Lil Wayne is suing Birdman for $51 million, and here's where everything went sour
In happier times, the world was Lil Wayne’s. After his stint at Rikers Island ended in 2010, dancing, rain-soaked women awaited him in the prison parking lot. Models dressed as Marie Antoinette-type courtiers whisked him away to a booth at a private out-of-jail party in Miami. Rap fans and critics mopped up puddles of their drool when Wayne dropped I Am Not A Human Being that year, and even Tha Carter IV in 2011. His “father” Birdman celebrated the success of label Cash Money Records on the cover of Billboard in 2012.
But just a couple years after those halcyon days, Wayne’s seemed to slide down a syrupy spiral of dings to his public image, culminating in what may be the most bitter pill ever for Cash Money stans. Yesterday, TMZ reported that not only are things worse than ever in the Cash Money/Young Money world, but Wayne is actually suing Birdman to the tune of $51 million.
SEE ALSO: It’s partially Drake’s fault that Lil Wayne is suing Birdman
According to TMZ, money is the reason we haven’t yet heard the long-awaited Tha Carter V — which, since Wayne first announced it in 2012, is fast becoming his own Chinese Democracy. Long story short: Wayne claims he never got millions in promised advances to record Tha Carter V, and only wants to legally let Cash Money release it if they pony up. He also claims he owns partial copyright on everything Cash Money has put out — so yes, that includes recordings by Drake, Nicki Minaj, and the whole gang.
Well, we can pretty much assume we won’t see any more cuddly Birdman/Wayne photos ever again. So how did things go sour in Wayne’s World, which just five years ago seemed iron-clad and gold-plated? We can look at this series of missteps and misfortunes to track how things went so far south.
Nobody really showed up for Trukfit recently.