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Canadian rapper and singer Drake amended his defamation lawsuit against Universal Music Group on April 18, claiming that Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl 59 halftime performance defamed him.
Drake has updated his defamation lawsuit against Universal Music Group, citing Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl and Grammy performances of “Not Like Us” as escalating threats and reputational harm.
Philadelphia Eagles iconic Super Bowl 59 celebration moment stars in a new Kendrick Lamar–narrated commercial alongside ...
Rapper Kendrick Lamar will be the headliner for the sports world again this weekend, this time in Gatorade commercials ...
Five Grammys, one Super Bowl halftime show, a slew of diss tracks and a handful of litigations later, the battle between ...
Kendrick Lamar united the West Coast with his Pop Out concert at the Kia Forum in Inglewood, Calif. K. Dot delivered the live ...
At the heart of the campaign is a surprising and powerful collaboration with 22-time Grammy winner Kendrick Lamar—the first musician ever featured in a Gatorade ad.
Punch, the president of Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE), shared his thoughts about Kendrick Lamar's Super Bowl halftime performance during a recent podcast interview.
In a bizarre twist of fate, Kanye West praised Drake's UMG lawsuit as a historic moment and urged rappers to unite against industry control.
In his ongoing legal battle with Universal Music Group, Drake is now claiming Kendrick Lamar's Super Bowl performance further ...
The Canadian rapper says more people were duped into believing he was a pedophile after Kendrick Lamar performed Not Like Us ...