Popp Hunna

Popp Hunna

Artist

Omir Bernard (born Oct. 21, 2000), better known by his stage name Popp Hunna, is an upcoming artist originating from Northern Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (aka. North Philly). He is best known for being the artist responsible for “Adderall (Corvette Corvette)”, the song that took TikTok by storm in October 2020.

Popp Hunna began his music career by releasing his album One Year Later in January 2020, and promoted music from it on TikTok. The video streaming platform quickly caught on to the track “Single”, making this Popp Hunna’s first viral hit. The wave continued with “Adderall (Corvette Corvette)” making this Popp Hunna’s second single to take off on TikTok, back in October 2020. The Philadelphia rapper has TikTok user @yvnggprince to thank for the viral dance, which resulted in over 16 million videos featuring the song. “We didn’t think too much of the song when we first made it,” Popp previously said of making the record during an interview with 100.3 RNB. Lil Uzi Vert joined forces with Popp Hunna on the remix of the “Adderall (Corvette Corvette)” in mid-December. The song has been taking off, yet again, since Uzi hopped on the remix.

However, things seemed to have came to a screeching halt when Popp’s paperwork with the police surfaced online.

Reportedly, Popp Hunna witnessed a murder at 14 years old and cooperated with police, giving information on several parties involved. Many rappers chimed in on this revelation, and labeled this as a major violation of the “street code.“ Among them, was Popp’s new collaborator, Lil Uzi Vert. Uzi requested to be removed from Popp’s Mud Baby EP, where he appears on two songs. The exchange of messages were released online via a screenshot shared to Popp Hunna’s IG Story, although it has since been removed. Lil Tjay also involved himself in the issue, and said that Hunna had a poor excuse for his actions, stating he was in a similar situation and age isn’t a justification for what he did.

However, the very next day after the snitching allegations went viral, and despite what previous DMs may have implied, Popp referenced the “papers” in a new IG story, using a rolled-up paper emoji, and calling it “fake.”

While it’s unclear if he’s referring explicitly to the above paperwork allegations or simply to the flurry of news surrounding it, it seems to insinuate that he won’t give up on his career just yet, despite his earlier musings.