A Drake and BTS crossover? What multiverse is this
After teasing the release date of his upcoming album literally through ice, Drake finally dropped Iceman on May 15. As someone whose playlist can jump from Lata Mangeshkar to BTS in seconds, I was casually vibing to the album opener Make Them Cry when suddenly Drake says: “I’m feeling like BTS cause it took the whole career for me to be so discovered.”
And honestly, I had to pause.
Even V and J-Hope looked stunned hearing the shoutout in V’s Insta story. Fans immediately started debating the line – Was Drake appreciating BTS’ global rise and hard work, or was there another meaning behind it? A lot of people defended the lyric too, saying Drake probably understands the years of effort it took for K-pop acts like BTS to reach this level worldwide.
But beyond the debates, this was simply a crossover nobody expected. One of the biggest rappers in the world casually referencing one of the biggest K-pop groups feels surreal. And as ARMYs love to joke, “BTS keep forgetting how famous they are.” Their reaction to the mention honestly proved exactly that.
Ten years ago, a Drake and BTS crossover mention would’ve sounded impossible. Now it just feels like music culture has completely merged into one giant playlist – and music noobs like me are absolutely here for it.
And maybe that is the bigger cultural shift hiding behind one throwaway lyric. Music fandoms no longer exist in separate corners of the internet. Thanks to streaming algorithms, TikTok edits, stan Twitter and Instagram reels, listeners now move seamlessly between hiphop, K-pop, Punjabi music and Bollywood classics without really thinking about genre or geography anymore. One minute it’s Drake, the next it’s BTS, and suddenly you are back to an old Lata Mangeshkar song at 2am.
K-pop itself has also changed dramatically in the global imagination. A decade ago, Western artists acknowledging K-pop still felt novel, almost niche. Today, BTS references appear naturally in mainstream rap lyrics.
Maybe the real multiverse moment is not Drake mentioning BTS. It is the fact that today, an artiste like Diljit Dosanjh can perform at Coachella, Coldplay can collaborate with BTS, and global playlists can hold all of it together without feeling strange at all. Pop culture no longer really has one centre anymore. Everything exists in the same feed now.
Even V and J-Hope looked stunned hearing the shoutout in V’s Insta story. Fans immediately started debating the line – Was Drake appreciating BTS’ global rise and hard work, or was there another meaning behind it? A lot of people defended the lyric too, saying Drake probably understands the years of effort it took for K-pop acts like BTS to reach this level worldwide.
But beyond the debates, this was simply a crossover nobody expected. One of the biggest rappers in the world casually referencing one of the biggest K-pop groups feels surreal. And as ARMYs love to joke, “BTS keep forgetting how famous they are.” Their reaction to the mention honestly proved exactly that.
Ten years ago, a Drake and BTS crossover mention would’ve sounded impossible. Now it just feels like music culture has completely merged into one giant playlist – and music noobs like me are absolutely here for it.
And maybe that is the bigger cultural shift hiding behind one throwaway lyric. Music fandoms no longer exist in separate corners of the internet. Thanks to streaming algorithms, TikTok edits, stan Twitter and Instagram reels, listeners now move seamlessly between hiphop, K-pop, Punjabi music and Bollywood classics without really thinking about genre or geography anymore. One minute it’s Drake, the next it’s BTS, and suddenly you are back to an old Lata Mangeshkar song at 2am.
K-pop itself has also changed dramatically in the global imagination. A decade ago, Western artists acknowledging K-pop still felt novel, almost niche. Today, BTS references appear naturally in mainstream rap lyrics.
Maybe the real multiverse moment is not Drake mentioning BTS. It is the fact that today, an artiste like Diljit Dosanjh can perform at Coachella, Coldplay can collaborate with BTS, and global playlists can hold all of it together without feeling strange at all. Pop culture no longer really has one centre anymore. Everything exists in the same feed now.
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