When 50 Cent was shot nine times in 2000, the attack didn’t just nearly end his life — it nearly ended his career. Music executives, radio stations, and labels across the United States quietly distanced themselves, labeling him “too dangerous,” “too controversial,” and “not worth the risk.” In an industry that constantly thrives on street credibility yet fears real-life consequences, 50 Cent suddenly found himself blacklisted from the very world he was fighting to break into.

But what happened next has since become one of hip-hop’s most legendary comeback stories.

Instead of disappearing, Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson packed his bags and headed to Canada. Far from the politics, fear, and blackballing happening in the U.S., Toronto became his battlefield — and his rebirth. And there, in gritty studios, cramped basements, and buzzing street corners, he launched one of the most ambitious underground mixtape campaigns hip-hop had ever seen.

50 Cent began releasing a relentless storm of tracks, flipping popular beats, dissing rivals, reworking radio hits, and flooding the streets with music faster than major labels could react. His voice was raw. His hunger was unmistakable. And his storytelling — shaped by survival, trauma, and sharp wit — hit harder than ever. Fans swapped CDs hand-to-hand. Bootleggers couldn’t keep up. DJ crews replayed his tracks on loop.

By 2002, the buzz wasn’t just loud — it was impossible to ignore.

 

 

Back in the U.S., hip-hop’s biggest powerhouses began hearing whispers about a rapper in Canada who was “rewriting the mixtape rulebook.” When a copy of one of 50 Cent’s Canadian releases landed in Eminem’s hands, everything changed. Em listened once… then twice… then reportedly told his team:

“50 Cent is definitely my favorite rapper right now.”

The endorsement wasn’t casual. Eminem immediately contacted Dr. Dre, insisting they sign 50 Cent before anyone else could. Dre agreed, famously saying that the intensity in 50’s voice felt “like someone who had something real to prove.” The two hip-hop giants moved fast, arranging meetings, clearing contracts, and preparing one of the most anticipated signings in rap history.

When 50 Cent finally returned to the United States under the wings of Eminem and Dr. Dre, the transformation was complete. In less than three years, he had gone from industry outcast to the most sought-after unsigned artist in the world.

The result was Get Rich or Die Tryin’ — a debut album that didn’t just succeed, but detonated across the industry, forever redefining early-2000s hip-hop with tracks like “In Da Club,” “Many Men,” and “P.I.M.P.”

What began as a blacklisting ended as a revolution.

50 Cent’s exile in Canada wasn’t a setback — it was the foundation of a legacy. By refusing to bow to the industry that rejected him, he built a new path on his own terms, proving that grit, reinvention, and relentless output could shake the world so hard that even its biggest legends — Eminem and Dr. Dre themselves — had no choice but to listen.