Quavo Concert Gets the Tiniest Turnout: Is it Chris Brown Sabotage?

Photo: Prince Williams/WireImage // Prince Williams/WireImage (Getty Images)
Photo: Prince Williams/WireImage // Prince Williams/WireImage (Getty Images)
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Since the beef between Kendrick Lamar and Drake is not entertaining Hip-Hop fans the way we want, people are turning to the feud between Chris Brown and Quavo.

If you haven’t been paying attention, the two have not been cool with each other for some time now, which led to them each releasing their own diss tracks, on which Quavo speaks on Brown’s domestic violence history and Brown raps about how “everybody” wished that Quavo died instead of his uncle and former Migos member, Takeoff.

Quavo took the beef to wax by releasing “Tender” over two weeks ago. Brown came back quickly with a response track titled, “Weakest Link.” This led Quavo to double dip in the diss track department by releasing, “Over H**s & B*****s,” last week.

Since then, it’s been silent on both sides. As a result, everything these two artists do is getting over-analyzed by fans on social media.

Over the weekend, a video of a recent live Quavo show was trending on social media due to the amount of people who did (or did not) attend. Although the venue looked like it could fit thousands of fans, it looked as if only a few dozen people were crowded in front of the stage with some scattered across the venue.

In the clip, the person recording the crowd can be heard saying, “Yo Chris Brown are you serious bro? I know you got something to do with this. Ain’t nobody at my man Quavo show today.”

This has led people to believe that Brown is responsible for pulling a 50 Cent and buying nearly all of the tickets to his rival’s show so that the crowd appears minuscule.

But despite the theories, nobody has confirmed these claims, including Brown or any of his associates.

This seems like a classic case of people wanting to make something out of nothing. What if there’s the chance that a lot of people just happened to not attend this Quavo show and he still decided to perform since he’s a professional and there is still money to be made?

Anyway, if Brown did buy a majority of the tickets to this show, he would simply be handing over money to his rival. In what world does that sound like a good idea?

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