The full interview of 50 Cent and Hot 97's morning team is out and 50’s verbal onslaught on his former partners in crime continues to go on. After emasculating Tony Yayo and Lloyd Banks on Hot 97 by reducing them to just Troy Ave’s hypemen, 50 aimed next towards his former West Coast artist, The Game, by calling him bi-polar.

During his interview with Hot 97, 50 Cent stated that Game’s departure stemmed from his beef with Memphis Bleek and the diss record he had for Jay-Z. In addition, while Game seemed primed and poised to go after the rappers, he opted to fall back when the opportunity struck and sort things out himself through a radio interview. In that same interview, he further vexed the G-Unit general by disassociating himself from the "Piggy Bank" record dating back to 50’s sophomore album The Massacre.

“Nah, that was intended,” 50 Cent said when he was asked about Game’s departure. “Cause I don’t even know what sparked it. You see what I’m saying? If I had an argument or we had some sort of differences, I would understand it…The first thing that happened he went overseas. His first week numbers came back. He attacked Jay. He said something about Jay cause he was supposed to have ran into Memphis Bleek and had some sort of beef. I didn’t know what was going on…First, I was trying to get in contact with Jay. Cause I was like ‘He just got off. Jay will stomp him out.’ You see what I’m saying? I’m like ‘Wait, let me get in contact with him to stop it from going bad. I can fix it before it actually happens.’

“And then before I could actually get to him. I went up and he was calling the radio station saying ‘Yo, put me on the air. Put me on the air,’” he said. “His way of trying to fix that situation was saying ‘I don’t have no problem. Not with Jay Z. Not with Memphis Bleek. I don’t have a problem with nobody. I don’t have anything to do with that record ‘Piggy Bank’ that 50 Cent got or anything else.’ I’m like ‘Alright, well get rid of him before he even get a chance to make the statement.’ Since he’s saying it internally over and over. So, I’m not gonna wait for him to say it publicly…He’s one of the artists that showed me that you don’t actually have to have consistency. Cause he’ll go one way and then completely go the other way like he bipolar or something.”

Watch the interview below:—Carl Lamarre

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