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Why You Aren’t Getting The Exposure You Think You Deserve

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When I was 18 years old, I had officially entered the blogging world. Throughout my time thus far, I’ve come across a couple good artists, but a whole lot of bad ones. My goal was always to promote the good ones, of course, but I soon came to realize why both good and bad artists fail(ed) to get the exposure they think they deserve. So, instead of keeping this to myself, I’ve decided to share a couple reasons with you guys. Check it out below.

1. YES MEN: There’s always that one rapper in the city who thinks he’s bigger than life. You wanna know why? He has too many ‘yes men’ on his team. Those guys who agree with everything he does, gas’ his music up even though he sucks, scared to tell him the truth, all because they wanna reap whatever benefits he (or she) may or are receiving. Prime Example: Meek Mill. When Drake dissed him last summer TWICE, Meek Mill has us wait damn near a whole month to hear his TRASH response on Hot 97 via Funk Flex’s show. Now, who do you think allowed him to release this trash response? NOT NICKI MINAJ! It was his circle. Most likely they gassed him up and told him it was the best diss of all time; and looked what happened? Not only did the diss backfire, but Meek Mill was sued for using Undertaker’s intro, and ended up getting into legal troubles a couple months after. So, in conclusion, know when you got ‘yes men’ on your team and remove them IMMEDIATELY.

2. SPAM: I’ve tweeted it, mentioned it in interviews, and ranted about it on Snapchat, time and time again. STOP SPAMMING – whether it’s via e-mail, Twitter, Instagram comments – STOP IT. We see the notifications, we get it. But, artists fail to realize that constantly doing the aforementioned tactics will get you BLOCKED with a quickness. If we don’t want to click our submission, we won’t; plain and simple. I know for me, I only go through submissions if I literally have nothing to do, or, I’ll plan ahead and send a tweet out saying I’m going to listen to music send submissions, and mentally prepare myself to do so. A lot of the times we don’t listen to submissions is because we simply do not have the time, but understand that you spamming us isn’t going to make us listen any quicker.

3. FAILURE TO INVEST: I can’t stress this enough. If you aren’t going to invest in yourself, how do you expect others to? I will never forget a time where an aspiring rapper I knew spent $50 on a video shoot that was ultimately TRASH. I stopped watching after the first 30 seconds, when I should’ve stopped at 5, but I wanted to give him a shot. There was no video production, the voice over was horrible, it was ridiculous. For $50, I could’ve gotten some business cards made … but, back to the topic at hand. You need to invest in yourself – whether it’s spending money on a music engineer, a mananger, PR person, artwork, studio time, etc. If you’re serious about your craft, you’d spend to damn near your last penny to make you dreams come true. Am I wrong?

4. EXPECTATIONS & CONSISTENCY: This honestly should’ve been number one. Since becoming a blogger, I’ve realized everybody wants to become a rapper; and when those aspiring rappers are your friends, they expect a lot from you with no type of token of appreciation in return except a shout out on Instagram or Twitter. Just like rapping is a business, so is blogging. There are people like me who genuinely wanna help, but only for so long. Once we see you’re taking advantage, we either cut you off to fend for yourself or we inevitably start charging. Too many of you guys are expecting handouts just because you had one poppin’ single in the city. It may work for some of y’all who have people slobbing on your knob, but for the rest of y’all, what excuse do you have? WHO ARE YOU!? Y’all have a lot of nerve. Not to mention, you lack consistency. You drop a record one month, and don’t return for another six. What were you doing for those six months? I know you weren’t working on a mixtape and I don’t see a music video. 90% of the time, people think there’s no more work to do after getting poppin’. Failing to realize that there’s a lot more work to be done. Not only do you have to solidify your name wherever you from, but you gotta start thinking about how you’re gonna get DJs to play your music in other towns/cities/states, not to mention website placements.

5. FANS: The most important thing on the list, the fans. A lot of artists of Boston decided to leave and play their music where they knew people would love it. Once they became who they are today, they returned to their home base where they finally started getting the love they deserve. Whether you live New York, London, Boston, Atlanta, it’s okay to leave your home if you truly believe you can make it, but your home town isn’t showing you love. However, if you lack the funds, try really hard to make a name for yourself wherever you reside – whether its reaching out to radio stations and DJs, e-mailing submissions to local blogs (FOLLOW THE DAMN RULES), or booking shows. It’s always best to start where you came from – that way, people believe you’re authentic and relatable.

Overall, I want you to believe in yourself and don’t forgot why you started. If it’s for the money, this business isn’t for you. People can tell if you’re doing it for the love of it versus doing it for the benefits. Stay true to yourself bih.

P.S. Do us all a favor and stop posting your shit on World Star, paying $600 +. All you’re getting is fake views and broken dreams. The money you’re paying keeps the site going, remember that.


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Twitter: @miixtapechiick
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Rick Ross Disses Drake on ‘Champagne Moments’

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Rick Ross Disses Drake on 'Champagne Moments' miixtapechiick

After Drake‘s official diss, “Push Ups,” leaked earlier today, in which he dissed Rick Ross, Metro Boomin, Kendrick Lamar, and others, Rick Ross throws his hat in the ring and immediately responds with a diss of his own titled, “Champagne Moments.”

In the diss track, Rick Ross reveals that Drake allegedly got a nose job and also unfollowed Drake on Instagram after Drake sent French Montana a cease and desist for a track on his album.

Stream the rough snippet below.

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Drake Disses Kendrick Lamar, Future, Metro Boomin, Rick Ross & The Weeknd on Leaked Track

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Drake Disses Kendrick Lamar, Future, Metro Boomin, Rick Ross & The Weeknd on Leaked Track miixtapechiick

After facing a barrage of diss tracks from the likes of Future, Metro Boomin, Kendrick Lamar, and more, Drake returns with a response that appears to have leaked online.

Earlier this week, Rory and Mal of the New Rory and Mal podcast teased the diss on episode 258, with Rory dropping hints like, “Drop down & give me 50,” a line directly lifted from Drake’s response.


Now, the Toronto native fires back, airing out his grievances towards his peers over a 4-minute track sampling Notorious B.I.G.‘s “Get Money.”

Drake’s response to Kendrick Lamar:

“What’s a Prince to a king? He a son, n****”

“Pip squeak pipe down, you ain’t in no big three, SZA got you wipe down, Travis got you wiped down, Savage got you wiped down, like your label boy you Interscope right now” “How the f*** you been big steppin with size 7 mens on”

“Maroon 5 need a verse, you better make it witty, then we need a verse for the Swifties, Top say you drop, you better drop and give up fiftyyy”

Drake’s reply to J. Cole’s apology for dissing Kendrick Lamar: “And that f*cking song y’all got is not starting beef with us/This sh*t been brewing in a pot, now I’m heating up/I don’t care what Cole think, that Dot sh*t was weak as f*ck”

Drake’s clapback at Rick Ross:

“I might take ya latest girl and cuff her like Ricky, can’t believe he’s jumping in, this n**** turning 50, every song that made it on the chart he got from Drizzy, worry bout whatever going on with you and—”

Drake’s response to Metro Boomin:

“Metro shut your h*e ass and make some drums, n****”


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Dreezy Releases ‘B**ch Duh’ Remix with BIA, Lakeyah and KenTheMan

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Dreezy Releases 'B**ch Duh' Remix with BIA, Lakeyah and KenTheMan miixtapechiick

Following the release of her hit single “B**ch Duh” in February, Chicago artist Dreezy is back with a female star-studded remix of the track featuring BIA, Lakeyah, and KenTheMan.

The original version of the song boasts a star-studded video with appearances from Metro Boomin, Travis Scott, Swae Lee, Coi Leray, Yung Miami, Natalie Nunn, 2 Chainz, Rubi Rose, Gillie, NeNe Leakes, and more.

“‘B**ch Duh’ came about with just me being in a studio, popping my s**t, getting in my vibe. I love to just make music that makes me feel confident and makes me feel like I’m on top of the world. It’s just one of those songs where I was just really in my element. I put it out, the internet went crazy about it. It was like organic love and everything,” Dreezy told BET. “So, I thought about an all female remix plus it was Women’s Month. When I put the original track out there, I was getting so much good feedback from the female rappers anyway. That’s how I chose who I wanted to be on the song.”

The release of the ‘B**ch Duh’ remix follows news of Dreezy’s 2016 single “Close To You,” featuring T-Pain, earning Platinum certification from the RIAA in March.

Stream the ‘B**ch Duh’ remix below.

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