The ‘Yeah Glo!’ raptress makes sure that she doesn’t offend anyone after being criticized by many social media users for using the R-word on her unreleased track.
GloRilla makes sure that she doesn’t offend anyone with her new music. After being met with backlash for using the R-word on her new song, the “Yeah Glo!” raptress quickly changed the lyrics.
On Sunday, August 24, the 25-year-old female hip-hop artist let social media users listen to the changes she made on her unreleased track. Making use of her Instagram page, she uploaded a video featuring the new version of the song.
In the snippet, Glo could be heard rapping, “H** you must not know what you just started/ Me and my b***h got naughty/ Give a f**k about this party/ We gonna step on s**t regardless/ Get my coins/ Swipe that b***h/ And I just dispute the charges/ Making music/ Beatin’ on b***hes/ I be really marching.”
Glo went on to spit, “I got hands for a h**/ I get bands for a show/ He want chance after chance after chance/ N***a no/ I keep saying free da 4/ Do my dance on dem folks/ If it’s up it’s going down/ Soon as I land on dem folks.”
In the short clip, Glo was documented mouthing the lyrics of the song in front of the camera. She was joined by her two female friends as they hung out at a supermarket. At one point, she held stacks of money in both of her hands.
The raptress, who collaborated with Megan Thee Stallion for “Wanna Be”, looked in good spirits as she flashed her radiant big smile and giggled in the footage. Along with the clip, she simply wrote in the caption of the post, “Hollonnnnnn.”
The video came after Glo found herself in hot water for her choice of words in the song’s lyrics. Previously, she shared a video in which she previewed the track. In the recording, she rapped in part, “H** you must not know what you just started/ Me and my b***h r******d/ Give a f**k about this party/ We gonna step on s**t regardless.”
It promoted social media users to comment. One in particular criticized, “Why are we still using the R-word in 2024? I can’t get with this one.” Another stated, “The word is a slur that makes reference to those with disabilities. Not saying it to their face doesn’t make it better, you’re still insulting them.”