Fans clown Adin Ross after he claims Drake won the beef despite 'Not Like Us' dominating

Adin Ross (Image via Instagram/ @adinross)
Adin Ross (Image via Instagram/@adinross)

Adin Ross has once again logged in, turned on his mic, and dropped a hot take. This time he’s declared Drake the undisputed champ in the ongoing lyrical match against Kendrick Lamar. He made this proclamation on the Full Send Podcast.

Ross dismissed Kendrick’s recent diss track Not Like Us as a collection of “lies.” He honed in on one particular claim—the now-infamous daughter reference—which he was quick to call “debunked.”

For him, that alone was enough to put a giant asterisk next to the track’s credibility.

Suddenly everyone on social media has opinions about Adin Ross' opinions. One X user dissed his comments saying:

"Yeah because Drake didn’t lie either. Gotcha."

Nothing hits harder than agreeing so hard that it loops back into disagreement.

Another user added:

"Again who cares about Adin’s opinion? Lol!"

If ‘who cares’ was a person, it’d be you… because you’re here, caring.

A user declared:

"Btw there is no universe where Drake won"

Not even in a parallel dimension? Damn.

A user asked:

"So where did Drake win? On what song?"

Academics don’t even analyze literature this hard.

A user went on to ask:

"Why do we care what he has to say"

Do you ever question your own existence mid-comment?

One user tried to set the record straight by mentioning:

"🤣🤣🤣🤣Drake lost the beef until he comes out with a better track"

So he’s basically on an indefinite losing streak?


Adin Ross about Drake vs Lamar

Ross ranted about Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl halftime performance:

“He made it all about Drake”
“He could've performed ‘B***h Don't Kill My Vibe,’ you know, all of his classics like the ‘A.D.H.D.’ stuff. He didn’t do it, he obviously wanted to make it about [Drake], and whatever.”
“In my opinion, I think Drake won that beef, the rap battle. Obviously, Kendrick made the hit song, the ‘Not Like Us,’ but it’s all lies. He said he had a daughter, which was debunked. Like, come on, bro, it wasn’t even real! But people don’t bring that up.”

Ross didn’t stop at the lyrics. To him, Kendrick’s Super Bowl setlist wasn’t a celebration of his career but a targeted assault on Drake, which apparently, in the eyes of Ross, is an artistic crime.

"It’s how it is, bro, they all had it out for him. [Drake] can get any girl he wants. Yeah, and it’s sad because you can argue that Drake put Kendrick on.”
“He’s been number one for so long, they just tried to knock him out. And that’s really what it is. You can’t knock him out, though.”
“He’s in Australia selling out crazy shows. He can do it anywhere in the world, it doesn’t matter. And this guy just dropped an album, it’s amazing, and, let’s be real, no disrespect to Kendrick. But his last album before GNX, Mr. Morale, horrible. Drake revived Kendrick’s career. Yeah, come on.”

Context of Ross’ comments

That was not the end of Ross’s roasting session. Before his podcast declaration, Ross had already gone on X to trash Kendrick’s halftime show, calling it the "worst" he’d ever seen and that Drake “revived” Kendrick’s career.

Naturally, this set the internet ablaze, with Kendrick fans sharpening their digital pitchforks.

Ross’s take, however, hinges on one major assumption: that without Drake’s early co-signs and tour slots, Kendrick wouldn’t have reached his current stature.

While that’s certainly one way to look at it, Kendrick’s fans would argue that the Compton rapper’s talent, storytelling, and relentless work ethic speak for themselves, and, well, a Pulitzer Prize tends to carry a bit of weight, too.

Edited by Sezal Srivastava