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State Champ Radio Mix

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Tommy Richman became a household name with “Million Dollar Baby” almost instantaneously upon its April arrival. Over two months later, with his breakout anthem remaining a chart staple, the DMV native delivered a visual to the catchy hit on Friday (July 5).

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Richman and his team mobbed across the world for the video shoot, which took place in Los Angeles, Paris and his home state of Virginia.

The 24-year-old makes it rain in the nightclub and then hangs out in front of the Eiffel Tower before also heading to the very Queen’s Gambit in Virginia that he name-drops on “Million Dollar Baby.” Although, from a style standpoint, Richman reps the Big Apple with a New York Jacket and signature Yankees fitted cap.

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Tommy adds the VHS effect to give the clip an edgier and vintage aesthetic through the fish-eye lens. He released a VHS-styled version of “Million Dollar Baby,” which some fans preferred to listen to the rougher cut.

“It was the combination of the sound of the VHS camera, the vibe of the people in the studio, how short the snippet was and how in your face the audio was,” Richman told Billboard of his smash catching fire on TikTok before is release. “The audio is really loud. I compare the audio to my other TikToks, and the one snippet is in your face. I think that’s why it caught on.”

“Million Dollar Baby” exploded onto the music scene upon its April 26 arrival and has been ubiquitous since. The track debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and currently sits at No. 6 in its ninth week on the chart.

The banger has also continued to be a viral force on social media as “Million Dollar Baby” spends an eighth week atop the TikTok Billboard Top 50, a new record.

Looking to shed the one-hit wonder label, Tommy Richman followed-up “Baby” with “Devil Is a Lie” in June, which boosted to No. 35 on this week’s Hot 100. He’s currently hard at work finishing up his debut album, Coyote.

Watch the “Million Dollar Baby” video below.

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The ominous 42 Dugg whistle is filling the air once again. The Detroit rapper returned Thursday (July 4) to deliver his 4eva Us Never Them debut album via 4PF/CMG and Interscope Records. Explore Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Filled with 22 tracks. Dugg enlists his school principal […]

In the eighth episode of Billboard Unfiltered, Billboard staffers Carl Lamarre, Trevor Anderson & Damien Scott run through Megan Thee Stallion’s new album, Camila Cabello’s C,XOXO and what they thought of Drake’s features. Additionally, the trio breaks down the highlights from the 2024 BET Awards, including Usher’s tribute and Will Smith’s first performance, along with other standout moments.Damien Scott:If this was just a 10-track album, it would have been like a…

Trevor Anderson:It would have been a 10/10? Album of the year?

Damien Scott:Classic record.

Carl Lamarre:It killed me knowing that you got two Drake records and they kind of were somewhat of a dud and then you come with a heater.

Trevor Anderson:I’m hoping we can take this and can continue going forward, build off this year and keep it going back.

Carl Lamarre:It’s been quite some time.

Damien Scott:Hey, hey!

Carl Lamarre:Just a little bit, everybody was doing their thing. Little vacays.

Trevor Anderson:Yeah. It’s that time of year.

Carl Lamarre:Yeah, BET.

Damien Scott:Skin tan, hair long. Smell like a vacation.

Carl Lamarre:I love that. You got a little tan on you, pop.

Damien Scott:A little bit.

Carl Lamarre:Alright!

Trevor Anderson:Oh, yeah. I forgot! Yeah! Well I know you were out in L.A. last week, obviously.

Carl Lamarre:Yeah I was in L.A. for BET.

Trevor Anderson:You can see…. I’m thinking of that Sexyy Red video with the…

Carl Lamarre:Oh she made it rain on me.

Trevor Anderson:Go check this out, if you haven’t seen Carl on the Billboard hip-hop social because what’s was the line?Watch the full video above!

There’s not many Ukrainian Jewish people walking around Brooklyn that can be taken seriously when it comes to carving out a legitimate rap career.
Your Old Droog — Droog means close friend in Russian — has repeatedly defied the odds to get to this point a decade into his career as an independent artist, which finds him still dishing out boom-bap raps and catering to a lane that’s a dying breed as far as mainstream hip-hop goes.

Do a quick Google search for Droog (born Dmitry Kutsenko) interviews, and you’ll notice there aren’t many since he made waves on the scene about a decade ago — when rap fans ran with a conspiracy theory he was actually Nas undercover.

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The early days of preumss caused him to lose faith in the media — but he’s willing to give it another shot in support of his latest alb Movie, which arrived on June 21.

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“I got tired of journalists twisting my words,” he tells Billboard. “I got PTSD from early on in my career where you think you’re having a good conversation with somebody and the article comes out, ‘Your Old Droog is still not Nas!’”

Growing up, whenever Droog would see a supernatural stunt in a film, his parents would reply in Russian, “Movie!” He bottled that energy up to get his Martin Scorsese on and direct his own blockbuster with this album.

The 35-year-old has compiled quite the Rolodex of collaborators over his career, as he connects on this album with producers like king of the underground Madlib, Conductor Williams and the legendary Roc-A-Fella orchestrator Just Blaze. Yasiin Bey and Method Man also pop up as special guests for lyrical sparring sessions throughout the 47-minute expedition.

Check out our interview below with Your Old Droog, as he speaks on his definition of success, working with Madlib and the idea of celebrity in America.

Who are some of your favorite storytellers — whether they be directors, rappers?

Scarface as far as rapping goes — Slick Rick. As far as movies go, Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, Brian De Palma — all the greats. A nobody could tell a great story. Just like an average person. 

How do you measure success for your album? What metrics are you using?

Personally, I try not to get too caught up in the metrics, because you could go crazy. Comparison is the thief of joy. I don’t think numbers always tell the full story. I am successful when I made the album, or even before I did. The definition of success — I was listening to a self-help thing, it’s the progressive realization of a worthy ideal. I think I’m doing that. 

Do you feel like you’re preserving an old-guard in rap and a part of rap that isn’t pushed in mainstream as much?

Not at all. I don’t think I’m championing an old sound or old aesthetic. I still rap the same way on the rap I grew up on. In that sense, maybe I’m preserving what I appreciate about hip-hop. What raised me. But I don’t set out to be like, “Yo, we’re bringing 2003 back!” When I came out they were calling me a “’90s revivalist.” I appreciate ’90s music, but I was a child. I wasn’t knee-deep into hip-hop yet. Early 2000s was more my era. 

Right — and the whole thing that came out saying you were Nas ghostwriting that EP.

You know journalists, they rehash talking points and it sounds cool. ’90s rap! Like I remember when Joey Bada$$ came out, the aesthetic was a little ’90s. I don’t think my aesthetic was ever ’90s. A lot of it has to do with maybe that’s one of the more recent times New York rap was at the forefront. The heyday and golden era so to speak. So that’s what people tend to point to. 

You said Kendrick Lamar being the top rapper gives you hope for storytelling lyricism. Seeing his run that he’s been on, does that inspire you?

It was a little complicated, because I’m trying to release music and dudes are dropping diss tracks back-to-back. So we gotta kinda wait this out, but those guys are heavyweights in the game so you gotta give them that respect. I think it’s good for the cultural, period, as long as it doesn’t spill out in the street. At the end of the day, these guys are using words and it’s good for lyricism. 

Kendrick Lamar being the biggest rapper in the game gives me hope for storytellers and #lyricism— YOD (@YourOldDroog) June 22, 2024

How did you link up with Mos Def on “Care Free?” I loved [that] you said, “I got a free verse like Ye in ’03.” That was funny. 

I heard through a few people he was a fan of mine. We ended up meeting when he had a show at Brooklyn Steel a few years ago. We met and he was showing me love that I almost forgot to fan out myself. A business partner passed my number to him and I get this weird text from an international number and lo and behold it’s Yasiin. Just understanding my story and my side of Brooklyn and being Ukrainian, that’s something he appreciates. Just a great dude. 

How was working with Madlib and Conductor on this album if you could compare and contrast those experiences?

Both excellent producers. Madlib is a crazy legend and Conductor is still coming up. He’s killing it, but Madlib is near the father of this underground. They’re both similar and easy to work with. They understand what I should be lending vocals to. They understand my voice and my writing. There’s really not too much to talk about, since they know what to send over. 

Working with Just Blaze harkens back to what we were talking about with the early 2000s era. 

Yeah, that’s the era I’m bringing back. [Laughs.] Just, I’ve known him for a while. I always wanted to rhyme over a Just Blaze beat. That’s something we did coming up. It’s something else to have a Just Blaze beat. He doesn’t really talk on records like that and he did the vocals on the interlude. 

On “Success & Power,” you said, “Don’t talk about Jews, that’s how Ye screwed up.” As a Jewish person, what’s your relationship with Ye’s music and has it changed?

I always had a love and hate. I didn’t love everything he did musically. Just to see him unravel in the public was really sad. To me, that was wordplay and a spin on his line. I like to have fun and not take myself too seriously, but I think there’s a lot of truth in that line too. He’s talented, but in recent years I guess I stopped caring [about his music]. I respect the line about the bleached a–hole. Musically, he’s a genius. 

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You had an interview in skits on your album. I feel like you haven’t done much press for recent albums. Was that intentional? 

There came a point I realized I didn’t need to do press. If you get it you understand it and that’s fine. I had no hope in the journalistic profession as far as hip-hop. I don’t think there was a good landscape at the time. I was like, “I’m gonna make music for myself and my supporters.” There were writers that did it get it too, though. 

My favorite record that I related to was “Grandmother’s Lessons.” Talk about your relationship with your grandma.

If you go through my music, I always mention my grandmothers. That’s a different type of love, if you’re fortunate enough to experience it. That’s like a mother on steroids. When I wrote it, I wasn’t even thinking about who else might like it. It’s just a song that I needed to write. That was enough for me. To get the feedback that I’ve been receiving, people are hitting me up telling me they shed tears to that song or their grandma is alive and they’re appreciating her more. That’s probably the best feedback you could ask for. 

“Crescent Moon” has a ton of NBA references. Talk about your relationship with hoops growing up and meeting Dirk Nowitzki. 

That was dope. When he tells me “all the best,” I take it literally. That’s Dirk. He’s cool as hell. I’m a Dallas Mavericks fan. Growing up, you dream of doing it professionally until you realize you’re not good enough or you smoking too much weed and you can’t really play ball like that. Basketball is life for me. When the playoffs are on, I can barely do anything else. It’s a big part of my life. I rap about whatever I’m interested in. Something in the back of my mind — any trivia or any basketball player type of thing. My high school didn’t have a basketball team. We just smoked marijuana, cut class and things of that nature. 

How did you become a Dallas Mavericks fan? What did you think of the run to the NBA Finals this year? That was pretty special for it all to click. 

I told Dirk the same thing. It was 2006 in the Finals and I kinda thought they got jerked by the refs. Part of me wanted to see them comeback and win. It took five years for them to get back and I just stayed on the bandwagon after that. Nobody expected them to go this far [this season]. I can’t be as upset as I was in 2006. It’s a different type of feeling and a different team. I’m excited for the future. 

Why did you sample that Jay-Z interview?

I feel like the placement of it was important because it’s right before “How Do You Do It?” That story that I tell on that song is so uniquely mind that I feel like nobody else could write it. That’s the sentiment I got from his quote. I want to do something that a Ukrainian Jewish immigrant could talk about.

Just trying to fit this mold — like preserving the value of something, but you don’t have to dress up a certain era. You could pay homage in the right way. It doesn’t have to be readily apparent to people. You don’t have to throw hoodies on and hang out with [Olde English] 40s. 

You’re not gonna get the jeans out with all the NBA teams on them. 

Nah, not even the Denver Nugget jeans on. My son got the drip. I grew up during that time. Usually when I see people paying [homage] to it, they’re nostalgic for an era they didn’t live in. I was around for that time. It wasn’t that great. Let’s move on.

I read your Variety interview and you were like, “How’d we go from having celebrities like Sammy Davis Jr. to Khloe Kardashian?” What do you think about the evolution of celebrity?

I don’t even know what it means anymore. Everybody’s a star. And I’m not s–tting on her. The dude could just be super poppin’. I didn’t know who Mr. Beast was. I think it was harder to be famous and you were famous for a real reason in those days. Sammy Davis Jr. is a legend. I think I watched a documentary and that stuck out in my mind. Following his work and talk show appearances, there’s never gonna be a person like that in American pop culture. Reality TV became a thing, I understand how things play out. 

Going off that within rap, I feel like the young generation’s stars aren’t as big compared to when we were growing up with Jay-Z, Eminem, Kanye West. Do you see that the same with the landscape of rap?

I think that goes back to the point I had about media. Certain things aren’t in place for there to be stars. No disrespect to the interviewers, I see flyers where the interviewer’s name is bigger than the artist and that doesn’t even make sense. These people are building their brands at the same time. You have journalists who want to be rappers. If the guy covering you wants to be famous, where does that leave you? They don’t have a stake in it. It’s a free-for-all.

What does it even mean to be a rap star these days? You saw what happened to Pop Smoke. People don’t want to see you do well, it’s sad. Do you even want to be a star on that level? Do you want what comes with that?

Jim Jones always says rappers have the most dangerous job in America. 

Dudes is hating on you before you even make it, so imagine when you are that guy. People are literally seething. 

What’s your advice for upcoming independent artists in how they can navigate the business?

Everybody’s not cut out to be an independent artist, but some of us are left with no choice. You gotta just go for it. You gotta release the music. You gotta be strategic too. You gotta understand where you’re at in your career, and where you’re tryna go. I think independent is the way to move. I work best without somebody standing over me telling me what to do. I got into this profession so I wouldn’t have to work, so I’m definitely not doing that. Maybe some people like being told what to do, but I don’t think you need to get in the music game [for that]. You could just go to McDonald’s.

When Cash Money Records co-founder/co-CEO Bryan “Birdman” Williams hits the ESSENCE Festival stage with his “Birdman and Friends” performance on Friday (July 5), he’ll be joined by Juvenile and Mannie Fresh, among others.
Confirming those names without disclosing any more, Birdman tells Billboard via email that the performance will mark a “Cash Money Millionaires reunion.” Music fans will recall that the Cash Money Millionaires was a collective of rappers — including Birdman, Lil Wayne, Juvenile, B.G. and Fresh — who were signed to the label in the late ‘90s and early 2000s.

“It’s been 15-20 years since we’ve been onstage together,” adds Birdman. “We’ve got a great production and some special guests. It’s going to be amazing! We are working on a few things that we can’t talk about yet. But I can promise you that it’s going to be a night to remember. We’re excited to be a part of the Essence Festival … We’re going to bring the energy; we’re going to have a good time. And we’re going to make sure the crowd has a good time, too.”

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In a July 4 report filed by People, Birdman did note that B.G. will also be among the friends who will be joining him and others onstage. He also told the publication that he’s hoping Drake — whose beef with Kendrick Lamar continues to make headlines — will appear as well. “It’s a possibility,” Birdman told People. “We made this a family thing but Drake, we’re close friends. He one of us.”

The Louisiana native did reveal that the “Birdman and Friends” segment will feature a special tribute to late Cash Money rapper Magnolia Shorty. “We lost a lot of great artists over the years, but Magnolia Shorty was one of the most special,” says Birdman. “We’re going to do a song for her and celebrate her life.” Magnolia Shorty was shot and killed in 2010 when she was just 28.

Celebrating its 30th anniversary this year, the 2024 Essence Festival of Culture kicked off Thursday (July 4) in New Orleans and runs through July 7. Previously announced performers for this year’s lineup include Janet Jackson, Usher reprising his classic album Confessions, Mya, Charlie Wilson, Tank and the Bangas and a special tribute to Frankie Beverly & Maze.

Cash Money Records is also celebrating its 30th anniversary. Birdman and his brother/fellow Cash Money co-founder/co-CEO Ronald “Slim” Williams were recently feted by YouTube Music at the platform’s Leaders and Legends gala in Hollywood on June 27.

Even at 46 years old, Tom Brady can still sling it. TB12 helmed the quarterback position for a beach football game prior to Michael Rubin’s July 4 White Party in the Hamptons, N.Y. Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Plenty of star power suited up as Travis Scott […]

Lucky Daye sat down with Billboard News and executive director of R&B/hip-hop Gail Mitchell to talk about his latest album Algorithm. “My mind-set was I kinda wanted to talk to myself as if God was talking to me,” the New Orleans singer said when asked what his approach was for this project. “So, I was […]

Ice Cube‘s popular three-on-three basketball league, BIG3, is setting down roots. Since its founding in 2017, the 12-team league featuring former NBA and international players has barnstormed around the country setting up shop in cities and playing a series of games, with last year’s contests rolling into Chicago, Dallas, Brooklyn, Memphis, Miami, Boston, Charlotte and Detroit.
In May, BIG3 CEO Cube announced the plans to pivot to a more traditional city-based model, writing on Instagram, “We need to plant our roots in cities so we can be more than a rolling all-star game coming through. It’s really about growing the sport and the league.” The league sold its first franchise in Los Angeles in May for $10 million to a group of investors led by DCB Sports.

In June the league welcomed a Miami franchise (also to the tune of $10 million) and on Thursday (July 4), the BIG3 announced that businessmen Eric Mullins and Milton Carroll had purchase the rights to a team in Houston. Those three teams will join a group of colorfully named squads including the Ghost Ballers, 3 Headed Monsters, 3’s Company, Aliens, Ball Hogs, Bivouac, Enemies, Killer 3s, Power, Tri-State, Trilogy and Triplets.

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The BIG3’s 2024 season marches on this weekend, with six games scheduled for Sunday (July 7) in Newark, N.J. at the Prudential Center, followed by weekend contests in Anaheim (July 14), Portland (July 20), Cincinnati (July 28), San Antonio (August 4), Nashville (August 11) and Boston (August 18). In March, Cube offered college superstar Caitlin Clark $5 million to join the BIG3, though she opted to sign a four-year contract with the WNBA’s Indiana Fever that was reportedly worth $338,000.

Megan Thee Stallion has welcomed another member of the Hot Girl crew. It all began over the weekend when U.S. gymnast Jordan Chiles shouted out the Houston rapper after she punched her ticket to Paris when she was selected as part of the American squad. “This was for you uncle and Megan, I’m going to […]

Jason Derulo re-lived one of the scariest moments of his life during a chat with old friend Paris Hilton on her I Am Paris podcast this week. The 34-year-old “Spicy Margarita” singer told Hilton that he thought the 2013 tour rehearsal accident in which he broke his neck might be the end of it all.
“That s–t’s crazy,” Derulo said, explaining that he was working with a trainer at the time to prepare for his upcoming world tour their prep went serious awry. “He was like, ‘today we’re gonna work on endurance, so I’ll need you to do these back tucks, back-to-back-to-back,’” the singer said his trainer told him.

“He had me doing like 50 back tucks back-to-back-to-back, which is another one of the worst ideas that somebody’s ever had,” Derulo said of the maneuver that is a backflip in which the performer starts from a standing position and flings their body backwards, landing on their hands and then springing off them to land back on their feet facing the same direction. “So I slipped during one of the back tucks and I landed on my head, breaking my C2 vertebrae.”

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As soon as the accident occurred, Derulo described hearing, “a big crack, and I was just like, ‘Holy s–t, is this it? Is this how it all ends?’ And all the thoughts that you could imagine are going through my head at the time.” He also recalled thinking at the time that his mother was outside the gym waiting for him in the car and that he didn’t want to scare her with the news. After laying on the ground for five minutes, he said he gathered himself and walked to the car holding his neck.

“And then I’m like, ‘Mom, I think I hurt myself a little bit’ — like with that bright kind of voice,” he said he told her. “‘I think I hurt myself a little bit inside, we should probably go to the hospital just to check it out.’” The ride to the hospital was rough, with Derulo describing every bump in the road as feeling like “hell on Earth. I’m just dying in that passenger seat, but I don’t wanna let her know that.”

At the hospital, Derulo was X-rayed and the doctor arrived with good and bad news. The good news, the doc said, was that Derulo had suffered what’s called a “hangman’s break,” which is the same break that happens when someone his hung from a rope. “‘And you’re still alive. This could’ve ended up way crazier, paralyzed or worse,’” the doctor told him. “That’s the good news, that you’re still here with us, and you can move all your limbs. The bad news is you’re gonna be out for seven months.”

Derulo described going from having total control over his life to not having “any kind of control at all,” down to an inability to tie his shoes or take a shower by himself. “That was the first time in my life where I felt like I just had no control,” he said. The injury required seven months of intense rehab, including a 45 minute walk every morning, followed by “hours and hours” in the studio writing and recording his 2013 Talk Dirty (aka Tattoos) album.

The other major blow for Derulo was the cancellation of his tour, which he knew would be a let-down for his fans. “I know how much this means to people, people save their money, their hard-earned money, and they wanna be part of this experience. All of a sudden all of that s–t was down the drain,” he said.

Derulo released his fifth studio album, Nu King, in February.

Listen to Derulo on I Am Paris below (talk about the accident begins at the 5:15 mark).