It just wasn’t real to me. I saw him after that and it was just love, so was that real or was it just for the people? At the same time it’s like, let it be real ’cause those were harsh words. You can’t just say that and then see me like, ‘Hey man, what’s up?,’ pretending like nothing ever happened. That’s not real. To me, that’s not the nature of battling. There’s passion behind it. There’s anger behind it. I personally enjoy making great music and bodies of work over being the talk of Twitter for five days.
I
t was unexpected. In working your way up and sort of building relationships, I wouldn’t expect you to throw all the relationships out the door for the sakof being the talk of the Internet for 10 days. People don’t even care about it anymore. Now, especially this week, they’re moving on. I don’t know if it was worth it. There’s a lot of people that were mentioned that I feel like can’t really go back and f–k with that guy.[...] I think the verse was great.
Regardless of how Drake feels, Kendrick is proving that he’s more relevant than a 10 day twitter buzz. Last weekend, while apart of one of BET Hip Hop Award’s cypher, K. Dot took another jab at Drake when he spit the line:
Yeah…and nothing’s been the same since they dropped “Control”
And tucked a sensitive rapper back in his pajama clothes
Ha-ha jokes on you, high-five,I’m bulletproof
Your s–ts a never penetrate
pin the tail on the donkey
boy you been a fake….
Well Drake looks like the ball is in your court now. What are your thoughts? Also check out Drake Response to Kendrick Lamar here.