


He even directly references the coughing sound effect that somehow made in into the DJ Paul/Juicy J instrumental, placed there as if on a dare. He quickly refers to himself as “the nicest in his group”, which is supposed to mean that he's the most likely to let you live, but we all know what he's really talking about. But the kid (who probably doesn't belong to our host anyway) doesn't pop up until the final minute, so until then, you get to enjoy Luda's two entertaining-as-shit verses over DJ Nasty and LVM's guitar sample-driven instrumental.

It isn't adorable: that's just poor parenting. Anytime you insert a child onto your rap album intro, it will be an automatic failure, especially if the child drops a few curse words. This may also be the reason that 'Act A Fool', which was originally up for consideration for the tracklisting for, was instead demoted to being a bonus track on the album's European pressing, although that shouldn't be seen as any sort of punishment for my readers across the pond. This holds especially true in hip hop, where short attention spans rule the roost. That might actually be the reason why he quickly got to work on: in the music industry as a whole, you're only as good as your last hit song, and if you take too much time off from the spotlight, you may as well not exist anymore. Ludacris didn't completely disappear from our chosen genre while he chased his Screen Actors Guild card, though: to appease his growing fanbase, he released the first single from the 2 Fast 2 Furious soundtrack, 'Act A Fool', although it ended up flopping on radio airwaves, mostly because it wasn't very good. But Luda had nothing to do with that perception, so let's move on.
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Dre and Snoop Dogg vehicle The Wash (which also included future Academy Award winner Marshall Mathers in the role of 'Crazy Disgruntled Car Wash Employee' well before his lead role in 8 Mile), Chris snagged a spot in the John Singleton-directed 2 Fast 2 Furious, the first sequel in what improbably became the Fast & The Furious franchise, and he also filmed a role in the Paul Haggis movie Crash, which has since become one of the most unliked flicks to have ever won the Best Picture statue at the Oscars. After scoring a glorified cameo in the Dr. Christopher 'Ludacris' Bridges, Atlanta-based rapper and, apparently, a cannibal who feasts almost exclusively on the legs of young women, recorded and released his third album for Def Jam Records (and fourth overall), in 2003, after taking a short hiatus that involved breaking him into Hollywood. But before the release of the album I'm talking about today was a time when Luda could have potentially vanished from the scene. You can chalk that up to the man's ability to keep up with the times: it's hard to be labeled as irrelevant when you align yourself with the newest trendsetters and refuse to quit working.
