From Record Deal To Death Threat: Finesse2x Goes Nuclear On J Prince Sr. & Jr.
In the cutthroat world of Southern rap, where business deals are often sealed with handshakes and broken with bullets, Finesse2x has just lit the fuse on what could become one of the most dangerous public feuds in recent Houston hip-hop history.
The target? J Prince Jr. And the powerful Prince family empire. “I signed the worst deal I ever signed in my life,” Finesse2x declared in a series of raw, unfiltered clips that have since gone viral.
“I should have just went to Atlantic by myself.” What began as a standard artist-label contract dispute has rapidly escalated into something far more personal and volatile.

Finesse2x, a rising voice from the streets, accuses Mob Ties Entertainment — the label run by J Prince Jr., son of legendary Rap-A-Lot founder J Prince Sr.
— of trapping him in a deal that delivered nothing but broken promises, hidden charges, and career sabotage.
According to Finesse2x, the deal was supposed to be his golden ticket. Mob Ties sits under the Atlantic Records umbrella, offering what appeared to be a direct pipeline to major-label resources, placements, and industry connections.
Instead, he claims he received almost nothing in return despite delivering consistent music and independent income.
“I got gold plaques because I’m having motion,” he said. “I make 20, 30,000 off the streets every day.”
Yet he insists the label provided zero meaningful support — no hits, no real promotion, and no access to the rooms that matter.
While he was in the studio cooking up records with artists like GloRilla, the label allegedly did nothing to push the music forward.
The resentment runs deeper than just inactivity. Finesse2x claims Mob Ties charged him for luxury expenses that were presented as label support.
A private jet ride and expensive jewelry used in a music video? He says he paid for all of it out of his own pocket, only discovering the charges later when the paperwork arrived.
That same video, he alleges, generated significant money — but none of it came back to him.
“I paid for that jet. I paid for that jewelry,” he stated bitterly. “I ain’t know that at first though… until I got the paperwork.”
The financial betrayal, combined with what he sees as professional neglect, pushed Finesse2x to his breaking point.
He says he tried handling it privately, reaching out directly to J Prince Jr. With no resolution.
Eventually, the frustration spilled into public view. The situation detonated when J Prince Jr. Appeared to respond indirectly on social media.
In a comment that Finesse2x took as a direct shot at him, J Prince Jr.
Posted about “a man who blew a million and is having trouble getting it back,” adding that it’s “harder to look in the mirror than it is to point a finger.”
Finesse2x did not take the subtle jab lightly. Instead of backing down, he went straight for the jugular — targeting not just J Prince Jr., but the entire Prince family legacy.
In one of the most explosive clips, Finesse2x addressed J Prince Sr. Directly, mocking the hip-hop icon’s appearance and legacy: “You nobody.
You a nobody with a bald spot, trying to be your daddy. He the gangster.
He the one laid this shit down.” The disrespect toward one of the most feared and respected figures in Southern rap was deliberate and unmistakable.
But Finesse2x didn’t stop there. He turned his attention to J Prince Jr., calling him “a sucker for a son” and questioning how a man born into privilege and power could lecture anyone about accountability.
The most chilling part came at the end of the rant. After unloading on the Prince family, Finesse2x issued a direct challenge: “You ain’t even do no real shit like that.
Come on, you can’t talk to me.” He then closed with the ominous phrase that has the streets buzzing — “Q to the end.”
In the coded language of street culture, that combination of public disrespect followed by an invitation to “meet up” carries heavy implications.
While Finesse2x insists he simply wants to be released from the contract so he can move on and make money freely, the tone and wording suggest something much more dangerous is simmering beneath the surface.
This is not an ordinary rap beef. The Prince family name carries real weight in Houston.
J Prince Sr. Built Rap-A-Lot Records into a Southern powerhouse and has maintained influence both in music and in the streets for decades.
Challenging that name publicly is not something most artists do lightly. Finesse2x, however, paints himself as a man with nothing left to lose.
He claims the contract has held him hostage, preventing him from capitalizing on his own momentum.
He says he’s tired of doing everything himself — being the quarterback and the wide receiver at the same time — while the label collects without delivering.
“I’m just a rapper,” he emphasized. “It’s y’all’s job to push the pen and the pad.”
Whether Finesse2x’s grievances are entirely valid remains to be seen. Record deals in the music industry are notoriously complex, and artists often overestimate what a label is obligated to do.
However, his detailed accusations about hidden charges, lack of support, and feeling trapped have struck a chord with many independent artists who have faced similar situations.
As the clips continue to spread, the hip-hop community is divided. Some see Finesse2x as a bold artist finally speaking truth to power.
Others view his approach — especially the direct shots at J Prince Sr. — as reckless and potentially suicidal in the streets.
For now, neither J Prince Jr. Nor J Prince Sr. Has issued a direct public response to the latest wave of attacks.
That silence is being interpreted by some as strategic, and by others as the calm before the storm.
What is undeniable is that Finesse2x has crossed a line that few artists dare to cross.
He has publicly declared war on one of the most powerful families in Southern hip-hop, all because he believes a single contract is standing between him and his destiny.
Whether this ends in a negotiated release, a courtroom battle, or something far more dangerous remains to be seen.
But one thing is clear: in the world Finesse2x comes from, when you put someone’s name “on the floor,” the consequences are rarely just words.
The contract that was supposed to elevate his career has instead become a cage. And Finesse2x has decided he would rather burn the cage down than stay locked inside it.
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