“Crank That” performer Soulja Boy has choice words for “Real Housewives of Atlanta” star Kandi Burruss.
In a passionate new video shared online, Soulja Boy wasted no time voicing his displeasure with Burruss after she interviewed one of the rapper’s former employees who made shocking allegations against him.
After Soulja Boy’s rant went viral, Burruss responded to his statements, insisting he “pull up” so they can work things out.
During the latest episode of her “Burruss Banter” podcast, Burruss, a Grammy-winning singer and songwriter, hosted Soulja Boy’s former videographer, Charlie Rocket. In the interview, Rocket thanked Soulja Boy, whose real name is DeAndre Cortez Way, for the opportunity to work with him in the early aughts. However, he recalled an alleged terrifying experience that’s gotten everyone riled up.
“I want to preface: I’m very grateful for Soulja Boy giving me an opportunity, but I’m grateful for the good and the bad because at this particular time in Las Vegas, I had actually not eaten in three days,” Rocket said.
As he continued, Rocket said he met Soulja Boy in a hotel room after he allegedly ordered thousands of dollars’ worth of room service. “When he was done, there was so much food left over. I was excited. I saw some chicken fingers and I was like, ‘Can I can I get those?’ ‘Cuz I’m hungry, I’m really, really hungry,” Rocket added.
According to Rocket, Soulja Boy allegedly told him he could “have whatever you want” before spitting all over the food.
And while Rocket claims this happened in the early 2000s, that didn’t make the allegations any easier for Soulja Boy to hear. In a livestream, the “Turn My Swag On” rapper slammed Burruss and his former videographer and threatened to take legal action against them both.
“Somebody tag this b-tch, Kandi, too,” the rapper said. “B-tch, why you got this fat a– [redacted] on your platform talking? I’m gonna sue the f-ck out you and this white n—a.. I’m about to sue the f-ck out Kandi.”
He didn’t stop there, though. Soulja Boy went even further, calling Rocket a string of vulgar insults before pleading with Burruss to let him share his side of the story.
“You’re on a motherf-cking internet talking about I spat on your food? You’s a b-tch, p-ssy a– n—a,” he added. “Who the f-ck on the road with somebody and don’t eat for three days? Kandi, you too, you little baldheaded b-tch. … Send me the motherf-cking address. Let me pull up, tell my side of the story.”
Burruss heard the call and didn’t waver. She responded to Soulja Boy on X, formerly Twitter, telling the 35-year-old to come share his version of events on her podcast.
“I heard @SouljaBoy was cussing me out on his live [and] said he wanted to pull up,” she wrote. “Well, I would love for you to pull up. Let’s speak on it!”
At the time of this publication, Burruss’ post has received over two million interactions and a plethora of responses.
Someone wrote, “Perioud auntie,” while another posted, “Y’all know Kandi don’t back down from nobody.”
This isn’t the first time Soulja Boy has unleashed his unfiltered thoughts about a celebrity or public figure. In early 2025, according to a report from The Blast, Soulja Boy slammed fans who criticized him for performing at President Donald Trump’s Crypto Ball pre-inaugural bash in Washington, D.C.
He wasted no time responding to his detractors, informing them that President Trump did for him what President Barack Obama and Vice President Kamala Harris didn’t.
“They paid me a bag. Obama ain’t never put no money in my f-cking pockets, n-gga. Kamala ain’t never put no money in my f-cking pockets, n-gga. Trump put money in my pockets, n-gga,” he said.
While he appreciated the hefty check he received and revealed he’d perform for Trump and his administration again, he admitted he felt misled about the event.
“I ain’t going to lie, though. Them folks did try to trick me, though. Halfway, I was like, ‘Man, f-ck this n-gga Trump. I don’t f-ck with this n-gga, then halfway, I was like, ‘N-gga, the president.’ You feel me? But whatever, man…the n-gga wasn’t there,” he said.
Quick on the heels of famously sassy, phrase-turning R&B singer and reality TV star Tamar Braxton’s announcement her recently released album, “Bluebird of Happiness,” will be her last — at least for a while — and news that her husband, music executive husband Vincent Herbert, founder of Streamline Records, was legally ordered to pay Sony more than $3.7 million to settle a lawsuit over a 2013 advance, the couple hoisted their grandly proportioned and glamorously appointed Mediterranean mansion in Calabasas, Calif., up for sale at $15 million.
The Herbert-Braxtons, married in late 2007 after about five years together, purchased the 13,716-square-foot mansion inside the double-gated Estates at The Oaks enclave in April 2013 for $10.5 million and public records show since then there have been several notices of default filed and subsequently canceled against the two-acre spread that provides a total of seven bedrooms and nine full and two half bathrooms between the main house and poolside guesthouse.
Wrought iron and glass front doors open to an entry vestibule and foyer with black and white floral-patterned inlaid floor and a floating, wrought iron railed staircase that curves up to the bedrooms on the second floor. The main living and entertaining space makes a great sweep across the rear of the residence with gleaming wide-plank hardwood floors laid in a classy chevron pattern.
A central gallery with glossy grand piano is flanked to one side by a lounge with semi-circular sofa in front of an ornate fireplace and to the other by a “champagne bar” modeled after The Dorchester Hotel in London with tufted velvet sofas and a stately wood-paneled ceiling.
Arched French doors open the vast space to an immense, stone-paved loggia with retractable canvas shade awnings and a bowling alley-length dining table that easily seats at least two-dozen al fresco diners. With elaborately carved cabinetry, granite countertops and a super-sized commercial-style range under a hand-hammered copper hood, the kitchen is open to a spacious informal dining area that, in turn, opens to a family room with fireplace and French doors to the backyard.
The three-story mansion’s creature comfort also include a home theater, a game room, an office, a wine cellar with tasting room and, unsurprisingly, a recording studio along with an elevator, an camera-equipped security system, a gentlemen’s lounge with authentic barber chair, a mirror-walled gym and a subterranean parking garage that will accommodate over a dozen cars. The mansion makes a U-shaped embrace around a broad and grassy courtyard with swimming pool and spa beyond which a soccer pitch-sized lawn gives way to a panoramic view over rugged ravines and undeveloped mountaintops.
Some of the other, equally sized and similarly luxurious estates in The Estates sections of The Oaks are owned by reality television’s Kourtney and Khloé Kardashian, Michael Jackson’s mother Katherine Jackson, Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker and Jay McGraw, elder son of extraordinarily well-compensated TV therapist Dr. Phil McGraw, and his Playboy model wife Erica Dahm.