Jay-Z Fires at Drake, Kanye, and Dame Dash in Rare Roots Picnic Freestyle
Jay-Z stepped to the Roots Picnic stage in Philadelphia on Saturday and turned a headlining set into something closer to a live press conference, delivering a new freestyle that had fans decoding bar-by-bar targets in real time. The sharpest shots went at Drake, who had taken aim on his recent album Iceman with a “Janice STFU” line suggesting Jay’s relevance is tied to Drake’s co-signs; Hov answered by saying he’s never looked up to someone who once looked up to him and dismissed the chart-comparison narrative outright. [Rolling Out] He extended the smoke to Kanye West — brushing off Ye’s public comments about Jay and Beyoncé’s children with a bar that framed his household as unbothered — and to Dame Dash, turning old Roc-A-Fella fractures into quick, cutting punchlines about physical decline. [Rolling Out]
Nicki Minaj Pulls Her Album and Points Directly at Jay-Z
Nicki Minaj has been lobbing public accusations at Jay-Z and his management for a while, but the Roots Picnic freestyle gave her something new to respond to: his first on-tape answer, delivered to 80,000 people in Philly. Before the weekend was over, she had announced she was pulling her new album and was “done putting out music,” and she addressed the statement directly to Jay-Z, linking the move explicitly to his actions in the industry. [Rolling Out] Whether that’s a firm line in the sand or a heat-of-the-moment escalation is still being debated, but the framing matters: this is no longer social-media back-and-forth between two artists — it’s a public allegation that one of rap’s most powerful executives is using industry leverage to impact another artist’s career and release timeline. [Rolling Out]
State Property Reunites on Jay-Z’s Stage — and Philly Raps Every Word
The freestyle and the beef were the headline, but the fuller picture of Jay-Z’s Roots Picnic set was something rarer: a generational reunion staged with obvious intention. He brought out Freeway, Beanie Sigel, Memphis Bleek, Jazmine Sullivan, Meek Mill and more for a State Property run-through that included “What We Do,” “Roc-A-Fella Billionaires,” and deep cuts from the Philadelphia Freeway era — and a crowd of an estimated 80,000 people, many of whom grew up with those records, rapped back every line. [Rolling Out] [The Root] That visual — Philly legends grouped on Jay’s stage right as he’s sparring with a newer generation over who has legacy and who doesn’t — was not accidental. Roc-A-Fella’s imprint on the city’s rap identity is one of the things he’s arguing is permanent. [Rolling Out]
Litty Vuitton Is Betting on Soulja Boy’s Blueprint — and It’s Already Working
SODMG artist Litty Vuitton’s 2025 single “Online Now” flipped Soulja Boy’s 2007 cultural landmark “Crank That (Soulja Boy),” and the traction it built heading into her new album cycle isn’t just a numbers story — it’s a statement about which era of hip-hop she’s consciously aligning with. [Rolling Out] Soulja Boy’s early career was built on MySpace then YouTube before either platform had a music-industry infrastructure attached to it; he proved you could bypass traditional A&R, gatekeepers, and label pipelines entirely if you moved faster than the system could react. Litty Vuitton is explicitly tapping into that history, positioning herself inside a lineage defined by digital independence and direct fan contact. [Rolling Out]
Afrika Bambaataa’s Death Forces Hip-Hop to Sit With a Complicated Founder
Memorial statements for Universal Zulu Nation founder Afrika Bambaataa are circulating today, and the most notable ones are doing something the culture hasn’t always been willing to do: holding the founding contribution and the documented harm in the same sentence. One statement credited him with shaping hip-hop’s early global identity around “peace, unity, love, and having fun” and inspiring generations of MCs, DJs, breakers, and cultural organizers, while explicitly calling his legacy “complex” and describing it as “the subject of serious conversations.” [The Root] That’s deliberate language, and it matters: Bambaataa spent years facing credible sexual abuse allegations involving minors, accusations that led to his resignation from the Zulu Nation in 2016 and that the hip-hop community handled slowly and unevenly.
A Florida Principal Is on Leave Because a Yearbook Printed a Fetty Wap Lyric
A Florida school principal has been placed on administrative leave after a yearbook at her school printed a lyric from Fetty Wap’s 2015 hit “Trap Queen” with her name attached. [The Grio] The story is absurd on its face — “Trap Queen” is an eleven-year-old song that has been in commercials, TV shows, and cultural conversation long enough to feel practically institutional itself — but the school board’s response reflects something real about how institutions still panic when a rap lyric collides with questions of professionalism, youth audiences, and public image. The fact that a yearbook committee thought it was an unremarkable choice for a staff quote is the actual headline: the lyric was normalized enough to slip through multiple layers of review without anyone flagging it. [The Grio]


















