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Real Boston Richey posted a lengthy Instagram video on May 3 denying a range of accusations from ex-girlfriend Tatiana Chanell, who claimed his new single was about her and raised allegations including abuse. Chanell replied with a forceful voice note.

In an era where relationship fallout often plays out in public, the latest exchange between Real Boston Richey and his ex-girlfriend Tatiana Chanell unfolded on Instagram and across messaging apps. The back-and-forth began after Richey released a new single, “B**ch You Weird,” which Chanell said was about her and followed a series of public accusations that quickly circulated online.
On Sunday, May 3, the Florida rapper posted a long video to his Instagram account addressing the allegations — which included claims of abuse, bisexuality and inappropriate relationships with minors. The post was part rebuttal, part personal defense, and part appeal to anyone still watching the spectacle on social media.
Richey framed the situation as the fallout of a bitter breakup. In the clip he pushed back on what he called false narratives, saying Chanell was lashing out after their split and weaponizing the internet against him.
“I ain’t never been a ni**a that try to run to the ’net and speak on my behalf,” Richey said. “I always take it to the chin. But, it’s damaging when a person you love take advantage and bully you at all costs. I’m a ni**a that done sat back and sacrificed everything for this girl.”
“I done went through everything with this girl,” he continued. “From the lawsuit, to the blackmailing me, putting me in jail. You name it, I done went through this sh*t.”
Richey also addressed a specific claim about a strap-on that Chanell implied was used in incidents between them, denying the suggestion outright and framing much of the exchange as personal vendetta rather than truth-seeking. His video alternated between pointed rebuttal and weary frustration — the tone of someone trying to control a narrative that has already spread beyond his hands.
Chanell answered with a voice note circulated online. In that message she did not back away from the accusations and accused Richey and his circle of trying to silence her.
“You’re sick,” she snapped in the recording. “You and everybody around you knew I wasn’t supposed to see the day of light right now. All the sh*t you was doing to me, I wasn’t supposed to be here right now…So, don’t get up on this internet and lie.”
Elsewhere on social platforms, fans and commenters split between supporting Richey’s denials and amplifying Chanell’s claims, turning the moment into another example of how private disputes become public drama in modern hip-hop culture. The exchange also raised questions about how allegations are aired, contested and consumed — and how quickly rumors can metastasize around a new single or a viral post.
Speaking to the larger context of his public persona, Richey has built much of his following through hard-edged singles and a steady presence on social media; moments like this complicate the relationship between an artist’s music, his private life and the court of public opinion. For now, both sides have left statements and voice notes on record, and the conversation continues to live on feeds and comment threads.
There has been no public legal resolution announced since the posts. As the story develops, the exchange offers a reminder that in the social-media age, allegations and responses arrive quickly — and often loudly — whether or not they settle into facts.