Boosie Badazz Diss Track Takes Aim at Kodak Black for Working with 6ix9ine

The Baton Rouge rapper's diss track appears on his new album 'Goin Thru Some Thangs,' which dropped on Tuesday.

Boosie Badazz And Kodak Black
Paras Griffin / Getty Images for BET
Boosie Badazz And Kodak Black

Boosie Badazz has taken aim at Kodak Black on a new diss track titled "Ungrateful," which appears on his new album Goin Thru Some Thangs.

The Baton Rouge rapper slams Kodak for collaborating with 6ix9ine, who infamously cooperated with federal authorities against the Nine Trey Gangsta Bloods as their star witness.

“I’ve been going through some shit, man, this shit done got deep/ Gotta realize everybody ain’t G/ How the fuck you do that when you represent the streets?/ Streets made you and the streets made me/ If you ask B.G., you was on PC/ The name that you got, I think you got that from me,” he raps.

He continued to spit bars directed at Yak, rapping: “Your fans all mad acting like they can’t see/ Your street cred gone, n***a, don’t blame me/ Shit, your homeboy right, you ain’t living like that/ Everything that you rap, you ain’t never did that/ ‘Cause the other n***a talking, he a certified rat/ Your codefendant been give me your paperwork, n***a. I gave you a video and verse, n***a, for the free/ When you was tryna pay a n***a, bitch, I’m a G/ Thought Turk felt the same way (God damn), ’cause we all from the same place (Louisiana)."

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Kodak Black linked with 6ix9ine for the rainbow-haired rapper's latest single “Shaka Laka” back in July, and even starred alongside the Brooklyn native in the music video, which ended up racking up over 27 million views on YouTube.

Adamantly against snitching in any form, Boosie Badazz was quick to share his disgust over his frequent collaborator's decision to link with 6ix9ine.

“That n***a Yak fucked me up,” he said at the time. “I wonder how all them Zoes feel, dawg? I know those Zoes fucked up right now. I know the state of Florida fucked up right now. This n***a ain’t got no morals, don’t got no principles. Damn. Thought that little n***a wasn’t like that, bro. N***a ain’t no street n***a, at all. Damn. Fucked me up.”

Meanwhile, Kodak allegedly received a massive payday and a Rolls-Royce to help convince him to jump on a song with 6ix9ine.

The latter's manager Wack 100 spoke about the collaboration in an interview with No Jumper last month, and said Yak was paid “a whole lot of money” to come to the studio and lay down a verse.

“It was supposed to be like 8 o’ clock, I seen Kodak by 1 [am],” Wack recalled. “Some things worth waiting on. Kodak pulled up [with] his girl and his kid, with fire in his eyes.”

After a “man-to-man” talk with 6ix9ine, both artists recorded their parts for what was subsequently released as “Shaka Laka” with Yailin la Mas Viral.

“And then right before [Kodak] left, shit, we kept it gangsta,” Wack added. “He came in a black car and he left in a Rolls-Royce. Tossed him the keys, tell him ‘go home’ … he put his baby seat in that bitch, he jumped in the driver’s seat, he put his driver in the passenger seat, his queen in the back and I jumped on the freeway with him.”

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