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Thursday, February 12, 2026

HIP HOP CONNECTION: Pebbles Makes the Wrong Kind Of Waves

Jineea Butler
Jineea Butler

By Jineea Butler

NNPA Columnist

Pebbles Ward who is a cast member on hit reality series “South Beach Tow”  reached out to the Hip Hop Union for help.  She said it was a life or death  situation and she had nowhere else to turn.  I asked her to explain to me  how the Hip Hop Union could assist.  She said, “I have headaches, nose  bleeds, numbness, vomiting of blood, shortness of breath, dizziness, back pain,  chest pain, and I can’t even walk some days.  The hospitals can’t  help.  They said I need a special surgeon.”  She went on to say “We  need to raise a minimum of $13,000 to remove this deadly substance from my  body.  If I don’t have surgery I could die.  So please help me have  this surgery so I can be here to raise my kids.”

I am thinking OMG what could be wrong?  She said she has cement oozing  down her leg because she received an illegal butt injection in 2004 by a fake  doctor.  My response was, “You allowed a doctor to come to your house and  inject you with cement because you wanted a bigger derriere?”  She replied,  “Yes.”

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For the past few days, I’ve been at a lost for words as I reflected on our  conversation.  I can’t say I haven’t noticed the influx of ‘Super Booty’s’  in hip hop.  And I can’t say I haven’t wondered what has been distorting  these young women’s bodies.  Then, I realized this is a quiet epidemic that  is hovering below the radar. It’s time for us to address it.

Remember the 20-year-old British tourist, Claudia Seye Aderotimi, while in  pursuit of a career in hip hop, lost her life to Philadelphia’s “Black Madam” in  February 2011 as a result of fatal silicone buttock injections at an airport  hotel?

Or how about Apryl Brown, a British woman who lost both her hands and feet,  as well as her buttocks, after getting black-market silicone injections that  turned out to be comprised of bathroom sealant?

I can’t fathom the feeling that leads any woman to change her physical  attributes, let alone allowing unlicensed individuals to come into their homes  to perform “pumping parties” and inject them with foreign substances, including  bathroom caulk, cement, super glue, Fix-a-Flat, and mineral oil. Is hip hop to  blame for this growing practice?

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The first time I saw “Buffie the Body” was in 2005 at the Entertainers  Basketball Classic at Rucker Park in New York City.  Every man, woman and  child strained to get a better view of her backside. And what they saw was  unreal — literally.

There wasn’t a man that she walked by who didn’t start drooling and wagging  his tongue.  Some females might see power in having men chase behind them  and be the center of all their fantasies.  I suspect many of these females  were bullied and/or have incredibly low esteem to risk their lives by undergoing  such a dangerous procedure. The irony is that just like anything else in hip  hop, when something is hot, everybody runs and does it.  No matter how  stupid.  While “Buffie the Body” was a rarity in 2004, the big butt  syndrome is now a normal attraction at strip clubs and in hip hop videos.   The woman’s role in hip hop has been diminished not because there are no women  recording music, but because in hip hop, women represent a man’s ultimate  fantasy.

Cash Money recording artist Nicki Minaj reminds me of a scene from the 1985  movie “Weird Science.”  Two nerds were trying to figure out how they could  become more popular and created the perfect woman to gain the attention they  desired. Now, fiction  overlaps reality; nearly every young woman’s dream  is to experience the success on the level of  Nicki Minaj.  It’s  common knowledge that Nicki underwent extensive cosmetic surgery and now is a  megastar.  Just like “Weird Science.” Cash Money resurrected a human barbie  doll and market her likeness every day.  Her image is being implanted into  the minds of young girls who aspire to be like her. What message are we sending  when the only way they can be like her is to reject their natural  attributes?  Vanity Wonder, author of Shot Girls, recalls how her  fixation with the injections became a competition with other women in the strip  clubs.  She then became infected and felt the need to continue getting   butt shots to cover up the lumps from hardening silicone.

What has our world become when people are preying on individuals seeking to  improve their appearance using deadly substances? What type of fantasy world are  our men living in that butt augmentations are the requirements for  conversation?  What is happening to our precious young women who apparently  are not satisfied with who they are?  This all circles back to  education.   If we spend more time making sure our young people are  educated and can see value in their lives, we wouldn’t have to hear sad stories  of people trying to make a living under these circumstances.  Many people  argue that these women and transgender men choose their fate when they place  their lives in the hands of the unknown.  That’s true, but they don’t  deserve to die for a bad decision.

You can help save Pebbles Ward by donating to gofundme.com/2gpr3g

 Jineea Butler, founder of the Social Services of Hip Hop and the Hip Hop  Union.

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