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The long-building and increasingly testy rap beef between Kendrick Lamar and Drake exploded into full-bore acrimony and unverifiable accusations over the weekend with the rapid-fire release of multiple songs littered with attacks regarding race, appropriation, sexual and physical abuse, body image, misogyny, hypocrisy, generational trauma and more. Most relentless was Lamar, a Pulitzer Prize winner from Compton who tends toward the isolated and considered but has now released four verbose and conceptual diss tracks — totaling more than 20 minutes of new music — targeting Drake in the last week, including three since Friday. Each racked up millions of streams and the three that were made available commercially — “Euphoria,” “Meet the Grahams” and “Not Like Us” — are expected to land near the top of next week’s Billboard singles chart, while seeming to, at least momentarily, shift the public perception of Drake, long a maestro of the online public arena and meme ecosystem. In between, on Friday night, Drake released his own broadside against Lamar — plus a smattering of other recent challengers — in a teasing Instagram interlude plus a three-part track and elaborate music video titled “Family Matters,” in which he referred to his rival as a fake activist and attempted to expose friction and alleged abuse in Lamar’s romantic relationship.
Persons: Kendrick Lamar, Drake, Compton, Lamar —
Read previewIf you thought rap's latest all-out brawl couldn't get any more convoluted, enter Taylor Swift, Snoop Dogg, and Tupac Shakur. On Friday, an embattled Drake released "Taylor Made," his second diss track in response to Kendrick Lamar, which mentions the "Fortnight" singer and uses what sounds like an AI-generated Shakur and Snoop Dogg to try to humble Lamar. AdvertisementThe fake Tupac gives Lamar advice on how to properly diss Drake by referencing rumors about the Canadian rapper "liking young girls." The actual human Snoop Dogg humorously responded to the verse in an Instagram video Friday evening. Representatives for Swift, Snoop Dogg, Drake, and Lamar, and a lawyer for Shakur's estate did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Persons: , Taylor Swift, Snoop Dogg, Tupac Shakur, Drake, Taylor, Kendrick Lamar, Lamar, J, Cole, Prince, Mike Jack, Michael Jackson, Jackson, Pop, Rick Ross, Ye, Lamar —, Tupac, Shakur, Snoop, Lamar hasn't, Swift Organizations: Service, Business, Metro Boomin, Listeners, Poet's Department, Genius, Dawg Entertainment, Apple Music Locations: Lamar
Nine Swifties have asked the FTC to look into Ticketmaster's ticket presale for her upcoming tour. The group is urging Swift fans to file complaints with their state attorneys general. The complaint also claimed that Ticketmaster violated the Americans with Disabilities Act by not making clear which seats were accessible to people with disabilities. The complaint claims Ticketmaster's 2010 tie-up with Live Nation should have been blocked. "This is bigger than Taylor Swift," said Burger.
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