Kylie Jenner returned to the booth with a ten-second verse of Yeat’s “Let King Tonka Talk.”
Kylie Jenner returned to the booth with a 10-second poem that has already had the internet buzzing about her return to music.
The billionaire beauty mogul teamed up with Yate for “Let King Tonka Talk,” in which the Oregon rapper brags about club dominance while Jenner crashes the party with her own bar.
It’s been a full decade since she last recorded, and for those who remember her 2016 debut on Burberry Perry’s “Beautiful Day” alongside Lil Yachty, Jordyn Woods and Justine Skye, this collaboration is a real moment.
Yeat spends much of the song describing a scene in which women threw themselves at him, before he became confused and mistook someone for Kylie Jenner’s “brand new BBL” herself.
That’s when King Kylie entered her contribution at :55: “Let King Kylie do the talking. I just walked into this club and all these b######s, yeah, they got me. They never could.”
What’s even more interesting is that Kylie Jenner doesn’t just appear in rap. She is credited as one of the song’s five songwriters, meaning she had a hand in its production.
The song will appear on Yeat’s upcoming album “A Dangerous Lyfe”, which will be released on March 27, 2026.
The “King Kylie” brand did not appear randomly here. The era from 2014 to 2016 defined an entire generation’s understanding of celebrity reinvention.
Jenner was a rebellious teen with teal hair who dyed her hair bright blue before Kim Kardashian married Kanye West.
During the same period, she launched the Kylie Lip Gloss Set, which sold out on day one and eventually became the basis for Kylie Cosmetics, a billion-dollar brand that made her one of the world’s youngest self-made billionaires.
Last October, she launched the King Kylie collection, celebrating a decade of success and recreating the looks on the packaging.
Her boyfriend, Timothée Chalamet, also has a rap history of his own, though his 2013 high school project “Statistics” earned him a D+ over LaGuardia High School teacher Miss Lawton, whom he mentioned in his lyrics.

