News

A Houston woman has launched a $100 million lawsuit against rapper Snoop Dogg and Death Row Records, claiming they defrauded ...
Lydia Harris reignited her legal war over Death Row Records by demanding Snoop Dogg stop using the brand until her $107 million judgment is paid in full.
A strain of marijuana from Snoop Dogg's Death Row Records Cannabis brand became available for purchase in Ohio on Aug. 10.
Death Row Records Cannabis, the culture-shifting cannabis brand founded by legendary rapper and entrepreneur Snoop Dogg, is ...
The launch of TryDeathRow.com follows Snoop Dogg's 2022 acquisition of the legendary Death Row Records—the iconic label that defined a generation with artists like Dr. Dre, Tupac, and Snoop himself.
Snoop also continues at work on a Universal film about his life, a project that first announced in 2022 following Snoop’s acquisition of Death Row Records. This reps the first film to come out ...
Snoop Dogg bought the Death Row Records brand from MNRK Music Group just before his latest album called B.O.D.R. is set to be released on Feb. 11, Blackstone said in a statement.
Snoop Dogg, a longtime fan of Mexican music, is the executive producer of the album “Julian Torres and Mariachi Cenzontle," which marks Death Row Records' first foray into the Latin music scene.
November 29 -- Death Row Records, the controversial former label of Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre, has taken the bizarre and most likely illegal step of posting all the songs from Snoop's upcoming No ...
In 2005, a California judge ruled in favor of Harris against Death Row Records and then owner Marion "Suge" Knight, awarding her $107 million, including $60 million in punitive damages. The judgment ...