Boosie Badazz seems to have a low tolerance for those critical of his hygiene, at least according to a woman who claims she was punished for calling him out.
On Thursday (July 4) night, an unnamed woman took to social media and shared a video of the Baton Rouge native looking upset and staring at her through a crowd inside a club. She subsequently uploaded another video in which she claimed to have been removed from the venue for what she said to the rapper during a brief interaction.
AD LOADING...
“He got mad, so he sent security up there,” the woman said. “They come to get me [and] I’m like, ‘Dang.’ Look how small [I am]. I didn’t even do anything. Like your breath was stank, but because I told you your breath was stank, you got me kicked out the club? I’m never going to nothing else.”
Check out the clip below:
Boosie Badazz accused of kicking woman out of club for saying his breath stank pic.twitter.com/5j6lxYFTTG
— HipHopDX (@HipHopDX) July 6, 2024
As for music, the 41-year-old MC released a song about his disdain for those who don’t abide by the standards of “traditional masculinity” last month.
In late June, he dropped “Letter To The LGBT” to air out his well-documented frustrations with queer folk and what he believes is their effect on straight men.
AD LOADING...
“Rapper paint they nails and told, ‘That’s what women do’/ Playing gay so ya’ll support em,’ they pimpin’ you/ So really ya’ll get played for change, supporting people who don’t even know your pain,” he raps on the resentful track.
“How can a real woman lay up in a bed with a man who got nails like her?/ Wear a fuckin’ purse like her, but not bleeding on the 1st like her?”
The Southern rapper has repeatedly fought accusations of homophobia in the past.
During an appearance on Math Hoffa’s My Expert Opinion podcast in 2023, he talked about how he’s never been afraid to use his platform to speak about things that he feels are right or wrong, and that he doesn’t care what people think about it.
AD LOADING...
“Everybody who speak the truth, they try to make you seem crazy,” he said. “Anything I speak on, I feel deeply that way. Everything I speak, I stand on it. It’s just that the world took it out of context, and said that I have something against those people, when I don’t.
“People have to understand that it’s not the same stroke for the same folk. My fuckin’ assistant manager is gay as fuck. Like, bruh. I don’t know where people get that from. He understands me. He know I don’t have any ill will towards those people. He deals with money. He deals with business. It ain’t never looked at like that. I trust gay people more than I trust regular people.”