Delrhonda Hood is an American gangster and drug lord from Detroit, she was Detroit’s most notorious and wealthiest woman during her high time.
Delrhonda Hood is an American gangster and druglord. Her empire started and rose in Detroit making her one of the most powerful people from the area in the process of building her empire.
A movie is also made to depict her life and the making of her empire titled American Gangster Presents: Big 50 – The Delrhonda Hood Story.
Sound Off: Shereé Whitfield (and Bravo) Fumbled Her ‘RHOA’ Legacy The ‘Housewives’ OG’s departure was deserved, though Bravo still could’ve handled it better.
By Elizabeth RandolphMay 16 2024, Published 6:47 p.m. ET
Source: BravoReality star Shereé Whitfield, an original cast member of The Real Housewives of Atlanta, is a successful entrepreneur, mother, and "Glam Ma." Despite her significant contributions to the show, Bravo has decided not to bring her back for Season 16, making her the most frequently fired housewife as of 2024.
The woman who went nips out for some beads during ESPN's Sugar Bowl broadcast is being offered a deal more eye-opening than the viral clip ... with an adult company willing to shell out up to $100k to get her to perform an encore on its platform.
The folks over at Camsoda laid out the terms of the proposition on Tuesday ... saying it's trying like hell to track down the Bourbon Street patron who exposed her boob during the TV broadcast of Monday night's game between the Washington Huskies and Texas Longhorns.
(feat. Young Thug)[Intro: Pharrell Williams]
Hey
[Chorus: Camila Cabello & Pharrell Williams]
Havana, ooh na-na (ayy)
Half of my heart is in Havana, ooh na-na (ayy, ayy)
He took me back to East Atlanta, na-na-na, ah
Oh, but my heart is in Havana (ayy)
There's somethin' 'bout his manners (uh huh)
Havana, ooh na-na (uh)
[Verse 1: Camila Cabello & Pharrell Williams]
He didn't walk up with that "how you doin'?
Americans seem to fear and love serial killers in equal measure. How else to explain us huddling, stricken, around a neverending deluge of movies, shows, novels, podcasts, true crime non-fiction, and even video games that constantly puts these (mostly) men and their bloody deeds front and center? Our latest national obsession is the Netflix miniseries, Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, which has already become one of its biggest hits. (Although given that so many people inexplicably equate Netflix with streaming — or even television itself — and given the streamer’s persistent dearth of premium content, I wonder if anything semi-compelling and suitably buzzy would instantly become a huge hit for it.