

Nothing is taboo from a life that started in Spanish Harlem, took root in Jersey City, and was recently broadcast on VH1’s Love & Hip Hop New York. While he isn’t the first rapper to mine his fucked up personal life for material, no one documents their ups and downs as exhaustively as Budden. That quick-witted, over-sharing narcissists happen to flourish in all three mediums is no coincidence.
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It’s one of the reasons the virtuoso rapper, Twitter God (he has over 890,000 followers), and reality TV bad boy is something of a star. Pussy is so easy to get, especially now.”īudden’s filter-less public life has been vital to his brand.

A 34-year-old rapper who has been fucking since he was 14 years old to have fucked less than 80? That is less than all the men I know. Some people who don’t understand volume and numbers think that’s a high number. He brings up his number with the nonchalance of a man revealing how he takes his coffee. “I don’t fuck anywhere near what people think,” says Budden. But despite the perception that he’s a womanizing freak, his actual love life is much less dramatic. He’s sitting at the head of his dining room table explaining why he’ll never join Tinder, a hookup app that seems perfect for someone like him-a guy who once tweeted a picture of himself going down on his girlfriend, and waxes lyrical on social media about the virtues of rimming. Loaded with guest spots (Lil Wayne, Wiz Khalifa, French Montana, Lloyd Banks, Juicy J, Fabolous, Twista, Omarion, etc.), the album's highlights include "She Don't Put It Down," "NBA," and "Skeletons.“I would feel like the biggest creep on the planet,” says Joe Budden. No Love Lost is his first solo album since 2009's Escape Route it concludes a four-album arc that goes back to Halfway House and Padded Room. Then came Slaughterhouse-his supergroup with Royce Da 5'9", Crooked I, and Joell Ortiz-and now Joe's famous again. He maintained a cult-like following despite limited sales. Known for his highly personal, Eminem-esque wordplay about his struggles with substance abuse, mental illness, and high-drama women, he continued recording independently over the years. Typical industry confusion soon found him dropped by the label, despite his several popular mixtapes in the Mood Muzik series.

After he signed with hip-hop powerhouse Def Jam, his debut single, "Pump It Up," was a huge hit, earning him a GRAMMY® nomination and a fast-growing fanbase.

Back in the early '00s, Jersey City rapper Joe Budden was on top of the world.
