As GloRilla continues to shine in the limelight through hits like “Blessed” and “Tomorrow 2,” the 23-year-old rapper is engaging in a back-and-forth related to her breakout hit: “F.N.F. (Let’s Go).”

On Sunday evening, GloRilla (real name Gloria Hallelujah Woods) was slapped with some allegations by Hitkidd, the producer behind the “Song of the Summer.”

Hitkidd specifically accused GloRilla and CMG Records — the record company she’s signed to, which is owned by Yo Gotti — of essentially trying to go behind his back to secure the rights to the track.

He went on to say that, despite his advice, GloRilla “signed [his] song without telling [him].”

“I did my best to protect you and the girls. This is only a portion of what I’ve been through. I’m bringing light to this before word get out like I’m the bad guy. I’m a stand-up guy and I stand on business and morals,” Hitkidd tweeted.

“This ain’t to make anyone look bad either,” he added before penning a now-deleted Instagram Story, which read, “If you know me you know I ain’t gone do nobody wrong to make some money because that ain’t what I’m on. I didn’t want no money or nothing from neither one of the girls. I just told them let me in the shows for free.”

However, GloRilla went retro and responded to the situation on Facebook of all places, alleging that Hitkidd “done made so much money” off the song while she herself hasn’t “made not one red cent.”

GloRilla also alleged that Hitkidd’s just “salty” that she went down a different path, though — despite the antics — she still has love for her fellow Memphian.

“Even after all this I still got luv for hitkidd cause we came up together even doe he been going behind my back every since the song blew but dats another story for another day,” she noted. “l just hate da fact he had to bring da business to social media when I could’ve BEEN came out about the snake s**t he been doing to me.”

She also appeared to shadily diss Hitkidd by giving a shoutout to another “day 1” producer on Twitter.

That wasn’t the end of the matter, though, as Kadeem Phillips — CEO of Power Entertainment and an associate of Hitkidd’s — also popped off of Facebook and said that he wanted to “address this from the business side.”

“Glo and Hitkidd get 50% split evenly of all the money brought in on FNF. Unfortunately, CMG froze all the money even Glo money in their latest claim to us. So if she hasn’t seen her money. Tell her to ask her label about it since she ‘sold’ her masters and publishing to them,” he wrote. “Glo won’t see a dime until her advance paid back but that was her choice by signing to CMG. Luckily Hitkidd still OWNs the song because we did a deal to keep the ownership.”

“This is what happens when you open doors for people. They build the house with you to let someone else live in it. But this won’t stop us from doing great business and creating a pipeline of successful for Memphis,” Phillips continued.

He also called out Yo Gotti and CMG’s handling of the situation.

“This will definitely get handled and was a pathetic way for a Black man from Memphis to attack another Black man from Memphis over a song he wasn’t around to even help create,” he noted. “Why does everything from Memphis need to go through CMG? Why does Gotti have to take credit for everything? Even Michael Jordan had to make room for Kobe Bryant.”

Big Glo responded by succinctly telling him to “shut [his] big crybaby fat ass up.”

There don’t appear to be any further developments at this time.

What do you think about the situation?