The track received a second surge in popularity in late January 2017, when Drake previewed a song called “KMT,” which has a similar sounding flow: After hearing Drake’s new track, X tweeted the following, which has since been deleted: Drake responded by saying he did not steal his flow and he admitted that it sounds similar.



" Bitch, I do Ayy, you put a gun on my mans Ayy, I put a hole in your parents Ayy, I just got lean on my ksubis Ayy, I got a UZI, no Uzi [Chorus] Fuck on me, look at me Ayy, fuck on me, yah, look at me Ayy, look at me, look at me Yah, fuck on me, yah Ayy, look at me, yah, fuck on me Look at me, fuck on me Yah, look at me, fuck on me Yah, ayy [Verse 2] I took a white bitch to Starbucks That little bitch got her throat fucked I like to rock out like I'm misfit My emo bitch like her wrist slit Curly hair bitch like I'm Corbin Got, like, three bitches, I'm Mormon Skeet on your main bitch's forehead Don't want your pussy, just want head [Chorus] Look at me, fuck on me Look at me, fuck on me Look at me, fuck on me Look at me, yah Ayy, look at me, fuck on me Look at me, fuck on me Look at me, fuck on me Look at me, yah “Look At Me” released on December 30, 2015, via Soundcloud.
It is X’s most popular song to date, sampling “Changes” by Mala.
Thanks to a federal judge, justice has been served for a Connecticut man with a penchant for scrawling nasty screeds on municipal paperwork.
Three years ago, Willian Barboza, a 21-year-old student at the time, received a speeding ticket in Liberty, New York.
was started by the team behind Fuckjerry: Elliot Tebele, Ben Kaplan, and Elie Ballas.
Yes there are :) and we can’t wait to release them.
The charges against Barboza were dropped a year later by a different judge, who conveniently bolstered Barboza’s eventual lawsuit by writing that “[n]o citation is necessary for this Court to determine that the language under the circumstances here, offensive as it is, is protected.” After the charges were dismissed against Barboza, he filed suit against Liberty and the town’s prosecutor, Robert Zangla, with the assistance of the New York Civil Liberties Union and Stephen Bergstein of Bergstein & Ullrich.
His First Amendment rights had been violated, and he wanted New York’s aggravated harassment ordinance to be scrubbed from the books, because seriously, fuck all the bitches in that shitty town.
It’s a particularly complex conundrum for Bear Grillz.