The fragile truce in Cardi B’s post-divorce saga just shattered like glass under a stiletto heel. On November 24, 2025, Miami IG model Jordyn Gorr unleashed a digital Molotov cocktail on Instagram, posting screen-recorded texts that she claims prove Offset—Cardi’s estranged husband and father of her first two kids—pressured her to “set up” NFL star Stefon Diggs, the man who just welcomed a baby boy with the “WAP” rapper. Tagging it as revenge for Diggs knocking up his ex while Cardi was still legally tangled in their messy split, Gorr’s bombshell has her “BG” army (that’s “Bronx Girl,” Cardi’s ride-or-die fanbase) declaring all-out war. “Offset’s done—receipts don’t lie,” one viral X post screamed, racking up 150K likes as #OffsetSetup trended worldwide. With Cardi staying radio silent amid her newborn bliss, Offset’s camp firing back with blanket denials, and Diggs dodging the drama like a sideline sprint, this isn’t just gossip—it’s a powder keg of paternity claims, private harassments, and pay-for-play schemes that’s got Hollywood holding its breath. As the screenshots spread like wildfire, one truth burns clear: In 2025’s celeb circus, no one’s ex stays buried.

For the uninitated—or those blissfully offline during Cardi’s whirlwind year—the timeline reads like a soap opera scripted by a scorned ghostwriter. Cardi and Offset’s union, a rollercoaster of hits (“Bodak Yellow” collabs) and heartbreaks (multiple splits since 2017), finally flatlined in September 2024 when she filed for divorce amid cheating rumors and custody wars. Fast-forward to May 2025: Cardi, 33 and unbothered, steps out at the Met Gala afterparty with Stefon Diggs, the chiseled Buffalo Bills-turned-New England Patriots wide receiver whose $104 million contract screams stability. By July, Paris PDA pics confirmed the glow-up; October’s Today show chat had her gushing, “He’s handsome, he’s mine.” Then, the plot thickens: On November 13, Cardi announces baby No. 4—a boy with Diggs—via adorable IG snaps of him swaddled in a Pats blanket, captioned “My little king.” Fans melted, but Offset? He allegedly posted (then deleted) a shady IG Story: “My kid lol,” sparking fury from Cardi’s camp who called it a low blow at her fresh start.

Enter Jordyn Gorr, the 24-year-old Miami influencer with 200K followers and a bio screaming “Boss Babe.” On November 24, she dropped the hammer: A carousel of alleged DMs and texts with Offset, spanning months, where he supposedly begs her to slide into Diggs’ DMs via a burner Finsta account. “Keep violating me but stay in my phone asking me to help set up Stefon,” Gorr captioned, pairing it with crying-laughing emojis and a shrimp (slang for “tender” or weak). The receipts? Screenshots show Offset (or someone using his handle) pressing: “Give drop or don’t come back around” (drop meaning location), followed by Gorr’s reply: “Opp ass n***a” (opposition/enemy). She claims he offered cash—up to $10K—for intel on Diggs’ spots, framing it as “payback” for the baby news. “He was obsessed, harassing me to trap Stefon,” Gorr told TMZ Hip Hop exclusively, her voice steady but eyes fierce. The timing? Eerily synced with Cardi’s November 20 IG Live where she vented: “Offset’s been harassing and threatening me for over a year—get a restraining order, sis,” fans urged in replies.

Offset’s response? Swift and scorched-earth. Hours after Gorr’s post hit 2 million views, his rep fired off to TMZ: “Any statements attributed to Offset circulating on social media are completely fabricated. This girl has an ongoing beef with Set and is now looking to blow this up into something it’s not. Their feud has no connection to Diggs.” No direct address from the Migos alum, who’s been IG-dark since the “My kid” fiasco (which he also denied via rep: “Fake posts”). But the denial only fanned flames—Gorr clapped back with voice notes (now circulating on TikTok) of Offset’s alleged calls, his voice raspy: “Just get his location, make it easy.” Legal eagles speculate: If verified, this could spell assault conspiracy charges, especially post-Cardis’ harassment claims. Diggs? Stone silent, laser-focused on Pats practice, but his camp’s reportedly looping in lawyers amid his own 2024 paternity suit from model Aileen Lopera (he denies fathering her April baby, demanding DNA tests).

Cardi’s “BG” army—those loyal Bronx warriors who’ve memed her clapbacks into legend—mobilized like clockwork. #BGWar trended with 500K posts by November 25, fan edits splicing Gorr’s texts over Offset’s “Ric Flair Drip” video, captioned “Drippin’ in desperation.” One viral thread from @CardiCultHQ dissected the DMs: “Timestamp matches Offset’s Miami trips during Cardi’s pregnancy—coincidence? Nah.” TikTok exploded with 10M+ views of duets: Gorr’s screenshots synced to Cardi’s “Be Careful,” lyrics hitting “revenge is the best revenge.” Fans dragged Offset’s history—2018 cheating scandal, 2020 COVID denial parties—while hyping Diggs as “King Steff”: “From gridiron to guardian—Cardi’s upgrade.” But not all one-sided: Offset stans fired back, calling Gorr a “clout chaser” with a grudge from a bounced club tab, sharing her old promo posts for rival rappers.

The backstory? Layers on layers. Cardi and Offset’s 2017 Vegas wedding birthed Kulture (2018) and Wave (2021), but infidelity rumors (hers with Diggs allegedly starting mid-2024) and custody dust-ups turned it toxic. Post-split, Offset’s been vocal: September 2025 IG Lives begging reconciliation (“We got magic, B”), October’s shady shots at Diggs (“Football ain’t family”). Cardi’s clapped back: “Obsessed clown—focus on your kids, not mine.” Diggs, 31 and fresh off a $104M Pats deal, entered clean—until Lopera’s suit painted him as a playboy. Now, Gorr’s claims tie it all: Offset allegedly paying models (rumors swirl of $5K wires to others) to catfish Diggs into compromising spots, echoing Cardi’s harassment warnings. “This is why I said get the order— he’s unhinged,” a fan petition (100K sigs) demands Cardi sue.

Social media’s a battlefield. X’s #OffsetExposed hit 1M mentions, with A-listers chiming: Nicki Minaj quote-tweeted Gorr’s post (“Messy but messy”); Saweetie liked Cardi fan edits. TikTok’s algorithm feasted—duets of Offset’s “Jealousy” over the texts, 50M views. Reddit’s r/CardiB subreddit ballooned 20K subs overnight, threads like “Gorr’s receipts: Fake or fatal?” dissecting fonts and timestamps (pro: Matches Offset’s iMessage style; con: No metadata). TMZ’s follow-up poll: 72% believe Gorr, 28% “fabricated.” Hollywood insiders buzz: Offset’s next album (slated Q1 2026) might drop diss tracks; Cardi’s Invasion of Privacy sequel? “Revenge bodak.”

Legal fallout looms large. Gorr’s facing cease-and-desist threats from Offset’s team, but she’s lawyered up with Miami litigator Gloria Allred (of Weinstein fame). Cardi? Sources say she’s “focusing on family,” posting cryptic Stories of her newborn (“My peace > your plot”). Diggs’ agent: “No comment—Steff’s ballin’, not brawlin’.” As 2025’s drama detonates—eclipsing even Taylor-Kim 2.0—this “setup” saga screams tabloid TV gold. Is Offset the villain, Gorr the hero(ine), or all smoke? With more “receipts incoming” per Gorr’s Stories, the war’s just warming. Cardi, your army’s locked and loaded—drop the next verse, queen.