On the quiet edge of Detroit, nestled between a worn-down warehouse and a row of auto shops, a once-abandoned building has come back to life—filled with barks, tail wags, and the unmistakable rhythm of something unexpected: Eminem.

This is Hope for Paws Detroit, a dog rescue shelter co-founded by Hailie Jade Scott and her mother, Kim Scott. The mother-daughter duo, once kept from the public eye by the weight of a complicated past, have turned a shared love for animals into a mission to save abandoned and mistreated dogs across the city.

But what’s turning heads (and turning ears) isn’t just the heartwarming work—it’s the sound of the place. Because, believe it or not, the shelter has an official ringtone… and it’s composed by none other than Detroit’s own rap legend: Eminem.

“He said no at first,” Hailie laughs, seated in the office behind the main kennel room. “He was like, ‘Hailie, daddy’s a rapper, not a whistler.’ And then I said, ‘Okay, but what if you’re the rapper who helps rescue dogs with beats instead of bars?’”

Kim adds with a smirk, “That got him.”

The idea started simple: abandoned dogs often arrive scared, aggressive, or traumatized. Many have lived on the streets or come from abusive homes. Hailie, having studied animal behavior in college, knew that calming music could play a vital role in helping dogs adjust to shelter life.

“I told Dad, we didn’t need another hype track,” she says. “We needed something soft. Rhythmic. Soothing. Like lullabies with soul.”

Eminem resisted for a week—typical Marshall stubbornness, as Kim calls it. Then one morning, he showed up at the shelter with a USB drive and a coffee in his hand.

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“He didn’t say a word. Just handed us the drive and said, ‘Play this. But not too loud—dogs got ears too,’” Kim recalls, smiling.

They plugged it into the sound system. What came out was unlike anything they expected.

A mellow beat. Lo-fi drums. Gentle synths, layered with a slowed-down melody built from sampled barks, subtly altered into a kind of percussive whisper. And over it, Eminem’s unmistakable voice—not rapping in the traditional sense, but humming, speaking softly, almost lullaby-like:

“You’re not broken, just scared / This world’s cold, but I care / So rest now, little one / You’re home where you belong…”

The room went silent. Then, a small miracle: dogs who normally paced, whimpered, or barked… sat down. Some even lay on their sides. Their eyes half-closed. One started wagging its tail gently in time with the beat.

“It was wild,” says Jared, a shelter volunteer. “We were all like—wait, is Slim Shady… making soothing music now? For dogs? But it worked. It totally worked.”

The track became known around the shelter as “Marshall’s Morning Loop.” It plays every morning at 9 a.m., and again at 6 p.m., just before dinner. Volunteers say it sets the tone for the whole day. The dogs are calmer, more sociable. New arrivals adjust faster. Adoptions have increased.

“We can prove it: dogs love Em,” Jared adds, chuckling. “Even the ones that used to bark at everything. Now they hear that beat and just melt.”

Word got out. Soon, Hope for Paws Detroit started getting calls from other shelters, asking for the loop. Eminem agreed to release it—but only through the shelter’s website, where donations support vet care, food, and training for the dogs.

In a rare public comment about the project, Eminem told The Detroit Free Press, “I made music that used to start fights. Now I’m making beats that stop barking. That’s growth, right?”

The ringtone version—short, sweet, and still strangely emotional—now plays when the shelter receives calls. It’s even available for download, with proceeds going directly to rescue operations. It’s a reminder that compassion has many sounds—and sometimes, the toughest voices make the gentlest music.

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As for Kim and Hailie, this is just the beginning. They’re planning a second location next year and are working with local schools to educate kids about rescue animals.

“Detroit gave us everything,” Kim says. “Now it’s our turn to give something back—four paws at a time.”

And thanks to a little rhythm, a lot of heart, and a rapper turned rescue DJ, Hope for Paws Detroit is proving every day that healing can have a beat… and a bark.