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Chance The Rapper Wants Everyone To Know That Child Support Case Is OLD News [VIDEO] + Migos Chat About Homophobia In Billboard

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Chance The Rapper has a message for those who keep bringing up his child support issue. Find out what he said, plus get a few highlights from Migos’ Billboard cover where they talk about homophobia and more inside…

With all the good things Chance The Rapper is doing in the community, there’s always someone trying to bring a black man down.

Apparently, a writer at the Chicago Sun Time didn’t get the memo that the Chi-town native and his daughter’s mom Kirsten Corley made up and all that court drama is old news.

In the article, it talks about how his child support drama could tarnish his “good boy image.” You can read it here. Well, Chance hopped on Instagram to let everyone know that he and his family are more than good.

Check it:

 

Family always.

A post shared by Chance The Rapper (@chancetherapper) on

 

Well, there you have it.

On the magazine front...

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Atlanta rappers Migos grace this week’s issue of Billboard magazine where they talk about several topics, including homophobia and spending time in jail.

Here’s Quavo’s take on homophobia:

“If you real from the heart, you real from the heart,” he says. “That ain’t got nothing to do with no sex or gender. It’s 2017, and we all living.” But he still doesn’t quite seem to get it. “When [Makonnen’s] music came out I thought it was hard, so if he would’ve come out the same way...” He pauses. “I got a record with Frank Ocean [“Slide,” a Calvin Harris track featuring Migos and Ocean]. That closes my case.”

How they came up with their hit track “Bad & Boujee”:

Offset, a father of two, who actually wrote “Bad & Boujee,” in his basement studio when he was “overwhelmed” by family stress. “I do a lot of the [domestic] work by myself,” he says. “The studio is where you get your anger out, get your fear good and get your money from.”

And Offset reflects on his jail stint:

“When I came home [the first time], we was suddenly getting $20,000 a show. It was fast-paced, I had a bunch of money, and I was wild as hell. I came from jail to being a star at 21. Bro, that’s outrageous.” (Now they get up to $200,000 per show.)

Read their full interview here.

Check out a clip from their interview below: 

 

Photos: Chance's IG/Billboard


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