Trey Songz Apologizes To Meek Mill For Making Him Feel Slighted

Meek Mill and Trey Songz are good buds again.

BYAron A.
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Meek Mill and Trey Songz had a bit of a back-and-forth this morning when it appeared that the latter suggested the Philly spitter didn't do enough for his spitter. Though that's not what Trey meant, Meek was easily triggered and listed off the major donations he made later. "200K to Philadelphia schools... my phantom for less fortunate 400K... and help raised 50 mill for reform @treysongz don't try me like that!" He wrote.

Trey Songz took their exchange and shared it to Instagram calling out Meek Mill for getting "offended." Meek clapped back and essentially stated that Trey was out of pocket for putting him on the spot and trying to spin it in another way for social media."Other artist telling artist to donate is dumb just handle ya business!" Meek yelled on social media. He later clarified it was just the thinking emoji that had him feeling a type of way.

Trigga Trey has since offered an apology, though he did seemingly troll Meek for getting fired up over an emoji. "Bruh emojis ain't shit how I do apologize if you felt slighted. Can we do the challenge in Philly man? It will be huge," Trey asked politely. "I’m all for the empowerment & uplifting of one another & our communities. I’m man enough to acknowledge that the emoji could have stirred things the wrong way even though that wasn’t the intent. It was so powerful feeding my city, I just wanted to bring some of the guys along."

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Aron A. is a features editor for HotNewHipHop. Beginning his tenure at HotNewHipHop in July 2017, he has comprehensively documented the biggest stories in the culture over the past few years. Throughout his time, Aron’s helped introduce a number of buzzing up-and-coming artists to our audience, identifying regional trends and highlighting hip-hop from across the globe. As a Canadian-based music journalist, he has also made a concerted effort to put spotlights on artists hailing from North of the border as part of Rise & Grind, the weekly interview series that he created and launched in 2021. Aron also broke a number of stories through his extensive interviews with beloved figures in the culture. These include industry vets (Quality Control co-founder Kevin "Coach K" Lee, Wayno Clark), definitive producers (DJ Paul, Hit-Boy, Zaytoven), cultural disruptors (Soulja Boy), lyrical heavyweights (Pusha T, Styles P, Danny Brown), cultural pioneers (Dapper Dan, Big Daddy Kane), and the next generation of stars (Lil Durk, Latto, Fivio Foreign, Denzel Curry). Aron also penned cover stories with the likes of Rick Ross, Central Cee, Moneybagg Yo, Vince Staples, and Bobby Shmurda.