By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Monday, July 20, 2015
Stevie J and Karlie Redd (with Sina) cooked up two different ways to exact revenge upon their enemies.
In the meantime, Kalenna Harper found another way to alienate someone, this time her friend Rasheeda.
For Kalenna, it started with the end of her business relationship with her husband Tony Vick (who is understandably worried she is suffering from post-partum depression). Rasheeda suggested she go to Deb Antney, Waka Flocka's mom. All went well the first meeting but Kalenna copped such a superior attitude the next time around, the interview devolved into nasty words and no deal.
Tammy Rivera shows up at Tony's club while Kalenna is working to defend her family's honor. "It ain't none of Tammy's business," Kalenna said. This all happened last week. After more words were exchanged this time around, Rasheeda joined Tammy to calm her down. Kalenna felt abandoned.
"To me, that's taking sides," Kalenna said. "Shouldn't Rasheeda come check on me?"
They meet up later to try to hash out what happened. Instead, it gets messy very quickly.
Kalenna was displeased when Rasheeda defended Tammy. "I understood where she was coming from," Rasheeda said. Then Rasheeda said she heard from Tammy that Kalenna was talking trash about her. Kalenna also heard that Rasheeda was spreading word about Kalenna's financial issues, which Tammy threw in her face.
As many "Love and Hip Hop Atlanta" arguments go, this one devolves into insults and near physical confrontation.
"You can kiss my ***," Kalenna said. "No. Put your legs between your own *** and kiss that."
Kalenna is convinced the friendship is over.
"There's no coming back from fake, yo!" she said. Then, to her husband, she feels like the pitiful victim: "First, Tony, then Deb, then Tammy. Now Rasheeda. I feel like the world is against me."
Karlie has a boyfriend! She announces that she's dating Lyfe Jennings. "He plays as many instruments as Joc has kids," she says snarkily. But it appears Lyfe wants nothing to do with this show, which is not to Karlie's advantage for airtime. So she instead decides to insert herself into baby mama Sina's desire to mess up Yung Joc's relationship with Khadiyah - or as Karlie calls her, Miss Piggy. "She [as in Karlie] doesn't mind getting a little bit messy," said Sina, who knows Karlie's modus operandi for being on this show.
So at a party where Karlie announces her new record company, Sina tags along. And Karlie innocently invites Miss Piggy. Piggy shows up at the party wearing something over-the-top revealing yet oddly unsexy. She didn't expect to see Sina. Piggy smells a rat in Karlie. "Karlie put together the invite list," Khadiyah said. "I could turn out and walk out the door or face these two tricks and really get this party popping."
Indeed, she starts arguing with Sina and as expected, they hurl insults and start to slap at each other until security intervene.
"Don't put your hand in my face, you crazy *** girl," Sina said, as the episode closed.
Go West! Stevie J plans to move to Los Angeles with so much work coming his way, including a film and music. Stevie J even started helping out another guy Ceo Daze with his magazine. He noted that he has disengaged from that other magazine, run by Benzino, whose name shall not be mentioned on this show. Joseline will naturally join him out West and she is thrilled.
Scrappy happy? Scrappy and Erica put aside child support issues to help give their 10-year-old daughter a nice party. Scrappy also sets asides differences with Stevie J and they have a nice talk in the studio.
Revenge plot #2: Stevie J, with part ownership of Scrilla Guerilla magazine, has the owner ask Nikko's squeeze Margeaux to do a photo shoot for the magazine. She has no idea Stevie J is involved until he waltzes in. His goal: "Make some bread off the woman in his life," he said. "She's a pawn in my war against Freako (Nikko.)"
Margeaus is displeased. "This is some shady business practice," Margeaux said.
She demands $10,000 for being on the cover. (Clearly, this is not traditional journalism.)
Nikko is there, too, being boring.
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