The hip-hop world is buzzing after a leaked jailhouse call allegedly captured Young Thug admitting he paid for fake streams—also known as “bots”—to boost both his own music and fellow YSL rapper Gunna’s album to the top of the charts.
The audio, which surfaced online this week, paints a messy picture of loyalty, betrayal, and behind-the-scenes manipulation in an industry where chart positions can make or break reputations.
Thug Frustrated Over Business Is Business
The leaked call reportedly begins with Thug venting about his 2023 album, Business Is Business, which dropped while he was behind bars. Despite strong hype, the project opened with 88,000 units—but fell short of the No. 1 spot, blocked by Morgan Wallen’s One Thing at a Time, which moved 108,000 units.
Thug allegedly questioned why his team didn’t push for a collaboration with Wallen to merge fan bases, expressing frustration at being edged out. For an artist whose name has long carried weight in rap, missing the top spot was a bitter pill.
The Gunna Revelation: $50K in Fake Streams
The conversation reportedly shifts to Gunna’s 2022 breakout, when his album DS4EVER landed at No. 1 on the Billboard 200—beating out The Weeknd’s Dawn FM.
According to the recording, Thug drops a bombshell:
“You didn’t honestly earn a number one album over The Weeknd. I paid for that. I spent $50,000 on streams.”
If true, the claim suggests Thug used bot-driven plays to artificially inflate Gunna’s numbers, sparking a firestorm of debate over authenticity in hip-hop’s most celebrated milestones.

Loyalty, Betrayal, and Bad Blood
Beyond the chart manipulation, the call takes a more personal turn. Thug allegedly accuses Gunna of switching up after success, claiming Gunna now charges aspiring rappers thousands for features—despite Thug having supported him without ever asking for a cut.
“I protected you,” Thug is heard implying, framing his sacrifices as loyalty met with disloyalty.
The tone suggests a deep fracture between the two YSL stars, adding fuel to already simmering speculation about the state of their relationship.
A Legacy Complicated
For Thug, Business Is Business was marketed as a defiant comeback statement from behind bars. But the leaked remarks cast a shadow over that narrative, instead raising questions about manipulation, fractured alliances, and the pressures of chart dominance.
The call even references Lil Uzi Vert’s Pink Tape, which broke hip-hop’s drought at the top of the Billboard 200 in July 2023. For Thug, that moment underscored how fragile rap’s grip on the charts had become—especially compared to rising competition from country and pop.
Not the First Leak
This isn’t the first time Thug’s private conversations have gone public.
- Previous leaks included calls with 21 Savage and Lil Baby, exposing tensions with other rap circles.
- Other audio referenced conflicts with Quality Control, one of Atlanta’s most powerful music collectives.
- These calls have turned Thug’s incarceration into a spectacle, with each new leak reshaping narratives about loyalty and survival in hip-hop.
As of now, neither Gunna nor The Weeknd has commented on the allegations.
What It Means for Hip-Hop
Whether the recordings are fully authentic or not, their impact is undeniable. They highlight the intense pressure artists face to secure chart positions in an industry where numbers equal leverage.
They also raise bigger questions:
- How much of chart success is real—and how much is manufactured?
- What happens when loyalty between artists turns transactional?
- Can Thug’s legacy survive the leaks, or will they overshadow his music?
For fans, the revelations are a mix of shock and disappointment. For the industry, they’re a reminder of how the pursuit of dominance can blur lines between authenticity and artifice.
Do you think Young Thug’s leaked call proves bots are common in hip-hop—or is this just another messy chapter in his ongoing RICO saga? Sound off in the comments below.
