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Rewrite and translate this title Pusha T Says ‘It’s Crazy’ Drake Filed Lawsuit Following Kendrick Lamar Beef to Japanese between 50 and 60 characters. Do not include any introductory or extra text; return only the title in Japanese.

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Pusha T is no stranger to rap beef, and he thinks “it’s crazy” that Drake ultimately resorted to legal action against Universal Music Group (UMG) and Spotify over Kendrick Lamar’s No. 1 diss track, “Not Like Us.”

In a Saint Sessions discussion with Ari Melber at Art Basel in Miami on Saturday, Dec. 7, Push was asked if he agrees that Lamar won the beef against Drake, to which he enthusiastically replied, “1,000%.”

“I think that Kendrick is a lyricist, and a lyricist that talks to your soul,” Push said. “You can be clever, you can say cute things, you can do things in cadences and so on and so forth, right? But the truth really hurts, and the truth cuts deep. And I think what Kendrick was doing was talking to his soul. I believe that, and I believe that would cause you to tap out. That’ll cause you to sue. That’ll cause you to do a lot of things.”

On Nov. 25, the 6 God filed a petition in a Manhattan court alleging that Universal Music Group (which he’s signed to) and Lamar artificially inflated streaming numbers for “Not Like Us,” the scathing diss track that, among other things, calls Drake a “certified pedophile.” The petition even alleges that UMG was in cahoots with Apple, claiming that when asking Siri to play his album Certified Lover Boy, “Not Like Us” would play instead (although multiple people claim Siri pulls from the song’s lyrics unless you specifically say “Play Certified Lover Boy by Drake”).

While Drake is taking legal action because of Kendrick Lamar’s track, the Compton rapper is NOT listed as a defendant in either of the petitions. Instead, Drizzy put the responsibility on UMG for failing to prevent the release of “Not Like Us.” Of course, it would be against UMG’s interests to prevent the release of the track considering it landed at No. 1 on Apple Music’s year-end global songs charts, regardless of how Drake feels about the content of the song.

Pusha T isn’t the only person who thinks it’s “crazy” that Drake has resorted to taking legal action. Last month, Joe Budden called out Drizzy in a scathing rant and called him “a selfish, lying, manipulative sack of shit.” Dame Dash, meanwhile, believes that Drake has benefitted from the same tactics he accused UMG of using with “Not Like Us.” Even Stephen A. Smith has urged Drake to either respond to “Not Like Us” with another diss track or just admit defeat.

It’s hard to forget that Pusha T had his own beef with Drake. The two traded subs for years after Push’s 2012 song “Exodus 23:1,” which is believed to be a diss about Young Money, particularly Lil Wayne and Drizzy. I mean, just check out this line: “Contract all fucked up/ I guess that means you all fucked up/ You signed to one n***a that signed to another n***a/ That’s signed to three n***as, now that’s bad luck.”

The beef escalated in 2018 when Push accused Drake of using a ghostwriter on his Daytona cut “Infrared.” In less than a day (but not as fast as Lamar’s record response time), Drake dissed Ye and Push on “Duppy Freestyle,” accusing both of them of being “leeches” among other things.

Pusha T then brought out the big guns with “The Story of Adidon,” featuring single artwork of Drake in blackface makeup. In the scathing diss heard ’round the world, the rapper took offense to Drake name dropping his then-fiancee by revealing that the “Passionfruit” rapper had a child with artist and former adult film star Sophie Brussaux. Reports surfaced the year prior that she was pregnant with Drake’s child, which his representatives attempted to squash immediately by claiming she was lying to get into the United States.

He then name-dropped Drake’s then-unknown son, saying, “Adonis is your son/ And he deserves more than an Adidas press run, that’s real/ Love that baby, respect that girl/ Forget she’s a pornstar, let her be your world.”

For what it’s worth, Drake did take the L. In an interview with Rap Radar a year later, he said it was his “first loss in the competitive sport of rapping.” Probably explains why he doesn’t want to take his second.

in HTML format, including tags, to make it appealing and easy to read for Japanese-speaking readers aged 20 to 40 interested in fashion. Organize the content with appropriate headings and subheadings (h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6), translating all text, including headings, into Japanese. Retain any existing tags from

Pusha T is no stranger to rap beef, and he thinks “it’s crazy” that Drake ultimately resorted to legal action against Universal Music Group (UMG) and Spotify over Kendrick Lamar’s No. 1 diss track, “Not Like Us.”

In a Saint Sessions discussion with Ari Melber at Art Basel in Miami on Saturday, Dec. 7, Push was asked if he agrees that Lamar won the beef against Drake, to which he enthusiastically replied, “1,000%.”

“I think that Kendrick is a lyricist, and a lyricist that talks to your soul,” Push said. “You can be clever, you can say cute things, you can do things in cadences and so on and so forth, right? But the truth really hurts, and the truth cuts deep. And I think what Kendrick was doing was talking to his soul. I believe that, and I believe that would cause you to tap out. That’ll cause you to sue. That’ll cause you to do a lot of things.”

On Nov. 25, the 6 God filed a petition in a Manhattan court alleging that Universal Music Group (which he’s signed to) and Lamar artificially inflated streaming numbers for “Not Like Us,” the scathing diss track that, among other things, calls Drake a “certified pedophile.” The petition even alleges that UMG was in cahoots with Apple, claiming that when asking Siri to play his album Certified Lover Boy, “Not Like Us” would play instead (although multiple people claim Siri pulls from the song’s lyrics unless you specifically say “Play Certified Lover Boy by Drake”).

While Drake is taking legal action because of Kendrick Lamar’s track, the Compton rapper is NOT listed as a defendant in either of the petitions. Instead, Drizzy put the responsibility on UMG for failing to prevent the release of “Not Like Us.” Of course, it would be against UMG’s interests to prevent the release of the track considering it landed at No. 1 on Apple Music’s year-end global songs charts, regardless of how Drake feels about the content of the song.

Pusha T isn’t the only person who thinks it’s “crazy” that Drake has resorted to taking legal action. Last month, Joe Budden called out Drizzy in a scathing rant and called him “a selfish, lying, manipulative sack of shit.” Dame Dash, meanwhile, believes that Drake has benefitted from the same tactics he accused UMG of using with “Not Like Us.” Even Stephen A. Smith has urged Drake to either respond to “Not Like Us” with another diss track or just admit defeat.

It’s hard to forget that Pusha T had his own beef with Drake. The two traded subs for years after Push’s 2012 song “Exodus 23:1,” which is believed to be a diss about Young Money, particularly Lil Wayne and Drizzy. I mean, just check out this line: “Contract all fucked up/ I guess that means you all fucked up/ You signed to one n***a that signed to another n***a/ That’s signed to three n***as, now that’s bad luck.”

The beef escalated in 2018 when Push accused Drake of using a ghostwriter on his Daytona cut “Infrared.” In less than a day (but not as fast as Lamar’s record response time), Drake dissed Ye and Push on “Duppy Freestyle,” accusing both of them of being “leeches” among other things.

Pusha T then brought out the big guns with “The Story of Adidon,” featuring single artwork of Drake in blackface makeup. In the scathing diss heard ’round the world, the rapper took offense to Drake name dropping his then-fiancee by revealing that the “Passionfruit” rapper had a child with artist and former adult film star Sophie Brussaux. Reports surfaced the year prior that she was pregnant with Drake’s child, which his representatives attempted to squash immediately by claiming she was lying to get into the United States.

He then name-dropped Drake’s then-unknown son, saying, “Adonis is your son/ And he deserves more than an Adidas press run, that’s real/ Love that baby, respect that girl/ Forget she’s a pornstar, let her be your world.”

For what it’s worth, Drake did take the L. In an interview with Rap Radar a year later, he said it was his “first loss in the competitive sport of rapping.” Probably explains why he doesn’t want to take his second.

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