Cardi B and Nicki Minaj are still going at it on X, but at least one of them is ready to move on.
Source: Prince Williams / WWD
Another exchange between the New York rappers saw both sides throwing personal jabs at each other and their respective children, which led to threats to escalate things to a physical confrontation. Nicki repeatedly referred to Cardi’s kids as “monkeys” and repeatedly spoke directly to the “Outside” rapper’s eldest daughter, 8-year-old Kulture.
“Dear Kulture VULTURE, Your mom is pregnant with another monkey to add to her litter,” Minaj wrote on Wednesday, Oct. 1. “The gag is that she was jealous of a little baby boy simply because his hair was longer than all 4 of you bald monkeys put together.”
“SHRUMP SAYS face ahh,” she continued in a separate tweet. “Ima kick your gums back into formation.”
Nicki’s repeated mention of Cardi’s kids clearly struck a chord, leading to some seriously lengthy responses in tweet form.
“Here you go starting again nice and early you sick pathetic loser ass demonic insane b***h,” Cardi began on Wednesday. “I said it back in 2018 and nobody believed me that you been talkin about my child since I was pregnant.. you BEEN jealous of my child.. I had never mentioned or talked about your f**kin kid!!! its one thing to be jealous of me but to be jealous of my kids is insane.. you’re jealous of my kids because they beautiful and f**kin smart and that’s why god punished you with having a slow ass kid.. you hate your child because you wish you could brag on him and his milestones but the only thing you can brag on is hair you f**kin dummy.”
That’s when Belcalis began physical threats, asking about Nicki’s location and insisting she would go to jail over her comments about Kulture.
“You said you gonna kick my child gums back??? Didn’t you say you was in NY???” she asked. “This past words now.. WHERE TF YOU AT??? Cuz today gonna be the day I go to jail.”
In what Cardi claims is her “last time” responding to Nicki, she urges the rapper to go to therapy and claims she must have a lot of trauma from her childhood. She went on to say that the rest of their issues will be handled in person, as she’s not willing to lose her career over “going back and forth wit words wit a possessed drug addict.”
“Dear Onika Tanya Maraj, This my last time responding to you because this past Twitter now.. I gotta see you… but first ima tell you truth,” Cardi began. “You said out your own mouth that the lil girl in you haven’t forgave your mother yet and that’s because your mom used to stay silent when your dad used to touch on you everytime he did that crack pipe… I know you experienced a lot of trauma and abuse but drugs is not gonna help you.. you need to go to therapy NOW… ima let you know this today.. your husband is not stoppin you from your actions because he lets you do drugs all day to numb you so he can max out your credit card… yea you think I don’t know??”
She continued,
“YOU NEED TO GET HELP!! You need to heal that trauma.. you always coming at people everytime you see them happy because you got so much trauma and pain that you wanna put on others.. your fans are gonna gas you up while you literally lose your god damn mind…. You don’t have no friends.. no family.. just that man in your house that let you do drugs til you pass out so he can spend your money and buy the hood chains.. I’m not throwing away my career and my endorsements going back and forth with wit words wit a possessed drug addict.. ILL SEE YOU WHEN I SEE YOU.”
As previously reported, the two first reignited their beef on Monday when Nicki took aim at Cardi and her new album, Am I The Drama?, seemingly mocking it, first by simply writing “$4.99,” seemingly referencing the promotional iTunes price of Cardi’s project.
She also threw shots at Cardi’s pregnancy while parodying the lyrics of Cardi’s new song, “Magnet,” tweeting;
“Abcdefgeeeee / Fallin off the charts wit a big bellyyyy / RUNNING TRAINS,” Minaj wrote. “Barefoot, still smellyyyyy / Still. You. Could. Not. outsell. meeeeee.”
Nicki went on to continue her previous narrative about Roc Nation and Jay-Z being involved in illegal activities, connecting those dots to Cardi’s album sales.
“Abcdefgeeeee SUR GER REE TO LOOK LIKE ME, ” she began. “Tell the rat & tell j ZEEEE RICO FRAUD & PERJURY.”
On Tuesday, while things seemed to slow down between the two, Nicki responded to Cardi’s accusations that she had to see fertility doctors in order to have a child because of the “percs [Percocets] scrambling” her eggs.
An incensed Nicki Minaj then clapped back, alleging that she would be taking legal action against Cardi for he fertility tweet. She also mentioned her foe, Roc Nation’s Desiree Perez, in her tweet that included the Pinkprint rapper calling Cardi “Barney B.”
“Is I’m da Barney B AND the FLOP?” wrote Nicki. “Is I’m lying about fertility when the Queen has never once seen or spoken to a fertility doctor In her life?”Is I’m the one sleeping with trade while hubby f***n sweetie & taking my big gewy hole for alimony? Is I’m going to be sued when the Queen show her medical records to the courts?
Oh ROC BOTTOM NATION WE WIN AGAIN. Desiree I have your medical records too. :). the lawyers said we gon have Barney b homeless within 36 months. Praise God. lucky we eating cake right now,” Minaj wrote. In a follow-up, she continued:
“Barney B, I know you don’t know this, but SOME women PLAN their pregnancies you dirty HEINEKEN p***y twat. We don’t let niggaz fuk us while we pregnant for the next trade who got 4 other ppl pregnant. You see? The devil has come to collect. You sold your soul. You made a pact. But you lost. Now hear this: you have been neutralized in the mighty name of Jesus. Every word you speak on Me or mine will now curse your enablers more than your dizzy brain could ever fathom.”
Read a full breakdown of the beginning of their beef here.
Following the release of what Cardi B had hoped would be a “summer anthem,” “Outside” (an overt diss at her ex-husband, Offset), she’s trying her hand again at securing a higher-charting hit with “Imaginary Playerz.” Named after and sampled from Jay-Z’s 1997 song (a deep cut from In My Lifetime, Vol. 1 that’s actually spelled correctly), the single finds Cardi B being slightly less “relatable” than usual. Mainly because the entire focus of the song is on her fashion prowess, her haute couture savvy. In addition to, as usual, flexing about her superiority.
Unlike “Outside,” “Imaginary Playerz” was special enough to Cardi to make a video for it, which she co-directed with Patientce Foster, her long-time collaborator in various ways since she started out as Cardi’s publicist in 2015. To commence the video, the two decide to give Puff Daddy vibes (back when he was called that) in the “Been Around the World” video as she rolls up to her private jet and begins to boast, “The shit these bitches be braggin’ about is like/Shit I was doin’ in like 2016, type shit/Like (why these bitches hatin’?)/You bitches don’t even know the difference between vintage and archive, like.” That last word said in a voice that sounds more than slightly reminiscent of Nicki Minaj, Cardi’s on-again, off-again nemesis at this point (for Nicki has, of late, been much more interested in “destroying” Megan Thee Stallion and, for a minute there, SZA). However, that Cardi should also opt to sample from a Jay-Z song lends further fuel to the idea that she’s goading Nicki, who recently called out Jay not only for owing her millions of dollars through Roc Nation, but also the CEO of said company, Desiree Perez, who was pardoned by Donald Trump in 2021 for previous drug-related offenses in the 90s.
Minaj brought this up in July of ‘25, seething, “You were pardoned by President Trump… I mean it kind of implies you guys are cool with him while y’all seem to pretend to be against him. Or are y’all not his friend either anymore just like Diddy? I mean if someone pardoned me we’d be friends for life.” The mention of Diddy as everyone seems to go along with the false belief that Jay-Z had nothing to do with his “antics” (to say the least) in the late 90s and early 00s for the sake of, essentially, not wanting Beyoncé to be cancelled too is also a bold move on Nicki’s part. Just as it is for Cardi to sample from him and act proud about it merely because Jay has been “cleared” in the eyes of the law. But then, Diddy has too, so what does that really say?
Regardless, Cardi feels she has nothing to apologize for as she continues to deride those many people (particularly women) “beneath her” via lyrics like, “Bitches, I leave ‘em all fucked, fists be balled up/Y’all hoes look cheap, that shit don’t cost much.” As though to prove she lives the glamorous life, for the first minute or so of the video, Cardi remains in a fixed point near her private jet (alternating between scenes of her outside of it in one bombastic outfit and scenes of her sitting in the back seat of her chauffeured car in a different over-the-top ensemble). In the next scene, she’s off to Mykonos (per the caption on the screen) on a yacht, bedecked in an oversized white hat that puts the “Javier” design Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall) wore to his funeral in Sex and the City to shame (though, of course, no hat could ever be as shameful as the gingham bonnet Carrie Bradshaw [Sarah Jessica Parker] wore in And Just Like That…).
As she flaunts her opulent lifestyle, complete with butlers (or waiters, if you prefer) emerging from the water to serve her on the beach, Cardi lives up to the line, “It’s really easy for me to talk this shit, ‘cause I live this shit.” And that, ultimately, is what “Imaginary Playerz” is all about: putting those who pretend that they’re “somebody” in their place, with Cardi explaining, “Y’all talk big shit, but guess what? Your life is imaginary. You got imaginary titles, imaginary careers…” Even those fellow rappers that do technically have a career aren’t safe from Cardi’s wrath as she reminds, “My flop and your flop is not the same/If you did my numbers, y’all would pop champagne.” This assertion goes for “Outside,” which, although it didn’t hit the top five on the Billboard Hot 100 (instead peaking at number ten), it did go to number one on the Rhythmic chart and number two on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. So yes, Cardi has a “right” to brag with a certain wiseness when she says, “Quicker they lift up, the quicker they fall down/Poor thing, Twitter must be gassin’ them heavy” (side note: Cardi has 36.4 million followers to Nicki’s 28 million on said platform). And yes, it’s pointed that Cardi would refuse to call Twitter “X.”
In the next segment of the video, Cardi jets off to Paris, as is her wont in the years since she appeared on the cover of Vogue (also calling out in her lyrics, “I’m the one who showed these girls what fashion could be/The first rap bitch on the cover of Vogue”). Having become a regular at Paris Fashion Week (which she paid for in flak circa 2021), this year was no exception as Cardi showed up to answer the question to her own album title, Am I the Drama? The answer, in haute couture speak, is a resounding yes (with Cardi re-wearing those key looks from her various Paris Fashion Week appearances at the end of the video). And she brings it in the form of her fashion and luxury displays that only amplify in the Paris portion of the “Imaginary Playerz” video, with Cardi getting a pedicure in a foot bath filled with expensive champagne (in the next scene, she’s being served a different bottle of Perrier-Jouët).
Ah, and speaking of champagne, it was on 2018’s “Champagne Rosé” (a Quavo track featuring Madonna and “Miss B”) that Cardi rapped, “They say my time is tickin’/These hoes is optimistic.” Now, she’s the one saying other rappers’ time is ticking, loosely quoting Andy Warhol when she says, “Now your fifteen up, you already out of time/I’m a legend, they gon’ hang my heels from the power lines.” This a reference to the landscape of her native Bronx, which, like J. Lo (with whom Cardi collaborated for “Dinero“), she still consistently makes mention of in her songs as a means to “stay true” to her roots.
Of course, if Cardi were really forced to go back to that life she led in said borough before hitting the big time, it’s unlikely she would feel all warm and fuzzy about it, instead missing the finer things. So yes, do be fooled by the rocks Cardi’s got, because she’s very much no longer Belcalis from the block. And with her braggadocio and pro-luxury stance on “Imaginary Playerz,” she continues to make that abundantly clear.
Nicki Minaj Claps Back at Trolls Criticizing Her Marriage to Kenneth Petty, confronting an online troll who mocked her union.
She emphasized the importance of individual joy over public scrutiny.
Minaj highlighted how social media can misrepresent real-life experiences.
Despite criticism, she remains dedicated to Kenneth Petty and values their relationship.
Nicki Minaj recently made headlines after she decisively responded to a social media troll who criticized her marriage to Kenneth Petty.
The incident unfolded when a user mocked a photo Minaj posted of herself and her husband during their son’s birthday celebration. In a fiery rebuttal, she expressed her disdain for the troll’s comments, emphasizing the importance of personal happiness over public perception.
Nicki Minaj Claps Back at Trolls Criticizing Her Marriage to Kenneth Petty | Image Source: people.com
In her lengthy response, Minaj did not hold back. She called out the troll for their apparent lack of joy in their own life, stating,
“Dear weak loser tweeting about someone else’s bday b/c you have nothing to rejoice about in your own sad existence.”
This statement underscores her belief that social media often distorts reality, as she pointed out that a single photo does not encapsulate the entirety of an event. She elaborated, explaining that the snapshot only represents a fleeting moment in time, which should not be the basis for judgment about someone’s life or relationships.
Nicki Minaj continued her tirade by highlighting the absurdity of making assumptions based on social media posts. She stated,
“A photo takes one second to take & another second to post,”
implying that there are countless hours beyond that moment filled with genuine experiences and emotions. Her passionate defense serves as a reminder that online interactions often lack depth and context.
Nicki Minaj Claps Back at Trolls Criticizing Her Marriage to Kenneth Petty | Image Source: vibe.com
The criticism directed at Minaj is not new; she has faced scrutiny for her relationship with Kenneth Petty since they went public in 2018. Petty’s criminal history, which includes a conviction as a sex offender and involvement in a manslaughter case, has led many to question Minaj’s choices.
Despite this, she remains steadfast in her commitment to him, frequently asserting that true happiness cannot be bought or defined by societal standards.
Minaj has previously defended her relationship on various platforms, including her Queen Radio show, where she articulated that her bond with Petty is rooted in genuine affection rather than fame or financial gain. She remarked, “Money cannot buy me happiness and good sex,” reinforcing her stance that emotional fulfillment is paramount.
In the last week, Kendrick Lamar and Lil Wayne have been at the center of conversations surrounding the 2025 Super Bowl Halftime show. Fans, celebrities, and even Tunechi have shared their disappointment with Wayne not being the headliner of the New Orleans gig. Jay-Z’s name and role with the NFL have also been a part of the conversation. Now, the halftime show’s producer, Jesse Collins, has publicly supported Jay’s decision-making.
Super Bowl Halftime Show Producer Backs Jay-Z & Kendrick Lamar
In a profile piece released on Monday (Sept. 16) by Variety, Jesse Collins opened up about the halftime show reactions. He notably mentioned Jay-Z and Kendrick, showing them love for a show he predicts will be a hit.
According to the outlet, Collins has been an executive producer of the SB show since 2021. He joined the spectacle’s production team nearly two years after Jay and Roc Nation signed on to consult on the league’s halftime headliners in August 2019. Jesse confirmed that Jay-Z calls the plays, and he supports them, including K. Dot’s upcoming performance.
“It’s a decision that Jay makes,” Collins told Variety. “Since we’ve been on board with that show, he’s made it every year, and it’s been amazing. He’s always picked right!”
Additionally, Jesse Collins addressed Wayne and his fans’ disappointment in the headliner pick. He asserted that there’s no agenda against the ‘Lollipop’ superstar and that Kendrick will eat the stage up!
“We love Wayne,” Collins reportedly said. “There’s always Vegas odds on who’s going to get to perform it. But I think we’re going to do an amazing show with Kendrick, and I think everybody’s going to love the halftime show. I know Kendrick is going to work exceptionally hard to deliver an amazing show.”
Meanwhile, Nicki Minaj seemed to find a kii in Jeese’s comments to Variety. The ‘Pink Friday 2’ artist dropped a laughing emoji in reaction to an X post featuring what Collins said.
Rundown Of The Mixed Reactions To Super Bowl Show Headliner
As suggested, folks have been divided on the selected headliner for the 2025 gig for over a week. Some, like Master P and Nas, have celebrated Kendrick and anticipated his performance. Meanwhile, others, like Nicki Minaj, Birdman, and Wayne’s manager, have taken Wayne’s lack of inclusion in the show as a dismissal of his legacy. As mentioned, even Wayne expressed his disappointment with not receiving the opportunity.
The NOLA native said not being chosen as the headliner “hurt a whole lot.” Furthermore, he blamed himself for not being “mentally prepared” to be let down. However, Lil Wayne didn’t directly name-drop Kendrick in his message.
“I thought that nothing was better than that spot, and that stage and that platform in my city. So that hurt, hurt a whole lot. But y’all are f***ing amazing. It made me feel like sh*t not getting this opportunity, and when I felt like sh*t, you guys reminded me that I ain’t sh*t without y’all.”
Kendrick Lamar has yet to openly comment on the mixed reactions to his secured gig. His fanbase seems to think he’s still focused on pressing his foot into Drake’s neck. Last week, he released an untitled track, expressing disgust with the state of the culture and music and affirming his refusal to reconcile.
Hollywood’s favorite photographer, Vijat Mohindra, is living the dream. He’s shot Kim Kardashian multiple times since 2009, to market Skims and her scent and just because. You’ve probably seen his photos of Doja Cat, Miley Cyrus, Dolly Parton, Cardi B… the list of his subjects is long and populated by luminaries from across the spectrum of celebrity. He’s shot Pamela Anderson for Paper. Nicki Minaj for Complex.
How can you spot a photo taken by Mohindra? There’s the signature colorful, Pop-ish aesthetic possibly best described as Barbie-esque. But despite the candy pink and blue and yellow plastic fantastic backdrops, Vijat’s subjects are always vibrant, dynamic and very much portraying themselves. Perhaps that’s not surprising, as he learned the ropes from famed celebrity photographer David LaChapelle. In the years since, he’s shot music videos, magazine spreads, album covers and more for some of the world’s top talent.
Mohindra is still shooting, but he’s been branching out. Earlier this year, he opened his first studio space in downtown Los Angeles, Powder Room Studio LA, which has a dozen uniquely Mohindra-esque sets in which to shoot everything from stills to reels. The 4500-square-foot space looks like Barbie’s 1990s-era dream house, and Paris Hilton and Christina Aguilera were early fans.
We chatted with Mohindra on a busy weekday morning about the new studio, why he loves polished portraits and his advice for young photographers.
Observer: What’s the story behind the Powder Room?
Vijat Mohindra: I’ve been a photographer—a celebrity photographer—in Los Angeles for the last 15 years, and in those years, I designed and created a lot of different environments for my shoots. Over time, I started collecting all these amazing set pieces that were left over from my shoots. They were just too gorgeous to throw away. I had them in storage at one point and I looked through it all, and I said, oh my gosh, all this stuff looks so great together. Maybe I can put it together in a format that could bring it all to life. And then I realized that could also be a place where creatives, photographers, directors, filmmakers, etc., could come and see all these amazing pieces.
The Living Room in Vijat Mohindra’s Powder Room Studio LA. Courtesy Vijat Mohindra
It looks like a Barbie house to me. Why?
It has that Barbie aesthetic because a lot of my work is very synthetic—very plastic, with a kind of glossy sheen to it. And then it all just sort of happened to have these different elements that coincided with the Barbie aesthetic but with a very ‘80s take on it. Pink is the color I use a lot. In a way, it made sense to create this surrealistic Barbie dream house experience.
Selfie museums are still on the rise—can just anyone come in and take some snaps with the sets?
Honestly, the space is for everybody. I have a lot of people from Instagram and TikTok coming in who just book the space for a few hours to create their own videos.
How common is this type of space in L.A.?
I’ve heard from some other people who have studios with a similar type of setup, with standing sets. They started back maybe around like 2018 or 2019, when there were maybe a thousand or so listings online of places like this throughout the Los Angeles area that could be rented for shoots. Now in 2024, it is up to around 8,000 spaces like this. It’s something that exploded in a way. Not all the spaces listed are aesthetic and design-focused the way mine is. I feel like the Powder Room is a very special category.
Let’s talk about your work. How do you feel about Photoshop?
I’m a big fan of Photoshop. I went to school for photography at the Art Center in Pasadena around 2003—right when film was switching over to digital—and I graduated around 2007. That was when this big debate was going on as to whether film was the future or digital. But when I took a digital photography class toward the beginning of my education, I realized that it was the way of the future.
It was amazing to be able to get all these different pictures and put them on the computer right away. You didn’t have to scan or retouch negatives. Photoshop opened a whole other dimension of creativity that wasn’t there for me with film. So, I’m a huge fan. I think it is beautiful, and it enhances pictures in an amazing way. That said, I still have respect for and really love certain film photography. I think there’s value in it, and I do see a lot of people going back to that nowadays as a trend because so much digital photography is over-saturated.
How do you feel about representing celebrities in a flawless way?
In a flawless way?
Glossy. That very L.A. aesthetic.
I really love a polished celebrity photograph that is very well-lit and has that glossy, punchy aesthetic to it. I’ve always been inspired by that type of celebrity photography going back to the ‘70s and ‘80s with Andy Warhol and the Interview Magazine covers. I think that it brings that glamor and special sort of sparkle that we kind of associate with celebrities. I like photographing them that way because I think that’s the way I see them in my head. And so that’s the way I want to put them on paper—to show people how I see them. I feel like it’s very powerful and it’s kind of show-stopping.
What’s it like behind the scenes once you actually get to know these celebrities?
For most of my celebrity photographs, there have been a lot of collaborative experiences where I will work with the artist to figure out what their aesthetic is or what drives them. And we build a concept around that and bring it to life from there. I really like finding out more about a celebrity’s personality and their background and what they’re interested in and then pulling that into what we create together.
Who are some of your favorite celebrity photographers and why?
My absolute favorite is David LaChapelle; he’s just one of my icons. I have been very lucky to have been able to assist him at one point during my career, which was a huge highlight. I just love his take on celebrity photography. It’s so different from anything that I’ve seen and is so imaginative and creative. I really look up to the creativity that he brings to the celebrity photography world. He takes celebrities out of their worlds and puts them in this hyper-creative, colorful, aesthetically driven space that I just find so beautiful. I also love the work of Annie Leibovitz, as well as Pierre and Gilles, a French photography duo who shoot creative portraiture that’s aesthetically driven. I love Miles Aldridge, who’s more of a fashion photographer but shoots celebrities in ways that are highly creative and very colorful.
I’ve been working a lot on Powder Room Studio LA—trying to get it up and running. It only launched this past January, but I’m happy to say that we are pretty booked up at this point. We’ve been getting quite a few bookings from brands as well as individuals, and we’ve gotten some great celebrities into the studio, too, like Paris Hilton and Cardi B. The space has been getting some great recognition, and that’s still my focus.
Last question. What advice do you have for young photographers entering the industry?
I’d give them the same advice I was given when I was in photography school, which I still think about to this day. One of my professors told me that you should always shoot what you love, and that really left a lasting impression on me. I feel like if you’re not shooting what you love, you don’t really put the same passion behind it. Passion is what really shows in your overall body of work—it’s the thing that people connect with the most.
Ice Spice is setting the record straight on her relationships with her fellow rap girls.
Source: John Nacion / Getty
During her recent cover story for Rolling Stone, the “Princess Diana” rapper touched on all the topics fans have been wondering about in recent months.
As highlighted in RS’s story, text messages Ice Spice sent to a former friend surfaced online earlier this year. In the texts, Ice Spice admitted to being frustrated while negotiating contract details with Nicki Minaj. Because of those hardships, she referred to her “Barbie World” collaborator as “delusional” and “ungrateful.”
Neither rapper acknowledged the leak when it happened, causing Internet rumors about their once seemingly-close relationship to run amok. Now Ice is setting the record straight.
“We don’t have the closest relationship, you know? But we’re definitely good,” Ice Spice told Rolling Stone of her friendship with Minaj. “We’re mutuals. We had smash records together…I love us together. I think the world does too.”
Unsurprisingly, the relationship between Ice and the friend who leaked those texts did suffer.
“I think that the saddest part of the whole situation, it’s somebody I knew for so many years and called my friend had me open up and be vulnerable with them, and then took complete advantage of that for her own benefit,” the rapper said. “So that was the saddest part really, just feeling used, basically.”
Elsewhere in her interview, the Bronx native also touched on her rumored beef with Latto and other women in the rap game.
“I just feel like that narrative is so dead,” Ice said of drama between female rappers. “There are so many rap girls that have just done so many big things simultaneously. It’s not like one or the other. There’s so many different flavors to choose from now.”
When speaking on Latto, specifically, the “Deli” rapper insists there’s no problem—at least, not on her part.
“I feel like if we ever spoke and I asked her, ‘What’s the issue?’ it’d be like a blank stare,” Ice says. “It’d really be no issue whatsoever. Especially from me.”
While referring to Latto seemingly dissing her with a cake referencing one of Ice Spice’s songs, she calls it a joke that the other rapper has tried to milk for too long.
“I can understand a friendly competition, but I just feel like at this point it’s a joke that she’s just dragged out, and it’s just not even funny,” Ice told Rolling Stone. “Like, bro, ‘Think U the S**t’ is from January. You’re going to post a piece of shit cake to announce something that’s good news for you? But it is kind of a compliment because you’re taking something that’s supposed to be a fun moment for you and you’re making it about me … again.”
You can read Ice Spice’s cover story in its entirety here.
As The Associated Press’ music writer, Maria Sherman has seen more than 40 concerts during the first half of 2024. Here are some picks for the best shows … so far, excluding any one-off performances that cannot be repeated, and where you too can catch these artists.
Bad Bunny, “The Most Wanted Tour”
March 14, Los Angeles’ Crypto.com Arena
Bad Bunny’s show begins with a symphony, transitioning into the unmistakable strings of his monster hit, “Monaco.” “The Most Wanted Tour” highlights El Conejo Malo’s fifth solo album “Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana” (“Nobody Knows What Will Happen Tomorrow”) and his past reggaetón hits, too.
HIGHLIGHT: There is one moment that can only be described as equine.
OPENER: When you’re one of the biggest artists on the planet, do you really need an opener? Bad Bunny didn’t.
SEE IT YOURSELF: This particular run of shows has come to an end, but here’s a reminder to catch him next time he’s in town.
Bad Bunny performs during “The Most Wanted Tour” at State Farm Arena in Atlanta on May 15, 2024. (Photo by Paul R. Giunta/Invision/AP, File)
Olivia Rodrigo, “GUTS World Tour”
April 5, New York’s Madison Square Garden
Rodrigo’s spirited punky-pop warms an arena, as does her irreverent charms and Disney-informed dancing. If women performing their rage has fallen out of vogue, Rodrigo has brought it back, full force.
HIGHLIGHT: For the fans of her big-hearted ballads — in one moment, she’s lifted into the air and circles the arena in a purple crescent moon to slow things down.
OPENER: The Breeders — fronted by the Pixies’ Kim Deal — legends of ’90s college radio and indie rock. There’s something completist about hearing an arena discover “Cannonball” for the first time, a song that no doubt inspired Rodrigo’s music.
SEE IT YOURSELF: Rodrigo heads back to the U.S. this month with a new opener, the U.K. hyperpop producer PinkPantheress, before the Breeders return for two final nights in Los Angeles.
Brutalismus 3000, “AMERIKATRÄUME”
April 11, New York’s Knockdown Center
Every generation gets the Crystal Castles it deserves. Or in less niche language: This Berlin duo brings humor to their music, which veers from hyperactive techno to German Neue Deutsche Welle in their acquired-taste electronica. The shows are sweaty, and no matter your age, you will be the oldest person in attendance.
HIGHLIGHT: The duo samples Dido’s soft-pop hit “White Flag,” while waving a white flag. It works.
OPENER: The techno-punk LustSickPuppy, whose abrasive rave music is presented as a kind of nightmarish clown show.
SEE IT YOURSELF: Brutalismus will be hitting a few festivals in Europe this summer and fall.
Nicki Minaj, “Pink Friday 2 World Tour”
May 1, New York’s Barclays Center
She will run on club time, and she will not disappoint. Nicki Minaj’s “Pink Friday 2” is almost a retrospective of her chart-toppers, shifting alter-egos with incredible ease.
HIGHLIGHT: At this particular show, Minaj brought out Cyndi Lauper to duet “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” after 1 a.m.
OPENER: Monica has joined Minaj for this tour, and in Brooklyn, Pepa of Salt-N-Pepa opened the show.
SEE IT YOURSELF: Minaj is hitting the European festival circuit this summer, then heading back to the U.S. in September.
Nicki Minaj performs during the MTV Video Music Awards on Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023, at the Prudential Center in Newark, N.J. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP, File)
Sum 41, “Tour of the Setting Sum”
May 6, New York’s Brooklyn Paramount
Canadian pop-punk band Sum 41 has called it quits — and they’re going out in a blaze of glory, a farewell tour that has the immediacy of their youth.
HIGHLIGHT: Sum 41 does not want to exit quietly — they prove their endurance with an explosive set, fireworks and mosh pits and all. There’s also a giant, blow-up skull.
OPENER: The Interrupters, a ska-punk band that revitalized the genre, are worth arriving early for. At future dates, Sum 41 will be joined by Gob, Pup, Neck Deep and the Bronx.
SEE IT YOURSELF: Sum 41 is zigzagging across Europe and North America through early 2025.
Deryck Whibley of Sum 41 performs during Sonic Temple Art and Music Festival on Friday, May 17, 2024, at Historic Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP, File)
Megan Thee Stallion, “Hot Girl Summer Tour”
May 21, Madison Square Garden
Not every artist can sell out Madison Square Garden on her first tour, but Megan Thee Stallion is not every artist. On her stage, Megan is an athlete and a dancer who delivers her fierce bars with an incredible crispness.
HIGHLIGHT: “WAP” is a can’t miss moment, of course — particularly if Cardi B makes a surprise appearance, like she did at MSG.
OPENER: Tennessee rapper GloRilla, who was most recently featured on the great, braggy “Accent” from the headliner’s third album, “Megan.”
SEE IT YOURSELF: Europe will get to catch her in July, before she heads back home for a few festivals.
Megan Thee Stallion performs during the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival on Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Manchester, Tenn. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP)
The Rolling Stones, “Stones Tour ’24 Hackney Diamonds”
May 23, East Rutherford, New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium
The Rolling Stones ran through 60 years of hits across two hours, including cuts from their first album of new material in nearly two decades, “Hackney Diamonds.”
HIGHLIGHT: When it comes to The Rolling Stones, the entire show is the highlight — but for this audience, it was likely the rollicking rendition of “Wild Horses.”
OPENER: The soulful Jon Batiste, an award-show staple for a reason.
SEE IT YOURSELF: The Stones’ North American tour continues through July.
Ronnie Wood, from left, Mick Jagger, Steve Jordan, and Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones perform during the “Hackney Diamonds” tour at Soldier Field on Thursday, June 27, 2024, in Chicago. (Photo by Rob Grabowski/Invision/AP, File)
George Strait
June 8, MetLife Stadium
They call him the King of Country for a reason. Live, George Strait can transform his one-off stadium shows into a honky-tonk; he performs with a big band and a lot of heart.
HIGHLIGHT: The closest a person can get to levitation is singing along to “Amarillo by Morning” in a stadium of tens of thousands.
OPENER: Chris Stapleton and Little Big Town, with Stapleton joining Strait for a new song called “Honky Tonk Hall of Fame.”
SEE IT YOURSELF: Strait has a two more stadium dates in July — in Detroit and Chicago — and another in December, in Las Vegas.
George Strait performs at the iHeartCountry Festival on Saturday, Oct. 30, 2021, at the Frank Erwin Center in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Jack Plunkett/Invision/AP)
SEE IT YOURSELF: Many of these artists will be hitting festivals in North American and Europe this summer. In fact, if you want to catch SZA, Sexyy Red and Chappell Roan in one go, consider Lollapalooza in August. Pluma is currently on his “Éxodo Tour” across North America, running through October.
Chappell Roan performs during the Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival on Sunday, June 16, 2024, in Manchester, Tenn. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP)
Sexyy Red performs during the Governors Ball Music Festival on Saturday, June 8, 2024, at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in New York. (Photo by Andy Kropa/Invision/AP)
CLAMM
Feb. 18, Melbourne, Australia’s Northcote Social Club
In the search for thrilling, cathartic underground music — particularly of the indie variety — look no further than the rich scene of Melbourne, Australia. CLAMM, the punk trio, brings a controlled aggression to their live show. It is ferocious noise punk that hits like inhaling hand sanitizer — stinging alert their audience with clever agitation.
HIGHLIGHT: Later this month, CLAMM will release a new record, “Disembodiment.” Live, they’ve begun performing the chant-along opening cut, “Change Enough.”
OPENER: At this particular show, the Aussie indie band Scott and Charlene’s Wedding and the rapper Mulalo. A genre-diverse club show is a life-affirming club show.
SEE IT YOURSELF: CLAMM are headed to Europe for a series of dates this July, and back to Australia in August.
(CNN) — Rapper Nicki Minaj apologized to fans outside her hotel in Manchester early Sunday morning for postponing a UK show after she was stopped by Dutch authorities on allegations she was carrying drugs.
“I love you and I’m so sorry this happened tonight,” Minaj said in a video posted on social media.
Minaj had earlier revealed the name of her Manchester hotel in a post on X, and invited fans to see her. “I’m going on the balcony so if you’re outside I’ll be able to see you & I may come downstairs. I’ll be out there for about an hour. Rlly (really) wanted to at least get to see you,” she said.
Though Minaj was released from police custody on Saturday evening, the concert, set to be held in Manchester on the same night, was unable to go ahead.
In a statement published by both Live Nation and the concert’s venue Co-op Live, organizers said they were “deeply disappointed” by the inconvenience caused.
“Despite Nicki’s best efforts to explore every possible avenue to make tonight’s show happen, the events of today have made it impossible,” the statement, published on Saturday evening, said.
In a video captured on the hip-hop artist’s Instagram Live – which was later disseminated online by various social media accounts – Minaj is heard speaking with police at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport while holding her camera phone.
In the clip, Minaj mentions “pre-rolls they found,” and is then seen being ushered out of her vehicle and urged to get in a police van. When she asks why she is being told to board the van, an official informs her she is “under arrest,” later adding, for “carrying drugs.” Minaj replies, “I’m not carrying drugs.”
Minaj repeatedly asks for the address of the police station and to have a lawyer present throughout the clip, while the police ask her to stop filming.
When CNN reached out to Amsterdam authorities with Minaj’s given name Onika Tanya Maraj-Petty, the Netherlands military police, known as the Royal Netherlands Marechaussee, said they arrested a 41-year-old American woman with “soft drugs” at Schiphol Airport.
Later on Saturday, the Royal Netherlands Marechaussee said the woman detained in their custody “on suspicion of exporting soft drugs has been released.”
“Following consultation with the Public Prosecutor’s Office, the suspect received a monetary fine and is now permitted to continue her journey,” the statement continued.
CNN has reached out to representatives for Minaj for comment.
Minaj is currently on her Pink Friday 2 World Tour in support of her latest album, released late last year. Minaj performed in Amsterdam on Thursday night, and is set to perform in Birmingham, UK, Sunday night.
Another Nicki Minaj concert is scheduled at the Co-op Live, Manchester, for Thursday, May 30.
The rapper recently sat down for an exclusive interview with Atlanta’s Hot 107.9 radio station, which was released on Tuesday, April 2, via YouTube. The interview appeared to be in anticipation of the rapper headlining Atlanta’s upcoming Birthday Bash concert.
To note, Latto will be the first female rapper to ever headline the event, per The Source.
About two minutes into the six-minute interview, the rapper was asked to share her top three G.O.A.T. (Greatest Of All Time) female rappers.
“Kim — gotta say Kim,” Latto began, referring to Brooklyn-bred rapper Lil’ Kim. “Imma say Left Eye — rest in peace, Left Eye and shawty.”
Social Media Speculates She Referred To Nicki Minaj
Social media users entered The Shade Room’s comment section to react to Latto’s list. Many shared their confusion about her mentioning someone as “Shawty.”
Instagram user @kingsilvy wrote, “Wait …. Shawty??”
While Instagram user @mocurlsss added, “Lord I thought shawty meant shawty lo and I got real confused 🥹🥹”
Instagram user @shanceys wrote, “nobody: me on google searching ‘shawty female rapper’ 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭”
However, some explained that they believed she was referring to Nicki Minaj.
Instagram user @iammalikalrahim wrote, “Shawty = Nicki Minaj. Of course she’s not going to say her name, but she has always gave Nicki her flowers way before the beef. Latto is a real one for that.”
While Instagram user @jaylen.dupree added, “‘Shawty’ is Nicki. She ain’t gotta say her name tf. It took a certain level of maturity to even still give credit after everything. Some of yall don’t even got that part down.”
Instagram user @shantoria__ wrote, “I respect her being real and still giving Nicki(shawty)😂 her props💯”
While Instagram user @jcockerhamofficial added, “‘Shawty’ is definitely Nicki yall if you not from the south it went right over your head 😂”
Instagram user @brittanycity wrote, “Love Latto for this actually, too many ppl would let their pride keep them from even saying that”
While Instagram user @mikeb_soxtraa added, “It’s clear she still likes Nicki. Nothing wrong with that. Hopefully they talk one day without social media….”
Instagram user @heisolivertwixt wrote, “I really feel like Nicki and Latto can be fixed.”
On April 9, Latto seemingly reacted to her own words with a brief tweet on X, formerly known as Twitter.
A Brief Recap Of The Viral Exchange Between The Rappers
As The Shade Room previously reported, Latto and Nicki Minaj’s relationship took a turn in October 2022. At the time, Latto had been nominated for a Grammy for Best Melodic Rap Performance with her hit single, ‘Big Energy.’
Minaj seemingly took offense to the Grammy Board’s nomination. At the time, the GRAMMY board considered her recently released single, ‘Super Freaky Girl,’ pop rather than rap.
“If ‘Super Freaky Girl’ is pop, then so is ‘Big Energy,’” Nicki told fans on Instagram Live. “If you move ‘Super Freaky Girl’ out of rap and put it in pop, do the same thing with ‘Big Energy.’ Same producers on both songs, by the way… Let’s keep s**t fair. Even when I’m rapping on a pop track, I still out rap.”
Shortly after Minaj shared her sentiments, Latto took to X to seemingly share that she couldn’t celebrate her nomination.
In response, Minaj blasted Latto for being “silent” rather than speaking out for her to the Grammy board.
RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) — The countdown to Dreamville Festival is just a day away.
Raleigh’s Dorthea Dix Park is closed on Friday as the final touches are being put together, gearing up for the weekend’s festival.
But, the excitement starts today.
All week-long crews at the park have worked to assemble each stage, the Ferris wheel and other attractions on the big field.
Local businesses have also been preparing.
Earlier in the week, ABC11 learned last year’s festival brought in $145 million. Tourism officials are expecting another 100,000 people all over the world to come back to the Oak City.
They’re one of the vendors participating in a free public block party outside of CAM Raleigh Museum in the Warehouse District the Friday before Dreamville.
WATCH | Businesses brace for surge of customers during Dreamville Festival in Raleigh: ‘Biggest Party’
Raleigh businesses, restaurants and hotels are bracing for a surge of visitors for the 2-day Dreamville Festival in Dix Park.
“People were getting last-minute (out)fits for Dreamville here,” Manager Iyana Thompson said.
The free events in downtown Raleigh start at 11 a.m. and last all day.
Dates for the 2024 Dream Festival are Saturday, April 6 and Sunday, 7 at Dorthea Dix Park. Some of the festival’s biggest performers include SZA, Chris Brown, Nicki Minaj and festival co-founder and Fayetteville native J Cole.
Safaree Samuels isn’t missing his chance to see Nicki Minaj on her ‘Pink Friday 2’ tour! Posts on his X page shared a plan to sneak into Gag City in “disguise.” After revealing part of his ‘fit, another post from the account claimed he was hacked.
“I’m definitely going to a Gag City concert in full disguise…y’all will not even notice me and I will enjoy the show!! Can’t wait!! Ima document it too and drop a video after.”
Another post had a lil extra sauce on what his disguise would look like.
“Imma wear a jean vest too!! Can’t wait!!”
If you know, you know, that jean vest, Safaree Samuels and Nicki Minaj, in the same sentence, bring up one of the internet’s most viral cuttin’ up moments!
He followed up with a “My page was hacked” post a few hours later, then a couple of laughing emojis. It’s unclear if he’s playing or not about his account being hacked!
We’ll have to wait and see whether Safaree actually goes and documents it or confirms a hack. On his Instagram Story, the rapper and ex-boyfriend of Minaj shared photos and videos of his two children with ex-wife Erica Mena.
Wow .. my page was hacked that was not me!! wtf !! Ridiculous
Social Media Recalls Safaree Samuels’ “Jean Vest” Drag
Nonetheless, social media couldn’t help but run down memory lane of when that clip of Nicki and Safaree Samuels went viral. Nicki was not playing with her ex about her fashion, especially her white jacket!
Meanwhile, others visualized songs the Queen Barb might gag Safaree with if he actually pulled up to a show! Nicki is nearly a month into her tour for her latest album ‘Pink Friday 2.’
The posts from Safaree Samuels’ X account come after the release of Jason Lee’s interview with him. During their talk, Safaree refused to comment on allegations that he stole her credit card. That clip has also been making its rounds on X, especially among Barb accounts.
Safaree and Nicki Minaj reportedly dated for 15 years, from 2000 until 2014. However, he clarified that he did not write Nicki Minaj’s raps and explained that they vibed while creating music at the 7:00 mark.
Nicki Minaj and the Gag City World Tour touched down in Atlanta at State Farm Arena this week. Photos by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice
“Sell out shows, we don’t sell our souls,” The Queen of Rap Nicki Minaj said in a tweet back in January.
Fast forward to March 20-21, Nicki Minaj touched down in Atlanta for her next stop on the Gag City World Tour. Minaj has also sold out eight shows so far on her critically acclaimed Pink Friday 2 World Tour.
For context, Minaj dropped her fifth studio album and sequel to her debut album Pink Friday, Pink Friday 2 back in December.
I have been anxious for weeks now and the time has finally come! The Barbz were outside in Atlanta showing off their pink outfits to celebrate the Queen of Rap.
Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice
Welcome to Gag City Atlanta!!!
They need rappers like Nicki Minaj! When Nicki said, “We’re going to Gag City”, I wasn’t aware she literally meant GAG CITY!
As a barb himself, this was my first-time seeing Nicki Minaj live on tour, so I had to go all out and purchase the VIP “Gag City Headquarters” Package. This included light refreshments like curry chicken samples and southwest egg rolls, two drink tickets for cocktails, Photo backdrop moments and opportunities, early access to merch, etc.
The lounge felt like a nice precursor before entering Gag City and it did not disappoint.
Once seated, I was sitting so close to the stage where I had an amazing view of Nicki and her dancers. Before Nicki came out on stage, the Barbz were rapping lyrics to her songs, bar for bar, while Nicki’s DJ, DJ Boof, was playing her classics to get the crowd hyped.
One minute we are all vibing and the next, the stage activates, and we are instantly transported into Gag City.
Opening with “I’m The Best”, instantly transported me back to the original Pink Friday days. There’s something so magical about seeing Nicki Minaj in her element and zone. It’s even better when you can feel the genuine love and respect the Barbs have for Nicki.
The setlist included classics like “I’m The Best”, “Feeling Myself”, “High School”, “Super Bass”, “Right Thru Me”, “Save Me”, “Here I Am”, “Starships”, “Roman’s Revenge”, “Monster”, and more. It also includes new and recent hits like “Barbie Dangerous”, “FTCU”, “Beep Beep”, “Press Play”, “Hard White”, “Win Again”, “We Go Up”, “Big Difference”, “Pink Birthday”, “Cowgirl”, “RNB”, “Fallin 4 U”, and more.
Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice
Some of my favorite songs played live at the show were Red Ruby Da Sleeze, Save Me, Press Play, Feeling Myself, Fallin 4 U, Starships, Hard White, FTCU, and Super Freaky Girl.
One of the most amazing moments of the show, to me, was hearing the entire State Farm Arena yelling to the top of their lungs, Nicki’s lyrics. Some were shedding tears of joy; others were dancing their tails off and having so much fun with their friends. The bond between Nicki and the Barbz are immaculate, you can tell the love between the two is genuine.
Once Nicki finished her first set, Monica came out looking beautiful as ever. She really showed Atlanta a great time and even was a little emotional from all the love she received.
Another one of my favorite moments of the show was when towards the end when Nicki gave all of us some inspiring affirmations to chase after our dreams and never stop until we reach them. It was a truly beautiful experience.
I have made some lifelong friends who all share the same love for Nicki. All in all, I am still on cloud nine because I was able to be a part of something great and that is the Pink Friday 2 World Tour.
Side note, seeing Nicki up close really hit home for me because she is so pretty and beautiful in real life.
I encourage all Barbz (even if you aren’t a barb) to go see this tour because it’s worth it. I thoroughly enjoyed myself and this felt like a dream come true.
A Moment 4 Life, if you will. Much love to Nicki, her team, dancers, and the rest of her tour, I can’t wait to see more!
It’s no secret that “I Feel Like 2007 Britney” has been long overdue to be retired as a “cute” little phrase to hyperbolically announce one’s fraught mental state. Plastered on every form of “merch” from t-shirts to coffee mugs to magnets, its reference to a time in Britney Spears’ life when she was mercilessly mocked for having emotional difficulties has continued to be commodified via this “light-hearted” allusion to one of the most troubled years in her life (as was well-documented). And this in spite of all the kumbaya bullshit of late about how we should treat mental illness with more dignity and respect as opposed to poking fun at those who have clearly suffered from its toll. Whatever Spears “has” (apart from Too Much Time Spent Under Media Scrutiny Syndrome), a “post-woke” public ought to realize the insensitivity of a phrase like “I Feel Like 2007 Britney” by now, and that the narrative surrounding it is due for an overhaul.
Here to provide that is, rather unexpectedly, Cardi B. Managing to make Britney and her newfound freedom a key part of her verse on Latto’s “Put It On Da Floor Again,” Cardi deftly references Britney’s frequent twirls and choreographic tirades paraded on her Instagram account—the source of much endless dissection as fans continue to search for the “truth” behind her often arcane posts. But maybe, sometimes, “What U See (Is What U Get)”—except that time the #FreeBritney movement accurately read into her coded messaging for help throughout her conservatorship. Regardless, Cardi is overtly Team Treat Britney Like A Grown-Ass Woman Who Can Do Whatever She Wants. This extends into “rebranding” Britney entirely…whether she wanted to be or not (as most know, the pop star has never had much agency when it comes to what people project on her). But surely positioning Spears’ incessant dancing videos as a source of self-empowerment is far better than the other spectrum of the rhetoric that states she’s more “insane” than ever, and should be put back into a conservatorship. And the commentary in favor of that is eerily loud at a time when society believes it has moved “beyond” the whole slap women with a “hysteria” or “witchcraft” charge so as to be able to ultimately control them and keep the patriarchy alive and well.
As though to exemplify that point, “concerned” “fans” had police perform a well check on the singer in January of 2023 due to some of her “erratic behavior.” Including not just her dancing videos, but also her arbitrary deletion of Instagram, which sent people into a frenzy over their speculation that she’s still somehow being “controlled.” Spears was so affronted by the infiltration into her supposedly free existence that she posted the comment, “I shut down my Instagram because there were too many people saying I looked like an idiot dancing and that I looked crazy.” One person who patently does not feel that way and wants nothing more than for the dancing to continue is Cardi B. So it is that, during her one-minute verse for “Put It On Da Floor Again,” she raps, “I’m sexy dancin’ in the house, I feel like Britney Spears.” To further emphasize that line, she appears in the video for the song wearing a t-shirt that reads, “I Feel Like Britney Spears.” Repurposing it with a positive connotation, whereas, in the past, likening oneself to Britney has invoked a degrading stigma surrounding one’s fragile mental health. Albeit intended as “jocular.” However, with her seemingly small gesture, Cardi B is actively reshaping the narrative that Britney is somehow “crazy” for dancing in her house all the time when, in fact, her dancing is not only sexy, but a flagrant display of how she chooses to use her agency.
Unfortunately, Latto is in the mix to trivialize mental health in a similar fashion to what the “I Feel Like 2007 Britney” mantra does by declaring, “She thought I would kiss her ass, she must ain’t took her meds.” What’s more, Latto definitely wants to highlight that line by wearing it as a shirt in the video, specifically during the moment where she’s working behind a pharmacy counter and throwing a slew of pill bottles up into the air. So yes, there’s still some work to be done on ableist language coming from the so-called “mentally sound.” As for who Latto might be referring to with that line, one person in particular that pops up is Nicki Minaj. The two famously had beef after Latto expressed her affection for Minaj throughout her still-germinal career (as so many up-and-coming female rappers do), only for Minaj to leave a bitter taste in Latto’s mouth after dragging her into some Grammy controversy surrounding “Super Freaky Girl” being moved into the pop category for a nomination consideration, while Latto’s “Big Energy” remained, in the eyes of the Recording Academy, worthy of remaining in the rap category.
This “affront” to Nicki that really had nothing to do with Latto found them rowing on Twitter ferociously, with Latto calling Minaj a “40-year-old bully” and a “super freaky grandma.” For comments about “being old” are always the cheap shot insult of someone younger. Nonetheless, the beef Minaj stewed was in keeping with her notoriety for starting feuds with newer female rappers. The same, naturally, went for Cardi B when she first rose to prominence in 2017 with “Bodak Yellow.” Although the two initially played nice by collaborating on “MotorSport” (also released in 2017) with Migos together, it didn’t take long for their rivalry to crescendo into a physical clash by the time September 2018 rolled around. The two were both in attendance at New York Fashion Week when Cardi ended up with a huge bump on her head after getting in an altercation with Minaj’s security, managing to throw a shoe at her during the fracas. Soon after the fight, Cardi was featured on Quavo’s “Champagne Rosé” with Madonna, rapping braggadociously of those, like Nicki, convinced of her downfall, “They say my time is tickin’/These hoes is optimistic.” Similarly, Latto raps on “Put It On Da Floor Again,” “They thought I was gon’ fall off/I hate to bring you bad news.”
Thus, despite claims of a “peace treaty” in the aftermath, it seems pointed that Cardi chose to work with Latto, while Minaj placed her bets on collaborating with Ice Spice (rap’s freshest female ingenue) on a remix of “Princess Diana” for the win. And, considering Taylor Swift placed her own bets on Ice Spice as well, Minaj is probably the victor in this round (though not in the round that involved her diss track inspired by Megan Thee Stallion’s “Hiss”). What’s more, “Princess Diana” is definitely the better track, but Cardi makes “Put It On Da Floor Again” stand out via her inherently protective statement about Britney. Funnily enough, Cardi’s baby daddy, Offset, veered toward less favorable commentary about Spears on the aforementioned “MotorSport” by noting, “488, hit the gears/Suicide doors, Britney Spears.” The allusion here plays with another moment from Britney’s worst year ever—2007—when she proceeded to go apeshit on a paparazzo’s car door with a green umbrella after having recently shaved her head. Indeed, the images of her bald self as she maniacally wields this umbrella are arguably more famous than the head shaving photos themselves. So perhaps, in her own way (whether deliberate or subconscious), Cardi is also trying to correct the insensitivity of Offset’s mention of Spears in another song she was featured on.
Latto, who also “worked with” Cardi roundaboutly by appearing in the 2020 video for “WAP,” instead opts to tell us she feels more like Shawty Lo. The deceased rapper who is something of the “OG” Nick Cannon in terms of fathering many children from multiple women (with Shawty beating out Cannon, in one regard, by having eleven children from ten women, while Cannon has twelve children from a mere six women). Going by behavior patterns, Shawty Lo was surely the “crazier” one if he was to be compared to Britney Spears. And yet, as is the norm, the standards for women’s behavior being deemed “crazy” are far less lax than they are for men (see: Kanye West a.k.a. Ye).
As for Cardi’s “erstwhile” rival, Minaj, she, too, has come to the defense of Spears in the recent past. Namely, to lambast Britney’s ex, Kevin Federline, for posting videos that her sons filmed without her knowledge wherein she’s meant to be portrayed as, once again, “acting crazy.” Minaj declared of Federline’s smarmy maneuver:
“Do you understand what kind of a clown you have to be to be a whole grown fucking man and as soon as you see somebody happy and getting married and moving on and being free and feeling good in their own skin, to do the very thing that you know is going to attempt to break them down? Going to the media. Only cowards use the media against a famous person who they once loved, they procreated with, they’re being taken care of by, they once were being taken care of by, using the person’s fame as this constant ‘gotcha’ moment… And you think you not gonna have fucking karma from it? You think it’s okay? You think that anybody is gonna feel sorry for you?”
The affection that Black women seem to have for Britney can perhaps be explained by seeing in her some form of similar oppression and subjugation simply for being herself. For trying to live her life without it being twisted and mutated into her somehow doing something “wrong.” And so, for Cardi to do her part to help rewrite the script about what it means to “feel like Britney Spears,” well, that’s just ripe for quoting Ana Navarro when she said, “The power that that has, the intelligence that that has, the clearance that that has, the access that that has, the influence that that has, the profile that that has, the international implication that that has.”
Nicki Minaj will return to the Valley as part of her Pink Friday 2 Tour this week.
She’ll headline at downtown Phoenix’s Footprint Center on Wednesday.
The tour, is named for Minaj’s album “Pink Friday 2,” which came out on Dec. 8. It’ll be her first time performing in the Valley since an Aug. 2012 show at what was then Comerica Theatre (now Arizona Financial Theatre).
Here’s everything you need to know if you want to check out the show.
When is the Nicki Minaj concert?
Nicki Minaj is scheduled to perform at Footprint Center on Wednesday, March 13.
Can I still buy tickets?
The show is officially sold out, but tickets are available through resellers.
When does the concert start?
Doors open at 7 p.m., and the show starts at 8 p.m. Monica is the opening act.
Where is Footprint Center and how do I get there?
Footprint Center is located at 201 E. Jefferson St. in downtown Phoenix. The closest freeway exits off Interstate 10 are Washington Street/Jefferson Street or Seventh Street.
Can I take Valley Metro Rail to Footprint Center?
Yes. Ticketholders can ride Valley Metro Rail trains for free up to four hours before the event and up until midnight. An eastbound rail station is located at Third and Jefferson streets and a westbound station is at Third and Washington streets.
Where can I park?
You can park in the adjacent parking structure at First and Madison streets, but there are many other parking lots and structures within a 10-minute walk of the venue, each with varying fees. For additional questions, call the parking hotline at 602-514-8472.
Where can I hang out before and after the show?
Downtown Phoenix has a bevy of restaurants, bars and clubs to choose from. Take a peek at our downtown dining guide to see what your options are.
A Nicki Minaj after-party starts at 10 p.m. at Valley Bar, 130 N. Central Ave. DJ Rikkie Tee will be spinning tunes in the bar’s game room. The event goes till 2 a.m. and there’s no cost to attend.
What is the bag policy at Footprint Center?
No backpacks or large purses are allowed. Small purses and fanny packs will be searched.
How can I pay for things at the concert?
Footprint Center is a cashless venue. If you want food or drinks, bring a credit or debit card. Footprint Center also offers reverse ATMs near the Ticket Office or Section 218 that will convert cash into a preloaded Mastercard.
What can I expect at security?
From the Ticketmaster website: “New security procedures have been implemented at Footprint Center. … Every individual entering the arena will be subject to search.”
Jess Hilarious has made a bold suggestion, claiming that Nicki Minaj inviting Katt Williams on her tour may be due to poor ticket sales.
The rapper is just one week away from kicking off her ‘Pink Friday 2‘ Tour on March 1, and the possible addition of bringing Williams on the road has Jess thinking it’s supposedly due to lackluster demand.
Jess Hilarious Comments On Nicki Minaj Wanting Katt Williams On The PF2 Tour
The ‘Breakfast Club’ co-host made the remark in a new episode of ‘Jess With The Mess: Uncut,’ where she brings up Minaj recently saying she wants Williams to be part of her tour in some capacity.
“When the f**k did Nicki and Katt Williams even have a f**ing relationship? To put him on your tour?” the 32-year-old said.
…. but it is tho. @livenation reports that this is Nicki’s best selling tour with over 25 sold out shows and is still adding more dates. Who would yall like to see… pic.twitter.com/5qkohxZ1dK
In a last-minute attempt to boost those numbers, it’s implied that Williams was being considered to increase the overall interest and demand for the North American run.
“Maybe it isn’t,” she added. But the former Wild ‘n Out star gave another take on the situation, wondering whether the current state of the economy could be blamed for why Minaj wants Williams on her tour.
She proceeded by joking about the people who went above and beyond just to see Beyoncé on her Renaissance Tour last year to make her point that times are tough.
“It’s totally expected to not sell out tours. No icon, no matter how big or small, is exempt from promotion. You promoted that album, you did interviews, you popped out, you promoted ‘Hiss.’ […] So, we’re going to have Nicki, Monica and Katt Willams. Mind you, Katt Williams hasn’t responded yet.”
As Jess aleady stated, Williams hasn’t publicly responded to Minaj’s request to get him on her tour.
Why Katt Williams Joining The Tour Is Almost Impossible… At Least For The North American Dates
It’s also important to note that the comedian is currently on his ‘Dark Matter Tour,’ reportedly with Mo’Nique and Torrei Hart.
The first set of shows kicked off a week after his viral ‘Club Shay Shay‘ interview in January. Williams will continue his run and take the stage for his final show in Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Missouri, on May 11.
So, it’s very unlikely that Williams would even have the time to join Minaj on her North American leg, which kicks off in Oakland, California, on March 1 and concludes on May 13 in Oklahoma City.
Of course, there’s always the possibility that Williams could join Minaj on the European leg of her tour, which kicks off on May 23 in Amsterdam.
But since Minaj has yet to reveal any additional details or confirm whether she has conversed with Williams, it remains uncertain if they are still considering him for the shows.
The internet is alive with fresh rap beef – and this time, it’s Nicki Minaj and Megan Thee Stallion who are at the centre of an unfolding feud. It seems that Nicki has taken major issue with Megan’s new track, Hiss – and one line in particular, at that.
Twitter (now X) has been alive with theories regarding the drama between the pair since Megan dropped the song on January 26 – but here’s what we actually know so far.
Why are Nicki Minaj and Megan Thee Stallion feuding?
Hiss is most certainly a diss track of sorts, with Megan taking down her haters and calling out a number of unnamed people in the lyrics. She sets the tone with a spoken section at the beginning of the song, saying: “I just wanna kick this sh*t off by saying, F**k y’all! I ain’t gotta clear my name on a motherf**kin’ thang… I’m finna get this sh*t off my chest and lay it to rest. Let’s go.”
One particular line, though, was thought to reference Nicki Minaj and her husband Kenneth Petty.
“These h**s don’t be mad at Megan, these h**s mad at Megan’s Law. I don’t really know what the problem is, but I guarantee y’all don’t want me to start,” the lyrics go, which many believe to be a jibe referencing a US law that requires all sex offender registers to be available to the public.
Nicki’s husband Kenneth is a registered sex offender, after he was convicted of attempted rape in 1995 when he was 16 years-old. More recently, he was sentenced to a year’s house arrest after failing to register as a sex offender in California, after he moved there with Nicki.
In response, Nicki took to Instagram Live to share her reaction to the song – and her own diss track aimed at Megan, in which she repeatedly called her ‘Big Foot’.
Seemingly referencing the ‘Megan’s Law’ lyric, she also said: “You bringing up 30-year-old tea from when this man was a 15-year-old child.”
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After joining in for a feature on “new queen bee” (not) Reneé Rapp’s “Not My Fault,” some listeners might have been misled into thinking Megan Thee Stallion had gone soft. But her new pattern of single releases seems to be “hard, soft, hard,” if we’re going by “Cobra,” “Not My Fault” and, now, “Hiss.” The latter obviously being thematically in line with “Cobra” based on the title alone. And yet, the “snake” Megan Thee Stallion has in mind as inspiration for this song is one, Nicki Minaj. While some might have been foolish enough to believe that there was harmony between the two rappers after they collaborated on 2019’s hit of the summer, “Hot Girl Summer,” there is often a pattern with Nicki when it comes to alienating the female rappers who have come up after her. Especially the ones she’s willing to collaborate with at the outset of their careers. Once upon a time, that was Cardi B, who quickly turned from “friend” to foe after 2017’s “MotorSport.” A song that Cardi was added to later in the creation process, and that Minaj felt she should have been more grateful for.
By 2018, the two famously got into a scuffle at an event for New York Fashion Week, prompting Cardi to release a series of videos in the aftermath defending herself and more fully speaking on their beef with comments like, “You lie so much you can’t even keep up with lies.” It seems Megan Thee Stallion, who collaborated with Cardi one year after “Hot Girl Summer” on “WAP” (and then again on 2023’s “Bongos”), would tend to agree. Along with the many venomous (snake pun intended) outcries about how Minaj is both enabling and defending a sexual predator. Which brings us to the most scandalizing (for Nicki and beef-lovers alike) line of all from “Hiss”: “These hoes don’t be mad at Megan, these hoes mad at Megan’s Law.” A direct aim and hit at Nicki for her husband, Kenneth Petty, not registering as a sex offender upon moving to California in order to be with her. This deliberate failure on his part was considered a federal offense. Thus, he was sentenced with three years of probation and one year of house arrest. Plus a $55,000 fine that Minaj undoubtedly paid.
Thee Stallion’s shade-throwing might seem like a non sequitur to some, but hints of contention have been publicly brewing at least since Minaj’s 2023 single, “Red Ruby Da Sleeze,” on which she raps, “I don’t fuck with horses since Christopher Reeve.” Stallion, horses…you get it. To cinch the allusion, Minaj also added, “Dorito bitches mad that they not chose.” Megan, as it happens, has an endorsement deal with Doritos (and all the other Flamin’ Hot products in the Frito Lay stable). So, not exactly subtle. Thus, Megan meets that “subtlety” and raises it on “Hiss.” Which is why she comes for Minaj’s “okayness” with sex offenders (including her brother, Jelani Maraj). She makes no mention, however, of Minaj’s beef with her stemming from, per Minaj’s account, the time Megan told her to drink alcohol while pregnant and get an abortion so she could really have a good time. It seems Minaj sat on that for a while and decided it was wildly inappropriate, even if said in jest (and probably because Thee Stallion didn’t want her to have a sex offender’s baby…so, if you think about it, it was coming from an inherently good place). Hence, “Red Ruby Da Sleeze.” But Minaj didn’t seem to bargain for Megan Thee Stallion actually lying in wait (like a cobra) to pounce when the time was right. And oh, how it was right for poking the bear that is Minaj’s furor on social media once she gets started. But all of that attention she gave Megan only worked to the latter’s advantage, with the video for “Hiss” becoming the number one trending video on YouTube the day after its release. Having warned us that she’s the “Black Regina George,” Thee Stallion dropped the equivalent of every page (photocopied ad infinitum) in the Burn Book into the public space with this song and video.
Directed by Douglas Bernardt (who also did “Cobra”), the video opens on a snake’s egg hatching (just as the video for “Cobra” ended on the image of one hatching). And who else should be inside of it but Megan herself? As we see her float inside the amniotic fluid, Megan paints the picture, “I feel like Mariah Carey/Got these niggas so obsessed/My pussy so famous, might get managed by Kris Jenner next/He can’t move on, can’t let it go/He hooked nose full of that Tina Snow/And since niggas need Megan help to make money/Bitch, come be my ho.” Invoking Mariah’s name from the outset was already an immediate dig at Nicki, who famously had beef with Mariah during the filming of American Idol starting in 2012. Though, just two years before, the sparring duo came together for a remix of a Mariah song called “Up Out My Face.” Released even before Minaj’s debut album, Pink Friday, it established the fact that “Barbie” was rising to the top as fast as some of her current competitors are now. This includes Ice Spice, who is theoretically “Team Nicki” after collaborating on “Princess Diana” and “Barbie World” with her. Though she might find herself eventually in a war with Nicki too, if we’re to go by the pattern of Cardi and Megan, both of whom Nicki collab’d with at the beginning of their mainstream musical journeys as well. But back to Mariah, who is strategically mentioned by Megan as an allusion to another feud and to make a callback to Carey’s 2009 single, “Obsessed,” which took shots at Eminem (both in the song and its accompanying music video). A rapper who would appear alongside Nicki on Pink Friday with “Roman’s Revenge.” How…circular. At least when it comes to making correlations based on “Hiss.”
And Thee Stallion also wants the correlation to be made that she’s still talking about Nicki (by referencing “Hot Girl Summer”) during one of the final verses when she raps, “Ever since I claimed the summer, all you bitches want a season/Ask a ho why she don’t like me, bet she can’t give you a reason.” But if Minaj didn’t have one before, she certainly has one now…and will no doubt be using this as cannon fodder in the future. Not just for attacking her, but also her “known associates.” Namely, Drake. Who gets majorly trolled by Megan in the verse, “All these lil’ rap niggas so fraud [perhaps a nod to the Nicki/Drake song “No Frauds”]/Xanax be they hardest bars/These niggas hate on BBLs and be walkin’ ’round with the same scars…/Cosplay gangsters, fake-ass accents/Posted in another nigga hood like a bad bitch (where are you from?).” So, essentially, she came for most of the Young Money alumni (except Lil’ Wayne). As per usual, Thee Stallion also talks about how the more people speak negatively about her, the richer she’ll get. This was addressed on Traumazine’s “Her” with, “The more hoes hating, more money I’ma make/And the more niggas talk, more niggas want a taste.” On “Hiss,” it becomes, “Bottom line is I’m still rich” and “Every time I get mentioned, one of y’all bitch-ass niggas get twenty-four hours of attention.”
This includes Minaj, who is currently getting more than just twenty-four hours of it as she keeps going off on social media while Thee Stallion has let the work do all the talking. Though one imagines Minaj won’t wait too long to deliver a better rebuttal than the one she gave with, “Bad bitch, she like six foot/I call her Big Foot/ The bitch fell off, I said get up on your good foot.” And maybe part of Minaj’s response will also be to the Cardi-delivered line on “Bongos” that goes, “My BD is a Migo/Bitch, your BD is a zero.” Which, yes, could even be interpreted as a dig at Minaj’s baby daddy (turned husband) selection.
As for Thee Stallion, she concludes “Hiss” by strutting down a stark white catwalk with a pit of snakes slithering on either side. By now, though, she’s prepared to bite back with her own distinct venom. Though there are some very specific moments during the video when she channels the Minaj aesthetic while doing it. Particularly just before opening an Alice in Wonderland-type door into a hall of mirrors where she can say to one version of herself, “Y’all goofy-ass niggas look so dumb after y’all celebrate fake news/Usin’ my name for likes and views/I don’t give a fuck what y’all make trend/Bitch, I still win.” It seems that’s the case for this round of the biftek between the two rap powerhouses (because if anyone knows Minaj, this isn’t going to stop now). So maybe Thee Stallion might be the first to prove that imitation isn’t the sincerest form of flattery…not when the person doing it also happens to be dragging your name through the mud in the process.
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This year is a monumental one for our culture and hip-hop in general. A little genre that started in the Bronx would go on to dominate the world and dictate what’s hot and what’s not worldwide. Often imitated but never duplicated this thing of ours is here to stay. Unfortunately, some of the pioneers left us too soon yet their contributions will live on forever through film and video.
We figured why not take a trip down memory lane and revisit 50 of the most iconic moments in hip-hop. Celebrate the final day of Hip-Hop’s 50th anniversary over the next five pages.
50 Iconic Moments In Hip-Hop History
These moments are in no particular order but all are significant when we talk about hip-hop. These are the moments that inspired a generation and pushed our culture forward. If you were lucky enough to experience some of these you know just how beautiful they were for something that wasn’t even accepted at first. Furthermore, hip-hop was the underdog and is now the determining factor in what is cool and what isn’t.
Tupac Sign’s To Death Row & Releases The Iconic “California Love” Video After Release From Jail
Young Dolph Survives 100 Shots and Releases Bulletproof
Dr. Dre Sells Beats by Dre To Apple For $3 Billion
Kanye West’s infamous “George Bush Doesn’t Care About Black People” statement
Suge Knight Disses Diddy During The Source Awards
If hip-hop was the Marvel Universe this would be the nexus moment that happens in every universe that can’t be undone. It changes the trajectories of several people and pushes hip-hop further into the forefront of entertainment. After all, drama sells, and very well at that.
Andre 3000’s infamous “The South Got Something To Say”
Nas Vs Jay-Z
Brawl Breaks Out During The 2000 Source Awards
TI Calls Out Lil’ Flip During Birthday Bash
Three 6 Mafia Wins An Oscar For A Song About Pimpin
Kool Herc Throws a Back-to-School Jam That Would Be Seen As The “Birth” Of Hip-Hop
Lil Nas X Makes Grammy History Becoming The First Openly Gay Rapper To Become Nominated
Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Mary J. Blige, Kendrick Lamar & 50 Cent Headline The Pepsi SB LVI Halftime Show
Run DMC & Aerosmith Cross Genres For “Walk This Way”
2 Live Crew’s Banned In The U.S.A Becomes First Album To Receive “Parental Advisory” Sticker
Yo! MTV Raps Premiers In 1998
Rick Rubin & Russell Simmons Create Def Jam Records
Elliott Wilson has issued a public apology to Twitch streamer Kai Cenat after feeling some type of way about his interview with Nicki Minaj earlier this week.
The hip hop journalist had previously interviewed the rapper when she dropped her 2014 album, ‘The Pinkprint,’ and again in 2018, following the release of ‘Queen.’ But amid her promotional campaign to support her latest record, ‘Pink Friday 2,’ Wilson wasn’t in the books for a sit-down chat.
On Thursday (December 14), the XXL editor took to his X account and shared a short clip of Minaj twerking during Cenat’s live stream. He captioned the photo, “Hip hop journalism,” a comment some fans perceived as an insult to the Twitch star.
Hip Hop journalist Elliott Wilson shared his thoughts on Kai Cenat’s livestream with Nicki Minaj. 👀 pic.twitter.com/rmvRcGMFdA
Elliott Wilson Takes Accountability After Nicki Minaj Clapped Back
Wison has previously taken issue with artists often neglecting traditional hip hop for creators with mass audiences. Amid Nicki’s interview with Kai and Funny Marco, Wilson decided to voice his opinion. Social media, Nicki Minaj, and her fan base, the Barbz, didn’t think it needed to be at Cenat’s expense.
After coming across his initial tweet, Minaj didn’t hesitate to respond as she lashed out at Wilson for his remark before calling out his journalistic practices. She accused him of manipulating narratives to make her appear in a negative light.
“Elliot, if you’d spit JayZ d*** out for one second, you’d be able to be happy for the new comers,” the ‘Barbie Dangerous’ artist posted on Friday (December 15) in response to Wilson’s remark about the live stream.
She added:
“Isn’t that how y’all tried to tarnish my image? By saying I’m not welcoming new btchs in? Did songs with all of them tho. Why you not happy for a young black man like Kai. Tmrw btch.”
Nicki Minaj later elaborated on the situation, telling fans that Wilson had allegedly disrespected her in several tweets in the past as she referred to him as “Idiot Wilson.” She added, “Nobody owes you s**t, h** n***a. F**k you!”
The podcast host attempted to clear the air by responding to Minaj as he clarified he was not disrespecting her with the tweet.
“Never dissed Nicki. Always said she’s the female rap [GOAT]. Over Lauryn, Missy, Kim and Foxy and all. I think Cardi B is dope too. Happy Holidays.”
On Saturday (December 16), however, Wilson hopped back on the social media platform to apologize for his comment, saying that he was out of line and should’ve never discredited the platform Cenat has been able to build from the ground up.
“I apologize to @KaiCenat + his fam,” Wilson wrote. “I was out of line and let my competitive nature get the best of me. Kai carved his own lane in the game, built a great platform and deserves respect. Salute the streamers and young creatives getting to the paper and pushing our culture forward.”