Nicki Minaj Says Cardi B Stopped 21 Savage From Being On 2 Songs With Her. Nicki Minaj brings 21 Savage into her feud with Cardi B. Today's episode of Queen Radio has been just as dramatic as the last few. With Cardi B's sister suggesting that Nicki leaked Cardi's phone number, Minaj just had to fight back and she came with some major tea.
Since 2018, Nicki Minaj has been feuding with Cardi B over claims the latter had tried to sabotage her nemesisā career and ultimately dethrone her as the hottest female rapper in music. Following their explosive showdown at Harperās Bazaar ICON party in September 2018, where Cardi infamously threw her shoe in Nickiās direction, the two
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Nicki Minaj denies insulting Cardi B's parenting skills Nicki Minhaj has denied disparaging rival rapper Cardi's parenting abilities during an alleged altercation at a New York Fashion Week party. The singers were allegedly involved in a heated argument at the Harpers Bazaar event in 2018, following which Cardi B accused Minhaj of making
. Nicki Minaj and Cardi Bās feud has everything: a physical altercation in couture gowns; the alleged leaking of private phone numbers on the internet; a 10-part Instagram saga; an odd call for a truce. The only thing missing from this clash of rap titans is an actual rap song, but thatās hardly necessary in our current era of social media-driven feuds. The latest chapter in the now year-old squabble began on October 28 when news broke that Cardiās sister, Hennessy Carolina, had accused Nicki of leaking Cardiās phone number to fan clubs devoted to Nicki, leading members of those fan clubs to harass Cardi. Nicki denied the accusation. āYou [Cardi] canāt control your sister, but you want me to control millions of fans,ā she said on the 10th episode of her radio show on Appleās Beats 1, Queen Radio, released this past week. āIāve never leaked a number in my life ... yāall continue to lie on me to make me look like a bad person.ā It seems fair to say that Nickiās comments struck a nerve. In response, Cardi posted 10 Instagram videos addressing Nicki and covering such topics as what kind of narrative Nicki is constructing; whether Nickiās role in their feud is that of a victim, an aggressor, or the Street Fighter character Chun Li (a reference to Nickiās latest album); how Cardi has turned down advertising deals that Nicki subsequently picked up (she specifically mentioned the denim brand Diesel); and how jealous Nicki is of Cardi's success. Altogether, the videos ran for about eight minutes total; Cardi would later delete them, but not before someone compiled them on YouTube for posterity: Cardiās posts made it seem like she had hit Nicki with her full arsenal of truth, feelings, and meme-worthy phrases. The videos immediately went viral. And while they may have been prompted by an alleged doxxing, they also seemed to confirm that bad blood has been brewing between Cardi and Nicki for some time. Among other things, Cardi specifically accused Nicki of lying āso much you canāt keep up with your fucking liesā and threatening other artists and telling them not to work with Cardi. Over the past year, the two rappers have gone from denying ill will toward one another to slyly shading each other to supposedly brawling at a party during New York Fashion Week. Their feud is supposedly rooted in a disagreement over how a track came together, and though itās gone through distinct periods of dormancy ā Jezebel has a full timeline ā Cardiās Instagram videos undoubtedly escalated it. Eventually, Nicki tweeted an oblique call for a truce. But itās unclear if that truce will actually happen or simply smooth things over temporarily. Regardless, while Nicki and Cardiās feud might seem superficially entertaining, thereās also something deeper and instructive embedded within it. By looking at the two rappersā latest clash in the relative comfort of its aftermath, we can see how they have maintained a tense relationship that speaks to both womenās understanding of their fans and fandom, and the roles they play in pop culture and the music industry. Whatās more, it reveals some unsavory things about what it means to be a rap fan today. Nicki Minaj and Cardi Bās feud fits into an established pattern of female rappers fighting with each other ā and their fans egging it on Nicki Minaj is no stranger to very public fights. Between clashing with Taylor Swift over who gets nominated for the MTV Video Music Awards, bickering with Miley Cyrus over taking sides in her dispute with Swift, and what is now an eight-year feud with Lilā Kim over rap industry dominance, the Google results of āNicki Minajā and āfeudā read like a yearbook of music titans, dating back to when Nicki released her first mixtape in 2007. Itās always possible that there are genuine disagreements or disfavor within these squabbles. However, itās important to know that when it comes to the mainstream consumption of female-driven hip-hop, there seems to exist an irrational paradigm that reads like a crooked fairy tale: There can only ever be one dominant female rapper of the moment. Cardi discussed this idea as it pertains to herself and Nicki in an interview with Complex in October 2017. āI feel like people wouldnāt even be satisfied if me and [Nicki] was making out on a freaking photo,ā she said. āI feel like people just want that drama because itās entertaining.ā This āonly oneā theory doesnāt seem to apply to male rappers, or to female artists in other music genres. (In the latter category, while you could point to Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera in the 2000s or Madonna and Cyndi Lauper in the ā80s, both of the artists in each of those respective pairs were able to coexist and be successful without being pulled into a narrative about dominance and reigning supreme.) But as Kiana Fitzgerald argued at Complex in April 2018, there was a decline in the number of prominent female rappers in early 2000s, and āonce the leading cast of female rappers dwindled, the space for women in rap restricted by default ā if there are fewer women rapping at a prominent level, thereās less room needed for them. That tightened space in the rap landscape was the perfect breeding ground for competition.ā Thatās how the idea of a reigning queen of rap likely originated. And as Tyler Lewis wrote for the Atlantic in 2010: What the hip-hop community wanted in female emcees is simply different than what the mainstream record-buying public wants in a female emcee. And the message that the mainstream record-buying public has sent to the industry is that it doesnāt much care about female emcees unless they are larger-than-life caricatures that tragically reinforce and celebrate white beauty standards and cartoonish, one-dimensional sexuality that fronts like it is all about female sexual agency when it isnāt. And there is only room for one. When Lewis was writing in 2010, Nicki had recently released her first album, Pink Friday, after three mixtapes. And Lewis was explaining that while the very public fight between Nicki and Lilā Kim that spanned that same year could have been the result of a genuine dislike between the two, it was also a byproduct of Nicki and Kim adhering to what the music industry seemed to want from them. āThe truth is that it serves the interest of a music industry that does not want to (or doesnāt know how to) support and promote a variety of female emcees to continue to perpetuate the notion that female emcees are volatile and wonāt allow for other female emcees to get any shine,ā Lewis wrote. So both women repeatedly asserted their supremacy over the other and over the genre. Their posturing made headlines, drawing attention toward the battle between the āreigning queenā and āthe new voice of hip-hop,ā and becoming a fight for fandom. That was eight years ago. But a similar pattern and narrative were in effect during Cardiās breakout year in 2017. As Complex recently pointed out, thereās actually a debate over whether the beef between Nicki and Cardi started in March 2017 or June 2017. The mere fact that a debate exists signals that there is interest in said fight. And though there were some perceived slights between Cardi and Nicki in the summer of 2017 ā over who Cardi was performing with and whether those people had beef with Nicki ā itās worth noting that Nicki warmly congratulated Cardi that September on her success with āBodak Yellowā: Congratulations to a fellow NEW YAWKA on a RECORD BREAKING achievement. Bardi, this is the only thing that matters!!! Enjoy it @iamcardibā QUEEN (@NICKIMINAJ) September 25, 2017 Itās not until November 2017 that we can find the first real hint of blood in the water, with Nicki subtweeting that Cardi was ungrateful after Cardi gave an interview about Nicki and Cardiās then-recent collaboration with Migos on āMotorSport.ā During the interview, Cardi said that when she recorded her verse on āMotorSport,ā she had heard Nicki perform a different verse than what ended up on the final track ā in effect calling into question a previous account from Nicki about how she had actually approved Cardiās inclusion on the song. The corniest thing you can be is ungrateful. Give thanks.ā QUEEN (@NICKIMINAJ) November 30, 2017 Then in April 2018, as Nicki released two singles, āChun-Liā and āBarbie Tingz,ā she started to talk about how Cardi had hurt her feelings and damaged her reputation because of what she said in the āMotorSportā interview. In a interview with Beats 1, Nicki said Cardiās comments had hurt her because they made her look dishonest. āThe only thing she kept saying was, āI didnāt hear that verse. [Nicki] changed her verse,āā Nicki said. Nicki also went on to say that Cardi had played into the idea of a feud by not speaking up when rumors emerged after the āMotorSportā video was released. Though Nicki and Cardi both appear in the video, they werenāt on the set at the same time, which some fans took to mean that they disliked each other. According to Nicki, the reason they didnāt shoot together was a conflict with her hairstylistās schedule. Nicki claimed that Cardi never set the record straight in interviews and made it look like they were fighting when they werenāt. The most significant apparent blowup between the two came shortly after Nicki released her latest album, Queen, in August 2018 (more on this in a bit). Nicki and Cardi reportedly got into a fight at the Harperās Bazaar Icons party during New York Fashion Week on September 7, and there were pictures afterward of Cardi sporting a giant knot on her forehead and being escorted out by security. Cardi said that security had hit her, while Nicki maintains it was someone in Nickiās entourage. Cardi devoted an Instagram post to Nicki on September 8, seemingly to explain why she and Nicki had fought. She called Nicki a āpussyā and accused her of trying to mess with Cardiās reputation, music career, and income. āI let you sneak diss me, I let you lie to me, I let you attempt to stop my bags, fuck up the way I eat! Youāve threaten other artists in the industry, told them if they work with me youāll stop fucking with them,ā Cardi wrote. She also said that Nicki had finally crossed the line by insulting Cardiās parenting skills ā the latter being one of the reasons she fought with Nicki at the New York Fashion Week party. Almost two months later, Nicki shared her own account of that night. On October 29, she bragged to the audience of Queen Radio that her friend Rah Ali had hit Cardi ā so badly that Nicki (sarcastically) felt sorry for her. But not so sorry that she didnāt offer $100,000 to anyone who could provide surveillance video of Cardiās forehead getting pulped: Rah really, really beat Cardiās ass bad. Rah beat you so bad that I was mad at Rah. You went home and told people security hit you, and we let that ride for legal reasons. Anybody that wanna pull up the surveillance footage, I will give you $100,000. The minute Rah let your head up, I saw the knot on your head. That account from Nicki, along with Nickiās denial that she had leaked Cardiās number to her fans, spurred the eight-minute Instagram diatribe from Cardi where she called out Nicki. āDo you wanna be the victim, or do you wanna be the gangster?ā Cardi asked in one of her videos. Cardiās question is a pertinent one that perhaps unwittingly confirms the female rapper paradigm that Lewis was writing about when he suggested that female rappers have to be willing to fight to be successful. Adopting and embodying one of these narratives ā victim or gangster ā is part of the formula for success. Whatās just as unfortunate as this paradigm, however, is the gnarled picture it paints of those who hang on every new development of Nicki and Cardiās feud. Itās easy to recognize that whatever theyāre fighting about is petty. Itās harder to recognize our own role in the proceedings, and how our interest in whatever feud is in the headlines encourages its participants to fight with each other for our entertainment. Nicki Minajās strategy in her feuds has been to weaponize the ugliest aspects of stan culture To fully understand the Nicki Minaj and Cardi B dynamic, you have to understand what mainstream music fandom looks like today. The term that comes to mind is āstan,ā a word derived from the 2000 Eminem song of the same name. The song is about a deranged fan, and its title has evolved into a label that describes a celebrityās most devoted followers. The word can refer to a member of a celebrityās fervent fandom, like Rihannaās Navy or BeyoncĆ©ās Beyhive or Nickiās Barbz (also stylized as Barbs or Barbiez). For example, BeyoncĆ© stans will declare their loyalty to the Beyhive and constantly remind you that your fave could never (do what BeyoncĆ© does onstage). It can also signal derision; for example, many people have condemned the Mac Miller stans who blamed Millerās ex-girlfriend Ariana Grande for the rapperās drug abuse and death. Reflexively, saying that you āstanā someone you admire has become a popular mode of self-deprecation and identification. It shows that you acknowledge someoneās greatness, even though their āgreatnessā is especially subjective. This often comes into play when someone admits they stan celebrities or fictional characters who display abhorrent or petty behavior. omg iāve finally caught up with ahs and holy fucking SHITalso madison montgomery really is THAT bitch i fucking STANā į“ÉŖį“Źį“ | 2 (@alrightkiara) October 4, 2018 For true stans, the objects of their stan affections can do no wrong. True stans are also willing to do whatever they can to ensure their chosen celebrity/actor/musician/artist is seen as the best. For some stans, itās not just about believing that someone youāre a fan of is superior to all comers; itās about proving and quantifying that superiority in any way possible, whether itās in terms of box office earnings and album sales or fan-voted honors like the Peopleās Choice Awards. A pertinent example: Earlier this year, a number of fervent DC Comics stans fervently demanded that Warner Bros. release Zack Snyderās directorās cut of Justice League, despite not knowing if such a thing actually existed. Snyder left the movie during its production to deal with a family matter, and director Joss Whedon finished the film, which then received negative reviews. But Snyderās fans were adamant that a movie heād had a hand in couldnāt have been bad, so any critical thrashings were the fault of either Whedon or Warner Bros. Nicki has occasionally weaponized this loyalty by courting her fan base, her Barbz, her stans to combat any criticism made against her. In June, for example, a freelance writer named Wanna Thompson criticized Nicki in a (now-deleted) tweet to her then 14,000 or so Twitter followers (Thompsonās follower count is now over 20,000). āYou know how dope it would be if Nicki put out mature content?ā Thompson wrote. āJust reflecting on past relationships, being a boss, hardships, etc. Sheās touching 40 soon, a new direction is needed.ā In response, Nicki tweeted a selection of her songs; the implication was that Nicki viewed them as examples of āmatureā work, and that she was responding to Thompson, even though her tweet didnāt directly reference Thompson or Thompsonās comment. Pills n POTIONS. Bed of Lies. Iām gettin ready. Nobody. Save me. Autobiography. The Crying game. I lied. All things go. Buy a heart. GRAND Piano.ā QUEEN (@NICKIMINAJ) June 30, 2018 But later, Nicki (or someone with access to Nickiās account) sent Thompson a direct message insulting her. Thompson published the comments. Nicki Minaj exhibited #Queen behaviour when she hopped in my DMs and insulted me numerous times over an innocent music opinion while her fans continue to harass me and DM me death threats. This is NOT okay. Chocolate Dropās Mama (@WannasWorld) July 1, 2018 And the New York Times reported that after Thompson made the response public, Nickiās Barbz began a relentless assault on her various social media pages and phone lines: In the week since publicizing the acidic messages she received directly from Ms. Minaj, whose next album, āQueen,ā is scheduled for release in August, Ms. Thompson said she has received thousands of vicious, derogatory missives across Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, email and even her personal cellphone, calling her every variation of stupid and ugly, or worse. Some of the anonymous horde included pictures Ms. Thompson once posted on Instagram of her 4-year-old daughter, while others told her to kill herself. A similar incident occurred during the promotional period around the release of Nickiās most recent album, Queen, in August. To promote the album, Nicki debuted Queen Radio on Beats 1, using the show to share her thoughts about the album, the music industry, and whatever else crossed her mind. When Queen didnāt debut as the No. 1 album in America during its release week, she spent an episode of Queen Radio making some NSFW declarations about Travis Scott, the artist who had edged her out for the top spot, and his girlfriend, Kylie Jenner. She named Scott the āHo N*gga of the Weekā and accused him of bundling tour tickets with his new album to inflate his sales numbers and bump Queen down to No. 2. Nicki also accused Scott of asking Jenner to mobilize her massive social media following to get people to buy his tour tickets and album: When [Scott] realized that Queen was about to [be] the Number One album in America, he and his label decided to have Kylie and baby Stormi put up a tour pass. ⦠He had her post and say, āHey, me and Stormi canāt wait to see yāall.ā How are you selling something that does not have anything to do with your album but it is being counted on Billboard as album sales?ā To some extent, with Scott and Cardi, Nickiās actions qualify as playing the game and creating entertainment. But with Thompson, Nicki was punching down and encouraging her fans to attack a critic who didnāt have anywhere near the clout or resources that Nicki has. Regardless, because Nickiās stans are so devoted, whenever Nicki attacks someone ā no matter who it is ā sheās simultaneously reenergizing her fan base and asserting that sheās the fighter they believe her to be. And they respond by brigading the message that sheās the undisputed best. Itās like shaking a tree, except instead of leaves, you get adoration. While Queen didnāt become the No. 1 album in America upon its release, Nickiās attack on Travis Scott most likely resulted in more streams and more purchases from her stans. Before that, in responding to Thompson, Nicki showed that she will never back down to criticism, no matter who is saying it. And now, even though Nicki insists that she did not leak Cardiās number, Cardi has said that she received death threats from Nickiās fans. But, ridiculous though it may sound, such threats are the natural outgrowth of the way Nicki operates. In continuing to fight (or āfightā) with Cardi for the past year, even as both she and Cardi have frequently said thereās no beef between them, Nicki has been gesturing that the rap crown is still hers to bear. And her loyal fans have internalized that message and amplified it. Why Nicki Minaj is in a no-win situation To judge who āwonā Nicki and Cardiās latest spat is to look at whoās dominated the conversation that has surrounded it. Cardiās 10-chapter Instagram novela is the thing people canāt seem to stop talking about. āNicki is more popular (based on Instagram followers) and more powerful (at least by tenure), but if youāre lured onto unfamiliar ground, you run the risk of being beaten with experience,ā The Ringerās Micah Peters wrote. āAs evidenced by the hastily uploaded selfie videos, each a haymaker in its own right, social media is Cardiās battlefield. She was born in it, molded by it.ā While Nicki is extremely aware of how powerful fandom can be, Cardi is perhaps even more so. Her fame is the product of virality and Instagram audacity: She is an artist who used Instagram to land a spot on a reality television show and then to launch a music career ā there was one point where she had 10 million Instagram followers without even releasing an album. It seems Nicki may have realized that in this case, weaponizing her fans wonāt be enough to take the upper hand away from Cardi, who intuitively understands how to use social media to sway public opinion in her favor. After Cardi posted her Instagram diatribes, Nicki tweeted a plea for a truce ā which Cardi then appeared to accept by amplifying it on her own Instagram: Thereās something somber about Nickiās tweet, in that it seems to reveal her frustration with that irksome āone female rapperā concept. āI know this stuff is entertaining & funny to a lot of people but I wonāt be discussing this nonsense anymore,ā she writes, as if she understands that to āwinā her fight with Cardi would mean getting messier, more candid, more raw. She appears to be nodding to the idea that conflict between Nicki Minaj and Cardi B is what fans want, and not how Nicki actually feels. Mainstream hip-hop fans, stans, the music industry, and the media have rewarded a Nicki Minaj who reinforces the paradigm that there can only be one dominant female rapper at any given moment, and that she must be perpetually aggressive and combative about her place in the industry hierarchy. We canāt be surprised by Nicki wanting to be that rapper, or leaning into that image to achieve success. Whatās more difficult is answering the question of why we find it so entertaining when Nicki Minaj, or Cardi B, or any other female rapper acts in this way. The āone female rapperā idea ensures that no matter how hard Nicki or Cardi or any other female rapper has worked or how successful sheās become, she will constantly be doubted, because her success can only exist until someone better comes along to challenge it. So she must be grateful for that success ā and to show her gratitude, she must defend it at all costs. As fans, we could easily stop this cycle. Nickiās plea to focus on the positive feels like the closest she can come to saying that the way female rappers are encouraged to behave is cripplingly frustrating. But the ghoulish way so many of us clearly cherish feuds and fighting, and love to demand that our idols prove they are the unrivaled best, suggests thereās no end in sight.
Posted in: Crossword CluesHere is the answer for: Nicki Minaj or Cardi B crossword clue. This crossword clue was last seen on Wall Street Crossword January 12 2021 Answers. If you are looking for other crossword clue solutions simply use the search functionality in the sidebar. Please keep in mind that similar clues can have different answers that is why we always recommend to check the number of CLUE: Nicki Minaj or Cardi BPOSSIBLE SOLUTION: RAPSTARLast Seen: January 12 2021Category: Wall StreetAlready solved Nicki Minaj or Cardi B? Go back and see the other crossword clues for Wall Street Crossword January 12 2021 this ad
Who has more money ā Cardi B or Nicki Minaj? Pic credit: Ā© Whether they like it or not, it seems that the hip hop world really wants to pit Cardi B and Nicki Minaj against each other. After both of the female rappers wowed at the Met Gala earlier this week, the big question now is who is richer ā Cardi B or Nicki Minaj? While Cardi B has been very vocal about her love of money and all the things she has done to collect even more of it, it turns out that in the battle of who is richer, Nicki Minaj wins and not just by a little bit. In fact, according to multiple sources, Nicki is more than 10 times richer than Cardi even though the last couple of years have seen the former Love & Hip Hop star shoot to the top of the charts and become an international superstar. According to online reports, Nicki Minaj has built herself an empire and is worth roughly $85 million. Meanwhile, Cardi Bās net worth is listed as somewhere around $8 million, which is significantly less. While Nicki Minaj is seemingly far richer than her counterpart Cardi B, itās worth noting that Nicki has been in the business far longer, having signed her first recording contract in 2004 and having more released music than Cardi. Nicki Minajās discography boasts four studio albums, three compilation albums and three mixtapes. Nickiās music catalog also includes a whopping 71 songs where she has been featured. Ultimately, all of that music equates to quite a bit of dough! In comparison, Cardi B has released one solo album, two mixtapes and 27 singles. Of those singles, 18 of them were songs where she was featured. Still, thatās not bad for an artist who has only recently started making hits. Sign up for our newsletter! View Comments (3)
Everyone thought the air was clear after a photo circulated the web of Cardi B and Nicki Minaj seemingly reconciling whatever differences they had. That was back in May, and after their most recent Fashion Week situation we know that the two rap stars are still at odds. Despite the drama, below are some historical milestones that both female rap stars have easily surpassed. Who has the best track record? Yes Nicki has YEARS on Cardi, but you canāt knock Cardi Bās come up! Who do yāall think is better? 1. Cardi B went from being a stripper in the strip club to a Billboard chart-topping artist. The 25-year-old rapper saw her first #1 pop hit on the Billboard Hot 100 with āBodak Yellow.ā She is only the second female rapper to have a #1 on the Hot 100, Lauryn Hill was the first. 2. She became the first rapper and only the third act to have her first three records on the Hot 100 end up in the top 10 simultaneously. The two acts before her to achieve such a noteworthy accomplishment in music history were The Beatles and Ashanti. The three hitās that made this possible were āBodak Yellow,ā āNo Limit,ā and āMotorsport.ā So no, no one hit wonder over here! 3. Itās important to remember that Cardi Bās initial claim to fame was staring on VH1ās hit show Love &. Hip Hop. Cardi B is pretty much the only reality show star that was able to transform into a truly successful rapper. She is now a global phenomenon, and this all happened over the past three years. 4. The new mom was also the first women with five simultaneous top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop songs chart. Prior to this, Kendrick Lamar and Drake were the only two rappers to launch five songs into the top 10; therefore, Cardi added her name to another short historical list in Rap! She also broke BeyoncĆ©ās record, for female artists in the process! Queen B had four hits on the chart back in 2016. Nicki Minaj 1. First of all, Nicki Minaj is the best selling female rapper of all time. Yes there are many other greats like Lauryn Hill, Missy Elliott, and Lil Kim, but Nickiās sales have crossed over the 50 million range! Most notably, āSuper Bassā was 8X platinum, and āStarshipsā 6X. Many believe that Nicki Minaj has earned the title āQueen of Rapā for these very reasons. 2. Before Cardi B, Nicki was the highest charting solo female rapper. In 2014, āAnacondaā didnāt gain the number one spot, but it peaked at #2 on the Hot 100. Put some respekt on her name! 3. Nicki Minaj BROKE Aretha Franklinās record and currently has more entries on the Hot 100 than any other female artist in history. The Queen Radio host has 76 Billboard Hot 100 entries. 4. In late 2010 her Pink Friday album reached #1 on the Billboard Top 200 albums chart, and her hit single āSuper Bassā peaked at #2 on the Hot 100. Go Nicki!
nicki minaj or cardi b