Cardi B’s long-awaited sophomore album, Am I The Drama?, has finally landed, and its sharpest edges are already dominating hip-hop discourse. The Bronx rapper, known for turning conflict into cultural currency, has centered her return around blistering diss records that leave no room for subtlety.
At the heart of the storm is “Pretty & Petty,” a venom-filled strike at Boston rapper BIA. Cardi wastes no time reducing her opponent’s catalog to dust, sneering, “Name five BIA songs, gun pointed to your head / Bow, I’m dead.”
From there, the attacks only grow more ruthless. “I’d rather die on the surgery table / Before I gotta walk around here lookin’ like you,” she spits, her tone equal parts mocking and merciless.
She doesn’t stop at aesthetics. Cardi undercuts BIA’s industry relevance, claiming promoters only book “Diarrhea Bia” when “they can’t afford Coi,” referencing Coi Leray.
The Bronx native sharpens her blade further with a jab aimed at industry rumors: “Why you always at Diddy house? / I heard they combed that lil kitty out / Tell these folks what it’s really about.”
For good measure, she twists the knife with a family-based insult: “I’m a bad b*tch and you mad / ’Cause you built like your dad.”
The feud between Cardi and BIA has been simmering since 2024, when fan comparisons spiraled into online spats and musical shots. Now, Cardi has turned their tension into headline-grabbing warfare, making “Pretty & Petty” the centerpiece of her fiery comeback.
But BIA isn’t the only rapper in Cardi’s crosshairs. On “Magnet,” she unleashes a relentless barrage on City Girls’ JT, spitting for nearly a minute without pause.
One line cuts straight to JT’s relationship with Lil Uzi Vert: “You just mad you got a na you can share bags with / My man might cheat, at least I don’t stick dildos in his as btch.”
She follows with another searing shot: “All that dck riding still ain’t get no feature a btch / She just mad she got a n**a she be sharing bags with.”
For Cardi, confrontation isn’t a distraction—it’s fuel. Am I The Drama? doubles down on her role as hip-hop’s most unapologetic provocateur, a rapper who thrives on turning feuds into anthems and controversy into dominance.


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