Music
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MADRID — After a successful First Spanish Music Encounter at the WiZink Center in 2024, Billboard returned to Madrid on Tuesday (March 18) with “Leaders of Music in Spain,” an event that reaffirms its commitment to the country’s music scene. The cocktail event, held at the Hotel VP Plaza España Design, gathered more than a hundred executives, artists, and key industry figures to strengthen ties and boost the global projection of Spaniard music.
Among the attendees were Pino Sagliocco, president of Live Nation Spain; José Luis Sevillano, CEO of AIE; Sandra García-Sanjuán, executive president of Grupo Starlite; Claire Immoucha, head of Amazon Music Spain; Mar García, marketing director of Warner Music Spain; Narcis Rebollo, president/CEO of global talent services at Universal; and José María Barbat, president of Sony Music Iberia. Artists like Rosana, Lela Soto, Natalia Lacunza and Álvaro de Luna also joined the event, sharing their thoughts on the present and future of music in Spain.
On Billboard‘s behalf were Leila Cobo, chief content officer for Latin/Español; Pamela Bustios, senior chart and data analyst for Latin/Español; and Marcia Olival, sales director for US Hispanic, LATAM, and Iberia.
“I’ve always said that Billboard is a bridge between Spanish-language music and the Anglo market. We tell these stories to an audience that doesn’t speak Spanish, but also in Spanish, and with Spain, this idea of a bridge is literal,” Cobo emphasized during the event. “Spain has more streams than ever, ticket sales are extraordinary, and it’s the world’s top music tourism destination. We want to amplify what you do, celebrate you, and be part of your story.”
This expansion of Spaniard music beyond its borders is a reality that resonates within the industry. Alicia Arauzo, general manager of Universal Music, highlighted the importance of these networking spaces to continue building international connections. “Without a doubt, these are great initiatives because, in the end, that’s what it’s all about: Spanish artists are going further and further. It’s something that didn’t happen years ago, and it’s fantastic to be able to cross bridges and have our music reach other territories,” she said.
José María Barbat, president of Sony Music Iberia (left) and Bernardo Miranda, vp A&R at Sony Music Iberia during Billboard’s “Líderes de la Música en España” event on March 18, 2025 in Madrid.
Aldara Zarraoa
Held at the Ginkgo Sky Bar — with panoramic views of the Royal Palace, the Almudena, and Plaza de España — the gathering served as a space for networking and dialogue about the industry’s challenges and opportunities.
In conversation with Billboard, Melanie Parejo, head of music for Spotify in Southern and Eastern Europe, emphasized Spain’s importance as a key point within the global ecosystem. “Billboard anchors here, in a country that is the gateway to Europe,” she noted. “Spanish-language music is more interconnected than ever. Gen Z doesn’t care if an artist is from Tenerife or Venezuela, and that’s incredibly powerful.”
For attendees, Billboard‘s presence in Spain represents a validation of the market’s growth and international projection. Rosana, one of the invited artists, expressed her gratitude. “Billboard opened its doors to me 15 days after releasing my first album in the U.S. and Latin America. Now that it has decided to come here, all they makes me want to do is make them feel at home,” she said.
From the business side, Blanca Salcedo, general manager of Sony Music Spain, highlighted the importance of the visibility provided by the platform. “I’d love for this to happen more in Spain,” she said. “The digital world has achieved unity and eliminated barriers.”
Attendees listen to Leila Cobo during Billboard’s “Líderes de la Música en España” event on March 18, 2025 in Madrid.
Aldara Zarraoa
For Álvaro de Luna, being part of this celebration was a personal milestone: “Seven years ago, I wouldn’t have imagined being mentioned in anything related to Billboard. It’s a dream.”
The event was made possible thanks to the support of Hotel VP Plaza España Design, Mahou, AIE, Santander SMusic, and Tequila Patrón, which prepared the evening’s special cocktail, the Paloma Patrón.
With “Leaders of Music in Spain,” Billboard continues to bet on strengthening its presence in the country and amplifying the impact of Spanish music globally. “We have total commitment to Spanish-language music, to Spain, and to its industry,” concluded Cobo.
The Contenders is a midweek column that looks at artists aiming for the top of the Billboard charts, and the strategies behind their efforts. This week, for the upcoming Billboard Hot 100 dated March 29, we look at the chances of generational rap phenom Playboi Carti and breakout pop superstar Chappell Roan to take over the chart’s top spot.
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Playboi Carti, “Evil J0rdan” (AWGE/Interscope/ICLG): After years of delays that had longtime fans wondering if Playboi Carti would ever release the follow-up to 2020’s cult favorite Whole Lotta Red, Carti finally dropped the long-promised I Am Music set last Friday (March 14) — with its title surprisingly shorted to just “Music.” Arriving in the not-so-early morning, the sprawling new collection offered 30 tracks for the Carti faithful, boasting a guest list of such big names as The Weeknd, Travis Scott, Future, Lil Uzi Vert, Young Thug and even man-of-the-moment Kendrick Lamar.
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Despite the A-listers featured on the set, it’s a Carti solo track that’s in the early lead on streaming services. The booming “Evil J0rdan,” fourth of the 30 tracks, currently sits atop both the real-time Apple Music chart and Spotify’s Daily Top Songs USA listing, and ranks below just the new Bhad Bhabie diss video (!!) on YouTube’s Trending for Music ranking. The song should be in line for the chart’s top debut on the Hot 100, likely contending for an entrance in the top five.
Will it be enough to contend for No. 1? It will be tough for it to really challenge the currently reigning “Luther” without much radio support – which is tough enough to amass quickly for any new rap song, and doubly so for one by the often purposefully abrasive Carti, who has unsurprisingly never really found much of a foothold on the airwaves. (Thus far, the amount of airplay “J0rdan” has received has been negligible.)
Chappell Roan, “The Giver” (Amusement/Island): Few songs of 2025 will be as hotly anticipated as “The Giver,” the first brand-new drop from Chappell Roan since her rapid rise to superstardom over the course of 2024. In truth, “brand new” should come with a bit of an asterisk, as the country-flavored new song was first heard by fans last November, when Roan debuted the song as a musical guest on Saturday Night Live. But “The Giver” did not receive official release until late last Thursday, following a weeks-long rollout of interviews and Instagram posts and Times Square billboards in promotion of the new single.
Many chart-watchers wondered if all the excitement around Roan in 2024 and early 2025 would lead to a Hot 100 No. 1 debut with her first release back. That doesn’t seem particularly likely at this point for “The Giver,” which has ranked below multiple songs from Carti’s Music album on DSPs since its first full day of release on Friday – and which did briefly top the iTunes chart over the weekend, but has already fallen to No. 9 on that listing since. In fact, it isn’t even the highest-ranking Roan song on that ranking: “Pink Pony Club,” which hits a new peak of No. 7 on the Hot 100 this week, lands at No. 2 on the downloads chart, and also ranks above “The Giver” on Apple Music’s real-time listing.
Combined with its strong performance at radio – the song moves into the top five on Pop Airplay this week — “Pink Pony Club” should be ranking in similar territory to “The Giver” on the Hot 100 next week. But “The Giver” has already amassed 1.5 million audience impressions (across all formats), per Luminate — with just over 300,000 of those impressions coming from country stations – and should have a strong overall debut on the airwaves in its first full week.
Kendrick Lamar & SZA, “Luther” (pgLang/Interscope/ICLG): Since taking over the Hot 100 in the weeks following Kendrick Lamar’s triumphant Super Bowl performance, “Luther” has proven fairly stable atop the chart – topping Streaming Songs for each of the last four weeks, while also climbing to No. 2 on Radio Songs, as it continues its cross-platform dominance. That should all continue next week, as “Luther” will likely give up its streaming crown but continue to gain on radio (and challenge for the top spot on Radio Songs), with its combination of stellar performance across the two platforms making it tough to unseat atop the Hot 100.
What’s more, Kendrick may add another few entries to his current Hot 100 takeover, as a featured guest on three strong-performing tracks on Playboi Carti’s Music: “Mojo Jojo,” “Backd00r” and “Good Credit.” Just another three on the pile for Lamar, who already boasts seven entries on the chart this week – including five in the top 20, and three (“Luther,” “Not Like Us” and “TV Off” with Lefty Gunplay) in the top five.
Drake, “Nokia” (OVO/Santa Anna/Republic): Though the chart unquestionably belongs to Lamar currently, it’s worth noting that his 2024-25 adversary also may be on his way to his biggest hit on the chart in years. Though “Nokia” was not the highest-debuting song from Drake’s recent full-length PartyNextDoor teamup LP $ome $exy $ongs 4 U – it bowed at No. 10, while “Gimme a Hug” entered at No. 6 – it has proven the longest-lasting, spending a third week inside the top 10 and even climbing to a new peak of No. 8 this frame, as it sits in the top six of the regular charts on Apple Music, Spotify and iTunes.
Radio has been relatively slow to pick up on “Nokia” — “Hug” was the initial focus track from the set for most radio formats – but it is starting to grow there as well, rising 31-24 on Rhythmic Airplay and debuting at No. 36 on Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay this week.
BLACKPINK‘s LISA dropped a high-energy YouTube Music Nights Special Stage Performance video for her solo single “FUTW” on Tuesday night (March 18). The visual is a static shot of the singer and six backup dancers on a stage framed by blood red columns, with all seven women wearing variations on black leather bikinis. Explore See […]
King & Prince’s “HEART” blasts in at No. 1 on this week’s Billboard Japan Hot 100, dated March 19.
The group’s 16th single is being featured as the ending theme song for the latest drama series starring member Ren Nagase. The CD launched with 329,809 copies to debut at No. 1 for sales, tops downloads (30,920 units), and comes in at No. 14 for streaming (4,288,922 weekly streams), No. 23 for radio airplay, and No. 3 for video views.
“HEART” becomes King & Prince’s 14th No. 1 on the Japan Hot 100. The group has consistently sold over 300,000 copies of all of its singles in the first week and all of them have topped the physical sales list.
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King & Prince First Week Single Sales
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1. “Cinderella Girl” 622,701 copies
2. “Memorial” 372,139 copies
3. “Kimi wo Matteru” 400,315 copies
4. “koi-wazurai” 385,303 copies
5. “Mazy Night” 531,162 copies
6. “I promise” 578,092 copies
7. “Magic Touch/Beating Hearts” 470,605 copies
8. “Koi Furu Tsukiyo ni Kimi Omou” 449,115 copies
9. “Lovin’ you/Odoruyouni Jinsei wo.” 471,845 copies
10. “TraceTrace” 513,056 copies
11. “Tsukiyomi/Irodori” 614,173 copies
12. “Life goes on/We are young” 1,051,909 copies
13. “Nanimono” 546,829 copies
14. “Aishi Ikiru koto/MAGIC WORD” 353,077 copies
15. “halfmoon / moooove!!” 315,400 copies
16. “HEART” 329,809 copies
Mrs. GREEN APPLE’s “Lilac” stays at No. 2. The track continues to rule streaming for the 28th week with 9,761,022 streams, while hitting No. 8 for downloads, No. 66 for radio, No. 2 for video, and topping karaoke. The Oblivion Battery opener has sailed past 500 million streams as of this week.
SKE48’s “Tick tack zack” debuts at No. 3. The girl group’s 34th single sold 288,724 copies in its first week, coming in at No. 2 for sales and No. 50 for radio.
At No. 4 on the Japan Hot 100 is Sakanaction’s “Kaiju,” slipping a notch from last week. The Orb: On the Movements of the Earth opener came in at No. 7 for downloads, No. 2 for streaming, and No. 6 for radio and video. The accompanying music video dropped Mar. 16, so points for video will also fuel the track from next week.
Mrs. GREEN APPLE’s “Darling” follows at No. 5. The track is also down a notch from last week, but radio and karaoke increased by 133% and 109%, respectively, compared to the week before.
Elsewhere on the chart, Remioromen’s J-pop classic “Sangatsu Kokonoka” (March 9th) charts for the second consecutive week (No. 33 this week). The graduation-related favorite from 2005 climbs the chart every year around this time, and this week, streaming for the track is up 111%, downloads 168%, videos 142%, and karaoke 126% week-over-week.
The Billboard Japan Hot 100 combines physical and digital sales, audio streams, radio airplay, video views and karaoke data.
See the full Billboard Japan Hot 100 chart, tallying the week from Mar. 10 to 16, here. For more on Japanese music and charts, visit Billboard Japan’s English X account.
Ye (formerly Kanye West) surprised fans with the leaked release of his Bully album early Wednesday (March 19), which became available on a file-sharing app through a short film directed by the rapper himself.
The 30-minute wrestling-themed flick was edited by rap video dignitary Hype Williams and stars Ye’s eldest son, Saint West.
There are 11 tracks showcased in total, including previously teased records such as the Kden Drip-sampling “Preacher Man,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Highs and Lows” and “Close to You.” Playboi Carti and Ty Dolla $ign are the lone features on the album closer “Melrose.”
The project drew a polarizing reaction due to Ye’s antisemitic tirades and hate speech, as well as his support for Diddy and since-deleted attacks on Jay-Z and Beyoncé’s children. Others were willing to overlook his recent behavior and enjoyed the project, as he recalled some of his 2000s brilliance chopping up soul samples and themes from 808s & Heartbreak.
“Of course BULLY is sonically the greatest s–t Kanye has worked on in years lmao,” one person wrote to X. “This clown is so annoying dawg.”
Another replied, “I will never listen to his crap let alone support it. You don’t have to intentionally hurt folks to promote your music. Time out for rewarding bad behavior.”
Don’t expect the project to land on streaming services anytime soon. “I may stop using DSPs cause streams are fake and the French and Jewish record labels treat artists like prostitutes,” he wrote.
However, it appears West will be turning his focus to his next solo effort, which looks to be Donda 2 — a sequel to his 2021 album named after his late mother.
Find more fan reactions to Bully below.
Yeah Kanye ain’t gonna be able to clear no samples off BULLY but that shit sounded nuts— Ahmed/The Ears/IG: BigBizTheGod 🇸🇴 (@big_business_) March 19, 2025
BULLY IS FUCKING INCREDIBLE— Kent Escobar (@yzyscholar) March 19, 2025
Listening to Bully, the album Kanye West leaked himself after working on it for a year, it is so clear musically nobody is even close to him. Its so sad he is in this state, knowing we won’t get this from him. So much talent and nobody around to help him. Hope he gets it together— O (@ashahzy) March 19, 2025
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Nick Cannon already has 12 kids, but he’s still hoping for a baker’s dozen — and maybe even a few more after that. On the latest episode of his We Playin’ Spades podcast that dropped March 17, the actor shared his stance on getting a vasectomy (spoiler: he’s against it) and affirmed that if things […]
Ben Stiller is ready to sit courtside with Taylor Swift again, and this time, Travis Kelce is welcome to the party. On the latest episode of the Kansas City Chiefs tight end and Jason Kelce’s New Heights podcast, the actor joined as a guest and recalled how he once attended a New York Knicks game […]
Less than an hour into February’s Grammy Awards telecast, one of the evening’s undeniable peak moments occurred. Doechii — the charismatic, lyrically dexterous Florida rapper who was up for three awards that night — won best rap album, making her just the second solo female rapper (and third overall) to win the honor. “Don’t allow anybody to project any stereotypes on you, to tell you that you can’t be here, that you’re too dark, or that you’re not smart enough, or that you’re too dramatic, or you’re too loud,” she declared in a tearful acceptance speech that instantly went viral.
For Billboard’s Woman of the Year, it was the culmination of a stunning rise, propelled by her acclaimed mixtape Alligator Bites Never Heal. But it was also just a beginning: The 26-year-old Tampa MC hasn’t even dropped her debut album yet.
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Doechii uploaded her first song to SoundCloud when she was just 16 and, in the following years, put out a pair of mixtapes, the latter of which included her first viral hit, 2020’s “Yucky Blucky Fruitcake.” In 2021, she guested on Isaiah Rashad’s “What U Sed,” and in 2022, she became the rapper’s labelmate after signing a joint deal with Capitol Records and Top Dawg Entertainment.
Join us at Billboard Women in Music 2025 — get your tickets here.
Her Kodak Black-featuring single, “What It Is (Block Boy)” — released in early 2023, around when she was named Billboard’s Women in Music Rising Star — became her highest-peaking entry on the Billboard Hot 100 at that date, but a fraught period followed; subsequent singles didn’t catch on, and Doechii was, as she later wrote on social media, “battling differences with [her] label and a creative numbness that broke [her].” To ease that tension, she turned to dance music. In March 2024, Doechii joined forces with Miami MC JT and DJ Miss Milan — the latter is now a fixture in her artist universe — to release “Alter Ego,” a vivacious house-rap track that served as a palate cleanser for the fans who hadn’t enjoyed her pop-rap swings from 2023, while also setting the stage for her “Swamp Sessions,” weekly drops of new music that led up to Alligator Bites Never Heal’s late-August release.
The mixtape featured many “Swamp Sessions” tracks, though it wasn’t an instant smash, debuting at No. 117 on the Billboard 200. But for Doechii, that was just a jumping-off point to let her singular vision and meticulous world-building — magnetic live and televised performances anchored by smartly assembled medleys and athletic, Bob Fosse-referencing choreography; proudly Black glam; idiosyncratic music videos nodding equally to ballroom culture, Westerns and telenovelas — blossom.
In the process, Doechii spun gold from one of the most painful periods of her life, and by late 2024, she was inescapable. In September, she featured on Katy Perry’s dance-pop single “I’m His, He’s Mine,” and the following month, she delivered a scene-stealing verse on Tyler, The Creator’s Chromakopia standout “Balloon.” In December, she mounted a pair of eye-catching performances that kicked her rise into high gear: first, a medley of “Boiled Peanuts” and “Denial Is a River” on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert that featured her own choreography; and, just two days later, her thrilling NPR Tiny Desk set, which quickly dominated social media thanks to her fastidious storytelling and cohesive arrangements.
As her star has risen, Doechii’s commitment to exalting all parts of her dark-skinned, Black queer self has remained paramount. It’s why her first unaccompanied Hot 100 entry was “Denial Is a River,” in which she confides to her therapist that her boyfriend had been cheating on her with another man — just one example of how refreshingly honest (and unafraid to get messy on wax) an artist she is. The week following the Grammys, Alligator Bites Never Heal soared to No. 14 on the Billboard 200, and in late February, “Denial Is a River” peaked at No. 21 on the Hot 100, while the track “Nissan Altima,” which had been nominated for the best rap performance Grammy, hit No. 73.
“To be so fresh in her career, Doechii has incredible vision and focus,” Top Dawg Entertainment president Terrence “Punch” Henderson Jr. says. “She’s a true student of hip-hop and it shows based on how she’s being embraced in the culture. The future is wide open for her.”
Now, even as Alligator Bites Never Heal continues to find new fans, Doechii is already scoring hits outside of it. Her collaboration with Blackpink superstar Jennie, “ExtraL,” debuted on the Hot 100 in March, and her latest release, “Anxiety,” is also having a major impact. Originally a 2019 direct-to-YouTube track, “Anxiety” was sampled by New York drill rapper Sleepy Hallow last year, and after a February Fresh Prince of Bel-Air-inspired TikTok trend, audiences begged for a new solo version by the Swamp Princess, who quickly obliged in early March. (The track debuted at No. 13 on the Hot 100 — her highest-peaking hit on the chart yet — and Doechii recently added it to Alligator Bites Never Heal.)
She did so as she descended on Paris Fashion Week, where her spectacularly theatrical looks made her the event’s undisputed victor — just ask Anna Wintour or Thom Browne — and affirmed she’s more central to the pop culture conversation than ever. Case in point: An offhand quip she made on Hot Ones about straight men being one of her dating red flags set social media ablaze for a week straight.
Around the same time, Doechii made a surprise live appearance that proved why she’ll always rise above that noise: At a Miami festival, Lauryn Hill invited her onstage to duet on “Doo Wop (That Thing),” then yielded the stage for Doechii to perform her own “Catfish.” Rapping and singing alongside her “hero,” the raw talent that makes Doechii an especially bright light in an ever-precarious industry was on full display — a reminder that, as she said at the Grammys, she’s a true “testimony” to the merits of following a vision and trusting that the world will eventually catch up to you.
This story appears in the March 22, 2025, issue of Billboard.
As the Grand Ole Opry celebrates its 100th anniversary this year, the revered country music institution is celebrating its essential role in country music.
What became the Grand Ole Opry launched as the WSM Barn Dance in 1925, and has broadcast as the longest-running radio show in U.S. history.
The Grand Ole Opry currently has 76 members — and for artists at any stage of their careers, from newcomers to those who have been in the spotlight for decades, entering the membership ranks at the Grand Ole Opry has stood as a coveted career milestone. Those invitation moments often mean tears and speeches of awe and gratitude from the artists who are extended the invitation to join the Opry’s ranks.
When Carrie Underwood was formally inducted as a member by Garth Brooks in 2008, he told her, “Nothing will last as long or be more important than this award right here tonight.”
Each year, the Opry’s management team extends membership invitations to a handful of artists. According to the Opry’s website, consideration involves a number of factors, including radio airplay, music sales, touring, and industry recognitions. But beyond simply career stats, the Opry also seeks “a musical and generational balance,” as well as those with a passion for country music, and commitment to the Opry.
“The decision to bring a new act into the Opry fold is a two-pronged one, based on a combination of career accomplishment and commitment,” the Opry’s website states. “But, really, it comes down to just one word: relationships. The relationships between performers and fans. The relationships Opry members have with each other, relationships that may last for decades. And, perhaps most importantly, the relationship between each artist and the ideal of the Grand Ole Opry.”
The Opry’s most recently inducted members are Lainey Wilson, Scotty McCreery, T. Graham Brown and Stephen Curtis Chapman (each inducted in 2024), while the Opry’s oldest living member is Bill Anderson who, at age 87, has been an Opry member since 1961. Beyond solely artists, those in Opry membership also include comedians such as Henry Cho and Gary Mule Deer (both inducted in 2023), and musicians such as Country Music Hall of Fame harmonica player Charlie McCoy, who has been a mainstay in Nashville’s recording studios for five decades, and who served as the music director for the television show Hee Haw for nearly two decades.
Below, we look back at 10 memorable moments of artists being invited to join the Grand Ole Opry.
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Playboi Carti has responded to Ye (formerly Kanye West) after the embattled rapper bashed him about allegedly snubbing Ye from his Music album and then requesting vocals from Ye and Kim Kardashian’s daughter North West.
“YE STFU,” Carti replied on X early Wednesday (March 19).
West — who has been criticized over his repeated antisemitic hate speech — addressed the “Magnolia” rapper hours later. “SHOULD CARTI HAVE EVEN SPOKEN TO MY BABY MAMA AT ALL,” he seemingly asked his 33 million X followers.
Ye continued to take shots at Carti: “CARTI IS JUST A WAY MORE BASIC DUMBER VERSION OF VIRGIL FINESSING YE AND DRAKE CO SIGNS.”
Kanye is referencing whenKardashian posted a SKIMS shout-out on Music to her Instagram Story, and Carti replied by asking his “niece” North to send some vocals for a potential collab. The embattled Chicago artist had felt Carti crossed the line with his initial request for North to send some music, and declared that his daughter wouldn’t be working with the “All Red” rapper.
“I DECIDED NORTH WONT BE DOING ANY SONGS WITH CARTI HOW IT LOOK FOR ME TO GET LEFT OFF THE ALBUM AND THEN HE ASK KIM TO HAVE VOCALS FROM MY DAUGHTER,” Ye wrote earlier. “I DONT A F–K ABOUT NONE OF THIS INDUSTRY S–T AND HOW ITS A SKIMS LINE IN THE FIRST PLACE AND I DONT GIVE A F–K WHAT NO COMMENTS THE MAN HAS THE FIRST AND FINAL SAY OVER HIS KIDS.”
He went on to bring up Carti’s baby mother, Iggy Azalea, and their son, Onyx, in a separate tweet, seemingly trying to get the little boy on Ye’s own music. Azalea chimed in and requested that he keep her son out of whatever issues he has with Carti.
“Ye, I understand the point you want to make,” she wrote in part on X in response. “I say this with kindness & as a mother: Please, leave my child out of this.”
It’s been a turbulent week for Ye, who has fired away at peers such as Jay-Z, Kendrick Lamar, Drake, Ty Dolla $ign, Travis Scott, Tyler, The Creator, Pusha T and more already. He even released the self-directed short film version of his Bully album early Wednesday, which stars his son Saint West — whom he also shares with Kardashian — and was edited by Hype Williams.
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