I’m much more confident now - in my music, myself, my sexuality, the things that I believe that I stand for.” I wanted to be even more authentic in my music and let people into my life. It just means you’re a people pleaser, and they never become legends. “I used to see things like that as a compliment, but it’s not.
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“Honestly, I believe the pandemic helped me get out of the idea of trying to please everybody, and the idea of ‘He’s a cool gay person he’s an acceptable gay person,’” Nas says.
#Lil nas x gay nobody cares full
This year alone, Nas (real name Montero Lamar Hill) has released one video that features him giving Satan a lap dance - for “ Montero (Call Me by Your Name)” - and another, prison-themed one that has him and several male dancers gyrating nude, albeit with their privates pixelated, in a shower ( “Industry Baby”) delivered a sexually loaded performance on “Saturday Night Live” during which he split his pants and finished the song holding his crotch (that was an accident) and most controversial of all, kissed one of his male dancers full on the mouth on the BET Awards (that was no accident). And while he avoids making grandiose statements about being a pioneer or a trailblazer for the LGBTQ community - “Let’s fuckin’ go, gay agenda!” he wrote last month, tongue firmly in cheek, when retweeting that he had the top two videos on the YouTube U.S. 1 hit in Billboard Hot 100 history, Nas’ recent lyrics, videos, TV appearances and especially public statements are exponentially more honest, autobiographical and queer.
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Far from “Old Town Road,” the rap-country earworm that famously was recorded for $50 in a small Atlanta studio and has become the longest-running No.