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"She Make It Clap" is a single by American rapper Soulja Boy. The song was initially self-released on March 15, 2021, before seeing a wider global release under Virgin Music on April 5, 2021.
The original version of "Make It Clap" (which features Spliff Star) was released to urban contemporary radio on October 14, 2002. [2]The remix version (which features another guest, Sean Paul) was later sent to radio as the album's official lead single on January 13, 2003.
Lyrics include the lines "I know what you want from me / If you wanna have fun with me / Wanna be on the winning team." [ 2 ] [ 10 ] During promotion for the song, Ciara said "Jump" was a celebratory anthem, reflecting on her journey since her previous album Beauty Marks (2019), "it celebrates the beautiful shades of culture that comprise the ...
"Make It Clap" (featuring Spliff Star) "Make It Clap" (V2) (featuring Sean Paul and Spliff Star) Erik White [264] "I Know What You Want" (featuring Mariah Carey and Flipmode Squad) 2003 Chris Robinson [275] "Shorty (Put It on the Floor)" (featuring Fat Joe, Chingy and Nick Cannon) 2004 Gregory Dark [276] "Touch It" 2005 Benny Boom, Busta Rhymes ...
The song became a meme in early 2019, on the video-sharing platform TikTok.As part of the "Pretty Boy Swag transformation meme", users upload short videos of themselves where they "transform into their favourite pop culture figures". [1]
A U.S. judge will consider on Monday the fate of President Donald Trump's buyout offer to two million federal workers as Trump presses ahead with an unprecedented effort to dismantle government ...
"Make It Clap" is the first single released from Busta Rhymes's sixth studio album, It Ain't Safe No More..., released on the following month, which is November 26, 2002. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The remix version was released on January 13, 2003 [ 3 ] as the official single in place of the original, released two months earlier, which is October 14, 2002.
According to the National Media Council, the lyrics were considered to be offensive to Arabs and to Islam because it quoted the Quran. [33] In November 2008, when "Arab Money" was released as a single, DJ Dany Neville and the Iraqi rapper The Narcicyst responded by recording a reply. Rhymes later apologized. [33]