JT of the City Girls turned up the heat on Cardi B this week, firing off a brutal tweet on October 9 that reignited their long-running feud and pulled BIA into the crossfire. The post came after Cardi’s viral X (formerly Twitter) Space, where she addressed “bullying” accusations and defended herself following leaks of her unreleased diss record, “No Hook.”
JT had a few words for Cardi B pic.twitter.com/EE3H6BPrFQ
— No Jumper (@nojumper) October 9, 2025
“Bodega baddie my ass, you chop cheeeeeese. This is facts! Spaces is not the studio,” JT wrote, mocking Cardi’s Bronx-inspired “Bodega Baddie” persona. “All jokes aside what happen to that song? I thought that was the song? Nobody wanted to be a Bodega Baddie???? Well look at that ugly ass bitch who made the song… I get it!”
The City Girls rapper didn’t stop there. In another jab, she added, “Ugly b has not shut her dick sucking ass mouth since ‘No Hook’ got leaked, do that hoe rest? When is her honeymoon stage with the new bd? Like go chill & look pretty, wait… nvm just go chill purge face!”
JT Rips Cardi B’s X Space Rant
The “new bd” (baby daddy) remark appeared to reference Cardi’s rumored split from Offset, while “purge face” echoed online mockery about the rapper’s recent appearance. The comments landed just days after Cardi’s fiery Space, where she called out BIA for allegedly spreading rumors about her private life and claimed BIA’s hit “Whole Lotta Money” was originally sent to her.
JT’s post seemed to mock both Cardi’s “No Hook” leak and her ongoing attempts to double down on her Bronx identity through the “Bodega” aesthetic — a recurring theme in her visuals and branding. The insults also deepened the divide between Cardi and a new wave of female rappers who accuse her of stirring online beef for attention.
While Cardi hasn’t fired back yet, the post immediately lit up X, with fans from all sides weighing in and old clips of their 2022 back-and-forth resurfacing.
JT’s latest attack adds fuel to a volatile rivalry that continues to define the tension between Cardi and other women in rap — turning social media into hip-hop’s most unpredictable battlefield.