Boosie Badazz Says He Has No Problem With His White Fans Rapping the N-Word

Boosie Badazz joined 'Vlad TV' and talked about how he doesn't have a problem with his white fans rapping along to his music and repeating the n-word.

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Boosie Badazz joined what has to be his favorite interviewer, DJ Vlad and Vlad TV, and talked about how he has no problem with his white fans saying the n-word at his shows.

“How do I feel about it? I feel like they’re a fan,” Boosie explained after being asked how he feels about his white fans saying the n-word while reciting his songs. “They’re not coming saying ‘n***er!’ You know? I feel like they’re a fan… like they’re fans bro, they’re singing their music. It’s a different type of weight, in a conversation that’s different from a fan.”

Vlad took it a step further by asking Boosie if he would be bothered if a singular white fan recited one of his songs to him backstage and said the n-word. The rapper doubled down and said it still wouldn’t bother him.

“Nah. Wouldn’t at all,” he said. “I got white fans bro. N***a I got the trailer parks, n***a. Yeah, they got ’em everywhere across the world... Every white boy is different. You can’t specifically mix no kind of white race cause they got white boys who hard as steel, bro. I been round ’em bro, in penitentiary. I been round ’em bro. N***a they gone beat you up. You gon beat them up for five minutes, ten minutes straight but at the end they don’t stop bro and they got a lot of respect bro.”

Boosie went to explain that because he believes there are white people who grew up in “the same struggle as us,” that they are valid in his eyes to say the n-word in his songs. This isn’t the first time he’s said he doesn’t have a problem with certain white people saying the slur either. It’s not the first time that Boosie has commented on white people using the n-word. Back in 2020, Boosie weighed in after a white battle rapper was punched for using the word. The Baton Rouge said that the white man shouldn’t have used the word in that specific situation and said it depends on the circumstance.

“It’s probably just a bad situation for him,” Boosie said at the time. “I done had white, close white friends call me ‘my n***a, you know. You can’t do that in certain situations. You gotta know how to say that word. In a battle rap, you dissin’. In a battle rap, it’s different. It’s aggression.”

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