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Cardi B has been referred to as the "Reigning Queen of Hip Hop" by multiple publications, including Billboard, The Hollywood Reporter, Entertainment Weekly, Omaha World-Herald, Black Enterprise, Newsweek, and The A.V. Club, [143] [334] and as the "Queen of Rap" by NME, Essence, Harper's Bazaar Malaysia, The Jakarta Post, Uproxx, iHeartRadio ...
Cardi B is once again making money moves and is now locking up her insanely popular catchphrase to use on an upcoming line of products.
Cardi B doesn't play when it comes to her children's attitudes in school.. On Thursday, Nov. 21, the rapper, 32, shared a video to her Instagram Stories as she sat in the car on the way to parent ...
"Enough (Miami)" debuted at number nine on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Cardi B's twelfth top-ten hit and her first solo top-ten since "Up" in 2021. It received a nomination for the Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards, extending Cardi B's record as the female rapper with the most nominations in that category.
"Bodak Yellow" (alternatively titled "Bodak Yellow (Money Moves)") is the major-label debut single by American rapper Cardi B. It was written alongside Pardison Fontaine, Klenord Raphael, and producers J. White Did It and Laquan Green, with an additional writing credit going to Kodak Black for the interpolation of his song "No Flockin".
Writing for AllMusic, Fred Thomas opined that the song "is made by Cardi B's high-energy, high-confrontation cameo." [6] Charles Holmes of Rolling Stone found Cardi's performance "brutal, swift and nimble" and considered it among the best on the album; he noted the song features her "dismantling a variety of unnamed detractors: rappers, blogs, trolls."
Lyrically, "Thru Your Phone" is about the protagonist finding explicit conversations on her partner's mobile phone and contemplates revenge on him. [2] A Billboard article deemed the song "the rap equivalent of Jazmine Sullivan's "Bust Your Windows", [3] while a Rolling Stone article noted it as one of the two "most emotionally hardcore" songs in the parent album—the other being "I Do ...
[4] In Pitchfork, Evan Rytlewski noticed Cardi B raps "exclusively in flexes on "On Me," and described the song as "a rowdy number cut from a distinctly "Bodak Yellow"-esque cloth." [ 5 ] Reviewing the song's parent album Aaron McKrell of HipHopDX cited "On Me" and "Splash Warning" as examples of tracks where Meek "lightens the mood with ...