Life of xxxtentacion and his controversy .
February 14: “Look at Me” enters the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 95.
February 18: In an interview with DJ Semtex aired on OVO Sound radio, Drake denies copying “Look at Me.” “The other day, I dropped this song with Giggs and I’m seeing all this shit on my IG under some random picture of people being like, ‘Fuck you, you took this kid’s flow’ or whatever. I’m like, ‘What’s happening to me right now?’ So I’m trying to read and figure out who they’re talking about.”
March 26: XXXTentacion pleads no contest to the charges of armed home-invasion robbery and battery, and is released from jail on probation.
March 29: In an interview on Miami’s 103.5 The Beat, XXXTentacion accuses Drake of stealing his flow. “He is not a man. I think he’s a bitch, that’s a bitch move,” he tells the interviewer.
April 7: XXXTentacion hosts a “surprise” show in Miami, which turns into a riot. Police intervene, shut down the show, and escort XXXTentacion out of the building.
April 22: “Look at Me” peaks at No. 24 on the Billboard Hot 100.
May 12: XXXTentacion releases a song called “Looking for a Star,” which is produced by Diplo.
May 17: XXXTentacion releases his debut mixtape, Revenge, via Empire Distribution. It consists of eight songs which he had previously released on SoundCloud, and doesn’t garner much press coverage on its own. Reviews by XXL, VIBE, and Revolt, present it as a collection of highlights rather than a new body of work. It peaks at No. 44 on the Billboard 200.
June 7: XXXTentacion is knocked out onstage at a show in San Diego. In the brawl that ensues, someone gets stabbed. Fans blame rapper Rob Stone for the incident.
June 13: XXXTentacion appears on XXL’s 2017 Freshman Class cover as the “10th Spot” winner — the only spot on the list that is fan-selected. According to XXL, “His fans blew up our voting page, pushing him to the top slot by thousands of votes.” In light of his domestic-violence charges, the decision to feature him on the list is met with significant resistance from XXL readers and other music publications.
June 14: XXXTentacion punches a fan at a show in Salt Lake City.
June 26: XXXTentacion and Ski Mask the Slump God release their Members Only Vol. 3 EP.
Early August: “Look at Me” is certified platinum. In a now-deleted Instagram post, XXXTentacion posts a picture of the RIAA certification with a caption saying: “say what you want, but you will always be forced to accept that I’m out here living my ‘own’ life.”
August 25: 17, XXXTentacion’s first album is released via Empire Distribution. It debuts at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 chart. One blog, DJ Booth (which is part of the Complex Network), refuses to review the album and posts an official statement, saying, “We felt we could no longer stand on the sidelines, watching rap’s ugly embrace of sexual assault.” Meaghan Garvey writes about the album for Pitchfork, and gives it a mixed review, attempting to articulate its merits and understand XXXTentacion’s fan base, while also acknowledging his troubling personal history. “The reasons it is difficult to listen to can overshadow the need to listen to it,” she says.
Kendrick Lamar cosigns the album on Twitter. “Listen to this album if you feel anything,” he writes. “Raw thoughts.”
September 2: XXXTencacion’s free show in Tampa gets canceled due to an overcrowding risk (2,000 people showed up to a 750 capacity venue, XXL reported). The crowd riots and chases XXXTentacion’s car. Police intervene.
September 8: Pitchfork releases excerpts from XXXTentacion’s ex-girlfriend’s testimony.
September 17: The “Look at Me” video is released. It includes a shot of XXXTentacion hanging from a noose.
September 28: XXXTentation’s October 5 domestic-abuse trial gets postponed.
October 5: A new trial date is set for December 11.
October 19: XXXTentacion signs a deal with Caroline, a subsidiary of Capitol Records, Billboard reports. One source says that the deal is worth $6 million.
October 20: XXXTentacion announces, via Instagram story, that he will donate “over a 100 thousand dollars” to domestic-violence-prevention programs.
October 21: During a his performance at the Rolling Loud festival in the Bay Area, XXXTentacion gets into another fight with a fan. A video of the incident shows XXXTentacion hitting the crowd member in the head with his microphone. In a video released on Twitter later that night, XXXTentacion argues that he was punched first and acted in self-defense.
October 26: XXXTentacion posts a message on his Instagram story stating that he is no longer signed to Capitol Records. “Terminating my deal with ‘capitol records,’” he writes in one message, followed by another saying “If you can match my alleged previous contract, and add free international travel & free international stay I would be happy to be in business with you, I am currently a free agent, well, I always was.” Soon after, a rep from XXXTentacion’s camp denies the claim, saying that “XXXTentacion is signed to Caroline/Capitol Music Group.”
October 27: In another Instagram story, XXXTentacion says that he “will not be making or releasing any music.” “I am tired of being mentally abused for trying to help people, I’m tired of the hate, I’m done,” he writes.
October 29: XXXTentacion says, via Instagram story, that he will return to music if Ski Mask The Slump God agrees to be his friend again. “Tell Ski Mask to be my friend again and I will make music. Tell him to be my friend again,” he said in the (now deleted) post. A couple days later, in a video, responded, “I will always love that alien-looking n***a named XXX, but I have to distance myself because nobody would see me as an individual,” and “On top of that, that n***a crazy as hell.” Then, he wrote on an Instagram story: “This is a person who has before threaten[ed] my family, told me I was supposed to be sacrificed on some crazy shit,”
November 2: XXXTentacion posts a snippet of a new song on Instagram, with a caption reading: “said I was going to stop making ‘music’ but… I don’t consider this ‘music.’”
November 26: XXXTentacion announces that he plans to host an “anti-rape” event at this year’s Art Basel in Miami.
December 1: XXXtentacion and his lawyers submit a document, allegedly signed by his ex-girlfriend, to the DA’s office in hopes of getting his domestic-assault case dropped. Accoring to TMZ, the document states that XXXtentacion’s accuser is refusing to cooperate with prosecutors and wants to drop the case.
December 15: XXXTentacion is jailed ahead of his abuse trial, with seven new charges added, including different degrees of witness tampering and witness harassment. According to TMZ, prosecutors believe the rapper coerced his ex-girlfriend into signing the previously submitted documents that claimed she wanted the charges dropped. His bail is denied. He now reportedly faces “decades in prison, at minimum, if convicted.”
December 20: TMZ reports that XXXTentacion will be released from jail and serve house arrest for two months ahead of his trial. His attorney David Bogenschutz told the site that the judge will allow the rapper to visit a local recording studio to fulfill his contractual obligations during this time.
2018 to death
January 10: According to a report in the Los Angeles Times, several anonymous sources with knowledge of XXXTentacion’s signing to Capitol Records in October, suggested that many staffers at the label opposed the deal. However, two of the Times’ sources said that in a staff meeting, Capitol president Steve Barnett “told executives that Onfroy’s surging popularity would help the company have a bigger market share in hip-hop and acknowledged the controversy around the artist, encouraging those with concerns to voice them.”
March 16: XXXtentacion releases his second studio album, ?, via his label Bad Vibes Forever. The album is distributed by Caroline Distribution, which is part of Capitol Records. It debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard album chart, selling the equivalent of 131,000 units in its first week.
March 21: XXXtentacion is released from house arrest, so that he can go on tour, TMZ reports. According to the article, XXX’s legal team argued that he would need touring income to “stay afloat,” because his earnings from record sales weren’t sufficient.
March 25: XXXTentacion’s sophomore album, ?, debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard charts, giving SoundCloud rap its first No. 1 album.
March 26: “Sad,” one of the two singles from ?, reaches No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming XXXtentacion’s first top-ten song.
May 10: Spotify removes XXXTentacion’s music from its playlists in accordance with a new Hate Content and Hateful Conduct policy. His reps issue a statement listing other artists accused of abuse, asking if they will also be penalized.
June 1: Spotify scraps its hate content policy following complaints from industry insiders. XXXTentacion’s music is reinstated on its playlists.
June 5: XXXTentacion is the subject of an extensive profile in the Miami New Times detailing his alleged abuse, including interviews with his accuser. In it, XXXTentacion dismisses feminism, saying “Women may see or feel that they’re belittled, but you’re only belittled if you want to be belittled.” He uses Hillary Clinton as an example: “She ran [for president] and she wasn’t killed for it. That says everything.” He says that, in the post-#MeToo era, allegations “can go off hearsay” and “women are almost more powerful than men.”
June 18: XXXTentacion, 20, is reported dead following an alleged drive-by shooting outside of a motorcycle shop in Deerfield Beach, Florida. He was awaiting trial at the time of the shooting.
Posthumous (2018–22)
June 19, 2018: “SAD!” earns 10.4 million global streams on Spotify in a single day, breaking the platform’s record (previously set by Taylor Swift’s “Look What You Made Me Do” with 10.1 million streams).
June 21, 2018: Trippie Redd releases the first posthumous XXXtentacion song, “Ghost Busters,” featuring Ski Mask the Slump God, to SoundCloud. A verse from Quavo is later added to the song.
June 25, 2018: XXXtentacion earns his first No. 1 on the Billboard “Hot 100” for “SAD!” The track jumped from No. 52 after its posthumous streaming bump. It’s the first solo song to top the chart posthumously in over 20 years, since the Notorious B.I.G.’s “Mo Money Mo Problems” in 1997.
June 28, 2018: A music video for “SAD!” is released, depicting XXXtentacion attending his own funeral.
July 19, 2018: A Florida grand jury indicts four men — Michael Boatwright, Dedrick Williams, Robert Allen, and Trayvon Newsome — in XXXtentacion’s murder. Each is charged with first-degree murder and armed robbery after the men had individually been named suspects and two had been arrested. Police claim Boatwright was the one who shot XXXtentacion.
October 19, 2018: XXXtentacion is deemed ineligible to be nominated for Best New Artist at the Grammys, Hits Daily Double reports, because his album 17 was released before the nomination window.
October 23, 2018: Pitchfork reports on a secret recording of XXXtentacion from around October 2016, when he was arrested for domestic abuse. On the tape, from the Miami-Date County state attorney’s office, the rapper confesses to abusing his ex-girlfriend. “I started fucking her up because she made one mistake,” he said. “And from there, the whole cycle went down. Now she’s scared. That girl is scared for her life.” Per Pitchfork, prosecutors and XXXtentacion’s defense both took the tape as a confession. He also admitted to multiple stabbings.
November 9, 2018: The first posthumous album from XXXtentacion, titled Skins, is announced, alongside the single “BAD!” The album is set to be released December 7.
December 17, 2018: Skins debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard “200” with 132,000 album equivalent units. It’s the first posthumous No. 1 album since The Very Best of Prince in 2016.
February 10, 2019: XXXtentacion is not included in the “In Memoriam” segment of the Grammys. Variety later reports the rapper was snubbed because of his domestic-violence accusations.
June 18, 2019: On the anniversary of his death, XXXtentacion’s estate releases a trailer to a documentary. The documentary is teased as “coming soon,” alongside a new album, in a release from the estate.
November 21, 2019: The XXXtentacion estate announces the rapper’s “final album,” Bad Vibes Forever, out December 6.
December 11, 2019: Pitchfork reports that the documentary teased by XXXtentacion’s estate began as a project for Fader Films, initially featuring an interview with his ex-girlfriend and accuser, Geneva Ayala. The documentary was then shelved, with the rapper’s estate becoming involved after his death.
December 15, 2019: Bad Vibes Forever debuts at No. 5 on the Billboard “200” with 65,000 equivalent units, a fraction of XXXtentacion’s previous two releases.
May 6, 2021: The XXXtentacion estate announces it will release five of the rapper’s unpublished songs as NFTs on May 10, making him the first artist to posthumously release music as an NFT.
March 15, 2022: Hulu announces the documentary Look at Me: XXXtentacion. Directed by Sabaah Folayan, its producers include XXXtentacion’s mother, Cleopatra Bernard, and former manager Solomon Sobande. It premieres at South by Southwest that day.
May 23, 2022: The XXXtentacion estate announces a posthumous compilation album, Look at Me: The Album, to be released June 10. The album features old XXXtentacion songs and already released ones along with a much-awaited collaboration with Ye (formerly Kanye West), “True Love.”
May 26, 2022: Look at Me hits Hulu. It features pre-death interviews with XXXtentacion and an interview with Ayala along with footage of her meeting his mother.
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