Michael C. Hall and his group Princess Goes To The Butterfly Museum have a new music video.
02.03.2020 - 19:46 / cosmopolitan.com
It's no secret that record labels don't always have their artist's best interest at heart—I mean, remember when delayed the release of her album for three whole years until she signed to Roc Nation? It was awful, and now a similar situation is happening with everyone's favorite Hot Girl, Megan thee Stallion.
On Instagram Live, Megan revealed that fans shouldn't expect new music from her anytime soon because her record label, 1501 Entertainment, is preventing the release of her upcoming album,
Michael C. Hall and his group Princess Goes To The Butterfly Museum have a new music video.
Megan Thee Stallion turns up the heat in New York City while stopping at the Coach store on Monday afternoon (March 9).
NEW YORK -- Megan Thee Stallion says she works extremely hard in the studio writing music, and so became more than a little worried when she almost couldn’t release her new album because of a dispute with her record label.
NEW YORK (AP) — Megan Thee Stallion says she works extremely hard in the studio writing music, and so became more than a little worried when she almost couldn’t release her new album because of a dispute with her record label.
NEW YORK (AP) — Megan Thee Stallion says she works extremely hard in the studio writing music, and so became more than a little worried when she almost couldn’t release her new album because of a dispute with her record label.
Rap newcomer Megan Thee Stallion is still on course to drop new music on Friday (06Mar20) after a Texas judge shut down her label bosses’ emergency motion to halt its release.
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."
Carl Crawford, the CEO of 1501 Certified Entertainment, has rejected the premise of a lawsuit filed by Megan Thee Stallion, one of the label's signees. The rapper (real name Megan Pete) successfully filed a restraining order against the company this week after claiming it was preventing her from releasing new music.
Megan Thee Stallion shook the internet this past weekend with claims that her label, 1501 Certified Entertainment, was barred from releasing any music after she requested to renegotiate her contract.
#FREETHEESTALLION has started trending on social media after “Hot Girl Summer” rapper Megan Thee Stallion opened up about her recent contract woes.
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.
Megan Thee Stallion alleged yesterday (March 1) that her record label 1501 Certified Entertainment was preventing her from releasing new music. The Houston rapper made the claims in an Instagram live session, stating that the terms of her contract were not clear to her upon signing with 1501, and that when she asked to renegotiate the contract, she was barred from releasing new work.