Social media users were sent into a frenzy on Monday night when a photo of Nicki Minaj and Cardi B engaging peacefully in a conversation at the Met Gala surfaced.

Despite a rumoured beef between them, Cardi B and Minaj were spotted sharing a moment and a quick chat inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The Bronx rapper teased exactly what was said during Wednesday’s episode of Howard Stern’s SiriusXM radio show, alluding to the duo’s “misunderstanding.”

“I never was feuding with anybody; there was a misunderstanding,” Bardi explained. “I think she felt a certain type of way about something. I definitely felt a certain type of way about something. I didn’t wanna ever talk about it in public because I felt like we gonna see each other again and we will talk about it, and it’s always like little issues. The thing is, it’s always little issues, but you know, fans are always gonna make it a big thing.”

Safaree Diss Nicki Minaj’s New Music, Praises Cardi B

She continued, “I spoke to her about it. I spoke to her at the Met Gala about it, and it’s just like, see? It’s just something that had to be talked about because it was an issue.”

Despite Stern pressing for dirt, Cardi B wouldn’t elaborate on what sparked their disagreement.

“I’m not gonna talk about it, but I really feel a certain type of way,” she said. “My feelings was really hurt, and I was just on some, ‘You know what? This is why I just keep to myself. This is why I cannot f— with nobody.’”

The supposed feud between the two picked up steam after the release of Migos’ “MotorSport,” which featured both rappers, when Minaj said that she was disappointed by Cardi’s reaction to the song.

Stern asked if Cardi believed media was to blame for throwing gas on the fire.

“The media, they just so thirsty to put women in hip-hop — not just women in hip-hop, color women — against each other,” she said. “I don’t understand why they do that and why they want to do that. Like, I’ve seen so many Hispanic artists — females — work with each other, and it benefits them so well.”

She added, “It’s the fans and it’s the people. Because the people get entertained by other people’s problems and conflict.”