Meek Mill Says Drake ‘Don’t Write His Own Raps,’ OG Maco Names Quentin Miller as Drizzy’s Ghostwriter
Rapper Meek Mill took to Twitter on Tuesday to blast YMCMB superstar Drake for allegedly using a ghostwriter to create his songs.
"Stop comparing drake to me too.... He don't write his own raps! That's why he ain't tweet my album because we found out!" he tweeted.
The 28-year-old Philadelphia rapper claimed that most hip hop and rap artists know the "Degrassi" alum's secret, but are too afraid to call him out.
"The whole game know forreal they scared to tell the truth! I can't wait tok these guys and sit back and act like they don't know!" the "Monster" rapper wrote.
He also said, though Drake is featured on his track "R.I.C.O.," he didn't write his own verses.
"He ain't even write that verse on my album and if I woulda knew I woulda took it off my album..... I don't trick my fans! Lol," he added.
Mill's comments caught the attention of rapper Rick Ross who tweeted that Drake is greater than Mill. The tweet was later deleted but not before Lil Edd posted this screengrab:
Rappers supported Mill's claim on Twitter, identifying Drizzy's ghostwriter as Quentin Miller.
Rapper OG Maco tweeted, "Some of us been knew. Meek just put it in the air. Sucks to have to compete with 6 n*ggas and get compared to 1," and added, "All this sh*t fake as f*ck! Meek hating or these credits clearly say Quentin__Miller I'm sick of you f*ck ass clowns."
"People BEEN said this, it's just no one believes us until someone, i guess, 'more official' says it. Lol... Let's keep a MILLION, did it ever occur to yall that QM wrote on MORE than the songs he got writer credits for? Making him a ghostwriter," wrote Steven "Stevo" Dingle, manager of OG Maco and the CEO of The Gloriam Group.
Miller was credited as a "composer" on the hit album "If You're Reading This It's Too Late" tracks "Legend," "10 Bands," "Know Yourself," "No Tellin'," "Used To" and "6 Man."
The Toronto native has not commented on the matter.
Mill's fiancée Nicki Minaj kicked off a Twitter controversy as well on Tuesday when her "Anaconda" and "Feeling Myself" songs failed to be nominated for the 2015 MTV VMA Video of the Year award. The singer said music videos featuring "women with slim bodies" and discrimination against black female rappers is to blame, though Beyoncé's "7/11" was nominated for the award.
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