The rapper seems pretty supportive of his girlfriend’s decision.

Moneybagg Yo recently took to social media to reveal the forthcoming release of his next project. The new effort is titled Hard To Love: Heartless Edition. The mixtape is set to be unveiled tonight at midnight. Additionally, he created excitement among his fans by dropping hints on Instagram about another album in progress. According to him, it will also be released this year. The rapper, AKA the “Motion God,” has been steadily increasing anticipation through intriguing teasers posted online. In a separate Instagram post, Moneybagg Yo candidly shared insights into the inspiration behind this tape. It serves as a continuation of his Heartless series.

Ari Fletcher, MoneyBagg Yo’s girlfriend, playfully alluded to the idea of launching an OnlyFans account, but with a catch. She stated that she would only proceed with the plan if MoneyBagg’s highly anticipated mixtape achieves top-ranking status on the charts. To further incentivize fans to support the rapper, Ari Fletcher took to Twitter and revealed her intentions to create an OnlyFans account once the mixtape reaches the number one position. She even mentioned that she has already prepared her first video. Now, Moneybagg is responding to his girlfriend’s offer.

Moneybagg Is A Supportive Boyfriend

Moneybagg’s new mixtape is set to drop tonight at midnight. When he announced it on social media, the rapper went into the meaning of the album to him. “Yooo, I know it’s been a minute. I miss y’all more than y’all miss me,” Moneybagg said in his post. “When I came up with the title Hard 2 Love I was referring to myself, but when I started working more on the project, I realized that it’s more than me being hard to love. It’s hard to love people because a lot of them don’t have good intentions. Just want something from you. It’s hard to love your life when the same people that you sacrifice everything for don’t even get to enjoy the rewards with you. Through it all my biggest source of strength is my fans. I appreciate all of y’all equally.” Stay stuned to HNHH for all the latest updates on Moneybagg and his new mixtape.

Music photographer Jill Furmanovsky said she wasn’t taken aback by the overwhelming excitement surrounding the Oasis reunion tour.

The photographer has been capturing the Wonderwall hitmakers for more than thirty years and shared that the Oasis Live '25 Tour, which brought Noel and Liam Gallagher back on stage together for the first time in 16 years, worked so well because the concerts have always been “about the audience”.

Jill, who first crossed paths with Oasis at one of their early shows at the Cambridge Corn Exchange in 1994, explained to NME: “It didn’t catch us off guard, because Oasis have always been about the crowd. Always. There was never much to shoot on stage.

“Even at the Cambridge Corn Exchange, the performance itself was simple, but the people in the crowd knew every word and were completely swept up in it.

“And that hasn’t really changed over time. They just bring out that songbook and deliver it. Liam is still magnetic and captivating, even when he keeps it minimal. It remains incredibly powerful. That’s the essence of their show.”

Furmanovsky, who has photographed icons like Bob Dylan and Led Zeppelin over the course of her fifty-year career, added: “What they’ve done with this new tour, the production, and the visuals… it’s something special.

“The mix of generations in the crowd is also striking. I went with my 13-year-old granddaughter, and there were plenty of kids her age singing along word for word. It’s incredible.

“‘Biblical’ is the term people throw around. It sounds almost silly, but when two brothers who’ve been at odds for years come together again, there really is something biblical about that alone. Combine it with what they’re putting on stage… it’s unlike anything else.”

Jill’s latest book Trying To Find A Way Out Of Nowhere reflects her years documenting Oasis, and she shared that no current act matches what the Supersonic band represents. She was also able to photograph them once again at one of their massive Wembley Stadium shows during the reunion tour.

She said: “There aren’t many artists today who can step into the space Oasis occupies and actually live up to it.

“We’re in a different time now, a kind of in-between phase. It feels like the closing of a rock ‘n’ roll chapter. That doesn’t mean talent or creativity is gone. It’s like with painting — we still have great impressionists, but we’re no longer living in the impressionist era.”

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