What Now | John Cena And Tha Trademarc -
The track serves as the penultimate movement on the 2005 platinum-certified album You Can't See Me , acting as a moment of high-energy transition before the project’s introspective finale. While often overshadowed by the cultural juggernaut "The Time Is Now," "What Now" encapsulates the core philosophy of the John Cena and Tha Trademarc (Marc Predka) partnership: a blend of blue-collar work ethic, underground hip-hop sensibilities, and a defiant answer to their sudden mainstream success. The Architecture of the Collaboration
Musically, "What Now" benefits from the "gritty underground production" that defined the album, separating it from the polished pop-rap of the mid-2000s.
"What Now" functions as a rhetorical question aimed at critics who expected the album to be a flash-in-the-pan novelty. John Cena and tha Trademarc - What Now
: Cena’s verses on "What Now" are characterized by his "Doctor of Thuganomics" bravado—witty punchlines delivered with the booming projection of a stadium performer. Lyrical Themes: Defiance and The "Chain Gang"
: A recurring theme in the song is the dismissal of "industry" rappers in favor of raw talent. Trademarc’s lyrics often highlight his "knowledge of self" over monetary status, a sentiment he would later carry into his solo work and his time in TNA Wrestling. Cultural and Musical Impact The track serves as the penultimate movement on
The song is a masterclass in the chemistry between Cena and his first cousin, Tha Trademarc. Unlike the "gimmick" rap often associated with professional wrestlers, Cena’s approach was rooted in a genuine, lifelong obsession with the culture.
: Predka brought a gritty, technical underground edge to the track, often handling the more complex multi-syllabic rhyme schemes that gave the album its "street" credibility. "What Now" functions as a rhetorical question aimed
: The lyrics reinforce the "Chain Gang" ethos—a commitment to a tight-knit circle and a relentless work rate. This mirrored Cena’s real-world rise from a struggling trainee to the face of WWE.