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Sexyy Red and GloRilla agree that female rappers are unfairly critiqued when it comes to dropping sexually charged material.
The ladies are the cover stars of the latest XXL issue, and in their accompanying conversation, Sexyy and Glo discussed when female rappers endure the double standard of racy lyrics.
“A lot of people will give female rappers a hard time, saying we are too sexual or over the top with lyrics and video content. What do you think when you hear that?” Glo asked her “Whatchu Know About Me” collaborator.
“I think y’all some haters,” Sexyy answered outright. “I think y’all don’t want y’all bitch to shine because y’all insecure and it ain’t a problem when y’all got y’all chest out, or y’all little tiny dick print showing and all that with your drawls sagging, your stinky as out, doo-doo stain. It’s not a problem when y’all do it, but y’all stealing our style. It’s wrong when we do it?”
Glo added that it’s considered “cool” when male rappers are overt with their sexuality. Sexyy replied, “It’s wrong when I do it? The fuck?”
Earlier this year, the Hood’s Hottest Princess artist explained to Billboard that she doesn’t like to be considered “pussy rap,” but instead raps about her “daily life.” “Girls that live like me, I just rap about what we go through. I don’t sit and talk about coochie all day,” she told the publication.
Like male rap, female rap is multifaceted, with conscious artists like Rapsody and Noname, while others like Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion are leading the frontlines of more salacious bars. On a mainstream scale, it was around the mid-1990s when Lil Kim kicked the door down for women in rap to freely rhyme about their sexuality.
in HTML format, including tags, to make it appealing and easy to read for Japanese-speaking readers aged 20 to 40 interested in fashion. Organize the content with appropriate headings and subheadings (h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6), translating all text, including headings, into Japanese. Retain any existing tags from
Sexyy Red and GloRilla agree that female rappers are unfairly critiqued when it comes to dropping sexually charged material.
The ladies are the cover stars of the latest XXL issue, and in their accompanying conversation, Sexyy and Glo discussed when female rappers endure the double standard of racy lyrics.
“A lot of people will give female rappers a hard time, saying we are too sexual or over the top with lyrics and video content. What do you think when you hear that?” Glo asked her “Whatchu Know About Me” collaborator.
“I think y’all some haters,” Sexyy answered outright. “I think y’all don’t want y’all bitch to shine because y’all insecure and it ain’t a problem when y’all got y’all chest out, or y’all little tiny dick print showing and all that with your drawls sagging, your stinky as out, doo-doo stain. It’s not a problem when y’all do it, but y’all stealing our style. It’s wrong when we do it?”
Glo added that it’s considered “cool” when male rappers are overt with their sexuality. Sexyy replied, “It’s wrong when I do it? The fuck?”
Earlier this year, the Hood’s Hottest Princess artist explained to Billboard that she doesn’t like to be considered “pussy rap,” but instead raps about her “daily life.” “Girls that live like me, I just rap about what we go through. I don’t sit and talk about coochie all day,” she told the publication.
Like male rap, female rap is multifaceted, with conscious artists like Rapsody and Noname, while others like Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion are leading the frontlines of more salacious bars. On a mainstream scale, it was around the mid-1990s when Lil Kim kicked the door down for women in rap to freely rhyme about their sexuality.
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