- So saying the songs aren’t for HER child ring a little hollow
- The girl’s a poet and you just don’t know it
How could anybody think that a ‘beautiful love song’ like “Wet Ass Pussy” (WAP)
could be “freaky” or “nasty”?
Only a “Republican”
– Cardi says it’s those “Republican Motherf—–s” who think this beautiful song is “so nasty”, “freaky”.
– She also said she “grew up listening to freaky” and “nasty” music all her life.
– Huh?
–“Other people might think its ‘strange and vulgar’, (this “Rhodes scholar” says,) “but to me it’s almost like really normal…you know what I’m sayin…'”
– The article emphasizes that Cardi didn’t get the backlash from “elected officials”… “not senators and shit like that”! dlh
CARDI B SLAMS REPUBLICAN CRITICS, BLAMES THEM FOR BACKLASH TO HIT SONG “WAP”
The singer collaborated on the adult track with Megan Thee Stallion
Cardi B says she noticed that a majority of the negative reactions to her hit song “WAP” in August came from Republican influencers.
The singer and rapper released the song in collaboration with Megan Thee Stallion and it quickly became one of the summer’s biggest hits. However, given the graphic and adult nature of the song, it also faced criticism that the star now says was mostly from the right.
Speaking with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe, the 28-year-old explained that she was surprised that people reacted so much to the song, arguing that she grew up listening to “nasty” and “freaky” music all her life.
“When ‘WAP’ came out, the people that were criticizing it the most, they were like, ‘This is so nasty, this is so freaky’ — I don’t even think it was religious people, it was really a lot of Republicans,” she explained.
Cardi made sure to note that she didn’t get any backlash from elected officials, but said that social media influencers who typically court a right-leaning audience were among the song’s biggest critics.
“Big Republicans, not like senators and s— like that,” she said. “It was literally like those motherf—–s that got blue checks on Twitter, they’re big influencers and it’s just like… out of anything that y’all could have talked about?”
Cardi B was previously a vocal supporter of prominent Democrats in the 2020 election, first throwing her weight behind Bernie Sanders before pivoting over to Joe Biden once he became the presumptive nominee.
“I used to endorse Bernie [Sanders] and then Joe Biden, so they were just trying to figure a way out to pick on me,” she said. “Like, ‘Oh Joe Biden is this the girl you were doing that interview with? The girl that’s talking about WAP? That’s what you want America to be influenced by?'”
She added: “It’s like, bro, come on now.”
Cardi B previously defended the song during an appearance on the Australian radio show “The Kyle and Jackie O Show.”
“The people that the song bothers are usually conservatives or really religious people, but my thing is I grew up listening to this type of music,” Cardi explained at the time (via People). “Other people might think it’s strange and vulgar, but to me, it’s almost like really normal, you know what I’m saying?”
She also took to social media to defend herself from people calling her a hypocrite for not letting her 2-year-old daughter listen to the track.
“Ya needs to stop with this already! I’m not [JoJo Siwa]! I don’t make music for kids I make music for adults,” she said at the time.
Added the Grammy winner: “Parents are responsible on what their children listen too [sic] or see. I’m a very sexual person but not around my child just like every other parent should be.”
I fail to be surprised when someone acts totally within character.
I remember going to concerts as a teen. Black Oak Arkansas’ Jim Dandy gyrating in tights, playing a washboard near his groin. Elvis the Pelvis to the next level. Alice Cooper becomes Marilyn Manson. The boundaries that were pushed yesterday, become passe, and “entertainers” and “artists” have to find the next taboo to break.
Cardi B and Nicky Minage (and 1000 others) make sex-themed videos with dirty lyrics. It’s what they do. Watch one, you’ve watched them all. Not my thing, but it appears there’s a market for it.
It’s like Batman and Joker debating “who made who?” Chicken/egg? Dirty video or guy with a screen and a credit card?
The market rewards those who give it what it wants. Some niche of society wants “Anaconda” and it’s not for me to say they can’t have it.