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Beyoncé in concert in Milan 2013

Source: Mondadori Portfolio / Getty

It was bound to happen. Beyonce and Megan Thee Stallion working together has always made sense and been something we’ve been dying to see. After all, the two queens are from Houston. They’ve posted up pics together. And Meg has signed to Roc Nation. It was only a matter of time before they were going to tear the timeline apart.

We just didn’t expect THIS. Beyonce hopped on the remix to Meg’s popular TikTok sensation “Savage” track and blessed us with not one but TWO new verses. What stood out, though?

“Hips TikTok when I dance, on that demon time, she might start an OnlyFans, Big B and that B stand for bandsssss”

So Beyonce knows about Demon Time? She might start an Only Fans? WORD?!

https://twitter.com/kharrizzmatik/status/1255568746430771208?s=20

Twitter is all up in arms over this new revelation, also the idea that Beyonce has to have some sort of burner account to be checking on all this. But what could it be?

Peep the investigation and the Twitter eruption that followed.

How much would you pay for a Beyonce Only Fans? And how do you save up a million dollars a month?

“Beyoncé really just said “on that demon time, she might start a onlyfans” in her Savage Remix snippet SKSJSKSJSKSJKSJS”

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This week in politics, the vibes are messy, alarming, and straight-up confusing. From late night TV being snatched off the air to vaccine policies getting hijacked, it’s giving “WTF is going on?” Let’s break down the headlines everyone’s talking about inside. First Amendment on the Chopping Block Jimmy Kimmel’s late night show has been pulled from ABC, and Stephen Colbert’s show? Cancelled completely. The official line is murky, but the bigger picture is loud. Free speech is being tested under the Trump administration. While Trump once said he’d “honor” the First Amendment, recent moves suggest he’s working off a remix version that only benefits him. Case in point? The Guardian reports his $15 billion lawsuit against The New York Times. A judge already tossed it out, saying Trump’s claims about “false content” violated federal rules. Still, the fact that these lawsuits and cancellations keep happening has people questioning the future of free expression in America. CDC Shake-Up Sparks Health Concerns Meanwhile, over at the CDC, things are getting political fast. Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. has basically turned the agency upside down, firing all 17 members of the vaccine advisory committee and replacing them with appointees that include vaccine skeptics. On top of that, the CDC director is out, high-level staffers are resigning, and decisions about vaccine safety are suddenly more about politics than science. Public health leaders are calling this move dangerous, saying it dismantles independent oversight just when Americans need clarity most. According to California’s government website, they are one of the few states pushing back on the federal government’s stance. California, Washington, and Hawaii aren’t taking it lying down. The states have formed an alliance pushing back on the feds, promising to keep vaccine guidance rooted in science, safety, and transparency. Their health officers are reviewing guidelines from trusted medical groups like the AAP and ACOG to ensure communities still have access to clinically recommended vaccines. Trump & Xi Meet About US TikTok’s Next Chapter And then there’s TikTok. After years of “will they, won’t they?” drama, Trump announced that he and Chinese Premier Xi Jinping approved a deal for TikTok’s U.S. operations. According to BBC, the plan reportedly hands control to a group of U.S. investors, sidestepping a shutdown. Trump called the call with Xi “productive” on Truth Social, and even, teased a face-to-face meetup at the APEC summit in South Korea this fall. From free speech battles to vaccine wars and TikTok drama, this week in politics has us all asking the same thing: WTFGO?

Global Grind