Eminem’s daughter Hailie Jade admits her father’s music makes her cry: ‘I cried so hard’

Eminem’s daughter Hailie Jade Smith said it’s hard for her to listen to some of her father’s most famous songs without getting emotional.

While discussing her new song, “Somebody Save Me,” on her “Just a Little Shady” podcast, Jade Smith admitted that the music video was so bad that after watching it “in full” once, she’s not sure she “could do it again.”

“Every time I listen to it, I definitely cry,” she said of the song and video, which also features Jelly Roll. “Between that and ‘Temporary’ … I think I cried out loud for both songs, but especially ‘Temporary.'”

The podcast host praised his parents and revealed he was raised in the same household as his rapper father, who has discussed his struggles with addiction over the years.

“But I will say that after watching the video again and listening to the song, I feel like my parents did a really good job of making me not realize how bad things were,” she added.

“But, now, looking back as an adult, it’s so scary to think about. And I think that’s why I get so emotional, like, thinking that this could happen.”

He added, “Obviously that’s the gist of the song, but if you’ve ever suffered from addiction or lost a loved one, I feel for you.”

The 28-year-old singer admitted that she even has difficulty listening to some of her father’s old songs.

“I can’t even hear [‘Mockingbird’] “I can’t stop crying now,” she said.

“The older I get, the less I listen to music,” Jade Smith added. “But it’s fun to watch [old family] Clips [in the videos]Just not in that context.”

In 2021, Eminem revealed that he once had to relearn how to rap due to his severe addiction.

Things got so bad that he took aim at Rihanna and referenced her 2009 domestic violence incident with Chris Brown in his song “Zeus,” which was recorded in 2009 and leaked online in 2019.

In an interview with SiriusXM’s Gray Rizzi, Eminem admitted that he “didn’t remember” the line at all, but said he had simply put in words that rhymed anyway because he was re-learning how to rap.

“I said it and I was wrong to say it. It was stupid. You know, a lot of times, especially with the ‘Relapse’ record, when I first started learning how to rap, because I went through the drug situation and I had to relearn a lot of things, it was one of those things that was like, ‘Well, if it rhymes, say it,'” Slim Shady continued.

In April, the “Love the Way You Lie” hitmaker publicly celebrated 16 years of sobriety by sharing a photo of himself holding a sobriety chip in his hand.

The black coin, emblazoned with the words “unity”, “service” and “recovery”, had the number 16 inscribed inside a triangle.

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