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Travis Scott Fires Back at Pusha T Over “Let God Sort Em Out” Remarks

Travis Scott has finally responded to Pusha T’s recent jabs on the Clipse’s album Let God Sort Em Out and the single “So Be It.” Pusha’s verse was aimed squarely at Scott, taking shots at his personal life and hinting at unreleased footage, rapping: “You cried in front of me, you died in front of me / Calabasas took your bitch and your pride in front of me… / The ‘net gon’ call it the way that they see it / But I got the video, I can share and A.E. it / They wouldn’t believe it, but I can’t unsee it / Lucky I ain’t TMZ it.”

The feud escalated after Pusha accused Scott of intentionally omitting Drake’s verse on “Meltdown” while Scott played Utopia during a Clipse and Pharrell studio session in Paris. Pusha described the incident to GQ, claiming Scott had interrupted the session and filmed them without consent. “He’s smiling, laughing, jumping around, doing his fucking monkey dance,” Pusha said, adding, “At the end of the day, I don’t play how y’all play … He’s a whore.”

In a new cover story with Rolling Stone, Travis Scott pushed back on these claims, disputing Pusha’s version of events. Scott said the film crew at the session was actually organized by Clipse and Pharrell. “I remember when I pulled up, it was them n*ggas that had a film crew. I was like, ‘Oh, shit. Am I in a documentary?’” he said.

Scott also clarified the issue with “Meltdown,” stating that Drake’s verse hadn’t yet been recorded when he played his album for them. “A lot of shit [Pusha] was saying just didn’t make sense to me,” he said. “It was like he was saying I was interrupting shit and I was playing them shit. First of all, I can’t interrupt something that somebody [Pharrell] asked me to come pull up on.”

Scott added a pointed remark about Pusha using his name in the rollout: “So when I hear that type of shit, it’s just like, I don’t know, man. If you got to drop Trav name for the rollout, so be it.”

Beyond addressing the feud, Travis discussed his musical inspirations, citing Iggy Pop and Ozzy Osbourne, and explained why he doesn’t concern himself with critics. He also gave a brief update on his next album, emphasizing his commitment to fully expressing himself: “[I’m] putting my whole body and soul into the next [project], for more people to understand… [For] the person that still don’t understand Trav, no matter how long I’ve been in this shit.”

This marks the first extended public response from Scott, clarifying his side of the dispute while signaling continued dedication to his music and upcoming projects.

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