Dame Dash has claimed that Drake has made him an offer to buy his one-third ownership stake of Roc-A-Fella Records.
Speaking on his America Nu Network, Dash explained that Drizzy made the offer after sliding into his Instagram DMs, although he didnât reveal exactly how much money the 6 God offered him.
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âDrake hollered at me through DM and made an offer,â he said. âIâm not quite sure what happened, but I thought that he had got with Jay or something. But I donât know.
âIt would be a good time to close, but if you got it. I wouldnât do it if he donât got it. If you want to own Reasonable Doubt, if you want to own a third of [Roc-A-Fella] and have a say at the board meetings for at least the next seven years and make money off of it.â
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The Harlem mogul also suggested that Drake could upstage his rival Kendrick Lamarâs Super Bowl halftime show next February, which is organized by JAY-Z, by attending the game wearing an original Roc-A-Fella chain, which Dame previously offered to gift the buyer of his shares.
While discussing Kendrickâs much-discussed performance, Dame said: âIâm thinking, âWhat would I do if I was Drake?â Iâd be like, âWell, a big W would be to be come to the Super Bowl with one of these Roc-A-Fella chains.'â
Dame Dash speaks on Kendrick Lamar performing at Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans and reveals Drake reached out to him via DMs and made an offer to buy his one third stake in Jay-Z's Roc-A-Fella Records.
(đ„ America Nu Network/YouTube) pic.twitter.com/QuZRLFhiwI
â The Art Of Dialogue (@ArtOfDialogue_) September 16, 2024
Despite Dame Dashâs insinuation that he is the one selling his shares in the storied record label, he was stripped of sale power after losing a copyright infringement lawsuit to film director Josh Webber.
Christopher Brown, who represented Webber in the dispute, told Rolling Stone in April that only he and the U.S. Marshal can sell off the shares.
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âHis shares have actually been assigned to United States Marshal, [at] my request,â Brown said. âSo he actually doesnât have anything to sell. Heâs not even in possession of this stock.â
The public auction for the shares was recently delayed to September 21 due to the sheer enormity of Dashâs debts and the various claimants that have come forward.
The sale was originally enforced to cover Dashâs nearly $1 million debt to Webber, but various other parties have laid claim to the funds from the auction as well.
Both New York State and New York City want money from the sale, with the city claiming that Dash owes $197,000 in unpaid child support, while the state wants some of the funds to help settle what it says is Dashâs $8.7 million tax debt.
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The minimum bid for the shares has also been raised from $1.2 million to ÂŁ3 million in an effort to cover Dashâs debts, with the delay also being used to come up with a plan on how the money will be dispersed after the sale.