đ€đ„ âBenzino Goes Nuclear on Eminem AGAIN?! đ€ Claims He Was Used, Dumped & ERASED From Hip-Hop History đ«đïžâ

It began with a beat.
It ended in obsession.
Benzinoârapper, former Source co-owner, and perennial thorn in Eminemâs sideâis back with a vengeance.
In a new freestyle that feels more like a time capsule than a diss, Zeno claims he is the architect of Eminemâs controversial legacy.
âI ate his a** up,â he says.
âI cooked him.
â But while Benzino spits bars, Eminemâtrue to his cold-blooded reputationâhasnât given him a syllable in months.
And the silence? Itâs deafening.
Benzinoâs claim? That Eminem built his entire âstreetâ image off of their feud.
That without the Source Magazine controversy, the âRap Elvisâ wouldâve never ascended to GOAT status.
And yet, the receipts say otherwise.
While Em was winning Oscars, topping charts, and defining the 2000s with 8 Mile and The Eminem Show, Benzino was losing credibility, losing The Source, andâdepending on who you askâlosing the plot.
But this isnât just a beef.
Itâs a psychological loop Benzino canât escape.
One moment heâs attacking, the next heâs crying on Drink Champs, begging for peace.
âI would hug him,â he once wept.
âWe need to sit down.
Just talk.
â But fast forward, and heâs back to calling Em a sheltered, anxiety-ridden white boy who âcanât walk through a mall.
â The contradictions are as loud as the disses.
So why is Benzino spiraling again?
Because Eminem finally acknowledged him.
Briefly.
On Doomsday Part Two, Em fired back in his trademark surgical fashion:
âWhatâs the opposite of Benzino? A giraffe.
Go at his neckâhow the f*** can I go at something he doesnât have?â
One line.
Thatâs all it took.
And just like that, Benzino unraveled.
He responded with two diss tracksâRap Elvis and Vulturiusâflinging decades of bitterness into every bar.
He also went after Emâs daughter, again, reigniting one of the darkest chapters of their feud.
Because back in 2003, Benzino infamously rapped about Hailie Mathers meeting the same fate as JonBenét Ramsey.
She was 7.
The backlash was instantâand permanent.
Even now, Benzino insists it was âjust lyrical retaliation.
â But Emâs fans never forgot.
And neither did Em.

So when Benzino dragged Hailie into the ring again in 2025, it felt less like a diss and more like a cry for relevance.
But it wasnât Eminem who clapped back this time.
It was 50 Cent.
Curtis Jackson, never one to miss an opportunity to throw gasoline on an old flame, reposted Benzinoâs freestyle with a savage caption:
âYo, this the worst s*** I heard this year.
The f*** wrong with him? Heâs 60 years old, bro.
Nah, this ainât it.â
Cue meltdown.
Benzino immediately lashed out.
Not at Emâbut at 50.
He insulted 50âs parenting.
Took shots at 50âs ex.
Even accused him of needing to âexplainâ what his son allegedly saw during Diddyâs now-infamous parties.
Then, the kicker:
âIâm down to make a couple Mâs.
Iâll go three rounds with your goofy ass.â
A celebrity boxing match? Between Benzino and 50 Cent? Twitter lost its mind.
But hereâs the truth: this isnât about a ring.
Itâs not about Eminem.
Itâs about legacy.
Benzino knows his name will forever be tied to Emâsâbut not as an equal.
As a footnote.
A villain.
A cautionary tale.
And yet, he still insists heâs the real one.
âYou can catch me at the craziest gas stations in any hood in America,â he says proudly.
âThey know me.

â Meanwhile, he paints Eminem as a reclusive, overprotected introvertâsomeone whoâs never âwalked through a mallâ without an army of security.
But Benzinoâs biggest misstep? Forgetting that Eminem never pretended to be a street rapper.
He never claimed Crip, never repped a block.
He claimed pain.
Abuse.
Addiction.
Mental illness.
He built his legacy not on gangsta bravadoâbut on vulnerability.
And thatâs what fans connected to.
Not his skin color.
Not his image.
His honesty.
Still, Zeno canât let go of the âculture vultureâ label.
âIf he was five shades darker,â he once rapped, âheâd be Canibus, and no one would care.
â But Em proved that wrong, tooâby obliterating Canibus, Ja Rule, and yes, Benzino.
Not because he was white.
But because he could rap circles around them.
Even the Source MagazineâBenzinoâs former empireâcouldnât help.
When it gave The Eminem Show 4 mics instead of 5, Em responded not with an interview, but with bars.
The Sauce.

Nail in the Coffin.
Bulldozer diss tracks that buried Zenoâs credibility with each punchline.
But the obsession didnât stop.
From 2003 to 2025, Benzinoâs timeline is littered with failed disses, boxing threats, leaked phone calls with Paul Rosenberg, and attempts to bait Em back into the mud.
Heâs tagged Em.
Posted his address.
Called out his fans.
Threatened violence.
Dared anyone to âpull up.â
And every time?
Eminem ignores him.
Until Doomsday Part Two.
And even then, just a flick of the wrist.
One verse.
No names.
Just smoke.
And now? Nothing.
Thatâs whatâs driving Benzino off the rails again.
Not the line.
Not 50âs trolling.
Not even the embarrassment of being flamed by the entire internet.
Itâs the silence.
Eminem isnât playing the game anymore.
He said what he needed to sayâand left Benzino shouting into the wind.
In the end, Benzinoâs legacy might be defined not by what he built, but by what he couldnât destroy.
Because Eminem didnât just survive the attacks.
He thrived.
And for a man like Benzinoâwho built a media empire only to lose it in a vendettaâthat truth is too bitter to swallow.
So he spits.
Louder.
Angrier.
Older.
And Em?
He doesnât even flinch.