Okayplayer Exclusive: Juvenile and Megan Thee Stallion Link Up on “B.B.B. (Remix)”

Juvie’s return gets a Megan assist, bringing two rap generations together on one record.

Promotional image for BBB by Juvenile and Megan Thee Stallion.

“B.B.B. (Remix)” doesn’t officially drop until tonight. The first listen starts here, on Okayplayer.

When Juvenile released “B.B.B.” featuring Genesisthegawd back in January, it took over timelines almost immediately.

Millennials gravitated toward the high-energy, nostalgic bop quickly. The vibe felt familiar. The bounce felt like a nod to ’99 and the 2000s. The tone felt seasoned. It sounded like an artist who never lost his step.

The single marked the beginning of Boiling Point, Juvie’s first solo album in a decade, set to arrive March 26. Almost organically, the song became a rallying cry for the 30-and-over crowd. It carried that “this was made for us” energy. Especially at a moment where Gen Z often feels like it’s steering the rap conversation, “B.B.B.” served as a reminder that the generation that built much of today’s foundation is still very much here.

Then Megan Thee Stallion teased her verse.

On Feb. 25, she posted a snippet over the track with a caption that needed very little context: “BBB ft ME @juviethegreat 👀 when you gonna drop it.” The internet handled the rest.

Now the remix arrives, and it does more than extend the record’s lifespan. It stretches its reach.

Juvenile represents a lineage. The Hot Boys and the Cash Money era. Gold teeth, tall white tees and Reebok Workout sneakers — known in New Orleans as “Soldiers.” A period of regional dominance that reshaped mainstream rap. Megan, meanwhile, is one of the defining voices of her generation. Confident, internet-fluent and unapologetically Houston. Where Juvie carries history, Megan carries momentum.

Together, the record feels less like a torch being passed and more like alignment between Juvie the Great and Hot Girl Meg.

For millennials, the remix feels affirming. For younger listeners, it feels seamless. It shifts the conversation away from “our era” versus “their era” and toward something more collaborative.

Maybe that’s the takeaway. Rap isn’t a relay race. It doesn’t move in isolated waves. It builds on itself, its history and its influence.

Check out Juvenile and Megan Thee Stallion’s “B.B.B. (Remix)” below, exclusively on Okayplayer, before it hits streaming platforms tonight. Boiling Point arrives March 26.