6ix9ine Defends “Rest in Piss” Comment About King Von in Explosive VladTV Interview
🚨 6ix9ine has done it again — reigniting one of the darkest chapters in modern hip-hop.
In a fiery new VladTV interview, the rainbow-haired rapper doubled down on one of the most infamous comments of his career: saying he doesn’t regret telling fans that slain Chicago rapper King Von should “rest in piss.”
💣 The Context
When King Von was shot and killed outside an Atlanta nightclub in 2020, the hip-hop community mourned. Artists across the industry paid tribute, fans filled timelines with grief, and Chicago stood still for one of its brightest young stars.
But not everyone showed sympathy.
6ix9ine — fresh out of prison and already polarizing for his snitching controversy — publicly mocked Von’s death.
He posted “Rest in piss” online and followed it up by saying he hoped Von was “burning in hell.”
The backlash was immediate and severe. Even his loyal fanbase was split. But now, years later, 6ix9ine says he stands on it — no apology, no remorse.
🔥 The Interview Moment
In the now-viral VladTV clip, Vlad confronts 6ix9ine head-on:
“When King Von got killed, you said ‘rest in piss.’ Was that necessary?”
6ix9ine doesn’t hesitate.
“If I die, what they gon’ say? You think they’d show me love? Hell no. They’d celebrate.”
Then he leans in:
“These rappers been speaking on me since I came home. They tried to stop people from playing my music. That’s taking food out my family’s mouth.”
He blames the constant ridicule and blacklisting he faced post-prison — claiming Von and his circle helped fuel it.
👀 He Names Names
6ix9ine doesn’t leave it vague.
He points directly at Lil Durk — Von’s mentor and right-hand man — accusing him of turning fans and radio against him.
“Durk’s his right-hand man. Von went on Twitter telling people not to play my music. That cuts into my money. I got bills. You play with my money — everything’s off the table.”
And then he doubles down, eyes locked on Vlad’s camera:
“Look at me, Vlad. I stand on it. I’m not taking it back.”
That line alone sent shockwaves through comment sections.
🔥 The Chicago Angle
When Vlad tried to steer the conversation toward morality, asking,
“When people die, the beef usually stops,”
6ix9ine snapped back with a controversial rebuttal:
“So why y’all only mad at me? Chicago rappers diss the dead every day. Von did it. Durk does it. Everybody does it.”
Vlad nodded — reluctantly agreeing that it’s true — before clarifying,
“Yeah, but that doesn’t make it right.”
The exchange captured the uncomfortable hypocrisy in hip-hop’s relationship with death — where dissing the dead is condemned only when the “wrong” person does it.
🎭 Moral or Mayhem?
As expected, the moment split social media in half.
Some fans defended 6ix9ine, saying he’s simply matching the same energy that the drill scene built its identity on — one where street loyalty trumps respect for the dead.
Others called it the lowest moment of his career, proof that 6ix9ine has no empathy left — only strategy.
One viral tweet summed it up:
“6ix9ine wants to be the villain so bad, he’s turned disrespect into a brand.”
Meanwhile, others saw nuance, saying the interview forced hip-hop to confront its own contradictions:
“He’s wrong, but he’s not lying — Chicago made death part of the art. He’s just doing it louder.”
💬 Public Reaction
YouTube comment sections filled with debates.
Some sided with him, arguing he’s only being singled out because of his reputation.
Others said that his logic collapses when he admits, “two wrongs don’t make a right.”
Even Vlad’s face told the story — visibly stunned yet unwilling to give 6ix9ine the moral win.
“Yes, Von dissed his opps,” Vlad finally said. “But that doesn’t mean you have to.”
The clip ends there — cold silence, no laughs, no spin.
🧠 What This Says About Hip-Hop Right Now
This moment isn’t just about 6ix9ine or King Von. It’s a mirror held up to the culture.
For years, the line between rap beef and real death has been dissolving. Entire fanbases cheer for revenge, and disrespecting the dead has become a viral trend — part of the content cycle that keeps artists relevant.
6ix9ine’s unapologetic tone isn’t just personal. It’s cultural commentary — intentional or not.
He’s exposing the uncomfortable truth:
Hip-hop has grown numb. Death has become dialogue.
And disrespect, in 2025, is just another marketing strategy.
🚨 Bottom Line
6ix9ine says he won’t apologize for dissing King Von after his death.
He insists it’s not about hate — it’s about retaliation and survival in an industry that blackballed him.
But to many, his justification is hollow. It’s not loyalty; it’s ego wrapped in logic.
💬 Final Takeaway:
6ix9ine isn’t walking back his “rest in piss” comment — and in doing so, he’s forcing hip-hop to confront an ugly truth:
In 2025, disrespect isn’t shocking anymore.
It’s content.
It’s marketing.
And that’s the real tragedy.
👉 Stay connected for more updates and exclusive hip-hop coverage at The Urban Spotlight Homepage
👉 For more background on King Von’s life and legacy, visit his Wikipedia page
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