As anticipated, Cardi B shouldn’t be comfortable about her lawsuit. Noting that the Gangsta B***h Music Vol. 1 tape made lower than $1 million, the “Bodak Yellow” rapper acknowledged in her deposition (per Inked Magazine), “I am actually upset as a result of I actually must be with my child. All due to some bulls**t making an attempt to get cash after which $5,000,000. Are you f***ing kidding me? That mixtape did not even make, not even 1,000,000 {dollars}.” Cardi added, “I bought actual lawsuits with actual sh**, and I bought to take care of this bulls**t. That is 4 hours lengthy taking away from my time, my job, my motherhood.”
Thankfully for tattoo artists, nonetheless, the case may set a precedent method for content material creators when depicting tattoos within the media. Whereas tattoos have triggered infringement lawsuits previously in movies and e-sports — Mike Tyson’s tattoo artist, S. Victor Whitmill, who filed a case against Warner Bros. for utilizing his design on Ed Helms’ character in The Hangover, for instance — Cardi B’s potential trial is the primary of its variety within the music business, per High Snobiety. The trial is scheduled for 2021, and you may count on to see Cardi B’s title within the press lengthy after that.