Diddy - Act Bad -ft. City Girls Fabolous- Apr 2026

Jada was losing her mind behind the camera. “That’s my bestie! Act bad, Mia!”

And somewhere in the Miami night, the DJ queued the track again—because some moments deserve a rewind.

The bass hit first—low, mean, and unapologetic. Then Diddy’s voice cut through the Miami night like a promise: “If you gonna act bad, act bad for real.”

And Mia did. She poured a sip of Cîroc on the floor—not wasted, just a toast to the old version of herself. Then she locked eyes with Marcus across the room and mouthed the next line Diddy hadn’t even written yet: “You never knew how to hold me. Now watch me glow.” Diddy - Act Bad -ft. City Girls Fabolous-

Mia smirked. Two weeks ago, her ex, Marcus, had called her “too much.” Too loud, too proud, too ambitious for a girl from Liberty City. He’d left her for a girl who wore beige and never raised her voice. Now, Marcus was standing across the club, sipping a weak gin and tonic, pretending not to see her in a custom metallic dress that caught every strobe light.

“Watch this,” Mia said.

Mia leaned her head against the cool glass, still buzzing. “Let ‘em watch,” she said. “They asked for bad. I gave them unforgettable.” Jada was losing her mind behind the camera

Mia leaned against the velvet rope, watching the champagne flutes tremble on a silver tray nearby. The club, Infinity , was packed with the usual suspects: ballers on cell phones, influencers perfecting their pout, and old heads in crisp white sneakers acting like they owned the place. But tonight, Mia wasn't here to watch. Tonight, she was here to act bad .

Her best friend, Jada, slid up next to her, phone already recording. “You ready?” Jada yelled over the beat switch—City Girls’ verse slicing through the speakers: “I ain’t comin’ polite, I’m comin’ correct.”

Later, in the limo, Jada played back the video. “Three million views by morning,” she laughed. The bass hit first—low, mean, and unapologetic

By the time Fabolous’s verse hit— “Bad? I been that, still that, will that” —Mia had Marcus’s new girlfriend staring open-mouthed, her beige dress suddenly looking like a napkin at a five-star dinner.

She didn’t walk to the dance floor. She glided —hips synchronized to the 808s, heels clicking like a countdown. When she reached the center, she spun once, arms wide, letting the crowd part like the Red Sea. A bottle of Cîroc appeared in her hand (courtesy of a promoter who knew her face). She didn’t ask. She took.