JT
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Source: Prince Williams / Getty / Yung Miami
Yung Miami is finally breaking her silence on Diddy; many believe she could have kept her comments to herself.
Caresha Brownlee, aka Yung Miami, aka Sean Combās former love interest he affectionately called āshawty wop,ā is finally āspeakingā about the allegations about the embattled Bad Boy music mogul.
The 30-year-old rapper and former City Girl member used the season two premiere of her Diddy-less REVOLT TV podcast, Caresha Please, on Thursday, August 8, to tell her side of the story.
Itās been a rough year for the embattled mogul, who has faced multiple sexual assault allegations and lawsuits from multiple women and a male producer, including his ex Cassie, who opened the floodgates with the bombshell accusations that got the ball rolling on Diddyās empire crumbling.
Yung Miami Opens Up, & Says Nothing
Yung Miami, who was romantically linked with the man who also calls himself Love, was deafeningly silent as Diddyās high-profile life fell apart.
In a very safe space, on her podcast, and fielding questions from her bestie, Saucy Santana, about the situation, she said, āI canāt speak on something that wasnāt my experience, I canāt speak on something I donāt know.ā
She continued, āI canāt speak on these allegations because I wasnāt around at the time. I donāt know that person, and that wasnāt my experience.ā
So basically, she said, all that sh*t happened before I came into the picture.
Yung Miami also spoke about being ācrucifiedā immediately after the allegations about the Diddler surfaced.
āPeople feel like I was Diddyās biggest cheerleader, and I made him my brand. And I feel like Diddy was on brand for me,ā she said. āI met him when he was in another era. I met Diddy when the world was celebrating him and giving him his flowers when he was alive.ā
Social Media Collectively Rolls Its Eyes & Says Caresha Please
While Yung Miami shed tears while talking about her experience, social media isnāt feeling what she had to say. Many believe she could have kept her mouth shut about the situation.
āShe is being extremely manipulative, and sheās not keeping it real. Girl you started fucking with him because you wanted to use him girl. Simple, and when the going got tough you jumped ship because he wasnāt a benefit anymore. She an opportunist and thatās okay. Just donāt lie,ā one person on X, formerly Twitter, wrote.
Another user on X wrote, āYou made diddy your brand . there hasnāt been any growth no accountability and self reflection how have you elevated as an artist , why should we care about Yung Miami the artist. when given constructive criticism you call people hating . aināt no coming back from this.ā
Welp.
During the candid interview, Yung Miami also spoke about her fallout with fellow City Girl, JT, and finding her voice.
Watch the entire episode above and hit the gallery below for more reactions.
From Brandy and Whitney Houston to Hilary Duff and Selena Gomez, musicians have been putting their own spin on the classic Cinderella story for decades. Now, JT ā one-half of City Girls, her five-time BET Award-nominated rap duo with Yung Miami ā has gifted the world a Cinderella reimagination rooted in her sleek alt girl aesthetic and the sonic signifiers of late ā90s and early ā00s New York and Miami hip-hop.Ā
Clad in a baby blue gown and a white fur boa with her seemingly endless jet-black inches crowned with a tiara, JT ā Miamiās reigning hip-hop princess ā celebrated the release of her debut solo mixtape, City Cinderella (July 19 via Quality Control/Motown). Featuring guest appearances from both OGs (Jeezy) and newcomers (CLIP), as well as production contributions from Grammy nominees Take A Daytrip (āIntroā) and OG Parker (āUncle Alā), City Cinderella is an impressive manifesto for the next stage of JTās career. Ā
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Across the tapeās 16 tracks, JT ā born Jatavia Johnson ā reflects on how her childhood traumas shape her present-day attitude, flexes her millennial status with nifty samples and interpolations that properly situate her in hip-hop history, and displays the evolution of her rap skills. She supplements the sexual liberation of her City Girl days with more luxurious beats that amplify the weight of her tone. Long toted as the standout MC of that hitmaking duo, JT makes formidable strides in fulfilling her potential with City Cinderella.Ā
Remarkably, as she explained in her Making of City Cinderella documentary (July 17), this mixtape is not the product of months of intense studio sessions. Rather, City Cinderella came together as JT traversed the U.S. on a headlining club tour that featured countless memorable, high-dramaĀ nights, including shootings, fights, power outages and, hilariously, a meet-and-greet in a deep freezer after a busted fuse in the main room of the venue sent one night awry. āReggie, the promoter, kept apologizing because he underestimated the crowd that I was going to bring,ā she says with a laugh. āIt wasnāt even enough liquor at one point! But me and him built a strong connection. He flew all the way from D.C. to my listening party.āĀ
JTās ability to form genuine connections ā whether itās with artists in the New York alt scene, Mugler creative consultants or her fans (a.k.a. the Juvies) ā comes from her authenticity. Sheās never tried to be someone sheās not, and even when sheās bracing for a personal evolution, she doesnāt leave behind what she truly loves. Her club tour may have drawn some jeers because of the small venue sizes, but those shows were packed shoulder to shoulder ā and thatās nothing to scoff at when some of her more commercially successful peers are struggling to fill larger venues. Lightning-fast rises will never disappear, but JTās slow-and-steady approach is already proving to be a winning strategy for building career momentum. She smartly used those club appearances nurture a fierce fanbase that helped her land both a No. 9 spot on Billboardās June ranking of the Hottest Female Rappers and a No. 27 peak on the Billboard 200 with City Cinderella, a higher showing than all three City Girls studio albums, the best-charting of which ā 2020ās City On Lock ā peaked at No. 29.Ā
āIt was easy to bring my fans in [emotionally],ā she explains, looking back on her club tour and City Cinderella documentary. āNow, itās time for us to turn up and celebrate.ā
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In a revealing conversation with Billboard, JT breaks down the sonics of City Cinderella, previews her upcoming tour and reflects on her Miami roots.Ā
How do you feel now that City Cinderella is finally out in the world?Ā
I feel like I just had a baby. [Laughs]. No, for real! Itās that joy. You feel all the pain before you push it out, and you just be nervous and scared like, āIāve never had this before. I donāt know how people would take and react to it.ā But the first night, everybody was loving the project. And then you get your postpartum. Then you find the joy because you never had it before, you donāt know what to do with all of it. Ā
Iām so happy. I love my project. I loved my project before I put it out, and thatās what really matters. Itās been projects I done put out and I really didnāt want to stand behind it, because I didnāt love it. I stand behind this project so fully and thoroughly, because itās literally my project. I wrote it.Ā
It was actually one critique that I loved ā it wasnāt even bad to me. I can take [it] because it makes sense. They was like, āI feel like on this part she was very monotone.ā And I told my A&R that! I already know that. So that was my only doubt. Because I know that the climate we in, music is so uptempo and TikTok is really taking over music to the point people canāt really put out a body of work no more. Every single, you feel like you gotta hit, you gotta knock hard. When I was growing up, I used to listen to projects front to back and it was [different] vibes. Ā
The mixtapeās title definitely showcases the juxtapositions present in your aesthetic as well as your come-up story. What were you pulling from when you were creating the solo JT sound and style?Ā
When I first announced that I was doing City Cinderella, that was like the dusty Cinderella part of the story, when I had to literally get out there and grind and announce it and go to the clubs and push and let people know, āHey, Iām now a solo artist.ā It was not easy because I got backlash and I got sick a lot in early parts of that club tour. It was a shooting ā like, I was in the trenches! It was a lot of sāt that I did not tell about the [behind the scenes] of what I went through just to get to this point. Ā
So, when that mixtape cover art came out and it was just so beautiful, I feel like that wasĀ the beautiful part of the story ā because I think that everybody was expecting it to be more like what they were seeing in the gritty part of the story. It started off dirty and it ended up so beautiful.Ā
People were loving that cover art! I even saw some comparisons to BeyoncĆ©ās Renaissance cover.Ā
Originally, it had the title on it ā and I have OCD, so I know that I was not going to want to look back at that title after a while. It didnāt give classy to me, it cheapened the original picture to me. When I took it off ā [with the help of] my friend Renell [Medrano], respect to her ā I knew that was it. Ā
I didnāt spend much of [my label budget]Ā with this rollout, because I put a lot of my own money into a lot of stuff [in terms of] rolling out the project. When it got to the project and I had put in all the work, [the label] wasnāt really shooting down prices, so my budget was a little high for my cover art. The people that I first was reaching out to [gave] me a hard time to shoot my cover. It got to the point where it was, either I find somebody who could shoot this cover or Iām going to end up not having a cover that I want. Ā
So, I reached out to Haley Wollens ā who I met at Mugler through my [late] friend Monica [Suh] ā and she loves me, she thinks Iām her muse. She was like, āGirl, I would love to do your cover!ā So, we came up with the ice sculpture idea, put the mood board together, shot [the cover] on Friday and we put it out Tuesday.Ā
Iām glad that I end up going with [Neva Wireko], a local Black girl, instead of a company that would overcharge me. The main cover was supposed to be me with the blue swimsuit and the crown looking down, but the other [look] ended up photographing so flawless and timeless.Ā
I know people was going to compare it to Renaissance, but I was not in no way shape or form thinking about Renaissance when I shot my cover. But you know how people are, they just look at colors, they donāt even know what the fāk they looking at. So, my first step was ignoring them because the love was so much bigger than those comments. They were salty that I served like that. They were like, āThis bāch ate it, what else can we say about this?ā So, they went with that. Ā
But who wouldnāt want to be compared to BeyoncĆ©? That is the queen! I lover her so much, so I wasnāt really mad at the comparisons.
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I was pleasantly surprised at the mix of Miami and New York sounds on the project. What were you listening to while creating City Cinderella?Ā
Iām not gonna lie, my intro (āHopeā) was heavily inspired by Rick Ross and āOhā was inspired more by Jeezy. For that outro (āStar of the Showā), I listened to Jay-Z. When I first heard the beat for āStar of the Show,ā I [knew] I had to get in my Dipset bag. Thatās what I grew up on. I listened to a few Jay-Z songs, and heĀ got that slow flow, so I used that for some inspiration and kept crafting and crafting and it turned out great.Ā
I am a ā90s baby. I am a millennial kid, so I grew up in the era of Dipset and āMake It Rainā and all that. Rick Ross, to me, was one of the artists that made it mainstream [from my city], after Trick Daddy and Trina. I used to love his music, it used to make me feel [luxurious]. When you listen to his old mixtapes, that was very luxurious, slow raps and put-together projects. And thatās what I wanted to do.Ā
Whatās your relationship with New York like?Ā
I live here!Ā Iāve been living in between New York and LA since me and my boyfriend got official. Me and my boyfriend moved in together in 2021, and we was living here and L.A. He was trying the L.A. thing just for me, because heās from Philly. After a while, he was like, āOh, baby Iām not pretending to like L.A. no more.ā I wanted to be in L.A. because of the sun and the trees. He wanted to be in New York because heās right down the street from home. We came to a conclusion when we found the perfect condo.Ā
When I went back to Miami for the club tour, it was so big. It was a big deal that I was home ā because I donāt live there, but they love me. They respect me. I stay true to my roots. They understand that I donāt live there for many reasons. Iād probably still try to scam if I lived in Miami! [Laughs.]Ā
When youāre picking beats, what are you listening for?Ā
Feeling. Texture. I donāt want the beat to take over me, I want to hear my voice. I want it to be smooth but still have a unique trap element to it. You know what song almost did not make the project and everybody loved it? āUncle Al.ā It was another song that was supposed to take its spot. I had too many songs on the project and between the [now scrapped] title track and āUncle Al,ā the label picked āUncle Al.āĀ
āUncle Alā [a tribute of sorts to the beloved late Miami radio broadcaster Albert āDJ Uncle Alā Moss]Ā is a hit. And itās such an authentic take on Miami bass, do you have any memories listening to Uncle Alās music growing up?Ā
Iām a big Uncle Al fan! I had to call my dad the other day and I think he found the tape Iām thinking about. I remember my fifth birthday, we was in Orlando, my daddy, me and my sisters and my uncle. My dream was to call the radio station and ride ā thatās what they used to call it. You would call a radio station and you ride, you introduce yourself and you get to talk on the radio. My dad never used to let his kids do that, but he finally let me on my birthday.Ā
Off the top of my head, I had to ride, and I was like, āFrom the J to the A to theĀ T-A-V-I-A/ something-something-something, you know I donāt play.ā [Laughs.] The last thing I said was, āMy momma done turned it out.ā I was so happy my daddy let me ride. It was really a full-circle moment to have Uncle Al as a standout figure on my album. Al was really, really big on underground radio. I was always a huge fan of underground radioĀ
Your love for the underground really shows on the tape with artists like buzzy New York rapper CLIP. Talk to me about working with her and the rest of the features on City Cinderella?Ā
Thatās my baby, I love CLIP. Sheās really in the underground, bruh. I think Iām an alt girl, I aināt got nothing on those hoes at all. Theyāre really undergound, the way they be living, Iām like, āTake me back to my car now.ā [Laughs.] Iām just like, āNo!ā I donāt do drugs. Itās like, Iām not ready for this underground life, but they fāk with me heavy because itās genuine.Ā
Me and [CLIP] met in a studio in Brooklyn when I was trying to experiment with myself and make my own project. It was no label around, I used to go over there by myself with no security. We used to meet up in that bāh, it was trapped out. It was so many different New York artists and it was messy.Ā She rapped about a lot of sad [stuff] and I was like, āGirl, you are depressing me⦠can we do some fly sāt?ā And she was like āOkay, yeah!ā and we came up with āAll Starsā and another song thatās really fire. Iām gonna put that one on my next project. I think [people] would like it more than āAll Starsā because itās very inspiring. Ā [CLIP] is such a gem. She is who she is and I love working with her.Ā
Now, this is my second collab with Stunna Girl. I didnāt want features on my project at first, but once I did Jeezy [on the āOkayā remix], I [figured I] might as well add other people on the project. So, I decided to put Stunna Girl ā becauseĀ fāk the mainstream sāt, me and her mesh well. I sent her the song during crunch time ā my label needed her to turn in her verse so we could get the CDs printed. I [held out for her] and when sent the motherfāking verse back⦠I said, āThis is why I wanted this bāh on my project.ā I need these gritty bāhes to be talking on my sāt! They can still talk that street talk them bāhes need to hear! It was a no-brainer.Ā
Tell me more about your work on the production side of things?Ā
I gotta call my A&R, because I need my money! I was a real producer. I kinda co-produced ā90s Baby.ā We did that beat right there. Me and Buddha was just in the studio, and I was listening to this Too $hort song from the Booty Call soundtrack [āCall Meā (with Lilā Kim)]. I was obsessed with the song, so I was like āCan you do a Tupac-like, grungy beat?ā And then I was like, āI want an interlude-type beginning.ā I had already did the hook in my mind, so I was like āWhatās my favorite 90s song?ā Joe, āAll the Things.ā Ā
The whole song started off sounding like that, but then I made him flip it so it could get more gangsta. ā90s Babyā aināt even have two verses. When I turned in the project, it was just a verse and an interlude, but my label was like, āThis is the single, you gotta do another verse.ā So, I was whooping my own ass trying to do that second verse because I really wanted to match the first verse. It turned out great.Ā
I also put together āUncle Alā right then and there, I made them get into their Miami bass. For āHope,ā I worked with [Take A] Daytrip, and their history is very pop.Ā
The second time we were in the studio together, I was too shy to even speak up because the vibe was so serious. But the next day, my A&R [reminded me to speak up because the sessions were expensive], so I was like, āCan we do a Rick Ross, luxury storytelling song?ā They started making the beat right then and there, and I went in and kinda freestyled the hook. The beat just talked to me, and I talked back to it, it was easy to storytell on it. They added the choir elements later, and they sent it back and I was like, āOkay, intro!ā
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āHopeā is a really powerful track. What does it feel like to be able to put something so personal as the opening track to your debut solo project?Ā
If you listen to the hook of āHope,ā itās like a summary of how I feel and why I act the way I do. It was a powerful message and I feel like a lot of us are walking around with past traumas from a long time ago, and I just wanted to talk my sāt. When the choir came in, it really made me emotional. I couldnāt listen to it without crying. Ā
I knew I wanted it to shape my project, but I [was worried] that my listeners, at their age, [might] not be ready to hear that type of music. Weāre in a climate with so much microwaveable music and itās going so fast. I was kind of doubting myself a little bit. When I did playbacks, āOhā was the intro, but then I was thinking about starting with āStar of the Show,ā but that was definitely a closer, so I went back to āHope.ā [One particular person] was rooting for āHopeā to be the intro and I was like, āYou look older, you might be setting me up!ā Then I was like, āFāk it, this is whatās going to set me apart and make me different.āĀ
You nod heavily to Magoo & Timbalandās āDropā in āJT Coming,ā did you try to clear the actual sample?Ā
āJT Comingā was a whole ānother beat! The sample did not get cleared initially. Iām still hoping and praying it happens, so I wonāt say why. I kept the most important part of it and I actually like the newer version of āJT Comingā now. When I listen to the one that was actually sampled⦠this version sounds better! Ā
I do want to sample some of their music in the future, and I think theyāre close to letting me do it, but itās politics with them older rappers. You gotta walk on eggshells until they understand the art of it and see it as worthy. But they got back to me two days before I turned my project in and they was like, āOh, I think we should collab.ā So, weāll see.Ā
You have a lot of uptempo tracks on here, are you gonna be dancing on tour?Ā
Yeah, I am! I gotta put together my show. My little Juvies be bringing the energy themselves, they want to do the show for me! They think that they are the stars of the show. I asked them, and they was like, āNo, we donāt want to see you dance!ā They must be thinking Iām going to embarrass them. [Laughs.]Ā
Billboard named you one of the ten hottest female rappers of the moment. What did you feel when you got that news?Ā
I was so happy. When I seen that, I couldnāt breathe because it was before āOkayā came out! I was like, āHold on now, Iāve got no songs!ā [Laughs.] But I noticed that yāall recognized my hard work and my dedication to female rap. Thatās what itās mostly about. I did deserve to be named on that list because Iāve been working hard to solidify myself as a solo artist. Itās not easy to just come in and be neck and neck with these girls. Itās a saturated market right now. And Billboard is important because if you donāt make Billboard, you is a flop!Ā
Give me my flowers! All of my songs have hit Billboard, even if it was Bubbling Under.Ā They be trying to sāt on Bubbling Under, and I appreciate [that chart] because thereās so many songs that come out.Ā
Choose one: āJT First Day Out,ā āSidewaysā or āNo Bars?āĀ
It would not be āJT First Day Out,ā sheās eliminated. It would be āNo Bars,ā I feel like that one kicked the doors down. It did what āFirst Day Outā thought she was going to do. Ā
āEx for a Reason,ā āMuƱekita,ā or āAlter Ego?āĀ
You donāt put three bad bāches against each other, so letās start there. Iām not gonna pick āEx for a Reason.ā Sheās eliminated first, because Summer Walker hated that song. That was a traumatic experience for me. Iām going to go with āAlter Egoā because I still kept true to myself on that song.Ā
What else do you have on the way?Ā
My next project wonāt sound like this. Itās so many layers to me. It might sound like āParadiseā or āAll Starsā or āUncle Al,ā we donāt know! I have to shape what I want my next era and sound to be. I donāt have to stay in one place. Iāve seen some bāhes complaining. Obviously Iāve outgrown you hoes. Itās plenty of other bāhes yāall can go listen to, but it aināt me. City Cinderella is strictly for the people that get it, the people that want to see me grow and love me. Itās a sneak peek of whatās to come.Ā
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The City Girls, rappers JT, and Yung Miami, were integral to the rise of women in Hip-Hop on the back of the duoās popular singles and sexy image. However, the City Girls are no longer a group with JT and Yung Miami deciding to part ways, ending months of speculation of it being a rift between the pair.
In a new interview with Complex, Yung Miami explained that she and JT were probably heading in different directions after the release of their last studio album, RAW, back in the fall of 2023. In Miamiās words, the chemistry was off and it appears that the split was amicable for the most part.
From Complex:
At what point did you realize you wanted to put out a solo project?
I think when the City Girls album [RAW] just dropped and it didnāt do too well, and we was just trying to do our press run. The whole rollout of the album was just so bad because we was just in two different spaces. We older now, and she was doing her own thing. She on the West Coast, Iām in Miami. Iām doing my own thing. And I felt like naturally, when she doing her own thing, it just worked for her. And when Iām doing my own thing, it worked for me. But when we get together as a group, it just wasnāt connecting. It just wasnāt working no more. So I think we both was at a point where we were just like, āWe probably should just do our own sh*t.ā
From what we can gather, the City Girls are now focused on their solo careers as evidenced by JTās national tour and Yung Miami promoting her new singles and video content.
On X, formerly Twitter, fans of the group had some things to say and weāve got reactions from all sides below.
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Photo: Getty
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City Girls fans thought they were witnessing the end of an era after members JT and Yung Miami went at each otherās weaves on X, formerly known as Twitter. In the end, the City Girls remained united after squashing the beef which was due to a misunderstanding.
Monday (April 8) was a wild day for many reasons. A large portion of the United States was witness to a solar eclipse, J. Cole walked back his diss of Kendrick Lamar, and the tensions spread to large factions of fans online.
From what we can determine, Saucy Santana wrote on X that he had some issues to address regarding Diddy via an upcoming television series to which JT responded by saying that she better not be mentioned. This sparked a light back and forth between the pair. Yung Miami, who is best friends with Santana, then suggested JT has been āsneak dissingā her.
All hell broke out from that point on with JT writing, āItāll be too much for me to tweet! I will like a sit downā¦. Caresha please! And this time leave Santana home! I know I come off crazy but never in my life did no wack sh*t to this girl she literally enjoys seeing me being dragged when ppl show me love she goes crazy & call it a hate train! But like I said we can sit & talk about it!ā
JT also wrote that she was āfor sure thereā for Yung Miami and added that āyāall will see this in time that Iām not, never was & never will be the problem!ā
There were a lot more exchanges, including Yung Miami saying that fans online have caused the rift which put JT and her at odds and if you saw what was said before it was all deleted, that part seems to be true.
The beef ended after Yung Miami, using JTās first name, wrote, āJatavia I love you. Iām moving on!ā
In a quote tweet, JT added, āI love you more [heart emoji] I actually love you the most!ā
While the City Girls look to be poised to talk their sh*t together on stage again soon, fans online had plenty to say about their beef and how they made up. Weāve got replies below.
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Photo: Getty
11. Same. Same.
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JT and Lil Uzi Vert are one of Hip-Hopās most popular couples and have had their share of ups and downs throughout their romance. Things seemingly got heated over the weekend after footage surfaced of JT tossing her phone at Uzi, and some online are speculating that itās over Ice Spice.
JT and Lil Uzi Vert were in attendance at the 2023 BET Awards in Los Angeles, Calif. on Sunday (July 25), another star-studded affair for the long-running network and brand. While the affair was largely drama free, that wasnāt the case among those sitting front row.
Some online are contending that JTās anger toward Uzi was over a line in a new song that they performed at the BET Awards where Ice Spiceās name is mentioned in the closing bar but it doesnāt seem like he was flirting with the Bronx rapper.
Footage that has surfaced showed JT calling Lil Uzi Vert a āgroupieā and āb*tchā before tossing the phone at them and having to be restrained by others in their row. Another video showed Uzi seemingly pleading with their partner but the City Girls star wasnāt having any of it.
The footage, now since viral, hasnāt been addressed by the couple nor Ice Spice so far but that hasnāt stopped Twitter from adding their investigative bent to the happenings. What can be confirmed is that JT and Uzi left the venue together shortly after their spat but it was tension in the air.
Check out the reactions below.
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Photo: Johnny Nunez / Getty
9. Thatās pretty toxic, but hey.
10. It do be facts tho.
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Fresh off his energetic performance of āJust Wanna Rockā on The Tonight Show, Lil Uzi Vert told TMZ that he supports the decision of his City Girls rapper girlfriend, JT to start therapy. He added that everyone should āembrace themselves.ā
JT shared on Twitter that she is āeagerā to start therapy while encouraging her fans to do the same.
Many of her fans congratulated the 30-year-old City Girl rapper on the social media site adding that her public decision could āinspireā others.
Lil Uziās support may come from his own journey into wellness. He announced earlier this month that he is sober and that the songs from his newest release āThe Pink Tape,ā were all born out of his sobriety.
He told TMZ that being sober allowed him to choose better song topics and encouraged other rappers to do the same, saying, āItāll change your life.ā
The couple has had an on-again-off-again relationship since first being romantically linked in 2021. But, earlier this year, she gushed about her admiration for Uzi telling Angie Martinez that she is āluckyā and āfortunate.ā
āI can say Uzi is a great man, no matter how the internet tries to paint Uzi,ā the Miami native told Angie with a big smile, according to Madame Noire. She added, āIām so lucky and fortunate to have somebody like him because heās so inspiring. When I see him in his bag, Iām like āI gotta get in my bag.āā
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