On Sunday, T-Pain was celebrated in his hometown of Tallahassee with a street named after him. The musician received the key to the city from Mayor John Dailey in a ceremony hours before his ...
maybe don’t listen to this cover T-Pain made with Mark Zuckerberg — excuse me, Z-Pain. Their version transforms the “Get Low” I got down to at all my school dances into a song with a much ...
Among the thousands of replies that flowed in was one from T-Pain. “Happy anniversary! Thanks for letting me be a part of this,” read his message, which was punctuated with a flame emoji.
Florida musician T-Pain has well and truly put his hometown on the map, and now the city of Tallahassee have returned the favor. By Tyler Jenke pmc-reporter Florida musician T-Pain has well and ...
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is testing out his vocal chops alongside T-Pain for a cover of Lil’ Jon’s “Get Low,” released under the name Z-Pain. On the song, Zuckerberg translates Lil Jon and ...
T-Pain at Minnesota State Fair (Photo credit: Nagashia Jackson for rolling out) T-Pain received multiple honors from his hometown of Tallahassee on Sunday, including a key to the city and a street ...
Mark Zuckerberg is potentially making music with T-Pain. The Facebook founder posted a photo of the two in the studio on his Instagram Story with the caption, “It’s happening guys.” ...
Zuckerberg, 40, revealed on Wednesday, Nov. 13, that he serenaded his wife with some help from hitmaker T-Pain, his years-long friend. The Facebook founder posted an Instagram photo on Wednesday ...
Tallahassee celebrated its famous son with a celebration to remember that began with a street dedication, a key to the city and a concert with more than 4,000 fans screaming T-Pain's songs into ...
native told fans at a concert Tallahassee, Florida, native Faheem Najmm, who goes by the stage name T-Pain, was recently honored in his hometown, with the city naming a street after him.
But this year, the swagged-out Zuck went above and beyond, collaborating with T-Pain to write an acoustic cover of the 2002 rap song. It sounds exactly how you would expect — almost Weird Al-esque.
T-Pain peforms at Target Field in Minneapolis (Photo by Nagashia Jackson for rolling out) In a surprising turn of events that blends Silicon Valley with the music industry, Meta CEO Mark ...