Love and hip hop gay cast

‘Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood’ Casts Same-sex attracted Rapper Milan Christopher

Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood has a modern cast member, and he is an openly gay rapper by the mention of Milan Christopher. According to reports byTMZ, Milan has been filming for 3 weeks, but in doing so, he’s gotten some backlash from the other male stars on the show.

READ: Ray J Reportedly Chucked The Deuces To ‘Love And Hip Hop Hollywood.’

Allegedly, Ray J, Souilja Boy, Mally Mall and Omarion own expressed their discontent in sharing the small screen with the queer rapper. But it’s not because of his sexual orientation, instead their plight with him runs more between the lines of his lack or thereof for having credibility as a rapper. The news outlet also stated that his fellow castmates, have been upset with the producers of the show for including Milan in what they believe as a “sideshow” and “goose” to amplify ratings. In addition, three unnamed acts from the business have refused to shoot any scenes with Milan— who is also a producer and model.

READ: Love For All: Supreme Court Declares Same-Sex Marriage Legal In Al

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TV & Film | Entertainment News

Gayes! MTV has unveiled the cast for their upcoming season of Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta, and bonafide hip-hop rap superstar Saucy Santana is set to join in on the action.

This season will follow Santana and Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood '' alum ZellSwag who is now openly embracing his sexuality on the show with his new relationship.

Saucy Santana and ZellSwag are set to be be featured alongside returning cast members Amy Luciani, Bambi, Erica Banks, Erica Dixon, Jessica White, Karlie Redd, Kendra Robinson, Khaotic, Kirk Frost, Mazi G, Mendeecees, Momma Dee, Rasheeda, Renni Rucci, Scrappy, Shekinah Jo, Sierra Gates, Spice, Yandy and Yung Joc.

This season will be after the explosive midseason finale and intense division amongst the castmates.

“Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta” is executive produced by Mona Scott-Young for Monami Productions and Lashan Browning for Antoinette Media with Sitarah Pendelton-Eaglin and Daniel Blau Rogge serving as executive producers for MTV Entertainment Studios.

Additional EPs include Donna Edge-Rachell, Paris Bauldwin, Daniel Wiener, Ali

‘Love & Hip Hop Atlanta’ Welcomes Very First Gay Cast Members

VH1’s ‘Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta’ is to welcome its very first gay couple to the family.

Full story below…

The show follows the lives of several characters with personal and professional ties to Hip-Hop and has featured stories fronted by lesbian and pansexual women in the past.

Next season, its producers are to introduce a queer couple who will serve as the very first queer men to luminary in the southern series since its inception.

Production kicked off last week  and saw Prince Carter and Zachary Jones introduced to some members of cast as friends of Karlie Redd.

They told ‘The Blast.’

As an African American same-sex attracted male couple it’s tough as hell in today’s community and there are sooooooooooo many stigmas we’re up against. We are two big personalities who just happens to love each other dearly. With this platform we crave to show that love has no face or tint. But love is all about treating others with respect. Allowing people to just live their best lives.

A due date for the show’s next cycle is yet to be announced.


Black reality TV has a bad rap. Known for being messy, with tons of fighting, drink and wig-throwing, its characters certainly made their way into mainstream culture by way of GIFs, memes and spin-off shows.

VH1’s Love & Hip Hop series, produced by Mona Scott-Young, is known for all of the above (and it’s where Cardi B rose to fame). The display, which started in 2011, is about new, emerging and established rappers, singers and songwriters trying to find love, build connections and make it as artists in their municipality (there are three to 10 seasons for Miami, Atlanta, Hollywood and Fresh York). But their journeys aren’t without a whole lot of drama: Connection drama, music industry drama, friendship drama and baby-mama-and-daddy drama.

There’s much to state about how these representations of Black culture contribute to the legacy of stereotypes against Black people; after all, digital blackface—the use of reaction GIFs and memes by non-Black people of Black people’s overexaggerated expressions—is rife in our daily communications. But I don’t think Love & Hip Hop has been given enough credit in the ways it resists these stere