Mendeecees Harris put his roots front and center this week, sharing a tribute on Instagram to the two cultures that made him who he is.
His father immigrated from Panama. His mother came from Guyana. They found each other in Harlem. The rest, as Mendeecees tells it, is him.
“My dad from Panama, my mom Guyanese, both came to America, met in Harlem, and they made me,” he wrote. “When you mix Panama and Guyanese, you get a one-of-a-kind me proud of this beautiful blend, this rich heritage.”
He closed the caption with rows of Panamanian and Guyanese flag emojis, the hashtag #PanamaMeetsGuyana, and one last line: “I got bars Lol.”
That mix of genuine pride and deadpan humor fits Mendeecees well. Fans of Love & Hip Hop: New York have followed his story for years. His relationship with Yandy Smith played out on screen. So did the birth of their children and the news of his federal drug trafficking charges. He was released in 2020. Since then, he’s remained open about his faith and his focus on family.
A post like this one fits that chapter naturally. There’s no product to pitch and no announcement attached. It’s a person sitting with his own history and finding something worth celebrating in it.
The post drew more than 16,700 likes. The real standout is the flip side: zero reshares. This didn’t spread the way viral content does. But it clearly connected. Heritage posts tend to land differently. People sit with them, recognize something in them, maybe think about their own parents and their own city.
Panama and Guyana are thousands of miles apart. Panama sits in Central America; Guyana is on South America’s northern coast. But both countries carry deep African diaspora and Caribbean cultural roots. Panamanian and Guyanese communities have had a presence in New York City for generations, particularly in Harlem and the Bronx. For two immigrants from those worlds to find each other uptown makes complete sense. New York has told that story many times over.
Mendeecees didn’t pair the caption with a photo, so the words carry the whole thing on their own. They hold up. The writing is grounded and specific, anchored in real places and real people. The “I got bars” ending lightens the mood without undercutting the sincerity of what came before.
He’s stayed active on social media through 2026, connecting with fans and occasionally reflecting on life and identity. This post fits right in with that.
His Panamanian-Guyanese heritage has always been part of who Mendeecees is. This week, he made sure everyone remembered it too.
