Plaqueboymax Drags DJ Akademiks Over “Grooming” Nour: “These Clips Are Nasty”

On Thursday, Plaqueboymax addressed the situation on another stream. He conceded that the guys in the chat regularly “joke around” like that, but spoke out about including someone underage.

“I’m not going through this s**t. I’m not! Because these clips are nasty. It’s bad work. Nasty work,” he said, despite worrying that the “weird energy” would affect that day’s stream.

“Ak, this s**t is very weird, I talked to Nour, Nour is good, to make sure bro was good. I’m not going through this s**t. But again, once again, I didn’t want to hide it in the comm (community) either. I didn’t want to hide it in the comm because then it looks like I’m hiding this s**t when I’m not trying to hide it. It’s not some s**t that I want to give light to. You know what I’m saying?” he continued.

He addressed Akademiks directly to tell him those conversations are unacceptable. Max also warned other children in these gaming and streaming communities to “separate yourself” in a similar situation.

“Ak, I would appreciate it if you don’t do that type of s**t with my lil bro. You know what I’m saying? He’s not my lil bro, but you feel me? Like, this s**t is not cool. That s**t is not cool,” Max said.

“And kids, if you’re ever in discords where it’s like n***as joking around with you, just make sure you separate yourself from those situations,” he added.

Max’s response looked out for Akademiks’ potential liability as much as Nour’s safety. This would’ve been a great time for the podcaster to graciously clear his name like he did with  LeBron.

DJ Akademiks Goes On The Attack: “These N****s Is Kicking My Back”

However, the Everyday Struggle host didn’t see it that way. Instead, Akademiks went off with vein-popping projection about how much he helped Max and other streamers. He went off about how much he’s done for Max, Kai Cenat, Adin Ross, and others he “doesn’t need,” as if they owe him too much loyalty or silence to call him out: “These n****s is kicking my back!”

“I swear to god, and I never swear to god, I never need to be on Kai, Max, Adin, nobody’s stream! I don’t need none of nobody who streams! I got my own thing going on! The f**k! Some of the s**t I’ve seen pisses me off! I’m like, bro, I’m over here f**king with these n****s! Supporting them! N***a, yo, I told Ray today, I said, ‘Bro, yo, f**k that! No more Max clips on my page.’ I’m supporting these n****s, and these n****s is kicking my back! I get nothing from it,” he shouted.

Akademiks sounded betrayed that Max checked him publicly instead of in private. Yet, he publicly put Max’s name in these sexually suggestive scenarios in the first place. Make it make sense! Even if Bro Code somehow ranked higher than protecting children, didn’t Akademiks already violate that first?

“I don’t benefit if Max goes up. Bro, I’m supporting them because I like these guys. I support them because I’m in the streaming community. I want him to go up,” he continued.

According to Sportskeeda, Akademiks called Max during that same Rumble live stream to make things right. Max clarified his comments were only condemning the way Akademiks spoke to Nour. He still didn’t back down about the principle and asked Akademiks to “take accountability and apologize.”

“I said this multiple times, that conversation that people saw in that clip is not supposed to be a normal conversation between anybody who is of age and somebody underage. I said what the reason was, I was on some big bro/little bro s**t,” Akademiks explained.

See… it was so close to being reasonable! Whether you’re siblings or play cousins or someone’s online mentor, that kind of conversation isn’t beating the “grooming” allegations swirling online (and that excuse probably won’t hold up in a legal battle, either).

Clearly, the devoted Drake defender does know better, but will he actually do better? We may already have that answer after he went on to say only “Kendrick fans” think he did anything wrong.

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