West Coast rapper Blueface did much more than put out a presidential song with his “Obama” smash hit. The hip-hop star recently dished on the meaning behind his popular record.
Big Facts
The rap rookie initially shared his thoughts on what the White House would look like if he became the head of state. Blue also reflected on the day he put “Obama” together.
“If I was the president, the White House would look like, bad b*tches, thickens with chickens, a whole lot of Hennessy, some weed in there. The homies in the back shooting dice – f*cking rich white h*es, old ladies and sh*t – I’d be using y’all taxes – it would be lit for sure.” (Genius)
High-Key Details
During a recent Real 92.3 LA radio Q&A, Blue didn’t hold back on his appreciation for fellow rap artist Lizzo. He took things further by admitting he would not only smash the award-winning entertainer if she had coronavirus but wanted her to give him a call.
“I done hit a couple big b*tches in my day. You feel me? Lizzo, call me baby. That’s a wide load right there, you feel me? I might need an extra n*gga, you feel me. [Juicy?] Is it? Is it? Lizzo, if you’re out there and hearing this, call me, baby. Call me. That’s all. I hope so. I’ve knocked a couple big ones down.”
Wait, There’s More
Instead of staying mum, Lizzo made sure to respond to the flirty words. She went to Instagram this past weekend with a freaky pic of herself in her underwear and name-dropped Blue.
“Blueface babyyy ?”
Before You Go
In a recent Rolling Stone cover feature, Liz came clean about her future. She specifically opened up to the idea of having an extended family.
For a long time, the future she had perceived for herself was a lonely one — “no children, two friends” — with her head buried in her work. “But it’s different now,” she says with a sigh, dropping the advice-guru voice she delivers her self-help sermons with on- and offstage. “Like my relationship with my family, I’m working on that. I open myself up to friendships. I open myself up to the idea of children, which is big for me, ’cause my albums are my babies.” (Rolling Stone)