Danielle Fishel, popularly known for playing Topanga in the 90s teen sitcom Boy Meets World, has long been regarded as people’s childhood crush, which would warrant them being starstruck if they got the chance to meet her. This past weekend, the roles were reversed when the 42-year-old actress met J. Cole.
The Fayetteville, N.C. rapper was a special guest at the iHeartRadio Music Festival on Friday (Sept. 22), joining Lil Durk to perform their hit “All My Life.” As Cole was walking backstage, he ran into Fishel who was very enthused to meet the Dreamville rapper.
“It is J. Cole!” the mother of two said upon realizing the Grammy winner was walking toward her. “I have to say hi to you. I went and saw your show in L.A. Unbelievable! I’m such a big fan.” The two shared an embrace before the “Middle Child” rapper echoed her sentiment. “Me too, likewise. Good to see you,” he said. Check out the moment below.
The two meeting comes ten years after J. Cole mentioned Danielle Fishel’s seminal Boy Meets World role in one of his songs. “Boy Meets World, I’m tryna find a new Topanga/ And bang her out, no hanging out,” he rapped on “Villematic” which came from his 2013 album Born Sinner.
Fishel is no stranger to the Hip-Hop world. She appeared in the promotional trailer for Jack Harlow’s May 2022 album Come Home The Kids Miss You and had a hilarious back-and-forth interaction with Waka Flocka Flame on Twitter in 2013. Trippie Redd expressed his own admiration for the actress in 2018 with his track “Topanga.”
J. Cole’s appearance at iHeartRadio Music Festival marked the first time he and Lil Durk performed “All My Life” live together. The record, originally released this past May, peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100. Check out their performance below.
In South America, a good-sized portion of the Orinoco River basin is in Colombia that is identified by expanses of llanos and the east facing slope of the Eastern Cordillera in the country, which is part of the great Andean range. The region is marked by a diverse spectrum of Indigenous families and languages, including the Arawak, Carib and Chibchan speakers. For the llaneros, who live in the region, cattle ranching is their economic lifeblood — el trabajo de llano. For […]