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Yung Miami Asks Drake to Get on ‘Spend Dat’ Remix: ‘I Want the Iceman’

The former City Girl has previously revealed that she tried to get him on her single "Take Me to Chanel" but was left on read.

Yung Miami Asks Drake to Get on ‘Spend Dat’ Remix: ‘I Want the Iceman’

Yung Miami is once again asking Drake to get on one of her songs.

Earlier this month, the Miami rapper and media personality joked that she got left on read by Drake when she asked the Toronto superstar to hop on her song “Take Me to Chanel.”


“I remember DM’ing him, but that was at the time when he was going through all his sh–. And when people going through they sh–, like, I get it, I understand,” she told Cam Newton. “But I DM’d him like, ‘Drake, I think you’ll sound good on “Take Me to Chanel.”’ He just liked the message — like come on, now, don’t do that! Drake, don’t do that now ’cause when you called me I was there! But, nah, I f— with Drake, I understand.”

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Now, during a red carpet interview at Sunday night’s 2026 BET Awards, she was asked by Complex who she would like to get on the remix, so naturally she mentioned Drake and pleaded with him to stop ignoring her calls. “You gotta stay tuned for that, but I really want Drake,” the former City Girl shared. “Champagne Papi. You know we gotta call Drake. Iceman. I want Iceman! Iceman, pick up the phone.”

Yung Miami is having a moment with her record “Spend Dat.” She performed it on a float during the New York Knicks championship parade because the team loves the song so much and even Fabolous put his own spin on it with the help of content creator Lowkey Mar as the team was closing in on it’s first title in 53 years.

“Spend Dat” currently sits at No. 35 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 7 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.

Yung Miami might have the song of the summer.

This article was first published by Billboard U.S.

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David Clayton-Thomas
Courtesy Photo

David Clayton-Thomas

FYI

Obituaries: Canadian Artists and Industry Figures Remember David Clayton-Thomas and Clive Davis

Last week, the music world lost two genuine legends. Here are tributes to them both from Canadian stars and industry notables.

David Clayton-Thomas (born David Henry Thomsett), the Toronto vocalist and songwriter who earned global success and multiple Grammys as frontman of pioneering jazz-rock group Blood, Sweat & Tears, died on June 24, at age 84.

An obit issued by publicist Eric Alper on his passing called Clayton-Thomas ''One of the most recognizable voices of his generation" while noting that he sold more than 40 million records and "helped shape the very sound of jazz-rock.''

He joined Blood, Sweat & Tears as its vocalist in 1968, prior to the release of its self-titled international hit second album. Blood, Sweat & Tears sold ten million copies worldwide, topped the Billboard 200 for seven weeks, and remained on the chart for 109 weeks.

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