Months after Young Thug was released from jail, a final guilty plea marks the formal end of a sprawling criminal case in America’s rap capital. Did prosecutors get what they wanted?
In remarks to the conference's more than 2,000 attendees, Sabin noted that 15% of them came from outside the U.S.
"It's shaping up amazingly," Sabin says of the move from Nashville to Atlanta. "Our sponsorships are off the charts."
New events are lined up for the annual music industry conference, set for May in Georgia.
The decision will finally end a bizarre episode in which attorney Brian Steel was sentenced to 20 days in jail after he exposed a secret meeting between the judge and prosecutors.
The trademark lawsuit says the term was "invented by OutKast" and that a lesser-known group is confusing consumers by using it as their name.
The annual conference will relocate from Nashville to Atlanta.
On the first morning of a trial expected to last many months, prosecutors blast "King Slime" and defense attorneys demand a mistrial.
More than a year after one of hip-hop's biggest stars was indicted on accusations that he ran a violent Atlanta street gang, he's finally headed to trial.
Using rap lyrics as evidence is controversial, but an Atlanta judge says it's fair game in a looming criminal trial against one of hip hop's biggest stars.