YBN Nahmir Wants To Prove He’s Not A One-Hit Wonder, Posts Receipts On IG

YBN Nahmir is showing receipts of his hits to fight back against recently reignited assumptions that he’s a “one-hit wonder.” Moreover, you may remember his smash record “Rubbin Off The Paint,” but via a recent Twitter post from Friday (February 23), he’s showing that -– at least numbers-wise -– he’s got a track record. The “Where I’m From” MC showed off four platinum certifications from the RIAA, one of those being “Rubbin Off The Paint,” that also comprised of “1942” with Yo Gotti and G-Eazy, “Opp Stoppa,” and “Bounce Out With That.” Also, he highlighted his gold-certified YBN mixtape with Cordae and Almighty Jay in response to Adin Ross’ recent attack towards him.

“Nahmir, you’re not worth $100,000,” Ross said on stream of his rejection of YBN Nahmir’s offer to fight for $100K. “You fell off, you suck at music. You failed your music career. I’ve got no disrespect to show, but that. Nahmir, you’re nothing. You’re nobody and your career sucks. He wanted 100 bands to fight. You are nowhere near 100 bands. And again, Kick paid Carti $2 mill. Hey, at least I got $2 mill to pay. You’re broke, f-ck you!”

Read More: YBN Nahmir Threatens Troll: “Shoot Your Mama House Up”

YBN Nahmir’s RIAA Certifications

“Don’t at me in no f***ing s**t if you’re talking s**t, because you gon’ get smacked in your f***ing mouth for it,” YBN Nahmir responded on social media. “You can hire all the security that you want to. It’s not going to work like that. Don’t disrespect my name and act like, ‘No disrespect, no disrespect!’ Shut the f**k up, n***a! How the f**k you talk s**t then cop a plea in the same f***ing video?” It’s clear that Ross’ comments made the Faster Car Music Vol. 1 MC realize how quick folks are to criticize and not give weight behind their words with actions.

Meanwhile, we hope that the Alabama native is doing well following his time in rehab, which he spoke on toward the end of last year. “I’m not out here doing hardcore drugs,” Nahmir tweeted. “Im addicted to alcohol & I just need a little help, that’s all. I pop Percs here & there, smoke some weed. Normal s**t, but I do feel my body failing. I gotta be here for the people that’s here for me in the long run. I wanna be sober.” For more news and the latest updates on YBN Nahmir, log back into HNHH.

Read More: Cordae Asked YBN Nahmir For His Blessing Before Changing Name

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Adin Ross Apologizes To Kanye West After Bianca Censori Intervenes

Adin Ross has apologized for his previous comments about Kanye West struggling to get brand deals. According to Ross, he had been driven to make the rare apology after Kanye’s wife, Bianca Censori, reached out to Ross to set the record straight. Ross confirmed he had received an email directly from Censori asking him to retract his statements.

Ross had tried to continue his trend of paying rappers to appear on his streams by saying he had the backing of Kick and Stake to pay Kanye for an appearance. This was taken as Ross saying that either Kanye is broke or that Kanye needs the charity. Ross backpedaled during his apology, stating that what he meant is that streaming services were not paying Kanye because “they’re not throwing money at anyone.” Do you believe Ross’ apology? Do you consider it an apology at all? Let us know in the comments.

Read More: Adin Ross Denies Sex Tape Allegations

Adin Ross Turns Down YBN Nahmir Fight Offer, Shades Rapper

However, Ross doesn’t have an apology for everyone. Ross rejected a $100,000 fight request from rapper YBN Nahmir. “Nahmir, you’re not worth $100,000. You fell off, you suck at music. You failed your music career. I’ve got no disrespect to show, but that. Nahmir, you’re nothing. You’re nobody and your career sucks. He wanted 100 bands to fight. You are nowhere near 100 bands. And again, Kick paid Carti $2 mill. Hey, at least I got $2 mill to pay. You’re broke, f-ck you!” Ross said on stream.

However, Nahmir didn’t take the shade lying down. “Don’t at me in no f-cking sh-t if you’re talking sh-t, because you gon’ get smacked in your f-cking mouth for it. You can hire all the security that you want to. It’s not going to work like that. Don’t disrespect my name and act like, ‘No disrespect, no disrespect!’ Shut the f-ck up, n-gga! How the fuck you talk sh-t then cop a plea in the same f-ckin’ video?” Nahmir retorted.

Read More: Fans Think 21 Savage & Adin Ross Faked Card Scandal To Promote SNL

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Adin Ross Turns Down YBN Nahmir Fight Offer, Shades Rapper

Adin Ross has rejected a $100,000 fight request from rapper YBN Nahmir. “Nahmir, you’re not worth $100,000. You fell off, you suck at music. You failed your music career. I’ve got no disrespect to show, but that. Nahmir, you’re nothing. You’re nobody and your career sucks. He wanted 100 bands to fight. You are nowhere near 100 bands. And again, Kick paid Carti $2 mill. Hey, at least I got $2 mill to pay. You’re broke, f-ck you!” Ross said on stream.

However, Nahmir didn’t take the shade lying down. “Don’t at me in no f-cking sh-t if you’re talking sh-t, because you gon’ get smacked in your f-cking mouth for it. You can hire all the security that you want to. It’s not going to work like that. Don’t disrespect my name and act like, ‘No disrespect, no disrespect!’ Shut the f-ck up, n-gga! How the fuck you talk sh-t then cop a plea in the same f-ckin’ video?” Nahmir retorted.

Read More: Fans Think 21 Savage & Adin Ross Faked Card Scandal To Promote SNL

Adin Ross Denies Sex Tape Allegations

However, this is just the latest scandal that Ross is involved in. Ross recently denied that a viral leaked sex tape is his. “That’s not my sex tape, you weird a–, f-ggot a– motherf-ckers. That’s not me,” Ross said when showed a clip from the video. However, fans have continued to call cap on Ross’ claims, arguing that the man in the now-viral video is absolutely the streamer. Despite this, the reports remain unsubstantiated until proven otherwise.

Of course, this is far from the only scandal Ross has been involved in regarding claims on the internet. A few weeks ago, Ross claimed he was the subject of a bounty. “As soon as I clear it with my lawyer, I’m exposing everything. Come and get me. F-cking put money on my head? You’re gonna get a refund. Even if you do put money on my head, I’ll go ten times harder. I’m rich, I’m richer than you. Try to put money on my head? It’s gonna be way worse. It’s not cringe, it’s real sh-t. If motherf-ckers want to take my life, I’m gonna make sure they know who took my life,” Ross claimed. Ross did not specify who was threatening him with a bounty. Furthermore, Ross’ comments imply that someone is merely threatening to place a bounty on his head but has not yet done so.

Read More: Kai Cenat Gets Heated After Being Called Out By Joe Budden, Adin Ross Backs Up His Fellow Streamer

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Playboi Carti Laments His Shyness While Apologizing To Adin Ross

Playboi Carti is infamous for his mysterious persona. Overall, there are a lot of fans out there who absolutely despise this. They hate the fact that he never shows himself, and when he does, he acts like he is above socializing. However, it has allowed him to develop an “aura” of sorts. These days, he is looking to drop a new album. Unfortunately, no one knows when it will actually be released. Instead, he has dropped five singles that aren’t even on streaming services. Needless to say, being a Carti fan is frustrating.

Moreover, it doesn’t help that he made a fool out of himself during a livestream with Adin Ross. During this stream, Carti refused to say more than just a couple of words. Following the stream, Adin Ross refused to pay Carti the second half of his promised fee. Furthermore, Carti was roasted online for his persona, which some are now saying is completely manufactured. Well, on Thursday night, Carti attempted to make it up to Ross by calling him while Adin was streaming on Kick.

Read More: Playboi Carti’s “2024” Is Turning Into An Overnight Sensation

Playboi Carti With The Excuses

During this call, Carti offered up an excuse for why he is the way he is. “You know I’m shy as f*ck, I don’t mean no harm,” Carti said, matter of factly. Ross completely understood, and based on the conversation, it seems like Carti might try to come see Ross in person at some point. It remains to be seen if that will actually happen. After all, Carti is someone who is known to change his mind from time to time. Hopefully, Ross can actually get the elusive and mysterious artist on his show, before fans turn on Carti once and for all.

Let us know what you think of Carti’s excuse for his behavior, in the comments section below. Additionally, stay tuned to HNHH for the latest news and updates from around the music world. We will continue to keep you informed on your favorite artists and their upcoming releases.

Read More: Offset Reveals Why Playboi Carti’s Not On “Set It Off”

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Adin Ross Denies Sex Tape Allegations

Adin Ross has denied that a viral leaked sex tape is his. “That’s not my sex tape, you weird a–, f-ggot a– motherf-ckers. That’s not me,” Ross said when showed a clip from the video. However, fans have continued to call cap on Ross’ claims, arguing that the man in the now-viral video is absolutely the streamer. Despite this, the reports remain unsubstantiated until proven otherwise.

Of course, this is far from the only scandal Ross has been involved in regarding claims on the internet. A few weeks ago, Ross claimed he was the subject of a bounty. “As soon as I clear it with my lawyer, I’m exposing everything. Come and get me. F-cking put money on my head? You’re gonna get a refund. Even if you do put money on my head, I’ll go ten times harder. I’m rich, I’m richer than you. Try to put money on my head? It’s gonna be way worse. It’s not cringe, it’s real sh-t. If motherf-ckers want to take my life, I’m gonna make sure they know who took my life,” Ross claimed. Ross did not specify who was threatening him with a bounty. Furthermore, Ross’ comments imply that someone is merely threatening to place a bounty on his head but has not yet done so.

Read More: Kai Cenat Gets Heated After Being Called Out By Joe Budden, Adin Ross Backs Up His Fellow Streamer

Fans Think 21 Savage & Adin Ross Faked Card Scandal To Promote SNL

Meanwhile, fans are starting to question just how real the drama between 21 Savage and Adin Ross was as the rapper performed on SNL. Several fans questioned whether the claims that 21 used marked cards to scam hundreds of thousands of dollars out of Ross was simply a way to promote 21’s turn on the popular late-night show. 21’s appearance was overshadowed by the scandal with Ross, as well as controversial host Shane Gillis. Gillis had briefly served as part of the SNL cast in 2019 before being fired over alleged racist comments.

Further evidence concerning the idea that it was faked came on 21’s own website. Days after the scandal, 21 started selling branded dice and cards as merch. The set of three d6 dice and a velvet bag costs $25 while a back of regulation playing cards costs $15. At the time of writing, the playing cards have already sold out. The new merch was released with very little fanfare but was clearly inspired by the ongoing scandal with Ross.

Read More: DJ Akademiks Addresses Adin Ross & 21 Savage Scam Allegations

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Joe Budden & Adin Ross Trade More Blows Over Streamers In Hip-Hop

There’s a big divide right now in the hip-hop media world: the old guard of journalists and commentators against the new wave of streamers and content creators. There’s perhaps no better example of this right now than Joe Budden’s recent tirades against the likes of Kai Cenat and Adin Ross. During his most recent episode of his podcast, released Sunday (February 11), he invited Ebro Darden to chime in as well, and reopened these wounds. Moreover, the issue stems from a lack of knowledge and authority that folks like Ross and Cenat have in the rapper’s eyes. No matter where you fall on this spat, it’s an important conversation to heal from.

“There’s a lot of people involved in culture that know absolutely nothing about culture,” Joe Budden’s new comments kicked off. “But today, because of tech, they’re integral parts in the conversation. In the song making, in what the artists can and cannot do. It’s like, who the f**k are you? Where did you come from? For me, the hip-hop I come from, there’s no world where me and Adin Ross need to talk about something. Who the f**k are you, n***a? Where did you just pop up from?”

Read More: How Adin Ross & Kai Cenat Are Making Hip-Hop Streams A Hot Debate

The Joe Budden & Adin Ross Battle Continues Over Streaming In Rap Culture

Furthermore, this was Adin Ross’ response on his Kick stream to Joe Budden reigniting this issue. “So why bring me up, bro? How does that make any sense? Why are you bringing me up, I respond, and now you’re saying there’s no reason for him and I to be in a conversation? What do you want to gain out of it? You want to gain something out of it, clearly. Is your podcast doing that bad, your numbers are that bad, you need me to react to it? Damn, nothing just works out for you, bro. Your rap career failed, your podcast is clearly failing.”

Meanwhile, this debacle began because Kai Cenat complained about Killer Mike winning the Best Rap Album Grammy over Travis Scott, and saying he didn’t even know who Mike was. When Budden blasted him, Ross defended Cenat, and now it’s all-out animosity. We’ll see if these personalities can learn from this exchange. For more news and the latest updates on Joe Budden and Adin Ross, come back to HNHH.

Read More: Megan Thee Stallion’s “HISS” Going No. 1 Wasn’t Organic, According To “The Joe Budden Podcast” Hosts

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Fans Think 21 Savage & Adin Ross Faked Card Scandal To Promote “SNL”

Fans are starting to question just how real the drama between 21 Savage and Adin Ross was as the rapper performed on SNL. Several fans questioned whether the claims that 21 used marked cards to scam hundreds of thousands of dollars out of Ross was simply a way to promote 21’s turn on the popular late-night show. 21’s appearance was overshadowed by the scandal with Ross, as well as controversial host Shane Gillis. Gillis had briefly served as part of the SNL cast in 2019 before being fired over alleged racist comments.

Further evidence concerning the idea that it was faked came on 21’s own website. Days after the scandal, 21 started selling branded dice and cards as merch. The set of three d6 dice and a velvet bag costs $25 while a back of regulation playing cards costs $15. At the time of writing, the playing cards have already sold out. The new merch was released with very little fanfare but was clearly inspired by the ongoing scandal with Ross.

Read More: DJ Akademiks Addresses Adin Ross & 21 Savage Scam Allegations

Adin Ross Confirms 21 Savage Reimbursed Him After Marked Cards Scandal

Meanwhile, during a phone call with Kai Cenat, Adin Ross cleared the air about the ongoing situation with 21 Savage. First, Ross made it very clear that he did not blame 21 for using marked cards during their recent high-stakes gambling stream. Instead, Ross placed the blame on a member of Savage’s crew. Furthermore, Ross confirmed that since the stream, he had received a $250K payment from 21 to settle their debt. Cenat was simply happy that Ross, a close friend of his, had “got that bread”.

It appears the pair settled on $250K after a variety of numbers were thrown around following their stream. 21 initially promised to pay Ross $400K after the streamer discovered that the rapper’s crew had brought marked cards for their gambling stream. 21 denied any knowledge of the cards. However, he said he would honor his debt and pay Ross the full amount he owed. The rapper had been down $400K at one point in the stream before making a miraculous comeback, eventually cashing out with Ross owing him $120K.

Read More: 21 Savage Wants Money From Adin Ross After Streamer Gave Playboi Carti $1 Million For Six-Minute Appearance

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Adin Ross Teases Playboi Carti Reunion Stream… Again

Adin Ross has had a streak of bad luck as of late when it comes to his Kick livestreams with rappers, one that might see brighter days ahead. Moreover, the most notable of these recent instances is his contentious and frankly tough to watch gambling stream with 21 Savage. In it, the rapper apparently played with marked cards, which Ross noticed halfway through and led to an awkward moment where 21 questioned how this happened in the first place. Since then, apparently everything’s resolved and they were able to even their mismatched bets, but the Florida native faces some other challenges for his platform.

Furthermore, Playboi Carti agreed to stream with him after the Grammys, but only showed up for ten minutes due to alleged discrepancies over payment. It was a pretty disappointing moment not just for Adin Ross fans, but for vamps who were looking forward to a more fleshed-out media appearance from their king. Alas, he mostly just stood around in the dark, and we honestly don’t know what else fans might’ve expected from it. Overall, it caused a lot of clowning online for both parties, and it puts into question what their true motives, expectations, and goals are with this link-up.

Read More: How Adin Ross & Kai Cenat Are Making Hip-Hop Streams A Hot Debate

Adin Ross Teases Playboi Carti Stream Part Two: Watch

However, Adin Ross returned to stream this week, and once again teased that a part two to the Playboi Carti collaboration would come soon. “Carti part two, me and Carti texted that,” he claimed to his viewers. “Guys, Ye is doing a bunch of events right now. I’m pretty sure after the album comes out and stuff -– ’cause Carti obviously has to attend to that s**t, right? I’m pretty sure. A bunch of artists are gonna probably go to his event. So y’all gotta understand, after that, Carti part two. He texted me today. I was like, ‘Yo, bro, we gotta make this s**t right for the vamps, for my community, for everyone, the world.’ He’s like, ‘It’s all love, bro, I swear. Let’s do it, let’s lock in.’ He’s texting back and telling me he wants to do it and run it.

Extended Remarks

“I’m following up with Carti every day,” he added. “So if it doesn’t happen, it’s not gonna fall on me, it’s gonna fall on Carti. I’m following up with him every single day. To make sure that it doesn’t go back on me, yeah, I’m gonna be releasing all the proof. I don’t want the vamps against the AR loyals, we’re already like this! *crosses fingers* I follow up with him every day, every f***ing day. No, I’m trying to give the fans what they want, bro. Carti’s fans what they want. I got a list of questions I’m gonna ask him and everything.” For more on Playboi Carti and Adin Ross, stay logged into HNHH.

Read More: Adin Ross’ Joe Budden Rant Leads To Back And Forth With Concerned Twitter User

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How Adin Ross & Kai Cenat Are Making Hip-Hop Streams A Hot Debate

Few hip-hop fans can engage with some of the biggest artists in the genre today without coming across a streamer or two. Kai Cenat and Adin Ross, on the Twitch and Kick platforms respectively, are certainly leading the pack in that regard. Moreover, their livestreams with rappers have been fan favorites for a few years now, and they show no signs of slowing down. However, their rise also provoked a tough, complex, and divisive conversation between the old guard of hip-hop media and journalism and this new emergence. According to “old heads” and critics of streamers like Cenat, Ross, IShowSpeed, and many more, they don’t really represent the culture, respect its foundations and missions, or platform it in a benevolent or knowledge-based manner.

But do Kai Cenat and Adin Ross have to hold themselves to these standards of hip-hop coverage to deserve a platform? They are by no means rap-centric, as they make content about a variety of things (and handled their own external conflicts outside of hip-hop, such as the New Yorker’s chaotic in-person giveaway and the Floridian’s controversial views or his promotion of them). In that last regard, they’ve resolved and moved past those, but the questions of their role in hip-hop culture remain unanswered. What does this generational divide mean for the future of the genre and community, how can all of us bridge that gap, and can (and should) these young, outspoken voices find not just success in the larger media world, but also respect from it?

Read More: 21 Savage Freaks Out After Kai Cenat Corners Him With Snakes, Travis Scott Calls In To Place A Bet

Killer Mike’s Grammy Win: Kai Cenat’s Youth Vs. Joe Budden’s Experience

 
 
 
 
 
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There’s perhaps no better starting point than to answer these questions at its core: are these streamers “right” about hip-hop? When Killer Mike recently won the Best Rap Album Grammy for MICHAEL, Kai Cenat, Adin Ross, and many others questioned who he was, and lamented Travis Scott’s UTOPIA‘s loss. Joe Budden blasted this take, aggressively saying that “it’s not about [them].” Cenat and Ross retorted quickly, flaunting their financial success and remarking how he always trashes both new music and new media. This would’ve all been much easier to empathize with if they knew who Mike was and just preferred UTOPIA over MICHAEL. A lack of familiarity with a genre you’re such a fan of reflects a lack of interest in the culture’s roots, and it made valid preferences of contemporary juggernauts harder to justify.

Of course, this “old vs. new” debate has been a part of rap from the very beginning, and it’s not wrong at all to prefer UTOPIA over MICHAEL. The real issue is that, while folks like Kai Cenat and Adin Ross get grander in the mainstream, they seem to only champion the most current artists making waves. Their visibility pulls all of hip-hop up with them, and without fully acknowledging their blind spots (which are fine to have), their frustrations don’t stand on any weight of fandom, experience, or knowledge. Instead, it turns into an old head complaining about young whippersnappers, and them responding just as stubbornly. In reality, they should cast aside these criticisms more passively, because the truth is that they are beneath them. Know what you are. Until you do, reactionary anger against you will inspire that same vitriol within you.

Read More: Adin Ross’ Joe Budden Rant Leads To Back And Forth With Angry Twitter User

Adin Ross’ 21 Savage & Playboi Carti Streams: Biting Off More Than One Can Chew

 
 
 
 
 
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By launching that rage back, folks like Kai Cenat miss the opportunity to invite them to see their work for what it is, and not as a threat, replacement, or alternative to more traditional media coverage and journalism. Both can have a respected and popular space for their audiences, and streamers are doing great with hosting sessions with rappers. Kai’s had Offset, Nicki Minaj, Lil Yachty, and more, whereas Adin Ross chopped it up with Rick Ross, Chris Brown, Tory Lanez, and most recently, two separate streams with 21 Savage and Playboi Carti. Both stirred controversy for different reasons. 21 almost scammed Ross out of hundreds of thousands, whether unintentionally or not. On the other hand, Carti got a million from him and left their post-Grammys stream after about ten minutes when the 23-year-old didn’t pay up more.

While 21 Savage apparently paid him back and Playboi Carti might return, this made Adin Ross the subject of much mockery and pity for hip-hop. For example, DJ Akademiks believes that 21’s team took the opportunity to “finesse a white boy” because they don’t have respect for him beyond an opportunity for profit, content, and promo. Some defended Ross in both cases; others thought he was a fool for thinking otherwise. But it shows how these industries exploit each other to some degree. The Florida native doesn’t deserve scamming, but many think that if his streams were more formal or music-oriented, he wouldn’t run into these social media-heavy antics. Sure, Ross does talk about serious topics with rappers and provide enlightening conversations, but it’s only on occasion. Right now, he’s seeing that all that success doesn’t earn you an ounce of respect or authority in hip-hop.

Read More: Kai Cenat Mocks Playboi Carti After Disastrous Adin Ross Stream

Respect & Rejection Between Rap & The Streaming Community

That begs two questions: how much do streamers really respect hip-hop? And how much does hip-hop really respect streamers? The first question sits in the middle. For every Joe Budden, there’s someone like Drake to shout them out and engage with them excitedly. While Playboi Carti shunned Adin Ross, Offset really appreciated the great time that Kai Cenat showed him. Given how young much of rap is today, most rappers unquestionably respect, admire or are at least cognizant of streaming’s importance in the media ecosystem today. But they identify them as platforms and personalities, not as folks to help them develop their craft, take their careers to the next level, or help them translate their artistic identity. As such, they follow engagement… but it might not be a sustainable collaborative model.

As for streamers respecting hip-hop, there’s no doubt that streamers who’ve found a fanbase in the culture are fans of its current form. There’s also no tangible obligation for them to particularly like or know of its past because their content reaches a much younger fanbase that doesn’t bump Roc Marciano like that. Yet Chief Keef can let Adin Ross say the n-word during a live show. That is the key problem: when they erase history rather than add to it. Traditional rap media isn’t going anywhere, despite their close-minded takes on up-and-comers. But streaming can fall into using rap for clout. It’s probably fewer negative instances than positives, but arrogantly invalidating legitimate criticism damages that crucial element of hip-hop without providing similar frameworks. For them, it’s all about who’s more successful, not about how they can responsibly use their platforms as the biggest media voices right now.

Read More: 21 Savage Wants Money From Adin Ross After Streamer Gave Playboi Carti $1 Million For Six-Minute Appearance

Where Does Hip-Hop Media Go From Here?

 
 
 
 
 
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In terms of that responsibility, streamers have a larger voice than ever. Back in June of 2023, after he moved to Kick and made openly transphobic comments, Adin Ross spoke to Travis Scott’s manager about why other artists didn’t want to work with him. The manager explained that he was a brand risk because of these comments, plus for endorsing figures like Andrew Tate and inviting Nazi sympathizers to his stream. Rappers didn’t want to associate with him. Now they do, which reflects that they saw his numbers go up and wanted a piece of the pie. So streamers have cleaned up their act somewhat, but the price is a transactional exchange for some, whereas others like Kai Cenat are more villainized by the media than by artists.

Both sides are wrong in their combative attempts to downplay and replace each other, despite ample room for both. There’s no clear authority to encompass hip-hop’s present-day nuances. But folks like Elliott Wilson retracting their dismissals of Kai Cenat and Charlamagne Tha God praising him are the right calls, although most haven’t followed. Rappers see streamers as peers; look at Ice Spice linking up with Cenat, a similarly young star from the Bronx. Maybe less trust in casual content with rappers would make the old guard recognize streamers as storytellers, not content chasers. If Kai, Adin, and others want respect in hip-hop, they have to respect its history. If the old guard wants to stick around, they have to support the new generation instead of dismissing their youth. Until then, petty back-and-forths about money, bars, or ignorance will kill hip-hop more than any attempt to preserve tradition or embrace change.

Read More: Kai Cenat Responds To Elliot Wilson’s Nicki Minaj Stream Criticism, Reacts To Charlamagne Tha God’s Praise

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Why Did Kai Cenat & Adin Ross Diss Joe Budden?

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Joe Budden has long been better known for his controversial opinions about pop culture than for his music, but his latest targets have equally large platforms and are fighting back against his latest rant. In the wake of the 2024 Grammy Awards, the newest episode of The Joe Budden Podcast found the New Jersey curmudgeon loudly venting against both the show itself — specifically, Travis Scott’s performance — and against streamers like Kai Cenat and Adin Ross, who were upset that Killer Mike won in three rap categories over their generation’s favorite artists like Drake, Metro Boomin, and Travis Scott.

“Shut your ass up,” he said, addressing the angry streamers. “Yo, y’all lil streaming n****s don’t always run sh*t. Shut the f*ck up! We don’t care about none of that little streaming, moshpit, marked car whatever you n****s is doing over there… I’m just so happy that the streaming — that the little f*ckity f*cks finally, finally have a look-in-the-mirror moment and say, ‘Oh, it’s not about us.’ No, adults are out, n***a. N****s got pocket handkerchiefs in. N****s got fly sh*t on. Yeah, real execs, business people, you little f*ckity f*cks.”

However, on their own respective streams, Cenat and Ross struck back. During his stream on Twitch, Cenat said, “What we have here is a case of old n**** syndrome… Stop talking about streaming n****s like we some lil’ n****s. I could buy you.” He also pointed out Budden’s habit of hating on younger entertainers, saying, “I could pull up like 20 clips of you doubting every 2016 [XXL] Freshman, and look at them boys right now,” before administering the coup de grace: “You got one hit, Joe! ‘Pump it up!’”

Meanwhile, on Kick, Ross was even nastier, saying, “Joe Budden, every time I see you or a clip of you, it’s just on some hating sh*t. I’ma be honest, bro, I don’t know what you do. I can’t even name one Joe Budden song, respectfully… You’re one of these old asses who hates. Why can’t you be more like Rick Ross or Snoop Dogg, the OGs that are cool as f*ck and show flowers to the young motherf*ckers? You have no room to talk, no room to speak.”

Unfortunately, both sides have good points. As per usual, the generational divide in hip-hop is the culprit, but neither side is taking the appropriate steps to bridge that gap (to paraphrase Dave Chappelle: Where’s J. Cole??). In the midst of Budden’s rant is a nugget of truth: maybe 22-year-olds aren’t in the best position to present themselves as authorities on rap music — especially if they refuse to engage with it past the obvious streaming favorites and hip-hop that barely counts as hip-hop.

But the streamers, jive turkeys that they are (I’m looking at white supremacist/misogynist apologist Ross here), have a point of their own: Joe Budden is a huge hater. Seriously, every time he goes viral it’s for another clip of him that sounds very much like he never got over being dropped by Def Jam, then torching his second chance at Shady Records. If anyone needs a “look in the mirror” moment, it’s Joe.