The energy was turnt up on the set of Future’s video shoot for his remix
Tag: diddy
Future recently took it to his hometown of ATL to shoot the new video for his remix with Diddy & Luda. Here is a few flicks from the set. Expect the final product to hit the net soon. hhnm
Pardon the French. Diddy takes us across the pond and shares his Cannes Film Festival through his eyes with cameos from Rick Ross, Cassie and my new infactuation, Rita Ora.
While out in Cannes, Ross turned his club experience with Diddy into an unofficial video for “Touch ‘N You”. That’s how you kill two birds with one stone. GFID on July 31. Preorder Self Made 2 here.
Last fall, Diddy’s oldest son Justin, accepted a full scholarship to play football at UCLA. Now six months later, local tax payers are calling for Justin to forfeit his endowment due to his father’s net worth. This is just stupid. With a 3.75 GPA, Justin earned his ride fair and square. It’s not his fault his pops can cop Maybachs like white-tees. Here’s to sticking it to the man. wshh
This past Memorial Day Weekend, Diddy was hosting a party at Mansion 360 in MIA. City Never Sleeps was part of the festivities and caught some footage of the night with cameos from Khaled & The Weeknd.
While in town for the Cannes Film Festival, Rozay partied the night away at Gotha and was
Future grabs the Godfather of remixes and his fellow ATLien for the official alternate version of the uh, same damn tune. Sounds like we’ll still be singing this all summer long. UPDATE: Same damn remix, just minus the Flex bombs.
Along with a few of his Bad Boy entourage, Puff returned to Hot 97 and spoke with Funk Flex on topping the Forbes list, Ma$e’s return, G. Dep’s murder conviction and his mansion break-in. UPDATE: Diddy makes Flex an official Ciroc Boy.
With "Which One," Drake and Central Cee bridge the Atlantic through their shared affinity for Caribbean-influenced sonics, cementing UK drill's arrival in mainstream hip-hop's upper echelon. This collaboration isn't just another checkbox on Drake's endless list of co-signs—it represents the continued global evolution of Black music dialects, with Central Cee's gritty London cadence providing the perfect counterbalance to Drake's melodic versatility. The track's immediate chart success proves that the UK-Toronto pipeline remains one of hip-hop's most fruitful cross-cultural exchanges.