
Drake Topless Selfie Fuels Fake Abs Speculation
In 2019, Drake hit back at a comment from DJ Carnage — with whom he was close friends — that mentioned his alleged plastic surgery. Carnage wrote, 'You got fake ab surgery in Colombia. You ain't fooling anybody,' to which Drake replied, 'Is this cause you are angry about the one thing that happened with that one person the other day that you thought was your wifey?'
Fast forward to just last year, and the speculation around Drake's abs reached new heights after Kendrick Lamar released a very pointed lyric on his scathing track 'euphoria' amid their memorable feud. He rapped, 'Let your core audience stomach that, then tell 'em where you get your abs from.'
Fellow artist Megan Thee Stallion also appeared to fuel the speculation on her 2024 track 'HISS.' She rapped, 'All these lil' rap n*ggas so fraud … These n*ggas hate on BBLs and be walkin' 'round with the same scars,' which some fans interpreted as a diss towards Drake, who rapped in 2022: 'This bitch lie 'bout gettin' shots, but she still a stallion.' Several people guessed that Drake was accusing Megan of lying about being shot by Tory Lanez, which you can read more about here, though some questioned if he was also accusing her of lying about getting cosmetic injections.
It's worth highlighting that amid all the rumors, there is no proof that Drake has undergone cosmetic surgery. But with that in mind, a recent shirtless selfie from the rapper has fueled speculation that his abs are 'fake.'
On Sunday, Drake shared this selfie as part of an Instagram carousel:
And the comments didn't hold back. 'Ordered abs from temu n forgot to add shoulders n tri lol,' read one comment with over 18,000 likes. Another said, 'No shoulders, no biceps, deflated chest but extremely defined abs lmao.'
Meanwhile, users of Reddit were equally perplexed. 'The level of definition in his abs makes absolutely no sense with the rest of his body,' one person wrote. Another quipped, 'It's giving 'novelty apron.''
Well then! Let me know what you think down below.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
4 minutes ago
- NBC News
Tamar Braxton says she 'almost died' after being 'found in a pool of blood'
Tamar Braxton says she experienced a medical emergency that has left her shaken and recovering from serious injuries that include the loss of her teeth and a broken nose. In an Aug. 19 post shared to her Instagram story, the 'Love and War' singer and television personality shared that she 'almost died' this week after a friend discovered her in a pool of her own blood. The 48-year-old detailed her health scare in a message written over a gradient-colored background. 'I struggled to write this but everyone keeps calling me and honestly, I can't even really talk anymore. I'm so weak,' her message begins. 'I almost died Sunday. I was found in a pool of blood from my friend with a face injury. As the days go by, the worse it is.' While the singer did not share further details regarding what caused her physical injuries, she did open up about the emotional toll it has taken. The extent of her injuries, which included a fractured nose, the loss of 'some teeth' and mobility issues, has also affected her outlook. 'The way I look at life now is totally different.' Despite the severity of the event, Braxton says her health is steadily improving. 'As my health is on the mend, my mental journey begins,' she continued. 'Pray for me for real. I don't even know what happened to me.' Braxton has been open about her health history in the past. In 2021, she shared an update after she was hospitalized after she was found unresponsive. 'In this present moment, it is my only responsibility to be real with myself and to be real with the ones who truly love me and care for my healing,' she wrote in a since-deleted Instagram. 'I have without fail, shared with you my brightest days, and I know that sharing with you what has been my darkest will be the light for any man or woman who is feeling the same defeat I felt just only a week ago.'
Yahoo
5 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tamar Braxton Reveals She 'Almost Died' 2 Days Ago, Was Found in a 'Pool of Blood' by Friend
"I don't even know what happened to me," Braxton says of an accident she suffered over the weekend NEED TO KNOW Tamar Braxton revealed she suffered a serious accident on Sunday, Aug. 17 The "Let Me Know" singer took to her Instagram Stories to share that she was found in a pool of blood by a friend and "almost died" She wrote that she "fractured my nose, lost some teeth and mobility" and "can't even really talk anymore" Tamar Braxton is recovering from a near-death experience. The singer, 48, revealed on her Instagram Stories on Tuesday, Aug. 19 that she suffered a terrifying accident over the weekend. In the post, Braxton detailed her injuries and said she was found in a pool of blood. 'I struggled to write this but everyone keeps calling me and honestly, I can't even really talk anymore I'm so weak,' she began. 'I almost died Sunday. I was found in a pool of blood from my friend with a face injury.' 'As the days go by the worse it is,' she continued. 'I fractured my nose, lost some teeth and mobility. 💔💔the way I look at life now is totally different. As my health is on the mend my mental journey begins… pray for me for real 💔💔💔💔I don't even know what happened to me 💔💔.' The singer added the song, "Spirit Lead Me" by Clavier in the background of her Instagram post. After she shared the news of the incident, she reposted a page of the Bible on her Instagram Stories showing Proverbs 31, which is a passage about strong women. Hours before she opened up about the incident, Braxton posted a quote to her Instagram Stories where she expressed gratitude for waking up. 'Thank you God for waking me up today,' it read. Earlier this year, Tamar shared her plans to focus on her health before her tour, which is still ongoing. 'It is OFFICIALLY tour time!!!!' she wrote on Instagram on March 23 alongside a video in which she was singing her 2013 song 'Stay and Fight.' 'Ima tell yall to get yall tickets!! A whole new set list… and the new music STARTS HERE!!!' In a second slide, Tamar included a photo of herself standing on a scale, which read 153.3 lbs. She vowed to get healthier as she prepared to go on the road. 'Bday is over so no more drinks…. No more carbs… all body and VOICE!!!' she said. 'Me and my brother @octoberlondon and I are going to give you a night you won't forget❤️😍🍀✨ see ya soon🏆.' Tamar recently graced TV screens when she teamed up with her sisters on the WEtv reality series, The Braxtons, which aired last year. Tamar was joined by sister Toni, Trina, Towanda and matriarch of the family, Dr. Evelyn 'Miss E' Braxton on the show as a way to honor their sister Traci, who died in 2022 from esophageal cancer. 'The main reason for wanting to do The Braxtons again is because of Traci,' Toni shared in a trailer for season 1. 'She asked us to do this — this was her last wish,' Miss E added. The family previously starred together on Braxton Family Values. Season 2 of The Braxtons has been renewed by WEtv. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. In April, the family celebrated what would have been Traci's 54th birthday with several sweet tributes. Tamar shared a clip on Instagram of a crowd holding up their flashlights to Traci's hit single, "Last Call," playing at a concert. "Happy Heavenly Birthday beautiful @therealtracibraxton," Tamar wrote in the caption. "We miss you down here sis!! But I know God didn't want to see you sick like that so, he brought you home to himself to heal you ❤️." "Thank you for being an amazing sister and covering all of us down here🙏🏼✨," she concluded. Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword


USA Today
32 minutes ago
- USA Today
Gay influencer couple Probably This broke up. The response is alarming at best.
Are we, as a society, OK when relationships ending on any sort of stage sends ripples across tens of thousands of people eager to engage in an algorithmic bloodletting? If you've spent any amount of time on the internet, you've probably heard this one before: Internet couple attracts an audience. Internet couple breaks up. Former internet couple's followers try to figure out who gets custody in the split. There's several somethings to be said about living your relationships Extremely Online in an attention economy, and they mostly boil down to this: Influencers are not your #RelationshipGoals. We were reminded of that again recently. On Aug. 16, influencers Probably This – a couple comprising Matt Armato (bald) and Beau Ciolino (not bald) – published a now-deleted video announcing they broke up after 12 years. I found their Instagram account in the depths of my 2020 pandemic doomscrolling and clicked the follow button for their design, renovation and decoration of a charming New Orleans home. Five years later, they've called it quits, but cited an enduring mutual respect and care for each other as they move on. (Armato got the Probably This TikTok account and Ciolino got the Instagram.) From one bald gay to another (though, I promise, not exclusively because of that), I empathize with Armato, whose clear discomfort was the impetus for the audience to scathingly pick Ciolino apart. Accusations of cheating, assumptions about open relationships and critiques of their differing demeanors (Ciolino seemed bubbly in a nervous way; Armato appeared quietly devastated) filled the comment sections of the now-deleted video. The discourse is discoursing, which prompted Armato to post a story highlight to his Instagram page. 'I know the video has sparked a lot of reactions,' Armato writes. 'Please know that there are no teams here. I see your compassion and I appreciate it, but if your support for me looks like tearing him down I don't want it.' People break up. The internet has changed what that looks like. People break up. Everyone does that. But the internet has changed our relationship with how relationships conclude, and it leaves us all spinning through the vacuum where there should be space, peace and processing. Because Armato and Ciolino made a living, at least on some level, by putting their relationship online and commodifying their personal lives, they felt they owed it to their audiences to explain their separation. I'm not part of their relationship, and I don't pretend to be an expert on either one of them. I've followed their content casually at best. But like Facebook rolling out legacy pages for dead users, we're still in the nascent stages of an internet that continues to redefine itself and the relationships around us. As a result, we're not thinking about what happens when a relationship publicly implodes, and our mileage in the aftermath may vary. In this case, we've gone from tablescapes to tribunals. I live for the mess. But we're not entitled to any of it. Admittedly, I live for it. I also desperately need us all to collectively march out our front doors and touch the nearest patch of grass. Perhaps it's that when gay audiences see gay people in relationships, they receive outsize attention and parasocial projections both on the relationship as a concept and also the individuals within them because of the representation the community sees from them – especially considering the historic lack of representation we've felt in spaces that were not ours to create. But, gay people set conveniently aside, the thematic thread in any kind of online relationship is that we're buying what they're selling in an economy predicated on attention. That comes with the highs and, for the more patient among us, the perceived ultimate low: the breakup that unfolds just as much online as the relationship did. Everyone loves a messy fight – at least, at my messiest, I'd water the sidewalk if it meant I could be nosy about an argument down the street – so social media is an ideal front porch to eavesdrop in real time as people and relationships unravel. Still, our parasocial relationships with these couples threaten to (and often do) shift our role as passive observers into active participants. We're not just watching and liking. We're commenting and taking sides in a void of context. Our currency becomes zingy reads and memetic reaction images and backhanded messages of support for one person or the other. That can't be healthy for any of us. Not for an audience that misunderstands our place in a relationship that has invited us in as casual observers. Not for a couple or content creator navigating a difficult space that sees their comment section revolting against the absence of a relationship that doesn't exist anymore. And not for the people somewhere in between, navigating a spew of videos by and about couples who aren't together anymore. What do influencers actually owe you? It's easy to wave this off as a piece of non-reality – it's not real and can't hurt us – but as our younger generations continue to experience higher levels of isolation, the internet grows as a bastion of community and connections, and thus the real-world impacts become more undeniable. The internet is real and it can hurt you. Perhaps there's some schadenfreude there in getting to see the walls crumble down and reality peek through. Real relationships and real people are deeply complicated, take a metric ton of work and you are not promised your idea of success. Seeing that stripped away thrills us because it's a reminder that the influencers who dupe us into buying their display of perfection are not all they pretend to be. It's fine to admire what you aspire for. It's good, even, to identify and appreciate that you have representation. But also accept that you are only getting the version of the story influencers choose for you. This is an attention economy, and they benefit from obfuscating the truth. It should not stop us from pursuing our own and living our lives defined by our own rules. The reality is that we never should've been idolizing relationships like Probably This – or the people who actually live them – to begin with. Otherwise, we're living in a digital panopticon of our own making. Did that former influencer couple ever really owe anyone the truth? And are we, as a society, OK when relationships ending on any sort of stage sends ripples across tens of thousands of people eager to engage in an algorithmic bloodletting? Probably not. Drew Atkins is an opinion digital producer for USA TODAY and the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at aatkins@