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Ice Cube Net Worth 2022, Life Highlights & Everything We Know

Ice Cube Net Worth

Ice Cube is a rapper, actor, producer, and entrepreneur from the United States of America. Ice Cube has a net worth of $160 million as of this writing.

Ice Cube has evolved from one of the pioneers of West Coast gangster rap to one of the most prominent figures in contemporary Hollywood.

Following his first success as a member of N.W.A., he had a tremendously successful solo career. Additionally, he has written, produced, and starred in several feature films.

Ice Cube Net Worth

Ice Cube Childhood

Ice Cube was born O’Shea Jackson in South Central Los Angeles on June 15, 1969. Doris Jackson, a janitor and hospital clerk, and Hosea Jackson, a UCLA groundskeeper, bore Jackson.

He has an elder brother and a half-sister who died tragically when Ice Cube was twelve. He grew up in Los Angeles on Van Wick Street and began composing raps and hip-hop songs at 14.

Ice Cube earned his rapper moniker since his elder brother threatened to put him into a freezer and take him out when he was an ice cube, and the term stuck.

He attended Woodland Hills’ William Howard Taft High School. He sold his first song to future N.W.A. member Eazy-E when he was sixteen. In the fall of 1987, he enrolled in the Phoenix Institute of Technology in Arizona.

He studied architectural drawing for a year and earned his certificate. Ice Cube then relocated to Los Angeles to pursue a rap career.

Ice Cube Career

Ice Cube, his pal Sir Jinx established the organization C.I.A. They played at Dr. Dre-hosted events in Los Angeles. Ice Cube and C.I.A. released “My Posse” in 1987, a tune produced by Dr. Dre. Ice Cube initially despised the words to a rap he had written, “Boyz-n-the-Hood.”

However, Eazy-E eventually recorded the song for N.W.A.’s first album, “N.W.A. and the Posse,” which included Dr. Dre, MC Ren, DJ Yella, and Ice Cube. Ice Cube created the rhymes and half of the lyrics for Dr. Dre and Eazy-breakout E’s album, 1988’s “Straight Outta Compton.”

However, he received just $32,000 in compensation for his work. Ice Cube quit the N.W.A. because disagreements about his compensation and official contracts with the organization could not be settled.

Solo Career

Ice Cube’s debut solo album, “AmeriKKK’a Most Wanted,” was released in May 1990 to immediate acclaim, riding the tide of rap’s massive popularity at the moment.

The next year, he released the E.P. “Kill at Will,” which went platinum, becoming the first hip hop E.P. to do so. Ice Cube honed his acting skills in 1991 when he starred as Doughboy in John Singleton’s criminal drama “Boyz n the Hood.” His performance was universally applauded and lauded by reviewers.

His second album, “Death Certificate,” was published in 1991. It was divisive and split both crowds and critics. In 1992, he played at Lollapalooza, expanding his following base.

In November 1992, he released his third album, “The Predator.” It was the first album in history to debut at No. 1 on both the mainstream and R&B charts and got positive reviews from reviewers.

It remains his most commercially successful album, having sold over three million copies in the United States.

Ice Cube’s rap following began to dwindle in 1993. His fourth studio album, “Lethal Injection,” garnered mixed reviews from reviewers. He then took a break from music, and his fifth album (War & Peace Vol. 1) was not released until 1998.

He joined Dr. Dre, Eminem, and Snoop Dog on the “Up in Smoke Tour” in 2000, then waited six years before releasing another album, “Laugh Now, Cry Later,” which debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard Charts.

Ice Cube’s eighth solo album, “I Am the West,” was released on September 28, 2010. Throughout the 2010s, Ice Cube cooperated on various projects and with various organizations, including venturing outside of hip-hop to work on songs with Trent Reznor and David Bowie.

He released his ninth solo album, “Everythang’s Corrupt,” in 2018, following several years of steadily releasing singles.

Ice Cube Career in Acting

Ice Cube made his cinematic acting debut in 1991 with the film “Boyz n the Hood.” Over the next few years, he acted in a number more films. In 1995, Ice Cube’s film “Friday” – which he starred in, wrote, and produced – was released to critical and economic acclaim. “Friday” spawned a slew of sequels.

He starred in “Anaconda” in 1997. “The Players Club,” which he directed, produced, wrote, and performed in, was released in 1998.

“Are We There Yet” and its sequel, “21 Jump Street” and “22 Jump Street,” “Straight Outta Compton,” “xXx: Return of Xander Cage,” and “Fist Fight” are among Ice Cube’s other films.

In October 2021, it was announced that Ice Cube had withdrawn from an upcoming film production of the comedy “Oh Hell No” due to his refusal to receive a COVID-19 vaccination, which was necessary due to the movie’s Hawaii location. Cube forfeited a $9 million paycheck to leave the project.

Additional Ventures

In 1996, Ice Cube co-founded Westside Connection alongside Mack 10 and W.C. Along with his solo career; he collaborated on two albums.

Ice Cube has its apparel brand, Solo by Cube, which sells hooded sweatshirts equipped with integrated headphones. Since 2011, he has served as the spokesperson for Coors Light beer.

On January 11, 2017, Ice Cube launched its new endeavor, Big3. Big3 is a concept pro basketball league comprised of former N.B.A. greats, and the first season premiered in June 2017.

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Ice Cube Private Life

On April 26, 1992, Ice Cube married Kimberly Woodruff. Together, they have four children: O’Shea Jr. (who represented him in the 2015 movie Straight Outta Compton), Darrell (b. 1992), Kaereema (b. 1994), and Shareef (b. 1995).

Terry Gross of NPR’s Fresh Air questioned Ice Cube in January 2005 about whether he allowed his children to listen to his music. “What has worked for me is establishing a sense of self-worth in my children and educating them about the substance of not just music, but also the violence on the evening news,” he said.

When asked what he tells his children about profanity, he stated that he had taught his children that there are opportune moments to use any language but that some terms should not be used among adults out of respect.

Residential Real Estate

Ice Cube spent $7.25 million on a house in Marina Del Rey, California, in May 2016. He acquired the property from Jean-Claude Van Damme, who purchased it for $6 million in 2012 as a brand new spec mansion. Cube and his wife also own a big house in Encino, California, which they purchased for $2.36 million in June 1996.

This property is on a 1.11-acre site and features seven bedrooms in a roughly 8,000-square-foot main house that includes a pool, jacuzzi, and full-size basketball court.

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