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Flo Milli Seemingly Denies Pregnancy Rumors

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Flo Milli is seemingly denying that she’s pregnant after sparking rumors with a video that featured what appeared to be a baby bump.

Shared to her Instagram account on Tuesday (November 12), the clip showed Flo dancing with a masked man who was rubbing on her stomach.

The video was intended to preview her new song, which samples T-Pain‘s “I’m N Luv (Wit A Stripper)” and finds Flo rapping: “He eat it up in the backseat/ I’m running like it’s a track meet/ I know this boy wanna trap me – okay!/ He wanna give me a baby/ I want him to give me Mercedes!”

Both fans and peers alike didn’t hesitate to congratulate Flo on her assumed pregnancy, with Sexyy Red writing, “FLO WAIT WAIT THIS ALOT RN” and Baby Tate saying, “I’m not gone lie I ain’t hear a word u said congratulations omg Flo Mommi Shittttt.”

But Flo is denying the rumors for now, taking to X moments later and writing, “damn i cant be bloated??”

You can view the video in question below.

 

Flo Milli released her sophomore album, Fine Ho, Stay, in March of this year. The 14-track effort featured appearances from Anycia, Cardi B, SZA, Gunna and Monaleo, with production from the likes of Bangladesh, Honorable C.N.O.T.E., Lex Luger, Mike Will Made It and more.

Cardi’s appearance came via her remix of Flo’s viral hit “Never Lose Me,” which initially received pushback from fans who felt her inclusion wouldn’t make sense. But in true Cardi fashion, she hit back at the detractors.

“When the Flo Milli remix came out, bitches were acting like they were so mad that I was on it,” she said on an Instagram Live. “[Mocking voice] ‘Cardi not even gonna sound good on this.’ And then when it came out, you know the haters — some of them didn’t even hear it. They was like, ‘She just don’t go with the song.’ And now there’s over 10,000 TikToks of people talking about, [singing] ‘Bitch could never be me in her life!’”

She continued: “Like the pretty bitches is talking about, [singing] ‘Bitch could never be me in her life!’ So I wanna say thank you to the pretty bitches. That’s why you can’t go with what people say. I have to go with what the artist say.

“And the artist — which is Flo Milli — said she fucking loved the verse. And she’s a real bitch. She ain’t gonna be like, ‘Oh yeah I love it!’ just because she wanted me on the song. She loved it. And SZA loved it, bitch. I wanna say this why you can’t listen to no fucking body.”

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Chris Brown & Drake Collab ‘No Guidance’ Reaches Major Milestone

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Chris Brown has received his first Diamond plaque thanks to his 2019 collaboration with former enemy Drake, “No Guidance.”

On Tuesday (November 12), the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) handed out a slew of new certifications. Among them, Breezy and Drizzy’s collab earned its Diamond plaque, which means the song has sold over 10 million units – though it’s actually now at 11 million.

Meanwhile, artists Tykeiya Dore and Marc Stephens just recently filed a lawsuit against Chris Brown and Drake for at least $5 million over claims they “No Guidance” stole from their 2016 track “I Got It.”

The suit, filed in New Jersey, alleges that Brown, Drake and other songwriters behind “No Guidance” took the main lyric from “I Got It” and changed it to “You got it,” using “the same chord progressions, tempo, pitch, key, melody, harmony, rhythm, structure, phrasing, and lyrics” as Dore and Stephen’s original track.

The complaint argues that “it’s impossible to not hear the two songs are substantially similar” and cites a since-deleted YouTube video comparing the two tracks.

In addition to the two superstars, the lawsuit also names co-writers Velous, Nija Charles and Michee Lebrun as defendants, as well as and producers Noah “40” Shebib, Vinylz, J-Louis and Teddy Walton.

Brown’s label RCA Records, along with several music publishers tied to “No Guidance,” are also named.

The suit claims that “I Got It” came to the attention of Vinylz through Benji Filmz’ YouTube Channel, while Nija Charles received a copy of the song from Tikeiya’s uncle, Jesse Spruils.

After the release of “No Guidance,” Spruils allegedly confronted Charles about her “stealing the chorus of [Tikeiya and Stephens’] song,” but never told Tikeiya about it because he felt “incompetent, humiliated and embarrassed.”

In an unusual move, the lawsuit also requests damages from YouTube and parent companies Alphabet and Google for defamation against Stephens in a dispute over a YouTube takedown notice.

Stephens claims that YouTube deleted his channel earlier this year after he filed a takedown request over “No Guidance,” with the company expressing concerns that “some of the info in [his] takedown request may be fraudulent.”

YouTube reinstated his channel two months later after Stephens threatened to sue the company for defamation.

“No Guidance” was previously at the center of a separate copyright lawsuit back in 2021, although that suit was eventually dropped.

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