'I like my beat down low/And my top let back/See me ride 24s/With my Impala wit that...'
Well, no more. While T.I. may continue to push his coveted Chevy Impala, he won't receive a direct deposit paycheck into his dwindling bank account for doing so. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, General Motors has severed ties with T.I. (real name Clifford Harris) in the wake of his conviction on federal gun charges. The endorsement deal, however, isn't his only cash cow to have fallen by the wayside as a result of his legal trouble. "GM had to back up off of me. There are films that I missed out on. Not speaking of, of course, shows. Tours. Tons of business. I’ve probably lost about $10 to $12 million dollars,” he told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution when asked about the deal. Last month, T.I. pleaded guilty to illegal weapons charges in Atlanta. He was arrested in October while trying to buy unregistered machine guns and silencers.
CONTINUE READING THIS STORY AFTER THE JUMP!
In his first sit-down interview since being arrested, T.I. tells AJC's Sonia Murray that his patience has grown since being on house arrest for months. "If I can sit at home all day and wait on people to bring me what I need... wait on getting permission to be able to do this and do that, it's not as serious as I used to make it sometimes. Sometimes it was like, 'If I don't get this right now I'm just going to lose it.' When you're going 350 miles per hour, it tends to be that way. But when you are stopped - halted, not slowed down, but halted - you figure, 'Well I could have just slowed down. I didn't have to be stopped.' I thought it was bad just to slow down. Now I see in me being stopped, I could have done this, been this, myself, instead of being forced to do it."
Well, no more. While T.I. may continue to push his coveted Chevy Impala, he won't receive a direct deposit paycheck into his dwindling bank account for doing so. According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, General Motors has severed ties with T.I. (real name Clifford Harris) in the wake of his conviction on federal gun charges. The endorsement deal, however, isn't his only cash cow to have fallen by the wayside as a result of his legal trouble. "GM had to back up off of me. There are films that I missed out on. Not speaking of, of course, shows. Tours. Tons of business. I’ve probably lost about $10 to $12 million dollars,” he told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution when asked about the deal. Last month, T.I. pleaded guilty to illegal weapons charges in Atlanta. He was arrested in October while trying to buy unregistered machine guns and silencers.
CONTINUE READING THIS STORY AFTER THE JUMP!
In his first sit-down interview since being arrested, T.I. tells AJC's Sonia Murray that his patience has grown since being on house arrest for months. "If I can sit at home all day and wait on people to bring me what I need... wait on getting permission to be able to do this and do that, it's not as serious as I used to make it sometimes. Sometimes it was like, 'If I don't get this right now I'm just going to lose it.' When you're going 350 miles per hour, it tends to be that way. But when you are stopped - halted, not slowed down, but halted - you figure, 'Well I could have just slowed down. I didn't have to be stopped.' I thought it was bad just to slow down. Now I see in me being stopped, I could have done this, been this, myself, instead of being forced to do it."
2 comments:
good for his azz, classic case of when keeping it real goes wrong
All I want to know is was it worth it T.I.?
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