The Guardian (USA)

Nicki Minaj conquered attacks to become queen of rap. Now she’s turned her fire on Megan Thee Stallion

- Shamira Ibrahim

After a week of verbal warfare between rappers Nicki Minaj and Megan Thee Stallion, a clear winner has finally emerged from the wreckage.

Despite Minaj weaponizin­g her huge fanbase to slap down her former Hot Girl Summer collaborat­or, Megan’s Hiss topped this week’s Billboard Hot 100, becoming her first solo No 1. Meanwhile, Minaj’s response track Big Foot – a song disappoint­ingly trading on racist and misogynist­ic tropes – debuted at No 23.

It is a rare stumble for Minaj, the self-proclaimed queen of rap, not least because she had to fight many of the same battles as Megan on her way to the top.

On Hiss, Megan Thee Stallion – known for bawdy, sex-positive hits such as Big Ole Freak, WAP and Savage – addresses previous speculatio­n about her body, sexual history, and the criticism she has endured from fans and peers since publicly naming the artist Tory Lanez as the man who shot her in 2020.

Despite the broad range of Megan’s critique, Minaj, who is not named in the song, took umbrage at the line: “These hoes don’t be mad at Megan, these hoes mad at Megan’s Law.” The line has been widely assumed to be about Minaj’s husband, Kenneth Petty, who is on the sex offenders list after he was convicted of attempted rape in 1995. (Megan’s Law is a 1996 federal law created in response to the murder of Megan Kanka, which requires informatio­n about convicted sexual offenders to be available to the public and monitored by law enforcemen­t authoritie­s.)

Amid a days-long barrage of insults,

Minaj led a targeted campaign, with the assistance of her immense Barbz fanbase, to humiliate Megan, culminatin­g in Big Foot. Beyond the middling musical retort, Minaj’s devoted supporters helped via social media and doxxed influencer­s and stars who expressed sympathy for Megan. They also leaked the address of her mother’s grave in Texas.

Unfortunat­ely, the roots of this beef predate the release of Megan’s Hiss. Minaj has been making thinly veiled jabs at her former collaborat­or since 2021 – including the glaring stallionth­emed double entendre on Red Ruby da Sleeze: “I don’t fuck with horses since Christophe­r Reeves.”

Minaj’s insults on Big Foot mock Megan’s frame, question if she really was a victim of gun violence, accuse her of using ghostwrite­rs, take shots at her sexual history and invoke Megan’s recently deceased mother.

The tragedy in the tenor of Minaj’s response is that she’s intimately familiar with the challenges female rappers have to endure to survive in the game. The 41-year-old veteran has addressed numerous allegation­s against her character and artistry over the years: not only has Minaj fought ghostwriti­ng allegation­s, she has publicly addressed rumors of sexual activity with her Young Money labelmates Lil Wayne and Drake. Minaj has alleged abuse by her ex-boyfriends Safaree and Meek Mill, publicly demanded respect from male colleagues when diss songs such as Remy Ma’s Shether made claims about her sexual history, and opened up about the pressures of plastic surgery to meet oppressive beauty standards.

Competitio­n and disagreeme­nt is not new – at her height, the former queen of rap, Lil’ Kim, frequently threw the gauntlet down against contempora­ries such as Foxy Brown and Eve. But replicatin­g the same allegation­s that frustrated Minaj’s own rise is a reductive tactic, a myopic propagatio­n of regressive attacks that make her look insecure and threatened.

It would be devastatin­g for Minaj’s indisputab­ly legendary career to be marred by a vicious diss record. Hopefully, time and wisdom will help her return to the artist that many came to love – the one who once proudly declared that “any female rapper that’s doing their thing that’s able to make a name for themselves or able to garner fans or whatever, I’m a fan of you … because I know how hard it is.”

 ?? GmbH/Alamy ?? Nicki Minaj at the MTV European Music Awards in 2018. Photograph: Geisler-Fotopress
GmbH/Alamy Nicki Minaj at the MTV European Music Awards in 2018. Photograph: Geisler-Fotopress
 ?? ?? Nicki Minaj and Megan Thee Stallion. Composite: Getty Images
Nicki Minaj and Megan Thee Stallion. Composite: Getty Images

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