What's in a Name -- Five MCs Who've Switched Aliases
Say it ain't so Killer Mike! The respected underground Atlanta lyricist with one of the most menacing monikers in hip-hop has decided to change his name to the less ominous Mike Bigga. But we shouldn't be that shocked. He's not the first MC to get his artist-forme
Ol' Dirty Bastard
Name Change: Big Baby Jesus
Did the late Wu-Tang Clan's mercurial wild-man switch up his MC tag to ring a more respectable, serious-mind
Peedi Crakk
Name Change: Peedi Peedi
We read that the North Philly spitter and former member of the Roc-A-Fella rhyme clique State Property changed his cooked-rock moniker because "crack was not good for endorsements
Uncle Murder
Name Change: Uncle M.
If an obscure Brooklyn rapper changes his name in a forest and no one is around to hear him, does he not make a sound?
C-Murder
Name Change: C Miller
When you are being convicted for a 2002 shooting death, it helps if your stage name does not denote, um, death.
B.o.B.
Name Change: Bobby Ray
We don't care if this talented MC calls himself Judy Garland. Just hurry up and bring out the damn album already.

