Young M.A Spits Explicit Freestyle For FADER’s First Ever “Sex Issue” [WATCH]

Young M.A will grace the cover of FADER Magazine’s first ever “Sex Issue.”

The New York spitter will get a full cover story in the magazine along with the cover. The story is sure to include some raunchy stories of M.A’s sex life and also about her sexuality. The rapper has never shied away from the topic and often raps about it in her songs.

In addition to the story and cover, M.A spit as very explicit a capella freestyle for the magazine. In the freestyle which goes on for about two minutes, she spits about how she’s gonna eat her partner and other freaky activities.

The issue will hit newsstands on March 7th, in the meantime you can press play on the freestyle above and get a preview of what’s to come.

@IAMBNYCE

 

Meek Mill Covers ‘FADER’ Magazine (News)

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Meek graced the cover of ‘FADER’ magazine’s Summer issue! Inside the magazine Meek opens up about his relationship with Nicki Minaj, and Rozay.

On relationship with Nicki Minaj.

Since his release, Meek has also become a person of interest to the tabloid press, who have been enthusiastically tracking his movements with half-true stories about parties he threw and grudges he holds. Most recently, his relationship with Nicki Minaj has been the subject of rigorous speculation, with various outlets reporting that a ring he bought her in Miami was an engagement ring. It wasn’t. “It’s definitely real,” he says of their relationship, “but it ain’t really time to get married yet. We’re still learning each other, feeling each other out.” Not that it matters: the story has been printed. Meek’s grandmother has been calling him about that one (“Whatever she sees on TV, she believes,” he says), and other celebrities, most notably Drake, have started congratulating them publicly, lending credence to the idea.

Like most people Meek has crossed paths with lately, T.I. excitedly congratulates him on his engagement. “I ain’t engaged,” Meek says sheepishly, but T.I. isn’t having any of it. “You never asked her, ‘Will you be my girlfriend?’ But she is your girlfriend,” he says. “You may not have asked her, ‘Will you marry me?’ But you are engaged.” Meek shrugs, unable to argue with this logic. “I’ve said my part,” T.I. says, backing away with his hands up. “As long as you know what’s going on.”

Rozay’s relationship with his family and visits in jail.

“Ross changed my life. He changed my whole family’s lives,” Meek says over a plate of roasted crab and garlic noodles. “Ross met my grandma a lot of times. She thinks Rick Ross is her boyfriend. She’s like, ‘Where my baby at?’” Ross smiles. “That’s my baby girl,” he says, taking a bite out of a crab puff. When Meek returned to prison last year, Ross visited him. He recalls trudging along the fence with Meek, who wore a yellow jumpsuit and was openly despondent. “I heard his disappointment,” Ross says. “The rage he felt that he couldn’t communicate his situation in the courtroom. I remember telling him, ‘You’re not going to make this a personal fight.’” As they walked the yard, the other inmates noticed the two rappers together and began banging on the walls in tribute. “You just started hearing that beating go around the whole building,” Ross says. The guards requested that he leave.

Nicki Minaj Covers FADER Magazine (News)

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Nicki Minaj graced the cover of FADER magazine’s fall fashion issue. Inside the mag Nicki opens up about the hardships of being in the public eye, being a role model to young black women, and The Pink Print. She also revealed that wants to get a collabo with Rhianna and Drizzy on her new album.

Read more below…
On how she’s evolved: “I think early on in my career, I was… just a little bit crazy. I took everything personally. That’s just not good, and it’s not healthy. I think one of my best attributes now, as a businesswoman and an artist and a professional PERSON, is being able to think before I speak. I’ve learned that everything I think doesn’t necessarily need to be stated.”

On her BET Awards speech: “My point of saying what I said was that women need to have a perspective. If we’re out here saying that we’re so confident, and we’re so this and so that, but we don’t even trust ourselves to write down our own thoughts and spit it on a beat?”

On referencing her health scare in her BET speech: “I was making a point to say that the business kills so many people and we don’t even realize it. I can only imagine how many people in this business have died because they may not have wanted to… to be embarrassed publicly. We care so much about what the world thinks that we don’t live, really.”

On moving away from her family: “I don’t want to get emotional. I just miss them. Every time I talk about them, I get emotional.”

On Lil Wayne: “Now we can have conversations and enjoy each other, but I don’t think I’ll ever feel like he’s my peer because of how much he’s done for me. I’ll always think of him like the king.”

On those who question her credibility: “I felt like my pop music made me have to retell my story. My credibility as an MC—I never thought I would have to explain that. I thought it was so evident that I belonged here [in hip-hop].”

On being a role model for young black women: “But every time I do a business venture or something that isn’t the norm for a female rapper, I pat myself on the back. It’s important that corporate America can see a young black woman being able to sell things outside of music.”