Lil Wayne Accused Of Dissing Drake On Saturday Mornings

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Lil Wayne Accused Of Dissing Drake On Saturday Mornings

Fans speculate if there is beef between Drake and Lil Wayne.

Lil Wayne has mentored Drake for over a decade and a half, yet fans are questioning whether he dissed the 6 God in his latest track. The song in question is “Saturday Mornings,” a slick collab with Cordae.

Some bars have been interpreted as potential shots at Drizzy. “It fit me like a glove, OJ hand. I’ma need a little love from your hating ass,” Wayne raps. “Need less yes-men and more amens. I’ma need more real prayers and less praying hands.” The OJ glove reference has been linked to the artwork for Drake’s diss track “6:16 In LA.” Meanwhile, the mention of praying hands is theorized to reference Drake’s “6 God” logo.

Drake’s Last Name Used As A Punchline By Lil Wayne

The line that really has fans puzzled is the one mentioning Drake’s surname: Graham. “You standing on business, I’m a business man,” Lil Wayne spits. “I’m a GOAT, nigga you a sacrificial lamb. You a Teddy bear, nigga, a Teddy Graham.” Weezy F. Baby is calling his target sweet, plain and simple. The evidence is compelling, especially given that Drake has often been teased for his perceived softness throughout his career. However, Wayne has always been supportive of Drake since day one. The two have collaborated multiple times, and Young Money has backed Drizzy in his clash with Kendrick Lamar.

Lil Wayne even went viral for attempting to defend Drake against Lamar’s “Not Like Us” diss. During a recent Vegas performance, Wayne tried to tweak the song’s lyrics, which only led to confusion about whose side he was on. It’s worth noting that Lil Wayne released a Rick Ross collaboration on July 26, despite Ross being anti-Drake. There’s much to speculate about, but ultimately, Wayne deserves the benefit of the doubt. Lil Wayne and Drake are on good terms until one of them says otherwise.

EMINEM AND FOREVER SINGLE CALLBACK?

There are others who believe the Cash Money Records legend is using wordplay from the Drake single that featured Eminem and Lil Wayne.”Forever” has the wordplay of “no brake pads”, “martians”, and “Space Jam”. The “Elvis has left the building,” could also be in reference to Eminem.

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