Is Legendary Rapper Eminem Homophobic To This Day?
Legendary rapper Eminem has gotten himself in hot water with the LGBTQ community on a few occasions. This is usually because of the homophobic and disrespectful lyrics across most, if not all, of his songs.
But is Eminem truly homophobic? Does Eminem support the LGBTQ community? Letβs take a look at the rapperβs eye-opening lyrics and thoughts on the gay community.
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Eminemβs First Homophobic Lyrics
Eminem (a.k.a., Slim Shady or Double M) is an American rapper, songwriter, and producer. Heβs known as the white rapper who popularized hip hop in middle America. Eminem is considered one of the greatest rappers to date.
His fame wasnβt without controversy, however, since the release of βCriminalβ on his 2000 album, The Marshall Mathers LP. The lyrics read, βMy words are like a dagger with a jagged edge / That’ll stab you in the head, whether you’re a f*g or les’ / Or the homosex, hermaph or a trans-a-vest / Pants or dress, hate f*gs? The answer’s yes.β
The media and his fans severely criticized him for the homophobic lyrics. This lead Eminem to do a Grammy collaboration with Elton John who has been famously gay since 1988. He even gifted Elton John and his husband David Furnish a pair of diamond penis rings for their civil union and expressed his support for gay marriage while talking to the New York Times.
βI think if two people love each other, then what the hell. I think that everyone should have the chance to be equally miserable if they want,β he commented, adding, βItβs the new tolerant me!β
It wasnβt exactly an apology and it still had a hint of homophobia, but it was a start. Whether the hip-hop community or gay people liked Eminemβs response or not, there was no further backlash or reaction at the time.
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Eminemβs Attack Against Tyler, The Creator
It seems like Eminem didnβt learn his lesson. He released a song called βFallβ on the album Kamikaze nearly two decades after βCriminalβ was released, with the lyrics directing homophobic slurs towards Tyler, The Creator:
βTyler create nothing, I see why you called yourself a f****t’, bitch / It’s not just ’cause you lack attention / It’s because you worship D12’s balls, you’re sack-religious.β
Itβs not clear why he was frustrated at Tyler The Creator. Possibly due to pressure, he later explained in an interview, βI was angry when I said the shit about Tyler. Every time I [see] this kid, [heβs] always so cool to you. I loved his energyβ¦ [But] at what point do I have to say something just to defend myself? And I think that the word I called him on the album on that song was one of the things where I felt like this might be too far.β
βIn my quest to hurt him, I realize that I was hurting a lot of other people,β Eminem admitted.
Many celebrities criticized Eminem for his comments. Bon Iver lead singer Justin Vernon (who collaborated with the rapper on the song) said he called Eminem out and asked the producers to remove the homophobic slur on βFall.β Imagine Dragonsβ founder-singer Dan Reynolds also expressed his frustration towards the apparent homophobia.
Eminem’s Quest to Hurt
However, big-name rappers like Jay-Z, The Notorious B.I.G., and Drake didnβt challenge Eminem on his lyrics, and nobody knows why. The rap community has been oddly quiet and hasnβt held him accountable for his βquest to hurt.β
As if to solidify his insincerity, Eminem released βKillshotβ just days after, where he fired homophobic lyrics in retaliation against Machine Gun Kelly. This all began when Machine Gun Kelly tweeted, saying Eminemβs daughter Hailie is βhot as f*ck,β in which Eminem responded with, βYou would suck a d*ck to f*kinβ be me for a second / Lick a ballsack to get on my channel.β However, Machine Gun Kelly doesnβt identify as gay.
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Is Eminem Homophobic To This Day?
Eminem is still popular to this day despite his lyrics being violent, misogynistic, and homophobic. His recent album Music to Be Murdered By uses similar themes and language.
He later followed the surprise album with Music To Be Murdered By: Side B, where he tried to redeem himself for the diss against Tyler, The Creator, saying on the track βNo Regretsβ: βI can make a mistake and erupt and end up takin’ a dump / Or sayin’ some dumb shit, thinkin’ I run shit / Misplacin’ my anger enough to give / Earl and Tyler, The Creator the brunt / Shoulda never made a response to the disdain.β
But homophobia isnβt the only controversy that Eminem seems to be involved in. Through his lyrics, he also apologized for siding with Chris Brown on his assault against Rhianna and for flippantly referring to the 2017 Manchester bombing before.
Moreover, he taunted Billie Eilish in βAlfredβs Theme.β The young neo-goth pop star has shared that sheβs scared of Eminem, preferring Childish Gambino. Eminem responded to this with: βBut really Iβm just fulfilling my wish of killing rhymes / Which is really childish and silly, but Iβm really like this / Iβm giving nightmares to Billie Eilish.β
In the track titled βTone Deaf,β Eminem included a lyric about Bill Cosby, who was found guilty of sexual assault. Eminem raps, βDoes Bill Cosby sedate once he treats the cheesecake and the decent steak?β. In another track, he dissed his ex-girlfriend Mariah Carey with the lyrics βWhat rhymes with Pariah?β on βThese Demons.β
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Conclusion
Is Eminem homophobic in real life? It seems like it. Does Eminem support the LGBTQ community? Probably not.
But for all his vaunted βhonestyβ and aggressive teenage-like vulnerability, Eminemβs hypermasculine persona continues to please his fans, allowing him to be a legend in hip hop.
With 220 million Eminem records sold worldwide and 52 million listeners on Spotify, Eminem remains one of the most iconic rappers of our lifetime β despite the disrespectful and homophobic slurs.
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