Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Bronx Drill Rapper Kay Flock Gets 30-Year Sentence in Racketeering Case

Kay Flock, born Kevin Perez, is shown in a photo shared on social media. The Bronx drill rapper was sentenced Tuesday to 30 years in federal prison after being convicted on racketeering and attempted murder charges tied to a series of gang-related shootings.
For a brief moment, Kay Flock looked like the next voice to break out of the Bronx’s drill scene — a raw, volatile presence whose videos racked up millions of views and whose name moved fast through New York rap circles. On Tuesday, that ascent ended in a federal courtroom.

The Bronx rapper, born Kevin Perez, was sentenced to 30 years in prison for his role as the leader of a gang prosecutors said carried out a series of shootings that terrorized neighborhoods between 2020 and 2021. Perez, 22, was convicted earlier this year on racketeering conspiracy, attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon in aid of racketeering, along with a firearm offense, following a two-week trial in U.S. District Court.

U.S. District Judge Lewis J. Liman, who imposed the sentence, said Perez “taunted, celebrated, and created a culture of violence,” adding that the harm caused by his actions “was immense,” according to court records.

Federal prosecutors described Perez as the leader of a Bronx-based gang known as Sev Side/DOA — shorthand for “Dumping on Anything” or “Dead on Arrival” — operating around East 187th Street. According to the indictment and trial evidence, the group used violence to defend territory, elevate its reputation and increase members’ status, while funding itself through bank and wire fraud schemes that later supported Perez’s music career.

“Kevin Perez used violence and fame to fuel fear and intimidation across the Bronx,” U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton said in a statement announcing the sentence. “Perez and his gang members carried out a string of shootings that struck both rival gang members and innocent bystanders.”

Prosecutors tied Perez to multiple shootings during a roughly 18-month span. Among them was a June 20, 2020, attack in which a rival was shot in the jaw and several others were wounded. Days later, Perez appeared in a music video that investigators said referenced the shooting. Additional attempted murders in June 2020, August 2020 and November 2021 were also presented at trial, with evidence showing multiple victims were struck by gunfire.

Clayton said Perez used his platform as a rising drill rapper to amplify the violence, releasing songs and videos — some drawing millions of views — that “threatened his rivals, bragged about his shootings, and taunted his victims.” Prosecutors argued the music and online posts helped spark retaliatory violence that rippled through the Bronx.

In addition to the prison sentence, Perez was ordered to serve five years of supervised release after completing his term.

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Donna Summer’s Songwriting Legacy Honored With Hall of Fame Induction

Donna Summer performs during the inaugural gala at the Washington Convention Center on Jan. 19, 1985, in Washington, D.C. Long remembered as the defining voice of disco, Summer was also a prolific songwriter whose work reshaped dance music, pop and R&B — a legacy now recognized with her posthumous induction into the Songwriters Hall of Fame. (White House Photographic Office via the National Archives)
Donna Summer is headed to the Songwriters Hall of Fame — a place longtime fans have argued she belonged all along, even when the disco backlash tried to pretend her pen didn’t matter.

The Songwriters Hall of Fame announced Summer’s posthumous induction following an intimate ceremony held on Monday in The Butterfly Room at Cecconi’s in West Hollywood, California.

The Hall rarely honors songwriters after their death, reserving posthumous inductions for moments when an artist’s influence has not faded with time but grown clearer with distance, a distinction that fits Summer, whose songwriting has increasingly been reassessed as foundational rather than decorative.

If Summer is still too often introduced as “the voice of disco,” the Hall’s framing quietly corrects the record. She wrote many of the songs that made her unavoidable, including “Love to Love You Baby,” “I Feel Love,” “Bad Girls,” “Dim All the Lights,” “On the Radio,” “Heaven Knows,” “She Works Hard for the Money,” “Spring Affair” and “This Time I Know It’s for Real,” among others. Those records didn’t just soundtrack an era — they helped reshape pop structure, dance music, and how female artists claimed authorship in spaces that often denied it.

The induction was led by Paul Williams, the Academy Award-winning songwriter and Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee whose own catalog spans pop, film and Broadway. Williams framed Summer not as a genre figure, but as a writer whose work permanently altered how emotion, rhythm and melody coexist in popular music.

“Donna Summer is not only one of the defining voices and performers of the 20th century; she is one of the great songwriters of all time who changed the course of music,” Williams said in a statement released by the Hall. He added that her songs “continue to captivate our souls and imaginations, inspiring the world to dance and, above all, feel love.”

Summer, who died in 2012 at 63, was represented at the ceremony by her family, including her husband, Bruce Sudano, and daughters Brooklyn Sudano and Amanda Sudano Ramirez. In a message shared with the Hall, Sudano spoke directly to the recognition Summer valued most, and didn’t always receive in real time.

“With all the accolades that she received over her career, being respected as a songwriter was always the thing that she felt was overlooked,” Sudano said. “So for her to be accepted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame I know that she’s very happy… somewhere.”

Monday, December 15, 2025

Lizzo Scores Partial Legal Victory as Fat-Shaming Claims Are Dropped

Lizzo performs on President James Madison’s 1813 crystal flute during a visit to the Library of Congress in Washington on Sept. 26, 2022. The Grammy-winning artist, known for her musicianship and advocacy for body positivity, recently celebrated a partial legal victory after former dancers dropped fat-shaming allegations in an ongoing lawsuit. (Photo by Shawn Miller/Library of Congress)
Lizzo called it “devastating” to stay silent while the world picked her apart. On Monday, the Grammy winning singer finally spoke — not through a press release, but through a social-media video — confirming that one of the loudest accusations against her has fallen away.

“The fat-shaming claims against me have been officially dropped by my accusers,” she wrote across the screen. “They conceded it had no merit in court. There was no evidence that I fired them because they gained weight — because it never happened. Now the truth is finally out.”


It was the first major turn in a lawsuit that’s shadowed Lizzo since 2023, when three former backup dancers — Arianna Davis, Noelle Rodriguez and Crystal Williams — accused her of creating a hostile work environment filled with sexual misconduct and body-shaming. Their most publicized claim, that she punished or fired employees for weight gain, has now been withdrawn after a judge dismissed it under California’s anti-SLAPP statute and the plaintiffs declined to appeal.

But while this moment clears a major piece of her legal slate, it doesn’t end the story. Other parts of the case — including allegations of inappropriate behavior and tour-related misconduct — remain active. Lizzo says she’ll fight them all.

“This claim has haunted me since the day it came out,” she said. “It has been devastating to suffer through this in silence, but I let my lawyers lead, and I’m so grateful for this victory. I am still in a legal battle. I am not settling. I will be fighting every single claim until the truth is out.”

The case, filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, has become one of pop culture’s most polarizing. It’s a collision between celebrity image and workplace ethics, fame and accountability, and a test of how quickly social media can rewrite a reputation before a court ever rules.

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