50 Cent Trolls Hurricane Chris After He Claims 50 'Can't Out-Rap Me'

Chris recently slammed Fif for not booking local Shreveport, Louisiana talent at Humor & Harmony festival.

September 11, 2024
50 Cent and Hurricane Chris
 
Getty/Thomas Cooper/Paras Griffin

50 Cent and Hurricane Chris are still going toe-to-toe.

In a new VladTV interview, Chris claimed he’s the better rapper. “I will slaughter his ass with any type of musical sh*t that you can even think of,” he said, per Vibe. "You know he can’t out-rap me."

“Anybody knows that,” Chris continued. “[He] do not make better music than me right now. He don’t make better songs than me. If 50 made a song right now and I made a song right now, I’ma smash that. Go listen to me and Boosie‘s song ‘Murder’ we just dropped. 50 can’t make that.”

When Fif caught wind of Chris’ comments, he trolled the Shreveport, Louisiana native on Instagram.

“This is what happens when the educational system fails you,” 50 wrote, alongside a clip of Chris’ Vlad interview. “IN THE 50 states of America. LOL.”

In the video, also from VladTV, Chris discussed Louisiana’s education system: “Louisiana got the fourth worst educational system in America,” Chris said. “Fourth worst out of all 50 states.”

According to the outlet, the “Ay Bay Bay” rapper defended himself in the comments, writing, “I corrected it [you] looping the video with them good editors.”

Chris then fired more jabs, taking to his IG to post a clip of 50 Cent saying he’s a fan of 6ix9ine and Soulja Boy’s music. “I write 16s u like 16s,” Chris captioned the video.

He came at 50 in another post for making fun of him. “A fake person will always try their best to make light of a real situation,” he said. “Louisiana has a very challenged educational system and I want to bring awareness and help our youth some people actual think it’s a joke but true colors will show.”

The pair started feuding when Chris slammed the “Many Men” rapper for failing to book local talent at the Humor & Harmony festival, and also spending $500,000 on cops to act as security during the event, when that money could have been spent to help the youth.

Related