![]() Shortly after news of the film broke, McCormick tweeted, “Fuck you, fuck your movie, at least change the title.” (It’s worth noting the family did support The Book of Mac: Remembering Mac Miller, which was published in October and largely focused on the artistry of Miller’s albums.) The project was originally titled “Good News,” seemingly plucked from Miller’s track of the same name from his posthumous album Circles. In July, his brother, Miller McCormick, lashed out at a report that Machine Gun Kelly was set to star in a film about a “troubled musician in his final days,” with inspiration being drawn from Miller’s life. It’s not the first time Miller’s family has openly decried a project that touched on the rapper’s legacy. ![]() But it wasn’t just the writing that Cantor found challenging, as he also faced enormous pushback from Miller’s family, who not only declined to be interviewed but publicly put him on blast in a family statement, encouraging the rapper’s fans to steer clear of the book. ![]() So as a fan himself, Miller’s sudden death caught Cantor off guard, as it did with the rest of the world. The two even crossed paths a handful of times. Replying that, yes, Miller deserved a shot, Cantor watched over the years as the Pittsburgh MC’s profile rose through the ranks of hip-hop’s top names. He’d been a fan of Miller’s since day one-almost literally, as a publicist for Miller’s future record label had sent Cantor a clip of the young rapper’s early music, asking for his opinion. Writing the book wasn’t easy for Cantor, a seasoned music journalist whose bylines have appeared in Rolling Stone, The New York Times, Esquire, Billboard, and XXL. 18, a day before the rapper would have turned 30. It was a moment many brought up with author Paul Cantor, whose biography Most Dope: The Extraordinary Life of Mac Miller hits shelves on Jan. Miller’s peculiar attitude around the car crash stuck with–or rather haunted–his close friends in the wake of his death. It would only be another four months after the crash that Miller’s assistant discovered him dead in his Los Angeles home after an accidental drug overdose which a toxicology report confirmed was due to a mixture of cocaine laced with fentanyl, as well as alcohol. “I just felt invincible.”Īvicii’s Private Journals Reveal a Superstar DJ Haunted by Demons “I don’t know why I did it, I don’t know what the fuck I was thinking,” Miller told a friend while intensely smoking a cigarette.
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