Machine Gun Kelly Responds To Statement That Eminem Won In Their Beef: “He Didn’t Win”

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Machine Gun Kelly Responds To Statement That Eminem Won In Their Beef He Didn't Win

Machine Gun Kelly says Eminem didn’t win the beef against him.

Machine Gun Kelly revisits his beef with Eminem as he states that the Detroit rapper didn’t beat him. The Cleveland artist recently released a new rap song “BMXXing“, in which he brought his old rap vibes.

Youtuber Scru Face Jean also reacted to the song, and brought Eminem in the conversation. “This reminds me Mac Miller’s “Kool Aid & Frozen Pizza.” It gives me that vibes,” he said. “Now, there’s some people who already wrote MGK off. There is the most extreme Eminem fans and Stans who will never like this ni–a just because he went into a battle against Eminem which I don’t understand because I respect people who go into battles. Eminem won. I got Eminem winning but MGK really stood up and fought. There is a lot of people who were afraid to say something about Em so I gotta respect him for that.”

He also shared the clip on his Twitter/X, which received a response from MGK himself. “To where it was shot: in Cleveland on CSU staircase and another spot on the west side of the city. And the pool – I just emptied it in my backyard. Also, he didn’t win.”

It’s been six years since Eminem and Machine Gun Kelly traded shots at each other, and Kelly released the “Rap Devil” diss track. The track was in response to Detroit rapper dissing Kelly on the song “Not Alike”, which appeared on his surprise tenth studio project “Kamikaze“. The Detroit rapper took shots at Kelly for his comments about his daughter Hailie Jade in 2012, at the time when she was only 16 years old.

The Game Picks Machine Gun Kelly As Winner In Beef With Eminem

Following ‘Rap Devil,’ Eminem released another MGK diss track titled “Killshot“. The song is reportedly the reason behind the end of Kelly’s rap career, as he switched his genre from hip-hop to pop-funk.

“Yes. [The 2019 album] Hotel Diablo is that for me because that was the first time I really expressed my true self with no outside influence, meaning the label,” said MGK in an interview with Dave Franco. “As a hip-hop album, it’s flawless front to back, and also a hint at the evolution of how I went into a pop-punk album. But it was coming off the tail-end of that infamous beef [with Eminem]. So no one wanted to give it the time of day. It’s like if you make a shi–y movie and then you come out with a great movie right after, but people want to focus on the fact that they hated whatever you just did. What I did in the beef was exactly what it should be, but that project wasn’t welcomed. The next album came from already feeling like I’d counted out, so I didn’t even care what the public was going to think. That’s why the project was ironically my best-received one because it was the most effortless, with the least outside influence.”

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