MIKEY D THE BEST RAPPER YOU NEVER HEARD OF
The story of LL Cool J and battle rapper Playboy Mikey D is classic ‘80s street lore: Folks claim LL, the allegedly less talented MC, studied his boy’s trademark technique and absconded with it, making pop history by snatching the career that should have been Mikey’s. The victim, the shafted favorite, then spiraled into a less remarkable life. The superstar, naturally, is mostly to blame.
The real story, though, isn’t so clear-cut.
Mikey, aka Mike Deering, says that he too was offered a record deal with Def Jam Recordings , which celebrates its 30th anniversary this year. The hazel-eyed MC certainly had what it took: pretty-boy looks, dope rhymes, a devoted following. So why isn’t Mikey’s name next to LL’s in the annals of Def Jam’s rich legacy?
Ask anyone from Queens who came of age in the ‘80s, and they’ll tell you they would have bet that Mikey would be the star.
"LL wasn’t even close,” says Jelani Cobb, director of African-American studies at the University of Connecticut, who went to middle school with LL Cool J. “Mikey was widely thought of as the best in Queens.”
The story of LL Cool J and battle rapper Playboy Mikey D is classic ‘80s street lore: Folks claim LL, the allegedly less talented MC, studied his boy’s trademark technique and absconded with it, making pop history by snatching the career that should have been Mikey’s. The victim, the shafted favorite, then spiraled into a less remarkable life. The superstar, naturally, is mostly to blame.
The real story, though, isn’t so clear-cut.
Mikey, aka Mike Deering, says that he too was offered a record deal with Def Jam Recordings , which celebrates its 30th anniversary this year. The hazel-eyed MC certainly had what it took: pretty-boy looks, dope rhymes, a devoted following. So why isn’t Mikey’s name next to LL’s in the annals of Def Jam’s rich legacy?
Ask anyone from Queens who came of age in the ‘80s, and they’ll tell you they would have bet that Mikey would be the star.
"LL wasn’t even close,” says Jelani Cobb, director of African-American studies at the University of Connecticut, who went to middle school with LL Cool J. “Mikey was widely thought of as the best in Queens.”
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