Yungeen Ace Drops Foolio Diss Track, Raps About Shooting Day After Rapper's Death
Yungeen Ace released a new diss track about gunning down his rivals just hours after Julio Foolio's shooting.
Keyanta Tyrone Bullard -- better known as Yungeen Ace -- released "Do It" shortly after his real-life rival was shot and killed at the Holiday Inn Tampa North on East Fowler Avenue at around 4:40 a.m. on Sunday, according to WTSP.
In the track, Bullard raps about shooting someone with the lines, "Every car I've been these b tinted / Choppers and killers in it / Catch his a** and go his a** you know he finished."
"I ain't sparing s**t, it's on sight if we into it (Come here) / He with his baby, do it / He with his mama, do it / This money make a n***a do it."
While he did not explicitly mention Foolio, social media users got curious about the timing of the release, considering the lyrics and theme of the music video. In the MV, masked men were shown shooting another man in what appeared to be a motel's parking lot.
"Dropping a diss song the same day your opp died, that's some serious work ethics," a YouTube user commented on Yungeen Ace's music video.
"Investigators [are] noddin' [their] head [right now] to this," quipped another.
"He isn't even in his coffin and there's already a diss," wrote a different commenter.
Meanwhile, someone else remarked, "This is not even necessarily a diss track toward Foolio. He didn't say nothing (sic) to incriminate himself. He didn't mention nobody's (sic) name or no hood names. He just knew this was a sweet time to drop a track."
"He could have dropped a country song and it would have done numbers. He knew everybody wanted to see what he [had] to say. You think he [doesn't] know everybody's watching? It's like a metaphor or a mirage. Ace is a smart man."
According to Complex, the two rappers were embroiled in a violent feud in 2017 when Julio's cousin was shot and killed, too. A year later, Ace was targeted in a drive-by, which left his brother and two other people dead.
After that, in 2021, he released "Who I Smoke" and aimed at "opposition members, dead and alive."
Responding to the diss track a month later, Foolio released "When I See You," mocking Ace and three people killed in a drive-by.
In the music video, the "List of Dead Opps" artist was seen in the cemetery with a photo of Ace's brother and the two others killed.