Season 13 of Love & Hip Hop Atlantais officially underway, and longtime cast members Rasheeda, Kirk Frost, Scrappy, and Mendeecees are setting the tone for what’s shaping up to be one of the franchise’s most explosive seasons yet.
Source: Love & Hip Hop Atlanta / MTV
From diss tracks to cultural resets, the OGs are holding their own—and making it clear that this isn’t their first rodeo.
Source: Courtesy / Paramount
Rasheeda Responds to Bambi’s Diss: “You grown, woman.”
The trailer teased a now-viral diss track from Bambi—and when fans heard Rasheeda’s name dropped, eyebrows raised, including Rasheeda’s.
“Definitely didn’t see it coming,” she said. “There was no history of any beef—it was always love. So when the diss track came, I’m sitting here like, now, you grown woman. You should know better.”
Despite the shade, Rasheeda made it clear she’s not retaliating.
“I’m not the type to run and make a song just because someone did. That’s not how I move. But I see it now for what it is.”
Kirk: “They want us to break up—but we’re still here.”
Kirk Frost stepped in with an honest reflection on the pressure of public opinion in a decade-long marriage.
“Everybody wants to weigh in. You should leave. You should stay. It’s like people want us to break up,” he told BOSSIP. “At the time when the relationship was rough, it was so many people saying, ‘leave him.’ But you don’t get the full picture.”
Kirk also pushed back on castmates who deflect attention by pointing fingers.
“Some folks want to act like they’re the Huxtables, but they’re so far apart. We all see it. This is probably the first time that’s going to get exposed—and we’re not deflecting. We’re just living in our truth.”
A Truce for Kannon: “It’s time to be grown.”
In a move that surprised longtime viewers, Kirk and Rasheeda extended an olive branch to Jasmine, the mother of Kirk’s son. But Rasheeda said it had nothing to do with drama and everything to do with doing right by their child.
Source: Courtesy / Paramount
“He’s nine. He’s got a phone, he’s aware,” she said. “I would never want him to see nothing but toxic stuff. This was about peace—for him. Not coins, not lifestyle. Just peace.”
ATL Royalty: “We brought you into the city.”
Asked what Love & Hip Hop Atlanta has done for the culture, Kirk didn’t hesitate.
“This show used to have folks running home like it was the playoffs,” he said. “We brought people into the city—into the lingo, the music, the real life. Even when it hurts, it’s real. That’s why people connect.”
Rasheeda & Kirk’s Theme Song? They Already Know.
When asked what track represents their marriage after 13 seasons, Kirk and Rasheeda laughed—and broke into song together singing Rasheeda’s song.