Megan Thee Stallion recently took to social media to let everyone know that she is wanting to release new music but her record label 1501 Certified Entertainment won’t let her due to the contract she signed when she was 20.
She, like most artists, signed a bad contract and wants to renegotiate due to her success. Meg says that the label gets 60% of her recording income and she has to pay for the engineers, featured artists, and mixers with the leftover 40%.
Unlike many artists, Meg is publicly fighting back. According to TMZ, she sued the label and the owner of the label former MLB player, Carl Crawford for $1 million and a Harris County Texas district judge issued a temporary restraining order.
The TPO stops the label from blocking Meg from releasing new music and she plans to release new music this Friday.
Aside from the lawsuit, Meg says that Crawford has been using his relationship with J-Prince to bully people in the industry. Says that Crawford pressured a producer to hand over some beats or J-Prince would be mad and says.
“Prince is notorious in the industry for strong-armed intimidation tactics, and the comment was taken as a physical threat of harm.”
She also thinks that J-Prince is responsible for an online smear campaign against her and is the reason people found out about her arrest 5 years ago.
All in all, a temporary win for Meg.
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