megan thee stallion
Here’s What You Need to Know About Megan Thee Stallion’s Testimony at Tory Lanez’s Trial
“I wish he would have shot and killed me if I knew I would go through this torture,” Megan Thee Stallion said in court on Tuesday.
The Music Festival Returns to New York
Photos of Megan Thee Stallion, Orville Peck, Leon Bridges, and more who performed at Governor's Ball this weekend.
Cardi B Is the Queen of Features That Break The Internet
For a woman whose reality TV slogan was “If a girl beef with me, she gon’ have beef forever,” the Bronx rapper plays exceptionally well with others.
The Black TikTok Creators Strike Is ‘a Labor Strike Too’
VICE News Reports talked to Erick Louis to break down the events that inspired the strike over cultural appropriation.
Travis Scott Is Sick of Brands and So Are We
Scott told Adweek he doesn't like marketing. His comments make you wonder who benefits the most from branding.
The Pandemic Somehow Made the Grammys Better
This year’s show was always going to be weird thanks to COVID-19 and the Weeknd’s boycott, but it was actually refreshing.
We Talked to the Director Behind Rap's Flashiest Videos
A conversation with Colin Tilley about how "WAP" and "Cry Baby" signal the return of maximalist music videos.
Music Videos Are Over-the-Top Again, Thank God
Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion are leading the charge for the return of the elaborate music video.
Here's the Book You Need For a Definitive History of Women in Rap
'The Motherlode' tells the stories of the women from rap's inception all the way to Cardi B.
The Viral ‘Hot Girl Shit’ Meme Challenges The Male Gaze
In this candid, anticlimactic and often absurd video trend, everything from shaving your pubes to napping is now considered hot.
Sorry, The Word 'Pussy' Isn't Going Anywhere
Netflix's new six-part comedy 'History of Swear Words' explores the origin of the word that has made people blush for the last 500 years.
Everything 'One Million Moms' Wanted to Call the Manager About in 2020
From a Burger King ad to 'WAP,' the right-wing Christian group was perpetually mad online.