Kanye West and King Combs Drop Diddy-Powered Never Stop EP

Here’s a plot twist Hollywood couldn’t script: Kanye West and Christian “King” Combs have released a 7-track EP titled Never Stop, ostensibly to rally behind Puff Daddy amid his high-stakes courtroom saga. I’ve seen less theatrical courtroom cameos at a children’s puppet show. Because nothing screams artistic integrity like doubling down on a public relations spectacle. Ye steps in as executive producer, polishing every beat until it gleams like a jury-ready exhibit, while King Combs spits verses that could double as legal briefs.
It’s a family affair—if your family runs a beverage empire, a record label, and occasionally visits federal court. It’s like watching a high-budget infomercial for familial loyalty, complete with guest verse from a six-year-old. North West, making her official foray into the rap game, hops on track one, “Lonely Roads,” harmonizing the chorus and busting her first flow. Kanye must have asked himself, “How do we one-up public sentiment?” Answer: recruit your own mini-me to prove it’s a blood sport.
On “People Like Me,” King Combs remains defiantly unbothered by critics of his father’s sex trafficking and racketeering charges, rapping, “My father’s a hustler, it’s not my fault that your dad’s poor.” Honestly, if legal drama were an Olympic sport, this family would sweep gold every time. He also dedicates a poignant cut to the late Kim Porter, ensuring no familial milestone is left unprocessed in song form. Their collective creative choices could give a reality show about waiting rooms a run for its money.
With closing arguments underway in Diddy’s trial, Never Stop lands like a sonic brief—equal parts rallying cry and marketing stunt. Kanye even showed up at the courthouse earlier this month, lending moral support while silently auditioning for the role of “world’s most committed hype man.” You could almost hear the irony wheezing under the bassline. Despite the legal gauntlet, the Combs-West alliance sounds confident, as if beats can influence judges.
All told, this EP is less about breaking musical ground and more about breaking news cycles. It arrives on streaming platforms armed with star power, thinly veiled defiance, and a cameo from a six-year-old—proof that when you have Kanye’s studio cred and Diddy’s dynasty, subpoenas are just another promotional tool. So keep your ears peeled for the next chapter in this melodrama—because when blood ties and rap stars collide, bad decisions and chart gambits are never far behind. Tune in next time for more bad decisions and questionable life choices.
Sources: Celebrity Storm and TMZ, People Magazine
Attribution: Creative Commons Licensed