....are mama's boys, and why he's got love for Puffy
by Andrea Duncan
This year, the long, tall drink of water known throughout the world as Snoop Dogg seems to have replaced Jay-Z as hip-hop's most featured artist. He has swung his perfectly coiffed hair in videos for Dr. Dre, Doggy's Angels, Xzibit and Lil' Bow Wow, and his unmistakable drawl has dominated the airwaves on both coasts. If all that's not enough, he just dropped Tha Last Meal, his latest and last album for Master P's No Limit label and seems on the verge—finally—of creative independence.
Between promoting his album, the artists on his label, Dogghouse Records, and pursuing a side career in acting, a mature, more spiritually-centered Snoop found time to speak candidly with Tonya Pendleton, BET.com's music editor, about everything from his ongoing battles with Death Row and the future of "Street Life," an unreleased track he did with Tupac Shakur, to why women should respect themselves.
e's got love for Puffy
by Andrea Duncan
This year, the long, tall drink of water known throughout the world as Snoop Dogg seems to have replaced Jay-Z as hip-hop's most featured artist. He has swung his perfectly coiffed hair in videos for Dr. Dre, Doggy's Angels, Xzibit and Lil' Bow Wow, and his unmistakable drawl has dominated the airwaves on both coasts. If all that's not enough, he just dropped Tha Last Meal, his latest and last album for Master P's No Limit label and seems on the verge—finally—of creative independence.
Between promoting his album, the artists on his label, Dogghouse Records, and pursuing a side career in acting, a mature, more spiritually-centered Snoop found time to speak candidly with Tonya Pendleton, BET.com's music editor, about everything from his ongoing battles with Death Row and the future of "Street Life," an unreleased track he did with Tupac Shakur, to why women should respect themselves.
e's got love for Puffy
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