Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Rapper Young Bleed Dead at 51 After Brain Aneurysm, Son Confirms

Young Bleed shown in a promotional image circa 2024.Young Bleed’s son, Ty’Gee Ramon, confirmed his father’s death in a video posted Monday on Instagram, saying the Baton Rouge rapper “gained his wings” on Saturday following complications from a brain aneurysm.
Baton Rouge rapper Young Bleed, whose 1998 anthem “How Ya Do Dat” became a Southern rap classic and helped define the bridge between No Limit’s street realism and Cash Money’s mainstream rise, has died at 51 following complications from a brain aneurysm.

His eldest son, Ty’Gee Ramon, confirmed the news Monday in an emotional Instagram video, saying his father “gained his wings” on Saturday. “It’s unreal,” Ramon said. “He never dealt with real health issues, but he did have high blood pressure and took medicine. It was a natural thing.”


The Louisiana native — born Glenn Clifton Jr. — suffered a brain aneurysm on Oct. 25, days after performing at the Cash Money–No Limit Verzuz event in Las Vegas and appearing at ComplexCon. He had been hospitalized in critical condition since then.


The sudden loss comes less than two weeks after his sister, Tedra Johnson-Spears, publicly pleaded for fans to stop spreading false death reports while Young Bleed remained in intensive care. “He is still currently in ICU,” she wrote at the time, asking for privacy and respect for the family.

In the days before his hospitalization, Bleed was enjoying a late-career renaissance, celebrating both his roots and his influence as a Baton Rouge trailblazer. Known for his poetic storytelling and unhurried drawl, he brought a philosopher’s calm to the chaos of late-’90s Louisiana rap — a sound that turned regional slang and hustler ethos into national conversation.

His debut album, “My Balls and My Word,” released through No Limit and Priority Records, debuted in Billboard’s Top 10 in 1998. The album’s breakout single, “How Ya Do Dat,” featuring C-Loc and Master P, became a Gulf Coast rallying cry that cemented Bleed’s legacy. The project went gold, earning Young Bleed a place among the first Baton Rouge rappers to reach a mainstream national audience.

Monday, November 3, 2025

Blueface’s First Day Free Turns Chaotic as Jaidyn Alexis, Chrisean Rock Clash

Blueface appears in a video (see below) shared to Instagram shortly after his release Monday, joking with followers and thanking fans for support as online drama with Jaidyn Alexis and Chrisean Rock reignited within hours. (Video via Instagram/@bluefasebabyy)
After 21 months behind bars, rapper Blueface walked out of prison today — and the drama that has long followed him wasted no time resurfacing.

Known for his breakout hit “Thotiana” and a social-media persona built on controversy and charisma, the 28-year-old rapper was released Monday and quickly reunited with his children, including son Chrisean Jr., whom he shares with Chrisean Rock, and two kids with longtime on-again, off-again partner Jaidyn Alexis.


Within hours, Alexis went live on Instagram and fired off remarks aimed at Rock, saying she did not approve of her children being around “a crackhead” — comments originally reported by TMZ Hip Hop. She abruptly ended the stream but not before fueling yet another viral moment between the two women at the center of Blueface’s offstage drama.

Blueface (real name Jonathan Porter) served his sentence on probation-related violations that stemmed from earlier assault and weapons cases. His release marks the end of a turbulent chapter that blended hip-hop fame with near-constant courtroom headlines.

Hours after his release, Blueface briefly went live on Instagram himself, thanking fans for support and joking, “Still that n***a, two years later,” before teasing that he might make his account private. The clip showed him inside his Los Angeles home alongside family members and his mother, Karlissa Saffold, who had posted a countdown to his release for weeks.

The rapper’s return home also reunited him with his new girlfriend Angela, who told TMZ Hip Hop she supported him through his sentence and believes he’s “a keeper.”

Blueface’s homecoming comes at a career crossroads. Before his incarceration, he teased new music and a possible label imprint; now, he faces the challenge of converting infamy into focus.

Nas, Resorts World Team up To Fund the Hip Hop Museum With $2 Million Donation

Nas appears at a Resorts World New York City event in Queens earlier this year. The Queensbridge icon recently joined the company in announcing a joint $2 million donation to help fund The Hip Hop Museum in the Bronx, slated to open in 2026. (Photo: Resorts World New York City)
Hip-hop is finally getting the temple it deserves — and one of its greatest lyricists just helped lay the foundation.

Queensbridge legend Nas has teamed with Resorts World New York City to donate $2 million toward the completion of The Hip Hop Museum in the Bronx, the long-awaited institution celebrating the genre’s origins and global rise. The announcement came during the museum’s annual benefit gala, where Nas said the project “is something our culture has needed for a long time.”

“Building this Hip Hop Museum is something our culture has needed for a long time,” he told guests. “It’s powerful to see a space being created to preserve that history and to educate and inspire the next generation. Being able to contribute alongside Resorts World to help bring this vision to life is an honor. This museum stands as a reminder of where we came from, and a celebration of everything Hip Hop continues to be.”


The museum, rising inside the Bronx Point development at 585 Exterior Street, is slated to open in 2026. It sits just minutes from 1520 Sedgwick Avenue, the site of DJ Kool Herc’s 1973 back-to-school jam that gave birth to hip-hop itself. Led by founder and CEO Rocky Bucano, the project will house interactive galleries, archives, performance spaces and a theater designed to preserve hip-hop’s five core elements — MCing, DJing, breaking, graffiti and knowledge.

“Receiving this generous $2 million donation from Nas and Resorts World at our benefit gala was a major highlight of the evening,” Bucano said. “His generosity supports our capital campaign and brings us closer to opening our doors in 2026.”

Resorts World’s contribution comes as the company pursues a full downstate casino license for its Queens racino, proposing a $7.5 billion expansion with $2 billion in community benefits — including cultural investments like this one. The Gaming Facility Location Board is expected to decide on licenses by late 2025.

The casino competition has been fierce: earlier this year, the Jay-Z/Roc Nation-backed Caesars Palace Times Square proposal was rejected by a local advisory committee after strong opposition from theater owners, leaving Resorts World and MGM’s Yonkers bid among the frontrunners.

But beyond the politics, Nas’s involvement brings the story full circle. The Bronx once birthed hip-hop; now one of its most eloquent sons is helping give it a permanent home. In a city that once tried to silence the genre, the sound that defined New York will finally have its own museum — built by the hands of those who made it matter.

At a Glance: The Hip Hop Museum

  • Location: Bronx Point development, 585 Exterior St., Bronx, NY 10451
  • Opening Target: 2026
  • Latest Funding: $2 million joint gift from Nas and Resorts World New York City (Oct 2025)
  • Capital Support to Date: $80 million + public and private funding (NYC EDC, UHHM Foundation, Resorts World)
  • Facility Size: ≈ 52,000 sq ft with galleries, archives and 300-seat theater
  • Mission: Preserve hip-hop history and foster innovation for future generations
  • Context: Near 1520 Sedgwick Ave.—the recognized birthplace of hip-hop culture

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