Nicky Minaj recently did an in-depth interview with BlackBook magazine, and in the five page spread she dishes about everything from her fast rise to international stardom, comparisons to Lady Gaga, the façade of pop stars and if she's dating Diddy. You can read all the highlights below...
On her Image
When I started making those weird voices, a lot of people told me how whack it was. What the fuck are you doing?’ they’d say. ‘Why do you sound like that? That doesn’t sound sexy to me.’ And then I started saying, Oh, that’s not sexy to you? Good. I’m going to do it more. Maybe I don’t want to be sexy to you today.
I’m definitely playing a role, I’m an entertainer, and that’s what entertainers do. That’s what people pay for. They don’t pay to see me roll out of bed with crust in my eyes, and say: Hey guys, this is me, authentic. They pay for a show. When I started doing all that weird stuff, I never thought in a million years that it would mean more people would start listening to my music, It was basically a ‘f*ck you’ to everyone who told me what to do and who to be.”
On the Lady Gaga Comparisons
We both do the awkward, non-pretty thing. What we’re saying—what I’m saying, anyway—is that it’s okay to be weird. And maybe your weird is my normal. Who’s to say? I think it’s an attitude we both share.
On being linked to Diddy
God, no! It was so disgusting to me that people would even link me and him. I grew up watching him. I look at him like a Russell Simmons figure, definitely not as someone I’d be getting it poppin’ with.”
On Her Twitter Followers
All of those people who follow me on Twitter? They aren’t my friends. Some of them are fans, but many of them are people who hate my guts and are just waiting for me to tweet something that they can put on their blogs. It’s easy to see two million followers and think, Look at all these people who love me! But not all of them love me. Whether I’m smiling or not, I know that people are always waiting for me to slip up
On filming the MTV documentary Nicki Minaj: My Time Now
I was afraid I’d been too real, that I’d shown too much of the actual person behind Nicki Minaj. Someone once told me, ‘People love the façade of pop stars. It’s not good to be a real person,’ so I lost sleep over it. But then I met tons of people who said, ‘I’ve became a fan of yours after watching that documentary.’ I’m realizing now that I’m never really going to know the rules. I just have to play.
On how fame has changed her life
I’ve always wanted fame..but when I achieved fame, I started realizing that it wasn’t as important as being great at what you do, or being critically acclaimed. Still, I never wish I wasn’t famous.
“I’ve lost my peace of mind. I no longer know who’s my friend or my enemy. I don’t know if they’re calling me because they like me or because they want a photo op, and that’s not a good feeling. I’m always second-guessing everyone, trying to figure out, Who is this person, and what do they want from me? Most people don’t treat me like a human being. I’ve become an image, a persona, a robot: ‘Stand there, take a picture, and smile.’”
On being about that paper and leaving a legacy
“Right now you got to paper chase. Paper chasing makes you step your game up. So I think in essence it [ends] up creating an insane legacy…a better legacy. But if you feel like you’re not concerned with money, ‘I don’t need money’ then I think you don’t go as hard. I have to constantly remind myself I want to be at a certain place financially in life one day. I can’t stop, I can’t get comfortable, I can’t take a break, a vacation..none of that“.
If you feel like reading the entire interview, head over to BlackBook right now!




No comments:
Post a Comment