

Later, Three 6 Mafia brought out actor Terrence Howard to help perform “It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp,” their Oscar-winning (another surprise, if you may have forgotten) song that he raps in the film Hustle & Flow.

That fight didn’t end up being the night’s only surprise. Let’s keep the party motherfucking rollin’.”

“I want to apologize to everybody the fuck out there, on both sides,” he said.

At first, Bizzy didn’t return to the stage with Bone Thugs, but he eventually came back to apologize, trading a handclasp with Juicy J. Bizzy Bone, you a hater,” Three 6’s Gangsta Boo said as things escalated before security eventually pulled the two groups apart. That quickly grew into a few seconds of full-on fighting between Three 6 and Bone Thugs - the first fight, perhaps surprisingly, after months of live and in-person Verzuz battles. “N-, suck my dick,” Three 6’s Juicy J replied, prompting Bizzy to throw a bottle in his direction. “You ugly motherfuckers ain’t finna be mocking me while I’m on motherfuckin’ stage,” he told the rival group. As the ’90s hitmakers traded the usual barbs and jabs of a Verzuz, Bizzy wasn’t having it. Bizzy took the stage with Cleveland rap group Bone Thugs-n-Harmony for a Verzuz battle against the Memphis crew that, for a second, turned into an actual battle. There's no love lost between Bone and Ruthless, and with Ruthless handling their history like this, it's easy to see why.Bizzy Bone starting a fight with Juicy J during this Verzuz battle 😂 #Verzuz /98fXtWflaC- Jason Williams December 3, 2021īizzy Bone had a bit of a bone to pick with Three 6 Mafia during Verzuz on December 2. Bone Thugs never rose above that brilliant album, as the numerous lesser tracks on Greatest Hits point out. 1 if you want a concise look at Bone, then pick up their E 1999 Eternal if you need more. All the producer and engineer credits you'd ever want are included, but good luck figuring out which track was on what without jumping on the Internet. Kicking off with the short and dramatic "Carole of the Bones" is a clever move, but where are the liner notes, and who laid the tracks out in such a lame order? Too many hits upfront weaken disc two's punch and too often likeminded tracks are put right next to one another. The third time Cleveland's quick rapping Bone Thugs-N-Harmony get compiled by their former label Ruthless starts out clever, but the packaging, lack of input from the band, and too-long run time make it nothing to get excited about.
