Sneakz & Beatz logoSneakz & Beatz
SneakersHip-HopAnimeGamingThe PHRHX ShowShopCommunity
SubscribeBrowse Beats
Sneakz & Beatz
SneakersHip-HopAnimeGamingThe PHRHX ShowShopCommunityAbout
SubscribeBrowse Beats
IGTTXYTDiscord
The Lane · Essay

Megan Thee Stallion's anime 'Hotties' is in production

Working with Boondocks producer Carl Jones, Megan is voicing and co-creating an original series for Prime Video. It's a rare case of a Black artist owning the anime crossover instead of just referencing it.

By PHRHX · Published June 15, 2026

Anime · Sneakz & Beatz

Plenty of rappers reference anime. Megan Thee Stallion is making one. The Houston artist is co-creating and starring in an original animated series titled Hotties for Amazon Prime Video, working alongside producer Carl Jones — the name behind The Boondocks and Black Dynamite, per Collider and Vibe. That last detail is the whole story.

Reference is cheap. Ownership is the move.

For two decades the anime-hip-hop relationship has run one direction: Black artists citing Naruto bars, cosplaying Dragon Ball, sampling soundtracks. The culture supplied the fandom and the cosign; Japanese studios and Western platforms kept the IP. Megan flipping that — building and owning a series rather than guesting on one — is the structural shift worth tracking, regardless of when it airs.

What's confirmed, and what isn't

Megan has described Hotties as high-energy and action-driven, centered on strong, fashionable women with real character arcs, per CBR. As of February 2026 she shared a studio update recording voice work for her character, per ComicBook. No release date is set; reporting points to a possible 2027 window, so treat any earlier date as speculation. She also clarified that a viral animated clip circulating earlier in the year was not from Hotties, per Foxy99 — a reminder to ground claims and ignore the fan-edit churn.

Carl Jones is the credibility, not the celebrity

The partnership matters more than the marquee. Carl Jones built The Boondocks into the rare Western series that earned genuine respect from anime-literate audiences — sharp animation, sharper politics, unmistakably Black. Pairing Megan's fandom and platform with Jones's production track record is what separates Hotties from a vanity project. It's a creative team that understands both the form and the culture it's speaking to.

The Japanese-hip-hop throughline

Megan's anime fluency isn't new branding. She's woven Japanese hip-hop and anime references through her catalog and her cosplay for years, and her single "BOA" was widely read as a love letter to the form, per Essence. Hotties extends a documented passion into ownership — the difference between being a fan in public and being a stakeholder.

Why S&B is watching

This sits dead-center in the anime-hip-hop intersection, and for once a Black artist is positioned on the ownership side of it. If Hotties lands, it becomes a template: the crossover doesn't have to mean licensing your taste to someone else's IP. It can mean building the IP. That's the version of the intersection worth celebrating — and the one the industry has spent years avoiding.

Until there's a confirmed date, the honest framing is this: the project is real, it's in active production, and the creative pairing is serious. The rest is reported, not promised.

Sources

  • Megan Thee Stallion Joins Forces With Prime Video 'The Boondocks' EP - Collider — 2026
  • New Megan Thee Stallion Anime 'Finally Coming to Life' - CBR — 2026
  • Megan Thee Stallion Drops Major Update for Her New Prime Video Anime - ComicBook — 2026-02
  • Megan Thee Stallion's "BOA" And Rap's Longstanding Relationship With Anime - Essence — 2025

More from The Lane

  • The Air Jordan-Naruto Pipeline — How Black sneakerheads run the anime conversation in 2026 — and why nobody covers it.
  • From Sega's MJ to GTA's Playlists — How hip-hop wrote the soundtrack for video games — and why gaming press still won't cover it as one story.
  • Why a Black-Owned Culture Brand Needed Beats, Podcasts, and the Drop Feed Under One Roof — The integrated model — and why every previous Black-owned culture brand ran into a wall by trying to operate just one of the three.
  • The 1,000-Pair Jordan 7 ‘Miro’ Is Now a General Release — The Air Jordan 7 “Miro” — a ~1,000-pair Beijing 2008 grail tied to the Dream Team and Joan Miró — returns July 10 at $255. First retro in 18 years, and the first you don’t need a connect to own.
  • True Blue Returns After a Decade — The only original AJ3 that broke from Bulls colors comes back July 18 in full-family OG spec, ten years after its last retro.
  • The Sunset 5 Was a Women's Exclusive First — Twenty years after debuting as the first women's-only Air Jordan 5, the Sunset returns July 1 — and the story of who it was built for matters.
  • The 9 Mike Never Played In — The OG Space Jam Air Jordan 9 returns August 29 for the film's 30th — a shoe built during the years Jordan was playing baseball, not basketball.
  • Peel the Tongue, Read Rare Air — The Air Jordan 4 Tour Yellow returns September 5 for its 20th — the elusive cousin of the Lightning, with the Velcro tongue secret intact.
  • The Chrome 8 Kobe Wore in the Playoffs — The Air Jordan 8 Chrome returns September 12 after a decade gone — a 2003 colorway whose biggest moment came on Kobe's feet, not Mike's.
  • Royal Returns in OG Leather at Last — The black-and-royal AJ1 High comes back October 10 in standard OG cut — the first leather Royal in nine years and only the fourth ever.
  • White Infrared, OG Mold, Nike Air Heel — The Air Jordan 6 White Infrared returns November 7 for the model's 35th — true 1991 mold, original Nike Air heel branding restored.
  • Bred 4s Land on Black Friday Weekend — The Air Jordan 4 Bred returns in true OG spec over Black Friday weekend — face box, white edges, Fire Red, the works.
  • The Sacramento 10 Has Never Retro'd — Thirty-one years after the City Series, the Sacramento Air Jordan 10 finally gets its first-ever retro — December 5, black and purple.
  • Space Jam 11 Closes Out the Year — The Air Jordan 11 Space Jam returns December 12 at $235 — the holiday anchor, with the price creep telling its own story.
  • Vince Staples Cry Baby Album Review — Cry Baby is the Long Beach rapper's first album as an independent artist, and the freedom shows in every guitar line.
  • Tay Keith Dead At 29 — The Memphis producer behind some of rap's biggest hits died at 29 with a royalty lawsuit still unsettled.
  • JAY-Z Headlines Roots Picnic 2026 — JAY-Z headlined a sold-out Roots Picnic with The Roots, marking 30 years of Reasonable Doubt and reuniting State Property.
  • Clipse Earn Five Grammy Nominations — Sixteen years between albums, and Let God Sort Em Out pulled Album of the Year and four more Grammy nods.
  • D12 Returns Without Eminem — Twenty-two years later, Kuniva and Swifty released D12 Forever (Vol. 1) — the group's first album since Proof died.
  • YG Signs A New Major Deal — The Gentlemen's Club is YG's first major-label deal in nearly five years, landing through 4Hunnid and 10K Projects.
  • Cardi B Leads BET Awards 2026 — Am I the Drama? made Cardi the only female rapper with back-to-back No. 1 debuts, and the BET Awards noticed.
  • Freddie Gibbs Goes Independent Again — You Only Die 1nce (Deluxe) stacks 10 new songs onto a 2024 surprise drop, all of it through AWAL.
  • The Grammys Hit 100 Categories — Five new categories push the 2027 Grammys to 100 awards — and rap fans have heard the bloat argument before.
  • Mariah The Scientist's Breakout Year — Five BET nominations and a No. 1 R&B album put Mariah the Scientist in the conversation rap usually keeps to itself.
  • Demon Slayer's billion-dollar theatrical blueprint — Infinity Castle's first film cleared $793 million worldwide and the biggest international opening the U.S. has ever logged. The model behind it now sets the terms for every studio chasing the theater.
  • Chainsaw Man proved the theatrical model isn't a fluke — MAPPA skipped a TV season and put Reze in theaters. The film grossed $191.4 million worldwide and opened number one in America, confirming the finale-to-multiplex pipeline is now standard play.
  • One Piece x Nike puts Devil Fruits on Air Max Plus — Three Devil Fruit colorways, $180 each, dropping Fall 2026. Nike's second anime collab in a year confirms the anime-sneaker pipeline is now a planned revenue lane, not a gimmick.
  • How an anime opening became a global rap hit — "Otonoke" topped Billboard Japan, charted in the U.S., went RIAA gold, and crossed 100 million YouTube views. The anime opening is now a legitimate path to a worldwide hip-hop record.
  • Anime is a $25 billion business now — Japan's anime market reached 3.84 trillion yen in its latest report, with overseas revenue topping the domestic market for the first time at scale. The audience abroad is now the business.
  • Jujutsu Kaisen's Culling Game isn't done — MAPPA confirmed The Culling Game Part 2 with a new teaser and a new director. The franchise that ran on its anime momentum is staying in the conversation while a tie-in game arrives.
  • Crunchyroll's Summer 2026 slate is stacked — Mushoku Tensei Season 3, Black Torch, and a wave of returning hits anchor a summer schedule that doubles as a map of where the next year's hype is heading.
  • Witch Hat Atelier is 2026's quiet powerhouse — After a long delay, Kamome Shirahama's beloved manga finally got its anime — and the craft on display is reframing what a fantasy adaptation is allowed to look like.
  • Kagurabachi's anime is taking a world tour first — The manga that became a meme before it became a hit lands its anime in April 2027 — and Anime Expo gets the first 20 minutes of episode one this July.
  • God of War: Laufey Hands the Axe to Faye — Santa Monica's next PS5 entry benches Kratos and builds a faster, agile combat system around his late wife.
  • Marvel's Wolverine Locks September 15 — The studio that nailed Spider-Man finally showed Logan's combat, and the September date is a strategic gift.
  • Forza Horizon 6's PS5 Delay Stings — Fable and Halo hit PS5 day one. Forza Horizon 6 didn't, and the official excuse keeps getting thinner.
  • EsDeeKid Brings UK Drill to Fortnite — Epic skipped the obvious superstar and added Liverpool's EsDeeKid to its Icon Series. The choice says plenty.
  • Marathon's Season 2 Bounce Didn't Hold — A free week pushed Bungie's extraction shooter to 40K players. Then Destiny 2's farewell update buried it.
  • Until Dawn 2 Goes Ghost-Hunting — Firesprite revives Sony's branching-horror series with a new cast and a found-footage TV-crew premise.
  • Marvel Tokon Bets on the Tag Team — A 4v4 tag fighter from the GranBlue and Guilty Gear studio lands August 6, with Magneto, Carnage, and Goblin in.
  • Two Indies Outscored the Blockbusters — Mewgenics and Mina the Hollower prove the indie shelf is carrying the year's critical weight, not the AAA slate.
  • Three Horror Games Share September 24 — Control Resonant and Silent Hill: Townfall both date September 24, with Onimusha right behind on the 25th.
  • Pokemon and Adidas Time a 30th Anniversary — A September 2026 capsule puts Pokemon on the Samba, Superstar and Adistar, the clearest gaming-sneaker tie of the year.
  • The Lane — positioning essay — Why Sneakz & Beatz exists and where it sits.

← Back to The Lane · About PHRHX · The PHRHX Show · Beat Store · $10K Rap Challenge

Sneakz & Beatz logoSneakz & Beatz

Where sneakers, hip-hop, anime, and gaming collide. We cover the culture. You live it.

IGTTXYTDiscord
Explore
  • Sneakers
  • Hip-Hop
  • Anime
  • Gaming
  • The PHRHX Show
Shop
  • Shop
  • The Vault — from $79
  • Sneakz Pass — $12/mo
  • Licensing
  • Refund Policy
  • DMCA
Company
  • About
  • The Lane
  • Community
  • $10K Rap Challenge
  • Press
  • Contact
  • Work With Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
Newsletter

Stay locked in. Substack delivers culture every week.

© 2026 Sneakz & Beatz LLC. All rights reserved. Sneakz & Beatz™ is a brand of Sneakz & Beatz LLC, a California limited liability company.Built for the culture.