The lawsuit claims an exclusive agreement is crushing competition for streaming lyrics, but a new response says the case is based on "buzzwords and hyperbole."
Bailey argues in a new court filing that DDG has dug up and exaggerated her history of threatening self-harm as “cold retribution” for domestic violence claims.
The new legal salvo, which argues that the song's references to prostitution describe the rapper’s views on women, comes amid a backlash to citing rap lyrics in court cases.
A Seoul court granted a request by the group's agency, ADOR, to prevent members from performing without prior approval. A second hearing is scheduled for Thursday (June 5).
The defamation case claims Simmons offered up exculpatory evidence, including “CIA-grade polygraph results," but that it was "disregarded" or "suppressed."
The new claims come a month after Bailey accused DDG of physical abuse and won a temporary restraining order against the Twitch rapper.
Bryana Bongolan also told jurors that the mogul threatened her life, telling her, "I’m the devil and I could kill you."
In this week's Legal Beat newsletter, the major labels talk settlement with AI firms, Lizzo launches an appeal, Eminem sues Facebook over "Lose Yourself" and much more.
The superstar wants an appellate court to overturn a ruling last year that allowed the blockbuster harassment lawsuit from her backup dancers to move forward.
A company that owns many of Eminem's songs is suing Meta over claims that the company added his tracks to its music libraries without permission.






