Then in 2005, the music Macgyver partnered with the everlasting King of Crunk aka Lil Jon and signed with Warner/BME. In 2006, not only did E-40 reposition himself, the Northern California music scene struck gold with the release of E-40's "My Ghetto Report Card." A swift 2 years later, he released his last album on Warner Brothers entitled the "Ball Street Journal." With proven successes while absorbing a weath of knowledge over the years E-40 simultaneously motivated his immediate offspring.
In 2010 he surpassed a new benchmark when he signed to Heavy on the Grind owned by his first son also Artist/Producer Droop-E. Together they released E-40's 13th and 14th albums entitled "Revenue Retrievin' Day Shift" and Revenue Retrievin' Night Shift." That very effort spun the Bay Area's famed Ambassador as on of the hottest commodities in Hip-Hop with the smash hit record "Bitch" featuring Too Short and 50 Cent. Empowering a familiar cliché that states, "If it's not broke, don't fix it" E-40 returns with yet another 2 album entrée entitled "Revenue Retrievin' Overtime shift" and Revenue Retrievin' Graveyard Shift"