On the album, Dre and guest rapper Snoop Dogg, a star on the rise at the time, diss Eazy-E in skits, in the single "Fuck wit Dre Day" plus its music video, and, closing the album, in the hidden track "Bitches Ain't Shit.
[8] Recently released from several years of youth incarceration, Dresta had forged his rap skill through activities inside, whereby his reputation preceded him onto the streets.
[10] Also disputing Dre's masculinity, Eazy alludes to Dre's androgynous styling, by attire and makeup,[9] in the 1980s DJ crew World Class Wreckin' Cru, which, in line with Los Angeles County's hip hop scene until N.W.A, was also an electro rap group,[11] occasionally donning glitzy styling.
[12] In the process, Eazy briefly disses Snoop as an "anorexic rapper" who weighs "60 pounds" when "wet and wearing boots."
It opens with aerial shots of Compton streets and scenes of lowriders, gangsters, and the metro Blue Line.
Once Eazy-E, on camera, raps, "All of a sudden, Dr. Dre is the G thang / But on his old album covers, he was a she-thang," shown is a photo of Dre on a World Class Wreckin' Cru album cover, predating N.W.A, wearing a white, sequined jumpsuit and detectable makeup.
As Eazy-E's music video opens, still jittering, Sleazy stands roadside, holding up the sign WILL RAP FOR FOOD.
The censored version's video closes instead with Sleazy, running again, falling flat at a Leaving Compton sign.
[15] Johnson informed Eazy of the threat, and recommended fellow comedian Arnez J to replace him in the video.