Megan Thee Stallion just dropped her new music video for “Captain Hook”.
10.03.2020 - 22:13 / genius.com
Last week, Megan Thee Stallion was granted a temporary restraining order against her label 1501 Certified Entertainment and its CEO Carl Crawford, clearing the way for her to release her latest EP, Suga. Although Megan was able to drop her project, she’s still in the midst of a $1 million lawsuit against 1501.
Megan Thee Stallion just dropped her new music video for “Captain Hook”.
New music from Megan Thee Stallion is finally here.
Today, Megan Thee Stallion released her latest project, Suga—with some assistance from a court order. The Houston rapper, who turned “Hot Girl Summer” into a ubiquitous viral meme ahead of last year’s mixtape Fever, has spent the last several days in a public contract dispute with her label, 1501 Certified Entertainment, and its CEO, former baseball star Carl Crawford.
#FREETHEESTALLION has started trending on social media after “Hot Girl Summer” rapper Megan Thee Stallion opened up about her recent contract woes.
A Texas judge has denied a request by Megan Thee Stallion’s label to halt the release of her upcoming album.On Thursday (March 5), Judge Beau A.
Amid her current legal battle with record label 1501 Certified Entertainment to release new music, Megan Thee Stallion has made it loud and clear that her upcoming album Suga will arrive on Friday. The "Hot Girl" rapper posted her vibrant album artwork with a "read my lips" message on s
On Monday, Megan Thee Stallion (real name Megan Pete) filed a $1 million lawsuit against her label 1501 Certified Entertainment and its CEO Carl Crawford seeking termination of her contract. She was also granted a temporary restraining order in which the judge ordered 1501 “to do nothing to prevent the release, distribution, and sale of Pete’s new records."
By now we’re sure you guys know that Megan Thee Stallion is currently going through it with 1501 Certified Entertainment, which is one of the two record labels she is signed to. On Monday, news broke that she has filed a lawsuit against the label, and now Carl Crawford, the head of the label is responding to her lawsuit.
After starting the #FREETHEESTALLION hashtag earlier this week, Megan Thee Stallion has sued record label 1501 Entertainment, climbing the label, which released her mixtape Fever, has withheld income from her, failed to provide financial transparency, misrepresented her contract during negotiations, and, when she attempted to fix these issues, blocked her from releasing new music.
Music boss Carl Crawford has dismissed Megan Thee Stallion’s claims he and his label associates are trying to prevent her from releasing new music.
On Monday afternoon (March 2), a Texas federal judge granted rapper Megan Thee Stallion (real name: Megan Pete) a temporary restraining order against her label 1501 Certified Entertainment and its CEO, former Major League Baseball star, Carl Crawford.
Megan Thee Stallion isn't happy with her record label. The 25-year-old rapper filed for a temporary restraining order against 1501 Certified Entertainment, LLC and its CEO Carl Crawford in Harris County, Texas on Tuesday.
Megan Thee Stallion has won a big battle in her legal spat with record label bosses – a judge has ruled she can release new music this week without their interference.