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‘I’m Done and Tired’: Here’s Why Ari Lennox Wants to be Dropped From Her Label

Lennox's response comes just after a recent podcast interview with MacG went viral over the weekend.

It appears things arenโ€™t going so smoothly for Americaโ€™s favorite Shea Butter Baby, aka Ari Lennox, who recently revealed her desire to be dropped from her label following a recent podcast interview that went viral over the weekend.

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Complex reports that during her convo with South African podcaster MacG, Lennox was explicitly asked about her sex life and was visibly taken aback my MacG โ€˜s โ€œcandorโ€ (read: gross AF way of asking.) Once the clip began circulating, Lennox took to social media to express how she felt about the situation in a series of since deleted tweets:

โ€œIโ€™m just likeโ€ฆwhy was I alone on a call full of people? Why didnโ€™t anyone intervene?โ€ And why wasnโ€™t parts of the interview destroyed like the team promised? Why did it happen to begin with? I just feel slow and ambushed and blindsighted. Just because I happily and freely sing/write about sex donโ€™t make any kind of creepy disrespect warranted. I clearly was in immense shock and hate that I didnโ€™t react differently.โ€

After folks online began to question Lennoxโ€™s reaction, citing the fact that she openly sings about sex in a lot of her music, the โ€œPressureโ€ singer responded:

https://twitter.com/AriLennox/status/1485295972515127300

โ€œI will continue to sing about dick when I want! And you misogynistic peasants can continue to jerk off to my music thank you!!!! Good morning.โ€

She further added, โ€œI want to be dropped from the labels. Iโ€™m done and tired. The interview was the icing on the cake. I want to be free. For Christ sakes. I realize I have no hits. I realize you all can live without hearing my music. I realize my complaining is so aggravating to yโ€™all . I donโ€™t ask blogs to post me when Iโ€™m at my worst. You judgemental self hating parasites wouldnโ€™t last a day as a signed artist. Complaining that Iโ€™m complaining about the shit Iโ€™m going through meanwhile in real life youโ€™re just as unhappy just as fucked up. You crying in the car too. Somebody calling you insensitive and dramatic too. You could never be honest about your demons.โ€

https://twitter.com/AriLennox/status/1485335331981332480
https://twitter.com/AriLennox/status/1485335874933907458

Now look, I donโ€™t know who needs to hear this but just because a womanโ€”or any artist for that matterโ€”decides to sing, rap, write about sex: thatโ€™s doesnโ€™t give you the right to crassly inquire about their personal sex lives. What happened to decorum? What happened to couth? What happened to actually having music journalists ask questions to artists that actually matter instead of wannabe journalists and writers who are just looking for a viral moment to up their internet clout? However, sadly I canโ€™t put all the blame on this podcaster. Lennoxโ€™s team should have done a better job at 1) screening the types of interviewers/interviews she goes on and 2) making sure certain topics are off limits or at the very least, asked in such a way that donโ€™t incite a clearly uncomfortable reaction for their artists.

Furthermore, Iโ€™d also be remiss if I didnโ€™t call out the fact that Lennox was getting more backlash for how she responded to something that she felt was disrespectful than the podcaster got for asking the inappropriate question in the first place. Society looooves to police Black women on everything from their hair and clothing to how they respond in various settings (looking at you especially, โ€œangry Black woman trope.โ€) Lennox was right for labeling those criticizing her as misogynists because thatโ€™s exactly what they are. Whenโ€™s the last time a male rapper was asked about who theyโ€™re sleeping with in that manner? They rap about women and sex all the time. So why arenโ€™t they commonly asked about โ€œwhoโ€™s fucking them good?โ€ Making music about a subject and wanting and choosing to divulge personal and private information about it as it pertains to your own life are two totally different things.

And before you hit me with the whole โ€œbut sheโ€™s an artist, artists sing about their personal and private lives all the timeโ€ excuse, I implore you to re-read that last sentence again and remember that not all artists write songs about things they personally are going through. Some are inspired by others stories (Jazmine Sullivanโ€™s Heaux Tales immediately comes to mind) and some simply just donโ€™t want to get into the details of their own personal goings and comings (no pun intended.)

The last thing Iโ€™ll say before I go is that itโ€™s beyond time for society to stop labeling women who sing about sex or even those who freely talk about sex as โ€œhoes,โ€ โ€œlooseโ€ or women worthy only of disrespect. That banal line of thinking derives straight from the ugly pits of respectability politics, sexism, and misogyny and itโ€™s high time we abolish, defund and actually cancel it once and for all.

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