Did Ice Cube really destroy his manager’s office at Priority Records? Some events in Straight Outta Compton did happen, but others were fictionalized.

Split image of the real NWA and the main cast of the film Straight Outta Compton

SUMMARY

Straight Outta Compton mixes fact and fiction, leaving the audience with questions about the accuracy of certain events portrayed in the film.
Important moments from N.W.A.’s history, such as Ice Cube destroying an office at Priority Records and Suge Knight beating up Eazy-E, are accurately depicted in the movie.
However, there are several instances in Straight Outta Compton where the filmmakers took artistic liberties, such as the portrayal of Ice Cube leaving N.W.A. and the band’s reunion after Eazy-E’s death.

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There have been dozens of biopics about bands, but in 2015 a film was made about the world’s most notorious hip-hop group, N.W.A., and it left many wondering: how accurate is Straight Outta Compton? Directed by F. Gary Gray, the director behind films like FridayThe Negotiator, and Set It Off, the film showed the origins of N. W. A. while also diving into the personal lives of Ice Cube, Eazy-E, Dr. Dre, MC Ren, and DJ Yella. Like most biopics, Straight Outta Compton mixes facts with fiction in order to create a more coherent and cinematic experience.

Because Straight Outta Compton mixes fact and fiction, it does leave the audience with a lot of questions. Did Ice Cube really smash a Priority Records office? Did Suge really beat up Eazy? Did Eazy E really want to kill Suge Knight? The story of N.W.A. is wild and unbelievable in many ways, and the movie captures some of the band’s wildest moments, but it also takes a number of artistic liberties in adapting their story. Many of these stories about the band live on in infamy to this day.

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Things In Straight Outta Compton That Actually Happened

Ice Cube Destroyed An Office At Priority Records

O'Shea Jackson playing his father Icecube in Straight Outta Compton

After Ice Cube left N.W.A, he was signed by Priority Records for a solo deal. Bryan Turner, the co-founder of Priority Records, was one of the men responsible for signing Ice Cube to his label. At one point, Turner offered to pay Cube extra on his second solo album if the first one was a hit. After Cube turned AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted into one of the most memorable albums of the 90s, Turner didn’t keep his promise to pay Cube extra money.

In return, future movie star Ice Cube destroyed Bryan Turner’s office with a baseball bat. This is depicted in Straight Outta Compton and one scene that O’Shea Jackson Jr. fought to keep in the film because of how accurate it actually was (via The Chicago Tribune). Ice Cube really did smash a Priority Records office, destroying most of its contents.

Ice Cube Left N.W.A. Because Of Jerry Heller

Paul Giamatti as Jerry Heller in Straight Outta Compton

A huge part of the film is Jerry Heller, played brilliantly by Paul Giamatti in one of the actor’s best performances, discovering N.W.A and helping them become a hip-hop group known all around the world. Towards the middle of the film, Ice Cube becomes irritated that Heller only seems to be catering to Eazy-E, despite Cube writing most of the songs on the Straight Outta Compton album.

In reality, Ice Cube did actually leave N.W.A. over a royalty dispute with Jerry Heller. In an interview with The Guardian, Cube explains that his future manager Pat Charbonnet helped him realize that he was getting the short end of the stick when it came to Ruthless Records and his deal with Jerry Heller.

Suge Knight Beat Up Eazy-E

NWA members sitting in a car in Straight Outta Compton

In one of the more dramatic parts of the film, Suge Knight beats up Eazy-E in order to get Dr. Dre out of his contract with Ruthless Records. Suge really did beat up Eazy in real life and like in the movie, Eazy-E wanted to retaliate by killing Suge. Jerry Heller talked Eazy out of retaliating in this way against Suge (via Consequence), which Heller later revealed that he regretted.

There is also a conspiracy theory that Suge Knight was responsible for Eazy-E’s death by injecting him with AIDS. This conspiracy stemmed from an interview with Suge Knight on Jimmy Kimmel, where he joked about Eazy-E’s death, and the rumor spiraled from there.

The Drama At The Detroit Show

Ice Cube on stage hyping up the crowd in Straight OUtta Compton

One of the biggest scenes in Straight Outta Compton is when N.W.A. perform the song “F*** tha Police” despite the Detroit Police Department specifically telling them that they couldn’t. The undercover police officers begin to storm the stage, which results in a chase between law enforcement and the band and the ultimate arrest of N.W.A.

This scene is mostly what happened in real life, but demonstrates how Straight Outta Compton took liberties with its accuracy. When the band played the song, the amplifiers were turned off at the venue, which did actually incite riots from the concert attendees (as reported by XXL in 1989). The only real difference is that in real life, N.W.A. was able to escape and make it back to their hotel, where they got arrested later in the night.

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The FBI Went After The Group

Rap group NWA from Straight Out of Compton walking by trucks

The police were obviously not fans of N.W.A. but at one point the band received a letter from the FBI, which Jerry Heller calls a “reasonably worded threat.” This is one monumental moment in N.W.A.’s career that most certainly happened (via The Daily Beast). FBI Assistant Director Milt Ahlerich was the man who wrote the letter and sent it to Ruthless Records.

As stated in the film, the letter read, “Advocating violence and assault is wrong and we in the law enforcement community take exception to such action” and that “recording such as the one from N.W.A. are both discouraging and degrading to these brave, and dedicated officers.”The FBI later had to fix Ahlerich’s mistake and explained that it would be inappropriate for the government to revoke the First Amendment from the band. The letter from the FBI to N.W.A. is currently on display at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland.

Ice Cube Wrote “Boyz-n-the-Hood” For H.B.O.

Members of NWA in the recording studio in Straight Outta Compton

Straight Outta Compton saw N.W.A. record the track “Boyz-n-the-Hood” after it was originally written for the East Coast group H.B.O. (Home Boys Only). The movie also saw members of both groups have an altercation in the recording studio when H.B.O. took issue with some of Ice Cube’s lyrics. Dre convinced Eazy-E to try out some of the lyrics in the recording booth himself.

Most of what happened in that particular sequence was true, though only the people actually in the studio know how heated the altercation got between the two groups. What is known is that H.B.O. didn’t like the track and walked out of the recording session.

Things In Straight Outta Compton That Were Fictionalized

Bye Felicia

Ice Cube and Chris Tucker in the original Friday movie leaning away from someone off screen

“Bye Felicia,” which was originally spelled “Bye Felisha,” was a slang term that originated in the ’90s after the film Friday was released. The 1995 film was coincidentally directed by Straight Outta Compton director F. Gary Gray and written by Ice Cube and DJ Pooh.

In the film, Ice Cube dismissed a woman who constantly mooches off of people in the neighborhood by saying the phrase. The same type of scenario happens in Straight Outta Compton when Ice Cube pushes a naked woman out of their hotel room and says, “Bye Felicia” in one of Straight Out Of Compton’s best quotesWhile the line was a funny way to pay homage to the ’90s term, it didn’t actually become known until Friday was released (via The Cut).

The Origin Of F*** The Police

Police officers confront members of NWA on the sidewalk in Straight Outta Compton

It’s no secret that N.W.A did not like the police and most police officers at the time didn’t like them. At one point in Straight Outta Compton, the members of N.W.A. step outside their Torrance studio and start to get harassed by two police officers. Jerry Heller confirmed that this actually happened in his memoir (via The Guardian), but it wasn’t the inspiration behind the song “F*** tha Police”.

Ice Cube had the idea for quite some time before that, but since Dre had to go to prison on the weekends for traffic infractions, he didn’t want to do the song right away. Once Dre had served his time and Ice Cube revisited the idea, Dre was ready to go. So harassment from the police obviously inspired the song, just not the way it played out on screen.

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How Ice Cube Left N.W.A.

O'Shea Jackson Jr as Ice Cube in Straight Outta Compton

The movie depicts one version of the story of Ice Cube leaving the hip-hop group, but there have been many versions of the story over the years. In the movie, he’s shown as choosing to leave on his own when Keller tried to pressure him into signing a solo contract without a lawyer looking it over. In Keller’s autobiography, he claimed it happened differently. According to Keller, the other members of N.W.A. actually voted Ice Cube out because he complained about compensation.

Ice Cube, however, has revealed other details about his leaving in interviews. He has explained (via Guardian) that he found it odd that Keller and Eazy had luxury items that he still couldn’t afford – including their own houses while he lived with his parents. He reached out to Pat Charbonnet, who doesn’t appear in the movie, and Charbonnet explained the financial situation to him and got him a contract with Priority Records. Charbonnet went on to become his manager.

N.W.A. Got Back Together

N.W.A. in 'Straight Outta Compton' in their jackets and caps

After N.W.A was broken up, Eazy-E had long-standing feuds with Ice Cube and Dr. Dre. Prior to Eazy-E getting diagnosed with AIDS, something which the movie deals with powerfully, Eazy-E had begun to rekindle his relationships with his former band members, but nothing ever really came to fruition. Eazy died only a month after he tested positive for HIV (news report via Youtube) so any plans they were forming never actually happened.

In the film, Eazy-E is shown meeting with MC Ren and DJ Yella, who are all waiting for Ice Cube and Dr. Dre to get there. This was one part of Straight Outta Compton that wasn’t accurate. It never actually happened as Eazy’s death came too suddenly for them to actually start working together again. That being said, Dr. Dre and Ice Cube both think that they would have made more albums as N.W.A. if he hadn’t passed away.

Dre’s Treatment Of Women

Corey Hawkins as Dr. Dre at a turntable in Straight Outta Compton

In Straight Outta Compton, Dr. Dre is seen entering a few relationships. However, his treatment of women was actually much worse in real life. Several people have accused Dre of becoming violent against them, most notably MTV news reporter Dee Barnes and singer Michel’le. While Barnes filed a multi-million dollar lawsuit against the artist, Michel’le didn’t take any legal action.

While Dre faced repercussions in the 90s for assaulting Barnes, he has since made several apologies, most notably to Rolling Stone magazine, where he stated, “I made some f***ing horrible mistakes in my life. I was young, f***ing stupid. I would say all the allegations aren’t true — some of them are. Those are some of the things that I would like to take back. It was really f***ed up. But I paid for those mistakes, and there’s no way in hell that I will ever make another mistake like that again”.

Eazy-E Goes Broke

A closeup of Eazy-E in Straight Outta Compton

N.W.A. breaks up in the film after Dr. Dre and Ice Cube both go solo because of the abuse from Jerry Heller. Instead of sticking with his band, Eazy-E sided with Heller, which caused him to foreclose his home, package marijuana, and move into a smaller house.

In reality, none of what is shown regarding Eazy-E’s finances in Straight Outta Compton actually happened. When Eazy-E passed away, he was still a multi-million dollar artist (via Phoenix New Times) and in the ’90s there were never any news reports about Eazy-E having to sell his mansion. Eazy-E may have not been making as much money after his days with N.W.A. were over, but he was no doubt still a very rich artist.