Mariah the Scientist pulled five 2026 BET Award nominations off Hearts Sold Separately, leading all R&B acts and tying Kendrick Lamar's overall count. The Atlanta singer who came up adjacent to rap's biggest names is now sharing the top of the board with them.
The take: Mariah's five nods are the R&B-rap crossover doing what it does best — a singer rooted in the same Atlanta ecosystem as the rappers, getting counted in the same breath. Her breakout isn't a genre-jump. It's the natural payoff of an R&B voice that hip-hop already claimed as its own.
Five nods, top of the R&B field
Her nominations span Best Female R&B/Pop Artist, Best Collaboration ("Is It a Crime" with Kali Uchis), Video of the Year and Viewers' Choice (both for "Burning Blue"), and Album of the Year for Hearts Sold Separately. Five nods make her the most-nominated R&B artist of the year, level with Kendrick.
A first No. 1
Hearts Sold Separately debuted atop Billboard's Top R&B Albums chart — her first chart-topper. The breakout isn't hype; it's a No. 1 with the receipts to back the nominations.
Burning Blue did the work
"Burning Blue" earned two of the five nods on its own, the kind of single that turns a respected name into a household one. A song carrying both Video of the Year and Viewers' Choice weight is the engine of a true breakout year.
Atlanta's R&B keeps feeding rap
Mariah came up in an Atlanta scene where the line between R&B and rap was always porous. Her run at the BET Awards — a hip-hop institution — is that porousness paying off. The genres were never as separate as the charts pretend, and her five nods are the proof on the marquee.

