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DJ Speedsta Uncertain About Video Collab With K.Keed After Freestyle Controversy

In a recent appearance on the Podcast And Chill Network on YouTube, DJ Speedsta addressed the uncertain fate of a planned music video shoot with K.Keed, following the tension sparked by their now‑infamous freestyle controversy.

Speedsta, speaking directly as if K.Keed were in the room, said: “We’ve got a beautiful song on the album which we’re about to shoot a music video for and now it’s like you’ve just killed the whole energy, and you also killed it because you would never come and apologise.” He went on to lament that K.Keed “would never come and apologise and admit that she messed up, so we keep it moving, we hug it out and life goes on.” He emphasised: “You won’t do that, so what must happen now on the special moment we had on my album?” He continued, adding plainly: “It just kills the whole thing, it just kills the whole vibe.”

DJ Speedsta was referring to his recently released album, which features K.Keed on the track “TAKE iT EASY.”

The backdrop to the current situation stems from an interview on 5FM’s “5 Hip Hop Nights,” where DJ Speedsta asked K.Keed to deliver a freestyle. K.Keed declined the request, responding, “Nah, let’s not do that, Speedsta” Following the response, Speedsta questioned why rappers in 2025 no longer want to freestyle. The moment gained traction online and sparked conversation across social media. In response, K.Keed addressed the situation on the social media, writing, “I hope the clickbait was worth it. DJ Speedsta, Happy Women’s Month to you too,” suggesting that she viewed the moment as being framed more for reaction than genuine artistic engagement.

Now, DJ Speedsta’s remarks about the video shoot make it clear that the fallout may extend beyond public perception into creative collaboration. His characterization of the track as “beautiful” and the element of the music video as a “special moment” underscores its significance to him and the album’s narrative. Yet, the unresolved emotional rift specifically K.Keed’s reluctance to apologise or reconcile, according to Speeedsta, has cast a shadow over the project’s future.

In the interview, Speedsta structured his comments in a way that framed K.Keed’s gesture of an apology as pivotal to restoring the creative momentum. By saying, “so we keep it moving, we hug it out and life goes on,” he portrayed reconciliation as a standard path forward, but added that without that gesture from K.Keed, the collaboration’s energy is uncertain.

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