Dwayne Michael Carter, Jr. (born September 27, 1982), known by his
stage name Lil Wayne, is an
New Orleans,
Louisiana. In 1991, at the age of nine, Lil Wayne joined
Cash Money Records as the youngest member of the label, and half of the duo
The B.G.'z, alongside fellow New Orleans-based
rapper Lil' Doogie. In 1996, Lil Wayne formed the
Southern hip hop group
Hot Boys, with his Cash Money label-mates
Juvenile,
Young Turk and Lil' Doogie (who now went by B.G.). Hot Boys debuted with
Get It How U Live! that same year. Lil Wayne gained most of his success with the group's major selling album
Guerrilla Warfare (1999). Along with being the flagship artist of Cash Money Records, Lil Wayne is also the
chief executive officer (CEO) of his own imprint,
Young Money Entertainment, which he founded in 2005.
American rapper from
Lil Wayne's debut studio album
Tha Block Is Hot (1999), was
certified platinum by the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). His following albums,
Lights Out (2000) and
500 Degreez (2002), were
certified gold. He reached higher popularity with
Tha Carter (2004), which was led by the single "
Go D.J.", also appearing on
Destiny's Child's top ten single "
Soldier", that same year. The album was followed by
Tha Carter II (2005) and several
mixtapes and collaborations throughout 2006 and 2007.
Tha Carter III
(2008) became Lil Wayne's most successful album to date, with
first-week sales of over 1 million copies in the United States. It
included the number-one single "
Lollipop", as well as "
A Milli" and "
Got Money", and won the
Grammy Award for
Best Rap Album.
Following the success of
Tha Carter III, Lil Wayne decided to record a
rock album titled
Rebirth, in which he is featured playing guitar and singing with the help of
Auto-Tune.
The album, released in 2010, was certified gold by the RIAA, despite a
generally negative critical response. In March 2010, Lil Wayne began
serving an 8-month prison sentence in New York after being convicted of
criminal possession of a weapon stemming from an incident in July 2007.
Wayne's eighth album
I Am Not a Human Being (2010), was released during his prison sentence. His 2011 album and first following his release,
Tha Carter IV, sold 964,000 copies in its first week of availability in the United States. It featured the singles "
6 Foot 7 Foot", "
How to Love" and "
She Will".
[5] On September 27, 2012, Lil Wayne passed
Elvis Presley as the male with the most entries on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart with 109 songs.
[6]
Early life
Dwayne Michael Carter, Jr. was born on September 27, 1982, and grew up in the
Hollygrove neighborhood of
New Orleans, Louisiana.
[7]
He was born when his mother, a cook, was 19 years old. His parents
divorced when he was 2, and his father permanently abandoned the family.
Although Lil Wayne and
Birdman
have a father–son relationship and Birdman calls Carter his son, Lil
Wayne’s biological father and namesake (Dwayne Carter) is still alive.
Lil Wayne has also spoken about his deceased stepfather, Rabbit, who he
has said he considers his real father. Carter has a tattoo dedicated to
Rabbit, who was murdered before Carter became a star.
[8] Carter enrolled in the gifted program of Lafayette Elementary School and in the drama club of
Eleanor McMain Secondary School.
[9] Lil Wayne attended McMain in the early 1990s for two years. He moved to the
Marion Abramson Senior High School.
[10]
In a CBS interview with
Katie Couric,
Wayne described why he goes by the name of "Wayne" instead of his given
name, Dwayne. Carter explained, "I dropped the D because I'm a junior
and my father is living and he's not in my life and he's never been in
my life. So I don't want to be Dwayne, I'd rather be Wayne". Couric
asked Wayne if his father knew of this and Wayne replied with a smile,
"He knows now."
[11]
He wrote his first rap song at age eight.
[12] In the summer of 1991, he met
Bryan Williams, rapper and owner of
Cash Money Records.
Carter recorded freestyle raps on Williams's answering machine, leading
him to mentor the young Carter and include him in Cash
Money-distributed songs. He also recorded his first ever
collaboration album
True Story with rapper
B.G.. At the time, Carter was 11, and B.G. was 14, and was billed as "
The B.G.'z".
[13] When he was 12, he played the part of the
Tin Man in his middle school drama club's production of
The Wiz.
[14]
At age 12, he accidentally shot himself with a 9 mm handgun, and
off-duty police officer Robert Hoobler drove him to the hospital.
[15] At McMain Magnet School, Carter was an honor student, but he dropped out at the age of 14 to focus on a musical career.
[16]
Career
1996–99: Career beginnings and Hot Boys
In 1996, Carter joined the
Hot Boys along with rappers
Juvenile,
B.G., and
Turk. At age 15, Carter was the youngest member at the time. Hot Boys' debut album
Get It How U Live! was released the same year, followed in 1999 by the group's major-label debut
Guerrilla Warfare,
[7] which reached No. 1 on the
Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and No. 5 on the
Billboard 200.
[17] During their career, the Hot Boys had two charting singles, "
We on Fire" from
Get It How U Live! and "
I Need a Hot Girl" from
Guerrilla Warfare.
[18] Carter was also featured on Juvenile's single "
Back That Azz Up", which reached No. 18 on the
Billboard Hot 100 and No. 5 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks.
[19] Let 'Em Burn,
a compilation album of unreleased tracks recorded during 1999 and 2000,
came out in 2003, several years after the group disbanded.
[20] It reached No. 3 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and No. 14 on the
Billboard 200.
[17]
1999–2002: Tha Block Is Hot, Lights Out, and 500 Degreez
Carter's debut solo album
Tha Block Is Hot was released when he was 17 and featured significant contributions from the
Hot Boys. It debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200 and was later certified platinum by the
RIAA.
[7] The album earned Carter a 1999
Source magazine nomination for "Best New Artist",
[21] and also became a Top Ten hit.
[7] The lead single was "
Tha Block Is Hot". After the release of
Tha Block is Hot, Carter was featured on the single "
Bling Bling",
with B.G., Juvenile, and Big Tymers. His verse appeared only on the
radio version of the song, while on the album version he performed on
the chorus.
His 2000 follow-up album
Lights Out failed to attain the level of success achieved by his debut
[7] but was certified gold by RIAA.
[22]
Critics noted the lack of coherent narratives in his verses as evidence
that he had yet to mature to the level of his fellow Hot Boys.
[23]
The lead single was "Get Off the Corner", which was noticed for an
improvement in its lyrical content and style. The second single, which
received less attention, was "Shine" featuring the Hot Boys. Near the
release of
Lights Out, Lil Wayne was featured on the single, "
Number One Stunna" with
Big Tymers and Juvenile, which peaked at No. 24 on the
Hot Rap Tracks chart.
Lil Wayne's third album
500 Degreez, released in 2002, followed the format of his previous two, with significant contributions from the Hot Boys and
Mannie Fresh. While being certified gold like its predecessor,
[22] it also failed to match the success of his debut.
[7] The title was a reference to the recently estranged Hot Boys member Juvenile's recording,
400 Degreez.
[24] The lead single was "Way of Life" which failed to match the success of his previous singles. After the release of
500 Degreez, Wayne was featured on the single "
Neva Get Enuf" by
3LW.
[25]
2003–06: Tha Carter, Tha Carter II, and Like Father, Like Son
In the summer of 2004, Wayne's album
Tha Carter was released, marking what critics considered advancement in his rapping style and lyrical themes.
[26] In addition, the album's cover art featured the debut of Wayne's now-signature
dreadlocks.
[7] Tha Carter gained Wayne significant recognition, selling 878,000 copies in the United States, while the single "
Go DJ" became a Top 5 Hit on the R&B/Hip-Hop chart.
[27] After the release of
Tha Carter, Lil Wayne was featured in
Destiny's Child's single "
Soldier" with
T.I., which peaked at No. 3 on the
Billboard Hot 100 and the
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts.
[28]
Tha Carter II, the follow-up to the original
Tha Carter album, was released in December 2005, this time without production by longtime
Cash Money Records producer
Mannie Fresh, who had since left the label.
Tha Carter II sold more than 238,000 copies in its first week of release, debuting at No. 2 on the
Billboard 200 albums chart, and went on to sell 2,000,000 copies worldwide. The lead single "
Fireman" became a hit in the US, peaking at 32 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Other singles included "Grown Man" with
Currensy, "
Hustler Musik", and "
Shooter" with R&B singer
Robin Thicke. Lil Wayne also appeared on a remix of
Bobby Valentino's "
Tell Me",
which rose to No. 13 on the U.S. R&B Charts. In 2005, Lil Wayne was
named president of Cash Money, and in the same year he founded
Young Money Entertainment as an imprint of Cash Money.
[29]
However, as of late 2007, Lil Wayne reported that he has stepped down
from the management of both labels and has handed management of Young
Money over to Cortez Bryant.
[30]
In 2006, Lil Wayne collaborated with rapper
Birdman for the album
Like Father, Like Son, whose first single "
Stuntin' Like My Daddy", reached No. 21 on the
Billboard Hot 100.
2006–08: Mixtapes and collaborations
Instead of a follow-up solo album, Lil Wayne reached his audience
through a plethora of mixtapes and guest appearances on a variety of pop
and hip-hop singles.
[7] Of his many mixtapes,
Dedication 2 and
Da Drought 3 received the most media exposure and critical review.
Dedication 2,
released in 2006, paired Lil Wayne with DJ Drama and contained the
acclaimed socially conscious track "Georgia Bush," in which Lil Wayne
critiqued former US president
George W. Bush's response to the effects of
Hurricane Katrina on the city of New Orleans.
Da Drought 3
was released the following year and was available for free legal
download. It contained Lil Wayne rapping over a variety of beats from
recent hits by other musicians. Numerous of features in prominent
hip-hop magazines such as
XXL[31] and
Vibe[16] covered the mixtape. Christian Hoard of
Rolling Stone magazine considered the mixtapes
Da Drought 3 and
The Drought Is Over 2 (The Carter 3 Sessions) "among the best albums of 2007."
[9]
Despite no album release for two years, Lil Wayne appeared in numerous singles as a featured performer, including "
Gimme That" by
Chris Brown, "
Make It Rain" by
Fat Joe, "
You" by
Lloyd, and "
We Takin' Over" by
DJ Khaled (also featuring
Akon,
T.I.,
Rick Ross, Fat Joe, and Birdman), "
Duffle Bag Boy" by
Playaz Circle, "
Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill)" by
Wyclef Jean (also featuring
Akon), and the remix to "
I'm So Hood" by
DJ Khaled (also featuring
T-Pain,
Young Jeezy,
Ludacris,
Busta Rhymes,
Big Boi, Fat Joe, Birdman, and Rick Ross). All these singles charted within the top 20 spots on the
Billboard Hot 100, Hot Rap Tracks, and
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts. On Birdman's 2007 album
5 * Stunna, Lil Wayne appeared on the singles "
100 Million" and "
I Run This" among several other tracks. Wayne also appeared on tracks from albums
Getback by
Little Brother,
American Gangster by
Jay-Z, and
Graduation by
Kanye West and
Insomniac by
Enrique Iglesias. "Make it Rain", a
Scott Storch production that peaked at number 13 on the Hot 100 and number two on the Hot Rap Tracks chart,
[32] was nominated for the
Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group for 2008.
[33]
Vibe magazine ranked a list of 77 of Lil Wayne's songs from
2007 and ranked his verse in DJ Khaled's "We Takin Over" as his best of
2007, with "Dough Is What I Got" (a freestyle over the beat of Jay-Z's "
Show Me What You Got") from
Da Drought 3 the second song.
[16] At the end of 2007, an MTV poll selected Lil Wayne as "
Hottest MC in the Game",
[34] The New Yorker magazine ranked him "Rapper of the Year",
[13] and
GQ magazine named him "Workaholic of the Year".
[35] In 2008 he was named "Best MC" by
Rolling Stone.
[9]
Another article, built around Lil Wayne's 2007 mixtape work, cites his
creative practice as an example of post performance creative practice.
[36]
2008–10: Tha Carter III, We Are Young Money, and Rebirth
Lil Wayne performing in concert at
Rogers Arena in Vancouver B.C., January 2009
In 2007, Lil Wayne stated that he would reunite with Hot Boys, with plans to release an album after B.G.'s solo album
Too Hood to Be Hollywood was completed.
[37] Tha Carter III
was originally scheduled to be released in 2007, though it was delayed
after several recordings were leaked and distributed through mixtapes,
including "The Drought Is Over Pt. 2" and "The Drought Is Over Pt. 4".
Lil Wayne initially planned to release
The Leak, a separate album with leaked songs and four additional tracks, on December 18, 2007, with
Tha Carter III delayed to March 18, 2008.
[38] Instead,
The Leak became an
EP with five songs and was released digitally on December 25, 2007.
[39]
Tha Carter III was released on June 10, 2008, with first-week sales of over 1 million copies, the first to do so since
50 Cent's
The Massacre (2005).
[40] The first single "
Lollipop", featuring
Static Major, became the rapper's most successful song at the time, topping the
Billboard Hot 100 and becoming his first top 10 single as a solo artist and his first number one on the chart. The third single "
Got Money",
featuring T-Pain, peaked at number 13 on the Billboard 100. The album
went on to win four Grammy Awards, including best rap album and best rap
song, which he won for "Lollipop".
[41] On July 14, 2008, the
Recording Industry Association of America certified
Tha Carter III two times platinum.
[42] In October 2008, Lil Wayne announced plans to MTV News to re-release the album with new tracks, including a duet with
Ludacris and remixes of "A Milli".
[43]
Lil Wayne also appeared on R&B singles "
Girls Around the World" by Lloyd, "
Love In This Club, Part II" by
Usher, "
Official Girl" by
Cassie, "
I'm So Paid" by
Akon, "
Turnin' Me On" by
Keri Hilson, and "
Can't Believe It" by T-Pain; rap singles "
My Life" by
The Game, "Shawty Say" by
David Banner, "
Swagga Like Us" by
T.I., "Cutty Buddy" by
Mike Jones,
All My Life (In the Ghetto) by
Jay Rock and the remix to "Certified" by
Glasses Malone; and pop single "
Let It Rock" by new
Cash Money artist
Kevin Rudolf.
In 2008, Lil Wayne performed at the
Voodoo Experience in October in New Orleans, which was described by Jonathan Cohen of
Billboard as his biggest hometown headlining set of his career.
[44] He also performed at the
Virgin Mobile Music Fest with
Kanye West, where they performed the remix of "Lollipop" and lip-synced to
Whitney Houston's "
I Will Always Love You".
[45] Lil Wayne also performed at the
2008 MTV Video Music Awards with
Kid Rock ("
All Summer Long"),
Leona Lewis ("DontGetIt (Misunderstood)") and
T-Pain ("
Got Money") and performed "Lollipop" and "Got Money" on the season premiere of
Saturday Night Live.
[46] He later performed at the
homecoming rally at
Vanderbilt University[47] and the 2008
BET Hip Hop Awards, where he received 12 nominations.
[48] He won eight awards at the BET Hip Hop Awards, one of which included the "MVP" title.
[49] After
M.I.A. dropped out of performing on the
I Am Music Tour due to her pregnancy,
Jay-Z performed "Mr. Carter" with Lil Wayne at select shows.
[50]
Following
Tha Carter III's achievement of selling over 3 million copies, becoming 2008's best-selling record, Wayne re-signed with
Cash Money Records for a multi-album deal.
[51] On November 11, 2008, Wayne became the first hip-hop act to perform at the
Country Music Association Awards, playing "
All Summer Long" alongside
Kid Rock, in which Wayne inaudibly strummed guitar strings alongside the guitarist in Kid Rock's band.
[52] Shortly after, Wayne was nominated for eight
Grammys – the most for any artist nominated that year.
[53] He was then named the first MTV Man of the Year at the end of 2008.
[54] He won the
Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance for "
A Milli",
Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group for his appearance in
T.I.'s single "
Swagga Like Us", and
Best Rap Song for "Lollipop".
Tha Carter III won the award for
Best Rap Album.
[41] MTV News listed Lil Wayne number two on their 2009 list of the Hottest MCs In The Game.
[55]
On January 6, 2009, Lil Wayne was a guest debater against
Skip Bayless on the "1st & 10" segment of
ESPN First Take.
[56] On February 10, 2009, he appeared on ESPN's
Around the Horn and beat out veterans
Woody Paige,
Jay Mariotti and fellow New Orleanian
Michael Smith to win that show's episode.
[57] Prior to the 2009 Grammy Awards, Wayne was featured in an interview with
Katie Couric.
[11] On February 7, 2009, he presented the
Top Ten List on CBS's
Late Show with David Letterman.
[58] On April 24, 2009, he appeared on
The View, discussing his GED and addictions.
[59] In September 2009, Wayne was profiled in an episode of
VH1's
Behind the Music[60] and was a presenter of the
2009 MTV Movie Awards.
[61] In film, Wayne produced and composed music for and starred in the direct-to-video film
Hurricane Season. A documentary of Lil Wayne titled
The Carter was released at the
Sundance Film Festival.
[62]
On December 23, 2009, Wayne released a collaboration album with Young Money,
We Are Young Money, with its lead single being "
Every Girl".
[63] The second single was "
BedRock", featuring
Lloyd, with the third being "
Roger That". On May 24, 2010, the album was certified gold by the RIAA with over 500,000 copies sold.
[64] Wayne is featured on the song, "
Revolver", with
Madonna for her greatest hits album,
Celebration (2009). He was also featured on a
Weezer song, "Can't Stop Partying", on
Raditude (2009).
[65] In late 2008, Wayne announced plans to reissue
Tha Carter III with leftover recordings, and was to be titled
Rebirth. Originally scheduled to be released on April 7, 2009 before being delayed several times,
Rebirth instead became his debut rock album, released on April 7, 2009.
[66]
To support its release and that of
We Are Young Money, he was featured on the cover of
Rolling Stone[67]
and headlined the 'Young Money Presents: America's Most Wanted Music
Festival', a United States and Canada–only concert tour which began on
July 29, 2009. "
Prom Queen", the first official single, debuted on January 27, 2009 immediately after a live Internet broadcast on
Ustream[68] of his concert in San Diego.
[69] It peaked at number 15 on the
Billboard Hot 100 charts. On December 3, 2009, the second single, "
On Fire", produced by
Cool & Dre[70] "On Fire" peaked at number 33 on the
Billboard Hot 100 charts. "
Drop the World", which features
Eminem, was the third single from the album.
[70]
2010–11: I Am Not a Human Being and Tha Carter IV
In an interview on MTV's Mixtape Monday, Wayne asserted the possibility of
Tha Carter IV,
[71] later announcing that it would be released in 2009 before the holiday season.
[72] Birdman had previously stated that
Tha Carter IV would be packaged with
Rebirth as a double disc album.
[73] However, Wayne denied this idea saying that "
Tha Carter IV deserves
Tha Carter IV", adding that
We Are Young Money may be packaged with
Rebirth.
[74][75] However, both albums were released separately.
Originally thought to be an
EP, Lil Wayne released his tenth album,
I Am Not a Human Being, on his 28th birthday, September 27, 2010. The album has sold over 953,000 copies in the U.S.
[76] and has spawned successful single "
Right Above It", which peaked at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Tha Carter IV was later delayed into 2011, after Lil Wayne began recording from scratch after his release from prison.
[77] He described his first song sine his release as "a 2010 version of
A Milli on steroids." The album's lead single, "
6 Foot 7 Foot" featuring Cory Gunz, was released on December 15, 2010 and made available for digital download on
iTunes on December 16, 2010. The song is produced by Bangladesh, who also produced "A Milli".
[78]
On March 8, 2011, Lil Wayne released another song, "We Back Soon", produced by
StreetRunner, though it was not included on the official track listing of
Tha Carter IV.
[79] The second single, "
John", was released on March 24, 2011, which features
Rick Ross and is produced by
Polow Da Don.
[80] The album's artwork was unveiled on April 20, 2011. The album was originally scheduled to be released on May 16, 2011,
[81] but
Mack Maine had confirmed its delay to June 21. On May 26, 2011, the third single, "
How to Love", was released. A song called "Dear Anne
(Stan Part 2)" was released in June. Lil Wayne said the song was a throwaway track from
Tha Carter III and was originally supposed to be on
Tha Carter IV,
but decided not to put it on there because of its age. Lil Wayne said
that he liked the beat, but not the lyrics, and was thinking about
revamping the song.
In July 2011, Lil Wayne confirmed in an interview with MTV that
Tha Carter IV was finished, and was released on August 29, 2011. For preparation for
Tha Carter IV, Lil Wayne released a mixtape,
Sorry 4 the Wait, with all the beats coming from other artist's songa, similar to his "
No Ceilings" mixtape.
Tha Carter IV debuted at No. 1 on the
Billboard 200,
with first-week sales of 964,000 copies, making it Lil Wayne's third
chart topping album of his career. On January 8, 2012, According to
Nielsen SoundScan was elected the seventh artist (second male artist) all-time best-selling
tracks digital with 36,788,000 million to the end of 2011.
[82]
2012–present: I Am Not A Human Being II
In October 2011, it was reported that Lil Wayne was working on sequels to
I Am Not a Human Being and
Rebirth.
[83] In January 2012, Birdman announced that he and Wayne had finished recording
Like Father, Like Son 2.
[84] On November 22, 2012, he announced that
Tha Carter V would be his final album.
[85]
After numerous delays,
I Am Not a Human Being II was released on March 26, 2013 debuting at #2 on the
Billboard 200 selling 217,000 copies in its first week;
[86] "
My Homies Still", "
Love Me", and "
No Worries"
were released as singles prior to its release. The album was met with
generally mixed reviews, with most critics noticing the declining
quality of his releases. Lil Wayne toured North America with
2 Chainz and
T.I. on the second Americas Most Wanted Festivil.
[87]
On May 3, 2013,
Pepsi dropped Lil Wayne, who was a spokesperson for
Mountain Dew, due to offensive lyrics about about
civil-rights icon
Emmett Till.
[88]
On September 1, 2013, Lil Wayne released the fifth instalment of the "Dedication" mixtape series, with
Dedication 5. The mixtape featured 29 tracks, with guest appearances from
The Weeknd,
Chance The Rapper, Jae Millz, Birdman, T.I.,
Vado,
Kidd Kidd, and 2 Chainz among other members of Young Money.
[89]
Future projects
Lil Wayne has announced several possible upcoming projects, including a collaborative album entitled
I Can't Feel My Face with Harlem-based rapper
Juelz Santana, that has been in production for several years.
[90][91] On June 19, 2008, Lil Wayne and
T-Pain formed a duo called T-Wayne
[92] with plans to release an album however those plans have died down.
[93] According to an interview with
Drake, in the December 2011 issue of
XXL, plans for an upcoming album with Lil Wayne had been scrapped for the time being because of the
Jay-Z and
Kanye West collaboration
Watch the Throne.
[94][95]
In late 2011, it was announced by Mack Maine, that Lil Wayne and
Juelz Santana have gone back to working on their collaborative album
I Can't Feel My Face, which had been delayed for a few years due to "label politics".
[96] In April 2012, on the premiere of
MTV’s Hip Hop POV, Wayne sat down with Amanda Seales and spoke briefly about an album he put together titled
Devol (loved, backwards), an album full of “love songs” that he wrote during his imprisonment at
Rikers Island. In May 2013 he has confirmed the album will still be released.
[97][98][99] He also announced that a new
Big Tymers
album would be released, which would result in Drake and himself being
added to the group. Wayne has indicated that some of these projects will
be released prior to his final album, which will be
Tha Carter V.
[100]
Retirement
On March 29, 2011, in an interview with
Hot 97's
Angie Martinez,
Lil Wayne announced that he would retire at age 35; saying "I have four
kids," and that "I would feel selfish still going to the studio when
it's such a vital point in their lives."
[101] He said in November 2012 that
Tha Carter V will be his last album as he wanted to go into other interests.
[102]
Philanthropy
On February 19, 2008, Lil Wayne and Cortez Bryant revisited their
alma mater McMain Secondary School to get students to design an
invitation to the gala introducing Lil Wayne's nonprofit One Family
Foundation.
[103]
The website Change.org states: "The mission of One Family Foundation,
Inc. is to empower urban youth by engaging them in opportunities to
cultivate their talents and skills, educating them to become productive
and economically self-sufficient, and motivating them to dream beyond
their circumstances."
[104]
Personal life
Relationships and children
Lil Wayne has four children. His first child, daughter Reginae, was born when he was 15,
[citation needed] to his high school sweetheart
Antonia "Toya" Carter (née Johnson). They married on Valentine's Day 2004 and divorced in 2006.
[105]
Internet rumors started circulating in August 2008 that Wayne's
daughter had died in a car crash, which however he quickly cleared up as
false saying "Please allow me to dispel any rumors or speculations and
report that my daughter is alive, healthy and surrounded by family who
care and love her dearly. The rumors are completely false and unfounded;
neither Reginae nor any other member of my family has been involved in
any car accident."
[106]
His second child, Dwayne III, was born on October 22, 2008 at
The Christ Hospital in
Cincinnati.
[107] His third child, Cameron Carter, was born to actress
Lauren London on September 9, 2009.
[108] His fourth child, Neal, was born on November 30, 2009 to singer
Nivea.
[109] He also got rapper
Trina pregnant but she suffered a miscarriage.
[110]
Beliefs and interests
In an interview with
Blender magazine, Lil Wayne revealed one of his favorite bands from childhood to be rock group
Nirvana, and cites them as a major influence in his music.
[111]
Wayne got his first tattoo at age 14 of his dad's name and his second was "Cash Money" across his stomach.
[112][113] His tattoos have grown to include a
Jay-Z
verse on his leg, "I Am Music" on his forehead and teardrops on his
cheeks among many others. His most recent one is "Baked" on his forehead
stylized as the
Baker Skateboards logo.
[114]
Lil Wayne identifies as a
Roman Catholic[115] and reads the
Bible regularly.
[116][117] While playing in
Newark Symphony Hall, Lil Wayne professed his belief "in God and His son, Jesus."
[116] During his 2011 tour in Australia with Eminem, before beginning his bracket he proclaimed his belief in God.
[118]
After earning his
GED, Wayne enrolled at the
University of Houston in January 2005. He dropped out in the same year due to his conflicting schedule.
[119] He also revealed on
The View that he switched to the
University of Phoenix and majored in psychology taking
online courses.
[59] An article in
Urb magazine in March 2007 asserted that Wayne had been earning high grades at Houston.
[120]
On September 24, 2008, Lil Wayne published his first blog for
ESPN in their issue,
ESPN The Magazine. Wayne revealed he was a fan of tennis, the
Green Bay Packers, the
Boston Bruins, the
Los Angeles Lakers and the
Boston Red Sox. To commemorate the
Packers' making it to
Super Bowl XLV, he spoofed
Wiz Khalifa's hit song "
Black and Yellow" (which were the colors of the Packers' opponents, the
Pittsburgh Steelers) in a song titled "Green and Yellow".
[121] Wayne has continued writing for ESPN, notably reporting at the ESPN
Super Bowl party.
[122] Lil Wayne made his debut on ESPN's daily sports round table show
Around The Horn on February 10, 2009.
[123]
Wayne received criticism after a video released by TMZ showed him
apparently stepping on the American flag. Wayne later explained that "It
was never my intention to desecrate the flag of the United States," and
that he was shooting a video for a song on his upcoming album, "God
Bless Amerika." He claims the purpose of the flag was to "show that
'behind the American Flag was the Hoods of America'."
[124]
Health issues
On October 25, 2012, Lil Wayne's private jet, bound for
Los Angeles, made an
emergency landing in
Texas due to an in-flight medical episode. Lil Wayne was transferred to a local hospital upon arrival.
[125] TMZ and other media sources claimed that Lil Wayne had suffered a
seizure aboard the plane.
[126] His publicist denied this, claiming that he was in fact treated for "a severe migraine and dehydration."
[127]
The following day, while flying from Texas to Los Angeles, Lil
Wayne's private jet was reportedly again forced to make an emergency
landing, this time in
Louisiana, after Lil Wayne suffered a second seizure and required further hospitalization.
[127][128]
His representative claimed that the reports of Lil Wayne's condition
had been exaggerated, and that he was resting at his Louisiana home.
[129] In a November 2012 interview with
MTV, Lil Wayne revealed that he was taking seizure medication, on doctors' orders, due to the aforementioned incidents.
[130]
On March 14, 2013, TMZ reported that Lil Wayne had been treated at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles on the evening of March 12, after suffering seizures while on a music video set with Young Money rapper
Nicki Minaj. He was reportedly released in the early hours of March 13.
[131]
On March 15, TMZ published a second story, claiming that hours after
his release on March 13, Lil Wayne was found unconscious after
experiencing further seizures, and was brought back to Cedars-Sinai,
where he was admitted to the
Intensive Care Unit in
critical condition.
[132][133][134] The article alleged the latest seizures were found to be linked to high amounts of
codeine in Lil Wayne's system, possibly due to binging on
purple drank after his initial hospital release.
[133][135][136] Multiple celebrities, including
Drake and
Birdman, were photographed on March 15 and 16 visiting Lil Wayne at Cedars-Sinai.
[135]
Several members of
Young Money Entertainment, including president
Mack Maine,
criticized media reports on Lil Wayne's hospitalization, particularly
those of TMZ, alleging that they exaggerated the severity of his
condition and falsely implied that he was on his
deathbed (such as by claiming that he was in a medically
induced coma),
[137] triggering what the
Washington Post called "the most overheated celebrity deathwatch in recent years."
[138]
In separate interviews on March 18, Mack Maine and Birdman disputed
TMZ's reports, and stated that in fact there were not multiple seizures
or multiple hospital visits. They explained that after Lil Wayne began
seizing on the way to the music video shoot on March 12, an ambulance
was called and he was transported to the hospital, where he was admitted
and remained continuously thereafter.
[139]
They also refuted the claims that Lil Wayne's seizures are
drug-induced, noting that they are an ongoing problem for which doctors
have been unable to identify a cause.
[140]
Lil Wayne was released from the hospital late on March 18, following a six-day stay.
[141] Lil Wayne addressed his condition via a
vlog, on March 21 saying he was more than good.
[142] In a March 28 interview with
DJ Felli Fel of
Power 106 in Los Angeles, Wayne said that he suffers from
epilepsy,
a neurological condition which is noted by seizures. He would say "This
isn't my first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth or seventh seizure.
I've had a bunch of seizures. Y'all just never hear about them. But
this time, it got real bad because I had three of them in a row."
[143]
Public references by Barack Obama
Lil Wayne has been referenced in public speeches by President
Barack Obama on at least two occasions, in mixed contexts. Speaking to a largely African-American audience during a
general election campaign town hall speech in
Georgia, then-
U.S. Senator
Obama exhorted children to stay in school and achieve their dreams
through education and perseverance instead of hoping for shortcuts to
fame and riches as professional athletes and entertainers via the fields
of sports and entertainment, stating: "You are probably not that good a
rapper. Maybe you are the next Lil Wayne, but probably not, in which
case you need to stay in school."
[144]
After assuming the Presidency, Obama later echoed this theme of
personal and familial responsibility and the difficulty of achieving Lil
Wayne's professional and financial success—during an address to a
meeting commemorating the 100th anniversary of the
NAACP, telling the audience:
They might think they've got a pretty jump shot or a pretty good flow, but our kids can’t all aspire to be LeBron
or Lil Wayne. I want them aspiring to be scientists and engineers,
doctors and teachers, not just ballers and rappers. I want them aspiring
to be a Supreme Court justice. I want them aspiring to be President of the United States of America.[145]
Obama has also noted that the music on his iPod includes Lil Wayne:
My rap palate has greatly improved. Jay-Z used to be sort of what predominated, but now I've got a little Nas and a little Lil Wayne and some other stuff.[146]
Legal issues
Arrests and incarceration
On July 22, 2007, Lil Wayne was arrested in New York City following a performance at the
Beacon Theatre; the
New York City Police Department discovered Lil Wayne and another man smoking
marijuana
near a tour bus. After taking Lil Wayne into custody, police discovered
a .40 caliber pistol on his person. The gun, which was registered to
his manager, was in a bag located near the rapper.
[147] He was charged with criminal possession of a weapon and marijuana.
[148][149]
On October 22, 2009, Lil Wayne pleaded guilty to attempted criminal
possession of a weapon. He was due for sentencing in February 2010 and
was expected to receive a one-year county jail sentence,
[150] but on February 9, 2010, Lil Wayne's attorney announced that the sentencing was delayed until March 2 due to dental surgery,
[151]
which was performed on February 16. The surgery included eight root
canals, the replacement of several tooth implants, as well as the
addition of a few new implants and work on his remaining original teeth.
[152] On March 2, 2010, sentencing was postponed again when the courthouse reported a fire in the basement.
[153]
On March 8, 2010, Lil Wayne was sentenced to a year in prison, which he served in
Rikers Island. His lawyer said the rapper expected to be held in protective custody, separated from other prisoners.
[154]
In May 2010 Wayne was found by Rikers Island correctional staff to be
in possession of contraband (an MP3 player, charger, and headphones).
[155]
In April 2010, Lil Wayne's friends created a website called Weezy Thanx
You, which publishes letters written by Wayne in prison.
[117][156] In the first letter, titled "Gone 'til November", the rapper described his daily routine, saying he works out a lot, and reads
the Bible every day.
[117] Wayne was released from Rikers Island prison facility on November 4, 2010 after serving eight months of his year-long sentence.
[157]
Following a performance at
Qwest Arena in
Boise, Idaho, Lil Wayne was arrested October 5, 2007 on felony fugitive charges after
Georgia authorities accused the rapper of possessing a controlled substance.
[158] The incident was later described as a "mix-up" and the fugitive charges were dropped.
[159]
On January 23, 2008, Lil Wayne was arrested alongside two others. His tour bus was stopped by
Border Patrol agents near
Yuma, Arizona. A K-9 Unit recovered 105 grams (3.7 oz) of marijuana, almost 29 grams (1.0 oz) of cocaine, 41 grams (1.4 oz) of
ecstasy,
and $22,000 in cash. Lil Wayne was charged with four felonies:
possession of narcotic drug for sale, possession of dangerous drugs,
misconduct involving weapons and possession of drug paraphernalia. He
was granted permission to travel outside of the state and remain out of
custody on the $10,185 bond he posted.
[160]
On May 6, 2008, Wayne returned to court in Arizona to plead not guilty to the charges.
[161] A
bench warrant was issued on March 17, 2010 when Lil Wayne did not show for a final trial management conference.
[162][163]
However, the rapper was already in prison, serving a year-long sentence
in Rikers on weapons charges. On June 22, 2010 Wayne pleaded guilty to
the charges. As part of the plea deal he may serve 36 months of
probation.
[164] On June 30, 2010, he was sentenced to 3 years probation.
[165]
On December 18, 2009, Wayne and 11 others were detained at the
Falfurrias, Texas border patrol checkpoint after an unknown amount of marijuana was found on two of his tour buses.
[166]
Lawsuits
On July 24, 2008,
Abkco Music Inc filed a
lawsuit against Lil Wayne for
copyright infringement and
unfair competition, specifically referring to
Tha Carter III's track "Playing with Fire".
[167] In the lawsuit, Abkco claims that the song was obviously derived from
The Rolling Stones' "
Play with Fire", to which Abkco owns the rights.
[167][168] Subsequently, "Playing with Fire" was removed from the tracklist of
Tha Carter III on all
online music stores and replaced with the
David Banner produced track, "Pussy Monster".
[169][170][171]
In February 2009, production company RMF Productions filed a
$1.3 million lawsuit against Wayne, following a $100,000 advance payment
for three shows, all of which were cancelled by the artist.
[172]
On October 2009, Lil Wayne,
Birdman,
Cash Money Records,
and various music distribution outlets were sued for copyright
infringement by Thomas Marasciullo, who claims his voice was used
without permission. The rappers asked him to record some "Italian-styled
spoken word recordings" in 2006. The lyrics were allegedly used on
"Respect" and other tracks from the rappers' collaboration album
Like Father, Like Son and Birdman's
5 * Stunna.
[173]
In March 2011, producer
Deezle (Darius Harrison) sued Wayne and his parent labels Cash Money Records over unpaid royalties from
Tha Carter III.
[174]
In May 2011, producer Bangladesh also filed a lawsuit against Weezy & Co. over unpaid royalties as well.
[175]
In early June 2011, another producer named David Kirkwood filed a
lawsuit against Young Money Entertainment and Cash Money Records on
claims that the labels have failed to pay him over $1.5 million in
royalties and production services for his work on the album, also
including his songwriting on "Love Me or Hate Me", a bonus song featured
only on the deluxe edition of the album.
[176]
Also in June 2011, Dallas producers
Play-N-Skillz filed a lawsuit against him claiming Wayne owes them at least $1 million in unpaid royalties for "
Got Money" from his album
Tha Carter III. The single has sold over 2 million copies since being released.
[177]
In July 2011, Done Deal Enterprises, a production company based in
Georgia, filed suit against Wayne, Universal Music Group, Cash Money
Records and Young Money Entertainment, claiming copyright infringement.
The lawsuit alleges Wayne stole the song "BedRock", featured on the
compilation album
We Are Young Money, and seeks damages of $15 million.
[178]
Feuds
Young Buck released a song featuring
Tony Yayo
called "Off Parole" which insulted Lil Wayne. Young Buck said that Lil
Wayne could not be angry, because Young Buck spoke the truth. Young Buck
also said "You think you got a problem with Juve and B.G.; you'll have a
true problem with me", referring to the Cash Money-Juvenile/B.G feud.
[179][180]
One of the reasons 50 Cent stated he was dismissing Young Buck was what
he called "inconsistent behavior" which included appearing on stage
with Lil Wayne, then seemingly dissing him on records with G-Unit.
[181] After he was dismissed, Young Buck appeared in the music video "
My Life" by The Game, which featured Lil Wayne in the vocals.
[182] As of 2009 Buck and Wayne have squashed their beef and also linked up to record a track "Up's and Down's" for Young Buck's
Back On My Buck Shit mixtape.
Tension between Wayne and American rapper,
Pusha T, had been going on for years, beginning soon after
Clipse and
Birdman worked on "What Happened to That Boy", the latter's 2002 single. In 2006, Wayne felt the Clipse song "
Mr. Me Too" was directed at him which caused more tension between the two.
[183] In 2012 after much speculation that Pusha T was subliminally dissing Canadian rapper and Wayne's
Young Money signee
Drake
in several songs, the speculation heightened after the release of Pusha
T's "Exodus 23:1" song. Lil Wayne quickly responded on online social
networking service
Twitter
and later released a diss track titled "Goulish". In the first verse
Wayne raps "Fuck Pusha T and anybody that love him / His head up his
ass, I'mma have to head-butt him".
[184]
Pusha T has called Wayne's diss track "horrible" and said he felt it
didn't deserve a response. Both men have downplayed the feud, with Wayne
saying he's over it.
[185][186] However in late November, Pusha T dissed Wayne and
Birdman on a new
Ludacris song titled "Tell Me What They Mad For" from his
Ludaversal (2013) album.
[187]
In early 2011, when
Jay-Z &
Kanye West's single "
H•A•M" was released, Jay-Z took shots at Lil Wayne's mentor
Birdman, saying "Really, you got Baby money" and "[you] ain't got
my lady's money!".
[188] On August 24, 2011, a song called "
It's Good" by Lil Wayne (featuring
Drake and
Jadakiss)
was leaked online and included Lil Wayne responding "Talkin’ ‘bout baby
money? I gotcha baby money. Kidnap your bitch, get that, How much you
love your lady? money".
[189][190] Rapper
Jadakiss later absolved himself of involvement in any brewing
beef on his official
Twitter feed.
[191][192]