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Season of da Siccness was Brotha Lynch Hung’s second album (first was 24 Deep), and a major milestone in Horrorcore Hip-Hop. What he’s saying here is most likely that this album is going to be three times as good as Season Of Da Siccness.

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This skit leaves off from the end skit on Murder Over Hard.
First Degree The DE (who plays the detective in the Coathanga Strangla trilogy) fishes out a body from the Sacramento River (much to C-Lim’s disgust) that was dropped there by Brotha Lunch Hung earlier in the album.

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Scott Peterson is a man who was convicted of killing his wife and the unborn child she was carrying in 2002. He maintains his innocence, but he remains on Death Row at San Quentin Prison in California.

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Misery sounds like Missouri (if pronounced with emphasis on different syllables). Tech N9ne is from Missouri. Get it? Ha!

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This song is supposedly about Black and Latino unity, since both communities suffer from the same problems, but it sounds more like Snoop Dogg is adding to the violence (unless you watch the video). Pharrell makes a still unexplained cameo at the end of the video along with Skateboard P.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXWFqxKU2qA

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Nas' diss to Fox News, controversial for it’s conservative point of view. Bill O'Reilly called Nas a “Pinhead” on his show The O'Reilly Factor, and Nas responded with this song against the entire network.

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The fictional hater Mitch Bade has made numerous appearances in Tech’s music.
Mitch Bade
Bitch Made
Get it? Ha… ha… ha…

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Bastardization of “Vallejo”, the city in California where E-40 is from.

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This album is actually the first album without Tech’s red spiked hair on the count that it was falling out due to the dye.

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Like the last phrase, this one is an allusion to E-40. ‘Hyphy’ (originating in the Bay Area where E-40 is from) has many meanings, and has been compared to it’s southern Hip-Hop equivalent – ‘crunk’. It usually means to become extremely energized, but can mean anything from ‘high’ to ‘crazy’. It’s all relative, really.

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