Trick Daddy is not a fan of Black women styling their baby hairs, as he thinks it’s an example of them trying to look more like white women.
During an Instagram Live on Thursday (August 22), the Florida native had some words for his passenger whose baby hairs were neatly gelled down.
“The white women been trying to be like y’all for 150 years and now y’all doing all the shit the white women do,” he said. “I don’t get it. Them ain’t no baby hairs. You a grown ass woman! And I been seeing girls with them standing up now. Like they wanna be free! Baby hairs leave when you two.”
His passenger, for her part, didn’t agree with the sentiment.
In other news, Trick Daddy recently offered a diplomatic response to a longstanding conspiracy theory about his connection to 2Pac prior to the rapper’s death in 1996.
In an interview with VladTV in February, the Liberty City MC talked about hopping on an unfinished song alongside the Hip Hop icon following his untimely passing.
Over the chat, host DJ Vlad asked him about Pac’s bar on what became “Still Ballin’ [Nitty Remix]”: “’Cause Trick don’t give a fuck, where you coward n-ggas now?”
After clarifying that he wasn’t rapping in the big leagues during the Hip Hop icon’s lifetime, the 49-year-old refused to share how it came to be that Pac mentioned his name on the song.
“All I can tell you is I promised his mama that I won’t ever answer that question, and so I’m not answering that question,” the Florida rapper said.
In the same interview, he also revealed the backstory of the song by recalling that Afeni Shakur reached out and asked him to hop on the remix with her departed son. It went on to appear on the posthumous album Better Dayz.
“His mom reached out to me,” he began. “She said, ‘You remind me so much of my son. I got a record that y’all should’ve been did, and you need to finish it. Whatever it takes …’
“I said, ‘It don’t take nothing but [for] you to send me that record, I’d give it back to you. I did that record in 15 minutes.”
He continued: “So I called for two weeks: ‘What did she say about the record? What did she say about the record?’
“In three weeks, that bitch is on the radio. I was like ‘Woah! This is my favorite n-gga in the world.’ I respect this n-gga and what he went through more than I respect my brother, more than I respect my daddy. He was like a young n-gga in the hood; he was like our Jesus Christ.”