It just sounds annoying and forced, right?
What I've found, as someone who has screwed around trying to write lyrics over the years, is this sort of thing tends to happen when someone is trying to write a verse with meaning in chronological order, starting at the beginning and working to the end of each line, and thinks of the perfect word or two to rhyme with a word or two fairly early in the previous line, but can't figure out how to finish the rhyme scheme with the remaining words in the previous line. I'll give you an example.
Let's say Eminem decides to write the line,
"Hailie thinks I'm an embarrassment to both her and her sisters"
His next thought may lead him to thinking, "every attempt I make to apologize DON'T WORK"...."YEAH, that's it, both her/don't work."
So Eminem hastily writes this down, because his writing process has changed. It's blatantly obvious when reading his lyrics off paper while listening to him actually rapping said lyrics that he no longer writes to the beat, but rather he writes what he wants on paper independently and then tries to improvise when he gets the beat, leading to forced, choppy deliveries.
So anyway, we have:
"Hailie thinks I'm an embarrassment to both her and her sisters
Every attempt I make to apologize don't work..." shiiiit, how do I finish this? What do I do about, "and her sisters?"
Eventually, he realizes he must start a new clause and carry it into the next line for an elongated, multiple-line clause.
"Hailie thinks I'm an embarrassment to both her and her sisters
Every attempt I make to apologize don't work and she's pissed, cuz ---> OVER to next line
I try to interfere with her dating all these douchebags in her class "
In the past, Eminem used to work in reverse. He wouldn't sit down and write line to line, he'd think of the subject matter and then think of various words/expressions that connected to what he'd want to say. You can see this on his lyrics sheets.
For instance, if he was working on Brain Damage, his stacked ammo would have a bunch of grouped words on the page like, "the janitor's storage booth/Kicked the door hinge loose/Ripped out the four-inch screws/brooms and foreign tools/took my orange juice." Then he'd get the beat and put it all together.
With the rhymes out of the way, he could work in reverse and make the line begin the way he wanted it to, which is much easier than trying to think of a way to complete the rhyme scheme, working line-to-line.
It's kind of similar to how modern freestylers like TheSaurus approach the challenge now. They think of the second line first, then create a punchline to go with it. TheSaurus thinks, "Look at this guy's Giants hat."
TheSaurus: All I know is that, this guy shouldn't even try to rap
Cuz all his lines are whack and he's a loser in that Giants hat
The point is, it's important not to box yourself in by forcing yourself to have to come up with the challenging part of your lyrics within the parameters of the set up lyrics.