Fabolous is threatening to sue TMZ over a story about his breakup with Emily B.

Fabolous is insisting that he and Emily B are still together, and he wants all breakup rumor to stop. The celebrity gossip site reported Thursday afternoon that Fabolous and longtime girlfriend Emily B had parted ways and were actively dating other people. But the New York rapper took to Instagram to deny the allegations and said that TMZ was running a false story. “I’ve never said I split up from Emily I love Emily Bustamante!!!,” the New York rapper said early Friday morning. We are a couple working on our relationship That @tmz story & blogs are LIES.”

Fabolous doubled down on his statement in a caption that read “I LOVE YOU EMILY That @tmz_tv story is fake. I never told anyone I split up from Emily. And I wasn’t on a date. That whole story is made up. #TMZ.”

Vic Mensa has released a political new music video for his Travis Barker-produced song “3 Years Sober.” The track is credited as a joint release between Mensa and his new rock band, 93PUNX.

Directed by Mensa and Franc Fernandez, the “3 Years Sober” clip follows on the heels of Mensa’s previous release, “Camp America,” in its political provocation. Mensa puts on lipstick and a dress blaring the Confederate flag design in sequins, before getting into a tug-of-war with Vice President Mike Pence, infamous for his anti-LGBTQ attitudes and supportive stance toward conversion therapy. The video later sees Mensa getting attacked by two men, who write “fraud” and “homo” in marker on his face, and him getting arrested for trying to use a women’s bathroom.The ‘3 Years Sober’ video is a statement about identity,” said Mensa. “I put on a confederate flag dress to be able to laugh at a symbol of hate, and played tug of war with Mike Pence over birth control. I had my face written on to get ahead of everything I know people will say about me and had a diner full of BBQ Becky’s call the police on me for using the women’s bathroom. I know some in hip hop culture will see this and say ‘Vic’s gay’ (which I’m not), whereas if I was white they’d just say ‘he’s a rockstar.’ 93PUNX is about being yourself, fuck what people think.”