Iggy Azalea just turned 35, and instead of keeping things low-key, she went whole spectacle. The Australian rapper spent her birthday week flexing alongside streamer N3on—first by copping a $300,000 Bentley live on stream, then by flying out for a $5 million yacht trip in the Bahamas.
The whole thing played out online, racking millions of views and making it one of the most talked-about crossovers between a mainstream artist and a digital creator this year.
The chaos started during a livestream when Iggy, fresh off some playful banter with N3on (real name Rangesh Mutama), walked into a dealership and dropped six figures on a Bentley—no hesitation, no second-guessing, just straight flexing. Fans in the chat lost their minds, and the clip instantly went viral on TikTok and X.
But the real celebration came after. Iggy invited N3on to join her for a multi-day yacht trip in the Bahamas that reportedly raised a $5 million bill. The pair streamed everything—from fishing to yacht tours—turning the birthday getaway into must-watch content. For context: most yacht charters in the Bahamas cost between $25K and $90K weekly. Iggy’s trip was on another level, signaling an extended stay or one of the most exclusive superyachts money can buy.
Naturally, people started speculating whether the rapper and the 21-year-old streamer were more than collaborators. Iggy cleared that up fast. She revealed that the connection is business on stream: she’s bringing N3on in as part of her MOTHERLAND casino platform in a multi-million-dollar deal.
“Well, yeah, we’re like business partners now,” she told viewers. “I signed him to my casino… ’cause I gave him a lot of money in the millions.”

The move signals a strategic expansion for both. Azalea has been developing MOTHERLAND as a hybrid online casino and entertainment platform, aiming to blend gaming with celebrity-driven livestreams. Azalea taps directly into his young, digital-native audience by bringing N3on—who boasts over 900,000 YouTube subscribers and 400,000 Kick followers into the fold as a co-owner.
N3on—who’s been building his audience since streaming NBA 2K at age 12—brings over 1.3 million followers across platforms. It’s a mutually beneficial power play.
Online reactions have been split between awe and disbelief. One viral comment best summarized the situation: “Bro went from streamer to National Geographic cameraman in 2 seconds.”
But beyond the jokes, the collab highlights a bigger trend: merging celebrity culture with influencer-driven media. Rappers aren’t just rappers anymore—they’re moguls, streamers, entrepreneurs, and entertainers across platforms. And streamers like N3on aren’t just online personalities—they’re building business empires with mainstream names backing them.


