Every few years, hip-hop produces a figure who bends the genre’s rules. Cardi B did it in 2018—and she’s done it again in 2025.
Her sophomore album, Am I the Drama?, didn’t just top charts; it shifted them. With 200,000 units sold in week one, Cardi becomes the first woman in rap to debut twice at No. 1—an accomplishment that places her among elite company across all of music.
But the Cardi Effect is bigger than sales. It’s cultural representation—of a loud, Latina, Bronx-bred woman rewriting what power looks like in hip-hop. Her authenticity is her weapon; her success, a mirror for an industry that once doubted her longevity.
Twenty-five years after Lauryn Hill’s Miseducation, Cardi’s success feels like a new chapter in the same book—one where hip-hop’s feminine voices no longer need permission to dominate.