Lil Baby Returns To Jayda Cheaves’ TikTok During Mexico Trip, Saweetie Seemingly Responds

Is there any celebrity couple that’s more on-again-off-again than Lil Baby and Jayda Cheaves? It’s hard to say, but from the look of the influencer’s Instagram page, things are once again heating up between her and her baby daddy – for the time being, that is.

Over the past few days, Cheaves has been posted up on a luxurious vacation in Mexico, twerking her days away on the beach with her besties. Over the weekend, videos uploaded across various blogs appeared to show that the Harder Than Ever hitmaker had joined his ex.

Prince Williams/Getty Images

On Sunday, Cheaves’ TikTok page lit up with some new content, including a video of the couple dancing to “Bitcoin” by YungManny, which samples Peggy Lee’s “Big Spender.” In the caption, she wrote, “lol he such a good learner.”

The song choice is likely no coincidence, as Baby has never been secretive about how much he spoils the 24-year-old. For Christmas, he gifted her with a flashy new vehicle and some designer bags, and within weeks internet sleuths figured out that they had joined dozens of other celebrities who headed to St. Barts as they rang in the new year.

@jaydafnwayda

Lol he such a good learner

♬ Bitcoin YungManny – trintrin ♡

Before this, it looked like Cheaves and the “Yes Indeed” hitmaker could’ve been calling it quits for good, as he began spending some time with “Best Friend” rapper Saweetie, even taking her on an extravagant shopping spree that Santa Clara-born star didn’t hesitate to flex on her Instagram page.

As Ace Showbiz reports, Saweetie may have thrown some shade at the couple with a recent upload to her own story. One upload sees a photo of someone flashing their middle finger, and another is a repost from DJ Miss Milan, who urged the 28-year-old to “send him back to the streets! Send him back! Return to senderrrr @saweetie.”

Some haters have been clowning the Icy Girl for her apparent response, saying things like “next time get your shopping spree and don’t post him lol. Get played in private,” and “I kinda think he went back where he should have stayed and left her in the streets.”

Check out Saweetie’s post below, and let us know what you think about Lil Baby and Jayda Cheaves’ rumoured reconciliation in the comments.

[Via]

Netflix “Top Boy” Season 4 Premiere Date Announced

Top Boy built a cult-like following within two seasons. Although it was canceled, bootlegged episodes circulated across YouTube, it spread to a wider audience outside of London that got a glimpse into the streets of London. Of course, one of the people who fell in love with the show after discovering it on the Internet is Drake. After the show was canceled on Channel 4, Drake revived it for a third season on Netflix.


Dave M. Benett/Getty Images

Fans have been excited about the fourth season but it suffered from the pandemic like most shows. However, it’ll officially return this spring, Netflix confirmed on Instagram together. Top Boy season 4 will be making its debut on March 18th. The news was announced through a promotional campaign in London on one of its biggest billboards which confirmed the launch date.

Ashley Walters gave fans a heads up of the announcement over the weekend. He teased the billboard being plastered with the word “Top” written and tweeted, “Tomorrow.” Walters also offered fans a glimpse into what they have in store during a 2021 interview with NME. “The scripts are really good, really tight,” he said. “We’re coming at it from a new perspective this time, because I’m executive producing on this one, so creatively and script-wise I’m much more involved.”

Check out the post below and sound off with your thoughts on the upcoming season. 

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How Three Artists Galvanized Black Women To Assume Their Place In The Self-Care Movement

Self-care, as it relates to Black women, is best defined by poet and writer Audre Lorde. “Caring for myself is not self-indulgence,” she wrote. “It is self-preservation, and that is an act of political warfare.”

The implications of Black women caring for ourselves above all else are, as Lorde said, political. As the world continues to expect more and more from us, we owe it to ourselves to take care — whether we are given the room to do so, or have to create it from nothing. The rise of self-care gave way to three records in the last decade of R&B music: A Seat At The Table by Solange, CTRL by SZA, and Shea Butter Baby by Ari Lennox. These records carved out three distinct paths in the same lane, creating space for Black women in the idea of preserving the self.

Solange’s A Seat At The Table, released right before the 2016 election, remains a monument of the time. The record’s centerpiece songs, such as “Don’t Touch My Hair” and “Weary,” were instantly topical, acting as a comfort blanket to protect against the increasingly fraught energy surrounding, well, everything. Originally conceptualized as an homage to her family’s Southern roots, and taking up space through documenting Black personhood, Solange lays out all of her failures and triumphs on her fourth record, giving way to truths that are ultimately universal. Her pillowy voice, warm bass, and delicate neo-soul keyboard sounds provide a soft place to land as we confront all of the things that are ugly in this world.

Solange gave the Black image a distinct place in the self-care movement as we know it today: the album cover features her best Mona Lisa, smiling slyly with multicolored hair pins holding the perfect waves framing her face. She presents the idea that before we can care for ourselves, we have to be sure that we are safe. Solange asserts this idea on “F.U.B.U” (which stands for “For Us By Us”), envisioning a world in which it is safe for Black women to rest, to live.

Establishing self-care as both a political and artistic act set the stage for SZA — Solange’s protege of sorts, and the adored singer behind CTRL, her well-loved debut and one of 2017’s most successful albums.

SZA’s video for “The Weekend,” directed by Solange herself, was a beautiful, slow-moving affair. The sleek, minimal track is about a mixed-up love affair, with multiple people vying for the time and attention of one person. This sounds like normal R&B fodder: a relationship gone wrong, a narrator who is upset at the way they’ve been treated. But, “The Weekend” became a beacon of sorts (and a platinum hit without being a single) — it is an admission of weakness if you look further. SZA admits that she is lonely, wanting to replace all of the someone elses in question.

CTRL was not a planned concept. After signing a major deal, SZA wrote and recorded as much material as possible, condensing it down to fourteen songs. And this is evident in the way it plays out; CTRL is a confessional booth, a diary, the ear of a best friend.

On “Supermodel,” the album’s show-stopping, sparse opener, SZA lets us know that she wants to be beautiful for us, and she has a hard time believing that she can. This admission of her lack of confidence establishes honesty as another important tenet of self-care. The album’s closer, “Pretty Little Birds” is a beautiful manifestation for good after everything that SZA has told us went wrong. She has covered the good, the sensual, the messy. She tells us that everything that she needs from her lover, and from us is to see and to be seen. When SZA sings, it is deeply about the self, with feelings examined from each angle with a goal in mind: to grow.

By the time Shea Butter Baby arrived in 2019, Ari Lennox was gaining attention for being the first woman to be signed to J Cole’s Dreamville label. Self-care had been largely established as a worldly, commodifiable interest, rather than a way to create comfort. Shea Butter Baby served as a balm to this concept, a reminder that the journey to self is messy.

Shea Butter Baby is distinctly feminine, the album’s title track featuring Cole himself serving as an ode to the beauty that is Black self-care on a physical level, silk sheets and soft, shiny skin. But, self-care is more than skin deep and Lennox makes sure that we do not forget this. On “Speak to Me,” Lennox is at her most vulnerable, wishing to know the truth about where she stands with someone who she loves. The delicate punch of “I Been” tackles the allure of escapism, Lennox so desperately wanting to be somewhere else while everything is going wrong. On “Static,” the album’s closer, Lennox implores us to save ourselves from drowning beneath all that is unimportant — reminding us that we are in control of our own destinies. Shea Butter Baby finds and cherishes the freedom that it takes to care for the self.

These three records charted distinct journeys for each of these artists on the same course to understand the self. The portraits of Black womanhood that each of these records paint represent different people at distinct points in time, striving to understand what it is that makes us who we are. That quest for closeness to the self is what makes self-care so important, and what makes each of these records a crucial snapshot of what that means for us. These records highlight the need to seek community, growth, and comfort: all necessary pieces to the self-care puzzle.

50 Cent Tells Us Why His ‘Power’ Cinematic Universe Is The Hottest Thing On TV

If you’d told me 20 years ago that 50 Cent would become one of the hottest producers in television with a veritable cinematic universe to his name… Actually, I would have believed you. At the time, he was the biggest thing in rap music, a world-class superstar who had promised to put the radio game in a chokehold — and then did it.

Now, he’s done the same with premium TV; again, if you told me his Power franchise (with three spin-offs plus an unrelated but thematically relevant Black Mafia Family bio series) were majorly responsible for a big boost in Starz subscriptions for the past three years, I would definitely be inclined to believe you.

The story that began with Ghost St. Patrick and Tommy Egan way back in 2014 in the original Power is, in 50’s own words, coming full-circle with the upcoming spin-off, Book IV: Force. Following Tommy’s exploits when he leaves New York for his hometown, Chicago, Tommy will once again get wrapped up in criminal enterprise and intrigue as he gets caught between two of the city’s rival organizations.

With Book IV: Force set to premiere on Starz on February 6, executive producer 50 Cent sat down for a Zoom call with Uproxx to discuss the show’s cultural impact, its catchy theme music, and why he would actually prefer if his cinematic universe was a little more family-friendly.

What modern-day social issues do you hope to address with the show with the story of Tommy in this new city?

Coming into the town, he interacts with who he would just run into. It turns into a whole different thing, but in the future, you should expect him to see more of that culture that we are aware of coming into the show, but it comes in as a resource that he sees. When he’s under circumstances where he gets into something and he involves them to come as muscle.

I’m not trying to fix the world with television. I’m trying to entertain people with it. And I think when you look at everything else that’s there, when you look at the news, all you see are things that speak to the graphic nature of premium television. So this is where we make a connection that network television doesn’t. I think people connect with that, having really flawed characters that people could relate to. I think that’s what makes them watch the show with a different intensity. They feel like they could have played the character.

How much of yourself do you see in your characters when they make choices on the shows? Do you find yourself going, “Well, I would do that differently”? Every time Cane [In Book II: Ghost] does something, I’m just like, “This dummy.”

I definitely do that. “What is he doing? Why are you doing that? I get into it too. I’ve seen the material. I’ve read it. Even when I’m not on set, I still get a chance to see the pieces of it. I watch it, complete it before everybody else watches it, and I’m still not excited until I’m watching it and everybody else is watching it because I’m thinking what everybody else is thinking when they watch it.

How hard is it as the producer not to jump in and be like, “Don’t do that! No. Change that.”

It is very hard. Look, I’ll call the writers or the showrunners of the shows, I’ve called each one of them at points and said, “Why? Why is this like this? Why does it have to be like this?” There are certain scenes that they’ve done in Ghost. I look and go, “Yo, could we tone that down a little bit?”

So, when you put that with younger characters… Also knowing some of the audience is not as mature. I like the sex scenes and stuff but some of it can be insinuated, you don’t have to see it. The fact that we can do it, they feel like, okay, cool. We just don’t want to go from watching television that ended up in soft pornography.

How many spinoffs do you think this universe can support? What would an Avengers-like crossover look like between the shows?

Whew, you said Avengers, that’s crazy. Look, I already took this far enough. If you looked at Power, Ghost, Raising Kanan, and now, Force. finishes the story. Because it was Ghost and Tommy in the beginning.

It’s just, his lady would help him with things. She was the right woman for the journey and the wrong woman in the story because she’s only seeing him one way. So she just wants him to be the biggest drug dealer. Remember that line, “When you look at me what do you see?”, “Biggest drug dealer in the city.”

Right. Right. Right. And it’s like, don’t encourage me to be this. Encourage me to be better.

Something different. And then while he’s having to change a heart no one knows.

And that’s kind of like where every gangster show goes, right? The guys want to go legit and the city won’t let them. The game won’t let them.

At the point that you decide that “I have enough. I’ve made enough. I experienced enough.” Right. This is when you go, “maybe I could have did it legit or did it a different way.” And at that point, the irony of it is you’re under investigation.

Yeah. Because you’ve gotten too big. That’s the danger of being the biggest is that you become a target. When you’re recording the theme music what inspiration do you take away from the show itself and how does it differ from writing music for yourself?

When you get into the theme songs, it’s fun to make those records for me. It’s like each one of them is a separate energy, a separate piece. I’ll go in the studio. I’m like, “Yo, this last one was forced.” It was easy. I had to make something that felt like Chicago and no matter what I write about Chicago, it’s going to feel like New York.

So look, there’s two vocal versions of the song. So when you hear the television show, it’s slightly different from when it’s on the song and it’s because I’ve really set the vocals once I heard the tones in Durk’s verse and what Jeremih the chorus felt like finished. Because we’ve done it several times. He’s done the hook two, three different times before we got it all the way right.

Durk recorded one time and then sent it back and then we heard it and then we had everything, all the pieces to put the song together. And I didn’t want it to feel like a collage because I’m here, they’re there and we just put it together. So I matched the tones of everything else so it’ll feel like a cohesive song.

How do you find angles to play off each individual style out from the collaborators like with NLE Choppa and Lil Durk?

Look, you have with NLE and these guys, these are the new guys, bro. The “hip” part of hip-hop is youth. You know what I’m saying? So what they’re thinking and doing, you got to watch them and see how to wave for what’s coming next. It’s going to go.

Do you think you can ride that wave into the future?

The cadences that they using is not difficult at all. If you listen to the music, you could just go, “Okay. I could write that.” If I was coming right now, I’d be on fire. I think once you’ve been, let’s say seasoned, right? I sold over 35 million records, bro. I have a whole 12 years, 13 years of dominating hip-hop culture. Nobody wants to remember that time period though because it was not comfortable.

When you represent things that are street or that have the energy, it’s on the artist without him even saying anything. The NBA YoungBoy, these kids is coming from different territories, but they have street on them. They can’t help it. It’s already there. You don’t have to have Instagram or Twitter or any of that stuff because once it connects it, it’s just there.

Power Book IV: Force premieres February 6th on Starz.

J. Cole Declares Himself The GOAT

J. Cole

In his first verse of 2022, J. Cole is crowning himself king. The North Carolina rapper sent tongues wagging with his featured verse on Benny Butcher’s new song Johnny P’s Caddy. He raps on the track, “ On God, the best rapper alive/Headshot, now go and ask the best rappers that died/They tell you he […]

Nicki Minaj Offers Heartfelt Congratulations To Rihanna On Her Pregnancy

Earlier today, Rihanna strategically revealed her pregnancy to the world, thanks to a few seemingly innocuous paparazzi photos taken during a recent New York walk with her boyfriend and soon-to-be baby daddy, A$AP Rocky.

The photos, taken by Diggzy, show Rihanna rocking an open pink winter jacket, with chains adorning the front and a pair of loose-fitting light blue jeans, thus allowing her protruding belly to be the focus. A$AP Rocky, who walked alongside her, rocked a baggy jean jacket, a black tuque, and leather pants. In one photo, he’s seen kissing the top of Rihanna’s head, while in a close-up shot of RiRi’s belly, his hand is seen holding hers.

RIHANNA PREGNANCY

Jonathan Brady – Pool/Getty Images

As the news of the announcement has quickly spread to all corners of the universe, we’ve already begun receiving a wide range of reactions, including some that postulate how Drake might be receiving the news. Now, among the celebs that have chimed in and offered the popstar good wishes, Nicki Minaj has joined the fold.

Nicki has been ramping back up on social media lately, as she leads fans towards a new single with Lil Baby, so perhaps this IG post is not too surprising.

Sharing one of the photos of Rihanna with a carefree and non-chalant smile on her face, Nicki wrote, “So happy for you mama. Conquered the world already. Given so much. Nothing left to prove. you deserve your own little gift now. Different level of joy that money can’t buy.”

Nicki welcomed her own bundle of joy with Kenneth Petty in 2020.

Rihanna & Blue Ivy Carter Reunite At Rams Game As JAY-Z Snaps Photos

Many minds were lost when Rihanna and Blue Ivy Carter crossed paths backstage at the 2015 Grammy Awards, and now, years later, they’ve linked up once again, although JAY-Z and Beyoncé’s daughter is looking much more grown-up this time around.

As InStyle reports, RiRi was wearing a gorgeous pink Giambattista Valli gown during her first meeting with Blue Ivy, which surely had the 3-year-old feeling as though she had walked into a real-life fairytale. 

Jason Kempin/Getty Images

A video uploaded to @theneighborhoodtalk captures the two Grammy award winners posing together in what looks like a VIP area of the Rams vs. 49ers game. As onlookers watch, Blue’s father can be seen snapping photos of his little girl with the iconic singer.

As he holds the phone up, a giant grin spreads across the “4:44” rapper’s face. After the picture is taken, Rihanna and her young friend appear to burst into laughter while people watching from a distance smile at them. 

“He’s [going to] be just like that at her graduation,” one user wrote in the comments of the post. “Proud dad.” Others added, “Blue is an icon” and “if Jay does nothing else, he’s snapping pics of his girls. Wonder if she knows her dad’s role in bringing an unknown Rih to stardom.”

In other news, Rihanna shared some exciting news earlier today, revealing that she and her boyfriend A$AP Rocky are expecting their first child together. Pictures of the famous lovers walking around the streets of New York, showing off their baby bump have sent fans into a tizzy of excitement – read more about that here.

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Saba Recruits G Herbo For “Survivor’s Guilt”

It’s been four years since Saba’s unveiled his last studio album, Care For Me. A critically acclaimed body of work that landed on many year-end lists, the rapper is now preparing to follow it up with the release of his upcoming project, Few Good Things. The album’s due out this Friday and ahead of its release, Saba offered fans a promising taste of what he has in store on Few Good Things.

Over the weekend, Saba came through with “Survivor’s Guilt” ft. fellow Chicago native G Herbo. Saba delivers a sleek banger over Daoud and daedaePIVOT’s sleek 808-heavy production as he and G Herbo reflect on their experiences living in Chicago.

Saba’s upcoming project is set to include appearances from Krayzie Bone, Smino, 6lack, and more.

Quotable Lyrics
I’m still on my square like a plaintiff
Be careful they armed and they dangerous
For diamonds, some n***as is spiraling
They want us in boxes but can’t contain us, oh my God

Central Cee Drops “Cold Shoulder” Ahead Of New Project “23”

The UK rap scene continues to flourish and Central Cee is one of the most promising young talents emerging right now. The budding West London MC has been a buzzing force across the UK, and now, North America. With his new project 23 set to drop in the near future, the rapper came through this weekend with another taste of what to expect with his latest single, “Cold Shoulder.”

Cee’s proven that he can produce a club-friendly banger with ease but on “Cold Shoulder,” he offers an introspective take on his rise through the rap game, the pressures that come with it, and gaining international success over Young Chencs’ melancholic production.

Cee’s album 23 is due out on Feb. 26th. Peep his latest single below and sound off with your thoughts in the comments.

Quotable Lyrics
Don’t worry ’bout hollerin’ chicks
Get rich, they’ll switch and holla at you
Sat in the trap, turned one into two
But that ain’t what I wanted to do
The fame get a bit too much sometimes
Fan-page tryna follow the goons