Lil Baby recently spoke on Lil Yachty’s podcast A Safe Place about a variety of topics, including his upcoming 2025 album. when discussing parenthood. Although the child’s mother posted some photos of the child online, the baby didn’t really like the practice. However, he also made it clear that he would discuss these topics with his sons to ensure that narratives online do not infringe on their well-being.
“I think the internet is a crazy place,” Lil Baby said when asked about online narratives about his upbringing and children. “If it were up to me, I wouldn’t really let my kids have the internet, you know what I’m saying? But here’s the thing. I’m coming from a place where I’m not even going to have the internet around me Leave a comment on, like, I can’t really beat the internet.
Lil Baby talks about his kids and the internet
“I had a personal conversation with my kids,” Lil Baby continued. “Like, I explained things to my two sons. I could record them all day long and put them on the Internet. If it were up to me, I would keep my kids off the Internet, period. [The lack of control over that] Don’t really bother me, it’s just something I have to deal with. […] Because I’m still new to them. But what I’m trying to say is, this is what we’re talking about. This is what I talk about with my sons: how you carry yourself when you’re in school, when you go out, when people say certain things, when people do certain things. I had those real conversations, like, no edits.
“Because it doesn’t even have an age,” Lil Baby concluded. “Jason Nine, he knows almost everything I know. And the Loyalists. They have the Internet. I can’t even beat around the bush. Jason asks me the craziest questions in the world. The Loyalists ask me the craziest questions.” I had to tell them what happened, especially seeing me because I’m not very good at hiding.
About the author
Gabriel Bras Nevares is a staff writer at HotNewHipHop. He joined HNHH in the summer of 2022 while completing his bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communications at George Washington University. His review of Bad Bunny’s 2024 hometown concert. ) and the lyrical and parasocial intricacies of the Drake war, or the many moving parts in the case of Young Thug and YSL RICO. In addition to his riveting breaking news coverage, Gabriel puts his concert obsession to good use, reviewing and recapping music festivals like Rolling Loud Miami and Camp Flog Gnaw. He’s also cultivated a strong editorial voice through album reviews, think pieces, and interviews with some of the genre’s brightest upstarts and most enduring obscure gems, such as Homeboy Sandman, Bktherula, Bas, and Devin Malik.
…