
One of the
more curious entries into the early-2000 teen pop explosion, Lil' Romeo shot
straight to the top of the Billboard charts with his first single at the unheard-of
age of only 11. Alongside Lil' Bow Wow, Romeo proved that a substantial market
existed for clean-cut preteen rappers with cute looks and PG-rated rhymes.
Of course, the young rapper didn't break into the rap game alone. Just as
Jermaine Dupri had masterminded Bow Wow's success, Romeo owed much to his
father, notorious rap mogul Master P. Given his father's reputation as a savvy
businessman, it was perhaps no surprise when a substantial buzz surrounded
the youngster before his debut single even hit the airwaves.

With a father and two uncles —
Silkk the Shocker and C Murder — who were all superstars during No Limit's
mid- to late-'90s reign, Romeo couldn't help growing up in a rap-centric environment.
In fact, his father even had him contribute cameos to No Limit albums, such
as 504 Boyz's Goodfellas, long before he considered launching his son's career.
It wasn't until 2000 that Master P first seriously considered catapulting
his son into the spotlight. Around this time, Master P's No Limit empire had
quickly crumbled; not only had most of the label's roster been dismissed,
but sales were undeniably dismal. It was clear that Master P needed a new
direction — even if that meant moving away from the gangsta motifs that had
initially made the label famous. At this same moment in time, a young preteen
rapper by the name of Lil' Bow Wow was monopolizing the airwaves with his
innocent raps and cute looks. Master P did what he has always done best: find
what sells, create a generic version, release it on a new imprint without
No Limit's tarnished reputation, and market the hell out of it.

Though many, no doubt, scoffed
at Master P's questionable choice to propel his son into the spotlight, it
worked better than anyone could have expected. First came the expected media-targeted
hyperbole, with Master P comparing Romeo to Michael Jackson. Next came the
lead single, "My Baby," a song that took no shame in its overt interpolation
of the Jackson 5's "I Want You Back." Then came the results: the
song quickly rose to the top of the Billboard charts, most notably lodging
itself atop the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles chart, before the full-length
album even hit the streets. Suddenly, Master P seemed relevant once more,
thanks to his son, with an album that didn't even warrant a parental advisory
sticker, once again proving that even if the Southern entrepreneur's reputation
had been built through exploitation rather than aesthetics, he was surely
one of rap's craftiest businessmen. — Jason Birchmeier