Megan Thee Stallion reportedly rejected a collaboration with Call of Duty due to her past trauma. The 30-year-old rapper reportedly declined to participate after she learned that her character could be shot in the popular video game series. Notably, Megan Thee Stallion was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder after being shot by Tory Lanez.
Megan Thee Stallion ‘ditched’ a collaboration with Call of Duty
Megan Thee Stallion reportedly declined a collaboration offer with the Call of Duty video game series. On November 19, Daniel Kinney, Roc Nation’s Senior VP of Branding & Strategic Partnerships, testified during the rapper’s defamation case against blogger Milagro Gramz. He disclosed certain collaboration offers and opportunities that never materialized for Stallion due to her mental health diagnosis.
According to journalist Meghann Cuniff, Kinney stated that Megan Thee Stallion “ditched Call of Duty when she learnt she would be a shootable character in the game.”
Cuniff also shared, “That triggered her and she said, ‘I’m not doing this’,” Kinney said about the 30-year-old rapper.
Megan Thee Stallion was shot by Tory Lanez in 2020. Following this, she underwent an intensive medical program called Dialectical Behavior Therapy, which cost her $240,000. Furthermore, according to TMZ, the rapper’s lawyers went on record to say that she’s been diagnosed with PTSD, as confirmed by Dr. Lenore Walker.
Last October, Megan filed a defamation lawsuit against social media commentator and blogger Milagro Cooper, popularly known as Milagro Gramz. The rapper accused the social media creator of carrying out a vicious “campaign of harassment and cyberbullying” against her in cahoots with Tory Lanez. (via Complex)
The lawsuit alleges that Gramz worked in tandem with Lanez to malign Stallion’s reputation after she publicly named the rapper as her shooter in the July 2020 case.
“She’s created a space for a lot of people to come speak negatively about me. I felt like nobody cared that I was shot. I know everyone was making jokes about it,” Stallion said. (via ABC News)
Originally reported by Anwaya Mane on Mandatory.
