Jelly Roll collaborated with the rapper on a recent single.
The verdict is in: Jelly Roll really is a nice guy. And, in case there was ever any doubt, rapper Shaboozey shared his thoughts on the country music sensation.
“Jelly Roll is the nicest, sweetest person,” Shaboozey told Us Weekly. “He’s the humblest. You wouldn’t even think he was a celebrity, to be honest.”
Jelly Roll, whose real name is Jason DeFord, worked with Shaboozey, whose real name is Collins Obinna Chibueze, on the song “Amen” which is featured on Shaboozey’s album, Where I’ve Been Isn’t Where I’m Going. The song hit both the Billboard Hot 100 and the Hot Country Songs charts.
“You think he was just someone working at the venues, honestly. That’s really it. I got nothing else to say.”
Jelly Roll, 40, has taken the world by storm, it seems, and he’s got collaborations with some of the biggest names in music. He’s currently on tour with Post Malone and has been sharing his music — and his story — with fans. His past struggles with addiction landed him in jail when he was a teenager. However, he’s worked hard to get where he is today and he remains grateful for the opportunities that he’s been given. “I’m having a ball, man,” he told People magazine in November 2024. “This started as me just kind of venting and telling my story, until I realized that I was telling the stories of tens of millions of Americans. This is so much bigger than my story.”
News
Just now: Parents of missing rower Jeremiah Gamble reveal their son’s last 3-word message before he was reported missing, and it’s now causing police a headache
GUNTERSVILLE, Ala. (WHNT) — A 25-year-old boater is still missing after jumping or falling off a pontoon boat on Guntersville Lake Sunday. Jeremiah Gamble’s parents said they spoke with him on FaceTime minutes before he was reported missing. Mae Jemison…
WAIT… MACKENZIE SHIRILLA ACTUALLY SAID THAT?:A prison phone call between Mackenzie Shirilla and her mother is now blowing up online, with listeners focusing on one awkward 4-second pause that suddenly changed the mood of the conversation 👀 Now people are replaying the audio trying to figure out what happened in the moments right before the call took that turn… 👇
Audio reveals sick prison phone call between Mackenzie Shirilla and her mum after her crime She joked about being famous and featured on the news Shocking audio has been shared of a phone call Mackenzie Shirilla had with her mum whilst she…
THE LAST POST NOW HAS A DIFFERENT FEELING…:Mackenzie Shirilla’s last three-word Instagram post before her tragic accident has unexpectedly resurfaced — and people are focusing on a specific line that viewers now believe gives the impression that HER MOTIVES WERE NOT SO SIMPLE
The Crash: Final post Mackenzie Shirilla shared on Instagram is a chilling statement The biggest true crime documentary on Netflix right now is The Crash. It tells the story of how teen Mackenzie Shirilla drove herself, her boyfriend and a friend…
THE FAMILY WAITED FOR DAYS JUST TO HEAR THIS NEWS 💔 After days of searching, the bodies of the Italian tourists have finally been recovered from the cave system in the Maldives. But what haunts many is the diagram showing they were found in the deepest chamber… 🌊
“The Family Waited for Days Just to Hear This News”: Bodies Recovered from Maldives Cave’s Deepest Chamber In the remote waters of Vaavu Atoll, days of agonizing uncertainty for grieving families finally ended with devastating confirmation. The bodies of four…
THEY DIDN’T STOP NEAR THE ENTRANCE 🚨 Five Italian tourists were ultimately located deep inside the Maldives cave system after days of searching. Now people are focusing on one disturbing detail — the final chamber sat nearly 164–165 feet underwater… 🌊
The fatal allure of unexplored underwater realms claimed five lives in what has become the deadliest diving incident in Maldives history. On May 14, 2026, Professor Monica Montefalcone and her team of Italian divers entered a complex cave system in…
THE WORST DIVING TRAGEDY IN MALDIVES HISTORY IS CENTURIZING AROUND ONE DETAIL 🚨🌊 The investigation is now focused on whether the group went deeper than permitted. And what’s under scrutiny now is the 30m mark above the recreational diving limit compared to the approximately 50m depth of the trip…
In the turquoise expanses of Vaavu Atoll, a scientific endeavor descended into the Maldives’ deadliest diving disaster. On May 14, 2026, five experienced Italian divers, led by marine ecologist Professor Monica Montefalcone, entered a complex underwater cave system. None returned…
End of content
No more pages to load