Skip to content
Search

Drake’s Label Fires Back at Rapper in Appeals Court: ‘Astoundingly Hypocritical’

Universal Music Group says Kendrick Lamar's lyrics calling Drake a pedophile represent "classic opinion," and Drake's attempt to revive his defamation lawsuit should fail

Drake’s Label Fires Back at Rapper in Appeals Court: ‘Astoundingly Hypocritical’

Drake on July 12, 2025 in London, England.

Simone Joyner/Getty Images

Universal Music Group is firing back at Drake again, arguing in a new appellate brief that the rapper’s attempt to revive his failed defamation lawsuit over Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us” is illogical and “astoundingly hypocritical.”

In its new 83-page filing obtained by Rolling Stone, UMG says the Canadian rapper born Aubrey Drake Graham is making arguments so flawed and “nonsensical” that he’s attempting to “turn the law upside down.” The new brief, filed in the Second Circuit, argues U.S. District Judge Jeannette A. Vargas ruled correctly last October when she concluded that Lamar’s lyrics calling Drake a pedophile were “nonactionable opinion,” meaning not statements of fact.


The label says Drake clearly felt free to use UMG’s platform to attack Lamar “in equally incendiary terms” when it suited him, but now he’s seeking a different standard for the “words he now dislikes” that were directed at him. “[Drake] seeks to strip words from their context and deem them actionable defamation if anyone, anywhere, might treat them as factual. That is not the law, and Drake’s view would critically undermine a highly creative art form built on exaggeration, insult, and wordplay,” the new filing argues.

In her ruling dismissing Drake’s lawsuit last fall, Judge Vargas found that Lamar’s lyrics were delivered as a “direct callback to Drake’s lyrics” amid “a heated rap battle with incendiary language and offensive accusations hurled by both participants.” She determined a reasonable listener would conclude Lamar was “rapping hyperbolic vituperations,” not “verifiable facts.”

“The issue in this case is whether ‘Not Like Us’ can reasonably be understood to convey as a factual matter that Drake is a pedophile or that he has engaged in sexual relations with minors,” Vargas wrote. “In light of the overall context in which the statements in the recording were made, the court holds that it cannot.”

The nine-track rap battle at the center of the legal war started making headlines in April 2024. It exploded when Drake released “Family Matters” on May 3, 2024, accusing Lamar of domestic abuse and not being the father of one of his kids. Lamar responded with the back-to-back drops of “Meet the Grahams” and “Not Like Us,” with the latter’s hook of “certified lover boy, certified pedophile” becoming an instant and viral sensation.

UMG says the court was correct to emphasize that the nine songs were “in dialogue with one another.” It notes that Lamar’s line, “Say, Drake, I hear you like ’em young,” was an obvious response to Drake’s lyrics in “Taylor Made Freestyle,” which taunted Lamar to repeat rumors that Drake had dated someone underage. “Talk about him likin’ young girls,” Drake says in the track.

“As much as Drake may dislike that context after the fact, it is fair game and critical to consider under New York law,” UMG and its lawyers argue in the new filing.

The label also calls it “nonsensical” for Drake to argue that Lamar’s lyrics could be defamatory because rap lyrics are sometimes admitted as evidence in criminal cases. UMG says that context, in which a jury is asked to make factual determinations under different legal standards, is distinct. In any event, the label notes, Drake signed a November 2022 petition criticizing prosecutors for treating artists’ creative expression as fact.

“Drake’s argument is also astoundingly hypocritical,” the filing states. It cites the petition’s claim that “more than any other art form, rap lyrics are essentially being used as confessions in an attempt to criminalize Black creativity and artistry,” and that such use “is un-American and simply wrong.” The filing suggests Drake is now taking the opposite position to serve his interests.

In his 60-page appeal brief in January, Drake renewed his argument that Lamar’s track states, as a “precise” and “unambiguous matter of fact,” that Drake is a “certified pedophile.” He claimed UMG “relentlessly” marketed “Not Like Us” in a way that misled consumers and caused him serious harm. He said Lamar’s lyrics are “capable of being proven true or false,” so his lawsuit belongs in front of a jury.

Drake and his lawyers further claimed the dismissal of his lawsuit could have far-reaching negative consequences by creating a “dangerous categorical rule” that would shield artists and labels from liability no matter how extreme or damaging their accusations might be. UMG responded Friday by claiming that argument “blatantly mischaracterizes” Judge Vargas’ ruling.

“It nowhere indicated that a diss track could never be defamatory; it simply recognized that the ‘average listener’ in this forum and ‘common expectation’ for statements in this forum were significant,” UMG’s filing says. “It held, including in light of those considerations, that this diss track could not be understood by a reasonable listener as conveying fact.”

Drake originally sued UMG in January 2025, accusing the label of promoting Lamar’s hit song in a way that “intended to convey the specific, unmistakable, and false factual allegation that Drake is a criminal pedophile.” He notably sued only the record label he shares with Lamar, not Lamar himself.

UMG responded with a pair of scathing motions to dismiss that ultimately prevailed. “Plaintiff, one of the most successful recording artists of all time, lost a rap battle that he provoked and in which he willingly participated,” lawyers for UMG wrote. “Instead of accepting the loss like the unbothered rap artist he often claims to be, he has sued his own record label in a misguided attempt to salve his wounds.”

“Not Like Us” went on to win Grammy Awards for Record and Song of the Year, becoming only the third hip-hop song to win Record of the Year after Childish Gambino’s “This Is America,” and Lizzo’s “About Damn Time.” Lamar also performed the song during the widely viewed 2025 Super Bowl halftime show.

Drake is expected to respond to UMG’s new appellate filing with a reply brief due April 17.

More Stories

Madonna Shares First Music From Long-Awaited Sequel Album ‘Confession II’
Rafael Pavarotti*

Madonna Shares First Music From Long-Awaited Sequel Album ‘Confession II’

After months of rumors and hints, Madonna has finally revealed plans for the sequel to her 2005 LP Confessions on a Dance Floor, which she’s titled Confessions II. The album is set to come out July 3, and she’s shared a brief visual teaser. The leadoff single is “One Step Away.”

“People think that dance music is superficial, but they’ve got it all wrong,” Madonna says in a statement. “The dance floor is not just a place, it’s a threshold: A ritualistic space where movement replaces language.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Kanye West Postpones Show in France After Facing Potential Ban: ‘My Sole Decision’

Kanye West on Feb. 2, 2025 in Los Angeles, CA.

Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

Kanye West Postpones Show in France After Facing Potential Ban: ‘My Sole Decision’

Kanye West has announced that he is postponing his concert in Marseille, France, which was scheduled to take place on June 11 at the Vélodrome stadium. The rapper, who now goes by Ye, faces a potential ban in the country amid ongoing backlash over his past antisemitic outbursts.

“After much thought and consideration, it is my sole decision to postpone my show in Marseille, France until further notice,” wrote Ye on X Tuesday night.

Keep ReadingShow less
Nine Inch Nails, Boys Noize Recorded Collab LP ‘in Studios, Hotels, Planes’ All Over

Mariqueen Maandig and Trent Reznor.

John Crawford*

Nine Inch Nails, Boys Noize Recorded Collab LP ‘in Studios, Hotels, Planes’ All Over

Nine Inch Nails‘ collaborations with Boys Noize began in 2024 when the German EDM producer remixed Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross’ Challengers soundtrack, and it blossomed last year when NIN made a short set of songs with Boys Noize a centerpiece of their Peel It Back tour. Now they’re releasing a unique, “purely electronic” full-length Nine Inch Noize album recorded “all over the place – some of it’s live, some in studios, hotels, planes, etc.,” according to Reznor, on Friday. The album is available to pre-save and preorder now.

“The creative fulfillment of working on the Challengers and Tron scores with Boys Noize led me to think that including him in the Peel It Back tour could be an interesting way to express NIN in more purely electronic terms live — a concept I’ve wanted to explore for some time,” Reznor said in a statement. “The result was so much fun for us we felt it was worth expanding and formalizing in some way.

Keep ReadingShow less
Katy Perry Under Police Investigation Over Ruby Rose’s Sexual Assault Claims

Ruby Rose (left), Katy Perry

Sam Tabone/Getty Images; Gilbert Flores/Variety/Getty Images

Katy Perry Under Police Investigation Over Ruby Rose’s Sexual Assault Claims

Police in Australia are investigating claims that Katy Perry sexually assaulted actress Ruby Rose during a night out at a Melbourne nightclub in 2010, a police spokesperson confirmed to Rolling Stone.

“Melbourne Sexual Offences and Child Abuse Investigation Team (SOCIT) detectives are investigating a historical sexual assault that occurred in Melbourne in 2010,” a spokesperson for the Victoria Police said in a statement on Wednesday. “Police have been told the incident occurred at a licensed premises in Melbourne’s CBD. As the investigation remains ongoing, it would be inappropriate to comment further at this stage.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Get Ready for Ticket Prices to Keep Rising

The chaotic onsale process for Taylor Swift's Eras Tour prompted the Justice Department's lawsuit.

Richard Lautens/Toronto Star/Getty Images

Get Ready for Ticket Prices to Keep Rising

Back in the Nineties, Pearl Jam famously sued Ticketmaster in an unsuccessful effort to rein in the runaway costs of attending a concert. These days, many are raising the same concerns — like Doc McGhee, Kiss’ longtime manager. In the late 1970s, when he was a young man on the rock scene, top concert tickets cost $10 to $11 (or about $50 to $55 in today’s dollars). Last year, according to Pollstar, the industry trade that monitors touring, the average ticket price had soared to around $132. That’s an increase of 38 percent just since 2019, when they cost a comparatively affordable $96.17. “It’s up to us,” McGhee says. “Until people say, ‘We’re not going,’ the prices are going up.”

This summer, that appears to be true. Entry to one of Harry Styles’ 30 dates at Madison Square Garden could cost you as much as $1,000; Alan Jackson’s sold-out touring finale at a Nashville stadium is prompting scalper prices of more than $5,000.

Keep ReadingShow less