Yung Bleu Says Trippie Redd Acted "Like A Little Girl" Over His Drake Feature

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Yung Bleu, Trippie Redd, Drake, VladTV

After Bleu and Drizzy collaborated on "You're Mines Still," Trippie & Bleu had a little back and forth online.

Nabbing himself a Drake feature has changed the way Yung Bleu approaches collaborating with his fellow artists. The rising Alabama rapper was able to, through chance and good timing, manifest himself a Drizzy verse on their recently released single, "You're Mines Still," and it all happened so quickly that Bleu admitted it's changed his outlook. "If I send something to somebody [and] they take a long time to send it back, I just be like, you don't wanna do it," Yung Bleu told VladTV. "'Cause Drake sent me my verse in twenty-four hours."

Elsewhere, Bleu was asked about Trippie Redd's reaction to him working with the OVO mogul. "I saw the little smart comments he made, he be making," said Bleu. Trippie reportedly suggested that he's talented enough to not need any features. "I done had platinum records, gold records, multiple, without Drake," said Bleu. "I can say the same thing."

According to Vlad, it all boiled down to Drake not making an appearance on Trippie's record because of some unknown reason but surfacing on Yung Bleu's track. Bleu added that he didn't reach out to Drake in the first place and it was the Toronto icon who told Bleu to post a screenshot of their DMs to "hype" the collaboration.

"He started acting like a little girl after that," Bleu said of Trippie. "Whatever." Check out the clip below.


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Erika Marie is a seasoned journalist, editor, and ghostwriter who works predominantly in the fields of music, spirituality, mental health advocacy, and social activism. The Los Angeles editor, storyteller, and activist has been involved in the behind-the-scenes workings of the entertainment industry for nearly two decades. E.M. attempts to write stories that are compelling while remaining informative and respectful. She's an advocate of lyrical witticism & the power of the pen. Favorites: Motown, New Jack Swing, '90s R&B, Hip Hop, Indie Rock, & Punk; Funk, Soul, Harlem Renaissance Jazz greats, and artists who innovate, not simply replicate.