Ice-T Says Rap Beefs Are 'Not Smart' and Warns They Can 'Escalate'

Mar. 15, 2025

While beefing might be the name of the game,Ice-Tthinks it has become too dangerous in rap music.

In an interview withBoss Talk 101,the West Coast rapper reflected on the changing definition and stakes of feuds in hip-hop over the years. “Hip-hop has always been competitive, so saying ‘I’m better than you’ is part of hip-hop.'” Ice-T, 66, said.

Host E CEO brought up Ice-T’s since-settled beef withLL Cool Jand noted that “the beef was going, but it was on wax,” meaning the animosity was kept within the music via diss tracks. “They wasn’t tripping like they started to do later on,” he added. TheBody Countfrontman agreed, saying, “The problem with beef is it can escalate away from you.”

Ice-T in Beverly Hills in November 2018.Jesse Grant/Getty

Ice-T attends Friends of The Saban Community Clinic’s 42nd Annual Gala at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on November 12, 2018 in Beverly Hills, California.

Jesse Grant/Getty

“When I had the ‘Cop Killer’ beef, I wasn’t worried about a cop. I could run into a cop’s brother or son who wants to start an altercation,” he said. “Having beef is just not smart if you can avoid it.”

Ice-T also acknowledged that the stakes of rap beef changed with social media. “Social media is an amplifier to everything,” he said. “It forces reaction that really could be squashed so much simpler. Why people would have a problem and take it to social media is beyond me, especially if you know a n—- phone number.”

The “Mind Over Matter” musician is no stranger to rap beefs, having been in a famous feud with LL Cool J, 56, in the ’80s and ’90s. After LL allegedly said he was “the baddest rapper in the history of rap itself,” Ice-T recorded a number of disses aimed at the New York rapper on his 1988 albumPower, including an interlude on the song “I’m Your Pusher” of a rap fandeclining to buyan LL record, perAll HipHopand Genius.

LL went on to respond on “To da Break of Dawn” in 1990 and levied a number of insults at Ice-T, including calling him “a downtown car thief” as a strike against his past before becoming a rapper. While the feud never escalated past some disses being traded, it was a momentous occasion when the pair took the stage together at the65th Grammy Awards rehearsalsin honor of the 50th anniversary of hip-hop in 2023.

In a statement made toAllHipHopin February 2023, Ice-T said the feud has long been settled: “LL and I have been together on different occasions. I’ve worked with him on Rock the Bells, we’ve done podcasts and stuff, but as far as an actual physical picture of us? I think there’s probably one other one out there. And I think the other one was before we actually really sat down and talked like grown men about it. But yeah, that’s over and lol the beef never really escalated. It was just rap beef."

Ice-T at the 60th annual Grammy Awards on Jan. 28, 2018.Michele Crowe/CBS via Getty

Ice-T on the red carpet at THE 60TH ANNUAL GRAMMY AWARDS broadcast live on both coasts from New York City’s Madison Square Garden on Sunday, Jan. 28, 2018, at a new time, 7:30-11:00 PM, live ET/4:30-8:00 PM, live PT, on the CBS Television Network.

Michele Crowe/CBS via Getty

Recently, Ice-T has been dropping nuggets of wisdom he’s taken away over the years as he reflects on his 40-plus-year career. In an October interview withThe Guardian, he recalled seeingthe real-life implications of “Cop Killer"and why saying controversial things could prove to be an expensive task.

“The heat came when they started sending bomb threats to Warner Bros. I threw the rock, that’s my heat,” he admitted. “But when other people could get hurt, that’s nerve-racking.”

Ice-T continued: “But I got news for people: Anybody that thinks controversy is a way to make money, it’s not. You get a lot of buzz, but now you need lawyers. So don’t just say something stupid and then back-pedal — if you’re going to say something, stand on it.”

source: people.com