celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Rap
Tag:

Rap

For the first time in 35 years, the Billboard Top 40 has no hip-hop or rap songs. Here’s why - National
Celebrity News

For the first time in 35 years, the Billboard Top 40 has no hip-hop or rap songs. Here’s why – National

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Starting in the late ’70s, hip-hop and rap ascended through popular culture, mostly in America but also in other countries.

Then, in 1990, a breakthrough. Hip-hop and rap tracks began infiltrating the Billboard Top 40, and for the next 35 years, we saw dozens of these songs reach official hit status. By the end of the decade, hip-hop/rap had supplanted rock as the nation’s cultudral driver when it came to music. It seemed unstoppable. America would forever be a hip-hop nation.

This month, however, a surprise. For the first time since 1990, the Billboard Top 40 was devoid of any hip-hop and rap.

What happened? Does this mean it’s on the decline and on the way out? Well, no. The genres are very alive and well. Its absence has more to do with the way charts are compiled these days than the popularity or strength of the songs.

Story continues below advertisement

Charts are the way the music industry keeps score with itself. The higher a song or album rises, the more opportunities for hype. Radio play increases, sales go up, and more people stream the songs. And at the end of the year, the record company executives measure themselves against each other over who had the most high-charting singles and albums.

And it used to be so simple. Charts were compiled based on sales and radio airplay. In the streaming era, there’s a complicated weighting system that tries to convert digital music consumption into old-school sales. One modern metric is the Track Equivalent Album (TEA). Under this formula, 10 digital song sales from the same album equal the sale of one album, thereby unifying digital sales with physical ones.


Billboard also has Streaming Equivalent Sales (SEA). This measurement counts on-demand plays of a song through Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music and all the other platforms. If 1,500 songs are streamed from the same album, that counts the same as an old-school sale of an album. Radio airplay plus sales and TEA and SEA are supposed to give the industry an accurate and complete picture of how a certain release is doing.

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Get daily National news

Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Put this all together and we have a chart compilation situation that is vastly different from what late broadcaster, Casey Kasem, used to count down every weekend. There’s plenty of gamesmanship happening.

When Taylor Swift puts out an album, like her latest, The Life of a Showgirl, Swifties buy up all the available physical copies of the record. There’s the standard vinyl release and seven additional variants, each with its own artwork and on various colours of vinyl. No Tay-Tay collection is complete without all of them, and each sale of a variant counts as an individual sale. Talk about juicing the numbers.

Story continues below advertisement

Swifties also stream her music by the tens of millions, increasing the SEA units for The Life of a Showgirl, pushing the album even further up the charts. And because streams also factor heavily in compiling the Billboard Hot 100 (which, of course, includes the official Top 40), Swift dominates. For the week ending Nov. 8,  the performer has three songs in the Top 10 and 12 in the Top 40, leaving just 28 spaces for everyone else.

Other artists are currently benefiting from the current chart rules. HUNTR/X (Huntrix), the fictional girl group from KPop Demon Hunters, is a streaming sensation with four songs in the current Top 40, leaving 24 spots — 23, if you count the song released by Rumi, Jinu, EJAE and Andrew Choi, the human voices behind HUNTR/X.

Then there are the Saja Boys, the fictional boy band from KPop Demon Hunters, who hold down two spots of their own.

Trending Now

  • The world’s tallest teenager — a Canadian — becomes tallest player in college basketball history

  • Ostrich cull complete at B.C. farm, flock of birds shot dead, CFIA says

Add in Morgan Wallen (two songs), Chris Brown (two songs) and Sabrina Carpenter (two songs), and there are only 17 spaces up for grabs. Those are divided up among pop artists like Olivia Dean, Alex Warren, Justin Bieber, Benson Boone, Tate McCrae and Kehlani.

Michael Jackson also made his annual appearance with Thriller (No. 32), which is always big around Halloween. There was only one debut last week, and that’s Love Girl from Megan Thee Stallion, which is more smooth R&B than anything else.

Story continues below advertisement

There’s another factor, too. Billboard just changed the rules regarding eligible songs. Luther by Kendrick Lamar and SZA was kicked out of the Top 40 after 46 weeks, including 13 weeks at No. 1. Why? Because it didn’t stick at No. 25 or higher after its 26th week on the chart. Boom. Gone. The song is now deemed “recurrent,” a radio term for a big hit that’s still popular after an extended period of time but no longer current. No Luther, no hip-hop/rap in the Hot 100.

Have your eyes glazed over yet? If they have, I don’t blame you. I do this for a living, and I’m having a hard time staying awake.

Remember all this the next time someone tells you that Taylor Swift is bigger than The Beatles. When they were around, Billboard operated its charts much differently. Comparing The Beatles’ chart performance to Tay-Tay’s is silly since the rules are vastly different. It’s not just apples and oranges. It’s apples and mushrooms.

Does this mean that hip-hop/rap is on the way out? Hardly. It’s a quirk of the mathematics involved in compiling charts, combined with the phenomenon of Taylor Swift and KPop Demon Hunters.

YoungBoy Never Broke Again; BigXthaPlug and Ella Langley are rap tracks bubbling under at the moment. They’ll probably advance upwards as Tay-Tay and the Demon Hunters are streamed less, and hip-hop/rap will return to the Top 40.

Story continues below advertisement

Anyone who grew up with Top 40 radio in the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s was exposed to a wide variety of sounds and genres. Not so much anymore, right? The Billboard charts may matter less than they ever did.

 

 

Curator Recommendations

  • Make way for winter with these snow removal essentials

  • 12 great gifts for hosts with the most

&copy 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

November 9, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
No Rap Songs In Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 For 1st Time Since 1990 As Kendrick Lamar & SZA's "Luther" Exits Chart
Celebrity News

No Rap Songs In Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 For 1st Time Since 1990 As Kendrick Lamar & SZA’s “Luther” Exits Chart

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Kendrick Lamar, SZA

No Rap Songs In Billboard Hot 100
Top 40 For 1st Time Since 1990 As Kendrick Lamar & SZA’s “Luther” Exits Chart

For the first time in 35 years, the Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 features zero rap songs following the exit of #KendrickLamar and #SZA’s song “Luther.”

The departure comes after #Billboard implemented a rule change that altered its retention criteria: songs must now hit certain thresholds, such as top 5 within 78 weeks or top 25 within 26 weeks, to remain on the chart. “Luther” dropped off despite finishing at No. 38, because it “failed to reach No. 25 after 26 weeks on the chart.”

The absence of rap in the Top 40 signals a shift in the genre’s commercial standing. Billboard noted this is “the latest sign of a recent dip in rap’s commercial dominance.” While rap tracks still appear lower on the chart, such as #YoungBoyNeverBrokeAgain at No. 44 and #CardiB at No. 48, none currently crack the Top 40.


October 30, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
50 Cent's A.I. Diss Track Could Mark A New Frontier In Rap Beef
Music

50 Cent’s A.I. Diss Track Could Mark A New Frontier In Rap Beef

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

50 Cent is notorious for welcoming all challengers in petty clashes, but the mogul recently utilized a new tool for his verbal art of war: artificial intelligence.

On Tuesday (Oct. 28), 50 Cent dropped a calculated social-media salvo: he uploaded photos of himself aboard a private jet on Instagram, paired with a short clip featuring a soulful A.I.-generated song aimed at Jim Jones, with a playful dig at fellow G-Unit member Tony Yayo.

In the brief audio clip, a male-sounding A.I. vocal opens by expressing Fif’s disappointed in Yayo’s delayed response to Jim Jones, who called Yayo “broke” and criticized the rapper’s hygiene during a recent podcast interview.

Tony Yayo attends 50 Cent Hosts Sapphire at Sapphire New York on April 23, 2023 in New York City.

Shareif Ziyadat/Getty Images

“50’s mad because Yayo let Jimmy talk tough and he ain’t answer back,” the voice sings while scenes of Fif and Yayo boarding a private jet plays in the clip.

“How you let that fake blood talk to you like that/ Somebody gotta pay/ Or no more jet flights/ Back to first class,” the faux song continues, with a chorus of A.I. background vocals furthering taking additional shots at the Harlem rep.

“Jimmy ain’t tough/ Jimmy ain’t like that/ How you let that crack baby say you smoke crack.” The private-jet backdrop dramatizes the “somebody gotta pay” and “or no more jet flights” lines.

50 Cent

Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson attends WE TV’s “Hip Hop Homicides” New York Premiere at Crosby Street Hotel on November 10, 2022 in New York City.

Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

The second stanza of the track includes slick wordplay referencing Uncle Murda’s annual “Rap Up” recap, as well as calls for Cam’ron to intervene and put an end to Jones’ pointed comments.

“Murda, rap ’em up, it’s a motherf**king wrap/ Don’t make me have to get the strap/ I’m calling Cam/ Come get ‘cha mans” before the clip ends.

To fully grasp the context: the simmering discord between 50 Cent, Cam’ Ron and Jim Jones stretches back to the mid-2000s.

Jim Jones

Rapper Jim Jones performs during week four of the BIG3 three-on-three basketball league at Barclays Center on July 14, 2019 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.

Mike Stobe/BIG3/Getty Images

Cam’ Ron has publicly addressed how the original conflict manifested when Jones appeared on stage with 50 during Cam’s beef era on several occasion.

“We were having interior problems at Dipset. … So when me and [50 Cent] were battling, you had members of Dipset to come to your show,” Cam recalled during Fif’s appearance on his Talk WIth Flee podcast in December 2024.

“When ni**as went on stage, I was like, ‘This sh*t is spinning out [of control]. It was a checkmate moment,’” he admitted.

50 Cent

Cam’ron speaks onstage during “It Is What It Is Podcast. Special guest: Sexyy Red” at attends ComplexCon 2025 at the Las Vegas Convention Center on October 25, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Bryan Steffy/Getty Images for Complex

Jones would take umbrage to Cam and Fif mentioning his name during the podcast, responding on Justin LaBoy’s Respectfully podcast shortly after, sparking a drawn out back and forth between all parties involved.

Now, 50 Cent’s use of A.I. to craft a soul-song diss signals a modern evolution of his trolling strategy — merging social-media visuals, private-jet flexing and technology-driven audio to humiliate Jim Jones while aligning himself again with Cam’ Ron’s camp. The result: a next-level one-two in a decades-old New York rap war.

See 50 Cent’s Instagram post and A.I. diss track below.

October 29, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
bitchy | A federal judge dismissed Drake’s lawsuit against UMG, a rap battle isn’t ‘against the law’
Celebrity News

bitchy | A federal judge dismissed Drake’s lawsuit against UMG, a rap battle isn’t ‘against the law’

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Last year, Drake and Kendrick Lamar’s years-long simmering beef came to a boil. First it was Kendrick’s verse on Future & Metro’s “Like That.” Then Drake spent weeks trying to goad Kendrick into a rap battle. Kendrick finally responded, dropping four songs in less than a week. The last two songs, “Meet the Grahams” and “Not Like Us” came out within 24 hours, and they were perfectly executed disses. “Not Like Us” became the song of the year (literally, it won the Grammy for SOTY) and Kendrick even performed “Not Like Us” and “Euphoria” during the Super Bowl Halftime. Drake has not been the same since. Instead of just licking his wounds, taking the L like a man and going away for a year, Drake decided to make a horse’s ass out of himself in like twenty different ways. Notably, Drake sued UMG – his label, and the label which has a licensing deal with Kendrick’s pgLang. In his lawsuit, Drake claimed that UMG *wanted* Kendrick to beat him in the rap battle, and UMG helped Kendrick in some way which Drake could never prove. Well, long story short, a judge just threw out Drake’s lawsuit. Hahahaha LOSER.

A federal judge on Thursday (Oct. 9) dismissed Drake’s defamation lawsuit against Universal Music Group over Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us,” ruling that a “war of words” during a “heated rap battle” did not violate the law.

Drake’s case, filed earlier this year, claimed that UMG defamed him by releasing Lamar’s scathing diss track, which tarred his arch-rival as a “certified pedophile.” He believed that millions of people took that lyric literally, severely harming his reputation. But just ten months later, Judge Jeannette Vargas granted UMG’s motion to dismiss the case at the outset – ruling that Kendrick’s insulting lyrics were the kind of “hyperbole” that cannot be defamatory because listeners would not think they were statements of fact.

“The artists’ seven-track rap battle was a ‘war of words’ that was the subject of substantial media scrutiny and online discourse,” the judge wrote. “Although the accusation that plaintiff is a pedophile is certainly a serious one, the broader context of a heated rap battle, with incendiary language and offensive accusations hurled by both participants, would not incline the reasonable listener to believe that ‘Not Like Us’ imparts verifiable facts about plaintiff.”

The ruling marks an abrupt end to a legal battle that stunned the music industry. Few expected a rapper to respond to a diss track with a lawsuit – a move that drew ridicule in the hip hop world and condemnation from legal scholars. Fewer still expected him to file it against UMG, his longtime record label and the biggest music company in the world.

Drake’s attorneys can appeal the ruling to a federal appeals court. His attorneys did not immediately return a request for comment. A spokesman for UMG also did not immediately return a request for comment.

[From Billboard]

While I didn’t follow the minute details of this lawsuit, I saw enough to say that UMG actually took the right position at the start of the beef. UMG’s management basically chose to sit on the sidelines and let the rap battle play out. They didn’t choose sides – they just didn’t “help” Drake, which is why he sued them. He’s spent the past decade getting high from his own supply, and he thought his label would tip the scale in his favor. All of the things he accused UMG of – without evidence, mind you – was projection, I believe. Drake thought UMG was doing all of that against him, because he was used to UMG propping him up.

Here’s the “Not Like Us” video again. It has over 403 million views. The YT video of just the song (with Megan’s Law markers over Drake’s house) has over 258 million views.

Photos courtesy of Backgrid, Avalon Red, Drake’s IG. Screencaps courtesy of the “NLU” video and the NFL/Super Bowl.

Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show, Caesars Superdome, New Orleans, LA, USA – 09 Feb 2025 DJ Mustard performing with Kendrick Lamar during the Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show. New Orleans Caesars Superdome, LA USA, UK NEWSPAPERS OUT Copyright: xSeanxRyanx,Image: 962058324, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: imago is entitled to issue a simple usage license at the time of provision. Personality and trademark rights as well as copyright laws regarding art-works shown must be observed. Commercial use at your own risk., Model Release: no, Credit line: IMAGO/Sean Ryan/Avalon/Avalon
Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show, Caesars Superdome, New Orleans, LA, USA – 09 Feb 2025 Kendrick Lamar during the Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show New Orleans Caesars Superdome, LA USA, UK NEWSPAPERS OUT Copyright: xSeanxRyanx,Image: 962059169, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: imago is entitled to issue a simple usage license at the time of provision. Personality and trademark rights as well as copyright laws regarding art-works shown must be observed. Commercial use at your own risk., Model Release: no, Credit line: IMAGO/Sean Ryan/Avalon/Avalon
Apple Music Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show, Caesars Superdome, New Orleans, LA, USA – 09 Feb 2025 Kendrick Lamar during the Super Bowl LIX Halftime Show New Orleans Caesars Superdome, LA USA, UK NEWSPAPERS OUT Copyright: xSeanxRyanx,Image: 962060515, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: imago is entitled to issue a simple usage license at the time of provision. Personality and trademark rights as well as copyright laws regarding art-works shown must be observed. Commercial use at your own risk., Model Release: no, Credit line: IMAGO/Sean Ryan/Avalon/Avalon


New York, NY – Rapper Drake exudes sophistication as he steps out for an evening dinner at his favorite NYC hotspot, Mamo, in SoHo

Pictured: Drake

BACKGRID USA 13 NOVEMBER 2023

BYLINE MUST READ: BlayzenPhotos / BACKGRID

USA: +1 310 798 9111 / [email protected]

UK: +44 208 344 2007 / [email protected]

*UK Clients – Pictures Containing Children
Please Pixelate Face Prior To Publication*

New York, NY – Drake enjoys a day off from his “It’s All A Blur/Big As The What? tour with dinner at Mamo Italian restaurant in New York

Pictured: Drake

BACKGRID USA 1 APRIL 2024

BYLINE MUST READ: BlayzenPhotos / BACKGRID

USA: +1 310 798 9111 / [email protected]

UK: +44 208 344 2007 / [email protected]

*UK Clients – Pictures Containing Children
Please Pixelate Face Prior To Publication*




October 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Rap Artists Whose Music Honors Assata Shakur's Revolutionary Spirit
Music

Rap Artists Whose Music Honors Assata Shakur’s Revolutionary Spirit

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Hip-Hop, at its very foundation, has always been more than beats and rhymes — it has been a vessel for survival, resistance, and rebellion.

Born in the Bronx during the 1970s, the culture emerged as a way to channel poverty, oppression, and sociopolitical strife into creative expression and communal strength. That defiant spirit mirrored, and in many ways carried forward, the ethos of the revolutionary movements that preceded it.

The music and the figures behind it were spiritual successors to the Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army of the late ’60s and ’70s, organizations that dared to empower young people of color to challenge authority, reclaim their dignity, and speak truth to power.

Among the most iconic figures to emerge from that revolutionary era was Assata Shakur. Born Joanne Chesimard in New York, she became active in activism during her college years, first joining the Black Panther Party before transitioning to the Black Liberation Army.

Outspoken and unyielding in her defense of Black lives, Shakur became a polarizing figure in the eyes of the American government.

In 1973, she and two other BLA members were involved in a violent shootout with New Jersey State Troopers on the New Jersey Turnpike. One officer was killed, another was wounded, and one of the BLA members was fatally shot.

Assata Shakur

Bettmann / Contributor

Though Shakur maintained her innocence, she was convicted of first-degree murder in 1977 and sentenced to life plus 26 to 33 years. Two years later, she staged one of the most famous prison escapes in U.S. history, ultimately finding political asylum in Cuba in 1984.

While the FBI branded her a fugitive and threat to society, Hip-Hop embraced her as something far greater: a freedom fighter, a survivor, and a symbol of uncompromising defiance against systemic oppression.

Considered an “aunt” to the late Tupac Shakur, Assata was revered not only by her nephew but also by countless artists who found in her story a reflection of Hip-Hop’s own struggle — marginalized voices fighting to be heard in the face of power.

Assata Shakur

Bettmann / Contributor

Her revolutionary spirit continues to echo through the music, referenced in verses and honored in interviews, a reminder that Hip-Hop is inseparable from the struggle that birthed it. To this day, Assata Shakur remains a beacon of love, resilience, and pride for Black people — a figure whose life, though fraught with controversy, has forever shaped the cultural consciousness of Hip-Hop.

Following her passing on Sept. 25, 2025, at the age of 78, she leaves behind not just a legacy of resistance, but a blueprint for artists who dare to stand defiantly against the forces that seek to silence them.

In celebration of her life and legacy, VIBE highlights more than 50 artists who kept Assata Shakur’s name alive in exile through their music. These lyrics and displays of homage will continue to resonate and introduce her to future generations of listeners and potential revolutionaries.

  • 2Pac

    Tupac Shakur
    Image Credit: Steve Granitz Archive/WireImage

    “New Afrikan Panthers, America’s nightmare/ Mutulu Shakur, America’s nightmare/ Geronimo Pratt, America’s nightmare/ Assata Shakur, America’s nightmare.” – 2Pac, “Words of Wisdom”

    –

    “Assata Shakur?”/ Another auntie, I miss her though/ Please thank Mr. Castro for keepin’ her safe bro/ How many more of us die before we can see the light/ It’s time brothers work it out, unite for a bigger fight.” – 2Pac, “Tearz of a Clown”

  • Nas

    Nas
    Image Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

    “Y’all dudes will never see me down/ Reading everything, books and body language/ Du Bois, Baldwin, and Chavis/ Assata, John Hope Franklin, Angela Davis.” Nas, “Stay Chisel”

    –

    “Football wives, basketball wives/ Mistresses slash more tires with knives/ They lookin’ for a dollar/ I’m lookin’ for a JoAnne Chesimard to turn to a shotta.” – Nas, “Royalty”

  • Killer Mike

    Killer Mike
    Image Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

    “When I surface on the streets I can hear the crowd yelling/ And see the neighborhood snitches pointing and telling/ I’m bailing like a felon or Assata Shakur/ Before the law leave me stinking like a bag of manure.” – Killer Mike, “Don’t Die”

    –

    “The U.S. government has a million dollar bounty on the head of Assata Shakur/ Y’all ni**as go on the internet, check that sh*t out, man/ That was Pac aunt, she in exile right now in Cuba/ Don’t let them bring our mamas home man and put her in no cage/ Just a little consciousness for all y’all wanna be rap trap motherf**kers.” – Killer Mike, “Long A** Outro”

    –

    “Thick with her a**, she in some Betty Shabazz, pretty as Coretta Scott/ All that I got, she got the face of a model/ She got the heart of Assata/ She from the gutter, my ni**a/ Wife and a mother, my ni**a/ Winnie Mandela, my ni**a.” – Killer Mike, “Down By Law”

    –

    “Black lives matter? Then prove it/ Grab a black Glocker, make them coppers face the music/ They try to tell me, ‘Mikey, but your papa was a copper’/ I tell ’em, ‘Suck my d**k because my auntie is Assata’/ And then I double down and tell them something twice as hard/ Jesus is a fraud, the black woman is god.” Bobby Sessions featuring Killer Miker, “Black Neighborhood”

  • Common

    Common
    Image Credit: Rebecca Sapp/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

    “In the Spirit of God/ In the Spirit of the ancestors/ In the Spirit of the Black Panthers
    In the Spirit of Assata Shakur/ We make this movement towards freedom/ For all those who have been oppressed/ And all those in the struggle.”
    – Common, “A Song For Assata”

    –

    “My man went to Cuba/ Caught in a political triangle, Bermuda/ The same way they said she was the shooter/ Assata Shakur, they tried to execute her/ I went to Cuba to see her/ We should free her, like we should Mumia.” – Common featuring JAY-Z, “Open Letter Pt. II”

    –

    “Child of a fresher God/ Influenced by the life of the former, Joanne Chesimard/ Assata Shakur, I gotta do more/ The light-skinned spook who got in the door/ I got in here for the same thing Cassius Clay uses pottery for.” – Common, “Pyramids”

  • Rapsody

    Rapsody
    Image Credit: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Billboard

    “I came through the rain, and I came through the thunder/ I push through the pain; I’m laughin’ at summer/ My hell was way hotter—I feel like Assata/ Escape with my truth; I came back like Nirvana.” – Rapsody, “Back In My Bag”

    –

    “Nobody know nada/ We all know the fate of Assata if Cuba don’t harbor/ Nobody know I’m harder on myself than lonely fathers/ Watching Mrs. Parker, these days nobody know who authored/ Rhymes of rappers on carpets.” – Rapsody, “Nobody”

    –

    “Bullets burn; they Holocaust us, ashes to our daughters/ Pray our sons have granddaughters and live to be grandfathers/ Dedicated to Assata, broke our fourth chakra/ In memory of the Rasta who forewarned us for Breonna.” – Rapsody, “He Shot Me”

  • Black Thought

    Black Thought
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for GQ

    “Dear white people, I am not your negro/ Yeah, Black people, y’all just got your hero/ All these rap demons I’m about to Deebo/ Me and Assata, my ATLien alter ego.” – Sa-Roc featuring Black Thought, “The Black Renaissance”

    –

    “It’s a long drawn out saga, like The Godfather/ Coming up this hard, it made a n**ga rock solid/ Now I be the top shotter, heart of a Rottweiler/ The boss that learned to move cautious as Assata.” – DANGERDOOM featuring Black Thought, “Mad Nice”

  • Public Enemy

    Public Enemy
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images


    “Flow on, the project, the pop off/ Low tempo to go off/ COINTEL better go to hell/ Bout that time hear the bell y’all/ Gotta lotta nerve never knowing Assata/ Gotcha mind wading in the water.” Public Enemy – “Gotta Give The Peeps What They Want”

  • Talib Kweli

    Talib Kweli
    Image Credit: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Ozy Fusion Fest 2017

    “The highest caliber make it a night to remember like Shalamar/ Then escape to Havana with Assata I do what I gotta/ Planes get shot down in Cuban air space over the water/ I got insight it’s a clear case of reading your aura.” – Reflection Eternal featuring Yasiin Bey, Mr. Man, “Fortified Live”

    –

    “She’s earth, wind and fire, don’t tempt her to show her power/ Turning all weeds to flowers/ Looking into her wise eyes will make a blind man see/ How can you dare name a eurocentric girl after me?/ Assata Shakur Barbara Jordan Nikki Giovanni and Angela Davis/ Look it up!/ These are the real symbols of liberty.” – Talib Kweli, “Manifest Destiny”

    –

    “I got love for every artist, I’m more than just a product/ I’ve been a prisoner, see Mumia, I’ve been to Cuba to see Assata/ Way before Mr. and Mrs. Carter went on a dinner date/ I had to send the lyrics ahead of time before I hit the stage.” – Talib Kweli, “5AM In Brooklyn

  • Dead Prez

    Dead Prez
    Image Credit: Evan Agostini/Getty Images

    “This is for Mumia and Sundiata, Herman Bell, we got ya/ Mutulu Shakur, we want you free with Assata/ And Giuliani, yo, you can swim with the lobsters/ I hope you mobsters lose your livers to the vodka.” – Dead Prez, “Together”

    —

    “Yes, they really invading your home/ And if you’re really looking for Assata Shakur/ She right here, it’s me, her and 2Pac over here having a beer/ Cheers, a toast to a lovely revolution/ What’s hush hush they know what we doing.” – M1, “Confidential”

  • Fatal Hussein

    Fatal Hussein
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “Roddy shot Yak, Mu took the Shahada/ I had another baby girl, and I named her Assata/ Her middle name your last name, her family tree/ I can’t help but think where we would be.” – Fatal Hussein, “Letter To Pac”

    –

    “If I don’t make it home tonight/ Kiss Assata and tell her daddy got it on tonight/ If it’s meant to be I be back the same way she was sending me/ And I ain’t gotta finish the century, gotta ’em history.” – Fatal Hussein, “Blocka Blocka”

  • Sean Price

    Sean Price
    Image Credit: Mike Lawrie/Getty Images

    “Slap a, bi**h boy knock his tooth out his grill/ Sean Price be the truth in the ‘Ville, listen/ If ya, knock on my door I’m cockin the four/ Great escape from the law like Assata Shakur.” – Sean Price, “King Kong”

  • Shock G

    Shock G
    Image Credit: Earl Gibson III/Getty Images

    “Afrika Bambaataa, Miles motherf**king Davis/ Sister Assata Shakur, once known as Joanne Chesimard.” – Digital Underground, “Heartbeat Props”

  • Rome Streetz

    Rome Streetz
    Image Credit: Gary Gershoff/Getty Images

    “Went platinum off the product to pay the rent, and cop the Prada/ My bi**h a model but she down to pop it like Assata/ Vow to let no snake in the grass divide us/ Dip the bogie in the juice if they tryin to buy dust.” – DJ Mugg featuring Rome Streetz, “Ace Of Swords”

  • Sa-Roc

    Assata Shakur
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET

    “They try to censor me, instantly on a hundred/ Named Assata, makes sense I’ma be the most wanted/ Wanna send for me, got the sentry on the hunt/ With that rrah soundin’ like a freaking symphony, son.” – Sa-Roc, “40 And A Mule”

    –

    “I ain’t new to this profession, I’m established in it/ Any challenge to the status quo would be a cataclysm/ Cuz I’m Assata with the good hair-9 ether/ I have em pissing lemonade when I arrive eager.” – Sa-Roc, “Queen Ting”

  • Kxng Crooked

    KXNG Crooked
    Image Credit: Tiffany Rose/Getty Images for Smoke Big Documentary

    “Conspiracy theories fueled the rumors/ Slaughterhouse faked they death and moved to Cuba/ Yeah, they with Assata now, the group is not around/ Ni**as went solo like Bobby Brown.” – KXNG Crooked, “Sorry”

  • Styles P

    Styles
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for ESSENCE


    “They say payback’s a motherf**king ni**a/ That explains why I’m sick of getting treated like a goddamn step-child/ Living like Assata, I’m an exile/ Gotta climb out of my skin, just like a reptile.” – Styles P, “Cause I’m Black”

  • Flatbush Zombies

    Flatbush Zombies
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “My grandfather, he live through me/ In the night, sometimes I feel like his voice is talkin’ to me/ Connected to a higher power, they couldn’t find me like Assata/ Weh dem a do like Mavado, and I’ma shoot if I gotta.” – Flatbush Zombies featuring RZA, “Quentin Tarantino”

  • JID

    JID
    Image Credit: Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images


    “Y’all need some lovin’ in your life/ A little Giovanni by your side/ A little of Assata’s all I need/ A little bit of Angela Davis and Ruby Dee.” – Alkebulan, “W4R” by JID & 6LACK featuring OG Maco

  • Stephen Marley

    Stephen Marley
    Image Credit: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

    “It’s foul how the youth glued to the television/ Ain’t heard of Assata but twitter following Paris Hilton/ It’s only right we want to be more than poor and righteous but/ Even the rich today can’t ignore the crisis in Babylon.” – Stephen Marley, “Babylon”

  • Freddie Gibbs

    Freddie Gibbs
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

    “Prick my finger, Alfredo, Illuminati/ Joe Pesci, pushing product/ You ni**as is sweeter than Joe Exotic/ On the run like Assata, so f**k the police/ As a ni**a be chillin’ in La Habana.” – Freddie Gibbs & The Alchemist, “1985”

  • Yasiin Bey

    Yasiin Bey
    Image Credit: Arturo Holmes/Getty Images

    “All our loved ones behind the walls/ All of those still in the struggle/ Assata, Mumia/ Sundiata/ My man Jamil, life is real/ To all the real soldiers, black people/ We family, y’all Let it be bright.” – Yasiin Bey, “Sunshine”

  • Vic Mensa

    Vic Mensa
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET

    “Rockin’ Prada leathers bought my chick a Saffiano/ Gelato in the fronto, it’s thick as a Cubano/ Touched down in Havana, just to holla at a Assata/ When they stop me at customs, I know nada.” – Vic Mensa, “Clipse Freestyle”

  • Billy Woods

    Billy Woods
    Image Credit: Facebook

    “Is that stupid or gangster?/ Is that flight or bammer?/ Mumia, if I had a hammer/ You’d be with Assata in Havana.” – billy woods, “High Treason”

    –

    “Temple Grandin, keep the cattle calm/ Side-saddle, took Carrie to the prom/ Joanne Chesimard, windows open, nights warm/ Power cuts, no ice, so the cuba libre’s strong.” – billy woods, “Smith + Cross”

  • Noname

    Noname
    Image Credit: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Coachella

    “We seen ’em murder the indigenous, the Passage Middle/ The Constitution, a life for a bag of Skittles/ So when we bleed, I load the sacred pistol/ And if you need, I’ll read Assata with you/ And if you rich, I pray that God forgive you.” – Anderson .Paak featuring Noname, “Lockdown (Remix)”

  • Nick Cannon

    Nick Cannon
    Image Credit: Robin L Marshall/Getty Images for ESSENCE

    “This for Rosa and Coretta, Assata and Loretta/ Betty, Roseta, Angela, Mahalia/ Dr. Bethune, Sojourner, she the truth/ I do it for the culture, the new Oprah in the booth.” – Nick Cannon, “The Invitation Is Cancelled”

  • Smino

    Smino
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for BET)


    “Silk the chakra, I’m tuned in with Assata/ From womb, been a lil prodigy/ New boo, like Rapunzel/ I love her the long way like PeeWee/ Spit shine like kiwi, for a hour, it make life more easy.” – Smino, “Black Luv Ain’t Dead”

  • Arrested Development

    Arrested Development
    Image Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

    “Freedom is our right, we demand that/ Possessed with the spirits of the Black Panthers/ The MOVE Organization/ Nat Turner/ Assata/ David Walker.” – Arrested Development, “Pride”

  • Denzel Curry

    Denzel Curry
    Image Credit: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    “Anti-American, I’m pro-Assata/ Write rhymes like a scholar, all about a dollar/ Dollar equals Allah, put away the scouters/ You won’t see my power, this your final hour.” – Denzel Curry, “Hate Government”

  • Grand Puba

    Grand Puba
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “Now if this falls short, I’ll try harder/ A wisdom to me is someone like Assata/ I’d like to say peace to Bambaata.” – Grand Puba, “Brand Nubian”

  • Paris

    Paris
    Image Credit: Raymond Boyd/Getty Images

    “So many things that I seen on tour/ Took a trip down to Cuba, met Assata Shakur/ Had dinner with Fidel, talked about hard times/ And now America’s steady tryna destroy minds.” – Paris, “Check It Out Ch’All (Alternate Version)”

    —

    “We the same thang/ That’s why the media is givin’ us the same names/ Convicts strikin’ Assata, the same game/ Settin’ up the same circumstances in the barrio and in the hood ’til we gangbang.” – Paris, “One Gun”

  • Saul Williams

    Saul Williams
    Image Credit: Jason Mendez/Getty Images

    “Yeah, I became militant too/ So it was clear on every level I was blacker than you/ I turned you on to Malcolm X and Assata Shakur/ In my three quarter elephant goose with the fur.” – Saul Williams, “Black Stacey”

  • Saigon

    Saigon
    Image Credit: Brad Barket/Getty Images

    “They said all I had to do was just follow the for-/Mula you does, and you gon’ be popular boy/ See, what they fail to realize is I rhyme for the cause/ And got the same mind frame as Assata Shakur.” – Saigon, “The Game Changer”

  • Blu

    Blu
    Image Credit: Chelsea Lauren/WireImage

    “Al Sharpton, Fred Hampton, Oprah Winfrey/ Barack Obama, Assata Shakur, Tupac Shakur, Biggie/ And everyone else creating black history/ That lives with me everyday, until I’m gone.” – Blu & Exile, “Roots Of Blue”

    –

    “Yeah and ain’t an artist as pure behind bars like Assata Shakur/ Slap cops, peace to Zsa Zsa Gabor, tell ’em pardon my gore/ Had flashbacks, started a war/ What a loss got caught in a storm.” – Blu, “BeGo(o)D!”

    –

  • Killah Priest

    Killah Priest
    Image Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images


    “Taught to pray hard, he would answer/ But he never answered the prayers from the Panthers/ From Stokely Carmichael, Geronimo Pratt, Assata Shakur/ We adore.” – Killah Priest, “The Beloved (DJ Wool Remix)”

  • Meshell Ndegeocello

    Meshell Ndegeocello
    Image Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Tribeca Film Festival

    “If you desire to be confrontational like Sojourner Truth/ If you wish to be audacious like Audrey Lord, antagonistic like Angela Davis/ Gangsta like Winnie Mandela, angry like Assata Shakur/ Come roar with us in the corner, sit beside us in schools/ Chant with us in church, vote with us and for us at the pole.” – Meshell Ndegeocello, “Tsunami Rising”

  • Chino XL

    Chino XL
    Image Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images


    “I took a deep breath leaving everything I knew behind/ The country air, the green grass and my piece of mind/ Harassed by white cops on our way, we’re pulled out our car/ Mistook my mom for Joanne Chessimar, now I’m really scarred.” – Chino XL, “What Am I?”

  • Blackalicious

    Blackalicious
    Image Credit: Rick Diamond/WireImage

    “I am the might of common law/ Kumbaya Chronicle/ Got piranha flow/ Jungles beside a hole/ Songs that Assata told Geronimo Pratt.” – Blackalicious, “Aural Pleasure”

  • Mr. Muthaf**king’ Exquire

    Mr. Muthafucking' Exquire
    Image Credit: Roger Kisby/Getty Images

    “Start out with her brain/ Not so that she’s trained but to make sure that she’s sane/ Funny like Kim Wayans/ But strong Assata Shakur.” – Mr. Muthafucking’ Exquire, “Build A Bi**h”

  • MARCO PLUS

    MARCO PLUS
    Image Credit: YouTube

    “Black panther in the booth, Fred Hampton picked my suit/ And then I smoked a spliff with Huey and Queen Assata did my hair/ Yo team silent, we the livest up in here/ So keep quiet cuz I speak knowledge but I preach violence up in here.” – MARCO PLUS, “Lately”

  • Lowkey

    Lowkey
    Image Credit: Martin Pope/Getty Images

    “Men make them, but the women get harmed in wars/ I pray for a heart as pure as Assata Shakur‘s/ We put them down, but on the pedestal we should put them/ Behind every good man, there’s a good women.” – Lowkey, “Something Wonderful”

  • Marlon Craft

    Marlon Craft
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “We live in a time when something’s gotta be more/ Where everyone who post a meme is Assata Shakur/ Where we live on explore pages but don’t gotta explore/ And everything they got in store, they done got in a store.” Marlon Craft, “Bars On I-95 Freestyle”

  • Brother Ali

    Brother Ali
    Image Credit: C Flanigan/Getty Images

    “Trying to open eyes, organize, and build power/ I know all about the hell I’m trying to get out of/ Two million dollars on sister Assata’s head/ It’s when you really get it poppin’ that they want you dead.” – Bambu featuring Brother Ali & Odessa Kane, “Illuminotme”

  • Nick Grant

    Nick Grant
    Image Credit: Paras Griffin/Getty Images for Universal Studios

    “If I take this peace sign, and I aim it at the coppers/ Would they take me for a threat, or just lay me out unconscious?/ Can’t explain this to my mamma/ No relation to Assata/ But these women strong and black, they been this way since a minor.” – Nick Grant, “Window Seat”

  • Cambatta

    Cambatta
    Image Credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage

    “Aim it at their black 750 arm strong and steady/ Let off one shot for every song on the Makaveli/ I’m sorry for your mom Afeni/ I like your aunt Assata heavy/ If you live I hope you go to Cuba/ I hope they got my million dollars ready.” – Cambatta, “Tupac Murder Confession”

  • Jasiri X

    Jasiri X
    Image Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

    “See Trump then gun but him now he’s really deaf/ That light skinned rapper blacker than Biggie’s neck/ Militant hardcore like them boys in Quantico/ With Assata in the chopper coming to close Guantanamo.” – Jasiri X, “P.O.W.E.R.”

  • Jamila Woods

    Jamila Woods
    Image Credit: Bennett Raglin/Getty Images for Slow Factory

    “Sojourner was a freedom fighter/ And she taught us how to fight/ Assata was a freedom fighter/ And she taught us how to fight.” – Jamila Woods, “Blk Girl Soldier”

  • Truck North

    Truck North
    Image Credit: YouTube

    “It’s automatic/ The devil calls it magic/Nah this ain’t no Harry Potter more like Garvey and Assata/ Tussle with wicked warriors from Africa to Georgia/ Watts to Copenhagen, slaughter pagans up in Persia.” – Truck North & The 3rd, “Out There”

  • Zion I

    Baba Zumbi
    Image Credit: Miikka Skaffari / Contributor

    “Yo, renegade rap writer/ Cadillac rider/ Track inside, I spray verbal Mac hot/ Blast the gat, lick a shot/ Then run like Assata/ Head to the hills, post no bills Don Dada.” – Zion I, “Target Practice”

  • Elucid

    Elucid
    Image Credit: YouTube

    “The Wi-Fi name is Assata Is Safe Here/ The pass code transposed and notated between kick and the snare/ For whosoever believe, feelin’ Beastie, Paul Revere/ It’s all gone square, sand shiftin’, a brief history.” – Armand Hammer, “Tread Lightly”

  • Bambu

    Bambu
    Image Credit: Instagram

    “And later as I grew up/ I found more connection in a book than in the hood I grew up/ Girls I used to fuck with used to bug/ When I request that we skip the DVDs and grab Assata off the shelf.” – Bambu, “Books”

  • PHZ-Sicks

    PHZ-Sicks
    Image Credit: X

    “My Angela Davis. black women/ My Nikki Giovanni, black women/ My Michelle Obama, black women/ My Maya Angelou, black women/ My Assata Shakur, black women/ My Josephine Baker, black women.” PHZ-Sicks, “Black Women”

October 2, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Latin rap star Bad Bunny to play the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show - National
Celebrity News

Latin rap star Bad Bunny to play the 2026 Super Bowl halftime show – National

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Bad Bunny will bring his Latin trap and reggaeton swagger to the NFL’s biggest stage next year: The Grammy winner will headline the Apple Music Super Bowl halftime show in Northern California.

The NFL, Apple Music and Roc Nation announced Sunday that Bad Bunny will lead the halftime festivities from Levi’s Stadium on Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, California.

The Puerto Rican superstar’s selection comes amid another career-defining run: He’s fresh off a historic Puerto Rico residency this month that drew more than half a million fans and is leading all nominees at the Latin Grammys in November. He has become one of the world’s most streamed artists with albums such as “Un Verano Sin Ti,” an all-Spanish-language LP.

Bad Bunny will host “Saturday Night Live” on Oct. 4.


Click to play video: '2025 Superbowl Commercials'

4:59
2025 Superbowl Commercials


“What I’m feeling goes beyond myself,” Bad Bunny said in a statement. “It’s for those who came before me and ran countless yards so I could come in and score a touchdown… this is for my people, my culture, and our history. Ve y dile a tu abuela, que seremos el HALFTIME SHOW DEL SUPER BOWL.”

Story continues below advertisement

Roc Nation founder Jay-Z said in a statement that what Bad Bunny has “done and continues to do for Puerto Rico is truly inspiring. We are honored to have him on the world’s biggest stage.”

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Get daily National news

Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

The 31-year-old artist born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio has won three Grammys and 12 Latin Grammys. He has become a global ambassador for Latin music, starred in films such as “Bullet Train,” “Caught Stealing” and “Happy Gilmore 2,” and collaborated with top fashion houses. He’ll enter the Latin Grammys as the leading nominee with 12, dethroning producer and songwriter Édgar Barrera.

Trending Now

  • Trump revives Canada ’51st state’ rhetoric in speech to U.S. military brass

  • Michigan church shooting suspect: What we know after attack kills 4

Roc Nation and Emmy-winning producer Jesse Collins will serve as co-executive producers of the halftime show. Hamish Hamilton will serve as director.


Click to play video: 'Sober Superbowl options'

1:57
Sober Superbowl options


“We know his dynamic performances, creative vision, and deep connection with fans will deliver the kind of unforgettable experience we’ve come to expect from this iconic cultural moment,” said Jon Barker, SVP of Global Event Production for the NFL.

Story continues below advertisement

Last year, Kendrick Lamar shined with guest SZA in New Orleans, setting the record for the most-watched Super Bowl halftime show with 133.5 million viewers. His performance surpassed the audience for Michael Jackson’s 1993 show.

“His music has not only broken records but has elevated Latin music to the center of pop-culture and we are thrilled to once again partner with the NFL and Roc Nation to deliver this historic performance to millions of fans worldwide,” said Oliver Schusser, the vice president of Apple Music and Beats. “We know this show will be unforgettable.”


&copy 2025 The Canadian Press

September 30, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Rap star Cardi B admits she's 'very dramatic'
Celebrity News

Rap star Cardi B admits she’s ‘very dramatic’

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

by Feeds-Bang |

24 September 2025

Cardi B is “very dramatic”.

Cardi B has confessed to being overly-dramatic

The 32-year-old rap star is well-known for her outbursts on social media, and she raised eyebrows earlier this year when she removed photos of boyfriend Stefon Diggs from her Instagram account – but Cardi insists people shouldn’t read too much into her online behaviour.

During an appearance on the Call Her Daddy podcast, Cardi explained: “I’m dramatic. That’s the thing.

“Like, something that to people is a big deal, to me is not a big deal at the moment. And then it’s like, ‘Ugh.’ It became something that is not.”

Asked whether she archives the photos or deletes them from her phone entirely, Cardi explained: “I just archive. But I’m very dramatic. Like I’m the type of person that’s like, ‘Oh, okay.'”

Cardi’s decision to remove Stefon from her social media accounts actually annoyed her boyfriend at the time. But the loved-up couple are now able to laugh about it.

The rap star said: “He was like, ‘Why would you do that?’ But you know, that’s the type of thing that we laugh about.”

Meanwhile, earlier this week, Cardi claimed that Offset, her estranged husband, wants her to “pay for [his] taxes”.

The chart-topping star filed for a divorce from Offset over a year ago, and she claims that financial disagreements are now slowing down the process.

Cardi said on a livestream: “The only reason why I’m still married is because somebody wants me to pay for their taxes

“Y’all wanna know the tea? The only way I can get out of my marriage is if I pay for somebody else’s taxes, even though I pay for my own, and give them one of my properties. I’mma fight for that. This is not no love s***. I’m not gonna stop living my life.”

Cardi claims that Offset – who stars in the rap group Migos – wants “millions of dollars” in order to finalise their divorce.

She said: “On a contract, I’m practically still married, because somebody [wants to] hold me hostage, if I don’t give them millions of dollars to get out of it.”




September 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Ed Sheeran Reveals His Favorite Rappers And Rap Albums Of All Time
Music

Ed Sheeran Reveals His Favorite Rappers And Rap Albums Of All Time

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Ed Sheeran has never been shy about his love for Hip-Hop, and now he’s letting fans in on which albums and rappers top his list. During a recent sit-down on GOAT Talk with actor Barry Keoghan, the British singer-songwriter revealed that his go-to records come from some of the game’s most championed lyricists.

“It’s that whole world. You have Get Rich or Die Tryin’, The Documentary – Game, or The Marshall Mathers LP,” she revealed. “Those three, I could put them on in any scenario. 2001 – Dr. Dre is another one.”

Keoghan named Get Rich or Die Tryin’ as his favorite, which prompted Sheeran to share a moment that proves his love for 50 runs deep. “I was listening to that weirdly with my dad the other day. We were in Italy. I was topless with a beer in my hand, explaining to him how great ‘If I Can’t’ was because it’s not a full eight bar chorus,” he laughed.

Sheeran has always shared his high regards for Eminem throughout his career as well. He’s often shared how rapping along to The Marshall Mathers LP as a kid helped him overcome stuttering.

“By learning that record, and rapping it back to back to back to back, it cured my stutter,” he previously told Howard Stern. Sheeran has also collabed with Em on three songs and has shared the stage with him.

50 Cent, who’s close friends with the Detroit icon, also gave Sheeran a major co-sign once after seeing his acoustic cover of “In Da Club.” At the time, Fif reposted it on Instagram with the caption: “Ed Sheeran right now in LA at the John Mayer concert Killing sh*t! BOOM.”

Busta Rhymes chimed in, dropping a slew of fire emojis in the comments.

Aside from U.S. rappers, Sheeran also gave flowers to U.K. spitters Skepta, Dave, Wretch 32, and Stormzy.

Watch above.

September 11, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Agency Spotlight: Sydney Schiff Knows Publicists Get a Bad Rap
Fashion

Agency Spotlight: Sydney Schiff Knows Publicists Get a Bad Rap

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84


With Agency Spotlight, we’re featuring the independent PR and marketing agencies that Fashionista loves to work with. Meet the hardworking professionals behind them and discover what it really takes to make it in fashion publicity. Sydney Schiff, 30, founded her agency Sydney On The …

Continue reading

September 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Young Thug Fires Back At Critics Following Jail Call Leak Drama + Claims Bashing Him With Only 'F**k That Rap Community Up More'
Celebrity News

Young Thug Fires Back At Critics Following Jail Call Leak Drama + Claims Bashing Him With Only ‘F**k That Rap Community Up More’

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Young Thug

Young Thug Fires Back At Critics Following Jail Call Leak Drama + Claims Bashing Him With Only ‘F**k That Rap Community Up More’

It’s been a rough few days for Young Thug.

Following a wave of leaked jail phone calls targeting artists like Gunna and Kendrick Lamar, Thugger hit Twitter with a pointed tweet:

“Bashing me only goin f**k that rap community up more, I’m the blue to this fake a** game.”

TJB Crew, is Thug really the glue or as he calls it, the “blue” that holds hip-hop together?

 


September 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming