers mutually announced their intention to stop making hostile records about each other,[29] but The Game has subsequently suggested in songs and videos that he won the feud.
Yukmouth
Yukmouth first met The Game at a club, and at the time Yukmouth was engaged in a feud with 50 Cent and G-Unit. The Game released a diss track aimed at the rapper over the beat of "I Got 5 on It", a song which Yukmouth recorded when he was a part of Luniz.[30] Yukmouth responded with a track that mocked The Game's appearance on Change of Heart. The two later tried to bury the hatchet, due to a personal friend and even recorded a song together, named "Peace." However, the beef continued afterward, since The Game dissed Yukmouth on "Peace" (they recorded their verses separately).[31] Since then, Yukmouth responded by releasing a free style music video over Fabolous' Breathe single. In the video there is a look-a-like of the rapper getting robbed and beaten up. In that song, Yukmouth claimed that The Game had a tongue ring and was slapped by mogul Suge Knight. Since the West Coast Peace Conference, both rappers ended the feud.
Death Row
Dr. Dre's old nemesis Suge Knight had an ongoing feud with The Game stemming from when Yukmouth claimed that The Game had been slapped by Suge Knight. The Game responded on his website, saying that if Suge Knight had ever touched him, he would be "six feet under." After the 2005 BET Awards, associates of Death Row had their invitations to a party hosted by Ciara rescinded. Supposedly, a member of Death Row had tried to steal The Game's chain. The Game stated on his Black Wall Street web site that he dislikes Suge Knight because of "the lives he has endangered." In Miami for the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards, Suge Knight was shot and wounded at Kanye West's party by an unknown gunman.[32] The Game vigorously denied involvement in the shooting, but the incident renewed efforts to pacify hip hop feuds and The Game has consequently been discouraged from attending certain events in hopes of averting retaliation.[33] Later, The Game and various representatives of California's rap cliques formed a West Coast "peace treaty" to end many rivalries between various West Coast rappers.[34] Although Suge Knight did not attend, he and The Game declared their feud over.
Roc-A-Fella Records
The feud between The Game and Roc-A-Fella Records grew out of an earlier rivalry with Memphis Bleek over the name of his label (Get Low Records), which was similar to the one The Game was previously signed to (Get Low Recordz). On the single "Westside Story", The Game raps that he "I don't do button-up shirts or drive maybachs", which was perceived as being directed towards Jay-Z. Later Jay-Z performed a freestyle on Funkmaster Flex's radio show on Hot 97 and in it he repeatedly used the word "game" which some hip-hop fans believed Jay-Z was directing towards The Game.[35] The Game responded and made several remarks directed at Roc-A-Fella Records.
While The Game was feuding with Roc-A-Fella artists his first album featured production from Kanye West and Just Blaze,[36] two Roc-A-Fella producers. In an interview with Ed Lover and Monie Love, The Game said the Maybach line on Westside Story was referring to Ja Rule, he also said he has a lot of respect for Jay-Z and would never take shots at a legend. Jay-Z later insisted that "game" references were just about the rap game itself, not the rapper. The Game still addressed Memphis Bleek and Young Gunz on some songs, but the beef between them cooled off. There were rumors that Jay-Z was planning on "declaring war" on The Game and others at a concert. Despite the feud, Jay-Z instead used the opportunity to make peace with many of his rivals.[37]
50 Cent and G-Unit
In early 2005 The Game began a feud with G-Unit. Even before The Game's first album was released and their feud became public there was tension between The Game and 50 Cent.[38] Soon after The Documentarys release, 50 Cent felt that the rapper was disloyal for saying he did not want to participate in G-Unit's feud with other rappers, and even wanting to work with artists with whom G-Unit were feuding, such as Nas and Jadakiss.
50 Cent also claimed that he was not getting his proper credit for the creation of the album, and he claimed that he wrote six of the songs, but The Game denied that. During that dispute, a member of The Game's entourage was shot after a confrontation at the Hot 97 studio in New York City[39] After the situation between them escalated, 50 Cent and The Game decided to hold a press conference to announce their reconciliation.[40] Fans had mixed feelings as to whether the rappers created a publicity stunt designed to boost the sales of the two albums the pair had just released.[39] Nevertheless, even after the situation had apparently deflated,[41] G-Unit continued to feud with The Game, denouncing his street credibility in the media and claiming that without their support, he will not score a hit from his second album. The Game responded during a performance at Summer Jam and launched a boycott called "G-Unot".[42] G-Unot is a boycott against 50 Cent and the other members of G-Unit Records.
After the performance at Summer Jam, The Game responded with "300 Bars and Runnin'", an extended diss going at G-Unit as well as members of Roc-A-Fella Records on the mixtape You Know What It Is Vol. 3. Many of The Game's fans felt that the diss song was the pivotal rebuttal that gave The Game the advantage in his beef with 50 Cent and G-Unit. 50 Cent responded through his "Piggy Bank" music video, which features The Game as a Mr. Potato Head doll and also parodies other rivals.[43] The Game threatened to sabotage the sales of Tony Yayo's album by asking his fans to repurchase The Documentary on the same week Yayo's debut album was released then mail the copy to The Black Wall Street Records offices, where he'll personally autograph each copy and include his next mixtape titled Ghost Unit. Ghost Unit continued the attacks of The Black Wall Street on G-Unit.
Later The Game released mixtape and DVD entitled Stop Snitchin, Stop Lyin, released in January 2006, and was said to be the last of the "beef" between him and G-Unit. 50 Cent's rebuttal was "Not Rich, Still Lyin'".[44] In the song he speaks about Game's fallout with his half brother Big Fase 100. Along with this, G-Unit started to respond on numerous underground mixtapes. G-Unit member Spider Loc, one of the newest members of G-Unit, began dissing The Game soon after. The Game responded with "240 Bars (Spider Joke)",[44] a song mainly aimed at Spider Loc, but also addressing Tony Yayo and rap group M.O.P..[44]
The Game had released images depicting the rap group in various parodies on some of his previous mixtapes. In response, G-Unit published a mixtape cover with the rapper's head on the body of an exotic dancer.[45] on the cover of G-Unit Radio 21. In a response to the mixtape, The Game came out with the track "The Funeral 100 Bars" aimed at the whole G-Unit camp. The Game also got "G-Unot" tattooed near his left elbow to go with the many tattoos he already has including homages to Eazy-E and N.W.A., the logo of The Black Wall Street, a portrait of 2Pac as an angel as well as the Dodgers' "LA" logo tattoo below his right eye, covering a previous tattoo of a butterfly.[46]
In October 2006, The Game extended a peace treaty to 50 Cent, which was not immediately replied to.[47] However, a couple days later on Power 106, he stated that the treaty was only offered for one day.[48] On The Game's new album Doctor's Advocate, on a few of the songs, he says the beef is over. There have been some rumors about Busta Rhymes trying to get 50 Cent The Game on a song together on his new album so they can end the beef.
Other feuds
Lil Eazy-E, a young rapper and son of legendary N.W.A. rapper Eazy-E, was also in a feud with The Game. The two used to be close associates and even recorded music together. Lil' Eazy-E has since directed numerous diss songs targeting the rapper and expressed his anger over what he felt was The Game misusing his father's name. The Game responded by claiming that Lil' Eazy-E is trying to establish himself off the success he had made since releasing The Documentary.[49] The Game responded on "120 Bars" where he claimed that Lil' Eazy-E does not write his own lyrics.[50] However, The Game states on the same track that he would rather not feud with Lil' Eazy-E, due to the deep respect he feels for his father. To which Lil' Eazy-E responded with "They Know Me". On October 30, 2006 The Game went on KDAY and said that he and Lil' Eazy-E ended the feud between them.
The Game has had a falling out with his manager and half-brother Big Fase 100. The rapper claims that Big Fase 100 had extorted him out of over $1.5 million,[51] and felt that his influence was holding him back. Later in interviews, Big Fase 100 attacks The Game's street credibility, claiming that The Game being a "certified gangsta" is fabricated.[51] The manager went on to claim that the supposed gangster life is based on his own life, and blamed selfishness on The Game's part as the main reason of their falling out.
A confrontation between The Game and Ras Kass took place at Club Element in Los Angeles.[52] The stories are different from each party, but what is known is that The Game approached Ras Kass over a song that Ras Kass made regarding The Game's son and asked him to take back what he said, but he refused. The Game's entourage claimed that The Game punched and knocked out Ras Kass. The story from Ras Kass' representatives was that he walked away and got hit by a bottle in the head and then The Game's crew jumped him, but he escaped with just a black eye.
Legal issues
On October 28, 2005 The Game was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest in Greensboro. At one point, police said, his companions were pepper sprayed when they surrounded officers in a threatening manner.[53] Mall security officers said the rapper was wearing a full-face Halloween mask, filming shoppers, cursing loudly, and refused to leave when asked. The Game continued to act up and was arrested, a police statement said. The Game claimed that officers overreacted and that he did nothing wrong when he was pepper sprayed by the mall security.[53] The five officers involved in the incident ended up suing The Game for defamation,[54] which has yet to be taken to court.
The WWE has made it public that they have plans on suing The Game over the rights to his name, which is a nickname for wrestler Triple H.[55]
Discography
Albums
Album cover | Album information |
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The Documentary
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|
Doctor's Advocate
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Singles
Year | Song | U.S. Hot 100 | U.S. R&B | U.S. Rap | UK singles | AUS singles | Album |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | "Westside Story" (featuring 50 Cent) | 93 | 55 | - | - | - | The Documentary |
2004 | "How We Do" (featuring 50 Cent) | 4 | 2 | 2 | 5 | 23 | The Documentary |
2005 | "Hate It or Love It" (featuring 50 Cent) | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 21 | The Documentary |
2005 | "Dreams" | 32 | 12 | 5 | 8 | 42 | The Documentary |
2005 | "Put You on the Game" | - | 96 | - | 44 | - | The Documentary |
2006 | "It's Okay (One Blood)" (featuring Junior Reid) | 71 | 33 | 16 | 26 | 68 | Doctor's Advocate |
2006 | "Let's Ride" | 46 | 55 | 14 | 42 | 75 | Doctor's Advocate |
2007 | "Wouldn't Get Far" (featuring Kanye West) | 64 | 26 | 11 | - | - | Doctor's Advocate |
Notes
- ^ a b Jamie Foster Brown. Jayceon Taylor is The Game (jpeg). Sister2Sister. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ Clover Hope (2005-02-18). XXL Spotlights West Coast Hip-Hop In March Issue. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
- ^ Conan Milne (December 2005). The West Coast Rap Up: 2005. Dubcnn.com. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
- ^ Kim Osorio (March 21, 2006). GAME: Playtime Is Over. BET.com. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
- ^ ALBUMS. United World Chart. Media Traffic (2005-02-05). Retrieved on Januray 29, 2007.
- ^ ALBUMS. United World Chart. Media Traffic (2006-12-02). Retrieved on January 29, 2007.
- ^ Jamie Foster Brown. Jayceon Taylor is The Game. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ Men of the Week: Entertainment. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ The Game. MTV. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ a b Bio. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ Jamie Foster Brown. Jayceon Taylor is The Game. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ a b Jon Caramanica. The Game. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ Encyclopedia of Popular Music 3rd edition, Copyright Muze UK Ltd. 1989 – 2005, ISBN:???
- ^ Shaheem Reid; Sway Calloway. The Game On Bad Boy? It Nearly Happened, He Says. MTV. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ Margo Whitmire. The Game's 'Documentary' Blasts Off At No. 1. Billboard. Retrieved on January 25, 2007.
- ^ Untold Story - The Game. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Robert (October 26 2003). Hip-Hop News: NBA Live 2004 & Hip Hops In The Game. Rap News Network. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ 48 Annual Grammy Awards Winners List (2005).
- ^ a b Peter Rooley (January 2006). The Top 10 Best-Selling Albums of 2005 (5). Ace Showbiz. Retrieved on January 26, 2007. <---Wikipedia detects link as spam. Remove asterisks to view page
- ^ a b The Game Continues (2006-10-26). Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Interview by Kawan Ari (2006-09-28). Man Up. XXL Magazine. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Kim Osorio (2006-09-28). DAILY MUSIC NEWS WRAP UP. BET.com. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Katie Hast (2006-11-22). The Game Wins No. 1 On The Billboard 200. Billboard. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
- ^ EbenGregory and Nolan Strong (2006-11-16). The Game Joins Pro Basketball Team, Invests In Company. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ The Game. imdb. Retrieved on January 26,, 2007.
- ^ Jon Caramanica. XXL Magazine Feature. XXL Magazine. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Jeff Dufour (2007-01-06). Butterfield’s engagement to The Game is short lived. The Hill. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Game Interview. KYLD (2007-02-05). Retrieved on February 26, 2007.
- ^ Nolan Strong (2004-03-08). Joe Budden And Game End Beef. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ BrooklyniteOne (2004-09-22). The Game Album Pushed Back & Yukmouth Diss Track. nobodysmiling.com. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Nolan Strong and Jigsaw (2004-11-07). Yukmouth And Game Speak, Say Beef Is Still On. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Janeé Bolden (2005-10-24). Suge Shooting Remains a Mystery. Sohh.com. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Rich Rock (2005-08-30). The Game Locked Out of Magic Convention, Suge Retaliation Feared. Sohh.com. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Houston Williams (2005-04-14). Snoop, The Game, Steve Harvey And Others Make West Coast Peace Treaty. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Clover Hope (2005-02-14). Game Says No Beef With Jay-Z, Speaks On Amsterdam Comments. allhiphop. Retrieved on January 29, 2007.
- ^ The Documentary. amazon.com. Retrieved on January 29, 2007.
- ^ Seandra Sims and Houston Williams (2005-10-27). Jay-Z And Nas Officially Dead Beef. allhiphop. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ March 2005 issue of VIBE magazine. The interview asks about The Game's and 50 Cent's physical altercation
- ^ a b Jayson Rodriguez (2005-03-01). UPDATE: Man Shot Not With 50 Cent; Violator Offices Shot Up. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 27, 2007.
- ^ Alvin Blanco (2005-03-08). AHH Special: 50 Cent And Game’s Truce. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 27, 2007, 2007.
- ^ Houston Williams (April 2005). Game: Winds of Change. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 27, 2007, 2007.
- ^ Jayson Rodriguez (2005-06-06). The Game Taunts 50 Cent, Jay-Z Returns At Hot 97’s Summer Jam. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
- ^ A-Plus (2005-08-05). 50 Strikes Back in “Piggy Bank” Video. Hip Hop DX. Retrieved on January 29, 2007.
- ^ a b c Carl Chery; Jesse Gissen (2006-02-03). The Game takes on Spider Loc, 50 Cent strikes back. Sohh.com. Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
- ^ 50 CENT FUELS FIRE WITH THE GAME. contactmusic.com (2006-07-24). Retrieved on January 29, 2007.
- ^ Tattoos. Hurricanegame.us. Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
- ^ Remmie Fresh (2006-09-30). The Game Extends Peace Treaty To 50 Cent. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
- ^ Audio of the conversation on Power 106 URL accessed on October 11, 2006 The Black Wall Street Forum
- ^ Jayceon Taylor (November 2005). The Game Releases Statement on Beef. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Interview by Dominic de Haas (January 2006). Exclusive ILLHILL.com Lil' Eazy Interview. IllHill. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ a b Houston Williams (Novemeber 2005). Big Fase 100: Change of Heart. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 26, 2006.
- ^ Nolan Strong (2006-09-14). Ras Kass, The Game Fight In Los Angeles Nightclub. Allhiphop. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ a b The Game's Halloween arrest. AskMen.com (2005-10-31). Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ N.C. police officers suing rapper The Game. Political Gateway. United Press International (2005-11-03). Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Nando (2006-09-18). The Game Arrives On West Coast Rydaz To Tell All.... West Coast Rydaz. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ The Game. Rock On The Net. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Gold and Platinum Database Search. Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved on January 26, 2007.
- ^ Top Album Sales ANALYSIS. Urban Connects (2007-02-14). Retrieved on February 26, 2007.
External links
- Official website run by Geffen Records
- Official website run by The Game
- The Game at Billboard.com
- The Game's MySpace
- Black Wall Street Records website
Persondata | |
---|---|
NAME | Game, The |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Taylor, Jayceon Terell |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | West Coast rapper. |
DATE OF BIRTH | November 27, 1979 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Los Angeles, California |
DATE OF DEATH | |
PLACE OF DEATH |
The Game |
---|
Studio albums |
The Documentary | Doctor's Advocate |
Independent albums |
Untold Story | West Coast Resurrection | Untold Story, Vol. 2 | G.A.M.E. |
Mixtapes |
You Know What It Is Vol. 1 | You Know What It Is Vol. 2 | You Know What It Is Vol. 3 | Ghost Unit | Stop Snitchin, Stop Lyin | The Re-Advocate |
Singles |
Westside Story | How We Do | Hate It or Love It | Dreams | Put You on the Game | It's Okay (One Blood) | Let's Ride |Wouldn't Get Far |
See also |
300 Bars and Runnin' | G-Unit vs. The Game feud | The Black Wall Street Journal Vol. 1 | The Black Wall Street Journal Vol. 2 | The Black Wall Street Records |
Categories: Semi-protected | 1979 births | African-American actors | African American musicians | West Coast rappers | American Roman Catholics | American songwriters | Bloods | California musicians | The Game | Geffen Records artists | Grand Theft Auto cast members | Living people | Participants in American reality television series | People from Compton, California | Roman Catholic rappers