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

