Crazy Cave Bytch SUES Kendrick, Jay-Z & Beyonce for $200MIL + GRAMMY: 'Stole TPAB & Her Idea'

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A Philadelphia woman is seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in lawsuits against Kendrick Lamar, Beyoncé and Jay Z, alleging that the artists slandered her and attempted to capitalize off the use of her name in various songs.

Sameerah Satterthwaite (aka crazy bytch) made her claims in two separate lawsuits this week, with one targeting Kendrick Lamar Duckworth and the other targeting Jay Z, real name Shawn Carter, and Beyoncé, real name Beyoncé Giselle Knowles-Carter. Satterthwaite is currently seeking $200 million in each case.

In her lawsuit against Lamar, Satterthwaite alleges that she met with the rapper in Philadelphia on November 3, 2014. The two “talked for like two hours,” Satterthwaite wrote in her statement,” over the course of which they “had a deep conversation.”

Satterthwaite alleges that she recited a poem of her own creation for Lamar titled “Revolutionary Women,” which contained themes she says the rapper stole for his own use on the album To Pimp A Butterfly. Further, Satterthwaite claims Lamar told her that “he will look out for me if I made him rich,” which she considers a "verbal agreement."

Satterthwaite also claims that the rapper uses her last name on the extended video version of the track “Alright,” speaking at the start “Satterthwaite turn that s—t up” :mjlol::mjlol:


and later saying “R.I.P., my diligence is only meant to write your eulogy.” The lyrics are listed by respected lyrics website Genius as “Sounwave, turn that s—t up,” with Sounwave being Lamar’s award-winning producer.

Satterthwaite is asking that Lamar “cease and desist all profit earned” from the album, or that he provide her “$200 million for being slandered with R.I.P.” She also asks that Lamar return one of five Grammys he earned for To Pimp A Butterfly in the suit.


Incidentally, there was some controversy earlier this year when some folks drew close comparisons between Lamar's Grammy performance and a performance by Philly rapper Dice Raw in 2013.

In her suit against Beyoncé and Jay Z, Satterthwaite claims that the pop star is “referring to me as a Hoe” in her track “7/11” as a result of the line “I’m fresher than you, hoe.” In live performances of the song, Satterthwaite claims that the singer refers to her “as Medusa referring to my Scoliosis.”

She also notes that “7/11” was released shortly after a family member, Rymir Satterthwaite, 22, entered the public eye last year for claiming that Jay Z is his father. The Family Civil Liberties Union recently took up that case.

Additionally, Satterthwaite alleges that Beyoncé "was slandering my clothing line," Struck7Philly, in a past performance by wearing “her t-shirt KALE which represents her capital worth.” The singer wore a “KALE” shirt in her music video for “7/11.”

In a separate track, “Formation,” Satterthwaite says the pop star is “referring to her slaying me” due to Beyoncé’s use of the term “I slay” throughout the track.

Representatives for Lamar, Beyoncé and Jay Z have not yet responded to request for comment.

image: http://media.philly.com/binary/badge_philly.svg
Published: April 14, 2016 — 3:30 PM EDT

Read more at Philadelphia woman files $200 million lawsuits against Kendrick Lamar, Beyoncé and Jay Z

TLDR; Crazy cave bytch claiming she met with Kendrick (for 2 hours) and gave him ideas for TPAB, and that he used her name in a song, and she wants 200 million from him or the entire profit from TPAB or that he gives back one of his Grammy's.
She also claims that Beyoncé called her a "hoe" in a song, suing her and Jay Z for 200 million as well.

She's def psycho
:pachaha::mjlol:
 
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Deltron

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they suing for free mixtapes now?

Yep..
Kendrick Lamar sued for allegedly copying Bill Withers song

Kendrick Lamar sued for allegedly copying Bill Withers song

Lawsuit alleges I Do This simply features Lamar’s lyrics over a ‘direct and complete copy’ of Withers’ hit Don’t You Want to Stay


Kendrick Lamar was sued on Thursday for allegedly replicating the music from the 1975 Bill Withers song Don’t You Want to Stay for his own track I Do This without permission.

According to a complaint filed in Los Angeles federal court, Lamar added his own lyrics to a “direct and complete copy” of Withers’ music to create I Do This, resulting in copyright infringement.

Kendrick Lamar: ‘I am Trayvon Martin. I’m all of these kids’

Lamar, whose album Untitled Unmastered topped the Billboard 200 album chart in March, has ignored demands to stop exploiting Withers’ music, and admitted to copying it “with a thumb to the nose, catch me if you can attitude”, the complaint said.

The lawsuit was filed by Golden Withers Music and Musidex Music, which said they hold the copyright to Don’t You Want to Stay.

Withers sang and co-wrote the song, which appears on his album Making Music. Lamar’s I Do This appears on a self-titled EP released in 2009.

The lawsuit seeks a halt to the alleged infringement and unspecified damages.

A lawyer for Lamar did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Other defendants include a unit of Lamar’s record label Top Dawg and a publishing unit of Warner Music Group. They did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The lawsuit was filed in the same court where a jury in March 2015 awarded singer Marvin Gaye’s family close to $7.4m after finding that the Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williams 2013 smash hit Blurred Lines copied parts of Gaye’s 1977 song Got to Give It Up.

Another jury is to be seated on 10 May in the same court to decide whether Led Zeppelin stole the opening for its 1971 classic Stairway to Heaven from the song Taurus, recorded four years earlier by Spirit, a band it once toured with.

Lamar’s album To Pimp a Butterfly won five Grammy awards in February.
 

Kaypain

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He'll settle and move on

But they putting pressure on producers and artists with this.Truth be told, you can be sued for anything, it comes down to is it worth being sued. In this case, I don't know, he clearly sampled the song, but then it was for a free mixtape, but that excuse violating free use, it all comes down to where you at, guaranteed if Kendrick wasn't where he was today, they wouldn't give a fukk. We gotta be smarter I guess

Hiphop was invented by sampling .... sometimes the legal theatrics put a damper on our culture.
And fukk whosampled.com :pacspit: snitch ass site
 
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