Fat Joe recently claimed that he lied in “95 percent” of his raps amid controversy over lyrics being used in court cases, and now he’s closing the loop with the other five percent.
Taking to Instagram on Tuesday (December 13), Joey Crack shared a throwback photo of himself in the streets of the Bronx pointing a gun at the camera. “This was the other 5%,” he captioned the post alongside a laughing emoji.
His fellow rap peers laughed with him in the comments, with Cam’ron posting laughing emojis and Memphis Bleek writing: “That 5% matters the most,” also with laughing emojis. Fabolous also commented: “5% Gat Joe.”
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Late last month, Fat Joe defended Young Thug by claiming that he’s lied in most of the songs he’s released throughout his career. During a CNN interview with Gayle King, the Bronx rapper said it’s a “travesty” that Thugga’s lyrics can be used against him in the ongoing YSL RICO case.
“I’ve been rapping professionally for 30 years — I’ve lied in almost 95 percent of my songs,” he began. “I’m being honest. I write like I feel that day. I’m just being creative. You couldn’t build a jail high enough for the lyrics I’ve said on songs which are all untrue.”
He went on: “What I am is a family man, the person who gives back to my community all the time, opens businesses in my community. So the music would never amount to the actual person, Joseph Cartagena.
“What’s even more horrible is that the district attorneys, they know those lyrics ain’t real. They know that’s creativity. But if it helps their case, they’ll use it to put these guys in jail.
“And here, we’re having a fun show about it and discussion, but there really is six defendants in Atlanta who might spend the rest of their lives in jail for something that’s totally not true. This is very serious. This destroys families.”
After people questioned his authenticity amid the admission, Fat Joe added further context. In explaining himself, he pointed out that MCs “move off of inspiration,” switching between a range of emotions such as anger, love, peace and tranquility.
“I had to say 95 percent of what I say is a lie so that they can understand that it’s unfair to try some kids for the rest of their life with shit they might’ve not done,” he said. “What you gotta understand is that it’s creativity […] now if I say I use my imagination, my creativity in my music don’t mean I ain’t live a real fuckin’ life in the streets.”