Cam'ron Reveals He Briefly Went To Private School: 'I'm One Of The Best Mathematicians'

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Cam’ron has surprisingly revealed that he once attended private school.

The Dipset rapper made the revelation during a debate with Elliott Wilson about Hip Hop media on his new YouTube interview series Talk With Flee.

“All my shit is calculated, I’m not no wild n-gga by accident,” he said. “My momma had me in private school. I started going to public school during high school and was like, ‘This shit weird.’ I’m well educated. I chose not to go school after a while ’cause all I wanted to do was play basketball.”

Killa Cam then boldly hailed himself as a genius in a particular academic field, saying: “I’m one of the best mathematicians in the world. I’m super duper good at math.

“But I’m not doing algebra ’cause I need to figure out things that are gonna benefit me in life. When I go to the bank, I can’t go, ‘Y + X = Z. Could you cash that?’ No. I’m not adding and subtracting letters.

“I didn’t graduate high school but they put me in college. I know how to beat the system and get away with it. I got kicked out of college my second semester and Ma$e ran into a record deal five months later.

“That is my life. At the end of the day, I am very educated.”

Cam’ron’s media empire continues to grow with the launch of his new talk show, as well as the news that he and Ma$e are taking their wildly popular It Is What It Is on the road.

Later this year, the longtime friends and former rivals will be visiting cities across North America for live tapings of their sports talk show which currently airs on YouTube.

The tour will see the duo “interview sports icons, celebrities, and surprise special guests in each city,” per an announcement on social media.

The roadshow begins on February 26 in Boston and end on April 12 in Miami. Tickets are available here.

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Jim Jones Hits Back At Cam’ron’s Taunts By Teasing New Song With Harlem Heavyweights

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Jim Jones has teased a remix of his Harlem-themed new song, with a bevy of Harlem rappers, right after his friend-turned-antagonist Cam’ron accused the rapper of not really being from the NYC neighborhood he claims in the track.

“You are from the Bronx, bro. You are not from Harlem. I did not grow up with you, my n-gga,” Cam said earlier this week on his and Ma$e‘s show It Is What It Is. Jim’s “This Sh!t Still In Harlem” remix, which he said on Tuesday (January 14) will feature Dipset member Juelz SantanaVadoDave East, and 2gs Like Gucci, was not directly billed as a response to that comment, but many observers took it that way.

“Thts uptown downtown east side west and th heights th whole Harlem is covered,” Jim wrote about the people on the remix.

Check the message, along with a teaser of Juelz’s verse, below.

The feud between Jim and Cam began with recent comments made by Capo in an interview with Justin Laboy.

Cam’ron objected to Jones’ claim during the Laboy sitdown that the Dipset members grew up together and that Jim watched Ma$e “shit on Cam” after he got signed to Diddy‘s Bad Boy Records.

In Killa Cam’s response, delivered Monday on It Is What It Is, he said that he and Jim only became cool after Jones tried to start a friendship with him following the success of his early freestyles and mixtapes with his Children of the Corn cohorts Ma$e, Big L and his cousin Bloodshed (several of which he played during the episode).

“You wasn’t there, n-gga! We were super-duper popping in the street. Everybody knew we were about to get a record deal,” he said.

“Basically, you heard our freestyles and you came up to me one day and you said, ‘Yo man, I heard the freestyles. Y’all killing shit. My grandmother died if y’all wanna come by and just hang out, y’all more than welcome.’”

He added: “You were fanned out and you begged n-ggas to come to your house after you heard all these mixtapes. That’s how you got in, n-gga.”

Cam’ron also mocked Jim for admitting that Ma$e taught him how to rap.

On Tuesday (January 14), Jones posted a song snippet on Instagram that appeared to respond to Cam’s words from the day before.

Jones captioned the video: “I said wht I said after they laugh at th lies th truth still hurts… Why would I waste free promo got me trending I’m tryin to drop.” He noted that his new album and movie At the Church Steps is coming soon.

The song begins: “N-ggas play with your name, then you remind them who you are.” He addresses Cam’s claim that Jim should be criticized for having friends who were incarcerated in the federal racketeering case that involved 6ix9ine.

“Stop tricking n-ggas out they freedom,” Cam said in his It Is What It Is segment. “‘Cause n-ggas get around you to put theyselves in better situations, bro. Not to be in worse situations than they was before they met you… You send them on dummy missions and trick them out they freedom… Shotti [Kifano “Shotti” Jordan, 6ix9ine’s former manager who was sentenced to 15 years in prison], he was trying to be a [manager], twelve years [in prison]. And I know you love Mel [Jamel “Mel Murda”/”Mel Matrix” Jones, who was sentenced to 135 months]. I love Mel Matrix, that’s my brother… You said when he come home, he gonna be the triple O.G. Get that man a job, my n-gga.”

In seeming response, Jones shouts out several of the people arrested in that case by name.

“All my n-ggas do they time, you know my team body,” he raps. “It’s been seven years since I’ve seen Shotti / It’s been seven years since I saw Melly And now he gotta fly straight ’cause he got four fellies.”

So what more you want to ask him?” Jones continues, before nodding to Cam’s reference to Ma$e teaching Jim to rap. “You n-ggas taught me how to rap, and now I’m platinum.”

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