Rick Ross Doesn’t Respect Birdman’s Treatment Of Lil Wayne
“I just released “Color Money” and it is what it is”, the MMG Boss said. The two-sided compilation featured the track “Color Money” where the Miami native allegedly takes a lyrical shot at Drake. He followed up with open-ended statements like, “that record is what it is” and “it’s a lot of people that’s gunna interpret it a lot of different ways” and “everybody who know Rozay know how I get down” and finally, “let’s see how it unfold”.
Though some liken it to a kid getting beat up and going to get his older brother involved, it looks as though Rick Ross has come to the rescue of Meek Mill in his (once thought to be over with) battle with Drake. We most definitely know how I come and what I do.
Ross, 39, also brushes off P Diddy’s status as a successful businessman and positions himself as the number-one hip hop entrepreneur, rapping: “Double M, we balling way harder than Puff and them/ It ain’t no love lost, I only see one boss”, which is perhaps also aimed towards the likes of Jay Z and Dr Dre. “I don’t play no games”. Thus meaning it was Birdman who he was hurling shots at with the “I got more money than that pu**y that your signed to” line. Whether Ross jumped into the feud for the headlines or to support his label, the Maybach Music Group founder has backed up Meek and even took it a step further by calling out Lil Wayne. “J Prince that’s my big homie”, he said.
Black Market is set for release worldwide on Friday 4 December 2015. I had a lot of time to just sit by myself, so I had a lot more things I wanted to address.
Closing the conversation about Ross’ lyrical shade, Charlamagne asserted, “So we know the p*ssy that Drake signed to is now…We figured it out”.