Universal Music Group has taken action against Drake by requesting that the lawsuit he filed be dismissed based on protected free speech.
On Feb. 9, there’s a strong chance that Kendrick Lamar will walk onto the stage at the Super Bowl halftime show in New Orleans, and call Drake a pedophile in front of hundreds of millions of viewers.
Drake is suing his record label for spreading a “false and malicious narrative” when it released and promoted Kendrick Lamar’s diss track “Not Like Us.”
Drake was so incensed by the song and its popularity that he sued Kendrick's record label, Universal Music Group. In a defamation lawsuit filed earlier this month, Drake accused UMG of spreading a "false and malicious narrative" that he is a pedophile.
UMG called Drake’s petition “an apparent effort to pressure” UMG and others “to limit the distribution” of Kendrick Lamar’s ‘Not Like Us’.
Universal Music Group claims that Drake has a "lack of evidence" to support his claim that the company botch "Not Like Us" streams.
In November 2024, Drake filed two actions with the first a petition in New York accusing the Universal Music Group of conspiring with the music streamer Spotify as well as a second one against UMG in Texas. While The Boy has withdrawn his petition in New York to make way for a lawsuit, his petition in Texas still remains.
What’s up with Drake’s complaint? The page count, for one. The 81-page federal complaint charging Universal Music Group with defamation, harassment and payola (deceptive business practices ...
Drake hit a little jig to Fivio Foreign's latest single dissing Plaqueboymax. In a clip on Instagram, The Boy holds a roll of money during his quick two-step.
Drake made some serious legal moves last year, hitting Universal Music Group and Spotify with one petition, then going
Last Tuesday, rapper/singer Drake withdrew his lawsuit accusing Universal Music Group and Spotify of conspiring to artificially inflate the popularity of Kendrick Lamar’s Drake diss track, “Not Like Us.
Kendrick Lamar and the NFL tease Not Like Us for the Super Bowl halftime show, unbothered by Drake’s legal pressure.