If anything illustrates just how slick JAY-Z‘s bars are, it’s how he subliminally jabbed Cam’ron on “Otis” without barely anyone realizing it for 15 years.
During the latest episode of his REVOLT series Talk With Flee, Killa Cam revealed that Hov quietly got at him on the Watch the Throne hit in response to him dissing Kanye West — a fact that had gone unnoticed by even the most diehard of Jigga fans.
“We had said some slick shit about Kanye one time,” he began, referencing his and Jim Jones‘ 2010 freestyle over Ye’s “Runaway” on which Cam rapped: “Kanye, you a sucka n*gga / Dissed Dame, so my attitude is fuck a n*gga / Suckin’ Jigga, how you gon’ live with that? / Took your beat, now come get it back.”
The Harlem rap legend then broke down the hidden meaning in Jay’s rhymes, making the link between his distribution deal with Asylum Records at the time and the “asylum” taunt in Hov’s second verse.
“[‘Otis’] came out probably a few months after we said something about Kanye,” Cam continued. “He said, ‘Live from the Mercer, run up on Yeezy the wrong way I might murk ya / Flee in the G450, I might surface / Political refugee, asylum can be purchased.’.”
(Sidebar: “Political refugee” could also be a subtle reference to the departure of Cam’ron’s Diplomats crew from Roc-A-Fella Records.)
Cam and his co-host Sen City couldn’t help but laugh at the cleverness of Jay’s bars, with both agreeing that he’s incredibly “slick.”
JAY-Z has been firmly back in the headlines of late thanks to what many fans are interpreting as a soft-launch for his long-awaited musical comeback.
In recent months, the Roc Nation mogul has rereleased a number of rare gems in his catalog including the original version of “Dead Presidents”; announced a string of shows at New York’s Yankee Stadium to celebrate the anniversaries of Reasonable Doubt and The Blueprint; and been confirmed as the headliner of the 2026 Roots Picnic festival in Philadelphia.
He also recently sat down for a rare and lengthy interview with GQ in which he discussed the Kendrick Lamar vs. Drake battle, the backlash to Kendrick’s Super Bowl halftime show and his relationship with J. Cole.
In addition to revealing he was “close” to appearing on the Clipse‘s Grammy-nominated album Let God Sort Em Out, Hov addressed the speculation surrounding his potential return to music.
“I have a lot of scratch ideas and they’re all bad [laughs],” he joked. “I got to be honest … I don’t know what I need to create currently that’s going to fulfil me and make me happy, because that’s most important. I know I just got to be honest about what I feel and where I am. Maybe I’m overthinking it. Maybe I’m stopping myself from just creating.”
He added: “Whatever it is, it just needs to be a true representation of how I feel. Trying to create something that people like is where I think a lot of artists get jammed up. And people can feel that because it’s not authentic. I just got to make something timeless that I really love and that’s really honest and true to who I am.”
