Too Short Siblings: Getting to Know Wayne Shaw

Too Short PHOTO/VIBE
Too Short, born Todd Anthony Shaw on April 28, 1966, in Los Angeles, California, is a pioneering American rapper, songwriter, and record producer.
Stylized as Too $hort, he rose to prominence in the late 1980s with his distinctive laid-back delivery, explicit lyrics often centered on street life, pimping, and freaky tales, and an independent hustle that defined his early career.
After moving with his family to Oakland, California, in the early 1980s, he became deeply embedded in the Bay Area’s vibrant rap scene, attending Fremont High School where he played drums in the band before transitioning fully to rapping.
Siblings
Too Short has one sibling, an older brother named Wayne Shaw.
Wayne, who was 61 years old at the time, was tragically shot and killed on January 29, 2025, in East Oakland during a botched robbery attempt while protecting a marijuana grow operation.
The loss deeply affected Too Short, who publicly mourned his brother in emotional videos and statements shared shortly after the incident.
Career
Too Short’s career began in the early 1980s when he started recording personalized raps and selling homemade tapes out of his car trunk in Oakland, building a grassroots following in the Bay Area.
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He released his first official album, Don’t Stop Rappin’, in 1983 under the local label 75 Girls, followed by a string of independent projects in the mid-1980s.
In 1987, his breakthrough came with Born to Mack, initially distributed independently through his Dangerous Music label before Jive Records picked it up for wider release, achieving gold certification without major radio support.
This success paved the way for Life Is…Too Short in 1988 (re-released nationally in 1989), which went platinum and solidified his status as a West Coast rap innovator.
Throughout the 1990s and beyond, he maintained a prolific output with platinum-selling albums like Short Dog’s in the House (1990), Shorty the Pimp (1992), and Get in Where You Fit In (1993), often collaborating with artists across hip-hop while staying true to his pimp-rap persona.
He briefly announced retirement after his 1996 album Gettin’ It (Album Number Ten) but returned strongly with projects like Can’t Stay Away (1999) and continued releasing music into the 2020s, including collaborative work with groups like Mount Westmore.
Accolades
Too Short received a nomination for Favorite Rap/Hip-Hop Artist at the 1991 American Music Awards and was honored at VH1’s Hip-Hop Honors in 2008 alongside legends like Cypress Hill, De La Soul, Slick Rick, and Naughty by Nature.
In a major civic tribute reflecting his deep Oakland roots, the city renamed a section of Foothill Boulevard as “Too $hort Way” in 2022 and declared December 10, 2022, as “Too $hort Day.”
His enduring legacy as a pioneer was further celebrated in events like the GRAMMY Salute to 50 Years of Hip-Hop, underscoring his impact on the genre’s West Coast sound and independent ethos.
