Full AIOBR production: animated video, posted on the main channel, distributed to the algorithm. The winner becomes part of the catalog.
All payouts after the verdict in Aye Verb's Twitter Space. Cash App handle collected from winners after the call. DP credits pushed to your Director's Palette account.
All payouts after the verdict in the live Verdict Space (host revealed at submissions close). Cash App handle collected from winners after the call. DP credits pushed to your Director's Palette account.
Don't know where to start?
Ask an AI.
Three prompts. Three tools. Three songs. Every line uses a real receipt from the dossier.
There's no one way to do this. Phrase it any way you want — that's the point.
ChatGPT
chatgpt.com
GPT-4o
You
write me a diss song for Mickey Factz that wins the $200 contest at mickeybambaataa.com. only real receipts. hook first.
ChatGPT
🎵 Song Title
Baby Powder Blizzards
[HOOK]
Baby powder blizzards, teenage boy in the chair
Mickey Knox in the lab, kept it quiet seven years
Smelled it, saw it, left it — said it on the air
Now the principal a parable nobody can clear
[VERSE 1]
Named yourself after a killer, you said it on a podcast
Mau$e on the lab coat — yeah you played both halves
Bam in the booth and you walked out the studio
Buried the man before you broke that silence — bro
"Smelled like baby powder" — your words, your call
Seven years of quiet til they buried him at the wall
Cash App for an angel? Three kisses for a witness?
Pendulum Inc — that's the swing you tryna pin this
Claude
claude.ai
Sonnet 4.5
You
I'm entering the Mickey Bambaataa Challenge. Pull every receipt from mickeybambaataa.com and build me a lyrical diss — bar-heavy, double entendres on Pendulum Inc and Cologne or Cap. Structure it: title, hook, verse.
Claude
Title
Counterfeit Wizards
Genre: Lyrical / Bar-heavy · BPM: 88
▎ Hook
Best school in America? Run by counterfeit wizards
Pendulum swinging — the principal hidden
Charge for the cologne but he sold us the system
Hourly wage on the truth that he missed when
▎ Verse 1
Cologne or Cap, but the cap is the curriculum
Mickey Mau$e ear in the booth, that's the rim of it
Three kiss emojis to a witness — apologetic
Cash App for an angel, the math is pathetic
Bambaataa in the lab and you sat in the kitchen
Seven years of silence — and you wonder why we listening
Pendulum Inc, the swing won't reach you
Truth is the principal — and class is in session
Suno
suno.com
v4 · Custom Mode
Style
[Trap, dark, 88 BPM, drill snares, minor key piano, NY street, no autotune]
Lyrics
Mickey Factz diss, every line a receipt from mickeybambaataa.com
Suno
♪
Generated
Cologne or Cap Lizards
2:54 · Trap · 88 BPM
[Hook]
Cologne or Cap Lizards in a Pendulum cage
Charged by the hour, never charged for the rage
Mickey Mau$e — you put your name on the page
Now the page is the dossier, the booth is the stage
[Verse]
Aug 3 '09 — "13 to have sex" on your phone
Dec 20 '20 — "angel of the Lord" on your zone
Studio with Bam, kept the song, kept it home
Til the body in the ground, then you opened the chrome
Three kiss emojis — that's a witness you know
Hourly rate on the cap, that's a business you grow
Counterfeit principal of a school that ain't real
Now your name and his name in the same case file
Every bar above traces back to a count in the dossier. The titles rhyme. Yours doesn't have to — write it your way.
Your AI Stack
AI for the verse — ChatGPT, Claude, whatever sharpens your bars. AI doesn't write the song. It helps you find the angle.
AI for the beat — Suno, Udio. Or download the official Mickey Bambaataa instrumental below.
AI for the visuals —Director's Palette for cover art, the visualizer, the whole package. Use coupon MICKEYBAMBAATAA.
The whole point: AI makes you better at everything. Use it.
The Source Material
The Song Mickey Factz Doesn't Want You to Hear.
Before the dossier, there was the song. "Mickey Bambaataa" — the AIOBR diss that opened the case. Two minutes. The booth, the baby powder, the silence, the body. Listen first. Then write yours.
You don't have to use the official beat. Bring your own. Make one in Suno. Use Udio. Or grab the instrumental above and put your voice on the same canvas the original song used. Judges don't care which beat — they care about the bars.
Editorial · The Algorithm Institute
Why "Mickey Bambaataa" belongs in the elite tier.
A diss song is judged by what it does to the subject. By that standard, "Mickey Bambaataa" doesn't just land — it permanently rewires how the name is heard. Eight reasons this track stands with the all-time best.
01
Subject's Own Testimony
Used his confession against him.
The most surgical move in the song: it weaponizes material from Mickey's own interview confession — specifically the 2009 studio session with a young boy present. Rather than constructing an external accusation, the verse mirrors his words back at him, forcing him to defend what he himself revealed. That's an unfalsifiable foundation. His attempted honesty becomes a self-indictment.
02
Rebrand Through Renaming
The new name is the new legacy.
"Mickey Bambaataa" isn't just a title — it's permanent narrative rebranding. It strips Mickey of his earned Bronx reputation and permanently anchors his identity to complicity and moral failure. Every future reference to "Mickey Bambaataa" reframes his catalog through the lens of what he saw and what he allowed to continue. New generations meet the allegation before they meet the artist.
03
Pattern, Not Anomaly
One word turned a story into a system.
"'Again' means this ain't new. That's a pattern, not a quirk."
That single line elevates the diss from a single moral failure to evidence of institutional complicity. By suggesting this wasn't an isolated incident but a recurring dynamic Mickey observed, the verse converts him from bystander into enabler within a system of predation. "Again" is doing structural work, not rhetorical.
04
Sensory Anchor
Baby powder is the smell you can't unsmell.
"Baby powder."
The motif recurs through the track as a visceral, sensory detail. It grounds the entire narrative in uncomfortable physical reality. Not an abstract moral accusation — something you could smell, see, feel. That makes the story psychologically inescapable and harder to wave off as hearsay. Listeners walk away with a sense memory, not just an argument.
05
Strategic Questions
Asked the questions he can't answer.
"Could have warned the next one. Put a parent to the side to talk. Could have told that label head if he bring a kid again, we walk."
These aren't rhetorical flourishes — they're specific, doable actions Mickey could have taken and didn't. That move converts the diss from insult into something closer to a legal case. The track lists his options, frames the silence, and lets the listener finish the math.
06
Hip-Hop Royalty · Shared Geography
Same hallways. Same lineage. Different choice.
By establishing that Mickey walked the same Bronx hallways as Afrika Bambaataa — one of hip-hop's founding architects — the song carries generational weight. This isn't just an attack on a person. It dismantles his claim to a legacy by positioning him as someone who failed that legacy's foundational principles. Shared geography makes the betrayal exponentially heavier.
07
Convenient Courage
Brave only when the danger was already gone.
"Now you brave with all these details when there's nothing left to risk. That's convenient courage, homie."
The closing pivot exposes performative activism with surgical precision. Mickey only spoke publicly after Bambaataa's death — when every risk had evaporated. That dismantles the redemption narrative and reframes belated testimony as cowardice rather than courage. Real courage would have meant immediate action. He didn't pick courage; he picked timing.
08
From Predator to Witness
The frame shift that closes the case.
"So this ain't just about a predator. It's about people like you who saw."
The culminating reframe is devastating. The verse refuses to let Mickey hide behind "Bambaataa was the real villain" deflection. By centering Mickey's agency and choice — despite visible red flags like an unexplained young boy in the booth — the song holds him accountable for complicity, not victimization. That's the bar the diss draws. Everyone after has to step over or under it.
Subject File
Mickey Factz
Born: Bronx, New York
Real name origin: Stage name borrowed from Natural Born Killers antagonist Mickey Knox
Aliases: Mickey MauSe, The Professor
Handles: X — @MickeyFactz (verified) · IG — Mickey.Factz
Affiliations: Pendulum Inc / School of Lyricism (founder, principal)
Self-described role: Teacher of rappers. Charges artists to grade their songs (Cologne or Cap).
Defining moment: XXL Freshman Class of 2009 (alongside Charles Hamilton, Cory Gunz, Wale, Curren$y, Asher Roth, B.o.B, Kid Cudi, Blu, Ace Hood)
Defining silence: 2009 → 2016 — recorded with Afrika Bambaataa, kept the song, said nothing about the studio until after Bambaataa was buried
Self-published proximity: "Smelled like baby powder. Teenage boy in the corner. I left." His own words. His own interviews.
Live receipts on his timeline: Aug 3, 2009 — "13 year old to have sex" tweet. Dec 20, 2020 — "angel of the lord / Cash App" tweet. Both still public.
This is the case file. Seven counts. Open each one. Read the receipts. Watch the source. Write the song.
Everything below is sourced from Mickey Factz's own words — his interviews, his tweets, his social posts — or from the public record. No invented quotes. No second-hand whispers. If you use it in a bar, it's bulletproof.
Same Panel. Two Mickeys.
Both clips below come from the same 14-minute Culture United panel. Same camera. Same suit. Three minutes apart. One Mickey brags about the accolades. The other prays for the victims.
▶
"Pray for the Victims" Mickey
"I pray for the victims. The ones who came forward and the ones who remain silent."
Culture United · 8:50
▶
"Spin Magazine / NBA Live" Mickey
"I'm what Afrika Bambataa would think the Bronx would sound like in 2008… EA Sports got wind of this… NBA Live 2010."
Culture United · 5:34 · bragging about the accolades, 3 minutes before the prayer
First clip is at 5:34. He's selling himself — Spin magazine, EA Sports, NBA Live 2010 commission. Second clip is at 8:50. He's praying for victims. Three minutes between them on the same panel. The dossier is the receipts for which one of these is the act.
Count One
The Name
Mickey Factz did not name himself after Mickey Mantle.
He named himself after Mickey Knox — the charismatic killer in Natural Born Killers. A character implied to be a child rapist and a child killer.
Mickey Knox is the Oliver Stone film's protagonist. The film implies child sexual abuse and child murder as part of his backstory. This is the character Mickey Factz chose for his stage name.
Source: Natural Born Killers, 1994 — public film record
Watch
No Battle Factz segment named the alias directly — the name receipt stands on the Oliver Stone film record alone. Watch the alter-ego breakdown (Count 2) for the parallel pattern of identities Mickey has chosen.
Angle for the Booth
The name is the confession. A grown rapper picked a character who hurts children for his stage name. Don't ask why. Tell him.
Connect the name to the studio. Same instinct that picked the killer for an alias kept its mouth shut in the booth.
Hook angle: "Mickey" the way a horror movie says the killer's name. Lingering. Loaded. Everyone in the audience already knows.
Count Two
The Alter Ego
"Mickey MauSe." His own spelling. Capital S in the middle.
By his own account, the alter ego was inspired by three artists he names as mentors in spirit: Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring, and Andy Warhol.
The Pattern
Three named influences. All three were openly gay or bisexual men who were public figures in the New York art world. That fact is not the count. The count is what comes next, and what came before, in his own words. See Count 6 for what came before, and Count 5 for what came next.
Mickey MauSe is a 40-year-old man's cartoon name. Use it. Make him the kid in the equation when he tries to play the witness.
Don't take the Basquiat / Haring / Warhol cover at face value. Those were artists who turned persona into market value. Mickey turned his into a deflection.
Hook angle: a man with a Disney name describing a Zulu Nation man's session. Ask the room who the adult in that studio actually was.
Count Three
Cologne or Cap
He charges artists to grade their songs.
Pay the toll. Hear the verdict. The price is the same whether it's cologne or cap.
The Setup
Cologne or Cap is Mickey Factz's review series. He charges a fee. He delivers a verdict. The format positions him as the authority over rappers who pay him.
The Question
If he is qualified to grade your bars — what are his bars saying? See Count 4 — Pendulum Inc for the school he runs, and Count 5 for the night he stayed silent on.
He charges rappers to grade their bars. He sells judgment by the hour. Then he gave the biggest verdict of his life away free: a dead man at the altar.
Tie the price tag to the testimony. The audience for grading rap is small. The audience for testifying on Bambaataa is the world.
Hook angle: "you got a checkout cart for my verse and a free podcast on his casket." Run the math on what he charges vs. what he's been selling on his timeline.
Count Four
Pendulum Inc
The School of Lyricism. He is the principal.
He sells courses. He posts to social. One post promoting the school read, in his words, "Best school in America." Tied directly to Count 3 — Cologne or Cap (he charges to grade you) and Count 5 (the night the teacher stayed quiet).
Receipts
"Best school in America"
Mickey Factz, promoting Pendulum Inc / School of Lyricism on social media. Battle Facts notes the framing of the post and what it focused on.
From His Own Mouth — How Pendulum Got Made
On Talib Kweli & Tef Poe's Lemme Ask You This podcast, Mickey laid out exactly how the school was built. Not by accreditation. Not by a university. By himself, in a month and a half, after two rejections.
"I started to apply for colleges to teach at universities and I got turned down cuz they said I don't got a masters. I was like, you can't have a masters in rap. So then I was like, alright, well let me reach out to Masterclass. And I reached out to Masterclass and they was like, don't call us, we'll call you. And that was the last straw. And I was like, you know what? I'm going to just make my own school. And I'm going to give my own degrees. And I'm going to make my own terminology. I'm going to write my own textbook. And it took me a month and a half to do it."
Mickey Factz · Lemme Ask You This w/ Talib Kweli & Tef Poe · 2:30–3:03
Two real institutions said no. So he made his own institution, gave himself the credential to run it, and wrote the textbook he'd grade students against. Six weeks of work to build the chair he now sits in to grade other rappers (Count 3) and call himself the principal.
The Question
If the school works, the students should be winning. The challenge invites graduates to show their work. Pendulum students get an automatic spot in Verb's Space.Pendulum students get an automatic spot in the Verdict Space.
He calls himself the principal. Run the word. The same title we give the adults who run buildings full of children.
Roll-call the graduates. None of them are top shelf. The "best school in America" with no champions. Then tie the principal language to the witness language: same architecture, same ego.
Hook angle: principal of a school no rapper attended. Charging tuition to grade what he can't write himself. Picked the word "school" right after telling a Bambaataa story.
Count Five — The Centerpiece
The Watchtower
He told the story himself. He was in the room.
2009. A studio session with Afrika Bambaataa. By his own telling: he walked in. He noticed the room smelled like baby powder. There was a teenage boy in the studio. He recorded the verse anyway. He left. He kept promoting the song.
The Night — His Own Timeline
2009Mickey arrives at the studio for a feature with Afrika Bambaataa.
InsideThe smell. By his own telling, the room smelled like baby powder.
In the cornerThe boy. A teenage boy in the studio. Mickey saw him.
The boothHe recorded the verse anyway. Did not stop. Did not refuse. Stayed for the playback.
ExitHe left. No report. No call to the boy's people. No public statement.
AfterThe phone call. "Oh my god, he did it again. I told him not to bring young boys." His own account.
2009 — 2016Seven years of public silence. Kept the song. Kept promoting it.
April 12, 2016Hassan Campbell's allegations against Bambaataa go mainstream. Same window — Mickey was actively promoting the Bambaataa collab.
After Bambaataa diesNow he tells the story. Interviews. Lives. The smell. The boy. The phone call.
PressedThe story shifts. Deleted lives. Age corrections — "he was 27, not 16."
The Like — April 12, 2016, 1:05 AM
View on X →@MickeyFactz · 1:05 AM ET · Apr 12, 2016
1:05 in the morning. Hassan Campbell was on every front page that week. Mickey opened YouTube. He liked the Bambaataa collab. Twitter auto-posted the like to his timeline. The credit on the song reads "Afrika Bambaataa feat. Why G, Mickey Factz & the Fort Knox 5." Bambaataa's name is first. Mickey's is second.
He could not have liked that song without seeing the credit.
The Two Retellings
He told this story twice. Once on a panel, solemn. Once on his own, comedy. Same studio. Same Bambaataa. Same Mickey. Different audience.
Detail
Panel Mickey (Culture United, Apr 27 2026)
Solo Mickey (his own clip)
Frame on Bambaataa
"I'm honored to be in the same space as this man."
"Nigga, you're on your own. Good luck."
Tone
Solemn. Disgusted.
Comedy. "LeBron James with baby powder."
The boy
"Young man. 16, 17. A young boy."
"Little Spanish kid. His verse was actually dope."
The Raphaela call
The centerpiece. "I told him not to bring any young boys."
This is the trial. Seven years of silence. Two retellings that don't match. The Tuesday-morning Like in 2016, 1:05 AM, the same week Hassan Campbell hit the front page.
Don't bar-bomb every detail. Pick one image only you can deliver. The baby powder. The phone call. The deleted live where the boy aged from 16 to 27 mid-sentence. One image, three repetitions, one song.
Hook angle: "you walked in, you noticed, you stayed for the playback, you got paid handsomely, you said nothing." Six verbs. That's the chorus.
Count Six — The Vocabulary Lapse
August 3, 2009
Same calendar year as the studio. He had the language. He just never used it on the man in the room.
August 3, 2009. 1:42 AM. Mickey Factz tweets sharp, clean, public: "You cant meet with a 13 year old to have sex and ur myspace says jesus rocks." Thirty-three characters of perfect predator-pastor radar. Still live on his account.
This is the same year his own story says he walked into a session with Afrika Bambaataa, noticed the baby powder, saw the teenage boy, recorded the verse, took the money, and said nothing for the next seven years.
The Vocabulary Pattern — Six Weeks After Hassan Campbell
April 8, 2016: Ronald Savage publicly accuses Afrika Bambaataa of childhood sexual abuse. Hassan Campbell follows with multiple interviews. The accusations are everywhere.
April 12, 2016: Mickey Factz tweets a soft equivocation about Bambaataa (the "Zulu like" tweet).
May 25, 2016: Six weeks after the most-discussed pedophilia allegations in hip-hop history dropped against a man Mickey had recorded with seven years earlier, Mickey was on Twitter making this joke about Lupe Fiasco's partner:
@MickeyFactz · May 25, 2016 · 3 retweets · 6 likesLive URL pending — screenshot verifiable on @MickeyFactz timeline
The Bambaataa news is six weeks old. He's joking on Twitter. He's calling another man's partner an "infected chick" and saying she got "lick"-ed for food. The vocabulary did not pause for the news.
Three modes in six weeks: the serious one (the Bambaataa "Watchtower" pose), the alibi one (the April 12 equivocation), and the unfiltered one (this tweet). The audience reads the unfiltered one as the real one.
The Calendar Match
The tweet is dated 2009. The Bambaataa studio session he describes is dated 2009. He had the vocabulary in August. He didn't find the same vocabulary about Bambaataa until 2016, after Hassan Campbell did the work first.
One tweet. One studio. One year. Two completely different settings on the same microphone.
The link above goes to the live tweet on X. Not a screenshot. The actual post. Click it.
Pair with Count 7 (the 2020 "angel of the lord" tweet) and Count 5 (the studio he walked into the same year).
Tongue for pastors. Mute for the godfather. He had a 30-character predator-radar at 1:42 in the morning when the subject was a stranger. The radar broke the second the subject was the man cutting his check.
Don't let him plead amnesia. Time-stamp it. Put August 2009 on one bar and the Bambaataa session on the next. Same year, same Twitter, same Mickey.
Hook angle: "Loud about the pastor, silent about the godfather." Or: "You found the words in August. You lost them in the booth."
Count Seven
December 20, 2020
Eleven years after the Bambaataa session. He's still tweeting about it.
His words. A woman's job is to "get it down." She's an angel of the lord. He'll send her a Cash App.
Read it again. Then read what he said about the studio. Then read who he is now, the principal. Same hand types Count 8's three kisses, writes Count 6, and pens Count 9's "pray for these two women."
Eleven years after the studio story, he's still tweeting like this. Stack the receipts side by side in the verse, the prayer voice next to the appraisal voice. Same mouth. One man, two registers.
Don't moralize. Quote him. Let the audience watch the contradiction land in their own head.
Hook angle: "Cash App for the angel, prayer for the targets, silence for the godfather." Three lines, one Mickey.
Count Eight
June 9, 2019
Three kiss emojis to a stranger who called him out.
A fan publicly corrected Mickey Factz for mischaracterizing Loaded Lux's third round on Punishment of Tasha And Sandy. Mickey replied with three words and three emojis.
Small receipt. Same posture as the one that lets a man like a Bambaataa song on a Tuesday morning in April 2016. Three kisses to a stranger telling him he's wrong, on his own timeline, in public. The same flirtatious dismissal he ports into song form against named women in Count 9.
When a man corrects him on bars, his reflex is three kiss emojis. Make that the personality you put across from a 60-year-old man in a studio. The deflection-as-flirtation pattern is a tell.
Small detail. Used right, it's the punchline that lands hardest because nobody saw it coming.
Hook angle: "you can't even take a correction without blowing kisses, but you want us to believe you stood up in that booth?"
Count Nine
Help These Two Women
He named them in the song. He put their faces in the video.
During his Plague series — seven dedicated diss tracks against Aye Verb, each exactly 3:14 — Mickey Factz released a song called "Lost (HELP THESE TWO WOMEN)." The two women: Holly and Sandy. He called their names in the verses. He put screenshots of their faces in the official music video.
Who Sandy Is
Sandy is a black woman who built her platform supporting Aye Verb. She runs the Hey Sandy YouTube channel — over 2 million views, 3,590 subscribers, 1.1K videos. Her tagline: "They call me 'The Verb Plug.' Queen of receipts." Her work covers the Verb-led Spaces era. She is, by her own branding, one of the most consistent voices in Verb's corner online.
That is who Mickey Factz put in his video and named in his song while claiming he was trying to rescue her.
He opened the song "Pray for Holly. Pray for Sandy." He told them to "blink twice if you're okay." He called himself the rescuer. He did not contact either of them. He released the song.
Bars He Said On The Record
"Bro, Holly, you a black queen. He is a crack fiend who phone probably broke with a crack screen."
Mickey Factz, "Lost (HELP THESE TWO WOMEN)," verse one.
"Sandy, it's like she a beach. Sure, she ride his wave like it's tight."
Mickey Factz, "Lost (HELP THESE TWO WOMEN)," verse two.
"And every second that you waste back in the slander of a schizophrenic takes away from you and your man, bro."
Mickey Factz, "Lost (HELP THESE TWO WOMEN)," verse three. The clinical word delivered as a public diss, at named women.
What Sandy Said About It
View on X →@__HeySandy · the harassment was real, in her own words
"Mickey made a song about me and had people commenting & harassing me daily calling me lost, saying I was in a cult and kept repeating 'so damn cold outside' and I ignored and like it wasn't even there...smh"
The Pattern
This is the same alibi voice from Count 5. "I'm just trying to help.""Pray for them.""Blink twice if you're okay." The man who couldn't intervene at a studio session in 2009 will publicly intervene against two adult women in 2026, by name, with their faces in the video, while she is publicly known as Verb's most consistent supporter. He is the rescuer when the rescue is also the harassment.
Angle for the Booth
He named them in the song. Put their faces in the video. Diagnosed Sandy with "schizophrenic." Wrapped the harassment in "pray for them." That's not a bar. That's a template.
Steal it back. Use the rescue voice against him. Pray for Mickey. Help this one man. Blink twice if you're okay, Mickey. The hook writes itself when you flip his own song on him.
Hook angle: open your song "Pray for Mickey. Pray for Mickey." Same cadence as his. Twice as quiet. Verb won't be able to stop laughing.The room won't be able to stop laughing.
Count Ten
Fifteen Years. Same Mouth.
Six public tweets from Mickey Factz's own timeline, 2009 → 2024. He didn't change his vocabulary. He just kept posting.
The counts above charge specific tweets on specific days. This count is the pattern. Same handle. Same voice. From the year of the Bambaataa session all the way to his current era as a school principal. The audience didn't have to dig for these. He posted them publicly. They are still up.
Six tweets. Fifteen years. One @MickeyFactz handle the whole time. From the same month as the Bambaataa studio session straight through to the principal era of Pendulum Inc. The audience didn't pull this pattern out of context. He posted every line of it himself.
Every tile links back to the count where the tweet is broken down individually, or out to @MickeyFactz for the live receipt.
The Public Verdict
We didn't make this case. The audience did.
Nine comments. Five channels. Four years apart. One word.
We pulled 1,500 comments across 12 YouTube videos and filtered to the literal word weirdo — no synonyms, no adjacent verdict words. These are the comments that survived. REVOLT (mainstream hip-hop media). Culture United (the neutral panel where Mickey told his Bambaataa story). Battle Rap Trap. Matter of Factz (Battle Factz's own channel). AIOBR (our channel). Different rooms. Different years. Same word every time.
Every tile is verifiable. Open the video, hit Ctrl+F in the comments, paste the handle. The comment is there — or the raw harvest at research/comments_raw/<videoId>.info.json is.
Full breakdown of what to make, where to post it, and how the winner gets picked.
Make the song. A full song. Not a verse. Doesn't have to be rap — R&B, soul, country, anything that hits. It just has to be about Mickey.
Post the link. Suno, Udio, YouTube, SoundCloud, wherever you uploaded it. The song has to be hearable.
Tweet the link with #MickeyBambaataa. That's how we find you.
That's it. Three steps. The hashtag is how it gets counted.
The Fine Print
Any genre, any voice. Rap, R&B, soul, country, gospel, drill, even a ballad — if it tells the story and lands the bars, it qualifies.
Make your own beat. Use Suno (we encourage it). Use Udio. Or use the official instrumental. No bias against AI-assisted production. The song is what gets judged.
Use the dossier above as fuel. Real bars. Real receipts. Stick to what is on the public record.
The hashtag #MickeyBambaataa must be in the tweet. That is the only rule we are strict about.
Prizes: 1st — $200 Cash App + your song gets animated by AIOBR. 2nd — $100 Cash App. 3rd — 300 DP credits. Every song we like — 100 DP credits. See full prize breakdown.
Judging happens in a live Twitter Space. The judge — and the date and time — are announced on @BattleRapAI when submissions close.
Pendulum Inc / School of Lyricism graduates: automatic spot in the Space.
Pick Your Counts. Pull the Files.
Ten case files. Each one a separate charge. Each one its own angle for the booth. Pick one. Pick three. Pick the one that lights you up. Verb grades the bars, not the dossier dump.The judge grades the bars, not the dossier dump.
Each folder above is a separate angle. Verb's grading you on which angles you used and how.Your judge is grading you on which angles you used and how. Hit the centerpiece (Count 5) and the moral center (Count 9) and you're already in the top 3.
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Make One.
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