

While Kanye’s Pete Davidson dig has got the internet talking, the single’s cover art initiated a separate kind of response from PETA, who condemned the two MCs for using a picture “reminiscent of” a skinned monkey. You can’t pay no more homage than actually using a sample from one of his biggest songs.” “Oh, I absolutely think if my father was alive he would have totally loved to be a part of this record,” Ebie concluded.


“What Kanye did and what he said on it, I mean, it don’t get no more gangster than that.”Įbie added that Ye knows “how to go viral” and that he “can’t do no wrong” because “Eazy taught him.” “My father literally represents revolutionizing everything, he also represents gangster rap,” she said. She’s also good with Ye’s infamous Pete Davidson line-“God saved me from that crash just so I could beat Pete Davidson’s ass”-and thinks it’s certifiably hip-hop. When asked about the sampling of her father’s 1988 track “Eazy-Duz-It,” Ebie gave her seal of approval. It’s an incredible record and it was also produced by my buddy Hit-Boy so shout out to all my guys.” “I think it’s a great song,” the 30-year-old daughter of Eazy-E told the outlet. Eazy-E’s daughter Ebie Wright stopped to talk with TMZ and share her thoughts about Kanye West and the Game’s sampling of her father.
