Nicki Minaj is trying to clear up any claims that she’s transphobic. According to her, she’s the “biggest advocate” for the trans community. A few weeks back, Minaj sat down with former DOGE advisor and conservative podcaster Katie Miller. A clip of their conversation recently made its rounds on social media. The pair were discussing the onslaught of criticism the rapper has been getting, specifically the claim that she’s transphobic. The rapper appears to support gender affirming care for transgender adults; however, when it comes to transgender youth, it’s a different story. “They’re adults, I don’t care. I only mentioned something because when it comes to children, I wouldn’t even allow my 17-year-old daughter to get breast implants, and most, 99% of the parents would not let their 17-year-old child get breast implants,” Minaj said. “So if you wouldn’t let a child get breast implants, you’re not going to want them to have any kind of surgery because we all know the brain is not developed.” View this post on Instagram Jay-Z Paternity Claimant Says He Has Assistance From President Trump and Nicki Minaj In other news, Rymir Satterthwaite, who has for years asserted that he is Jay-Z’s biological son, is continuing his pursuit of a paternity determination following another setback in court. A recent filing related to the case failed to advance, but Satterthwaite has indicated that his efforts are ongoing. The dispute, which has unfolded over more than a decade, remains unresolved. Its longevity has kept it intermittently in public view despite limited legal movement. In recent weeks, Satterthwaite’s social media activity has drawn renewed attention to the case. Several posts suggest he may be seeking encouragement or assistance from prominent figures outside the legal system, including Nicki Minaj and President Donald Trump. In a message shared widely online and highlighted by The Neighborhood Talk, he wrote, “Thanks to Nicki and Mr. President for your help!!!” The post did not specify the nature of any involvement.
Lil Jon’s Son Young Slade Missing: Here’s What We Know
Lil Jon’s son, DJ Young Slade, is reportedly missing. The 28-year-old artist was last seen in Milton, Georgia, on Tuesday (Feb.3). TMZ reports that Young Slade—real name Nathan Murray Smith—was allegedly last seen fleeing his home on foot around 6 a.m. It was also reported that Smith left with no belongings. Questions have arisen about Smith’s state of mind. According to police reports, Smith was reportedly disoriented and allegedly naked at the time he left. The official missing person alert was made later that day, around 4 p.m. Authorities have stated that Smith poses no threat to the community. They’ve also urged the public to contact the police and confirm his whereabouts if they spot him. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Milton Police Department at 678-297-6300. This is a developing story. View this post on Instagram
The Fashion Brand Taking Over the Knicks: Max Siegelman’s Story
In this interview, Max Siegelman shares the story behind his unconventional path into fashion and how his brand grew from handmade hats into a label worn by artists like Gunna and Future, Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart, and many more A-List celebs. Max talks about his passion for horseback riding and equine therapy for adults, and how that led him to donate to equine therapy programs and build a brand centered around purpose. He breaks down how his connection to the Knicks developed, including creating a custom look for Jalen Brunson and featuring Jalen’s mom as the face of the campaign. The conversation also dives into Knicks culture, working with New York captains, building collaborations, and navigating growth as an independent brand. Max explains his pop-up model strategy, discusses past and future collaborations, and hints at a possible partnership with HOT 97. This episode explores how fashion, mental wellness, and community impact can intersect — and what it really takes to build a brand with meaning behind it.
Sherri Shepherd Breaks Silence After Show Cancellation
Sherri Shepherd has broken her silence about the cancellation of her Fox-syndicated daytime show after four seasons. She also revealed that she hasn’t addressed the news because she contracted COVID. Taking to Instagram on Tuesday, Feb. 3, Shephered thanked her fans for the “outpouring of support.” “Wow! I am completely overwhelmed by the outpouring of love for me and The @sherrishowtv. You might’ve noticed that yesterday and today, I was struggling because I wasn’t feeling up to speed. Well, it turns out I have Covid. As soon as I feel better and return to the show, I will address all of the news that has come out,” Shepherd wrote. “Until then, I am truly grateful that SHERRI has made such an impact on you! See ya soon.” TAMRON HALL SHOWS HER SUPPORT Tamron Hall, host of the daytime show “The Tamron Hall Show,” expressed her support in comments. “You just wrote your first children’s book. And you are on an epic comedy tour, you have a podcast, and you took over a daytime space and made it your own,” Hall wrote. “I’m tired just listing all you have done! And the list of next chapter moments will be amazing love you, Family.” As WBLS previously reported, “Sherri” is coming to an end after four seasons. Season 4 production will continue as planned, with the series airing its final episodes in the fall. When the show was picked up last season, Frank Cicha, Fox TV Stations’ exec vice president of programming, said the show was “a linchpin of our daytime lineup.” “I don’t take it for granted that people welcome me into their homes daily,” Shepherd said last year. “And I work so hard to bring escapism to viewers’ lives through joy, laughter, and inspiration. I’m grateful that the audience has embraced what we do. I look forward to raising the bar and turning up the volume as we plan for our season four return.”
Rapper B.G. Officially Off Probation
New Orleans rapper B.G. is officially a free man, says his girlfriend, Brooke Jones, over the weekend. On Jan. 31, Jones publicly congratulated the Cash Money legend after he officially completed probation, closing the final chapter of his post-prison supervision. The moment marked B.G.’s full release from all legal restrictions following more than a decade behind bars and two additional years on supervised release. “Today the official shackles came OFF,” Jones wrote. “NO MORE PROBATION BABY!!” View this post on Instagram The message signaled more than excitement. It underscored what true freedom looks like after incarceration. While B.G., born Christopher Dorsey, returned home earlier, probation kept strict limits in place. Court check-ins, paperwork, and the constant risk of violation remained part of daily life. Jones made it clear that those burdens are now gone. “You did over a decade in jail and 2 years on supervised release,” she continued. “But today marks a new chapter for you and it includes FREEDOM.” Jones framed the achievement as earned, not given. She emphasized patience and discipline, noting that freedom required more than time served. It required restraint. B.G.’s Girlfriend Says The Rapper Is Officially Off Probation “I know this feeling all too well,” Jones added, explaining why the moment hit her emotionally. Her words suggested lived experience with the system and its long shadow, giving her message added weight. She also praised B.G. for avoiding setbacks. “You didn’t allow anyone to TRICK YOU out your spot,” she wrote, a phrase rooted in street survival. It speaks to staying focused and steering clear of situations that could lead back to prison, even through technical violations. B.G. and Juvenile are currently working on a new Hot Boys album. Calling his approach honorable, Jones said B.G. “did the time like a man,” framing compliance as strength rather than submission. Growth, accountability, and maturity defined the process. Her final message looked forward, not back. “Now it’s time to really LIVE,” she wrote. For B.G., the moment represents more than legal closure. It signals a fresh start, unrestricted movement, and a future built without supervision. Jones’ message captured the weight of that freedom and the resilience it took to earn it.
John Monopoly, Kanye West’s Friend, Explains Ye’s Current Mental Health
John Monopoly is stepping forward to vouch for Ye, better known as Kanye West, at a critical moment in the mogul’s career. The longtime friend and manager of Kanye West addressed Ye’s recent public apology, framing it as real growth, not rollout theater. His comments arrive as Ye prepares to release his upcoming album, Bully, amid renewed scrutiny. Ye’s long-time partner, John Monopoly, speaks on his current mental space and personal growth: “[Ye] is in a great place and taking accountability for the things he says and does.” “For the first time in a while, he is really approaching his mental health head-on and making a… pic.twitter.com/Fn6SIGAd9x — Kurrco (@Kurrco) February 1, 2026 Ye sparked conversation after taking out a full-page ad in The Wall Street Journal. In it, he apologized for past antisemitic remarks and reflected on living with bipolar disorder. The move drew mixed reactions. Some called it overdue. Others questioned motive. Monopoly rejected the skepticism. “He’s in a great place and taking accountability for the things he says and does,” Monopoly told People. For Monopoly, the moment felt personal. He spoke from experience, not distance. He has managed Ye since the early 1990s and knows the terrain. “For the first time in a while, he’s approaching his mental health head-on,” he said. “He really cares and he’s trying to do better.” Kanye West’s John Monopoly Addresses Ye’s Mental Health Ahead Of ‘Bully’ Album Monopoly also shared his own history with bipolar disorder. He described stability as fragile and constant work. “The sanity is a thin line,” he said. “Being on the right side matters.” Their bond runs deep. They met as teenagers. They built music together before fame followed. Monopoly has seen Ye evolve through every era. “He’s an incredible person who wants to stay on the right path,” he added. As Bully approaches, critics framed the apology as strategic. Ye pushed back hard. In an email exchange with Vanity Fair, he dismissed any promotional angle. “I was in the top ten most listened-to artists in the U.S. on Spotify in 2025,” Ye wrote. “That includes last week.” He also pointed to the demand for Bully, calling it one of Spotify’s most anticipated pre-saves. Graduation, his 2007 album, also dominated hip-hop streams this year. “This isn’t about reviving my commerciality,” Ye wrote. Instead, he described regret. “These remorseful feelings sat heavy on my heart,” he wrote. Ye named Jewish and Black communities as those he hurt. He admitted his words crossed lines. “All of it went too far,” he wrote. “That episode isn’t who I am.” For Monopoly, the message matters more than the noise. Ye spoke. The work continues.
Cam’Ron Addresses Suing J. Cole
Rapper and podcaster Cam’Ron is ready to talk about why he is suing J. Cole after filing a lawsuit back in November 2025. On an upcoming episode of his Revolt’s Talk With Flee podcast, the Harlem native laid out his side of the dispute with measured candor and pointed frustration. Cam originally sidestepped the situation when asked by co-hosts last year. “Me and J. Cole are cool, or was cool,” Cam’Ron said at the start, framing the situation as a matter of principle rather than personal conflict. For him, the issue comes down to follow-through. “Being a man is keeping your word,” he said, referring to the traditional manhood approach to business. Camron speaks on suing J cole on the new episode of ‘Talk With Flee’ pic.twitter.com/1tuISAeA6g — 2Cool2Blog (@2Cool2Blog) February 4, 2026 Cam’Ron traced the breakdown back to Cole’s early career. He recalled recording an intro for Cole’s first project, without hesitation or delay. In return, Cam’Ron said he asked for one thing: a verse if he ever needed it. “He said cool,” Cam’Ron remembered. That understanding, he said, never materialized. When Cole later requested another contribution, Cam’Ron said he delivered quickly. “I did a record in 20 minutes,” he said, describing the urgency as respect. When Cam’Ron asked for his verse, the tone changed. Cam’Ron Explains Why He Is Suing J. Cole On Talk With Flee Cam’Ron described repeated delays tied to Cole’s creative process. He mocked the explanations with humor, quoting Cole’s reasoning as, “the chakras ain’t right right now and the moon gotta align with the stars.” Cam’Ron pushed back internally. “Okay, let’s put your all into it,” he said. When the verse stalled, Cam’Ron shifted strategies. He proposed an interview instead. Cole agreed, then postponed. June turned into October. October became February. Each date passed without resolution. The situation stalled further during Cole’s public tension with Kendrick Lamar. Cole declined to speak publicly. Cam offered a compromise, promising to avoid the topic. Cole refused, saying he could not do an interview without addressing it. By February, Cam said nothing had changed. “Oh shit, I’m still working, man,” Cole told him. Cam’Ron framed the lawsuit as accountability, not resentment. In his telling, the issue remains simple. Commitments were made. Commitments were missed.
Floyd Mayweather Sues Showtime, 50 Cent Reacts
Boxing’s Floyd Mayweather Jr. filed a lawsuit in California, accusing former promotional partner Showtime of playing a central role in what he describes as the loss of hundreds of millions from his career earnings. TMZ broke the news on Tuesday (Feb. 3). In the filing, Mayweather alleges he generated more than $1 billion during his fighting career. He claims a significant share of that revenue never reached him. View this post on Instagram The lawsuit seeks to recover “hundreds of millions of dollars in misappropriated funds and damages,” framing the dispute as a prolonged financial fraud scheme. Mayweather finished his perfect career with Showtime, fighting high-profile fighters such as Manny Pacquiao, Conor McGregor, and Canelo Alvarez. The case centers on Mayweather’s former adviser Al Haymon, who managed him for more than a decade. Mayweather alleges Haymon diverted roughly $340 million from his earnings. While Haymon is not named as a defendant, the lawsuit claims Showtime and former Showtime Sports president Stephen Espinoza enabled the alleged misconduct. Floyd Mayweather Jr. Sues Showtime For Misappropriated Funds & Damages, 50 Cent Jokes Showtime and Espinoza are both listed as defendants. According to the complaint, fight purses from blockbuster bouts were routed into accounts effectively controlled by Haymon. Mayweather alleges this structure stripped him of direct oversight of his own income. The lawsuit references some of the biggest events in boxing history, including superfights against Manny Pacquiao and Conor McGregor. Each produced massive pay-per-view revenue. Mayweather claims funds from those bouts were sent through channels he did not control. After switching managers, Mayweather says his new team requested financial records from Showtime. He alleges the network claimed the documents were lost in a flood or otherwise inaccessible. He maintains the money remains unaccounted for. Mayweather is suing for aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty, civil conspiracy, fraud, conversion, and unjust enrichment. He is also seeking punitive damages. The lawsuit sparked public commentary from Mayweather’s former friend, 50 Cent. In an Instagram post, 50 throws a jab at Floyd. “Oh no don’t cry now champ they beat you out of $320 million, you dumb ass ,” 50 captioned the post. “I told you let me read the contracts now lace up, You gotta look good fighting Mike. then maybe we can get Bud to beat your ass for some big money.” For Mayweather, the fight has shifted arenas. His record remains flawless. The outcome now hinges on the courtroom.
Gervonta “Tank” Davis Faces Warrant In Baltimore After Miami Arrest
Boxing superstar Gervonta “Tank” Davis is facing fresh trouble in Baltimore, just days after his arrest in Miami added new heat to his legal saga. One week after Miami police took the boxer into custody, a Baltimore judge issued a separate arrest warrant tied to a prior conviction. The two cases are unrelated, but the overlap has intensified scrutiny around the embattled fighter. A Baltimore judge has issued an arrest warrant for Gervonta Davis on grounds that he violated his probation one week after he was arrested in Miami on allegations of domestic violence. For more https://t.co/Bs7Ae1LScU — ESPN Ringside (@ESPNRingside) February 3, 2026 On Monday, Baltimore Circuit Judge Althea M. Handy authorized the warrant, citing alleged probation violations. ESPN’s Andreas Hale broke the news on Davis’s new warrant on Tuesday. Davis was sentenced in 2023 for a 2020 hit-and-run in Baltimore that injured four people, including a pregnant woman. The court ordered three years of probation, home detention, and community service. That arrangement later unraveled. Judge Handy ruled Davis violated home detention rules after prosecutors said he stayed at a luxury hotel and a $3.4 million penthouse. The approved residence belonged to his trainer, Calvin Ford. The violation resulted in a six-week jail sentence. Baltimore Issues Warrant For Gervonta “Tank” Davis After Miami Arrest Now, Davis’ attorney wants to avoid another lockup. Lawyer Hunter Pruette asked the court to recall the arrest warrant and issue a summons instead. He also requested GPS monitoring. “Mr. Davis has appeared as directed, posted bond, complied with all conditions, remained within Florida, and promptly notified supervision of his arrest,” Pruette wrote. Pruette argued that holding Davis in Maryland would disrupt his ability to address the Miami case. Tank’s Miami legal issues have halted his return to boxing. The Miami arrest stems from accusations made by former girlfriend Courtney Rossel. She alleges battery, false imprisonment, and kidnapping linked to an Oct. 27 incident at Tootsies, a Miami-area strip club. Rossel told police Davis attacked her in a back room, dragged her outside, and assaulted her in a parking garage. Authorities say surveillance footage supports parts of her account. “The investigation determined that Mr. Davis used force to restrain the victim,” said Miami Gardens Police executive officer Emmanuel Jeanty. As Baltimore and Miami cases unfold, Davis faces mounting uncertainty. For now, the drama outside the ring threatens to eclipse anything happening inside it.
Blueface Makes Controversial Comments About NLE Choppa
A long-running dispute between Blueface and NLE Choppa resurfaced this month following the release of Choppa’s new track, “Shotta Flow 8.” The song, released earlier in September, was widely interpreted as containing indirect references to Blueface. Soon after, Blueface responded on Instagram with a series of images accompanied by a blunt caption. “I can’t beef with no man getting his booty ate; somebody get the baby oil, we finna play with his nipples,” he wrote, without further context. The post followed a recent livestream in which Blueface addressed Choppa while reacting to online content involving the mother of Choppa’s child. During the broadcast, Blueface suggested that the ongoing tension served to keep his counterpart in public conversation. He also indicated that he intended to respond if the situation continued. The remarks reinforced the public nature of a dispute that has repeatedly moved between music and social media. Lyrics and Public Commentary Listeners quickly focused on a verse from “Shotta Flow 8” that appeared to allude to the rivalry: “Who want the smoke? You come and you dead / Lil bro Crip, but he see red.” Though the lyrics did not identify a specific target, they were read by many as part of the ongoing exchange. Such indirect messaging has become a familiar device in contemporary rap conflicts. NLE Choppa later addressed the situation in a video that circulated widely online. “Y’all talking about Chop having an identity crisis. Have y’all seen this n***a’s face?” he said, before criticizing Blueface’s artistic direction. He went on to suggest that the focus on image outweighed creative growth, calling the approach “pitiful.” The comments added to the back-and-forth without signaling any effort to de-escalate. The latest exchange reflects a pattern that has developed over several years. Previous episodes between the two artists have included talk of a boxing match, highlighting how their disagreements have extended beyond recorded music. Both have also engaged in public disputes with other artists, contributing to a broader culture of visible rivalry.