Drake has ignited a new round of online drama with A$AP Rocky, using his surprise album ICEMAN to question why Rihanna has not heavily promoted her partner’s recent music on social media.
On the track “Burning Bridges,” released as part of Drake’s multi-project drop on May 15, the Toronto rapper includes a repeated chorus that directly references Rocky’s situation: “Your baby mama ain’t even post your single, damn, where she at? / Yeah, where she at?”
The line has been widely interpreted as aimed at A$AP Rocky, whose longtime partner Rihanna is the mother of his three children. While Rihanna publicly supported Rocky’s January 2026 album Don’t Be Dumb — including posting about it reaching No. 1 — fans and observers noted she did not push individual singles from the project to her massive Instagram audience with the same level of visibility some expected.
Drake’s fans quickly amplified the diss, flooding comment sections on both Rihanna’s and Rocky’s recent Instagram posts with the lyrics, “Where she at?” queries, ice emojis, and related memes. The trolling has extended across TikTok, X, and other platforms in the days since the album’s arrival.
The latest exchange continues a long-simmering tension between the two artists. Drake and Rocky were once collaborators, appearing together on the 2011 hit “Fuckin’ Problems.” Rihanna’s previous on-and-off romantic history with Drake, followed by her public relationship with Rocky that began around 2020, has added a personal layer to their rift.
On Don’t Be Dumb, Rocky included lines widely seen as directed at Drake, such as references to stealing flow and claiming “my baby mama Rihanna.” He later characterized the comments as not constituting serious “smoke” but acknowledged the pair are no longer close.
Drake’s ICEMAN, released alongside two other projects titled Maid of Honour and Habibti, features additional bars believed to reference Rocky, including apparent jabs at their fractured friendship and past disses.
As of May 19, neither Rocky nor Rihanna has publicly responded to the specific lines on “Burning Bridges.” The song, which shifts from a jazzy piano opening into hazy trap-pop, has contributed to strong early streaming numbers for the project.


