Maserati Bud shares FaceTime call logs to prove Claressa Shields contacted him after she denied knowing him [VIDEO]

The 50 Cent associate releases iPhone screenshots showing recent calls with the Olympic boxer as their public feud escalates.

Maserati Bud posted a 1-minute-54-second video this morning (March 24), showing iPhone call logs he says prove Claressa Shields has been in recent contact with him. The footage includes a FaceTime call lasting approximately five minutes dated March 5, 2026, along with other calls and missed attempts spanning the same period. The contact in his phone is saved under the name “B Clarsa Shelds.”

The video arrives after weeks of public back-and-forth between Bud and Shields, which began when 50 Cent accused the Olympic boxer of infidelity with Bud during her relationship with rapper Papoose. Shields has denied any meaningful relationship with Bud, calling him a “fan” or “groupie” in interviews and social media posts. Bud’s latest post is his most detailed response to those claims.

What follows is a tour through his iPhone, showing logs with Shields along with a photo of her, and a self-promotional plug for an upcoming track—the kind of evidence-meets-entertainment approach that has become common in hip-hop disputes on social media.

A Screen Recording That Speaks Louder Than Words

The clip opens with Bud speaking directly to the camera, holding his iPhone. He explains that he is releasing this footage because Shields continues to publicly deny knowing him despite what he describes as ongoing communication. His tone is measured but frustrated—presenting what he says is evidence rather than simply making claims.

He then switches to screen-recording mode and scrolls through his call history. The logs show multiple interactions dated March 5, 2026: a FaceTime video call lasting approximately five minutes, an outgoing call canceled at 1:53 AM, and additional calls with durations ranging from 32 seconds to several minutes. Bud narrates as he scrolls, pointing to timestamps and emphasizing the year.

No audio from the calls is played. The video relies entirely on the metadata displayed on the screen. Bud’s argument is that the logs themselves—showing two-way communication on specific dates—contradict Shields’ characterization of him as someone she barely knows or has cut off.

From Christmas Parties to March Phone Logs

The current dispute traces back to mid-March 2026, when 50 Cent posted allegations that Shields had been unfaithful to her boyfriend, rapper Papoose, with Bud. The claims referenced alleged Ring camera footage from a Christmas gathering where Bud was reportedly present in Shields’ home while she FaceTimed Papoose from another room.

Bud followed by releasing his own videos and texts, including footage from the Christmas party and messages he said showed a pattern of communication. Shields responded by denying any romantic involvement, characterizing Bud as a persistent fan or someone she had limited interaction with. She released selected text messages and audio clips that she said showed her rejecting advances or setting boundaries.

The March phone logs represent an escalation in Bud’s responses. Earlier posts focused on events from late 2024 or early 2025. Meanwhile, the logs show interactions from March 2026—the same month the public dispute intensified. Bud’s video suggests contact occurred more recently than Shields’ statements have indicated.

The Timeline That Made Bud Hit Record

Bud’s decision to release call logs appears calculated. The logs he highlights are dated March 5, 2026—recent enough to directly counter any claim that contact ended months earlier. The 1:53 AM canceled call is presented without commentary, left for viewers to interpret.

Throughout the clip, Bud mentions that every time he tries to “leave it alone,” Shields brings his name up again. He frames the video as a response to her continued public statements, positioning himself as someone who would rather move on but feels compelled to defend himself.

The video ends with Bud promoting an upcoming track titled “Mr Get Up In Now.” This self-promotional element is common in such disputes, where personal conflicts often double as marketing opportunities for music releases.

Split Screens and Divided Loyalties Across Social Media

X users responded to Bud’s video with the kind of engagement that follows high-profile celebrity disputes. The @mymixtapez post hosting the video accumulated over 296,000 views within hours, with reactions spanning amusement, skepticism, and debate over the evidence presented.

One user wrote, “Claressa out here doing Olympic denial while the piggyback pic got her on his shoulders Receipts hit harder than her jab.” Another added, “That FaceTime log plus the old piggyback photo? Her ‘I don’t know him’ just got folded like a cheap lawn chair.” A third framed the moment as entertainment: “Drama alert! Maserati Bud just went full receipts mode… dropping a FaceTime call that’s got everyone talking.”

Some users focused on the specifics of the logs, reposting screenshots of the March 5 entries and noting the 1:53 AM canceled call. Others questioned why Bud had saved the contact under a misspelled name or why he had kept the logs. A smaller contingent dismissed the video as promotional theater, pointing to Bud’s plug for his upcoming track as evidence that the dispute serves his career interests.

The comments themselves became part of the story. Users posted reaction videos, analyzed timestamps, and debated whether the evidence was conclusive. The video was no longer just Bud’s claim—it was a piece of content being dissected and redistributed across platforms.

What Happens When Receipts Become the Main Event

Bud’s latest post does not resolve the dispute. However, it shifts the public conversation. Shields now faces a decision about how to respond. She can address the logs directly, dismiss them as fabricated or misleading, or let the moment pass without comment. Each option carries different implications for how the story will continue to unfold.

For Bud, the video serves multiple purposes. The video rebuts Shields’ public statements, keeps his name in circulation, and it builds anticipation for his upcoming music. And it positions him as someone willing to provide detailed evidence to support his claims—a tactic that resonates in an environment where credibility is often contested.

Meanwhile, 50 Cent has amplified the feud from the beginning. So, the video is another chapter in a pattern of turning personal disputes into public spectacles. His involvement has kept the story in front of audiences who might otherwise have moved on.

Conclusion: A Call Log That Raises Questions

Maserati Bud’s video adds new material to an ongoing dispute between him and Claressa Shields. The call logs he presented show interactions dated March 5, 2026, including a five-minute FaceTime call. The piggyback photo he included shows a level of familiarity that contrasts with Shields’ public characterization of their relationship.

Whether the logs prove what Bud says they prove is a matter of interpretation. Shields has not yet responded to this specific post, and her version of events remains available in her previous statements. Bud’s video is his side of the story, presented in a format designed to be shared, debated, and consumed.

The dispute has drawn significant attention across social media, with users analyzing the evidence, picking sides, and waiting for what comes next. Bud has made his play. Whether Shields responds, and how, will determine whether this chapter closes or another begins.