Ice Spice BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Ice Spice has been in the thick of the hip hop news cycle these past few days, and not just with her music. Her latest single Baddie Baddie, produced by RiotUSA and built around a sample of MIAs cult classic Bad Girls, dropped with a visually striking video directed by George and Frederick Buford, the Evil Twins behind her previous hits. The video features model Anok Yai and U.S. Olympic gold medalist Suni Lee and is being hailed as a statement piece for the Bronx-bred artist, marking her first solo single since the 2024 debut album YK2. Music Connection calls it the “Video of the Week,” noting that her creative team continues to elevate her visuals—testament to her growing influence and a sure sign this release will be a major line in her bio. Not to mention, The Beat and WBOM both covered the sample’s unexpected twist and elite cameos, underlining its broad cultural resonance.
On the collaboration front, Ice Spice was seen teaming up with PinkPantheress and Quen Blackwell for the viral “Beez In The Trap” trend, blending social media savvy with her rapper cred. Pop Crave posted their “Whats Up” challenge on X, instantly sending stans into overdrive and feeding into the meta-collision of meme culture and real-world pop. This kind of digital engagement keeps Ice Spice at the center of how rap interacts with Gen Z fanbases and is a blueprint for the genre’s new school of stardom.
Behind the scenes, though, drama found its way to her orbit. According to The Fader, a leaked phone call surfaced in which someone sounding like Cardi B was heard threatening Ice Spice, in the middle of hyper-publicized online beefs this October involving Cardi, Nicki Minaj, JT, Tyla, and even Cardi’s sister Hennessy Carolina. The tape, plus Cardi’s alleged shots at Ice Spice on the diss track Magnet, set rumor mills spinning, but so far, Ice Spice has kept her cool and refrained from engaging publicly. That silence has only amplified her image as someone above the fray, even as her name trends across X and Instagram. For now, the only “response” is more music—no messy tweets, just a relentless focus on hits.
No major business activities or touring announcements have broken in the last week, though ticket presale guides are gaining traction with fans—suggesting rumblings but nothing concrete yet. Across socials, Ice Spice’s appearance in trending challenges and her own promo posts for Baddie Baddie are fueling hundreds of thousands of mentions and shares, helping cement her status as one of the most-watched figures at the intersection of rap and pop. And that—paired with this week’s headlines and charts—is the mark of an artist not just in the game, but reshaping it in real time.
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