TLDR: The new Trap Lore Ross documentary “RATLANTA: The Embarrassing Fall of Young Thug” exposes a leaked police video that fuels Atlanta’s growing “snitch city” stigma.
Trap Lore Ross’s latest deep dive, RATLANTA: The Embarrassing Fall of Young Thug, is less a documentary than a cultural autopsy. Atlanta, once celebrated as the epicenter of hip-hop innovation, now finds itself smeared with a reputation no city wants: the home of rappers who snitch.
The fallout traces back to the highly publicized YSL trial. Gunna was branded a “rat” after taking a plea deal—critics unwilling to accept that Young Thug himself would later enter a plea of his own. Even so, Gunna’s name stuck to the scarlet letter while Thug remained draped in the mythology of the street hero. That illusion shattered when a decade-old police interview resurfaced, showing Thug freely speaking to detectives about PeeWee Roscoe and the infamous Lil Wayne tour bus shooting, among other incidents. The video, unearthed and amplified by Ross’s film, has ignited a storm across social media, YouTube, and podcasts, leaving Thug accused of being an even bigger “rat” than the men he let twist in the wind.
The GQ piece “Why Young Thug’s Leaked Jail Calls Are Roiling the Rap World” paints a grim portrait of Atlanta rap, describing the scene as “resembling the Boston underworld of The Departed—rampant paranoia, finger-pointing, in-fighting amongst crews, and a lot of accusations about who may or may not be a ‘rat.'” That paranoia now hangs like a storm cloud over the entire city’s reputation.
PeeWee himself insists Thug’s statements don’t amount to snitching, but the internet court has already delivered its verdict. Ross’s documentary simply turned up the volume on a conversation already raging: Can Atlanta ever reclaim its status as rap’s crown jewel, or has the city’s culture of suspicion and public betrayal permanently stained the throne?
For now, Atlanta has to wear its new nickname—”Ratlanta”—with the shame of a scarlet brand, while Thug, once its king, is left to answer for the rules he bent and the city he dragged down with him.
























