Soulja Boy unloaded on Kanye West, Drake, Tyga, and other celebrities in a recent interview. Find out all there is to know about Big Draco for people who don’t know who he is.
Rapper Soulja Boy, real name DeAndre Cortez Way, was born on July 28, 1990. His most popular song is “Crank That (Soulja Boy)”.
Along with these songs, he was successful with “Miss Me Thru The Phone,” “Turn My Swag On,” and “Pretty Boy Swag.” He received an invitation to participate in BET’s 50th-anniversary celebration of hip-hop in 2023
The first Internet rapper, undoubtedly, was Soulja Boy, who existed long before TikTok and SoundCloud rap. Soulja Boy (DeAndre Way), who found success on the website SoundClick and gained worldwide fame owing to a dance-related with his debut record, demonstrated the potential of what hip-hop might accomplish on the Internet. He was presumably selected to participate in the 2023 BET Awards homage to Hip-Hop reaching 50 for this reason.
Hip-hop is said to have originated during a house party at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx in 1973. The BET Awards will honor everyone who contributed to the development of the hip-hop genre because of the celebration organized by DJ Kool Herc, which identified a time and location as the genre’s genesis.
A celebration of the genre at 50 years old will take place on June 25 and feature celebrities like E-40, Big Daddy Kane, Chief Keef, MC Lyte, Tyga, Trick Daddy, The Sugarhill Gang, Fat Joe, and others.
He Made An Attempt To Market A Video Game Console
While Soulja advertised that the SouljaGame (and the SouljaGame Handheld) could play Playstation, PC, SEGA, Nintendo, and NEOGEO games and had between 800 and 3000 built-in games, this raised some suspicions among gamers who thought the consoles might not be genuine.
According to Dot ESports, Soulja Boy withdrew the consoles under threats from Nintendo of legal action, but on January 12, he unveiled the SouljaGame Handheld, which resembles a PlayStation Vita. According to IGN, they have allegedly renamed emulators rather than a new system, and in 2019 he entirely ceased selling them.
Regarding the video game dispute, he told Rolling Stone,
“Honestly, I feel that everything is 100% legit and there will be no reason for any legal ramifications or anything like that.”
“To be really honest, I have absolutely no reservations or qualms since everything we’re doing is legal. It has been investigated.
Everything has essentially been confirmed, so we have the all-clear. People who are concerned are partially those who are looking in from the outside and don’t comprehend the kinds of agreements that were done in secret.
Before TikTok, he had great success with a popular dance song
Soulja Boy was born in Chicago, Illinois, but his family relocated to Atlanta when he was six years old, where he grew up. He moved to Batesville, Mississippi, when he was 14, where he started sharing songs online.
He issued “Crank That (Soulja Boy),” which was initially from his Unsigned & Still Major: Da Album Before da Album but was later included on his debut studio album, SouljaBoyTellEm.com.
The song “Crank That (Soulja Boy)” went viral and made the then-17-year-old Soulja Boy a household name (the YouTube video has had 375 million views). He became a household name because of the hit song, the accompanying dance, and the educational music video.
The song also peaked at number one on the US Billboard Hot 100. It spent seven weeks on the Hot 100. Despite the album receiving negative reviews, it debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 and sold more than 110,000 copies in its first week.
Before there was Soundcloud, Soulja Boy was a rapper
Soulja Boy explained his accomplishment to Vulture in 2008 by citing the website SoundClick. “You would upload MP3s, and once others rated your music, you would appear on charts. I had a tune I liked to call “Doo Doo Head.”
After a few weeks, the terrible comic song reached the top of the charts, and people began visiting my page in search of fresh music. I later discovered MySpace, created my first page, and linked SoundClick to the MySpace page. Actually, all of my SoundClick views and all of my YouTube hits came through MySpace; they were mutually beneficial.
Since making his big label debut in 2007, he has put out three additional albums, the most recent of which being Loyalty from 2015. He has a ton of mixtapes and a few indie albums under his belt. Soulja has a ton of songs out now, but none have been as successful as “Crank That.”
He nearly boxed Breezy
Over the years, Soulja Boy has had disputes with other rappers, including Ice T, Hopsin, Bow Wow, and others. He got into an argument with Chris Brown in 2017 when Soulja claimed that Chris had threatened him because he had liked a picture of his ex-girlfriend Karrueche Tran.
Chris was then made fun of by Soulja for his parenting style and his friendship with Rihanna. Chris issued a boxing fight challenge to Soulja. Floyd Mayweather was enlisted by Soulja to coach him, while Mike Tyson ecstatically promised to teach Chris “every dirty trick in the book.”
Soulja Boy made a fool of himself on an Instagram Live video amid the height of this conflict. “Man, what’s going on? Before someone yanked the phone out of his hand, giving the impression that he had been jumped, Soulja remarked, “They say Soulja Boy ain’t from the hood.” The altercation never happened, by the way. Chris resigned, calling it “immature” (source: Bleacher Report).
He Ate Drake’s Viral In 2019!
2019 saw Soulja Boy pay a visit to The Breakfast Club, where he engaged in a heated dispute about Meek Mill’s more successful comeback than his own. Soulja mentioned that he too was imprisoned in response to the presenters’ question about Meek.
Soulja brought up his dispute with Chris Brown when they discussed Meek’s beef with Drake. Charlamagne said, “His beef with Drake!” God, “the biggest rapper in the world!” (h/t NME)
“Drake? Soulja said, raising his voice a few octaves, “Drake?!” “The n—- that Pusha T beat up? The n—— who tried to keep his child hidden from the world, but the world didn’t try to keep his child hidden? Drake, Aubrey Graham? Stop acting like Drake didn’t learn anything from me. On his debut song, Drake was not audible.
From there, Soulja rapped, “Drake copied my whole f—king flow,” and continued, “Tell me what’s really going on / Drizzy Drake back in this thing / I’m ready / What’s happenin’?” World-for-world! Bar-for-Bar!”
When Soulja and Charlamange reunited in 2021 for the latter’s Comedy Central show, Soulja minimized his response. He told NME, “It was all about Drizzy.” “They surprised me by asking that question.
Also Read: A Look At The Success And Relationships Of Joan- Baez