"That Is Not the Law”: UMG Fires Back at Drake’s Appeal Over Kendrick Lamar’s ‘Not Like Us’

Published 03/28/2026, 1:16 PM EDT

Drake’s response to Kendrick Lamar’s ‘Not Like Us’ did not come only in the form of diss tracks. In 2025, he filed a lawsuit against Universal Music Group, accusing the label of amplifying what he called a “false and malicious narrative.” In a genre built on lyrical warfare, this was unprecedented: a rapper taking a diss track to court, not the booth. The first twist came swiftly: a federal judge dismissed the case in October. But the story did not end there, it sharpened.

Drake is now attempting to revive his lawsuit over Lamar’s' Not Like Us,' drawing a strong response from UMG.

UMG draws the line and incinerates Drake

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UMG’s latest response to Drake’s appeal argues that Drake is attempting to “critically undermine” the very mechanics of rap, a genre they stress, built on exaggeration, insult, and verbal brinkmanship. 

“That is not the law, and Drake’s view would critically undermine a highly creative art form built on exaggeration, insult, and wordplay,” UMG’s attorneys write. 

Their argument hinges on something every rap obsessive already knows: diss tracks are not affidavits. UMG points out that Kendrick Lamar’s bar came in direct response to Drake’s own claims about domestic abuse and paternity that were equally explosive. To isolate one line, they argue, is to misunderstand the entire tradition.

To understand how it got here, you have to rewind to the long tail of tension between Drake and Kendrick Lamar, a feud that simmered through years of coded shots. It ranged from Lamar’s infamous ‘Control’ verse in 2013 where he called out all his peers, to Drake’s subtle but silent dismissals. This was always about authorship and who gets to wear the crown when the metrics say one thing and the culture says another.

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But while the courts debate context and other musicians continue to target Drake, the culture has already moved on for Drake.

Drake’s music streams do not flinch

Outside the courtroom, the numbers tell a different story, one where controversy coexists with dominance. Drake recently became the first artist to surpass 130 billion streams on Spotify. Five of his albums have crossed seven billion streams each, an absurd metric of consistency in an era that rarely allows it.

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Even in the shadow of ‘Not Like Us’, Drake’s catalog moves untouched, playlisted, replayed, recontextualized by millions who may never read a court filing but know every word to ‘Marvin’s Room’. His upcoming 2026 release, ‘ICEMAN’, folds this moment into his mythology rather than running from it, another entry in a discography that has always blurred vulnerability with dominance, melody with menace.

If Kendrick Lamar won the battle in the court of public rhythm, Drake remains undefeated in the algorithm. In the end, this feud has outgrown diss tracks. It is about where hip-hop lives now, between bars and briefs, streams and statutes. 

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What do you think? Did ‘Not Like Us’ cross a line, or is this just hip-hop being hip-hop at its sharpest? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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Sarah Ansari

393 articles

Sarah Ansari is an entertainment writer at Netflix Junkie, transitioning from four years in marketing and automotive journalism to storytelling-driven pop culture coverage. With a background in English Literature and experience writing across NFL, NASCAR, and NBA verticals, she brings a research-led, narrative-focused lens to film and television. Passionate about exploring how stories are crafted and why they resonate, Sarah unwinds through sketching, swimming, motorsports—and yearly winter Harry Potter marathons.

Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra

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