Eminem’s The Eminem Show turns 23 this week, and it is still his most streamed project, staying on charts and in playlists.
The album that first dropped on May 26, 2002, has now passed a whopping 8.4 billion streams on Spotify — and it is still clocking around 3.5 million plays daily. Not bad for a record old enough to rent a car.
At the time of release, “The Eminem Show” was a shift in tone for Em. While it still carried his signature sharp tongue and twisted humour, it leaned more into rock production and personal reflection. It was also packed with social and political commentary, referencing everything from post-9/11 America to media pressure and personal turmoil. Fans saw a more grounded version of Em here, a step away from the cartoonish chaos of Slim Shady and closer to Marshall Mathers himself.
TES was the second-most played CD on computers a week before its release, something an unreleased title has never achieved before or after. It was not a record Eminem and his label aimed for, and a release date was pushed forward, giving the album only one day window on a chart-tracking week.
The album debuted at No.1 on the Billboard 200 and went on to become the best-selling album of 2002, both in the US and worldwide. It was the first album to hit the top spot based on just one day of sales, and it held strong from there, selling nearly 3 million copies in just four weeks. To date, it has moved over 27 million units globally, earned 12× Platinum status in the US, and reached No.1 in 18 countries, including the UK, Germany, and Australia.
Singles like “Without Me”, “Cleanin’ Out My Closet”, “Sing for the Moment”, and “‘Till I Collapse” remain fan favourites. And while it did not feature as much Slim Shady mayhem, Em still made room for the mischief — just with a more grown-up edge.
Eminem once said the album was inspired by the movie “The Truman Show” and that, at the time, his life felt like a circus where everyone was watching. “Basically, Jim Carrey wrote my album”, he wrote, presenting the TES 15th anniversary collection in 2017.
But behind the humour, there was serious introspection — the kind of emotional honesty that has helped the album stay relevant for more than two decades.
Whether you were around when it dropped or just discovered it now, “The Eminem Show” is still, well, a showstopper.
Listen to the album below: