Biggie or Tupac? Who was more important to hip-hop?

There is no one without the other. They were both talented and both the biggest names in the business. Their ultimate fame came because of their feud and untimely deaths.

He was as New York-to-the-bone as Woody Allen, and in the early 1990s, NYC hip-hop was in need of a local hero. Rap's center of gravity had shifted to Southern California; on The Chronic (1992), Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg turned songs about gunplay and sex into plush, chart-topping party music. Biggie reclaimed the zeitgeist for New York by merging gangsta rap's lurid subject matter with his hometown's hip-hop traditionalism: rugged beats, witty rhymes, an earthy street-corner worldview.

In "Ten Crack Commandments" (1997), he offered a "step-by-step booklet" for fledgling drug dealers: "Number six: that goddamn credit/ Dead it/ You think a crackhead payin' you back? / Shit, forget it.".

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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