Cam’ron stayed silent when pressed about his lawsuit in opposition to J. Cole throughout a preview of the upcoming “Discuss With Flee” podcast, sidestepping direct questions concerning the ongoing authorized dispute over their collaboration “Prepared ’24.”
In a teaser clip from the episode, which drops Wednesday (November 5), co-host Sen Metropolis wished solutions from Cam.
“You suing J. Cole? As a result of I received questions on that,” he requested. Cam’ron didn’t reply.
Sen Metropolis stored pushing. “J. Cole, that’s the prodigal son from North Carolina. Why are you suing J. Cole, my n####? He don’t hassle no one.”
Nonetheless, Cam’ron stated nothing.
Making an attempt once more, Sen Metropolis requested if Cole’s rising standing in Hip-Hop may change Cam’s thoughts. “Aight, you don’t wanna reply. Effectively, simply reply this: he’s on his approach to being a rap legend. That don’t make you simply wanna be like, ‘Nah. You already know what…let bygones be bygones’ or regardless of the case could also be?”
Cam lastly broke his silence. “I feel J. Cole positively gonna be a rap legend. 100%. Particular.”
Nonetheless, when requested, “However he don’t get a go,” Cam’ron clammed up once more.
Sen Metropolis ended the alternate with a sigh: “Aight, man. Y’all see, I be attempting.”
The lawsuit, filed earlier this yr, accuses J. Cole of breaching an settlement tied to “Prepared ’24,” a observe featured on Cole’s 2024 mixtape, May Delete Later.
In line with courtroom paperwork, Cam’ron claims he offered vocals and lyrics for the music however was solely credited as a co-author of the composition—not as a performer.
Cam’ron additionally alleges that Cole agreed to both seem on his podcast It Is What It Is or ship a visitor verse on a Cam’ron report in return for the contribution. Neither occurred, based on the swimsuit.
After months of delays and no response from Cole, Cam’ron says he had no selection however to take authorized motion.
He’s searching for at the least $500,000 in royalties and income, together with official credit score as a co-author on the sound recording and a full monetary breakdown from Common Music Group.
As of now, neither J. Cole nor UMG has responded publicly to the allegations.
Associated


