Oblock Members React To Cheif Keef Doing A Song With Lul Tim

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Oblak members heard that clip and lost their minds. And I need y'all to understand why. Because if you don't know the history, you might hear that and think, "Okay, two rappers made a song. So what?" But the second you understand who these two people are and what connects them, this becomes one of the most controversial moves in Chicago drill history. LOL Tim is the man who shot and killed King Vaughn. King Vaughn was Oblak's biggest star. Chief Keef is Oblak's founding father. The man who literally built that name into something the whole world knows. These two men are not supposed to be anywhere near each other. They're not supposed to be in the same room. They are definitely not supposed to be in the same studio making music together. So when Oblak members found out that Chief Keef, their Chief Keef had a song in the vault with the man who killed their guy, the reaction was exactly what you'd expect. Anger, disbelief, betrayal. But here's what Oblak is not talking about. But here's what they conveniently left out of their outrage. Chief Keef didn't just randomly stop messing with Oblak one day. They pushed him out. They violated him. They robbed him. And once you know what they did to Sosa, you're not going to be asking why he made a song with Lil Tim. You're going to be asking why he didn't do it sooner. That's what this video is about. Let's get into it. To understand how we got here, we need to go all the way back to the beginning. Because you can't understand this situation without understanding what Chief Keef actually means to Oblock. Not what people say he means, what he actually is to that neighborhood. Parkway Garden Homes, 64th and Cottage Grove, south side of Chicago. That's Oblock. That's where Chief Keefe, born Keith Frell Kart, on August 15th, 1995, grew up. Raised by his grandmother, Margaret Carter, in those same Parkway Gardens housing projects, running with the Black Disciples, living the same life every other kid in that neighborhood was living. The difference Sosa had something nobody else had. He had a gift. At 16 years old, under house arrest, this kid was filming music videos in front of his grandmother's house and uploading them to YouTube. No budget, no label, no connections, just raw talent and the realness of where he came from. And the internet went crazy. The whole world went crazy. I don't like featuring Lil Reese hit and suddenly Oblak wasn't just a housing project in Washington Park. It was a name that the entire hip hop world knew. Let me put this in perspective for y'all. Before Chief Keef, nobody outside of Chicago was talking about Oblock. He didn't just make it out. He made it out and took the Block's name with him. Innercope Records came running. A bidding war broke out between major labels. This kid, still a teenager, still technically on house arrest, signed a deal and became the face of an entire genre. Drill music. That's Sosa. He didn't just help create it. He is it. And who was right there when all of this was happening? Oblak. His people. His day ones. And for a minute, it was beautiful. He brought people out on stage. He put money into the neighborhood. He made sure people ate. That's what you're supposed to do when you blow up, right? That's what loyalty looks like. But here's where it starts to get complicated. Because the moment the money got real, the moment Sosa went from being a hood rapper to a genuine star. Some of those same people started moving different. Real talk. And this is something that happens way too often in the culture. The block started looking at Keef like a resource instead of a person. And that's when everything changed. Now, at the same time all of this is unfolding on the other side of Chicago and in Atlanta, another chapter in this story is being written because Lil Durk was over here building and one of his artists, a young kid from Oblak named Devon Bennett, better known as King Vaughn, was starting to come up hard. King Vaughn was the real deal. Sharp storyteller, vivid lyricism, crazy charisma. He was putting Oblak back in the conversation in a whole different way. And the fans loved him. The streets loved him. But here's what you got to understand. King Vaughn coming up didn't fix what was happening between Sosa and Oblak. If anything, it just showed there was a split forming. Two different Oblak generations, two different energies. And by the time things got really ugly between Keef and his old crew, King Vaughn was already becoming the face of the newer wave. So now you've got Chief Keef, the man who built everything, slowly but surely being pushed to the outside of the very neighborhood that he built. And you've got Oblak still waving the flag, still claiming that name, but apparently not extending that same loyalty back to Sosa. That right there, that's the foundation. That's what you need to understand before we get to the real violation. All right, so here's where it gets crazy because we're not just talking about Sosa making it out and people being haters from a distance. We're talking about actual documented onrecord violations, real ones. It starts around 2014. Chief Keef is at the height of his early fame. He's got the mansion. He's got the jewelry. He's got the money. And some of the people closest to him, people from his own block, people he grew up with, people he was putting on, decided they wanted a piece of it. Not the legitimate way, not through music or hustle. They just took it. Boss Top, Oblock member, somebody who was supposed to be Sosa's people. In 2014, Boss Top and other Oblock members were involved in a break-in at Chief Keef's mansion. Not some outside robbers, not some random ops, people from the same block, people he knew. They came in, took clothing, took jewelry, and according to reports, a shooting occurred inside the home afterward. This was Ke's house, his personal space, his crib. And what did Keef do? He went public. He aired it all the way out on social media because at that point, what else do you do when your own people violate you like that? He posted everything. He said they stole his Monontlair's, his earrings, his Robins jeans, his Gucci bags, his pelle, his Louis Vuitton coats. He said, and I want y'all to really hear this part. He said they stole his daughter's clothes out of her room. Her room, detergent, deodorant, all of it. That ain't a robbery. That's a violation of the highest order. That's telling somebody, "We don't respect you as a man. We don't respect your family. We just see a bag and we're taking it." And these were supposed to be his day ones, his Oblak brothers. But wait, it gets worse because Boss Top didn't just do this and go quiet. He flexed about it. He posted himself wearing Ke's chain. He literally changed his name on social media to chief boss top like he was claiming Ke's title on top of taking his chain. And then he started talking crazy, started threatening Glow Gang, started inserting himself into Kef's lane like he had earned it. Now, here's where the internet went crazy. Boss Top later came out and admitted to taking the chain. He said it in an interview. He admitted it and his whole defense was that Kee lied about the house being broken into. But whether you believe Boss Top's version or Keith's version, one fact remains. Boss Top took the chain. He said so himself. That's not an allegation. That's a confession. Now, let's layer in something else that was happening simultaneously. Lil Durk, who had a complicated history with Keef going back to their early days, was publicly telling Sosa he wasn't welcome back in Oblak on Twitter for the whole world to see. Durk wrote, "All da money but can't go get. Where you going spend it at cuss? You can't come around here with it. In other words, you got rich, you moved out, you're not one of us anymore. The very block that Keefe built was now telling him he couldn't come home. And the police situation made it even worse. Because Kee had legal troubles that kept him under surveillance. And every time he tried to come back to Chicago, law enforcement was on him immediately. He'd pull up, police would flood the area, his car got towed and damaged during an arrest. It became impossible for him to even navigate the city without the feds in his face. So between Oblak beefing with him from the inside and law enforcement locking him out from the outside, Sosa had no choice but to leave. He relocated to the suburbs, then further, eventually out of Chicago entirely. But here's the part that really matters for this story. He didn't just leave physically. He left emotionally. He detached. And when you've been robbed by your own people, exiled from your own block, and publicly disrespected by people you once called brothers, that detachment makes complete and total sense. So fast forward, King Vaughn gets killed in November 2020 in Atlanta. The whole drill community is shaken. Off Chicago, everybody is mourning and Lulim, Quandondo's associate, Timothy Leaks, is charged with pulling the trigger. The case eventually gets dismissed and Lul walks free. Now, here's the real question. Where does Chief Keef stand in all of this? What does he owe to Oblak at this point? Because the block that Vaughan represented, the block that's out here mourning, out here saying, "How dare anyone do business with Lil Tim?" That's the same block that broke into Sosa's house, that's the same block that stole his daughter's clothes. That's the same block that told him he wasn't welcome anymore. Real recognize Real Fam and the streets always remember. February 2026, Mike Will Made It drops a song called Rooms and it features Chief Keef alongside NBA Young Boy. Now, let me be clear about why this specific collab is already a problem before we even get to Lol Tim. Because NBA Young Boy has been in a very public feud with Lil Durk for years, and Lil Durk is the F leader, King Van's big brother figure, the one who's been riding hardest for Oblak since Van passed. So when Sosa hops on a track with YB, somebody who is openly on the opposite side of Durk, Oblock members and Fans went crazy. The question immediately became, whose side is Chief Keef on? Where does his loyalty lie? And a lot of people were looking to Sosa to say something, to address it, to at least acknowledge the sensitivity of the situation. But Sosa didn't address it. He didn't need to because shortly after something even bigger dropped. Lulim goes on Instagram live. No warning, no buildup. Just casually hops on and says it plain as day. I got a song with Chief Keef. I got a song with Chief Keef. That nin Nama called who I can't play that Nana though. That's it. No apology, no disclaimer. No, I know this might upset some people. He said it like it was the most normal thing in the world. Like him, the man who shot King Vaughn, having a studio session with Oblak's founding father was just another Tuesday. And that's when the internet went completely nuclear. Oblak members were furious. F affiliates were furious. King Von's fans were furious. Because in the court of street politics, doing music with someone means something. It's not just a business transaction. It's an endorsement. It's a cosign. It's saying on record forever embedded in a song that I'm cool with this person. And Chief Keefe, who grew up in the same complex as King Vaughn, who helped put Oblock on the map, who should by all measures of loyalty be on the side of his block or was apparently cool with Lel Tim. Cool enough to make music together, cool enough for Lol Tim to be hyped about it on live. Now, immediately the reaction started pouring in. And this is where it gets really interesting because even LOL Tim himself stepped up and addressed the people who were upset about the Chief Keef and NBA Young Boy rooms collab. He said it directly. All that crying and chat about a Fkin song, get some [ __ ] money. He was shutting down the outrage before it even fully formed, which tells you everything about where his head is at. He doesn't see any of this as a problem. And apparently neither does Chief Keef. That right there is the climax gang. Two men, one who built Oblak's legacy, one who is responsible for ending one of Oblak's greatest stars are in the studio together making music and the block that should be the angriest about it. The block that should have the most moral authority to say something. They're the same block that violated Chief Keef first. That's the turning point. That's where this whole story becomes a mirror because you can't rob somebody, exile them, disrespect them and their family, and then expect them to ride for you when it matters. Now, here's where people started connecting the dots. And this is the part of the story where you got to think like a detective because everything lines up in a way that's almost too clean. Let's lay out the facts in order. One, Chief Keef grows up in Oblak, puts the neighborhood on the map, makes it globally recognized through his music and his influence. He should have been protected by those people forever. That's what you do for somebody who did what he did. Two, instead Oblak members break into his mansion, steal from him, steal from his daughter, and publicly flex about it. Boss Top admits to taking his chain on record. The violation is documented. It's not alleged it happened. Three, Lil Durk publicly tells Keef he's not welcome back on the block. Sosa is exiled from his own home neighborhood by the people he helped put on. Four. Keef leaves Chicago. Physically and emotionally disconnects. Builds his own world outside of the Oblak ecosystem. He's doing music with whoever he wants. Gucci May. Mike Will made it. Playboy Cardi. Lil Uzi Vert. NBA Young Boy. Five. King Vaughn. The next great voice of Oblak gets killed in 2020. Lol. Tim walks on the murder charge. The streets are heated. Six. 2026. Lol. Tim casually announces on IG live that he's got a song with Chief Keef called Who I and Oblak loses their mind. But here's what really happened when you zoom out and look at this objectively. Chief Keef doesn't owe Oblak anything. He already paid his debt when he put that neighborhood on the map at 16 years old. He already gave back when he was taking people on tour, letting people eat off his name, funding people's lifestyles, and they paid him back by robbing him. So the idea that he should now years later after all of that refuse to make music with Lil Tim out of loyalty to people who violated him, that logic doesn't hold up, not even a little bit. And Lil Tim's energy makes sense, too, when you understand the full picture. He's not from Chicago. He doesn't have a dog in this fight from an Oblak standpoint. He's not claiming their block or their politics. For him, Chief Keef is just one of the greatest rappers to ever do it. A legend of drill music. And getting a song with him is a career moment. period. The politics around it, that's other people's problem. Now, let's talk about something deeper. What does it mean that Chief Keef is willing to do this? Some people are reading it as shade, as a deliberate statement, like Keefe is intentionally saying, "I don't care about Oblock's feelings." And honestly, that reading isn't wrong. Because when you've been done dirty the way Kee was done dirty, sometimes the most powerful statement you can make is just living your life. Not doing it for spite. not doing it to send a message, just genuinely not caring anymore. That indifference, that's louder than any diss track. The streets been talking about this for months. And the consensus, most people who actually know the full story, who know about the robberies, who know about the exile, who know about Durk publicly blocking Keef from coming home. Most of those people understand why Sosa moves the way he moves. They might not agree with all of it, but they understand it. The ones who don't understand it are the people who only see the surface level, who just know Keef is from Oblak and Lul Tim killed Vaughn and stop there. They're not connecting the dots. They're not doing the homework. And that's exactly why this video exists. Here's where we are right now. The song Who I L Tim and Chief Keef collab hasn't officially dropped as of the time this video is being made. LOL Tim said on live he can't play that [ __ ] though which means it was either still being held back or waiting on the right timing for release but the fact that it exists the fact that they made it that's already the statement and the reaction has been exactly what you'd expect affiliates are in their feelings supporters are posting about it fans of King Vaughn are expressing their frustration online the question how could Kee do this is being asked everywhere Chief Keef hasn't addressed it at all He hasn't posted about it. He hasn't acknowledged the outrage. He hasn't explained himself. And that silence, that's intentional. That's a man who genuinely does not care. Not in a cold, heartless way, but in a I already processed this years ago when y'all violated me kind of way. He's moved on. He moved on a long time ago. Lil Tim, on the other hand, has been pretty vocal. He addressed the YB and Keef rooms backlash headon by telling people to stop crying about a song and go make money. He's not losing any sleep over the optics. And honestly, from where he's standing, why would he? His murder charge got dismissed. He's free. He's making music. And now he's got a song with one of the most iconic figures in drill history. Meanwhile, King Vaughn's legacy continues to grow. His music is still being discovered by new listeners. His storytelling is still being studied. His name is still being celebrated. But here's the thing about legacy. It exists separately from street politics. Van's music doesn't get worse because of this Keefe and LOL Tim situation. His impact doesn't diminish. The fans who love him still love him. And the complicated politics around his death, that's a separate conversation from his artistry. What this situation does affect is the perception of Oblak as a unified entity. Because if Chief Keefe, literally the man who built that name into something internationally recognized, if he doesn't rock with Oblak anymore, that says something. That's not a small thing. That's the foundation of the house cracking. And when the foundation cracks, everything built on top of it becomes unstable. We're also seeing something bigger play out here. The generational shift in Chicago drill politics. The old alliances are breaking down. The loyalties that were supposed to be sacred are being renegotiated in real time, and social media is making all of it visible in ways that would have stayed private a decade ago. Lil Tim wouldn't have been able to casually hop on IG live and say, "I got a song with Chief Keef if this was 2013." The whole dynamics of how these relationships get displayed publicly has changed completely. So, let's zoom all the way out because this story is really about something that goes beyond Chief Keef and Lull Tim. It's about a question that runs through the entire culture. What do you owe the people and places that shaped you when those same people and places failed to protect you? Chief Keef was a teenager from a housing project who became one of the most influential figures in modern music. He didn't just make it out. He made it out carrying Oblak's name on his back. And the block repaid him by robbing his house, taking his jewelry, stealing from his daughter, and publicly exiling him. Now, people want to be outraged that he made a song with Lil Tim. After all of that, here's the real tea. The Oblock that people are defending right now is not the Oblak that raised Chief Keef. The loyalty broke a long time ago, and Sosa recognized it before most people were paying attention. He just quietly moved accordingly. He didn't make a big announcement. He didn't post a whole explanation. He just stopped showing up for people who stopped showing up for him. That's not betrayal. That's survival. And lol Tim, whatever you think about the circumstances around King Vaughn's death, the legal system made its decision. The charges were dismissed. That's where that case stands. And Lol Tim is living his life, making music, moving forward. Whether that feels right or wrong to people watching from the outside, that's for each individual to wrestle with. But it's reality. What's also reality is that Chief Keef has spent years building a life completely outside of Chicago street politics. He's in the studio. He's dropping projects with Mike Will Made It. He's collaborating with NBA Young Boy. He's creating on his own terms with his own people. The block that tried to hold him back didn't succeed. And now that same block wants accountability from him for a song. That ain't how this works, fam. You don't get to take from somebody, exile somebody, disrespect somebody's family, and then claim any moral authority over their choices. That's not how loyalty operates. Real loyalty is a two-way street. Always has been, always will be. The bigger picture implication here is something every artist coming up from the streets needs to understand. Your loyalty will be tested. And sometimes the test comes from the people you least expect. Sometimes the violation comes from inside the house. And when it does, you have to make a decision about who you're going to be and what you're going to carry going forward. Chief Keef made his decision years ago. The lull Tim song is just the latest public confirmation of it. King Vaughn deserve better. That's real. His fans deserve to grieve without the added weight of these politics. That's real, too. But Chief Keef's complicated relationship with Oblak was broken long before Vaughn died. And fixing it was never in Sosa's control. The people who broke it made their choice. Sosa just responded accordingly. So the next time you see headlines about Oblak members reacting to Chief Keef making moves that don't align with their expectations, ask yourself one simple question. What did they do to maintain his loyalty? Because real recognize real. And if you violate the real ones, you don't get to be surprised when they stop moving for you. Now that's the whole story. No cap. Drop your thoughts in the comments. Let me know. Was Chief Keef right to detach from Oblak or does the situation with Low Tim cross a line even given everything that happened? The comments are open.

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Oblock Members React To Cheif Keef Doing A Song With Lul ...