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Will Smith Addresses Chris Rock Oscars Slap, Marriage on New Album


Sat 29 Mar 2025 | 10:50 AM
Will Smith
Will Smith
Yara Sameh

It has been three years since Will Smith’s life turned upside down after he slapped comedian Chris Rock on the stage of the 2022 Academy Awards.

In his song “Int. Barbershop — Day” from his new album “Based on a True Story,” Smith addresses the Scandal head-on by talking about it on the first track of the album.

The close to two-minute track features Jazzy Jeff and B. Simone and sees differently-pitched voices trade rumors and opinions about the actor and rapper in a freestyle manner. 

The topics of conversation touch on Smith’s children, his marriage to Jada Pinkett-Smith, his movie career, that slap and more – basically everything that has been said about the Fresh Prince over the past five years.

It starts off with someone saying, “Will Smith is canceled,” as another person chimes in, saying, “Oh, you can’t cancel no icon.”

After much back and forth, slapgate is addressed.

“I heard he won the Oscar but he had to give it back. And you know they only made him do that s–t because he’s Black,” one of the voices said.

While Smith was able to keep his award, he has been banned from the ceremony for 10 years for slapping Rock.

The conversation continues later when Pinkett-Smith’s name is brought up.

“Him and Jada both crazy, girl, what you talkin’ bout. You better keep his wife’s name out of your mouth.”

One of the last lines says, “I ain’t never going to forgive him for that stuff he did.”

Moments later, a bell can be heard, like that on a barbershop door, indicating Smith has entered the place, causing everyone to change their tune to a more favorable one towards the rapper/singer.

Smith talked about his marriage more on his new song “You Lookin’ For Me?”.

“Took a lot, I’m back on top, y’all gon’ have to get acclimatеd. Won’t stop, my s–t’s still hot even though I won’t get nominatеd. Personal life with my wife, mind your business, it’s complicated.”

Their relationship has been a topic of tabloid fodder for decades, but things exploded in 2020 when the couple addressed Pinkett-Smith’s 2016 entanglement with R&B singer August Alsina.

“Based on a True Story” marks Smith’s first full-length solo music project in 20 years, with his last release being 2005’s “Lost and Found.” 

However, it is not the actor and rapper’s first major project since the slap. Months later, Smith navigated a limited promotional cycle for his next prestige picture, Apple’s historical drama “Emancipation.” 

Last summer, he co-starred with Martin Lawrence in “Bad Boys: Ride or Die,” the fourth entry in Sony’s buddy cop franchise was a box office hit, earning more than $400 million worldwide.