In the opening song, "When Will They Shoot", Ice Cube addressed criticisms of
anti-Semitism he received for his last effort,
Death Certificate: :White man is something I tried to study, :But I got my hands bloody, yeah. :They say I can sing like a
jaybird :But, nigga, don't say the
j-word :I thought they was buggin' :'Cause to us,
Uncle Sam is
Hitler without an oven :Burnin' our black skin :
Bomb a neighborhood, then
push the crack in Elsewhere "We Had to Tear This Mothafucka Up" is directed at the
LA Police officers acquitted in the
Rodney King trial, an event that ignited the
1992 LA Riots. The similarly themed "Who Got the Camera?" imagines a scenario in which a black man is subjected to
police brutality. The songs are broken up by interludes involving interviews with Ice Cube and what appears to be a debate between members of a congregation or talk-show audience. "Now I Gotta Wet'cha" is the source of the popular phrase "It's on like
Donkey Kong." Since the song's release, the quote has been used in sports, commercials, movies, and television with a huge surge in usage from the years 2000 through 2005. In 2010,
Nintendo trademarked the phrase in order to promote the
Wii game
Donkey Kong Country Returns. In the 2023 animated film
The Super Mario Bros. Movie Donkey Kong uses the phrase himself. ==Singles==