In a music industry often built on ego and betrayal, real loyalty is rare.
But when 50 Cent speaks about Eminem, it’s not just respect — it’s reverence.
“I love Eminem to d**h. Nobody can tell me sht about him.”
These aren’t just bold words from a rapper.
They’re a tribute from a man who says he wouldn’t be alive — or legendary — without Marshall Mathers.
More Than a Mentor — He Became Family
Long before 50 Cent dominated the charts with Get Rich or Die Tryin’, he was just another hungry artist blacklisted by the industry after surviving a near-fatal shooting.
Labels didn’t want him.
Radio didn’t touch him.
The streets doubted him.
Then came Eminem.
At a time when no one else would touch him — Em signed him.
Backed him. Protected him. Bet the house on him.
“Behind my grandmother, taking care of me and looking out for me when she didn’t have to, he’s the only other person that did that for me.”
It Wasn’t Business. It Was Brotherhood.
50 says Eminem didn’t have to do what he did.
He wasn’t chasing clout. He wasn’t trying to ride a wave.
He saw potential. He saw pain. And he saw himself.
“When I say it to him, he’s flattered by it, and he looks at me says, ‘Yo you always say that.’
And I’m like, ‘Yeah — that’s because it’s true.’”
And it is true.
Because without Eminem’s co-sign, 50’s debut album may never have seen daylight.
Without Shady Records, there may never have been G-Unit domination.
And without that belief, Curtis Jackson’s story might have ended in silence.
“You Can’t Tell Me Sh*t About Him” — Loyalty That Runs Deeper Than Fame
The music world is filled with fallen friendships, fake alliances, and post-collab beefs.
But Fif and Em?
They’ve never wavered.
No matter the era.
No matter the hits, the headlines, or the solo pursuits.
50 still credits Eminem as one of only two people in his life who showed up when no one else did — and meant it.
Eminem Didn’t Just Help a Rapper. He Saved a Life.
When the world said 50 Cent was done… Eminem said, “Let’s go.”
He introduced him to Dr. Dre.
He cleared the path.
He stood by him — not because it was popular, but because it was right.
That’s not industry. That’s family.
Final Word: Real Recognizes Real — and Loyalty Like This Never Dies
In an age where beef and betrayal sell records, this story is different.
This is a story of two outcasts who found strength in each other.
A white rapper from Detroit. A black hustler from Queens.
Both broken. Both brilliant.
And one saw the fire in the other — and poured gasoline on it.
So if you ever hear 50 Cent say “I love Eminem to death”, don’t question it.
Because when the world turned its back, Eminem didn’t.
And some debts you never stop paying — you just keep honoring.
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