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Tag: Rick Ross

  • Aht! Aht! Rick Ross Speaks On The “Nepotism” Talk Surrounding Bronny James’ Lakers Draft

    Aht! Aht! Rick Ross Speaks On The “Nepotism” Talk Surrounding Bronny James’ Lakers Draft

    Social media has been buzzing with reactions ever since LeBron James’ eldest son, ‘Bronny James, was drafted by the Los Angeles Lakers on June 27.

    RELATED: Whew! Rick Ross Riles Social Media UP After Reacting To Pretty Vee Receiving Her First Honorary Doctorate Degree

    Ross Speaks On Bronny’s Draft

    Rick Ross is the latest celebrity to respond to Bronny’s big news. The Maybach Music founder hopped on Instagram to let everyone know that he is not here for the nepotism talk surrounding Bronny.

    “Who was he suppose to play for? Go get that Nike money! Y’all let me know. Bronny soon as you get out there on that court, make sure you throw that baby powder in the sky! And you run out there and do that leg pump,” Ross said.

    Ricky Rozay also expressed his frustrations with the new words people create on social media, specifically pointing out nepotism.

    “Nepotism, nepotism. Y’all make me sick, every two years y’all come up with a new word. Now it’s nepotism. 85% of all of you m***a f****s got a job, by somebody you know. And that ain’t even what I’m referring to. Little Bronny a bigger star than 95% of the m***a f****s in the league now,” Ross continued.

    Social Media Reacts To Rozay

    Whew! The Roomies quickly hopped in The Shade Room comment section to share their thoughts on Ross’ statements.

    Instagram user @iamdariusalford wrote, Nepotism new to you Rick Ross. We been knew that word 😂”

    Instagram user @ra3ofsunshin3 wrote, Bigging up someone else’s child while neglecting your own is nasty work.” 

    While Instagram user @bri_klassyy wrote,Ross your son has a FULL Scholarship to a respectable HBCU and you on the internet talking about another man’s son accomplishments🤡… This what Tia be talking about!” 

    Then Instagram user @ shayonce._ wrote, You didn’t even go to your sons graduation. We don’t wanna hear from you.” 

    Lastly, Instagram user @emeraldmarie wrote,Him & his baby mom talk the same 😂” 

    Details On Bronny’s Lakers Draft

    As The Shade Room previously reported, Bronny James has officially joined the Los Angeles Lakers. On June 27, it was confirmed that Bronny and LeBron James will make history as the first father-son duo to play in the NBA together.

    At 19 years old, Bronny James secured the 55th overall pick and will don the iconic purple and gold colors alongside his dad in the upcoming NBA season.

    RELATED: Oh My! Tia Kemp COOKS Rick Ross Online For Celebrating The End Of His Child Support Payments (VIDEOS)

    What Do You Think Roomies?

    Ashley Rushford

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  • Metro Boomin Couldn’t Have Made ‘BBL Drizzy’ Without This Comedian

    Metro Boomin Couldn’t Have Made ‘BBL Drizzy’ Without This Comedian

    Photo: Prince Williams/WireImage

    If you haven’t gotten “BBL Drizzy” out of your head, you can thank Metro Boomin — but you also need to thank King Willonius. Metro’s beat is a sped-up version of a ’70s-style R&B song that Willonius posted nearly a month earlier, inspired by Rick Ross accusing Drake of getting a Brazilian butt lift. Now, that song has become one of the bright spots in Drake and Kendrick Lamar’s beef after Metro challenged fans to freestyle over the track. (Drake should’ve been careful when he told Metro to “shut your ho ass up and make some drums.”) Even your mom might be singing along.

    Willonius has been “trying to work just as hard as Kendrick” during the beef, writing and producing over a dozen songs inspired by the rappers trading bars. A comedian and songwriter, he makes the songs using artificial-intelligence software, feeding his lyrics and toggling with different prompts until he gets a product he likes. “When I first got introduced to tools like ChatGPT, it unlocked all my creativity,” he says. “Honestly, it felt like I had an advantage over a lot of my peers, just in the ability to create at warp speed.” Now, it’s helped him make his mark on hip-hop history. “Hope I get a BBL out of it. Nah, I’m joking.”

    So Rick Ross first coined “BBL Drizzy.” What made you think, That’s a song?
    I mean, it was hilarious. Just the words “BBL Drizzy” is funny in itself. But I always had a history of anytime something was trending on Twitter/X, I would make a song and throw it on my SoundCloud. This time I put it on X, and it took off like wildfire. The timing of “BBL Drizzy” and the Drake-Kendrick beef being so polarizing, it was the perfect storm.

    What is your process from writing to making the song with AI?
    Anytime I come up with lyrics, it is just thinking of a concept and thinking about what type of impact I want to have or story I want to tell. For “BBL Drizzy,” it was essentially a singer celebrating his BBL. Like, “Hey man, I got a BBL — I got the best BBL.” Instead of shaming somebody about having a BBL, let’s celebrate Drake for his BBL.

    Then actually producing the song with AI, is that a lot of trial and error? How do you get to the final product?
    Yeah, a lot of trial and error, just going back and forth with the different prompts. I have a really great ear, so it’s just listening to the music once it’s done and being like, I don’t like this, then just keep reiterating the track until it’s something that I feel that people would enjoy. Then just keep tweaking it until you find what actually works. That particular track, I’ve done it in multiple different styles, country, Afrobeats, yacht rock, and it works in each one.

    So how did you find out that Metro Boomin flipped this into a beat?
    I was leaving the Improv late at night; I think it was three o’clock in the morning. I just saw it on X, and I was like, Man, this is insane. Then people started calling me and texting me.

    Do you think he did a good job with it?
    Yeah, he did an excellent job. I mean, it is going viral right now, man. I made the song back in early April, and it had this moment where it did its thing, then it kind of died down. Things don’t stay viral for very long. Then he came back and flipped it and now it’s massive. You got nuns dancing to it. It is taking on a whole life of its own.

    What have been some of your favorite versions that you’ve seen?
    I like the dude playing the guitar. That was really dope. I liked the Indian dancer. The Duolingo TikTok was interesting. I’ve been working, so I haven’t seen a lot of the videos.

    Metro eventually thanked you on X for the sample. Have you heard more from him since?
    Not much. He gave me a shout-out, so that was cool. It’s been a lot of people riding for me. Any time somebody posts the song, there’ll be people in the comments like, “Hey, that’s King Willonius who made that and wrote it.” That’s probably the biggest misconception with AI. People think that you can just throw a prompt in there and it’ll make a track like that, but like, AI doesn’t know about “thicker than a Snicker.” You’re not going to get lines like that from AI.

    What did you think about Drake using AI of Tupac on “Taylor Made Freestyle”?
    Drake just opened up the floodgates. I think Drake gave permission for everybody to use AI. Prior to that, people that were making AI songs last year, it was kind of taboo. For the biggest rapper in the world to use AI to imitate one of the greatest rappers ever, a deceased rapper, I think anything goes now because of that.

    Do you think Drake actually got a BBL?
    He’s rich enough that he could get it. I saw a TikTok with a doctor and he was saying that Drake got one, but who knows? I don’t know him. If he did, shout out to him, then he really is BBL Dizzy.

    Between Drake versus Kendrick, who is winning right now?
    I would have to say Kendrick is winning. Drake’s last diss record, “The Heart Part 6,” just felt like a lackluster effort. He was like, “Yeah, okay, I’m kind of tired of this.” But if you look at the music that really moved the people, it was Kendrick’s music. Who knows how much was factual or not, but if you just look at the impact of the records, I think Kendrick did a lot more to change how we look at Drake. But at the end of the day, “BBL Drizzy” is the best song of the whole beef.

    Justin Curto

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  • Kendrick Lamar and Drake gave us an epic hip-hop beef weekend. Here’s what to know

    Kendrick Lamar and Drake gave us an epic hip-hop beef weekend. Here’s what to know

    (CNN) — Two of hip-hop’s biggest stars have beef and people are taking sides.

    Kendrick Lamar and Drake have been engaged in a lyrical battle in recent weeks that escalated over the weekend. The two artists each released songs about the other, in one case with Lamar not even waiting a full hour before he dropped a track in response to one of Drake’s.

    Here’s what you need to know about the verses that have been a hot topic of cultural conversation.

    Analysis by Lisa Respers France and CNN

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  • *Clutches Pearls* Kendrick Lamar DRAGS Drake’s ‘Bad B****’ Behavior, Suspected Build-A-Abs & Everything Else On Scathing ‘Euphoria’ Diss, Sparks HILARIOUS Hysteria

    *Clutches Pearls* Kendrick Lamar DRAGS Drake’s ‘Bad B****’ Behavior, Suspected Build-A-Abs & Everything Else On Scathing ‘Euphoria’ Diss, Sparks HILARIOUS Hysteria

    *clutches pearls*

    Source: Prince Williams/Wireimage/Joseph Okpako/WireImage

    After several days of loud silence, Kendrick Lamar finally clapped back at Drake’s “Push Ups” diss with scathing diss track “Euphoria” where he listed every single reason why he HATES the Canadian hitmaker–yikes!

    Check it out below:

    On the long-awaited diss track that features several different voices and beat changes, K. Dot unleashes an endless flurry of body blows that grew more vicious by the minute.

    “This ain’t been ’bout critics, not about gimmicks/not about who the greatest It’s always been about love and hate/now let me say I’m the biggest hater I hate the way that you walk /the way that you talk I hate the way that you dress”

    Over the course of the nearly 7-minute song, Kendrick dissed everything you can diss about Drake, including his fake tough stories and alleged plastic surgery.

    “And notice, I said “We,” it’s not just me, I’m what the culture feelin’ /How many more fairytale stories ’bout your life ’til we had enough? /How many more black features ’til you finally feel that you black enough /I like Drake with the melodies, I don’t like Drake when he act tough/ You gon’ make a nigga bring back Puff, let me see if Chubbs really crash somethin’ /Yeah, my first one like my last one, it’s a classic, you don’t have one /Let your core audience stomach that /Didn’t tell ’em where you get your abs from”

    At one point, Kendrick even expresses his disgust over Drake saying the n-word in songs in one of several petty moments on the track.

    There’s also the devastating jab at Drake’s relationship with Sexyy Red and his alleged bad b*tch behavior.

    Picking up where Pusha-T left off, Kendrick fired more shots at Drake’s parenting skills, reigniting the narrative that he’s a deadbeat father to his son, Adonis.

    “Y’all think all of my life is rap? /That’s hoe s***, I got a son to raise, but I can see you don’t know nothin’ ’bout that /Wakin’ them up, know nothin’ ’bout that /And tell ’em to pray, know nothin’ ’bout that /And givin’ ’em tools to walk through life like day by day, know nothin’ ’bout that /Teachin’ the most, and take all the discipline, listen man, you don’t know nothin’ ’bout that /Speakin’ the truth and consider what God’s considerin’, you don’t know nothin’ ’bout that”

    Naturally, social media exploded with hilarious reactions to the diss that’s trending across the whole entire internet.

    Who do you feel is winning the battle: Drake or Kendrick? How do you think J. Cole reacted to the track? Tell us down below and peep the funniest, wildest, and messiest reactions to Kendrick’s ‘Euphoria’ diss on the flip.

    Alex Ford

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  • Wayment Now! Rick Ross & Webster’s Dictionary React To Kendrick Lamar’s Diss Track ‘Euphoria’

    Wayment Now! Rick Ross & Webster’s Dictionary React To Kendrick Lamar’s Diss Track ‘Euphoria’

    Kendrick Lamar set social media on fire after releasing a diss track aimed at Drake. Hours after ‘Euphoria’ went live on YouTube, the reactions are still pouring in. We already told y’all that Metro Boomin weighed in. Now, Rick Ross, Lil Yachty, Gunna, Gillie Da King and even Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary have added to the commotion!

    RELATED: Here We Go! Everything Kendrick Lamar Said About Drake On New Diss ‘Euphoria’

    Here’s What Rick Ross & Lil Yachty Posted

    Taking to Instagram, Rick Ross seemed to troll Drake over K Dot’s bars. As previously reported, Kendrick Lamar called out the Canadian rapper’s fatherhood habits, pen game, sexuality, Black identity, and more in a little over six minutes.

    Rozay opened his trolling by repeatedly calling Aubrey a “white boy.” He then offered his version of “some advice.”

    “Stop, don’t respond. Don’t respond,” Rick said, pointing specifically to Kendrick’s ‘Euphoria’ intro. “Don’t do it, don’t go write an eight-minute verse.”

    See what Rick Ross said below and swipe for his additional post. 

    In his “advice,” Ross seemingly named Lil Yachty, suggesting that he’s a writer for Drizzy. Meanwhile, on X, Lil Boat—as he’s nicknamed—seemed to be siding with the 6-God.

    He liked a post that questioned Kendrick’s fatherhood in the context of his past infidelity. According to HipHopDX, Lamar admitted to being unfaithful in his album ‘Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers.’

    The post that Yachty liked said, “So who was raising your child while you were out cheating on your wife with white women?” 

     

    Rozay sharing his thoughts on ‘Euphoria’ wasn’t too much of a surprise. The ‘Diced Pineapples’ rapper joined the rap feud on several occasions in the last month, including releasing his own diss track against Drizzy called ‘Champagne Moments.’

    Drake later clapped back at Rick Ross on his first of two diss tracks against Kendrick, titled ‘Push Ups.’ Drizzy shared his second diss, ‘Taylor Made Freestyle,’ on social media but removed it last week. The freestyle featured AI vocals of Tupac Shakur and Snoop Dogg. The removal seemingly came after Pac’s estate demanded so under threat of a lawsuit.

    RELATED: Drake Officially Removes ‘Taylor Made Freestyle’ Featuring Tupac’s AI-Generated Vocals

    Who Else Has Weighed In?

    Aside from Metro, Rick, and Yachty, a couple of others have joined the group chat! After Kendrick somehow involved them in the feud, Gunna and Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary weighed in.

    Starting with Gunna. There’s a lyric in ‘Euphoria’ where Lamar plays on rumors that the rapper snitched on Young Thug. Note that Gunna and his attorney have denied these claims. Still, Kendrick rapped, “I know some sh*t about n****s that’ll make Gunna Wunna look like a saint.” On X, Gunna seemingly responded to the line, writing, “Mannnn WASSAM?!” 

    Meanwhile, Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary seemed to be here for Kendrick involving them. For context, the rapper used a screenshot of their definition of ‘Euphoria’ as the diss track’s cover art.

    Fans have speculated that the song’s name is also Lamar referring to Drizzy’s executive production of the HBO show of the same name.

    “Dear @MTV. We humbly nominate ‘Euphoria’ by @kendricklamar for a Video Music Award for ‘Best Video Ever,’” the dictionary’s X account posted.

    Meanwhile, ‘Million Dollars Worth Of Game’ host Gillie Da King is also trending online after saying Kendrick did not one-up Drake with ‘Euphoria.’ He called the track “corn on the cob.”

    See his comments below.

    As for J. Cole, he’s been hush-hush while social media trolls him for exiting the beef early.

    RELATED: J. Cole Trends As Folks Discuss His Early Exit From Kendrick Lamar & Drake’s Beef

    Cassandra S

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  • Rants To Raps! Rick Ross’ Ex Tia Kemp Gags Social Media By Teasing Bars From The Booth (VIDEO)

    Rants To Raps! Rick Ross’ Ex Tia Kemp Gags Social Media By Teasing Bars From The Booth (VIDEO)

    Roommates, it looks like Rick Ross‘ ex Tia Kemp has turned her rants into raps! On Monday (April 22), a video surfaced of Kemp dropping bars from the booth.

    For context, Kemp and Rick share a teenage son named Williams Robert III, per XXL. She and Rozay have a shady public history, including when she dragged him in her 2009 autobiography ‘Tia’s Diary Deeper Than Rap: Clarity, Truth and Exposure.’

    Introducing Tia Kemp, The Rapper

    Kemp pulled up to the studio to remix BossMan Dlow’s ‘Get In With Me.’

    Catch her raps by swiping below.

    Tia slid into The Shade Room’s comment section to react to the footage. She wrote, “It’s YUNTIE!! Stop fkn playing with me!!” Meanwhile, here’s what the Roommates had to say on Instagram about Tia’s remix.

    @thatboyfunny wrote, “She went crazy. Everybody lick they front teeth.” 

    @ansleyelise added,Let me find out auntie was the one writing all the Maybach music.” 

    @takinchanses wrote, BIG MAMA FLIP A BRICK WITH THAT CHILD SUPPORT. SHE ATE.”

    @rollitupk said,Lmaoo man she said big Cuban link but I’m American. Man she ate det one lil thing.”

    @dreahwalker added, “Her voice sounds good. We can work with it.” 

    Kemp also went viral earlier this year when she threw shots at her son’s father via social media. But HipHopDX reports that the ‘Diced Pineapples’ star sent her a cease and desist of “disturbingly false and defamatory statements,” halting the messy exchanges.

    Rozay’s Most Recent Ex-GF Also Shared New Music

    Kemp isn’t the only ex of Rick Ross sharing her thoughts through music. Cristina Mackey recently went viral for her new single ‘Forgiveness.’

    The 27-year-old dropped the track at the top of April, about a month after she confirmed her split from Rozay. According to a social media post that Cristina shared in March, they dated for about six months before parting ways.

    Though she has yet to confirm or deny if the song is about Ross, Cristina sang about forgiving a man after he betrayed her love. Rick Ross also hasn’t shared a public reaction to Cristina’s song. He’s been a little preoccupied with exchanging shady shots with Drake.

    Will Rozay pay Tia Kemp’s track dust? We’ll have to wait and see, Roomies! 

    RELATED: Issa Hit? Cristina Mackey Releases Song Following Split From Rick Ross (LISTEN)

    Cassandra S

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  • Shaquille O’Neal Reminds Everyone He’s the Best NBA Rapper to Ever Do It, With An Assist From Rick Ross and Meek Mill

    Shaquille O’Neal Reminds Everyone He’s the Best NBA Rapper to Ever Do It, With An Assist From Rick Ross and Meek Mill

    Rap and basketball are inextricably linked—the majority of entertainers in both fields typically hail from the same communities and grew up in the same culture. It’s more than likely that if you made it doing one, you probably had dreams and aspirations of doing the other too. As such, crossover is inevitable and endless. J. Cole’s recent stint as a pro player is an echo of the real run Master P tried to go in in the late ‘90s. Everyone from Kobe to Allen Iverson has a rap song or five to their name if not a whole project. Kevin Durant executive produced the latest Drake album. LeBron James, one of our most important music critics, also invented the deluxe track. The list goes on, but one take is universally held as fact: if we’re talking crossover success stories, Shaquille O’Neal is the Gold Standard. And he just hit everyone with a big reminder last night.

    First, let’s back up: Rick Ross and Meek Mill are releasing a new album, called Too Good to Be True. The title is an accurate description of most collab projects, but this is a big deal—Ross and Meek’s reunion is as close as we’ll get to the halcyon early 2010s of Maybach Music Group, when they were one of, if not the hottest label squads out, with Ross’s roster spearheaded by Meek and DC rapper Wale minting club hits, street bangers and radio smashes with ease. It was a time when every Meek verse sounded like he needed to be extinguished after leaving the booth, Wale churned out melodic radio hits like it was nothing, and people of taste knew there was a real, credible argument to be made for Ross’ lifelong friend Gunplay being one of the best rappers out. French Montana, also at his peak, was a close family friend despite being formally beholden to Bad Boy Records. Even bemusing decisions like signing Omarion yielded an undeniable track or two (and later, in true Ross fashion, A1 punchlines admitting it didn’t work out.)

    Alas, all good crews come to an end. Ross and Meek had a brief (and thankfully never that serious) period of estrangement, Wale has since departed for Def Jam, Gunplay is in and out of trouble and endorsing Donald Trump amongst other problematic behavior, and so on.

    All of that is to say, while Ross and Meek have been no stranger to featuring on each other’s albums still, it’s a thrill to see them really back together, trading verses over a mean, gritty beat for “Shaq and Kobe,” mean-mugging in a music video that feels like Michael Mann directing Bad Boys 4 and in full album rollout mode up at radio stations with Funk Flex like it’s 2011 again. They kept the momentum going with an only slightly-less-hard album cut that flips Jay-Z’s classic “Lyrical Exercise.” And last night was their biggest coup yet, with a “Shaq and Kobe” remix that gets one of its namesakes back in his rapper bag. (The original song, save a “hustling 24 hours” double entendre, is light on overt NBA references and moreso just alludes to the duo’s historic dominance. Rap and ball, linked as ever.)

    Nineties babies and NBA/hip-hop fans alike are all too familiar with Shaq’s rap career, which began not long after his 1992 draft to the league, peaked with his 1996 album You Can’t Stop the Reign, and petered out right before the start of the new millennium. The annals of rap history are littered with aspiring-rapper-athletes—All-Stars who despite their achievements on the court couldn’t resist the urge to be an entertainer of a similar but different cloth. Most of the music merits participation trophies at best; few ballers came as correct as Shaq did in the 90s, with albums graced by production from the likes of RZA and Erick Sermon and features from the hottest singers and rappers of the moment. Who else can boast having the first track with Jay-Z and Nas together (in ‘96 no less, what taste) or delivering a true-blue rap classic alongside prime-era Notorious B.I.G. with the titanic yet still smooth “You Can’t Stop the Reign.” It’s not even a case of letting the smooth beat ride out until you get to Frank White’s verse—Shaq is actually spitting. (Extra Credit homework: the late, great DJ Kay Slay’s underrated 2006 flip with Shaq, Papoose and Bun B.)

    Frazier Tharpe

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  • Rick Ross’s Beloved Buffalo Annoy Neighbors

    Rick Ross’s Beloved Buffalo Annoy Neighbors

    Dr. Brewster M. Higley captured the essence of America’s frontier spirit with a poem he penned in the 1870s. “Oh! Give me a home where the buffalo roam,” the verse read, which was later put to music and became an unofficial anthem of the West. 

    Well, one Fayetteville, Georgia woman feels differently. As TMZ reported on Sunday, an unnamed but irritated neighbor of rapper and record executive Rick Ross is quite perturbed that she keeps finding his fuzzy, enormous beasts on her lawn, poking around garbage bins, and near various motor vehicles. (The outlet includes some amusing pics.) 

    The aggrieved neighbor says she is worried about the safety of her small children, as the animals (which are likely technically bison, not buffalo, but that’s a whole thing) can weigh a ton. (That’s not a euphemism; they can weigh 2,000 pounds.) 

    TMZ says that when she tried to discuss this with Ross, she was intercepted by “a member of Rick’s team,” which ended in “a verbal dispute.” There is also evidence that the animals are “tearing up her yard.” 

    The neighbor was rebuffed by police (buffaloed, one might say!) and told that this is a civic dispute. She intends to lodge a complaint with the city officials in Fayetteville, Georgia (though not before discussing with TMZ, apparently.) 

    V.F. has reached out to Ross’s representatives for comment. 

    Ross’s mansion and property, which once belonged to boxer Evander Holyfield, also features an indoor basketball court, indoor swimming pool, and a bowling alley. 

    Behold: video of errant buffalo!

    The 47-year-old “Hustlin’” artist, who recently paid a fine for labor violations at one of the many Wingstop franchises he owns in the South, was recently gifted two buffalo by his clothing line partner. He recorded several Instagram videos to celebrate their arrival. One of the prized creatures is named Timbuktu. “This is big for me,” he said, listing the other animals on his compound (horses, bulls, dogs.) 

    “I love you,” he said, looking into Timbuktu’s eyes. “This is something I spoke into existence!” he later claimed. “My whole life I wanted a heifer—I got a heifer!”

    “That’s that quality feces,” he also said, remarking on their leavings. You should probably just watch these videos for yourself, they’re better than whatever you’re about to stream on Netflix right now. 

    It’s our sincere hope that Ross and his neighbor can find an amicable solution to this issue. Since we began by quoting a well-known phrase, we’ll close with another: “Good fences make good neighbors.”

    Jordan Hoffman

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  • Rick Ross, Prolific Entrepreneur, Author, Rapper, Songwriter and Record Executive Will Be a Keynote Speaker at This Year’s Black Men Talk Tech Unicorn Ambition Conference

    Rick Ross, Prolific Entrepreneur, Author, Rapper, Songwriter and Record Executive Will Be a Keynote Speaker at This Year’s Black Men Talk Tech Unicorn Ambition Conference

    Press Release


    Oct 7, 2021

    Black Men Talk Tech, a collective and conference series that supports emerging and elite Black tech entrepreneurs, officially announces this year’s 3rd Annual Unicorn Ambition Conference. Black Men Talk Tech Unicorn Ambition Conference is the only national conference that focuses on providing support for the Black man tech founder. This year, one of the special guests is keynote speaker Rick Ross, a serial entrepreneur, rapper, songwriter, and bestselling author with an empire covering everything from fast-casual food, spirits, real estate, and music.

    The Unicorn Ambition Conference is a national tech conference providing exposure and resources to Black tech founders who are building innovative companies and focused on massive growth or becoming the next “unicorn.” Since its inception, the conference has highlighted Miami and South Florida as an emerging tech hub, especially for the Black community. This year’s 3rd annual conference will be a hybrid event on October 21, over the Hop.in virtual platform, with supporting in-person events in Miami before and after the conference programming. 

    Rick Ross added to his list of bestsellers with the recent release of The Perfect Day to Boss Up, which debuted on bestseller lists all around the country, including the prestigious New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller lists.

    “We are elated to have mogul Rick Ross as a featured keynote speaker,” says Boris Moyston, one of the co-founders of Black Men Talk Tech. “Looking forward to his insights about how he chooses his tech investments and advice for entrepreneurs that will surely benefit our attendees.” 

    REGISTER FOR TICKETS HERE: https://bit.ly/3sUUC4n 

    :BLACKPRINT at Meredith Corporation is sponsoring the Rick Ross Keynote. 

    :BLACKPRINT has joined as a media sponsor of this year’s Unicorn Ambition Conference and represents the Black voice of Meredith Corporation – home to brands like PEOPLE, Entertainment Weekly, InStyle, Shape, Health, Travel + Leisure and more.

    Deleon, Crown Royal and Johnnie Walker are the official spirit sponsors for the Black Men Talk Tech Unicorn Ambition Conference Welcome Mixer. Additional sponsors of this year’s Unicorn Ambition Conference include JP Morgan Chase, Balsamiq, Craig Newmark Philanthropies, MorganStanley, Pitchbook, The Steve & Marjorie Harvey Foundation (SMHF), and Intuit. 

    About Black Men Talk Tech: 
    Black Men Talk Tech is a tech collective and conference series that supports emerging and elite Black tech entrepreneurs. Despite the many successes of Black men in the tech industry, Black men are still underrepresented as founders. Black Men Talk Tech is fixing that problem by creating an authentic ecosystem for Black men who are scaling their startups to Unicorn status.

    Media Contacts for Black Men Talk Tech:
    Demetria@PressPassLA.com
    Tiffany@PressPassLA.com

    Source: Black Men Talk Tech

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