Rick Ross and his crew were allegedly attacked by Drake’s “Supporters”
Drake supporters allegedly attacked Rick Ross and crew at the Vancouver music festival when the rapper allegedly pulled a stunt playing Drake’s Pulitzer-winning song “Not Like Us” in the Hotline Bling singer’s hometown.
Details about the event
Rick Ross had a rough night at his show in Canada … getting physical with a guy and causing a fight that was caught on film.
It all started after the rapper performed at Sunday’s Ignite Music Festival in Vancouver. After the concert around 10:30 p.m., Rick walked offstage into a crowded area and got into a heated argument with other men over their choice to close the set with Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us.” that played in the background.
A group of about 15 dudes approached Rick and formed a human wall so he and his crew couldn’t move around them.
video showing the verbal altercation between the two parties with Rick having a tense exchange with one of the men. It soon escalated into violence.
Watch the clip … the guy arguing with Rick suddenly hits him in the area around the head, sending the liquid from his drink flying into the air. From our perspective, it’s hard to tell if Rick was punched in the face.
Chaos broke out as the two groups clashed, leading to several men brutally beating and punching one another.
It is unclear what prompted the attack or whether anyone was injured or arrested. Also read – Taylor Swift streams when Travis Kelce shows up to surprise her at the Dublin Eras show
Drake-Rick Ross beef
Amid Drake’s protracted war of words with several other hip-hop moguls, he also exchanged some controversial dates with Ross in April. The duo, once famous for their iconic long professional partnership, have produced enough songs to fit an entire music album. However, their bad blood has severed a once iconic long professional partnership.
Drake Diss Ross
On April 13, the Toronto rapper released a new single addressing potential rivalries. The track uses Mike Jones Drop & Gimme 50 and was leaked online before DJ Whoo Kid officially released it.
In the nearly 4-minute track, Drizzy takes shots at Metro Boomin’, Future, Kendrick Lamar, J Cole, The Weeknd, Rick Ross, and Ja Morant. This tune seems to have come out as a follow-up to Metro Boomin’ and Future’s last album, We Still Don’t Trust You, which featured all of Drake’s industry rivals.
Highlighting his Rick Ross record, Drake brought it up with, “I might take your lastest girl and cuff her like I’m Ricky / I can’t believe he jumpin’ in, this n***a turnin’ fifty / Every song that made it on the chart, he got from Drizzy / Spend that lil’ check you got and stay up out my business.”
Ross Diss Drake
Within hours of Drake’s track hitting the Internet, Rick Ross’s scathing response followed in the form of another diss track, Champagne Moments. Taking a dig at Drake’s biracial ethnicity, Ross called Drake a “White Boy” in his song.
He added: “It’s like ‘they’re recording when we’re talking live.’
Ross even addressed the supposed origins of their fallout, which came into focus last month when Rick unfollowed Drake on social media.
“I unfollowed you because you sent the cease and desist to French Montana, na,” Ross said. “You sent the police, na, haters for my dog project, na, that wasn’t the same white boy I saw, na, when we were doing the early recordings,” he concluded.