A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie got into an altercation outside a club in Europe that ended with him and his crew getting peppersprayed.
On Sunday (April 28), Vendetta Daily shared a video of the New York City native and his entourage getting into a scuffle outside a club in Paris after being denied entry. Just as he began walking away, the “Did Me Wrong” rapper confronted the bouncers and escalated the situation into a physical altercation.
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Whereas the exact details of the incident remain unclear, a social-media user who claims to work at the venue in question commented: “I work in this nightclub and we are used to receiving all kinds of people rihannaneymar Mbappé travis scottkanye [West] tygamigos and many others
“this artist when he came back he took the bottle and another threw a bottle on us it was then that we asked them to move back without hitting anyone but raising their voice…..”
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He concluded: “there is an attitude to have before entering a club if it behaves like that outside, imagine yourself as a customer. jostled or pushed imagine what could happen in a dark and closed place think before you speak.”
Watch the fight below:
Soon after the above clip began making the rounds online, the 28-year-old took to his Instagram Stories and wrote: “N-ggas only got outta there cus they mased us! Never runnin from a n-gga.”
In a follow-up post, he added: “Lmao fuck I look like playin with mase n-ggas can’t fight.”
Whereas A Boogie has been involved in a number of conflicts over the years, he recently praised fellow Bronx rapper Ice Spice and even singled her out as the hottest name in the Big Apple.
During an appearance on Adin Ross‘ Kick stream in February, the rapper was asked who he thinks the King of New York currently is, to which he replied: “Ice Spice got it right now … I feel like Ice is just wildin’ right now. She got it right now.”
The host then suggested that the two link up for a song, which A Boogie seemed receptive to as he said: “For real, though.”
The “Drowning” hitmaker also shared his thoughts on the “King of New York” title: “I feel like the people, the fans, make it that. I never really forced that on people. I was never on songs like, ‘I’m the King of New York.’
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“It was a lot of people that was out here doing that and made people give their opinions. But on my end, that shit just fell in my lap. I’m just doing my thing. I like making fire music. The beauty of it is being able to sell out arenas.”