Transform Into BBL Drizzy: Drake-Inspired Halloween Look
The public mockery of Drake is still going strong, as Fashion Nova rolls out a hilarious “BBL Booty” costume that clearly nods to Metro Boomin’s “BBL Drizzy” diss. This costume features a butt pad designed to give your backside a boost, with the model rocking an outfit that perfectly replicates Drake’s look from the 8AM In Charlotte music video. Complete with colorful hair clips and a hoodie boasting “Papi” across the front.
Product details reveal the accessory is available in nude, is “Extreme Butt Inspired,” and “fits most,” meaning fans of the viral “BBL Drizzy” track can rock it just in time for spooky season. The price for this BBL Drizzy-inspired pad? $23.99, while the rest of the costume is sold separately.
Fans are having a field day with this costume drop. One person tweeted, “The things they put this poor model through.” Another chimed in, “Lol and this is exactly why I say being famous would drive me insane.” One clever person even suggested Drake should drop a cease-and-desist, referencing the OMG Girlz’s recent legal win. “Do them like T.I. and Tiny did LOL dolls I bet they take that s— down quick…,” they joked.
Metro Boomin fired back with the BBL Drizzy instrumental in response to Drake during his feud with Kendrick Lamar. He dropped it exclusively on SoundCloud and challenged fans to freestyle over it, offering the winner a free beat plus a sweet $10,000 cash prize. Drake then gave a shout-out to Metro on Push Ups, rapping, “Metro, shut your h– a– up and make some drums, n—-.”
Metro took to Twitter to respond, saying, “The drum thing was laughable, so I let it slide, but what we not gon’ do is spread lies and have my loved ones involved.”
In an effort to ride the viral wave of “BBL Drizzy,” Drake sampled the record on his collaboration U My Everything with Sexyy Red.
According to Billboard, the St. Louis producer’s diss beat has made waves as the first-ever AI-generated hit song. While it hasn’t hit streaming services, U My Everything is making history as the first official release to feature an AI-generated sample.
This is “unchartered territory for the music industry,” poses the question: as Billboard puts it, “Does an artist need to clear a song with an AI-generated sample?” Metro’s song was a remix from King Willonius, who crafted the original using AI.
“This sample is very, very novel,” Willonius’ attorney, Donald Woodard, told the publication. “There’s nothing like it.” Woodard, who’s guiding Willonius through this wild ride, explains that the “BBL Drizzy” master recording is seen as “public domain,” meaning it’s not copyrighted.