• ansis@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    In the album context this reads like Shady narrative, not “Eminem/Marshall”, but yeah, it was kinda weird to listen to before “Guilty Conscience” kind of put this in some artistic “alter-ego” context. The aftertaste remained, though. Reminded me how South Park re-branded Cartman for a while. I guess this is what a lot of 90s/2000s art & humor that leaned on ignorant shock humor has gone through to adapt. That wave died a natural death (or got killed (?) like Slim Shady by Eminem on this album, supposedly). Limp Bizkit comes to mind as well.

    • Randomgal@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      This is just my theory, but I think this order is also meant to communicate a message, a kinda “anybody you look up to can turn out to be like this”, what makes it cool, I think, is that it works whether you believe he is a hateful fuck or not after the alter ego “reveal”. (Altho it is called “the death of slim shady” so the idea is kinda of there from the beginning.

      I also think not everyone listens to the full album in order (which one could say is the intended experience by the artist, there is a narrative after all), so without the extra context, it is understandably much harder to believe that this is not Marshall rapping, but Slim Shady