FACT CHECK: Billboard and Others Falsely Link Nicki Minaj’s Instagram Deactivation to Turning Point USA Appearance
Nicki Minaj’s Instagram Deactivation Predates Controversial Turning Point USA Appearance
A significant wave of misinformation has permeated mainstream entertainment journalism this week, with Billboard leading the narrative that rap icon Nicki Minaj deactivated her Instagram account as a direct response to backlash from her appearance at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest.
Misinformation Surfaces as Media Links Nicki Minaj’s Instagram Deactivation to Turning Point USA Appearance. On December 21, 2025, Nicki Minaj appeared in Phoenix, Arizona, for a high profile sit-down with Erika Kirk, the widow of late activist Charlie Kirk. While the appearance sparked intense national debate, the claim that she shuttered her social media presence to escape the fallout is a demonstrable falsehood.
Data from digital archives and social media tracking services confirm that Minaj’s Instagram account, @nickiminaj, was deactivated as early as October 20, 2025. This timeline places her departure from the platform more than two months prior to the TPUSA event. Despite this easily verifiable fact, Billboard and several other major outlets published reports on December 25, 2025, framing the deactivation as a "drastic move" triggered by the criticism of her political commentary, effectively creating a fabricated cause-and-effect relationship.
Investigating the "10 Million Follower Loss" Allegation
Central to the reports circulated by Billboard and viral social media posts was the claim that Nicki Minaj lost upwards of 10 million followers in the 48 hours following her interview. However, independent analytics tell a much more stable story. In November 2025, Minaj’s follower count stood at approximately 227.5 million. By the time of the event in late December 2025, that figure was roughly 223.8 million a decline of 3.7 million over a two-month period.
This fluctuation is consistent with standard "bot purges" or typical audience shifts during periods of celebrity inactivity. The narrative of an overnight 10-million-user exodus is statistically unfounded. Furthermore, because the account was already deactivated and "invisible" to the public when the TPUSA event occurred, it was physically impossible for users to "unfollow" her in mass numbers during that specific window in December 2025.
The Context of the AmericaFest Controversy
The media's rush to link the deactivation to the event likely stemmed from the polarizing nature of the summit. During her conversation with Erika Kirk, Minaj expressed support for President Donald Trump, referring to him as "handsome." The event went viral for a controversial verbal slip where Minaj accidentally referred to Vice President JD Vance as "the assassin" a particularly sensitive remark given that Charlie Kirk had been assassinated just months earlier in September 2025.
While the "assassin" comment and her criticisms of California Governor Gavin Newsom drew significant fire from online critics, the rapper did not retreat from the internet. On the contrary, she remained highly active on X (formerly Twitter) throughout the week of December 21, 2025. She even reposted clips from the event with the dismissive caption, "Didn’t have a clue. Carry on," regarding the industry’s reaction. Her continued presence on X directly contradicts the media’s theory that she was seeking a total digital blackout to avoid scrutiny.
A History of Strategic Platform Breaks
Long-time fans of the artist, known as the "Barbz," were quick to point out that Minaj has a well documented history of deactivating her Instagram for personal and professional resets. The October 2025 deactivation was widely understood by her fanbase at the time as a way to focus on her wedding anniversary with husband Kenneth Petty or as a "blackout" period preceding her sixth studio album, rumored for a 2026 release.
Minaj has frequently referenced her habit of leaving social media to avoid "stalkers" and maintain mental peace. By ignoring this established pattern, Billboard and other news organizations have weaponized a routine social media break to fit a more sensationalized narrative of a celebrity in crisis. This lack of context serves to heighten the drama of the political moment at the expense of factual accuracy.
The Collapse of Journalistic Rigor: The failure of a prestigious publication like Billboard to verify the status of a celebrity’s account before linking it to a current political event highlights a concerning decline in journalistic standards. In the digital age, the pressure to produce "viral" content often outweighs the commitment to basic fact-checking. For an artist of Minaj's stature, whose every move is scrutinized, these chronological errors are not merely trivial; they fundamentally warp the public record of her career and political engagement.

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