Wack 100 responded to Big Meech this week after the BMF founder used his Kick stream to call him a BAN. Big Meech went live on Kick, settled into the new platform, and made it clear he was not addressing anybody’s accusations. In his own words he is not apologizing, especially not him, and he is not worried about what anybody plans to do. He went further and told the people around him not to even respond to the chatter, calling it hate from people who do not know what they are talking about.
That was all the opening Wack 100 needed. He hopped on Instagram and posted a video going directly at Meech, telling the world to tag him and force him to answer one specific question.
The name Wack 100 wants Meech to say out loud is Cuffee. For anyone who has not followed this corner of the story, Cuffee is tied to a St. Louis case that Wack 100 has pointed to for more than a year, alleging that Meech cooperated in some fashion connected to it. In the video, Wack pushes a simple point. Meech has been home for a while now, he has been active, he has been talking, so why has he never once addressed the man who has directly called him a rat and claimed he was set up. Wack says he has an exclusive interview with Cuffee on the way, and he is daring Meech to speak on it before that drops.
Here is where the video turned from a familiar rat versus loyalty argument into something much darker. Wack 100 did not keep it on Big Meech. He questioned Lil Meech’s own reputation, claimed the son has been caught telling three or four times, and then delivered a line aimed at Meech’s child that stopped sounding like a diss. Wack said, “go over there, get some motherfucking D-Con and put it under your son’s pillow, and let’s rid this world of one less roach.” D-Con is rat poison, and framing the son as vermin to be eliminated is exactly why the clip is spreading the way it is. It moved the exchange past the usual sport of a rap beef and into territory that made even longtime spectators uncomfortable.
Wack 100 is not treating this as a debate anymore. He is treating it as a campaign, promising what he called exposés and saying he is going to get everything going now that, in his telling, Meech brought it on himself.
He also went at the myth directly. Wack 100 claimed BMF itself no longer respects Meech, insisting this is not 2001 through 2005 and that the organization’s own people know the deal and talk to him regularly. Whether any of that is true is a separate question, and it is worth being clear that these remain Wack’s allegations. Meech has not validated them, and his Kick stream posture suggests he has no plans to.
Context matters here. Big Meech came home in 2025 after more than a decade and a half in federal prison, and he has spent his return rebuilding his name, linking with rappers, and now streaming on Kick to a large audience. The snitching allegations, pushed publicly by 50 Cent and amplified by Wack 100, have shadowed that comeback from the jump. Every time Meech tries to reintroduce himself as a free man and a brand, the rat conversation resurfaces, and Wack has appointed himself the loudest voice keeping it alive.
The Lil Meech piece adds another layer. Demetrius Flenory Jr. is an adult and a working actor who plays his own father in the BMF series on Starz, so he is a public figure in his own right, not a bystander. That is exactly why Wack 100 aiming at him lands the way it does. It is one thing to accuse a grown man who built an empire of cutting a deal. It is another to point at his child, adult or not, and say what Wack said.
For now, the ball is in Meech’s court. He said on Kick that he is not worried and not apologizing, which is not the same as answering the Cuffee question Wack 100 keeps putting in front of him. If that promised Cuffee interview is real, this gets louder before it gets quieter, and Meech will have to decide whether staying silent reads as unbothered or as avoidance. Either way, Wack 100 made sure the internet is watching how he responds.
