NLE Choppa and NBA Ben 10 were involved in a heated encounter in Houston earlier this week, and footage from the moment has quickly started making the rounds on social media. The two unexpectedly crossed paths amid Choppa’s ongoing lyrical shots aimed at NBA YoungBoy, which he has continued to reference across multiple songs in recent months.
In the video, Choppa appears leaning out of a car window as the vehicle pulls away, while Ben 10 films the interaction. Shortly after, Choppa took to social media to share his side of what happened. “What type of gangsta pull up on a man, say they gonna do something do a man, and pull out they phone?” he said in a video message. “... What y'all wanna do? Why y'all keep staring at me? I'm standing here right in the parking lot... I had two n****s on the frontline that would've laid y'all down. If you gonna post something, post that. Pull the surveillance footage up. I was standing there...You n****s ain't do sh*t to me."
OG 33, who was also at the scene, later fired back with a video of his own. “You all on these cameras and then you wait until you pull off to pull out a little baby toy and say, ‘It could go down. It could go down.’ N***s know you're a btch man,” he said, before closing with a warning for Choppa to leave his name out of the situation.
NLE Choppa has been feuding with NBA YoungBoy since dropping his track, "KO," back in October. “YoungBoy, what? This the big boy league/ I put one up in your gut under the Jesus piece/ Last thing that I heard was ‘Jesus, please’/ Had me looking at the devil like ‘This is your king,'” Choppa raps on the song.
NLE Choppa’s issues with NBA YoungBoy trace back to October, when he released the track “KO.” On the song, he takes direct aim, rapping, “YoungBoy, what? This the big boy league/ I put one up in your gut under the Jesus piece/ Last thing that I heard was ‘Jesus, please’/ Had me looking at the devil like ‘This is your king.’”
After the song dropped, Choppa spoke with Rolling Stone about his reasoning for addressing YoungBoy on the record. “And my thing was I’ve heard interviews from him that he’s vocalized, that he’s conscious of what he’s doing, and I have no problems with him, but that’s the part where my assignment, that’s the part of my duty, that’s what I’m on the contract of, because I’m conscious of it,” he explained. “I know you can’t continue to consciously choose a way that’s indifferent to the most highs.”

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