Inglewood’s Nana Explains Why It’s So Important To ‘Save Yourself’ From Your Own Demons

Inglewood is going through a bit of a resurgence, not just geographically and economically, but also artistically. While the City Of Champions receives an influx of business and development thanks to a giant new football stadium and the new Clippers arena currently being constructed in the area, its profile in the entertainment world has risen dramatically, thanks to the efforts of locals like rapper D Smoke and multi-hyphenate Issa Rae. They’ve been putting on for their city in a way that hasn’t been seen since the Los Angeles Lakers and their Showtime antics gave Inglewood its nickname in the late ’80s/early ’90s with Issa’s show Insecure, Smoke’s season one win on Netflix’s Rhythm + Flow, and his debut album Black Habits.

The city is now the home of the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers, the future home of the Los Angeles Clippers, and the hometown of rising rap star Nana. Nana, the son of Ghanaian immigrants and a lyricist of powerful artistic intent, recently released the cathartic, authentic debut album Save Yourself. On it, Nana details his battles with demons both internal and external with wit, empathy, and a stark, realistic outlook that conveys all the sensibilities of old-school gangsta rap with a much more cosmopolitan and modern twist. Call it gangsta-adjacent rap. It’s the sort of lyricism that has long been embraced in the Inglewood area by longtime friends like Thurz and in the wider LA area from the likes of Kendrick Lamar, Murs, and Reason, but Nana’s unique approach gives it enough originality to overcome straight-up homage and elevate his street credibility.

I connected with Nana via Zoom to talk about the album, as well as our shared experiences as children of the Los Angeles street culture who stayed out of it by some stroke of fate, faith, or luck (or all of the above), but were still touched by it.

All right. So first off, I would like to say thank you for creating Save Yourself, because that is an incredible album. I discovered it on my last trip to the park to hoop and I swear I shot 87% from three that day.

There we go. Though safe to say that it had a positive effect.

Yes, sir. So let’s start with who is Nana? You are from Crenshaw and I know that, and I know that your parents are Ghanaian. I don’t know much about you, so let’s just start with when did you start rapping? Why did you start rapping? What was the impetus behind who you are now?

Word. Well, I’m Nana, a young man from the Crenshaw district and born and raised here. Didn’t move here. I was born and bred here. My parents came here, I want to say 1983. 1983. And then I’m one of five siblings. So I’m of and from the area and I’m somebody that I felt like it’s my God-given destiny to not only give my story, and my story, it’s a very interesting story given where my parents are from and me being first-generation Ghanaian. But to really tell the story of young Black and brown kids that come from where I come from and who don’t have the voice that I have. So that’s just the tip of the iceberg of who I am.

You changed your stage name from Blaison Maven. Can you explain what that name meant, why you changed your name and why it was so important to you to go by your government?

Man, I chose that name because I wanted to be like Lupe [Fiasco]. I felt like “Blaison” looked good on paper. I remember Lupe telling his story and how he said he chose the name Lupe because it looked good on paper.

And in hindsight, it was a ridiculous name that I chose. But I decided to change my name because I was always insecure about my name, the name Nana. I was always insecure about it. I didn’t want to go by my real name initially, which is why I went by what I was going by, but I think with my newfound honesty and me really giving people my truth. I’m like, I can’t really tell people the truth until I’m truthful with myself, right?

So I’m like, I have to embrace my insecurities. There are other people that are out there that have insecurities and I got to be the one to kind of let them know that it’s okay to embrace who you are. You don’t have to run away from it, especially the power that is behind the meaning of my name. My name means “King” in Ghana.

So once I grew up and really embraced it and really took on the meaning of my name, I felt like I defeated that demon of insecurity. If I’m giving people the real, I got to be real with myself.

Absolutely. Now I don’t know if you know this, you’re actually one of two rappers named Nana. When I was doing my research, I found out that there is a German rapper named Nana, who is also Ghanaian, which is pretty wild.

Somewhere down the line, I’m sure we probably even related, but no. I had no idea. It’s a common name in Ghana, especially. I think coming from where my parents are from, it’s kind of like every name has a meaning. If you are born on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday… I have a friend named Thurz. His name is Kofi, though.

I know exactly who you’re talking about. So with that being said, you’ve spoken extensively, I think, about your faith and how faith gave you a way out, but you named the project Save Yourself. And I find that dichotomy to be fascinating because there are two different things at play there: fate and predestination, and also free will and saving yourself. How do you reconcile those two ideas, both in your music and in your personal philosophy?

Well, I think before anybody else can help you, even on a spiritual level, you got to be like, “Yo, I’m going to make this conscious effort to do better.” Once you decide you’re going to make this conscious effort to go in this direction, then you open yourself to all of the positive possibilities within that. I know there’s people out there that are probably alcoholics. If you want to stop, you got to be like, “Yo, I’m going to stop.” Before anybody else could come in and help you, you have to be the one. You are the author of your destiny and you make your own decisions.

Switching gears a little bit. On the album, you don’t really have too many guest stars but you have my boy Reason from Carson on “LA Times.” How did that connection get made, and what was the inspiration of that song that you guys did together?

Yeah, me and Reason, we have the same mixing engineer, my boy Kytel. I met Reason two years ago after Kytel played my music for Reason. Reason took a liking to it, and he’s one of the most genuine guys in this industry. You know how you just meet good people, and you’re like, “Yo, I actually f*ck with him.” Outside of music, outside of everything, he’s genuine, and he’s a good person. So, me and him, we just been cool ever since.

So when we did that song, I was like, “I think it would be cool if I gave my perspective of growing up in South Central.” He was like, “Yeah, I should give my take on being a victim of circumstance growing up in Los Angeles and how we’re ultimately both victims, but giving it in a way where it’s like reality,” because there have been times where… you just trying to go to the mall and you get jammed up and you end up in a situation, and you don’t know whether or not you’re going to make it home or not.

And those were like real turning points in a lot of people’s lives. A lot of people didn’t walk away from those situations. I ended up in those situations a lot. Thankfully, I was able to walk away. So, it was just giving the reality of that because Reason is from Carson and the same thing that’s happening in Carson, is happening in the Crenshaw District.

That part, it’s Southern California culture. So, it was dope how it just transpired and it just felt so organic because of the right relationship that I had with him, I was so hype on how it came out. When I got his verse back, I was like, “This is perfect.”

Now, talking about dualities and dichotomies, you also address that on the album, on the record “Heaven & Hennessy.”

I think Hennessy is fit perfect because, I feel like it represents… this might sound a little dark, but to an extent, a demon in a sense. Where it’s just being caught in the middle of your angels and your demons. We all sin, it’s a representation of sin. A lot of times, when we get turned up, when we get drunk, we’re not really ourselves.

We all struggle and we all are still trying to make the conscious effort to save ourselves by trying to be the best versions of ourselves that we can be. I know I fall short and my intention was to let people know, I’m just like you. I go through the same sh*t that you go through.

So, a year from now, what’s your ideal outcome? What do you want the world to know about Nana? Where do you want to be in 2022?

Man in 2022, I’ll probably have another album out. Within another year, man, hopefully, by God’s grace again, I’m able to really see people and touch people physically. I think for me that was like the most like, (frustrated noise). The fact that I put out a project… and I think it was very dope that I was able to put out a project when I put it out because I know a lot of people needed it, but not being able to see the people and be amongst the people during that.

…Tour with it, yeah.

Yeah, I was like, “Damn,” I want to just be able to travel the world. For me, it’s not really about just traveling the world, but really traveling the world and taking Los Angeles with me and taking these stories with me because I know people from other places can also relate to these stories and just really spreading and getting the movement, these words, and the gift that I was given out there.

Save Yourself is out now. You can get it here.

Little Simz Shares A Blistering New Track About Her Father, ‘I Love You, I Hate You’

British rapper Little Simz has a blistering new song out today called “I Love You, I Hate You,” which is the latest offering from her forthcoming album Sometimes I Might Be An Introvert, her first full-length release since 2019’s critically acclaimed Grey Area. Unrolling pointed verses over swells of horns and strings, with a sung chorus of “I love you, I hate you,” Simz addresses her father on the Inflo-produced track.

She says in a statement, “Flo asked me, ‘What do you love and what do you hate?’ I knew the answer immediately, but I was adamant I didn’t want to talk about it.” The song’s lyrics echo her inner-conflict, as Simz asks, “Is you a sperm donor or a dad to me?” Later, she gets even more blunt: “You made a promise to God to be there for your kids […] You made a promise to give them a life you didn’t live / My ego won’t fully allow me to say that I miss you / A woman who hasn’t confronted all her daddy issues.”

Prior to this, Little Simz released the singles “Rollin Stone,” “Woman,” and “Introvert.”

Listen to the poignant “I Love You, I Hate You” above.

Sometimes I Might Be An Introvert is out 9/3 via Age 101. Pre-order it here.

Apryl Jones & Dr. Dre Rumors Flare Again After Night Swim Thirst Trap

Apryl Jones’s new thirst trap on the Gram has people talking about those Dr. Dre rumors again. On July 8, the Love and Hip Hop: Hollywood reality star posted a couple pictures of herself poolside, late at night. Jones captioned her post, “Night swim on dat ass oh and cause he told me to post it.”

Jones’s followers were quick to point out that the photos were taken at an expansive mansion– the type of crazy digs that Dr. Dre would indeed own. Her followers also noted that the “he” Jones is referring to in the caption could also refer to the good doctor– obviously, that was her intention, too.

Speculation about the two first started when the reality personality and the music mogul were seen leaving an L.A. restaurant together earlier this year, shortly after Dre’s highly-publicized divorce.

The tea about the potential coupling was spilled around February of this year, shortly after episodes of Love and Hip Hop: Family Reunion showed Apryl Jones and her previous love interest, Lil’ Fizz, were no longer together. Although Jones’s Love and Hip Hop: Hollywood co-star, Moniece Slaughter, confirmed the rumors, Dr. Dre and Jones have not spoken out to confirm or deny the status of their relationship.

The reason could possibly be because Dr. Dre is in the middle of divorce proceedings from his soon to be ex-wife, Nicole Young. The two have been going back and forth for quite some time. Details from the divorce proceedings include the absence of a prenuptial agreement, along with the super producer asking a judge to declare him legally single. 

Check out Apryl’s post below, and let us know what you think.

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Rihanna’s “ANTI” Has Spent A Record-Breaking Number Of Weeks On Billboard

For those who remember a time where Rihanna was more than a fashion mogul, don’t fool yourselves. That is still the same timeline we’re living in, no matter how long it’s been since she last released new music.

ANTI, the Barbadian singer’s critically-acclaimed LP released back in 2016, has been sitting on the Billboard 200 for a grand total of 275 weeks, per ChartData. Take that number, divide it by 52, and the quotient will round it to somewhere around 5.28. Like we all know, the album released a sliver over five and a half years ago, which means the hit-machine of a record. Sure, the album only had four official singles (“Work,” “Kiss It Better,” “Needed Me” and “Love on the Brain”), but anyone who says that they haven’t heard “Sex With Me” or “Consideration” on the radio before is simply lying.


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Her 8th studio album was featured on dozens of decade-end lists, often boasting a place within the top 10 for the best album of the 2010s, as well as the number-one spot on SPIN Magazine. Rolling Stone even placed the album in the top half of their most recent 500 Best Albums of All Time list this past year. Written in at #230, it sits above the practically genre-birthing 808’s & Heartbreak and seminal alternative albums like Heaven or Las Vegas, which is rightfully high praise. Rihanna has left listeners in the dust with nothing but her most enjoyable project yet; not to mention countless other singles that still offer extensive replay value.

Most recently Rihanna was seeing heading to a studio out in New York City with A$AP Rocky, and all we could hope for is some brand new material coming out of that booth.

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KILLY Stays True To The Game On New Single “EUPHORIC”

Toronto rapper KILLY might have just released his latest project KILLSTREAK 2 a few weeks ago but he’s already coming through with more new music. The 23-year-old recording artist has been having an incredible run this year, continuing to level up on an international level. He’s tired of waiting around to rise up though, so he’s emptying out the clip with another new single called “EUPHORIC.”

Sounding as though it could have fit onto KILLSTREAK 2, KILLY’s new record sees the rapper snapping over a Jaegen-produced beat. He speaks about the euphoric feeling he has when he holds a hundred racks, how everything he does is large-scale, and why he lives life to the fullest every single day.

Watch the new music video for “EUPHORIC” by KILLY below. What do you think?

Quotable Lyrics:

Killy-Kill be the light to your darkness
I know that they watching
I just trust the process
I just trust my pockets
I’m going crazy, they ain’t used to this
If you can’t play the role, thеn you useless

Chance The Rapper Shares “Magnificent Coloring World” Trailer & Release Date

Chance the Rapper is one of the most engaging artists when he steps on the stage. Through every step of his live show, he seeks to connect with each and every soul in the audience, bringing raw energy and charisma to the table. For weeks, the Chicago-based rapper has been teasing the upcoming release of his feature film, titled Magnificent Coloring World, and the world has finally received a proper trailer and release date for the movie.

Much like with Justin Bieber, Michael Jackson, and other world-shifting musicians, Chance the Rapper becomes the latest artist to have a movie made about him, debuting the Magnificent Coloring World trailer on Friday.


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The film documents a secret concert that the rapper performed in his hometown during his 2016 world tour. Some of Chano’s biggest fans were in attendance, singing along to every single song, which helped to create a stunning and energetic atmosphere for any music lover. At the time, Chance was touring his album Coloring Book, which is one of his most celebrated bodies of work. If you’re a fan of that project, you’ll want to watch Magnificent Coloring World when it’s released in theaters on August 13.

Pre-sale tickets begin next week on July 16. Watch the trailer below for the upcoming film and let us know if you’ll be buying a ticket.

6ix9ine Sued By Tattoo Artist Takashi Matsuba For Defamation After Being Inspired By Him: Report

Tekashi 6ix9ine, real name Daniel Hernandez, is no stranger to beef. This time, he’s embattled in a legal feud with tattoo artist Takashi Matsuba, who reportedly inspired the rapper’s own stage name. The beef reportedly stems from claims 6ix9ine made in two recent documentaries about the controversial star, 69: The Saga of Danny Hernandez and Supervillain: The Making of Tekashi 6ix9ine, respectively.

In both of the Tekashi 6ix9ine documentaries, the rapper claims that Takashi Matsuba is a heroin addict. When Supervillain: The Making of Tekashi 6ix9ine aired on Showtime, the rapper explained where his stage name came from, and proceeded to name-drop Matsuba.

The “Fefe” rapper says, “There was this tattoo artist named Takashi from our neighborhood. And he was this heroin addict. He did heroin to create. He did it to get himself in his little world. He did it to be himself. And that’s where I got the name Tekashi from. And that’s who I am.”  

WATCH: the clip-in-question from “Supervillain: The Making of Tekashi 6ix9ine”

The director of the Tekashi 6ix9ine Hulu documentary also references Takashi Matsuba. In 69: The Saga of Danny Hernandez, the director is heard stating, “Peter’s roommate, a Japanese tattoo artist named Takashi would inspire Danny’s new persona, Tekashi69.” During the director’s statements, Matsuba’s full name is printed on the screen.

WATCH: the clip-in-question from “69: The Saga of Danny Hernandez

The tattoo artist is none too happy about the claims in these docs, and the simple fact that Tekashi 6ix9ine essentially stole his name in the first place, save for a letter. What’s more, he says that he is being falsely accused of habitual heroin use.

Per legal documents obtained by TMZ, Matsuba says that 6ix9ine “has created confusion and the false public perception,” that the tattoo artist uses heroin. Matsuba’s legal documents further states, “tattooing requires the use of needles, and heroin is connected in the public’s mind with hypodermic needles.” After requesting producers of the Hulu project to remove his name, image, and likeness, Hulu refused to make the edits.

Matsuba is suing for damages. 

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50 Cent’s “Street King Immortal”: A Complete History

Where other artists would be more than content with over 30 million in record sales, rapper-turned entrepreneur Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson is incapable. Whether it’s in a personal or professional sense, 50 never remains stationary for too long, diversifying his portfolio and finding new streams of revenue and relevancy seemingly every day.

From making upwards of $100 million from Vitamin Water to chronicling the journey of fictional drug tycoon James “Ghost” St Patrick with Starz’ Power, 50 has routinely found new frontiers. Along the way, despite his banter and beef with rap friends and foes alike50’s music has taken a clear backseat.

14 years on from his initial threat of retirement during his infamous Graduation Vs Curtis sales clash with Kanye West, 50 has yet to formally bow out of the game. In reality, his emphatic loss at the hands of Ye  didn’t stop him from adding two further entries to his solo canon, not to mention two EPs with a reformed G Unit.

That said, there was a time where 50 had every intention of bidding adieu to his career as a recording artist with one grand, career-encapsulating finale in the form of his Street King Immortal project, only to leave fans still pining for this elusive album a whole nine years after it was initially slated for release.

50 cent street king immortal

50 Cent at a “Street King Immortal” promotional shoot in NYC, 2012 – Johnny Nunez/WireImage/Getty Images

After he’d originally alluded to his fifth album arriving in the form of an aborted “dance music”-inspired project known as Black Magic, the term Street King Immortal first entered the hip-hop lexicon when 50 took to Twitter in July of 2012, excitedly proclaiming, “Jimmy iovine said STREET KING IMMORTAL is the best album I’ve made since GET RICH OR DIE TRYING.” It’s worth noting, the album title drew its name from a new beverage business venture 50 was investing in at the time, that is, Street King energy drink.

The album announcement was promptly followed by the release of the Dr. Dre-produced and Alicia Keys-aided “New Day.” As a result, 50 exhibited every sign of being in album-release-mode and stipulated that the record would emerge in November of that year, after a reported two years of behind-the-scenes work on it, too.

LISTEN: 50 Cent “New Day” feat. Alicia Keys

“I can’t offer what collaborations I’ll be actually having, but I want to say that the actual project itself was the longest body of work I had an opportunity to work on besides Get Rich Or Die Tryin’,” 50 remarked to XXL that August. “As far as what’s next, they’re gonna see what I have next. I’m not gonna wait a long time. You’re gonna hear new stuff from me.”

Initially earmarked for release on November 13th of 2012, an October interview saw 50 concede that the record wouldn’t come out as previously planned, citing the fact that the album represented his last contractually-obligated record with Interscope, Shady and Aftermath. However, he was gracious enough to drop off an engaging consolation prize in the form of “My Life” featuring Eminem and Maroon 5’s Adam Levine. Then, as he transitioned to 2013, 50 spoke to Fuse and claimed that the “business part is slowing me down.”

Ever the promotional powerhouse, 50 continued working under the pretence that SKI was imminent for the remainder of the year, releasing singles in the form of the Snoop and Jeezy-assisted “Major Distribution” and his Daft Punk-sampling dalliance with Kendrick Lamar that was “We Up.” 

Where this collaboration between a perennial star of the moment and a wily vet should’ve set the world ablaze, the response was far more muted than anticipated. And as commercial misfires mounted, so too did his aggravation with his longtime home of Interscope. 

WATCH: 50 Cent “We Up” feat. Kendrick Lamar & Kidd Kidd

“It’s a lot of staff changes, a lot of different people moving in and moving out,” Fif told MTV News in July of 2013. “So you have to kind of wait until everything’s right; until it’s settled in.”

Adamant that he was waiting until the album was “right,” another year would pass without Street King Immortal. Another twist in the tale was right around the corner as 50 would officially severed ties with Interscope in February 2014, taking his G-Unit imprint with him to independent distribution company Caroline International in the process. 

Looking to mark his newfound autonomy with a bang, 50 would  release an album in the form of Animal Ambition. But even as it descended upon the world in June of 2014, it was already being billed as a prelude to Street King Immortal

“It’ll be seamless,” 50 Cent proclaimed in an interview with Complex. “It’s gonna ride right into it. Street King Immortal is more personal. It’s way more personal than this record. Of course this one is about a portion of my actual experience, but that one is…I talk about things that I haven’t talked about.”

Rather than be the one-two combination that fans were awaiting, 50’s insistence that SKI was waiting in the wings would soon cause the record to take on a mythical allure that mirrors that of mentor Dr. Dre’s archived project Detox.  

Following a newly-designated release in September 2014, 50 wasted little time in pushing the record back to 2015, in order to allow him to consolidate his efforts into the revived G-Unit and avoid sacrificing what he termed as “the momentum” of “everyone being back together.”

Having reasserted that the album was “now the focus” as of late January 2015,  50 continued to add news wrinkles to the hype around SKI by informing Hot 97.3 Hartford that both Chris Brown and Kendrick Lamar had contributed, not to mention, there was another record with former label head Eminem that would reportedly be unveiled soon.

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It also appeared that hooks would play a pivotal role within the album as over the years, Trey Songz, John Legend and Ne-Yo were all confirmed for appearances by 50. As far as rhyming partners go, the G-Unit general’s trip to Hartford also saw him disclose that he’d be teaming up with a southern artist that he’d previously had unfavourable things to say about.

“I just did a song with [Lil] Wayne though, ‘Ejected,'” he relayed. “It’s actually Kidd Kidd and Wayne but I had to put it together and I got them to give me the clearance, both Wayne and Baby to clear the record so it’s cool.”

Billed as an album that revolved around storytelling, fans were heartened in August of 2015 when the riveting and deeply autobiographical “9 Shots” was unveiled. Marking a return to the unrivalled grit and lyrical forthrightness that’d made 50 into a superstar in the first place, any fan will recall how the emphatically positive response to the track made it seem as though all the pieces were finally coming together. 

WATCH: 50 Cent “9 Shots”

Consequently, it couldn’t help but feel bittersweet when in December of 2016– after the proposed September 2015 and August 2016 deadlines had came and went– 50 finally assigned a retirement narrative to the long-awaited album.

“I want to finish with that project,” he informed Muscle & Fitness during a Q&A. “I don’t want to write another record after that. You know how some artists got to have confirmation that they’re right? I have that confirmation in fucking 35, 40 million [albums] that I already sold.”

Despite, or perhaps as a direct byproduct of the importance that he’d allotted to SKI, the trail would go cold for much of 2017, with 50 dropping off “Still Think I’m Nothing” alongside Jeremih without so much as an insinuation that it was an album teaser.  

By January of 2018, the status reports on Street King Immortal felt more like backpedalling, with Jackson informing The New York Times that he was “in the middle of recording” what was once thought to be an already-complete sixth album and claimed (again) that it was “as thrilling as my first.” 

Later that month, at the premiere of bank heist movie Den Of Thieves, 50 breezily remarked that “at the end of the year, they’ll get the full album” and suggested that his film and TV endeavours had played a role in the then 8-year gestation period of the project.

50 cent street king immortal what happened

Steven Ferdman/Getty Images

Considering that DJ Whoo Kid claimed to have heard 22 songs worth of “ridiculous shit” way back in March of 2013, it’s safe to say SKI has likely been completed and then rejigged on numerous occasions by this point. And with so many plates spinning and a comfortable lifestyle already secured, 50 could be forgiven for refusing to release something that fell below his personal standards.

But after the NLE Choppa-assisted “Part Of The Game” from the Raising Kanan soundtrack marked a commercial and critical return to form, Curtis Jackson, the musical artist, has begun to exhibit signs of life. In the wake of the track becoming, in his words, “the most added track on urban radio” the G-Unit legend self-effacingly toasted the song’s success by stating, “oh sh*t i’m still 50 cent LOL.” 

Although many have consigned the album to the same vault as hip-hop’s other last artefacts, Street King Immortal is yet to be formally cancelled by 50 Cent or his camp. And with 50 riding high off “Part Of The Game’s” warm reception, and the 20th anniversary of breakout mixtape 50 Cent Is The Future approaching in June of 2022, perhaps now would be a fitting time for him to embrace his illustrious place in hip-hop’s history books with the sort of bullets and bravado-ridden farewell that only he could deliver. 

Drake Went Full-Drake For A Private Dinner Date On The Field At Dodger Stadium With The Mother Of A Basketball Phenom

A private candlelit dinner on the baseball field at Dodger Stadium sounds like something Drake would do, right?

Well, he did it.

Los Angeles’s ABC News affiliate’s helicopter reporter Chris Christi happened to catch the international superstar during a midnight flyby, spotting him getting cozy. The shots found their way to Twitter, and already, fans are buzzing about not just the utter Drake-ness of the date, but also the identity of the woman sharing a meal with the self-declared Certified Lover Boy — a nickname he’s certainly earning with this stunt. The prevailing theory is that it’s entrepreneur Johanna Leia, who is the mother of high school basketball star Amari Bailey, one of Bronny James’ teammates at Sierra Canyon School.

It seems that Drake has become rather fond of dining in closed-down arenas over the past few months. He recently celebrated his Billboard Artist of the Decade Award win with dinner on the 50-yard-line for his crew at the SoFi Stadium, also in Los Angeles.

Drake’s supposedly been hard at work on his next album, Certified Lover Boy, which he says is due to drop by the end of the summer — although he’s pushed it back a few times already — so perhaps this instance will form the basis for one of his many, many flexes when the album finally does drop. Check out some fans’ responses to his Dodger Stadium date below.