Offset is not here for the commentary—and he’s making that loud and clear after Jess Hilarious, co-host of The Breakfast Club, gave her unfiltered take on his split with Cardi B during her recent appearance on Shannon Sharpe’s Club Shay Shay.
Jess, never one to bite her tongue, had this to say:
“I would never do that,” she remarked, referencing Cardi and Offset’s frequent online blowups. “Me and Rome [her son’s father] have had our arguments, but I’ve never gone back and forth with him online. Hell no. Never, ever want to do that. Because at the end of the day, we’ve still got this child, I’ve got to deal with you.”
From there, she dove even deeper into the couple’s rocky history, claiming Offset manipulated the emotional balance in the relationship.
“I think Offset just knew that she would never leave,” Jess said. “He knew the things to do to get her back… but when she started moving on, oh, that baby couldn’t take that. He be upset.”
And the jabs didn’t stop there. Jess added:
“Cardi’s a lover, we obviously know that. She just wanted to be happy and tried to make that happen several times, but it don’t always work out like that.”
Offset Claps Back
Offset caught wind of the remarks and wasn’t about to let them slide. Taking to X (formerly Twitter), he fired off a now-deleted post aimed straight at Jess:
“Jess stop mentioning me for I roast you ass for hating on another Black women.”
But the story didn’t end there. According to Jess, Offset also slid into her DMs—though she’s keeping her cool for now.
“He tried it. He is in my DM but I didn’t open the DM yet ’cause I didn’t feel compelled to go crazy on this man,” she said on The Breakfast Club the next morning. “I read the first few words and it said, ‘Why my name in your interview?’”
Why It Matters
This isn’t just gossip—it’s a modern masterclass in celebrity accountability, media boundaries, and the razor-thin line between honesty and intrusion. Jess Hilarious represents a new wave of no-filter media voices. Offset is part of a generation of artists forced to fight personal battles in public arenas.
In a culture where every comment becomes a headline, Offset’s response signals something real: Black artists—especially Black men—are demanding a more nuanced narrative.
KMOB1003’s Take
This isn’t about picking sides—it’s about recognizing the weight of public narratives. Jess Hilarious may be speaking from her truth, but Offset is reclaiming his right to protect his. And in the court of public opinion, that balance matters.
The next chapter in the Offset/Cardi saga is still unwritten—but one thing’s for sure: the era of unchecked commentary is over.
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