😱 Tupac’s REAL Thoughts About Jada Smith Finally REVEALED – Why He CUT Her Off Before His Death 🔥🚫

When TK Kirkland sat down with The Art of Dialogue, few expected him to go straight for the jugular.
But that’s exactly what he did.
Without mincing words, TK declared that Jada Pinkett Smith’s long-standing story of an emotional, unbreakable bond with Tupac Shakur was nothing more than a “one-sided fantasy.
” According to TK, Tupac would never have been involved with Jada “like that,” and in fact, he likely wouldn’t even speak to her today.
This explosive claim flips the narrative on its head.
For years, Jada has carefully curated a legacy as the woman who “understood” Tupac—the ride-or-die confidante from Baltimore who saw the real man beneath the bandana.
But as the years have gone by, fans have grown increasingly skeptical.
Why, after more than two decades of marriage to Will Smith, does Jada still talk about Tupac more than she talks about her own husband? And why does it feel like Tupac’s legacy is being constantly dragged into
Jada’s quest for identity and relevance?
TK Kirkland didn’t hold back.
“I’m tired of this mindset,” he said.
“Some women think just because a guy was cool with them 30 years ago, he’d still mess with them today.
Tupac wouldn’t have messed with her.
Period.
” TK’s words struck a nerve—not just with fans who are fed up with Jada’s frequent name-dropping, but with those who remember the real history of Tupac’s final years.
Let’s rewind.

Jada and Tupac met at the Baltimore School for the Arts.
They were both teenagers, both scarred by rough upbringings, and both full of ambition.
Jada has always emphasized that their bond was “deeply platonic,” but also admitted that at one point they tried to kiss—only to discover there was no romantic chemistry.
“It was the most disgusting kiss for us both,” Jada once recalled.
“There was no spark.”
But if that’s true, why does Jada still speak of Tupac as if he were the great love of her life?
In her own words, she said that if they had been intimate, they “would’ve killed each other” due to their strong personalities.
Maybe.
Or maybe the truth is what TK Kirkland suggested: that Tupac never saw Jada the way she saw him.
That he had moved on from their teenage bond and didn’t share the obsession she still seems to carry.
Adding fuel to the fire is the now infamous Willow Smith letter—a note written by Jada’s daughter, who was born four years after Tupac’s death.
The letter begged Tupac to “come back” so that “mommy and me can be happy.
” That’s not just disturbing—it’s a crystal-clear sign that Jada projected her unresolved grief onto her own children, shaping their view of a man they never even met.
The backlash was swift.
Social media exploded with outrage over Jada’s behavior, especially after she released Red Table Talk episodes that conveniently resurrected Tupac’s name anytime her personal life—or marriage—faced criticism.
During the infamous “entanglement” episode, Tupac once again began trending, as fans mocked how Will Smith looked more like a ghost in his own marriage than a partner.
Even Will himself admitted, painfully, that he felt insecure and intimidated by the ghost of Tupac.
“That was a big regret for me,” he confessed.
“I could never open up to interact with Pac.
” Imagine being married to someone who still emotionally belongs to someone else, even in death.
And then there’s the issue of Kadida Jones, Tupac’s real fiancée at the time of his death.
The daughter of Quincy Jones and a prominent figure in her own right, Kadida was living with Tupac and planning a future with him.
Yet Jada’s narrative rarely acknowledges her.
It’s as if, in her version of the story, she was the one Tupac would have chosen—if only fate hadn’t intervened.
TK Kirkland wasn’t having any of it.
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He brought up how Tupac had the confidence to dump Madonna, one of the most powerful women in the world at the time.
“Tupac broke up with Madonna,” TK reminded viewers.
“You gotta be a cold [expletive] to do that.
You think he would’ve been checking for Jada today?”
That sentiment echoed across fan forums, Reddit threads, and comment sections.
One fan posted, “Those of us old enough to remember know the truth.
Jada was just a friend.
Tupac had love for her, but he wasn’t checking on her like that.
” Another added, “Tupac and Jada weren’t even talking when he died.
They had fallen out.
So why is she acting like she lost her soulmate?”
And here’s the kicker: Tupac and Jada weren’t even on speaking terms at the time of his death.
That’s a fact many conveniently forget.
Their friendship had frayed.
They had grown apart—she was headed toward Hollywood; he was drowning in legal battles, street politics, and East vs.
West drama.
So what’s really going on? Why does Jada keep resurrecting this narrative?
TK Kirkland has a theory—and it’s brutal: clout.
In his words, Jada keeps invoking Tupac because she knows it draws attention, creates headlines, and fuels the mystery.
Every time the public starts to forget, she releases a memoir, drops a quote, or slams a biopic.
It’s never about Pac.
It’s always about her.

In 2017, Jada slammed the Tupac biopic All Eyez on Me for allegedly misrepresenting their friendship—even though actress Kat Graham said she had Jada’s blessing while preparing for the role.
Fans saw right through it.
“This isn’t about truth,” one wrote.
“It’s about control.”
At some point, you have to wonder: What would Tupac think if he saw all this today? The woman constantly inserting herself into his story, rewriting his legacy, and emotionally dominating her family with a love
story that never happened?
According to TK Kirkland, he wouldn’t be impressed.
He’d be disgusted.
And maybe, just maybe, that’s why the world is finally seeing through Jada’s performative grief.
Tupac left behind more than a few poems and high school memories—he left behind a movement, a message, and a fiancée who mourned him privately, not performatively.
In the end, perhaps TK Kirkland said what many have been afraid to say out loud for years: Jada Pinkett Smith wasn’t the one that got away.
She was just one chapter in a book Tupac had already finished.
And for a woman who claims to protect his legacy…
she sure can’t seem to stop making it all about herself.
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